A few of our recent additions will show from what widely distributed areas we draw:

Japan:Chalcopyrite in groups of sharp crystals, some of them beautifully iridescent.
Stibnite, brilliant crystals, 5 to 8 inches long.
Hokutolite, a new radio-active barium-lead silicate.
Reinite, in large, sharp crystals.
Quartz Twins, fine, large crystals.
Rhodesia:Malachite, beautiful polished specimens showing concentric banding.
Hopeite, in small groups of excellent crystals.
Madagascar:Betafite, a new uranium niobate, in good crystals.
Euxenite, good crystals.
Beryl, in large brown crystals with pyramidal faces.
California:Tourmaline, polished transverse sections of large crystals of rich red and green colors.
Kunzite, superb gem crystals.
Benitoite and Neptunite in fine crystals and groups.
Greenockite on Magnetite, uncommonly good.
Utah:Willemite, drusy masses of colorless and red crystals.
Aurichalcite, singularly beautiful robin’s-egg blue, crystallized coatings.
Nova Scotia:Magnesite in groups of small distinct hexagonal crystals.

New lots of fine specimens are constantly arriving. Ask for price-list No. 160.

Cheap minerals are described in No. 158.

Circular No. 170 enumerates all of our many catalogues and price-lists.

Ward’s Natural Science Establishment
84-102 College Avenue
Rochester, N. Y.


Entomological News

A forty-eight page illustrated magazine, published monthly except August
and September, devoted to the study of INSECT LIFE. It contains a list
of the titles of the current Entomological Literature, and also
articles by the leading Entomologists in the United
States and Canada. Valuable information
for the beginner, the economic
entomologist and the
systematist.