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LECTURES AND CLINICS.

Dr. Th. Liebold, Operative Surgery of the Eye and Diseases of the Conjunctiva.

Dr. T. F. Allen, Anatomy and Physiology of the Eye and use of the Ophthal

moscope.

Dr. J. McE. Wetmore, Diseases of the Cornea, Iris, and Lens.

Dr. C. A. Bacon, Anomalies of Refraction and Accommodation.

The Board of Consulting Surgeons, consisting of Drs. P. P. Wells, H. D. Paine, G. E. Belcher, and Carroll Dunham, will, during the session, deliver lectures on the Materia Medica as applied to the eye, and on other selected subjects.

Special Clinical instruction will be given at 2 P.M., on Mondays, by Dr. Liebold; Tuesdays, by Dr. Allen; Thursdays, by Dr. Bacon; Fridays, by Dr. Wetmore.

The large number of patients daily prescribed for in this Hospital afford an extensive field for observation and instruction, which the attending Surgeons will render valuable to students who wish to avail themselves of its advantages.

Tickets to the Clinics may be had gratuitously on application to any of the Surgeons. Tickets, for the course of lectures, five dollars. Students who attend the lectures will also be permitted to witness operations.

At the close of the session, those who shall pass a satisfactory public examination before the Boards of Attending and Consulting Surgeons, will, on payment of ten dollars, receive from the Trustees the regular diploma of the school.

Graduates of regular Medical Colleges will be admitted to the lectures free of charge.

The Hospital is open for the reception of patients every day at 2 o'clock (Sundays excepted).

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German Hospital,

Southeast corner of Fourth avenue and Seventy-seventh street.

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Presbyterian Hospital.

INCORPORATED 1868.

OFFICERS.

James Lenox, President.

John C. Green, Vice-President.

Robert M. Hartley, Corresponding Secretary.

Aaron B. Belknap, Recording Secretary and Treasurer.

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The city of New York has many general hospitals, as well as others appropriated to specific purposes; it also contains several under the control of nationalities and religious denominations. Among the latter, the Jewish, the German, St. Vincent's and St. Francis' (Roman Catholic), and St. Luke's (Episcopal) Hospitals may be named. Recently, the large and influential body of Presbyterians have organized such an institution, which has been liberally endowed by James Lenox, Esq. It has not yet erected hospital buildings; but the site donated for that purpose is that large and eligibly situated plot of ground lying between Madison and Fourth avenues and Seventieth and Seventy-first streets.

St. Francis' Hospital,

(UNDER THE CHARGE OF THE "SISTERS OF THE POOR OF ST. FRANCIS,")

Nos. 407 and 409 Fifth and No. 173 Sixth streets.

LEONARD WEBER, M.D., Visiting Physician and Surgeon.

GENERAL REGULATIONS FOR THE HOUSE.

The undertaker of the house has volunteered to bury all destitute persons free of charge, but any person dying in the hospital, whose friends may wish to bury the body, said friends, if they do not wish to employ this undertaker, must pay to him the sum of ten (10) dollars, as a remuneration for the expense he may be put to in other cases of destitution.

REGULATIONS FOR VISITORS.

1. The friends of the sick are allowed to visit them twice a week, viz.: On Tuesdays and Sundays, between the hours of three (3) and five (5) o'clock in the afternoon.

2. Visitors are respectfully requested to retire when the bell announces the expiration of the visiting hours.

3. No article of food or drink is to be given to the sick by their friends, all must be left with the Sister in attendance, who will give or withhold it, according to the condition of the patient.

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