NOTICE.

The Association assumes no responsibility for the statements and opinions expressed in the papers read at its meetings. AMERICAN CLINICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

OFFICERS, 1932-1933.

PRESIDENT. GEORGE R. MINOT, M.D., Boston, Mass.

VICE-PRESIDENTS. JAMES E. PAULLIN, M.D., Atlanta, Ga. THOMAS C. KELLY, M.D., Philadelphia, Pa.

SECRETARY-TREASURER. ARTHUR K. STONE, M.D., Framingham Centre, Mass.

RECORDER. FRANCIS B. TRUDEAU, M.D., Saranac Lake, N. Y.

COUNCIL. J. WOODS PRICE, M.D., Saranac Lake (Term expires 1933) GORDON WILSON, M.D., Baltimore (Term expires 1933) GERALD B. WEBB, M.D., Colorado Springs (Term expires 1934) L. WHITTINGTON GORHAM, M.D., Albany (Term expires 1934) GEORGE M. PIERSOL, M.D., Philadelphia (Term expires 1935) STUART PRITCHARD, M.D., Battle Creek (Term expires 1935) LOUIS HAMMAN, M.D., Baltimore (Term expires 1936) WILLIAM B. PORTER, M.D., Richmond (Term expires 1936)

DELEGATE TO THE CONGRESS OF AMERICAN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. THOMAS DARLINGTON, M.D., New York.

ALTERNATE. ALPHONSE R. DOCHEZ, M.D., New York. AMERICAN CLINICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

OFFICERS, 1933-1934.

PRESIDENT. CHARLES D. PARFITT, M.D., Gravenhurst, Ontario.

VICE-PRESIDENTS. CHARLES H. COCKE, M.D., Asheville, N. C. RoY D. ADAMS, M.D., Washington, D. C.

SECRETARY-TREASURER. FRANCIS M. RACKEMANN, M.D., 263 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.

RECORDER. FRANCIS B. TRUDEAU, M.D., Saranac Lake, N. Y.

COUNCIL. GERALD B. WEBB, M.D., Colorado Springs (Term expires 1934) L. WHITTINGTON GORHAM, M.D., Albany (Term expires 1934) GEORGE M. PIERSOL, M.D., Philadelphia (Term expires 1935) STUART PRITCHARD, M.D., Battle Creek (Term expires 1935) LOUIS HAMMAN, M.D., Baltimore (Term expires 1936) WILLIAM B. PORTER, M.D., Richmond (Term expires 1936) GEORGE R. MINOT, M.D., Boston (Term expires 1937) J. WVOODS PRICE, M.D., Saranac Lake (Term expires 1937)

DELEGATE TO THE CONGRESS OF AMERICAN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. THOMAS DARLINGTON, M.D., New York.

ALTERNATE. ALPHONSE R. DOCHEZ, M.D., New York. FORMER OFFICERS. Presidents. Name Year A. L. LOOMIS ...... 1884-5 WILLIAM PEPPER ...... 1886 FRANK DONALDSON .1887 A. L. LOOMIS.1888 VINCENT Y. BOWDITCH. . .1889 CHARLES DENISON ...... 1890 FREDERICK I. KNIGHT.. .1891 W. E. FORD ...... 1892 R. G. CURTIN.1893 A. H. SMITH . .1894 S. E. SOLLY.1895 J. B. WALKER.1896 E. FLETCHER INGALS..1897 E. 0. OTIS . .1898 BEVERLY ROBINSON ...... 1899 ABRAHAM JACOBI. . . 1900 ROBERT H. BABCOCK . . .1901 SAMUEL A. FISK. . . 1902 NORMAN BRIDGE . . .1903 JAMES C. WILSNN.1904 W. F. R. PHILLIPS . .1905 E. L. SHURLY ...... 1906 THOMAS DARLINGTON ...... 1907 THOMAS D. 1908 CHARLES E. QUIMBY. . . 1909 EDWARD R. BALDWIN ...... 1910 JOHN WINTERS BRANNAN . . .1911 ALEXANDER D. BL ADER .E R 1912 CHARLES L. MINOR ...... 1913 JAMES M. ANDERS ...... 1914 HENRY SEWALL . . .1915 JAMES ALEXANDER MILLER ...... 1916 JUDSON DALAND . . .1917 JABEZ H. ELLIOTT...... 1918 GUY HINSDALE. . . 1919 LAWRASON BROWN. . . 1920 vii V111 FORMER OFFICERS

Name Year CARROLL E. EDSON ...... 1921

WILLIAM DUFFIELD ROBINSON ...... 1922

CHARLES W. RICHARDSON ...... 1923 GORDON WILSON.1924 GEORGE W. NORRIS ...... 1925 DAVID R. LYMAN ...... 1926 WALTER E. BAETJER.1927 JOSEPH H. PRATT ...... 1928 WILLIAM LEROY DUNN. 1929 J. WOODS PRICE ...... 1929 GERALD B. WEBB ...... 1930 GEORGE MORRIS PIERSOL ...... 1931 LOUIS HAMMAN.. 1932 GEORGE R. MINOT ...... 1933

Vice-Presidents. F. I. KNIGHT, W. H. GEDDINGS. 1884-5 FRANK DONALDSON, BEVERLY ROBINSON...... 1886 V. Y. BOWDITCH, R. G. CURTIN.1887 A. Y. P. GARNETT, J. T. WHITTAKER ...... 1888 J. R. LEAMING, E. T. BRUEN. 1889 A. L. GIHON, H. B. BAKER ...... 1890 E. L. TRUDEAU, T. S. HOPKINS... 1891 E. FLETCHER INGALS, BEVERLY ROBINSON ...... 1892 A. H. SMITH, E. 0. OTIS ...... 1893 I. HULL PLATT, E. L. TRUDEAU ...... 1894 JOHN H. MUSSER, G. R. BUTLER ...... 1895 CHARLES E. QUIMBY, JAMES A. HART. 1896 S. A. FISK, JOHN C. MUNRO ...... 1897 BEVERLY ROBINSON, C. F. MCGAHAN..... 1898 JAMES A. HART, R. C. NEWTON ...... 1899 R. H. BABCOCK, J. W. BRANNAN ...... 1900 ALBERT C. PEALE, S. W. LANGMAID ...... 1901 NORMAN BRIDGE, W. F. R. PHILLIPS ...... 1902 JAMES C. WILSON, H. S. ORME ...... 1903

THOMAS DARLINGTON, THOMAS D. COLEMAN ...... 1904 S. G. BONNEY, S. D. RISLEY... 1905 A. D. BLACKADER, HENRY SEWALL. 1906 FORMER OFFICERS ix

Name Year FRANK FREMONT-SMITH, C. L. MINOR.1907 JUDSON DALAND, CHARLES Fox GARDINER...... 1908 R.BALDWIN,E. C. E. EDSON ...... 1909 JAMES M. ANDERS, H. LONGSTREET TAYLOR ...... 1910 WILL HOWARD SWAN, JOHN H. LOWMAN...... 1911 HERBERT MAXON KING, CARROLL E. EDSON ...... 1912 JAMES M. ANDERS, C. D. ALTON ...... 1913 LAWRASON BROWN, WrLL HOWARD SWAN.1914

ARTHUR K. STONE, JAMES ALEXANDER MILLER ...... 1915 PHILIP KING BROWN, HENRY M. BRACKEN ...... 1916 W. L. DUNN, JABEZ H. ELLIOTT.1917 W. G. SCHAUFFLER, H. M. BRACKEN...... 1918 JOSEPH H. PRATT, H. M. KINGHORN ...... 1919 CHARLES W. RICHARDSON, J. N. HALL.1920 GORDON WILSON, ESTES NICHOLS.1921 COL. GEORGE E. BUSHNELL, CHARLES D. PARFITT ...... 1922 WILL H. SWAN, GEORGE W. NORRIS.1923 ALEXIUS M. FORSTER, H. R. M. LANDIS.1924 DAVID R. LYMAN, PHILIP MARVEL.1925 EARL A. BRUNS, EDWIN A. LOCKE.1926 JOHN A. LICHTY, GEORGE M. PIERSOL.1927 GEORGE D. PORTER, JAMES S. MCLESTER ...... 1928 J. WOODS PRICE, THOMAS A. CLAYTOR ...... 1929 JOHN P. SAWYER, RAY W. MATSON ...... 1930 CHARLES N. MEADER, WALTER C. KLOTZ ...... 1931 PAUL H. RINGER, WILLIAM BRANCH PORTER...... 1932

JAMES E. PAULLIN, THOMAS C. KELLY ...... 1933 Secretaries and Treasurers. JAMES B. WALKER.1884-95 GUY HINSDALE... 1895-1918 ARTHUR K. STONE...... 1918-33 FRANCIS M. RACKEMANN.1933- Recorders. WILLIAM DUFFIELD ROBINSON...... 1918-21 CLEAVELAND FLOYD...... 1921-30 FRANCIS B. TRUDEAU.1930- PRESENT MEMBERS. 1933-1934.

HONORARY MEMBERS. Elected 1931. ARCHIBALD, EDWARD WILLIAM, M.D., 900 Sherbrook St., Montreal, Que. 1914. BLUE, RUPERT, U. S. Public Health Service, Washington, D. C. 1912. CARPENTER, FORD A., Central Bldg., 6th and Main Sts., , Calif. 1928. FARRAND, LIVINGSTON, M.D., LL.D., Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. 1914. Fox, R. FORTESQUE, 36 Devonshire Place, W., . 1926. GAUVAIN, SIR HENRY, M.D., M. Ch., Alton, Hampshire, Eng. 1911. GRENFELL, SIR WILFRED, K.C.M.G., St. Anthony, Newfound- land. 1914. GROS, EDMUND L., 23 Ave. Foch, Paris, . 1912. HENDERSON, PROFESSOR YANDELL, 440 Prospect St., New Haven, Conn. 1908. LISTON, LIEUT.-COL. W. GLEN, C.I.E., Research Laboratory, 2 Forest Road, Edinburgh, Scotland. 1917. MARVIN, PROF. CHARLES F., Chief, Weather Bureau, Wash- ington, D. C. 1914. PHILIP, SIR ROBERT W., Charlotte Sq., Edinburgh, Scotland. 1926. RIST, PROF. EDOUARD, 5 rue Magdebourg, Paris, France. 1910. ROGERS, SIR LEONARD, C.I.E., M.D., 14 Heath Drive, Hamp- stead, London, N. W. 3, . 1923. ROLLIER, A., Leysin, . 1911. STUPART, SIR ROBERT F., K.B., F.R.C.S., Director, Dominion Meteorological Service, Toronto, Canada. 1898. SUNDERLAND, SEPTIMUS, 24A Portland Place, W., London. 1902. WEBER, F. P., 13 Harley St., W., London. 1907. WILLIAMS, LEONARD L. B., 6 St. James PI., W., London. 1928. WILLIAMS, LINSLY RUDD, M.D., 2 W. 103d St., New York. O.M.* WILSON, EMERITUS PROF. JAMES CORNELIUS, 1509 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1917. WRIGHT, SIR ALMROTH, St. Mary's Hosp., London, England. *O.M., Original Member. x LIFE MEMBERS xi

LIFE MEMBERS. (Courtesy List.) Elected 1897. ALTON, CHARLES D., 37 Gillette St., Hartford, Conn. 1899. ANDERS, JAMES M., 250 South 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1915. BAILEY, WALTER C., 87 Milk St., Boston, Mass. 1891. BALDWIN, EDWARD R., Saranac Lake, New York. 1897. BONNEY, S. G., 1128 Grant St., Denver, Colo. 1891. BRANNAN, JOHN W., 43 West 56th St., New York, N. Y. 1907. BROWNING, CHARLES C., Merritt Bldg., 8th and Broadway, Los Angeles, . 1889. COOLIDGE, A., 198 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 1896. GARDINER, C. Fox, 1112 North Cascade Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. 1899. KLEBS, ARNOLD C., Nyon, Switzerland. 1888. tOTIS, E. 0., 270 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 1885. RICE, C. C., 52 Park Ave., New York. 1901. SEWALL, HENRY, 1360 Vine St., Denver, Colo. 1898. WHITNEY, HERBERT B., 564 Metropolitan Bldg., Denver, Colo.

