President Wilson and British Premier Confer in Buckingham Palace oq Questions Vital to Pemm HA'RRISBURG lfSl§Bi TELEGRAPH M \ Sl)t Stoc-2n&epcn6cttl. ==================== ' LXXXVII- No. 284 16 PAGES nriK/.ri,'i,Sar HARRISBURG. pa.. FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 27, 1918. ° V 'n kws p a per iN SS ii\Hrjsmi'" ISS HOME EDITION WILSON AND LLOYD GEORGE HOLD INITIAL CONFERENCE ON WORLD PEACE PROBLEMS Big Crowd Ahead of Premier in Early Visit LEADERS SEE U. S. CHIEF Former Leader Is: Among Callers [ on President By Associated Press London, Dec. 2 7.—Premier Lloyd , George, accompanied by Sir Maurice, Hankey, secretary to the Committee j on Imperial Defense, arrived at ; Buckingham Palace at 10.30 this, morning for a conference witn Pres- j ident Wilson. The day was dark ! and rainy, but a big crowd had ar- j rPrd before the premier. Mr. Wilson was astir early this! morning and was busy with his see-; retary. There weie a number of j American callers and the Duke of| Connaught and Sir Richard Her-1 schell visited the palace before the' arrival of the premier. A. J. Bal-! four, secretary of state for foreign I affairs, walked over from the For-1 . ign Office to attend tlie conference | between Mr. Lloyd George and the j President. Rider Statesmen Greet The company invited to meet Pres ident Wilson for the luncheon ar-l ranged to be held to-day at Premier Lloyd George's residence comprised a small gathering of elder states men, the personnel inc'uding the leaders in the last and tlie present government and the head of three of the political parties, "Conservative, Liberal and Labor. Asq tilth Calls at George Residence The luncheon gave occasion for, tile first visit by former Premier As- | uuith. to the premie.r's official resi dence since the Liberal leader re signed his office. Crowds Greet Wilson It was 1.40 o'clock when the President drove up to No. 10 Down ing street, lie was the tenth of the; guests for the prime minister's i luncheon to arrive there. He was j given an enthusiastic greeting from I the crowd. Of the luncheon guests, including j representatives of all parties, the I Karl of Reading was the first to ar- j rive. He was followed by former Premier Asquith, the Marquis of Crewe, John W. Davis, the American Ambassador, Earl Curzon and Vis count Bryee. The premier himself, who as de tained at llie conference in Buck ingham Palace, came next, and aft er him Arthur Henderson, the labor leader. Andrew Bonar Law, chancel lor of the exchequer, and William Adamson, labor member of Parlia ment. Premier Lloyd George and Secre tary Balfour were cheered by the crowd, 'but it was evident that it was President Wilson they were waiting for. Rear Admiral Grayson, who escorted the President, stepped out [Continued on I'ugc ll.] Wounded Academy Athlete Returns Home With Five Bits ol Shrapnel in Arm Harry J. Finley, 21 years old, for mer Harrisburg Academy football player, who was wounded In the severe fighting about Soissons on August 2, while fighting with the Headquarters Company of the 112 th Infantry, is spending a short time with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Finley, 1725 North Third street. In some of the thickest fighting about the French city, Private Fin ley was struck by shrapnel five times in his right arm, one piece breaking entirely off two and one-half inches of bone, all of which had to be removed from his upper right arm. Since that time he has been confined to French base hospitals and at Base Hospital No. 3, near Rail way, N. J., having arrived in this country on October 5. Three opera lions have already been made on the arm and another will be performed shortly after he returns to the New Jersey Institute. He will never re cover the full use of the arm, sur geons affirm. Enlisting in June, 1917, with Com pany C, of the old Eighth Regiment, recruited at Chainbersburg, lie went to Camp Hancock. Oa., and arrived in France in May. 1918. , Less than two months later he entered the fir ing line and participated in some of the heaviest fighting of the war from then until the time that he was removed because of injury, having taken part. In the fighting about Cha teau Thierry and other important regions. I THE WEATHER] For Hnrrlsliurg anil vicinity i i.cncrnlly cloudy to-night und Wuturduy, prohnhl) urcnxlonal light miiiiti not much change In tcmpcrnturci lowest to-night ti ho lit as degree*. For Knatern l*enn*yM nnlu i Gen erally rlauily to-night and Mnt urdn). probably light loeal *no o * i gentle to moderate whirl