PENNSYLVANIA STATE ITEMS ® Mt. Carmel.—While on his way to work at the Greenough colliery, An- drew Toth, of this place, dropped dead. York.—Fifty-five members of the York County Bar Association attended a dinner at the York Country Club. L.ancaster.—A wage increase to em- ployes of the Conestoga Traction com- pany was announced here. Altoona. —Success attended the drive for the local American Legion. Mountville.—Miss Mary Musser, schools a number of years, has been chosen principal of the Parkesburg high school. Pittsburgh. exonerated Lieutenant The police trial board blame in connection with their alleged Archie, whose father killed Mrs, Archie and then committed sulcide on April 4. Jerome Archie charged that the police refused to respond to a call before the shooting occurred. Wilkes-Barre.—Paul Donah, leading playing in this city, was held In $3000 ball, charged with failing to turn over ernment. The company is sald to have failed to pay 10 per cent of the re. ceipts for November, December and January, and Donah was taken before United States Commissioner Smith, where he walved a hearing. West Chester.—Truman D. counsel for Mrs, Julia Upton, brought a suit in the common to recover the equivalent of 25,000 Bel- gian francs, which it is alleged, she lent to Daniel Daley, of Strafford, In 1921. At that time Daley, who was traveling abroad, met Mrs’ Upton. Their friendship grew, and when Daley told her he was short of cash, Mrs. Upton furnished the amount now sued for, taking his tote. This was dated September 1, 1921, and made in Brussels, Daley returned to this country and pot long ago married the widow of Horace Petitt, of Straf- ford. Mrs. Petitt's first hushand was counsel fog the Vietor Talking Ma- chine company, of Camden, left her SO00.000, Harrishurg —Governor Pinchot ap- pointed Howard ¥. Marsh, of Wells. boro, judge in Tioga county, to fill a vacancy. He is the first judge appoint- ed by the governor and is a native of Tioga county, 60 yeas old. ticed law In Wellshoro and gaged in newspaper work in New York. He returned in 1897 and has been practicing law there since, Pittsburgh. —Christmas trees for the Pittsburgh market will be grown In this distriet, if plans of H. R. Eby, Allegheny county fam agent meet with approval of the farmers. Mr. Eby will conduct experiments in ler county to demonstrate Scotch pines can be grown on barren hillsides and other waste lands unsuitable tivation, Wilkes-Barre. — The Dickson, pleag court who He prac- 1 for cul- of Wyoming, to appear at Miss Anna Rinkus, of Extra, prompted the parents of the disappointed bride to have a warrant sworn outsfor the missing bridegroom. he to havé been performed in Casimir's church, at Pittston. Every. thing in readiness the bride and bridal party at the church, but the prospective bride. groom interfered considerably with the program by failing to appear. Reading. General George Goethals, builder of the Panama Canal, has noti. fied city officials that he will make ap inspection of the plans for the elim- ination of the Seventh street crossing, preparatory to whether or not he will become consulting engineer on the problem, Philadelphia.-—~Matches are the chief cause of fires In this city, as shown by the report of the Fire Insurance Pa- trol. There was an Increase of fires in 1922 over 1921, according to the report, and there were In all 5858 fires here during the last year. The report fixes tle losses to Insurance companies for the year 1922 as $4.335.- 108, ag compared with $5.641.043 In 1921. The fires are diviged in the re- port as follows: Stores and ware. houses, 320: printers and publishers, 11; metal workers, 44 : wood workers, 25; textile workers, 47; miscellaneous, 2799, and dwellings, 2408. Bethiehem.—The New Jersey Zine company, which abandoned zine ore mines a few, miles below this city nearly a generation ago, is now mak- ing a eareful examination of the mines there and may resume operations. The mineg were closed down years ago when the cost of production’ became more than the market value of the product, but zinc ore I now so high in value that It is thought the old Friedensville mines can be profitably worked, Lewistown The schoo! bogrd has ordered the Wayne street building re. modeled at a cpst of $7500, Pittsburgh. —Western Pennsylvania cases will be heard by the superior court when It convenes here, Pittsburgh.—Fifteen persons, charg. ed with Hlegal use of railroad passes, were fined $100 each In federal court® Lanecaster.—Frank G. Betterline, 51 years old, fell dead as he was on his way home from a quarry near here, Altoona. Twenty-five Chinese have heen put to work on track repalr work in the Pennsylvania yards at East Al none. was was were Phoenixville —Totense whey the excitement walls of the sunk, windcwpanes crashed te the floor and several window cords broke. A thorough investigation has been started by the school board. The dl rector of recreation was putting a number of pupils through their exer- cises when the crash came and a panic was barely averted. Reading.