492 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
ONONDAGA LINEATA C. K. 1848. 
Plate XXXIX, figs. 9—9e. 
1848. IVLevia lineata C. K., Arachn, XIV, p. 77. 
1883. Attus ;QUadbelineatus P., New or little known Attidae, p. 19. 
1888. Ictus lineatus P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Letters, VII, N. 
A. Att., p. 45. 
1891. Menemerus lineatus Em., Trans. Conn. Acad., VIII, p. 21. 
1895. Icius lineatus Banks, Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc., Ill, 2, p. 92. 
1904. Fuentes lineatus Banks, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., p. 139. 
Length, 3 4 mm., $ 4-5.3 min. Legs, 3 1423, $ 4123. 
First legs much thickened. 
Small spiders marked with two longitudinal lines on the dor¬ 
sum of the abdomen, and two others on the sides. The latter 
are so low down on the sides that only their anterior ends are 
seen from above. 
The color of the female is brown, the male is much lighter. 
The white lines on the abdomen have their edges very dark. The 
eye-region is black covered with yellowish and white hairs. 
The thoracic part brown in the female, testaceous in the male, 
though the depth of color varies in different specimens. The 
thoracic part and also the abdomen are thinly covered with yel¬ 
low and white hairs. The legs in the female are brown, in the 
male light yellow, except the tibia of the first, which is brown 
and in striking contrast with the other joints of the leg; some 
of the other joints have narrow dark rings. 
Mr. Banks reports this spider from Long Island, K. Y., and 
Bunnymede, Florida ; Mr. Emerton, from Massachusetts, and 
we have it from Wisconsin, Kansas, Pennsylvania, Georgia and 
Labrador (Britcher Collection). 
PSEUDICIUS E. S. 1885. 
Type, Aranea encarpata Wlk. 1802. 
1885. Pseudicius E. S., Bull. S'oc. Zool. Fr., p. 28. 
1888. Icius P., (piraticus), Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Letters, VII, 
N. A. Att., p. 49. 
