v ..... SECOND SECTION FRIDAY EVENING, PAGES 9TO i 6 HARRISB [JRG TELEGRAPH JUNE 12, 1914. | Your Suit For the 4th of July | SHOULD BE Tailored to Measure Order now, we will hold it for you, to suit your i | convenience. | SPECIAL FOR YOUR VACATION jj > Finest all-wool White Flannel or Cream Colored Serge ! > (Some With Neat Hair Lines) i| TROUSERS QP || || TO MEASURE jj These are the kind that are sold ready made at ij $5.00 and $6.00 a pair. ij jj OVER 300 STYLES OF REGULAR $25 SUITINGS jj ii Tailored to pa) ii Your Exact %I L hcCM ii || Measure fipX v I Ii ABSOLUTE SATISFACT 1 That's || |i OR • Our ij ij You Need Not Pay For Your Order J Slogan ij | Harrisburg's eldest and enlj original popular price Tailors j| | Standard Woolen Co. jj ;! Brunch of tlie World's Greatest Tailoring Organization J| Ij 19 Hiorfh Third Street | Corner Stra\» berry Avenue. ALEX. AGAR. Manager. 5 During this month —FREE—with every suit—sl.oo ij I belt with your initials on the buckle. \\ THOMAS DOLAN DIES IN TORRESDALE HOME Until Recently He Was Connected Actively With United Gas Improvement Company Philadelphia, Juno 12.—Thomas Do ian, one of the wealthiest men in Philadelphia and once a member of the widely known Widener-Klklns- Whitney street railway syndicate, died to-day at his home at Torresdale. near here. He was 82 years old and had been in poor health for a lons time. You'll be prouder than ever of your B woodwork when you clean it with || #gEfe| GOLD DUST I \N and grease, and cleans everything. | " Lmt *1- OOLO OUST TWINS 4a JO urn work" 1 • 1 N KING OSCAR 5c CIGARS There are no bands on 'em! They are full londres size carefully assorted as to color! They are filled with choicest Havana and domestic tabacco!' If you don't enjoy 'em and say they are the best ever ' take a vacation. Standard Nickel Quality H For 23 Years I — * < r Although he conducted as chairman of the board of directors until recently the operations of the United Gas Im provement Company, which owns gas and electric light plants, street rail ways and water companies in various cities from the Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic Coast, Mr. Dolan had practically retired from public activi ties since the gas lease light in Phila delphia in 1905. The son of a poor toilgate keeper, Mr. Dolan started his business life as a clerk, entered the textile trade and became one of the largest, manufac turers of textiles in Philadelphia. Later he went into finance and became interested in street railways, in which he made a large fortune. Mr. Dolan was associated with P. A. B. Widener. the late William L. Elkins and the late William C. Whitney in many street railway deals, notably in the Metro politan Street Railway Company of 1 New York. BOYD-PAYNE GOLF MATCH TOMORROW i Reservoir and Country Club to Meet For Sixth Time on Former's Course The golf teams of the Reservoir Park and the Country Club of Harris burp will meet at the Reservoir course to-morrow afternoon for the sixth match in the Boyd-Payne cup series. The Reservoir has won three matches and the Country Club two, and if the Reservoir wins to-morrow it will have the cup. The arrangements for the match, which has attracted much attention, were made to-day. Play will begin at 1 o'clock in order t6 permit free use of the links by those not on teams as early as possible. While it is not the intention to prevent other players than the contestants from using the course until after the match ends, yet the match players will have at all times the right of way on the links. The Saturday afternoon rule forbidding anything but twosomes will be strictly enforced. The clubs' professionals, T. J Dinan and Stewart MacEwen, will act as referees. By reason of the difference in play between the match play of to-morrow's contest gnd the medal play of the all-summer handi cap club tournament, it is likely that the latter will be called off for the day, although it has not been definitely determined. The drawings are as follows: Reservoir. Number. Country Club. Perry 1... Payne (capt.) Longnecker 2 R. McCreath T. Devine, Jr 3 Fownes Clement 4. ... L. McCreath H. C. Miller 5 Sides Lesher 6 Bent Harris 7 Ely Pavord 8 Maguire Nissley 9 Reily fori 