A catalogue of achromatic microscopes and other optical... instruments
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- A CATALOGUE
- * « ,
- of ;... :::
- ACHROMATIC MICROSCOPES
- AND OTHER
- OPTICAL, PHILOSOPHICAL,
- AND
- *
- Iftetjjwtiatl Instruments,
- MANUFACTURED AND SOLD BY
- J. AMADIO,
- r '
- OPTICIAN TO THE ADMIRALTY,
- 7, THROGMORTON STREET,
- LONDON.
- ;#
- I*’-C •
- *. F'.Vk;
- ENTERED AT S T ATI 0 N ER S VH A LL.
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- •' ..'"Is
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- A CATALOGUE
- OK
- /W2i
- // ...
- ACHROMATIC MICROSCOPES
- AND OTHER
- OPTICAL, PHILOSOPHICAL,
- MANUFACTURED
- Instruments,
- AND SOLD
- B Y
- J. AMADIO,
- OPTICIAN TO THE ADMIRALTY,
- 7, THROGMORTON STREET,
- LONDON.
- ENTERED
- AT STATIONER’S
- HALL.
- Printed by H. F. Lawrence, 7, Hatton Wall, Hatton Gardeu, London.
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- CARTER
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- J. Amaclio, Optician,
- COMPOUND MICROSCOPES.
- No. 1 A Large Compound Microscope, on an Improved Construction to prevent vibration, the stage allowing one inch motion in rectangular direction, having sliding object plate and sliding spring holder, rack and fine screw movements to the optical part, two eye-pieces, flat and concave mirrors, diaphragm, stage forceps, and glass plates; it has also a secondary stage underneath the object stage ; having rectangular, rotary and vertical movements, for holding and adjusting diaphragms, Listers wells, condensers, spotted lens, illuminating and polarising apparatus, paraboloid, and all instruments which are placed underneath the object . £27 0 0
- No. 2 A Smaller Microscope, having three quarters of an inch motion, and ordinary rotating object plate to the stage, complete
- and similar in all its parts as the above........ £17 0 0
- No. 3 A Smaller Microscope, complete as the above. ... £13 10 0
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- No, 4.
- No. 4 A Compound Microscope, with lever stage, fine adjustment, condenser, forceps, - pincers, animalculse cage, polariscope, spotted lens, two eye-pieces and three object glasses two inch, one inch, and quarter inch, the whole packed in Mahogany .Case •••. ..> >>. *»•. •>»
- £21 0 0
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- No. s.
- No. 5 A Compound Microscope, with fine adjustment, forceps, pincers, animalculae cage, condenser, polariscope, and two object glasses, one inch, and quarter inch, the-whole packed in mahogany case ... • •• Itl f •• '*«• | «|
- £8 8 0
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- No. 6.
- No. 6 A Compound Microscope, with lever stage, forceps, pincers, condenser and two object glasses, two inch, and quarter inch, the whole packed in mahogany case...... ... £7 7 0
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- No. 7 A Compound Microscope, with forceps, condenser, animalculae cage and one set of achromatics, the whole packed in Mahogany Case..................... ..................... ...
- £5 5 0
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- No. 8.
- No. 8 A Compound Microscope, with forceps, condenser, animalculse cage, pincers, fine adjustment, three object glasses and one set of achromatics, the whole packed in Mahogany Case
- £5 15 6
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
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- No. 9.
- No. 9 A Compound Microscope, with forceps, condenser, animalcules cage, pincers, fine adjustment, and one set of achro-;• matics, the whole packed in mahogany case ....
- £4 14
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- No. 10.
- No. 10 A Compound Microscope, with pincers, needle and knife for dissecting, and one set of achromatics, the whole packed in Mahogany Case ............. ..........................
- £3 13 6
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- No. 11 A Compound Microscope, with three powers, packed in Mahogany Case................................. £2 12 G
- No. 12 A Compound Microscope, with pincers, condenser, two slides, two glass plates and three object glasses, the whole packed in Mahogany Case ......................... £0 18 6
- A Smaller Compound Microscope* with two slides, pincers, and two object glasses, the whole packed in Mahogany Case ... £0 14 6
- A Smaller Microscope, with pincers, one slide and one
- “ object glass, the whole packed in Mahogany Case
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- ACHROMATIC OBJECT GLASSES,
- FOR MICROSCOPES.
- Object Glasses. Angular Aperture. Magnifying Power with the Eye Glasses. various Price.
- A. B. C. D.
- 2 inch | 15 degrees 20 30 40 60 2 15 0
- 14 » 20 ” 40 65 70 90 2 18 0
- i „ 25 » 60 80 100 120 3 5 0
- i >> 65 100 130 180 220 4 15 0
- 95 >> 220 350 500 620 4 15 0
- t - 135 97 320 510 700 910 7 7 0
- 150 79 400 670 900 1200 8 8 0
- OBJECT GLASSES OF LESS ANGULAR
- APERTURE.
- Object Glasses. Angular Aperture. Magnifying Power with the various Eye Glasses. Price.
- A. B. C. D.
- 2 inch 12 degrees 20 30 40 60 1 10 0
- 1 „ 15 „ 40 55 70 90 1 10 0
- t 99 56 „ 60' 80 100 120 3 3 0
- 1 4t » 75 „ 100 130 180 220 3 3 0
- APPARATUS FOR COMPOUND MICROSCOPES.
- £ S. d.
- Side Reflector, for illuminating opaque objects . 1 5 0
- Lieberkuhns—
- Two-inch Lieberkuhns, packed in brass box, from 0 7 0 to 1 10 0 Eye Pieces—
- Micrometer Eye-piece.................. ...... 1 0 0
- Erecting Eye-piece, for dissecting with the Compound Microscope 110 A., B., C., and D. Eye-pieces, each, from . 0 15 0 to 1 1 0
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- Camera Lucida (Wollaston,) plain, from ............. 0 16 0 to
- Ditto, best, with double frame ...............................
