FP dis AY, MABCH 29, 1915. PAGE SIX THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MO KIDNEY TROUBLE AFFECTED HIS SPINE Suffered For Forty Years Uafil He Used *Fruil-a-tives" BRONTE, ONT., OCT. 118t. 1013. "Por about forty years, I wast with Lame Back b and lder Trou 1 io my bed wi Then | saw "'FProit-a-tiv vert and decided to try them. They me more good than any other remedy, fered from the san equently had to leave off a-ti emedied trongly advise sifferiug mw K and Bladder Trouble to use "Fruit-a-ti H. DORLAND es "Fruit es ves", a box, G for de $2 t.p-tives | ed. Oltawa THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987. ; i vher | MARBLE HALL | Pure Ice Cream | In Bulk or Bricks. Packe1 | nd delivered to any part of | the elty, | GEORGE MASOUD, Phone 080. 238 Princess St. | | | CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Tells How To Get Quick Relief . from Head-Colds. It's Splendid! vour clogged nos- the r passages of and you® cam In one minute trils will open, your head will ¢ breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dry- ness. No struggling for breath at night; your eold or catarrh will be gone, Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of "this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your -- nostrils. penetrates through every alr passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and re- lief comes instantly. It's just fine. up with a cold or nasty catarrh---Re- lief comes so quickly. Carters & Teamsters Good frame house on Division Street, all improvements, furnace, gas, good stable and poultry honses, good wer © $2,500 teamster, Price ......... Brick house near Princess Street, nine rooms. improve. ments, furnace, $3 400 gas and electricit for <u ' HORACE F. NORMAN Real Estate and Insurance - Office 177 Wellington St. NOW IS THE TIME Don't stay stuffed-, and later will be buried by the side DIED ON SAME FARM of his father and mother jn the family plot at Latimer. WHERE HE WAS BORN EIGHTY- EIGHT YEARS AGO, The Late Daniel Aykroyd, Lough- boro, Died Five Rods From Where He First Saw the Light of Day. ery few men lived go place the late I who died age of WHERE QUEEN MEN ARE Duchess Of Connaught"s Canadian Red Cross Hospital, This Hospital, established through the generosity of Major and Mrs. As- the covered tennis court and reation hall at Cliveden, is com- Juniel 1 and ready for patients, and a : umber of gues assembled to-view "1ghLY- 1 it on Thursday afternaon, Feb, 18th, He | 4 kind invitation of Major and Mrs. more | yztor Most of those present had vready given proof of their interest in the hospital by promising the loan of their ears when required for the transport of patients 40 and from Taplow Station, or by undertaking other active work on_its hehalf. A considerable number of Canadian friends also arrived by train and mo- jor from London, accompanied by various Red Cross and staff officers The guests were received by Mrs. As tor, and a tojr of inspection wa¢ made under the kindly guidance of Lieut.-Celonel Gorrell, Colonel C. A. Hodgetts (Canadian Red Cross Com missioners), the matron, Miss Camp- bell, and the staff of the hospital The arrangements for the care and well-being of the patients excited the highest praize, everythi uppedring and reflecting the great upon all who have been concerned in the work of prepara- tion. The entire equipment has been provided by the Canadian Red Cross Society, and a vast array of cases, till to be unpacked, bear witness to the interest taken by the people of Canada in their Red Cross Hospital Close upon 150 patients can be ac ommodated, and though primarily intended fo} Canadian patients, any wounded Britisher will receive g hearty welcome from Colonel Gorrell staff, who are one and all of Canadian birth Mrs. Astor subse quently entertained her ghests at tea n one of the three large wards The hospital, which centains 150 heds, will known as the Duchess of Connaught's Canadian Red Cross Hospitat.