ih i HY {i | h i h ih DR. FIFE FOWLER, For nearly ity years a professor Queen s Medical Cilege. i t iL sii § i John ¥ Kennedy, Donald Lavell and Richard A. doctors, three are alive : ronto University Medical faculty. In 1591, the original status was resumed, additions were made to the staff, and an interchange of services arranged be Aween arts and medical faculties, which has proved of mutual benefit to In the course of studies Queen's has other Similar fuatitutions, and 4 me particulars has been in advance of the Ontario Medical council which is supposed $0 lead in everything per taining to medical education in this province. Her students have been drawn from every province in the do- minion, from the United States, and from distant parts of the earth as Newt d" J : R 4 com . Inculty | montresi witness. R , [posed of coral. Fowler, Michael Sullivan, Rod- Maclean, Mi Reeve. Of always endeavored to keep abreast of ISL ~ CORAL INSECT sis, The Hon. Mr. Sawyer, Member of - 4 Agls Bus aged ago - the total fnsect agen Working, anu lonuba, mn process ul the, ond wmousand ay ismnus Lue West aniies, i schipelago of we vabamas. isianus wie latge and small; ney worn 8 vonusuous leagth of, say, we or sia, punwrea mies. 1bey ace ah cou 10u walk upon streews ul corat. rou meet coral ul evap urn. IMIOW a bolle nlo we wae sua de wil be enciusteu with coral, eayuisive formations, of wil ue vocal ilusecy alone ses Lue pa wae. 2 0c whe coral is sud busy, wna evolution, never ceases. ine ouhamas kaye a population of some foity wousanu peuple, of whom u jour are whiw. ie geal major- hy of tne population © black, or course. these placn people are of African cescent. 1hey are quid, wu dusuious, moral. Many of wew are peasant proprietors. Lhe staple in dustries are the sponge usneiy, tue cuwitivation of pmeapples, anu we growing and exporung of the tamouss eloul plant, from which binder twine is mage. rears ago the late cir Am- brose Shea, then governor of the ba- hamas, snowed tO a Witness represen- tative some stulas of tuis native plant wuich had been neglected, but the L cial value of wunich dir Am Barbadoes, Persia and New Zealand. Her graduates are to be found to-day in every quarter of the globe, and wherever found they are doing well, and reflecting credit upon the fastitu tion at whith they received their edu- cation. Queen's has turned out be tween 800 and 900 medical men, a of Medicine unless they doctors of hingston to establish , petitioners were : Dr. Sampeon, Stewart, Dr. DIAMOND DYES {57% Enable Mothers to Dress [all having their Children at now passed to res! \ who dared to Dr. St tin an add medical students fii ily after my arrival from Scot = ® formality of an introduc said : 'You are the man 1 © me on the should: contin chair of materia medica in Queen's medical faculty." | answered : the university t me? 1 was unused to this = Lj] Ee g £3 Diamond Dyes give new life to faded and dingy dresses, skirts, | w suits, jackets, stockings, ribbons, Sique, six feet three inches high, straight as an arrow and as he him- sai Ju tloman, a scholar, and a quor." * as known, Dr, W. L. Herri man, of Lindsay, is the only one liv ing of those cight men who formed the first class in n's medical college and d d if 1855. He is to speak at the jubilee proceedings next Wed nesday, and will receive an enthusias tic welcome. { Vari DWELLINGS FURNISHED AND UN- Its Various Homes. stores, ete. MoOman's Real | Queen's University heartily concurred Satate Often, 81 Brock street. Phone | in the formation -. medical faculty, or ofl. and ctioned the appoi of the various professors. a, MISS B. BELL WILL BE IN THE |; , Judge As fax gy ag tar Bresson ampooing, Maniou nd ring. a oft at Mahood's -Drus Store TO-LET LARGE FRONT ROOM, WITH ALL modern conveniences Mrs. Yates, 765 William street. Also table board TWO LARGE orricE ROOMS In The. first ses: wt | Mon, 1854-55, was held in a buildin; g cham Clift, Brock Strat on Princess street, in close proximity 98 Clarence ateeet, or John | to the building now occupied by Hon. De. Sullivan. Mainly through the con 3 of the late Rev, Dr. Wil liamson, the midial 1 department oc - ng reessm--== | qupied during the second and third SAFE SURE RELIABLE | sessions the wings of the building