430 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
There are white hairs on the sides, and between the eyes of the 
first row. The abdomen is velvety black, with a pure white 
band around the front end, a white, central spot, two pairs of 
white spots further back, and two oblique lines on each side, the 
front one running lower down than the other. Behind the cen¬ 
tral white spot a bronze band runs to the spinnerets, and in 
front of the spot there is a less distinct bronze region, which 
sometimes appears as three indistinct spots, as is represented 
in the figure, and sometimes consists of a central band crossed 
by a line, the dorsum being thus broken into four black patches. 
The venter has a dark wedge-shaped region surrounded by white. 
The legs are black, barred with reddish-brown, the first one 
having a double black fringe under the femur, and a single 
fringe of long hairs under the other joints. This fringe is white 
on the patella, and on the proximal end of the tibia, black on the 
rest of the tibia, white at the proximal and black at the distal 
ends of the metatarsus and tarsus. The falces are iridescent 
green. 
We have several specimens from Texas, and San Rafael, 
Mexico. 
PHIDIPPUS FARNEUS P. 1888. 
Plate XXX, fig. 5. 
1888. Phil^eus faeneus P. $, Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Letters, 
VII, N. A. Attidse, p. 26. 
1901. Phidippus farneus P. $, Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Letters, 
XIII, p. 287. 
9 . Length 9.2 mm. Legs 4132, all fringed. 
The cephalothorax has a brown integument covered with 
white scales and reddish hairs, with long tawny hairs above the 
front eyes and tufts of the same color above and on the sides. 
The clypeus is covered with white hairs. The falces are darkly 
iridescent and have long whitish hairs along the inner sides and 
around the base of the fang. The abdomen is black, encircled, 
except at the apex, with a scalloped white band. In the mid- 
