PART II 



METHODS OF RESEARCH 



A few pages on the technics of plant bacteriology^ will be 

 of service to the student. These are not designed to do away 

 with the need of reference books. Therefore, at the beginning, 

 the student is advised to read as much as he has time in the fol- 

 lowing standard works, and to consult them daily as problems 

 arise. The list is by no means exhaustive and does not include 

 all the good books, but is more than sufficient probably for the 

 beginner. 



A FEW OF THE MORE RECENT REFERENCE BOOKS 



Lee: The ^Nlicrotomists' Vade-mecum. 7th ed. Phila- 

 delphia, P. Blakiston's Son & Co., 1913. 



Gage: The Microscope. 12th ed. Comstock Pub. Co., 

 Ithaca, N. Y., 1917. 



Mallory and Wright: Pathological Technique, W. B. 

 Saunders Company, Philadelphia and London. 



Jordan: A Text Book of General Bacteriology. W. B. 

 Saunders Company, Philadelphia and London. 



Eyre: Bacteriological Technique. W. B. Saunders Com- 

 pany, Philadelphia and London. 



MuiR and Ritchie: Manual of Bacteriology. The Mac- 

 millan Co., New York and London. 



Hewlett: Manual of Bacteriology. Clinical and Applied. 

 5th ed. J. and A. Churchill, London, 1914. 



Stitt: Practical Bacteriology, Blood Work and Animal 

 Parasitology, including Bacteriological Keys, Zoological Tables 

 and Explanatory Clinical Notes. 5th ed. P. Blakiston's 

 Son & Co., Philadelphia, 1918. 



Abbott: The Principles of Bacteriology. A practical 

 manual for students and physicians. 9th ed. Lea and Febiger, 

 Philadelphia and New York, 1915. 



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