THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1916. were held here only one session, ve- | ing moved to the old Commercial Bank building near the foot of Prin- cess street. Classes were held here until the new arts building was erect- ed, when the classes in arts ani theology were transferred there, and the medical college returned to its former home on the campus, | -- SKETCH OF ITS EARLY HISTORY. 'Dr. N. F.Dupuis. Unearthed Wealth of Valuable and Entertaining 'In- formation Before the Osler Club of Queen's University, Before the Osler Club of Queen's Thursday night, Dr. N. F. Dupuis Bave an exceedingly interesting sketch of early medical education in Kingston, - Referring to the ' founding of Queen's Medical College in 1854, the speaker sald it was felt by Hon. John A. Macdonald, later Sir John A. Macdonald, and Rev. Prof. Williamson that there was a call for a medical college in Upper Canada that should be free from all religious tests and give to students of all creeds and nationalities, and that Kingston offered a favorable loca- tion for such a college. These gen- tlemen accordingly called a meeting of the medical men of Kingston to whom they propounded their scheme, It was there and then decided to establish a medical school in connec- | tion with Queen's, and the follow- ing medical pen were Communion Footwear We are well prepared to fill the wants of the children, needing Commun- ion shoes for Sunday next. Girls" Patent Strap Slippers, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.00, Boys' Patent Oxfords, $1.75, $2. 00, $2.50 and $3.50. "SHOES THEY'LL BE PROUD OF." ABERNETHY S SHOE STORE ------------ CROP OUTLOOK IS NOT GOOD WHAT A NUMBER OF FARMERS TOLD THE WHIG, Hay Crop is Promising, but Grain, Corn and Potato Crops do not Pro- mise Very Well at Present, The Whig on Friday called up al number of farmers to ascertain wiiat effect the wet weather was having on the crops in their districts. All were agreed that the general outlook | was not nearly so promising as it was this time last year. The hay crop| looks exceptionally well, but the oth-| er crops do not promise well. . The! grain crop, except on Specially high | land, will be more or less of a fail-/ | ure. Very little corn has been sown, | i and not a great deal of potatoes have! | been planted. Of course, if the | AD-| weather improved (note the "if") pointed to orm its first} pe crop outlook would likewise im-| staff of professors: Dr. Samp-| prove, but the yield, in any event, | son, took the chair of clinical medi- | will not be as large as last year. cine and surgery, and was president | C. F. Adair, of Cataraqui stated | of the school; Dr. John Stuart, the| | that the hay crop was especially chair of anatomy and physiology; { good. The hay, however, was be- Dr John R. Dickson. that of sur-| ginning to fall down as a result of | gery; Dr. H. Yates, that of medi-| tha overgrowth, and if the rain con- cine; Dr. O. Strange, that of materia | | tinued, would be partly ruined. The medica, and Dr. Hayward, that of | grain sown about 1st of May looked midwifery. Dr. Strange, however | eceptionally well in all high situa- resigned almost imunediately, and | | tions, but that sown on low land was Dr. Fife Fowler took his place. |a failure. In many cases the grain Twenty-three students were regis was sown twice, but the second sow- tered in the first session, 1854 {ing was as bad as the first. © Very forty-seven in the second session, | little corn had been sown, but it was over fifty in the third and sixty-four | not too late yet. in the fourth. The college was, Hiram Atkinson, Kilburnie, took then situated on Queén street, op-|an optimistic view, and said that the' posite St. Andrew's church. Dr.| farmers in his district had not much! Hayward retired after the first ses-| to complain of as yet. There would sion and his place was filled by Dr.| be some loss of grain, but the hay Litchfield in the subjects of mid-|crop was excellent. Only part of the wifery and medical jurisprudence, he | potatoes had been planted and practi being assisted in the latter subject (cally no corn, but there was time for by Alexander Campbell, who later| Doth yet. Bay, became Sir Alexander Campbell. { George F. Clark, Collin' said | In 1860, through a change in the that the wet weather had seriously 'medical act, which made it illegal [affected the farmers im his district for one professor to teach more than | I 1ey were unable to do anything on one subject Dr. Litchfield resigned their land owing to the ground being that of midwifery, and was succeed- | 80 wet. The grain Sowh on low ahd ed by Dr. M. Lavell, who subsequent-| %#8 all Bouse The un Brat of he ly became warden of Portsmouth | clover was all rotting, and 8 crop penitentiary. | would be an indifferent one, No raguvlar J. Greenlee, Cushendall, stated the ed to the chair of chemistry, and | oroPS Were fairly good an high Jand. jantil- he. yoar- 1858 the subject was BE Tin i, a has taught by Prof Williamson of the| crop wag better than it was last year, Arts faculty, until he was relieved by BC the grain crop materiadly | Bi APDoisunent of Dr Lousos. Pp improved, it would only be about half e r pere- as good as it was last year. grinations, at first moved to more E y commodious