LIFE MEMBERS. Amendment to the Constitution passed 1925. 1900. ARNOLD, HORACE D., 1559 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 1901. BARLOW, W. JARVIS, 1105 Roosevelt Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. 1902. BERGTOLD, WILLIAM H., 910 Metropolitan Bldg., Denver, Colo. 1903. BROWN, LAWRASON, 104 Main St., Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1903. BROWN, PHILIP KING, 909 Hyde St., , Calif. 1906. CLAYTOR, THOMAS A., 1826 R St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 1901. COBB, J. O., U. S. Public Health Service, 544 Wilcox Building, Los Angeles, California. 1901. COLLINS, CHARLES FARNHAM, 863 Park Ave., . 1892. DALAND, JUDSON, 317 South 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1890. DARLINGTON, THOMAS,2 7 Washington Sq., N., New York. 1907. DARNALL, WM. EDGAR, 5 So. Morris Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. 1903. ELLIOTT, JABEZ H., 11 Spadina Rd., roronto, Ontario, Can. 1907. HALL, J. N., 730 Metropolitan Bldg., Denver, Colo. tDied May 28, 1933. xii LIFE MEMBERS

Elected 1893. HINSDALE, Guy, White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. 1902. HOAGLAND, HENRY W., 1190 Arden Rd., Pasadena, Calif. 1901. JENNINGS, CHARLES GODWIN, 7815 Jefferson Ave., Detroit. 1907. KINGHORN, HUGH M., 14 Church St., Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1907. LYMAN, DAVID R., Wallingford, Conn. 1902. MARVEL, PHILIP, 101 So. Indiana Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. 1905. MILLER, JAMES ALEXANDER, 133 E. 64th St., New York. 1909. MINER, CHARLES H., 264 So. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 1907. NICHOLS, ESTES, 1 Deering St., Portland, Me. 1906. PERKINS, JAY, 169 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. 1895. PHILLIPS, W. R. F., School of Medicine, Charleston, S. C. 1902. POTTENGER, F. M., Monrovia, Calif. 1905. PRATT, JOSEPH H., 270 Commonwealth Ave., Boston. 1905. tSCHAUFFLER, WILLIAM GRAY, Princeton, N. J. 1904. STONE, ARTHUR KINGSBURY, Framingham Centre, Mass. 1910. SWAN, JOHN M., 457 Park Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 1907. TAYLOR, J. GURNEY, 1330 Wells Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis.

ACTIVE MEMBERS. 1921. ADAMS, ROY D., 1801 Eye St., Washington, D. C. 1922. AMBERSON, JAMES BURNS, JR., 651 W. 238th St., New York. 1932. AMoss, HAROLD L., Durham, N. C. 1932. ANDRUS, EDWIN COWLES, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Balti- more, Md. 1930. AUSTRIAN, CHARLES R., 1417 Eutaw P1., Baltimore, Md. 1917. BAETJER, WALTER A., 1115 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. 1907. BARNES, HARRY LEE, Wallum Lake, R. I. 192 5. BEARDSILEY, E. J. G., 1919 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1933. BLUMGART, HERRMAN L., 330 Brookline Ave., Boston, Mass. 1931. BORTREE, WILLIAM LEO, Ferguson Bldg., Colorado Springs, Colo. 1931. BRADLEY, ERNEST B., 190 N. Upper St., Lexington, Ky. 1929. BRADBURY, SAMUEL, 151 West Coulter St., Germantown, Pa. 1919. BRAY, HARRY A., Ray Brook, N. Y. tDied April, 1933. ACTIVE MEMBERS xiii

Elected 1919. tBRUNS, EARL A., COL., M. C., Fitzsimons General Hospital, Denver, Colo. 1933. BURWELL, C. SIDNEY, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. 1914. BYERS, JOHN RODDICK, 3166 Westmount Boulevard, Montreal, Can. 1927. CAULFIELD, A. H. W., 160 Bloor St., W., Toronto, Can. 1925. CECIL, RUSSELL LA FAYETTE, 33 East 61st St., New York. 1919. CHADWICK, HENRY D., 21 Seminole Ave., Detroit, Mich. 1918. CLARKE, RAYMOND, 310 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1927. CLENDENNING, LOGAN, 934 Argyle Bldg., Kansas City, Kan. 1922. COCKE, CHARLES HARTWELL, Asheville, N. C. 192 5. COOKE, ROBERT A., 60 East 58th St., New York. 1917. CRAIG, FRANK A., 2011 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1910. CRANE, BAYARD T., Rutland, Mass. 1918. CRANKSHAW, CHARLES W., Prudential Bldg., Newark, N. J. 1932. CUSHING, EDWARD HARVEY, 10515 Carnegie Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. 1925. DOCHEZ, ALPHONSE R., 620 W. 168th St., New York. 1929. DOWDEN, CHAUNCEY W., 325 West Broadway, Louisville, Ky. 1925. DRAPER, GEORGE, 33 E. 68th St., New York. 1922. DUNHAM, KENNON, 1020 Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. 1927. EVANS, FRANK A., 121 University P1., Pittsburgh, Pa. 1931. FARLEY, DAVID LA BAUVE, 4429 Larchmont Ave., Philadelphia. 1931. FARRIS, HUGH ALLEN, 159 Germain St., St. John, N. B. 1930. FERGUSON, ROBERT GEORGE, Fort Qu'Appelle, Canada. 1923. FLINN, JOHN WILLIAM, Prescott, Arizona. 1910. FLOYD, CLEAVELAND, 246 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. 1917. FORSTER, ALEXIUS M., Colorado Springs, Colo. 1929. FREMONT-SMITH, MAURICE, 12 Hereford St., Boston, Mass. 1911. FULTON, FRANK TAYLOR, 124 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. 1919. GARVIN, ALFRED H., 1105 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 1925. GEYELIN, H. RAWLE, 103 East 78th St., New York, N. Y. 1927. GIBBES, JAMES HEYWARD, 7 Hampton Ave., Columbia, S. C. 1927. GILBERT, G. BURTON, 402 Bruns Bldg., Colorado Springs, Colo. tDied February, 1933. xv ACTIVE MEMBERS

Elected 1922. GORDON, ALVAH H., Medical Arts Bldg., W., Montreal. 1921. GORHAM, L. WHITTINGTON, 214 State St., Albany, N. Y. 1909. GRIFFIN, WALTER ALDEN, Sharon, Mass. 1930. HABLISTON, CHARLES CARROLL, 104 West Madison St., Balti- more, Md. 1925. HADEN, RUSSELL L., Crile Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio. 1912. HAMMAN, LouiS, 9 East Chase St., Baltimore, Md. 1933. HARROP, GEORGE A., The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md. 1914. HAWES, JOHN B. 2nd, 11 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass. 1932. HAYES, JOHN A., Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1918. HEISE, FRED H., Trudeau, New York. 1927. HERRMANN, GEORGE R., 816 Avenue B, Galveston, Tex. 1914. HOLDEN, G. WALTER, Metropolitan Bldg., Denver, ColO. 1932. HOUSTON, WILLIAM R., 1845 Greene St., Augusta, Ga. 1929. JACKSON, HENRY, JR., 541 Hammond St., Brookline, Mass. 1929. JENNINGS, ALPHEUS F., 987 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. 1915. JOHNSTON, COLLINS H., Metz Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich. 1933. KEEFER, CHESTER S., Thorndike Memorial Laboratory, Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass. 1926. KEIDEL, ALBERT, 315 Professional Bldg., Baltimore, Md. 1923. KELLY, THOMAS C., 105 School Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. 1932. KERN, RICHARD A., 368 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1925. KING, JOHN T., JR., 1210 Eutaw P1., Baltimore, Md. 1922. KLEIN, THOMAS, 250 So. 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1917. KLOTZ, WALTER C., 1158 Fifth Ave., New York. 1921. KRAUSE, ALLEN K., Desert Sanatorium, Tucson, Arizona. 1932. LATHROPE, GEORGE H., 965 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 1928. LAWRENCE, CHARLES HENRY, 119 Willard Rd., Brookline, Mass. 1914. LEE, ROGER I., 264 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 1927. LEMANN, ISAAC IVAN, 6110 St. Charles St., New Orleans. 1932. LEVY, ROBERT L., 31 E. 72nd St., New York. 1917. LLOYD, JOHN J., 80 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 1909. LOCKE, EDWIN ALLEN, 311 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 1913. LORD, FREDERICK T., 305 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. ACTIVE MEMBERS xV

Elected 1925. MAJOR, RALPH H., c/o First National Bank, Liberty, Mo. 1930. MCCAIN, PAUL PRESSLY, Sanatorium, N. C. 1929. MCCANN, WILLIAM SHARP, Crittenden Blvd., Rochester, N. Y. 1932. MCCLELLAN, WALTER S., Saratoga Commission, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 1921. MCLESTER, JAMES S., 930 So. 20th St., Birmingham, Ala. 1925. MCMILLAN, THOMAS N., 2044 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1929. MCPHEDRAN, FREDERICK MAURICE, 7th and Lombard Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 1929. MARCY, C. HOWARD, 121 University P1., Pittsburgh, Pa. 1917. MATSON, RALPH C., 1004 Stevens Boulevard, Portland, Ore. 1917. MATSON, RAY W., 1004 Stevens Boulevard, Portland, Ore. 1928. MAYER, EDGAR, Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1917. MEADER, CHARLES N., 518 Majestic Bldg., Denver, Colo. 1915. tMERCUR, WM. H., 5244 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 1922. METZGER, JEREMIAH, Tyrone, New . 1919. MILLER, A. F., Kentville, N. S. 1928. MILLER, SIDNEY R., 1115 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. 1932. MILLER, T. GRIER, Penn Valley, Narberth, Pa. 1925. MINOT, GEORGE R., Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass. 1933. MOORE, JOHN WALKER, University of Louisville, Louisville, Ky. 1923. MOORMAN, L. J., 304 Osler Bldg., Oklahoma City, Okla. 1930. MORGAN, HUGH J., Nashville, Tenn. 1932. MORRISS, WILLIAM H., Wallingford, Conn. 1919. MOUNT, WALTER B., 11 Seymour St., Montclair, N. J. 1933. MULHOLLAND, HENRY B., University of Virginia, Charlottes- ville, Va. 1921. MUSSER, JOHN H., 1430 Tulane Ave., New Orleans, La. 1927. NICHOLSON, SAMUEL T., Hill School, Pottstown, Pa. 1917. NILES, WALTER L., 115 E. 61st St., New York. 1921. PACKARD, EDWARD N., Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1913. PARFITT, CHARLES D., Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada. 1921. PAULLIN, JAMES E., 1010 Medical Arts Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. 1930. PEPPER, 0. H. PERRY, 36th and Spruce Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 1917. PIERSOL, GEORGE MORRIS, 1913 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1926. PINCOFFS, MAURICE CHARLES, 24 E. Eager St., Baltimore, Md. tDied July 16, 1933. xvi ACTIVE MEMBERS

Elected 1917. PORTER, GEORGE D., 162 Crescent Rd., Toronto, Ontario, Can. 1922. PORTER, WILLIAM BRANCH, 5125 Cary St., Richmond, Va. 1917. PRICE, J. WOODS, Saranac Lake, New York. 1922. PRITCHARD, STUART, Battle Creek, Mich. 1928. RACKEMANN, FRANCIS MINOT, 263 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 1919. RATHBUN, WALTER L., Newton Memorial Hospital, Cassa- daga, N. Y. 1917. RINGER, PAUL H., Asheville, N. C. 1933. RIVERS, THOMAS M., Rockefeller Institute, 66th St. and York Ave., New York, N. Y. 1927. ROBERTS, STEWART R., 768 Juniper St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. 1927. ROBEY, WILLIAM HENRY, 202 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 1932. ROOT, HOWARD F., 44 Dwight St., Brookline, Mass. 1920. RUFFIN, STERLING, 1150 Connecticut Ave., N. W., Washing- ton, D. C. 1917. RUSSELL, NELSON G., 135 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 1918. SAWYER, JOHN P., Rose Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. 1926. SCHLEITER, HOWARD G., 121 University P1., Pittsburgh, Pa. 1931. SEVIER, JOHN ALSTON, Colorado Springs, Colo. 1915. SHATTUCK, GEORGE CHEEVER, Harvard Medical School, Bos- ton, Mass. 1910. SHURLY, BURT R., 62 Adams Ave., W., Detroit, Mich. 1932. SMITH, DAVID T., Durham, N. C. 1927. SMITH, F. JANNEY, 2405 Burns Ave., Detroit, Mich. 1927. SMITH, JAMES H., 1000 W. Grace St., Richmond, Va. 1933. SMITH, WILLIAM ATMAR, 72 Society St., Charleston, S. C. 1917. SMITH, WILLIAM H., 8 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass. 1925. SNOWDEN, RoY Ross, Physicians' Bldg., University Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. 1927. SOPER, WILLARD BURR, 326 Fountain St., New Haven, Conn. 1932. SPRAGUE, HOWARD BURNHAM, 270 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 1925. SPRUNT, THOMAS P., 1035 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. 1911. STEINER, WALTER R., 646 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn. 1909. STEVENS, MARTIN L., Asheville, N. C. ACTIVE MEMBERS xvi

