Pecbham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 549 
Second leg not so dark. Femur of the third, simple in some 
specimens, in others a little enlarged and round at end; patella 
of the third more or less enlarged, and spotted with black; there 
may or may not be black stripes on the joints of the second and 
third legs. Fourth in general color much like the third. 
Sternum pale; venter pale with three dark stripes. 
Mr. Banks has this species from Yuma, Arizona, and Dixon 
Canon, Colorado. It appears in the Britcher Collection from 
Scotsdale, Arizona. We have many specimens from Salt Lake, 
Utah. 
PELLENES CAROLINENSIS P. 1901. 
Plate XLVIII, figs. 6—6b. 
1901. Pellenes carolijmensis § P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 
No. 4, p. 219. 
A distinctly marked, black and salmon-colored species. 
9. Length, 5.5-7 mm. Legs, 3412, first and second a little 
stouter than the others. 
The hairs on the cephalic part are bright yellowish-red over 
the first row of eyes, and silvery further back. There is a scal¬ 
loped salmon-colored band behind the dorsal eyes. In our 
specimens the other parts of the cephalothorax are rubbed bare, 
excepting the clypeus, which is white in a band along the margin, 
in a large spot under each lateral eye, and in a narrow band 
which begins just between the middle eyes, and widens as it 
passes downward to the margin, and which has an oblique chest¬ 
nut-colored band running outward from below each of the mid¬ 
dle eyes. The abdomen is velvety black, with markings of a 
bright pinkish and salmon-color, there being a wide transverse 
band near the front end, an oblique hand on each side, further 
back, two oblique marks in the middle and two irregular, some¬ 
times continuous spots on the posterior part of the dorsum, and 
two dots near the spinnerets. The pattern is complicated by a 
sprinkling of salmon-colored hairs, which surround the posterior 
part of the dorsum. The legs are yellowish, and are covered' 
with white and salmon-colored scales. 
