550 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters . 
We have several females from Charleston, S. C., and Way- 
cross, Georgia. 
Very much like the female of viridipes; see this species, 
where the differences are noted in detail. 
PELLENES COCKERELLII B. 1902. 
Plate XLVI, figs. 5—5d. 
1902. Pellenes cockebellii B., Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., for Nov. 
1901, p. 591. 
Length, S 5 mm., $ 7 mm. Legs, 3 $ 3412, first pair a 
little the stoutest. In the male the pattern is most distinct un¬ 
der alcohol. The eye-region is fawn over the front eyes and 
darker behind, bordered on the sides by white, with a white 
V-mark between the dorsal eyes, the point of which touches the 
fawn region. The sides and thoracic part are dark, with fawn 
bands on the lower sides, and running back from the dorsal eyes. 
The abdomen is black with a middle notched band, an encircl¬ 
ing band, and a bar on each side white. The legs and palpi are 
light brown except the tarsus of the palpus which is dark. 
The female has a black cephalothorax with a white band on 
each side arising above the front lateral eyes and running just 
below the dorsal eyes to the end, where it curves forward along 
the side margin. An abbreviated white band comes up from 
between the front middle eyes. The abdomen is white in the 
middle of the dorsum, with a broad black band on each side, 
interrupted near the end by an oblique white mark, which comes 
up from a wide white band encircling the sides and base. The 
black bands do not meet in front. 
Mr. Banks has one pair from Hew Mexico, Las Vegas Range, 
11,000 ft., taken in the last week of June. 
PELLENES DELECTUS n. sp. 
Plate XLVII, figs. 6—6a. Plate XLIX, figs. 1—la. 
Length, <2 3.5 mm., 9 5 mm. Legs, 3 2 3412, first a little 
stoutest, and in 3 fringed with white under femur and patella. 
