The physiology and hygiene of the house in which we live . Various Bacterial Micrococcus septicus; a, scattered; b, in chains—torula. 2. Same in zooglceaform. 3. Bacterium termo. 4. Same—zooglcea. 5. Bact. lineola. 6. Bacillus sub-tilis. 7. Bacillus anthracis and blood-corpuscles. 8. Bacillus (from mouth) withcilium. 9. Bacillus leprae. 10. Bacilli with spores. 11. Bacillus malarise. 12. Vibrioserpens. 13. Spirochaete Obermeieri. 14. Spirillum volutans. 15. Sarcina. X 500.(Copied from Zieglers path. Anatomie, Jena, 1882.) The general name of bacteria (singular, bacterium) isapplied po


The physiology and hygiene of the house in which we live . Various Bacterial Micrococcus septicus; a, scattered; b, in chains—torula. 2. Same in zooglceaform. 3. Bacterium termo. 4. Same—zooglcea. 5. Bact. lineola. 6. Bacillus sub-tilis. 7. Bacillus anthracis and blood-corpuscles. 8. Bacillus (from mouth) withcilium. 9. Bacillus leprae. 10. Bacilli with spores. 11. Bacillus malarise. 12. Vibrioserpens. 13. Spirochaete Obermeieri. 14. Spirillum volutans. 15. Sarcina. X 500.(Copied from Zieglers path. Anatomie, Jena, 1882.) The general name of bacteria (singular, bacterium) isapplied popularly to all forms of life produced as just de-scribed. At first, they were known as animalculse ; later, asinfusoria ; at present, microbes (little lives) is their properscientific name. By whatever name they may be called, theyare essentially microscopic bits of protoplasmic matter, whoseplace in the scale of life has not been definitely settled. TheGermans call them spaltpilze, that is, split or dividedfttligi, and such they are in so far as the


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