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1224 THE SERVICES.-MEDICAL NEWS. respectively.-Mr. NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN replied : The total numbers of houses authorised from Jan. 1st to May 20th, 1925, are 35,822 under the Housing Act, 1923, and 41,942 under the Act of 1924. The latter figure includes 9000 houses which had previously been authorised under the Act of 1923. During the four weeks ended on May 20th the numbers authorised were 4706 under the Act of 1923 and 8377 under the Act of 1924, of which 3106 had pre- viously been approved under the 1923 Act. The Services. ROYAL NAVAL MEDICAL SERVICE. Surg. Comdr. R. Hughes is placed on the Retd. List with the rank of Surg. Capt. - ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS. Maj. F. W. W. Dawson to be Lt.-Col., vice Lt.-Col. R. N. Hunt, to half pay. Maj. W. L. Hay to be temp. Capt. and relinquishes the rank of Maj. MILITIA. Capt. H. C. Sinderson to be Maj. and remains secd. Capt. G. F. P. Gibbons to be Maj. TERRITORIAL ARMY. Capt. H. Forrest to be Maj. (Prov.). Capt. A. J. Chillingworth (late R.A.M.C.), to be Capt. Capt. J. Robinson resigns his commn. and retains his rank. Lieut. P. M. Speed (late Argyll and Sutherland High- landers) to be Lt. Colonel E. C. Montgomery-Smith, C.M.G., D.S.O., T.D., has been appointed Honorary Surgeon to His Majesty, in succession to Colonel F. Kelly, C.B.E., T.D. (retired). Medical News. UNIVERSITY OF LONDON.—At a recent meeting of the Senate, Prof. E. A. Gardner, the Vice-Chancellor, being in the chair, Dr. E. C. Dodds was appointed to the University Chair of Biochemistry tenable at Middlesex Hospital Medical School. He studied at Middlesex Hospital Medical School. In 1918 he was appointed demonstrator -in physiology and in 1919 senior demonstrator in physiology and pharmacology. In 1920 he was appointed assistant in the Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, and since 1921 he has been lecturer in biochemistry in the Institute. He obtained the diplomas of M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. in 1921 and the degrees of M.B., B.S., with distinction in pathology and midwifery, and the B.Sc. degree by research in physiology in 1922 as an internal student, and the external Ph.D. degree in 1925. He has been a recognised teacher since January, 1923. He has published numerous papers in various scientific journals.-The title of Emeritus Professor of Bacteriology in the University was conferred on Prof. Richard T. Hewlett as from August 1st, 1925, on his retirement from the University Chair of Bacterio- logy in consequence of the closing of the Department of I Bacteriology and Public Health at King’s College.-The D.Sc. in Physiology was conferred on Mr. B. Babkin and the D.Sc. in Veterinary Pathology on Mr. A. L. Sheather. - Dr. R. A. Young was appointed representative on the occasion of the eleventh annual conference of the National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis to be held in London in July, and Sir Holburt J. Waring representative on the occasion of the Second Imperial Social Hygiene Congress to be held.at the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley in October.-The semi-general election of medical members of the Senate for 1925-29 resulted in the appoint- ment of the following : By Convocation-Medicine: Dr. E. Graham Little, M.P.; by Royal College of Physicians of London : Sir Wilmot Herringham ; by Royal College of Surgeons of England : Mr. J. Sherren ; by Faculty of Medi- cine : Sir Holburt J. Waring.—A course of three lectures on Blood and Circulation from the Standpoint of Physical Chemistry, will be given by Prof. L. J. Henderson (professor of biological chemistry in Harvard University) at University College, London (Gower-street, W.C.) on June 10th, llth, and 12th, at 5.30 P.M. At the first lecture the chair will be taken by Prof. A. V. Hill.-A course of four lectures on Cardiology will be given by Dr. John Hay (professor of medicine in the University of Liverpool) at University College Hospital Medical School (University-street, Gower- street, W.C.) on June llth, 12th, 18th, and 19th, at 5 P.M. At the first lecture the chair will be taken by Prof. T. R. Elliott, F.R.S. Admission to the lectures is free, I without ticket. ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE.—The next social evening commemorating the Charcot centenary will be held on Monday, June 15th, when Fellows and guests will be received by Sir StClair Thomson, the President, at 8.30 P.M. At 9.30 P.M. Dr. Farquhar Buzzard, President of the Section of Neurology, will give an address on Charcot and the Centenary Celebration of his Birth, and many of the works of Charcot and his pupils will be exhibited. WEST LONDON MEDICO-CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY.-- The annual conversazione of this society will be held in the Kensington Town Hall on June 12th, when Sir Humphry Rolleston, Regius Professor of Medicine at Cambridge, will deliver the Cavendish Lecture. The reception by the President of the society is at 8.30 P.M., and the lecture at 9. QUEEN CHARLOTTE’S MATERNITY HOSPITAL.-A series of post-graduate lectures will be held on Thursdays during June and July at the hospital, Marylebone-road, N.W. 1., at 5 P.M., as follows : June llth, Mr. Aleck W. Bourne : Maternal Mortality ; 18th, Mr. Trevor B. Davies: Antepartum Haemorrhage ; 25th, Mr. Louis C. Rivett: Mechanical Difficulties in Labour ; July 2nd, Mr. Leonard G. Phillips : Intracranial Haemorrhage ; 9th, Mr. Lane Roberts : Clinical Features of Obstructive Labour ; 16th, Mr. Leslie Williams : Toxsemia of Pregnancy. BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE.—The ninety-fifth annual meeting of this Associa- tion will be held at Southampton from Wednesday, August 26th, to Wednesday, Sept. 2nd. The President is Prof. Horace Lamb, F.R.S. Among the principal subjects of medical interest to be dealt with in presidential addresses and sectional discussions are the following : The Physio- logical Basis of Athletic Records; the Acquisition of Muscular Skill; Mental Law of Diminishing Returns; Health in Schools; the Inorganic Elements in Animal Nutrition ; Distribution of Animals and Plants in Relation to Continental Movements. The sections will be in session severally or jointly throughout the meeting for the hearing of papers on many other subjects within their various departments.-The Leeds City Council have unanimously invited the Association to hold its meeting in 1927 at Leeds. The Association met in Leeds in 1861 and in 1890. Particulars may be obtained on application to the Secretary, British Association, Burlington House, London, W. 1. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE PREVENTION OF TUBERCULOSIS.-The eleventh annual Conference will be held on Monday and Tuesday, July 6th and 7th, in the Robert Barnes Hall of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1, Wimpole-street, London, W. 1. On Monday at 10.30 A.M. the Conference will be opened by Sir Kingsley Wood, M.P., Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health. Three of the four sessions will be devoted to discussion of tuber- culosis in childhood in which the following will take part: Prof. Pirquet (Vienna), Dr. Stanley Griffith (Cambridge), Dr. Richard Wagner (Vienna), Sir Robert Philip (Edin- burgh), Dr. Clive Riviere (London), Prof. A. Louise Mcllroy (London), Dr. Fergus Hewat (Edinburgh), Sir Henry Gauvain (Alton), Prof. John Fraser (Edinburgh), and Dr. Gordon Pugh (Metropolitan Asylums Board). The afternoon session on Tuesday will concern itself with the Treatment of Tuberculosis by Sanocrysin, on which Prof. Holger Mollgaard (Denmark), Prof. Knud Faber (Denmark), and Prof. Lyle Cummins (Cardiff) will speak. At the annual meeting of the Association on Monday evening films will be shown, including one recently acquired by the Association, entitled the Invisible Enemy. FELLOWSHIP OF MEDICINE AND POST-GRADUATE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION.-On June 9th at 5.30 P.M. Sir Thomas Horder will give the opening lecture of the June to July series at 1, Wimpole-street, on Some Cases of Fever without Physical Signs.-Three special courses are continuing throughout the months-namely, in Dermatology at the St. John’s Hospital ; Venereal Diseases at the London Lock Hospital ; and Tropical Diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.-From June 8th to 27th a special course in Gynaecology will be held at the Chelsea Hospital for Women.-The Victoria Park Hospital will hold a fortnight’s course dealing with the various Diseases of the Heart and Lungs from June 8th to 20th.-From June 22nd to July 4th an intensive course has been arranged by the London Temperance Hospital.-In July there will be special courses in the following subjects : Cardiology at the National Heart Hospital; Diseases of Children at the Queen’s Hospital; Neurology at the West End Hospital for Nervous Diseases ; and Urology at St. Peter’s Hospital for Stone. The programme of the Fellowship of Medicine, together with copies of the syllabus for each of the courses, may be obtained from the Secretary at 1, Wimpole-street, London, W. 1.
Transcript
Page 1: Medical News