Elected 1919. STEWART, DAVID A., Ninette, Manitoba. 1915. STONE, WILLARD J., 65 N. Madison Ave., Pasadena, Calif. 1925. STROUD, WILLIAM D., 1011 Clinton St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1932. STURGIS, CYRUS C., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 1931. THOMAS, HENRY M., JR., 1201 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. 1910. THOMAS, JOHN D., 1800 K St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 1929. THORBURN, GRANT, 105 East 53rd St., New York. 1920. TRUDEAU, FRANCIS B., Saranac Lake, N. Y. 1929. WARING, JAMES JOHNSTON, 203 Metropolitan Bldg., Denver. 1928. WEARN, JOSEPH TREOLAR, Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. 1917. WEBB, GERALD B., Colorado Springs, Colo. 1922. WHITE, PAUL D., General Hospital, Boston. 1911. WHITE, WILLIAM CHARLES, Cosmos Club, Washington, D. C. 1910. tWILSON, GORDON, 715 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. 1933. WILSON, GEORGE, 133 South 36th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1917. WILSON, ROBERT, 165 Rutledge Ave., Charleston, S. C. 1925. WOLFERTH, CHARLES C., 4209 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1932. WOOD, J. EDWIN, Charlottesville, Va. 1913. WOOD, NATHANIEL K., 520 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 1933. WYCKOFF, JOHN, University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 26th St. and First Ave., New York.

MEMBERSHIP NUMBERS Honorary. 22 Life (courtesy list) .13 Life (25-year list) .29 Active. 1 55

Total .219 Died during the year. 5

tDied October 26, 1932. xviii AMERICAN CLINICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

MEMBERS PRESENT, 1933. CORRESPONDING MEMBER. Evans, Frank A. Weber, F. P. Farris, Hugh Allen Fulton, Frank Taylor LIFE MEMBERS. Garvin, Alfred H. Sewall, Henry Gordon, Alvah H. Brown, Lawrason Gorham, L. Whittington Claytor, Thomas A. Habliston, Charles Carroll Darlington, Thomas Haden, Russell L. Hinsdale, Guy Hamman, Louis Jennings, Charles Godwin Hayes, John A. Kinghorn, Hugh M. Herrmann, George R. Miller, James Alexander Holden, G. Walter Pratt, Joseph H. Houston, William R. Stone, Arthur Kingsbury Jennings, Alpheus F. Keidel, Albert ACTIVE MEMBERS. Kelly, Thomas C. Adams, Roy D. Kern, Richard A. Amoss, Harold L. King John T., Jr. Andrus, Edwin Cowles Klein, Thomas Austrian, Charles R. Krause, Allen K. Baetjer, Walter A. Lawrence, Charles Henry Beardsley, E. J. G. Levy, Robert L. Bradley, Ernest B. Locke, Edwin Allen Bradbury, Samuel Lord, Frederick T. Bray, Harry A. McCain, Paul Pressly Caulfield, A. H. W. McCann, William Sharp Cecil, Russell La Fayette McClellan, Walter S. Chadwick, Henry D. McLester, James S. Clendenning, Logan McPhedran, Frederick Maurice Cocke, Charles Hartwell Miller, Sidney R. Cooke, Robert A. Miller, T. Grier Crane, Bayard T. Minot, George R. Crankshaw, Charles W. Morgan, Hugh J. Dochez, Alphonse R. Mount, Walter B. Dowden, Chauncey W. Nicholson, Samuel T. Draper, George Packard, Edward N. MEMBERS PRESENT, 1933 xix Parfitt, Charles D. Smith, David T. Paullin, James E. Smith, F. Janney Pepper, 0. H. Perry Soper, Willard Burr Piersol, George Morris Sprague, Howard Burnham Pincoffs, Maurice Charles Sprunt, Thomas P. Porter, William Branch Steiner, Walter R. Price, J. Woods Stevens, Martin L. Pritchard, Stuart Stroud, William D. Rackemann, Francis Minot Thomas, Henry M., Jr. Rathbun, Walter L. Thomas, John D. Ringer, Paul H. Trudeau, Francis B. Root, Howard F. Waring, James Johnston Ruffin, Sterling Wearn, Joseph Treolar Russell, Nelson G. Webb, Gerald B. Sawyer, John P. White, Paul D. Schleiter, Howard G. Wilson, Robert Sevier, John Alston Wolferth, Charles C. Shattuck, George Cheever Wood, J. Edwin Shurly, B. R. Wood, Nathaniel K.

Total present-105. xx AMERICAN CLINICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

MEETINGS.

1. 1884. Washington, D. C. May 3 2. 1885. New York. May 27 3. 1886. New York. May 10 4. 1887. Baltimore. May 31 5. 1888. Washington, D. C. (First Congress). Sept. 18 6. .1889. Boston June 25 7. 1890. Denver Sept. 2 8. 1891. Washington, D. C. (Second Congress) Sept. 22 9. 1892. Richfield Springs, N. Y. June 23 10. 1893. Philadelphia May 25 11. 1894. Washington, D. C. (Third Congress) May 29 12. 1895. Hot Springs June 13 13. 1896. Lakewood, N. J. May 12 14. 1897. Washington, D. C. (Fourth Congress) May 4 15. 1898. Bethlehem, N. H. Aug. 31 16. 1899. New York May 9 17. 1900. Washington, D. C. (Fifth Congress) May 1 18. 1901. Niagara Falls May 30 19. 1902. Los Angeles June 9 20. 1903. Washington, D. C. (Sixth Congress) May 12 21. 1904. Philadelphia. June 2 22. 1905. Detroit June 28 23. 1906. Atlantic City May 12 24. 1907. Washington, D. C. (Seventh Congress) May 7 25. 1908. Boston June 9 26. 1909. Fortress Monroe. June 4 27. 1910. Washington, D. C. (Eighth Congress) May 3 28. 1911. Montreal June 15 29. 1912. Hartford, Conn. June 10 30. 1913. Washington, D. C. (Ninth Congress) May 6 31. 1914. Atlantic City June 19 32. 1915. San Francisco. June 18 33. 1916. Washington, D. C. (Tenth Congress) May 9 34. 1917. Lakewood, N.J. May 29 35. 1918. Boston June 5 MEETINGS XX1

36. 1919. Atlantic City (Eleventh Congress) . June 14 37. 1920. Philadelphia . .June 17 38. 1921. Lenox, Mass.. June 3 39. 1922. Washington, D. C. (Twelfth Congress) May 2 40. 1923. Niagara Falls . .May 23 41. 1924. Atlantic City . .May 1 42. 1925. Washington, D. C. (Thirteenth Congress) May 5 43. 1926. Philadelphia . .Sept. 27 44. 1927. White Sulphur Springs . .May 19 45. 1928. Washington, D. C. (Fourteenth Congress) May 1 46. 1929. Old Point Comfort . .May 2 47. 1930. Quebec . .May 20 48. 1931. Hot Springs . .ay 7 49. 1932. Absecon, N. J. .May 5 50. 1933. Washington, D. C. (Fifteenth Congress) May 8 xxii AMERICAN CLINICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS.*

CONSTITUTION. ARTICLE I.-NAME. This Society shall be known as the AMERICAN CLINICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION.

ARTICLE II.-OBJECT. The object of this Association shall be the Clinical Study of Disease. ARTICLE III.-MEMBERSHIP. Section 1.-This Association shall consist of active, life, and honorary members. The number of active members shall not exceed 175. The present corresponding members will be added to the honorary list.

Section 2.-Names of candidates for active membership whose applications shall have been endorsed by three (3) active members shall be sent to the Secretary at or before the annual meeting, at the second business session of which they shall be read and then lie over until the next annual meeting, when such as are approved by the Council shall be balloted on. Three (3) black balls shall be sufficient to reject a candidate. The Council shall have power to nominate active and associate members. Candidates for membership shall, at the discretion of the Council, present a paper to the Association showing clinical study of merit.

Section 3.-Anyone who has been a member in good standing in this Association for twenty-five years is automatically transferred to life membership, and anyone who has been an active member for *As amended May 6, 1925, May 2, 1929, and May 10, 1933. CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS xxii

twenty years in good standing and has attained the age of sixty (60) years may become a life member by expressing his desire to do so in writing to the Council. A life member shall have all the rights and privileges of an active member, including eligibility to hold office, but shall not be subject to the penalties noted in Section 4, Article 3.

Section 4.-Any member of the Association absent from the meetings, in person or by contributed paper, for three (3) consecutive years, without sufficient cause, shall be dropped from the list of mem- bers by vote of the Council.

ARTICLE IV.-OFFICERS. Section 1.-The officers of this Association shall consist of a President, two Vice-Presidents, a Secretary and Treasurer, and a Recorder, who, with the Delegate to the Executive Committee of the Congress of American Physicians and Surgeons and his alternate and eight other members, shall constitute the Council of the Association. Section 2.-Nominations. The officers, including the Council, shall be nominated by a committee of five (5) members, which com- mittee shall be nominated by the President at the first session of each annual meeting and shall report at the business meeting.

Section 3.-Elections. The election of officers shall take place at the business meeting. A majority of votes cast shall constitute an election.

Section 4.-The President, Vice-Presidents, Secretary and Treas- urer, and Recorder shall enter upon their duties at the close of the annual meeting at which they are elected, and shall hold office until the close of the next annual meeting, or until their successors are elected.

Section 5. Members of the Council, other than the officers, shall hold office for four years, two members being elected at each annual meeting. The delegate and his alternate to the Executive Committee of the Congress of American Physicians and Surgeons shall be elected xxiv CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS at the annual meeting after the meeting of the Congress, and they shall hold office for three years. Section 6.-Vacancies. Any vacancy occurring among the officers of the Association during the year may be filled by the Council.

ARTICLE V.-DUTIES OF OFFICERS. President and Vice-President. Section 1.-The President and Vice-Presidents shall discharge the duties usually devolving upon such officers. The President shall be ex-oflicio Chairman of the Council. Secretary and Treasurer. Section 2.-As Secretary, he shall attend and keep a record of all the meetings of the Association and of the Council, of which latter he shall be ex-officio Clerk. At each annual meeting he shall announce the names of all who have ceased to be members since the last report. He shall notify candidates of their election to member- ship. He shall send a preliminary notification of the annual meeting two (2) months previous thereto, and the programme for the annual meeting at least two (2) weeks previous to its assembly, to all the members of the Association. He shall also send notification of the meetings of the Council to the members thereof. At each annual meeting of the Association he shall read the Minutes of the previous meeting and of all the meetings of the Council that have been held during the current year. Furthermore, he shall read the names of those active and associate members who had failed to attend three consecutive meetings without sufficient cause. Section 3.-As Treasurer, he shall receive all moneys due, and pay all debts therewith. He shall render an account thereof at the annual meeting, at which time an auditing committee shall be appointed to report. Recorder. Section 4.-The Recorder shall secure the papers read and also proper notes of the discussions thereon and shall superintend, under the direction of the Council, the publication of the TRANSACTIONS. CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS xxv ARTICLE VI.--COUNCIL. The Council shall meet as often as the interests of the Associa- tion may require. Four (4) members shall constitute a quorum. It shall have the management of the affairs of the Association, subject to the action of the Association at its annual meetings. It shall consider the claims of candidates recommended to it for admission to membership. It shall not have the power to made the Association liable for any debts exceeding in total one hundred dollars ($100), in the course of any one year, unless specially authorized by a vote of the Association. It shall have the entire control of the publications of the Asso- ciation, with the power to reject such papers or discussions as it may deem best. It shall have power to nominate active members at the annual meeting. The Council shall have power to invite any gentleman, not a member, to read a paper at the annual meeting, on any subject within the scope of the objects of this Association. The Council shall determine questions by vote, or-if demanded -by ballot, the president having a casting vote. The Council shall constitute a Board of Trial for all offenses against the Constitution and By-Laws, or for unbecoming conduct, and shall have the sole power of moving the expulsion of any member. The President, or any two members, may call a meeting, notice of which will be transmitted to every member two (2) weeks previous to the meeting. ARTICLE VII.-PAPERS. ,Section 1.-The titles of all papers to be read at any annual meeting shall be forwarded to the Secretary not later than one (1) month before the first day of the meeting, in order to appear on the printed programme. Section 2.-No paper shall be read before the Association which has already been printed or been read before another body. xxvi CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS

ARTICLE VIII.-QUORUM. A quorum for business purposes shall be ten (10) members.

