THE DAILY BRI Do You Want The Best? When you are dressed your Dest, you look your best. When you look your best, you feel your best. Whon you feel your best, this old world looks the best. If you. want the best Clothing--best in materials, best in workmanship, best in fit, best in style--then the best place to get the best is at 218 PRINCESS STREET. We still have a good assortment of OVERCOATS to choose from at prices from |, seesrsee.. $18.00 to $40.00. D.J. WiLL "THE MEN'S STORE" .. REAK away from imperfect vis- B fon. The consequences of im- paired eyesight unless it is im- mediately checked by the proper cor- rective glasses, may spell failure in the ease of a school child or a grown man, Let us examine your eyes in a scientific manner. We will discov- er just what Is wrong and prescribe the proper remedial glasses. J.J. 5 OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Pearls Perfect weal production of the Oriental Pearls, with their Iustre, beauty and color. . Richelien Pearls aro perfect imitation, indestructible and ine soluble. Graduated strings, $10 to $60. Uniform, strings, ..$10 to 835 Kinnear & d'Esterre Ne amas acd) ed Offices to let; first Nour front; heat- TELEGRAPH BUILDING, CLARENCE STREET C. 8. KIRKPATRICK, on Premives General Steamship Ticket Agent 88 Clarence St, Kingston ld When you are choosing your presents for 'Christmas, call and see our line'of novelties. A few suggestions: Table Lamps--Heaters--Irons-- Toasters, Pocket Flashlights, Toy Motors, etc. H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC C0. Tae RRR TELEPHONE 441 SRC Gourdier's 78 BROCK STREET, /ALS0 A FEW ODD. LINES AT PALS CEA sneak aaa ye -86.00 $4.95 He : il KINGSTON uk FURNH ALL CLINGS NECESSARY | (Continued From Page 1) ian colleg | years of college work only. { | The Queen's dean claims that the | pplicy of Canadian schools as to de- | velopment and progress ought not to { be influenced very much by Ameri- {ean eriticism, and certainly ought | Bpt to be modelled upon the detailed | réquirements of the American Coun- | ¢jl of education. i Queen's graduates, it is pointed | gut,"are to be found the world over {And there: are "very few "duds" {among them, Dean Connell says; at / the present time Queen's stands next {to Toronto and MoGill. It is easily | third in respect to attendance, equip- {| ment and general efficiency. Attend- { ance is one of the criteria upon which |a school may be judged. This year there Is an entrance class of eighty, although the faculty expressed a de sire to limit the classes to fitty. "In point of fact there is nothing wrong with the school, except that it needs e--generous---support from the Board of Trustees with permission | to continue its development along | natural lines." declares the Queen's | dean, | Enquiry as to what was needed to | make Queen's medical school eligible { for admission to Class A, yielded the | information from the secretary of | the council on medical education { that the main difficulty is that | Queen's has not adopted the six year | course as have Toronto and McGill. | But Queen's last February decided | to adopt the six-year course, begin- { ning with the session of 1920-21, so f his obstavie will remain no longer | after the present session. Dr. Con- | nell has asked. for a re-inspection | during the current session with a re- | quest that Class A standing be grant- | ed. : {At present, Queen's has laboratory | work in every year of the course, | There are fully oquipped 'laborator- | les in anatomy, histology, embryo- | logy, physiology, chemistry, physies, | pharmacology, pathology and bacter- | lology. These subjects are'all in | charge of full-time well-trained tea- | chers, | Every undergraduate of Queen's | medical school serves at least two { terms as interne in one of the city | hospitals. The first term of LWO { weeks is during the fourth year. Dur- ing the fifth year a longer period is arranged, the duration depending upon the number of students in the chass. No one can now graduate in medicine from Queen's without hav- ing at least a short hospital experi- ence, A few weeks is very little, but it Is enough to bring the student into direct contact with actual evéryday medical work, and to/give him some idea of what a hospital training «| means. Up to the present, Dean Cannell declares that the University has done nothing financially for the medical school, although in 1913 the Board of Trustees decided that the medical faculty should participate in univer- sity funds. The financial statement for the year ending March 31st, 1919, shows an expenditure of $44,- 000. Fees received amounted to $26,- 000. This is $18,000 expended over and above fees. Of this amount, Dr. Connell states that only $2,000 was provided out