650 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
Viciria paludosa sp. nov. 
A small, slender male, marked with black and. white bands 
on the cephalothorax. The first leg is not fringed. The pal¬ 
pus is short, the tarsus being about equal to the patella and 
tibia and nearly as wide as long. 
6. Length 7.5 mm. Legs 3412, not very long, nearly equal 
in thickness. 
The face is narrow., The front eyes are close together in a 
straight row, the middle being fully twice as large as the lat¬ 
eral. The second row is nearer the first than the third. The 
third is plainly narrower than the cephalothorax at that place. 
The clypeus is one-third as wide as the'middle eyes. The falx 
has one tooth on the lower and one on the upper margin. The 
spines are long, the tibia having 3-3 and the metatarsus 2-2 in 
both first and second legs, besides lateral spines. 
The palpus, like that of V. miranda, has a tarsal spine 
above the apex of the apophysis on the tibia. 
Our single specimen is somewhat rubbed. The cephalo¬ 
thorax has a white longitudinal band on the cephalic plate, the 
region on each side being bare., A broad black band extends 
entirely around the lower sides and back, and above this is a 
broad white band. On the thorax, just behind the dorsal eyes, 
is another black band. There are long white hairs on the cly¬ 
peus. The falces are reddish-brown. The abdomen has snow- 
white hairs in front, and a white herring-bone stripe down the 
middle with a dark band on each side. The venter is brown 
with two white spots in front, a dark streak down the middle^ 
and white spots on the sides. The legs are light, the first 
and second pairs tinged with red. The femoral joints are 
banded longitudinally in front and behind with black. There 
are no fringes. The palpus is reddish. 
a 
Viciria petulans sp. nov. 
The cephalothorax has the sides and cephalic plate covered 
with white hairs, the latter being bordered with red. The ab¬ 
domen has a brown band, darkest at the edges. The tibia of 
