544 Wisconsin Academy o\f Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
spider has been kept for a time. When dry, the upper surface 
of the cephalothorax, and the entire abdomen, above and below, 
are closely covered with yellowish-gray hairs, giving a pale gold¬ 
en tint, with scattering, long, black hairs over all. There are 
white hairs on the sides and posterior thoracic slope of the ceph- 
alothorax. The clypeus and the spaces between the eyes have 
long white hairs, which are also found on the palpi. The falces 
are brown with a few white hairs, and the legs reddish, with 
white scales. 
We have one female from Salt Lake City, Utah. 
PELLENES CALIFORNICUS B. 1904. 
Plate XLY, figs. 1—la. 
1904. P. californicum B., Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc., XII, 2, p. 117. 
3 . Length, 4 mm. Pat. Ill triangular, with a wide blunt 
apophysis above, projecting over tibia, pale in color, with many 
brown dots. Tib. I 3 serial spines on posterior side below, and 
3 long spatulate spines in front; above is 1 long simple spine. 
Met. I 2-2. Fern. I black above and on outer side, with fringe 
of black scales near tip; pat. and tib. not fringed below, but 
with a row of dark scales, enlarged at ends, on outer side. 
When dry the eye-region is seen to be covered with white 
hairs with fine spots of black. There is a band of fawn hairs 
over the front eyes, and two whitish bands pass along the sides 
of the eye-region to the hind margin. In this specimen the sides 
and back are rubbed bare, except for a few white hairs. The 
abdomen is black above, with a basal white band, a wide trans¬ 
verse spot in front of the middle, and a white elongated spot 
behind. Under alcohol the eye-region looks black, and the rest 
of the cephalothorax pale reddish-brown with a median black 
spot behind. The legs are pale yellow, excepting for the black 
region on the femur I, for several black transverse curved bars 
on femur III, and for the tibia III, which has an oblique black 
line above, a broad pale stripe below this, and the rest of the 
