616 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
has a small spine near the base, on the posterior border, and a 
very tiny one near the distal end. The tibia of the second has 
three on the anterior and two on the posterior margin, and the 
metatarsus has two pairs, without laterals. The posterior legs 
have a few weak spines. 
This genus is much like Thianitara E. S'., one of the group 
of Unidentati, in the spinal armature. It seems to be most 
nearly related to Servaea. 
Goajara crassipes sp. nov. 
$. Length 8.2 mm. Legs 1342, first pair darkest and stout¬ 
est, without long hairs but with heavy spines on the tibia. 
Under alcohol the general color is reddish-brown. The ceph- 
alothorax has a central longitudinal white band from front to 
back, and wide white bands on the sides, while the slender, 
tapering abdomen has, on each side of the middle, white bands 
running from base to apex and approaching each other behind. 
Outside of these are two bands somewhat darker than the 
brown in the middle of the dorsum, and still lower down the 
sides are covered with white hairs. When dry, the spaces be¬ 
tween the white bands on the cephalothorax show red hairs 
which grow thick around the eyes. The white bands on the 
sides, which are marked, just above the margin, by a jet black 
line, pass forward as far as the outer edges of the front middle 
eyes, and there end abruptly, leaving the wide clypeus bare. 
This appearance is, perhaps, due to the rubbing of the Hairs in 
our specimen. In the abdomen the middle brown region seems 
to have been covered with yellow hairs. The first leg is deep 
reddish-brown, the metatarsus and tarsus being a little lighter- 
colored than the other joints. The femur has black streaks in 
front and behind, and seems to have been covered with short 
white hairs. On the front face of the metatarsus, near the 
base, is a round black spot. The other legs are light brown, 
all the tarsi being short. The palpus is pale yellow excepting 
the tarsus, which is brown. The falces are red-brown. The 
brown venter is marked by four lines of white spots, like chains 
