BIBLIOGRAPHY OF C. W. DEYSDALE 35 



.1915. Geology of Franklin Mining Camp, British Columbia. Canadian Geo- 

 logical Survey, Memoir 56, 246 pages. 



Geology and ore deposits of Rossland, British Columbia. Canadian 

 Geological Survey, Memoir 77, 317 pages. 



Note on the geology of the "Molly" Molybdenite Mine, Lost Creek, 

 Nelson Mining Division, British Columbia. Transactions of the Cana- 

 dian Mining Institute, volume XVIII, pages 247-255 ; also in the 

 Bulletin of the Canadian Mining Institute, number 43, pages 872-880. 



Bridge River map area, Lillooet Mining Division ; Highland Valley 

 Copper Camp, Ashcrof t Mining Division ; human skeleton from silt 

 bed near Savona, British Columbia. Summary Report of the Geo- 

 logical Survey of Canada, pages 75-92. 



1916. Anyox map area; Bridge River map area; Index Molybdenite Mine; 



Lillooet Mining Division ; Slocan area, Ainsworth and Slocan Mining 

 divisions ; general notes on stratigraphy and correlation of Kootenay 

 terranes. Summary Report of the Geological Survey of Canada, 

 pages 44-63. 



1917. Ymir Mining Camp, British Columbia. Canadian Geological Survey, 



Memoir 94, 185 pages. 

 * Geology applied to mining in British Columbia. National Progress, 

 June, 1917, pages 75-78. 



In addition to the above, Doctor Drysdale had very nearly completed a 

 memoir on the Bridge River Mining area, British Columbia, and had partially 

 prepared a report on the Slocan Mining area, British Columbia. These manu- 

 scripts are being edited and will be published by the Geological Survey of 

 Canada. 



MEMORIAL OF ARNOLD HAGUE ^ 

 BY JOSEPH P. IDDINGS 



Arnold Hague was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on December 3, 

 1840, His father, Eev. Dr. William Hague, was a Baptist minister, as 

 was also his great-great-grandfather, William Hague, who was active in 

 his pulpit at the age of eighty-five, in his home in Scarborough, England. 

 William Hague, the father of Arnold, was born near Pelham Manor, 

 New Eochelle, New York, being a descendant, on the maternal side, of a 

 Huguenot family which left France for Martinique, and later moved to 

 New York State, and settled in the place afterward called New Eochelle. 

 He v^as also descended from David Nimham, a North American Indian, 

 who acted as guide for Washington's troops through the forests of West- 

 chester, New York. Arnold Hague's mother was Mary Bowditch Mori- 

 arty, of Salem, Massachusetts, a granddaughter of Deborah Bowditch 



1 Read before the Society December 27, 1917. 

 Manuscript received by the Secretary of the Society; January 14, 1918. 