-- is proposed to make Cliveden the main Canadian Base Hospital for the reception of wound ed Canadians in England. With this end in view plans have been prepar ed for the £00N 4s Pos sible, hospital capable of 500 beds adjoining Taplow Lodge, which is at present being used as a barracks by the me dical and nursing staff, Should fur- ther accommodation be required there will, we understand, be further developments, As already slated, the building was generously placed at the disposal of o the War Office by Waldorf Astor, was married at St. George's Uathe- | who undertook the elaborate strue- dral, in 1322, to Nancy Lyom, Stor: |, 1a) alterations necessary to make rington, and they settled _in the | 3, hospital the most' complete im- Township of Loughboro, Lon land provised institution of its kind in bordering on and near the head oi the country. The Canadian Rex Loughhoro Lake, a _place now. wel Cross Society is responsible for the known to many a Kingstonian whe i : 1 . . . splendid equipment of the hospital angles for the agile salmon trout, |" 1 Hhing is of the . t They were pioneer settlers in the djs | 200 €¥€ ryihing is of t e most up-to- trict. and Bad: to hew themselves date and convenient description. home out of the then almost tract The personnel is being drawn less forest. { from the Canadian Army Medical Two sons and four daughters wer, | Corps and the officers and men of the the result of this union. 'Daniel, the | Canadian Clearing Hospital, "who lately dec 1, was the eldest, anc | Were in residence at Taplow Lodge Mrs. John lLeatherland, the only one | Some time ago, have since gone to of the family now surviving, the | the front and have been sueceeded at youngest. y a | the hospital by a staff from the C.A. In 1852 Daniel married "Sartha M.C., from Salisbury Plain. Lieut.- Knight, Storrington, who survivea| Col. Charles W. F. Gorrell, of Ot- him They raised a fam'ly of ten tawa, ig in charge and the present children, only one of whom is de-| staff of medical officer, who will be ceased, Etta, wife of John Wartman, | responsible for the operating, surgi- Glenvale. The surviving members| cal and medical work, consists of of the family are: Samuel A, den-| Capt. E. A. Neff and Capt, S. Gordon tist, and Overton and Oscar, car-| Chown, The matron is Lieut. (Miss) penters and builders, . Kingston; E. Campbell and the nursing sisters, William H., M.D., Edenwold, Sask.:| who also rank as lieutenants, are Mrs. Maon, Mrs. Poynton and Mrs.| Miss I.. V. Smith, Miss &. Black and Worrell, Toronto; Mrs. Roddenizer, . Wellen, The ladies, who Jacksonville, Florida, and Miss Bella present a very smart appearance in at homé with her mother. | their military-looking uniforms, The late Daniel Aykroyd" was an|came to England with the hundred honest and most independent char- ;urses who accompanied the first Ca- acter. He loved his <hildren and padian Expeditionary Force. In addi- labored hard to provide for them. (jon there is the warrant-officer, At seventy-five he was still active On| Sergt.-Major A, C. Galbraith, and a the farm. He could plow at eighty | number of N.C.0's and men of the C. and last fall in his eighty-ninth AM.C./ but the staff is being augu- year, he helped dig potatoes. In his| ,onied daily by medical officers, nur- young days he was considerable of ses and orderlies. an athlete, a country-wide champion wrestler and jumper, and in pad- dling a canoe no one on the lake ever matched him. In religion he was of the Meétho- dist persuasion. in pelitics he usu- ally voted Liberal, but the last vote! he ever cast was for the present member of Fronténae, Dr. Edwards. | On March 30th, his remains were placed in the vault at Sydenham | or in have as did Loughboro, 25th, 'at the and eight months, on the farm not ds from where he breathed eath, and lived there all He was the eldest son . of Samuel Avkroyd, who was Hudson, N.Y., and his father to York State about } was ten on a horn late at chine Kingston from the year '1510, old. His ia 3 the grandfather of the of this notice, came Englaiid. He was of ancient family veomen, whose ancestry back the f years fom the of has warteenth an to entur Ih terest " surnames' is subject, amd man name to" sc rigin of ing a in as Aykroyd is might state an ot wi it he of nterest ne to its origin was "Dak-road" the oak where the people five Hei trees." : ideal credit 0 be : place family lived hundred Various « Lhat est some Fhere the » forms Akroyd and thought the it 1s not Samuel hingston at the time Great Britain 1812-14, supply He ay of time, but Ackroyd, Many fiave foreign one, but Great-grandiather \ living i oye name Aykroyd between anu and | he the Brit was likely not known "rake off or not, but owned considerable in the