W 1 Filipino Senator Quezon Urges Complete Independence For Pacific Ocean Peoples in New York Speech % ■ ■ • ■ ■ miz ■ T LXXXVIJi-. N.GJ92 2D.PAGSLS Da,, fcK t WK'. t HARRISBURG, PA. SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 19, 1919. HOME EDITION BARON SONNINO IS PLEADING ITALY'S CLAIM TO FIUME AT WORLD PEACE TABLE IN PARIS Adriatic Problem Now Foremost Since Council Has Disposed of Danzig Matter; I risk-Americans Are to Confer With Colonel House on Erin's Claim GERMAN TROOPS AND SOVIET FORCES ARE IN CONFLICT; OUTBREAKS OF LABOR CONTINUE PARIS, April 19. —Italy's territorial claims, especially in the Adriatic, were presented to the Council of Four to-day by Baron Sonnino, the Italian foreign minister. The fact that Baron Sonnino, and not Premier Orlando, presented the Italian case to the council is regarded as .sig nificant because the foreign minister is an extremist advocate of Italy's utmost claims. It was Baron Sonnino who signed the Treaty ot London, and he now holds Premiers Lloyd Deorge and Clemenceau to the pledges made in the treaty. With the~question of Poland's western boundary settled, the Council of hour of the Peace Conference in Paris was prepared to-day to take up anew the problem of the Adriatic for definite disposition. As a result of the council's deliberation yesterday Danzig, the Baltic port claimed by Poland, is to become an international harbor, it is understood. Poland will be given a corridor through (ierman territory, it is said so that she may have free access to Danzig. Whether this corridor coincides with that designated by the Peace Con fcrence some weeks ago is not known. Representatives of Irish societies in America will confer withe Colonel K. M. House of the American mission to-day relative to. the claims of Ireland before the conference. It is understood that j they will ask that three Irish delegates be permitted to go to Paris j for a hearing. Egyptians Now in France Another Nationalist movement within the British empire may j be brought to the official notice of the delegates by reprcsenta- I ti\es of Egyptian elements which arc demanding independence j for their country. The Egyptians now are in France and ; arc rxpcftfd to roach Paris soon in* an endeavor to lay their case before il.• conference. Conditions at Cairo | arc reported t• he pjrave as a result of this independence inevement. It is announced that Rumanian troops have been ordered to occuoy j territory which was provisionally .-.1-iotted iotted by the peace conference to that country in Transylvania, for merly a province of the Austfo-Hun garian empire. When the new Soviet government was established in Uuda ga pest, it was declared that the turn- ins over of this particular territory ; to Rumania was one of the causes nl the overthrow of the regime heaJ- d b> Count Michael K&rolyi. righting \round Munich (let man government troops and Ravarian forces are believed to be' lighting in or around Munich, but! little lias been learned as to the trend of cvctitM there. In Northern Gcr-{ many, labor troubles continue, Bre men ielng the storm center of what . appears to be a serious strike, while ■ s;like movements also persist in Berlin. New York Governor Signs Bills Legalizing Sunday Ball and Movies \lhuiiy. V Y . April !!♦.- -Governor Smith to-day signed hills authorizing Sunday baseball and motion picture j shows, t'nder the two bills baseball, games may be played and moving . picdure exhibited on Sundays previd- 1 ing that cons* nt is given by the local governing body. The bills were fought by the Lord's Ihiy Alliance, j and other religious organ! '..ufons, but were supported bv tlie Stat.' FrrJor- i ation of Laboi; and nttnierous • isir ess and political bodies. Widow and Four Little Ones Are Victims of Fire /;/ Associated Press Chatham. N. V., April I!). —Mrs. | Fay Walterniire, 40, a widow, and i lour of lier five iinall children, were'; burned lo death early 10-da.v in a j lire which destroyed the Chatham] steam laundry. The children were Carlis. II: Paul, 9: Poland, 7: Sarah, I 5. The only survivor of the family, was the eldest son Kossman, 15, who | was away from home. / Mtiiii: TROOPS OKI>I<:RI-:I> HOME Washington. April 19. -All urban izations making up the Thirty third (Illinois) and Seventy-eighth (New York, New Jersey and Dela-| ware) Divisions have been assigned I to early convoy home, the War Dc- j partmeut was informed to-day by j General Pershing. MUNICH COUNCIL DISSOLVED l.oiulon, April 19. —The central council at Munich has been dls-1 solved and the power at present is in the hands of a committee of five! men elected by the soldiers' council j of the Bavarian capital, an Ex change Telegraph dispatch from i Copenhagen says. BABY'S SKIILIi BROKEN Charles Bowman, four-year-old son of Charles Bowman, of Fort Hunter, is in the Harrisburg Hospital • with what is believed to be a frac furorl skull. The injury was caused when the child was accidentally struck by a pick being used by an older brother. 