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METROPOLITAN ANCILLARY SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE

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512 32 guineas. 5. Composition fee for Dental Students, 60 guineas. 6. Composition fee for the whole course of instruction for the Preliminary Scientific (M.B.) Examina- tion of the University of London, 35 guineas. Exhibitions, Prizes, &c.-Three Entrance Exhibitions, of the respective values of £100, £60, a,nd C40 per annum, tenable for one year, are annually awarded, upon examina- tion by printed papers, to gentlemen who are about to com- mence their first winter attendance in a medical school. The subjects of the examination are-Chemistry, Physics, Botany, and Zoology. The Atkinson Morley Surgical Scholarship of £45, tenable for three years, is annually awarded to the student who, upon examination, is found to possess the greatest proficiency in the Theory and Practice of Surgery. The Sharpey Physiological Scholarship of about £105 per annum. Filliter Exhibition : a prize of £30 is awarded annually, in July, to the most proficient student in the class of Pathological Anatomy. An Atchison Scholarship, value about £55 per annum, tenable for two years. The Cluff Memorial Prize, value about iL5, every second year to the most proficient in Anatomy, Physiology, and Chemistry. The Erichsen Prize : a surgeon’s operating case of the value of £10 lOs., awarded yearly to the student of the class of Practical Surgery who shall most distinguish himself by manipulative skill. The Morris Bursary of f,16 a year, tenable for two years. Besides the above, gold and silver medals and other prizes are awarded in each class. Several professors and other gentlemen connected with the College receive students to reside with them ; and in the office of the College there is kept a register of persons unconnected with the College who receive boarders into their families ; among these are several medical gentlemen. The annual dinner of the old and present students of the Faculty of Medicine will be held in the General Library of the College on Wednesday, Oct. lst, at 6 30 P.M. C. J. Hare, Esq., M.D., F. R. C. P., will preside. WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL.-The hospital contains up- wards of 200 beds. There are separate departments for Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Skin, Teeth, and Throat, for Orthopsedics, and for Diseases of Women, and a special ward for Children. The Anatomical Museum is constantly open to the students. There are also a Pathological Museum and a Materia Medica Museum. A curator of the museum and a pathologist, each with a salary of f50, and a medical and surgical registrar, each with a salary of £40, are appointed annually. Two house physicians, two house surgeons, and a resident obstetric assistant are appointed for six months after examination, and are provided with rooms and commons. Clinical assistants to the physicians and surgeons, and to the officers in charge of special departments, are appointed from among qualified students of the hospital. Scholarships and Prizes.-A Science Scholarship, value £100, is offered annually; the Guthrie and Entrance Scholar- ships. on alternate years, value £80; and Two Entrance Scholarships, value £40. Entrance Scholarship, summer session, value £40. A E20 Entrance Scholarship is offered annually to Dental Students. The Treasurer’s Prize, an I Exhibition in Anatomy, Physiology, and Chemistry, value ’, £10 10s., tenable for one year for first-year men. The Pre- sident’s Prize, a Scholarship in Anatomy, Histology, and ’, Physiology, value jE21, given by his Grace the Duke of West- minster, President of the Hospital, to a student of the second year (to be styled Assistant Demonstrator). At the end of the fourth winter session, prizes of f,5 each (books or instruments) in Clinical Medicine and Clinical Surgery, Frederick Bird Medal and Prize, value £15. Subjects of examination: Medicine, Midwifery, Diseases of Women and Children, and Pathology. Chadwick Prize for General Pro- ficiency, i21 (books or instruments), to the most meritorious student or students of any year not exceeding the fifth. In most of the classes special prizes, value about 2 guineas each, are given by the lecturers. LONDON SCHOOL OF MEDICINE FOR WOMEN, 30, Handel- street, Brunswick-square, W. C. -The winter session of this School, which is in connexion with the Royal Free Hos- pital, Gray’s-inn-road, will begin on October lst, 1890, and will end on March 29th, 1891. Dr. Stanley Boyd will de- liver the opening address, at 3 30 l.lvt , on October 1st. The summer session will begin on May lst, and will end on July :11 st, 1891. No student will be admitted to the study ot Medicine who has not completed her eighteenth year. The admission of students rests exclusively with the Execu- tive Council. Scholarships and Prizes.-The Executive Council offers annually a Scholarship of i30 to women preparing for the medical profession. The following scholarships will be offered for competition on September 25th and 26th, 1890 :-1. The Scholarship, value £30, open to all candidates who have passed a preliminary examination in Arts recognised by the General Medical Council. 2. The Stuart Mill Scholar. ship, value C30 a year for four years, open only to candidates willing to practise Medicine in India in connexion with the National Association for sup- plying Female Medical Aid to the Women of India. The United Kingdom Branch of the National Association for Supplying Female Medical Aid to the Women of India provides funds for the Dufferin and Jubilee Scholarships, each of the value of £25 a year, at the School, to students who will enter into a legal arrangement to practise in India under the Countess of Dufferin’s Fund on the completion of their course of study. Three Scholarships, each of the value of £100 a year for three years, will be offered yearly to girls under nineteen years of age on the first day of the examination, whose parents reside within the metre. politan area as defined in the Elementary Education Act by the trustees of the St. Dunstan’s charities. The holders must fit themselves for the practice of a profession, medical or otherwise. The Scholarships will be tenable at any place of higher education approved by the governors. The Helen Prideaux Memorial Fund (£505) has been in- vested, and the income derived from it will be given as a prize every second or third year to a graduate of the School, for the further prosecution of her medical studies, at the discretion of the trustees. There is also a small fund from which assistance can occasionally be given to students and to graduates who specially require pecuniary help to obtain additional experience in operative midwifery. Prizes and (’ertificates of Honour are awarded in each class at the end of the session. The Wood’s Prize for Operative Midwifery, value jE5 5s., will be offered at the end of the winter session, 1891. Secretary, Miss Heaton. METROPOLITAN ANCILLARY SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE. THE following institutions offer a partial curriculum in the form of classes dealing with particular subjects, or adapted to special circumstances. BETHLEM HOSPITAL. -This hospital is open for the admission of two Resident Clinical Assistants who have recently obtained their diplomas to practise Medicine and Surgery. They will be permitted to reside in the hospital for a term generally not exceeding six months, and will be provided with such apartments, rations, and attendance as the Committee shall consider reasonable. They will be under the direction of the Resident Physician, and will be elected by the Committee from candidates whose testimonials appear to be most satisfactory. Medical students who have completed the third year of study are allowed to attend the practice of the hospital free, and qualified practitioners may attend for a period of three months on payment of a fee. HOSPITAL Fon CONSUMPTION AND DISEASES OF THE CHEST, Brompton.-Four House Physicians reside in the hospital for a period of six months. Pupils are admitted to the practice of the hospital ; terms £3 3s. for three months; six months :E5 5s. perpetual fl0 10s. Lectures and Clinical Demonstrations are given throughout the year by members of the medical staff. The medical practice of the hospital is recognised by the University of London, the Apothecaries’ Society, and the Army and Navy and Indian Medical Poa,rds. The hospital contains 321 beds in the two buildings. CENTRAL LONDON THROAT AND EAR HOSPITAL, Gray’s- inn-road.-The hospital contains accommodation for seven. teen in-patients, and has a very extensive outpatient department, which is open to all medical practitioners and students for the purpose of clinical demonstration and instruction during the hours of the surgeons’ visits. During the past year 6450 out-patients and 218 in-patients were treated. Fee for three months’ attendance, 2 guineas; for six months, 3 guineas. A course of lectures on the special diseases treated at this hospital will be delivered during the winter months by members of the staff. The date of these lectures is announced in the medical journals prior to their commencement. They are free to qualified practitioners
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32 guineas. 5. Composition fee for Dental Students, 60guineas. 6. Composition fee for the whole course ofinstruction for the Preliminary Scientific (M.B.) Examina-tion of the University of London, 35 guineas.

