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Titles
- Sanitary reform and preventive medicine: annual address delivered before the Medical Society of the County of Washington, on the occasion of its 73d anniversary, at Cambridge, June 24, 18791
- Schedule in regard to consumptives1
- Second instalment of American ornithological bibliography1
- Section-cutting: a practical guide to the preparation and mounting of sections for the microscope, special prominence being given to the subject of animal sections1
- Sections and section cutting: with a description of a new poly-microtome for freezing1
- Sexual neuroses1
- Sobre as bacterias do pús azul: these apresentada á Faculdade de Medicina do Rio de Janeiro ... afim de poder exercer a sua profissão no Imperio do Brazil1
- Some new points on the pathological anatomy of tetanus1
- Some of the practical relations of ophthalmology and otology to the general practice of medicine: a paper read before the Delaware State Medical Society, June 11th, 18781
- Some of the preventable causes of insanity1
- Some phases of cerebral syphilis1
- Some practical facts in fractures of the thigh: verified by the treatment of twenty-five cases occurring in private practice1
- Special rules for the management of infants during the hot season1
- Statistics of drunkenness and liquor selling: under prohibitory and license legislation, 1874 and 18771
- Strangulated hernia, with fecal fistula, treated by a new and simple enterotome and an anaplastic operation1
- Strengthening weak teeth by heavy gold and screws1
- Students' manual of urinary analysis, chemical and microscopical: compiled, translated and abridged from the most recent French authorities1
- Studies in relation to the production of pain by weather1
- Subcutaneous section of the internal condyle of the femur for the relief of genu-valgum: after the method of Ogston, with a report of two cases : also, remarks upon the operative treatment of this deformity1
- Substantialism, or, Philosophy of knowledge: based upon the perception that the emanations which are continuously radiating from the forms of substance that make up the objective universe are substantial thought-germs, whose doings, or modes of motion, within the organs of sense by which they are subjected, represent the special qualities--tangible, sapid, odorous, luminous, and sonorous--of the forms to which they are fruital1