Daily British Whig (1850), 29 Jul 1925, p. 2

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THE DAILY BRITISH ------ BANKING GRADUATES | Now in Effect We invite you to call and see our beautiful Fur Coats, Silk Lin- ings, Fur Scarfs and Fur Skins. JOHN McKAY Ltd. THE FUR HOUSE HER FULL COURSE DINNER, 65c¢ A LA CARTE MEALS Best food and excelicnt service. Queen's Orchestra in attendance every day 12 to 2 p.m., CAFE Picnic Lunches prepared. PETER LEE, Prop. THE GRAN Opposite Capitol Theatre a a DRESS UP FOR OLD BOYS' WEEK POSTED AT QUEEN'S] | Which Is the Only University in Canada Giving This . | Training. [ A, | Below will be found the list of graduates in the banking course at Queen's University, which conduct- ed its eleventh annual examinations | last month { Queen's is the only university in Canada giving this training, really acting as an agent in the matter for { the Canadian Bankers' Association. | The course was estiblished in 1914. | | It falls into three parts: A prelimin-7 | ary course of six subjects leading to | the degree of Associate, an advanc- | ed course of six subjects leading to | | the degree of Fellow of the Cana- | dian Bankers' Association, and | { courses in Spanish and advanced for- | eign exchange which are supplement- | ary to the Fellows' course. Tuition in | the Associate&' course is given by the | Bhaw Schools, Ltd., Toronto, and in| | the other courses by Queen's. The | | training is taken entirely by cor- respondence. The regulations re- quire that the student is employed | | by a bank. There are no gradustion | | exercises in connection with the de-| grees, though the successful candi-| | dates receive a diploma. The work at [ Queen's is directed by Prof. W. A.! | Mackintosh. As will be observed, | | students come from far points, in- | cluding all part of Cgnada and sev- | eral from the West Indies. | | = The graduates in the , Fellows'| { Course are given below in order of | ' standing: | { Honors--A. Mc G. Watson, Dids-| | bury, Alta.; R. H. Bishop, Winnepe- | gosis, Man.; A. S. Jamieson, Mont- { real; E. H. Brandon, Toronto; W. H. | Coghill, Toronto; D. G. Marble, Win- | Suits, he would let us have them for | students interested in the venture, in | | QUEEN'S MILITARY | MEN OF THE PAST! Col. Lennox Irving Writes | About an Old Company-- ] Wear Glengarrys. Lieut.-Col. Lennox Irving, Ren- frew, in reviewing military affairs at Queen's University says: The Queen's | Rifle Company was in existence be- | fore I was a student. The Inde- pendent Corps of a little later date | was armed with the famous Poa- | body rifle. We were instructed by a splendid officer from the Battery, Col. Billman, later of Winnipeg. we | purchased our own uniform and we | were quite proud of the style and | make of it. The master tailor of the | EVERYBODY DECORATE We have a large assortment Canadian Union Jacks and American F, lags from 10¢. to $6.00 each. _ We also have a beautiful, special ish Ban sewn Union Jack 8' x 6' that will last h re taingiish Bus ng aly Pole for sidewalk or home at $7.30 complete, MOORE'S TOYS SPCRTING GOODS Baffery was the artist. It consisted of & navy blue Norfolk coat and | trousers of the same material. As al head dress we wore the Glengarry. | Our arrangement with the master | tailor was that if we ordered "thirty $10 each. We looked quite efficient in our new uniforms and were pretty proud of them. As to our Northwest ° Rebellion | Company my recollection . is that | Capt. 