606 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
yellow farther back, and dark-hrown at the end. The clypens 
is half as wide as the front middle eyes and is covered with 
short yellowish hairs. The falces are vertical, short and weak. 
They are dark in color with short yellowish hairs. The palpus 
is reddish with thick yellow hairs. The tarsus is much en¬ 
larged. The legs are long and dark-colored, except the meta¬ 
tarsi and tarsi, which are pale. They are nearly equal in 
thickness, and have black fringes on the tibiae. These fringes 
are easily rubbed off in handling. 
This species might be L . mbvexus except for the curve of 
the first row of eyes. Thorell emphatically states that in his 
species this row is not curved downward, but is straight. 
One male from Sarawak. 
Cyrba cirmillata sp. nov. 
This species has red hairs around the eyes, projecting red¬ 
dish falces and pale palpi. 
$. Length 4.8 mm. Legs 3124, first pair a little the stoutest. 
The cephalothorax is high and slopes in both directions from 
the dorsal eyes, the thoracic part falling more steeply after the 
first third. The sides are widest at the dorsal eyes, being 
nearly parallel in front but contracted behind. The cephalic 
part is as long as the thoracic. The front eyes are large, the 
lateral more than half the middle, and close together, the row 
being curved downward. The second row is about halfway 
between the others, and the third is but little narrower than the 
cephalothorax. The sternum is truncated in front. The an¬ 
terior coxes are separated by the width of the labium, which is 
a little longer than wide. The falces project and are rather 
stout and long, with six teeth on the lower margin and two on 
the upper. The first and second legs, besides lateral spines, 
have 3-3 under the tibia and 2-2 under the metatarsus. 
Our specimen is imperfect. The cephalothorax isi reddish- 
brown, darker on the sides than above. The eye-region is 
bordered by rufous and white hairs which surround all the 
eyes, extending between those of the third row. Back of this, 
on the upper slope of the thorax, is a thick patch of yellowish- 