Exhibitions, Prizes, &c.-Three Entrance Exhibitions, ofthe respective values of £100, £60, a,nd C40 per annum,tenable for one year, are annually awarded, upon examina-tion by printed papers, to gentlemen who are about to com-mence their first winter attendance in a medical school.The subjects of the examination are-Chemistry, Physics,Botany, and Zoology. The Atkinson Morley SurgicalScholarship of £45, tenable for three years, is annuallyawarded to the student who, upon examination, is found topossess the greatest proficiency in the Theory and Practiceof Surgery. The Sharpey Physiological Scholarship ofabout £105 per annum. Filliter Exhibition : a prize of£30 is awarded annually, in July, to the most proficientstudent in the class of Pathological Anatomy. An AtchisonScholarship, value about £55 per annum, tenable for twoyears. The Cluff Memorial Prize, value about iL5, everysecond year to the most proficient in Anatomy, Physiology,and Chemistry. The Erichsen Prize : a surgeon’s operatingcase of the value of £10 lOs., awarded yearly to the studentof the class of Practical Surgery who shall most distinguishhimself by manipulative skill. The Morris Bursary of f,16a year, tenable for two years. Besides the above, gold andsilver medals and other prizes are awarded in each class.Several professors and other gentlemen connected withthe College receive students to reside with them ; and inthe office of the College there is kept a register of personsunconnected with the College who receive boarders intotheir families ; among these are several medical gentlemen.The annual dinner of the old and present students of the