block Queen," Un streets ol + contract with to beet It i 1 got as fdlemen say he property big a do to-day once situated Wellington, Princess hounded and" hiuldings' is the house, still stand- the of Princess + occupied by the late n. the home of grandiather grandmother the late! Daniel and it Is an interesing faot great-grandson, a century practising profession only block. away from the old place. lhe founder of the family in this country died Waterloo, now Ua taraqui, in and the burial ser- vices were conducted by the minister of St.George's Cathedral, there being no Anglican church at Waterloo at. that time. His son, Samuel Aykroyd, be tarho the Une at foot street Sen Sul his was the and decensed, of Avkroyd, that the later, ig erection, as another accommodating [4 nis a at 1832 SON OF FIRST MINISTER Of Chalmers Church Preached There On Sunday Evening. Rev. - J. - A. ° Elkhorn, Man. son of the late Rev. Dr. Burns, the organizer and the first minister of Chalmers Presbyterian Chureh, preached in that church on Sunday 'evening on Christ's walk to Emmaus with His disciples after His resur- rection. After the morning service, Rev. To place your order for a Monument, and by placing your order with us you are ling awiy the temptation ot liquor » { drinking "from Tr sons an us- fnaranteet ir slags Work, Lands whom they are giving to fight pt delivery )- {in the cause of the empire. A large rate price. A call of inspee- | number of names were appended to the W. C. T. U. to Premier Borden asking that faith be kept with the mothers and-wives-of Canada by ta- { the petition, The Women In Service. THE LATEST TIDINGS PRESENTED IN THE BRIEFEST POSSIBLE FORM. : The Whig's Daily Condensation of the News Of the World From Tele. graph Service and Newspaper Ex- changes. A wireless message York sags that the Dutch vessel Prinz Mauritz had sunk of Cape Hatteras with a crew of fifty. Mrs. Florence Conklin Carman, wife of Dr. Edwin Carman, Freeport, N. Y., will go on trial again charged | with the murder of Mrs, louise Bail- oy. received in New « , At Colen, Panama, Corporal Lang- don of the United States Artillery, was shot and killed and three other American soldiers were injured, one of them seriously, in a riot. J. W. Borden, Accountant and Paymaster-General of the Militia De- | partment, and brother of Premier Borden, has been added to the mem- bership of the Shell Committee, 'The Turks', 'are busy building new forts at San Stefano, on the wes- tern outskirts Constantinople to the Sea of Marmeora, where they are installing heavy calibre guns.' It understood in Andrew that Dr Herkl ecclesiastical the late Sir principal. ari Sehmidt and Gustoff Stephens, arrested on suspie- fon of being German spies, pieaded guilty Saturday carrying loaded revolvers and sentenced to three months imprisonment. Thousands of Londoners voluntar- ily pledged themselves not to drink any intoxicating liquor while the war continues. Included among the pledge signers leading merch ants and Government officials LH 18 generg §, Glasgow, professor y, will succeed Janies Donaldson 'as At Port Arthur, C St John of to were were is 5 - CBITUARY Death _Of Burney C. Woodrufy, After a week's the death occurred of Woodruff, ; his home, King street . William Woodru twenty-ote years illnkss Burney 105 a son of was unmarried, and of age. Ho was The Late Richard Clarke. At the Kingston General Hospital, on Sunday, there passed away Rich- | ard Clarke, aped forty-eight years. The deceased was a- resident of Tam- worth and came here to undergo treatment. The rémains were trans- ferred to Pamworth on Monday after- noon by James eid & Co., under takers. * Late Mrs. Richardson. The death * &eccurred at v.B., en Sat ay abeth: Smith; wife of R. &, Richard- son, superintendent. of the Iterna- } tional Railwe Deceased was forty. | nine years of age, and was born af | Portsmouth. In roligion she was | an Anglican, ,.She is survived by her | husband, thré daughters and two | sons : Mrs. John Brigg, Moncton, morning, of Eliz Toronto: Mrs. Stomess, Westport, and Mrs. H, | Pound, Kingston; Henry,, Ottawa, and William, Kingston. The funeral tovk place Monflay afternoon, at Na- panee, the remains being placed at rest in the family plot. t ' The Late Miss C. C. Kennedy. . | i On Saturday the death occurred aj | the Hotel Dien of Miss Catharine | Charlotte Kennedy, = aged