206 GLANDS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE 



chives of Internal Medicine, volume 17, page 607, 1916) 1 

 and Bailly and Jeliffe's "Tumors of the Pineal Gland" 

 (Archives of Internal Medicine, volume 8, page 851, 1911). 

 See, also, W. E. Dandy's "The Treatment of Brain Tu- 

 mors" (Journal of the American Medical Association, 

 volume 77, page 1853, 1921). Tilney and Kiley's The 

 Form and Functions of the Central Nervous System 

 (P. B. Hoeber, New York) contains a mass of valuable 

 material. 



THE KELATION OP THE DUCTLESS GLANI>S TO ONE 

 ANOTHER. (See also the "general" references above. ) 

 Certain angles of this problem are taken up by Stewart 

 and Rogoff (American Journal of Physiology, volume 46, 

 page 90, 1918), and Anon. (Endocrinology, volume 1, 

 page 404, 1917). 



THE INFLUENCE OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS ON GROWTH 

 AND METABOLISM. (See the "general" references above.)' 

 Biedl discusses this question in an article entitled "The 

 Significance of the Internal Secretions in Disturbances of 

 Metabolism and Digestion" (Endocrinology, volume 5, 

 page 523, 1921). 



THE NERVOUS SYSTEM: AND THE DUCTLESS GLANDS. 

 (See also the "general" references above.) A mass of 

 literature, much of it of a pseudo-scientific nature, has 

 accumulated on this phase of the subject. Only a few of 

 the books and pamphlets will be referred to. See, for ex- 

 ample, M. Laignel-Lavastine : The Internal Secretions and 

 the Nervous System (Nervous and Mental Disease Pub- 