Faculty of Medicine will be held in the General Library ofthe College on Wednesday, Oct. lst, at 6 30 P.M.

C. J. Hare, Esq., M.D., F. R. C. P., will preside.

WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL.-The hospital contains up-wards of 200 beds. There are separate departments forDiseases of the Eye, Ear, Skin, Teeth, and Throat, forOrthopsedics, and for Diseases of Women, and a specialward for Children. The Anatomical Museum is constantlyopen to the students. There are also a Pathological Museumand a Materia Medica Museum.A curator of the museum and a pathologist, each with a

salary of f50, and a medical and surgical registrar, eachwith a salary of £40, are appointed annually. Two housephysicians, two house surgeons, and a resident obstetricassistant are appointed for six months after examination,and are provided with rooms and commons. Clinicalassistants to the physicians and surgeons, and to the officersin charge of special departments, are appointed from amongqualified students of the hospital.

Scholarships and Prizes.-A Science Scholarship, value£100, is offered annually; the Guthrie and Entrance Scholar-ships. on alternate years, value £80; and Two EntranceScholarships, value £40. Entrance Scholarship, summersession, value £40. A E20 Entrance Scholarship is offeredannually to Dental Students. The Treasurer’s Prize, an IExhibition in Anatomy, Physiology, and Chemistry, value ’,£10 10s., tenable for one year for first-year men. The Pre-sident’s Prize, a Scholarship in Anatomy, Histology, and ’,Physiology, value jE21, given by his Grace the Duke of West-minster, President of the Hospital, to a student of thesecond year (to be styled Assistant Demonstrator). At theend of the fourth winter session, prizes of f,5 each (books orinstruments) in Clinical Medicine and Clinical Surgery,Frederick Bird Medal and Prize, value £15. Subjects ofexamination: Medicine, Midwifery, Diseases of Women andChildren, and Pathology. Chadwick Prize for General Pro-ficiency, i21 (books or instruments), to the most meritoriousstudent or students of any year not exceeding the fifth. Inmost of the classes special prizes, value about 2 guineaseach, are given by the lecturers.

LONDON SCHOOL OF MEDICINE FOR WOMEN, 30, Handel-street, Brunswick-square, W. C. -The winter session of thisSchool, which is in connexion with the Royal Free Hos-pital, Gray’s-inn-road, will begin on October lst, 1890, andwill end on March 29th, 1891. Dr. Stanley Boyd will de-liver the opening address, at 3 30 l.lvt , on October 1st. Thesummer session will begin on May lst, and will end onJuly :11 st, 1891. No student will be admitted to the studyot Medicine who has not completed her eighteenth year.

The admission of students rests exclusively with the Execu-tive Council.Scholarships and Prizes.-The Executive Council offers

annually a Scholarship of i30 to women preparing for themedical profession. The following scholarships will be offeredfor competition on September 25th and 26th, 1890 :-1. TheScholarship, value £30, open to all candidates who havepassed a preliminary examination in Arts recognised by theGeneral Medical Council. 2. The Stuart Mill Scholar.ship, value C30 a year for four years, open only tocandidates willing to practise Medicine in India inconnexion with the National Association for sup-plying Female Medical Aid to the Women of India.The United Kingdom Branch of the National Associationfor Supplying Female Medical Aid to the Women of Indiaprovides funds for the Dufferin and Jubilee Scholarships,each of the value of £25 a year, at the School, to studentswho will enter into a legal arrangement to practise in Indiaunder the Countess of Dufferin’s Fund on the completion oftheir course of study. Three Scholarships, each of thevalue of £100 a year for three years, will be offeredyearly to girls under nineteen years of age on the first dayof the examination, whose parents reside within the metre.politan area as defined in the Elementary Education Actby the trustees of the St. Dunstan’s charities. Theholders must fit themselves for the practice of a profession,medical or otherwise. The Scholarships will be tenable atany place of higher education approved by the governors.The Helen Prideaux Memorial Fund (£505) has been in-vested, and the income derived from it will be given as aprize every second or third year to a graduate of the School,for the further prosecution of her medical studies, at thediscretion of the trustees. There is also a small fund fromwhich assistance can occasionally be given to students andto graduates who specially require pecuniary help to obtainadditional experience in operative midwifery. Prizes and(’ertificates of Honour are awarded in each class at the endof the session. The Wood’s Prize for Operative Midwifery,value jE5 5s., will be offered at the end of the winter session,1891. Secretary, Miss Heaton.