1224 THE SERVICES.-MEDICAL NEWS.

respectively.-Mr. NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN replied : Thetotal numbers of houses authorised from Jan. 1st toMay 20th, 1925, are 35,822 under the Housing Act, 1923,and 41,942 under the Act of 1924. The latter figure includes9000 houses which had previously been authorised underthe Act of 1923. During the four weeks ended on May 20ththe numbers authorised were 4706 under the Act of 1923and 8377 under the Act of 1924, of which 3106 had pre-viously been approved under the 1923 Act.

The Services.ROYAL NAVAL MEDICAL SERVICE.

Surg. Comdr. R. Hughes is placed on the Retd. List withthe rank of Surg. Capt. -

ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS.

Maj. F. W. W. Dawson to be Lt.-Col., vice Lt.-Col. R. N.Hunt, to half pay.

Maj. W. L. Hay to be temp. Capt. and relinquishes therank of Maj.

MILITIA.

Capt. H. C. Sinderson to be Maj. and remains secd.Capt. G. F. P. Gibbons to be Maj.

TERRITORIAL ARMY.

Capt. H. Forrest to be Maj. (Prov.).Capt. A. J. Chillingworth (late R.A.M.C.), to be Capt.Capt. J. Robinson resigns his commn. and retains his rank.Lieut. P. M. Speed (late Argyll and Sutherland High-

landers) to be Lt.Colonel E. C. Montgomery-Smith, C.M.G., D.S.O., T.D.,

has been appointed Honorary Surgeon to His Majesty, insuccession to Colonel F. Kelly, C.B.E., T.D. (retired).

Medical News.UNIVERSITY OF LONDON.—At a recent meeting of

the Senate, Prof. E. A. Gardner, the Vice-Chancellor, beingin the chair, Dr. E. C. Dodds was appointed to the UniversityChair of Biochemistry tenable at Middlesex Hospital MedicalSchool. He studied at Middlesex Hospital Medical School.In 1918 he was appointed demonstrator -in physiology andin 1919 senior demonstrator in physiology and pharmacology.In 1920 he was appointed assistant in the Bland-SuttonInstitute of Pathology, and since 1921 he has been lecturerin biochemistry in the Institute. He obtained the diplomasof M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. in 1921 and the degrees of M.B.,B.S., with distinction in pathology and midwifery, and theB.Sc. degree by research in physiology in 1922 as an internalstudent, and the external Ph.D. degree in 1925. He has beena recognised teacher since January, 1923. He has publishednumerous papers in various scientific journals.-The title ofEmeritus Professor of Bacteriology in the University wasconferred on Prof. Richard T. Hewlett as from August 1st,1925, on his retirement from the University Chair of Bacterio-logy in consequence of the closing of the Department of IBacteriology and Public Health at King’s College.-TheD.Sc. in Physiology was conferred on Mr. B. Babkin andthe D.Sc. in Veterinary Pathology on Mr. A. L. Sheather.- Dr. R. A. Young was appointed representative on theoccasion of the eleventh annual conference of the NationalAssociation for the Prevention of Tuberculosis to be heldin London in July, and Sir Holburt J. Waring representativeon the occasion of the Second Imperial Social HygieneCongress to be held.at the British Empire Exhibition atWembley in October.-The semi-general election of medicalmembers of the Senate for 1925-29 resulted in the appoint-ment of the following : By Convocation-Medicine: Dr.E. Graham Little, M.P.; by Royal College of Physicians ofLondon : Sir Wilmot Herringham ; by Royal College ofSurgeons of England : Mr. J. Sherren ; by Faculty of Medi-cine : Sir Holburt J. Waring.—A course of three lectureson Blood and Circulation from the Standpoint of PhysicalChemistry, will be given by Prof. L. J. Henderson (professorof biological chemistry in Harvard University) at UniversityCollege, London (Gower-street, W.C.) on June 10th, llth,and 12th, at 5.30 P.M. At the first lecture the chairwill be taken by Prof. A. V. Hill.-A course of four lectureson Cardiology will be given by Dr. John Hay (professor ofmedicine in the University of Liverpool) at UniversityCollege Hospital Medical School (University-street, Gower-street, W.C.) on June llth, 12th, 18th, and 19th, at5 P.M. At the first lecture the chair will be taken by Prof.T. R. Elliott, F.R.S. Admission to the lectures is free, Iwithout ticket.

ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE.—The next socialevening commemorating the Charcot centenary will beheld on Monday, June 15th, when Fellows and guestswill be received by Sir StClair Thomson, the President,at 8.30 P.M. At 9.30 P.M. Dr. Farquhar Buzzard, Presidentof the Section of Neurology, will give an address on Charcotand the Centenary Celebration of his Birth, and many of theworks of Charcot and his pupils will be exhibited.

WEST LONDON MEDICO-CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY.--The annual conversazione of this society will be held in theKensington Town Hall on June 12th, when Sir HumphryRolleston, Regius Professor of Medicine at Cambridge, willdeliver the Cavendish Lecture. The reception by thePresident of the society is at 8.30 P.M., and the lecture at 9.

QUEEN CHARLOTTE’S MATERNITY HOSPITAL.-Aseries of post-graduate lectures will be held on Thursdaysduring June and July at the hospital, Marylebone-road,N.W. 1., at 5 P.M., as follows : June llth, Mr. Aleck W.Bourne : Maternal Mortality ; 18th, Mr. Trevor B. Davies:Antepartum Haemorrhage ; 25th, Mr. Louis C. Rivett:Mechanical Difficulties in Labour ; July 2nd, Mr. Leonard G.Phillips : Intracranial Haemorrhage ; 9th, Mr. LaneRoberts : Clinical Features of Obstructive Labour ; 16th,Mr. Leslie Williams : Toxsemia of Pregnancy.

BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OFSCIENCE.—The ninety-fifth annual meeting of this Associa-tion will be held at Southampton from Wednesday,August 26th, to Wednesday, Sept. 2nd. The President isProf. Horace Lamb, F.R.S. Among the principal subjectsof medical interest to be dealt with in presidential addressesand sectional discussions are the following : The Physio-logical Basis of Athletic Records; the Acquisition ofMuscular Skill; Mental Law of Diminishing Returns;Health in Schools; the Inorganic Elements in AnimalNutrition ; Distribution of Animals and Plants in Relationto Continental Movements. The sections will be in sessionseverally or jointly throughout the meeting for the hearingof papers on many other subjects within their variousdepartments.-The Leeds City Council have unanimouslyinvited the Association to hold its meeting in 1927 at Leeds.The Association met in Leeds in 1861 and in 1890. Particularsmay be obtained on application to the Secretary, BritishAssociation, Burlington House, London, W. 1.

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE PREVENTION OFTUBERCULOSIS.-The eleventh annual Conference will beheld on Monday and Tuesday, July 6th and 7th, in theRobert Barnes Hall of the Royal Society of Medicine,1, Wimpole-street, London, W. 1. On Monday at 10.30 A.M.the Conference will be opened by Sir Kingsley Wood, M.P.,Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health. Threeof the four sessions will be devoted to discussion of tuber-culosis in childhood in which the following will take part:Prof. Pirquet (Vienna), Dr. Stanley Griffith (Cambridge),Dr. Richard Wagner (Vienna), Sir Robert Philip (Edin-burgh), Dr. Clive Riviere (London), Prof. A. Louise Mcllroy(London), Dr. Fergus Hewat (Edinburgh), Sir HenryGauvain (Alton), Prof. John Fraser (Edinburgh), and Dr.Gordon Pugh (Metropolitan Asylums Board). The afternoonsession on Tuesday will concern itself with the Treatment

of Tuberculosis by Sanocrysin, on which Prof. HolgerMollgaard (Denmark), Prof. Knud Faber (Denmark), andProf. Lyle Cummins (Cardiff) will speak. At the annualmeeting of the Association on Monday evening films will beshown, including one recently acquired by the Association,entitled the Invisible Enemy.FELLOWSHIP OF MEDICINE AND POST-GRADUATE