- Plate for fixing fish, frogs, &c., for exhibiting the circulation of the
- Blood, from ................................... 0 10 0 to
- Animalculse Cages, with best screwed caps, from ... 0 4 6 to
- Set of three Animalculae Tubes in morocco case ...............
- Set of six ditto, in best case ...............................
- Stage Micrometers, each ......................................
- Large Condensing Lens on stand, from ................ 1 1 0 to
- Polarizing Apparatus, from .......................... 1 10 0 to
- Darker’s revolving Selenite Stage with set of three revolving
- Selenites in brass box ..................................
- Plain Selenite Stage with one tint, from ............ 0 7 6 to
- Stage Forceps, from................................ 0 3 6 to
- Glass Troughs, for holding Polyps, &c.........................
- Condensers—
- Gillett’s Achromatic Condenser on a new combination of principles for the illumination of transparent objects ......
- Plain Achromatic Condenser, with adjusting tubes,
- from ...................................... 1 10 0 to
- Paraboloid in setting for dark ground illumination.......
- Side Condensing Lens with double joints, from ... 0 5 0 to
- Lister’s Dark Wells and fittings.........................
- COMPRESSORIUMS----
- Best Lever Compressorium.................................
- Ditto ditto ......................................
- Ditto for high powers ...................................
- Spotted Lens, for black ground illumination, from 0 7 6 to
- Curved Phial Forceps, per pair, from ........... 0 4 6 to
- TERMS—CASH ON DELIVERY.
- 1 0 0 1 10 0
- 0 12 6 0 12 0 0 2 6 0 7 6 0 7 6 1 8 0 2 10 0
- 2 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 4 6
- 6 0 0
- 3 10 0 1 12 0 0 12 0 0 12 0
- 1 10 0 0 18 0 0 10 0 0 14 6 0 6 6
- Post Office Orders to be made payable at Mooryate Street.
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- LIST OF
- MICROSCOPIC PREPARATIONS.
- From 12s. to 18s. Per Doz.
- In transmitting Orders, an indication of the Number will be sufficient.
- TEST OBJECTS.
- 1 Hyalodiscus subtilis
- 2 G-rammatophora subtillissima
- 3 " Marina
- 4 " Serpentina
- 5 Campylostilus striatus
- 6 Amician Test
- 7 Tripoli
- 8 Ceretoneis faschiola
- 9 Navicula Cuspidata
- 10 " Gracilis
- 11 " Angulata
- 12 " Quadratum
- 13 " Spencerii
- 14 " Lineata
- 15 " Elongata
- 16 " Strigosa
- 17 " Anceps
- 18 " Waltonii
- 19 " Balticum
- 20 " Hippocampus
- 21 " Formosum
- 22 " Sti-igilate
- 23 Scales of Meadow Brown
- 24 11 Pontia Brassica
- 25 " " Raphse
- 26 " Menelaus
- 27 " Azure Blue
- 28 " Clothes Moth
- 29 " Amathusia
- 30 " Gnat’s-wing
- 31 ” Papilio Paris
- 32 " Papilio Io
- 33 " Podura
- 34 ” Lepisma
- 35 Hair of Indian Bat
- 36 " Mouse
- 37 n Mole
- 38 " Babbit
- 39 Larvae of Dermestes
- 40 Pygidium of a Flea
- 41 Sections of Coal—American
- 42 tf Darlaston
- 43 Sections of Coal, Derbyshire
- 44 Heraclea
- 45 Newcastle
- 46 " Oldbury
- 47 Torebane Hill
- 48 Jet
- 49 Sections of FossilWoods, Antigua
- 50 " Australia
- 51 " Claycross
- 52 " Claydon
- 53 n Craigleith
- 54 " Darlaston
- 55 a East Indies
- 56 " Egypt
- 57 Harwich
- 58 n London Clay
- 59 " New Holland
- 60 " Oldburgh
- 61 " Tweed Mill
- 62 " Van Dieman’s Land
- 63 Flints, containing Ammonites
- 64 n Fish Scales
- 65 " Sponge
- 66 Xanthidia
- 67 Sections of Lime Stone—Bath
- 68 " Clifton
- 69 " East Indies
- 70 " Galway
- 71 n Germany
- 72 " Lyme Begis
- 73 " Portland
- 74 " Warwickshire
- 75 Corprolite— -Walton
- 76 " Woodbridge
- 77 Madrepore—Clifton
- 78 East Indies
- 79 " Torquay
- 80 Moss Agate
- 81 Fossil Sponge
- 82 Hairs of Animals, Ant-eater t.s.
