Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 503 
cephalothorax and abdomen. The front eyes are surrounded 
by rings of red hairs. The abdomen has a white basal band. 
The falces, palpi and femora of the first legs are bright reddish- 
brown. The rest of the first leg is lighter brown, and the other 
pairs are pale, all marked with two longitudinal black stripes 
from the beginning of the patella to the end of the metatarsus. 
The tube of the palpus is curved on itself. 
Mr. Banks has found this species in Florida. We have it 
only from the Bahamas. 
ICIUS SEXMACULATUS B. 1895. 
Plate XL, figs. 6—6a. Plate XLI, fig. 10. 
1895. Icius sexmaculatus B. Can. Ent., p. 100. 
2 . Length 3.5 mm. Legs, 1423, first pair plainly the thick¬ 
est. Spines, tib. I 3-3, met. I 2-2, tib. II 1 below, met. II 1 
pair and one behind, all long, especially those on met. I. 
Our specimen is rubbed nearly bare. The eye-region is black 
with a few reddish hairs. The sides and thoracic part are 
brown, with no marginal band. The abdomen is light brown with 
six white spots, two at the front end, two larger, and obliquely 
directed, at the middle, and two smaller ones farther back. Be¬ 
tween the white spots, on the hinder half of the dorsum, are 
three white chevrons. The palpi and front legs are bright-red¬ 
dish brown banded with dark brown. The other legs are pale 
with blackish streaks, like interrupted lines, along the sides. 
The venter is pale, with two longitudinal dark bands. 
The front lateral and dorsal eyes are unusually large for 
Icius, and the front row is straight. 
Reported from the District of Columbia, and Louisiana. 
ICIUS VERSICOLOR n. sp. 
Plate XLI, figs. 4—4a. 
$ . Length 7 mm. Legs, 4132, first pair much the stoutest. 
Spines, tib. I 3-3, tib. II 1-1, met. I, II 2-2. There seems to 
have been an unpaired spine, further back, under the tibia of 
the second, but in our example it is broken. 
