Pechham>—Spiders of the Family Attidae. 203 
plainly wider behind than in front. The eyes of the first row 
are rather large, the middle being less than twice the lateral, 
subtouching, and form a straight row. The second row is 
about halfway between the others. The third, is but little nar¬ 
rower than the cephalothorax. The sternum is rounded, and 
truncated in front. The anterior coxse are separated by a lit¬ 
tle less than the width of the labium, which is about as wide as 
long, and only half as long as the maxillae. The falces are 
long, oblique, and strongly divergent, with a long curved fang, 
and one strong tooth on the lower margin. They are light 
brown and iridescent. 
We have but one specimen. There is a band of pure white 
hairs around the lower sides of the cephalothorax, a central 
white spot on the cephalic, and another on the thoracic part. 
The rest of the cephalothorax seems to> have been covered with 
rufus hairs. The clypeus has long white hairs. The falces, 
pale brown in color, are nearly bare. The abdomen is rufus 
with a whitish band down the middle and one on each side. 
The legs and palpi are mottled with lighter and darker brown, 
and have a good many white hairs. The first leg has a black 
line on the upper 1 face of the femtur, and a fringe of mixed 
black and white hairs on each side of the femjur, patella, and 
tarsus. 
We have one male from Cape Colony, South Africa, sent to 
us by Dr. Brauns. The species is named for our friend M. 
Eugene Simon. 
Euophrys Leipoldtii sp. nov. 
Plate XXII, fig. 6. 
$. Length 6 mm. Legs 3412, nearly equal in thickness. 
The cephalothorax is dark colored with wide white marginal 
bands on the sides which do not meet behind. The clypeus has 
white and red hairs which grow also around the eyes of the first 
row. A white band runs back on each side including the three 
lateral eyes, uniting with its fellow behind the dorsal eyes and 
extending for a short distance on the middle of the thoracic 
