552 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
first legs darker than the others. The integument of the ab¬ 
domen is brown with pale chevrons and mottlings and a few 
white hairs at the front end. 
This species is easily distinguished from nemoratus by the 
-eyes of the first row, which in dolosus are all subtouching, and 
form a straight row, while in nemoratus they are separated and 
.form a curved row. 
We have one female from Arizona, and Mr. Banks reports it 
from Ft. Collins and Denver, Colorado. 
PELLENES ELEGANS P. 1901. 
Plate XLIV, fig. 9. Plate XLVI, fig. 4. 
1901. Pellenes elegans $ P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 4, 
p. 212. 
1901. Pellenes birgei $ P., ibid., p. 217. 
$ . Length 5 mm. Legs 3412, the first, second and fourth 
differing but little in length, first pair fringed. 
The cephalothorax is covered with short fawn-colored hairs; 
there is a band of white hairs on lower margin which passes in 
front across clypeus, and behind, at back of thorax, runs up on 
^each side to dorsal eye, leaving the space between dark-colored. 
On the sides just above the white band there is a brown space. 
On the clypeus, the white band reaches to the lower edge of the 
large middle eyes; above this and also below the lateral eyes of 
the first row there is a tinge of chestnut color. The front faces 
of the falces are covered with short, white hairs. In some speci¬ 
mens the face is rather light fawn than white, and there is an 
indistinct light line continued forward from the dorsal eye to 
the anterior lateral eye. On the abdomen a white median lon¬ 
gitudinal band extends from the base nearly to the spinnerets, 
narrowing to a. point at the posterior end. On either side of the 
median white band, are dark bands; a reddish tinge shows in 
these hands next to the white. The sides are white. The un¬ 
der parts are yellow or brown, and there is a ridge of black hairs 
above the first row of eyes. The first leg is ornamental; 
on both sides of the femur, patella and tibia are fringes of hairs; 
