THE MICROSCOPE. 151 



MR. Hitchcock asks for those who have received eleven of the 

 twelve numbers of Vol. II. of his journal to pay their sub- 

 scriptions. If his subscribers felt as if they had received anything, 

 doubtless they would have paid long ago. Perhaps those persons 

 intend to pay him in the same way the Bohemian paid his tailor. 

 The tailor's bill had remained unpaid for years. One day he called 

 upon the Bohemian and found him in bed at noon. "Why don't you 

 work instead of sleeping?" said the tailor. "Time is money." "Ah, 

 well, if time is money," answered the delinquent, "I will pay in 

 titne." 



WE have had placed in our hands, for sale, one of McAllister's 

 best oxy-calcium lanterns, No. 402, with a large number of 

 views. The whole outfit cost over five-hundred dollars; has been 

 used but three times and must be sold. 



It will be sold for two-hundred and fifty dollars cash. It is 

 complete in every respect. Full details given to any one who thinks 

 of purchasing and can raise the cash. It is as good as new. 



T 



HE offer we made in our last issue, viz., to buy microscopes for 

 our subscribers, holds good yet under the same conditions. 



READ carefully the new advertisements of Bullock; Zentmayer; 

 Chapman, Green & Co.; Fasoldt; The Century Co., and Munn 

 &Co. 