of general university, funds. In concluding his statement, Dean Connell says: "When all these facts are fully weighed, I am of the opinion that it is clearly proven that there is noth- ing wrong with the medical school It is far from ideal, but it compares favorably with any. other school in results secured. There is much to be said in favor on behalf of the small school in the relatively small com- munity; to lay the best foundation for a medical career. No medical school can turn out a finished pro- duct requiring nothing further. The history of Queen's medical depart- || ment and the demand for its train- ing, as evidenced by the large attend- ance and the numerous applications for admission that are refused, all warrant a confident belief in the fu- ture of the school, and do not in any sense justify the dangerous experi-. ment of taking away part of the school out of the city of Kingston." |QUEEKS MEDICAL CLINGS THE OTTAWA CITIZEN COMMENTS ON WHIG'S EDITORIAL Says Ottawa Iy Not Trying to Take Queen's From Kingston, But To Help the Medical College Here. Ottawa Citizen. The Kingston Whig makes eut a good case for Queen's Medical Col- lege as far as regards the splendid work done by the staff of that {nsti- tution in the past, and the devotion of graduates of the college to their alma mater. It rightly points out that Queen's graduates rank highly wher- ever they may be located. | i These are not, however, the points to be considered in discussing whet- her Queen's Medical School should come to Ottawa for clinical fnstruc- tion. The Whig admits that hospital facilities "in. n are inadequ- ate; i admits that many Queen's graduates have forced to take up post graduate work because of the lack of experience in clinical work during the regular course. Certainly post graduate work should be taken up whether the student has bad am- ple clinical experience or not. But here is-a difference in taking this work up voluntarily and in being forced to take ftup, | for clinical Incles suen es are given credit for three | : 7 {Old Folks' Coughs, _, { Catarrh, Bronchitis | Quickly Cured | } This Tells of a Method That Cures | Without Using Drugs. } Elderly people take eold easily. | {Unlike young folks, they recover islowly. . That 48 why so many peo- | {ple past middle life die of pneumonia. | | Cough Syrups seldom do- much | good because they upset digestion, Any doctor knqgws, that a much more | jeffective treatment is "CATARRH- | {OZONB," which heals and soothes | {the irritated surfaces of the throat. | { In using Catarrhozone you do not | {take medicine into the stomach-- | {you simply breathe into the throat, | ynase, and lungs rich piney balsamic | j vapor, so full of healing power that {colds, catarrh and bronchitis disap- {pear almost instantly. The germ-killing balsamic vapor | mixes with the - breath, descends | thropgh the throat, down the bron- chial tubes, and finally reaches the deepest air cells in the lungs. All parts are scothed with rich, pure, medicinal essences, whereas with a syrup the affected parts could not be reached and Harm would resuli through. benumbing the stomack with drugs. A Catarrhozone _ Inhaler in your pocket or purse enables you to stop TISH WHIG a an A 4 Warm Slippers Ladies' Colored Kid and Warm Felt Slippers--most every color that's made--best grades hr minieie sve «bie + Sash L $2.50 and $228 Children's and Girls' Slippers . . ..$1.00 to $2.00 -Abernethy's Shoe Store ses ase h 2 cold with the first sneeze. Large | size costs $1.00 and supplies treat ment for two months, small size 50c; trial size, 25¢; all storekeepers and druggists. rene, Par, ence the student has the more bene- ficial will be a post graduate course to him, As we understand the suggestion that Queen's students be transferred to Ottawa, only titose in the Junior and 'senior years are affected. Stu- dents who have not passed their "primaries" are not concerned, be- cause 'the course in the years up to the primary examinations is not con- cerned with hospital or clinical work, only ¢lass room, dissecting work and | laboratory work are indulged in dur- ing the first two years. What the suggestion amounts to, therefore, is | what the Whig asserts many Queen's | gradubtes take up, after leaving col- lege--clinical work on a broader scale than is possible in Kingston. It is natural for Kingston to wish to retain all of Queen's within her borders, The city and the university are closely knit by many bonds and Queen's, we know, would be as reluc- tant to leave Kingston, which is per- haps the best "study" town in the Dominion, as Kingston would be to see her, "or any part of her, go. But the interests of Queen's students are above all sentiment, . Ottawa Is not attempting to thie Queen's from Kingston. We