The Lake Champlain and Lake George valleys, Vol. III, Part 9

Author: Lamb, Wallace E. (Wallace Emerson), 1905-1961
Publication date: 1940
Publisher: New York : The American historical company, inc.
Number of Pages: 882


USA > Vermont > The Lake Champlain and Lake George valleys, Vol. III > Part 9


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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THOMAS ARTHUR LEAHY-Lake Placid not only enjoys leader- ship among the American summer and winter resorts, but occupies a pre- eminent position among the pleasure centers of the world. The great beauty


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of the twin lakes-Placid and Mirror-nestling like rare gems in the very heart of the Adirondack Mountains, the magnificent surrounding terrain, the facilities for sports, the easy accessibility of the section, have combined to make it "a veritable summer paradise." Lakeside Inn is one of its favorably known centers, magnificently situated upon the shores of Mirror Lake, com- manding marvelous views of both lakes and the contiguous mountain country. Its proprietor, Thomas Arthur Leahy, Adirondack born and reared, and a hotel man here since the turn of the present century, is one of the best known and esteemed Bonifaces of this charming region of New York State.


He first saw the light of day at Mineville, Essex County, April 6, 1877, son of Andrew and Margaret (Hefferan) Leahy, the former a native of Troy, New York, and the mother born in Montreal, Canada. Both parents are deceased. He was educated in the public schools of Mineville and the Sher- man Collegiate Institute, from which he was graduated with the class of 1895. He then taught for awhile before entering Plattsburg State Normal. In 1900 he accepted a position as clerk and bookkeeper at the American House, Lake Placid, where he remained for six years prior to purchasing the Northwoods Inn, at Lake Placid. During the following fourteen years that he operated this establishment, he increased its capacity to more than double, and achieved a wide reputation for both himself and his house. In 1920 Mr. Leahy disposed of Northwoods Inn and purchased Lakeside Inn, of which mention has already been made. He has repeated the best features of his record during his proprietorship during the past eighteen years and has a place of which both he and his clientele are proud. The inn is restricted to one hundred guests, but there are also attractive cottages furnishing accommodations. Practically all land and water sports are available on the grounds to guests, except golf, and Lakeside Inn even provides for this by special connections with a nearby sports course of full size. Golf is the favorite game played by the proprietor.


How prominent Thomas Arthur Leahy is in his vocation is indicated by the variety of affiliations he has with colleagues in the same line of business, and the offices he has filled in his trade organizations. He is president of the Adirondack Resorts Association ; a member of the American Hotel Associa- tion; executive committeeman of the New York State Hotel Association; is a charter member of the Lake Placid Chamber of Commerce and was its presi- dent during the period that the noted White Face Mountain Memorial High- way was secured. He served on the committee which brought the winter competitions of the Third Olympic Games to Lake Placid and worked effi- ciently in making these events a huge success.


Mr. Leahy has long been keenly interested in civic and political affairs. From 1906 to 1912 he was a member of the local Board of Education, for half the time president of the board. From 1912 to 1936 he has been a justice


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of the peace, and during 1936-37-38 was a member of the New York House of Representatives, where he served upon the Committee on Conservation, Committee of Public Service, Committee on Internal Affairs, and Committee on Labor and Industry. At the session of 1938 he was appointed acting chair- man of the Committee on Labor and Industry; and a member of the com- mission for the celebration of the memory of Father Jogues. Mr. Leahy is a member of the Republican Assembly Caucus Committee, and for more than two decades has been a member of the Republican County Committee. He has been official delegate to several Republican State Conventions, and is a member of the World's Fair, to be held in New York City, in 1939, Hotel Advisory Committee. Fraternally, he is affiliated with the Lake Placid Council, No. 1827, of the Knights of Columbus, of which he is a Past Grand Knight. During the World War period, Mr. Leahy was a "four-minute" speaker and prominent in the various drives for "Liberty" and other govern- ment loans and the raising of funds for the humanitarian agencies of the time. He attends St. Agnes Catholic Church, Lake Placid.


