404 LILY HUIE. 
The Nuclear Plasm appears very indistinctly granular, as 
if the granules had swelled and fused, but is still extremely 
dense. 
The Nucleolus stains a purple-red. It is still full and 
spherical, and frequently appears even enlarged. It is sur- 
rounded by a broad Frommann’s circle, and does not show 
the endonucleoli as distinctly as in the resting condition. 
Effect of Stimulation for One Minute on the Apical 
Gland-cells. Type 2. Fig. 3 (slightly more ad- 
vanced than Fig. 2). 
The Cell Wall is pinkish purple, as in the last specimen, 
and there is the same appearance of some reddish material 
between the apices of the cells. 
The Cytoplasm is shrunken from the walls, but attached in 
one place to the basal wall, and in two places to one lateral 
wall. Its matrix and granulation are indistinguishable from 
each other. The plasm is very red round the nucleus for a 
distance equal to two thirds of the diameter of the latter. 
Beyond this it is deep blue-purple, as in the last specimen, and 
the apical fourth of the cell is entirely occupied by a network 
of vacuoles, the reticulum between them containing masses of 
the deep blue granules which line the vacuoles as in the last 
specimen. The same granules are distributed, apparently in 
strings, through the thick granulation occupying the middle 
of the cell. A pseudo-corpuscle is present, as in the last 
specimen. 
The Nucleus is normal as to position, size, and shape. It is 
of the same reddish tint as the cell-plasm surrounding it, but 
is clearly defined by its dark blue periphery, and still maintains 
its plumpness. 
The Nuclear Chromosomes are like those of unfed specimens. 
The Nuclear Plasm is of the same tint and general appear- 
ance as the granulation surrounding the nucleus. 
The Nucleolus is dark reddish purple, and is surrounded by 
Frommann’s clear zone. The endonucleoli in all the cells are 
much less distinct than in unfed specimens, 