ARTICLE IX.-AMENDMENTS. Section 1.-This Constitution may be amended by four-fifths (4/5) vote of all the members present at an annual meeting, pro- vided that notice of the proposed amendment has been printed in the notification of the meeting at which the vote is to be taken.

Section 2.-By-laws may be amended at any business meeting of the Association by a three-fourths (3/4) vote of all members present and voting.

BY-LAWS. (1) Meetings of the Association shall be held annually. (2) The time and place of the meeting shall be determined by the Council. (3) The dues of active members shall consist of an annual assessment not to exceed ten ($10.00) dollars. Members in arrears shall not be entitled to vote. Those in arrears for two (2) years may be dropped from membership by recommendation of the Council. (4) The dues of life members and associate members shall be five ($5.00) dollars a year. The Council may, in individual cases, remit the dues of life members. (5) Candidates for membership that have not been favorably considered by the Council within three years shall be dropped from nomination, but can be renominated. (6) Vacancies created by increasing the limit of membership (to 175) shall not be filled in excess of five a year. (7) Order of business meeting. First day: Calling the roll of members. Minutes of previous meeting. Secretary's and Treasurer's reports. CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS xxVii

Recorder's report. Report of Committee of Arrangements. Appointment of Auditing Committee. Appointment of Nominating Committee. Report of Council on recommendations for membership.

Second day, morning session: Reports of Nominating Committee and Auditing Committee. Election of officers. Election of members. Nomination of candidates for membership. Reports of committee on health resorts. Unfinished business. Miscellaneous business. Adjournment of business meeting. MINUTES OF BUSINESS MEETINGS.

TUESDAY AFTERNOON SESSION, MAY 9, 1933. The first Business Session of the Fiftieth Annual Meeting of the American Clinical and Climatological Association convened in the Willard Hotel, Washington, D. C., at two forty-five o'clock, Dr. George R. Minot of Boston, President of the Association, presiding. PRESIDENT MINOT: The business meeting will now be held. The first business will be the report of the Secretary and Treasurer. SECRETARY STONE: The Secretary's report has been published in the TRANSACTIONS. The Treasurer's report is as follows: On May 1st, 1932, there was a cash balance in the bank of $1,496.00. During the year there was received from all sources $733.00, making a total of $2,229.00. During the year there was expended $1,396.00, leaving a balance in the bank on May 1, 1933, of $833.00. I have omitted the cents. There will be the expense of this meeting. There is the usual honora- rium to the Recorder and the Secretary. PRESIDENT MINOT: As an Auditing Committee to examine the Treasurer's report, I will appoint Dr. Maurice C. Pincoffs, Chairman, Dr. Allen K. Krause, and Dr. T. P. Sprunt. The next business is the report of the Recorder. Dr. Trudeau, have you any report? SECRETARY STONE: The TRANSACTIONS have been sent around. I have heard from one man that he has not received them. If anyone else has not received them, will he please report to Dr. Trudeau? PRESIDENT MINOT: The next order of business is the report of the Council. SECRETARY STONE: The Council met last evening with all fifteen members present. The resignations of Dr. Charles C. Browning, who had a stroke during the last year, and of Dr. John W. Brannan were not accepted, and it was voted to recommend that they be made life members and that their dues be remitted. The resignation of Chaille Jamison of New Orleans was accepted with regret. xxviii BUSINESS MEETING xxix

It was voted to have the Recorder provide an index for future volumes of the TRANSACTIONS. It was voted that the Treasurer pay the usual honorarium to the Recorder and that the honorarium to the Secretary be divided between the Secretary and Dr. Rackemann. It was voted to establish the Gordon Wilson Medal for Clinical Excellence to be awarded each year by the Association; that a com- mittee of three, consisting of Dr. Lawrason Brown, Dr. Walter Baetjer and Dr. David Lyman, should cause the medal to be made and recommend to the Council the first person to whom the medal should be awarded; that this same committee should solicit the funds from the friends of Dr. Wilson to defray the expense. It was also voted that any slight charge necessary for the first medal be supplied out of the funds of the Treasurer. It was voted to recommend that the next annual meeting be held at Toronto in May of 1934, the exact time and place to be left with the President and Secretary. It was voted to recommend that at the Toronto meeting the question of changing the time of the annual meeting to the fall should be considered by the Council, and then the matter reported back to the Association later. There are also sundry recommendations in regard to changes of the Constitution that will come up at the business meeting tomorrow. PRESIDENT MINOT: I would like to say just one word about the fall meeting, so the members may be thinking about it. It has been suggested that this Association might meet in the fall, perhaps in the second week of October, instead of in the spring. In the North, ait least, there are a number of meetings in the spring, including the meeting of the American Medical Association, and it might be pleas- anter to separate our meeting more from the others. Next year in Toronto the question will be formally voted upon. You have all seen the amendments that have been sent out to be voted upon, as well as the recommendations of the Council regarding membership. They will be voted upon tomorrow. There is a new amendment recommended by the Council which will be voted upon a year hence. I would like to explain what it means. At the present time the list of nominations has been sent to xxx BUSINESS MEETING all members following the spring meeting and for some reason the Council has felt constrained to act on these names in the winter and submit the approved list to all the members some time in advance of the meeting. This necessitates a meeting of the Council members in the winter, making them travel considerable distances. I will read the proposed amendment, which will be printed and acted upon at the next meeting: "The names of new candidates for active membership, each endorsed by three active members of the Association, shall be sent to the Secretary within six months after the Annual Meeting. The Secretary shall list these names, make a sum- mary of the candidates' qualifications, and mail the list to each active member with the request that comments concerning the candidates be returned to the Secretary for presentation to the Council. The Council will then act upon these at their meeting, to be held the evening before the first scientific session." This amendment has been proposed by the Council. Will some- one move to submit this to the Society in writing for their positive or negative vote a year hence? DR. L. W. GORHAM (Albany): I so move, Mr. President. (The motion was seconded.) PRESIDENT MINOT: It has been moved and seconded that this amendment be printed and submitted in writing at the appropriate time before the next annual meeting for vote a year hence. (The motion was put to a vote and carried.) Dr. Stone brings to my attention the fact that we need a formal vote on the action of the Council regarding the honorariums they approved. (Upon motion regularly made, seconded and carried, the action of the Council was approved.) I shall now appoint a Nominating Committee to consider the officers for the ensuing year. I wish to appoint Dr. Gorham, Dr. Hamman, Dr. Piersol, Dr. Wood and Dr. Soper, and would be pleased if they would report their recommendations at the business meeting tomorrow. I believe there is no further business to come before this business meeting. DR. ALLEN K. KRAUSE (Tucson, Arizona): No one has done more to put the Climatological Association (the old name) along the right path than Gordon Wilson, and no one desires more to memo- BUSINESS MEETING XXXi rialize Gordon Wilson than myself, but I have great doubts as to whether the present recommendation submitted by the Council to memorialize Gordon Wilson is all that we might do. The proposal, as I understand it, is every year to award a medal for clinical excel- lence. There are medals and medals. The awarding of a medal is not only difficult, but it is tricky, particularly if the selection is based on written papers. As a general thing we award as we think; as we understand a thing. The more original the work is, perhaps the less we are inclined to see its excellence or its true import at the time it is presented. As I said, I would like to memorialize Gordon Wilson, but I think we could do it in a much more productive way and also in a way that will leave no chance for hard feelings. I should think to memorialize Gordon Wilson we might establish a lectureship in his own university, on that subject which he has associated with our name, which is not only the oldest form of therapy but upon which there has never yet appeared a really scientific paper-that is, on the effects of climate. I do not suggest that because I have moved to the Southwest. As an alibi I can only say that in 1924 I myself did publish an article on climate long before I moved to the Southwest. I would like to submit the matter for discussion as to whether or not that might not be put through. The first thing that will occur to you will be, of course, the expense. The expense of a medal would probably require a fund of $1,000.00. That will give you a poor medal; it will not give you a medal designed by the best designers in the . I do not think there is any hurry about this. We might take more than one vear to collect the funds. When a lectureship is estab- lished we don't have to have a lecture every year. It might be every two years or every three years, but it would be a Gordon Wilson lectureship at the University of Maryland on the effect of climate on disease and on health, and it should be sponsored by the American Clinical and Climatological Association. It seems to me that could be done with a capital fund of no more than $5,000.00. xxxi BUSINESS MEETING

DR. LOUIS HAMMAN (Baltimore): Dr. Brown suggested the plan of giving a medal yearly from this Association for the outstand- ing qualities in clinical medicine. It appealed to me very much. Since I presented that motion to the Council last night I feel I must say something in defense of it. The plan that Dr. Krause has suggested is an excellent one. Yet I do think the plan suggested by Dr. Brown is a still better one. In the first place it seems to me that this Association wants to recognize the work that Gordon Wilson did for the Association and that it is much more appropriate to give a prize each year to some one distin- guished in clinical medicine than to establish a lectureship at the University of Maryland, where he was on the faculty. That would undoubtedly be an excellent thing to do, and I think it is quite pos- sible that the University of Maryland may do that independently of anything this Association does. It seems to me much more desirable and much more appropriate to honor Gordon Wilson's work in this Association by giving some recognition yearly for outstanding work in clinical medicine. Dr. Krause is perfectly right in pointing out the difficulties in selecting someone upon whom to bestow this honor. The opinion of one genera- tion is obviously not the opinion of the next. Yet I think, judging as best one may, no very grave errors will be made. Some will be made, it is true. It would not be the motive of the Association, as was discussed in detail last night, to pick out some notable contribution of the year. Our judgment on the value of such contribution is often erroneous, and, of course, it is well known that contributions which at the time may receive very little attention turn out in later years to be notable achievements. The suggestion that was made was that in giving this medal yearly someone be selected who is distinguished for his work in clinical medicine, on the basis of three attainments: First of all, his reputation as an outstanding clinician among his associates; second, his reputation as a teacher of clinical medicine; and third, the value of his contributions to clinical medicine. In regard to the type of medal that is given, it seems to me that BUSINESS MEETING( *iii*