In 1903 Thomas Arthur Leahy married Ada C. Glad, a native of Bloom- ingdale, Essex County, New York, and they are the parents of three children : I. Gladys Margaret, graduate of Sherman Park Seminary, who married Robert Randall, of Lake Placid, and is the mother of a daughter, Jean Adair. 2. Eva Vera, who is associated with her father in Lakeside Inn. 3. Grayce Rite, a graduate of Sherman Park Seminary.


EUGENE W. P. SHEA-Since his admission to the New York bar, Eugene W. P. Shea has been engaged in the practice of law at Lake Placid. Although one of the younger lawyers of the community, he has been active in a variety of professional connections and in other phases of Lake Placid life.


Mr. Shea was born at Lake Placid on March 9, 1912, son of James and Grace A. (Obrey) Shea. His father, who was born in Essex County, New York, is engaged in the meat and provision business at Lake Placid. His mother, Grace A. (Obrey) Shea, is a native of Springfield, Massachusetts.


Eugene W. P. Shea received his preliminary education in local public schools and at Mount Assumption Institute in Plattsburg. Afterward he entered Dartmouth College as a member of the class of 1934, continuing until his junior year, when he matriculated at Fordham University Law School in New York. From this institution he was graduated in 1936 with the degree of Bachelor of Laws and in the following year was admitted to the New York bar. His activities have since centered at Lake Placid, where he has made a successful start in his career and in building up his practice. Mr. Shea's offices are located at 99 Main Street, Lake Placid. He is a member of the


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Essex County Bar Association and of other local organizations, including the Chamber of Commerce and Lake Placid Council, Knights of Columbus, of which he is Chancellor. He has made a hobby of politics and is active in the Republican party organization and in the Republican Club of North Elba, of which he is a member. In addition to these connections, Mr. Shea is affiliated with the Gamma Eta Gamma Fraternity and Beta Theta Pi Fraternity. He is a member of St. Agnes' Roman Catholic Church and finds his principal recreation in fishing and hunting.


EDWARD F. STONE-In Keeseville, Essex County, New York, Edward F. Stone enjoys the distinction of being the oldest druggist in town, having owned and operated his present business for the past thirty-six years.


Mr. Stone is a native son of Keeseville and was born January 16, 1876, the son of William M. and Carmina (Merchant) Stone. The father was a machinist, working in the local roller-mills and nail manufactories, and he invented many of the mechanical devices used in the making of horseshoe nails. In his later life he was a traveling salesman and for a year was asso- ciated with his son in the retail drug business. He is now deceased, but his widow, a native of Canada, was still living in 1939.


Edward F. Stone attended the Keeseville public schools and after his graduation went to Albany (New York) Business College, where he gained a fundamental knowledge of office routine and general business practice. Returning to his home town he became associated with A. G. Fletcher in the grocery business, continuing here until 1901 when, in partnership with his father, he established the first drug store in Keeseville. William M. Stone retired from the firm a year later, and his son has continued the business for himself ever since.


Active in local politics, Mr. Stone is a member of the Republican party's town committee, has served twenty-five years as a member of the local Board of Education, three years as member of the Library Board here, eighteen years as town clerk of the town of Chesterfield (which includes parts of the villages of Clintonville and Keeseville), and seven years as member of the Essex County Board of Supervisors. He is a communicant and trustee of the Roman Catholic Church of St. John the Baptist, and affiliated with Plattsburg Council, No. 255, Knights of Columbus.


In 1899 Mr. Stone married Adeline M. Pine, a native of nearby Clinton- ville, and they are the parents of four children : 1. Mildred L. 2. Blanche E., married to Adolphus Brelia of Keeseville. 3. Velma A. 4. Warren E., attend- ing Albany College of Pharmacy, class of 1940. Edward F. Stone's principal diversions are civic affairs and stamp collecting.


