USA > Pennsylvania > Philadelphia County > Philadelphia > The physicians' protective register : containing the names of physicians of the city of Philadelphia, 1881 > Part 1
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org.
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11
W
22 AP4.2 P5P6 1881
THE PHYSICIANS'
PROTECTIVE REGISTER
£
₩ 22 AP4.2 P5P6 1881
27311390R
NLM 05107379 1
NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE
DAVIS, ORNEY,
923 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
GENERAL MANAGER FOR
Pennsylvania, Delaware, South New Jersey, Canada, Texas, and California,
FOR Wood's Library Standard Medical Authors, Ziemssen's Cyclopædia,
Bock's Atlas of Anatomy, Wood's Ophthalmic Test Types, Buck's Hygiene.
Medical l The Medical Record. Weekly. New Remedies. Monthly. Journals : ) American Journal of Obstetrics. Quarterly, Send for circular of special offer.
Re" For Circulars, Specimen Pages and Copies, Full Descriptions, Prices, Terms, etc., please write.
MEDICAL RECORD VISITING LIST, BEST IN USE.
TO PHYSICIANS AND DRUGGISTS!
FLEMMING'S
MANUFACTORY of ELECTRO-MEDICAL APPARATUS
OTTO FLEMMING PHILADA.
Offer their Superior Faradic and Gal- vanic Batteries, for Physician's and Family Use.
The demand for our excellent Batteries hav- ing steadily increased, we are now prepared to fill all orders ( wholesale or retail) with the ut- most promptness. Send for illustrated Catalogue or illustrated Price Sheet. Address all communi- cations to
OTTO FLEMMING;
729 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
McLEAR CARRIAG
216, 218 & 220 N. Broai
While they Manufac all styles of Buggies Carriages, pay especia tention to their style:
SURGEON GENERAL'S OFFICE
LIBRARY.
A
Section,
No. 167236 3-1639
NDALL, NUFACTURERS,
Philadelphia, Pa.
used by Physi- and cordially invite inspection of their
Particular Attention given to
Repairing.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
PEIRCE'S COLLEGE OF BUSINESS. 1
No. 39 S. Tenth St., Philadelphia, Pa., THOMAS MAY PEIRCE, M.A.,
Accountant and Expert, Proprietor.
The CENTENNIAL COMMISSION awarded but two Diplomas and Medals to Business Colleges,- one was awarded to PEIRCE'S COLLEGE in the following language :
" The exhibits afford evidence of excellent work in the different departments embraced, while the general plan and purpose of the institution also entitle it to commendation. Besides the college proper, the institution embraces a well-organized Pre- paratory School, in order that none may have an excuse for ignorance of the ordinary English branches, proficiency in which should be everywhere considered a prerequisite to admission to a commercial school."
Branches Taught:
Book-keeping, Penmanship, Arithmetic, Mental Arithmetic, Banking, Business Correspondence, Customs and Forms, Commercial Law, and the practical English branches that are most useful in business life.
Hours of Instruction :
College session from 9 A.M. to 2 P.M. Afternoon school from 3 to 5. Night school from 7 to 9.
Office Hours:
From 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. all the year ; during vacation the same as when school is in session. From September 15 to March 31, also open from 63 to 9 P.M.
The Faculty
is very large and experienced. Each of the six teachers of book-keeping is an expert accountant. PROF. FLICKINGER teaches penmanship. A lawyer teaches commercial law ; still another lectures on law. Three well-educated, successful teachers of arithmetic and of the English branches are constantly employed- under their instruction great improvement is made in business correspondence.
Preparation for Business Life
Of ladies and gentlemen. Adults as well as the young.
Its Course of Instruction
is as valuable and necessary a training for those about to engage in business as the medical college course is for those about to practice medicine.
Five Hundred and Seventy-two (572) students were in attendance during the session closing June 30, 1880.
The Certificate of Tuition
issued by this College is good in eighty-eight (88) Business Colleges in the United States and Canada.
Special Attention given to the morals of students.
Business Men and Merchants
secure competent and reliable young men at Peirce's College.
College Session, 9 A. M. to 2 P.M. Afternoon School, 3 to 5 P.M. Night School, 7 to 9 P. M. Special Class in Penmanship in August.
