THE GLO r E OPEN EVENINGS THE GLOBE An Interesting Pre-Christmas Sale Another Large Purchase of Ladies' and Misses 1 Coats Tust received another large shipment of the most charming •coats of the season —samples of our best coat maker. Every model a beauty—every one lined with satin—every desired fabric is here—Zibelities. Chinchillas, English Tweeds, Elysian Beav- £BB^o^ ers. Boucles, Waffle Cloth, etc. Some beautifully trimmed with fiuSs&litSttL fur. \"alues to s2s—to go at iust one price, 524 jjjjSjk Tl~l#=> CMohf* Ladies' Coat Dept. Xne VJrIODC, Second Floor Jjt" t J MRS. LAVCKS ENTEKIMNS SUNDAY SCHOOI. CI.ASS Mrs. Harry R. l.aucks entertained members of her Sunday school class! at her home last evening with the fol- ! lowing guests: Miss Alice Snyder, Miss ; Mildred Fromin, Miss Kathryn Gerber, J .Miss Margaret Mullen. Miss Mary Ella j llartwell. the Rev. Robert A. Bausch J Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Laucks, Oscar i l.aucks. The house was prettily deco rated in the Christmas colors and a I pleasant evening closed with refresh-1 ments. VISITOR FROM NKW YORK Miss Blanche Sieber. of the Inter-! national Young Men's Christian .\sso-1 < iation business department. Newi York, is in the city for the Christmas! holidays. She is visiting her sister, i Mrs. A. E. Shirey, and her family, at J 131T State street. ' I Uttley's Flowers "The Touch That Tells" • k ■ frflir Mj' Bouquets a Specialty I CHRISTMAS OPENING Friday, Dec. 18th, to Dec. 24th largest assortment of bleoming plants In the citv. Bonnie Scotch i Heather, Matchless Pandanus. Veitchii. American Beauties. Violets Gardenias and Orchids. Bell Phone 1132 321 Walnut Street Charles Vttlcy, the floral artist, wishes to announce that lie has no connection with the Houquet Flower Shop at 311 Walnut street. lice Cream Flavors For Christmas^ I VANILLA MAPLE WALNUT ' | CHOCOLATE PEPPERMINT I STRAWBERRY TUTTI FRUTTI 1 i 1 CUSTARD LEMON ICE , K BISQUE CHERRY ICE I I SPECIAL | ) ORANGE SOUFFLE, qt., 50c CLARET PUNCH, qt 50c ' j WALKER & MESSIMER /; # 411 N. Second Street i ( jam m g m |j|fX/lljn.o — I I Case's Quality 1 I Ice Cream and | Water Ices J SPECIAL FOR CHRISTMAS j I English Plum Pudding and Frozen Cherries j I Ten Other Flavors to Pick From 1 I Delivered to You at 35c Per Quart j Service Right—Quality Right J Never Been Fined For Impurities In My Ice Cream ! Factory 1932 North Third St. \ Both Telephones E. W. CASE, Prop. 1 !. WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARIUSBURG TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 23, 1114. CHRISTMAS RECEPTION Mr. and Mr-. Homer Black Will Re ceive at Tlielr Siii-hm-ltaii Home Mr. and Mrs. Homer Black have is sued invitations for a reception to be . held at their home at uld Orchard i Friday afternoon. December 25, from j 4 to 7 o'clock. Mr. Black is general [Secretary of the Young Mens Cliris , tian Association of this city and Mrs. ! Black is not only head of the Sun-; shine Socle ty but prominent in various civic and charitable movements. John <'. Herman, a Yale student, is ! a holiday guest of his parents. Mr. and I Mrs. Edwin S. Herman, at Front and i Maclay streets. Miss Helen 1.. N'eidig. a kindergar ten teacher in the public schools of i Munhall. Pa., is with her parents at i j South street for the holiday recess. • Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henderson have I (gone home to Pittsburgh after a short j 'visit among Harrisburg relatives. |COVENANT CHOIR REHEARSAL There will be a special rehearsal of J the Covenant Presbyterian choir this evening for the Christmas anthems to , be sung at the services next Sunday. LEAVE FOR ALABAMA Mr. and Mrs. George AY. Stone ; seifer have gone to Alabama to re j main for the winter. Mrs. John C. Powley. of 1201 Derrv street, accom panied them to Washington.