Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 565 
The female is a uniform fawn, with four indented dots on the 
abdomen. There is a hare black triangular region on the mid¬ 
dle of the thoracic part, and under alcohol the sides of the ceph¬ 
alothorax look darker than the upper surface. 
We have it from Oregon and Sisson, California. Las Vegas,. 
Hew Mexico, Mr. Banks. 
PELLENES PEREGRINUS P. 1883. 
Plate XLV, figs. 5—5b. Plate XLVII, fig. 7. 
1883. Attus peregrinus g P., Descr. new or little known Attid« of 
the United States, p. 17. 
1888. Habrocestum pebegrinum g P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and 
Letters, VII, N. A. Att., p. 61. 
1891. Habrocestum peregrinum g $ E., Trans. Conn. Acad. VIII, N. E. 
Attidse, p. 27. 
1901. Pellenes peregrinus £ 9 P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soc., N. S., 4, 
pp. 203, 207. 
Length, $ 5.3 min., 9 6 mm. Legs, $ 3412, 9 3412, first 
pair fringed and third pair modified in S . Spines, $ tib. I 
3-3, of which the front spines of the second and and third pairs 
are so far forward that they are almost anterior lateral; these 
spines are large and long hut not spatulate. Tib. II 1-1 and 
1.1 and 3 anterior lateral. Patellae I and III anterior lateral. 
Met. I 2-2; met. II 2-2 and 2 anterior lateral. 
The male has the cephalothorax with the usual marking; the 
cephalic plate is covered with light brown short hairs in front, 
growing darker behind. A white stripe passes back from the 
anterior lateral eye on each side, past the dorsal eye down to the 
base of the thorax where it turns forward along the margin of 
the cephalothorax and is united with the one of opposite side over 
the clypeus. Abdomen snowy white on the sides and middle 
of dorsum, with two black longitudinal bands extending through¬ 
out its length. The under sides of the body and legs are light 
brown, with white and black hairs. The first leg has a fringe on 
the femur, patella and tibia. The patella of the third is widened 
and somewhat triangular in shape, the distal end has an apophy- 
