STIEGLITZ, JULIUS (OSCAR), an American chemist, born at Hoboken, N. J., in 1867. He was educated in Ger many, and from 1892 to 1915 was con nected with the chemical department of the University of Chicago. He was a member of many scientific societies, and in 1917 was a member of the division of chemistry of the National Research Council. He was vice-chairman of the division of chemistry, from 1919, and was special expert of the Public Health Service in the same year.
viscous material, which is most abundant at the period of fecundation. It is some times smooth, at others it may be cov ered with papilla: or with plumose hairs, or it may have around it an indusium. Morphologically viewed, the stigma is the apex of the carpellary leaf. When there is more than one style, each has a stig ma; when there are several, they may coalesce so as to have various lobes or divisions. In most cases the stigma is
thicker than the style. It varies greatly in form, and may be capitate, penicil late, plumose, or feathery, petaloid, pel tate, filiform, or papillose. In some cases the stigma extends dpwn the inner face of the style; it is then called unilateral. In ecclesiology, stigmata is a term bor rowed from Gal. vi: 17, "I bear in my body the marks (Greek and Vulgate, stigmata) of the Lord Jesus," and ap plied by ecclesiastical writers to the marks Of STIGMATIZATION (q. v.). St. Paul probably took his metaphor from the fact that pagan soldiers sometimes branded the name of their general on some part of their body. No writer of authority has ever maintained that the stigmata of St. Paul were anything more than the actual marks of suffering in flicted by his persecutors (2d Cor.
23-27).