twenty-six | vears, after a lingering iliness. The | deceased was born in Kingston and | always resided here. She was the | daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs, James Kennedy. In religion she was a lloman Catholic and member of St. Mary's cathedral. The deceased was also connected with the League of the Sacred Heart. To mourn her loss theré are four brothers, | Michael, Patrick and James, this city, and Christopher, Hamilton. On Tuesday morning at 9.30 o'clock a solemn requiem mass will be sung at St. Mary's cathedsal by 2 Father A. J. Hanley. will be placed in St. Mary's vault. Pr. Macgillivray read a petition of , Henry who died 'last Thursday, wae ¥ {| Annie Lorimer, Rev. | The remains | THE LATE THOMAS McCAMMON. The Funeral Took Place On Monday Afternoon. The funeral of the late Thomas McCaromon, Main Monday' afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock; to Cataragui cemetery. In a room full of the choicest flowers the. remains rested since Friday. On Monday afternoon service was conducted qy Rev. J. W. McIntosh, assisted by Rev. G. I. Campbell. " es The funeral was in charge of the 1.O.OF. The cortege proceeded along Colborne street to Division street, and up Princess street. 'The remains {were 'carried from the house by Thomas Moore, Herbert Moore, Har- ry Coyle, Stanley 'Trotter, Stanley Cooper ynd Melville Hyland. In addition to the representatives of the various lodges of the 1.0.0. F., wholturped out in a body, there were delegntions from the Mac- nee and Miuwnes wholesale, the Vie- toria Baseball Club, and other sporting organizations. Mrs. John Evans, at the sarvice held in the house, sang several solos. The floral tributes were as follows : Sheaves--Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. J. Evans, Mrs. Suddard and Melville, Mr. and M . F. Me- Farland, Mr. and Mrs. F. Emmons, Mr. and Mrs. A. MacMahon, Mr. and Mrs. H. Nidholson, Mr. and Mrs. W C. Laird, Mr. and Mrs. Ive Ackroyd, Mr. and Mrs. George McG'll, Mr. and Mrs. J. Pigeon, Mr. and Mrs. Char les Beaupre, Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, and Emmie, Mrs. Mayden and fami ¥, D. A. Cays, Joseph J. Daley, Flor rie Knox, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Harkness, John Burke, George Clenahan, Mrs. Say age and family, Mr. and Mrs. T. K. Nicholson, Mrs. Sharpe. H. Turpin and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow George and Bert Derry, Mr. and Mrs. W. Lawrence Knox, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Murray, Mr. Vanhorne and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. J Vinee, Mr. and Mrs. George Druce Mr. and Mrs, A. Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. R. Taylor and family. Mr Mrs. R. Walsh, Mr. sand Mre¢ Brunke, Frontenac Hockey Club Herb and Fred Crozier, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Staley, James MeCam- | mon, Edward Hartrick, Laurence Sléeth, George Vanhorne, Mr. and Mrs. I.. Langdon, William Moore and family, Miss Lorraine Smiih Anchors--Mr. and Mrs. W. F Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cooper Thomas Driver, Ushers Queen Street Methodist Church, Wreaths--Mr. James Pound, F. K Ludlow, Mrs. Alexander Newlands, Mrs. W. H. Reid. Mrs. Snider and family, Victoria Baseball Club. Broken Circle--Employees of Mac- nee and Minnes. Three Links--No. 59 1.0.0.F. Hearts--Mrs. Harkness and family, Mrs. L. H. McCammon, Mr. and Mrs H. Coyle. Broken Column--From the Club. Crosseg~----Macnea & Minnes; Pony Jaseball Club, Mr. and Mrs. S. S Corbett, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Grim- ason. Crown-- ana C.J Mr. and Mrs. W. Crozier EE cart The Late Martin McPermott. The funeral of the late Martin MoeDermott took place on Sunday af- terncon to St. Mary's Cathedral The pall hearers were J. Lormer, BeHeville; Wilfred Martin, W. P J.! O'Meara, J. J. O'Neill, A. DeRoches and Mr. Nixen, The last five were Queen's students from deceaséd's class. The floral offerings Wreath, G.T.R. employecs; sprays, Science '15, 'Miss Sylvia Crowley, | Mrs. H. Parker, J. James Druce and] family, J. H. Hoppes, Mrs. Merrin| and family, Mr. and Miss Ronan, | Mr. and Mrs. 8S. €. Wright, Misa} Muriel Walsh, Mr. and Mrs. W. E.| Jeffries, William Cabey. | Spiritual offerings--- His parents,! Dora McDermott, Sister Saint Eliza- beth Marie, Miss 8. McDermott, Miss | Mrs. J. P. Hanley, | James S. Hanley, Misses Margaret! and Mary Lambert, Mr. and Mrs.