88 Journal New York Entomological Society. [Voi. iv. 
setae, normal. Spiracles large, circular, Eucleid-like, a soft, eversible, 
colorless space above tubercle vi on the segments with feet. 
Head black, the sutures pale; labrum white. Body with the dor¬ 
sum broadly black, containing a narrow white dorsal line, a broader 
pale orange addorsal line, darker orange at the slightly elevated 
tubercles i and ii, especially on joints 3, 12 and 13; a narrow white 
subdorsal line. Eateral region colorless ; a broad white lateral line above 
tubercle iii, edging the black dorsum; a narrow white stigmatal and a 
subventral line. Spiracles yellowish; setae pale. Anal plate whitish, 
slightly marked with black. Skin finely transparent granular, the 
markings appearing as if below the surface, as is so common in the Eu- 
cleidae. Hooks of the abdominal feet in a half circle on the inner side 
of the planta. Length of the larva 8 to 9 mm. Width of head about 
1.3 mm. 
Cocoon. —Rounded, flattened on two sides by the leaves between 
which it was spun, of a firm hard texture like the cocoon of the Eu- 
cleidte and of the same dark brown color. There is, how r ever, no 
lid for the emergence of the moth, but the pupa forced a crack along 
one side where the cocoon was angulated by the leaf and emerged en¬ 
tirely on the escape of the moth. The pupa is simply a soft transparent 
yellowish skin without cremaster, possessing the usual Tineid char¬ 
acters. 
- #- 
NEW CALIFORNIAN SPIDERS. 
By Nathan Banks. 
Most of the following new species of spiders were contained in a 
collection sent me for determination by Prof. V. L. Kellogg, of Leland 
Stanford Junior University. 
Theraphosid^e. 
Atypoides californica, sp. nov. 
Length ceph. 5.5 mm., breadth, 4 mm.; abdomen long 6 mm. The cephalo- 
thorax is pale, head fusco-olivaceous, mandibles still darker, legs and sternum pale, 
abdomen brownish, venter lighter. Eyes similar to A. riversi, but the cephalothorax 
plainly broader than in that species; the groove simply a round impression, not 
elongate ; legs shorter and more spiny than in A. riversi, there being a fe,v spines on 
anterior tarsi, smooth spaces above on the patellce ; second joint of palpi almost as 
long as the anterior femora; six spinnerets, the small pair thicker than in A. riversi, 
superior pair shorter than in that species, the last joint not longer than the penulti¬ 
mate, and conical in shape. 
