"Goldsmith Furniture Makes the House a Home" | Goldsmith's I | Gift Furniture I | And You— | | What shall I buy? That's the monu mental question as the Christmas season approaches 1 nearer and nearer. Every year more thought is | 1' given to the sensible and practical side than ever be fore. People now ask themselves, "Is the gift a thing of comfort?" "Does it have permanent value and is | H' it adapted to the every day life of the recipient"? This store, the recognized home of | the highest grade Furniture at lowest prices has an | answer for every perplexing gift problem. Our three jj I floors are stocked with gift-things that can be enjoy ed by any size purse Furniture that is inexpensive j but good and something that will endure, not only on | | Christmas but the years to come. I GOLDSMITH FURNITURE is | g not the kinds that are simply made to sell —it is || made to last. No better Furniture can be had any- | [where at the regular day in and day out GOLD- 1 SMITH PRICES. Settle your gift question here to- | day you'll do it quickly, satisfactorily and econ omically. Just a Few Suggestions-- f Solid Mahogany Tea Tables plain and inlaid, $6 I to S2O. 1 Solid Mahogany Tea Trays plain and inlaid, $1.50 Ito $6. ( | Smoker's Stand and Trays, $1 to sls. Fitted Cellarettes, $lO to $35. - | Mahogany Sewing Tables — twenty different styles, including the Martha Washington, $6.85 to S2O. Ladies' Desks plain and inlaid mahogany, sl2 to § $75. Mahogany Bookcases, $lB to S6O. H Mahogany Parlor and Library Tables, $8.50 to $55. I I Upholstered Winged Chairs, $ 19.50 to $45. 1 1 Piano Benches, $6 to sls. B Floor and Table Lamps, extensive showing, $3.00 to 8 $35. | Cedar Chests, $lO to $25. j Utility Boxes, $2 to $7.50. j Table Scarfs, $1.75 to $5. g 1 Japanese Basketry, 79c to $5. | Buy NOW for Christmas we'll deliver any time. g' Convenient Charge Accounts can be arranged. 'g North Market Square ILiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii aiiaaii I m;iiiiiaiiiiiH,^ "'THREE NOTABLES TO SPEAK HERE [ Continued tYnm First Page] Department of the Harrisburg Cham ber of Commerce composed of Messrs. John F. Dapp, chairman: Joseph Wallazz, Robert H. Irons, G. F. Watt, C. W. Lynch, Qulncy Bent, Edward Bailey and "W. T. Hlldrup, Jr. This committee will meet In the rooms of the Chamber at 4:30 o'clock this aft ernoon. Cattell Xoted Speaker /' Edward J. Cattell, who will ad TUESDAY EVENING, j dress the Chamber's meeting in honor ! ! of the traveling men is known to al- i | most every diner-out in Pennsylvania, j as one of the most witty and inspiring: speakers in the country. Mr. Cattell addressed the get-together meeting for the organization of the Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce which now has 5,000 members. Mr. Cattell sounded! the keynote at Charles M. Schwab's, recent SIO,OOO dinner to the citizens: of the Bethlehems. Dr. Koo World Known Dr. Wellington Koo, the Chinese minister, wholte coming to Harrisburg j will bo one of the greatest events of j the Chamber's history, is one of the | prominent figures In diplomatic circles I ,at Washington. Dr. Koo is very much! of an American In many ways, as he iis one of the greatest graduates of j Columbia University of New York. While In Columbia, Dr. Koo, was editor of the dally paper published for Its 15,000 students and was head of its debating team. While head of j Columbia debating team Dr. Koo de- I feated every Important college in the ' East with which Columbia had de ] bating contests. He is a young man j of the early thirties. Dr. Jeremiah Jenks, the govern j menial expert who organized the Re i publican system of government for I China pronounced Dr. Koo to be the | best expert on international !aw in I the world to-day. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH! MATCH WILLARD AND CARPENTIER World's and French Cham pions to Mix in Ten-Round Bout in N. Y. Soon New York, Dec. 5. Georgs Car pentier, heavy 'weight champion of France and Jess Willard, wprld's champion, arc virtually matched for a ten-round no decision bout to be fought in this city within the next two months. While the final signatures of the pugilists have not been secured tho verbal consent of both heavy weights ha 3 been obtained and they ar now waUlng for the articles of agreement to be forwarded to them. The sum of $40,000 from the profits of tho match is to go to a French war relief fund and it was on account of this arrangement that permission was obtained for the releaso of Car penUer from the French army. Final contracts for the contest are -expected to be signed by Promoter "Tex" Rickard and the representa tion of the pugilists here within a few days. The date and place of the bout has not been decided but the battle will probably be staged in Med ison Square Garden or a similar place. The match has been in the making for several months and the corre spondence and other arrangements, both domestic and foreign, lift the promotion of the bout within a notch or two or international diplomacy. Carpentier, holder of the European heavyweight championship, has been serving with the French army since virtually the beginning of the war. Rickard failed in all his early at tempts to bring the French and Am erican champions together. It was not until ho enlisted the aid of the mem bers of one of the French relief fund committees that the contest was made possible. Pressure was brought to bear upon the proper officials in France and their consent obtained for Carpentier to ieave the army and the country for about three months. STANDARD OIL" MAGNATE DIES [Continued