CIRCULARS FREE to any who call or write for them. Address,
Rev. JOHN THOMPSON, Business Manager, 39 South Tenth St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Residence, 2002 Brandywine St.
1
THE GUARANTEE TRUST AND SAFE DEPOSIT CO., CAPITAL, $1,000,000. IN ITS NEW FIRE PROOF BUILDING.
Nos. 316, 318, and 320 Chestnut Street,
Is prepared to Rent Safes in its Fire- and Burglar-Proof Vaults, with Combination and Per- mutation Locks that can be opened only by the renter, at 89, $10, $14, $16, and $20; larger sizes for corporations and bankers.
Allow Interest on deposits of Money.
Act as Executor, Administrator, Guardian, Assignee, Committee, Receiver, Agent, Attorney, etc. EXECUTE TRUSTS of every kind. under appointment of States, Courts, Corporations, or Individuals -holding Trust Funds separate and apart from all other assets of the Company.
COLLECT INTEREST OR INCOME, and transact all other business authorized by its charter. Receive for safe-keeping under guarantee, VALUABLES of every description, such as Coupon, Registered, and other Bond-, Certificates of stock. Deeds, Mortgages, Gold Plate, Jewelry, etc., etc. Receipt for and safely keep Wills without charge.
For further information call at the office or send for a circular
THOMAS COCHRAN, Prest .- EDWARD C. KNIGHT, Vice-Prest .- JOHN S. BROWN, Treas .-- JOHN J. GILROY, Sec. Directors ;- Thomas Cochran, Edward C. Knight, J. Barlow Moorhead, Charles S. Pancoast, Thomas Mac Kellar, John J. Stadiger, Clayton French,
John S. Brown, W. Rotch Wister, Alfred Filler, Daniel Donovan, Charles S. Hinchman, William J. Howard.
NATATORIUM AND PHYSICAL INSTITUTE, BROAD STREET, BELOW WALNUT. SWIMMING SCHOOL AND GYMNASIUM FOR LADIES, GENTLEMEN, AND CHILDREN.
Persons taught to swim in from 6 to 10 lessons. An even and comfortable temperature maintained by the use of steam boilers. Polite and competent instructors always in attendance. Strictly Private Lessons if desired. OPEN FROM 5 A.M. TILL 10 P.M.
Water changing constantly. Send for the New Illustrated Circular.
The department of Calisthenics and Gymnastics is under the direction of very competent and experienced teachers. Cautious and studied training of feeble and delicate children constitutes a marked feature of our institution.
J. A. PAYNE, Proprietor.
1}
Business Established in 1835.
BOERICKE & TAFEL,
AWARDED BY
UNITED STATES
CENTENNIAL
COMMISSION
635 Arch St., and 125 S. 11th St., Philad'a,
HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACEUTISTS,
(Manufacturers, Importers, and Wholesale Dealers).
Complete Stock of Homeopathic Medicines.
1- BOERICKE & TAFEL received THE ONLY Prize Medal awarded at the Centennial Exposition for Homeopathic Preparations and fine Exhibit.
BOERICKE & TAFEL, MEDICAL PUBLISHING HOUSE. ( Homoopathy Specialty.)
635 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
*.* ESTABLISHED 1821 ....
WILLIAM SNOWDEN,
No. 7 S. ELEVENTH ST., PHILADELPHIA.
MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF
PHILA.
0
SNOWDEN.
SURGICAL
INSTRUMENTS,
TRUSSES,
B
ETC.
FORCEPS,
OBSTETRICAL
C
SNOWDEN'S PERFECTED BINAURAL STETHOSCOPE.
The rubber Tubes are free from all woolen or silk coverings, thus avoiding all friction-sounds arising from this source. This instrument is composed of a Hard Wood Bell (E), with a soft Rubber Cup ( F), two Flexible Rubber Tubes (CC), attached to the upper portion of the bell by two Perforated Nipples at (Di, two Ear-Pieces ( A.A), of hard wood covered with soft rubber pads, the whole completed by a wire spring (B), so arranged as to retain the car-pieces firmly in position when in use. The advantages claimed for this instrument are its simplicity, together with the per fection and accuracy of its acoustics. An illustrated circular sent to any address. Price, $3.00. Sent per mail on receipt of price.