METROPOLITAN ANCILLARY SCHOOLS OFMEDICINE.

THE following institutions offer a partial curriculum inthe form of classes dealing with particular subjects, oradapted to special circumstances.BETHLEM HOSPITAL. -This hospital is open for the

admission of two Resident Clinical Assistants who haverecently obtained their diplomas to practise Medicine andSurgery. They will be permitted to reside in the hospitalfor a term generally not exceeding six months, and will beprovided with such apartments, rations, and attendance asthe Committee shall consider reasonable. They will beunder the direction of the Resident Physician, and will beelected by the Committee from candidates whose testimonialsappear to be most satisfactory. Medical students who havecompleted the third year of study are allowed to attend thepractice of the hospital free, and qualified practitioners mayattend for a period of three months on payment of a fee.HOSPITAL Fon CONSUMPTION AND DISEASES OF THE

CHEST, Brompton.-Four House Physicians reside in thehospital for a period of six months. Pupils are admitted tothe practice of the hospital ; terms £3 3s. for three months;six months :E5 5s. perpetual fl0 10s. Lectures andClinical Demonstrations are given throughout the year bymembers of the medical staff. The medical practice of thehospital is recognised by the University of London, theApothecaries’ Society, and the Army and Navy and IndianMedical Poa,rds. The hospital contains 321 beds in the twobuildings.CENTRAL LONDON THROAT AND EAR HOSPITAL, Gray’s-

inn-road.-The hospital contains accommodation for seven.teen in-patients, and has a very extensive outpatientdepartment, which is open to all medical practitioners andstudents for the purpose of clinical demonstration andinstruction during the hours of the surgeons’ visits. Duringthe past year 6450 out-patients and 218 in-patients weretreated. Fee for three months’ attendance, 2 guineas; forsix months, 3 guineas. A course of lectures on the specialdiseases treated at this hospital will be delivered during thewinter months by members of the staff. The date of theselectures is announced in the medical journals prior to theircommencement. They are free to qualified practitioners

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and advanced students of medicine. Consulting Surgeon :Mr. Thomas Nunn. Surgeons : Mr. Lennox Browne, Dr.Arthur Orwin, Dr. J. Dundas Grant, Mr. Percy Jakins, andMr. T. W. Carmalt Jones. Assistant Surgeon : Mr. WalterFowler. Dental Surgeon : Mr. George Wallis. Defects ofSpeech: Mr. William Van Praagh. Secretary: Mr.Richard Kershaw.ROYAL HOSPITAL FOR CHILDREN AND WOMEN, Waterloo-

bridge-road (instituted 1816).-Consulting Physicians: Dr.Wilks, Dr. John Williams, Dr. G. V. Poore, and Dr. Geo.Roper. Consulting Surgeon : Arthur Durham. Physicians :Drs. W. A. Duncan, Alex. Haig, Septimus Sunderland, andW. R. Dakin. Surgeon : Mr. H. C. Jacobson. AssistantSurgeon : Mr. E. Overman Day. Surgeon-Dentist: Mr.Alfred Barnard. Resident Medical Officer : Mr. EnochMoss. Secretary: Mr. R. G. Kestin. Advanced Studentsin Medicine, and such practitioners as may desire it, arepermitted to attend the practice of this hospital gratis. Ifa certificate signifying such attendance be required, thesum of £5 5s. must be paid to the physicians and surgeonsin ordinary conjointly.HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN, Soho-square, W. - In con-

