APPENDIX III 487 



The local hospital-sanatorium as one of the most important phases in the 

 anti-tuberculosis crusade. Med. Rec., May 21, 1910. 



Robert Koch in memoriam. Med. Rec., June 4; also N. Y. med. Monats- 

 schr., June; Zeitschr. f. Tuberk., xvi, no. 2, 1910. 



Robert Koch the passing of a pioneer. Estimates by Trudeau, Park and 

 Knopf. Jour. Outdoor Life, July, 1910. 



State phthisiophilia and state phthisiophobia, with a plea for justice to the 

 consumptive. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., vi, 139, 1910; also N. Y. Med. 

 Jour., July 9, 1910. 



Edward Livingston Trudeau an appreciation. British Jour, of Tuberc., 

 July, 1910. 



The relation of modern dentistry to the tuberculosis problem. Jour. Am. Med. 

 Assn., Aug. 13, 1910. 



A tuberculosis sermon. Jour. Outdoor Life, Aug.; also The Messiah Pulpit, 

 Sept., 1910. 



Le fremissement subjectif comme moyen de diagnostic, comme precede 

 nouveau permettant de localiser et de determiner 1'amplitude du fremisse- 

 ment objectif dans les examens du pumon. L'Union Med. du Canada, 

 Dec., 1910. 



Licht- und schattenseiten antituberkuloser Bestrebungen in den vereinigten 

 Staaten. Med. Monatsschr., Nov., 1910; and Zeitschr. f. Tuberk., xvii, 

 heft i, 1911. 



Memorial address on Dr. Robert Koch, by John A. VVyeth, M.D., LL.D., 

 and S. A. Knopf, M.D. Med. Rec., Jan. 21, 1911. 



The hygiene of public conveyances. Med. Rec., March 18, 1911. 



The starnook a new device for the rest-cure in the open air and for outdoor 

 sleeping. Bull. Johns Hopkins Hosp., Aug., 1911. 



Halving the tax rate on buildings; the relation of congestion to the tubercu- 

 losis problem. A plea for more sanatoria and tuberculosis hospitals and 

 better tenements. Survey, Sept. 23, 1911. 



Robert Koch the father of the modern science of tuberculosis. Bull. Johns 

 Hopkins Hosp., Dec., 1911. 



Primary sources of tuberculous infection; their relation to eugenics, and the 

 cost of tuberculosis. N. Y. Med. Jour., June 29, 1912. 



The immigration of the tuberculous into the United States. A problem for 

 every nation. Med. Rec., July 13, 1912; Bull. Am. Acad. Med., June, 

 1913; also Zeitschr. f. Tuberk., xix, no. 2. 



The relation of atmospheric air to tuberculosis. The 6th International Tu- 

 berculosis Congress held in Washington in 1908, awarded in 1912 to this 

 essay half of the Smithsonian Institution prize of $1500; the other half 

 being awarded to Dr. Guy Hinsdale, of Hot Springs, Va. A revised 

 edition of this essay is in preparation. 



The unjustified prejudice of tuberculous patients against sanatoria and hos- 

 pitals. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., viii, 140, 1912; also Med. Rec., Sept. 28, 

 1912. 



Some modern medico-sociologic conceptions of the alcohol, venereal diseases, 



