12 . AMUSEMENTS I !L '! FAIRBANKS AT RBGENT The first Fairbanks-Artcraft sub ject, "In Again—Out Again," which is ■being shown at the Regent the first three days of this week, bids fair to outshine, by far, any of the smiling comedian's previous efforts. In tho most timely pnotoplay of the day—a combination of patriotism and prepa rationjwith a fusillade of laughs and thrills!! we see the beloved idol of mil lions oT photoplay patrons. Support ing "Doug" in this picture is a Har risburg girl. Miss Arline Pretty. This is tho first of the Fairbanks productions to be released through the Artcraft Corporation, the presi dent of which is the man who made the "Paramount Program." Adolph SCukor; hence all future subjects star- POSLAM ALL QUALITY AND HEALING ENERGY Would you be surprised and pleas ed to awake some morning to find that vour torturing Eczema, your dis figuring and embarrassing skin affec tion. had wholly disappeared. This has been the experience of manv after brief treatment with Pos lam," the quick-acting skin remedy, which possesses the most highly con centrated healing energy, and which is intended and made effective for the very purpose of aiding YOU to have a better, healthier and more sightly skin. Sold everywhere. For free sample ■write to Emergency Laboratories. 243 West Forty-seventh St., New York City.—Advertisement. ORPHEUM TO-DAY TO-MORROW MATINEES FOR LADIES ONLY MATS. Usc and 50c NIGHTS Mc, 50c, 75c THURSDAY MAY 10 THE IIEST BURLESQUE ON THE WHEEL JACK REID'S j RECORD BREAKERS —AND— ASA THE SULTAN'S FAVORITE DANCER All Next Week Beginning MONDAY NIGHT i MATINEES WED. AND SAT. j .-idßr,, William Elliot, F. Ray Comstock j and Morrim GeJ j Preient THE MOST i " \ WONDERFUL PLAV \ IN AMERICA r / -hr% 9Mo nlwYoA : I j 9 7 Month* in I ' Chicago \ M., 6 Month* in Boston Uli er at the Capitol followed, at which he met the members of the Legislature and State officials, and a little after 10 the members of the Dauphin County Bar waited upon him in a body, George Fisher mak ing the address of welcome. Visited Masons Ilcrc At 2 o'clock he returned to the Governor's mansion and at 8 o'clock in the evening figured in a reception that has come to be one of the great events in Masonic history in Harris burg. Lafayette was an ardent Ma son and he was escorted to the lodge room of Perseverance lodge, where he remained about a quarter of an hour fraternizing with the mem bers. Tuesday at noon was again conducted to the Capitol, es corted by a corps of dragoons under command of Major Forster, and companies of volunteers from the counties of Cumberland. Lebanon and Dauphin and the riflemen of town. His arrival was announced by a salute of 13 guns under the direction of Lieutenant Weise, of Carlisle. He was then introduced to the Senate and sot "at. the speaker's right hand." until the Senate ad journed. At 1 o'clock he was ten dered a reception by the House and afterward addressed the students of Dickinson College, who had come down to meet him. A subscription dinner was given the distinguished visitor at 4 o'clock in Matthew Wilson's hotel, at which many well known men, including the Governor and members of the Leg islature, paid their respects. He led the assemblage in singing "Hail Col umbia," and made a speech. Wed nesday he departed with his retenue for York, being escorted to the out skirts of the city by volunteers who assembled in Market Square. The Nation's Guest It was in 1824, nearly fifty years after he had first come to our shores, with his own ship manned and out fitted at his own expense, a young en thusiast of twenty years aroused by the shot that "was heard around the world" to embark his lire and his for tunes in the cause of American lib erty that Lafayette returned. James Monroe, who as a young subaltern had been wounded on the same battle j field upon which Lafayette had shed his blood—the battle of Brandywine j —was then President of the United States. Three of his old-time friends j —Madison, Adams, and Jefferson—■ were ex-Presidents. His greatest j friend—the man in military lamily he had served as a trusted and