+ All Categories
Home > Documents > SCOTTISH MEDICAL SCHOOLS

SCOTTISH MEDICAL SCHOOLS

Date post: 02-Jan-2017
Category:
Upload: vanduong
View: 213 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
2
507 Prentice. Assistant House Surgeon and Dispenser: Mr. I W. F. A. Clowes. Secretary: Mr. Charles H. Read. Over 800 in-patients, 3000 out-patients, and 1000 dental cases are attended in a year.. LIVERPOOL NORTHERN HOSPITAL (150 beds).-There is a special ward for the treatment of children. Clinical lectures are delivered by the physicians and surgeons during the summer and winter sessions. Clinical clerkships and dresserships are open to all students without additional fee. Consulting Surgeons: Mr. W. H. Manifold; Dr. Henry Lowndes; Dr. W. Macfie Campbell. Physicians : Dr. E. H. Dickinson, M.A.; Dr. James Barr. Surgeons : Messrs. -Chauncy Puzey, Damer Harrisson, and G. Gibson Hamilton. Fees for hospital attendance: perpetual, f26 5s. ; one year, 1:10 10.!.; six months, i7 7s.; three months, i4 4s.; Practical Pharmacy, £2 2s. Students can enter to the medical or the surgical practice separately on payment of half the above fees. LIVERPOOL ROYAL SOUTHERN HOSPITAL.-Physicians : Drs. Cameron, Carter, and Williams. Surgeons: Messrs. Paul, Rawdon, and Alexander. Pathologist and Clinical Tutor: Mr. C. J. Macalister. Senior House Surgeon: Mr. W. C. Helme. Junior House Surgeons: Messrs. W. H. ’C. Davey and W. B. Paterson. There are 200 beds. Clinical Lectures are given by the physicians and surgeons during the winter and summer sessions. Clinical clerkships and .dresserships are open to all students. Special wards for acci- .dents and diseases of children. Resident students received. NORFOLK AND NORWICH HOSPITAL (220 beds).-One .year’s attendance recognised by the examining boards. Fees: For the physicians’ practice, 5 guineas for six months; £10 10s. perpetual. For the surgeons’ practice, including Jressership, £10 for three months; 915 for six months; £20 for one year; £30 for two years; £40 perpetual. Pupils resident and non-resident. Consulting Physician: Sir P. Eade, M.D. Consulting Surgeon : Mr. T. W. Crosse, F.R.C.S. Physicians : Dr. Barton, Dr. Bateman, and Dr. "Taylor. Surgeons : Mr. Cadge, Mr. Williams, and Dr. Beverley. Assistant Surgeons : Mr. H. S. Robinson and Mr. S. H. Burton. House Surgeon: Mr. H. Chester Nance. Secretary: Mr. Howard J. Collins. NORTHAMPTON GENERAL INFIRMARY (Established 1743 ; rebuilt 1793).-In-patients, 1693 ; out-patients, 8223. The - number of beds is 160. Out-pupils are received, and have - every opportunity of acquiring a practical knowledge of their profession. Instruction is also given in Anatomy and Materia Medica and Practical Pharmacy. Pupils’ fee jE25 ,per annum, or a perpetual fee of 950. NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE INFIRMARY, Hartshill. -The New Infirmary, opened in 1869, is built on the pavilion plan, ,has accommodation for over 200 patients, including Child- ren’s wards, special Ovarian wards, and a special department for the treatment of Diseases of the Eye. In-patients last .year, 1690; out-patients, 9603. The attendance of pupils .at this infirmary is duly recognised by all the examining boards ; and there are unusual facilities for acquiring a practical knowledge of the profession. Physicians and Medical Officers: Dr. J. T. Arlidge and Messrs. M. .Ashwell and J. G. U. West. Surgeons : Messrs. W. H. Folker, J. Alcock, and W. D. Spanton. Dental Surgeon: .Mr. W. Bartlett. House Physician : Mr. A. Knight Holt. House Surgeon: Mr. A. S. Barling. Secretary: Mr. R. Hordley, Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent, from whom particulars :a,s to fees &c. may be obtained. WOLVERHAMPTON AND STAFFORDSHIRE GENERAL HOS- PITAL (founded 1848 ; beds, 230).-A preparatory school ,of Medicine and Surgery. The pupils have the advantage of seeing the whole of the practice of the physicians and sur- geons, and are trained in clinical work by the medical and :surgical staff. The attendance of pupils at this hospital is recognised by all the examining boards. Operations are performed every Thursday at 11 o’clock, and practitioners .are welcomed. MANCHESTER GENERAL HOSPITAL FOR SICK CHILDREN, Pendlebury and Gartside-street.—The hospital contains 140 beds, including 28 for scarlet fever. The medical staff ’visit the hospital daily at 10 A.M. Clinical instruction is given by the medical staff at, the Hospital and Dis- pensary. Out-patients are seen daily at 9 A.M. at the Dis- pensary, Gartside-street, Manchester. Physicians : Drs. Ashby and Hutton. Surgeon: Mr. G. A. Wright. Assistant Surgeon : Mr. Joseph Collier. During 1888 there were 1344 in-patients and 10,468 out-patients under treatment at the Dispensary. SCOTTISH MEDICAL SCHOOLS. The following schools provide a more or less complete curriculum of medical study. SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, EDINBURGH.