ing Mind*. lllver The *n*itnchnnnn rtvrr nnd all tta hrnnrbr* Mill full loMly ar re main nrnrlr *tntlonnry. A *tngr nl about <1.4 fret la ladlratrd for llarrlabnrg Saturday morning. Kaiser's Death Rumored By Associated Press Paris, Dec. 27. (4.25 a. m.) —Rumors that the former emperor of Germany had been assassinated became current in Paris, notably in the Chamber of Deputies, last evening. There is not the slightest confirmation of the report up to the present. HINDENBURG SCURRIED DEEP INTO THE GROUND Hero of Song and Story Shared Wilhelm's Dislike For Shells and Airplane Raids; Elaborate Shelters Used to Protect the Men who Drove Armies to Their Destruction By Associated Press ; Spa, Belgium, Dec. 2 7.—The for liner headquarters of the Kaiser und ' his general staff is disclosing some .'extraordinarily queer facts these •days about the men who engineered I the world war. Take, for one, Hln jdenburg, Germany's superman, ! around whom reams of poetry have I been written disclosing him as a 'fearless Napoleon leading ltis troops |to victory. As a matter of fact, lie I spent a great deal of time in a won derfully < onstructed "funk-hole." or dugout underneath the grounds of ids villa itcrc. j Spa. it may be noted, is almost on 'tile German border and so far from where battle lines used to be that it was almost a day's journey In a fast motorcar to get within sound of the big guns. The Kaiser, too, had a sim •ilar hiding place at Xeubois, near a comic cpera trench system about which he is said to have paraded for the benefit of motion pictures. Warned of Hanger At each of their villas there were delicate electrical instruments which would set up furious buzzing when ever an airplane approached. At the first souna from this contrivance llindenburg and the K.vcer used to run t. shelter, it is; reported. People who worked about Llndenburg's es itablisliment said he. was continually ! running for cover. | America's representatives on the | international armistice commission {now are occupying Hindenburg's |headquarters and they were amazed • Our Two Food Problems DEA"R 1 DEAR, I f OH , I XKDjqV CARE WHAT SHALL WE HAVE ROAST BEEF, HAM-N-ECiQS, PGR, DINNER,,HENRY ? TURKEY—'R —ANYTHING j j**iLLrNCiLLrNC AFTER DECIDING WHAT YOU 1,1, HAVE YOURSELVES. WHY NOT TAKE A MINUTE TO ~ • CONSIDER WHAT VOI'LL GIVE TO THESE? I when they discovered this under ground refugee of the "great war rior." The entrance was through the Jdtriing room. From there a flight of I steps led down to a tiled anteroom, {which now serves as a very good pantry for tho Americans. From the tiled room another flight :of steps led down to the real dugout. This was ' locked by u huge iron |door about cne in"h thick wnich [Continued on I'ago 11. J Former Czar of Russia and Family Still Live, Says Ukraine Fugitive By Associated Press Warsaw, Dec. 27. —"There is no i doubt that the Czar and his entire 'family are alive. 1 am positive of | this," was the declaration made to the correspondent here by Michael de Tchihatchef, a nephew of Gen eral Skoropadski, and who has just escaped from the Ukraine after a recent trip to Petrograd, Dvinsk, Vllna and Renovo. "1 cannot reveal where the Czar is because he does not wish It," he add ed. "He does not care to be bothered and lie wants to be left alone. His whereabouts is known to an allied government, it is in a neutral coun try. Accounts of his murder at | Ekaterinburg were manufactured by Trotzkj and Lenine for propaganda purposes." COAL GOES A BEGGING FIRST TIME IN MONTHS |• • i i i Dealers Have More Fuel on Hand Than Orders to Fill DELIVERY HANDS IDLE Extraordinarily Cold Weather Can Upset the Stiuation in City CONSERVATION IN ORDER Six Thousand Tons of Anthra cite Now in Local Yards Awaiting Purchasers The advent to-day of cold weather need not cause anxiety over the coai situation here, was the information received from dealers this morning. With 160,000 tons ordered by Har risburg householders and 90,000 to 100,000 tons delivered, the prospects ! at present arc that not more than j 30,000 additional tons will need to be I put in tho consumers' bins to tide over ! the winter. I'lenty on It unit I There are approximately 5,000 tons | of prepared sizes of anthracite in the ! city now. Consumers, however, nro | making no efforts to acquire their share of this tonnage, it was the ' policy of the Fuel Administration. I through the Central Coal Exchange. ; to give every consumer two-thirds of ; the amount he ordered, but the weath . or lias been so mild that many eori -1 