The Tingitoidea or “Lace-Bugs'" of Ohio 
235 
fourth segment blackish, Pronotum blackish; membranous margins, hood, and 
apex pale yellowish-brown. Legs pale yellowish-brown; tips of tarsi blackish. 
Nervures of elytra pale yellowish-brown; more or less of three or four transverse 
nervures near basal third dark-brown or black; areolae hyaline. 
Common on Basswood; Cedar Point (Kostir), Berea (Drake), Jeffer¬ 
son (Sim), Columbus (Drake), Oxford (Shideler), Milan and San¬ 
dusky (Osborn), and Vinton (Hine). 
Gargaphia amorphae Walsh. 
Tingis amorphae Walsh, Proc. Entom. Soc. Phil., Vol. Ill, p. 408, 1864. 
This species is unknown to us and we include the original description 
of Dr. Walsh. 
“Differs from the above {tiliae'\ only in the large, basal, carinate cell of the 
elytra, terminating behind nearly in an angle of 60-80°, and in the veins of the 
wings, both those on the basal side of the middle and those at the tip, being on 
the average of specimens much more deeply stained with black, though individuals 
of the two species occur which are identical in this character. Length about .15 
inch. Eighteen specimens on Amorpha fructicosa." 
Gargaphia solani Heidemann (Fig. 7). 
Gargaphia solani Heidemann, Proc. Entom. Soc. Wash., Vol. 15, p. 136; Fink 
(Life Hitory), Bull. 239, U. S. Dept. Agr. 
Fig. 7. Gargaphia solani Heidemann (after Fink), 
