568 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters. 
margin. It has a white spot in the middle, running from be¬ 
tween the middle eyes to the falces and an oblique chestnut-col¬ 
ored spot passing outward from under each of the middle eyes 
to the margin. Above these, below the lateral eyes, it is white. 
The abdomen is black, mottled with gray, with a lighter basal 
band, running on to the sides. There are two pairs of gray 
spots on the anterior part of the dorsum and a central gray spot 
further back. Hear the spinnerets are two snow-white dots. 
The legs have the coxae and trochanters yellow, contrasting 
strongly with the other joints, which are dark, with many white 
hairs. The front faces of the falces are thinly covered with 
white hairs. The under parts are light gray. 
We have several females from Wavcross, Georgia. 
PELLENES SCOTSDALEI n. sp. 
Plate XLIX, figs. 6—6a. 
9 . Length 6 mm. Legs 3412, first a little the stoutest. 
Under alcohol the color is mottled brown, the abdomen with 
a white region mottled with black at the base and three short 
white bars on each side. Two indistinct light bands start at the 
white base, pass back through two-thirds of the length of the ab¬ 
domen, and then diverge and join the middle pair of side bars. 
The legs are light brown, the first pair a little the darkest. When 
dry, the cephalothorax shows a covering of copper-colored hairs 
mottled with black. The color is clearest in three short bands 
coming up between the front eyes. These eyes have long black 
hairs above them and are surrounded by white hairs. The cly- 
peus is pinkish-white on the sides, and has a bunch of long, 
bristly, white hairs in the middle. The falces are black with 
thin, white hairs. The legs have a good many pink scales and 
black and white hairs. The dark part of the abdomen, in one 
specimen, is nearly black, and the pattern which looks white 
when wet, is seen to be formed by copper-colored hairs. In a 
second example the whole abdomen is copper-colored, mottled 
with black. 