ELECTRO-MEDICAL BATTERIES
AND ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
A. F. FLEISCHMANN, Manufacturer, No. 27 South Tenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
2
COMPARATIVE VALUE
MALTINE AS A CONSTRUCTIVE. OF
It has been clearly shown by the most distinguished chemists in this country and Europe, who have made comparative analyses of MALTINE and Extracts of Malt that, quantitatively, MALTINE contains from two to three times the nutritive and digestive properties that are found in the best Extracts of Malt in the Market.
This fact has been amply demonstrated by the concurrent opinion of the most cmninent medical authority in the world ; and the practical experience of nearly the entire medical profession of the United States and Great Britain proves beyond question that MALTINE, as a constructive, is by far the most valuable product yet presented for the consideration of scientific medical men.
Being supplied at the same prices as the ordinary Extract of Malt. and containing fully double the quantity of Diastase and nutritive elements to be found in the best of them, it can be prescribed at less than one-half the expense.
Extracts showing the value of MALTINE in comparison with Extract of Malt, and as a Constructive:
In order to test the comparative merits of MALTINE and the various Extracts of Malt in the market, I purchased from different druggists samples of MALTINE and of the most frequently prescribed Extracts of Malt, and have subjected them to chemical analysis. As the result of these examinations, I find that MALTINE contains from half as much again to three times the quantity of phosphates, and from three to fourteen times as much diastase and other albuminoids as any of the Extracts of Malt examined.
PROF. WALTER S. HAINES, M.D., Professor of Chemistry and Toxicology, Rush Medical College, Chicago.
In comparison with the alcoholic Malt Extracts, your MALTINE is about ten times as valuable as a flesh former ; from five to ten times as valuable as a heat producer ; and at least five tunes as valuable as a starch digesting agent.
PROF. ATTFIELD, F.C.S., Professor of Practical Chemistry to the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain.
MALTINE is superior in therapeutic and nutritive value to any Extract of Malt made from barley alone, or to any preparation of one variety of grain.
PROF. R. OGDEN DOREMUS.
In its superiority to the Extract of Malt prepared from barley alone I consider it to be all that is claimed for it, and prize it as a very valuable ad lition to the list of tonic and nutritive agents.
C. HI. LEWIS, M. D., Jackson, Mich. The following is an extract from a report of WM. PORTER, A.M., M. D., St. Louis, Mo. :
After a full trial of the different oils, and Extract of Malt preparations, in both hospital and private practice, I find MALTINE most applicable to the largest number of patients, and superior to any remedy of its class.
CHICAGO, January 21, 1880.
I am very much pleased with MALTINE, and since its introduction here I have entirely given up the use of Ex- tract of Malt.
PROF. A. F. INGALLS, A. M., M.D.
PROFESSOR L. P. YANDELL, in Louisville Medical News, says: MALTINE deserves to stand in the front rank of the constructives; and the constructives, by their preventive, corrective, and curative power, are probably the most widely-tisetul therapeutical agents that we possess.
ANN ARBOR, MICHL., July 2, 1880.
GENTLEMEN : The preparations of MALTINE I have already used have impressed me as being not only supe- rior to barley malt as a nutrient tonic, but as furnishing an admirable vehicle for the combination of other tonics. The preparations with cod-liver oil, with pepsin and pancreatine, and with phosphates, as well as the malto-verbine, I have especially liked. I have used no "Barley Malt" since I have been able to obtain the MALTINE. W. F. BREAKEY, M.D., Professor University Michigan.
LIST OF MALTINE PREPARATIONS.
MALTINE-Plain. MALTINE with Hops.
MALTINE with Iodides.
MALTINE with Peptones.
MALTINE with Alteratives.
MALTINE with Pepsin and Pancreatine.
MALTINE with Beef and Iron.
MALTINE with Phosphates.
MALTINE with Cod-Liver Oil.
MALTINE with Phosphates Iron and Quinia.
MALTINE with Cod-Liver Oil and Iodide of Iron.
MALTINE with Phosphates Iron, Quinia, and Strychnia.
MALTINE with Cod-Liver Oil and Pancreatine.
MALTINE Ferrated.
MALTINE with Cod-Liver Oil and Phosphates.
MALTINE WINE.
MALTINE with Cod-Liver Oil and Phosphorus. MALTINE with Hypophosphites.
MALTINE WINE with Pepsin and Pancreatine. MALTO-YERBINE.