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FREDERICK HENRY HEISE, M. D .- The professional career of Dr. Frederick Henry Heise is of noteworthy interest and importance. He is outstanding among the leaders in our country in the fight against the "white plague" ; is a voluminous and authentic writer on tuberculosis ; and is himself a proof of the efficiency of the methods he advocates.


Dr. Heise was born at Baltimore, Maryland, November 18, 1883, son of John Henry and Katherine (Ernst) Heise, both natives of Germany and both of whom are deceased. Mr. Heise was a wood box manufacturer for many years prior to his death. Dr. Heise was educated in the public schools of his birthplace, the Baltimore City College and the University of Maryland. He received his medical degree in 1907, but during the following year went to the Trudeau Sanatorium in the Adirondacks for his health. He remained to par- ticipate in endeavors of this remarkable institution, founded for the treatment of incipient tuberculosis. In 1909 he was made assistant physician assigned to the Trudeau Laboratory. In 1912, three years prior to the death of Dr. Trudeau, he became resident physician of the Sanatorium, a post he filled with great skill until 1929, when he was made medical director.


Dr. Heise, from September, 1911, to April, 1912, also was assistant resident physician at the Maryland Tuberculosis Sanatorium, an experience which resulted in one of his first technical articles, "What Is Maryland Doing in Her Fight Against Tuberculosis," published in the "Maryland Medical Journal," July, 1912. For the past thirty-five years he has kept in touch with all the scientific research that is adding to the knowledge of tuberculosis, while making his own valuable contributions, with colleagues active in his field ; and because of his own achievements has been drafted for public service by professional and other organizations.


Dr. Heise is a member of the American Medical Association ; a past presi- dent of the American Sanatorium Association; former vice-president and former director of the National Tuberculosis Association; a member of the American Clinical and the Climatological Association; chairman of the Diag- nostic Standards Committee of the National Tuberculosis Association ; mem- ber of the National Tuberculosis Association Research Committee; the Sar- anac Lake Medical Society ; Medical Board of the Saranac General Hospital ; member of the Franklin County Medical Society and the New York State Medical Association. He is an instructor in the Trudeau School of Tuber- culosis ; and a member of the Saranac Lake Society for the Control of Tuber- culosis, and during the World War was a member of the Medical Advisory Board. At one time Dr. Heise was "question box" editor of "The Journal of the Outdoor Life," to which he was a contributor of many articles. He has had published a very large number of his writings, mainly technical in type and for fellow-scientists and physicians. A list of these is appended to this outline record.


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Fraternally, Dr. Heise is affiliated with Whiteface Mountain Lodge, No. 789, Free and Accepted Masons, and with all the bodies of the York Rite including the Franklin Commandery, No. 60, Knights Templar. Among his clubs are the Saranac Lake Fish and Game Club, and the Saranac Lake Curling Club, which indicates both summer and winter sports. He worships at the Presbyterian Church, of which he is an elder.


In 1914 Frederick Henry Heise, M. D., married Ethel Roberts, a native of New York State.


The publications of Dr. Heise are as follows :


I-"What is Maryland Doing in Her Fight Against Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Maryland Medical Journal, July, 1912, LV, No. 7, 167.


2-"Properly Regulated Rest and Exercise in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, Journal of the Outdoor Life, August, 1912, IX, No. 8, 175.


3-"Edward Jeuner," Fred H. Heise, Medical Century, Vol. XIX, No. 9, September, 1912, 266.


4-"The Bacteriology of the Blood in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Lawra- son Brown, Fred H Heise, S. A. Petroff, Transactions National Association Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, 1913, 344.


5-"The Occurrence and Importance in Treatment of Secondary Infec- tion in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, S. A. Petroff, Transactions National Association Study and Prevention of Tuber- culosis, 1913, 254.


6-"Food and Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Journal of the Outdoor Life, February, 1914, XI, No. 2, 33.


7-"An Attempt To Immunize Guinea Pigs Against Tuberculosis by the Use of Graduated, Repeated Doses of Living Tubercle Bacilli," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, S. A. Petroff, Journal Medical Research, July, 1914, XXX, 3, 475.