-The lectures qualify for the University of Edinburgh and the other Universities; the Royal Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh, London, and Dublin, and the other Medical and Public Boards. In accordance with the Statutes of the University of Edinburgh, any four of the medical classes required for graduation, or two complete anni medici, may be attended in this school, each of which anni medici maybe constituted by attendance on two of the six months’ courses, or on one of these and two three months’ courses. The regulations require that the fee for any class, taken for graduation in Edinburgh, shall be the same as that for the corresponding class in the University. The whole education required for graduation at the University of London may be taken in this School. Fees.-For a first course of lectures, £3 5s.; for a second, JE2 4s.; perpetual, JE5 5s. To those who have already attended a first course in Edinburgh the perpetual fee is j62 4s. Practical Anatomy (six months’ course), i3 3s.; course of demonstrations, E2 2s.; perpetual, i4 4s. Practical Anatomy, with course of demonstrations, £4 4s. Practical Chemistry, jE3 3s. Analytical Chemistry, i2 a month, i5 for three months, or £10 for six months. Practical Materia Medica, including Practical Pharmacy, Diseases of the Ear, Diseases of the Skin, Diseases of Children, and Diseases of the Tropics and Climatology, each f2 2s. Vaccination, j61 Is. For summer courses of Clinical Surgery and Clinical Medi- cine, each E2 4s.; Practical Anatomy, including Anatomical Demonstrations, Operative Surgery, and Practical Medicine and Medical Diagnosis, each JE2 2s. Insanity, ;j61 Is. EDINBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY, Marshall-street, Nicolson-square.-The classes of this School will be resumed for the winter session on October lst next. Chemistry, Theoretical and Practical, Midwifery, Surgery, and Medicine. From the Dispensary attached to this institu- tion, Pharmacy, Practical and Theoretical. Practical Mid- wifery. Out-door Practice. Medical and Surgical Diagnosis. Attendance at this institution qualifies for the University of Edinburgh and all other licensing boards. Tutorial classes in all the branches of the medical curriculum. Preliminary Medical Classes, 11 A. M. to 4 P.M., and in the evening. Particulars of R. Urquhart, Secretary. ANDERSON’S COLLEGE MEDICAL SCHOOL, GLASGOW.- The following courses are given, which qualify for all the licensing boards:-In winter : Anatomy, Chemistry, Physio- logy, Surgery, Medicine, Materia Medica, Midwifery and Diseases of Children, &c. In summer: Anatomy, Prac- tical Chemistry, Practical Physiology, Diseases of Women, Medical Jurisprudence, Botany, Hygiene, &c. The Chemical Laboratory is open daily from 10 to 5. Students of the School are admitted to the Lectures and Clinique at the Ophthalmic Institution free of charge. Fees.—Each course of lectures (except Anatomy), first session, i2 2 2s. ; second session, j61 1 ls. ; afterwards free. Anatomy (including dissecting-room), first session, i4 4s. ; second session, JE4 4s. ; third session, El 1 ls. ; summer (in- cluding Practical Anatomy), i2 2s. Practical Anatomy only, 91 1 ls. ; Osteology, il 11s. 6d. Students who have attended classes at other schools will be admitted to such classes as they may have attended elsewhere at the reduced fees. Fees for all the Lectures and Hospital practice required of candidates for triple qualification, about f48. The new buildings are situated in Dumbarton-road, immediately to the west of the entrance to the Western Infirmary, within two minutes’walk of it, and four minutes’ walk of the University. Extensive accommodation is pro- vided for Practical Anatomy, Practical Chemistry, Practical Physiology, Practical Pharmacy, Operative Surgery and Hygiene, and Public Health. There are also provided a large library and reading-room, and a students’ recreation room. The Professor of Anatomy is assisted by four Demonstrators and three Assistant Demonstrators. . ST. MUNGO’S COLLEGE AND GLASGOW ROYAL IN- FIRMARY.-The Medical School, which has been carried on for the last fourteen years at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary has been absorbed by, and is to be continued as, the Medical Faculty in St Mungo’s College. This College was incor- porated in the spring of the present year. Its objects are not limited to Medicine, but embrace Law, Science, and
Transcript
Page 1: SCOTTISH MEDICAL SCHOOLS

