JOHN H. LOWMAN, M.D. 359 



all the many physicians with whom I have been associated in 

 the last fifteen years, I know of no one toward whom I felt the 

 same sense of personal attachment, as well as of high admiration." 



Dr. Lowman's death was typical of his life. He made the 

 supreme sacrifice as surely as any American soldier on the battle- 

 fields of Flanders or in France. When he was called to direct 

 the anti-tuberculosis work in Italy under the auspices of the 

 American Red Cross, he knew the risk he was taking, but he 

 answered the call. He returned in broken health and lived but a 

 short time thereafter. 



Former Secretary of War, the Hon. Newton D. Baker, speaks 

 of Dr. Lowman's passing away in the following impressive words: 

 "When the world's great test came, he could not help sacrificing 

 himself to minister to the stricken and suffering. Surely he died 

 a soldier's death after living, in the best sense of the words, a 

 physician's life." 



The bibliography of Dr. John H. Lowman follows: 



Account of the general sanitary condition of Cleveland, Ohio. Nat. Board 



Health Bull., 1879-80, i, 258. 



A study of fever. Ohio Med. Jour., 1881-2, i, 159-166. 

 The conflict with tuberculosis. Cleveland Med. Jour., 1902, 485-96. 

 The anti-tuberculosis dispensary. Cleveland Med. Jour., 1903, 404-14. 

 Tuberculosis and the sanatorium. Columbus Med. Jour., 1903, 145-167. 

 An ideal sanatorium with notes on the black forest. Cleveland Med. Jour., 



1903, ii, 18-27. 

 The opening of the tuberculosis dispensary in Cleveland. Cleveland Med. 



Jour., 1904, iii, 488-93. 

 The anti-tuberculosis movement in Cleveland. Cleveland Med. Jour., 1905 



iv, 205-212. 



Schools and tuberculosis. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., iii, 107, 1907. 

 The care of healthy children in tuberculous families. Tr. Int. Cong, on 



Tuberc., 1905, ii, 200. 

 The Paris Congress of Tuberculosis, 1905. Cleveland Med. Jour., 1906, v, 



i -20. 



Tuberculosis and the Schools, Charities, New York, 1907, 657-662. 

 Address of the President. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., x, 17, 1914. 



