Pus OF A PULMONARY ABSCESS IN A HoRSE DEAD OF GLANDERS. 
1. The nuclei of pus cells, 
2. The glanders-bacilli, 
Magnifying power 700. (The preparation had been stained with methylene-blue.}: 
After Klein. 
From A PREPARATION OF HuMAN TuBERCULOUS SPUTUM, STAINED AFTER 
THE EHRLICH-WEIGERT METHOD. 
‘The nuclei are stained blue, the tubercle-bacilli pink. Magnifying power 700. 
After Klein. 
We must firstly turn to the consideration of the symptoms of acute 
glanders. This malady appears. suddenly, being ushered in with severe 
shivering fits. The temperature rises to as high as 106° F., or even higher. 
In health it should only reach 100°.5. The pulse and the breathing are 
much quickened, and the membrane lining the inside of the nose is greatly 
inflamed, varying in colour from a light to a dark brownish coppery hue. In 
a few days the fever abates somewhat. It again becomes more severe after 
this short remission, during which the membrane lining the inside of the 
nose becomes studded with small tubercular nodules arranged in groups, or 
more generally diffused over the surface. These little nodules vary in size 
from that of a small seed to that of a pea. In a few days they soften and 
become converted into ulcers, and then there issues from the nostrils a foul 