1 THE WEATHER] For llnrrlnburg nnd vicinity: Fair 10-night, with loWpit tempera tiirc about 10 degree*; probably light front; Sunday fulr nnd r ii niter. For Hnntorn Pennwyl vnnia: Fulr to-night, probably light front; Sunday fair and warmer; gentle to moderate winds becoming MOllth. Itlver Tlie lower portion of the ninln river will remain nearly ntu tionnry to-night and fall nlowly Sunday. All othe r ntreamn of the nyntem will fall nlowly. A ntngc of about 11.3 feet In Indi cated for II arrlnburg Sunday , i:.erulng. WAR TROPHIES TO RE BROUGHT HERE; FOR EXHIBITION! i Peace Movies to Be Shown in! Market Square For Victory Bonds Attendance records for moving : picture performances in Harrisburg j arc going to be smashed to smith-j ' ereens sometime during the week of ] ! April 28, when the Victory l.oan ! i lilm, "Tlie Price of Peace," will be J shown in Market Squrc. Just what | evening litis picture will be displayed ] has not been decided as yet. Victory Loan headquarters this I morning announced that a large: ] screen is to lie placed on one of tlie buildings in Market Square, if pres ! ent plans do not miscarry, and tlie I projecting machine is to be placed |on a truck, which will stand in tlie i Square. "The Price of Peace" is attracting j 1 enormous crowds throughout the! Fnited States. It is a five-reel pic- I jture in which a number of noted j stars appear. Tlie story it tells is! i one of great human interest. "The Price of Peace" is to he di§- j played for the first time in Harris- j burg at the big mass meeting to be j bold on April 28 in Chestnut Street Hall, at which there will be present j the majority of Victory Loan work- I ers for every district in Perry, Ju ! niata and Dauphin counties. Another i feature of this meeting will be the i presence of the Municipal Band of thirty pieces. The relic train which is touring | Pennsylvania in tlie interest of the (Victory Loan is to reach Harrisburg] the night of May 4 front Mitllintown. | j it will he open to the public all of i I May 5, and while the location has I not definitely been announced, an j ' effort will lie made to have tlie train j j placed on the siding across Market j street front tlie Beading station.: I Much of the war paraphernalia on | 'this train will be unloaded. Tanks land heavy guns will lie taken [ {throughout tlie streets in all likeli-j | hood, unless there is danger that tlie j I streets will be wrecked through their] passage. A request has been received at i I Victory l.oan headquarters that ' i some of tlie big guns and a tank or' ] two be taken throughout the court try districts so that the agrieul- j |tural population which is very busy: : at this time of tlie year will be able ] jto see them without coming into j I Harrisburg. Arrangements are be- | j ing made through which a baby j 'tank will be placed on a large truck: land taken through a number of j country districts. ROYAL PRINCELINGS THROWN FROM POWER * | Small German SUiles Exile Numerous Blue-Blooded Rulers Where They Crowded Hie Land Berlin, A|>rl 1 19. —A German pro fessor figures out that tlie abdica tions and dethronements in Germany 'includes 27X persons. Bavaria leads with one king, one queen, fifteen ! princes, sixteen princesses, five dukes and one duchess. Prussia has sent 33 royalties into exile, including the em peror, empress, 20 princes and 11 princesses. Brunswick is at the bottom of the list, with only the ducal couple and their three children. The two tiny principalities of Iteuss, whose area DANIELS, FERRY CHIEF FOR U. S., TALKS TO ARMY Belgian Order of lite Crown Conferred I'pon Marine Corps Captains ] ('dblenz. April 19. Secretary of the Navy Joscpltus Daniels, speaking j to the men of the Second Division ol I tlie American Army of Occupation yesterday afternoon, told liis audi- I ence