4 BAMNffi!I>«WDER Absolutely Pure No Alum—No Phosphate TELLS CHILDREN OF BIRD LIFE William S. Essick Urges Boys and Girls to Be Kind to Feathered Folk Before a large audience of boys and \ Kirls in the .Harrisburg Public' Library auditorium this afternoon,! William S. Kssick gave an illustrated ! talk on "Birds and Bits of Nature; i Kindness to All and Cruelty to None." , Mr. Essick who has spent much j ttme in studying bird lore showed striking pictures of bird life in this vicinity and in some of the other parts, of the country. He told the boys and girls that his fiast equipment was a jackknife and a five-dollar camera, and then gave lntarestiug information j about the methods of getting pictures of birds and their homes. His entire I address centered around the con servation of birds and he made an 1 open appeal to the? children to study the feathered and to learn to love them. A number of the Views shown were j taken in the woods and nooks near Harrisburg. showing many different 1 kinds of birds, their y»ung, nests, and favorite haunts. Mr. Essick then exhibited a number of slides taken while on a western | tour and told many lfrttle stories of his experiences in obtaining the pic-' tures. Several colored slides were shown, one showing a rainbow in the Grand Canyon. Freaks in birdlife. atfid birds mak ing faces added to the humor of the little talk, which was Interspersed with views of the horrnes of great nature lovers, and pictures of a num ber of persons noted for their study i of birds. Mr. Essick also gave the boys and girls the names of authors and books dealing with nature study and then gave a short account of but- j terflies and moths befone closing his address. RABBI SENTENCED FOB INVOKING BLESSING By Associated Press Amsterdam, May 20. A. Bloch, grand rabbi of Belgium, has been sentenced to six months' imprison ment for preaching a sermon in which he invoked a blessing on the Belgian '• royal family and expressed a hope for 1 their speedy return. TRENTON STRIKE BROKEN By Associated Press I, Trenton, N. J., May 20. The' striking carmen of the Trenton and; Mercer County Traction Company re- ] j sumed their posts to-day and cars i 1 are being run on schedule time. The strikers at an early morning confer- j ence decided to arbitrate the rein-11 statement of dismissed conductors. ! i if ffil hungry at bedtime For that bef ore-bedtime Hunger there's nothing more nourishing, more satisfying, more digest ible, than Uneeda Biscuit. Soda crackers are a most nourishing flour food—the most easily digested. Uneeda Biscuit are the best soda crackers—naturally, then, it stands to reason that Uneeda Biscuit are best adapted to the bedtime meal. Always fresh, crisp and good. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY ""g'"g UP Father * »" (fi) ® J - ) f -\ [ | SMD I P N "I L [ I 1 THIS ""V* **" I 81 SPIFFLEDINKT] IM| I SPJFFLEDIISK- J C '-"■U THlN"]*> BUSTCO • ] D'N N - , LULL >— ) HUH? 1 , SPIFFLEDINK I j a L,KE ,C^ E \ AIN " ''S~~"Y "SPFFFLEDINK • SATURDAY EVENING, BANKERS SCORE ll RESERVE ACT Donald McCormick and Other Delegates Point to Flaws in System "One-man control" and the lack of specific regulations were among the features of the Federal reserve act at tacked yesterday by a number of tiust i company officials at the last meeting iof the Pennsylvania Bankers' Asso jciation's convention at the Bellevue ' Stratford. I{. I* Austin, Federal reserve agent ■ in the Philadelphia district, defended the act. He laid great stress on "five I hundred million dead reserves which the Federal reserve act has revivified", i asserted that the bankers "are to be : congratulated" on the passage of the law, and said that the "only troubles) you have are those resulting from our i unusual prosperity." The discussion which precipitated j ■ the attack was on "What essential changes should be made in the Fed- j cral reserve system to render member- j ship in its attractive to banking in- ' I stitntions working under State char-, I ter ?" Criticise Reserve Act John G. Reading, president of the I Susquehanna Safe Deposit Company, i of Williamsport, put a world of sai'- J casm into his description and cnti- ! cisms of the limitations of the system, and asserted that what is needed is ; "not changes in the act and system, i but in the whole field, the whole sit uation.'' Only by placing all the fin.'tn- \ ! ciai institutions of the country under i Federal control, either by an amend- ! ment to the Constitution or by an act i of Congress, he said, can thev attain ! j their greatest efficiency. Donald McCormick, president of the j I Dauphin Deposit Trust Company, of Harrisburg: Albert A. Jackson, vice- j president of the Uirard Trust Com pany, Philadelphia, and B. M. Mariin, treasurer of the Union Banking and \ Trust Company, of Du Bois, were in i sympathy with this position, while j Montgomery Evans, president of the j Norristown Trust Company, of Nor- ' ristown, was "not able to tind the re, ! serve system at all compatible with ; trust