INDEX 
211 
Endocarditis, acute, 127 
Endoplasm, 25 
Endo’s medium, 108 
Endotoxins, 55 
Enzymes produced by bacteria. 
36 
Epidemic cerebrospinal men¬ 
ingitis, 134 
Estivo-autumnal fever, 190 
Exotoxins, 54 
Extracellular toxins (see En¬ 
dotoxins), 32 
F 
Facultative aerobes, 32 
anaerobes, 32 
Favus, 193 
Fecalis alcaligenes bacillus, 
156 
Feces, examination of, 116 
Fermentation, 36 
Ferments, 36 
Film preparation, 84 
Filter plants, 199 
Filtration of water, 199 
Flagella, 28 
staining, 90 
Flexner’s serum, 136 
type of dysentery bacillus, 
157 
Fluid, cerebrospinal, examina¬ 
tion of, 116 
pericardial, 116 
peritoneal, 116 
pleural, 116 
Food supply of bacteria, 31 
Foot-and-mouth disease, 196 
Formaldehyde, 47 
Formalin, 47 
Frambesia, 189 
Free receptors, 70 
Friedlander ’s pneumobacillus, 
158 
Fumigation, 40 
Fungus, 192 
G 
Gas bacillus, 164 
Gelatin agar, 107 
Generation, spontaneous, 20 
Glanders, 166 
Glassware, sterilization, 42 
Glycerin-potato medium, 107 
Gonococcus, 138 
Gonorrhea, 139 
Gram negative, 87 
positive, 87 
Gram’s iodine, 87 
method of staining, 86 
Granules, 25 
Group agglutination, 150 
agglutinins, 150 
Growth of bacteria, 34 
influence of antiseptics on, 
41 
of electricity on, 39 
of environment on, 32 
of food supply on, 30 
of light on, 34 
of moisture on, 34 
of oxygen on, 31 
of temperature on, 34 
Gruber-Widal reaction In ty¬ 
phoid fever, 154 
H 
Hanging drop, 77 
Haptophore atom group, 69 
Hiss-Kussel type of dysentery 
bacillus, 157 
Hoffman’s pseudodiphtheria 
bacillus, 173 
Hydrophobia, 196 
I 
Immune bodies, 61 
Immunity (see individual), 56, 
*60 
acquired, 58 
active, 59 
artificial, 59 
mechanism of, 62 
natural, 57, 59 
passive, 59 
theories of, 66 
Ehrlich’s receptor, 68 
Metchnikoff’s, 67 
Infantile paralysis, 195 
Infection, 52 
requirements for, 52 