- 83 " Bats, (various)
- 84 . " Beaver
- 85 " Doremouse
- 86 " Hare
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- 87 Hair, Human (t.s.) 1 137 Skin of Alligator
- 88 Mouse 138 " Boar
- 89 90 l " Sea " White 139 " Elephant
- 91 Opossum 140 " Man
- 92 " Ornithorhyncus 141 " Ox
- 93 Otter 142 " Rhinoceros
- 94 " Rabbit 143 Human Corn
- 95 » Sable 144 " Muscle
- 96 " Seal 145 " Nail
- 97 i! Squirrel 146 " Tendon
- 98 Walrus 147 " Tooth
- 99 " Water Rat, &c. 148 Sections of Agate
- 100 Whalebone—Findland Whale 149 " Brighton Pebble
- 101 " Greenland do. 150 " Granite, (variou
- 102 " South Sea do. 151 " Labradore Spa
- 103 Horn of Antelope 152 " Lime Stone
- 104 " Sheep 153 " Marble, (black)
- 105 Staq 154 " " White
- 106 Hoof of Ass 155 " Sand Stone
- 107 " Camel 156 " Scotch Pebble
- 108 " Deer 157 " Quartz
- 109 v Elephant 158 Starch—Buck Yam
- 110 " Horse 159 " Colchicum
- 111 » Ox 160 0 Cycas
- 112 " Pig 161 " Potato
- 113 0 Rhinoceros 162 " Tous les mois
- 114 " Sheep 163 " Arrow Root
- 115 " Zebra 164 Hairs from Cactus
- 165 " Deutzia
- POLARISCOPE. 166 " Eleagnus
- 167 " Ferns, (various)
- 116 Selenite, various thicknesses 168 ” Rhamnus
- 117 Cotton 169 " Rose
- 118 " Gun 170 " Tabaiba
- 119 Cuticle of Aloe 171 Asparagine
- 120 " Cactus 172 Bichromate of Potash
- 121 " Equisetum 173 Bitartrate of Ammonia
- 122 Fibres of Palm 174 " Lime'
- 123 " Flax 175 ” Potash
- 124 Silk 176 Boracic Acid
- 125 Horn of Antelope 177 Borate of Ammonia
- 126 " Ox 178 Borax
- 127 " Ram 179 Carbonate of Lime
- 128 " Rhinoceros 180 Chlorate of Potash
- 129 Hoof of Antelope 181 Cholesterine
- 130 " Camel 182 Citric Acid
- 131 " Deer 183 Epsom Salts
- 132 " Horse 184 Gallic Acid
- 133 Pig 185 Hippuric Acid
- 134 " Rhinoceros 186 Iodide of Quinine
- 135 " Sheep 187 Lithic Acid
- 136 " Zebra 188 Murexide
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- 189 Oxalate of Ammonia
- 190 " Lime
- 191 Oxalurate of Ammonia
- 192 Quinine
- 193 Salicine
- 194 Sulphate of Cadmium
- 195 tt Lime
- 196 " Nickel
- 197 Tartrate of Ammonia
- 198 " Lime
- 199 Bissus of Pinna
- 200 Bladder of Sturgeon
- 201 Egg-shell of Goose
- 202 " Ostrich
- 203 Feather of Bird
- 204 Fibres of Banana
- 205 " Pinna Shell
- 206 Fish-bones
- 207 Grey Human Hair
- 208 Hair of Brahmin Bull
- 209 " Horse
- 210 " Piceary
- 211 " Pig
- 212 Oyster Shell
- 213 Palate of Limpet
- 214 " Snail
- 215 " Whelk
- 216 Papyrus
- 217 Plates from Star Fish
- 218 Baphides of Cactus
- 219 Scale of Eel
- 220 " Perch
- 221 " Sole
- 222 Skin of Prawn
- 223 " Shrimp
- 224 Spicules of Gorgonia
- 225 Tendon of Ostrich
- 226 " Ox
- 227 " Sheep
- 228 Tremolite
- 229 Whalebone
- 230 Whisker of Walrus
- 231 Wing-case of Beetle
- 232 Zeolite, &e., &c.
- Fossil Diatomacese, from
- 233 Aberdeenshire
- 234 Albany
- 235 Africa
- 236 Baden
- 237 Bangor
- 238 Banks of the Spey
- Barbadoes—Chalky Mount " Mount Hilloughby
- " Scotland District
- " Springfield
- Bermuda Bilin
- Blue Hill Pond, Maine Cartel del Piano Chalk—Cambridgeshire " Gravesend " Moudon " Suffolk " Sussex " Palermo Dolegelly, North Wales Egar, Bohemia Fraunzebad, Bohemia Georgia, South Carolina Gossa, Bohemia Hartford, Connecticut Island of Mull Kritchelberg, Bohemia Lapland Lunenberg Lough Mourne Madgeberg Manchester. U. S. A.
- Mourne Mountain, Ireland
- New Zealand
- Obero, Germany
- Oran
- Oregan
- Peat
- Petersberg, Virginia Peterhead
- Premnay, Aberdeenshire Rappanhannah Cliff, Virginia Rassay
- Richmond, North America Shockoe Hili; U. S. A. Tarrytown, New York Tripoli, Italy Tuscany
- West Point, New York Wreatham, Massachusetts Yorkshire Zante
- Diatomaceae, from
- Atlantic, (various)
- " Creek, adjoining the Australia Blackheath
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- 290 East Indies
- 291 Elchies
- 292 Gomera
- 293 Guano, (varieties)
- 294 Hull
- 295 Jamaica
- 296 Kew Gardens
- 297 Norwich
- 298 Saint Vincent
- 299 Southampton
- 300 The Humber
- 301 " Medway
- 302 " Naze
- 303 " Orwell
- 304 " Siene
- 305 " Thames
- Miscellaneous Diatomacese.
- 306 Achnanthes longipes
- 307 Actynocyclus
- 308 Amphitetras
- 309 Arachnoidiscus Ehrenbergii
- 310 " Japonica
- 311 Biddulphia
- 312 Cocconema
- 313 Cocconeis, Algoa Bay
- 314 " Grevillii
- 315 Coscinodiscus, Eossil
- 316 " Atlantic
- 317 " Centralis
- 318 " Concavus
- 319 " Concinnus
- 320 Gomphonema
- 321 Haliomma Humholdtii
- 322 Heliopelta
- 323 Meloseira
- 324 Meridion Circulare
- 325 Navicula Bomhus
- 326 " Formosa
- 327 n Grandis
- 328 " Pandura
- 329 Orthos eira Dickeii
- 330 Podocrytis Schomberkii
- 331 Bhopalocanium Ornatum
- 332 Triceratium, (varieties)
- Gemmules and Spicules of Sponges.
- 333 Dysidea
- 334 Geodia Barettii
- 335 Grantia Compressa
- 336 Halichondrea Panicea
- 337 Pachymatisma Johnstonia
- 338 Tethea Cranium
- 339 " Lyncurium
- 340 t Spongilla Fluviatilis 1
- 341 ‘ " Fragilis } British
- 342 " Lacustris ’
- 343 " Alba 'i
- 344 " Meneyii r Bombay
- 345 " Plumosa 5
- 346 Spicules of Alcyonium
- 347 " Synapta
- Spicules of Gorgonia.
- 348 Anceps
- 349 Ampla
- 350 Decussata
- 351 Gelata
- 352 Bugosa
- 353 Pinnata
- 354 Placonius
- 355 Purpurea
- 356 Tricolor
- 357 Vericosa
- 358 Zingiber, &c., &c., &c.
