Beckham—The Attidae of Borneo. 645 
The hairs around the eyes are snow-white with an intermin¬ 
gling of bright red. The clypeus is wide and retreating, with 
white hairs. The abdomen is covered with silky golden hairs 
and brilliantly iridescent white hairs, the pattern, unfortu¬ 
nately, being indistinct. There seems to have been a wide 
white band down the middle, and two transverse white bands. 
The anterior sides are golden. On each side, between the 
transverse white bands, is a dark bar covered with golden 
hairs, and at the posterior end, on each side, is an abbreviated 
dark band running longitudinally, also covered with golden 
hairs. The spinnerets are dark-colored. The under surface 
is light with a dark streak down the middle of the venter. 
The falces are small and yellow, the palpi white, the legs 
yellow. 
Two females. 
Viciria concolor sp. nov. 
This male, under alcohol, is of a general light brown color, 
ihe legs being tinged with red. There are no marked contrasts 
excepting the black eye-tubercles. The first and second legs 
are fringed. 
$. Length 10 mm. Legs 1324, long, nearly equal in thickness. 
The front eyes form a straight row, the middle being fully 
twice as large as the lateral, which are a little separated from 
them. The small eyes are placed on the same tubercle with 
the laterals, and are nearer to them than to the dorsals. The 
third row is plainly narrower than the cephalothorax. The 
clypeus is one-third as wide as the large middle eyes. The 
falces project and are rather long and stout, with one tooth 
on the lower, and two on the upper margin, the one nearer the 
fang being the larger. The tarsus of the palpus has a spine 
which is directed toward the tibial apophysis. The spinal ar¬ 
mature of the first and second legs is 3-3, with laterals, on 
the tibia, and 2-2, with laterals, on the metatarsus. The poste¬ 
rior legs have numerous spines. 
Our single specimen is rubbed nearly bare. The cephalo¬ 
thorax is of a pale yellowish-brown color, the eyes placed on 