THE
Physicians
rotective
Register,
CONTAINING THE
NAMES OF PHYSICIANS OF THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA,
REGULARLY GRADUATED FROM MEDICAL COLLEGES OF GOOD STANDING. ALSO THEIR ADDRESSES, OFFICE HOURS, NAMES OF COLLEGES FROM WHICH THEY GRADUATED, AND YEARS OF GRADUATION.
TOGETHER WITH A
DIRECTORY OF THE BENEVOLENT, CHARITABLE, AND HUMANE INSTITUTIONS
IN SAID CITY, PRESENTING, IN ADDITION,
A STATEMENT OF THE OBJECTS AND WORKINGS OF THE MOST PROMINENT OF THEM.
APRIL, 1881.
LIBRARY SURGEON GENERAL'S OFFICE
OCT-91899 167236.
PUBLISHED BY
THE PHYSICIANS' PROTECTIVE REGISTER CO., FOURTH AND ARCH STS., PHILADELPHIA.
PRESS OF A. W. SELDEN, NO. 15 NORTH NINTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1881, by PACKARD & Co., in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
W 22 AP4.3 1516
10 406, no-1
1881
HOWARD METHOD OF VOCAL TRAINING.
AS TAUGHT ONLY BY
R. ELLIOTT CLARKE. REMOVED TO NEW ROOMS, 1514 CHESTNUT STREET.
INTHE new and elegant room- of the above method are now open for the reception of pupil- of both sexes. This
T" method is hased upon strictly scientific principles and is equally applicable for either Singing, Public Speaking. Reading, or the Cure of Vocal Defects; such as Stammering, Stuttering, Spasmodic Hesitation, Harsh, Cracked. of Weak Voices, Short Breath, Clergymen's Sore Throat, and all other vocal defects resulting from an improper mer of the vocal organs. Persons afflicted with throat or lung affections are treated by specialists, not manufactured diploma doctors, but eminent physicians of this city,-regular graduates, and well-known among the medical fraternity and to the general public as eminent practitioners in their special departments. The success achieved by the undersigned, during last season, in treating the voice, has been gratifying in the highest degree to pupils of all classes, representing teachers of the voice, heads of conservatories, ministers, lawyers, singers, actors, readers, and public speakers, whose vocal powers were failing, as scores of enthusiastic testimonials attest.
THE METHOD EXPLAINED.
T THE HOWARD METHOD regards the voice as the passive result of a bodily effort as positive as the effort to take a book from the table. To raise the book, the fingers, the hand, the arm must be moved inlo new positions, by contracting muscles. so, to sing or speak a tone, certain parts of the thront must be turned around, raised, drawn together- in short, moved into position, by contracting muscles. These movements shape the thront into the most perfect of all musical instruments. The vocal chords are properly stretched and adjusted ; but to be thrown into vibration they now require a heavy pressure of nir from below, from the reservoir of the hings.
To gain this powerful upper pressure of breath the lungs must be squeezed or compressed, by drawing inward upon them the parts of the body surrounding them, such as the ribs and the diaphragm ; and ngain the agency must be contracting muscles,
The Howard Method deals directly with these muscles themselves in- stead of uselessly seeking to control the tone, which is the simple result of their contraction. By easily-learned movements of the parts of the throat, it gives the scholar the power to bring into voluntary action certain normal vocal muscles, while by other movements it effectually opposes all false or forcing muscles. For nearly all faults of delivery are due not to any weakness of the vocal paris, but to the action of interfering or forcing mascles, which have no rightful concern in the vocal act. So, by the same plan, the respiratory movement- are brought under control.
In a word, the scholar is taught to mannge the vocal machine, instead of trying to remodel the vocal fabric after mannfacture. Virtually this grand mistake is made by nearly all the methods now in vogne; for they dwell mainly upon the influence of the month, not knowing the acoustic fact that nearly all radical faults are committed in the throat, or by the respiratory organs before the mouth is reached, and that the mouth has little inthence over the individual quality, pitch, or power of the voice, save as it models the tone, already formed in the throat, into the various vowels of the language, -- a task well learned in infancy,
and requiring only the most general directions for the more exalted efforts of declamation.
