FAVORITES IE 01B01! BILL Manager Hopkins An nounces Promising Show for Orpheum Charity Week BESSIE WINN'S NAME ON LIST Sale of Seats for Next Week Is Said at Box Office to Be Greater Than Any Advance Sale Previously Known Here Lntil last evening the slogan adopt ed by the Rotary Club for next week, when they will operate the Orpheum theatre for the Belgian relief fund, was "An empty seat at the Orpheum means an empty stomach in Belgium,'' and this was about the only inducement of fered vaudeville fans to get in line to witness next week's bill. But after Mr. Hopkins arrived from New York City with a choice line of Keith acts, acts tin. ; are bound to make a strong bid for favor here, it will be stronglv seconded by a slogan something ]jk' 0 An empty seat at the Orpheum will also mean a disappointed vaudeville devotee." • Who could imagine a more popular arrangement than Bessie Wvnn and Joe Jackson? One is as laughable as the other is winsome and both are great favorites here. Then there aro the Farber Sisters, pleasing girls who were a big hit at the Orpheum before and who are presenting an entirely new act this season. Malinger Hopkins was fortunate in securing them for next week after witnessing their successful act at the Palace theatre in New Y'ork. Joe Jackson will be recalled as the tramp bicyclist. 'His ragged togs and bicycle parts become so entangled that Joe hands out one stream after an other while manfully struggling to get straightened out. Bessie Wvnn is also offering a new repertoire of song this season and at Keith s Philadelphia theatre this week she is scoring a triumph at each per formance. The remainder of the bill has been announced as follows: LaHone and .Dupreece, in a novelty act; Ed. How ard and company, presenting the laugh ing success, ''Those Were the Happw Bays;" Elsie Morton and Tony Rediro, in a new eomedy offering. • This rounds out a bill that the Or pheum management feels confident will well repay the big crowds for helping with the relief fund outside of the satisfaction of aiding in the charity it self. At the Orpheum box office it is re ported that the sale for next week eclipses any advance sale ever known in the r<>. ■> Community Silver . SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. McFarland, direct from the factory, will be at our store all day To-morrow, Saturday, Dec. 12 and will be pleased to tell you WHY Community Silver is the best. ( lastei sis lieadc|uaiters for Community Silver. We are showing all the new patterns in single pieces and sets, beautifully cased in mahogany cabinets < and boxes. This is an extraordinary opportunity to make your selections as Mr. McFarjand will give you the benefit of his experience at the factory. H. C. CLASTER Gams—J e wels —Silverware 302 MARKET STREET HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 11, 1914. $545,000 TO BE TOTAL OF :i)D£ET Continued From Flr»t I'nfir. Commissioners now are working on the basis of creating but one new patrol man 's job. The Mayor has asked for one new "copper" although he has also sug gested that, if money is available, it would not be unwise to employ five ad ditional patrolmen. Commissioner Bowman to-day said it now is positively certain that the tax rate will be reduced by a half mill, although he added that it will be im possible to give exact figures on the probabTe amount to be carried in the budget until after the Monday meeting. But one cut in an estimate has b?en made thus far. That, Mr. Bowman said, came yesterday, when he, unso licited, obtained the permission of his colleagues to reduce the estimated cost of running the department of the City Electrician from SII,OOO to something over SB,OOO. Should the general appropriation bill carry $545,000 for the new year, the amount will exceed the 1914 "appropri ation bill, which covered only nine months by approximately $35,000. Yet that is at least $20,000 less than was actually expended by the Commis sioners, since, at the beginning of the 1914 fiscal year on April 1, last, thev made provision for paying a $55,000 indebtedness, which was created through deficiencies during the last eight or ten years. Balance in General Fund The balance in ttie city's general fund