188 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
with the eyes of tlie second row. Tlie abdomen is yellowish with 
two parallel, longitudinal hands, on each of which, just hack 
of the middle, is a perfectly circular black spot. The con¬ 
tour of the abdomen is such that only the inner edges of these 
spots are on the flattened upper surface. The legs are yellow, 
the first pair being the darkest. 
We have a single male from Durban, Natal, sent to us by 
Mr. Quekett. 
mSTDENTATI.* 
Telemonia aequipes sp. nov. 
Plate XIX, figs. 3-3c. 
$. Length 4.5 mm. Legs 1432, first and second a little the 
stoutest, first, third and fourth nearly equal in length. 
The cephalothorax is. high and convex, the highest point 
being between the second and third rows of eyes. The cephalic 
part is only very slightly inclined, but the thoracic falls in a 
steep rounded slope. The sides are gently rounded out so that 
the cephalothorax is nearly as wide as long. The quadrangle 
of the eyes is nearly equally wide in front and behind. The 
first row is straight, with the middle eyes subtouching and less 
than twice as large as the lateral, which are separated from 
them. The second row is halfway between the others and the 
third is narrower than the cephalothorax. The clypeiis is 
rather high. The faloes' are strong, projecting, and divergent, 
with a single slender tooth near the distal end, on the inferior 
margin, and a long fang. The tibiae of the first and second 
legs have three pairs of long slender spines, underneath, and 
the metatarsi have lateral as well as inferior spines. The ster¬ 
num is rounded in front and slightly pointed behind. The 
first coxae are separated by more than the width of the labium 
which is about as wide as long. 
We have two rubbed specimens. Both cephalathorax and ab¬ 
domen show patches of brilliantly iridescent white scales, and 
* While Thyene is included in the Unidentati, one species, crudelis y 
has a compound tooth on the lower margin of the falx. 