-~The Reading Transit and Light company advanced the wages of Its B00 motormen and con- ductors four cents an hour on its en. tire gystem, which includes Reading, Norristown, Roxborough and Lebanon, This ralses the wages of Its car serv- men from forty-six to fifty cents who will Cars, receive fifty-five ing been five cents an hour more than Danville—~A libel guit asking $5000 Mayberry against Mrs, resident of the dis- pupils attend Miss The plaintiff bases township, Loreman, a from which Vought's school. by Mrs loreman and Madison Vought, the The letter, accord- ing to the plaintiff's statement, read in part: “We beg you to look Into Viola's sent to Mrs, Her scholars are taught to be a set of liarg and tattietales, ending in curs crossing accidents during February, commission, smnounced. This Is an of two and 29 pared with the same month of 1922 the killed and There were 48.305 ind: during the first year compared same period of occupants 40 injured strial accidenty three months of this 35,608 for the workmen's with 1922, the compensation bureau announced pensat Com long paid during the first quar ter amounted to $£2270344, which $688 4833 was for fatalities. Harrisburg.-——Provision for the non. year of ed in a bill George W, Woodruff Ig having drafted the The measure Is designed to re for introduction in week, establish senate the system set tion of the 1921 legl Ln now in prepars with all party require that they tickets entirely aside by ac 3 : f ee ” election of Judges be on non-partisan The measure, accord ing to Atterney General Woodruff, has the support of the administration. Pittsburgh. — One Kendall man Moon was illed nt station, argument call was the victim of the shooting m getting into shape for the bout. Has Much Confidence in Catcher Devormer Frank Chance, having been a catch- | er himself, thinks he knows one when he sees him, and it was his liking for i the work of Al Devormer when Al was playing in the Coast league that caused No hig bearings player's Chance ton the services, SOOGHer got as the boss than he began Yankees for a deal, Devormer is not to be & veteran, but he has classed had from bulk is hig gone the loston, Al probably will do of the team’s catching, for he and strong and can the work-—work he never had a chance to do with the Yankees, Devormer got his early training un der such =a manager Bill Essick, in the Central lengue. When Essick went to the coast as man wise as iger with | good ished him, and he in class AA owt the year immedintely He with company. fin of 1918 and was sold end seasons bark in Vernon to the Yankees at the under Miller Hug chance to work | orating the bench gins, | again and Is happy. Now he has a the shot, escaped ty detectives, According Boceall and Peliazzar's to coun a party of visited hame, At to early to go retire. Boccall "sald it was too Bloomsburg Mrs er, the oldest rest Elizabeth Fletch Altoona. Stella old, at a hospital . here scalde received when she pan of boiling water at her home Marietta Shuptar, 2 died fell Stephen Debner, a farm ing over it and his left foot upset % Orders for 1000 steel hop siove lerwick local plant of Car and Foundry company. Pottsville.—Collection of Sunday office department agreed to allow $300 for this work until the end of the fiscal year in July. This is the exact ed in ag a surplus last year. At Min. ersville the department has allowed an uppropriation for auxiliary work. Shenandoah,—The Shenandoah Con- contract for 400 modern homes on Shenandoah Heights, a new section recently purchased from the Girard Estate, of Philadelphia, on Locust Mountain, overlooking this town. Hazleton.-~Fortune tellers and phrenologists will pot be permitted to do business hare, according to a rul- ing by Mayor James G. Harvey. Lancaster. — Robert 8. Hoffman, aged 12 years, of Little Britain town. ship, this county, had his left hand mangled when a cartridge exploded while ig school. Mowrey. Milton Wolfgang, of this place, was instantly killed by a car on the Locust Spring rock bank that was knocked off the track by another ear that struck it. ; Altoona. — After fifty years of serv. ice, Christopher J, Cassidy, foreman of the wheel shop at the Pennsylva. ofa raliroad shops here, has been re tired on a pension. Uniontown. There were more than 200 prisoners In the Fayette county Jalil, the greatest number of the year, Uniontowr. Fayette connty set a new record in March for violent deaths when fifty-one were reported to the coroner. Wilkes.Barre.