507

Prentice. Assistant House Surgeon and Dispenser: Mr. IW. F. A. Clowes. Secretary: Mr. Charles H. Read. Over800 in-patients, 3000 out-patients, and 1000 dental casesare attended in a year..LIVERPOOL NORTHERN HOSPITAL (150 beds).-There is

a special ward for the treatment of children. Clinicallectures are delivered by the physicians and surgeons duringthe summer and winter sessions. Clinical clerkships anddresserships are open to all students without additional fee.Consulting Surgeons: Mr. W. H. Manifold; Dr. HenryLowndes; Dr. W. Macfie Campbell. Physicians : Dr. E.H. Dickinson, M.A.; Dr. James Barr. Surgeons : Messrs.-Chauncy Puzey, Damer Harrisson, and G. Gibson Hamilton.Fees for hospital attendance: perpetual, f26 5s. ; one year,1:10 10.!.; six months, i7 7s.; three months, i4 4s.; PracticalPharmacy, £2 2s. Students can enter to the medical orthe surgical practice separately on payment of half theabove fees.LIVERPOOL ROYAL SOUTHERN HOSPITAL.-Physicians :

Drs. Cameron, Carter, and Williams. Surgeons: Messrs.Paul, Rawdon, and Alexander. Pathologist and ClinicalTutor: Mr. C. J. Macalister. Senior House Surgeon: Mr.W. C. Helme. Junior House Surgeons: Messrs. W. H.’C. Davey and W. B. Paterson. There are 200 beds. ClinicalLectures are given by the physicians and surgeons duringthe winter and summer sessions. Clinical clerkships and.dresserships are open to all students. Special wards for acci-.dents and diseases of children. Resident students received.NORFOLK AND NORWICH HOSPITAL (220 beds).-One

