474 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences , Arts and Letters, 
especially on the sides. On the front of the cephalic plate the 
hairs are bright reddish gold in color, and across the middle 
there is a white band, which is sometimes broken into three 
spots, one central, and one in front of each dorsal eye. One 
specimen has three white points, visible from above, between 
the eyes of the first row, and a central white spot on the anterior 
thoracic part. The hairs on the clypens are sometimes white 
and sometimes yellow. The falces are reddish with a few white 
scales. The abdomen is yellow, marked by pure white basal 
and side bands, and by two velvety black bands, broken by three 
pairs of white spots, which extend from in front of the middle 
to the spinnerets. The legs are yellow like the abdomen, some¬ 
times with darker shadings at the joints. The palpi are yellow 
with white hairs. 
We have several examples from New York, and one from 
Tallehasse, Florida. 
DENDRYPHANTES PERVAGUS n. sp. 
Plate XXXVII, figs. 9—9a. 
$ Length 4.5 mm. Legs 4123. Spines, tibia I 3-3, tibia 
II 1-1 and 1 farther back, with 1 anterior lateral; met. I, II 
2-2. The spines under tibia I not evenly paired. 
The cephalothorax is dark red, rather thinly covered with 
hairs, which are white on the sides and thoracic part, and yellow 
on the cephalic part and clypeus. The abdomen, when under 
alcohol, is light brown with a dark biown central region, as it 
appears in the figure. When dry, the light base, sides and cen¬ 
tral band show a covering of white hairs, while the two dark 
stripes have yellow hairs. In the posterior half long dark dia¬ 
gonal bands, covered with yellow hairs, come up from the venter 
and cross the white sides, and, alternating with these, white ob¬ 
lique bars cut the outer edges of the two dark, longitudinal 
stripes. The legs and palpi are yellow, the former banded with 
dark brown. 
We have a single female from Wallace, Kansas, sent by Mr. 
Papenhoe. 