is a matter of relatively little importance. Whether it is gold or silver or bronze doesn't make very much difference. Referring to the initial expense of having the die cast, I think we might have something which, although it might not be extremely valuable from the artistic standpoint, would be artistic. I think any- one might be glad to receive the medal. The important thing is the honor that is bestowed and not the medal that is merely given as the tangible evidence of that honor. I still feel very strongly that the Association should approve the recommendation of the Council that the Association confer a yearly medal for distinction in clinical work. It is not necessary that the man upon whom the honor is bestowed be a member of this Society. It was suggested that he be a physician practicing in North America, but I think that might even be extended to those practicing in other countries as well. DR. HENRY SEWALL (Denver): I haven't given much thought to this subject except along the lines of any person who is in any way connected with the scientific side. I have no objection to the medal, if I could only tell where it would go, but I am very much impressed by the fact that the good and ancient practice of medal-giving should give way occasionally to benefices that look forward, not backward. It seems to me that one of the finest departures in public teach- ing of recent years are the lectureships founded at Johns Hopkins. They do not look back except in the way of a foundation, but they are enormously important. They are throwing their thoughts forward continually. There is no comparison of the giving of a medal with that world-wide awakening which a good lecture will involve. I cannot take your time on this subject, but I should say that if Gordon Wilson were here today and could smile his acquiescence, he would smile on the idea of the lectureship rather than on the giving of a medal. While I think they are both of noble design and properly show appreciation of great work, the point Dr. Krause mentioned of the bitterness that might follow the giving of this medal is a very important thing, because unity and amity and brotherhood have been the lifeblood of this Association, the American Clinical and Climato- logical Association. A very good friend of mine proposed this name several years XXXiV BUSINESS MEETING ago, not because we knew everything about climate but because we had come to the end of our rope and did nothing in climatology. If you do not accept this proposition to make a foundation for the study of climate and teach us something about climate, which every doctor along the seaboard has declared does not belong to the medical pro- fession at all, you have missed the greatest source of knowledge and of actual good in the world. PRESIDENT MINOT: Does anyone else wish to express an opinion on this important subject? It seems to me we have the problem of selection in either of these cases. We want a man of similar qualifica- tions to give a lecture or to receive an honor. Possibly a man could be honored here-it is not such an expensive item as a medal-and could be informed he is invited to give a lecture at the University of Maryland. DR. B. R. SHURLY (Detroit): Why not ask the man upon whom you pin the medal to give a lecture afterwards? DR. MAURICE C. PINCOFFS (Baltimore): Through my associa- tion with the chair of medicine in which Dr. Gordon Wilson preceded me, I think I am in a way excluded from the discussion of these topics. Dr. Hamman brought out the thought that there might be some lec-tureship established independently in the University of Maryland for such a memorial. I would like to correct that and, as chairman of our Faculty Committee which is devising a memorial for Gordon Wilson, say that that idea has been set aside, so it need not complicate the decision in any way. PRESIDENT MINOT: I feel we should have a motion regarding the Council's action on this matter. I think that is the first thing to entertain-a motion to uphold or not to uphold the Council's action. DR. W. B. PORTER (Richmond, Virginia): I am a Virginian and Gordon Wilson himself came from Virginia. He graduated from the University of Virginia. If a lectureship is established, I see no reason why it should be at the University of Maryland at all. If we have a lectureship, why not make it quite personal and have it at his alma mater? I feel about this matter as Dr. Hamman does, that a lectureship stands a chance of becoming quite an impersonal thing. I for one am quite keen on establishing something which represents a very per- BUSINESS MEETING xxxv sonal thing intimately connected with the real life of this organization. I should like to move, sir, that we vote upon the recommendation of the Council. I move we accept the recommendation of the Council. (The motion was seconded.) PRESIDENT MINOT: The recommendation of the Council, simply put, is for the establishment of a Gordon Wilson memorial medal to be awarded for clinical excellence by a committee that has been named, the first award to be made a year hence. (The motion was put to a vote and carried.) I am not quite sure whether we have accepted the other recom- mendations of the Council, and I would be glad to have a motion that the recommendations that have not been voted upon, which were made by the Council, be approved, if anyone wishes to make such a motion. DR. THOMAS DARLINGTON (New York): I move that we accept all the recommendations of the Council. (The motion was seconded, put to a vote and carried.) PRESIDENT MINOT: I do not believe there is any other business to come before us at this time. We will vote on the other matters to'morrow. (The business session adjourned at three-fifteen o'clock.)

WEDNESDAY MORNING SESSION, MAY 10, 1933. The Second Business Session convened at twelve-ten o'clock, President Minot presiding. PRESIDENT MINOT: The business meeting will come to order, please. I want to first appoint some tellers, so while we are doing some other business the voting for the new members may be carried on. I will ask Dr. Miller, Dr. Bray and Dr. Soper if they will serve as tellers. In voting on these ballots I would suggest that a negative vote is all that is necessary. Record "No" against any items on which vou wish to vote to the contrary. No mark will signify a positive vote. I would like to call to your attention a slight correction in the way the amendment in Article II is worded. It should read: "The object of the Association shall be the Clinical Study of Disease." Under Article III there is an addition for clarification which xxxvi BUSINESS MEETING

should read: "Corresponding members are to be added to the honorary list." We will now ask Dr. Pincoffs to report for the Auditing Com- mittee. DR. M. C. PINCOFFS (Baltimore): The books have been ex- amined and approved. DR. THOMAS DARLINGTON (New York): I move the report of the Auditing Committee be accepted and placed on file. (The motion was seconded, put to a vote and carried.) PRESIDENT MINOT: The report of the Nominating Committee for officers for the ensuing year. Dr. Gorham. DR. L. W. GORHAM (Albany): The Nominating Committee proposes the following names: President, Charles D. Parfitt, Graven- hurst, Ontario, Canada; Vice-Presidents, Charles Hartwell Cocke, Asheville, North Carolina; Roy D. Adams, Washington, D. C.; Sec- retary and Treasurer, Francis Minot Rackemann, Boston, Mass.; Recorder, Francis B. Trudeau, Saranac Lake; Members of the Council, George R. Minot, Boston, Mass.; J. Woods Price, Saranac Lake. PRESIDENT MINOT: Gentlemen, you have heard the reporr of the Nominating Committee with their recommendation of officers for the ensuing year. DR. THOMAS DARLINGTON (New York): I move the nomina- tions be closed, and the Secretary be instructed to cast one ballot for the unanimous election of the officers named for the ensuing year. (The motion was seconded and carried, and Secretary Stone cast the ballot.) PRESIDENT MINOT: Dr. Rackemann has served in the past months as the member to handle matters specially pertaining to new membership. I will ask him if he will read the list of candidates pro- posed for membership since a year ago. DR. F. M. RACKEMANN (Boston): The list of names that were approved by the Council this year has been mailed to you in this form and they are all duly elected. Today I have applications for new names for next year. They are as follows: John Staige Davis, Jr., Staige Davis Blackford, W. J. Stoner, Louis F. Bishop, Jr., Ernest W. Willetts, T. Duckett Jones, BUSINESS MEETING xxxvi

Charles W. Mills, D. V. Erickson, Brace W. Paddock, John Barn- well, Lorne C. Montgomery, Mack McConkey, John Minor, John B. Yeomans, James M. Strang, William T. Finney. I would like, if I may, Mr. President, to say just a word about these nominations and the list which I have just read. In times past the procedure in electing new members was just this. The list was read at the annual meeting in the preceding year. Then the creden- tials of those men have been secured and the list presented in the winter to the members of the Council-not to the whole Society, but to the members of the Council. The members of the Council have then gone over the list and have approved certain members for elec- tion, and that list has been printed and submitted to you. I have no figures, but I wager there has never been any differ- ence of opinion of the Society as a whole with the recommendations of the Council. It seems to me that this plan is very crude. The only way a man can keep a candidate from joining the Society is to get up and disapprove of the recommendation of the Council at the time it is presented. As you heard yesterday, there is an amendment to the Constitu- tion that has been proposed which would change this scheme of elec- tion. That amendment proposes that this list of names which you have just heard, for example, should be sent not to the Council but to every member of the Association, together with the credentials of each man so that every member of the Society will have an oppor- tunity to express his likes or dislikes concerning each individual candidate. The Secretary will correct the answers from each member of the Society, digest them and present the digest to the Council at its meeting. From that digest and from the list the Council will then be able to choose, presumably very easily, the list of the men it approves, and the list will go through. That, I understand, Mr. President, is the general scheme that is followed in other societies, and it would certainly seem to me to give a fairer chance to the members at large to know about the men who are coming up as candidates. It is said that we cannot make this change this year, because the amendment to the Constitution is only proposed now, and it will take a year before that can go into effect. But, as a matter of fact, I do not know that the Constitution would xxvii BUSINESS MEETING

forbid the sending of names to every member and the request that those individual members express their opinion about the list of candidates. There is, however, one thing that is not specifically mentioned in the Constitution, but that has gone on as a matter of habit, as I understand it. That is, the list of names as they have been approved by the Council in the past, has been mailed in printed form, after approval by the Council, to the members at least six weeks in advance of the meeting. This, of course, necessitates a meeting of the Council in the winter and is a cumbersome thing, and, as far as I can see, it does no particular good. I would like it very much this year if the Secretary could be excused from sending the list of approved candi- dates six weeks in advance of the annual meeting. I would much prefer that the approved names be submitted at the meeting itself. PRESIDENT MINOT: With due respect, I think Dr. Rackemann has made a slight error. The names have been mailed to each member soon after the annual meeting. It would seem a great advantage if all members received a list of all nominees with the addresses and the qualifications of each man quite as presented on today's ballot. The qualifications could then be carefully considered by everybody. A member, for instance, might not know a given individual but might feel that if he had received a degree three years ago he was too young for membership. We want an expression of opinion based not only on your knowledge of the member but based on such knowledge as may be obtained from a synoptic statement. It appears to me that it is rather unfortunate to mail around some six weeks in advance a list of the names with the recommendation of the Council. That cannot help becoming somewhat public. I think, again with due respect to Dr. Rackemann, there have been nominations made by the Council six weeks in advance that have been thrown out at this meeting. It would thus seem wiser, as suggested yesterday, to follow the scheme that the new members pro- posed by the Council be announced the day of the meeting and voted on the second day of the meeting, and that all members receive a fulf document regarding all men nominated. As I understand, what Dr. Rackemann would like to accomplish in the next year-which would be the spirit of the change voted BUSINESS MEETING SXX1X yesterday by the Council-is that the Secretary would not be obligated to mail a list of candidates with the Council's action six weeks prior to the annual meeting, thus saving the members of the Council traveling expense in the winter, and also saving the embar- rassing situation of having the Council's action become publicly known. I would like to hear discussion on the matter. Would anyone care to second what I understand was essentially a motion? (The motion was seconded by Dr. Gorham.) DR. JOSEPH H. PRATT (Boston): I think the new plan is much superior to the old. I hope it can be put into effect. DR. THOMAS DARLINGTON (New York): I feel the same way. PRESIDENT MINOT: As I understand it, there is a motion before the house, which has been seconded, that the Secretary is not required to send, this coming year, a list of the Council's action on proposed members, as has been done, weeks in advance, but that it will be reported on the first day of the meeting a year hence. (The motion was put to a vote and carried.) I would like to announce that it has not been possible yet to draw up the memorial that was proposed to Colonel Bruns yesterday. It will be drawn up and sent to the Secretary and presented at the meeting next year, or, as Dr. Stone says, it will probably be possible to print it this year in the TRANSACTIONS. Regarding the amendments to the Constitution, I should like to know whether it be your pleasure to take these up one by one, or would you prefer to vote on all the amendments as a whole? We would be glad to hear any discussion on these amendments. I might ask particularly if there is any discussion about the change in Article II. It now reads: "The object of this Association shall be the Clinical Study of Disease." In Article III the change an- nounced is that there should be added words to make it clear: "The present corresponding members will be added to the honorary list." Is there any discussion on this or on any of the other articles? DR. THOMAS DARLINGTON (New York): I move the amend- ments be adopted as a whole. (The motion was seconded by Dr. M. C. Pincoffs of Baltimore.) DR. HARRY A. BRAY (Ray Brook, New York): Why do you xI BUSINESS MEETING