- SECTIONS OF SHELLS.
- 359 Anomia ephippium
- 360 Avicula Margaritacese
- 361 Belemnite
- 362 Cidaris
- 363 " Spines
- 364 Cowrie
- 365 Crab, Surface
- 366 tt Transverse Section
- 367 " Claw .
- 368 Cuttle Bone
- 369 Echinus
- 370 " Spines
- 371 Haliotis Splendens
- 372 Lobster
- 373 Malleus Albus
- 374 Mya Arenaria
- 375 Ostrich
- 376 Ostrea Edulis
- 377 " Malleus
- 378 Pentacrinite
- 379 Pinna Marina
- 380 " Nigrina
- 381 " Squamosa
- 382 " Fibres of
- 383 Prawn
- 384 Shrimp
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- 385 Spatangus
- 386 " Spines
- 387 Star-Fish
- 388 " Plates
- 389 " Spines, &c., &c., &c.
- Dissections of Insects.
- 390 Ant
- 391 " House
- 392 Bee
- 393 Bee-Fly
- 394 Beetles
- 395 Blow-Fly
- 396 " East Indian
- 397 " West Indian
- 398 Boat Fly
- 399 " Larvae
- 400 Breeze-Fly
- 401 Bug
- 402 Butterfly
- 403 Chameleon-Fly
- 404 Cicada y
- 405 Crane-Fly
- 406 " Larvae
- 407 Cricket
- 408 Drone-Fly
- 409 " Larvae
- 410 Empis-Fly
- 411 Field-Bug
- 412 Flea
- 413 Gnat
- 414 Hornet
- 415 House-Fly
- 416 " Larvae
- 417 Ichneuman Fly
- 418 Mason-Wasp
- 419 Moth
- 420 Mosquito—African
- 421 " American
- 422 " East Indian
- 423 " West Indian
- 424 Ophion
- 425 Ryngia
- 426 Sand-Bee
- 427 Saw-Fly
- 428 Scorpion-Fly
- 429 Spider
- 430 " Water
- 431 Tabanus (?)
- 432 Tick
- 433 Wasp
- 434 Spiracles of Bee
- 435 Spiracles of Blow-Fly
- 436 " " Larvae
- 437 " Breeze-Fly
- 438 " Caterpillars
- 439 " Cockchafer
- 440 " " Larvae
- 441 " Dytiseus
- 442 " " Larvae
- 443 444 " Hydrophylus " " Larvae
- 445 " Silkworm
- 446 Stings of Ant
- 447 " Bee
- 448 " Hornet
- 449 " Ichneuman-Fly
- 450 " Ophion " Wasp, &c.
- 451
- 452 Stomachs of Bees
- 453 " Beetles
- 454 " Blow-Fly
- 455 " Cricket
- 456 " Wasp, &c., &c.
- 457 Ovipositor of Crane-Fly
- 458 " Cricket
- 459 " ” Field
- 460 " Drone-Fly •
- 461 " Ichneuman-Fly
- 462 " Saw-Flies
- 463 Feet of Asilus
- 464 " Bee
- 465 " Blow-Fly
- 466 ” Caterpillars
- 467 " Crane-Fly
- 468 " Cricket
- 469 » " Field
- 470 » Curculio
- 471 " Diamond Beetles
- 472 " Drone-Fly
- 473 " Dytiseus
- 474 " " Suckers
- 475 " " do.
- 476 " Ophion
- 477 " Saw-Fly
- 478 " Scorpion-Fly
- 479 " Spider
- 480 " " Water
- 481 Tabanus
- 482 " Wasp, &c., &c.
- 483 Antennae of Ant
- 484 " Bee-Fly
- 485 " Beetles
- 486 " Blow-Fly
- 487 " Cockchafer
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- 488 Antennae of Drone-Fly
- 489 " Moths
- 490 " Gnat
- 491 " Midge-Fly, &c.
- 492 Eyes of Bees
- 493 " Butterfly
- 494 " Cockchafer
- 495 " Crane-Fly
- 496 " Dragon-Fly
- 497 " Drone-Fly
- 498 " Dytiscus
- 499 " Moth
- 500 " Spider
- 501 " Wasp, &c.. &c.
- 502 Gastric Teeth of Beetles
- 503 " Bees
- 504 " Cricket
- 505 " Dragon-Fly Larvae
- 506 " Fly
- 507 " Hornet
- 508 " Spider
- 509 " Wasp
- PARASITES.
- 510 Acarus folliculoruxn
- 511 Albatros
- 512 Ass
- 513 Bat
- 514 Bug
- 515 Cat
- 516 Dog
- 517 Eagle
- 518 Fish
- 519 Flea Bat
- 520 " Bed
- 521 " Cat
- 522 " Dog
- 523 " Fowl
- 524 " Hedgehog
- 525 " Squirrel
- 526 Fowl
- 527 Guinea Fowl
- 528 " Pig
- 529 Horse
- 530 Partridge
- 531 Peacock
- 532 Pediculi, Human
- 533 Pig
- 534 Pigeon
- 535 Rabbit
- 536 Rat
- 537 Raven
- Rook
- Sandpiper
- Snipe
- Sparrow
- Swallow
- Water-Rat, &c , &c A Set of Slides, (12) to illustrate the anatomy of the Blow-Fly
- OPAaUE.
- Antimony
- " Needle " Red " Sulphuret Australian Gold Dust Copper Dross " Moss " Native Crystallized Silver Crystals from Indigo Electro typed Silver Feet of Betties Fossil Shells, Barbadoes " Bohemia Leaf of Deutzia " Eleagnus " Ferns
- Peacock Copper Ore Pollen of Hollyhock " Lily " Mallow " Mint " Passion Flower " Sun Flower Raphides of Cactus " ' Pear " Rhubarb
- Ruby Copper Ore Sand from Gold-diggings Seeds from Orchis Skin of Curculios
- " Diamond Beetle " Dog-Fish " Shark " Sole
- Spicules of Gorgonia " Alcyonium
- " Synapta Spines of Star-Fish Wing-case of Diamond Beetle " Curculios,
- &c., &c, &c.