will be amfounced to the Commis sioners 011 Monday by .Commissioner Gorgas, head of the Finance depart niwit. Rough estimates place it at ailywhere from $30,000 to $4 0,000. To that will be added a $3,500 fund which in April had been allowed to the City Electrician's department for buy ing new equipment, but which has not been expended. In the same department a $3,000 fund was created in April out of which was to be paid the cost of underground cables and for the lading N>f them. Thus far only SHOO of that iifinev has been_ expended, and it is Mr. Bow man's plan t-o reappropriate it to the City Electrician for the same purpose. The money was not expended because the desired cable could not be obtained. It will not be necessary this year to appropriate additional nionev for that purpose, and, with a fund of SB,OOO, carried in the new budget, the City Electrician will have well 011 to sll,- 000 available for all needs. That fund will also provide for new equipment 10 Ibe purchased during the new year Half a mill tax means a revenue of approximately $25,000. With a 9Vi mill tax rate, the Commissioners ex pended $565,000 during 1914 and there yet will be a reserve fund of not less than $30,00/). With that in mind, the Commissioners figure they can. with a 9-mill rate, take tare of a $54 5,000 j budget and still have a balance at the close of 1915. No one department will suffer to a great extent when the pruning is doni on Monday, since the reductions now considered total only $4,000, although the Commissioners say ther- plan to lot the larger departments which have the larger requisitions stand most of the I reductions. • CLOUDY AGAIUO-MORhOii Lower Temperatures Are Forecasted for Harrlsburg To-night—Zero in Plain States White lower temperatures are fore casted for the next thirty-six hours there will be little change in the gen eral weather conditions, ami the sun is not expected to shine with any great degree of regularity, partly weather being the prospect for to-night and to-morrow. A temperature of stligiitJy below freezing is indicated for Uarrisburg to-night. The Atlantic const disturbance, Which was responsible for the rain and snow of t'he (vast week, has moved north to the Canadian maritime provinces ami its place is gradually being taken by a high pressure area which was cen tral this morning over Arkansas. A large part of the (Mississippi valley this morning was clear and zero tempera tures as a result covered the major por tion of the plain States. Another depression has appeared on the western coast and rain fell in North ern California. MRS. ANNIE (J. YATES lUES Was the Widow of Captain George I* Yates ilrs. Annie Gibson Yaies, well known in the Cumberland Valley, died at her home in Pierrepont Place, Brooklyn, X. •> lust Wednesday evening. She was the widow of Captain George L. Yates, who was killed in the * 'lister disaster, and the daughter of W. Wilmer Roberts, one of the most distinguished engineers of his times, -and the granddaughter of John Bannis ter Gibson, late Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Yates was a woman of great culture and brilliant attainments and was a favorite in literary and artistic circles in New York City Her unusual personal c'harn: won her hosts of friends in many walks of life and her quiet deeds of kindness an. charity will cn aear her memory to many of those less fortunajte than herself. She is survived by one son, George Livingstone Yater, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; a daughter, Mrs. Hugh Moore Hewson, of New York, and three brthers, W. Wilmer Roberts, of Cumberland, Md.; Colonel Thomas P. Roberts, of Pitts burgh, and Richard A. Roberts, of Charleroi, Pa. The funeral services will be held to morrow morning in Carlisle. PHILADELPHIA CLOSING Philadelphia Closing By Associated Press, Philadelphia, Dec. 11. —'Stocks closed steady. Cambria Steel . 42% Gtneral Asphalt 33 do pfd 67% bake Superior Corpoiation .... 12 Lehigh Navigation 75 V* Lehigh Vallev IJ6V2 Penna. R. R,' 53 1-16 Philadelphia Electric 23% Philadelphia Company ........ 31'/, Pl.iJode'jphia Rapid Transit .... 