'Mowat, now Justice H. M. Mowat, who was justly very popular with the student body and was élect~ | ed president of the Alma Mater] Society, came up to the University | and addresged the mass meeting of | what was then the Philosophy Class | Room in our beautiful Arts Build- | ing. | Capt. Mowat assisted us®in our We can start you on the right road to an attractively furnished home Beautiful Silks "FOR LADIES WHO CARE" / ~The time was when Silks were only intended for millionaires' wives, the price was prohibitive, but not so to-day. We show all the very newest weaves, in attractive colors and popular prices. organization which resulted in Jack | Marshall, Harry Pirie and myself | being chosen as the officers. We had many "men of brain, education 'and mighty in valor and enthusiasm." | | As I am writing, I recall your worthy | FUJI SILK, $1.00 29 ins. wide and 20 of the sea- son's most popular shades, $1. CANTON CREPE, $1.90 36 ins. wide. White, Black, Orchid, Honeydew, Crabap- ple, Almond Green, etc. $1.90 | citizen, Dr. Edward Ryan as one of | nipeg; H. T. Ross, Jr., Napanee. them. The old roll will speak loud- | Pass--R. Buckley, Melville, Sask.; Everything new in Men's Wear. FLAN DE LAINE, 85¢ The CLUB 3 Doors Below Opera House ~ nN rn. YOU BUY WHEN! "The exceptional tcne quality in the Weber § Piano appeals to the most aesthetic taste. HEAR FOR YOUKSELF AND BE CONVINCED. Al C. W. LINDSAY'S Warerooms, Princess Street p b p p W. N. Bradley. Colonsay, Sask.; V.| H. Atkinson, Owen Sound; R. E.| Daw, Beaver Lodge, Alta.; G. F.| Trevejo, Havana, Cuba; ' K. A.| Clarke, Pictou, N.S., and Miss K. G. | Macdonald, North Sydney, N.S. equal; R. B. McDowell, Chicago; T. Thomson, Souris, Man.; E. V. Den-| kin, Ottawa; J. W. Chittick, Conis- ton, Ont.; I. Galt, Toronto; H. 8. Caldes; Myrtle Station, Ont.; G. D. Cowans, Omemee, Ont.; G. Lawson, | | Dominion City, Man.; A. D. Me-| Neilly, Toronto; R. F. Corkran, Bee-| be, Que.; H. Arbuckle, Winnipeg; W. H. Brett, Trenton; J. C. David-| | son, Wetaskiwin, Alta., and W. R.| | Wells, Provost, Alta., equal. When housecleaning have your Mattresses cleaned and re- modelled. Go to Hughes' when you want a new one at low price. 408 PRINCESS STREET 'Phone 2130.J. Cherries EXCELLENT Black or Green Tea, 1b. . .62c, PURE CREAM Baking Powder (large) ..23c. MARMALADE Then, when you have "pressed the || iButton," put, your Kodak Films in ff 'our hands for finishing. You'll say (ff NEW HONEY Go, ld fl Cullen's ll -- cas AND carry Every Straw Hat must go. We . ~ have reduced oN equal; ll line Beall, ll Moose Jaw; D. J. Eynon, Ottawa. | The following have been awarded | | the standing of Associate of the] | Canadian Bankers' Association; (ar-| | ranged in order of standing): | Honors--R. J. Redrupp, Toronto; J. E. Dalgleish, Goodwater, Sask.; J. L. -Browne, Burlington, Ont.; A. C. Huddart, South Porcupine, Ont.; {N. J. McLeod, Newcastle, N.B., {equal; G. W. Hewitt, Stettler, Al- ta.; Ivy G. Phillips, Port of Spain, Trinidad; G. L. Reid, Toronto, B. T. Relyea, South Poreu- | pine, Ont.; J. 8. Armstrong, Coron- {ation, Alta.; R. T. Kidd, Listowel, Ont.; J. H. Morris, Victoria, B. C., 'equal; J. Addison, The Pas, Man.; { BE. H. Cassidy, Vancouver, C. D. Mc- | Millan, . Oyen, Alta., L. F. Streit, Montreal, equal; S. E. Goodwin, St. H. E. Pobst, Gleichen, F. W. Quane, Toronto; Caro- | Lindsay; A. R. Elmy, |! Picton; A. V. . Samson, Sault Ste. | Marie; J. Habkirk, Brandon, R. C. Sproule, Calgary, equal; J. C. Moss, Hoffman, Plattsville, Pass--J. J. Winnipegosis, B. A. Oakden, A. W. Farwell, St. John's, G. R. Chapman, Buchanan, Jeannie Dick, Glace Bay, N. A. ly of their names and fame. We | drilled in the spacious room in the | attic of the Arts building. What a | AAA AAA rane | "THE HAT STORE" Sand. 8 Blues, Greens, of Hats A Great Event $1 Hats for Men. $1 Hats for Ladies. All Wool Flan de Laine, 32 in- ches