quarte on Willi J. S. Sibbit, Pittsburg, reported s rs 1 illiam > at tl rain was beginning to be street, and finally to its resting place | that the. 8 E g scalded. Little corn had been plant: 98 the campus, where it is situated | ed, and it would probably be neces- 0-day. | d. | sary to plant something in its stea o ane building bag pees some years] | SREY potatoes were rotting, but the elore erected as a deanery or resi od, if it would get a ence for Archdeacon Stewart, of the hay would be goed, s : : hanc ripen. | Anglican church-in-Kingston, and 1s} £ a Sa Glenburnie, stated A featnt known as ihe Fretidences " that hay was looking pretty fair. ou s @ 3 | , but there was quite a lot building, but consisting of only two Bigh land, but there : stories i first rate, but there was quite a lot ies, was built ostensibly at least : x . for the medic of low land that had mot yet been { ical faculty. ! land 40 Muslin Dresses 40 Floral and striped effects. The very newest arto 3750. 5 "Saturday, to Tog $3.95 8 Doz. White Repp Skirts | 95¢ 40 Trimmed Hats 40 The season's best shapes, all ready to wear; hats in the lot worth up rs? 39 $5.50, Sairday v to clear . i 10 DOZ. STRAW SHAPES TO CLEAR AT 89c EACH. Shop here Saturday and save money. T.J.O Connor 260 Princess Street 3 3 Phone 800 Higher up street, but lower in price. Home-Made Candy and Chocolates Fresh Made Every Day SAKELL'S Next Opera House. Four new styles to choose from. Baturday Bach Phone $40 "For Every Man a Becoming Hat" 3 LIGHT, COOL, COMFORTABLE HATS : 1 eri A = ! rene Fait Attention and a range of new ® ® shapes that respond to vour individual de- mands make this store! headquarters with men who appreciate the best. Panamas. Leghornettes. Straw Sailors. Crash Hats. Come and them for vourself and inves- tigate our wonderful valies; Campbell Bros The House of Successful Hat Styles. | professor was appoint- | Military Camp Comforts Folding Woven Wire and Canvas Cots, Folding Chairs and Tables. \ Everything in Camp Sup- plies. see NO NEED TO GO To 71 King St. West, Toronto, tor First-Class Portrature Work. Representa. tives o The Blakemore Studie have arrived in Kingston, and intend to open &8 soon Phone 147 {sown. The planting was, of course ay om. lve real estate man gets them a -Joeation. and Wedding G Watch G. BLAKEMORE £rovs, ites. 3 wiTUART, STREET. Kingston. | New Bedroom Furniture Just received a number of new de signs in brass and iron beds. We have exercised a great care in selecting our stock of bedroom furniture in order to insure our customers receiving the The speaker told of the financial and other difficulties which Queen's | cal college did not pass through the malstrom unscathéd, for besides] losing the annual government grant of $1,000, as a result of the Ontario Government passing a bill that no celve state aid, it was afflicted by | | internal troubles from which it suf-| fered sorely. Three of the staff-- | Stuart, Dickson and Lawson-- resign- | ed, although Dixon afterwards recon- | | side ered his resignation and returned! o the chair of surgery until he fin- | 1 accepted the position of medical { superintendent of Rockwood. His | | position in .the school was flled by | | McLean and later by Sullvan. Stu- best values and the ver y latest finishes | ae s chair was divided, Kennedy tak- and patterns. New Bed Room Carpets We large stock of have a very good values. New Dia- Nothing We handle Edison's mond dise phonograph. better. T. F. Harrison Co, . PHONE 90. "Spring Pumps" All the New Lasts which Dame Fash" ion has decreed for ae hs Spring of 1016. exquisite patterns and charming styles, offered. a our fashionable display of Spring Pum will delight the woman who uses taste in sorsction and judgment in expenditure. Allan M. Reid, - 11 Priess. treet Kingston : . new Brussels Rugs for the bed room. Extra] LIMITED, _ ng anatomy and Octave Yates phy- | JE hua and Lawson's place was filled by the appointment of Robert Bell, { C.E., Owing to the want of harmony, which developed between the medical | | faculty and the trustee board, it was | decided to separate' the school from the university. however, was affiliated The col- | lege, with ! Queen's for the purpose of having as well as for the from degrees conferred, { purpose--of----gefting assistaace some members of Queen's staff, | Teo provide residence for tha staff, {the Board of Trustees resolved to iturn the building occupied by | Queen's classes into three residences, { later than last year, encountered and said that the medi- | denominational university was to re- | {at the big military camp, i boy and later by Dr. T. R. Dupius. |, 0 | the medical | | youngster, jent but, .,on the whole, everything was looking pretty fair. BOY GOT TAME CROW FOR COPY OF WHIG: A Novel Transaction at Bar- riefield camp on Thurs=- A novel transaction ocenrred at Barriefield camp on Wednesday when a newsboy had a tame crow given to him by a soldier, in return for a copy of the British- Whig. The story goes to show just how +popular the Whig is with the men in' khaki; and the demand for it The news- through noticed of pa was making his way lines when the soldier lad carrying his bundle pers. "I havb not got the price of a pa '* said the man in uniform, to the "but I will tell you what I will