The Museum Premiums. 
Desiring to bring the Journal to the notice of all who are engaged in collecting, 
or are interested in the study of Natural History, the publishers of The Museum make 
the following liberal offers :— 
1 , For Three Yearly Subscriptions, one dozen Slides for Microscope, French Edu¬ 
cational Objects; or, 
2 , Six Cabinet Photographs of Peruvian and Chiriqui Antiquities, Ancient Vases, Idols 
and Gold and Silver Ornaments; or, 
3 , One large Pocket Magnifying Glass, hard rubber case, two lenses (i and inch 
diameter). 
4 , For Five Subscriptions, a collection of 50 different species of foreign and domestic 
Mosses, correctly named. 
5 , For Six Subscriptions, a. collection of 100 specimens of Minerals, all different, 
correctly named; or, 
6 , A copy of the Rev. J. G. Wood’s “ Common Objects of the Microscope ” (containing 
400 engravings, in colors) and a Boy's Compound Microscope , packed in a polished 
walnut case. 
7 , For Fifteen Subscriptions, The Museum for one year; a fine collection of 100 
pressed and correctly named foreign and American Mosses; a copy of Wood’s 
book on the Microscope and a Universal Household Microscope , packed in a 
polished mahogany case. 
8 , For One Hundred Subscriptions, a Histological Binocular Microscope, 14 inches 
in height, with necessary accessories, in an upright mahogany case. This is a 
splendid $75.00 instrument. 
9 , For Four Subscriptions, 12 fine Indian Spear and Arrow Points. 
10 , For Fifteen Subscriptions, a splendid collection of 100 beautiful butterflies, all 
different, carefully prepared and mounted, many of them rare. 
11 , For Twenty Subscriptions, a collection of 25 fine bird skins, all different, includ¬ 
ing a number of rare species. 
12 , For Fifty Subscriptions, a choice collection of genuine Indian relics,—all unusually 
fine specimens,—worth over $35.00, including a stone pipe, a fine piece of ancient 
pottery (entire vessel), ceremonial badge, perforated tablets, large and perfect 
spear heads and arrow points of rare forms, fragments of painted and corrugated 
Pueblo pottery, from ancient ruins in Southern Utah, shell beads, flint awls, 
haliotis-shell pendants, bone perforators, etc., from ancient graves in California. 
The first to avail themselves of this offer will secure the best specimens, although 
all of the sets are very desirable. 
(over.) 