in' ". Fully Paid, $1,000,000. | which fhe principal and two profes. : sors now live. The anatomical depart. ment was in one of the wings, and a I ad labosmteres in 3 central tion at that time ®, A d licint oc da ti. in common with other like institutions in Ontario the sum of $1,000 a year from the government, This sum was We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have. It i's gray now, no matter; for Ayer's Hair Vigor ai ways restores color to gray hair. And often it makes : OF. Conformed to tests which were distastefui Those gentlemen petitioned here which would be open to the same terms. | he names of bers, Robert Douglas, Samuel Lunbar, Weston L. Herriman, Witham Hillier, John F. Mercer, Witham 8. Scott, and H. W, Spafford. A correspondence was : up with them he late br. John Stewart, and the result was the fi jon of the ical faculty of Queen's. The professors consisted of Dr. Horatio Yates, Dr. J. _R. Dickson, Dr. Hayward and Dr. Fife Fowler, Hon. Dr. Sullivan once said : "If old Dr. Stewart did not found the institu tion he took the credit anyway, dnd it? When he stalked down street with his Scotch tartan people knew that b him. It looked ile Fowler made this three : "l remember well my first th Dr. Stewart in 1554, a stopped me on the street i'l want you to take wa den mode of versity appointment. He emphati cally answered : 1, John Stewart, ap-- MD, MRCS. .. F.0.8.,' Bdin., lecturer; John Weakit, Ph.D, Leip. DS8e., E demonstrator. DR. HORATIO YATES, Queen's Medical College first professors, One of large proportion of whom were also graduates in arts. All but one of Queen's medical teachers graduated from her halls. She gave forth many eminent men, and among those in dis- tant places might be named Dr. Reeve, dean of Toronto University Me- dical faculty, and Dr. Chown, Winni peg's leading surgeon. it was hoped that Dr. Fife Fowler would have been present at the aus- pick event, but death called him to rest (wo months ago. He alone re- mained of those who founded the medical college, and he served the - | institution to the very last, being its dean at the time of his death. n. Dr. Sullivan is the only living men who was identilied with the col in its pioneer years, and has been con nected with it continually ever since. He entered it for a course in 1554 and graduated in 1858. Another must be mentioned in con- nection with Queen's Medical College, and that is "Tom™ Cofley, the Cri- mean veteran, who came to it as Janitor the same year as the late Principal Grant took up his duties here. He retired in 1901, having done faithful service for twenty-three years. -- The Present Staff. The present teaching stall of the modical college consists of the fol lowin, Medicine John Herald, M.A. M.D, professor of clinical medicine and der matology, secretary of the faculty; J. W, Campbell, B,A., MD., professor of materia medica, therapeutics and pharmacy; James Third, M.D., Toron- to; MD, CM, Trinity, professor of practice of medicine. - Surgery--Hon, Michael Sullivan, M. D., professor of the principles and practice of surgery; D.- E. Mundell, BA., M.D. assistant; W. G."Anglin, M.R.C.S.,, Eng., professor of 1 surgery. Obstetrics, gynaecology and paedia- tries---R. W, Garrett, M.A, M.D., pro- fessor; Isaac Wood, M.A, M.D, M.R. C.8., Eng, F.O.8, Edin, assistant professor and lecturer on paediatrics. Medial jurisprudence and sanitary science W. T. Connell, M.D, M:R.C.8., Eng., L.I'C.P,, Lon., professor. Aiugtomy Edward Ryan, B.A, M.D., professor of descriptive anatomy; D. E. Mundell, B.A, M.D., professor of ical anatomy; G. W, Mylks, M.D. , BA, M.D, C. A. Morr )., A. W. Richardson, B. brose early perceived. ine governor gave himseli no rest until ne nad in wrested not only tne people them- sulies, vut the outside worla, in the culdvation of this plant, ana to-aay iv is a native product worth forvy LWOUsand pounds per annum. 