that lie tioped tlie arnty would ! be taken home as soon as possible. I "As captain of the ferryboats which ] ] brought the American Army to | | Europe," he said, "1 wisli to say j that I have under my command j i 10,000 American boys who .arc clam- I i oring to return to their homes. X j ! have told those sailor boys they | ; would get home, but that, first, J j they must help get hack to the Unit- ■ ! ed States the boys who fought in j France and Belgium." Mr. Daniels contrasted tlie day's j assemblage with that of the Ger j mans, who stood on the same I ground in 1914 before beginning the I war. Had World Visions | "Their chiefs," he said, "had vis : ions of conquering the world, but ] America entered the war without | desire for territorial gains." The Secretary's reference to the soldiers' return home was answered with cheers, and shouts of "how soon?" were heard. The Secretary smiled, but did not answer. In the morning during Hie review of the division, tlie Belgian Order of the Crown was conferred on Captain ! Gaines Moselcy, and the the Order ! of Leopold on Captain Robert Balke. i 12,000 Pupils Enrolled in the County Schools; Many in Rural Districts I Reports furnished by teachers in all the county districts and boroughs except Steelton and Middlctown, show that there are 8122 pupils i n rolled in lite first eight grades. Pro fessor W. IX. Zimmerman, assistant county superintendent, announced to duy. The statistics have hern ompilod t be sent through State departments to Washington, Of the total enroll ment of pupils there are 1537 boys I and 1519 girls in rural schools; 2(iio I lioys und 2451 girls in schools in bor- I ouglis and villages. In Dauphin county there are 732 j rural schools, of which there are only I let- with an enrollment of less than j twelve pupils. Consolidation of I schools has been effected in but one district, but in twenty-two others I could be accomplished, according to ! the report. ] Superintendent F. E. Shambaugh [■and Professor Zimmerman estimate I that about 12,00(1 pupils are enrolled I in all county schools, including the I high schools and the student enroll j inent in Steelton and Middlctown. SUIT'S WIN IN lOWA Hy Associated Press lies Moines, la., April 19. i Woman Suffrage scored a victory in j the closing hours of the lowa Legis lature to-day, when the measure ac ! cording woman Presidential suffrage i completed passage through adoption in the House by a vote of 84 to 2. is hardly one-three hundredths part of that of Prussia, have exiled 36 royalties. The principality of Mppc, only about twenty square miles larger than the Keuss states, had a royal family numbering 24 persons. Most extraordinary Is the case of Schaum burg-ldppe, with its area of 130 square miles, where there was nearly one royal personage for every five square miles. These included the reigning prince, 17 princes and 7 princesses. Pennsylvania at the Front ' v }TJ - / v -t ly *~". > . *>* ♦ . f*7~> Xr /L - & *** Tliis is a picture of members of the Keystone Division receiving hot chocolate from the Y. M. ('. A. when they were off duty during some of the heavy lighting of last summer. The picture was taken at t'ourhon. France, July 27, 1918. This, is one of the series of Keystone Division pictures produced by the Signal Corps of the United States Army. Persons interested in securing copies should get into communication with the United States Army recruiting officer, 325 Market street. KOONSGOESTO BOSTON TO TRY TO END STRIKE i Assistant Postmaster General i Tells Leaders Service Should Be Restored Immediately By Associated Press Paris, April lt.—President j Wilson this morning cabled Sec retary Tumulty declining a re | quest he had revolved from New England governors to intervene in the telephone strike in New England. Tile President said he felt he eould not net intelligent ly at tlds distance. ! Boston, April 19.—Assistant Post- I master General Koons, chairman of | the Wire Control Board, told repre sentatives of the striking telephone j workers to-day that lie saw no rot j son why tlie strike could not be sot i tleil within a few hours. He said lie | had full powers front Postmaster General Burleson to adjust the diffi culty. lioons Meets \\ orkers t Atr. Koons Arrived here early to | day a nd met a committee of tit" New ' Englond Joint council of electrical 1 workers at the office of Mayor Pet ! ers, who ha:l accompanied itini from ! Wtshington. In a brief statement to the com ! mittee, he said that no action had | been taken heretofore by the depart ! nmnt in relation to the strike because j the suspension of telepliont service had hampered communication be tween Boston and Washington. Un til the arrival in Washington of I Mayor Peters, lie added the exact sil j uation was unknown there. A rrinigcs for < 'onferciice I Mr. Koons said that before taking definite action, lie wished to look I into tlie financial condition of tlie New England Telephone and Tele graph Company. It was arranged ■ that the committee should to the | office of General At a nag or William JR. Driver. Jr., of the telephone com | pany for a conference with Koons and Mr. Driver at 3.30 this after noon. Mayor Peters returned early in the day with a message to the striken? from Washington where he confer red yesterday with Postmaster Gen eral l.urb. son and Joseph I'. Tumulty, secretary te the President. Before leaving Washington ha expressed himself as "very hopeft!" but de clined to indicate the nature of his proposal to the strikers. I|>"ran.r* In Mass Meeting Alc-tnwliiic the young women tele phone opt tutors whose walkout 1.0 enforce demands for wage Increases and Hie principles of collective bargaining precipitated the strike which spread until it involved 20,000 workers in various branches, held thoir daily mass meeting, and mem bers of New England joint council of telephone workers planned to go into session later in the day. $475,000,000 Wheat Crop If. Forecast in Kansas Topoka. Kan., .April 19. —The firjl Kansas wheat crop report of tne year, issued yesterday by the Secre tary of the Slat? Board of Agricul ture, shows that the condition end acreage of wheat in Kansas this year is the best and largest in ihe history of any Stale at this time of year. The repof places the acreage ii 10,758,000 acres, and the condition in estimated a* PJ.;>2, which WJiil.i indicate a yield of more than 215,- 000,000 bushels of wheat, valued a! '■l 5,000,000. SIXTKKN AMIJtKANs KII.I.I'M J'aris, April 19.—The death list in ihe railroad wreck at Crisse, north west of Be Mans, on Thursday, has lVtounted to thirty-three, including sixteen Americans. Forty-five per sons were injured in the smash of the trains, which was caused when an Amcricun train dashed into u French troop train. THREE LEADING NATIONS MAY BE BOUND BY PACT By Associated I res.:. Paris. April 19.—The question of an alliance between France, I the United States and Great Brit- j ain is still being discussed by tlie newspapers. The Excelsior to- I day says that the latest sugges- I tion is for a special covenant re- ! I stricted to defensive measures. j This agreement would not be ; j intended to insure, the payment j j of financial rcparatidn. ( ! FACTORY SITES BEING LISTED BY COMMITTEE ! . I Chamber of Commerce Gets! Information Wanted by \ Manufacturing Men The industrial committee of the! Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce lis planning for an immediate census of the city to determine the number 'and location of till vacant sites and' I buildings at present available for! 'manufacturing purposes, it was an jnounccd to-day. The co-operation of i I property owners lo make the survey! j successful was urged as a necessary j I factor in the census. Representatives of manufacturing j j industries now located at other points j I constantly arc requesting the Cham ber of Commerce for information j concerning factory sites and build-1 j ings in Harrisburg, and tlie posses-1 | sion of accurate data on all avail-1 | able locations would facilitate tlie j j work of furnishing the information, l |in addition to stimulating industries j I contemplating Harrisburg as a base | I for their operations have had no! I definite place at which to secure in-1 | formation concerning available loca-j | tions, and the Industrial committee j desires to overcome this shortcoming! |in the city's inducements to outside! interests. Information to he secured in tliej census includes such items as tlie | J size of the buildings or locations, im j provements, convenience to water ! pipe lines, gas mains, power facili- Ities, railroad facilities, whether for j rent or for rale, and approximate ; prices. Blue prints showing floor ar i rangements also should he included 'in the information wherever possible, jit was said. HAMBURG SUKXK OK UPRISING By Associated Press Berlin, April 19. Bamberg, which has been the seat of the Ba-! varian government of Premier lloff-1 man, was the scene yesterday of a | strong communist, uprising, accord-! | ing to the Vossische Zeitung. The j communists occupied tlie central J railway station, the former royal I residence and all the military bar- J racks in Bamberg. CHICAGO IN THROES OF BIG CRIME WAVE | Period of Extreme Violence Leads to Manifesto by Police Chief Garrity to Commanding Officers of Force lly Associated I'rrss j Chicago, April 1 if.