8 RED MEN COMING TO CONVENTION IN LARGE NUMBERS Ask People of Harrisburg to Put Out Flags and Deco rate Homes Next Week 1 t HANG OUT FLAGS THE committee in charge ct the Red Men's State con vention, which will be held in Harrisburg June 9-12, re quests that the people of Harris burg display flags and decorate their homes for the parude which will be held Wednesday. The committee has financed the con vention without asking for local assistance beyond that preferred by a few friends and volunteers and asks only that the flags and other decorations be displayed. The Stato convention of the Red Men, which will be held in Harris burg, with headquarters at the Penn- Harris, June 9 to 12, will be the seventieth annual gathering of the kind and the third held in Harris burg during the past 20 years. The committee in charge believes it will be one of the largest in the history Of the organization, especially the parade to lie held Wednesday, of which Senator Frank A. Smith will be chief marshal. The order has 75,000 members in Pennsylvania. It maintains no or phanages but it does provide for the orphans of members, whether father or both father and mother be dead, bv keeping them, if possible, in their own homes or if that cannot be done in good homes of relatives or friends, where the order pays all expenses until the child is 14 years old. The order is purely American, as the name indicates, and is of a pa triotic character. During the war it placed hospital ambulances, fully equipped, in all of the cantonments at a cost of $150,000, raised by sub scriptions of members, and these ambulances rendered especially val uable services during the influenza epidemic. —r — x Storage Batteries Are only as powerful and reliable j as their' plates and separators and j other parts. Over 400 "Diamond C r os s i ngu" in the hold the active material in the i plate and prevent buckling, twist- j ing, bending and short circuiting. | The patented exclusive separators j last as long as the plates. Every starting, lighting and ignition | battery is Guaranteed 18 Months Drive your oar in and let us inspect your battery (free) nnd . tell you its exact condition. Wc I do dependable recharging and | repairing at reasonable rates. Live dealers wanted in Dauphin ; and Cumberland Counties. I DIAMOND GRID BATTERY CO. 08 S. Cameron St. IT'S ALL CAR KEYSTONE MOTOR CAR CO. Bell 709 C. H. Baiter Mgr. Dial 4454 57—105 S. Cameron St. Harrisburg Statement of the Condition of Dauphin Deposit Trust Co. Harrisburg Pa. At the Close of Business June 2nd, 1919. Required by the Com missioner of Banking ASSETS: LIABILITIES: Cash and Cash Items. .$ 178,468 45 Capital $ 300,000 00 Due From Banks 389,769 56 Surplus 300,000 00 Loans and Investments 3,465,469 81 Undivided Profits 46,134 54 Building- 72,000 00 Due to Banks 5,707 29 M Overdrafts 90 74 DEPOSITS 3,453,956 73 $4,105,798 56 $4,105,798 56 M > TRUST FUNDS $656,867 37 • • '' /: * SATURDAY EVENING, HJLRRISBTIRG TELEGRAPH '• JUNE 7, 1919. MASONS ATTEND 16TH BANQUET Harrisburg Lodge, No. 629, Celebrates Anniversary at Big Gathering Celebration of the sixteenth an niversary of Harrisburg No. \ 029, Free and Accepted Masons, last night, was a brilliant success. In honor of the event a banquet was ; held in Masonic Temple, Third and State streets, and was attended by '4OO Masons. Numbered among the ; guests were many prominent mem bers of the Masonic order from out of the city. The decorations and floral display were the most elabo rate of the season. | Seated at a table at the front of ; the room were Charles C. Stroll, I worshipful master, who served as ' toastmaster, and the guests of the j lodge. The honor table was built around a sunken garden with many i beautiful blooms, including peonteH ' and palms. Beneath these flowers * were many small lights. Back of the garden was a huge basket of roses, i and extending from the garden to | each plate at the honor table was a string of asparagus vine. Back of the head table was a large i painting showing a garden scene. On i each side were lattices