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- Vegetable Preparations.
- 586 Fibro-cellular Tissue
- 587 Scalariform Tissue
- 588 Simple Cellular Tissue
- 589 Stellate Tissue
- 590 Petal of Balsam
- 591 » Deutzia
- 592 » Geranium
- 593 » Heart’s-ease
- 594 " Pelargonium
- 595 " Sunflower
- 596 Pollen of Acacia
- 597 " Cycas
- 598 " Fuschia
- 599 " Hollyhock
- 600 " Lily
- 601 " Mallow
- 602 a Passion Flower
- 603 n Sunflower
- 604 ii Pine
- 605 Eaphides from Aloe
- 606 " Cactus
- 607 " Garlic
- 608 " Hyacinth
- 609 " Onion
- 610 " Pear
- 611 " Ehubarb
- 612 " Squill
- 613 Sect, of leaf oflndia-rubber tree
- 614 " Oleander
- 615 " Orchis
- Seliceous Cuticle of
- 616 Aloe
- 617 Auricaria Excelsa
- 618 " Imbricata
- 619 Bamboo
- 620 Cactus
- 621 Deutzia
- 622 Equisetum
- 623 Indian Corn
- 624 " Grass
- 625 " " Seed
- 626 Ivy-
- 627 Oleander
- 628 Eice
- 629 " Straw
- 630 Kochea falcata
- 631 Straw—Barley
- 632 " Canary
- 633 " Oat
- 634 " Wheat
- 635 Yucca
- 636 Smut of Barley
- 637 !! Oat
- 638 Eye
- 639 Wheat
- 640 Spiral Vessels—Asparagus
- 641 " Balsam
- 642 " Banana
- 643 " Buck Yam
- 644 " Cactus
- 645 " Canna-bicolor
- 646 " Collomia Seed
- 647 " Hyacinth
- 648 " Lily
- 649 " Melon
- 650 " Palm
- 651 " Ehubarb
- &c., &c., &c
- 652 Starch from Canna
- 653 " Cassava, bitter
- 654 " " sweet
- 655 " Colchicum
- 656 " Cycas revoluta
- 657 " Ginger
- 658 " Indian Corn
- 659 " Plantain
- 660 " Potato
- 661 " Eice
- 662 " Wheat
- 663 Arrowroot—African
- 664 " Bermuda
- 665 " East Indian
- 666 " Portland
- 667 " Tahati
- 668 Stomata—Auricaria
- 669 " Box
- 670 " Equisetum,
- 671 " Hyacinth?
- 672 " Iris
- 673 " Oleander
- 674 n Straw
- 675 n Yucca
- 676 Hard Tissues—Cone of Cedar
- 677 " Larch
- 678 " Pine
- 679 " Pear
- 680 Shell of Brazil-Nut
- 681 « Cocoa-Nut
- 682 " Hazel-Nut
- 683 n Ivory-Nut
- 684 " Sago Palm
- 685 " Walnut
- 686 Stone of Apricot
- p.23 - vue 23/32
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- 687 Stone of Cherry-
- 688 " Damson
- 689 " Date
- 690 " Grape
- 691 " Peach
- 692 " Plum
- 693 " Tamarind
- Sections of Woods, &c.
- 694 Alder
- 695 Aloe, Flower-stalk
- 696 Apple
- 697 Apricot
- 698 Balsam Fir
- 699 " Poplar
- 700 Banksia Grandis
- 701 " Speciosa
- 702 Beech
- 703 Birch
- 704 Buckthorn
- 705 Camphor Tree
- 706 Cane—Bamboo
- 707 " Dragon
- 708 " Wanghie
- 709 Cedar
- 710 Cherry
- 711 Chestnut
- 712 CobtB scandens
- 713 Clematis
- 714 Cork-wood
- 715 Cycas
- 716 Cypress
- 717 Elder
- 718 Elm
- 719 Fern-root
- 720 Fig
- 721 Fir
- 722 Larch
- 723 Lemon
- 724 Lime
- 725 Mahogany
- 726 Maple
- 727 Mazerion
- 728 Oak
- 729 Orange
- 730 Palm, Date
- 731 " Dragon
- 732 " Fan
- 733 Pepper, (varieties)
- 734 " Wild
- 735 Poplar
- 736 Pear
- 737 Savin
- Stone Pine
- Sugar-cane
- Sycamore
- Upas
- Willow
- Yew &c., &c., &c.
- Miscellaneous.
- A Set of Slides (12) to illustrate the Process of Felting. Bark of Lace Tree Bone of Egyptian Mummy " Peruvian do.