sumers now find they will not require ' the remaining one-third of coal. For the first time since the begin ning- of the war, coal is not iu tmrne -1 diate demand as soon as it arrives in i the city. Half the delivery forces of j the dealers arc idle. One of the larg ; est coal-seiling establishments an i nounced it had filled its stendiug or : dors and the delivery equipment was | idle at 9.30 o'clock this morning. Conserving Supply i The present snappy wnther woull, j if it continued, cause an increased de j mand for coal. The dealers, liow j rvr, were not unduly rushed by or { ders this morning. t The cost of coal is working a great J saving in its consumption. Numerous families are living around their kltcli ; en ranges and. because of the com paratively mild weather, are not using their furnaces. Many consumers | seem to he waiting for a. decreased ; price scale, but this is unlikely, it is said. ' Only extraordinarily severe weather | would cause complications in the pres- I c-nt favorable fuel conditions, was trie I summary of the sltuntion expressed ! by a dealer this morning. COMMUNITY SING i FOR SOLDIERS AT I CAPITOLSUNDAY Christinas and Patriotic Songs Will Be Sung; Municipal Orchestra Will Lead DR. BAGNELL TO PRESIDE (combined Church Choirs to Have Scats on Steps of Rotunda I YANKS RAPIDLY i PASSING BACK TO CIVIL LIFE By Associated Press \Yuftliington. Dee, 27. Sixty- I eight thousand American soldiers have been returned from overseas r up to December 21, and slightly ! more than 500,000 In this country ; had been mustered out of service, I members of the House Militaiy j Committee weie told to-day at their weekly conference at the War ! Department. • Officers nre being discharged at a rapid rate, Chairman Dent said, explaining that 32.000 had been re leased since the armistice was signed. Troop movements from abroad on ships now controlled by ' the United States 'are limited to 160,- 000 men a month, but the depart- I ment hopes to increase this to 200,- ! 000 or 300,000. ! A Community Sing will be held In lllie rotunda of the new Capitol Sun- Iday evening at 9 o'clock, Mrs. J. G. , Sanders of the Community Song | Committee announced to-day. The affair will be ill honor of visiting ;soldiers and Christmas and patriotic songs will be sung under the leader ship of Abner Hartman. An orches jlra made up from the Municipal band, with Frank Blumenstein as di • rector, will accompany the singers. [The Pennsylvania Railroad Glee Club, Ira Behney conductor, .and the {Pine Street quartet, will sing. The gathering will be under the direction of the Commission of Training Camp Activities, and the Rev. Dr. Robert Bagneli, pastor of Grace Church, will preside. The Rev. Henry \Y. A. Hanson, pastor of Messiah Lutheiyin Church, will of jfer prayer. Members of church j choirs will have seats on the broad 'staircase and ail such have been urged to take their places there with {out special invitation. ' HEAD OF RKICHSUAXK HAS n. Dec. 27.—Dr. Rudolf Hav- I enstein, president of the Imperial IBank of Germany (the Relphsbank), j has resigned, according to a dispatch from Copenhagen. He was a ! an j German. SEEK NAMES OF EVERY SOLDIER FOR HISTORY Relatives ol' Keystone Fight ing Men Asked to Aid Movement That a complete history may be prepared of the part Pennsylvania soldiers played in the war witli no repetition of the incomplete war ser vice records of the civil War, the Pennsylvania Council of National Defense and Committee of Public Safety has opened a campaign to Continued on l*agc 2 24,712 Pennsy Employes Furloughed For War to Get Positions Again By Associated Press Philadelphia, Dec. 27. —'Arrange ments have been made whereby all employes of the Pennsylvania railroad who were furloughed for military service will bo given their former po sitions, or positions equally as good, when they return to duty after having been honorably discharged by the Government. Announcement to this effect was made to-day by the com pany. It was stutfM that 24,712 em ployes of the compuny had been fur loughed for military service up to November 1. MAIDEN ASKS CITY EDITOR TO PROVIDE PHOTOGRAPHS Maiden With Brown Hair and Eyes Attracted by Widower's Plea For Helpmeet Seeks Ocular Proof The impending scarcity of males eligible for life companions is now standing in good stead, the man who lias applied to the Telegraph's City Editor for aid in finding a lady will ing to sail her bark on the sea of matrimony with him. With some 50,000 Tanks finding bonnle, wee French lasses to travel through life's paths "for better or worse," and many more youths vic tims of Hun bullets, the scarcity promises to be a critical one, and the ladies of this vicinity are taking no chances and are wasting no time. So the labors of the City Editor ,ln aiding the Lebanon man In his WOMEN PERSECUTED BY BOLSHEVIKI IN REIGN OF ANARCHY Landlords Forced Naked Into the i Streets GERMAN TROOPS ARE DISARMED By Associated Press . \\ arson. Dec. 27.