6 See Other Store News on ,\\r £ £ \V\A v\ Page 10 for Saturday Page 10 w\M V Specials from Bto 1 O'clock Suits That Are Offered You Saturday at $12.50 Are From Regular Stock Have Been Reduced From $16.50 &_> $lB Nothing'the matter with the suits, the styles or the quality--the fact that every one is from reg tular stock is evidence of their worthiness. But--when there's a run on this line of styles and on that j,| group of patterns and the season (from the manufacturers' viewpoint) has so far advanced that re- Cif orders cannot be filled, the broken sizes must be dismissed to prevent an accumulation of odds and I ends. For a little of this and that is undesirable in all well regulated establishments. W / \ L There You Have It Briefly-The * Reason For These Good Values 4-5 Two and three-piece suits, silk and mohair lined, some skeleton lined. Cassimeres and worsteds in nobby club checks, black and white checks, plain greys and plain browns, blue serge, fancy weaves, shan dow stripes, grey diagonals. I ftHKI $15.00 Suits From Regular Stock at SIO.OO "Ml This lot of reduced suits make the offerings at SIO.OO very attractive for Saturday. The variety of styles includes— Tan checked worsteds. Striped grey cassimeres. Pin striped blue and green cassimere suits. n;; Grey herringbone worsteds. Silk mohair suits. 0 .. ~, . { \M \M ~ 1,11 " White chalk stripe black and blue cassimere Plain grey and striped grey tropical, wor- three-piece suits,, full and ® ill and worsteds. sted suits. skeleton lined sack coats with regular and Plain grey cassimeres. Light grey tropical worsted suits. patch pockets. f ————i ,i ; $20.00 Suits in Stout and Regular Sizes at $15.00 • | $25.00 Suits in Stout and Regular Sizes at $20.00 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Men's Clothing, Second Floor Rear, Three Elevators SPECIAL MUSIC FOR [Vill OF PRAISE Mendelssohn's "Hear My Prayer" Will Be Among Selections of Pine Street Presbyterian A speciiil musical service has been ar ranged for the even ing service next Sun day in the Pine Street Presbyterian Church. •"I . Anthems and solos lft?n appropriate to the . -Bm. sermon on "ThePrivi . .1 illt lege of Praise," which Jraffl ' >e ~rear' l ot' ■M' lid them. "The Day is Ended," I y Bartlett, ** t" i Tiril will sing the contral to solo, and the violin obligate will be played by W. Walley Davis. The cele brated anthem, "Hear My Prayer," by Mendelssohn, will be sung, Mrs. Cox / \ tofiu[d] Wfcy be «utlMt«d wkn Reguln I ton the work. Cu be bad at all i Inc itorai. H complexion rteads ■ v DAGGETT & RAMSDELL'S ■' PERFECT COLD CREAM elite of New York Society for twenty-three years and still their fayorite Imparts health and beauty to the skin, smoothes away tho marks of Time* brings Nature s bloom to aallow cheeks, discourages jHRK dail* wrinkles. Improve your loolu > H fo IttbfV 10c. , 25c., 50e. la jars 35c, 50c, 85c. fi. 50, When you laalat upon D &3- TELEGRAPH JUNE 5,1914. taking the soprano solo and obllgato parts. In addition to these anthems Mr. Sutton will sing "Gloria" by Peceia. Mr. McCarrcll will play the following organ numbers: Prelude, "Pilgrim's <"horus," Wagner-Eddy; offertory, "Prayer," Verdi-Shelley; postlude, Grand Chorus in D, Gullmant. » (joes to Baltimore.—On account of the illness of his mother in Baltimore, the Rev. Henry W. A. Hanson left esterday for that city. The St. Paul Baptist Church, corner of State and Cameron streets, which has taken on new life since the coming of the Rev. E. Luther Cunningham to the pastorate, is making very elaborate preparation for formal dedication. Extensive alterations have been made in the building and it now presents a very pleasing and attractive appear ance. New circular pews have been installed, walls and ceiling decorated, auditorium carpeted, woodwork var nished; indeed, the interior of the building is very beautful. No colored congregation of the city has had a harder task to perform than the St. Paul congregation, but to-day the outlook is brighter than at any time in the history of the church. No t people in any of the city churches are poorer than the mem bers of St. Paul, and no people have made more sacrifices, been more faith ful and accomplished more in the in terest of the cause of Christ than this humble people. The dedicatory exercises will con tinue for one week and the formal dedication of the building will be ob served on the fourth Sunday afternoon in June at 3.30 o'clock. An attractive program is being arranged. The Rev. Dr. J. Wallace Green, of the Taber nacle Baptist Church, will preach the dedicatory sermon and St. Paul choir, i under the leadership of Professor Harrod. will render appropriate selec tions. BULL MOOSDIS IN QUICK CHI9E ABOUT Decide to Be For Local Option and Adopt Platform With Every one Looking On NO SECRECY ABOUT IT AT ALL William Flinn Has Everything Done in the Open to Contrast With Democrats The Washington party State com mittee just before adjourning late yes terday afternoon turned Its back on its declaration on the regulation of the liquor traffic made last January and came out for local option with the county as the unit. This action was taken in the unanimous adoption of the platform containing the local op tion plank and it was buttressed by speeches. Last January William Flinn, who ran the conference as he did the com mittee yesterday, gave up his ideas on local option in favor of a plank which offered the iniative and referen dum as the means of regulating the liquor traffic. Yesterday the commit tee made a flat declaration and Dean Lewis, the party's candidate for gov ernor, made a speech in which he said that he not only stood for it, but if elected governor would work with might and main for the pas sage of a local option law and would sign it The Washingtonians adopted their platform differently from the Dem ocrats. William Flinn went about the city chuckling over the fail ure of the Democrats to let their State committee pass on the platform and have a say ab'out its planks. The Pittsburgh boss, who had concluded that the position taken last January was wrong, decided to "backtrack" and to do it in a