- " Cuttle-fish Capsules of Moss Carbonate of Lime
- " Magnesia Cheese Mite Coccoon of Moth Crystalline Lens of Eye of Frog " Fish
- " Human
- " Shark
- Cystic Oxide Exuvia of Dermestes " Myriapod
- Feather of Humming Bird '
- " Ibis
- " Love Bird
- " Parrot
- " Penguin
- " Pigeon, &c
- Fibres of Cotton
- " Cotton Grass
- " Flax
- n Palm
- " Silk
- " Sponge
- Glands of Mint " Sage
- " Sweet Briar
- Hairs of Leaf of Anchusa " Buckthorn
- " Deutzia
- " Elseagnus
- " Ferns
- " Nettle
- " Olive
- Hair of Demestes " Bee " Caterpillars " Flies " Myriapod
- 738
- 739
- 740
- 741
- 742
- 743
- 744
- 745
- 746
- 747
- 748
- 749
- 750
- 751
- 752
- 753
- 754
- 755
- 756
- 757
- 758
- 759
- 760
- 761
- 762
- 763
- 764
- 765
- 766
- 767
- 768
- 769
- 770
- 771
- 772
- 773
- 774
- 775
- 776
- 777
- 778
- 779
- 780
- 781
- 782
- 783
- 784
- 785
- 786
- 787
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- 25
- 788 Hair of Spiders
- 789 Head of Caterpillars
- 790 " Crane-Fly
- 791 " Gnat
- 792 " Musquitto
- 793 " Saw-Fly
- 794 " Scorpion-Fly
- 795 " Spider
- 796 Larva of Bot-Fly in the Egg
- 797 " Blow-Fly
- 798 " Flea
- 799 Marine Algce, (various)
- 800 Meal Mite
- 801 Mouth of Tadpole, Frog
- 802 Moss Agate
- 803 Mummy Cloth, Egyptian
- 804 " Peruvian
- 805 Murexide
- 806 Negro Skin
- 807 Ovipositor of Spider
- 808 Palates of Perriwinkle
- 809 " Limpet
- 810 " Slug
- 811 " Snail
- 812 " Whelk
- 813 Pigment Cells in Eye of Sheep
- 814 Poisers of Crane-Fly
- 815 Pygidium of Flea
- 816 Scales of Butterfly
- 817 " Curculio
- 818 " Diamond-Beetle
- 819 " Moth
- 820 " Silkworm Moth
- 821 Scales of Blenny
- 822 " . Eel 871
- 823 " Perch 872
- 824 " Sole 873
- 825 Scale of Pangolin 874
- 826 " Turtle 875
- 827 Sections of Madrepores 876
- 828 " Organ Coral 877
- 829 " Bed 878
- 830 " White 879
- 831 " Pearls 880
- 832 Section of Human Lung 881
- 833 " Lung of Porpoise 882
- 834 " " Whale 883
- 835 " Truffle 884
- 836 Siliceous Sponge 885
- 837 Skin of Beetle 886
- 838 " Caterpillar 887
- 839 " Dog-Fish 888
- 840 " Eel, with Scales 889
- 841 Skin of Frog
- 842 " Shark
- 843 " Snake
- 844 " Sole, with Scales
- 845 " Sword-fish
- 846 " Toad
- 847 Spicules of Alcyonium
- 848 " Gorgonia
- 849 Spinnerets of Silkworm
- 850 " Spider
- 851 Sporules of Equisetum
- 852 " Fern
- 853 " " Australian
- 854 " Truffle
- 855 Suckers from Foot of Beetle
- 856 Sugar Mite
- 857 Talc, with crystals of Carbonate
- of Iron
- 858 Tanned Skin, Human
- 859 " Alligator
- 860 " Boa Constrictor
- 861 " Elephant
- 862 " Ox
- 863 " Pig
- 864 " Sheep
- 865 Tendon of Ostrich
- 866 " Sheep
- 867 Teeth of Hydatids
- 868 " Leech
- 869 " " Horse
- 870 " Star-Fish
- Transverse Sections of Hairs of
- Wing of Blow-Fly " Butterfly.
- " Gnat " Midge-Fly " Moth
- Wings of Bee, with Hooklel " Saw-Fly with do
- " Wasp, with do
- p.25 - vue 25/32
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- Transverse and Vertical
- Sections of Fossil Bone.
- 890 Bear
- 891 Deer
- 892 Dinornis
- 893 Dugong
- 894 Elk
- 895 Hippopotamus
- 896 Hyena
- 897 Ichthyosaurus
- 898 Iguanodon
- 899 Mammoth
- 900 Man
- 901 Mastodon
- 902 Pterodaclyle
- 903 Rhinoceros
- 904 Seal
- 905 Tortoise
- 906 Whale
- Transverse and Vertical Sections of Fossil Teeth.
- 907 Myliobates
- 908 Shark , . ,
- BLOOD DISCS.
- 909 Bird
- 910 Boa Constrictor
- 911 Fish
- 912 Frog
- 913 Human
- 914 Lepidosyren (!)
- 915 Reptile
- 916 Syren (!)
- 917 Toad
- SPERMATOZOA.
- 918 Elephant
- 919 Bull
- 920 Horse
- 921 Human
- 922 Ram
- 923 Rat
- 924 Rhinoceros
- Transverse and Vertical Sections of Bone.
- 925 Alligator
- 926 Bear
- 927 Boa Constrictor
- 928 Cat-fish
- 929 Crocodile
- 930 Deer
- 931 Dog
- 932 Elephant
- 933 Elk
- 934 Flying-fish
- 935 Horse
- 936 Human
- 937 " Fsetal
- 938 Lion
- 939 Monkey
- 940 Ostrich
- 941 Ox
- 942 Rat
- 943 Ray-fish
- 944 Rhinoceros
- 945 Saw-fish
- 946 Sheep
- 947 Silurus
- 948 Snake
- 949 Sword-fish
- 950 Tiger
- 951 Tortoise
- 952 Turtle, &c.
- Transverse and Vertical Sections of Teeth.
- 953 Alligator
- 954 Bear
- 955 Boar
- 956 Cat
- 957 Deer
- 958 Dog
- 959 Dolphin
- 960 Fox
- 961 Hippopotamus
- 962 Horse
- 963 Human
- 964 Monkey
- 965 Miliobates
- 966 Ox
- 967 Porpoise
- 968 Saw-fish
- 969 Seal
- 970 Sheep
- 971 Shark
- 972 Sword-fish
- 973 Whale, &c., &c.
- 974 Aset of Slides (12) to illustrate the growth and Structure of Human Bone.
- 975 A set of Urinary deposits (12)
- p.26 - vue 26/32
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- Colouring Matter in Skin of
- 976 Eel
- 977 Frog
- 978 Negro
- 979 Toad
- 980 Muscular Fibre, Human
- 981 " Bird
- 982 " Fish
- 983 " Pig
- 981 " Insects
- 985 " Reptile
- 986 Cartilage, Human
- 987 " Bird
- 988 Cartilage, Fish
- 989 " Reptile
- 990 Hydatids from Human Liver
- 991 Section of Human Tendon
- 992 Section of Human Muscle
- 993 Artificial Calculi
- 994 Sarcina ventriculi
- 995 White Fibrous Tissue
- 996 Yellow Elastic Tissue
- 997 Adipose Tissue
- 998 Crystalline Lens of Human
- Eye
- 999 Fibrous Membrane of Egg-shell
- 1000 Section of Human Lung Injected and other Anatomical Preparations.
