562 Wisconsin Academy df Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
diverging and reaching the inner sides of the dorsal eyes. The 
white marginal bands on the cephalothorax pass to the clypeus. 
The face is very striking. The first row of eyes is strongly 
curved, and from the outer side of each of the large middle eyes 
a broad brown streak runs outward and obliquely downward. 
The middle eyes are separated by white hairs, which also cover 
the middle part of the clypeus and the spaces under the lateral 
eyes. The falces are brown. The palpi and legs are brown with 
black spines and white hairs, the first legs being the darkest. 
While the clypeus of the female resembles those of sabulosus 
and carolinensis, the white band throughout the length of the ab¬ 
domen distinguishes the species. 
We have a male from California and a female from Texas. 
PELLENES MONTANUS E. 1894. 
Plate XLVII, figs. 9—9c. 
1894. Habrocesttjm montanum Em.. Trans. Conn. Acad., IX, p. 420. 
1901. Peluenes montanus P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., I, 4, 
p. 204. 
Length, S 7 mm., $ 8 m,m. Legs, S 3142, 9 3412, first 
pair scarcely stouter than the others. Tib. Ill narrowest in 
middle. 
In the female the colors are black and gray. The sides of the 
cephalothorax are light below, with a dark band, narrowing 
toward the front, above. In the middle the cephalothorax is 
light, almost white, mixed with gray hairs and a few yellow 
scales; between the dorsal eyes is a dark angular mark, usually 
with a light spot at the anterior angle. The abdomen is dark 
with a light longitudinal band outlined in black, which widens 
and breaks into chevrons in the second half, and with oblique 
light and dark bands along the sides. The legs are gray, ringed 
with black at the base and near the end of each joint. In the 
male the front of the head is white; the white bands along the 
sides of the cephalothorax are more distinct and farther down 
the sides, and the middle of the cephalothorax is light yellow. 