From First Page] eration and transfusion was performed on the afternoon of November 29 by Dr. Ed-ward Lindemann and Dr. George E. Brewer. Following the operaUon Mr. Arch bold showed increased strength and his physicians and members of his family appeared optimistic that the improvement would be permanent. His simple habits of life and rugged constitution buoyed up the hope that he .would recover. Throughout his illness Mr. Arehbold retained his keen mentality and his strong determination to recover aided for a time the fight to bring him back to health. Relieved in Trust Idea John D. Archbold was almost as closely identified with the history of the Standard Oil as John D. Rocke feller himself. Of the first nine trus tees of the "trust" formed in 1882 he alone remained in this capacity until its dissolution in 1911 at the order of the United States Supreme Court, and it was he who was named to engineer the dissolution, after which he became president and director of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. He was the most active and aggressive fighter in the oil combine and invariably rep resented the Standard Oil on the wit ness stand in the numerous hearings in connection with the government suit to dissolve it. John Dustin Archbold was born at Leesburg, Ohio, July 26, 1848, and was working in a country store at Salem, Ohio, when he heard of the wonderful oil regions in Western Pennsylvania where men were becoming rich over night. In 1864 he went to the oil fields and became a refiner and buyer at Titusville. He became the agent of a new company, the Acme Company, which proved to be an offshoot of the Rockefeller interests, and from that time, in 1875, until his death he was an associate of the Rockefellers. Worth $100,000,000 It has been estimated that his for tune, maue almost entirely in oil and its byproducts, was nearly $100,000,000. Mr. Archbold was one of the best Informed of men in the details of the oil business in all its branches and he held, according to his own statement, that all the practices of the Standard Oil Company were honorable, and, he believed, in conformity to law. "I stand unquestionably," he said In defending the trust Idea, "for co operative evolution. I helieve that the large corporations of the present day represent more nearly this co-operation than any other system yet under taken." Although Mr. ArehboM was "not par ticularly conspicuous as a benefactor, he made many large gifts, Including a sum of $400,000 to Syracuse University in one lump, besides annual donations of smaller amounts. He was also a church member and a liberal con tributor to religious work. He was married in to Miss Annie Mills, of Titusville, Pa,, and maintained a beautiful estate at Cedar Cliff, Tarry town-on-Hudson. and a home at Southampton, Long Island. Fears For Neutrality of the United States .gjsssi —i In an address which has aroused much Interest James M. Beck, former Assistant Attorney General of the United States, said he believed the war In Furope was the besinning of a titanic conflict. He said the world is ' likely to see a "seething caldron of In s ternational hatred for some decades" i and it would bo difficult for the United i States to keep out. j At Troup's Christmas Player-Pianos $395 and $455 LRA home needs the complete piano admittedly leads the world. But if the I~J that every one can play and there is cost of an Angelus is beyond your reach— „TrhirChris,™ y h ° mC ShOU,d n °' " aVC ■ WM S5. • For those who want the best there can For $ 395 > r ° u can secure a Frances Ba be no indecision, no other choice except the con '< f° r $455 a Marshall & Wendell. In Angelus at $585 to SIOSO, for the Angelus every way these instruments arc Equal to Any Sold Anywhere at Buy one of these Player-Pianos now of dealing with Troup's, the city's leading for Christmas—at a lower price than you music house, and the satisfaction of know would pay elsewhere for an inferior instru- ing that your Xmas player-piano is fully ment of unknown make. Have the security guaranteed. A Down Payment $lO Sends One Home Balance $8 or More Monthly 25 Music Rolls, Bench, Scarf and Tuning Included Free J. H. Troup Music House TROUP BUILDING 15 SOUTH MARKET SQUARE ————— am^m^ Doctor Says Crying Of The Woman Of Today Is More Iron I TO PUT STRENGTH IN HER NERVES AND* COLOR IN HER CHEEKS. / ■■ Any > Tires Easily, is Nervous or Irritable, or Looks Pale, Haggard And Worq jh Should Have Her Blood Examined for Iron Deficiency. Administration of Pure Nuxated Iron in Clinical Tests Gives Most Ac tonishing Youthful Strength and Makes Women Look Years Younger^ It "Thar* can be no healthy, beautiful, roy oheeked women without Iron," says Dr. Ferdinand Kins, a Now York physician and author. "In myj recent talks to physi- l clans on the grave and, serious consequences of iron deficiency in the blood of American •women, I have strong ly emphasized the fact that doctors should prescribe more or ganic iron—pure nux atcd iron—for their nervous, run - down, weak, haggard-looking women patients. Pal lor means anemia. The skin of the anemic woman is pale, the flesh flabby. The muscles lack tone, the brain fags and the memory falls, and often they be come Weak, nervous. Irritable, despondent and melancholy. WTien the Iron goes from the blood of women, the roses go from their cheeks. . "In the most common foods of America, the starches, sugars, table syrups, candles, polished I rice, white bread. oda crackers, 1 biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti, ta- I ploca, sago, farina, degerml- - nated cornmeal no longer