Peckham—Revision of the Attidee of North America. 555 
lique chestnut-colored bars. The legs are yellow, with gray 
hairs. 
Mr. Hutchinson has sent us a specimen from Los Angeles, 
Cal., and we have it also from Salt Lake, Utah. 
PELLENES HIRSUTUS P. 1888. 
Plate XLVI, figs. 2—2a. 
1888. Habrocestum hirsutum P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Let¬ 
ters, VII, N. A. Att., p. 64. 
1901. Pellenes hirsutus P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 4, 
p. 211. 
Length, $ 5 mm., 2 6 mm. Legs 3412, first pair in mala 
stoutest, with fringes, and iridescent metatarsi. 
In the female the eye-region is dark, covered with reddish- 
gray hairs, and edged with white on the sides. A white band 
comes up from between the front eyes and reaches the middle of 
the cephalic plate, where it splits into two, which diverge and 
pass back to the inner sides of the dorsal eyes. Around the 
lower sides are white bands which pass up on to the thoracic 
part and join the two bands from in front, leaving a diamond¬ 
shaped dark region, bounded by white, between the dorsal eyes. 
The white clypeus is continuous with the side bands, and has 
long white hairs in the middle. The upper sides and the middle 
of the thoracic part are brown. The abdomen is dark, covered 
with tawny-gray hairs. Around the base is a white band, and 
behind this is a black border which is widest in the middle. On 
the back, behind the middle, is a dark region, on which is a 
longitudinal band of four small triangular white spots. There 
is an oblique white band in the middle of each side and a pair 
of curved white bands at the end. The legs are light yellowish- 
brown, the first and the femur of the second darkest, all covered 
with white hairs. The falces are reddish, the sternum is pale, 
encircled by a black ring on which grow white hairs, and the 
venter is white. A female recently taken by Mr. Hanham at 
Duncan’s, Vancouver Island, differs in a marked degree from 
other specimens. The hairs that form the pattern, instead of 