.year’s attendance recognised by the examining boards. Fees:For the physicians’ practice, 5 guineas for six months;£10 10s. perpetual. For the surgeons’ practice, includingJressership, £10 for three months; 915 for six months;£20 for one year; £30 for two years; £40 perpetual.Pupils resident and non-resident. Consulting Physician:Sir P. Eade, M.D. Consulting Surgeon : Mr. T. W. Crosse,F.R.C.S. Physicians : Dr. Barton, Dr. Bateman, and Dr."Taylor. Surgeons : Mr. Cadge, Mr. Williams, and Dr.Beverley. Assistant Surgeons : Mr. H. S. Robinson andMr. S. H. Burton. House Surgeon: Mr. H. Chester Nance.Secretary: Mr. Howard J. Collins.NORTHAMPTON GENERAL INFIRMARY (Established 1743 ;

rebuilt 1793).-In-patients, 1693 ; out-patients, 8223. The- number of beds is 160. Out-pupils are received, and have- every opportunity of acquiring a practical knowledge oftheir profession. Instruction is also given in Anatomy andMateria Medica and Practical Pharmacy. Pupils’ fee jE25,per annum, or a perpetual fee of 950.NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE INFIRMARY, Hartshill. -The

New Infirmary, opened in 1869, is built on the pavilion plan,,has accommodation for over 200 patients, including Child-ren’s wards, special Ovarian wards, and a special departmentfor the treatment of Diseases of the Eye. In-patients last.year, 1690; out-patients, 9603. The attendance of pupils.at this infirmary is duly recognised by all the examiningboards ; and there are unusual facilities for acquiring apractical knowledge of the profession. Physicians andMedical Officers: Dr. J. T. Arlidge and Messrs. M..Ashwell and J. G. U. West. Surgeons : Messrs. W. H.

Folker, J. Alcock, and W. D. Spanton. Dental Surgeon:.Mr. W. Bartlett. House Physician : Mr. A. Knight Holt.House Surgeon: Mr. A. S. Barling. Secretary: Mr. R.Hordley, Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent, from whom particulars:a,s to fees &c. may be obtained.WOLVERHAMPTON AND STAFFORDSHIRE GENERAL HOS-

PITAL (founded 1848 ; beds, 230).-A preparatory school,of Medicine and Surgery. The pupils have the advantage ofseeing the whole of the practice of the physicians and sur-geons, and are trained in clinical work by the medical and:surgical staff. The attendance of pupils at this hospital isrecognised by all the examining boards. Operations areperformed every Thursday at 11 o’clock, and practitioners.are welcomed.MANCHESTER GENERAL HOSPITAL FOR SICK CHILDREN,

Pendlebury and Gartside-street.—The hospital contains 140beds, including 28 for scarlet fever. The medical staff

’visit the hospital daily at 10 A.M. Clinical instructionis given by the medical staff at, the Hospital and Dis-pensary. Out-patients are seen daily at 9 A.M. at the Dis-pensary, Gartside-street, Manchester. Physicians : Drs.Ashby and Hutton. Surgeon: Mr. G. A. Wright. AssistantSurgeon : Mr. Joseph Collier. During 1888 there were 1344in-patients and 10,468 out-patients under treatment at theDispensary.

SCOTTISH MEDICAL SCHOOLS.

The following schools provide a more or less completecurriculum of medical study.SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, EDINBURGH.-The lectures qualify

for the University of Edinburgh and the other Universities;the Royal Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh,London, and Dublin, and the other Medical and PublicBoards. In accordance with the Statutes of the Universityof Edinburgh, any four of the medical classes required forgraduation, or two complete anni medici, may be attendedin this school, each of which anni medici maybe constitutedby attendance on two of the six months’ courses, or on oneof these and two three months’ courses. The regulationsrequire that the fee for any class, taken for graduation inEdinburgh, shall be the same as that for the correspondingclass in the University. The whole education required forgraduation at the University of London may be taken inthis School.Fees.-For a first course of lectures, £3 5s.; for a second,

JE2 4s.; perpetual, JE5 5s. To those who have alreadyattended a first course in Edinburgh the perpetual fee isj62 4s. Practical Anatomy (six months’ course), i3 3s.;course of demonstrations, E2 2s.; perpetual, i4 4s. PracticalAnatomy, with course of demonstrations, £4 4s. Practical