carrying wis | laria blooms and red roses. A wall i of palms was placed beneath the big I picture. An attractive floral dis ' play was red, white and blue flags. Toasts and Speakers The guests were welcomed by Philip S. Moyer. The toasts were, "To the Right Worshipful Grand j Lodge of the Most Ancient and Hon ! orable Fraternity of Free and Ac- I cepted Masons of Pennsylvania and Masonic Jurisdiction, Thereunto Be | longing," by Charles C. Stroh, wor shipful master; "To the Memory of 'our Deceased Brother, George Washington, Frederick M. Tritle, senior warden; "Freemasonry 'Round the Globe," Howard C. Irwin, junior warden, and "To the Memory of AJI Freemasons Who Gave Their Lives That Liberty Might Be Ad-1 vanced Throughout the World and J to All the Nations Thereof," Charles C. Stroll, worshipful master. ' The speakers and topics were, "Masonry and Democracy," Glenn | M. Smith, Clarion Lodge No. 277; "Our Boys," David L. Martin, La fayette Lodge, Boston, Mass., and | "Recompense," John- R. Geyer, past- | master Prince Edwin Lodge No. 486. Talks were also given by Sam uel M. Goodyear, grand junior warden, Carlisle Lodge; William S. Snyder, district deputy grandmaster and visiting masters of other lodges. Musical features were by the Ma sonic orchestra under the leadership of Fred W. Weber, Harrisburg Lodge No. 629, and the Masonic chorus which included C. Linford Scott, choirmaster; Fred J. Kramer, Lodge No. 260, pianist; Augustus G. Shantz, 464; Arthur L. Hall, No. 21; George 1., Ebersole, No. 21; Walter E. Dietrich, No. 464; G. P. Sheaffer, No. 464; Frank L. McGlaughlin, No. 629; I. Birkitt Dickir.-son, No. 464; Claude R. Engle, No. 486; E. Ralph Kulp, No. 21; John N. Kinnav No. 464: Samuel S. Fackler, No. 464; and Arthur Cowdrey, No. 629. The an niversary committee in charge of last night's successful affair includes: Charles C. Stroll, chairman; Har- , ry E. Warner, Frederick M. Tritle, I John S. Boas, Howard C. Irwin, Os car J. Bogen, Frederick. J. Smith, ] Martin L. Bo'wmar.-, William Spry Hurlock, Charles E. Covert, Howard A. Rutherford, E. Clark Cowden, Mercer B. Tate, William H. Drink water, Samuel D. Sansom, Charles W. Erb, Luther W. Walzer, Francis H. Hoy, Jr., John C. Sliumberger, Jo- j seph W. Ibach, Warren B. Kelm, ! Frederick L. Koenig, Benjamin M. Nead, Milton H. Plank, Edward A. Miller, S. Sholl Rutherford, Clinton E. Chamberlin, C. Linford Scott, Benjamin W. Demming. A. Carson Stamm, Jesse E. B. Cunningham, Wheat Tractor Stops Here On Coast to Coast Tour : r ; The wheat tractor which left New York city late on the night of May 21) reached this city last night on the first leg of a transcontiental run I from New York to Los Angeles. This I tour is the first ever made by a j tractor over the road and has for its | object a demonstration of the scr ! viceabiiity of heavy rubber-tired | road wheels as a part of tractor equipment. Indeed the eas with which this now tractor was handled | from the heart- of New York City to the city limits through a dense traffic surpassed even the expecta tions of the promoters of the tour. Encumbered as the tractor was by a heavy trailer equipped with a "pra irie-schooner" caboose containing sleeping accommodations for the crew and farming equipment tra versing New Jersey and northern Pennsylvania, not a little local in terest was aroused especially among farmers along the route who were found working their slow-going horse-drawn plows. The tractor is manned by a crew who until a few woeks ago described themselves as Lieut. T. H. Irwin, U. S. Army Air Service; Lieut. Robert E. MacKenzie, U. S. Tank Corps; Lieut. Howard S. Tiffany, U. S. Ord nance Department, and Gus Bohlig. Already the tractor has encountered the most trying of road conditions and successfully passed these tests which lead its drivers to believe, that they will be able to surmount! the chassis-racking highways along J the 4,000-mile journey. The coast-to-coast tractor tour,! unlike the now time-honored auto-1 mobile tours, is not designed as a ; spectacular stunt but us a