company business in Pennsyl- 1 vania. Officers Elected These officers were elected: J. W. B. 1 Bailsman, president, of the Farmers' Trust Company, Lancaster, president: < Lawrence E. Sands, president of the! First-Second National Bank, Pitts- j burgh, vice-president; Robert J. Mat- j torn, cashier of the Union National j Bank. Huntingdon, treasurer. It was decided to let the council of I administration determine the place of j next year's convention. Ue SociaHhwtes Story No. 5 The Millionaire Plunger Plot by George Bron6on Howard. Novolization by Hugh C. Weir. Copyright Kalcm Company. (Continued from Vtaterdar.) Mary tried to change the subject. But Mona came baok to her father# troubles, and hte Idea, again and again. "Oh, I don t know. Mona!" said Mary, at last. "But I'll tell you what we ran do. We might go down and see Dadl Then you could talk to him." "Splendidl" said Mona. "Let's start at once!" "I'd like to coma, too," said Gerry. "I'll get my car and take you down. How about that?" "That would be splendid!" aald Mona. "Are you willing, Mary?" Mary was. And so It was arranged, j Gerry, of course, did not stfe neeruur. who was waiting outside the res rant, epring into a taxlcab when J 1 dropped her handkerchief. But i was what happened And when. R little laMona In an enterprise of this sort. It seemed to him more of a hold on her than he had ever had before, and that. If this went throuerh she-would find It much more difficult to maintain their relationship on a formal plane. And he thousrht. too, that what he had seen was enough to prove that there was a possibility of deception, rt was th« evidence of his own eyes that he rellet Upon. And it was upon exactly tblß Tact that they had all counted. To Be Contlauad Tomorrow. SONS OF ITALY IIKHK MAY 21 Finishing touclies to the program ! for the annual convention of the ; "Figle D'lialia" Sons of Italy to be : held In tlie Chestnut Street Auditor ium, May 28-31 are being made by the committee in charge. The com munity represents the three local I lodges, Carlo Alberto, 272, San Me chele, 329, Cittadinl Halo-American, j HARRISBURG t&f&l TELEGRAPH OAMUSE]^MENTS^ THEATRICAL DIRECTORY MAJESTIC Vaudeville and Moving > Pictures. " i COLONlAL,—"Civilization's Child." " s V'e»K lh of the Weak." ; \ ICTORIA— Love s Toll." ! HARRISBURG ACADEMY Ben Greet i Plajers, Saturday evening- May 27 : i "Taming ol the Shrew." ' 1 PLAYS AMD PLAYERS William Gillette has repealed his stage success for the screen, nay the I , critics, in hlc. seven-part film of ''Slier- : lock Homes." A heavy booking; Is claimed In America, England and Aus . trail a. Cyril Maude, the English actor, will; sail for shortly to b© present at the wedding: of his daughter. Next season he will come back with two new plays. one by Haddon Chambers and ! the other by Michael Morton and ?i ep & en , U ' a £? tk H< * wUI appear at the Empire Theater. New York, In one of then; through an arrangement lie ■ made with the late Charles Fxohman. Miss Margery Maude will accompany her father to England. She has lately ! been appearing as leading woman with i | Ueorge Arliss in "Paganinl." It Is said that Elsie .lanis will take the leading role in "Stop! Look! Listen!" which C. B. Dillingham ts to have re written. She ought to l.e a great Im provement on Gabriel of the Lllllea. Lucrezia Bori, who wss disabled ! through a surgical operation last sum- | j mer in Italv, is now so far recovered ; that she will be able to take lier place [ at the Metropolitan Opera House. New I York, next season. Mile. B..rt lins not sung- at all since her participation In a [concert given for a war charity In j Italy. It wii to this appearance that her phvsiclan attributed the complete I l los* of her ringing voice for so many j months. I .OC A I. THE ATERS Lovers of good music should not fail to hear tne splendid male quintet who furnish the harmony In "The I At the Luck of a Totem." the Ala tlnjentlc jtstic's headllr.er the last halt | I ... . ... week. Their song en titled "Pralrieland." is scoring a dis < tlnct lilt at each performance. For the ' tirst half of next week Bart McHugh's j big musical comedy tabloid. "The Caba [ ret Girl," will giva the entire perform ance, the act lasting about an hour- I and-a-half. A company of eighteen! I people are employed In the act, which i ;is full of good comedy, beautiful cos ; tumes and excellent musical numbers. The scenery is an exact replica of a ! millionaires' club at Newport. Anna Delir. who is co-starred with William H. Thompson in "Civilization's Child," Ince's "Civilization'* ( lilld" Triangle-Kay «t Colonial Bee feature, showing at tile Colonial to-day displayed remarkable courage during the making of h scene in which a platoon of Russian cavalry charges over her as she lies prostrate on the ground. She was. however, less frightened than those w ho watched the spectacle, this being- because of her faith in the theory that horses do not step on people unless by accident. On the same program is a new two reel