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Titles
- O'Neill's Catholicon: an infallible remedy for scrofula, king's evil, white swelling, erysipelas, ulcers or running sores, ulcerous sore throats, eruptions of the skin, diseases of the bones, syphilitic diseases, and all kinds of constitutional derangement occasioned by the improper use of mercury1
- Objections to Mr. Redfield's theory of storms: with some strictures upon his reasoning1
- Objections to the nomenclature of the celebrated Berzelius: with suggestions respecting a substitute, in a letter to Professor Silliman : first published in 1834, and republished in Silliman's Journal for 1835, Vol. XXVII1
- Objections to the theories severally of Franklin, Dufay and Ampere: with an effort to explain electrical phenomena, by statical, or undulatory polarization1
- Observations made during a visit to the Clarendon Springs, Vt. in relation to their character and properties, in a part of July and August, 1839: with an analysis of the waters1
- Observations of the magnetic intensity at twenty-one stations in Europe1
- Observations on a portion of the Atlantic tertiary region: with a description of new species of organic remains1
- Observations on apparent death, from suffocation, by hanging or drowning: choke damp, produced by inhaling carbonic acid, or some other irrespirable exhalation, by a stroke of lightning or electricity, and by exposure to extreme cold : with directions for using the resuscitating apparatus, invented by the author, and general instructions for the recovery of persons from suspended animation1
- Observations on certain parts of the animal oeconomy: inclusive of several papers from the Philosophical transactions, etc2
- Observations on ergot1
- Observations on ergot, read before the Medical Society of the State of New York, February 3, 18411
- Observations on intermittent, remittent and congestive fever1
- Observations on malignant cholera: intended to illustrate the natural course of the disease, the natural processes by which a spontaneous recovery is effected, and the mode of treatment best adapted to second the curative efforts of nature1
- Observations on some of the signs of live and still birth, in their applications to medical jurisprudence1
- Observations on the curability of consumption: by a new, safe and painless mode of treatment, illustrated in selections from three hundred and ten late cases1
- Observations on the cure of strabismus: with engravings1
- Observations on the diseases incident to pregnancy and childbed1
- Observations on the epidemic yellow fever of Natchez, and of the South-west1
- Observations on the milk sickness, sick stomach, or gastro enteritis1
- Observations on the nature, causes, symptoms, and cure of bronchitis, laryngitis, or clergyman's sore throat, asthma and consumption, by a new, safe, and painless mode of treatment: with notes taken during several years residence abroad, under Louis, Trousseau, Andral, Ricord, Chomel, Ramadge and others1