24 
Accessions 
The following specimens were received and added to the Museum col- 
lections: 
By Gift 
Asbestos Corporation of Canada, Thetford Mines, Que.: brucite and 1,000 pounds 
of chromite ore. 
Canadian Refractories, Limited, Grenville, Que.: 200 pounds of magnesite. 
Cariboo Quartz Mining Company, Limited, Wells, R.C. (through Mr. R. Randal 
Rose, General Superintendent): gold specimen. 
V. L, Eardley-Wilmot, Mines Branch: very fine cluster of sphalerite crystals 
from Lucky Jim mine, B.C. 
H. V. Ellsworth (described by Ellsworth and Graham in American Mineralogist, 
June, 1930) : cenosite, lot 8, con. 5, North Burgess tp., Lanark co., Ontario. 
Elie Frenette, Allens Mills, Que.: 300 pounds diatomite. 
Federal Lead and Zinc Company, Quebec (through J. C. Beidelman, Montreal, 
Que.) : 500 pounds lead ore and 700 pounds zinc ore. 
Lake George Mining Company, St. John, N.B.: 700 pounds stibnite ore. 
Ivor Peterson, Brookfield, Lac du Bonnet, Man.: ruby red granite. 
Renfrew Minerals, Limited, Lyndoch, Ontario : 100 pounds rose quartz. 
Pioneer mine, Calabogie, Ontario: 300 pounds molybdenite ore. 
By Exchange 
Geoffrey W. Crickmay, Assistant State Geologist, Atlanta, Georgia: fluorescent 
hyalite (three specimens) from Stone mountain, Georgia. 
Kuri-mura, Nima-gun, Iwami province, Japan: aragonite. 
Mr. Shimmatsu Ichikawa, Kitashinjo-mura, Imatate-gun, Fukui-ken, Japan: 
jamesonite on quartz from Kuratani, Ishikawa-gun, Kaga province, Japan. 
R. P. Bower, Trade Commissioner at Batavia, Java, on behalf of Exploitatie en 
Handel mij. v/h F. Buning, Cheribon: suite of specimens consisting of gyp - 
sum in large crystals, phosphate minerals, asphalt minerals, chalcedony, and 
serpentine. 
Prof. A. Lacroix, Paris, France: anhydrite from Ampandrandava, Madagascar. 
M. Vonsen, California: provertite (radiated) borax in clay, Kramer, Kerm. 
county, California. 
