Showing 76 results

Archival description
Osler Library Flick, Lawrence F. (Lawrence Francis), 1856-1938
Print preview View:

Letter, March 28, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from William Henry Welch, 935, St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Welch will have to miss Flick's luncheon and will also be late for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee in Philadelphia. He is not convinced that they will be able to come to a unanimous conclusion at the conference, but he will be ready to follow the prevailing sentiment. He does not support the idea of forming yet another national society for Tuberculosis.

Welch, William Henry, 1850-1934

Letter, March 26, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Daniel Lewis, 252, Madison Avenue, New York, New York, USA. Lewis will attend the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee in Philadelphia, but will not make it to Flick's luncheon.

Lewis, Daniel

Letter, March 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Charles L. Minor, 65, French Broad Avenue, Asheville, North Carolina, USA. Minor accepts Flick's luncheon invitation despite Maragliano's absence. He hopes that the question of the Tuberculosis Congress will finally be settled and that the funeral of the two "quack" Congresses of Daniel Lewis and Clark Bell will soon be at hand.

Minor, Charles L.

Letter, March 24, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from H.M. Bracken, State Board of Health, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA. Bracken will not be able to attend the upcoming meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee in Philadelphia.

Bracken, H.M.

Letter, March 24, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Henry Barton Jacobs, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Jacobs agrees with Flick that the staff of the Phipps Institute ought to be invited to attend the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee.

Jacobs, Henry Barton, 1858-1939

Letter, March 24, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from William Henry Welch, 125, West St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Welch understands Flick's position towards Daniel Lewis's and Clark Bell's Congresses on Tuberculosis, but he wonders if Lewis's society is as bad as Flick believes it to be. Prominent men have attached themselves to Lewis's cause and it would not be advisable to alienate them by opposing them. His advice is to let the troubled waters settle before leading men in the medical profession take a positive course of action in the Tuberculosis issue.

Welch, William Henry, 1850-1934

Letter, March 23, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Vincent Y. Bowditch, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Bowditch is sorry that Maragliano has cancelled his visit to Philadelphia. Bowditch hopes to meet with Phipps while he is in Philadelphia for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee.

Bowditch, Vincent Y.

Letter, March 22, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Henry Barton Jacobs, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Jacobs is sorry to hear that Maragliano has cancelled his visit to Philadelphia on account of illness. He accepts the invitation to Flick's luncheon for selected members of the Tuberculosis Committee.

Jacobs, Henry Barton, 1858-1939

Letter, March 22, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from E.O. Otis, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Otis regrets that he will no be able to attend the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee in Philadelphia, as his work keeps him busy and his wife is ill. He was sorry to hear that Maragliano cannot come to Philadelphia either. Otis is in support of forming a national Tuberculosis association.

Otis, E.O.

Letter, March 22, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Sigmund Adolphus Knopf, New York, New York, USA. Knopf is sorry to learn that he will not have the pleasure of meeting Maragliano. He suggests that they postpone the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee to an evening hour when more men would be able to attend.

Knopf, Sigmund Adolphus

Results 1 to 10 of 76