560 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
one reaching the spinnerets. The legs are brown covered with 
white scales. The venter is yellow. 
This species is naimed for Mr. Hutchinson, from whom we 
have two females from Los Angeles, California, one of them 
much browner than the other. There is also a specimen in the- 
Cambridge Museum, taken by Mr. Henshaw at Wenass V., 
Washington. 
The pattern shows most plainly under alcohol. 
PELLENES JUCUNDUS n. sp. 
Plate XLVIII, figs. 7—7a. 
9 . Length 6-7 mm. Legs 3412, first pair stoutest. 
The eye-region is fawn, mottled with black, bordered by whit¬ 
ish bands which widen behind the dorsal eyes, and then pass to 
the hind margin. The hairs along the lower sides are white, the 
upper sides, and the middle of the thoracic part being dark 
brown. The face is fawn, a little darker below the middle eyes. 
The abdomen has the base, an irregular band down the middle,, 
and the lower sides fawn-colored, each side being marked with 
two oblique black bands; on the upper surface, on the sides of 
the middle fawn band, is a pair of wide black stripes, more or 
less notched on the edges, which do not meet in front, but which 
approach each other behind, and meet over the spinnerets. The 
legs are brown, covered with white scales and black hairs. In 
one specimen the femoral joints of the legs and palpi, have, 
above, a clear space in which is a dark longitudinal line. 
This female resembles the male of Viridipes. We found it 
at Sisson, Cal., and Glacier, B. C. 
PELLENES LAGGANII n. sp. 
Plate XLIX, figs. 2—2a. 
2 . Length 5 mm. Legs 1342, first a little stoutest, not 
fringed, second pair very short. 
This is a black species with crimson hairs around the front 
eyes and on the clypeus, a few white hairs on the cephalic plate,. 
