ious ways in
which animals may produce or carry disease.
The Oversea Transport of Insect-borne Diseases. Editorial in
_Jour. Trop. Med. & Hyg._, XI, Jan. 15, 1908, pp. 22-23. Points out
the danger of yellow fever, plague and other diseases being borne
overseas by infected insects.
The Society for the Destruction of Vermin. Editorial in _Jour.
Trop. Med. & Hyg._, XI, Apr. 15, 1908, p. 124. Tells of
organization of such society and its purposes.
INDEX
Adams, S.H., 132.
Advisory Committee, 146.
Agramonte, Dr. Aristides, 123.
Alimentary canal, fly larvae in, 49.
Amoeba, 19.
Anopheles,
adults, 91;
eggs, 92;
habits of adults, 94;
larvae, 78, 79, 93;
pupae, 93;
resting position, 92;
species in U.S., 92.
Anthrax, 44;
and flies, 70.
Arthropoda, 26.
Asexual reproduction, 111.
Bacillus,
anthracis, 44;
icteroides, 124;
leprae, 171;
pestis, 150.
Bacillus carriers, 66.
Back-swimmers, 100.
Bacteria, 15;
saprophytic and parasitic, 17;
effect on host, 18;
dissemination, 18.
Bedbugs, 54, 147.
Banks, Nathan, 34.
Bell-animalcule, 22.
Berne, 51.
Birds as enemies of mosquitoes, 99.
Black-flies, 46.
Blackheads, 35.
Blow-flies, 48.
Blue, Dr. Rupert, 143.
Blue-bottle flies, 48.
Bot-flies, 50.
Break-bone fever, 169.
Breeze-fly, 44.
Buffalo-gnats, 46.
Calliphora vomitoria, 48.
Camphor, for mosquitoes, 102.
Cancer, 36.
Carroll, Dr. James, 123.
Castor-bean tick, 27.
Cattle tick, 29.
Cedar oil, for mosquitoes, 102.
Ceratophyllus,
faciatus, 153;
acutus, 156.
Cesspools, 72.
Chigger, 53.
Chigger-flea, 53.
Chigo, 30, 39.
Chigoe, 53.
Cholera, 68.
Chrysomyia macellaria, 47.
Cimex,
lectularis, 54;
rotundatus, 173.
Contagious diseases, 8.
Conjugation, 20.
Cooley, Prof. R.A., 33.
Craig, Dr. C.F., 118.
Ctenocephalus,
canis, 154;
felis, 154.
Culex,
fatigans, 96, 170;
pipiens, 98.
Dengue, 169.
Dermatobia cyaniventris, 51.
Dermatophilus penetrans, 53.
Diarrhea, 69.
Diptera, 43.
Diving beetles, 100.
Dragon-flies, 99.
Dysentery, 20.
Eggs,
of flies, 63;
of mosquitoes, 77;
of Anopheles, 92.
Egyptian opthalmia, 52.
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