364 A HISTORY OF NATIONAL TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION 



In this small space I cannot count them all, 



And in your modesty you will not tell 



What greater things you did for God and man. 



Throughout your long and earnest life 



Your greatest joy has been to work, 



But never for yourself. To serve, 



To help wherever there was greatest need 



Was your ideal, the motive of your life. 



So then be thanked on this your honor day, 



For inspiration and example you have given 



To pupils and to friends, 



For countless deeds of mercy and of good 



You gave to others. 



Now may reward of peace and happiness 



Be yours for many years to come, 



And may no cloud of sorrow cast a shadow 



On the evening of your life. 



The bibliography of Dr. George M. Kober follows: 



The etiology and prevention of tuberculosis. Report of Board of Health of 



Calif., xi, Sacramento, 1890. 

 A plea for the prevention of tuberculosis. Proc. State Sanitary Convention, 



Sacramento, 1894. 



Morbific and infectious milk. Pub. Health Rep., Feb. 14, 1896. 

 Milk in relation to health and disease. Biannual Health Report of California, 



Sacramento, 1896. 

 Milk in relation to public health. Senate Document No. 441, 59th Congress, 



Govt. Printing Office, 1902. 

 The transmission of bovine tuberculosis by milk. Tr. Assn. of Am. Phys., 



1903. 

 The prevention and treatment of tuberculosis by state methods. Pan-Am. 



Med. Congress, Panama, 1906, ii, 249-258. 

 The tuberculosis hospital in Washington, D. C., designed by George M. Kober, 



8 plates. Published by Board of Charities, D. C., 1908. 

 Unterbringung von schwerkranken Schwindsiichtigen und der luftkur bediirf- 



tigen leichtkranken Tuberkulosen in^inem und demselben Krankenhaus. 



XIV. Intern. Kongr. f. Hygiene u. Demographic, Berlin, 1907, bd. iv, 432. 

 The fight against tuberculosis in various countries. Opening discussion, 6th 



Internat. Congr. on Tuberc., Washington, D. C., 1908, vol. iv, part I, p. 



105-110. 

 Tuberculosis; report of committee on social betterment of the President's 



Homes Commission. Senate Document No. 644. 6oth Congress, 2nd 



Session, Jan. 8, 1909. 



The influence of sewers and general sanitation upon the prevalence of tubercu- 

 losis. Bull. Johns Hopkins Hosp., vol. xx, March, 1909. 