wide. All the wanted cél- orstoshowyou ........85¢. RAYON CREPE, $1.95 Fancy Rayon Crepes, 36 inches wide. Brown, Yellow, Navy, White PRINTED CREPES, $2.50 Beautiful range of Printed Crepes, 38 inches wide. Mixtures of SATIN CANTON, $3.00 Satin Canton, 38 inches wide. Black and colors. Priced $3.00. Sand, Henna, Fawn, Sere ieee. ALLL. $1.95 Usually sold at $3.75. Our price $2.50. Newman & Shaw THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE $1 Hats for Children. Let Everybody Pre- pare for Old Boys' Week With a New Hat We're starting the celebrat- ing this week with a Sale of Hats that will make them all look up. It's to be a great slaughter of all Summer Hats for Men, Ladies and Children. The only way to get an idea of Clearing Sale of Summer Millinery Parisian Shop 322 FROCK STREET ------------------ rr wonderful time --it- was and how | greatly the "youth and beauties" | were honored and impressed with | the "great military operations (to us) in which we were embarking." the wonders we will offer, is to J | Possibly our youth had much to visit our store or see our win- M/do with it all. But when we look dow displays. {back on those halcyon college days | there wells up in our throats emo- tions and feelings of the strongest, W. Ormrod, St. | Stephen, N.B.; D. J. Ferguson, Al-| sask, Sask.; R. S. Batten, Bell Is-| E. M, G. McPherson, Toronto, J. B. Milner, Toronto, equdl; D. A. McMurtry, Ottawa, J. ll U. Ross, Jr.. Picton, N.S., equal; R. [| 0. Hurst, Selkirk, Ont.; G. W. Har- | rington, Toronto, W. A. Parker, To- ll! ronto, equal; J. B. Davidson, Ham- I] ilton; A. J. Phillips, Revelstoke, B. 3} C.; J. Hamilton, Minitonas, Man.; { HH. Cranstoun, Lethbridge, Alta... J. B. Simpson, Portage La Prairie, Man.; R. N. Eagleson, Ottawa; B. L. Biernacki, Verigin, Sask. F. IL Calvert, Mallorytown, A. J. Hender- { son, Toronto, L. J. Malouin, Mont- real, equal: IL. Daigneault, Mont- real, egual; L. C. Crawford, Toron- to, W. H. Gaetz, Taber, Alta., A. La- frenlere, Vernber, Ont., equal; D. O, Robertson, Moncton, N.B.; D. Mac- donald, Summerside, P.E.I; G. A. Sirois, Shebrooke, Que.; L. C. James, Port Hope: A. Hutchison, Nelson, B.C.; D. F. Dewar, Toronto, A. F. M. Lindsay, Mount Forest, Ont. equal; H. B. Anderson, Montreal; J. W. Harris, Princeton, B.C., and "RR. Tibert, Digby, N.S., equal; W. St. C. Bond, Chester, NS, H. 7. Clarke, Windsor, equal; S. G. Sisen- Toronto, D. R. Pearce, Briercrest, Sask., equal; A. F. Baines, Leth- bridge, Alta., S. Wilson, Redeliff, Alta., equal; D. B. Jones, Verdun, Que.; J. V. Carter, Vancouver, J. Wheeler, North Toronto, equal; J. | M. Armstrong, J. K. Flis, Hamilton, D. 8. Meldrum, Neville, Sask., equal: L. R. MeConnell, Madoc: W. R. Bradley, Calgary; H. Robson, Grande Prairie, Alta; J. B. Bow- 'man, Natal, B.C.; J. A. Lauzier, f tenderest and most hallowed pos- sible. Our affections, high regard {and esteem for 'our brilliant, devo- | ted, efficient, self-sacrificing profes- sors, was genuine and sincere and as I-look back I am proud to be- | lieve that we had as our teachers, | such great men as Principal Grant, the noble nestor of the educational | world in our day: our revered world | renowned philosopher, the brilliant | Dr. Watson: the wonderfully effici- Soft Hats for $1.00 | ent and clever mathematician, N. Worth from $3.00 up. F. Dupuis, whom we believed to be Cloth Caps for $1.00 the discoverer of the sclence of ma- w Tess $2.00. { thematics and still to ©is the wonder | grew how was it possible for one Straw Hats for $1.00 Wor and $2.50 old professor knew. So with them all, every one of them, the truest, the best and most self-sacrificing of men, all sincere in making Queen's