Hygienic Laboratory bulletin. no. 60-63, 1910, Issues 60-63

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U.S. Government Printing Office, 1910

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Page 3 - Prof. William H. Welch, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. ; Prof. Simon Flexner, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York; Prof. Victor C. Vaughan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Prof. William T. Sedgwick, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass., and Prof. Frank F. Wesbrook, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. LABORATORY CORPS. Director.
Page 386 - spotted fever." By Ch. Wardell Stiles. * No. 21. — The immunity unit for standardizing diphtheria antitoxin (based on Ehrlich's normal serum). Official standard prepared under the act approved July 1, 1902. By MJ Rosenau. * No.
Page 257 - SERVICE. The Hygienic Laboratory was established in New York, at the Marine Hospital on Staten Island, August, 1887. It was transferred to Washington, with quarters in the Butler Building, June 11, 1891, and a new laboratory building, located in Washington, was authorized by act of Congress March 3, 1901.
Page 385 - Hymenolepis; by Ch. Wardell Stiles. No. 14. — Spotted fever (tick fever) of the Rocky Mountains; a new disease. By John F. Anderson. No. 15.
Page 259 - Report No. 3 on the origin and prevalence of typhoid fever in the District of Columbia (1908).
Page 36 - Rosenau. *No. 20. — A zoological investigation into the cause, transmission, and source of Rocky Mountain "spotted fever.
Page 386 - The conduct of phenolphthalein in the animal organism. A test for saccharin, and a simple method of distinguishing between cumarin and vanillin. The toxicity of ozone and other oxidizing agents to lipase.
Page 258 - Mueller, 1787. III. Three new American cases of infection of man with horsehair worms (species Paragordius varius), with summary of all cases reported to date.
Page 386 - No. 32. — A stomach lesion in guinea pigs caused by diphtheria toxine and its bearing upon experimental gastric ulcer. By MJ Rosenau and John F. Anderson. No.
Page 258 - On the stability of the oxidases and their conduct toward various reagents. The conduct of phenolphthalein in the animal organism. A test for saccharin, and a simple method -of distinguishing between cumarin and vanillin.

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