§ " WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1021, Summer Gri rippe Requires prompt treatment. A few doses of DR. HICKEY'S-- CHEST REM- EDY, together with a treat- ment of COLD TABLETS will break up the worst cold Do not 'Weddings take place in SEPTEMBER and OUR STOCK is in a few hours. neglect your cold, hut get these remedies at once. L. T. Best, Druggist PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST Open Sundays. Phone 59. full of choice gifts for THE BRIDE THE GROOM and Their attendants as well as The New Home Wedding Rings. SMITH BROS. Jewelers «= Limited Established 1540. Registered Opticians 850 Kirg Street Marriage Licenses. uncommon words--maybe, but very common causes of HEADACHE We have glasses that remove these causes and give IMMEDIATE RELIEF Before consulting the physi- clan, before using medicines and drugs, come and see us. If your headache is caused by * eye strain we cure it THROUGH PROPER GLASSES Keeley Jr, M.0.D.0. Optometrist and Optician, 226 Princess Street. 8 doors above the Opera House DENTAL PARLORS: 183 PRINCESS STREET KINGSTON, ONTARIO We specialize on:--Painless Extrac- tion, Latest Treatment of Pyorrhea, | X-Ray work. | Catiada, "wii "make a charge of $2 | {have been spending their honeymoon Dr. Nash's Have Your Stove Repaired A large number of people have Stoves and Ranges which have some of the parts burnt out or miss- ing. Let us repair them before the cold weather comes. There will be a big rush the first cold day and yours may be the one which cannot be used until repaired. - We carry Bricks and Castings in stock. Have your range repaired to-day. McKelvey & Birch, Limited Phone237, ee « = = Kingston ¢ - is your room of comfort. It is the most important room in the house. More of your home hours are spent there than in any other part of the house. The "GERHARD HEINTZMAN" PIANO is a living room Piano. Its design is suitable for any and every living room. . We will be pleased to give you a demonstration and prove its goodness. Call and get our prices on Pianos and Phonographs before purchasing, and ask about our convenient terms. CARPETS, CURTAINS, LINOLEUMS, VICTROLAS, " PIANOS, WHITE SEWING MACHINES, HOOVER ELECTRIC SWEEPERS T.F. Harrison Co, Limited Pee 30 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. | Fr In 3 | | Twilight | | | Notice--Heredaft 'r, the Whig, in [common with other papers all over for inserting an engagement, mar- riage or reception Bh ynouncement.) | To get the Whig' society writer, | telephone No. 857w. Yass Earl street, { . : Miss Helen Tofleld, Barrie street, | will go to Toronto on Thursday for la visit. | Miss Marion Lewis, Smith's Falls, has returned to Queen's and is at | The Avonmore, | Miss Phyllis Sepncer left on Mon- | day for New York to spend the win- | ter with her mother, Mrs. Stadler. | Miss Mary Rayson has returned from England, where she spent the summer, and is at 49 Clergy street. Mrs. E. J. Adams has taken an ap- artment at "Park View," and will occupy it after October 1st. Mrs. Edward Low, Ottawa, is with her daughter, Mrs. W. P. Wilgar, Mack street, Mr. and Mrs, Belwa, Johnson street, and their daughters, Geraldine and Madge, left on Sunday for De- troit, where they will visit Mrs. Bel- wa's sister, Mrs. Richmond Harman, Royal Oak, Mich. Miss Anne Neilson, come to Kingston to attend Queen's College, and will be at 49 Clergy street. Stella, has | * * x Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Abbott, who in Muskoka, arrived in their home in Dunnville to-day. Miss Elsie Davidson, Prescott, will arrive in Kingston on Thursday to attend Queen's College, and will be at 189 Earl street, Miss Sweetman is a Trenton girl who has come to Kingston to take a course at Queen's and is at the Y. W.C.A., Johnson street, Miss M. M. Elliott, Brock street, has returned {rom Toronto where she was the guest of Prof. and Mrs. Humphrey Mitchell. Miss Honora Dyde, who has spent the summer in the west, returned to town to-day. Mrs. H. A. Lavell, Barrie street, is spending the week in Toronto and will return to town on Saturday. Prof. P. G. C. Campbell and Dr. Norman Miller spent the week-end at Bob's Lake. Ld * * Rev. J. D. Boyd, Mrs. Boyd and their family have come from their camp at East View, to their Univer- sigy' Avenue home, Miss Eileen Jandrew, Ottawa, is a girl student at Queen's, who has re- turned to town. Mrs. Andrew Shaw, Williamstown, is the guest of Mrs. D. A Shaw, Ba- got stroet. Major and Mrs, Garnet Greer, who have been in Toronto and Peterboro, have returned to town, and are with Dry and Mrs. R. W. Garrett, Johnson street, for a week or so. Miss Fleiger, Chatham, N.B., whe has come to Kingston to attend Queen's University, is at the "Y," Johnson street. Mr. and Mrs. Brinkman, L'Origi- nal, who are in town for the Sowards- Boyce wedding, are with Mr. and Mrs, James Sowards, Montreal &treet, es 0 .Miss Clara Farrell, Barrie street, returned from Toronto to-day, Mrs. W. 8, Dyde, Union street, has returned from a very much enjoyed trip to England, where she spent the summer, Miss Anna Rose, Carleton Place, has returncd to Queen's University. Mr. and Mrs. 8. G. Sutherland and their son, Gordon Sutherland, who spent the summer in the vicinity of Kingston, returned to St. Louis this week, Miss Mary Taylor returned to To- ronto, where ghe is a law student at Osgoodo 1Tall, on Tuesday. * * - J. J. Doyle and Miss Irene Doyle spent the week-end with Mrs, E. A. Fitzgibbons, Watertown, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Chown, Uni- versity avenue, have returned. from Toronto and Cobourg. Mrs. Nell Jackson and little sons, Clark and Clyde, Cape Vincent, N.Y., have been visiting her parents, Bath