10 rilAPTKK I. 



knife sot square to the line of section. In the celloidin 

 met In ul, as in the cutting of unimbedded tissues, it is 

 generally cut web, and always with the knife set sluntiiuj. 

 Some microtomes that are well adapted for the paraffin 

 method are ill adapted for the celloidin method or the 

 cutting of unimbedded material, and vice versa. It may be 

 well to possess the two sorts of instrument ; but if only one 

 can be afforded it should be such as will give good work in 

 either way. 



Microtomes fall further into two classes according as 

 the knife and the surface of section of the object are (A) 

 in a horizontal plane, or (11) in a vertical plane. The 

 former offer greater facility for the orientation of the plane 

 of section, which is an important point for the zoologist ;m<l 

 embryologist. Amongst these may be mentioned (a) The 

 "Sliding" Microtomes, in which the knife is carried on a 

 sledge and moved against the object (those of THOMA, 

 SCHANZE, REICHERT, and others). The THOMA, of medium 

 size, as made by R. Jung, Hebelstrasse, Heidelberg (No. -">(> 

 of his catalogue for 1911, which may be obtained from Mr. 

 C. Baker, 244, High Holborn, London), is very suitable for 

 the zoologist. It works equally well with either paraffin or 

 celloidin, and can be adapted as a freezing microtome. But 

 this (as is the case with the others mentioned) will not 

 always furnish work of the highest accuracy; for the knife 

 being only clamped atone end is liable to spring, and to give 

 sections of unequal thickness. This defect is remedied in 

 (b), a type of sliding microtomes in which the knife is 

 (lumped at both ends and is a fixture, the object being carried 

 on a sledge ;m<l moved against it (CAMBRIDGE SCIENTIIH 

 INSTRUMENT COMPANY'S large microtome, the Mi NOT precision 

 microtome, LEITZ'S, DE GROOT'S, JUNG'S " Tetrander." This 

 last seems to be near perfection; see the description by 

 MAYKK in Z<ut. wi*s. Mile., x.xvii, 1910, p. 52 ; but is more 

 cumbrous than is desirable for ordinary work. 



Class A also includes some instruments in which the knife 

 is carried on a horizontal arm and swung against the object 

 by a rotary movement (JuNG, ROY, FKOMME, REICHEKT, 

 TIIATK, and others). I know nothing of t hese personally, but 

 doubt their constant accuracy. 



Class is contains some very fine instruments, admirably 



