P*/teclrrr;cMA, DEPARTMENT OF ANATOMY JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL SCHOOL BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. Dec. 9~ 1922. Dear Mrs. Denison, Do you mind a typewritten letter, writtdn by my own hand as proved by many mistakes. I find them easier than hand written after my hand has gotton tired with long use of the miorosoope. I have gotten tremendously interested in the study if abnormal blood, the methods which I have developed of studyltang normal blood have raised questions that can only be setteled by stud$ing the abnormal and the new man here in our clinical laboratory is a wonder. He is a Dr. Amos who has been trained fork several yeass ?t the Roskerfeller Institute. During the war he trainod all the doctors who went into the laboratory division who were to have charge of the epidemics of menirqitis and things of that sort- He came here last year to get back into the teaching fDooe and he is simply splendid, in fact the real putting of our medical department into the hands to two very fine full time men, Dr Longcope and Dro Amos seem to me to have already justified the idea that Dr. Edall had of it. They both welcome me over there and give me every possible chance to study their cases- Moreover they have asked me to train a student Por them so that more work can be done. Next Monday, week, Dr. Cunningham, Mr. Doan and I are to give our 7lor2 c:t a medical meeting and I think after that there will be even more interest.. Our technician developed Valta fever which comes from eating goats milk, in this case per'paps from cheese o Dr. Amos made a vaccine and finally I could show that by the vaccine he had heightened the power of the white cells to #J eat up foreign substanoes. Nelct week v:e arc going to take some of his ccl rs , add some o f the germs of his own disease and ~66 how many the cells will take uP the bacteria* DEPARTMENT OF ANATOMY JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL SCHOOL BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. The Trust Fund makes a big ingression on my mind; when you think that the original endowment of the IIopkins Medical So-2 was only a half of a million dollars and consider how the wise expenditure of that money has 'affected medical education and practice in this country it'makes one feel the responsibility of the wise use of funds fDr education. I fcought tha t I would wait before naming a successor until I heard from you or perhaps until we could talk it over next summer. It is certainly a wonderful memorial and I do so hope that it will bring forth really great results. Last night I went to hear the French Socialist who has come over to answer Clemenseau- c\ ', He made a real impression on my mind. He said that with the data at hand, which was mainly the papers from Germany and Russia, let out thru their revolutions we were for the time being justif'rhed in thinking Germany more to blame than other countries for the war; that the data :7&s not all at hand because Z-gland, France and Italy had published only ?vhat they chose of their diplomstio relations. Eut that since Germany had become democratic we had no right to lay up against tho present government the faults of the precceding government and th?,t we must 136% act under the concept that delnOGrR%iG Germnay intended to play fair. I have been thi-:king more and more about the Capital and Labor troubles and it seems to me that lots of the ideas of labor are wrong but in this one thing they are right that they question whether the imperialistic desires of the advanced nations to capture all the n::tural resources of the world for their own exclusive use are worth the cost, the cost bbing all that w