464 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
long, is wider behind than in front and occupies two-fifths of 
the cephalothorax. The front eyes form a curved row, the mid¬ 
dle subtouching and twice as large as the lateral, which are a 
little separated from them. The cephalothorax, including the 
clypeus, seems to have been entirely covered with yellowish 
white hairs. The abdomen is encircled with a band of the same 
color. The middle part of the dorsum, in our specimens, is 
rubbed bare, but under alcohol, it shows on the anterior part, a 
dark, diamond-shaped spot on a lighter background, and, further 
back, three dark chevrons. The posterior part has three pairs of 
black spots just at th© edge of the white. The legs are brown, 
darkest at the distal ends of the femoral joints. The palpi and 
falces are brown, the falces vertical and diverging, with two 
teeth on the lower margin. The maxillse are truncated, with a 
projection at the outer corner, and are a little more than twice as 
long as the lip, which is about as long as wide. 
The apophysis on the tibia of the palpus is bifurcated, and 
the tube is much enlarged. 
One male from Arizona. 
DENDRYPHANTES HARFORDII P. 1888. 
Plate XXXVII, figs. 6—6b. Plate XXXVIII, fig. 4. 
1888. Pseudicius harfordii P. $ $, Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Let¬ 
ters, VII, N. A. Attidse, p. 51. 
1904. Dendryphantes harfordii B., Proc. Acad. Sci., 3rd Ser., Zool., 
Ill, 13, p. 358. 
Length, $ $ 6.5 mm. Legs, $ 1423, 9 4123. Spines, $ 2 
tibia I 3-3, tibia II 1-1 and 2 single, behind, with 1 anterior 
lateral; met. I, II 2-2. In some males the first leg is rela¬ 
tively longer than in others. 
In the male the cephalothorax is brown, clothed with yellow 
hairs above and on the sides, and marked with white bands. 
One of these comes up from between the front middle eyes and 
passes back to a point between the dorsal eyes, where it ends in 
a spot. White bands pass along the sides of the upper surface, 