nexion with this institution there has been for some yearsa well-organised Clinical Department, which has latelybeen enlarged under the title of the London School of Gynee-cology. To meet the want increasingly felt by medical menof an accurate knowledge of the ordinary diseases of women,gentlemen are appointed every three months to act asclinical assistants to the physicians and surgeons seeingout- and in-door patients. The appointments are nominally" open to qualified medical men and to students of medicineafter their third year," but in the selection of candidatespreference is naturally given to gentlemen already engagedin practice. The large numbers of out-patients afford quiteunrivalled opportunities for practical instruction in the useof gynaecological instruments, and for the study of diseasespeculiar to women. A course of lectures on the Anatomyand Physiology of the Female Pelvic Organs is given duringeach quarter by a member of the Staff. Clinical lecturesare given in the Operating Theatre on alternate Thursdays,throughout the winter and summer sessions. Valuableprizes are given, after examination, annually, open to pastand present clinical assistants. Fee for the three months’course, ;C8 8s. Any further information can be obtained byletter, addressed to the Dean at the hospital.MR. THOMAS COOKE’S SCHOOL OF ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY,

SURGERY, &c.-By decision of the Royal Colleges of Phy-sicians and Surgeons, gentlemen rejected at their Anatomicaland Physiological Examinations (Primary R. C. S., or SecondConjoint) can get "signed up" from this school for thethree or six months’ work they are now required to put inbefore re-examination. This school is intended to meet therequirements of two classes of students :-1. Qualified prac-titioners and advanced students-i.e., gentlemen wishingeither to obtain some of the higher qualifications, or tocompete for appointments in Her Majesty’s Army, Navy,and Indian Medical Services. 2 Students preparing forthe usual Primary and Pass Examinations of any of thelicensing bodies. The instruction is given on the dissectedand undissected body, with normal and pathologicalspecimens, microscopical preparations, chemical, physiologi-cal, and surgical apparatus, splints, &c. The school possessesa good collection of physiological apparatus, allowing ofthe demonstration to the class of the great bulk of the usualpractical exercises in Physiology; also chemical apparatus,allowing every student not only to see, but to repeat for i

himself, the analysis of the principal food-stuffs, andtluids and solids of the body, and also all the usualreactions, tests, &c. Gentlemen preparing for the HigherExaminations receive special instruction in the moredifficult subjects, and have the advantage of personallyrepeating the practical exercises in Physiology above alludedto. The operations of Surgery are performed by the studentson the dead body. Private address: 40, Brunswick-square.DENTAL HOSPITAL OF LONDON MEDICAL SCHOOL,

Leicester-square. - Lectures are delivered, in winter, onMechanical Dentistry, by Mr. David Hepburn, on Wednes-days, at 5 P.M.; in summer, by Mr. Storer Bennett, on DentalSurgery and Pathology, on Tuesdays and Fridays, at 8 A.M ,and by Mr. Arthur Underwood, on Dental Anatomy andPhysiology (Human and Comparative), on Wednesdays andSaturdays, at 8 A. "’1. Fees: General fee for special lecturesrequired by the curriculum, £15 15.s’.; fees for two years’hospital practice required by the curriculum, f:15 15s ; ;

total fees for lectures and practice, £31 10s. ; perpetual fees,£36 15s. Hospital Surgeons: Messrs. Canton, Gregson,Truman, Storer Bennett, Claude Rogers, and Woodhouse.Assistant Surgeons: Messrs. Hern, Matheson, Parkinson.Read, Rogers, Paterson, and E. Lloyd Williams. Anaes-thetists : Messrs. Braine, Bailey, Bird, and Mills. AssistantAnaesthetists: Drs. Buxton and Hewitt. Medical Tutor:Mr. H. Baldwin. All communications to be addressed toMr. Morton Smale, Dean.ROYAL HOSPITAL FOR DISEASES OF THE CHEST, City-

road. (Established 1814.)-This hospital has recently beenenlarged by the addition of a very complete out-patients’department, and also by the erection of a new wing, whichprovides accommodation for 80 in-patients. Expenditurefor 1889, f5383 ; income (including legacies), £37lO; leavinga deficit of fl673.ROYAL EAR HOSPITAL, Frith-street, Soho-square, W.

(Founded 1816, for the special treatment of Diseases of theEar.)-During 1888, 102 in-patients and 2765 out-patientswere treated. The clinique of the hospital is open tomedical practitioners and advanced students by previousarrangement with the Secretary. Surgeons: UrbanPritchard,M.D., F.R.C.S., and Farquhar Matheson, M.B., C.M.Secretary: M. C. Puddy.GREAT NORTHERN CENTRAL HOSPITAL, Holloway-road.

