LEPROSY. 243 garded by some as spores, but which are even less likely to be spores than the similar appearances in the tubercle bacillus. The organism almost always occurs singly or in irreo-- ular groups, filaments being unknown. It is not motile. Many experimenters have endeavored to grow this ba- cillus upon artificially prepared substances, but in spite of modern methods, improved apparatus, and refined media, few claim to have met with success. Bordoni-Uffredozzi was able to grow upon a blood-serum- glycerin mixture a bacillus which partook of the staining peculiarities of the lepra bacillus as it appears in the tissues, but differed very much from it in its morphology. After 'numerous generations this bacillus was induced to grow upon ordinary culture-media. It commonly pre- sented a club-like form, which was regarded by Baum- garten as an involution appearance. Frankel points out that tlie bacillus of Bordoni is possessed of none of the essential characters of the lepra bacillus except its stain- ing. Czaplewski1 offers a confirmation of the work of Bor- doni-Uffredozzi, together with a description of a bacillus supposed to be the lepra bacillus, which he succeeded in cultivating from the nasal secretions of a leper. The bacillus was first isolated upon a culture-medium consisting of glycerinized serum without the addition of salt, pepton, or sugar. The mixture was placed in flat dishes, coagulated by heat, and sterilized by the inter- mittent method. The secretion, rich in lepra bacilli, was taken up with a platinum wire and inoculated upon the culture-medium by a series of linear strokes. The dishes (Petri dishes were used for the experiment) were securely closed with paraffin and stood in the incubating-oven at 37° C. Upon the surface of the medium there grew numerous colonies of staphylococcus aureus, the bacillus of Fried- 1 Centralbl. f. Bakt. und Parasitenk., Jan. 31, 1898, vol. xxiii., Nos. 3 and 4> P- 97-