8-"Ambrose Pare," Fred H. Heise, Medical Pickwick, April, 1915.


9-"Ueber Das Vorkommen Von Tuberkel Basillen Im Blute Von Patien- ten Mit Lungentuberkulose," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, S. A. Petroff, Zeitschrift fur Tuberkulose, 1915, XXIV, No. 2, 97. -


IO-"Rest in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, The O'Door, 1915, 1, No. 7, 3.


II-"The X-Ray Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, H. L. Sampson, Interstate Medical Journal, 1915, XXII, No. 10, 1041.


12-"Observations on the Cutaneous Tuberculin Reaction in Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Am. J. Med. Sc., June, 1916, CLI, No. 6, 862.


13-"The Occurrence of Living Tubercle Bacilli in River Water Con- taminated by Sewage from a Health Resort," Lawrason Brown, S. A. Petroff, Fred H. Heise, Transactions National Association Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, 1916, 287.


14-"The Physics of Percussion and Auscultation of the Chest." Fred H. Heise, Medical Record, July 29, 1916.


15-"Prognosis in Tuberculosis from the Standpoint of the Occurrence of Hemoptysis and Tubercle Bacilli in the Sputum," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., July, 1917, I, No. 5, 280.


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16-"Observations on Prognosis," "Patient's Condition on the Tenth Anni- versary of His Discharge from the Sanatorium," Fred H. Heise, Annual Report, Medical Supplement, Trudeau Sanatorium, 1917.


17-"The Assistance of the X-Ray in the Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuber- culosis," Fred H. Heise, H. L. Sampson, New York State Journal of Medi- cine, November. 1917, XVII, No. 11, 499.


18-"A Comparison of Physical Signs, Symptoms and X-Ray Evidence Obtained in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, H. L. Sampson, Am. Rev. Tuberc., February, 1918, I, No. 12, 709.


19-"The Classification of Pulmonary Tuberculosis with a Comparative Analysis of the Different Methods Employed," Fred H. Heise, H. L. Samp- son, Am. J. Roentgen, March, 1918, V, No. 3, 139.


20-"The X-Ray Classification of Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, H. L. Sampson, Annual Report, Medical Supplement, Trudeau Sana- torium, 1918.


21-"A Study of Pulmonary and Pleural Annular Radiographic Shadows Together with Notes on Interlobar Fissures," H L. Sampson, Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, Am. Rev. Tuberc., January, 1919, II. No. 11, 664.


22-"A Study of the Effects of Typhoid Fever and Antityphoid Immuniza- tion on Pulmonary Tuberculosis," "History of a Typhoid Fever Epidemic at the Trudeau Sanatorium," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, S. A. Petroff, George E. Wilson, Am. Rev. Tuberc., February, 1919, II, No. 12, 717.


23-"The Conditions of Patients Twenty Years after Discharge from the Trudeau Sanatorium," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., October, 1919, III, No. 8, 497.


24-"A Preliminary Study of Clinical Activity," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, S A. Petroff, H. L. Sampson, Am. Rev. Tuberc., December, 1919, III, No. 10, 612.


25 .- "An Unusual Case of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Terminating in Spon- taneous Hemopneumothorax Following Artificial Pneumothorax." Fred H. Heise, Allen K. Krause, Am. Rev. Tuberc., February, 1920, III, No. 12, 788.


26 "Twenty-four Years Experience with the Subcutaneous Tuberculin Test," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., June, 1920, IV, No. 4, 254.


27-"Adrenalin Hypersensitiveness in Suspected and Definite Pulmonary Tuberculosis." Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, Transactions American Clinical & Climatological Association, June, 1920.


28-"The Classification of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Based Upon Svmp- toms and Physical and X-Ray Findings," Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, H. L. Sampson, Am. Rev. Tuberc., August, 1920, IV, No. 6, 417.


29-"The Occurrence of Intestinal Tuberculosis in Patients with Pul- monary Tuberculosis at the Trudeau Sanatorium," Lawrason Brown, H. L. Sampson, Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., August, 1920, IV, No. 6, 451.