Consulting Physician: Sir Andrew Clark, Bart., M.D.Consulting Surgeons: Frederick le Gros Clark and SirW. S. Savory, Bart. Physicians: Drs. Cholmeley, Burnet,Beale, Beevor, Syers, and Galloway. Obstetric Phy-sicians : Drs. W. S. A. Griffith and Dakin. Surgeons: aMessrs. W. Adams, Macready, Lockwood, H. W. Alling-ham, and H. Percy Dean. Ophthalmic Surgeon: Mr.A. Stanford Morton. Aural Surgeon: Mr. W. R. H.Stewart. Throat Department: Mr. W. Spencer Watson.Skin Department: Dr. Cook. Dental Surgeon: Mr. E.Keen. The new buildings in the Holloway-road haverecently been completed, and the practice of the hospitalis open to qualified practitioners and senior students.Clinical assistants are appointed in the wards and out-patient department. Further information can be obtainedon application to the Hon. Secretary of the Medical Com-mittee, 57, Welbeck-street, W.LONDON TEMPERANCE HOSPITAL, Hampstead-road, N. W.

(Established 1873.)-Physicians: Dr. James Edmunds,M.R.C.P., Dr. J. J. Ridge. Surgeon: Dr. W. J. Collins,F.R.C.S. Dental Surgeon: Mr. A. Alexander. Thehospital contains 70 beds. The in-patients average 700and the out-patients 3000 a year. The medical and surgicalpractice of the hospital is open to students and practi-tioners. Special departments for Ophthalmology andGynaecology. Operations, Mondays and Thursdays, 3 30.Classes will be held during the winter and summer sessionsfor students preparing for the final examinations at theColleges and the Universities. Appointments, vacanciesfor which are advertised in the medical journals : Registrarand Pathologist, senior and junior House Surgeons. For

particulars as to hospital practice and classes apply at thehospital to Dr. W. J. Collins.NATIONAL HOSPITAL FOR THE PARALYSED AND EPI-

LEPTIC (Albany Memorial), Queen-square, Bloomsbury.-The new hospital, with the Finchley branch, contains 170beds and cots. The physicians attend every Monday,Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, at 2.30 P.M. In- andout-patient practice and electrical room treatment at thathour. Physicians : Drs. Ramskill, Hughlings Jackson,Buzzard, and Bastian. Physicians for Out-patients : Drs.W. R. Gowers, D. Ferrier, Ormerod, and Beevor. AssistantPhysicians : Drs. James Anderson and Tooth. Surgeons :Messrs. W. Adams and Victor Horsley. Ophthalmic Sur-geons : Messrs. R. Brudenell Carter and Marcus Gunn.Aural Surgeon: Mr. A E. Cumberbatch. Laryngologist oDr. Felix Semon. Anaesthetist: Dr. Silk. Pathologistand Registrar: Dr. W. S. Colman. House Physicians: Drs.James Taylor and W. H. R. Rivers. Medical practitionersand senior students may attend the practice after signingtheir names in the clerk’s office.QUEEN CHARLOTTE’S LYING-IN HOSPITAL AND MID-

WIFERY TRAINING SCHOOL, Marylebone-road, N.W.-Con-sulting Physician: Dr. Brodie. Consulting SurgeonsMr. H. Lee and Sir William Mac Cormac. Physicians toIn-patients : Dr. W. Hope and Dr. W. C. Grigg. Phy-sician to Out-patients: Dr. W. S. A. Griflith. This

hospital, which has been recently enlarged, receives nearly1000 patients annually, besides having a large out-patient

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department. Medical pupils are received at all times ofthe year. Pupils have unusual opportunities of seeingobstetric complications and operative midwifery, on accountof the very larae number of primiparous cases-upwards ofthree-fourths of the total admissions. Clinical instructionis given on the more important cases which presentthemselves. Certificates of attendance at this hospitalare recognised by all universities, colleges, and licensingbodies. Midwives and Monthly Nurses are trained. TheMidwives are specially prepared for the examination of theObstetrical Society, and the fees are paid by the hospitalfor those who obtain the Society’s diploma and have pre-viously passed an examination by the physicians of theHospital. Fees : Medical Students, f3 3s. for one week;;C5 5s. for two weeks ; £6 16s. 6d. for four weeks, exclusiveof board and lodging. Pupil Midwives, f26 5s. for threemonths; Pupil Nurses, £15 15s. for twelve weeks, andfll Os. 6d. for eight weeks; these include board and lodging.For further particulars, application should be made to Mr.G. Owen Ryan, Secretary, at the hospital.SEAMEN’S HOSPITAL (late Dreadnought), Greenwich, S.E.