tfay that would be in contrast to the other committee. And it was done, ostentatiously and with supporting speeches. The whole platform business was framed up to be different from that of the rival State committees. Flinn, the candidates and members of the resolutions committee set up half the night discussing the planks and went at it again after breakfast. They called in some of the "elder states men" and about noon started to re vise it. Finally, the platform was finished about 2 o'clock, half an hour behind the time for the meeting, and was adopted portly after 4. Next to seeing that there was no ambiguity about the party's declara tions on local option, woman suffrage and other things, Flinn was most con cerned about thumping Senator Pen rose and deriding the return to the party movement. He gave the keynote on Penrose in his own speech to the committee, which came right after Judge C. N. Brumm, of Pottsville, who had been staged to declare that he was for the ticket, although beaten out for first place. Flinn charged that the mills were idle to-day and busi ness bad because Penrose had enter ed into a conspiracy to let the Demo crats elect the President rather than allow the Republicans of the nation to select Roosevelt with whom he was not on friendly terms. Penrose must have been a most puissant personage in 1912 to have accomplished all that Flinn charged that he did. Dean Lewis, Gifford Pinehot and all the rest of the speakers took that as their cue and the senior senator was be labored as an evil genius, but at the same time given credit for tremendous Influence when the United States was picking a president two years ago. Pinehot went Flinn some better in assailing the return, to the party movement by saying all the overtures came from Republicans and that the Progressives would have none of them. He also gave the committee men and workers jaded with weeks of a strenuous primary campaign the news that he intended to resume his campaign to-morrow and keep going until November. "I'm on the stump now and I'm going to keep on the stump. This is a time to work and not to go fishing" said he. And some committeemen groaned. Dean Lewis was full of ginger in his talk and hammered the desk as he declared for local option, for real regulation of monopolies against the Wilson poli cies, for protection and when declar ing that he was against Penrose. Throughout the meeting everything appeared to be on the table. It was a tame meeting compared to the Dem ocratic session and lacked the spirit of the Republican State committee. The last half dozen speakers, all can didates, spoke to a dwindling audi ence and reiterated much that the topliners had said. And the platform contained all that anybody said. SHAKESPEARE THE MASTER "He sweeps with the hand of a mas ter the whole gamut of human experi ence, from the lowest note to the very top of its compass, from the sportive, childish treble of Mamilius and the \ *sj gtefetn Sc jfliartne Co. | 7 Women's Collar Pins S 2 Given Away Tomorrow S I 1 —Gold plated collar pins— two in a set—will be given away abso- J H lii™ lutely free tomorrow. This will be our third souvenir day of the / Z JL spring season, and we have arranged some very pretty collar pins, ■ I * n a variety of different patterns, for this occasion. Z P —These sets will be given to adults only; and although we have Z ■ provided a liberal supply, we advise you to come early. Remem- J you do not have to purchase a thing. We give these useful ■ 1 ' articles away simply to advertise our store and our up-to-date as- Z m sortments of men's, women's and children's wearing apparel. P ■ I Now Is The Time To Start Your Charge Account y Buy Your Summer Outfit Here On Easy Terms I j ASKIN & MARINE CO. j ■ 36 N. Second Street I 7 CORNER OF WALNUT £ ' l - . 'I■ •' ' pleading boyish tones of Prince Arthur up to the specter-haunted terrors of Macbeth, the tropical passion of Othello, the agonized sense and tor tured spirit of Hamlet, the sustained elemental grandeur, the titanic force and utterly tragical pathos of Lear." — From the Encyclopedia Britannica. The Telegraph offers its readers a complete large type imported edition of six volumes for ten days only, as our importation of this new English edition in library cloth binding is lim ited. —Advertisement. NEW INTERNE ARRIVES Dr. Gilbert L. Dailey, one of the four physicians selected at this year's interne at the Harrisburg hospital, arrived yesterday at the hospital. Dr. Dailey is a raduate of the University of Maryland and was formerly of Steelton. There are now more than 27,000 motorcyclists affiliated with the Fed eration of American Motorcyclists. As He Walks 200 Miles From Jail, Writes Mayor George Pay, whose 90-day sentenco for vagrancy was .suspended, provided that he walked 200 miles away and stayed that far off is reporting daily to Mayor John K. Royal. A postal card received yesterday was written by Kay in Johnstown and says: 'I reached this place last night, 169 miles, and have only 28 miles more to go to my destination." ■ ' * Business Locals THE LAST DAY A suit Is worn is what you want to judge it by, and not the first week's appearance. That Is the real test of Its goodnes. A suit from Simms gives satisfaction until it Is no longer fit for wear, because the garment Is made to fit and the wearing away of material does not affect the shape. A. J. Simms, 22 North Fourth street. Business Locals "DEIJIGirrKD'* Back from the Jungles comes this famous word to be quoted again al most daily. The same word will leap from your tongue when you look at your laundry work on Its return from the Arcade, whose success Is due to pleasing particular people. Both phones. The Arcade, D. E. Proprietor. THE OLD PAPER COLLAR How many of the present genera, tlon remembers the wearing of paper collars in place of the present Troy laundered collars? Very few, Indeed, and the celluloid collar tried to sup plant the paper collar, but neither stood a ghost, of a show when modern ■ laundry methods were introduced. It put Troy on the map, and Troy laun dry work stands for the best In Har rlsburg. Either phone for wagon.