Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 479 
around the eyes. In the male the legs and palpi are brown, 
the first pair darkest, all lightening toward the tips, with many 
long metallic scales, white on the palpus and colored on th© legs. 
In the female the palpi are light brown covered with white hairs, 
and the legs are distinctly barred with light and dark brown, 
these bands, in life, bearing, according to Mr. Cockerell, alter¬ 
nate rings of white and black hairs. The falces are dark brown. 
In the male the front row of eyes is straight, the middle less 
than twice the lateral; in the female it is curved downward and 
the middle eyes are fully twice as large as the lateral. 
We have one male and one female, sent to us from Mesila 
Park and Las Cruces, Hew Mexico, by Mr. Cockerell, who 
found it not infrequently, hibernating under the bark of apple 
trees. 
SALTICUS ALBOCINCTUS P. 1896. 
Plate XLIV, fig. 5. 
1896. Epiblemum aleocincttjm P. $, Occ. Pap. Nat. Hist. S'oc. Wis., Ill, 
1, p. 84. 
$ . Length, 4.9 mm. Legs 4312, nearly equal in thickness, 
first and second pairs without spines, except one on the meta¬ 
tarsus of the first. 
This is a very distinct species, the body being black with 
transverse white bands, and the legs and palpi light clear yellow. 
On the cephalothorax there is a band above the front row of eyes, 
a second in the depression behind the dorsal eyes, and a third, 
less distinct at the end. There is also a white marginal band. 
The abdomen has four bands, one in front, one in the middle, 
and two near the end, the last at the spinnerets. On the ab¬ 
domen the edges of the white bands are tinged with orange. 
The falces are black. 
The first row of eyes is curved downward, and the middle 
eyes are twice as large as the lateral. The second row is 
nearer the third than the first. 
We have three females, from Refugio, Mexico’, and La 
Blanca and Austin, Texas. 
