MF/niohS. 325 



with II parts concentrated aqueous solution of 



fuchsin, and different iatcs in absolute alcohol with 1 percent, 

 of acetic- arid and O'l per cent, of iodine. Nncleoli red, 

 chromatin blue. 



I'YscHER (Fii'u-HH'j, etc., p. 140) adds 30 drops of hot O'l 

 per cent, fuchsia solution to 100 c.c. of 0*3 to 0'5 per cent, 

 solution of methyl green. 



MONTGOMERY (Journ. Horjih., xv, 1899) stains for an hour 

 in Khrlich's hajmatoxylin, and then for five minutes in con- 

 centrated aqueous eosin, or first with concentrated aqueous 

 methylen blue, and then with concentrated alcoholic solution 

 of Brazilin. 



See also REDDINGIUS, Virchow's Arch., clxii, 1900, p. 206. For nucleoli 

 of ova, LIST, Mittli. Zool. Stat. Neapel, xii, 1896, p. 480 ; of nerve-cells, 

 RUZICKA, Zeit. wiss. Mil:., xiv, 1898, p. 453, and LEVI, Rio. Pat. Nerv. 

 Ment. Firenze, iii, 1898, p. 289. 



650. Plasma Stains. I have been unable to discover a 

 single thoroughly satisfactory one. Almost all of them 

 colour too readily the enchylema or hyaloplasm at the same 

 time as the spongioplasm. And, on the other hand, there 

 are many important elements of cells which cannot be got 

 to stain sufficiently. 



I consider Saurefuchsin the most generally recommendable, 

 especially after iron hsematoxylin. See also Bordeaux R. 



Flemming's Orange Method has been much used. It is 

 very capricious and unreliable. 



Ehrlich-Biondi mixture is a celebrated plasma stain. 



The Iron-Hsemateiu Lakes of Benda and M. Heidenhain 

 give good plasma stains, according to the degree of extrac- 

 tion, and would be inferior to none were it not that they 

 stain in the same tone as the chromatin. See also Ehrlich's 

 tri-acid, and his acidophilous mixture, also gold chloride, 

 Apathy's process, 371, and Kernschirarz. 



Imperfectly stained plasma structures can often be well 

 brought out by mounting in Euparal instead of balsam. 



651. Centrosomes. These can be stained by some "acid" 

 anilin dyes, better by a " neutral " dye (e. y. Flemming's 

 orange method, or the Ehrlich-Biondi-Heidenhain stain) . But 

 by far the best stain is iron-hsematoxylin. 



