PAGE SIX | THE) SPORT REVIEW | The Vancouver and Westminister lacrosse elubs will - play. a benefit game Saturday to Help out the fiinan- ces of the Vancouver Baseball club. This is the first time in Jistory that the lacrosse boys have been called upon to help out a baseball ¢lub Ty. Cobb has stolen bases in sixty-three games, If the Tiger terror keeps on at this rate he will well over 100 cushions by the the seafon, and thereby bust As a matter of fact, speed would net him stolen bases, A aan forty-seven steal end of all big league records. his present about 115 Jess Willard, world's heavyweight champion places a valuation of $100,000 on the two arms that gave him the title at Havana He made application to a Rochester, NY, in- surance agent for a one year policy in that sum, $50,000 on each arm. Professionalism is still a facter in lacrosse. The disease has affected some of the Cornwall players But then they have such a large bunch of youngsters at Cornwall that the di rectors there are not worrying in the least about "the hold-outs". To get | a place for all the applicants for the teams is the ¢hief trouble just now, | A quiet resort of be@huse there is less strain on his] pitching arm. was for League Club on Wednésday transferred to Harrisburg, Pa., the remainder of the season. decision was reached at a leagué on i | How the Dainty The Newark, N.J., International! This | meeting called in New York to, act} of the Newark should be Announ upon the request tlub that the franchise temporarily transferred. -1 wkite ment was made that the first game at Harrisburg would be played. with Jersey City on Friday. Officials of the "league stated that no other changes were contemplated, The invasion of Newark by the Fed eral League and the consequent slump in gate receipts at the Inter- national ¢lub's park were said to be the leading reasons for the transfer, This is the second team to be shifted in the Barrow circuit owing to Fed- eral League invasion of its territory, Baltimore having been transferred to lichmond, Va THE SUMMERY Ju GIRL «e Shippey in 56 the summery sort Is where I am longing to be, | gether, | tight chambers, the floors and ceil- MAKING PERFUMES, Odors Are From the Flowers, | i Pomades are the commereial ve- hicle for absorbing and transporting the perfumes of the jonguil, tube-| rose, jasmine. and a few other. spe-! cies of flowers. A Stolen squaré frame or chassis of] wood and about 20 by 30| inches in size is set with a pane of strong plate glass. On each side of! the glass is spread a thin, even lay-| er of grease, which has been purified | ani | refined. Thus prepared, the | frames are piled up in ranks six or seven feet high to await the scasom| of each special flower, When the .blogssoms arrive the] petals are picked from the stem--| the pistils and stamens being "dis-| carded---and laid so as to cover the grease in each frame. These being] again piled so as to rest upon their] wooden edges, which fit closely to-| there. is formed a series of ings of which are of grease, exposed | | to the perfume of the flower leaves | | within, | Where girls with bright glances are! seeking romances, And eool woods would beckon to me, Where roaming and boating and swimming and floating Formality put out of curl. And soft is the heart of the sum- mery sort The grease absorbs the perfume, | the spent flowers aré¢ removed daily | and fresh ones supplied, and this process goes on from two to four or| five months, according to the desired | strength of the pomade, which, when | | | sufficiently charged with perfume, is) taken from the glass with a wide, | thin spatula and packed in tin cans | for export. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, CONSTANTINOPLE. The Siege and Sacking of the Famous | City by Mohammed II. Mohammed IL. moved to begin his great siege of Constantine ple in Feb- ruary, 1452, but the ponderous acter of his artillery ma: it impos- char- | sible to get his weapons In place for three - months longer, and the real siege began in April. It lasted fifty- three 'days, and Mohammed entered the city and extinguished the last re- mains of the Roman empire on May 29, annon were stiil in mental stage, and there was a belief that the bigger the gun the more de- structive it would .be, so Mohammed the exper: bad a cannon made, the diameter of | been |W Stone balls were | Moham- | med had 70,000 men, while the force | whose mouth is said to have two feet and a half. still in use in these days. of the Christians (id not