30-"Points in the Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis : A Synopsis," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., September, 1920, IV, No. 7, 512.


31-"Influenza and Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, George Milan, Trudeau Sanatorium Medical Supplement, 1920.


32 -- "Prognosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Canadian Medical Association Journal, May, 1921.


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33 -- "The Effect of Six Weeks' Bed Rest Upon Patients Entering Tru- deau Sanatorium," Lawrason Brown and Fred H. Heise, National Tubercu- losis Association, Eighteenth Annual Meeting, 1922, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. VI, No. 10, December, 1922.


34-"A Study of the Occurrence of Hemoptysis, Pleurisy, Rales, Tubercle Bacilli and X-Ray Findings in One Thousand Consecutive Cases Admitted to the Trudeau Sanatorium," Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, National Tuber- culosis Association, Eighteenth Annual Meeting, 1922.


35-"The Intracutaneous Reaction in Tuberculosis to Glycerine Bouil- lon and Tuberculin," Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, National Tuberculosis Association, Eighteenth Annual Meeting, 1922.


36-"An Analysis of Cases Discharged Showing Presence, Absence, In- crease, Diminution, etc., of Rales ; Occurrence and Disappearance of Tubercle Bacilli and Changes in X-Ray Plates, Etc.," Fred H. Heise, Trudeau Sana- torium Medical Supplement, 1922.


37-"The Question of the Most Reliable Ausculatory Signs in the Diag- nosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. VIII, No. 3, November, 1923.


38-"A Case of Hydropneumopericardium in a Tuberculosis Individual During an Attack of Typhoid Fever," Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. VIII. No. 3, November, 1923.


39-"The Value of the Trudeau Sanatorium's Five Diagnostic Criteria of Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Negative Diagnosis," A Study of 264 Cases Admitted to the Sanatorium, Diagnosed as Nontuberculosis and Followed up from One to Seven Years, Lawrason Brown, Fred H. Heise, National Tuberculosis Association, Twentieth Annual Meeting, 1924, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. IX, No. 5, July, 1924.


40-"An Attempt To Classify by Means of the X-Ray Cases of Suspected and Definite Pulmonary Tuberculosis Showing Less Than a Definite Paren- chymatous X-Ray Lesion," A Preliminary Report, Fred H. Heise, Homer I .. Sampson, National Tuberculosis Association, Twentieth Annual Meeting, 1924.


4I-"Distribution of the Lesions," Fred H. Heise. Fortieth Annual Medi- cal Report of the Trudeau Sanatorium, October 31, 1924.


42 -- "The Diagnostic Value of Small Numbers of Tubercle Bacilli in the Sputum," Fred H. Heise, Fortieth Annual Medical Report of the Trudeau Sanatorium, October 31, 1924.


43-"The Present Condition of Patients Discharged from the Trudeau Sanatorium," Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, Tubercle. February. 1925.


44-"The Diagnostic and Prognostic Significance of Pleurisy in Pul- monary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Lawrason Brown, Forty-second An- nual Medical Report of the Trudeau Sanatorium, September 30, 1926, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. XVII, No. 5, May, 1928.


45-"The Progression of Lesions in Active Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Forty-second Annual Medical Report of the Trudeau Sana- torium, September 30, 1926, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. XVII, No. 5, May, 1928.


46-"Laennec's Contribution to Medicine," Fred H. Heise. (Not pub- lished.)


47-"Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise. The American Journal of Nursing. June, 1927.


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48-"Primary Pleural Mesothelioma," A Case of Pneumothorax and Mediastinal Hernia the First Symptoms, Fred H. Heise, Francis B. Trudeau, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. XVI, No. I, July, 1927.


49-"Rales in the Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. XVII, No. 4, April, 1928.


50-"Rales in the Prognosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. XVII, No. 4, April, 1928.


