640 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters . 
palpus has bright scales on the tibia, and the femoral joints of 
all the legs are more or less iridescent. The color of the legs 
is light brown, the first having a dark streak down each side. 
One female. 
Telamonia crisi at a sp. nov. 
A handsome species with wide white bands and a central 
white spot on the thorax, and a transverse white band between 
two black bands on the abdomen. Over the middle eyes of the 
first row are tufts of black hairs. 
8. Length 5.9 mm. Legs 1432, first pair stoutest, darkest 
and much the longest. 
The cephalothorax and eyes are like those of T. annulipes , 
excepting that the front row is more plainly curved, with the 
lateral a little separated from the middle eyes. The sternum 
is truncated in front. 
Our specimen is rubbed but still shows handsome markings. 
The cephalothorax is dark-colored, with black tubercles in the 
eye-region. The cephalic plate is covered with bluish irides¬ 
cent scales, but in the middle, over the first row of eyes, is a 
large spot of white iridescent scales ; on each side of this, pro¬ 
jecting obliquely over the middle eyes, is a tuft of black hairs, 
which shows conspicuously from in front. The white irides¬ 
cent scales appear also in patches between the eyes of the sec¬ 
ond and third rows, in a central spot on the thorax, and in 
wide bands which begin under the dorsal eyes and meet be¬ 
hind. Above these bands is a wide black band and below them 
is the black margin. The front, sides and face are dark, with 
a line of white hairs on the edge of the clypeus, which is one- 
half as wide as the middle eyes. The abdomen has a covering 
of golden yellow hairs with a darkened region in front. Across 
the middle is a tiansverse band of white iridescent scales bor¬ 
dered in front and behind by a black band. At the posterior 
end are three black spots, one in the middle and one on each 
side. In front of the side spots are patches of the white scales. 
The palpi are white, covered with white iridescent scales, ex¬ 
cepting the tarsi, which are dark with dark hairs. The legs are 
