LIST OF HYGIENIC LABORATORY BULLETINS OF THE PUBLIC 
HEALTH AND MARINE-HOSPITAL SERYICE. 
Tlie Hygienic Laboratory was established in New York, at the Marine Hos- 
pital on Staten Island, August, 1887. It was transferred to Washington, with 
quarters in the Butler Building. June 11, 1891, and a new laboratory building 
located in Washington, was authorized by act of Congress, March 3, 1901. 
The following bulletins [Bulls. Nos. 1-7, 1900 to 1902, Hyg. Lab., U. S. Mar.- 
Hosp. Serv., Wash.] have been issued: 
* No. 1. — Preliminary note on the viability of the Bacillus pestis. By M. J. 
Bosenau. 
No. 2. — Formalin disinfection of baggage without apparatus. By M. J. 
Bosenau. 
* No. 3. — Sulphur dioxid as a germicidal agent. By H. D. Geddings. 
* No. 4. — Viability of the Bacillus pestis. By M. J. Bosenau. 
No. 5. — An investigation of a pathogenic microbe ( B . typhi murium Danyz) 
applied to the destruction of rats. By M. J. Bosenau. 
* No. 6. — Disinfection against mosquitoes with formaldehyd and sulphur 
dioxid. By M. J. Bosenau. 
No. 7. — Laboratory technique: Bing test for indol, by S. B. Grubbs and 
Edward Francis ; Collodium sacs, by S. B. Grubbs and Edward Francis ; 
Microphotography with simple apparatus, by H. B. Parker. 
By act of Congress approved July 1, 1902, the name of the “ United States 
Marine-Hospital Service ” was changed to the “ Public Health and Marine- 
Hospital Service of the United States,’’ and three new divisions were added to 
the Hygienic Laboratory. 
Since the change of name of the Service the bulletins of the Hygienic Labora- 
tory have been continued in the same numerical order, as follows : 
* No. 8. — Laboratory course in pathology and bacteriology. By M. J. 
Bosenau. (Bevised edition, March, 1904.) 
* No. 9. — Presence of tetanus in commercial gelatin. By John F. Anderson. 
No. 10. — Report upon the prevalence and geographic distribution of hook- 
worm disease (uncinariasis or anchylostomiasis) in the United States. By 
Ch. Wardell Stiles. 
* No. 11.- -An experimental investigation of Trypanosoma leioisi. By Ed- 
ward Francis. 
* No. 12.— The bacteriological impurities of vaccine virus; an experimental 
study. By M. J. Bosenau. 
* No. 13. — A statistical study of the intestinal parasites of 500 white male 
patients at the United States Government Hospital for the Insane; by Philip E. 
Garrison, Brayton H. Ransom, and Earle C. Stevenson. A parasitic round- 
worm (Agamomermis culicis n. g., n. sp.) in American mosquitoes ( Culej) 
sollicitans ) ; by Ch. Wardell Stiles. The type species of the cestode genus 
Hymenolepis; by Ch. Wardell Stiles. 
No. 14. — Spotted fever (tick fever) of the Rocky Mountains; a new disease. 
By John F. Anderson. 
No. 15. — Inefficiency of ferrous sulphate as an antiseptic and germicide. By 
Allan J. McLaughlin. 
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