4 his plant is not grown from seed, but wom small plants waoich the parent trunk or pole puts fortn, ana whicn wre planted in the ground. ihe na- vies have taken to tue growing oi it with a ready appreciation of its worth. It mekes exceuent vinuer twine, and it is exporiwed wo the uni wa owes ana Lerwany. Al nus os tadag ne growth of Le sal plant SIf AmMDIOSe Dhea renueied a geal service to tne Bahamas. ihe sponge industry brings something like oue hundred thousand pounds per annum. G1 here are live hundred boats and Lve thousand persons engeged in tbe lsh ory. Lhe Hon. Mr. Sawyer, a member of the executive council of the Bahamas, who is at present in the city, has many interesting things to tell about this industry. The sponge is both ani- mal and vegetable. 'Ihe creature is am- arphous, yet there is life in a series of "'ingers * which resemble the arteries in the human body; and this life has to be killed, which is done by the ex- posing of the sponge to the sun's rays on the decks of the fishing boats. I he sponge, when caught, is as black as ink, and has to be beaten until all the blackness disappears. 'ihe sponge is propagated by spores, which attach themselves to bits of rock or shell or marl in the bottom of the water. When such support fails, you will have the Hoating sponge. 'The men engaged mn the Duinnee are provided with wat- er glasses a lo hishing pole, ana when, with the - of the glass, they see a sponge below, they put down the pole and bring it 'up, when it 1s beaten and dried. Ihe pineapple industry is worth something like sixty thousand pounds per annum, while the conch fishing and the pearl fishing are subsidiary, yet helpful. For instance, there was a pink pear] discovered once which brought $2,000, All trade is with the United States. There is direct steam communication with New York and Florida, and yet, although the Bahamas are cut off from the Old Country, with which the official relations are very slight, al- though their market is found in the United States, the people are intensely loyal to British connection. There isa governor (Sir Gilbert Carter, who re- cently married an American lady) and two houses of parliament. There are the forms and ceremonies which we as- sociate with august occasions. The governor reads the speech from the ne ; the government recom- mends certain measures. And do you know that the House of Assembly (the lower house) 'will pass some forty measures session ! The lower house is elected by the people. There are at present two colored representa- tives. The legislative council is nomin- ated by the crown. The Hon. Mr. Sawyer is "Father of the Assembly." He been - a member continuously for the last half century. He has come to Canada with his wife (and ac- companied by 'the members of his fa- mily) fo renew acquaintance with scenes which, when he was last here upon his honeymoon appealed him with the glamor of youth and rom. ance. fect climate. "This golds day. now," said the Hon. Mr. Sawyer, on Satur day, looking out of a window at the St. Lawrence Hall, "would our winter." $ : 7 3 + : : ANDS FORMED BY Tri A Colds are quickly cured by Chamberlain's + Cough Remedy. It acts on mature's plan, loos- i ens the cough, relieves the lungs and opens the i secretions, effecting a permanent cure. It coun- teracts any tendency of a cold to result in pneu- monia. It is pleasant to take, both adults and children likeit. Price 25c; large size soc. If you test a coat by the collar, you'll .- tate the perfection of '* FIT-REFORM "' Collars on "FIT-REFORM' Coats. * Note our adoption of the very newest thing for fall wear -- the long, narrow collar, with rather a wide roll as it joins the coat in front. " FIT-REFORM" Collars are hand shaped -- hand moulded --hand stitched. Only by hand work can the collar be made to snugly hug the neck and retain ite perfect shape. That is why a " FIT-REFORM ' Collar lends the finishing touches to a perfect coat. Whether it is a single detail --or the suit as a whole -- "" FIT-REFORM *' Clothes are absolutely faultless. Every size to fit every figure--the tall and short -- the lean and ean stout--and all between. \ Suits and Overcoats, $12 to $30. Fit-Keiorm Wardrobe E. P. JENKINS Sole Agent for KINGSTON. ABERNETHY"S Special Sale $2.50 SALE PRICE $2.50 Sale started SATURDAY at 10 o'clock. Headquarters for Trunks and Valises. ASK FOR LABATT'S ALE The Purest and Most Agreea ble Beverage APNE on the Market. . Los Not Carbonated--Made from the best To of Malt and Hops. J AS.McPARLAN D, Agent. ae noUCATIONAL. |The Best Is What You Want. Insure in the North American A. Abernethy, in the Bahamas last winter. The - insurance A Bn A, AD, demonstmtors. _---- is a well-known winter resort, In. ing SIAMATA VAN PELT, HAV- Sempany in Jig "athology an teriology--W. T. go are troub) until THERE SURER BETTE Connell, WD, WRC.S., Fag. LR. | to fret the mind; there are no wore the plotter by, Pnwared to teach nn m a, CP, Lon, professor; A. R. B. Wil |tional questions to agitate the people; above the Y.W.C.A., in {oy Oda- OLA iii Shere or wter world do ot sear, | SePtumber farm. sta. 