PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS. 221
Emergency Hospital, Annapolis, Maryland—Receives from State,
$5,000 for 1909 and $5,000 for 1910. Also $25,000 for buildings. Ap-
ply to institution for information.
Emergency Hospital, Easton, Maryland—Receives from State,
$3,500 for 1909 and $3,500 for 1910. The Emergency Hospital at
Easton treats free all persons in need of treatment and who are
unable to pay. Patients are admitted upon request of their attend-
ing physicians, and are always admitted when rthere is room in the
hospital to receive them. Correspondence should be addressed to
the Superintendent of the Hospital, or to M. M. Higgins, Secretary.
Franklin Square Hospital of Baltimore City, Calhoun and Fayette
Streets, Baltimore—Receives from State, $6,000 for 1909 and $6,000
for 1910, and for buildings, $10,000. Shall receive from each county
of the State and each Legislative district of Baltimore, one free
patient at a time each year upon the certificate of the County Com-
missioners and the Board of Health of Baltimore.
Frederick City Hospital Association, Mrs. A. D. Willard, Secretary,
Frederick, Maryland—Receives from State, $8,000 f or 1909 and $8,000
for 1910. This institution receives absolutely free patients, patients
who can pay a reduced rate and those whose rates are below the case
to the institution of their maintenance and treatment.
Good Samaritan Hospital, Hoffman and McCulloh Street, Baltimore
—Receives from State, $1,200 for 1909 and $1,200 for 1910. Apply to
institution for particulars.
Hebrew 'Hospital and Asylum Association, Corner Monument
Street and Hopkins Avenue, Baltimore—Receives from State, $7,000
for 1909 and $7,000 for 1910. We have a hospital containing eighty
beds, fifty-two of these are in wards, exclusively free beds. Our
Medical Superintendent has entire charge of the admission of
patients, irrespective of their religious belief. One ward has been
especially fitted up for children, and we take care of the.sick children
of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum and those of the Sheltering Home.
We have a home for the aged, both male and female. Here in accord-
ance with our constitution we only admit residents of this State, of
the Jewish Faith, sixty years of age, after two years residence in this
State. Correspondence may be addressed to A. g. Adler, Secretary,
Pikesville, Maryland.
Hospital for Relief of Crippled and Deformed Children of Balti-
more, Charles, Corner Twentieth Street, Baltimore—Receives . from
State, $5,000 for 1909 and $5,000 for 1910. This charity admits and
treats all needy poor children from this State that are amenable to
treatment, t. e., those that are not incurable or feeble-minded. The
benefit aside from the humanitarian side that the State accrues from
its appropriation to this institution is that it relieves the pain and
suffering of its little citizens and by cure or amelioration enables
them to become physically normal self-supporting citizens and not
wards upon the State's bounty nor crippled beggars in our streets or
counties. Correspondence may be addressed to Thomas M. Hulings,
Secretary of the Board of Trustees, Continental Trust Company,
Baltimore, Md., or directly to the hospital.
Hospital for the Women of Maryland, Lafayette Avenue and John
Street, Baltimore—Receives from State, $4,000 for 1909 and $4,000 for
1910. There are twenty-four free beds in the hospital open to
patients from the city of Baltimore and from all parts of the State.
|
|