oxcced 9,000. The Turkish fleet consisted of | 320 vessels. The Cheisti were in adequately supplied with gunpowder, and every repulse they inflicted on the Turks brought nea<cr the day of | their own downfall. Battering rams, cannon and fire were used constantly tack upon the half ruinoe Constantinople, gnd at one time the Turks sent forward a wooden turret | on rollers, which was docs the Greeks anc their Christian squadron repulsed the Turks in desperate naval engagement, though Moham lic A of only five ships | FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1915. Mendels On Sale Saturday & Monday 10 DOZ NEW HOUSE DRESSES, ALL SIZES 8 DOZ. MIDDY BLOUSES -ALL SIZES PLAIN AND COLORED , COLLARS. Of summer resorty girl. By these methods the delicate | odors of flowers are extracted and | retained for transport to distant] markets, where, being treated with| horse f1ito ihe sea alcohol, they. yield their 'perfume t0| Mohammed conceived the desper- | Ing one, two, three tendencies and fety that stronger vehicle and produce ate operation of carrying his ships | getting the crowds as a result. Just Of the bait served us on swords: | floral waters and, extracts of com-| gyerland Arom tho Josphorus into | now Montreal is the best patronized And none of it thrills me--with en. | merce, | the higher part of the:harbor. In city on the International League of nui it fills me-- Coarser pomades are made by | one night the Turkish fleet climbed Suit, i With je E7ekt Jopulation, it And yet I'd get all in a whirl boiling the flowers in the grease and | a hill and was taunched, and the | as wound erful possibilities as a base Could T ramble apart at some sum-| Subjécting the residue to pressure, | upper harbor was occupied. The ball city. J mer resort The spent pomades are used for| Ottoman cannon demolished. the . | With a summery sort of a girl. toilet purposes and In the manufae-| Greek forts in forty days, and the Walter Johnson, Washington has | pr ture.of fine soaps. ) final assault began in the morning changed his style of pitching since | Oh, dull 'may things grow at the gar- The procesd of preparing perfum- of May 29. The Emperor Constan- ed oils involves the same principle| tine fought to the last and died like last season. He no longer relies | den or show } principally upon his eurve ball to de-| Ang unspeakably dull at the club! | except that instead of solld grease| , hero, and a pitiless sack of the | city began the moment i' fcll, under cieive the batsman, but is again us | You may nete streaks of gray, feel | Superfine olive oil is used. ing lis wonderful speed to hold op- you'te getting passe, | [Essence and flower "water" arehyne explicit permission and even or- posing teams in check. Only oc- And sigh you're no longer a cub; | Produced by ordinary distillation, in] der of Mohamme. himself. casionally nowadays does he resort|But just take to the woods, run| Which the flowers are beiled in Wa-| An invasion of Serbia began with- to a "hook," and then only for the | away from your moods, ter in large alembics. The vapor| in 5 few days, ani the Turk was purpose of convincing the batsman! And you'll soon frisk about like a | €arries off the perfume and is con-| paceq firmly on his European that he also is endowed with this dé squirr'l : densed in adjoining copper tanks throne. vi . i Mery... With the abandoning. of the Wien -w-strofting voi 'start at a sum. | 11ké ofdinary spirils. Some Gf the | curve the full measure of the great | mer resort retorts used for this purpose are of | pitcher's speed, which made him fa-| With a summery sort of a girl. sufficient size to recelve at once half | or mous, seems to have returned to him, | sain @ ton of fresh flowers, with the A wretched beggar, whose "I am | and he can now display as much ve- | requisite water for their distillation. | Pind" sign was a lie, was arrested locity with a ball as he ever could | The White Star liner Aradic ar- When "flower waters" are to be| With several ¢dmpanions who made in his career, The result is that his | rived at Liverpool, Eng., Friday from | produced alcohol is used in the dis-|@ Specialty of preying on church- work is easler than it used to--be,\New York. | goers. He explained that he only | tilling tank to receive the perfumes. | 8 practiced fraud om week days and | A A A AA A A A A A AA A A AAA PAA AA AA Aen ond begged honestly on the Sabbath, | Eight thousand people attended | the International League games in Montreal Last Saturday and Sunday. After a