honored officer and whose mem ory he revered to the point of hom age—George Washington—had pass ed away many years before. It was a new nation, with almost double the i original number of States, tliatj greeted him—greeted him with such , an outburst of enthusiasm and long j rtent-up gratitude that he was over whelmed with the unexpected magni- j tude of the ovation, and the uncoil- ) trollable tears coursed down his] cheeks upon his first landing. As the Nation's Guest The occasion was the dedication of i the Bunker Hill monument. He] came as the guest of the Nation—an honor never before accorded a for- j eign nobleman —In pursuance of an ! unanimous resolution passed by Con- J gress in recognition of the splendid services he had rendered to the Am erican cause. An American warship ! was tendered him by President lion- i roe to convey him from France, but this Lafayette declined, saying that ihe preferred to come as a private' i citizen to meet old friends and re-! \ new old associations. He sailed from j Havre, France, on a ship of the line j on July 12, 1824, accompanied by his i son, George Washington Lafayette, j and his secretary, M. Levasseur, and | he arrived in New York on August 15, landing at Staten Island. One of the first to greet him was Joseph I Bonaparte, brother of the great Na- I poleon, then residing at Bordentown, New Jersey, and the interview be tween the two was marked by the warmest emotions —the years that had rolled between these two men since last they met were charged with | most momentous events for both of them. As the fleet by which Lafayette's ship was convoyed arrived off the Battery at New York a military line composed of thousands of the veter ans of the Revolution was formed, and the people crowding the Battery : and all the adjacent streets, swelled the throng to the number of forty j thousand, and as shout after shout j Begin To Purify Your Winter-Blood Grandmother's Old-Fashion i ed Sulphur and Molasses Did It. | But Not So Well as This Sul , pherb Tablet— Sugar Coated | Through the winter the blood ac- I cumulates poisons because you do I not prespire enough, because you do j not live In the open air, and because > you eat more meat, mush and other rich foods. Every spring we feel slug | gltsh, constipated, liver and kidney I Ills beset us, colds and chronic coughs, pimples, boils and carbun cles, all evidence of Impure, thick, sluggish blood. Sulpherb Tablets (not sulphur tab | lets) are composed of extracts of roots and herbs, combined with sul phur and cream of tartar—and no better physic, blood-tonic and blood cleanser has ever been developed. Every spring thousands who already know their value take them to purify the system of Winter Poisons. Now is the time to begin, so you won't be attacked by serious ailments when Spring and Summer come. Sold by all druggists, 50c per sealed tube with full directions.—Adv went up and the bands began to! play a triumphant welcome to the hero when they tirst caught a glimpse of him upon the deck of his ship, Lafayette was entirely overcome with emotion. He pressed both hands to his heart and said, "It will burst!" then bowed his head and gave way to his feelings. Ills stay in New York was an unbroken succession of civic functions that must have sorely tried the endurance of the old man, then in his sixty-fourth year. From here he started on a triumphal tour of the twenty-four States of the Union, covering more than live thou sand miles, and everywhere he was met with the wildest enthusiasm. Cities, States, legislatures, Governors and members of Congress vied in j their demonstrations of honor and | respect. It was his wish to visit all the old battle fields in which he had participated and all the old familiar scenes of his Revolutionary days —lie wanted to live them over again and to point out the well-remember [ed places to his son. On the trip up I the Hudson it is related, he was on ! deck early in the morning with his son, pointing out with animated ges ture, the spot where Major Andre had been arrested, describing Wayne's capture of Stony Point and