- Plate-Glass Slips, Polished Edges, three inches by one, 9s. per Gross. Best Flatted Crown ditto, 7s. 6d. per Gross.
- Cells ready for use 6s. per Dozen.
- LIST OF MICROSCOPIC PHOTOGRAPHS.
- 2s. 6d. EACH. J-pyiscM? -Xfy
- John Hunter Lady Dover Lord Byron Laying down the Law
- A Testimonial, 17 Lines Alton Towers, from the Bridge Alton Towers, from the Garden Artie Council, 13 Portraits Bolton Abbey in the Olden time Bonaparte crossing the Alps. Captain Montague O’Reilly Covenanter
- Conference of Engineers Creed, illuminated Creed, plain
- Conservatories, Alton Towers
- Deer Stalkers returning
- Dr, Johnson
- Eugenie
- Entombment
- Ecce Homo
- Family Group of Figures First of May, Birthday Present Family Group, Boys Fountain’s Abbey Ferry House
- Her Majesty the Queen, Princess Royal & Prince of Prussia Her Majesty in Robe of State H. R. H. Prince Albert ditto Highland Shooting Pony
- Lord’s Prayer, plain Lord’s Prayer, illuminated Louis Seize Madona
- Major Dickson’s Tablet Napoleon III.
- Nelson
- Nature
- Odin
- Portrait of Her Majesty Do. Prince Albert Pagodo Fountains Pharaoh’s Horses Paul Preaching at Athens Refreshment Rustic Felicity Ripon Minster Sturgeon’s Tablet Sir D. Brewster Shakespeare
- Suffer little children to come unto me Smugglers Watching The Dreadnought
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- The Imperial Family of Eussia The Departure The Eeturn
- The Empress and her Ladies The Princess Eoyal The Prince Alfred and the Princess Alice
- The Glorious Company of the Apostle
- The Holy Family The Princesses Tintern Abbey
- Ten Commandments, illuminated
- The Ould Man’s best Argument
- Wellington
- Washington
- £20 Note
- SPECTACLES AND EYE GLASSES.
- Gold Spectacles £1 5 0 to £4 4 0
- Silver ditto 0 9 6 to 1 1 0
- Steel ditto ' 0 3 6 to 0 18 6
- Invisible Spectacles with grooved Glasses 0 18 0 to 1 1 0
- Horse-shoe Spectacles 0 10 6 to 1 1 0
- Spectacles with'tinted Glasses 0 4 6 to 0 10 6
- Double Gold Eye Glass 2 2 0 to 4 14 6
- Double Plated ditto 1 6 0 to 1 15 6
- Double Silver Eye Glasses 0 12 6 to 1 5 0
- Silver Gilt Tortoise-shell or Pearl 0 16 0 to 1 5 0
- Single Eye Glasses, Gold 0 12 6 to 2 10- 0
- Plated 0 7 6 to 1 5 0
- Blue Steel 0 3 6 to 0 4 6
- Tortoise-shell 0 2 6 to 0 7 6
- Tortiose-shell double hand folder with spring bridge which by its action keeps the folder on the nose glazed with Pebbles 0 18 6
- Ditto with Glasses " o' ”7 6 to 0 14 6
- Reading Glasses and Magnifiers in every variety.
- BAROMETERS AND THERMOMETERS.
- Wheel Barometers, from ..............£1 10 0 to £18 18 0
- Pediment ditto 10 0 to 15 15 0
- Boxwood Thermometers ............... 0 2 0 to 0 10 6
- Sixes self-registering Thermometers . 0 16 6 to 2 2 0
- Horizontal Thermometers for registering the Cold. 0 5 6
- OPERA GLASSES.
- Binocular Opera Glasses, containing 12 lenses
- and of the greatest magnifying power..... £2 10 0 to £7 17 6
- Bace Glasses, in sling cases ... 2 18 6 to 7 17 6
- Single Opera Glasses........................ 0 16 6 to 3 10 0
- Perspective Glasses ........................ 0 12 6 to 1 15 0
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- TELESCOPES.
- Achromatic Pocket Telescopes, with three draws and
- Mahogany Body.......................................£1 5 6
- Achromatic Pocket Telescopes with six draws and closing up to
- 4 inches ........................................... 116 6
- Ditto in German Silver ............................. 1 18 6
- Ditto packed in case with tripod Stand and astronomical eye-piece 3 13 6
- Portable Telescopes of larger size, from ... £2 12 6 to 4 12 6
- Amadio’s improved walking-stick Telescope .......... 2 2 0
- Naval Telescopes, one draw, body covered with
- Leather, a code of signals, from............. £1 15 0 to 3 10 0
- Day and Night Telescopes..................... 1 10 0 to 2 12 6>
- Astronomical Telescopes .. ... ........ 1212 0 to 40 0 0
- Larger on Equatorial stand to order.
- STEREOSCOPES.
- Pocket Stereoscope, ... ............ ............. £0 16
- Stereoscopes, from ............................. £0 2 6 to 1 1 6
- Srereoscopes mounted on brass stands ............ 1 10 0 to 2 10 0
- Stereoscopic Pictures, per dozen, from ... 0 9 0 to 2 2 6
- Transparent Stereoscopic Pictures on Glass, each, 0 5 6 to 0 6 6
- MAGIC LAMTERNS.
- No. 1 Magic Lantern, £0 4 0
- No. 2 ........... 0 6 6
- No. 3 ........... 0 9 6
- No. 4 ........... 0 16 6
- No. 5 15 0
- Slides per dozen.
- £0 3 6 to £0 5 6
- 0 5 6 to 0 6 6
- 0 12 6 to 0 16 6
- 0 16 6 to 15 6 1 0 0 to 1 10 0
- ASflAIDa<D»0
- Improved Phantasmagoria Lanterns.