10.. D. McCormick H. S. Miller 11... W. McCreath Gilbert 12 Todd Harry 13 Wolf or Cox Laurie 14 Bevan I Fager 15 Dull! Kelley IS Brown Extras will include: Reservoir, De vine, Sr., Springer, Richards, Doehne; Country Club, W. W. Davis, Hickok, Gaither. SMITH iYNOT HUVE TO STUM fContinued from First Page] t madhouse—or end his life in the elec tric chair. Of all the murder trials that have been listed in the Dauphin county courts few have attracted more wide spread attention than the Smith case listed to-day. Consequently, despite the unusual heat, Courtroom No. 1 was I crowded when at 10.30 o'clock thisj morning District Attorney Stroup called Smith for trial. Smith, in custody of a couple of deputies, was brought from the Jail just a few minutes after 10.30. That the insanity plea was to be advanced in some form had been the general impression and the pale youth was the cynosure of a good many eyes as he appeared in the , doorway. He was pale, and apparently cool. To those who expected some sign of mental unbalance, the action of Smith as he stepped into the room caused a little surprise; he calmly re moved his cap and smoothed his rather long wavy hair. In tlic Row Behind the Bar In the lirst row behind the bar rail ing sat Smith's relatives, including his mother and pretty sister. His father sat at the counsel table with Attor-1 lieys John Fox Weiss and William H. | Earnest. Across the table with Dis-1 trict Attorney Stroup was Assistant District Attorney F. B. Wickersham and County Detective Walter. Before Smith was arraigned Mr. I Weiss offered the motion asking for a special jury to determine the ques tion of Smith's sanity at the present! time. If he were insane now the law, Mr. Weiss said, wouldn't require or| compel Smith to answer to a jury for murder. Witnesses could be produced, Mr. I Weiss said, who had seen Smith, had talked with him in the jail, members of his family, friends apd others who had seen him within the last few years and some of the best insanity experts and alienists in the State—witnesses to the number of forty would be called to substantiate the defense's conten tion that Smith is insane, has been for years and is gradually growing worse. District Attorney Stroup said he had had no inkling of the defense's plan, and did not know that the special plea was to be made. Consequently the Commonwealth, he said, was notl prepared to fight the special plea peti- I tion. That started a wordy battle between Mr. Weiss and Mr. Stroup, during which some complimentary remarks as to the respective abilities of each as criminal lawyers and as prosecut ing attorneys*were exchanged. Stroup's Argument District Attorney Stroup, however, contended that he didn't feel like try ing a man who was a lunatic. Mr. Weiss said the District Attor ney must have known that insanity would be the defense. In answer to Judge Kunkel's inquiry as to whether or not Smith had ever been contined, Mr. Weiss said that question had caused frequent quarrels in the fam ily; that Mr. 'Smith wanted him sent to an asylum and Mrs. Smith, the I daughter of the murdered man, re- j fused to allow this. And when the court had finally di rected the continuance and Smith got up to go back to Jail, a tearful woman pose in the front seat of the court room and threw her arms about the youth's neck and kissed him. Then she quietly cried into her kerchief as the boy was led away. The woman was Smith's mother. ' F. AND M. HONORS HENSEL Lancaster, Pa., June 12.—Ex-Attor ney General W. U. Hensel, following in the footsteps of a President of the United States, James Buchanan, has become president of the board of trus tees of Franklin and Marshall Col lege, having been elected yesterday to till the vacancy occasioned by the death of George F. Baer. To (111 the vacancy on the board, William N. Ap ple, of Lancaster, a brother of the president of the college, the Rev. Henry H. Apple, and son-in-law of George F. Baer, was elected. PRISONER'S PI.ISA MOVES ALDERMAN AT HEARING Moved by the sad story of James Wolfe, arrested for Illegal train riding on the Heading, Alderman Edward Hil ton discharged the defendant. Wolfe, who was arrested by Special Officer Shuy, said he had a wife and seven chil dren in Cumberland. Md„ and came north In search of work. • v I This Live i Setts $ 15 Suits' For Fifteen Dollars 1 And So on Up to 1 S3O 1 M \ y /ik)\. HIT may be that we're old- II ft \Y# fashioned, or not onto our job, or |1 \ f jjf jfeSp something of the sort, in not having any I| $lB or S2O suits to sell at $12.50, nor any I \!H * $45 or SSO suits at fifteen ninety-eight. 