442 CIIAPTEB XXXV. 



Similarly, in a very complicated way, L'hbrmittb and GucciONE, 

 Semaine Medicale, xxix, 1909, No. 18, and Meezbachbe, Journ. f. 

 Psych, u. Neurol., xii, 1909, p. 1 (Zeit. wiss. Mik., xxviii, 1911, p. 229). 



See also Galbsbscu, C.B. Soc. Biol., Ixv, 1908, p. 429 (sections mor- 

 danted witli resorcin and stained with methyl-violet and oxalic acid). 



842. Saurerubin. — Kultschitzky (Anat. Anz., viii, 1893, p. 357) 

 stains paraffin sections (of material hardened in his copper liquid, § 55), 

 either for five to ten seconds with a mixture of 1 grm. Siiurenibin 

 (Rubin S.), 400 c.o. 2 per cent, acetic acid, and 400 c.c. saturated solution 

 of picric acid, or for half an hour in a mixture of 3 to 5 c.c. of the above 

 stain with 100 c.c. of 96 per cent, alcohol and washes out well with 

 alcohol. Glia violet, ganglion cells and axis cylinders reddish. 



Insignificant modifications are described by Popow, Zeit. wiss. Mih., 

 xiii, 1896, p. 358, and Buechardt, La Cellule, xii, 1897, p. 364. 



843. Tamagiwa (Virclww's Arch., clx, 1900, p. 358) hardens very small 

 pieces of tissues for a month or more in liquid of Miiller, makes celloidin 

 sections, stains for twelve hours in saturated alcoholic solution of eosin, 

 then for four to six in satui-ated solution of anilin blue in water, and dif- 

 ferentiates in dilute alcohol with a very little caustic potash. Water, 

 alcohol, origanium oil, balsam. Neuroglia red, axis-cylinders blue. 



844. AcHucAEKO {Bol. 8nc. Espan. Biol., Madrid, 191], p. 

 139; Zeit. ivis-i. Mih., xxix, 1912, p. 238) puts sections of 

 frozen formol material into cold saturated solution of tannin, 

 warms till vapour is given off, rinses^ and puts into 10 c.c. 

 of water with 6 to 8 drops of Bielscliowsky's oxide of silver 

 solution (undiluted). As soon as tliey turn yellow they are 

 put into formol of 10 percent., and after about 10 minutes 

 washed and mounted. 



By mordanting the material with 5 per cent, acetate of 

 copper, or Weigert's mordant, and silvering by Eamon y 

 Cajal's process, he gets a stain of the amoeboid cells of the 

 cortex. 



Retina.* 



845. Fixation and Hardening^, — Notwithstanding the Encycl. 

 mih. Techiih., 2nd edition, p. 75, I hold that osn/te acid is by 

 far the best fixing agent. The retina of sviall eyes is best 

 prepared by fixing the entire unopened bulb with osmium 



* Besides the sources quoted in the text, see Seligmann, Die tnihro- 

 shopischen Uiitersuchungsmethoden des Aucjes, Berlin, S. Karger (Karl- 

 strasse 13), 1899 ; Geeep Aitleitimg zur Mihr. Unleysuch. d. Auges, 

 Berlin, Hivschwald, 1898; and the Art. '■Ectiiia" in Er.cycl. mil;. 

 Technilc, 2nd edition, p. 575. 



