468 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
DENDRYPHANTES NEOMEXICANUS B. 1902. 
Plate XXXVIII, figs. 2—2a. 
Palpus of male, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila. 1901, PI. XXXIII, 
fig. 21. 
1902. Icius neomexicanus B. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., Nov. 1901, 
p. 589. 
$ . Length, 3.8 mm. 
As we have no example of this species we copy the color de¬ 
scription given by Mr. Banks. His specimen was rubbed, but 
the peculiar palpus will serve to identify it. 
“Cephalothorax reddish, eyes on a black band, two indistinct 
dark spots in middle of eye-region, a white stripe each side be¬ 
low eye-region and extending backward, lower sides black, some 
golden hairs around the anterior eyes; mandibles reddish; ster¬ 
num red-brown; femora red-brown, rest of legs clear pale yel¬ 
low, except the patella, tibia and metatarsus of leg I, which are 
red-brown like the femora ; abdomen reddish-brown above, with 
faint indications of a few black spots, the sides of the abdomen 
are distinctly white, the venter black, spinnerets black.’’ 
The tube of the palpus is tipped with three short black stylets, 
visible from below. In Mr. Emerton’s drawing from the unique 
example, only two stylets are shown. 
Mr. Banks has a single male, from. Beulah, Hew Mexico 
(8000 ft.). 
DENDRYPHANTES ^NEOLUS CURTIS 1892. 
Plate XXXVI, figs. 1—lb. Plate XXXVIII, figs. 6—6a. 
1892. D. jeneolus Curtis £, Zoe, III, p. 382. 
1895. D. bifida Banks, 5, Can. Ent, p. 96. 
Length, & 4.5 mm., 2 5.5 mm. Legs, $ 1423, 2 1423. 
Under the tibia of the first, in both sexes, are three pairs of 
spines, which occupy but little more than the distal half (in 
capitatus they occupy nearly the whole length) ; the first meta- 