14 8 Msr\ that doesn't worry us I P A lillvv \ H Jj\ su * ts at suc ' l P r i ces either, frequent I ■ fn\ announcements to the contrary not with- I I i\ O n other hand, we feel I m 111 A\\|U U pretty well satisfied with ourselves when we I 111 m \\l J)i) / oarounc ' see mens clothes—even I II j | ligj I on the so-called "special" occasions—being || I If \i v offered at $2.50 to $5 more per suit than 0 I I I 11 i our re B u ' ar Prices £&■} Mj <■ I■ 1 Home ot Hi • 1 11l 1 1 M /Mi i||w And we might add that so I | many men have awakened to the true state & ? C iE&M&SaKL. ■ biggest and busiest men's store in Harrisburg. I NEW BLUE SERGES | sls S2O $25 S3O I Among the men of this community, as among men everywhere, the blue serge takes a deservedly first place. No fabric spun can % compare with it in point of service— of wear; and yet, as with all good things, there are in addition to the genuine, the serviceable serges, shoddy cheap cloths $K that unscrupulous dealers unload upon the unsuspecting, season after season. B This Live Store has been known for years as the home of The Kuppen- H heimer Blue Serge, and so large is the number of men whom we have Satis l! factorily served with these goed clothes, that our label in a blue serge has become I a "hall-mark" of quality. I n n tllllllllMWiMi 1 I I 304 MARKET ST. I j, = Business Locals FINEST OF LINGERIE Dresses are cleaned as good as new if you entrust them to Compton"s. the old reliable cleaning and dyeing es tablishment. The refinement of our work is most apparent when com pared with the work of ordinary cleaners. Unexcelled facilities and years of experience In cleansing and dyeing make our work distinctive in its thoroughness. Compton's, 1006 North Third street, 121 Market street. (iOOl) BIT. GOOD WEAR That's what a man is looking fdr i when he is in need of a pair of shoes. The M. A. Packard shoes for men at \ $3.50 and $4.00 are known for their perfect tit and splendid wearing quali ties. There is none better to he had I at the price than the Packard, and ; none neater in style. Deichler, Thlr- ' teenth and Market streets. i I RUBBER-SOLE YOUR SHOES 1 Your old shoes will stand any wear and be suitable for most anywhere— -1 tennis. golf, yachting, tramping, I camping city or county, boardwalk . or mountain —If you will let us put on a pair of Goodyear rubber soles. For $1 .50 we will remake your old shoes i with full soles and spring heels of pure para rubber. City Shoe Repairing t Company, 317 Strawberry street. GOING SOMEWHERE? When you are ready to pack and find you haven't any trunk let us show you a special value in a 32-inch trunk with straps all round, full cloth lined and two trays at $5. Very special fiber-bound trunk with maleable trim mings, three center bands and five top slats, $lO. Regal Umbrella Co., Sec ond and Walnut streets. ONE-THIRD LESS ELECTRIC That is what we claim for our elec tric fans. Made of extra thin, fine quality steel blades and exceptionally rapid motors, you can have cool breezes all summer for one-third less than the average fan. Fans, 8 to 16 inches, including oscillating models, $9 up to s2l. Keystone Supply Co., 814 North Third street. I PREVENTING WRINKLES Experts say that if the skin is kept soft and smooth, wrinkles may be kept away indefinitely. Potts' Greaseless Cold Cream should be gently massaged into the tissues to keep the face soft 1 and smooth without that greasy resi due so many women object to. On sale at Bowman & Co. and Potts' Drug Store, North Third and Herr streets. ALWAYS INVITING That noon-hour lunchson that Is • specially prepared for the busy men of Harrlsburg at the Columbus Cafe Is i surely a delicious luncheon for 40 cents. The food Is nicely cooked and faultlessly served. Try one of these luncheons to-morrow noon. Hotel Co- JLumbus, Third and Walnut streets.