road, for the past 'wo weeks. Dr. and Mrs. L. E. Crowley have returned to town from an extended trip through the Berkshire hills. Mrs. E. H. Keate, Los Angeles, Cal., is visting her aunt, Mrs. R, J. McOleband, 185 Clergy street, Mrs. STROUD'S TEA Full flavored and satisfying 100 Princess Stryet land first-year science started, but {although a few registrations were re- i The staff of the faculty are kept Keatle was formerly Mies Haze! Kil- an, of 'this city. Rev. T. W. Savary and Mrs. Sav ary, St. James' rectory, Lave re- turned from Toronto. { (Continued on Page 8.) | | | EICHTY-FIRST SESSION OF QUEENS COMMENCES) | Lectures Started Wednesday | Morning--Students Regis= | ter and Seek Rooms. Queen's University's eighty-first| session opened on Wednesday morn- ing. The lectures in.arts, medicine many of the students are occupied with the task of registering. The registrar's office Is the busiest place in the university, and the staff is being rushed to look after the stu- dents, who are applying for regis- tration, Last session 2,258 students were registered, 953 of whom were registered extra-murally, either as' summer school students or taking regular arts subjects or the course in banking, thus leaving 1,300 intra- mural students in the faculties of arts, science and medicine. It is anticipated that the registration will this year be larger than that of last session, Registration and classes in the faculty of arts opened Wednesday, ceived by the registrar on Tuesday. busy aiding the students prepare their courses so that the proper sub: jects may be taken without having any trouble in the succeeding years. The first year in this faculty pro- mises to be a large one. The first-year students in science, whose registrations were received on Tuesday, commenced classes Wednesday. The senior years are now registering and classes start later in the week. The medicals also got down to work on Wednesday morning, but, like the other faculties, the majority of students are 'only arriving in the city. In view of the fact that the medical school limits the number of students in the first year to fifty, it is possible that 'some students who are coming to enter without having made the necessary application, will find themselves barred. Some stu- dents who have not been able to se- eure admission at Varsity, Toronto, have come on to Kingston in the hope that they will be able to get in the faculty here. In practically all the departments at the university, the staffs are up to strength, the professors who have spent the summer in the old coun- try having now returned to resume their duties, and the recent additions tc the staff having reported. During the summer many changes have taken place on the college grounds, and the first remarks of the students returning to the old haunts are the nature of the tun- nelling operations and the anxious enquiry of whether the new (Pink will be ready for the winter. The tun- nel cutting across the tennis court has cut off the walk between the new and old arts buildings, and as a result the students have to get from one to the other by round-about ways. It will, however, not be long until this part of the work is com- pleted and this inconvenience r moved. To look at the lower campus in the afternoons, an outsider would think that here is where classes are being held, for the students are tak- ing the keenest interest in the rugby squad. As an aid to the students who are in the city for the first time, and have to find rooming accommodation, the university authorities have had sheets prepared, which on one side have the list of these wishing to take students into their homes and on the other a map of the city. This greatly simplifies the difficulties of the students'coming to the university and city for the first time, and hav- ing the task of finding rooming ac- commodation. CANADIAN PACIFIC R.rv. To Be A Change of Time on October First. Commencing with the fall change of time, October 2nd, the following changes will be in effect: -- Train No. 617 for Sharbot Lake, daily except Saturday, will leave 11.15 p.m. instead of 10.15 p.m. Train No. 615 for Tichborae, daily except Sunday, will leave 4.50 p.m. ins'ead of 4.10 p.m. Train No. 614 will leave Tichborne daily except Sunday, 3.66 p.m. in- stead 3.30, arriving Kingston 5.30 p.m. Train No. 616 will leave ~ Tich- borne, dally except Sunday, 7.00 p.m. instead 6.15, arriving Kingston 8.40 p.m. Rockefeller, junior, gives sixty [PEE [a thousand doHars to explore Armag- We have for your Balmoral; recede toe sizes 5} to 10. Price New Autumn Styles styles in Men's fine Footwear of the famous A. H. M. brand Special, Gunmetal Calf Don't fail to see this and the rest of our Fall goods. JACK. JOHNSTON'S SHOE STORE _ inspection the latest last, Goodyear welt, * a PROBS: -- Thursday, increasing winds; showery. SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY From 9 Until 1 O'clock DOUBLE DISCOUNT STAMPS! This special feature attraction should crowd this busy shopping centre with bargain-wise, thrifty women to-morrow morning. Shop the STEACY WAY and save money while you spend it, DOUBLE DISCOUNT STAMPS MEANS YOU SAVE 10%. on all your regular cash purchases, STEACY'S ANNUAL 98 Cent SALE TAKES PLACE FRIDAY 'This great One-Day Sale affords exceptional buy- ing opportunities. We start with special values at 98c. and run the gamut of sensational bargains up to $9.98. : This is positively one of the greatest One-Day Sales of the entire year, offering as it does a broad choice of articles, representing all departments of this, the Women's Store of Kingston. WATCH TO-MORROW"S PAPER FOR COM.- '°LETE LIST OF DETAILS. Steacy' s - 'Limited "The Women's Shop of Kingsion