Beckham—The Attidae of Borneo. 
621 
The first leg, besides lateral spines, has 4-4 under the tibia 
snd 3-3 under the metatarsus ; the second, besides laterals, 
has 3-3 under the tibia and 2-2 under the metatarsus. 
Our specimen is rubbed. The cephalothorax is reddish- 
brown with a wide pale streak, probably once covered with 
white hairs, over the middle of the thoracic part, and small 
black tubercles in the eye-region. There are patches of white 
hairs under the eyes on the sides as well as under the lateral 
eyes on the face, and a few white hairs appear on the middle 
of the cephalic part and over the first row of eyes. The abdo¬ 
men had, evidently, a brilliant metallic band down the middle 
and seems to have been white on the sides. The falces are red¬ 
dish-brown with darkened edges. The legs are reddish-brown 
with the proximal part of the femoral joints pale. The first 
and second have also a pale region at the proximal end of the 
tibia. The femur in the first has a ridge of black hairs above, 
which extends, though diminished in length, over the patella. 
The patella, in both first and second legs, is enlarged and flat¬ 
tened, with the front face slightly metallic, and a tuft of long 
black hairs below. The palpus is long, and has the tibia 
longer than the tarsus, with a straight apophysis at the distal 
end. It is pale except the tarsus, which is tinged with red. 
The venter is dark. The coxae and sternum are pale, and the 
long maxillae are brown with a fringe of black hairs on their 
inner edges. 
This species is most easily distinguished from B. manicatus 
E. S. by the apophyses on the falces. 
One male. 
Bathippus sedatus sp. nov. 
The male is dark, the legs brightly tinged with red, the front 
face of the femur of the first black. The female has two dark 
streaks on the thorax. 
Length, <3'6.3 mm., ? 6.7 mm. Legs, $ 3124, first and third 
nearly equal; third longer than fourth by nearly the tarsus 
and metatarsus; ? 3142. 
The shape of the cephalothorax is like that of B. Shelf ordii. 
The quadrangle of the eyes occupies more than half of the 