Is* iron to be found. Refining processes have removed the Iron of Mother Earth from these impoverished foods, and silly methods of home cook ery, by throwing down the waste pipe the water in which our vegetables are cooked, are responsible for another grave iron loss. "Therefore, If you 'wish to preserve your youthful vim and vigor to a ripe old age, you must supply the iron de ficiency in your food by using some form cf organic Iron, Just as you would use salt when your food has not enough salt. "As I havo said a hundred times over, organic Iron is the greatest of all Btrength builders. If people would only throw away patent medicines and nau seous concoctions and take simple nuxated Iron. I am convinced that the lives of thousands of persons might be saved who now die every year from pneumonia, grippe, consumption, kidney, liver, heart trouble, etc. The real and true cause which started their disease wan nothing more nor less than a weakened condition brought on by a lack of iron in the blood. "On account of the peculiar nature of woman, and the great drain placed upon her system at certain periods, she re quires iron much more than man to help make up for the loss. "Iron is also absolutely necessary to enable your blood to change food into living tissue. Without It, no matter how much or 'what you eat, your food merely passes through you without do ing you any good. You don't get the strength out of it, and as a consequence you become weak, pfiie and sickly look ing. just like a plant trying to grow in a soil deficient In iron. If you are not strong or well, you owe It to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can I Wfr. I * JBS Dr. Ferdinand King, New York physician and au thor, telling physicians that they should prescribe more organic iron—Nuxated Iron—for their pa tients Says anaemia iron deficiency is the greatest curse to the health, strength, vitality and beauty of the modern American Woman. - —Sounds warning against ________ use of metalic iron which may injure the teeth, cor rode the stomach and do far more harm than good; ad vises use of only pure nux ated iron. walk without becoming tired. Next take two flve-gratn tablets of ordinary nux ated Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. 1 have seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were ail ing all the while double their strength and endurance and entirely rid them- Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ads DECEMBER 5, 1916. selves of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days' time eimplyi by taking iron in the proper form. And this, after they had in some cases been doctoring for months ■without obtaining any benefit. But don't take tha old forms of reduced iron, Iron acetate, or tincture oil iron simply to save a few cents. The Iron demanded by Alother Naturo for the red coloring matter in tha blood of her children Is, alas! not that kind of iron. You must take Iron in a; form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated to do you any good, other* wise it may prove worse than useless. "I have used Nuxated Iron -widely In my own prac* tice in most severe aggra* vated conditions with un* falling results. I have Inn duced many other physicians to give it a trial, all of ■whom have given me most surprising reports in regard to its great power as a health and strength builder. "Many an athlete and prize-lighter has won tha day simply because he knew the cecret of great strength and jndurance and Ailed his blood with iron before ha went Into the affray; while many another has gona down In inglorious defeat simply for the lack of iron.'* Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Surgeon of St* Kllzabeth's Hospital, New York City, said: "I have never befora given out any medical Information or advica for publication, as 1 ordinarily ao not be* lleve in it. But so many American worn* en suffer from iron de-4 ficlency with Its at tendent ills—physical weakness, nervous ir* rltablllty, melancholy, Indigestion, flabby, sagging muscles, etc., etc.—and in conie quence of their weak* ened, run-down condU tlon they are so liable to contract serious and even fatal diseases, that I deem It my duty to advise all such to take pure Nuxated Iron. I have taken It myself and given It to my patients with most surprising and satisfactory results. And those who wish quickly to Increase their strength, power and endurance will flnd it a most remarkable and wonderfully effective remedy," NOTE: Knitted Iron, which la pretorlbed and rec ommended above by iihyaiclane in auch a treat variety C,M *' '• not • M'ent medicine nor aecret rented?, but one which la well known to druaglata and whoa* | r ™ c ™<ltunta are widely premrihed by eminent phyatcana both In Europe and America. Unlike tha , I,r< S uo "' J* u ,MJI aaaimllatad, does not Injur* the teeth, make them black nor iin aet the atomach; on the contrary. It la • moat potent remedy in nearly all forma of IndlgeaUon aa wetlaj for nerroue. run-dawn conditions. The manufacturer* have auch great oonlMonoe In nuxated Iron, that tha offer to forfeit (100.00 to any charitable tnatltutloa if they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who laeka iron, and Increano tbrtr atrenrth 200 per oent. or over In four weeka' time, provided they have no terloua onranto faouble. They alao offer to rofiuul your money If It doe* not at least double yo# ■tronath and endurance In ten da"' ','na - 7, dispensed in this city by Croll Keller G. A. Gorges, J. Nelson Clark and all good druggists. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers