HENRY INGERSOLL BOWDITCH. 329 



Remarks on the Death of Dr. John B. S. Jackson. 



Cholera in Xew York, as described by Dr. Jacob Bigelow. 



Prevention of Consumption. A Series of Articles in the "Youth's 



Comjianion." 

 Sanitary Organization of Nations. A Paper read before the Boston So- 

 ciety for Medical Improvement, with a Preface addressed " To all Cit- 

 izens of Miissachusetts who desire that sanitary work may not fail of 

 its highest fulfilment in future years in this Commonwealth." 

 Laparotomy. Its great Future. 



The Three Climates of New England; viz. the Oceanic, the Shore, and 

 the Inland. 



The Garrison Mob. 



My Letter to Dr. Porcher, of Charleston, S. C, on the Advantages to 

 jMankind of Establishments of Boards of Health by various States. 



The Temperance Alliance and Dr. Bowditch. 



Medical Education of Women: the present hostile Position of the Har- 

 vard Medical School and of the Massachusetts Medical Society. What 

 Remedies therefor can be suggested ? 



Dr. Elliott of New Orleans proves that the Truth of the Law of Soil 

 Moisture (1862), as discovered by myself and by Dr. Buchanan three 

 years afterwards in England, holds good at New Orleans. 



Venesection, its (occasionally) great Value. Remarks on Dr. Dunn's 

 Case. 



Letter to the Sanitarian : Views on National and State Sanitation. 



Moral Education in Schools; in a Letter to a Teacher, Mr. Fisher of 

 Brooklyn, N. Y., who had asked me to give an opinion on the 

 question. 



Two Fatal Cases of Pleuritic Effusion. Would not Thoracentesis have 

 saved Life? 



Defence of the National Board of Health from an Insinuation by the Edi- 

 tor of the Boston Daily Advertiser, that, as the Board has been 

 accused of doing little, it had then an opportunity to study Cholera 

 in Mexico. 



Brief Remarks made at a Political Primary Meeting on the Duty of every 

 Citizen to attend and take part in such Meetings, and of voting 

 afterwards. 



Circular signed, with others, by me, urging the Colored People not to 

 vote for General Butler, on the ground that he would be faithless to 

 them. 



Garibaldi. A Letter from the Central Committee of the League of Italian 

 Societies for Cremation, urging that the remains of the hero should 

 be disinterred and cremated, according to the terms of his will. 



The Ethical Results of Darwinism. An Essay presented at the Liberal 

 Union Club. " Survival of the Fittest." "• Natural Selection." 



Woman Suffrage. Remarks before a Committee of the Legislature. 