51-"Diagnosis," Lawrason Brown and Fred H. Heise. (Printed in "Bedside Diagnosis," Blumer, Vol. i, page 149, 1928; published by W. B. Saunders Company. )


52-"The Present Status of Vaccination in Tuberculosis," Lawrason Brown and Fred H. Heise. (Printed in "The George Blumer Edition of Billings-Forchheimer's Therapeusis of Internal Diseases," Supplement, page 138, 1929 ; published by D. Appleton and Company.)


53-"The Value of the History in the Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuber- culosis," Fred H. Heise and Lawrason Brown, Tuberculosis Abstracts, Vol. ii. No. 5, May, 1929. (Published by National Tuberculosis Association.)


54-"The Influence of Colds on Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Patients Undergoing Treatment," Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol., xxi, No. 5, May, 1930.


55-"The Lungs," and the Early Stages of Tuberculosis, Lawrason Brown and Fred H. Heise. Printed by D. Appleton & Company, 1931. (Bound volume.)


56-"Old Tuberculin Administered Subcutaneously for Diagnosis," John Steidl and Fred H. Heise, Amer. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. xxiv, No. 3, September, 1931.


57-"Variations in Tuberculin Sensitiveness in Tubercular Patients," William Spencer Schwarts and Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. xxiv, No. 4, October, 1931.


58-"The Pulse Rate and Blood Pressure During Artificial Pneumothorax Insufflations," John Steidl and Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. xxvi, No. 6, December, 1932.


59-"Clinical Activity in Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise and Homer L. Sampson, Trudeau Medical Supplement, 1932.


60-"Studies of Liver Function in Advanced Pulmonary Tuberculosis," John Steidl and Fred H. Heise, Am. J. Med. Sc., Vol. clxxxvi. No. 5, No- vember, 1933.


61-"The Condition in 1931 of Patients Discharged from the Trudeau Sanatorium from 1916-1930," Fred H. Heise and William A. P. Hennigar, Tubercle, Vol. xv, No. 3, December, 1933.


62-"Pleural Fluids During Artificial Pneumothorax Treatment in Pul- monary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise and David Paine, Trans. Am. Clinc. & Climat. Assn. 1934.


63-"The Cinchophen Oxidation Test of Liver Function in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," John B. O'Connor, Herbert Young, John Steidl, Fred H. Heise, Am. J. Med. Sc., 1934, Vol. 188, No. 1, 81.


64-"Diagnosis in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Bull. School of Medicine, University Maryland, 1935, Vol. 19, No. 3.


65-"Hepatic Function in Pulmonary Tuberculosis: Further Studies," John Steidl and Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., Vol. xxxi, No. 6, Decem- ber, 1935.


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66-"The Cinchophen Oxidation Test of Hepatic Function in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," A Study of Its Variation, John Steidl and Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., xxxii, No. 6, December, 1935.


67-"After Results in Patients Reacting Constitutionally to Tuberculin," Fred H. Heise, Fifty-first Annual Medical Report, Trudeau Sanatorium, and Thirty-first Medical Supplement, 1935.


68-"Bilateral Apical Nontuberculous Bronchiectasis," Report of a Case, John Steidl and Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., xxxiii, No. 1, January, 1936.


69 "Agranulocytic Angina Following Sanocrysin," A Case Report, Spencer Schwartz, Fred H. Heise, Am. Rev. Tuberc., xxxiv, No. I, July, 1936.


70-"Ascorbic Acid Metabolism in Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise, Gustav J. Martin Proceedings Soc. Exper. Biol. & Med., 1936, 34, 642-644.


71-"Trudeau Sanatorium after 1903," Fred H. Heise, J. Outdoor Life, 1931, 28, 280.


72-"The North American Colonies and the Medicine of the Time," Fred H. Heise. ( Address to Saranac Lake Osler Society, 1931.)


73-"Medicine of the Seventeenth Century," Fred H. Heise. ( Address to Saranac Lake Osler Society, 1932.)


74-"Urinary Excretion of Vitamin C in Pulmonary Tuberculosis," Fred H. Heise and Gustav Martin, Trans. 32nd Annual Meeting of the National Tuberculosis Association, 1936.




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