[ERMS IMPOSED UPON BULGARIA - Conditions Follow General Plan of Austrian Treaty ———————— TERRITORY SHE MUST LOSE important Changes In Her Frontiers Are To The South, Where She Cecdes Western Thrace To The Allied Powers. Washington.—A summary of the Bulgarian treaty of peace cabled to the State Department by the American Mission Paris, shows the pact to follow the same general plan as the Austrian treaty. "Many clauses are identical with the Austrian treaty ex- cept for the substitution of names, at aerial navigation, penalties, prisoners of war and graves. “Regarding the change in garian fronti the ehanges are to the garia Western principal and ers and agrees the Bul important where Bul Thrace to south, cedes associated allied pow whatever iis territ the pow but | event disposition of tl ers ultimately lated that ir wasiern ror slightly vantage decide is stipu 1 any be modified itiers shall ad erbia’'s he recognize to Berb, Croats provision fonalily months to demob voluintes reduced (« Army Is clugively 1 the main and frontier control materia; 1s hment the oth confined to one establis er establishment verted All air forces must be garia is two quarter : i within 17 in : WAN ad losed or co! warships, submarines or surrendered. Bul francs Provisi the creation of billions of Years. ons an in are made fo : Bulgaria allied commission, on is but to and mitted for comii this which represented have no votes the sums rough on, committee reparation to are be toda Inigaria agrees to return Rumania and Blovene to Greece the Serb, 8X for Sayre anal aurnea within cial compensation Serbian coal mines for five years deliver coal annually to the Serb, Croat and Slovene slate The those of the Bulgaria shall EG DOO of are similar treaty. and the charges repars financial clauses of the Austrian to rovide priority ov Bulgaria for x cost against tion shall armies of occ the external debt Bulgaria benefits of the Bucharest sk treaties and surrender the moneys and to services of Ottoman nounces Brest-Litovy pre-war public Ire the and to tins rece] treat ARETE secnri those ved according to LAST U. 8. PRISONER FREED. General Brings Word. New York.—The last of the Ameri war have been repatriated Harris, head of the Re Commission, announced on United States on board angport Mount Vernon. General Harris was in months directing the work of locating procuring their freedom and providing them with transportation home The prisoners included besides soldiers captured at the front and naval men, a number of merchant sailors from vessels sunk in the North Sea. of dier General patriation the return to the Ir captive Americans, GOLDMAN TO BE DEPORTED. Federal Warrants Chafing Her With Anarchy lssued, Washington. —Federal warrants for the arrest of Emma Goldman and Alex. ander Berkman, charging them with anarchy and looking to their deporta tion have been issued by the immigra tion anthorities. Mise Goldman is fin. fshing a term In the federal peniten- tjary at Jefferson City, Mo., and Berk- man is confined in the penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga. Both were convicted of obstructing the draft, CROWN PRINCE BACK AGAIN. Paps A rumor has again reached Paris by way of Zurich that former Crown Prince Frederick William, of Germany, has returned to his native eountry, 19553 o \ From Ruins DEBRIS BLOCKS STREETS Put At $10,000,000 State Begns Relief Work, Three Property Loss Trains Reaching Stricken City. 1 the stormawe] f Texas contin Probably from statement that hich had 3iCh iG Deen been discovered had tland be and Taft. This infor rought across Nueces Bay resident who asserted that at Portland bay of sti, 12 at ont at another. 28 of “ dead were whi oes rhe raj advices receis from place ince Sunday, reported no los and Port property dam is about $100 000 on the bay front and to shi which has been Lavaca lated » 1 fe there buat Port or at Seadrift d the Lavaca machinery {or the relief érnor Hobby, who ordered uni the Texas National Federal in charge of the situa- tion at Corpus Christi as quickly as transportation could be arranged. The issued cali ing for prompt ts of to relieve Guard troops a proclamation contributions of money Latest estimates placed the property Christi at $10,000,000 and meagre advices indicated the dam Port Aransas would be Rescue workers faced a task of clearing the debris blocked streets loss in Corpus age at very hea vy tre mendous Several of the city bakeries at Cor turning the Red heir entire output % for distribution over to The list of missing at Corpus Christi was gradually redoced as continued to be found after being refugees storm Approximately unfortunates 176 were taken from of these wreck They were reported to have suffered intensely from exposure. The storm carried buildings and wreckage many miles inland, accord ing to reports from Odem and Sinton, in which region 70 victims are report ed to have been found SUPERSEDES CONSTITUTION. Sign Paper Article 61. Parie ~The written declaration con. cerning Article 61, of the German Con- stitution, demanded by the Allies, is reported in a Berlin dispatch to have been signed by the German Govern. ment. The declaration required was that the article in question, relating to | Austrian representation in the Ger man Parliament was not to be con sidered as transcending the section of the peace treaty forbidding German participation in Austrian affairs. Germans Repudiating | STILL AFTER EX-KAISER, Paris.—Premier Lloyd George is de termined to have it settled that the peace conference demand from Hol iand of the handing over of former Emperor Willlam be complied with, according to Le Journal. The news paper asserts that the Premier, who is planning to leave Paris will insist be. fore his departure upon baving such Ea action decided upon, CONVERSION PLAN changing 1stand 2d Fours PRIVILEGE NOW IN FORCE Treasury Officials Urge Holders Take Advantage Of Opportunity Bankers Will Aid Investors in Transfer Of Securities. they w notice nd Nove mm coupons Loan converted December 15 of th The i= of mar Se payable the 1 . Le RRL question Treasury of Congress piace the De ent, under authorit has provided that the Sed oan 4 per cent Jdhorty ond Liberty First cent bonds and the loan con may This con sion priv force and frgues n jlege ia ders per cent of it at In fact, Treasury Department urges all holders of 4 per cent take advantage any time the hecome payable; that is 15 in the case of the go nd loan and loan converted. of these bonds may and held until they The interest at the cent. on the new November 15 and spectively If for any reason the holder of 4 per honds does not wish them con verted into 4%. he may merely ex change his 48 on or after November 16 or December 15, as the be become payable rate honds begin December 15, re will case may attached. Although there T50.000, 000 of 4 per cent. bonds of the two issues stil it is the opinion of the Treasury officials that most of the holders of them will prefer to con their holdings into 4% se rather go, once they understand have the privilege. that they ALTITUDE RECORD VERIFIED. Rohifs’ 30,300f00t Climb Confirmed Made 24,000 Since. New York.—~The Aero Club of Amer: jea announced that it had officially homologated the altitude record made by Roland Rohifs on July 30 at Hoose- velit Field, Mineola. The height reached was 30,800 feet, which estab lished a new American record for a pliot alone and exceed the official French record of 28,937 feet made by Jean Casale on May 28, last. Rohifs made another altitude flight at Mineola yesterday and Peached & height of 34.000 feet, but this figure has not been verified officially. GREAT PARADE LEAD BY PERSHING A ————— Nation Honors Heroes and Com- mander-in-Chief ARRAYED AS FOR BATTLE Thousands From All Sections Of The Country in Great Crowd Lining Flowerstrewn Path Of Sol diers—Notables There. Washington, D. C.—A grateful na tion paid homage to its conquering heroes, herpes of the world's greatest war, represented by Pershing and the ist Division, Official Washington and the representatives of all nations greatest army of ile was recognized The natio a demonstration; heroes vyelarans May, the greatest has not ged such wiles such a welt a8 was accorded the gince 1865, the grand Meade review when and Sher led thelr victorious armies up Persons came to Washington of the Unit adjourned and its eo ith muititu ita from the the Huns Germany sald would not i away io the of thogsand Was IRANG Sergt ander L 6th F Artillery yard to fire that first shot Arch, the of Battery C iad who pulled the which was 3 8 4. party on a rect hit upon an rhing bridge in Isace enemy w Lorraine, of iden there $m od naa but he ide no means hero, Was the First Division to return. r CONGRESS HONORS PERSHING John J nation, in joint thanks of Congress. The pre ing officers of both bodies paid quent tribute to him and his victorious army. a tribute whic Pershing was Gen the as the received by and Cot gress gegsion extended Wo the modestly erous credit and the American people, efforts the the united of including even it was the history that Congress the thanks of a whole occasion was without spontane ous outbursts that marked the two parades in which the returned com mander has participated. If anything it was solemn and dignified. And It as a fitting tribute of the people to the military leader. The galleries were filled with officials, military men and admiring men and women, while members of the Sa preme Court were seated on the floor to do honor to General Pershing, and, through him to the fighting Americans he commanded twenty-sixth has nalion, the time ————————— A A 5 A505 TELEGRAPH TICKS. A campaign urging the Government to reissue the twowent coin, with drawn from circulation in 1874, was inaugurated by the Women's Roose velt Memorial Association. Cardinal Mercier was the central figure at a requiem high mass cele brated in 8t. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, on the first anniversary of the death of Cardinal Farley. BE. H. Gary, chairman of the United States Steel Corporation, in a state ment condemning the “closed shop,” practically defies union labor to a stesl strike. PENNSYLVANIA STATE ITEMS Mahanoy City.—Matthew Anibal bas come back home after nineteen months’ service, bringing with him 6 erolx de guerre from France and 4 citation from the ment. He says he did nothing and has gone back to his job digging coal in the Knickerbocker colliery. Allentown. —With an enrollment of schools of Allentown are overcrowded be enlarged, Bethlehem. — Council will place be- fore the people in November the qus- tion of the purchase for $1,700,000 of the plant of the Bethlehem City Wat- Er company. Easton. —A will erected Guard armory of the heir lives bronze memorial tablet at the Easton City honor of mein. he in the Hers company who in the war, a8 well a8 those returned, -1'0 cmployes of who Easton ower orined & CoO lication has } It is repori ty that the Westen nd is fig iakes, as r and lower, negot a there he purpose aflequale w ater suppl) the Harris - whos * " 1s it one “wl ‘e iis main ilne, and also divisions Wester: terminus is near the lake Harrisburg. Notice of a fare wag filed with the publi commission by the Southern geven-cent Service Cambria H Pennsylvania Ut rates on ths wesiermn ana mi in advanced lines Chambersburg purse has this place through the nursing activities of Red Cross. Hazleton A public health been secured to work commitiee of the American and petitioned {Union here council pass an a board to examine to do work in Conshohocken, — plumbers have ordinance creating all candidates who their line. Jounty asking for of a 0 Controller bids for bridge is the new ACTORS Pottstown. ~During a severe electri eal storm here a ball of fire dropped on the Reading railway tracks, near Hanover street, and, running along for some distance, disappeared in the mist, he Harrisburg—~The state department of health has issued permits for the extension of the sewer systems of more than a score of cities and bor oughs Blairsville Falling to notice an approaching passenger train at Blairs ville Intersection, Reynold Juden, of Altoona, a Pennsylvania freight brake. man, was Killed, Hazleton, ~—Motorists here welcom- od a detail of three state policemen, assigned there for an indefinite peri od, Ashland. ~A class of sixteen was gradaated from the Fountain Springs training school for nurses at exercises in the Temple Theatre here, Scranton. Rev, Howard King, past- or of the Baltimore Christian church, has accepted a call to the First Chris tian church of Scranton, Pottsville ~-Accidentally drinking lodine, the life of a little son of W. F. Wingard, this place, was saved by prompt wedical attention. ant farmer on tie Henry Bridgens { furm along the river west of this city, { died in the local hospital following i an injury which he sustained in a ron. { away accident at Flemington. | Waynesboro, ~Thieves entered Has | baugh's church, at Midvale, a few ‘nights ago and stole a service flag, an American flag and a large lamp. {| They pried open one of the windows | to get In. There is no clue { Sharon. —~Eiderberry rooms, groundhog, honey and flowers were among the articirs offered for gale at the Bharon curb market. The | elderberry wine sold at 81 a gallon. { Shamokin ~The {| report shows that seven arrests during the month of | August, The falling off In crime Is attributed to the wartime prohib regulation, Kulpmont are leaving the employment ir Ohio wine, mush Shamokin theee police were only ivwmn Beores of young region and 1 the rubber There is a we geruring mills in scarcity of collieries due to the a vired marxeq labor at local exodus of Young men, The than a score Kulpmont sinte i more Peni he different cig per Perkiomen ir fo 4° girik 5 5 rthar ( instantly came in contact WHS wire at the power Yalley Transl The hod y fury vigh Keo orpha; of six-year-old Ralph place Lansdale Julive B. Rauch, a } man here, has donated a site on wh former service men will I a gr: ite memorial shaft the nine wi died in the war Reigelsville <James Bray, of place, jumped from back automobile truck and stepped in of another, being knocked dow receiving two fractured ribs Chester ~The new bond Issue of $400,000 war awarded hy the Mellon ere {o fhe oy 34 National bank, of Pitts. burgh, at a premwiom of £7040 and n crued interest. Raston.~—~When a chain broke while a heavy nachioe wag being moved bere, the machine fell on Calvin Gra- ham, breaking and crushing his right leg. Allentown —("harles reventy-one, a cigarmnker here, has taken out a license to mares Mary Gaul, aged fifty-one, is the old est Lehigh county bridegroom of the year, Shenandoah. Charles Presser, a | carpenter foreman of this place, fell forty feet from a roof and fractured his skull, Ashland By an explosion of gas at Locust Spring colliery here, Jo sept Beikus and Thofas Romonosky were so badly burned they will die Easton, — Lafayette College win open for its eighty-fith year on Sep tember 18 ’ Mount Carmel. —<Rev. J. 0. Weigle has asked the police to nesist in Joon ing the thieves who dug out and stole the greater part of the potatoes Tr tanre, aged whn his war garden west of town
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers