DIPHTHERIA. 287 accurate examinations can be made. The method re- quires some apparatus, though a competent bacteriologist can often make shift with a bake-oven, a wash-boiler, and other household furniture instead of the regular sterilizers and incubators, which are expensive. When it is desired to make a bacteriologic diagnosis of a suspected case of diphtheria or to secure the bacillus in pure culture, a sterile platinum wire having a small loop at the end, or a swab made by wrapping a little cotton around the end of a piece of wire and carefully sterilizing in a test-tube, is introduced into the throat and touched to the false membrane, after which it is smeared carefully ovei the surface of at least three of the blood-serum-mixture tubes, without either again touching the throat or being sterilized. The tubes thus inoculated are stood away in an incubating oven at the temperature of 37° C. for twelve hours, then examined. If the diphtheria bacillus is present upon the first and second tubes, there will be a smeary yellowish-white layer, with outlying colonies on the second tube, while the third tube will show rather large isolated whitish or slightly yellowish colonies, smooth in appearance, but rather ir- regular in outline. Very often the colonies are china- white in appearance. These colonies, if found by micro- scopic examination to be made up of diphtheria bacilli, will confirm the diagnosis of diphtheria, and will at the same time give pure cultures when transplanted. There are very few other bacilli which grow so rapidly upon Loffler's mixture, and scarcely one other which is found in the throat. Ohlmacher recommends the microscopic examination of the still invisible growth in five hours. A platinum loop is rubbed over the inoculated surface ; the material secured is then mixed with distilled water, dried on a cover-glass, stained with methylene blue, and examined. This method, if reliable, will be very valuable in making an early diagnosis preparatory to the use of the antitoxin. The presence of diphtheria bacilli in material taken