demon-' stration that a farm tractor can he i worked efficiently on the road as on the field, provided it is equipped with the proper sort of road wheels. L. B. Cravath, vice-president and general manager of the Hession Tiller and Tractor Corporation, who was a pioneer, in the tractor field, is the originator of this somewhat rev olutionary idea. He believes in act ual demonstration rather than prom ises and optimistic statements. The whea ttractor is equipped with road wheels and solid Firestone tires, which are standard equipment. At- 1 ■ William P. Starkey, Harvey E. I Knupp, Frank Suydam, George P. Drake, W. Fred Weber. ! Chaplain, John F. Rohrer; raar shal, Mercer B. Tate; assistant mar shal, Francis H. Hoy, Jr. Officers of Harrisburg Dodge No. 629 are: Worshipful master, Charles C. Stroh; senior warden, Frederick M. Tritle; junior warden, Howard C. ! Irwin; treasurer, Charles E. Covert: secretary, Benjamin W. Dommin-g; trustees, William Spry Hurlock, P. M., Howard A. Rutherford. P. M„ Benjamin M. Nead, P. M.; represen tative in grand lodge, Frederick J. Smith, P. M.; chaplain, John F. Rohrer; senior deacon, William J. Freed; junior deacon, Frederick J. Milllgan; senior master of ceremo nies, Alfred Brur.-house, junior mas ter of ceremonies, Oscar J. Bogen; pursuivant, Joseph W. Ibach; tyler, Jacob C. Holbert, Jr.; stewards, Frederick D. Koenig, William H. Drinkwatcr. Will Call Nation-wide Strike of the Telegraphers Washington, June 7. President 8. J.Konenkamp, of the Commercial Telegraphers' Union of America, an nounced last night that he would call a nation-wide strike of members of 'the union upon reaching Chicago to-day. He said that neither the date of the proposed walkout nor whether it would affect both the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company and the Western Union Telegraph and Cable Company had been decided. The strike, President Konenkamp said, would be called in support ot, union employes of the Western Ur.ion Company in ten Southeastern States, who were requested by him to leave their work, following return by or der of Postmaster General Burleson of the wire systems of the country to private operation. INDICTMENT QUASHED The indictment against John Den chak, a hotelman from the upper end of the county, who was charged with selling liquor during the in fluenza epidemic, although health authorities had ordered that no in toxicating drinks should be sold, was quashed in an order by the court to day. A true bill had been returned a few months t.go by a Grand Jury and the motion to quash the indict ment followed. . tachcd to it as a trailer which car i ries a ti-joc-bottom plow and a set [of wide, cleated tractor wheels for j use in plowing and other farm work. | These wheels can he substituted for the rubber-tired ones very quickly, ias quickly in fact as wire wheels | can be changed on passenger auto | mobiles. Within twenty minutes the 1 tractor can be taken off the road and \ made ready for field work. The , itinerary includes Harrisburg, Read | ing, Pttsburgh, Canton, O.; Akron, i Cleveland, Dayton, Indliyiapolis, | South Bend, Chicago, and thence to I the coast via St. Louis and the Mid land Trail, Pikes Peak Highway and ! the Pioneer Way. At Wichita, Kans., in July, the wheat tractor will be on hand for the tractor exposition there. One of the aims of the trip is to demonstrate to the Government that in case of more war being forced upon this country, whereby defense on a big scale becomes necessary, tractors of the country equipped with road wheels and manned by army drivers can be made instantly avaiiahlc for hauling guns and for general transportation purposes, cither in this country or_ another country. Tn the past the tractor has been considered a heavy, unwieldy implement, primarily intended for tilling, cultivating and power farm ing, but the present trip is to prove the wonderful utility of this type of tractor for hauling on roads where cleated tractor wheels and land wheels are prohibited. The trip also marks the. inauguration of an