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THE LONG ISLAND COLLEGE HOSPITAL

BROOKLYN-NEW YORK

Sixty-first Annual Session begins September 22, 1919

The medical college requires two years of study in a college of liberal arts or sciences for admission.

See specifications for Class A Medical Colleges by the Council on Medical Education, A.M.A.; also those for a Medical Student's Qualifying Certificate by the University of the State of New York.

Conditioned Students not admitted

For particulars address

THE DEAN OF THE COLLEGE OF MEDICINE

Henry and Amity Streets

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UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

The One Hundred and Fifty-Fourth Annual Session will open September 26, 1919

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION] Candidates for admission are required to have completed at least two full years of college work which must include specified amounts of English, French or German, Physics, Biology and Chemistry (including Organic). Laboratory work is required in the three sciences.

The first and second year classes are limited to 100 students. Women are admitted. Application should be presented before July 1st, as on that date the selection of the entering class will be made.

About 125 students can be accommodated in the third and fourth year classes and applications for admittance on advanced standing will be considered from students who have made excellent records in other "Class A" medical schools.

INSTRUCTION

Clinical instruction is given in the University Hospital on the campus with 400 beds and the immediately adjoining Philadelphia General Hospital with 1600 beds, The fundamental branches are taught in the Hare Laboratory of Chemistry, the combined Laboratories of Pathology, Physiology and Pharmacology, and the Laboratory of Hygiene and Bacteriology.

GRADUATE COURSES

Information concerning courses in the recently organized Medico-Chirurgical College Graduate School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania, which includes as a unit the former Philadelphia Polyclinic Hospital and Polyclinic Graduate School of Medicine, can be obtained from the Dean as well as information about courses leading to the degree of Doctor of Public Hygiene (Dr. P.H.) and courses in Tropical Medicine.

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The course of instruction occupies four years, begin. ning the second week in September and ending the first week in June. The first two years are devoted to the fundamental sciences, and the third and fourth to practical clinic instruction in medicine and surgery. All the organised medical and surgical charities of the city of Augusta and Richmond County, including the hospitals, are under the entire control of the Board of Trustees of the University. This agreement affords a large number and variety of patients which are used in the clinical teaching. Especial emphasis is laid upon practical work both in the laboratory and clinical departments

TUITION

The charge for tuition is $150.00 a year except for residents of the State of Georgia, to whom tuition is free. For further information and catalogue address

The Medical Department, University of Georgia

AUGUSTA, GEORGIA

WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY School of Hygiene and Public Health

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

ONLY MEDICAL SCHOOL IN
THE CITY OF CLEVELAND

Admits only college degree students and seniors in absentia.

Excellent laboratories and facilities for research and advanced work.

Large clinical material. Sole medical control of Lakeside, City, Charity and Maternity Hospitals and Babies' Dispensary. Clinical Clerk Services with individual instruction.

Wide choice of hospital appointments for all graduates.

¶ Fifth optional year leading to A.M. in Medicine. Vacation courses facilitating transfer of advanced students.

OF

The Johns Hopkins University

The second academic session will begin September 30, 1919. Opportunities for instruction and investigation will be offered in Bacteriology, Immunology and Serology, Protozoology and Medical Zoology, Epidemiology, Biometry and Vital Statistics, Sanitary Engineering, Physiology as applied to hygiene, including the principles of industrial and educational hygiene, Chemistry as applied to hygiene including the analysis of foods and the principles of nutrition, Social and Mental Hygiene, etc. The courses in these

subjects are organized upon a trimestral basis and students may enter the School as candidates for a degree or as special

students at the beginning of any trimester, fall, winter or spring. Men and women students are admitted on the same terms.

For regularly matriculated students courses are arranged leading to the degree of Doctor of Public Health, Doctor of Science in Hygiene and Bachelor of Science in Hygiene. The details in regard to the requirements for matriculation in these courses are described in the catalogue of the School which will be forwarded upon application.

A certificate in Public Health may be awarded to quali

¶ Session opens Oct. 2, 1919; closes June 17, 1920 fied persons after one year of resident study. Tuition, $150.00.

For catalogue, information and application

blanks, address

Persons desiring to take one or more courses not as applicants for a degree may enter as special students on approval of the Faculty.

For further information address the Director of the School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, 310-312 West Monument Street,

THE REGISTRAR, 1353 East 9th St., Cleveland Baltimore, Maryland.

Syracuse University College of Medicine

Entrance Two years of a recognized course in arts or in science in a registered college or Requirements School of Science, which must include Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and French or German. Six and seven years' combination courses are offered.

The First Two
Years

The Third Year
Course

The Fourth Year Course

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Marine Biological Laboratory

Woods Hole, Mass.

INVESTIGATION

Entire Year

INSTRUCTION

July 2 to August 12,
1919

SUPPLY
DEPARTMENT

is clinical. Students spend the entire fore-
noon throughout the year as clinical clerks
in hospitals under careful supervision. The
clinical clerk takes the history, makes the
physical examination and the laboratory
examinations, arrives at a diagnosis which
he must defend, outlines the treatment
under his instructor and observes and
records the result. In case of operation or
of autopsy he follows the specimen and
identifies its pathological nature. Two gen- Open the Entire Year
eral hospitals, one of which is owned and
controlled by the University, one special
hospital and the municipal hospitals and
laboratories are open to our students. The
afternoons are spent in the College Dispen-
sary and in clinical work in medical and
surgical specialties and in conferences.

Summer School-A summer course in pathology covering a period of six weeks during June and July will be given in case there is a sufficient number of applicants.