MEDICAL ASSOCIATION.-On June 9th at 5.30 P.M. Sir ThomasHorder will give the opening lecture of the June to Julyseries at 1, Wimpole-street, on Some Cases of Fever withoutPhysical Signs.-Three special courses are continuingthroughout the months-namely, in Dermatology at theSt. John’s Hospital ; Venereal Diseases at the London LockHospital ; and Tropical Diseases at the London School ofHygiene and Tropical Medicine.-From June 8th to 27tha special course in Gynaecology will be held at the ChelseaHospital for Women.-The Victoria Park Hospital willhold a fortnight’s course dealing with the various Diseasesof the Heart and Lungs from June 8th to 20th.-FromJune 22nd to July 4th an intensive course has been arrangedby the London Temperance Hospital.-In July there willbe special courses in the following subjects : Cardiologyat the National Heart Hospital; Diseases of Children atthe Queen’s Hospital; Neurology at the West End Hospitalfor Nervous Diseases ; and Urology at St. Peter’s Hospitalfor Stone. The programme of the Fellowship of Medicine,together with copies of the syllabus for each of the courses,may be obtained from the Secretary at 1, Wimpole-street,London, W. 1.

Page 2: Medical News

1225MEDICAL NEWS.—MEDICAL DIARY.

. RONTGEN SOCIETT.—The annual general meeting of this society will be held on Tuesday, June 9th, at (S.15 P.M. in the British Institute of Radiology, 32, Welbeck-street, London, W. 1. A paper on Investigation of theHeart Movement by the Use of the Slit Diaphragm will beread by Dr. Robert Knox.

THE Committee of the Royal National OrthopaedicHospital, 234, Great Portland-street, London, W., has

prepared plans for providing an additional 200 beds at thecountry branch at a cost of not less than £50,000. The

present out-patient department is now " hopelessly inade-quate," the total attendances last year having greatlyexceeded 71,000, and plans have been laid for the extension ofthis department, the nurses’ home, resident medical officers’quarters, and workshops at the cost of another £50,000.RESEARCH DEFENCE SOCIETY.—The annual general

meeting will be held at the house of the Medical Society ofLondon, 11, Chandos-street, W. 1, on Tuesday, June 9th,at 3.30 P.M. The chair will be taken by Lord Lamington,and a short lantern lecture given by Dr. R. A. Lyster onOur Defences Against Small-pox.INFANT MORTALITY IN DUBLIN.-Speaking last

week at the annual meeting in aid of St. Ultan’sHospital for Infants, Dr. M. Russell, medical officerof health for Dublin, remarked that a great deal had beensaid about Dublin’s dirty milk and the havoc it played withchild life. The truth was that milk-dirty or clean-entered very little into the question at all, because most ofthe time the infants never got milk of any kind. Infantmortality was high in Dublin because housing conditionswere such as compelled families of eight or ten persons tolive in one room. According to the medical report of thehospital the percentage of illegitimate babies admittedincreased from 15 per cent. in 1923-24 to 19 per cent. inthe present year, and the death-rate among illegitimatesincreased from 48 to 54 per cent. This very high death-rate among illegitimate babies had this year raised thetotal death-rate in the hospital to 44 per cent., as

compared with 39 per cent. in 1923-24.