11% Reading 7i1% Storage Battery LSV3 I Union Traction SS'/i; ; U. G. I 82% ASTRICH'S Buy Your XMAS RIBBONS Here LARGEST STOCK LOWEST PRICES Ribbon Bows, Rosettes and Sashes Tied FREE Ribbon Girdles made very cheap if Ribbons are bought here The Largest and Most Complete Stocjc of Ribbons in Harrisburg WONDERFUL VALUES FOR LITTLE PRICES Wide Dresden 5 Inch Taffeta and Moiree | Dresden Ribbons RMons yi1 k : White andAU j e . LeadingColorß 'All Silk New ' Beautiful Newj| JBBf Patterns, 5V 2 - J inches wide, 29c /jll| den Ribbon, 39c /\J|* Kibbon; Bright coi i ar value 20c, I •II , I value, yard, .. value, yard, .. on, m am. Yard, yard Extra IV de Moiree Ribbons Wide All Silk Messalineß.bbons Heavy All Silk, 654 Inches Wide Inch, 15 of the Best and Qa All Good Colors, 30c Value, Yard m"v Newest Colors, Values 29c yard Avv | Wide Itoman S.nped SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY ..Sl&Si ST, ' h JiffE, Brocaded Sldk and Sitii Ribbons yt J** *■ r 39c and 49c y 49C 1 Narrow Satin Ribbons 1 a piece Holly and Narrow Fancy Ribbon By the Yard or piece, from ..1 " v up All widths at low prices | i Satin Ribbons Narrow, medium Cp , Extra Wide and Beautiful Fancy Dresden Striped Slid Plaid RibboilS* All at Special Prices HONORED BYUNIONLEAGUE Penrose, Brumbaugh and McClain Are the Guests of Honor at Elaborate Dinner and Reception (Special to the Star-Independent.) Philadelphia, Dee. 11. —Approxi- mately a thousand members attended the Union Deiague reception to Senator Penrose, Oovernor-elevit Brumbaugh and Lic'utenant-Grovernor-Cveict Mc- Clain last night. The three smcces&ful BepulbJicau candidates thus honoirod are likewise m'cun>l>sirs af the elulb, Senator Penrose since September l, ISS4; Dr. Brumbaugh since November 10, last, and Mr. McClain eince June 24, 1811. Prior to the reception, the guests were 'tendered a dinner which was al so attended by the present officer* ami the surviving former presidents of the League. President William T. Titian, was the toastm aster and informal ad dresses were made by the three guests. B. T. StoteshhiTv, l>i mncr Heeler, C. Stuart Patterson and Thomas J. Jef fries. In addition to the quests, those in the line which greeted the long file of menuLems at the reception were Messrs. Tilden, Sproul and Jeffries. M«jw Blankenburg and former Gov ernor Stokes, of New Jersey. WILL NOTIPROSECUTE WIFE William Smith Tells Police She Stabbed Him but Requests That She Be Not Arrested An investigation by the police of the stabbing of William Smith, North and Capital streets, last evening, has uncov ered th e additional fact that he was struck by a brick before the wound was inflicted injiis left side near the heirt by a small dagger. The police have Smith's story that he was stabbed by his wife. While a search is being made for the woman the police are confident that should he recover he will not appear against his wife. His condition is still serio,us but physicians at the Harris burg hospital believe that he will re cover. Smith at first told th e police that he was stabbed by a colored man on Cur rant near Verbeke, but after his wife, who had accompanied him to the hospital in the police ambulance had left the hospital, h£ told Lieutenant Warden that she had stabbed him after accusing him of being with other wom en. He asked that she should not be arrested. At the Photoplay Large production, with orig inal New York cast and leading actors, "The Master Orackaroam,'' is a fea ture show and should not be missed by our patrons. Along with this we pre sent a 2-act Vitagraph comedy, with funny Billy Quirk and Lee Beggs in the leading roile, "Convict, Costumes and Confusion," is as follows: Jones, dressed as a devil, goes to the masque rade unknown to his wife. Mrs. Jones, is told of his escapade ami follows him. An escaped convict seeks refuge in the ball room and Jones learning his wife is wise to the deception, changes costumes with the convict whom Jonos thinks is a guest. The Authorities seek ing the coiuvict niEtfteJoe Jones amd things become lively and exciting. The many funny things that happen in this Vita-laugh, shown at the Photoplay to-day, makes it one of the best come dies ever shown at this delightful place of amusement. Adv. *** There is no lack of German, French and English dyes on the 'battlefields of Europo. FIREMEN GIVE TURKEY DINNER Members of Eeily Hose Company Re member Ladies' Auxiliary The members of the Roily Hose Com pany last night gave thp Ladies' Aux iliary a turjtey dinner, in which 120 persons participated. Ten' nicely done turkeys went a good ways toward mak ing the evening very enjoyable. Fire •Chief John C. Kindler ami his assist ant, BUnvard C. Halbert, were among the guests. Talks were given by Charles Stroll, president of the company, and thief Kindler. l>avid W. Bowman acted as toastmastor. After the dfliner a de lightful musical program was rendered •by some clever local talent. