A —— THER FIL WonO Germans Get The Reply To Their Counter Proposals OR FIGHT MUST SIGN Enemy Compelied To Do Own Trans lating, And Forty-eight Hours Are Added To Original Five Days. Paris.— The final reply of the Allied and Associated powers to the condi- tions of peace handed to the Germans at Versailles May 7th was delivered to the German Delegation Monday and made public shortly afterward. The Germads are allowed five days to accept or refuse the treaty as it stands. If they accept, peace will be signed at once; the armistice will terminate on Satur day (June 21), and the powers will take such steps as may be necessary to enforce their terms, The principles of the original con- ditions have been.vigorously upheld, nodifications in detail explanations of the effect of execution are made. The reply is in two parts—a geenral covering letter and seriatim discussions of the general counter-proposais. The Changes Proposed. certain many The changes include guarantees of coal from that territory Frontier rectifications in West Prus sia. Ouinission third gone in the Schleswig plebiscite. of the Temporary Army from 100.000 to 200.000 men. “They believe that it is not only a Just settlement of the great war, but that it provides the basis upon which the peoples of Europe can live to gether in friendship and equality.” The clause adds that the treaty creates the machinery for the peaceful adjustment of all international prob lems by discussion and consent aud represents a sincere and deliberate at tempt to establish “that reign of law, based upon the consent of the gOV- erned, and sustained by organized opinion of mankind,” which was the agreed basis of the peace, Must Accept Or Reject. It is added that the treaty in its present form must be accepted or re jected, “The Allied and associated powers,” it continues, “therefore require a dec laration from the German delegation within five days that they are prepared to sign the treaty as now amended. If they declare within the period that they are prepared to sign the treaty as it stands, arrangements will be made for the immediate signature of the peace at Versailles. In defanlt of such a declaration, this communica tion constitutes the notification pro of the 16th of February, 1819, prolonging the armistice signgd the 11th of November, 1918, and again prolonged by the agreement of the 13th of December, 1918, and 16th of January, 1919, and the said armis tice will then terminate on the and the ke such steps as think needful to force their terms.” they TWO MORE STATES RATIFY. Suffrage Amendment. Columbus, Ohio. The Ohio Gen Assembly ratified the Federal suffrage wWOoms amendment and immediate! thereafter passed a b Ohio women the right t« for Pres } YOi¢ sl - G94 . 3 electors 1820 should ths amendment mit within a month of signature of those laws an Offer coma ion on ceive suggest obligation Certain detailed modifi ions finance terways of the sion. Assurance econ clauses, pre nosed i membersh of ip in the League of Nations in the early future if Germany fulfills her obligations With treaty, con : interlineations in red ink, changes had been made in it, covering by Pre Clemenceau, the Peace Conference. The covering note cast gates Germany for protesting against the treaty on the ground that the revised tho Lil€ note, written president of severely mistice M. Clemenceau says she occupies today in the estimation of the world for being responsible for & war which was “the greatest crime against humanity and the freedom of the people that any nation, calling it eelf civilized, bas ever consciously omitted. * -— ' Clemenceau’s Letter, The covering letter from M. Clem enceau in part follows: “The Allied and associated powers, have given the most earnest considera delegates on the draft treaty of peace The reply protests against the peace on the ground that it conflicts with the terms upon which the armistice of No vember 11, 1918, was signed, and that it is a peace of violence, and not a peace of justice. The protest of the German delegation shows that they fail to understand the position In which Germany stands today. They seem to think that Germany has only to make sacrifices In order to attain peace,” as if this were but the end of some mere struggle for territory and power, The Allied and associated powers, therefore, feel it necessary to begin their reply by a clear statement of the judgment of the world, which has been forged by practically the whole of civilized mankind. “In the view of the Allied and as sociated powers, the war which began on August 1, 1914, was the greatest crime against humanity and freedom of the people that any nation calling Itself civilized has ever consciously commitied. For many years the rul ers of Germany, true to the Prussian tradition, strove for a position of dom. inance in Europe. They were not sat. isfled with that growing prosperity and influence to which Germany was entitied, and which all other nations were willing to accord her; they re quired that they should be able to dictate and tyrannize over a subservi ent Europe, as they dictated and tyrannized over a subservient Ger many, Letter Last Word, Clause 8 says: “In conclusion, the Allied and assoclated powers must make it clear that this letter and the memorandum attached constitute their last word. They have examined that German observation and counter.pro- posals with earnest attention and care, They have, In consequence, made im portant modifications in the draft treaty. But, In its prineipics, they stand by Ki. ' Kansas Also In Line. Kan The Kans U. 8. From Gunboat. government 1 4 new pna to the Outbreaks have occurs the capital, has entere iispatches and the seri American forces on th Cas yw at Port Limon, are held can be landed at ice, it 8 md was said. The com instructed not to instructions from Washington act without specific WOULD DISMEMEER TURKEY On Question, Washington. —8enator King, Utah abolishment of the Turkish Govern ment and the placing of territory now mandatories. The resolution’s pre said réports from Paris Indi cated that the Peace Conference "econ templates that the Turkish Govern ent shall be perpetuated, and added that the Turkish Government has ALLIED TROOPS ADVANCE. Move Against Hungarian Reds To Ald Czechs. Berlin. On the expiration of the uitimatum to the Hungarian Soviet Government, the Entente immediately began military action according to the Neue Freie Presse of Vienna. and French troops have arrived at Press burg, 234 miles east-southeast of Vienna. The French Government. the newspaper adds, emphatically refuses to negotiate with the representatives of Bolshevism in Hungary. TO BUILD FRENCH SHIPS HERE. Hurley Approves Order For Construc tion Of 500,000 Tons. Parig. Orders placed In American shipyards for a half million tons of merchant ships to go under the French flag have been approved by Edward N. Hurley, chairman of the United States Shipping Board, and he has in formed M. Casenave, French Charge d'Affaires at Washington, to this ef fect, SN AS SN. KRONSTADT NEAR FALL. White Flag Said To Have Been Raised Over Naval Base, Helsingfors.—The fall of Kronstadt, the naval base of Petrograd, is immi nent, according to reports received by naval circles here from Revel, the cap ital of Ethonia. The reports say that # white flag has been hoisted aver the fortress several times by itt Bolshe vik defenders. PENNSYLVANIA | STATE ITENS | 5 Tens St 5 Sma AA TS 28 ———— Pottstown.—~A landscape artis{ from Pennsylvania Btiate College who view- ed the grounds estimated that it will cost $02,000 to transform Gabel's Mea- dows, this , into a sallors’ memorial park, and $10,000 an- nually to maintain it, Reading Esther Clouser, a young girl riding tandem on a motorcycle driven by Francis Fisher and John B, Sherker, a store shipping clerk, were badly injured in a here. girl Is sustained a fracture of the knee when place soldiers’ driving accident The believed to have the motorcycle struck a motortruck at a turn In a suburban read, Reading of many com- plaints about the smoke nuisance from trains passing through the Reading Rail issued ansiructions Because the city, pjdiny to all firemen to kes Pp “output” 3 passing Way has Siok on sii #n ¥ Mor. five Lock this of the normal being caught Hhe Rireamns ie : Most of the on flies front aiken wy good are made, Robesonia A! sis higve tigitde their sevenieen Bppenr of Yew ance Ir winnie an the Routh slow ® the borough . ¥X untain near Moyer twig his the twig locust she Hazleton under the of having re fellow he didn’t care anything or France or any other country exo pt the United the grand jury at Williamsport. He he cause it was contended by in orchard, ‘lis attached to Alfred eEponage act Leinfort, arrested on the charge Ashmore to the war that about England marked at wWarkmen during States, war freed by court acquitted of the distriet was that he bad committed no crime against American Reading Inquiries are being made here about the census supervisorship next year for the Berks Lehigh census district. The position will pay $1800 for seven months’ work, Although the work is not done until next year, the appointment may be made in July of this year. Chambersburg —8truck in the tem ple by a piece of metal which chipped from a steel bar which he was using, David Hoover, of this place, employed by the Cumberland valley district of the Pennsylvania rallroad as a track repairman, almost lost his life when an artery in his head was severed by the chip. After receiving first ald, Hoover was rushed to the hospital. He will recover, Hazleton. Strawberry week here found housewives on strike against canning the fruit at a price of forty. five to forty-eight cents a box, Mt. Carmel—Picking at a daulin cap that he found in the street, Peter Andrewlovich had both hands blown off. He was taken to the State hos pital, Worcester Howard M, Weber, of this place, has a rye stalk seven and a half feet long. . Bloomsburg Coming In contact with a live wire while working on a high pole, Henry F. Geist, a lineman, was electrocuted here, Heys the government, Lehigh Gap--An nccldental death certificate has been Issued by Coroner i tie R, McFarland, burned to death in home, was found cellar of her who the SBunbury.--Publle school teachers here, who are among the poorest paid in the larger boroughs of the state, petitioned for an increase in salary. They point obit that thels nol reach of raflroad clerks, Connellsville, Arrested charge of robbing a Rogers, of this city, was released fron custody when she pald a fine and re turned the $00 which had lifted She failed to explain how thi imstructors incomes do sil workers those und thie Siella on soldier, she she got money, Chambersburg—During the month of May, F. A. Forman, of inspector of welghts and measures {for this piace, Franklin county, Inspected 741 welg and of that he eh Ineasures various Kinds, found only Forty of correct number, incorrect the sis found were adjusted twenty-seven Huzieton John condetinned Clrged with Skebs, & when the returned eran, former the I's John Butchko and Wi viteh, of West Hazleio: trial under Moody, who r stn d stripes 1 i Ie £1000 ¥ . Joseph f