DONATIONS AND BEQUESTS.—The Harrogate TownCouncil have made a gift of £5000 for the purchase ofa site in Knaresboro’-road for a new infirmary.-Mr. JohnSmith, Dewsbury, bequeathed £1000 to the Dewsbury andDistrict Infirmary.-The late Mr. William Lyall Stewart,of Edinburgh, left the residue of his property (about £30,000),subject to certain life interests, for distribution for charitablepurposes in Scotland.-Mr. Alfred Dickinson, of CedarLodge, Sunderland, left by will £2000 for distributionamong the Sunderland Royal Infirmary, the Monkwear-month and Southwick Hospital, the Durham County andSunderland Eye Infirmary, the Sunderland Orphan Asylum,and the Sunderland Children’s Hospital.-By the will of thelate Sir George Donaldson, of Grand-avenue, Hove, Sussex,the London Hospital and the Sussex County Hospital willreceive £1000 each.-Among other bequests the late Mrs.Annie Eliza Clegg McCay, of Troy Hall, Londonderry, leftby will £1500 to the Londonderry Eye and Ear Hospital and£1000 to the Montrose Infirmary, Scotland. The residue ofthe property will be divided between the Montrose Infirmary,St. Dunstan’s Hostel for the Blind, and the LondonderryCity and County Infirmary.—Mr. William Sillito, ofEccleshall. near Stafford, who was once a patient in theStaffordshire General Infirmary, bequeathed to this institu-tion a legacy of over £5000.—The London Hospital hasreceived a cheque for £60 from a man who 12 years ago wasoperated on in the hospital for an internal complaint. In

gratitude for his recovery each year he has given a

percentage of his income to help the hospital funds. Thetotal amount contributed by him is over £500.—The BelgraveHospital for Children has received an offer of £10,000 toassist in defraying the cost of building a new west wing on acondition that the committee of the hospital shall them-selves collect another £10,000.—Mrs. Adelina EllertonCrdagli- Osborne, of Ditton Park, Slough, left £1000 toKing Edward VII. Hospital, Windsor.-Blackburn RoyalInfirmary has received a cheque for £500 from Mrs. Nutall,an ex-mayoress, as a thanksgiving for her restoration tohealth, and in recognition of the sympathy and kindnessshown during her illness. Mr. W. Kay, cotton merchant,and his wife, Mrs. Kay, sent a sum of £500 in commemorationof their golden wedding, and their late son. A third giftof B100 was from an anonymous donor.-Sir Gilbert WheatonFox, Bart., sugar merchant, Sefton Park, Liverpool, left£1000 each to the Liverpool Royal Infirmary, the RoyalSouthern Hospital, Liverpool ; the David Lewis NorthernHospital: the Stanley Hospital, Bootle ; the LiverpoolSeamen’s Orphanage and the Liverpool Prison Gate Mission ;£500 to the Birkenhead Borough Hospital, and £2000 eachto the Liverpool Bluecoat School and the training shipIndefatigable.

Medical Diary.SOCIETIES.

ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE. 1. Wimpole-street. W.

MEETINGS OF SECTIONS.

Friday, June 12th.OPHTHALMOLOGY : at 8.30 P.M. (Cases at 8 P.M.)Papers :

Mr. G. H. Pooley : The Operative Treatment of Acute andChronic Dacryocystitis.

Dr. G. Montagu Harston : The Safety Limits of the JullundurOperation for the Intracapsular Extraction of Cataract.

To be followed by theAnnual General Meeting :

Election of Officers and Council.

BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY.MONDAY, June 8th.-5 P.M. (at St. Thomas’s Hospital,

S.E.). Communications :-J. Patterson : The Carbo-hydrate Content of Normal Urine. H. P. Marks :Some Observations on the Testing of Insulin. R. H. A.Plimmer and J. L. Rosedale : Study of Van Slyke’sMethod of Analysis of Proteins. R. H. A. Plimmer andJ. L. Rosedale : Experiments on Nutrition. R. H. A.Plimmer : The Action of Nitrous Acid upon Amides andsome Amino Compounds. W. J. N. Burch: SomeEsters of Phosphoric Acid.

MANCHESTER MEDICAL SOCIETY.: WEDNESDAY, June 10th.—4.30 P.M. (at the Manchester

Royal Infirmary), Clinical Meeting.

LECTURES, ADDRESSES, DEMONSTRATIONS, &C.ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS.

TUESDAY, June 9th.-5 P.M., Dr. S. A. K. Wilson : Disordersof Motility and of Muscle Tone with special referenceto the Corpus Striatum. (First Croonian Lecture.).

THURSDAY,.-5 P.M., Dr. Wilson : (Second Croonian Lecture.)FELLOWSHIP OF MEDICINE AND POST-GRADL’ATEMEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1. Wimpole-street W.MONDAY, June 8th, to SATURDAY, June 13th.—WEST

LECTURE HALL, Royal Society of Medicine. Wimpole-street, W. Lecture arranged by the Fellowship ofMedicine and open to all members of the MedicalProfession. At 5.30 P.-%i., Tuesday, June 9th, SirThomas Horder on Some Cases of Fever withoutPhysical Signs.—CHELSEA HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN,Arthur-street, S.W. Post-Graduate Course in Gynreco-logy, lectures and demonstrations daily. Operations,pathological demonstrations. First week.—LONDONSCHOOL OF HYGIENE AND TROPICAL MEDICINE,Endsleigh Gardens. Tuesday and Thursday, at 2 P.M.,lecture-demonstration by Dr. P. Manson-Bahr andDr. G. C. Low.—ST. JOHN’S HOSPITAL FOR DISEASESOF THE SKIN, Leicester-square, daily demonstrationsin the O.P. Department. Bi-weekly lectures by Dr.Sibley and Dr. Whitfield.—CITY or LONDON HOSPITALFOR DISEASES OF THE HEART AND LUNGS, VictoriaPark, E. Post-Graduate Course in Chest Diseases.Lectures, clinical demonstrations, and laboratorydemonstration.—LONDON LOCK HOSPITAL, Dean-street, W. Comprehensive Course. Daily out-patientinstruction, and lectures dealing with the diagnosis andtreatment of venereal diseases. Second week.

WEST LONDON POST-GRADUATE COLLEGE, WestLondon Hospital, Hammersmith, W.MONDAY, June 8th.—11 A.M., Surgical Registrar : Surgical

Wards. 12 noon, Mr. Simmonds : Applied Anatomy.2 P.M., Dr. Scott Pinchin : Medical Out-patients.

TUESDAY.-11 A.M., Mr. Endean : Venereal Diseases.12 noon, Dr. Burrell : Chest Cases. 3 P.M., Dr.Pritchard : Medical Wards.

WEDNESDAY.—11 A.M., Medical Registrar : Medical Wards.2 P.M., Dr. Burnford : Medical Wards. 2.30 P.M., Mr.Donald Armour : Surgical Wards.

THURSDAY.—10 A.M., Dr. Grainger Stewart: NeurologicalDept. 11 A.M., Sir Henry Simson : GynecologicalWards. 2 P.M., Mr. Bishop Harman : Eye Dept.

FRIDAY.-10 A.M., Dr. Dowling : Skin Dept. 2 P.M., Mr.Sinclair: Surgical out-patients. 2 P.M., Mr. Vlasto :Throat, Nose, and Ear Dept.

SATURDAY.-10 A.M., Dr. Saunders : Medical Diseases ofChildren. 10 A.M., Mr. Banks-Davis : Operations onThroat, Nose, and Ear.

Daily, 10 A.M. to 6 P.M., Saturdays, 10 A.M. to 1 P.M.,In-patients, Out-patients, Operations, Special Depart-ments.

NORTH-EAST LONDON POST-GRADUATE COLLEGE,Prince of Wales’s General Hospital, Tottenham, N.TUESDAY, June 9th.—4.30 P.M., Dr. J. K. C. Laing : Demon-

stration of Cases of Mental Disease (at the MentalHospital, New Southgate, N.).

FRIDAY.-4.30 P.M., Ilr. A. E. Giles : Treatment byRadiation in Gynaecology.

Daily.—Clinics in General and Special Departments,Demonstrations. Operations, &c.

QUEEN CHARLOTTE’S MATERNITY HOSPITAL, Maryle-bone-road, N.W. POST-GRADUATE LECTURES.THURSDAY, June llth.-5 P.M., Mr. Aleck W. Bourne :

Maternal Mortality.


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