put in "Clinical Study of Disease"? Why isn't it "Study of Disease"? What does the word "clinical" study of disease suggest there? PRESIDENT MINOT: I think it is an excellent tradition of this Association that the members are clinicians rather than experimental men. I think that defines one of the clear-cut objects of the Associa- tion. DR. BRAY: I am not objecting, but it occurred to me they sup- plement each other so closely. PRESIDENT MINOT: In clinical study I would not rule out pa- thology at all. DR. DARLINGTON: Question! PRESIDENT MINOT: It is moved and seconded that all these articles be accepted. (The motion was put to a vote and carried.) We will now proceed to the election of the candidates. I believe it is customary to have the election by ballot. If the tellers will kindly collect the ballots and count them, I will announce the results. DR. RACKEMANN: I shall have to confess my own deficiency. There were several names held over from last year, which were turned in too late to be prepared for action by the Council, and there were other names whose credentials were not quite complete in other respects. I am sorry to say I do not have that list here. It comprises five or six men. You will just have to trust me to put those names on the list which will be sent to each and every member during the ensuing year. May I say one thing more? The time relation in this study is of some importance. In the future, the proposed amendment to the Constitution will make it possible for nominations to be made after the end of this annual meeting. As it stands, the Constitution requires that all names of new candidates shall be read at the meeting pre- vious to their election. So I suppose that for this year we have to consider the list of new candidates as closed and act simply on these new names in the rather limited list. That means that I can go right to work preparing the list and securing the credentials of these men. I will submit them to you in due course. "In due course" sounds well. But when will that be? Presumably it will be sometime next fall. I will warn you now that if a member of the Association has a comment to make he will have to make it within a month after he BUSINESS MEETING xli receives the list. At the end of the month we will simply call the list closed, and if we haven't heard from someone that is just too bad. DR. DARLINGTON: I would like to make a motion, Mr. Presi- dent. Some of the speakers have not handed in their papers. I move that, in order to appear in the TRANSACTIONS, all papers must be handed in by June 15 to the Recorder. If all the papers have not been received by June 15 we will go ahead with the TRANSACTIONS anyway. (The motion was seconded by Dr. Gorham.) PRESIDENT MINOT: It is moved and seconded that all papers must be in by June 15. Those that are not in by June 15 will not be published. I would like to suggest to Dr. Trudeau that on May 15 or thereabouts he might be good enough to write to the delinquents so they may have at least two weeks' notice. (The motion was put to a vote and carried.) DR. DARLINGTON: I have three or four other motions I would like to make, Mr. President. I move we give our cordial thanks to the President for his fair- ness, for this wonderful program that he has gotten up and all the work he has done, and for the way he has treated the membership as our presiding officer at this meeting. (The motion was seconded by Dr. Gorham, put to a vote and carried unanimously.) I would also like to make a motion that we thank the Washing- ton members for the luncheon, and particularly Roy Adams for the arrangements which he has helped make here in Washington. (The motion was seconded by Dr. Gorham, put to a vote and carried unanimously.) I would like to move also that we thank the hotel for their courtesy and the accommodation of this room we have used here. I think the thanks of the Society are due the hotel for their treat- ment of us. PRESIDENT MINOT: It would be nice, I think, Dr. Darlington, if the new Secretary, at his leisure, would write to the hotel a letter of appreciation. DR. DARLINGTON: That can be done, but I would like to pass this resolution, as I think it is due them. (The motion was sec- onded, put to a vote and carried.) There is one other motion I would like to make. Our Secretary xli BUSINESS MEETING has been a faithful secretary for the last fifteen years or more-I don't remember the date exactly, but it has been a long time and he has been very faithful to us. He has filled the office satisfactorily in every way. Now, upon his retirement, I think we should give him our hearty thanks for all that he has done. (The audience arose with prolonged applause.) That is very nice. Dr. Stone is one of my closest friends. I think he is a prince among men. The little hand you gave him was very nice. PRESIDENT MINOT: Gentlemen, the tellers report that all the men on this list have been elecfed: Herrman L. Blumgart, Boston, Massachusetts. C. Sidney Burwell, Nashville, Tennessee. George A. Harrop, Jr., Baltimore, Maryland. Chester S. Keefer, Boston, Massachusetts. John W. Moore, Louisville, . Henry B. Mulholland, Charlottesville, Virginia. Thomas M. Rivers, New York, N. Y. William A. Smith, Charleston, South Carolina. George Wilson, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. John H. Wycoff, New York, N. Y. Is there any other business to come before the meeting? If not, the meeting stands adjourned until we meet at the Metropolitan Club this noon for luncheon as guests of the Washington members. (The meeting adjourned at twelve-forty o'clock.) GENERAL INDEX

Volumes XLVI - XLIX

Roman numerals indicate the volume. D indicates remarks in discussion.

ACCESSORY lobes of the human lungs, Willard Soper, XLVIII, 160 Achlorhydria in Addisonian anemias, XLIX, 59, 62, 63 in gastritis, XLIX, 58 in gastric carcinoma, XLIV, 59, 60, 61 in other disease, XLIX, 59 Acropachy, Bray, D, XLVIII, 227 Locke, D, XLVIII, 225 Miller, D, XLVIII, 226 Sprague, D, XLVIII, 226 Thomas, XLVIII, 208 Wilson, D, XLVIII, 226 Adams-Stokes syndrome, XLVII, 13 Addisonian anemia, XLIX, 57, 59, 62, 63, 64 Agglutination reaction, in rheumatoid arthritis, XLIX, 21, 22 Air embolism, XLVII, 152 Kinghorn, D, XLVII, 157 Allen, C. I. and Smith, F. J., primary carcinoma of the lung, with a report of a case treated by operation, XLVII, 201 Allergy, agglutination after typhoid vaccine, XLIX, 210 further observations on nature of, F. M. Rackemann, F. A. Simon, M. A. Simon, M. A. Scully, XLIX, 209 response to histamine, XLIX, 213 the nature of, F. M. Rackemann, XLVI, 72 Alton, D. C., emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 70 Amberson, J. B., scalenotomy, D, XLVIII, 205 and Riggins, H. McL., the uses and dangers of lipiodol in bronchography, XLVIII, 169 Amoss, H. L., migrainous patient, D, XLIX, 32 Andrus, E. C., renal manifestations of obstruction of the lower urinary tract, XLVII, 104 and Padget, Paul, delirium in association with myorcardial insufficiency, XLIX, 100 Anginal pain, XLIX, 125 2 INDEX

Ankylosis, XLIX, 1 Amuria, reflex, XLVII, 104 Aortic root, persistent right, clinical aspects of, H. B. Sprague, C. H. Ernlund, F. Albright, XLIX, 83 persistent right, G. R. Minot, H. B. Sprague, D, XLIX, 94 Aortic stenosis, clinical observations on, Sylvester McGinn and Paul D. White, XLIX, 132; D, 144 G. R. Minot, D, XLIX, 144 F. J. Smith, D, XLIX, 144 Aortitis, syphilitic, Keidel, D, XLVIII, 28 Pincoffs, D, XLVIII, 29 Archibald, E. A., rat-bite fever, D, XLVI, 5 thoracoplasty, D, XLVI, 48 Arteriosclerosis, pulmonary, XLIX, 150 Arthritis, chronic, art and general principles of treatment in, George R. Minot, XLIX, 1 chronic, diet in, XLIX, liv, ii environment in, XLIX, lv exercise in treatment of, XLIX, liii prognosis in, Russell L. Cecil, XLIX, 16; D, 25 George Draper, D, XLIX, 24 C. G. Jennings, D, XLIX, 23 psychological factor in, XLIX, 24 removal of infection, XLIX, lvi, 13, 19 rest in treatment of, XLIX, lii, 11, 20, 25 results of treatment, XLIX, lvii, 13 search for infection, XLIX, 8, 24 two main types of, XLIX, li vaccines in, XLIX, lvii, 12, 24, 25 chronic atrophic, treatment in, XLIX, 6, 11 (rheumatoid), the treatment of, Russell L. Haden, XLIX, 5; D, 25 rheumatoid, age as a factor in, XLIX, 18 Schilling hemogram, test in, XLIX, 22 Asbestiosis, pneumonary, Soper, XLVI, 210 Asthma, bronchial, sinus findings in, XLIX, 206 in pregnancy, J. Perkins, D, XLVI, 74 Austrian, C. R., encapsulated hydrothorax in association with myocardial in- sufficiency, XLVIII, 105 Ayerza's syndrome, XLVII, 3

BABCOCK, Robert Hall, memorial notice, XLVII, xl Bacteriological studies on rheumatic fever and infectious arthritis, Nichols, Stainsy and R. I. Cecil, XLVI, 36 Bethune, N. and Byers, J. R., preoperative localization of lung abscess, XLVI, 157 Bishop, Louis F., coronary artery disease, D, XLIX, 76 INDEX 3

Blackader, Alexander Dougall, memorial notice, XLVIII, xliv Blood in bronchial tree, X-ray appearance of, XLVII, 190 iron and hemoglobin, a chemical study, McNeill and Dowden, XLVIII, 1 sedimentation, Bortree, XLVIII, 41 Brown, D, XLVIII, 51 Heise, D, XLVIII, 49 Pratt, D, XLVIII, 50 Bortree, W. L., blood sedimentation as a prognostic aid, XLVIII, 41 Bowditch, Vincent Yardley, memorial notice, XLVI, xli Bray, H. A., acropachy, D, XLVIII, 227 lung, accessory lobes, D, XLVIII, 167 pathological and roentgenological comparison of pulmonary tuberculosis in humans and in rabbits, XLIX, 34 Bromer, A. W. and Stroud, W. D., familial study of cardiovascular disease, XLVI, 188 Bronchiectasis, sinus findings in, XLIX, 204 Bronner, A. W., Zschiesche, L. J., and Wearn, J. T., the significance of the presence of blood vessels in heart valves, XLVII, 1 Brown, Lawrason, blood sedimentation, D, XLVIII, 51 focal infection of teeth, D, XLIX, 225 vitamin deficiency, D, XLIX, 236 Browning, C. C., emphysema, generalized, subcutaneous, secondary to pathological fracture of a rib in advanced pulmonary tuberculosis with report of a case, XLVII, 253 tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 180 Bruns, Lt. Col. E. A., the present status of thoracoplasty in the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis, XLVI, 38 and Casper J., unroofing of pulmonary tuberculous cavities, XLVIII, 185 prognosis and treatment of hemorrhage in pulmonary tuberculosis, XLVII, 183 Byers, J. R. and Bethune, N., preoperative localization of lung abscess, XLVI, 157

CARCINOMA, of lung, Miller, J. A., D, XLVIII, 182 of lung, early diagnosis, Funk and Clerf, XLVIII, 179 surgical removal of, Allen, C. I. and Smith F. J., XLVII, 201 Cardiac infarction, Porter, D, XLVIII, 112 infarction, Wearn, D, XLVIII, 111 and pathology of, Gorham et al, XLVIII, 105 Cardio-vascular disease, familial study of, Bromer and Stroud, XLVI, 188 Cecil, Russell L., prognosis in chronic arthritis, XLIX, 16; D, 25 and Nichols and Stainsy, bacteriological studies on rheumatic fever and in- fectious arthritis, XLVI, 36 Chadwick, Henry D., R. C. L. Markoe and Joseph Thomas, collapse therapy in treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis in negroes, XLIX, 48; D, 56 4 INDEX

Cholesteatoma of pleura, Porter, D, XLVII, 247 Cholesterol-thorax, Stein, H. M., XLVII, 234 Choline, XLVII, 50 Circulation, the lesser, syndrome of obstruction in, James J. Waring and W. C. Black, XLIX, 145; D, 160 W. B. Soper, D, XLIX, 160 P. D. White, D, XLIX, 159 Claytor, T. A., a case of heart block with Adams-Stokes syndrome, XLVII, 13 Cocke, C. H., tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 179 Cold, protection of extremities against, R. T. Grant, XLIX, 95 Colds, etiology of, XLIX, 247 Collapse therapy in treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis in negroes, Henry D. Chadwick, R. C. L. Markoe and Joseph Thomas, XLIX, 48 Coronary arteries, syphilis of, M. C. Pincoffs and W. S. Love, Jr., XLIX, 122 Coronary artery disease, facts based on survey of clinical and pathological records, Robert L. Levy, Howard Bruenn and Dorothy Kurtz, XLIX, 67 Bishop, Louis F., D, XLIX, 76 clinical diagnosis, XLIX, 69 etiologic types, XLIX, 68 increasing incidence of, XLIX, 71 pathological diagnosis, XLIX, 71 Craig, Frank A., tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 181 Crane, Bayard T., is after-care of tuberculosis a medical problem, XLIX, 254

DECOMPRESSION in malignant hypertension, XLVII, 100 Deformities, thoracic, Packard, E. N., XLVI, 225 Dextrocardia, King, D, XLVIII, 145 Lloyd, XLVIII, 138 Digitalis, therapeutic indications for, T. Frazer, XLVI, 113 Displacements, visceral, Packard, E. N., XLVI, 225 Dochez, Alphonse R., acute infection of respiratory tract, XLIX, 245; D, 253 experimental upper respiratory infection in anthropoid apes, XLVI, 31 Dowden, C. W. and McNeill, C., a clinical study of blood and hemoglobin, XLVIII, 1 Draper, George and Grace A. Touraine, abstract of paper on the migrainous patient, XLIX, 27; D, 32 chronic arthritis, D, XLIX, 24 Dunham, Kennon, tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 179