score of years in the second | division, the Royals are at last show med himself, sitting on horseback | on the beach, yelled reproaches at bis sailors and even spurred his | 18 DOZ. VOILE, LAWN, CREPE AND MUSLIN WAISTS, ALL SIZES 6 DOZ. BOYS' NEW YORK WASH SUITS. --. RUSSIAN, BUSTER AND SAILOR 5 DOZ. WHITE WASH SKIRTS FINE INDIAN HEAD AND REPP 9-DOZ. GIRLS' SUMMER DRESSES, FOR AGES 6 YRS. TO 14 YRS. 2 DOZ. COLORED SUMMER PARASOLS, I've tried every jolly and dangerous folly The prodical city affords, I'vé toyed to satisfy with each var- A --_-------------- 40 Only Mid-summer Dresses 40 Pancy Muslins in Misses' and Ladies' sizes, values to $5.50. On sale at, each... .. ~37 Only Exclusive Model Dresses 37 | Travellers' Samples--no two alike swell arments; 1 : priced regular $15 to $30. On sale at. 5 % P rice 10 Dozen Penman's Sweater Coats Pure Wool, medium and long lengths--plain and fancy stitch--every shade. Ladies' and Misses' sizes, wor th reg, to $6.50. On sale 1 6 at, each $ # 9 Good-Bye Millinery Every Hat and Shape for Ladies, Misses and Children must move out. All on sale at Half Price and Less. If you want Real Millinery Bargains, take advantage of this Baturday and Monday Sale. . Princess 1 MENDELS [= KINGSTON'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE LADIES' READY-TO-WEAR STORE Phone 532. T. J. 0'Connor, Manager Fresh Columbia Ig- nition Dry Cell, 29CEACH KINGSTON FOUNDRY A Beggar's Pride. A Long Trip. He was a college professor, who was greatly beloved because of his kind heart, but who had the not un- common scholastic failing of absent- mindedness. One day his married niece favored him for a long time with loud praises of her first-born. When at last she pauséd for breath, the professor felt that he must say something. "Can the little fellow walk?" he asked, with every appearance of in- terest. "Walk?" cried the mother indig- nantly. "Why, he's been walking now for five months!" "Dear me!" exclaimed the pro- fessor, again relapsing into abstrae- tion. "What a long way he must have gone!" . tye ---- Hot Stories. A contributor to The Chino Her- ald, telling of the experiences during a summer trip into the desert, nar- rates that while he watched a lizard run across a sun-baked open strip of sand it disappeare in g puff of vapor. The intense Leat of the sand had turned the moisture of its body into steam, the pressure of which rose so high that the littls creature was blown into bits so minute that no trace of it was afterward to be found. In backing up his statement, he quotes an old prospectors' allegation that in Death Va:ley, during the heat of the day, water poured from a canteen will not reach the ground, being turned into steam as fast as it leaves the mouth of the canteen. A great deal of moralizing and of cynicism might be expended on this old man's singular ethics. Yet each | person kas his standard of conduct, | and includes in its reservations no | less inconsistent than the beggar's delicate attitude toward Sunday. We | are prone to be proud of things we do not do, rather than of our pasi- tive goodness. Not stopping at that, we judge those whose code permits | them wider latitude tham that we enjoy. | The faking beggar clings to a negative virtue," founds his sole claim to a self-respect on that. ! Many -amother, dwejling on. planes far above the beggar, yields to the | same naive tendency. insurance against '"'fire, accident, flood" and every other seeable danger. Why not secure insurance against loss of good will? You buy GOOD WILL INSURANCE Good will is a mighty fine asset to have intact if your plant should be swept away. Good will is built up by quality, service and ad- vertising. A large part of every dol- lar you spend in advertis- ing is going into "Good Will Insurance." Some Famous Doctors, Morgagni, the founder of modern pathology, was an Italian. Auenbrug- ger, inventor of physical diagnosis, was an Austrian. Jeuner, the discov- erer of vaccination, and Lister, fath- er of modern surgery, were English- men. Schwann, originator of the cell doctrine, and Koch, who isolated the bacillus of tuberculosis, are credited to Germany; O'Dwyer, inventor of in- tubation, and Wright, who worked | i a | out the theory of opsonins, which | teaches how the blood fights disease, |] OUR FRESH GROUND OOF. | to Ireland. Pasteur, father of pre- || FEE AT 40c. CAN'T BE BRAT. | ventive medicine, who taught the | Try a_ sample order and be world the causes of sickness and de- | monstrated that no one need die of | parasite diseases, vas born in France, | Consider your advertis- ing from this in point of view et newspaper help you. convinced. NOLAN'S GROCERY Princess St. Phone 720. Prompt Delivery At Brockville on Wednesday, Rev. | C. W. Shelley united in marriage William Edward Kinch, of the town- ship of Kitley, to Margaret May Ro- beson, of Athens, Ont. William Begley, Westport, engi- ueer on the B. W. & N. Railway, was called to Wolford by the serious ill- ness of his mother. She died on Wednesday, Gunner C. 8, Fleming, well known in Brockville, has been recommended for a commission on account of his good work on the field with the First Artillery Brigade. i Paper Money. | Marco Polo (1254-1324) of Venice '| was the first person to announce to «| Burope the existerice of paper money in China under the moguls. The fact has induced the belief that the mo- guls were the originators of it. But in the history of Ghengis Khan and of the mogul dynasty in China pub- lished in the year 1739 the author speaks of the suppression of the pa- per money which was in use under the dynasty of the Sung, who reigned in China previous to the moguls, and [Saturday Sale OF English Tweed Suits for Sum J SEER EEE | mer Wear at $7.85 Conscription In Rome, In the earliest period of Roman $12.00 to $15.00 Suits in Tweeds, dependable English weaves, [if | ™!itary history all able-bodied citi: and brown or grey worsteds, in small check afd 'stripe patterns. . Single breasted sack models, with single breasted vest and medinm J gens under the king as co in-chief were compelled to serve in Width trousers; linings of fine twill mohair: si Slo Saturday ....... aliair; sizes 34 10 A a the army in time of war. It was under Servius Tullius, sixth king of Boys' Tw s Saturday for ... i; reg. $6 and $5. Rome, that the first real organiza- Men's Khaki Outing Pants. Saturday . .... coos. 81.50 tion took place. The srmiés were recruited by means of tribal levies Boys' Khaki Duck Suits ii nce Saturday . Bloomerd , and blouse--all Ses. : -made inh a general public assembly, Men's Summer Weight Underwear, in white porous knit, a and each tribe was called upon to furnish an equal number of men. iid bination style--sizes 36 to 44, Saturday... 0 he 'Men's White Shirts; plain white body, with : A Question of Supplies. pique fronts, plain "So your daughter married that white laundered cuffs, coat styl e; sizes 14 #* ; $1.25 and $1.50. Saturday for .... - . 25k. A aid a th Barvied every happy oo ' ; : of course ' fa : a "Wall, ue, Mandy's got a Boots and Shoes [== Rogier Pum, In plain yr colgniat styte; noc metal. protly Ne 00. rday fon .. $1.98 her lit! a PAI As ERs cies ean. . 's Gun Metal Patent ular $5.00. Saturday for ( RAILWAY HERES Local Branch Time Table. IN EFFROT MAY 30TH; 1915, Trains will leave and arrive at City Depot, fost of Johnston street. Gelag West. Lv. City. A 19--Mall 5 .m. 1 13--Fast Ex. .. 258am. 27--Lel, to- Tor. 9.20 a.m. 1--Intl. Ltd. , 1.41 p.m. 3i-- Local --Loca Belleville ---- BUSINESS TATKS #934 Jel 1 +f y Q 89 ~ 28% B BEsa: No. No. No. No. Ne: : Jl he: ' woe amon oy - Smeg TT TeEep 1 [REL FE Feacte: ofthe =e MYCTHSINESDeparimen - nr 85" »C # "~ Ea B wo we a oy ®eS wero ou wep Anything that the man who makes Spearmint chewing = gum has to say about advertising is interesting. tf. Millions have been spent to "nationalize" this product, and Wm. Wrigley, Jr., who has used every kind of advertising medium, knows something about relative values. ' He says: y - Brockville 658pm. 7.37p. Nos. 1, 6, 7, 18, 14, 16, 18, 19 run dally, other traihs dally except Sunday. i Direct route to Toronto, FPeterboro, | Hamiiton, Buffalo, ndon, t.| Chicago, Bay City, inaw, Montreal, | Fresh Fru it ¥ Guanes, Shebec, hon, hd St. John, | Vegetables |oniisiai: Fort ab: CH g's | 490 PRINCESS ST. PHONE 53% % MN 3 trea AE -------------- ANADIAN adele handsome young poet who stopped with you last summer, ¢h, Farmer ek 7 , Hagel "We are firm believers in news- paper advertising, because: News- paper advertising hits the spot we want to reach. Newspaper ad- vertising earries our story to the consumer with his daily news, "Newspaper advertising does effective team work with the local dealer." I ar vow 8 t is ly ad- ena mere hr Ie rs ae Wellington 4. Phone \ cer . . i Port SAULT PORT UR and i Pleamer "Manitoba," sail rom. Port McNipoll on "Wena: 8, will call at Owen Sound, leay- ing that point 10.30 pm. - 3 Ee -------------- "STE. leave t so ing with steamers at Port MeNi- on sailing days. : SI FE Ma ee werd