searching out with eager gaze the house where he and Washington were breakfasting with Mrs. Arnold when they tirst learned of Arnold's treason. At Baltimore, a pleasant emotional surprise had been prepared for him. General Washington's tent filled with many souvenirs of the commander in-chief, had been set up for his re ception, as part of the civic demon stration. Mere he was met by Gov ernor Stevens, who tendered him the freedom of the State and the city and then conducted him into the tent. Lafayette, at first, did not. grasp the significance of the compliment con veyed in the selection of the tent, but when he stepped inside and look ed around, he recognized at once many of the personal belongings ot his loved commander that had be come familiar to him in the old days of storm and stress, and in a voice of strong emotion, he said simply: "1 remember." When he reached Philadelphia, a city associated in his memory with many tender and thrilling recollec tions, the enthusiasm of the people overleaped all bounds. A reporter for a contemporary newspaper, writ ing of the reception accorded him, said: "Lafayette beat in every grateful heart. Lafayette hung on every lip. Lafayette burst from every tongue. Lafayette glowed on every cheek. Lafayette glistened in every swim ming eye. The name of Lafayette swelled on every gale." The parade in his honor was three miles long, with seventy-eight com panies of infantry, cavalry and ar tillery. He visited Yorktown, where many affecting demonstrations awaited him. A field of tents, as of an army in camp, had been spread to accom modate the vast throngs that as sembled there to meet him. The old house that had been occupied by Cornwallis as his headquarters in Bostonian Shoes for Men thonc "klppy,** Niinppy, mtyl i* h, new Kdkllnli NhnpfM in wide nml nar row toe*. Oxford* niil hlffli mHocm, $5 to $7 II road toe* In button and I are —tan* uiid lilaekM at I." and 90. n 19 SHOE Paul s BTOIIE 11 Xorth Fourth St. TAKE IT IN TIME .lust As Scores of Harrisburg People Have Waiting doesn't pay. j If you neglect kidney backache. Urinary troubles often follow. Doan's Kidney Pills are for kidney backache, and for other kidney ills. Harrisburg women endorse them. Mrs. Robert Marzolf, 315 Hummel street, Harrisburg, says: "X was troubled by my back, which was weak and achy. My kidneys acted irregularly. Another of the family had used Doan's Kidney Pills with such good results that I took them. I can certainly recommend them not j only because of what they jlid for i me, but because of the good they did I others in the family." Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't ! simply ask for a kidney remedy—get ! Doan's Kidney Pills —the same that i Mrs. Marzolf had. Foster-Milburn I Co.. Props., Buffalo, N. Y. $3.00 —TO— Baltimore —OR— Washington SUNDAY -| Q MAY 15 AND RETURN Via READING RAILWAY SPECIAL TRAIN I'IKIH Lv.A.M. Harrisburg 2.40 Hummelstown 2.57 Swatara 3.02 Hershey 3.05 Palmyra 3.12 Annville 3.21 Cleona 3.25 Lebanon 3.32 i Baltimore (Camden Station) arrive 8.05 Washington (Union Station) ar-ive 9.05 > Heturnlnic. Speelal Train wll( j leave W'aNhlnKioii 11 alon Station) 0.10 P. M. f leave llaltlmore (Cam den Station) 7.10 I*. M„ name date 1 'it above Mtatloni*. MAY 8, 1917. 1781, was still standing;; and the place was but little Changed from what It was in the days when he had fought there. Unveiled Monument to a German At Camden, S. C., Lafayette assist ed in laying the cornerstone of a monument to Baron De Kalb, the German putriot, who had come over In the sume vessel with Lafayette, in 17 76, und volunteered his services in the American army l'or three years. De Kalb fell at the buttle of Camden, having been wounded eleven times, and Lafayette, on this occasion, re called the words of Washington upon a certain visit to Dc Kalb's grave: "There lies De Kalb, the generous stranger, who came from a distant land to light our battles and to shed his blood for our liberty. Would to God he had lived to share its fruits." Probably the most moving event in his whole tour was his visit to the tomb of Washington. Arriving at the place accompanied by a great con course of people, he gave evidences of deep feeling as he approached the tomb and requested that he be al lowed to enter lirst alone. He descend ed into the tomb with his head un covered and remained there for some time. He returned with his face bathed in tears and taking his son and Levasseur by the hand he re entered the tomb, knelt reverently by it, kissed it, and then threw his arms about the shoulders of his son and embraced him in silence. 