MONOGRAPHS OF THE ROCKEFELLER INSTITUTE FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH 



Under the head of Monographs of The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research are published from 

 time to time scientific papers which are so extensive, or require such elaborate illustrations, as to 

 render them unsuitable for current periodical issues. M anagraphs will be sent post paid on appli- 

 cation, at $1.C0 each, payable in advance by check or money order. 



Monograph No. 1. (Issued June 30, 1910.)] 



SIMON FLEXNER and J. W. JOBLING. Studies upon a transplantable rat tumor. Plates 1-16. 

 J. W. JOBLING. The biology of a mixed tumor of the rat. MAUD L. MENTEN. Experi- 

 ments on the influence of radium bromide on a carcinomatous tumor of the rat. J. W. 

 JOBLING. Spontaneous tumors of the mouse. Plates 17-28, J. W. JOBLING. Transplan- 

 tation experiments in Macacus rhesus with a carcinomatous teratoma from man. 



Monograph No. 2. (Issued February 15, 1911.) 



WILLIAM TRAVIS HOWARD and OSCAR T. SCHULTZ. Studies in the biology of tumor ceUs. 

 Plates 1-6. 



Monograph No. 3. (Issued March 15, 1911.) 



BENJAMIN T. TERRY. Chemo-therapeutic trypanosome studies with special reference to the 

 immunity following cure. 



Monograph No. 4. (Issued June 24, 1912.) 



FRANCIS W. PEABODY, GEORGE DRAPER, and A. R. DOCHEZ. A clinical study of acute 

 poliomyelitis. Plates 1-13. 



Monograph No. 5. (Issued September 27, 1915.) 



J. P. SIMONDS. Studies in Bacillus wdchii, with special reference to classification and to its rela» 

 tion to diarrhea. 



Monograph No. 6. (Issued January 31, 1916.) 

 JAMES L. STODDARD and ELLIOTT C. CUTLER. Torula infection in man. Plates 1-9. 



Monograph No. 7. (Issued October 16, 1917.) 



OSWALD T. AVERY, H. T. CHICKERING, RUFUS COLE, and A. [R. DOCHEZ. Acute 

 lobar pneumonia. Prevention and serum treatment. Plates 1-3. 



Monograph No. 8. (Issued July 31, 1918.) 

 ERNEST C. DICKSON. Botulism. A clinical and experimental study. Plates 1-10. 



Monograph No. 9. (In press.) 

 JAMES HOWARD BROWN. The use of blood agar for the study of streptococci. Plates 1-34. 



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