'made' Known: ot |sompasy bad yoy senasome LLR.C.P., Lon, nstrator. o or t a . p on Piseasre of the Thar $hitmt and | this fairyland, ors all a lapped ation, atu nd sign ive you aie id ong enough: Sad nose--l, C. Connell, + M.D, pro- lin an abiding calm. The negro tills his - North ia a Asssrence Mental divasen=0, K. Clarke; 3, {018,08 land aod To dmppy, x white of HArt om Jas watnielied nr Pr De edical + Ecintentent of Rick: tioned, brings up his family under the Evening classes, Tuesday and" Thurs boa ee ri polic; Biology, physiol and hist, v both of <> are ond d vided day, 7:50 to 9:80. Thess classes are {in he No AT, Life Assorance . Jumes Fowler, M.A, F.R.C.S., the life is healthy; few ido i | specially mechanics and imstruction | Company. It a splendid investment fessor of botany and vege n is pro ) his. tology; A. P. K J monstrator. Edin., prokesor; Isaac Wood, M.A, ed os Edin, table " ty A MD. pro/ | poemibiy shemendow fo 3 fessor of animal logy, temptation to and 'histology; 1. Bogart, | bop he the outer world; generally the with Chemistry--W. L. Goodwin, D.8¢., | Juctive paratively few wants, a pro- for Booms 3004 Priscem swt KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE TORONTO BUSINESS COLLEGE J TORONTO. Rooms 3304 Princess street : fate security. Ses W. J. FAIR, Peeves 1 70TH YEAR. N [Sm Soaked I You won't get soaked weather, or by us, wear one ol our Raineoa They keep out the wet 4 as a light overcoat as wi Gbe "Brigh With a strap on the b newest idea is fall. The plain coat, also r, We import our rain co: from England, thereb) about 20 per cent Yo benefit. "¢ JENKIN 114 Princess $ NOT HERI It it is not of the quality it cannot be here. We exclude from ov ! any article that fall of the highest st OUR WATCI Are as near perfec human skill attains. We are official age: the famous Regina ¥ Watches. Ask to se Your money refu they don't give satis 'P. B. CRE JEWELLER, y, Cor. Princess and Wellin 8 oes OO OOO OO -FOUNTAIN | Waterman and P: One distinct advantag ting us sell you your Fen, is that we are capa ting that pen right sho thing happen to it. We make no charge f repairs to pens we sell. SMITH BR Jewellers and Opticians, J TO CONTRACT TENDERS WILL BE RES the undersigned up to 4 § 13th inst, for the several v ed in the erection of a | Blacksmith shop for the Mo portation company Plans. and specifications 1 at our office Lowest or an necessarily accepted POWER October Sth, 1905 = WANTED. Kk COOK. APPLY Clement, 250 King stres SMALL DWELLING, Mt central locality Apply street. A GOOD PLAIN COOK, A! perienced housemaid. A office. este COOK, APPLY IN THE to Mrs. N. Stuart Lesl Rot street ---------------------------- TWO EXPERIENCED S dies. None other need cy & Steacy ------------------------ A QUANTITY OF DRY O inch and a hulf in diam der. The Win. Davies, | ------------------------ AT ONCE, TWO FIRST Cl] makers First class Apply at once to Z. Pr ant tailor, Brock street. A GOOD STEADY MAN Avviy at W. J. Crother between 7 and 8 o'clock ine HELP WANTED--WE WA) people in each locality us durin~ spare time. Pl Liberal pay. Llmperial Ci don, Unt. $1,950 MADE BY ONE year selling our hous ties. Did you make as our lines. Always wselli Marshall, & Co., Londo MEN TO LEARN BARB Practical course that Few weeks required dipiomas given each Special arrangements fo) plicants. Write for. Moler Barber College. Cl ------------------------------ EXPERIENCED COTTON Good weavers can earn per Week We pay _to y learning the Wo SHoecial inducer to famities Apply to t Cotton Mills Company, K A TRUSTWORTHY GENT lady in 'sach couniy to ness fpr an old establis solid Bnancial standing. hona fide weeklv salary bv check each Monday nerses direct Money advanced close addressed envelo 870 Caxton Bidg..