1 The climax of the enthusiasm was reached at I lie ceremony at Hunker Hill. There was nobody left at home for miles around the country on that day, and thousands came from every State in the Union to be present at the event. Third Class City Bill Presented by Beidleman Senator Beidleman last night pre sented to the Senate a resolution for the naming by the Governor of a commission to inquire into the meth ods of bookkeeping and accounting, reports, supervision of debt and other fiscal affairs of cit ies. Other third-class city bills pre sented were from Senator Schantz, Lehigh, providing for city treasurers to be collectors of all taxes and for one assessment of all property. Southerland Sisters, Demonstrators, at Keller's Drug Store For Ten Days Tell Them About Your Hair Troubles 405 MARKET STREET CONSULTATION FKEE Absolutely No Pain f Mr Utnt ta(rTd H f tneta, Inelallac u oiT(> &T7 . fflWSWfc-iH Ue4 air apparatui, raakta .(* * Jj vlW'' *1 extrictlaK ant all dental V Nff.,- \VjT 7 mrk positively patnleu _ /-V aa< la perfectly harm- .O 1 .Vy Uaa. (As-aoljMtteak^^F^<> V EXAMINATION .~U£ FREE XaVV r.M ■ alloy Ma - ... vT Gold cTowna and 223?at0 _'V ▼" Mm. work |3,HH Juliataata Ottca open dally SiSO V rn K*li crown.. .5.00 X to < !• m.| Moo, Wed. lara, 10 a a. ta 1 •• ab MIX rHONB 8533-H. A# * BAIT tbrm) OW pavwnti V/ 320 Market St. (Om the Hit) Harriaburg, Pa. u .• hK * >Mt t := ~ : i For 26 Years We Have Been Making KING OSCAR Sc CIGAR the best we know how. We are making a bid for your patronage by giving you honest quality for "Value Received I ' —in other words, for your nickel. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers / > Technical High School Auditorium >iny r ""h."m?. I"*' 1 "*' Cloning Mualcnl Kvcnt of the enon—Joint Itecltnl PAUL RIEMERS, Tenor; NEWELL ALBRIGHT and CONSTANCE RULISON, Pianists FOPUL.AU rillCßS—soc, 75c, *I.OO and #1.50 400 STUDENTS' TICKETS, AT .50 CENTS ISent* now on HOIC nt Sluice'* Munlc Store, 30 North Second atreet, nnd C. M. Stlrlt Music Warerooinn, 24 North Second utreet. Reserva tion Nby mall und telephone promptly fllled. SticlV I'luno Cited. W. E. McKissick Dies From Injuries Sustained When Struck by Auto William Elmer McKissick, of Fort Hunter, who was hit by an automo bile at RockviUe April 29, died early this morning at the Harrisburg Hos pital. He is survived by his wife and three children —Carl, Rolund airt Violet; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. V. D. McKissick; two brothers, Leroy and John, and one sister, Margaret, all of Harrisburg. Funeral services will be held Frix day afternoon at 2 o'clock, at th# home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. D. McKissick, 3360 North Sixth street, this city. Burial will be made in Dauphin Cemetery. NORWKGIAX BARK SUNK By Associated Press liondon. May B.—The Norwegian bark Dionc was sunk by gunfire on May 2. Her crew of twelve were rescued, including two Americans. [ When Itching Stops | There is one safe, dependable treat* i ment that relieves itching torture and ■ skin irritation almost instantly and I that cleanses and soothes the skin, j Ask any druggist for a 25c or $1 bot j tie of zemo and apply it as directed, j Soon you will find irritations, pimples, i black heads, eczema, blotches, ringworm ! and similar skin troubles disappear. ! A little zemo, the penetrating, satis i fying liquid, is all that is needed, for it banishes all skin eruptions and makej | the skin soft, smooth and healthy. The G. W. Roio Co., Cleveland, O. | _._ . _ _ HEADQUAHTKHS FUR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES