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Osler, William, Sir, 1849-1919 London (England)
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Letter to William Osler, September 7, 1918

Letter to William Osler from John George Adami, Pembroke House, 133 Oxford Street, London, England. Accepts the invitation. Information about Finley. Gives him the address of the latter and of Falconer. Invites Osler to join them at a Farewell dinner to Finley and Starkey at the Canadian Officers Club.

Adami, J. George (John George), 1862-1926

Letter to William Osler, September 5, 1916

Letter to William Osler from John George Adami, Cecil Chambers, 86, Strand, London, England. Informs him that he has given the original of the enclosed (his resignation from the C.A.M.C. in protest) to the D.M.S.. Asks him to keep this confidential for now and asks him his advice on the matter.

Adami, J. George (John George), 1862-1926

Letter to William Osler, September 29, 1913

Letter to William Osler from Walter Hines Page, London, England. He accepts with pleasure his invitation for the dinner to Jastrow. Sympathetic comments on Osler's dinners. Will try his best to attend to the lecture. Civilities.

Page, Walter Hines, 1855-1918

Letter to William Osler, September 23, 1919

Letter to William Osler from Dorothy F. Buxton, Save the Children Fund, 7 St. James Terrace, Regent's Park, London, England. The Save the Children Fund is in support of Osler's plan to bring Wenckebach to England. The Fund recently received a letter from Sir William Good, who called their work invaluable, but hoped they could do more to stimulate the public. Buxton believes that most Europeans are unaware of the severity of the famine, due in large part to the fact that the press often boycotts the subject.

Buxton, Dorothy F.

Letter to William Osler, September 23, 1919

Letter to William Osler from Robert Cecil, 117, Piccadilly, London, England. Cecil responds to Osler's letter concerning Hector Munro's suggestion that Wenckebach come to England. He assures Osler that Wenckebach should have no trouble obtaining a visa for England if he applies with the British Military Authorities in Vienna.

Cecil, Robert

Letter to William Osler, September 20, 1912

Letter to William Osler from C. Louis Taylor, British Medical Journal, 429, Strand, London, England. Answers him on the origin of the skull and cross bones. He could not find the origin of the emblem, but it would appear to be connected with a legend that the cross on which Christ was crucified was set up on the site of the grave of Adam. Details about it. Civilities.

Taylor, C. Louis

Letter to William Osler, September 20, 1905

Letter to William Osler from H.K. Lewis, 136, Gower Street, London, England. Letter from a medical publisher who is taking care of the reprint of Aequanimitas in England. They request Osler's approval on the appearance of the book and on the question of the sale price.

Lewis, H.K.

Letter to William Osler, October 28, 1909

Letter to William Osler from Seymour J. Sharkley, 22, Harley Street, London, England. Invitation to accept the position of Honorary Lecturer on Medicine. Details about it. Request from Cushing to Wallace, in 1923, to know if Osler did accept.

Sharkley, Seymour J.

Letter to William Osler, October 27, 1910

Letter to William Osler from Green & Co. Longmans, 39, Paternoster Row, London, England. Vallery Radot had written to them to know if it is the "Life of Pasteur" issued 24 years ago in England and America or the translation by Lady Claude Hamilton of "The Scientific work of Pasteur" that Phipps wishes to give away.

Longmans, Green and Co.

Letter to William Osler, October 19, 1914

Letter to William Osler from John Charrington, The Grange, Shenley, Herts, London, England. He had been studying with a lens a portrait of a man who seems to have been a writer on leprosy and Elephantiasis. Asks him the name of early writers on that subject around the 16th or 17th century. Information on the labels on the background of the books. Tells him that one of the other medical portraits is of a man called Crollus, or Crollius or Croli. Thanks for Spielmann's address.

Charrington, John, 1856-1939

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