This institution is established for the relief of seamen of allnations. Casualties are received at all hours. Apartmentsare provided in the house of the Principal Medical Officerfor students. Honorary Consulting Physicians : Dr. RobertBarnes, F.R.C.P., and Dr. Richard Quain, F.R.C.P. Visit-ing Physicians : Dr. John Curnow, F.R.C.P., and Dr. JohnAnderson, C. 1. E., M. R. C. P. Honorary Consulting Surgeon:Mr. J. N. Davies-Colley, F. R. C. S. Visiting Surgeon : Mr.G. Robertson Turner, F.R.C.S. Principal Medical Officer :Mr. W. Johnson Smith, F.R.C.S. House Physician: Dr.Otto J. Kauffmann, M.R.C.P. House Surgeon: Mr. R.Ritson, M.R.C.S. Secretary : Mr. P. Michelli.HOSPITAL FOR SICK CHILDREN, Great Ormond-street,

Bloomsbury, W.C., and Cromwell House, Highgate.-There are now 121 beds in the hospital, Great Ormond-Street, and 52 beds at the country branch ; total, 173. In-patients last year, 733 ; out-patients, 18,896. Particularsas to the times of Medical and Surgical Visits and thePractice of the Hospital can be had on application to theSecretary.ROYAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL, Moorfields.-

The hospital founded in 1804, and considerably enlarged in1876, now contains 100 beds for patients, which wereoccupied during last year by 2337 persons. The out-

patients are yearly over 25,000; attendances, 129,325 in1889. Operations are performed daily from 10 to 1 o’clock,and three surgeons attend on each day. Students areadmitted to the practice. Fee for six months, £3 3s.;perpetual, i5 5s. Classes, demonstrations, and lectures aie eperiodically given, to which perpetual students are admittedfree. Students of the hospital are eligible for the office ofhouse surgeon, or may be appointed clinical assistants.The Secretary, Mr. Robert Newstead, will furnish furtherinformation, as may be desired.ROYAL WESTMINSTER OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL, King

William-street, West Strand.-The hospital contains 50beds; and the patients, who number 10,000 annually, areseen at 1 o’clock, and operations performed daily at 2 o’clock.The following are the days of attendance of the surgeons:Mr. Power and Mr. Rouse (Consulting Surgeons); Mr. Cowelland Mr. Juler, Wednesday and Saturday; Mr. Macnamaraand Mr. Wainewright, Tuesday and Friday; Mr. Hartridge,Mr. Frost, and Mr. Dodd, Monday and Thursday. Thepractice of the hospital is open to students. Fees for sixmonths, dE3 3s.; perpetual, £5 5s. Students of the hospitalare eligible for the post of house surgeon. Special demon-strations and lectures will be given during the session, com-mencing in October. Clinical Assistants to the Surgeonsare appointed for periods of six months. Secretary: Mr. T.Beattie- Campbell.ROYAL ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL, 297, Oxford-street.-

Surgeons : Messrs. B. E. Brodhurst, H. A. Reeves, CharlesRead, and William E. Balkwill. Assistant Surgeon: Mr.H. F. Baker. House Surgeon: Mr. A. Lyndon. Secretary:Mr. Maskell. Operations on Mondays at 2 P.M. The hos-pital is open to all legally qualified practitioners. Pupilsare admitted to witness the practice of the hospital on thefollowing terms: six months, £3 3s.; twelve months, X5 5s.;perpetual, £10 10s.