educational campaign to dealers and consumers throughout the country. Oliver Chill Plows With Tractor on X-Country Tour Accompanying the wheat tractor that is in Harrisburg to-day on its way across the courrtry in the coast to const tour is a representative of the Oliver Chill Plow Company. Tho Oliver plow No. 78 is being used by this tractor in its plowing demon stration. H. H. Boozer, local manager of the Oliver Plow Company, met the tractor last evening when it arrived here and escorted it into the city. BERLIN EAGER TO RETAIN HER CAPITAL STATUS Citizens Meet and Protest Against Efforts to Strip the City J Berlin. June 7. A huge meeting I was held here the v other day to pro j test-against the efforts to strip Berlin !of its status as a capital. Mayor j Wermuth and several others painted I Berlin as a world city of art, a city for visitors and a city of the future. Despite its present srnuttiness, crime and disorder, they said, Berlin will regain its reputation as the cleanest, safest and best governed city in the world. Wermuth said that further disturbances would bring agony, and urged all to work to improve condi tions. Sydicus Willner admitted that Ber lin never was popular, especially in Germany and that "Berlin is con sidered a black sheep among Ger man cities." He explained that its position necessitated the presence of good, bad and indifferent. Dr. Max Osborn declared that im perial Berlin had clogged itself with lonely buildings and senseless mon uments. "The real Berlin is hidden behind these pretentious character less things, but now there is no bar rier to recreating it as a city of art without parallel," he declared. Boys Find Soldier Drowned in Marsh Creek; Was Gassed Overseas Gettysburg, Pa.. June 7. Ray mond Hershcy, son of Mrs. Abra hum Hershey and a soldier just re turned from t"he Army, was drowned in Marsh Creek about four miles from town. Hershey had been In Prance eight months as a member of a motor transport outfit and had been busy taking materials up to the front a few duys before the armistice wns sign-ed. He was gassed and about two months ago sent back home, where he has since been under treat, ment at the government hospital at Carlisle. He was discharged from there on Tuesday und return-ed home. Yester day afternoon he went up the coun try to visit a brother. While there he went to the creek to take a bath. The last seen of him was about 1 o'clock until he was found by hoys about fi. No particulars are known as to the accident, as he seems to have been alone. He was 2!) years old and is survived by his wife, three sisters and four b-athcrs. FORMER KF.SIDKNT HERE Mrs. Ransome Tedrow Rewis, of Elmira, N. Y„ who resided in this city about twenty years ago, is vis iting Miss Cora Ree Snyder on the way to Rititz to attend the com mencement festivities of Rinden Hall, where her daughter. Miss Kathleen Rewis, is one of the grad uates. Mr. Rewis has been manager of the Elmira plant of the Ameri can Bridge Company for a number of years. : : / ARRIVES HOME Private Thomas M. Reete, 304 En-gineers, 79th Division, arrived at his home In Camp Hill after serv ing 11 months in the Army. Reese was gassed in battle and was con fined two montha to a hospital. MARKETS FULL i OFNEWPRODUCEj Strawberries and Cherries I Plentiful and Prices Drop Farmers and truckers from nearl the city brought big supplies of. home-grown green produce to the markets to-day and as a result prices took a drop over the ones established during the last few weeks. Strawberries and cherries were plentiful and the prices dropped ac cordingly. Oxlieart cherries at the markets early this morning were on the stands at 25 cents a box. As more dealers came in with big sup plies, the price kept going down and soon had reached 16 cents, with indi cations of a still greater drop. Strawberries, home raised, were put on the stands at 25 and 30 cents, hut the supply was far above the demand at that figure and a number of dealers had out their prices before the markets were open three hours, some selling as low as 18 cents. Green beans, which had been sell ing for SO cents a quarter peck for the last few weeks tumbled to 18 and 20. Peas were still 20 and 25 a quarter and new potatoes were kept at 20 and 25 a quarter. Lettuce, fresh onions radishes, spinach and othor greens were down in price, every stand having a big supply on hand. Shipped fruits changed very little over the prevailing prices of the last few weeks, but some deal ers predicted a slight increase for lemons within a week. Prices fallow: Asparagus, 10-18 c; beans, green, V t peck, 18-20 c; ba nanas, 25c; butter, country, 57-64 c; butter, creamery, 65-68 c; cabbage, head, 5-15 c; currants, box, 10-15 c; cherries, box, 16-20 c; eggs. 48c-; lem ons, 40e dozen; lettuce, 5-10 c; oranges, 30-80 c; onions, box, 12-15 c; onions, bunch, sc; peas, 14 peck, 20-25e; potatoes, new, peck, 20- 25c; peppers, sc; cucumbers, 5-10e; radishes, sc; spinac-h, M peek, 8-10 c; tomatoes, box, 15-20 c; bacon, GO-5Rc; ham, 48-60o; lard, 33-35 c; chickens, dressed, pound, 42-47 c; chickens, live, pound, 30-35 c. QUENCHES PERSISTENT THIRST HorsforU's ArUI Phosphate In any drink makes it more satisfying —acts as a wholesome stimulant. Do You Want to See All of the World's Series Baseball Games This Year FREE? Free Trips for Fifty Baseball Enthusiasts to See The World's Championship Series Next October Between the Pennant Winners of the National and American Leagues. Everyone has an equal chance to take this great trip AS THE GUEST OF THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER You will have no expense. There is nothing for you to do to win this greatest offer ever made to baseball lovers but to get the votes. Your friends will provide them. It will be all fun for you; a big trip, a chance to see the greatest series of baseball games ever played, as well as other places of interest in the cities visited. And all AT THE EXPENSE of the Philadelphia Inquirer. Here Is How You May Be One of "The Inquirer's Famous Fifty" The fortunate ones will be elected from the great army of baseball rooters by ballot, the flfty who receive the largest popular vote be ing the winners In this great baseball contest. In next Sunday's Philadelphia Inquirer nnd continuing bo til daily and Sunday thereafter until September 30th, The Inquirer will print a WORLD'S SERIES COUPON at tile iMittom of the first column of the second iwgc. the dally Coupon counting one vote anil the Sunday Coupon counting five votes. Collect as many of these Coupons as possible, and send them to The Itiquirci- World's Series Editor each week. The. num ber sent in each week will Is- cremuxl to your total, und tho Itfty who have received the greatest numlicr of votes and subscription credits at the close of the contest on September 30th will in- elected to take this great trip as the guests of The Philadelphia Inquirer. Special Subscription Offer—No Cash in Advance Is Required With Subscription Orders Any contestants who wish to solicit new nix months' subscriptions to the daily Inquirer will be credited with 1000 extra votes for the name of oach new subscriber they send in before Saturday, August 16th, and in this way may secure a large number of extra votes. Subscription blanks can be obtained by writing to Tho Philadelphia Inquire.- World's Series Dept., N, W. Cor. 9th and Spruce streets, Philadelphia. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS COVERING ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS All Subscription Orders must be shown to the news agent In the town where paper is to bo delivered and Indorsed by him as a new daily reuder before being sent to The Inquirer Office in order to receive credit. You need not collect any money nor send any money with the order. Just get your friend or neighbor to sign the subscription blank and promise to pay tho news agent, on his regular collection days, and then get the news agent's indorsement that it is a new daily reader for six months. Subscriptions to be sent by mail must be prepaid and votes will be credited at the proportion of 260 votes for each month paid for. No credit can be given you for the names of old readers who are already taking The Daily Inquirer, as that, of course, does not rep resent a new Daily Reader. No credits will be gjven for Sunday subscription orders. No one at this time can foretell which clubs will bo the l'cmiuiit Winners this year so it is Impossible yet to know whore tho World's Series of games will bo played. One club may be located as far west as Bt, lands or Chicago and the other as fur east as Boston. It does not inntter where the games are played, the fifty winners of the contest will go there as tho guests of The Inquirer, und The Inquirer will guarantee them plenty o f entertainment i.H through the journey. The Inquirer's "FAMOUS FIFTY" has become a well-known feature wherever World's Series Baseball Games are played. They are always there as a representative body of rooters, with new faces every season, but none the less a typical bunch of the elect baseball fans. And they enjoy the best of everything, whether traveling, at their hotels or at the big games. WHERE WILL THE BIG GAMES BE PLAYED THIS YEAR? The "wise ones" are predicting that at leaHt one club will be located in the West. If their prediction comes true, it will make thtg year's trip a banner one, but no matter where it may be, this year's Inquirer Tourists will be there. Will a Western trip this year be even more interesting than that of the Fifty who spent nearly two weeks with the rtttsburgh und De troit teams, visiting Cleveland, Buffalo, Windsor Canada, and returning byway of the Great Rakes and Niagara Falls? Special traveling arrangements will be made in order that they may have every comfort, and at the cities visited they will be entertained at the leading hotels. While in distant cities, entertainment will bo provided for the guests o.' The Inquirer. EVERYTHING WILL BE PROVIDED BY THE INQUIRER to make the outing one never to be forgotten by the fortunate winners of this great contest. In the meantime prepare to secure all the coupons und subscription credits you can. Instructions how to win arc printed here. Subscription blanks and any further information can be had by writing to The Philadelphia Inquirer World's Series Contest Headquarters, N. W. Cor. Ninth and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia. NEWS OF S Music in Lutheran Church Tomorrow At the morning service in St. John's Lutheran Church, Miss Rebecca Mil ler, instructor of music in the Kit tanning public schools, will sing a soprano solo. Nevin's "The Twilight Fulls" will be rendered in the even ing by the choir. Ministers Hold Final Meeting of Season The final meeting of the Steelton Ministerial .'ssoclation for this sea son will be held Monday morning at 10 o'clock in St. John's Lutheran Church. Steelton Churches Main Street Church of God—The Rev. J. E. stine. 10.45, "The Tower of Babel nnd Its Builders"; 7.30, "God's Great Fire Department"; Sun day school. 9.45. i First Methodist—The Rev. F. A. I Tyson. 10, Children's Day; 6.30, Ep [ wortli League; 7.30. Boy Scout night, I sermon, "Training Youth for Citizen* i ship." v St. ohn's Lutheran —The Rev. G. N. Lauffer. 10.45. "An Open Door." 7:50, "Take Heed What Ye Henr"; Sunday School, 9.30; Christian En deavor, 6.30. First Presbyterian—The Rev. C. R. Segelkon. 11, "Man's .Constitution and God's Consideration"; 7.30, "The Moral Constitution of the Universe"; Sunday school, 9.45. Trinity Episcopal The Rev. W. C. Heilman. 10, church school; 11, Holy communion and sermon; 7,30 evening prayer and sermon; Monday evening, vestry meeting at rectory. Centenary United Brethren—The Rev. Joseph DnughertV. 10 30, Chil dren's Day; 6.30, Christian Endeavor, with address by Prof. I* E. McOinnes on "Conditions Necessary for World Peace": 7.30, "Christ Our Strength," First Reformed—The Rev. H, H. Rupp. 10, Children's Pay, joint serv ice; 7.30, "That Child of Yours," mus ic by junior choir. Grace United Evuq#celical The Rev. J. K. Hoffman. 