—Forces com j inanded by Tetlura, the Ukrainian | {•leader drove General Skoropadskij ; from Kiev on Sunday, December 15. j Petlura himself entered the city last i Thursday. Prince Rndziwill, a j wealthy Polish land owner, escaped ! and has reached here with other refu gees, which include four hundred l Russian officers driven out of the 1 district of Dubno by peasants. Prince Itadzlwill said to .The Associated ■ Press upon his arrival here: "Kiev is calm again. The siiops are open and it Is still occupied by ten thousand German troops under General Kirbach. The horrors of anarchy in that country, especially in the Volhynla district, cannot be realized. 1 have seen how landlords I and their managers have been cruelly | assaulted and beaten by peasants and j naked in the bitter cold. • They have ] begun to ill-treat women, which is ' something new to Bolshevism. For ( instance, if they cannot find the hus j band or father tliey wish to arrest, l Ihev take the wife, mother or duitgh ' ter. j "I escaped, dressed as a railroad employe, on a train currying a nunt ' her of German soldiers, a few women i and some civilian passengers. At j every station, it was a fight to get | by. The peasants nre robbing and | disarming German soldiers every | where, being infuriated because of | German thefts of grain and food, j It is stated that the defeat of Gen j eral Skoropadski may be attributed ;to the fact that two months ago | under allied advice, he proclaimed ! Ukraine a part of Russia whereas i the peasants want that country to jbe independent. It is declared that he thus played into the hands of Petlura who promised land to the peasants and has Issued land grants to every man who has served as a soldier under hint. A message from Danzig says the I Germans are dismantling the port and | carrying off all the dock machinery. 1 fearing the arrival of allied forces. llt is also rumored that the peace conference may give that port to Poland. Odessa is reported to be again in Bolshevist hands, after the defeat of Polish troops near that city. DANCING WILL FOLLOW DINNER AT PENN-HARRIS Reservations For Tables at Stockholders' Banquet Must Be in Early These are strenuous days for the management of the new l'enn-Hur rls Hotel. Hectic is tho better word in any description of tho rush to ward the finish for the opening night next Tuesday. Acceptances of stockholders and their Invited guests are to be In hand to-morrow and as the dinner will be served in the main lounge and dining room all who cannot be accommodated in this splendid room will be seated at tables in the large ballroom which will later be cleared for dancing. Those who desire to he seated with their guests at round tubles must have their ac ceptances in the hands of Warwick M. Ogelsby, secretary of the Hotel Company, not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning. This is necessary In order t tat the seating arrange ments mcy be completed by Man ager Wiggins.. It Is expected that all attending the reception and dinner will enter on Walnut street, nnd take the elfe vatort to the cloakrooms on the second floor. While there are cer tain to be some missing details of decoration here and there, tho hotel in the mu'n will he ready Tuesday. i matrimonial Intentions are becoming r | more strenuous. Applicants who are willing to consider the matter favor 'ubly in case they llnd further details satisfactory, ure sending tentative . ; acceptances, und unless the widower j 1 of Lebanon is over-fastidious, he should not have the least trouble in finding a helpmafe for the remainder ' of his dnys. 1 One lady who should please the . Lebanon countian who would a-mar rled tie, writes In part: "I am a single girl, 30 years old. 1 have brown lialr, blue eyes and I have a fair complexion. T would like ; to have you send your photo." | The City Editor Is asked to serve ''as an Intermediary in the exchange it of photographs. FOCH PUTS GUARD ON GERMAN CAMP Zurich, Dec. 27. —A battalion I Of infantry has occupied Mann heim by order of .Marshal Focli In order to watch the prison camp near there, where ten