EDSON, Carroll Everett, memorial notice, XLVI, xlviii Emotional states, relationship of, to organic disease, Fremont-Smith, XLVIII, 62 Alton, XLVIII, D, 70 Gordon, XLVIII, D, 71 Hamman, XLVIII, D, 71 Hawes, XLVIII, D, 68 INDEX 5

Paullin, XLVIII, D, 67 Pincoffs, XLVIII, D, 70 Pratt, XLVIII, D, 70 Ringer, XLVIII, D, 69 Emphysema, generalized, subcutaneous, secondary to pathological fracture of a rib in advanced pulmonary tuberculosis, Browning, C. C., XLVII, 253 Empyema, acute, Locke, E. A., XLVI, 138 Endocarditis, in undulant fever, D, XLVI, 13 Epituberculosis, XLIX, 45 Erythrocytometry, clinical value of, XLVII, 74 Evans F. A., 'respiratory infections, D, XLVIII, 82 some factors in metabolism of importance in obesity, XLVI, 76 Experimental upper respiratory infections in anthropoid apes, Dochez, A. R., XLVI, 31 Eye, the relation of, to some nutritional diseases, Ramsey, G. S., XLVI, 80

FAT splitting and soap formation, XLIX, 188 Feces, fat content, XLIX, 186 weight of, XLI, 192 Finland, M., Robey, W. H., and Heimann, H., the effect of tonsillectomy on the occurrence and course of acute polyarthritis, XLVIII, 84 Flinn, J. W., and Flinn, R. S., bird's-eye view of the histo-pathology of tuber- culosis and its reflection in the differential blood count, XLVI, 204 Foci of infection and vaccine therapy in non-tuberculous peribronchitis, Meader, C. N., XLVI, 53 Ford, Willis E., memorial notice, XLVII, liv Forster, A. M., tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 178 Frazer, Thompson, memorial notice, XLVIII, xlv what are the therapeutic indications for digitalis, XLVI, 113 Fremont-Smith, Maurice, relationships between emotional states and organic disease, XLVIII, 62 Funk, E. H. and Clerf, L. H., can an early diagnosis of primary carcinoma of the lung be made with reasonable certainty, XLVIII, 179 memorial notice, XLIX, xlix

GALEN, a day in the life of, Klotz, W. C., XLVII, 265 Garvin, A. H., the clinical and functional termination of surgical tuberculosis, XLVIII, 147 Gastric carcinoma, XLIX, 59, 60, 61, 62 Gastritis, in its relation to other disease, Miller, T. Grier, XLIX, 57 Hurst, A. F., D, XLIX, 65 Ghon tubercle, XLIX, 39 Goitre, exopthalmic and solar radiation, Smith, XLVIII, 229 Gordon, A. H., emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 71 6 INDEX

mononucleosis, D, XLVII, 252 pericardial effusion in myxedema, D, XLVII, 70 Gorham, L. W. and Ordway, Thos., undulant fever, a report of fifteen cases, XLVI, 6 and Ordway, T., Jacobsen, V. C. and Hosoi, K., the pathology of cardiac infarction, XLVIII, 105 and Randles, F. S., Dresbach, M., rupture of the auricle of the heart, XLIX, 77 psittacosis, D, XLVI, 29 wounds of heart, D, XLVIII, 257 Grant, Ronald T., protection of extremities against cold, XLIX, 95 Griffin, W. A., undulant fever, D, XLVI, 12

HABLISTON, C. C., intrathoracic malignancy, XLVII, 221 Haden, R. L., clinical value of determination of the size of the red blood cell, XLVII, 74 treatment of chronic atrophic (rheumatoid) arthritis, XLIX, 5; D, 25 Hamman, L. V., chronic tonsillitis, D, XLVIII, 102 emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 71 president's address, XLVIII, xxxi Hance, Irwin Howell, memorial notice, XLVII, li Howes, J. B., a survey of tuberculosis work in private practice in a large city, XLVI, 280 emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 68 Heart block, XLVII, 13 Heart, relation of functional disturbance to the pituitary gland, Perkins, Jay, XLVI, 95 rupture of the auricle of, Gorham, L. W., Randles, F. S., Dresbach, M., XLIX, 77 stab wounds of, Porter, XLVIII, 247 valves, blood supply of, XLVII, 1 wounds of, Gorham, D, XLVIII, 257 Waring, D, XLVIII, 258 Wolferth, D, XLVIII, 256 Heat, causes of deaths from, in Mass. Shattuck, George C. and Hilferty, Mar- garet M., XLIX, 161 clothing, housing, habits in, XLIX, 175 contributory causes of deaths, XLIX, 181 death rates, XLIX, 168-181 exhaustion, primary, XLIX, 178 hyperpyrexia, XLIX, 163, 183 waves, in Boston, XLIX, 164 Heise, F. H., blood sedimentation, D, XLVIII, 49 Helium, use of, in pneumothorax, Parfitt, D, XLVI, 251 Hemolytic streptococcus infection, Nicholson, XLVIII, 73 INDEX 7

Hemoptysis, Kinghorn, D, XLVII, 199 Lemon, D, XLVII, 199 pneumothorax for, Parfitt, XLVI, 242 'Hemorrhage, prognosis and treatment in pulmonary tuberculosis, Bruns, E. H., XLVII, 183 Hernia, diaphragmatic, Hamman, XLVIII, xxxviii Hodgkins disease, Pepper, D, XLVIII, 135 Hurst, A. F., gastritis in relation to other disease, D, XLIX, 65 Hydrothorax, Kinghorn, D, XLVIII, 124 encapsulated, Austrian, C. R., XLVIII, 105 Hypertension, malignant, Pincoffs, D, XLVII, 114 malignant, Porter, XLVII, 115 Hypopituitarism, XLVI, 96

INTERLOBAR exudate, Hamman, XLVIII, xxxv

JACKSON, H., Jr., some little appreciated aspects of malignant lymphoma, XLVIII, 126 Jennings, A. F., focal infection of teeth, D, XLIX, 225 Jennings, C. G., chronic arthritis, D, XLIX, 23

KEIDEL, A., syphilitic aortitis, D, XLVIII, 28 Kern, Richard A., chronic paranasal sinus infection, XLIX, 203 King, J. T., dextrocardia, D, XLVIII, 145 psittacosis, the clinical picture of, XLVI, 15 Kinghorn, H. M., air embolus, D, XLVII, 157 classification of rales, XLVI, 167 hemoptysis, D, XLVII, 199 hydrothorax, D, XLVIII, 124 lung abscess, D, XLVI, 155 migrainous patient, D, XLIX, 31 pleurisy, D, XLVIII, 156 tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 176 Klotz, W. C., a day in the life of Galen, XLVII, 265

LAWRENCE, C. H., systemic conditions influencing human fertility, XLVI, 62 Lemon, W. S., hemoptysis, D, XLVII, 199 pulmonary neoplasms, D, XLVII, 230 Levy, Robert L., Howard Bruenn, and Dorothy Kurtz, coronary artery disease, XLIX, 67 Lipiodol, in bronchography, Amberson and Riggins, XLVIII, 169 use of, Miller, J. A., D, XLVIII, 177 Litchfield, Lawrence, memorial notice, XLVI, xlv Literature, prescription of, Webb, XLVI, 262 Lloyd, John J., dextrocardia, a report of six cases, XLVIII, 138 8 INDEX

Locke, E. A., acropachy, D, XLVIII, 225 acute empyema, XLVI, 138 Lung, accessory lobes, Bray, D, XLVIII, 167 carcinoma of, Miller, J. A., D, XLVIII, 182 abscess, H. Kinghorn, D, XLVI, 155 localization of, Byers and Bethune, XLVI, 157 Lymph node, enlargement with mononucleosis, Sprunt, T. P., XLVII, 248 Lymphoma, malignant, Jackson, XLVIII, 126

MALIGNANCY, intrathoracic, Habliston, C. C., XLVII, 221 Malignant hypertension, XLVII, 86 Margolies, A. and Wolferth, C. C., the early diastolic snap in mitral stenosis, XLVI, 87 Mayer, E., nutritional therapy of tuberculosis, XLVII, 259 McCann, W. S. and Stephens, D. J., clinical conditions associated with sclerosis of the pulmonary arteries, XLVII, 3 McGinn, Sylvester and Paul D. White, clinical observations on aortic stenosis, XLIX, 144 McNeill, C. and Dowden, C. W., a clinical study of blood iron and hemoglobin, XLVIII, 1 McPhedran, F. M., the relative importance of the indices of activity in the su- pervision of pulmonary tuberculosis in children, XLVI, 120 Meader, C. N., foci of infection and vaccine therapy in non-tuberculous peri- bronchitis, XLVI, 53 Migrainous patient, abstract of paper on the, Touraine, G. A., and Draper, George, XLIX, 27; D, 32 Kinghorn, H. M., D, XLIX, 31 Amoss, H. L., D, XLIX, 32 Miller, S. R., D, XLIX, 32 diet in, XLIX, 32 eye-strain in, XLIX, 32 morphology in, XLIX, 28 psychological characteristics of, XLIX, 27, 30 Miller, J. A., acropachy, D, XLVIII, 226 carcinoma of lung, D, XLVIII, 182 use of lipiodol, D, XLVIII, 177 Miller, R. T., surgical tuberculosis, D, XLVIII, 155 unroofing tuberculous cavities, D, XLVIII, 204 Miller, S. R., migrainous patient, D, XLIX, 32 Miller, T. Grier, gastritis in relation to other diseases, XLIX, 57 Minot, G. R., aortic stenosis, D, XLIX 144 president's address, the importance of art and general principles of treatment in chronic arthritis, XLIX, 1 the importance of the treatment of pernicious anemia on a quantitative basis, XLVIII, 31 INDEX ()

vitamin deficiency, D, XLIX, 237 Mitral stenosis, early diastolic snap in, Margolies, A. and Wolferth, C. C., XLVI, 87 Monod, Gustave Jean Philippe, memorial notice, XLIX, xliii Mononucleosis, Gorham, D, XLVII, 251 Gordon, D, XLVII, 252 with lymph-node enlargement, Sprunt, T. P., XLVII, 248 Montgomery, Charles M., memorial notice, XLVIII, xlvi Morgan, H. J., Hillstrom, H. T. and Blitch, C. G., early (subclinical) syphilitic aortitis: an evaluation of radiographic diagnostic methods, XLVIII, 22 Myocardial insufficiency, delirium in association with, Andrus, E. C. and Padget, Paul, XLIX, 100 Pincoffs, M. C., D, XLIX, 120 Sprague, H. B., D, XLIX, 120

NEGROES, pulmonary tuberculosis, collapse therapy, XLIX, 48-55 Nichols, Stainsy and R. I. Cecil, bacteriological studies on rheumatic fever and infectious arthritis, XLVI, 36 Nicholson, S. T., Jr., an outbreak of hemolytic streptococcus infection in a boys' school, XLVIII, 73

OBESITY, metabolism in, Evans, F. A., XLVI, 76 Ordway, Thos. and Gorham, L. W., undulant fever, a report of fifteen cases, XLVI, 6 Osteomalacia, Snowden, XLVIII, 54

PACKARD, Edward N., pathological and roent-enolo! ical comparison of pulmo- nary tuberculosis in humans and rabbits, D, XLIX, 55 thoracic deformities and visceral displacements without pleural adhesions, XLVI, 225 Parfitt, C. D., continuous instead of interrupted artificial pneumothorax for the control of hemoptysis, XLVI, 242 use of helium in pneumothorax, D, XLVI, 251 Paullin, J. E., emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 67 Pepper, 0. H. P., Hodgkins disease, D, XLVIII, 135 malignant hypertension simulating cerebral lesions, XLVII, 86 Pericardial effusion, White, D, XLVII, 68 in myxedema, Gordon, D, XLVII, 70 Pericardium, adherent and Pick's syndrome, Sprague and White, XLVIII, 260 Perkins, J., asthma in pregnancy, D, XLVI, 74 the relation of functional heart disturbance to the pituitary gland, XLVI, 05 Pernicious anemia, treatment, Minot, XLVIII, 31 Phenolsulphonephthalein, normal curve of excretion, LXVII, 109 Phrenicectomy, XLVIII, 189 Phthisis florida, XLIX, 37 10 INDEX

