460 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences , Arts and Letters. 
sides are entirely covered with white hairs which thicken into 
bands above. The clypeus is brown with two conspicuous white 
bands which begin between the middle and lateral eyes of the 
front row, and extend obliquely down and back to the lower 
margin. Parallel with these are two equally wide and white 
bands across the dark front of the falces. The abdomen, when 
rubbed, is dark brown in the middle, with two black stripes and 
an encircling white band, but when fresh the whole region with¬ 
in the encircling white band is covered with yellow metallic 
scales. The palpus is brown, the upper surface covered with 
white hairs. The legs are brown, darkest on the femora. 
The female has the cephalothorax dark brown with white 
bands on the sides, and the upper surface thinly covered with 
white hairs. The clypeus is densely covered with long white 
hairs, and a white band crosses the upper part of the black fal¬ 
ces. The abdomen is light brown, with a central, branching, 
whitish band edged with black stripes, which are more or less 
broken by white bars. There is a white'basal band, and the 
sides are striped, obliquely, with white and brown. The legs 
are banded with light and dark brown, the first pair less dis¬ 
tinctly than the others. The palpi are pale yellow, with white 
hairs. The venter has three dark stripes on a light ground. 
We have this species from Arizona, and from San Diego and 
Palo Alto, California. 
DENDRYPHANTES MILITARIS H. 1844. 
Plate XXXVII, figs. 1—If. 
1844. Attus militabis hentz, Jour. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., IV. 
1846. Eris aurigera C. K. rf. Die Arachn., p. 189. 
1875. Attus militaris H., Occ. Pap. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., II, p. 62. 
1885. Phil^eus militaris P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Letters, 
VII, N. A. Attidae, p. 28. 
1888. Icius ALBOviTTATUS K. Ver. zool-bot. Gesell., Wien, VI, p. 502. 
1888. Dendryphantes multicolor P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and 
Letters, VII, N. A. Att. p. 40. 
1891. Dendryphantes militaris E., Trans. Conn. Acad., VIII, New 
England Attidse, p. 12. 