do: Give me a copy of the Whig, and 1 will make you a pres of my tame crow." Immediately the lad was all smiles smiles of the Sunny Jim variety. Here was an offer worth while. He had an idea that the sol- dier was joking with him, but' the per, | the classes taking over the medical | man wearing the King's uniform was building, the niedical classes be'ng turned out on the street. (The medi- | cal faculty had to seek other quart- {went into a tent and coming ers and secured the building, which again said, by 442! : Zs {is now the home for the aged. Classes | handing the bird to the new sboy, {handed over to the soldier, {as good as his word, for in less time than 'it takes to tell the story he out "Here's your - crow, By Purifying the Blood Poison causes pains and aches, tired, languid feelings and derange- iments of the vital. organs of the ibody. By ridding the human sys- {tem of _ poisonous impurities Dr. |Chase' s Ridney-Liver Pills cure rheu- {matism, headache, backache and {pains through the body and limbs. | As an illustration, we would refer iyou to the sworn state of Mrs. Bergland. It is just such experiences as this that has made so many thou- sands 'of 'people enthusiastic about Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. This is why they are to be found in the great majority of homes. Mrs. O. Bergland, Dunkirk, Sask., writes: --"I can highly recommend Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to all i ho are suffering from weak kidneys. 1 suffered from "headache and back- You Get Rid of Pain | Here is the Sworn Statement of of a Lady Who Was Cured Alan Mara Bateman Takes a Bride | by Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. { I would get any rest. I had rheuma-| tism and always had a heavy feeling in the region of my kidneys. I was nervous and often dizzy. Reading about Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills led me to use them, and with the most highly satisfactory results, and I can recommend them to everyone who wants to be cured of kidney troubles." Mr. W. E. Johnson, Commissioner to take oaths, writes: "This is to certify that I know Mrs. Bergland and believe her statement in regard to Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to be true and correct." Put Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to the test when suffering from tor- pid, sluggish action of the liver, kid- neys and bowels and you will soon abprecists Sheiy value. all She pill a dose. cents & box, all dealers, or -| Edmanson, Bates & Company, Tamit- i "Coffee" For over thirty ('offee. has been standard of quality" sistently maintained years our "a high con Have no hesitation to try it. It will do eredit to your breakfast table. It will "set vou up' and carry vou through the day. Henderson's Grocery 59-61 Brock St. | A square house to deal with who was now bubbling over with ex- citement. The copy of the Whig was at once and' the deal was completed The Whig is not giving this crow | story in order to "crow" over it. but merely to show the readers just how eager the, men at the big military camp are to read the news of the] day. | A JUNE WEDDING. at New Haven, Conn. The Old Stong Church in East Ha- ven, Conn., was the scene of a rain-| how wedding on June 3rd, when Miss! Grace Hotchkiss Street, daughter of} Mrs. Frederick Burton Street, was| united in marriage to Alan Mara| Bateman, son of G. A. Bateman, of] Kingston, by Rev. 'D. J: Clark. The| rainbow idea was carried out in the| decorations of the church and | gowns of the bride's attendants, and! was both attractive and unusual. | Miss Emeline Street, sister 'of the | | bride, was maid of honor. The bride had six bridesmaids. ammonia | Seeking Son at Barriefield L. F. Kallmejer, of Rochester, N.| Y., was 'at Barriefield camp today! seeking his son who left home on) Monday on the steamer Toronto. to enlist in a Canadian regiment. A Youth answering She + description of _spen' ns at one of the ity regruliing places, i Phone 279. | y James Reid, And have them delivered to your lL The Busy Store With the Large Stock SQUARE PER SOM Specials At OO0D'S PICKED CHICKENS AND FOWLS, 500 LBS. FARMERS BUTTER n Rol d Prints. Also an Large Stock of HAMS AND BACON, Our Own Curing SPECIAL PRICES TO CLEAR THE ABOVE LOT. West End Meat Market BARRIE STREET. Phone 407. | 50 DRY FAIR anp SQUARE In ths fair and square shop of satisfaction you can ask for what ou want and get it from our ac- commodating salesmen. Fresh vegetables, fresh Strawber- ries, fresh Fruits, Oranges, Bananas, Cherries, also fresh Fish. EMPIRE GROCERY. | Phone 349. - "Ranks with the Strongest" HUDSON BAY Insurance Company FIRE INSURANCE Head Office. Royal Insurance Bldg. MONTREAL Military Supplies DPiresns Shoes, best insole on the mare ket, the Ames-Hoiden; a strictly up-to- date shoe. Call and inspect them. Also military eaps, rea wale. tectors, putieces, khaki towels, bathing sults, swagger summer underwear, wrist watches or variety), ete. SAVE MONEY BY BUYING HERE ISAAC ZACKS, ' 271 PRINCESS ST. PERCY J. QUINN, Manager. Ontario Branch, Toronto W. H. GODWIN & SONS AGENTS, KINGSTON, ONT. | | Nyal's EASEM for Tired, Perspi- | i ing Feet | Preparations at the N Nyal A full line of Nyal's Quality Store. Sargent' Gor. Princess and Montreal Sts. :