Chemistry, jE3 3s. Analytical Chemistry, i2 a month, i5 forthree months, or £10 for six months. Practical MateriaMedica, including Practical Pharmacy, Diseases of the Ear,Diseases of the Skin, Diseases of Children, and Diseases ofthe Tropics and Climatology, each f2 2s. Vaccination, j61 Is.For summer courses of Clinical Surgery and Clinical Medi-cine, each E2 4s.; Practical Anatomy, including AnatomicalDemonstrations, Operative Surgery, and Practical Medicineand Medical Diagnosis, each JE2 2s. Insanity, ;j61 Is.EDINBURGH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY,

Marshall-street, Nicolson-square.-The classes of this Schoolwill be resumed for the winter session on October lst next.Chemistry, Theoretical and Practical, Midwifery, Surgery,and Medicine. From the Dispensary attached to this institu-tion, Pharmacy, Practical and Theoretical. Practical Mid-wifery. Out-door Practice. Medical and Surgical Diagnosis.Attendance at this institution qualifies for the University ofEdinburgh and all other licensing boards. Tutorial classesin all the branches of the medical curriculum. PreliminaryMedical Classes, 11 A. M. to 4 P.M., and in the evening.Particulars of R. Urquhart, Secretary. ANDERSON’S COLLEGE MEDICAL SCHOOL, GLASGOW.-

The following courses are given, which qualify for all thelicensing boards:-In winter : Anatomy, Chemistry, Physio-logy, Surgery, Medicine, Materia Medica, Midwifery andDiseases of Children, &c. In summer: Anatomy, Prac-tical Chemistry, Practical Physiology, Diseases of Women,Medical Jurisprudence, Botany, Hygiene, &c. TheChemical Laboratory is open daily from 10 to 5. Studentsof the School are admitted to the Lectures and Clinique atthe Ophthalmic Institution free of charge.

Fees.—Each course of lectures (except Anatomy), firstsession, i2 2 2s. ; second session, j61 1 ls. ; afterwards free.Anatomy (including dissecting-room), first session, i4 4s. ;second session, JE4 4s. ; third session, El 1 ls. ; summer (in-cluding Practical Anatomy), i2 2s. Practical Anatomyonly, 91 1 ls. ; Osteology, il 11s. 6d. Students who haveattended classes at other schools will be admitted to suchclasses as they may have attended elsewhere at the reducedfees. Fees for all the Lectures and Hospital practice requiredof candidates for triple qualification, about f48.The new buildings are situated in Dumbarton-road,

immediately to the west of the entrance to the WesternInfirmary, within two minutes’walk of it, and four minutes’walk of the University. Extensive accommodation is pro-vided for Practical Anatomy, Practical Chemistry, PracticalPhysiology, Practical Pharmacy, Operative Surgery andHygiene, and Public Health. There are also provided alarge library and reading-room, and a students’ recreationroom. The Professor of Anatomy is assisted by fourDemonstrators and three Assistant Demonstrators.

. ST. MUNGO’S COLLEGE AND GLASGOW ROYAL IN-FIRMARY.-The Medical School, which has been carried onfor the last fourteen years at the Glasgow Royal Infirmaryhas been absorbed by, and is to be continued as, the MedicalFaculty in St Mungo’s College. This College was incor-

porated in the spring of the present year. Its objects arenot limited to Medicine, but embrace Law, Science, and