Address the Secretary of the College,

307 Orange Street

Facilities for reseach in Zoology, Embryology, Physiology and Botany. Seventy-six private laboratories, $100 each for not over three months. Thirty tables are available for beginners in research who desire to work under the direction of members of the staff. The fee for such a table is $50.00.

Courses of laboratory instruction with lectures are offered in Invertebrate Zoology, Protozoology, Embryology, Physiology and Morphology and Taxonomy of the Algae. Each course requires the full time of the student. Fee, $50. Alecture course on the Philosophical Aspects of Biology and Allied Sciences is also offered.

Animals and plants, preserved, living, and in embryonic stages. Preserved material of all types of animals and of Algae, Fungi, Liverworts and Mosses furnished for classwork, or for the museum. Living material furnished in season as ordered. Microscopic slides in Zoology, Botany, Histology, Bacteriology. Price lists of Zoological and Botanical material and Microscopic Slides sent on application. State which is desired. For price lists and alli nformation regarding material, address

GEO. M. GRAY, Curator, Woods Hole, Mass. The annual announcement will be sent on application to The

SYRACUSE, N. Y. Director, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.

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The instrument has a very nearly uniform scale, obtained by properly proportioning the coils.

It may be used as a mutual inductance.

It has a good ratio of maximum to minimum inductance (about 9 to 1) and also has as high a time constant as is consistent with good design and moderate size.

The instrument is fully described in Bulletin No. 152, a copy of which will be sent upon request.

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PARR'S SOLID ILLIUM BOMB

as used in the Parr Oxygen and Parr
Adiabatic Calorimeters

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offers to the chemist doing routine analysis of coal and coke an accurate calorimetric device entirely free from the annoyances occasioned by enamel, gold or platinum lined bombs. This is evidenced by the photograph shown here of the first Illium Bomb, in constant use for 6 years, during which time over 2000 determinations have been made without the least evidence of corrosion.

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In further support of the superiority of this type of bomb, the U. S. Bureau of Mines makes the following statements in Technical Paper No. 91, recently issued:

No. 2384 Parr Illium Bomb

"Parr has recently designed a bomb of an acid-proof base-metal alloy that is decidedly satisfactory. If the plating of a bomb is really acid-proof, a plated bomb, or an alloy bomb such as Parr's, is preferable to one with a replaceable lining..

"In the experience of the authors, this service is considerably better than that given by any threaded bomb except, perhaps, the Parr, on account of the heavy threads of the Parr lock nut."

This bomb can be employed in any of the Mahler type calorimeters, although it is adapted especially for use in the Parr outfits.

For

the most accurate determinations, we particularly recommend the

Parr Adiabatic

Outfit

No. 2394 Parr Adiabatic Calorimeter, complete with motor

For full description of the Parr Oxygen and Parr Adiabatic Calorimeters, send for Bulletin 73S, or see our new Catalog C, pages 126 to 128.

CENTRAL SCIENTIFIC COMPANY

460 East Ohio Street

CHICAGO, U. S. A.

"The World's Most Perfect Zoological Monograph "'

A Monograph of the Pheasants

By WILLIAM BEEBE

Published by the New York Zoological Society, with the coöperation of
Col. Anthony R. Kuser

This magnificent work, to be completed in four royal quarto volumes, describes the haunts, habits and plumages of the most brilliant family of birds. It appeals equally to the layman and the scientist. Richly illustrated with reproductions in color of exquisite paintings by Thorburn, Lodge, Knight, Fuertes and Jones. Also many photographs and maps.

Only 400 copies, a large number of which have already been subscribed for, are available for sale in America. Vol. I, containing an introduction by Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn, 198 pages of text, 20 colored plates and 31 photogravures, is now ready for distribution. Price $62.50 each volume.

Prospectus, specimen plate and subscription blank sent on application to the New York Zoological Society, Zoological Park, New York.

"There can be no question that Mr. Beebe's Monograph of the Pheasants' will rank as the standard work on the subject."-Country Life (England).

"A magnificent work of art, as well as a valuable contribution to our knowledge of one of the most resplendent families of birds."—Ibis (England).

"This sumptuous volume promises, with its three successors, to take prominent rank as the leading work of reference on the pheasant tribe."—London Times.

"Its outstanding merits are the beauty of its plates. . . . the extensive series of photogravures. . . . and the graphic and popular descriptions of their habits from studies made amid their native wilds. These and other features render the work far in advance of all other books written on the subject and make it welcome alike to the ornithologist, the aviculturist and the sportsman."-Nature (England).

"It pulses with life and interest, and the charming personal touch of the author. scope is broad, its plan new and original, and it grips the reader with a warm and masterful hand. The overflowing wealth of first hand facts is a delightful surprise. It tells the reader the things he most wishes to know about these strange and beautiful birds. It reveals their personalities, their habits and their romantic dwelling places, their classification and their geography. The science of ornithology is made fascinating and the general reader of Mr. Beebe's abundant text soon realizes that when science is written by a sympathetic hand, it can be both understandable and delightful."— Wm. T. Hornaday.

"Nothing has been spared to make this study of the most brilliant family of the larger birds of the world complete. The illustrations are brilliantly drawn and excellently reproduced and the series of photographs showing the natural surroundings of the species are models of what such pictures should be. Nor is the wide knowledge displayed, the unfailing perseverance by which it was acquired, his justice to his predecessors, the aptness of his quotation and the singularly happy power of expression possessed by the writer less remarkable. With a modesty not always shown by great specialists, he claims only to have added a handful of material to a great structure; it is only fair to suggest that no one will ever again write a serious book upon the pheasant family without admitting the indebtedness of science to Mr. Beebe."-Daily Telegraph (London).

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