. The American journal of anatomy. ®@5^^ Fig. II. A portion of the same gland shown in Fig. I more highly stained in iron-alum hematoxylin. Leitz Homog. Imm. 1 4. on the whole smaller and less spherical than those of the granule cells,and are located nearer to the base of the cell than in the other varietyof cell. These cells, even after the shrinkage with which their fixationis always attended, possess a somewhat larger diameter than the granule Benson A. Cohoe 175 cell. Their average diameter is about 28 micra, while that of thenucleus is 9 micra. Secretory canal


. The American journal of anatomy. ®@5^^ Fig. II. A portion of the same gland shown in Fig. I more highly stained in iron-alum hematoxylin. Leitz Homog. Imm. 1 4. on the whole smaller and less spherical than those of the granule cells,and are located nearer to the base of the cell than in the other varietyof cell. These cells, even after the shrinkage with which their fixationis always attended, possess a somewhat larger diameter than the granule Benson A. Cohoe 175 cell. Their average diameter is about 28 micra, while that of thenucleus is 9 micra. Secretory canaliculi occur abundantly in connectionwith these outer cells, and are seen to ramify between the cells. (Fig. III.)The evidence adduced by a study of sections of the normal restinggland, stained with certain selective dyes, is most convincing of thespecificity of these two kind of cells. Sections hardened in Bensleysfluid, and stained with iron hsematoxylin and orange G., show the cyto-plasm of the granule-holding cells deeply stai


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectanatomy, bookyear1901