Page 2: SCOTTISH MEDICAL SCHOOLS

508

Arts. Both the Medical and Law Faculties will commencework at the beginning ot the present winter session. TheMedical Faculty, by arrangement with the managers of theinfirmary, who have a representation of nine on the Collegegoverning body, will obtain possession of the buildingsbelonging to them, in which are suitable laboratories,museums, and lecture-rooms, fully equipped for the pur-poses of a medical college. The Royal Infirmary, which isat the service of the College for teaching purposes, is oneof the largest general hospitals in the kingdom. It has582 beds, and it has special wards for Diseases peculiar toWomen, for Venereal Diseases, Erysipelas, Burns, andDiseases of the Throat. At the Dispensary, special adviceand treatment are given in Diseases of the Eye, Ear,Teeth, and Skin, in addition to the large and varied numberof ordinary medical and surgical cases-over 40,000 perannum-which in a great industrial centre daily requireattention. Students of the College and Hospital get thebenefit of dispensary experience free of charge. All appoint-ments are open. There are four Physicians and six Sur-geons’ Assistants, who board in the hospital, and act inthe capacity of House Physicians and House Surgeons.These appointments are made for six months, and are opento students who have completed their curriculum and passedall their examinations except the last, or to gentlemen whohave a legal qualification in Medicine or Surgery, to whompreference will be given. Clerks and Dressers are appointedby the visiting Physicians and Surgeons. From the largenumber of cases of acute disease and accidents of variedcharacter received into this hospital, these appointmentsare numerous, and valuable to students. In the Pathologi-cal Department Assistants are also appointed by the Patho-logist. The session will open on Wednesday, Oct. 23rd, atthe College buildings.The fee for each class is £2 2s., except for Anatomy,

which is jE4 4s.; but the governors have arranged a sessionalfee, payment of which entitles the student to attendancenot only on the curriculum classes, but all the classes-nearly as many more as the curriculum classes,-and thissessional fee is only slightly greater than the sum total ofthe fees required for the curriculum classes. Students arestrongly recommended to begin their course on the sessionalfee plan. Students who have already taken part of theircourse at this School, or in other schools, can learn, onapplication to the Secretary, what in their case the sessionalfee would be.GLASGOW WESTERN MEDICAL SCHOOL.—The School is

situated close to the University and Western Infirmary, inwhich latter students obtain their Hospital Practice andClinical Lectures. Lectures and Demonstrations are givenon Surgery, by Dr. D. N. Knox; on Practice of Physic, byDr. D. C. Me Vail ; on Midwifery and Gynaecology, byDr. J. K. Kelly; on Diseases of the Ear, Throat, and Nose,by Dr. Walker-Downie; on Diseases of the Eye, by Dr. F.Fergus ; and on Public Hea!th, by Dr. P. C. Smith.The Lectures qualify for the University of Glasgow, in

accordance with the regulations, the Faculty of Physiciansand Surgeons, Glasgow, and the other corporations.

Class Fees.-For each course of Lectures, except in thespecial courses, the fee for the first session is i2 2s., secondsession il Is. Students who have attended a first courseelsewhere pay £1 1s. For the following three special courses,the fee for each is 91 Is.: Diseases of the Ear, Throat, andNose, Diseases of the Eye, and Public Health.UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, DUNDEE.-The courses of Lectures

and Practical Classes in Chemistry, Natural History, Botany,and Anatomy are recognised for graduation in Medicine bythe University Court of the University of Edinburgh.The nrst year of medical study can thus be overtaken atUniversity College. In accordance with the statutes of allthe Scottish Universities, another annus medec2cs can betaken in Dundee by means of attendance during the wintersession on Practical Anatomy, and on the Medical andSurgical Practice of the Royal Infirmary.Fees.—Chemistry : Professor Percy Frankland, Ph. D.,B.Sc ,

&c.; lectures, i4 4s.; practical class, winter, i3 3s.; summer,jE2 2s. Anatomy: Professor Paterson, M.D., M.R.C.S.,&c.; lectures, i3 3s.; practical class, winter, i3 3s.;summer, i2 28.; demonstrations and tutorial class, il Is.Natural History: Professor D’Arcy W. Thompson, B.A.,£3 3s. (including practical class). Botany: ProfessorPatrick Geddes, i3 3s. (including practical class). Opera-tive Surgery: Dr. MacEwan, E2 2s.Royal Infirmary.—The Infirmary contains 250 beds.

There is a special ward for the treatment of children. Inaddition, during last year there were 3790 out-patients and5893 home patients. Appointments : Two qualified residentmedical assistants are appointed annually; clinical clerksand dressers will be attached to the physicians and surgeons.Students may also be appointed to assist in the post-mortemroom. Fee, jE2 2s. per annum.Royal Asylum. -Appointments: a qualified resident

assistant and resident clinical clerk. Clinical instructionis given at the asylum.

