Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 561 
and yellowish-red hairs around the dorsal eyes. The abdomen 
has a white basal hand with some reddish hairs in front of it, 
a white line down the middle, broken, behind, into five spots,, 
and two oblique white bands on each side, one at the middle and 
one behind. The legs are dark, the skin on the inside of the first 
tibia reddish. The palpus is dark with white hairs which are 
tinged with red on the tarsus. The venter and lower sides are 
thinly covered with white hairs. The bulb of the palpus is 
elongated. 
We found this species running on fallen trees at Glacier, B. 
C., and again at Laggan, Alberta. 
PELLENES LIMATUS P. 1901. 
Plate XLVIII, figs. 2—2a. 
1901. P. limatus P. <?, Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 4, p. 217. 
1901. P. townsendii P. ibid., p. 218. 
Length, $ 6 mm., 2 5 mm. Legs, $ $ 3412, first pair hut 
little stoutest. Spines, $ 2 tib. I 2-2-1, tib. II 2-1-1 and 1 
anterior lateral, near end; pat. II 1 anterior lateral; met. 1 
and II 2-2. 
In the male the upper sides and the middle part of the upper 
surface are covered with yellow hairs, the color being deepest on 
the eye-region. Two white bands run from the front lateral eyes 
to the hind margin where they meet white marginal hands which 
reach forward only to a point opposite the dorsal eyes. The 
clypeus is yellow, the falces brown. The abdomen is white with 
two longitudinal bands of yellow hairs which reach the apex but 
not the base, and which have, on their edges, in the posterior 
part, a series of darker bars, giving them a jagged appearance. 
The distal three joints of the first leg are brown, hut other¬ 
wise the legs are light yellow with many short white hairs. 
The female, which we formerly described as a separate species, 
has the yellow replaced by fawn, and has the dark bands on the 
abdomen much wider. The eye-region has a. white hand coming 
up from between the middle eyes which splits into two, the ends 