thou sand Allied prisoners await lib- Oration, the Badische Landeszei tung says. This step, it is added, was taken because of the had treatment of tho prisoneis, sev eral of whom were murdered. Mannheim is on tho east bank of the Rhine, south of Mayenp. •It is within tli© neutral zone east of the Rhine out'hied by the terms of the armistice. SANTA CLAUS AND CLOWNS TO MAKE MERRY AT DINNER Rotarians Arc All Ready For "Rig Brother" Entertain ment; Zcnibo Gives Hall Santa Claus will make a speech and distribute gifts to the boys and girls In attendance at tho Rotary t'lub's annual Big Brother dinner in t'hestnut street hall Tuesday noon, January 31, and a, delegation of cir cus clowns will lie on hand to make fun for the diners. There will be one clown for oacli table and they will compete witli each other. Each Is going to try to he funnier than the other, and as each, as a prom inent businessman of Harrisburg said, has a reputation to maintain, the fun promises to be fast and fu rious. "Yott can say for the committee," said John H. Nixon, to-day, "that this Is going to bo the biggest and best Big Brother dinner that the Ro [Continued on Page 14.] . ... T -r. ;v .- THE Y. M. C. Ai T Paris—Genera! Pershing has sent following mes y sage to E. C..Carter, secretary of the American expedi- X tionary forces of the Y. M. C.-A.: "With a deep feeling T* gratitude for'the enormous contribution which the 4* I of athe American army, all ranks join rne in sending you 7 ii' • v ' T year - ' T WANTS LEAGUE OF NATIONS T y ■ i 4 ■ X pfcifj. for'a League of Nations,* Representative ]Brittcn. of . TJ Illinois, Republican, said unless such a league is estah -5 • ! At contention that Amerk X make the world safe for democracy." ▼ OJean. N. • Y.—Mrs. James Dempsey and her five ' T c X stroyed their home In Prestissvale, near here. X I It COAL MEN REFUND $83127 X - -Re; v t 4l •' T coal men of Pennsylvania to the State's Federal Fufel X >; •- . , ; .• •. *io • *•• .?een O - '*-" • T>• :, 9:e. ■v. rr . the -kep c< '-1 .e CT'; S • - is t VETERAN RAIL'CHIiy TO -JRLZ I £ Philadelphia—Announcement was 'made to day that X Wilk 3rn A. Patton, assistant to the President of the Penn* 4* ' V "•4 clelphia and Norfolk railroad will be retired on December X iT 3! from active service under the provision of the pension ♦ plan. He will have served continuously for fifty three J'yej" nd eleven months. J O'BRIEN TO FLY OVER ATLANTIC ♦ Kankakee, lll*.—Lieut. Patrick O'Brien. American X aviator in' British service whpse escape from German ■ !T r - ecl r.'.-tl' '• • -(Hy that he will attempt to he the first" 4 $ MARRIAGE UCENSES •S < harlra Brown and (•rorwlntinn Jnrkaon, llldriletovrn: John K. A. h Smith, (nradra, A. J„ and Jrnn'Hn I*. I'latlo. Sew Vork Clt> t t( Thomaa 11. Moriran and Kmmn K. Sowplirr, l.nociiatrr | t'harlr* *V. . Wniatr nnd lluldnh 1.. Hull. S>Mort| tmoa t'. Mcllol and I.llllnn r >*• Shoffar, t'onlpnrii Carl Belter. llnrrUburg, nndd Ilell It. ltonrn- w muter, I'hllailrlpbln. ♦ NO PEACE UNTIL ALLIES SUBDUE BERLIN RIOTERS "Don't Let Them Send the French," Warns Sailor to the Allied Powers WANT TOMMY AND YANK Attack on Sailors Ordered by Fbcrt, Schcidemann and Lansberg, Barth Says MAY LEAVE GOVERNMENT Disquieting Feature Seen in Part Played by Women Who Join Riot By Associated Press London Dec. 27. —"We shan't have peace here until the English and American troops come to keep or der," is a statement attributed to one of the riotous German sailors in Ber lin by the correspondent of the Dally Express at the German capital. The correspondent says he talked with a dozen other men who expressed themselves siriiilarly, some of them adding: "Don't let them send the French, or there will be more fighting." : The correspondent adds that all the lower classes of Berlin are will ing to sec foreign troops in the capital, feeling that they have noth ing to lose and perhaps something to gain by the presence of outsiders. Richard Barth is quoted by the correspondent as saying that he and his fellow cabinet members, Hugo ilaase and Willielm Dittmann, would not accept tho responsibility of or dering an attack on the sailors. The instructions for the attack, he added, •wore given by Premier Ebert, Philipp Scheidemann and Herr Landsborg. 'Barth said he intended to consult his Icollcagues and might leave the gov ernment immediately. The correspondent considers one lof the most disquieting factors of {the situation the part played by the •sailors' wives and sweethearts, some of whom participated in the fight ing.