The results of this physical method are surprising, almost incredible. The delivery is generally revolutionized in a single mouth; not only is the power of every voire at least doubled, and its scale extended from threo to six notes, but the quality becomes pure-not simply modified and im- proved, but absolutely pure and resonant throughout its entire compass. ]
To this point - the recovery and enlarged control of the natural four- tional process-the method is equally valuble for speakers and singers, and has been applied with unvarying success by lawyers, clergymen, public speakers, readers, and actors, whose vocal powers were failing.
Public Speakers gain from their increased compass such richly-modula- ted intlections, and from their enlarged volume of tone such striking contrast- of power, that the grand faults of monotony and mannerism give place to a varied and effective delivery.
[A short breath, a weak roies, a limited compass, are proved to be the rarest of rare phenomena. Protracted effort can he endured without fatigue. The full use of the vocal powers affords pleasure instead of pain, even when serious fears have been entertained on account of catarrh, clergy- men's sore-throat, or irritation; acute bronchitis being apparently the only throat affection which materially impairs the fulland strong vibra- tion of the vocal chords, when once the functional process has been re- stored.1
Mr. Clarke exhibits these statements, not in a spirit of speculative bravado, but with full confidence, and with the hope that they may be critically examined and put to the practical test. He knows, and un- hesitatingly asserts, that the whole rank and file of voice-teachers are either contradicting or practically ignoring the fundamental laws of tone which have been disclosed by the wonderful acoustic discoveries of the past few years; that they employ exercises which improve the voice a little, if at all, only at the ruinons expense of the natural func- tional process; that they often confirm the very errors they have under- taken to remove; that, certainly, they do not touch the radical faults of laryngeal ar respiratory muscular action,
SINGING!
VOCAL DEFECTS! ROOMS OF
ELOCUTION !
R. ELLIOTT CLARKE, Specialist in Vocal Training,
Originator of the " Normal Method of Vocal Training," and author of " Clarke's Practical Vocal Drill," " The Human Voice in Song," " The Speaking Voice," " The Cause and Cure of Stammering," and
"Clarke's Normal Method of Vocal Training." { For Singing, Public Speaking, Reading, and the Cure of Stammering.
THE COURSE OCCUPIES THREE MONTHS (TWO LESSONS PER WEEK).
TERMS :
Full Course in Private $50.00 Full Course in Class of 15 Persons . each $10.00
66 " Class of 5 Persons . each 25.00 Special rates to Societies, Schools, and Church Classes.
4 10 6.
15.00 Special Class for Clergymen, Teachers, and Ladies.
1514 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
READING! VOCAL IMPEDIMENTS !
STAMMERING!
3.1
GENERAL INDEX
AND
DIRECTORY OF THE BENEVOLENT, CHARITABLE, AND HUMANE INSTITUTIONS.
CHARITABLE.
Board of Public Charities of the State of Pennsylvania. Office, 1224 Chestnut Street.
Board of Trustees of the Iloward Building, Bainbridge Street, east of Fourth Street.
Bethany Mission for Colored People, Brandywine, near Sixteenth Street.
Bedford Street Mission, 619 Alaska Street.
City Mission (Protestant Episcopal). Page 55.
Clay Mission for Colored People. Under the direction of the Philadelphia Protestant Episcopal City Mis- sion, Pearl Street, above Twelfth.
Corporation for the Relief of the Widows and Children of Clergymen in the Communion of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Commonwealth of l'enn- sylvania, 212 S. Fourth Street.
Central Employment Association (Friends), Fourth and Green Streets.
Churchmen's Missionary Association for Seamen of the Port of Philadelphia, Swanson and Catharine Sts.
Christmas Fund for Disabled Clergymen (Protestant Episcopal), 421 Chestnut Street.
Clergy Daughters' Fund ( Protestant Episcopal), 708 Walnut Street.
Female Episcopal Benevolent Society.
Female Hebrew Benevolent Society, 1411 Arch Street. Female Association for Relief of Sick and Infirm Poor (Friends), 152 N. Fifteenth Street.
Female Society of Philadelphia for the Relief and Em- ployment of the Poor ( Friends), 112 N. Seventh St. Female Association of Philadelphia for the Relief of Females in Reduced Circumstances, 2029 Pine St. Flower Mission, Horticultural Hall.
Friends' Charitable Fuel Association, Race Street above Fifteenth.
