374 PATHOGENIC BACTERIA. ical or of a whetstone form, and by transmitted light are darker, more opaque, and less refractive than the typhoid colonies. By reflected light, to the unaided eye they are pale yellow. The surface-colonies are large, round, irreg- ularly spreading, and are brown or yellowish-brown in color. Hiss claims that by the use of these reagents the typhoid bacillus can be readily detected in typhoid stools. When transferred to gelatin puncture-cultures the ba- cilli develop along the entire track of the wire, with the formation of minute confluent spherical colonies. A small thin whitish layer develops upon the surface near the center. The gelatin is not liquefied, but sometimes is slightly clouded in the neighborhood of the growth. The growth upon the surface of obliquely solidified gela- tin, agar-agar, or blood-serum is not very luxuriant. It forms a thin, moist, translucent, non-characteristic band with smooth edges. Upon potato a growth formerly regarded as character- istic takes placd When the potato is inoculated and stood in the incubating-oven, no growth can be detected at the end of the second day, unless the observer be skilled and the examination thorough. If, however, the medium be touched with a platinum wire, it is discovered that its entire surface is covered with a rather thick, in- visible layer of a sticky vegetation which the microscope shows to be made up of bacilli. No other bacillus gives the same kind of growth upon potato. Unfortunately, it is not constant, for occasionally there will be encountered a typhoid bacillus which will show a distinct yellowish or brownish color. The typical growth seems to take place only when the reaction of the potato is acid. In bouillon the only change produced by the growth of the bacillus is a diffuse cloudiness. In milk a slight and slow acidity is produced. The growth in milk is not accompanied by coagulation. The chief hindrance to the ready isolation of the typhoid bacillus is the closely-allied Bacillus coli com- munis. This organism, being habitually present in the