1924 ] 
New Spiders from Southern New England 
141 
transverse marking composed of three gray spots, and there are 
indefinite gray marks along the sides. Fig. 1, b. The legs are 
long and slender, as usual in this genus, the fourth leg is 8 mm. 
long. The front legs, probably the longest, are broken off and 
lost. 
One female only among weeds in an asparagus field. Hollis- 
ton. Mass. N. Banks. 
Geratinopsis tarsalis n. sp. 
Male 1.5 mm. long. Cephalothorax orange brown, black 
between the eyes. Abdomen and feet pale. The female is 
black around the eyes like the male, but does not have a sharply 
Fig. 2. Ceratinopsis tarsalis n. sp. 
defined black spot like C. nigriceps. The epigynum is distinctly 
different from that of nigriceps and resembles some of the 
Lycosidce. Fig. 2b. The male palpus has the tibia larger and 
wider than in nigriceps. Fig. 2a. The outer edge of the tarsus 
is slightly thickened and there is a thicker ridge parallel with it. 
Fig. 2a. 
Buttonwoods, near Providence, R. I., Monponsett, Middle- 
boro, and Hyannis, Mass. 
Grammonata capitata n. sp. 
This resembles closely G. pictilis, and like it lives in trees. 
It is one-eighth smaller than pictilis and paler in color, the light 
spots of the abdomen running together so that in some specimens 