ST. PETER’S HOSPITAL FOR STONE AND URINARY DiS-KASES, Henrietta-street, Covent-garden.-Established 1860.New Hospital built 1882. Honorary Surgeons: Mr. F. IR.Heyeock, Mr. F. Swinford Edwards, Mr. E. Hurry Fenwick,

Mr. Reginald Ilarriaon. Pathologist: Mr. E. HurryFenwick. The hospital contains 24 beds and 3 privatewards. Consul ations are held and operations are performedeach Wednesday at 2 r.M. A course of lectures uponUrinary Diseases is delivered every year by members of thestafl’, whilst clinical instruction in the wards and out.patient department is given daily throughout the year,except on Friday. The attendance of practitioners andsenior students is invited. A limited number of clinicalassistants is appointed to the out-patients.THE COLLEGE OF STATE MEDICINE, London. -The objects

of the College, which was founded in 1886 and incorporatedin 1887, are-(a) to found, establish, and maintain in ornear London an institution to aid the theoretical andpractical investigation and study of sanitary science, and ofall matters relating thereto ; (b) to aid the theoretical andpractical investigation and study of other branches of StateMedicine ; (c) with a view to effecting these objects, to

appoint professors, to institute lectures and demonstrations,to issue publications of the Transactions of the Association,and to found chemical and pathological laboratories and alibrary ; (d) to do all such other things as may from timeto time be incidental or conducive to the attainment of theobjects above set forth or any of them. The importance andnecessity of such an institution have been forcibly impressedupon the notice of the Council—(1) by the increasingdemand for Public Health qualifications ; (2) by the factthat possession of such a diploma is of great value to armymedical ofticers, as it gives exemption to this subject in thequalifying examinations for promotion ; (3) that thepossession of such a diploma is, in accordance with theprovisions of the County Government Act, compulsory inthe future upon those seeking appointments as medicalofficers of health. Further particulars as to the courses oflectures &c. may be obtained from the Hon. Secretary, atthe College, Great Russell-street, Bedford-square.VOLUNTEER MEDICAL STAFF CORPS (LONDON DIVISION),

62, St. Martin’s-lane. - Hon. Commandant : Surgeon-General Sir William Guyer Hunter, K.C.M.G., M.P.,Q.H.S. Commandant : Surgeon-Major A. T. Norton.The Volunteer Medical Staff Corps bears the same relationto the Volunteer Army as the Medical Staff Corps bears tothe regular Army. The course of training has the greatadvantage of affording, in addition to a knowledge ofordinary military duties, special ambulance instructionuseful in all ranks of life. All who have gone through theranks of this corps are capable of rendering valuable aid inany accident, and in cases of emergency may be the meansof saving lives which would otherwise be lost. In additionto the company and battalion drills of an ordinary infantrycorps, the special training includes stretcher, waggon, andlitter drill; the use of improvised seats and stretchers; theuse and application of bandages, splints, &c. ; lectures bythe oflicers on first aid to the injured, and on the elementsof anatomy, physiology, hygiene, and nursing. Lecturesare delivered during the winter session.SCHOOL OF PHARMACY OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL

SOCIETY or GREAT BRITAIN. — Chemistry and Physics:Professor Dunstan, M.A., F.I.C., F.C.S. Practical Che-mistry : Professor Attfield, Ph.D., .F.R.S., F.I.C., F.C,S.;F. W. Short, Demonstrator ; H. D. Fuge, Assistant Demon-strator. Botany: Professor Green, M.A., B.Se., F.L.S.Materia Medica: Mr. Greenish, F.I.C., F.L.S. PracticalPharmacy: Joseph Ince, F.L.S., F.C.S. The sessioncom-mences on Wednesday, Oct. 1st, at 10 A. M. Medicalstudents, or pupils intending to enter the medical profession,are admitted to the lectures &c., and to a course of practicalchemistry of any length in the laboratories. Applicationfor admission to the school, or for further information, maybe made to the Dean of the school, Professor Attfield, F.E.S,,17, Bloomsbury-square, London, W.C. Sir E. H. Sieveking,M.D., LL.D., F.R.C.P., will deliver an introductory addresson Wednesday, Oct. 1st, at 8 P.M.SOUTH LONDON SCHOOL OF PHARMACY, LIMITED.-This

School was established in 1868 and incorporated in 1888 asa public company. The managing director is Dr. JohnMuter, M.A., F.R.S.E., F.C.S., F.I.C., who lectures onChemistry, Physics, and Botany. The other lecturers are:Mr. W. H. Dodd, F. C. S. (Materia Medica and Pharmacy) ;Mr. L. De Konnigh, F.I.C., F.C.S. (Analytical Chemistry);and Mr. T. Townsend, A.C.P., and Lond. Matric. (Classics,Mathematics, and Mechanics) ; assisted by a staff of com-petent demonstrators. The department most valuable tomedical students is the Medical and General Science


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