would like very much if Queén's were to come to the Capital, but there is not, and never has been, any serious at- tempt on our part in that direction. Queen's is ideally situated in King- ston. But ;in the matter of helping Queen's students acquire a better course than would be possible for them in the Limestone City, we ad- mit 'having designs upon a portién of Queen's population, The new Ot- tawa civic hospital, which is to be erected at a cost of $1,500,000, would be an invaluable adjunct to Queen's Medical School, and the ad- vantages to Ottawa. would not be greater than to the reputation of Queen's and, consequently, to the re- putation. of Kingston! MAY BE MAYORALTY FIGHT VETERANS ARE ORGANIZING EOR ACTIVE CAMPAIGN. And Will Secure Quarters on Prin- cess Street--A Meeting Was Held on Saturday Evening. A LESSON IN ECONOMY Buy Your Furs Now Our Furs were purchased long before the recent sharp advance in prices took place. Prudent fur buyers will read. ily see why it is to their great advantage to buy now. HUDSON SEAL.COATS Made from selected pelts in the new models. FINE FUR SETTS In all the leading Furs, New Hats, new Caps, new Gloves. CAMPBELL BROS. Kingston's Largest Hat Dealers. NA + ------ : ; 3 A Our Slogan PLEASING OUR PATRONS GIVES US DELIGHT IF WE ARE WRONG, WR 'MAKE THINGS RIGHT FRIENDSHIP' 410 DIVISION STREET PHONE 545 -- The Kingston Veterans Municipal Committee held an enthusiastic meet- ing on Saturday evening, when fur- ther progress was made in preparing for the coming municipal election campaign. The report of the com: mitte appointed to confer with the labor delegation and with the Retail Merchants' Association - was: handed in, announcing that it had been found impossible to uffiliate with labor, but that a basis of co-operation had been reached. It also reported that the Retail Merchants' Association - had unanimously endorsed the veterans' platform in its entirety, andl that both parties were willing to work together for 'the common good: of the city: Te report was received with great satisfaction by the general committee, which was well pleased with the pro- gress made during the past week. It was stated that a contest is expected for the office of mayor, Steps were taken to organize for an active campaign. ~~ A committee was appointed to make al | arrange- ments for a big-orgadization meet- ing to be held in the G.W.V.A. rooms on a night during this week, to be announced in the press. The full membership of both the veteran ast sociations and al§o the general pubs lic are to-be invited to attend this organization meeting, which is to be called for the purpose of riecting ward organizations. Another com- mittee was appointed suitable building or ro. to be used as campaign headquartel It is ex- pected that prenvises in a prominent ocation on Princess street will be secured as headquarters of the Vet- erans' Municipal Committee for the | next month. Another committe + was named to make arrangements for a mass meeting of citizens to be held in the Grand Opera House during the week between omigation day and to secure a T ttee on candidates Sed gat a public 3 ouncemtent ight expected early in the pres. week, as one more meeting would ssary before this could bel : Tet of candidates includes | enidid standing in, the | Portraiture, come | J "some | NOW OPEN The Marrison Stutio is Again Ready for Buas'ness Commercial Work Copying, Enlarging, Etc, Phone 1318w. « 92 Princess Street Anything --Any Time--Any Place Ye ---- -- COFFEE TEST The best tests for Coffee is in the using. & Increasing sales of Coffee is the result of tests by our num. : Ey 100 Per Cent. Pure & Not the cheapest--but the best. b dhnariadiadiadhghdhid 4 a a a an ye i. HE am <€ < shummsde § 5961 Brock street. Phone 279 | The old -- i | Ta <OD \ Coe » 01d problem, "What to Buy," finds easy solution, inasmuch as we have a store filled with Christmas novelties for men, women and chile dren, a t prices to suit one and- all, JAMES REID The Store with the Christmas Spirit "Phone 147 for Service. >. > i i Don't miss this OA I Ice Cream Parlor NEXT TO THE OPERA HOUSE We will offer for Saturday only, the highest grades in Chocolates = at a price you can pay. : GANONG'S NO. 1, AT Massnemersitnisas ssns dC to get the highest grade Chocolates 3 or Sunday. pe - SAKELL'S Next Door to the Opera House I It is the unfailing, uh- tiring performance of the hor which has made it the leader in the e washing machine field, You can forget - about the mechanics of the THOR. It is built so per fect that it is almost trouble proof. ' "One thing you will be conscious of -- that a THOR always goes when you require {tii ig, al- ways ready to turn out "thé biggest washing for FOU ©. ole x wo Over 13 years of wash- oe machine *