| James McDermott, Misses Mary and | Katie McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. A | included: | Simpson, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Doyle, | { W. P..J. O'Meare, J. O'Neill, Mr. and | Mrs. V. Eccles, A. DesRoches, some! of the Catholic Girls of Queen's, | | Misses McGregor, Toronto. INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. | Local Notes and Items of General { Interest, J. W. Bradshaw, County. Clerk, was. | at Parham Junction on Saturday. ! The British American Hotel had, over one hundred at dinner on Sun- day. : | Dean Coleman went to Toronto to- | day to attend the meetings of the | Ontario Educational Association. | About twenty-five of the Cana- | | dian Fngiveers, stationed at Ottawa, (were in the city for the holiday and { ai i ont wnw [event on Sunday in this hurg. returned at noon on Monday. i Soldiers had a game of baseball | on the cricket field on Sunday fore- street,» Can You Solve the Mystery of The Black Box? It is one of those powerful, gripping stories that kéep you in breathless suspense between installments. Ther thrills that the author, E. Phillips Oppenheim; has woven through the tale are: guaranteed to satisfy, every lover of action in fiction. - Readsthe story in this paper, then follow it in the movies. First Installment in a Few Days" - Save your husband's dollars by wearing the "D & A" or the "La Diva" Corsets which are stylish, comfortable, lasting, and cost about one dollar less on every three than imported corsets. Unless you deal with a prejudiced, old fashioned corset department, your corsetiére will shovy and recommend the "D & A" and the "La Diva" Corsets made by the Deminion Corset Co. "BUY MADEIN-CANADA CORSETS" 815 ™" HI TI {HEE LULUC ULI LL 2 PURE -- ParataBLE -- NUTRITIOUS ~-- BEVERAGES FOR SALE BY WINE axb SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE LOCAL OPTION --Residents in. the local option districts can legally order from this brewery whatever they require for personal or family use. Write to JOHN LABATT, Lpatep, Loxpon, CANADA NY AY A A A A RN III SAY v James McParland, Agent, 339.341 King St. East. The Queen's graduates whe crossed lon the S.S. Northland to England, 'had a faiely good passage, but {when the sca rolled there were quite a few seasick. The special committee is at work this week arranging for the billeting i of the delegates for the General As- | sembly of the Presbyterian Church {annual meeting to be held here in | June. Fifty-three children from the Or- { phans' Home attended the session of | 8t. James church Sunday school on i Sunday afternoon, {he largest num- | ber ever in attendance from this in- stitution. » } { A special hymn "For Britain's | Sors on Land and Ses" was sung in {Queen Street Methodist Church on | Sunday evening for Sergt. Hpselion e sea, | London Mail. - : Some twenty women are driving { motor-vans in London to-day with| | perfect success. In one Newcastle shell factory the number of women employed has risen ffom 600 to 2,- | 500 since the war. At one of the | most august of London Cubs the | | foefmen 'have left in a y for the | 3 ; fortum and parlourmaids have taken Bad or Indifferent. | their places. In the north of Emng-| # i land, where the need of workers is But a cup. of "being 'most sorely felt, women have | Leven been employed with success as! {carriage cleaners on 'the railways. | In the East End, through the clever! | organization of the Women Suffra-' | gists, they are building up a Britsih/ toy Industry. In' short, the only. i guartér in which little or no prog-| ' ress has been made in thiy substitu-| | tion of ome form of labour for an-| | other is agriculture, and there the: | need is greatest of all. Heavy work! {in the field is quite unsuitable for! women. ~~ But there is much light] *j work which they might undertake at the call of patmotism--If not prim-| | arily as an economic employment, as! ® I 1 Tem e---- 2 {(Dr.) Williams, Brockville, is! her parents, Col. and Mrs. | Frontena¢ street. | ~ 3. E. MULLEN Cor. Princess and Clergy St Phone No. 1417. For The Finest Quality BEEF, LAMB, MUTTON, PORK AND VEAL, : CALL AT ARKER BROS., Phone 1683 (and Elwood Nicholson, cn enroiite to the front. MEANS JUSTONE THING--the most ph ap, SPECIAL. PRICES,