Friends' Association for the Free Instruction of Poor Children, Winslow Street, near Jacoby.
Friends' Association for the Aid and Elevation of the Freedmen. Office, 30 N. Third Street.
Friends' Association for the Relief of Colored Freedmen. Office, 116 N. Fourth Street.
Friends' Boarding-House Association, 1623 Filbert St. Fuel Savings-Society of the City and Liberties of Phila- delphia. Secretary's office, 217 S. Sixth Street. Germantown Flower Mission.
Grandom Institution to Aid Young Men in Business, and to Assist the Poor in Proeuring Fuel, 715 Wal- nut Street.
House of Employment, Seventeenth St., below Market. House of Industry, 714 Catharine Street.
" House of Mercy" of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia, 411 Spruce Street. Page 55. Home Missionary Society. Page 57.
Humane Society for the Recovery of Drowned Persons. Indians' Hope Association (Protestant Episcopal) of Pennsylvania.
Indian Aid Association (Friends), Race Street, above Fifteenth.
Ladies' United Aid Society of the Methodist Church, Thirteenth Street and Lehigh Avenue.
Ladies' Depository Association, 1024 Walnut Street.
Locust Street Mission Association, S. E. cor. Locust and Raspberry Streets.
Mission for Colored People (Church of the Crucifixion), S. Eighth Street, near Bainbridge.
Merchants' Fund Association, 5 Walnut Street. Page 56.
4
GENERAL INDEX.
Northern Association of the City and County of Phila- delphia for the Relief and Employment of Poor Women ( Friends), 702 Green Street.
Preachers' Aid Society (Methodist), 1018 Areh Street. Pennsylvania Society to Proteet Children from Cruelty. Page 54.
Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Page 53.
Pennsylvania Scamen's Friend Society.
Philadelphia Protestant Episcopal City Mission. Page 55.
Philadelphia Society for the Employment and Instrue- tion of the Poor. Page 52.
Presbyterian Board of Relief for Disabled Ministers, and the Widows and Orphans of Deceased Minis- ters. Office, 1334 Chestnut Street.
Society for Organizing Charitable Relief, ete., 1429 Mar- ket Street.
St. Peter's House (Protestant Episcopal), S. W. cor. Front and Pine Streets.
Union Benevolent Association. Page 55.
Western Association of Ladies of Philadelphia for the Relief and Employment of the Poor, 19 S. Seven- teenth Street.
Women's Christian Association. Page 56.
Women's Branch of the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 1216 Chestnut Street.
SICK-DIET KITCHENS.
Central. Page 52. Northeastern. Page 52. Southern. Page 52. Southwestern. Page 52. Home for the Homeless. Page 53.
HOMES AND ASYLUMS.
Baptist Home of Philadelphia, Seventeenth and Norris Streets.
Bishop Potter Memorial House for Deaeonesses, Front Street and Lehigh Avenue.
Boarding-House for Young Women (W. C. A.), 1605 Filbert Street.
Boarding Home for Young Women, 1433 Lombard St. Clinton Street Boarding Home for Young Women, 915 Clinton Street.
Christ Church Hospital Home for Women, Belmont Av. above Forty-eighth Street.
Emlen Institution-Manual-Labor Free School. Israel H. Johnson, 809 Spruce Street.
Franklin Reformatory Home for Inebriates. Page 55. Franklin Reformatory Home for Women, 220 N. Thir- teenth Street.
Forrest Home for Aged and Infirm Actors, near Holmes- burg.
Home for Consumptives. Page 44.
Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons. Page 57. Home for the Homeless, 708 Lombard Street. Page 53. Home for Incurables. Page 45.
Home for Aged Couples, 1723 Franeis Street, cor. of Per- kiomen.
Home for Aged and Indigent Odd-Fellows of Eastern
Penna., S. E. cor. Seventeenth and Tioga Streets. House of the Good Shepherd ( Roman Catholic). Page 54. Howard Institution, under the care of an Association of Woman Friends of Philadelphia. Page 55.
Indigent Widows' and Single Women's Society, Cherry Street, below Eighteenth.
Little Sisters of the Poor (Roman Catholic), Eighteenth Street, above Jefferson.
Lutheran Orphans' Home and Asylum for the Aged and Infirm, 5580 Germantown Av. Page 59.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.