Letter to William Osler from Ellen Osler. Ellen Osler has been busy with Christmas preparations and decorating the Church. She relates news of family and friends. She tells Osler the news that Bovell will take orders in the West Indies.
Letter to J.A. Ormerod from William Osler, The Athenaeum, London, England. Osler's resignation as Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians. Includes manuscript notes.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for Osler's upcoming lecture in Philadelphia. Flick writes briefly of his plans to invite the International Congress on Tuberculosis to the U.S.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick would like to take advantage of Professor Maragliano's time in the U.S. and plan a Tuberculosis Committee meeting around the date of his lecture in Philadelphia. Flick provides a list of organizations and individuals in Pennsylvania who could be of help in their crusade against Tuberculosis.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick . Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick is confident that Osler will be satisfied with the results of the recent meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee when the United States Society for the Study of Tuberculosis is fully organized. Flick is worried about raising the necessary funds to sustain a new Journal of Tuberculosis.
Letter to William Osler from Edward Revere Osler, Battalion Headquarters, S. Stafford. Revere writes that he was unexpectedly sent for to do a 48-hour liaison with a different battalion. He describes the battalion's facilities and the men's activities in the trenches. He looks forward to returning home to Oxford and reuniting with his family. Includes a partially completed letter to Grace Revere Osler, dated December 30th.
Letter to William Osler from Edward Revere Osler. Revere describes the scene at the front, his observation post, and his fellow officers. He asks his father not send any more books, as he has no time to read and can only carry with him the bare necessities.