-D. C, and will join them later in the South. Professor Charles Yahn, of the | North East High School, is spending Christmas with his parents, the Rev. Mr. anil Mrs. G. S. Yahn. ,".04 South t Thirteenth street. Miss Dorothy McCormick, a senior !at Smith College, will come home from | Northampton. Mass., for a holidav va cation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harris McCormick. at Riverside. j Mrs. Charles Parrot. Wilmington, , Del., is spending the holidavs with ! her mother. Mrs. Mary Hoover. 224 .South street. i Samuel Ilall. of the Fniversit.v of Pennsylvania, is visiting his mother. I Mrs. C.win M. Harvey, at 11 IS Green I street. * j Miss Maryland Gourley, of 202 I Chestnut street, is home from Wilson college for the Christmas holidays. I Miss Hermione Barker, a Wellesley student, is at her homo, "3 Evergreen i street, to remain until after the New I Year. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Wood. Jr.. iand Miss Evelyn Wood, of Cameron | Extension, will spend the holidays i among relatives at Baltimore and Nev | York city. Alfred S. Ellenberger, of Riverside, returned yesterday from his studies at Harvard University, for the Christmas holidays. Samuel F. Reese, of 644 Peffer street, accompanied by his little grand son. Samuel Reese, Jr.. has gone to ; New Castle for a holidav visit with ' relatives. -Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mitchell, of Bos ton. Mass.. will be holidav guests of (their daughter. Mrs. William S. Hall, at 120G North Fifteenth street. Miss Hazel V. Wise, of 445 Hummel avenue. Lemoyne. has gone to Fort I Pierce. Florida, for a permanent resi dence. Miss Susanna Fleming is at her home. 11l West State street, after spending several months in the home of her uncle. William Robinson, at ' La wrenceville. Mr. and Mrs. David K. Ebersole and children, of North Fifteenth street. ; with a Yuletide; gdance. Holiday decorations will pre | vuil :it the beautiful clubhouse alons I the l-inglestow n road, and the I'pde-! 'sjrove Orchestra will play all the latest! | music as well as many old-time fa-! vorites. I As this is the regular club night. I J the attendance will be large. Including ! the members and many OUt-Of-tOWn| ! visitors. I < 'n the committee of arrangements j 'are H. D. Delinotte, Silas S. Pomeroy. ! Ur. Thomas Bowman, Jaines Q. Hand-I jshaw, Jr., W. 11. Johnston and Hart! iOgelsby. I The dance arranged for New Year's j j night at the Colonial Club has been; ! postponed. IUIWEK IIWCK AT C'tl'lt SATI'ROAY. Dlt EMBKIt Jti I Vance C. McCorinick has issued in vitations for a dinner-dance at the' , Country Club of Harrisburg, Saturday I evening. December 26, at 7 o'clock. ' ■ The debutantes will figure promi nently in the event, which also- in-1 eludes prominent society folk of thisi and other cities. MISS ('OH\ VISITS IIKitK Miss Mamie Cohn. of Baltimore,! Md., will spend her Christmas vaca tion of two weeks as the guest of her I cousin. Mrs. Charles Aronson, 257 ' Korster street. Miss Cohn is a popu lar young lady in Baltimore and is a i teacher of the fifth grade in one of the I public schools of that city. IWiITKS DAVIS KAMI I. V Mi. and Mrs. \V. J. Daxis and fain-j ily, of t>2t» Hoss street, will be dinner: guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard G , Campbell at their residence, 16o7 ( North Seventh street, on Christmas Day. Miss Mary Bent, of Philadelphia, j will spend the holidays with Mr. and J Mrs. William Rider Bailey, of Front I and South streets. Miss Mary Sponsler, of Chestnut! I street, a student at Smith College, will 1 arrive home from Northampton. Mass.. this evening, for the holiday recess. Curzon Pager. Spencer Koss. Harold j Fox and Franklin Ktter, all Princeton j students, are spending the holidays, with their parents in town. Mr. and Mrs. K. M. Stevenson and Miss Martha H. Wyman, of Lock Haven, are Christmas guests of Mr. i and Mrs. John Schwab, at 191S Market street. Mr. and