- —Forty-eight i hours of extreme violence caused I i Chief of Police Oarrity to summon ' i till commanding officers to his of '! iice to-day and wr.rn them that ' | unless there were unremitting ef • | forts to check the crime wave some n of them would face-the trial' board. i | accords of the chiefs office show- II cd that since January 1 there had j'been torty-tlirec murders in the city, SLACKER FIRMS TO BE EXPOSED SAYS M'CLAIN Former Lieutenant-Governor Hits at Railway Adminis tration's Rule on Soldiers 11 "Unless the slacker employers of I Pennsylvania come across and make I good their promises made to the | boys when they went to war that .their jobs would be wuiting l'or them i when they returned, I am going to | give out for publication the long list iof such concerns that 1 now have .i on my desk." ] This ultimatum lo employers I; throughout the State was made yes j terday by former l.kutenant-Gover | nor I 'rank It. Mct'laln, director of j the State Employment llureuu and executive director of the Pennsyl jvania Commission of Public Safety (and Defense. As he uttered the j words Air. McCluin held in his hand j reports captaining lists of concerns j from various parts of the State that ' | have not made good their promises. • All of these, according to Mr. Me ('lain, instead of giving their men j the positions occupied when they 'I went to war, or their, equal in pay, hare offering nothing but inferior . j [Continued on Page ll.] Jurorr Instructed tc Return May 5 to Hear <| the Hardscrabble Cases ij With the close of tin 1 April special ■ sessions of civil court jurors were ■I instructed to return, for the session ■ I to be held during the week of May i [ 5, when Hardscrabble cases will be , | heard. A number of eases in whir'i !j (hp city is endeavor.ng to have bene . I tits assessed against properties on )i tlie oust side of North Front street . ] in the Hardscrabble district are to . j be heard. , | Other actions listed for trial ;n -.j elude cases in which (lie city has i.p -!; pealed from the award of damages by j viewers to property owners affected J by the closing of South Third street, hand other smaller highway?, and the • construction of the South .front ;.rul | South Second street subways. Verdicts were expected to Ire rc ! turned by juries late to-day in the cases of J. M. Walker vs. Harrisburg - Railways Clmpuny and Jeremiah R. ' Sweeney vs. Harrisburg Storage 1 company. Russian Reds Capture MifH.nburg Sergeant .! Itu Associated Press . j Washington, April 19. —Capture L | by the Bolsheviki of Sergeant Glenn !W. Leitaell, of AHfflinburg, Pa., a ■ member of the American force in I north Russia, was reported to-day in II a dispatch to the Wur Department. • I The message said it was reported he '' was being taken to Moscow. I twenty-nine deaths by manslaughter I and eight homicides, a total of eighty killings in 108 days. In add'tion, 202 stores had been lihed, ninety-four saloons held up and looted, and three ticket sellers in elevated railway stations forced to surrender their cash. Three ma jor causes were given by the chief for the reign of lawlessness: Dis charge of criminals from the army; unemployment; too few policemen. NEW QUARANTINE ACT TO INCREASE STATE'S POWERS Commissioner Martin Plans' to Prevent Recurrence of Influenza Epidemic TO EXTEND VACCINATION | New Measure. Will Permit of Full Prosecution of Violators Conditions such as arose in Penn sylvania. during 11ns prevalence of the influenza epidemic 'u t fall would be guarded against and pos sibilities of a return of the prostrat ing disease taken into account in u bill which its understood 1o l>e in course of preparation for presents tion to (lie Legislature us represent ■ ing the idea's of Colonel Ldward Martin, the ittato Commissioner of i Health. The eoionel and his chiefs .of bureaus liiive been studying the I results