Abstract
In the course of the routine examination of rats for plague infections following the outbreak of pneumonic plague at Los Angeles in the fall of 1924, occasionally guinea pigs inoculated with suspected tissues presented plague-like lesions. For convenience the findings may be divided into two classes. Those in which organisms morphologically resembling plague, but culturally not plague, could be demonstrated, and those in which no plague-like organisms were found even on repeated reinoculations.
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