Pechham—Sliders of the Family Attidae. 
241 
Habrocesfu'm luculentum sp. nov. 
Plat© XXVII, figs. 3, 3a. 
$. Length 3.5 mm. Legs 3142, first pair stoutest, third much 
the longest. 
This is a small species with the cephalothorax longer than 
the abdomen. The first row of eyes is a little curved upward, 
the middle eyes being less than twice as large as the lateral, 
which are close to them. The second row is nearer the third 
than the first. The sternum is small and almost round. The 
clypeus is wide. 
The integument is black. The eye-region is covered with 
reddish hairs, excepting a wide white central spot which runs 
forward between the large eyes of the first row. The thoracic 
part, in our specimen, is rubbed bare. The abdomen is also 
somewhat rubbed, but seems to have, had the back covered with 
reddish hairs, a white band around the base and sides, and a 
wide transverse white band a little way in front, of the spinnerets. 
The front faces of the first and second legs are black. The legs 
are otherwise brown, and seem to have been well covered with 
short white and red hairs. The palpi are entirely covered with 
long, snow-white hairs. The falces are short and weak, and 
brown in color. 
We have one male from Cape Colony. 
Langona avara sp. nov. 
Plate XXVIII, figs. 5, 5a. 
$. Length 5 mm. Legs 3412, almost equal in thickness. 
The cephalothorax is long and rather narrow in front. The 
front row of eyes is plainly curved, the second row is nearer 
the third than the first, and the third is nearly as wide as the 
cephalothorax. Our specimen is damaged so that we cannot 
be sure of the color. The whole spider is black with a covering 
of mixed white and red hairs on the cephalothorax and three 
longitudinal bands of the same hairs on the abdomen, one cen¬ 
tral, which in our specimen is interrupted, perhaps from the 
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