ANTHRAX. 363 which extend throughout its meshworks in long threads. Most beautiful bundles of these bacillary threads can, at times, be found in the glomeruli of the kidney and in the minute capillaries of the intestinal villi. In the larger vessels, where the blood-stream is rapid, the bac- teria are relatively few, so that the burden of bacillary obstruction is borne by the minute vessels. The con- dition is thus one of pure septicemia, and bacilli can be secured in pure cultures from the blood and tissues. The susceptibility of the anthrax bacillus to the influ- ence of heat, cold, antiseptics, etc. not only permitted Buchner, Behring, and others to produce biological curi- osities in the form of bacilli unable to bear spores and robbed of their pathogenic powers, but also suggested to Pasteur the important practical measure of protective vaccination. Pasteur found that the inoculation of non- virulent bacilli into cows and sheep, and their reinocula- tion writh slightly virulent bacilli, gave them the ability to withstand the action of highly virulent organisms. Loffler, Koch, and Gaffky, however, found that these immunized animals were not absolutely protected from intestinal anthrax. The methods of diminishing the virulence of the anthrax bacilli are numerous. Toussaint, who was cer- tainly the first to produce immunity in animals by inject- ing them with sterile cultures of the bacillus, found that the addition of i per cent, of carbolic acid to blood of animals dead of anthrax destroyed the virulence of the bacilli; Chamberland and Roux found it removed when 0.1-0.2 per cent, of bichromate of potassium was added to the culture-medium ; Chauveau used atmospheric pressure to the extent of six to eight atmospheres and found the virulence diminished; Arloing found that direct sunlight operated similarly; Lubarsch found that the inoculation of the bacilli into immune animals, such as the frog, and their subsequent recovery from its blood, diminishes the virulence markedly. Protection can be afforded in still other ways. The