the great university it has become. An Appeal. : FOR LADIES $1, $2, $3 Your choice of any Summer Hat in our store at these three Prices--regular $4.75 to $12. (Contributed.) In a very few days they, "Our Old Boys and Girls" will be with us for a short, rapidly fiying and (we trust) happy time. Like many others, will have its appeal for one and all. Could we not also, with consent of | elders and deacons and trustees, | |i have the stowed-away-for-summer i benches and other seats brought out | If and placed invitingly on the lovely | lawns that surround these churches, | [i under shady trees and against grey Hi limestone walls where all who will ||} might come, without question or {Ji price and occupy them thankfully? | |i Perhaps strains of music from f crgans within, touched by gifted and | generous musicians would at inter- vals reach them and woo inside. | And if church lawns could thus be Ii made to serve, why not our private | i lawns? Could we not place seats on ||] Street, § them near the pavements and con- |[I Tn re-- hardwood floors, veniently near on small stands pitch- [Jf bath, a; Saved Aven ers of oft-renewed refreshing water ll ana garage, for © US lot with drinking glasses. In a pond Pull Het at . - office. paratively short time their beauty | |i and that of the church grounds wilt | Can place the following amounts on first mortgage at once--§i,. have, iu the nature of things, faded. { ; Then why not enjoy them to the full ([if 000, #2,100, 3,500, 84,500, by sharing them with our visitors [i Buliding Lots. Houses for remt. while they and summer days are Bonds and Investments. with us? Some will come to us after E. A M Real Estate Buy your home now, before ¥ the rush TO CLOSE AN BSTATE A brick dwelling on Ordnance Street, 8 rooms, fireplace, gas and &ood yard, for $2,550, Semi-Detached Dwelling _ on Earl Street, 8 rooms, hot heating, fireplace, sleetrie lig! > three piece bath, large barn to bold four ears, for Detached brick ou Clergy home altar broken down because father and mother, the high priest @nd priestess of childhoods days, have gone a long journey into the Upper Country and these await the small head to contain all the good | home fire out, the hearth cold, the home coming of the boys and girls Phone 588, 580-w and 589.J, who still linger in the lowlands. Let o them not fail to feel the glow of love | and concern for them emanating from the church homes of their youth as they "bide a wee amang us." long years of absence to find the | | Cor. Johnson and Division Sts, a BOY SMASHED A WINDOW -- And His Father Had to Pay for the Boys who play baseball on the street had better watch their step. Baseball should be played in the parks or in vacant lots, away from houses. A youngster who was playing ball the other day and knocked the ball through a window, was haled to the police court on Wedtiésday morning, along with Mis father, and 8s a result of the broken window, the father of the youngster was called upon to pay for the damage. ------ Hay Harvest Delayed. Watertown, N.Y,, July 29. --Wea- ther is - IN NARINE CRLES | Tlearinces, Wednesday: Steamers ~-Scout, for Prescott; Nesbitt Gram- mer, west at 2.05 am.; Rol N. Pomeroy, east at 2.20 a.m.; n J. Rammacker, west at 10 a.m.; King- ston east to Prescott. Returned this afternoon and cleared west for Charlotte and Torento. The schooner Burt Barnes is un- loading coal at Swift's wharf. The tug Mary P. Hall and barge Mamie of the Donnelly Wrecking Company cleared for Darby's Lake Ww morning, to assist in taking off the steamer Kenore, which is ashore in the Cornwall canal. The pleasure yacht Ontario arriv-

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