NINTH ANNUAL MEETING 203 



Executive secretary, Dr. Livingston Farrand; assistant secretaries, Philip P. 

 Jacobs, Ph.D., and Thomas Specs Carrington, M.D. 



The following is a list of papers read before the respective sec- 

 tions at the meeting of May 8-9, 1913: 



The tuberculosis campaign its influence on the methods of public health 

 work generally Hermann M. Biggs, M.D., and Charles F. Bolduan, 

 M.D. 



The tuberculosis problem from the sociological and medical points of view 

 John R. Commons. 



The medical side of the tuberculosis problem William Charles White, M.D. 



Tuberculosis and public health H. R. M. Landis, M.D. 



The decline in the tuberculosis death-rate, 1871-1912 Frederick L. Hoffman, 

 LL.D. 



Is the economic problem of the sanatorium graduate being solved? John H. 

 Huddleston, M.D. 



The relation of the industries to tuberculosis B. S. Warren, M.D. 



A method of finding early cases of pulmonary tuberculosis Harry Lee Barnes, 

 M.D. 



One year's results at the Home Hospital Edward C. Brenner, M.D. 



The tuberculosis preventorium Alfred F. Hess, M.D. 



The tuberculosis problem of the country and small towns Charles S. Prest, 

 M.D. 



The value of auto-inoculation in pulmonary tuberculosis Harry Lee Barnes, 

 M.D. 



The occurrence and importance in treatment of secondary infection in pul- 

 monary tuberculosis Lawrason Brown, M.D., F. H. Heise, M.D., and 

 S. A. Petroff. 



The treatment of progressive cases of pulmonary tuberculosis Mary E. Lap- 

 ham, M.D. 



Results on January i, 1913, in Philadelphia patients discharged from Mont 

 Alto in 1909 Albert P. Francine, M.D. 



What became of one group of cases E. S. Bullock, M.D., and L. S. Peters, 

 M.D. 



Clinical observations with the bacilli emulsion administered by the poly- 

 nuclear neutrophile index method Wallace J. Durel, M.D. 



Report on a group of infants infected by a tuberculous attendant Alfred F. 

 Hess, M.D. 



Further observations on vital stains in relation to tubercle Paul A. Lewis, 

 M.D. 



The relation of the spleen in rats and mice to their resistance to experimental 

 tuberculosis Paul A. Lewis, M.D., and Arthur Georges Margot. 



Observations on the products obtained from the tubercle bacillus by the 

 method of Vaughan Benjamin White, Ph.D. 