Sirs. James Bailey and j family, Pine Forge, will lie holiday I guests of Mrs. Bailey's mother. Mrs. J George Reily, 1501 North Front; street. Woman's Aid Society Sells Paxton Cook Book Everyone knows what it is to hur-j riedly select a gift in these last days before Christinas. For such perplexity! the book. "Historic Paxton —Her Days; and Her Ways." by Helen Bruce Wal- ■ lace, published by the Women's Aid : Society of Paxton Church, will be a happy solution. This book makes an attractive pres ent for either a man or a woman, with its unusual combination of historic and practical interest. The lirst half is devoted to the story of old Paxton i and its sister church. Derry. one ofi the famous churches of America, i around whose early years center ex- . citing events in Pennsylvania history. Its second pastor. John Elder, was l one of the big men of this comniun- | ity. Exery son of Dauphin county j should know why. The story is full of color and put] iin a way that is readable for the busy' j man. The illustrations heading the j i sketches include pictures of old and j i new Paxton and of its sister church. I I Old Derry. The woman who does not particu- j larly care for history will revel in the' cook book section. Here for the first] time are given favorite receipts of noted cooks, receipts that have been cherished carefully for generations. Jn addition there are practical helps for home emergencies, and comprehensive I instruction for the home gardener and I poultry raiser. Such a book i« easily mailed to tho | Harrisburger, who cannot get hornet for Christmas, and who will appre- j elate such a touch of home scenes. It I is for sale at 214 Pine street and al ' the leading book stores at a small cost. I The Woman's Aid Society through the ! selling of its book keep in repair the) old Paxton < liurch, which has been used nearly 175 years. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Yost announce the birth of a son. John Alvey Yost, Monday, December 21. 1914. Mrs. Yost was Miss Mary Maugans prior to! her marriage. Mr. and Mrs. William Shipley, ofj 1939 North Sixth street, announce the I [birth of a daughter, Mildred Viola Shipley. Sunday. December 20, 1914.! | Mrs. Shipley was formerly Miss Ber-j' nice Cronin. Mr. and Mrs., Willis Freeman, of Pittsburgh, former residents of this city, announce the birth of a daugh ter, Lillian Marie Freeman, Saturday, December 19. 1914. Mr. and lira. John Emil Asseln an-i nounce the birth of a son, Eric As-1 seln, Sunday. December 13, 1914. Mrs.! Asseln is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs , Fred W. Yingst. METEOR FRIGHTENS MEN By Associated Press Greensburg, Pa.. Dec. 23.—Twenty | men, slaughtering pigs on a farm, one mile front Delinont. were badly fright- ' ened late yesterday when a meteor) fell with a menacing shriek and ex-; ploded with a terrific report about a ! half mile from them. The heavenly! body buried itself several feet in the 1 ground. According to the men, it ap- ! peared to be white hot when it struck | the earth. The explosion was heard I for miles around. ' i AN EVENING THOUGHT. Bins in the valiant man and free. The larger heart, the kindlier ! hand: King out the darkness of the land. i Iting in the Christ that Is to be: —Tenuyaou. I\ ACADEMY SMOKER 10 BE BIG AFFAIR 'Former Students For Many Years Will Gather at the New Build ing Above the City For probably the first time in its long and eventful history the llarris , burg Academy will 'have an "Academy ; night." at which the alumni and for mer students ol' the institution, which ] owes its inception to John Harris, the | founder of Harrisburg. will gather and | talk over old times. The arrangements ! are being made by Dr. Arthur E. | Brown, the headmaster, and a com j mittee of the younger alumni and I every effort has been made to reach every man who was ever registered as a student under the