Physiotherapy, in chronic atrophic arthritis, XLIX, 6, 11 Picks disease, Stroud, D., XLVIII, 274 Picks syndrome and adherent pericardium, Sprague and White, XLVIII, 260 Piersol, George Morris, president's address, XLVII, xxv Pincoffs, M. C. and Love, W. S., Jr., syphilis of coronary arteries, XLIX, 122 delirium with myocardial insufficiency, D, XLIX, 120 emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 70 malignant hypertension, D, XLVII, 114 syphilitic aortitis, D, XLVIII, 29 Pleural adhesions, Soper, W. B., D, XLVI, 240 Pleural shock, Trudeau, F. B., D, XLVII, 157 Pleurisy, Kinghorn, D, XLVIII, 156 Pneumopericardium, therapeutic, for tuberculous pericarditis, XLVII, 61 Pneumothorax, in children, XLVI, 122 in hemoptysis, Parfitt, XLVI, 242 re-expansion, D, Lyman, XLVIII, 243 Price, XLVIII, 239 Pollinosis, sinus findings in, XLIX, 206 Polyarthritis, acute, tonsillectomy in, Finland, Robey and Heimann, XLVIII, 84 Porter, W. B., cardiac infarction, D, XLVIII, 112 cholesteatoma of pleura, D, XLVII, 247 non-fatal stab wounds of the ventricles with electrocardiographic signs of coronary thrombosis and absence of anginal pain, XLVIII, 247 vagus syncope, D, XLVII, 158 Porter, G. D., health among university students, XLVI, 258 Pratt, Joseph H., a study of steatorrhoea, XLIX, 185 blood sedimentation, D, XLVIII, 50 chronic tonsillitis, D, XLVIII, 101 emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 69, 70 vitamin deficiency, D, XLIX, 237 P'resident's address, Minot, George R., XLIX, 1 Price, J. W., re-expansion of artificial pulmonary collapse, XLVIII, 239 Psittacosis, Gorham, L. W., D, XLVI, 29 the clinical picture of, King, John T., Jr., XLVI, 15 Pulmonary arteries, sclerosis of, XLVII, 3 Pulmonary arteriosclerosis, Thomas, D, XLVII, 54 Pulmonary neoplasms, Lemon, D, XLVII, 230 Piulmonary tuberculosis, hemorrhage in, Bruns, E. H., XLVII, 183

RACKEMANN, F. M., acute infection of respiratory tract, D, XLIX, 253 the nature of allergy, XLVI, 72 and Simon, F. A., Simon, M. A., Scully, M. A., further observations on the nature of allergy, XLIX, 209 Riles, classification, Kinghorn, XLVI, 167 Ramsey, G. S., the relation of the eye to some nutritional diseases, XLVI, 80 INDEX 11

Rat-bite fever, Archibald, E., D, XLVI, 5 a case of, Steiner, XLVI, 1 Respiratory infections, Evans, D, XLVIII, 82 tract, acute infection of, Dochez, R., XLIX, 245; D, 253 Rackemann, F. M., D, XLIX, 253 Shurly, B. R., D, XLIX, 253 Rheumatic fever and infectious arthritis, bacteriological studies on, Nichols, Stainsy, and R. I. Cecil, XLVI, 36 fever in Virginia (1), Wood, J. E., Jr. and Hart, A. D., XLIX, 238 Richardson, Charles Williamson, memorial notice, XLVI, xxxv Ringer, P. H., emotional states and organic disease, D, XLVIII, 69 tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 177 Robinson, William Duffield, memorial notice, XLVII, xlii Rochester, Delancey, memorial notice, XLVI, xlvii

SAWYER, J. P., tuberculosis convalescence, D, XLVII, 180 Scalenotomy, Amberson, D, XLVIII, 205 Schleiter, H. T. and Thomas, A. B., observations on venous pressure, particu- larly in the presence of arterial hypertension, XLVII, 86 Schmidt, diet, XLIX, 191 Sedimentation rate in chronic atrophic arthritis, XLIX, 5, 7, 8, 10, 21 Shattuck, George C. and Hilferty, Margaret M., causes of deaths from heat in Massachusetts, XLIX, 161 Shurly, B. R., acute infection of respiratory tract, D, XLIX, 253 vitamin deficiency, D, XLIX, 236 Sinus infection, chronic paranasal, Kern, R. A. and Schenck, H. P., XLIX, 203 Smith, F. Janney, aortic stenosis, D, XLIX, 144 Smith, David T. and Smith, Susan Gower, relation of vitamin deficiency to focal infection, XLIX, 226; D, 236 Smith, J. H., the influence of solar radiation on the distribution and prevalence of exopthalmic goitre in the United States, XLVIII, 229 Snowden, R. R., osteomalacia, report of a case, XLVIII, 54 Soper, W. B., accessory lobes of the human lungs, XLVIII, 160 obstruction in lesser circulation, D, XLIX, 160 pleural adhesion, D. XLVI, 240 pulmonary asbestiosis, XLVI, 210 Spondylitis, hypertrophic, XLIX, 16 Marie-Strumpell type, XLIX, 19 Sprague, H. B., Burch, H. A. and White, P. D., adherent pericardium and Picks syndrome, an autopsy study, XLVIII, 260 Ernlund, C. H., Albright, F., clinical aspects of persistent right aortic root, XLIX, 83 acropachy, D, XLVIII, 226 delirium with myocardial insufficiency, D, XLIX, 120 Sprunt, T. P., chronic lymph node enlargement with mononucleosis, XLVII, 248 12 INDEX

Stainsy, Nichols and R. I. Cecil, bacteriological studies on rheumatic fever and infectious arthritis, XLVI, 36 Steatorrhoea, a study of, Pratt, Joseph H., XLIX, 185 fat absorption in, XLIX, 193 carbohydrate absorption in, XLIX, 199 nitrogen absorption in, XLIX, 197 Schmidt diet test, XLIX, 199 Stein, H. M., cholesterol-thorax (cholesterin pleurisy) with report of a case, XLVII, 234 Steiner, Walter, a case of rat-bite fever, XLVI, 1 focal infection of the teeth, XLIX, 217; D, 225 Stewart, D. A., some phases of the epidemiology of tuberculosis, XLVI, 252 Stroud, W. D., Picks disease, D, XLVIII, 274 and Bromer, A. W., familial study of cardiovascular disease, XLVI, 188 Sun-stroke, primary, XLIX, 178 Swan, Will Howard, memorial notice by Bortree, L. W., XLIX, xliv Syphilitic aortitis, radiographic diagnostic methods, Morgan, Hillstrom and Blitch, XLVIII, 22 Systemic conditions influencing human fertility, Lawrence, C. H., XLVI, 62

TAYLOR, Henry Longstreet, memorial notice, XLVIII, xlviii John Madison, memorial notice, XLVIII, xli Teeth, focal infection of, and their subsequent extraction, Steiner, W. R., XLIX, 217; D, 225 Brown, Lawrason, D, XLIX, 225 Jennings, A. F., D, XLIX, 225 chronic periapical infection, XLIX, 223 chronic pulp infection, XLIX, 223 pyorrhoea alveolaris, XLIX, 223 residual alveolar infection, XLIX, 223 Thomas, John D., pulmonary arteriosclerosis, D, XLVII, 54 Thomas, H. M., Jr., acropachy, or secondary subperiosteal new-bone formation, XLVIII, 208 Thoracoplasty, XLVIII, 189 Archibald, D, XLVI, 48 in the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis, the present status of, Bruins, E. A., XLVI, 38 Thrombosis, pulmonary (obstruction in lesser circulation), XLIX, 148 Tonsillitis, chronic, Hamman, D, XLVIII, 102 Pratt, D, XLVIII, 101 Tonsillectomy in acute polyarthritis, Finland, Robey and Heimann, XLVIII, 84 Touraine, Grace A. and Draper, George, abstract of paper on the migrainous patient, XLIX, 27 Trudeau, F. B., pleural shock, D, XLVII, 157 Tuberculosis, age of onset, XLVII, 164 INDEX 13

after-care a medical problem? Crane, Bayard T., XLIX, 254 of curable cases, XLIX, 255 of dying cases, XLIX, 256 of middle group, XLIX, 257 bovine, XLVI, 134 childhood, in Denver, Waring, J. J., XLVI, 129 convalescence, Browning, D, XLVII, 180 Cocke, D, XLVII, 179 Craig, XLVII, 181 Dunham, D, XLVII, 179 Forster, D, XLVII, 178 Kinghorn, D, XLVII, 176 Ringer, D, XLVII, 177 Sawyer, D, XLVII, 180 Wood, D, XLVII, 182 differential blood count in, Flinn, XLVI, 204 epidemiology of, XLVI, 252 histopathology of, Flinn and Flinn, XLVI, 204 in children, McPhedran, F. M., XLVI, 120 industrial colony, Rutland, Mass., XLIX, 262 nutritional therapy of, Mayer E., XLVII, 259 private practice, Hawes, XLVI, 280 pulmonary, pathological and roentgenological comparison of, in humans and in rabbits, Bray, H. A., XLIX, 34 Packard, E. N., D, XLIX, 55 sanatorium results, XLIX, 258 surgical, Mayer, XLVIII, D, 157 Miller, R. I., D, XLVIII, 155 late results, Garvin, XLVIII, 147 village settlement, XLIX, 259 Tuberculous cavities, pulmonary unroofing of, Bruns and Casper, XLVIII, 185 pericarditis, with effusion, treatment, XLVII, 61 Tyramin, XLVII, 48

UNDULANT fever, Griffin, W. A., D, XLVI, 12 a report of fifteen cases, Gorham and Ordway, XLVI, 6 endocarditis in, D, XLVI, 13 University students, health among, Porter, XLVI, 258 Unroofing tuberculosis cavities, Miller, R. T., D, XLVIII, 204

VAGUS syncope, Porter, D, XLVII, 158 Vascular bed, reduction in, XLIX, 158 crises, White, D, XLVII, 115 Venous pressure, XLVII, 86 14 INDEX

Vitamin deficiency, relation of, to focal infection, Smith, D. T. and Smith, S. G., XLIX, 226; D, 236 vitamin A, XLIX, 226 vitamin B, XLIX, 229 vitamin C, XLIX, 230 vitamin D, XLIX, 230 vitamin E, XLIX, 231 vitamin G, XLIX, 231 Brown, Lawrason, D, XLIX, 236 Minot, G. R., D, XLIX, 237 Pratt, J. H., D, XLIX, 237 Shurly, B. R., D, XLIX, 236 Wood, Ed., Jr., D, XLIX, 237

WARD, Robert DeCourcy, memorial notice, XLVIII, xlii Waring, James J. and Black, W. C., the syndrome of obstruction in the lesser circulation, XLIX, 145 childhood tuberculosis in Denver, XLVI, 129 wounds of heart, D, XLVIII, 258 Wearn, Joseph T., cardiac infarction, D, XLVIII, 111 Webb, G. B., presidential address, XLVI, xxvi the prescription of literature, XLVI, 262 White, Paul D. and McGinn, Sylvester, clinical observation on aortic stenosis, XLIX, 132; D, 144 obstruction in lesser circulation, D, XLIX, 160 pericardial effusion, D, XLVII, 68 vascular crisis, D, XLVII, 115 Williams, Herbert Franklin, memorial notice, XLVIII, xliii Wilson, Gordon, acropachy, D, XLVIII, 226 memorial notice by Lyman, D. R., XLIX, xlvi Wolferth, C. C., wounds of heart, D, XLVIII, 256 and Margolies, A., the early diastolic snap in mitral stenosis, XLVI, 87 Wood, Nathaniel K., tuberculosis, convalescence, D, XLVII, 182 Wood, J. Edwin Jr. and Hart, A. D., rheumatic fever in Virginia, XLIX, 238 vitamin deficiency, D, XLIX, 237