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Titles
- Observations on street-cleaning methods in European cities ; Review of the general work of the Department of Street Cleaning of New York ; Report of the snow inspector ; The adjustment of labor questions by the "Committee of 41" and the "Board of Conference"1
- Observations on the establishment of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in the City of New-York, and the late proceedings of the regents of the university, relative to that institution: communicated in a letter to James S. Stringham, M.D. professor of chemistry in Columbia College1
- Observations on the means of improving the medical police of the City of New-York: delivered as an introductory discourse, in the hall of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, on the sixth of November, 18201
- On Dupuytren's finger-contraction: its nervous origin1
- On abscesses in the lower abdominal cavity and its parietes1
- On bacteria in ice, and their relations to disease, with special reference to the ice-supply of New York City: an experimental study from the laboratory of the Alumni Association of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York1
- On epidemic cholera: the phenomena, causes, prevention and treatment, with an appendix relating to the Brooklyn city sewerage1
- On pigmentary deposits in the brain, resulting from malarial poisoning1
- On spasmodic urethral stricture1
- On the effects of high temperature upon the public health of New York, and on measures of prevention1
- On the movements and present condition of the tenement house population of New York, with suggestions of measures of relief1
- On the normal urethra and its constrictions in relation to strictures of large calibre1
- On whooping cough: its great fatality, and the necessity for isolation and rest in its treatment1
- Opinion of the medical profession on the condition and needs of the city of New York in regard to street-cleaning: expressed in a mass meeting of the physicians of the city, held at Chickering Hall, Wednesday, April 13, 18811
- Our city sustained a severe loss yesterday in the death of two of her most active and useful citizens, Dr. J. Kearney Rodgers and Gardiner G. Howland1