Triangle-Kay Bes coined-- called "A Hough Night." This is the first com edy produced by this company, and f it is a sample of the others that are to follow, they bid fair to become as popular as the Keystone comedies. Mary Fuller will apear in "The Strength of the Weak" to-day only at the Regent. >lo»y Fuller at iter father, dying llie Urgent by accident. had committed Pauline D'Arcy to the keeping of an elderly man as her protector and legal guar dian. The gili, alone in the world, vig orously healthful, ambitious and eager to make her name famous: the man who was charged with her protection made her a victim of his own desires. This price paid, the girl t ntei ed col lege. plunged into her studies and hoped that forgetfulnes.s would come with the lapse of time. During gradua- ' tion exercises her eyes met those of a handsome young 111:111 and a pure love was instantly created. Their associa tion led to a love which finally must rule their destiny. Just what the girl really did will be disclosed in "The; Strength of the Weak" to-day. One of New York City's greatest de partnunt stores and Ilazei Dawn and her violin play important parts in "The Saleslady," in which .Miss Dawn will appear 011 Monday and Tuesday. The moral to be drawn from the his tory of a young girl who "loves un wisely but not too "Love's Toll'' well." is obvious, and ! :it the Daniel Carson Good-i Victoria Today man, in his five-reel drama. "Dove's Toll." states clearly and shows the price his 1 heroine paid for blindly trusting a man against whom she had been warned. 1 There is al«o another moral to be de rived from this great photodrama: Hap- i piness that is founded upon a lie will not endure. Rosetta Bruce, as Marion Dane, reflects the shallow nature of the | heroine with truth and gives her an ; added nersonal charm that is all her I own. Hichard Buliler. as the doctor, is : all that could lie expected in tills dif- ! (lcult role. For Monday Mabel Talia- 1 ferro, in a Metro five-act production en- 1 titled. "Her Great Price." <'harley Chaplin will be shown here in his fun- i niest comedy Friday and Saturday next, May 26 and 27, In "Carmen." BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. Try Telegraph Want Ads ~ ' here not alone Ucriiunf pUceM are l(»w*r, but tierauKe qualities arc bettt ( r>^>^^HY^^^' i ► Now For a Monday Sale of ; NEW MILLINERY At Less Than Manufacturers' Prices ! ► All This Season's Stylish Creations at Special Prices For Monday Only ' :| «.«.»! v.„„ |: : « yp '. ice '.... 69c ~ $1.48 ;i > *- * v < J ;s2to $3 Actual Values $1.50 Actual Values ] ( Lot ol 88 ) ' ► Milan Hemp, Lisere, etc.. Z „ , xr _ . . _ . J < , in black and colors, newest Panama Hats, newest New Trimmed Outing and < shapes. Monday AQ shapes. Monday OO _ Sport Hats. Mon- AO i price J7OC price, choice OOL day price, .choice, TrOv 4 N *■ i ► TRIMMI NGS ' ► Three special lots, comprising the very latest novelties. ► AV EXCEPTED VA Monday prices, < : (( 25h| 15c ' 19ca " d25c i i ; V. department JJ Soutter's lc to 25c Department Store < " Where Every Day Is Bargain Day < LOCAL RIFLE CLUB READY FOR WORK Made Requisition For Rifles and Ammunition; to Practice on Lueknow Range The doctrine of preparedness lias enthusiastic advocates in Harrisburg. The Harrisburg: Rifle Club, an organ ization formed recently under the act of Congress approved April 27, 1914, providing for the organization of government rifle clubs, has taken the initial stops toward securing a membership which will demonstrate that this city intends to be in the fore rank for national preparedness. The club has forty-one charter members and has elected the follow ing officers: President, 11. A. Douglass, who has seen active service in the Philippine Islands; vice-president, 11. B. Kirk; treasurer, 11. 11. Mc-Dees; secretary, C. S. Land is; range officer, G. W. Thompson. Oimrtcr Received The club has received a charter and has made requisition on the Spring field, Mass., and Frankford, Pa., arsenals for 2 3 Krag rifles and for ammunition which it is expected will be received in a few days. The members are purchasing their own rifles, but are not financially able to purchase, or lease, sufficient grounds for a range for outdoor shoot ing. or for an indoor range. Arrange ments have been made for the tem porary use of the range of Companies D and 1 and the Governor's Troop range back of Lucknow. The membership of the organiza tion is open to any person more than sixteen years of age and applicants are requested to forward their appli cations at once, as the next quarterly report for membership and for rifles and ammunition will be made in June, each member being entitled to 120 rounds of ammunition free. NOKWAY SAWNti DAYLIGHT By Associated Press Chrisliania, May 20. The legis lature lias passed" the daylight saving bill, advancing the clock one hour. The new regulation goes into effect on May 22. AMUSEMENTS To-dn y, MARY KUI.I.KIt, In a arrrrn vrralon of (bp great problem play, "THE STRENGTH OF THE WEAK" A