—Plans and specifica. tions for the Luzerne county tuberecu- losis hospital have been approved by the commissioners, Hazleton~~An automobile stolen from Willlam Caso, of this city, was found on the Nescopeck mountain, burned so badly It could not be sal vage:d Claude Jonnard, speedball artist, is expected to be a great help to the Me. Graw pitching staff this season. Jon nard has a world of speed and con | trols it well, but he Is trying hard to | develop a hook on his fast one, as well as soquire a change of pace that is needed to fool the opposing batsmen, I Chief McGraw Likes to Boast About Irish John McGraw likes to boast about the part the Irish have played in de veloping baseball. He is wont to remark that baseball would never have gotten anywhere but for the Irish. That is, he used to, But one day he was telling a fat German-American about the power of the Celts when the fat chapple interrupted him with: “What about those Irishers? You had Donlin and a lot of Kerry patch. ers and you got badly trimmed by a team that had Pfeister and Reunlbach and Steinfeldt and Huffman and" Put John was on his way out and did not hear the rest of it. + - - -— Announce Harness Card ww" ond A one day's harnegs-horse rac. ing program will be held at the new Granwood track on Decora: tion day, when the new plant will be dedicated. Throe races, each for £1000, will make up the program. Over 256,000 invi- tations will be sent out, The first gcheduled meeting will commente on June 25 and last six diya, TE ————— — Hard on Cantillon One afternoon up at Minneapo- His the Millers playing rather poorly. About the second inning the bag at first base cut and the pour out, leaving it a hit limp. Manager Joe Cantiflon of the Millers was sitting on the bench, gloomily, The piling up the runs, and his men couldn't sdemn to get Finally of his sald to him, “Boss, you'd better have that bag at fixed body's lable to stumble over it and break his were Was sawdust started to opposition was going. one boys first Some BAA AA MAA A BR we leg.” bt AAA AA AAR Bh A AAA AA AA AAA AA MA Six Los Angeles high . * - Northwestern university has ele Golf is pretty 1) to be tioned In the course of an enthusiast's remarks, ely men * - * golf fee Is twelve nominal boasts publie where =a Chicago charged . = @ Whatever the French for chortle is, undoubtedly did it when she - * * The All-Cuban baseball team represent Middletown (N, Y.) in the Atlantic league » . * Notre Dame university will with Yale on at New Haven on May 12 * » ot track the team clash cinders Cornell had 28 hockey ket-ball teams and 60 has playing a regular * - LL The Yale varsity boxing team easily defeated the Queen's university glove men, winning five out of six matches, eo * » Babe Ruth is planning te go into Massachusetts farm when he * at - retires, When man becomes truly civilized, he will find that there are other things bezides golf worth going out of doors for, * - » A number of fast young swimmers are coming along. but so far none of them measures up to the invincible Johnny Weissmuller. » * . Now that we have a machine to de. tect a lie and reveal it, perhaps some- body will invent a golf ball that can detect a bad lle and dodge It - » * It is sald that Manager Rickey of the Cardinals puts his players through the most grueling skull practice of any pilot in the major leagues, - - . Eddie Casey, who will again coach the Tufts football squad, will have as an assistant Walter Cleary, who is himself a former gridiron star, » - - The international intercollegiate track meet between combined Har vard-Yale and Oxford-Cambridge teams will be held July 21, in the sta- dium at Wembley, near London, . . . Fred Klobedansz, pitcher, with the Boston of oldtime days, now employed in a cotton mill In New Bedford, Mass, recently céanught his left hand in a machine and the thumb was taken off. . . More boost for the Chicago White Sox: Nell Blaisdell, the Honolulu pitcher signed by Kid Gleason for a trial, pitched a nohit college game the other day. He is to join the White Sox In May. . 0. Secretary Thomas W. Cahill of the United States Foothall association, the governing body of the soccer game, says Capt. Tate Brady of the national champion Soullin team of St. Louis Is the greatest fullback in the country, ’ POLO FORERUNNER OF BALL TYPE OF SPORT Game Is Progenitor of All Pas- times Played With Bat and Is 2,000 Years Old. To many Americans, says a writer, | baseball seems to be the oldest lying inhabitant and polo the rank intruder, the exotic Importation of its rich pa- trons. They forget that polo is the progenitor of all games played with a bat and a ball, and that the young heroes who disport’ themselves in the world series are but continuing one variety of play which existed as much as 2,000 years ago on the plains of Persia, Polo, the recreation of Persian horsemen of the days of Julius Caesar, the sport of Indian gentlemen of the Chinese before Alfred the Great, is still much the same. Baseball, golf, tennis perhaps even basketball, the offspring of this original invention, at Crosse, Who first contrived polo is uneertain, but it is known that before the Chris- tian era, In the higher civilizations of Asia, men raced thelr horses about an plot of ground, ball toward a bafMing have would oval goal, It might been supposed that the took it to themsel ta have true, gehack was the origin in have he oN, invented sport fore cavallers ! val this seems not heen Perhaps it was because the time In Persia only the and the great were permitted | luxury of play If that { modification of polo to quirements of m with olden rich the be the RO, meet the re en a part of the democratization of sport any that tennis, golf, lean purses is event it is millions nheréd by dozens In horses hove gained old Men run faster and jump higher than ever before, Team play in many sports { has been developed { Athletle records exist | be broken yet I's race broken records only soon by in Its fashion Nowhere else is the oncoming | and i Supreme remains strength and intelligence of fine Dn | and swiftness ly bred horses so perfectly blended man's deftness snd courage ag the dash and brilliance racing and nome mil and horse {| golf combined into a very | sport, Millions in 1923 for Thoroughbred Owners reetrack Purse distribution bs owners in North Americas will exceed 1923. The existing record | made in 1022. Of that in the United States pald over $8.000.. (MX) to winning horse The Canadian track paid than £1.750,000, and the rest of It was made up by purses donated In Cuba and Mex- fen in is $0,000215, Pode d OWDers out moe maore In 1005, which was considered by many the “golden sge of racing.” the total money paid out was $5,601. That remained a record until 1020, when the figures went to $7.7738.- 4007 In 1921 they jumped £8500 000, The ebb year when the horses were active | New York state, and the total paid | out in North America was only $2, 337.047. BR po hd not Knox College Team : Is Most Versatile Knox college has what is probably the most verdatile basketball team tm» the country. Of the ten men on the Knox squad every man is active in at least one other major sport. The team has three captains of other varsity or- ganizations, Albro, captain of the college football team ; Rhind captain of the track team, and Ludwig, cap tain of the foothall eleven. Five of the other men are regulars on the Knox football team, and one other is the best intercollegiate golfer in that part of the map centering about Galesburg. Walter A. Kinsella aE B ied iE Walter A. Kinsella, American pro- fessional champion who made an un- successful bid for the world's open court tennis title In England last year, is to meet George P. Covey, titleholder, again this season. The match 1 take place at the Princess club, Jou, In May. THE RIGHT VIEW “Bo It was your ambition tn» have n business of your own.” “Yes” aut your ship That's too bad I” “Oh, 1 don't know. 1 found that there was plenty of sievedore work un loading other people's ships, so I've got along pretty well” once didn't come in, eh? GOOD LUCK *Look Maria, some ope has left a nice load of cord wood for us. Moribund. A bullfrog sat on a ly pad A sobbing fit te ‘ “Kind friends,” says he, "1 feel 80 guess, 1 know I'm going to croak.” we Travel want Rather Uncertain, -y know how to got Springeville,” “Nes, ma'am.” £7) 10 the clerk at the “You take a traln half an bour over ; ] tion line™ said information window that leaves | ¢ in the Juniper Jun “And then “And then you trust to loek™ Educated. at if a jane Is bean- the higher education is unneces Simple—1 say tl} tifnl, BATY. Simon—Yes ; not enough gnd If she jsn™, iv's Some System. “Ay hushard is strong for system. ™ *Rystem?” “If 1 am cisses me, If not, bh is sitting there” he kisses whoever gitting in that chalr, A Cynic's Explanation, “Wonder why women kiss when they meet.” “1 guess it's a sort of apology in ad vance for intend to about each other gfter they part” * what they “ny Not a Mere Superstition, The Apprentice Seaman—Do you be ifeve that a woman aboard ship brings bad luck? The Old does ashore. Salt—Yep. Same ag she Not an Agreeable Prospect should hap will be al nsured my life Closeman--1f anything pen right. Mrs, Close n——-PBut ing does hap to you? . ETF . fe Suppose noth Well Timed, Miss Catt—Their honeymoon on [Ash Wednesday Miss Nipp—What an day to begin to repent! Better Than Most Voices. Reginald—They say the violin is the nearest approach to the ‘uman voice Lillilan—No, reeiy? I thought the ended appropri hte BECOMES CONVINCING “Do you believe everything you hear?” “Not until | have repeated it a few times.” Too High Up. He loved a girl, Vio surely was a peach; But found, alas! Ehe was beyond his reach. To Be Preserved. “Before 1 consent to marry yon Jack, I must tell you that people say 1 have a temper.” “I don't mind that. All you need is to take care of it—don't loge it, that's all” \ Improprieties, Young Lady (stupping near subway entrance)--Little boy, does your father know that you smoke cigarettes? Urchin——Naw | No more'n yers knows you talk to strange gents on «dy com mon widout de proper interdue Hand Painted, \ Mrs. Houseby—Fred says he ad mires me because I am the picture of health, Miss Green—Yes, the foolish fellow was always crazy for anything hand painted.