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Titles
- Early American chemical societies: read to the Washington Chemical Society, April 8, 18971
- Early syphilis in the Negro1
- Economic and sociologic relations of the Canadian states and the United States, prospectively considered: address by Charles S. Hill, Vice President, Section I, before the Section of Economic Science and Statistics, American Association for the Advancement of Science, at the Toronto meeting, August, 18891
- Editorial in the New York medical record, December 27, 1879: Editorial in the New York medical record, January 17, 18801
- Educational hygiene1
- Elephantiasis arabum of the labia majora: a case of successful operation by excision1
- Elliott's hand-book of medical, hygienic, pharmaceutical and dental journals of the United States and Canada1
- Emergency and hygiene notes for the militia1
- Employment of Cavalry organizations not mounted1
- Error of position: being a discussion of the ultra medical policy of the American Medical Association, as advocated by medical professors, Medicus and others : showing the policy to be adverse to the great interests and institutions of society, and the peace and prosperity of the nation1
- Erysipelas and child-bed fever1
- Ether death: a personal experience in four cases of death from anaesthetics1
- Eulogium on Doctor William Shippen: delivered before the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, March, 18091
- Eulogy of Hon. Stephen Arnold Douglas, one of the Regents of the Smithsonian Institution1
- Exchange of prisoners of war1
- Exchanged officers and men to report at parole depots1
- Extension of the military lines of the United States1
- Extracts from the reports of the Chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department, for 1863 and 18641
- Extracts from the second report of William Crawford and Whitworth Russell, Esqs., the Inspectors of Prisons for the Home District ; addressed to the Right Honourable the Secretary of State for the Home Department1
- Extracts of letters received in relation to Circular no. 6, of the Surgeon General's Office, and the importance of the proposed medical and surgical history of the war1