10.45. "Thp Dis ciples' Preparation for the Outpour ing of the Holy Spirit"; 7 30, A. C. Fellman. of the Brooklyn Christian Mission to the Hebrews, will speak on "Evangelisation of the Hebrews"; Sunday school, 9.30, C. E„ 6.45. Upper Pine Street Is to Be Developed Plans for the improvement ofi Pine street in the section Known as| the Twelfth Extension were drafted | last evening by the housing commit-' tee of the Municipul League and i will be brought before Council at Its J next meeting. There is an assurance | that as soon as water, sewer and gas ./>lpes are laid in the section the street will be speedily developed. This action comes as the result of much agitation for better and great-! er housing facilities. The opening and developing of this section will mean the extension of one of the cleanest and prettiest streets in the borough, in which are some of the most modern houses of Steelton. The building of a number of modern homes is assured immediately after , gas. water and sewerage eonveni | ences can be secured. Sunday School District Chooses New Officers [ At a meeting of the Sunday School | Association of District Six of Dau jphin County, held in Grace United jE\ angelical Church, the following I officers were elected: ! J. A. Pinley, president; H. It. Iltupp, first vice-president; C. How lard, second vice-president; J. M. I Cooper, treasurer, 8. Fred Conner, | secretary; Mrs. W. F. Maginnis, su | perintendent of elementary grades; H. J. Sander l *, organiser of adult Bi ble classes; Mrs. Ilosa Smith, super intendent of home department; Prof. 'L. E. MeGtnnes, superintendent of j teacher training; Miss Mabel Hupp, | missionary superintendent; C. B. Steviek, temperance superintendent; C. W. McCoy, superintendent of ru ral work. The officers will meet on June 17. SERGEANT TC SPEAK Sergeant G. S. Fairall, recontly re turned home from France, where he served during the World War, will tell his experiences to-morrow aft ernoon at the United Brethren Church. He will address the young men's Bible class of that congrega tion, of which Charles Saylor is tho teacher. WILL BUII-I) GARAGE A building permit wc. issued yes terday for the erection of a garage by John Bogner on his property at 165 Conestoga ctreet. Sergeant Morrison Returns to His Home Sergeant Frank Morrison, son of Mrs. Ephraim Morrison , North. Front street, returned home last evening. He received his discharge from military service after serving in France for the past year as a member of the Three Hundred and Fourth Engineers of the Seventy*, ninth Division. Ball Game on Cottage Hill Diamond Today The teams of the rolling mills and transportation department of tho steel plant will play ball on the Cot. tage Hill difmond this afternoon at •1 o'clock. The game will not be counted in the Inter-department League. Mangin Prohibits Strikes Against the Rhenish Republic Berlin, June 6.—A proclamation |by General Mangin, commander of the French army of occupation at | Mayence, forbidding strikes against | the Rhenish republic and threaten* ; ing leaders of any such movements ; with expulsion, is published in tho j Frankfort Gazette. "The Khinclanders have been dis cussing the interests of their father i land for the last six months without I disturbing public order," the procla | mution says, "but now the German 1 government threatens them with tm j prisonment. They have created a , republic within the German empire (and have sought the right of elec i tion, in which they will have com- I pleto freedom. There is nothing in | their procedure which might occa j sion protests or strikes, which dis j turb order and economic life." I The French have a propaganda | fund amounting to 10,000,000 francs I with which to further the movement for the Rhenish republic, declares the Karlsruhe correspondent of tho Lokal Anzeiger. This sum, he says, is being used principally in the Hhineland and Palatinate and it is being partly distributed to those favorng an independent republic at Landau. Mayence, Cologne and Wiesbaden, who without doubt, he adds, "have been bribed." I Harry C. Hunter Shows Will Exhibit at Third