cancies on the regular monthly Walter W Begtty Warren. WHR severe] 1 Wey this year sent irom the ate | thin the Iz yeral i were eries wi and have viaced mans creek in the County, near the state go; Shortly Wes ers | over Ktutes fawn Unit | senate votedl on suffrage women employes of the El gar here, number, voted In iar elections ch hundred in se nlohy factory several advance of the They cast rego. their halloty referendum changing the working hours, deciding to day light by starting work at six A M cach day during the summer and qui at a shop SAY § ting earlier each afternoons Birdsboro,— The this borough hag increased tax rate for thie year from 14% mills to 18 mills, an increase of 31% mills The board will have to pay £28500 mon In teachers’ salaries in the com ng term Weiseport schoo bosrd o the schoo While ©. H. Strohl, a old child, belonging to a distant neigh bor, who had wandered away from its mother while she was doling work up siairs, Wayneshoro.- United States Wayneshoro In the two years the war In the war the district, which includes subweribed more than $T.500.000 to ald the government in its fight against the Germans, This amount 18 more than was sabscribed by some entire counties in the state of Pennsylvania. There were 11.020 sub srribers, Mechanicsburg~In n battle with a monster trout while fishing near here, David A. Ulrich had hig steel fishing rod snapped. He suceeded, however, in landing the giant fish, which weigh. ed 4% pounds and measured twenty three inches, Weatherly ~The bourd of directors of the middie coal fleld poor district! have reduced the ax rate from 3% to 3 mills, Mount Cargoel Caught under a fab of top conl at Richards colliery, Mich ael Kozma, of Exchange, was killed A widow and three children survive Mahanoy City Caught in a prema furely exploding blast at Rock Moun tain eolliery, Stiney Webnck was kill ed and his helper, Anthony Wider, was badly hort, Uniontown. ~~Carpenters here won n strike for wage advance from $6 (c “ Jean Dubue the Sait Lake club of the Boston Red ing heights, and If Mons, Jean good. United fandom the Pacific Nox § ntinnes n't get by “1 pot by all right Southern and Ameri ation.” replied Kerr “That may be so but you w= never get by gue you don't retorted Gleasor te show Kerr how trick. siaop i he fo turn and ietics to Play Ball in New Jersey Village. It's “back to the farm” again for in the American league last season, with which club be aniso starred as an outfielder in those days when Connie® Mack was pulling down pennants, Having now secured his release from the Athletics, “Rube” Intends to take np his residence at Quinton, a rural village In Salem County, N. J, where he helped to organize 8 nine that two years ago would wallop nearly all ri- vals In seven townships, Manager Gleason Mas Mis Men Batting Well and Running Bases Better Than Usual, Manager Gleason of the White Sox not only appears to have his team batting in fine shape, but they are showing more speed on the bases than has usually been the case with Chi. cago American teams of past years, Stealing seven bases In one gnine je something new for the White Sox, es. pecially with Alnsmaith doing the cateh an— T LAKE BY J. M'GRAW - BB he rey John been relen McGraw from sed by to the big league make ti he Giants staff, ued hy to which he ¢ fight to at his 3 oY | had come Hauck r¢ he's sure to "DIAMOND _~ NOTES - 4 ¥ 8 oF i game HIPs from Ping Bodie il . at {| Red Faber will have his®hanner sea- son in the American league if he keeps y his work of recent combats, - -. od Wallace, the youngster who was fry- ng for an Infield job with the Phillies, has been released to Hartford of the | Josh Devore is surpriging the fans { by his work for the Indians. Devore | has been fielding in fine fashion snd | is hitting the ball hard. ® - * H from an Lawson, recently dis- the Canadian army, Is i planning “outlaw” league, to be ! known as the Allled league. . * {| The New York Ysnkees charged {Carl Mays was using an emery ball, but now having beaten him they may : conclude they were mistaken. i . + » {i Manager Lee Fohl of Cleveland is | well pleased at what George Ulle has | shown him and declares the young seml-pro is going to be.a real star. .- & » George { charged Joe Wilhoit, a star in the Coast { league three or four years ago and for {a moment looking lik~ a star In the | big show, seems to have fizzled out with Seattle, - * * Hugo Bezdek has benched South. worth and played Lee in right field The former, who hit for 341 In 64 | games last season, has been doing un- der 100 this season, * * *. Shortstop Jimmy Cooney, who did { mot join the Detroit Tigers and who {thus is technically a member of the | Boston Red Sox, is finally out of the army and no piace to go. » - » A left-hander can’t hit a soathpaw, Not at all, Casey Stengel only pot four hitg, one of them a triple, against the mightiest boy in the National loop, Jim Vaughn, the other day. - . » An allstar association football team will go to Sweden this summer ander | direction of Secretary Thomas Cahill of the United States Football pssocin. tion, the governing council of the sport. "0 Manager Miller Huggins assigned Duffy Lewis to center field to start the season, but sooh changed his mind und switched Duffy to left. Ping Bo die went to center. » Ping will keep on going if he doesn’t watch out . "a George Runge, infielder, who was re leceed by Clarence Rowland of the Brewers, has signed to play with the Nash Motor company team of Keno sha, Artie Pues, Art Kores and Rip Hogerman, former A. A. players, are liso with the club,