Abstract
Mayer's albumen fixative, of which the active principle is white of egg, is used almost universally for affixing paraffin ribbons to the slide. About eight years ago the writer's attention was called to a gelatin fixative which has proved to be so superior to albumen that he has used it almost exclusively ever since in the making of a great variety of botanical preparations, and has recommended it to a number of other workers whose experience with it subsequently has been just as satisfactory. The gelatin method was first described by Szombathy1 and later discussed by Artschwager,2 but it does not seem to have received the attention in the literature which its importance deserves. It certainly merits a wide spread use among both botanists and zoologists.