- No. 1 Amadio’s Improved Phantasmagoria Lantern,
- with argand lamp, condensing lenses 3 inches in diameter, for
- showing 2^-inch pictures, packed in Box .................... £3 10 6
- No. 2 Amadio’s Improved Phantasmagoria Lantern,
- with lenses 3|-inch diameter, argand lamp and reflector ... ... 3 13 6
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- DISSOLVING VIEWS.
- Amusement and instruction by means of J. Amadio’s Improved Dissolving Lanterns, with Chromatrope and Dissolving Views, and every variety of Sliders including Natural History, Comic, Lever, Astronomical, &c.
- No. 1 Dissolving View Apparatus, with condensing lenses 3 inches in diameter, argand lamps and reflectors, Dissolvers moved by rack work, the whole packed in case............. £7 17 6
- No. 2 Dissolving View Apparatus, with condensing lenses 3|-inch diameter, argand lamps and reflecters, dissolvers moved by rack work, the whole packed in case .................. 9 9 0
- Comic Slipping Slides, from .................. 2s. 6d. to 4s. 6d.
- Views ........................................ 3s. 6d. to 18s. 6d.
- Lever Slides ................................. 5s. 6d. to 9s. 6d.
- Long Slipping Slides ......................... 7s. 6d. to 9s. 6d.
- Astronomical Slides, from................ 7s. 6d. to £5 10s. the set.
- Views and other subjects Painted to Order.
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- 31
- LIST OF VIEWS.
- Temple of Vista Tivola Bank of England Ramsgate Lighthouse Rome
- Robin Hood Bay
- St. Paul’s by Day and Night
- Tower
- Royal Exchange *
- Venice
- Odessa
- Sebastopol
- Gallipolli
- Adrainople
- Georgia
- Holyrood Chapel
- MOVEABLE
- A Black draught A Lion’s head Adieu
- Blacksmith at work British Tar
- Boy catching a Butterfly British Queen Boy fishing Boy stealing Jam Chubbs’ Patent Christmas Fruits Civet Cat Cat and Mouse Cobbler at work Child and Skipping-rope Chinese Jumpers Clown whose head falls off „ and Donkey’s head „ dancing „ and Pudding „ in pieces „ and cracker „ and Dog „ Jumping Horse
- Silistria
- Cronstadt
- Widdin on the Danube Balaclava Harbour Castle ot Chillon Constantinople Custom House Greenwhich Hospital Hampton Court Palace Post Office Sweaborgh St. Petersburg Tintern Abbey Thames Tunnel.
- COMIC SLIDES.
- Drummer Gin and Water Jim Crow Jugged Hare Kicking Donkey Lamp Black Moving Nose My own Blue Bell Miser
- Meet me by Moonlight Napoleon crossing the Alps Performance on two chairs Policeman and Cook Peacock
- Russian and Turk Squally
- Sportsman Shooting Scotch Snuff Tailor at Work The Night-mare Venetian Blind Woman beating Boy Windy Windy Day
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- J. Amadio, Optician,
- TESTIMONIALS.
- Clerical Journal; July 22nd, 1857.—Both for private study, and for the now common task of lecturing in towns and villages, the clergy are likely to take an interest in this catalogue, which they may procure by writing for it. It contains engravings of nine microscopes, from thirty pounds to half-a-guinea, all of which are as cheap as they can well he produced with the recent improvements, We have used two of them; that marked No, 6, described as a Compound Microscope, with forceps, condenser, animalculse cage and one set of achromatics, the whole packed in a mahogany case, price five pounds five shillings ; and No. 11, a Compound Microscope, with pincers, condenser, two slides, two glass plates, and three object glasses, the whole packed in a mahogany case, price eighteen shillings and sixpence. The former is a very complete affair for the money with the highest power J inch, magnifying 350 diameters, and the lowest one inch, eighty diameters. This instrument will answer every purpose when high professional accuracy is not needed. The cheaper microscope is very powerful, showing the animalculse in water plainly, and being very portable will be found a useful companion on excursions for natural history purposes. Photography is now applicable to the microscope, in illustration of which we may mention a very beautiful object prepared by Mr. Amadio, the “Lord’s Prayer.” the whole space of which in scarcely visable to the naked eye, and yet by the low power of No. 6, microscope every letter appears in a good text-hand. We have much pleesure in introducing these finished instruments to our readers.
- Household Words, August 8th, 1857.—A microscope museum should be formed on somewhat the same principle as a picture gallery. First there should be nothing but what is good; secondly, there should be variety, with several samples of all the great masters. Preparers who have been in the habit of collecting during several years, have each of them, probably, in his secret store-house, some treasure whose native habitat, or source has baffled the research of competing collectors. To some the superiority of certain instruments, or special adroitness, may give the superiority in certain classes of objects. The microscopist will profit by all these in turn. The field of nature is so vast, that every student may gratify his own peculiar taste. It is desirable to have some sequence and connexion in the objects collected* Thus, we may have preparations of the principle organs of the domestic fly, to illustrate its economy; the eye, the proboscis, the foot, the spiracle, and other parts of its bodily frame. The scales of butterflies and other insects afford ample subjects for comparison; the cuticles of plants, showing their stomata, or perspiring holes; sections of bones and teeth; starches from various plants; feathers, hairs, and innumerable other things will suggest themselves. A good selection of the spiracles, or breathing-holes in the sides of different larvse and insects would afford a series of objects to which there is nothing similer in birds and beasts. A friend to whom I showed the spiracle of the house-fly, exclaimed in astonishment that nature had taken more pains with those insignificant creatures than with us.
- One great merit of the modern microscopes is their portability; if the reader wish to test their attractiveness, let him arrive some rainy day at a country house full of company, when the guests are prevented from enjoying out-door amusements. Let him there produce one of Amadio’s forty-guinea instruments, with the polarizing and dark-ground apparatus complete accompanied by a box-full of good preparations, and he will work wonders.
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