Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 569 
There are two mature females and two young ones in the 
Horace W. Britcher Collection, Hew York Museum. They were 
found in Scotsdale, Arizona. 
PELLENES SIGNATUS B. 1900. 
Plate XLVI, fig. 3. Plate XLVII, figs. 3—3a. 
1900. Habrocestum signatum B., Can. Ent., XXXII, 4, p. 101. 
Length, £4.5 mm., $ 6 mm. Legs of first pair clothed with 
long, white hair, and with brushes of stiff black hair under fe¬ 
mur, patella and tibia, especially long, and thick on the tibia. 
Patella of third leg, simple. 
The cephalothorax is brown, with gray hairs on eye-region 
and in two bands on the thoracic part, which has a dark stripe in 
the middle. There are gray bands along the sides, and the cly- 
peus is bright red. The abdomen is gray with a curved brown 
stripe on each side, the two being connected, behind, by a band 
of dark chevrons, and being united at the spinnerets. Hear 
the front end is a median, diamond shaped, brown mark which 
touches each stripe. The legs are light colored with white 
hairs. 
We have not seen the female of signatus, but Mr. Banks de¬ 
scribes it as having a dark cephalothorax clothed with hairs of 
gray and yellowish-gray, clypeus white, with white fringe on 
edge and over eyes; legs, pale yellowish, darker on outside of 
tibiae and metatarsi; abdomen, dark brown, a median pale irreg¬ 
ular stripe behind, and pale oblique bands on sides. 
Mr. Banks has this species from Los Angeles, California. 
PELLENES SPLENDENS P. 1883. 
Plate XLVII, fig. 2. Plate XLVIII, figs. 8—8a. 
1883. Attus splendens P., New or little known Attidae, p. 4. 
1885. Pellenes nigroceps Keys., Verh. z. b. Ges., Wien, VI. p. 512. 
