PNEUMONIA. 347 beautiful pictures in blood and tissues when stained by Grain's method. The capsule does not stain. To demonstrate the capsule, the glacial acetic acid method may be used. The cover-glass is spread with a thin film of the material to be examined, which is dried and fixed as usual. Glacial acetic acid is dropped upon it for an instant, poured (not washed) off, and at once fol- lowed by anilin-water, gentian-violet, in which the stain- ing.continues several minutes. Finally, the preparation is washed in water, and may be examined at once in water or mounted in balsam after drying. The capsules are probably more distinct when the examination is made in water. The pneumococcus is no stranger to us; it may some- times be found in the saliva of healthy individuals, and the inoculation of human saliva into rabbits frequently causes a septicemia in which the bacillus is found abun- dantly in the blood and tissues. Because of its frequent presence in the saliva it was described by Fliigge as the Bacillus septicus sputigenus. When desired for purposes of study, it may be obtained by inoculating rabbits "with pneumonic sputum and re- covering the organisms from their heart's blood, or it may be secured from the rusty sputum of pneumonia by the method employed by Kitasato for securing tubercle ba- cilli from sputum. A single mouthful of fresh sputum is secured, washed in several changes of sterile water to free it from bacteria of the mouth and pharynx, carefully separated, and a central portion transferred to an appro- priate culture-medium. The organism grows upon all the culture-media except potato, but only between the temperature-extremes of 24° and 42° C.; the best development is at 37° C. The growth is always limited, probably because the formic acid produced serves to check it. The addition of an unusual amount of alkali to the culture-medium favors the growth. The organisms readily lose their virulence in culture-