SCOTTISH ANCILLARY SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE.

The following hospitals provide instruction in specialbranches of medical education and facilities for clinicalstudy :-ROYAL INFIRMARY, EDINBURGH.-Beds are set apart for

clinical instruction by the professors of the University ofEdinburgh. Courses of Clinical Medicine and Surgery arealso given by the ordinary physicians and surgeons. Specialinstruction is given in the medical department on Diseasesof Women, Physical Diagnosis, and on Diseases of the Skin;.and in the surgical department on Diseases of the Eye, theEar, the Larynx, and the Teeth. Separate wards are devotedto Venereal Diseases, Diseases of Women, Diseases of theEye, also to cases of Incidental Delirium or Insanity. Post-mortem examinations are conducted in the anatomical theatreby the pathologists, who also give practical instruction inPathological Anatomy and Histology. The fees for hospitalattendance are as follows--viz. : Perpetual ticket, in onepayment, £12; annual ticket, E6 6s.; six months, i4 4s.; ;.three months, i2 2s.; monthly, El 1 ls. Separate payments.amounting to fl2 12s. entitle the student to a perpetualticket. No fees are paid for any medical or surgical ap-pointment. The appointments are as follows :-1. Residentphysicians and surgeons are appointed, and live in the housefree of charge. The appointment is for six months, but maybe renewed at the end of that period by special recom-mendation. 2. Special non-resident clerks are appointedfor six months. The appointment may be renewed for alike period by special recommendation. 3. Clerks anddressers are appointed by the physicians and surgeons.These appointments are open to all students and juniorpractitioners holding hospital tickets. 4. Assistants in the

pathological department are appointed by the pathologists.EDINBURGH EYE, EAR, AND THROAT INFIRMARY,

6, Cambridge-street, Lothian-road. Clinical Lectures andInstruction are given in this institution, which is open at1 o’clock daily for out-door patients tor Eye Diseases ;.Mondays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 12 noon for out-door Ear Patients; and Tuesdays and Fridays at 4 P.M.for out-door Throat Patients. Those whose diseases require-operations or more than ordinary care are accommodatedin the house. Consulting Surgeon: Dr. Joseph Bell, F.R.C.S.Surgeons: Dr. J. J. Kirk Duncanson, Dr. G. HunterMackenzie, Mr. J. Maxwell Ross, and Dr. William GeorgeSym. Treasurer and Secretary: Mr. A. P. Purves, 12,.Queen-street.GLASGOW HOSPITAL AND DISPENSARY FOR DISEASES,

OF THE EAR, 28, Elmbank-crescent.-The hospital, whichcontains twelve beds for in-door patients, is always open.for urgent cases. Hours of surgeons’ visits 2 P.M. daily;,clinical teaching daily. Out-patients are seen on Mondays,Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays,at 2 P.M., by Dr. Barr and assistants ; and operations and

special demonstrations to students and practitioners takeplace on Thursdays from 3 to 4 P.M.GLASGOW WESTERN INFIRMARY.-This hospital adjoins.

the University of Glasgow. Number of beds upwards of400. Special wards are set apart for Diseases of Women andfor Cutaneous Affections. In the out-patient departmentthere are special cliniques for Diseases of Women and forDiseases of the Throat, Ear, and Teeth. The ClinicalCourses are given by the Physicians and Surgeons, each ofwhom conducts a separate class, and students may attendwhichever they select at the beginning of the session.Special instruction is given to junior students by tutors orassistants, and clinical clerks and dressers are selected fromthe members of the class. All the courses of clinical instruc-tion are recognised by the University of Glasgow and theother boards in the kingdom. In the Pathological Depart-ment the course is both systematic and practical, andextends through the winter and following summer; theseare likewise recognised by the University for graduation


Recommended