BACILLUS AEROGENES CAPSULATUS. 465 the stain. The specimen is then examined in the color- ing-solution, after soaking up the excess with filter paper, the thin layer of coloring fluid not interfering with a clear view of the bacteria and their capsules. After mounting in Canada balsam the capsules are not nearly so distinct. The width of the capsule varies from one-half to twice the thickness of the bacillus. Its outer margin is stained, leaving a clear zone immediately around the bacillus. It was at first thought that the bacillus produced no spores, but Dunham1 found that spores were produced upon blood-serum, and especially upon Loffler's blood- serum bouillon mixture. The spores resist desiccation and exposure to the air for ten months. They stain readily in hot solutions of fuchsin in anilin water, and are not decolorized by a moderate exposure to the action of 3 per cent, solution of hydrochloric acid in absolute alcohol. They are oval, and are usually situated near the middle of the bacillus, which is distended because of the large size of the spore and bulges at the sides. The bacillus is anaerobic. It grows upon all culture- media, both at the room-temperature and at the tempera- ture of incubation, best at the latter. The bacillus grows in ordinary neutral or alkaline gelatin, but better in gela- tin containing glucose, in which the characteristic gas- production is marked. Soft gelatin, made with 5 instead of 10 per cent, of the crude gelatin, is said to be better than the ordinary medium. There is no distinct liquefaction, but in 5 per cent, gelatin there is sometimes a softening that can be best demonstrated by tilting the tube and observing that the gas-bubbles change their position, as well as by noticing that the growth tends to sediment. In making agar-agar cultures careful anaerobic precau- tions must be observed. The tubes should contain con- siderable of the medium, which should be boiled and freshly solidified before using. The implantation should be deeply made with a long wire. The growth takes 1 Bull, of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, April, 1897, p. 68. 30