Academy, j it is recognized that a school which j lias had such a long career as the j Academy must necessarily have some ' former students whose names are not ; on the lists which have been gathered in the lasl few months and the com mittee earnestly hopes that whether ! any former students receive invita j lions or not they will show up at the Academy on December 2S. 1 The smoker has been fixed for Mon . day night and already many of tho ■ former students have put a red mark on that date, planning to attend. j There will lie reunions of students I who atttended the Academy back in the sixties and the seventies and the men of the eighties and the nineties will be out in force to show the stu dents of the last decade that their j interest in the old school is still strong, j The committee in charge has re- I quested that former students who I have not received invitations send in their names so that the list may be ! made complete. The names may be ; sent to Dr. Brown or to John Smith, j Ehrman B. Mitchell and William C. t Dunlap, the committee actively in charge of the arrangements. Market St. Bridgekeeper Dies Following Stroke ' ' i " t aBBHPTOW JOSEPH N. PVR Joseph N. Pye. aged 66 years, for i man" years daylight tollkeeper at the , Market street bridge, died suddenly ! last night at his home. 610 North Sec • ond street. Death was due to a stroke. Mr. Pye was well-known through the I city, having been Connected with the Adams Kxpress Contpanv prior to being made tollkeeper. He was also an ele vatorman at the Uonaldson Building, in North Second street. Mr. pve was a member of the Pine Street Presbyterian ■ Church, and of the James McCormick ' Bible Class. He is survived by his wife and the , following children: .Mis. George S. Henderson. Mrs. Anna M. I'rver, Samuei If. Pye. Ivy Pye. all of this citv, and the following brothers and sisters: Samuel Pye and John Pye. both of New (Cumberland: John S. Pye. of Newport, and Mary Pye, of this city. Funeral services will be Iwhl Satur ■ day afternoon, at 2 o'clock. Burial will lie made in the Kast Harrisburg Ceme j [ OPTICAL SALE I NOW GOING ON Eyes Examined Free Glasses Fitted / j in Gold Frames k j j|for Reading or I / I J I Sewing as Low as »> > JBL || RUBIN & RUBIN || EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 320 Market St. Second Floor I Two tiood Eye Specialist* to I (Cxamlne Your ICyea. Open Even- I IngM I nlll S o'clock. 11 "ttlc TUj] 1015 North Third St. NUCI-fMOr to HOV CATKIUXG CO. ROMAN PUNCH for the Christmas Dinner Pure rich, all cream Ice Cream. Order* for Christina* received now. Dellverlea all ilaj Ckrl.t --t;lf» < ami? appropriately bnird | for < lirlatmn*. Itellclona home. ' made Clear Toya. HKI.C I'llOM; 402 .1. SILVERWARE 26 pc. Set, consisting of 6 knives, 6 forks, « teaspoons. 6 tablespoons, butter knife r.nd 1 sugar shell, from $5.98 up. JOS. D. BRENNER Dlammrt M»rrh«iit unif .lonrlrr ftp. I ?Vorll» TMrd St. CALL 891-/WT "PHONE. J3QW7UZ4I4 HAOTUWM'f POPIAJMI HMHiar ••DM require two pages to tell what a merchandising treat has been prepared for you for tomorrow. You will find them side by side on pages 6 and 7. Read and profit. What the Shops Are Showing Convenient in size, substantial in construction, and capable of perform ing' the highest grade of work, the at tractive l'remoette Jr. camera, offered at the Gorgas Drug- Store for $5.00 makes a delightfully satisfactory gift. It is finished with genuine grain leather, attractively boxed, and is not only good to look at. but is also good in results given. It weighs .just 12 oz. and tits conveniently iti a lady's hand bag, or a boy's pocket. These features combined with its photographic value, and its popular price make it one of the most desirable of cameras for gift giving. A complete line of Kastman Pre mo cameras and kodaks at prices from *I.OO up is offered at the Uor gas store. A THoruirrrrij