Peckham—Revision of the Attidce of North America. 571 
This species is common in Wisconsin. We have it also from 
Salt Lake, Utah, (Mr. Chamberlain), and from Pullman, Wash¬ 
ington. Mr. Emerton took it at Beverly, Mass., and near Al¬ 
bany, X. Y., and reports it from Ship Harbor, Hova Scotia. 
Mr. Banks has it from Fort Collins, Colorado, and in the Cay¬ 
uga Lake Basin, Y. Y. 
PELLENES SUPERCILIOSUS P. 1901. 
Plate XLVI, fig. 9. 
1901. P. SUPERCILIOSUS P., Bull. Wis. Nat. Hist. Soe., N. S., I, 4, p. 222. 
$ . Length 7 mm. Legs 3412. First pair stoutest. 
Under alcohol the eye-region is white with two indistinct yel¬ 
low hands which begin at each large front eye and pass hack, 
diverging, to the dorsal eyes. The clypeus is thickly covered 
with white hairs except just under the lateral eyes, where it is 
dark. The lower sides are white. Our only example has the 
rest of the cephalothorax rubbed. The falces are reddish, thinly 
covered with white hairs. The abdomen shows patches of white 
and reddish hairs, pale chevrons, mottlings and oblique bands 
being visible on the dark integument. The legs are light brown, 
clouded with dark. 
A single female from Arizona. 
PELLENES TARSALIS B. 1904. 
Plate XLIV, fig. 11. Plate XLVI, fig. 8. 
1904. Pellenes tarsalis Banks., Jour. N. Y. Entom. Soc., XII, 2, 
p. 118. 
Length, S 5 mm. Legs 3142, first pair fringed. 
This is a very striking little male; the black tarsi, the white 
on the palpus and the snow-white line across the clypeus just 
under the first row of eyes serve to distinguish it from all other 
species. 
The cephalothorax is dark, covered with short brown and gray 
hairs; a narrow white line runs back on the cephalic plate from 