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman in Panama Dean M. Hoffman, managing editor af the "Patriot,' - and his bride, who was Miss Kthel W. Miller, also of the "Patriot" staff, arrived in Panama on December 3, and will pass some time in the vicinity of the isthmus. \ m specials' '• -" For Saturday Only | WATCHES RINGS Watch Bracelet j § Elgin or Walt- Diamond Rinp In _ TelV\<>*ye™»~ ' ° f optional open fact or fA brilliance, one "Mw J hunting case; if V tliat would sell / w J§ ladles' or gents; 11 ] for almost double I regular $15.00 \\ JJ •> value; special, the P rlce we ask . Watch Bracelet, gold filled, Saturday only Saturday spscial, values up to $lO, • Saturday spe slo S2O $5 Wfe 26 Piece Set /fvC\\- ■ Rogers & Son f! Table Silver ft gy This set consists of six knives, six forks, six table spoons, six £$ fr Sm \VWS teaspoons, one sugar shell, one butterknife. All In beautiful mn- H'l hogany sliver chest, Sold elsewhere from sll to sl3. Saturday vS' £]/ |j 1 Wo alßo sell Community and Alvln Plate. 4t jjj Jjr p A " CHAFING S» 1847 ROGERS BROS. W ?ZL a 5 J TI MSHES LOT 30-B. These are . the famous aswell as the Dinner, Tea and Fruit Knlve&ara ■ ■ Menning-Bowlhan chafing the be,t that money and long experience c«d |13,50. nickel or cop per Xlsh. Hold produce. The handles are Nickel Silver 9U- 4 * regularly for SG. Special ver soldered, light and handsome, and Fine Q«n»rAf ' or Saturda y only. Crualble Steel Blades insure a thin, keen cutting JCCICt . _ - ~ edge. Spoons, Forks, etc.. to match can be m ,1 J r i /% purchased at your convenience. Let u» >how "'"flnl y y vU tou other articles ol this famous ware. ■ WE CASH CMitINTMAb HAVINGS CHUCKS The P. H. CAPLAN CO. JEWELERS 18 NORTH FOURTH STREET The Store of Standard Quality Where Modest Prices Are Marked in Plain Figures Friends Treat Fitzgerald Mean The "specialty" introduced at the Family Theatre, Third and Harris streets, last evening was John Fitz gerald, an Enola railroad man, who had an "act." His friends, who were re sponsible for his appearance in public, greeted him with a shower of foodstuffs and most anything else throwable. The kind electrician back on th'e stage turn ed out the lights and allowed him to make a graceful retreat. Carruthers Class Orator The senior class of Princeiton Uni versity, according to word received here to-day, has chosen as class orator Donald W. Carruthers, of thus city, now •holder of the junior medal for oratory. The class honored two other Ha.rris •burg 'bovs, selecting Willliam Mell hennv Smith the oraitor for Washing ton 's Birthday and Wier Stewart, a commiitte-envan. How are "the movies going to present a 250 mile battle front in three reels? 13 LIGHTING PLAN IS CHANGED Clusters Will Be Omitted at Certain Street Intersections Plans to plaice sixteen cluster light standards in Walnut and Locust streets between Front and Third, as outlined in the budget of ltorry F. Bowman, Commissioner of Public, Safety, has been modified so as to omit the streiit sections between Front and Second and permit continuing the new and modern system up Second street, from Locust. At lelaat two additional blocks of Second street wild gelt those new lights •under this latest plain which was made in order to conform wiith the original scheme to make the central bu»ineua soction more brilliant. Coal Breaker Burns; Half Million Losa Wilkes-Barre, Dec. 11.—The Ewen breaker of the Pennsylvania Coal Com pany at Port Griffith was entirely de stroyed by fire to-day. The ' loss is ■pltaed ait half a million dollars. Fif teen hundred employes are thrown out of work.