cf tlic Slate handling of in lluenzu and various hil's now before the Legislature, such as vaccination, contagious and infectious disease ( regulations and tlio like and have made un n program which will l>n an- I nonpeed soon. ; Tlie influenza epidemic showed j where the health laws of Iho State ; were weak and the aim will he to | overcome the deficiencies and pre- I pare fcr emergencies. The various [Continued on Page I I.] Hint of Rain !s Given ' in New Week's Weather; Warmer in First Half i /W. h a>liiiiKln. April 111. Weather prediction* for the week beginning ' Monday, issued by the' Weather Mtl ; tea it to-day, are: | North ami Middle Allanli • Slab s: | Some slight prospect' ■ f ram by Mou ; day night or Tuesday in North At | lantic States and about. Wednesday | in North and Middle Atlantic States. 1 generally fair probable latter days of j week. Warmer lirst half of wc-ek, I normal temperatures thereafter. <%* 'l* A 2 % •; f a *** V ;; A x 1 4* V 4* 5" '* V j4 *" 14* n ! *s # ■*■' i 4* '*'■ (§ H - $* i - i* :v j <4i * ■ 4* *' * *■ j4 *T I J |4 2' ¥ 2 S 1 ■ *v* |X Vi •" O'- ia -v *r ! *t" I i *t i JiL ♦£- iT >A Victotv Übttty L6%tt . • ■ ; ... - <he 3 i£ ' T p* i s♦ **■ $* *1 ft C** I *r I 4 r 4* •••• *f Miir,' '• J, 4* **• Ml T road north to the White Sea, according to an official JL •? *e 4* Boh!." .1 t.-. ••' T ¥ I I f MARRIAGE LICENSES . t Frank \Y. Diflrndcrrcr, \. J.. and i:iimlrlli I), <iuy. *T <4* \\ iiMbhmton, 11. C.j .Inltii McC. t.ordon. llcr*hcy, and Fdnn >l. Fber- J. 5 nolo, Annvlllei (irrßc C. Stlne. PlttburKh, and Aline O. /.linmer- V man. WuNliln&ton, 11. i\\ .lhn 1,. I.eldla; and Unry 11. I,oilman, it IlinhMplre; Chnrlo* K. ftovlnjtcr and Ida 1". Roarer*, lln J <<?* Hay A. Stußnrt, Montgomery, anil Mary A. tlardlim, Moorman; .loxepli F. Kecfer and Florence l<). I,olio, MlllcraburKt John Kovnce- aL vie and Mary Kuril, Sleclton; William DlflVnderfer. II ip;hN|iro, j anil Stella M. Ilunkle. Steeltoni lOdnnrtl F. Shoop. Mlller*lHiru, nnd £ Mary K. I)lmpney, Wayne town*hlp; tiuyro >lrvlnch and UnU J, lludn*liiov leb. Ster||nn; HON* F tirlevo* and Knthryn I. licit union t, V 4. HradlnKi John 11. Conn. Ilirrlnbi*, and Martbn K. Perry. I)un y ennnon; tieorKc ii. lllehardM, Mltldleto** n, nnd Knthry n >l. Hoover, Roynltoni Arthur 1,. FMpenshrtTlc, Londonderry tounNhlp, and !\n- V omi K. timber. Palmyra | John ||. F.nvmf npor nnd Kmmn 11. Schnp *7* pe||. Went Filnlent Raymond S. Mctherell, Hnolai, and Catherine T 11. I'lirbt, Markelvlllei William F. Mower nnd Marlon K. Taylor, *{* llarrlnburni Monroe \. Morrison. Ilarri*hurur. and Catherine* K. JL tloeker, Ponbrook; Howard O. Ilnrr and F.dltb M. Iluntr.berjrer, T" JL IfnrriMhurfct Fill* R. Petrc, I. S. S. Prcaton. and Ciretna V. I). r t amphell. Ilcrahey. ' *§■ FLOWERS AND FASHIONS WILL SHARE EASTER 'Bright Skies Tomorrow to Murk Greatest of Chris tian Holidays |BLOOMS ARE BEAUTIFUL Impressive Church Services Planned For Observance of the Resurrection If Ihe wauthor prophet's prognos tications lie correct'" Ilarrisburg's ICuster morning will dawn bright, j clear and sunshiny. Skies will be un ! clouded and Jupiter Pltivius will be I safely imprisoned while Mother Har ; rls and lier daughters display their spring linery to the admiring male sex and the envious si: terhood of j femininity. Such is the cheering word thai canto from the weather bureau thi: 1 morning. Ami at the same time flor ists of the city were doing a record breaking business. "Prices arc i triHe higher but that is partly du< to the enormous demand and thr other rot sun is that an embargo ha 'been declared on importution of cer lain (lowers. Consequently we mus depend on lbe American-grown va rielies," said J. P. Horstick, win operated a flower stall at the Chest nut street market this morning ! When the market lirst opened in lit early hours of the morning, the nu morons booths were piled high wit. : blooms but they were soon strippei bare. Tito Luster shopping crowi surged to and fro in the marke [Continued on Page 11.] President to Gel: Back Home Middle of May; to CaD Congress in Sessioi liy Associated rrcss Washington. April 19.—Report. \ from Paris seem lo indicate tha. 1 President Wilson plans to return t j America the middle of next month and that an extra session of Con ' gress may lie called to meet sonv 1 time between May 15 and June 1.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers