PENNSYLVANIA STATE ITEMS Uniontown.—Charged with operat- ing a speakeasy 'ncidental to n board. ing house, Stephen Patak was lodged in the Fayette county jail. The of- ficers claimed to have sont men Into the boarding house who purchased drinks of moonshine for thirty-five cents, In addition the officers state that they found twgo gallons of liquor in the house, ence D. Fortman, at Tyler One hundred tons of hay were also lost, Six months age another barn was de- stroyed on the Fortman farm forty head of cattle burned. Plttsburgh.—Secretary of ture the convention Producers’ Association sumption state In Agricul of the National Milk that the of milk per capita In 1922 was thirty gallons, The tion in 1870 of four gallons. in- cent. In value of mllk ranked third in the nation. The value of the milk output in 1022 was 280. 715,000. Butter and cheese produc. tion in the state, the ecretary sald, was on the decline, In 1870, state produced 58,000,000 pounds butter as compared with pounds in 1922 Altoona.—"More stores are open In Altoona on Sunday than churches.” the morals committee reported to the ing prevalent on every side, The com- ditions. Pittsburgh. Bight horses were burned to death and two automobile trucks and forty tons of hay destroy- ed by fire in the stables of the Dia- mond Ice company, at Braddock, loss was estimated at $15,000 Greensburg. The congregation of ecopal church lald the new chureh edifice here, Harrishurg.—To determine the na- the w'll use Pennsylvania roads, seo ly, the state highway department be gan a motor transport survey on Important roads. The survey will be the most intensive ever undertaken by any American state or foreign country, will involve the operation of seventy-eight truck-weighing stations and more than 300 recording stations, distributed over Penns lvanla's pri- mary and secondary highway systems in a manner calculated to give the most accurate estimate of the traffic It will contlaae Jor an entire year, it ia believed leading. — Judge George W. Wag- ner, 82 vears old, of the Berks bench, died here. He was ill for almost a year from heart trouble, with rare intervals In which he was able to at. tend court. He was completing his fourteenth year on the bench, having teen elected as a Democrat for his second term four years ago. Sharon.-—Hunters who spent the 1ast several days in the woods in Mer. cer county report game more abund- ant than for years. Practically all experienced hunters have been able to bring In the limit in rabbits and birds. In some Instances ring-neck hens have heen killed by careless hunters, but they have been left in the woods, as arrests were feared. State College. Requests for infor mation on the businesa and commer- cial home study courses offered re- cently by the engineering extension department of the Pennsylvania State (College have come from over fifty chambers of commerce in Pennsylva- nia, according to an announcement here, Inquiries are coming In faster than the department ever anticipated and already arrangements have been made for extension representatives to visit a number of chambers prepara- tory to installing courses In depart- ment stores and In commercial offices, Kane. -—Willlam O. Altman, who re- cently left his home In the forest near Westline, sald the coming winter would be a mild one. As Mr. Altman's accurate predictions on the season's weather months In advance has at. tracted the attention of the United States weather bureau, his forecast is taken with credence by many people. Harrisburg. — Governor Pinchot's Thanksgiving Day proclamation, lssu- ed here, calls upon all the people in Pennsylvania to assemble Thursday, November 20, and give thanks that “Almighty God has spared up the bur. dens of industrial contention and so- cial unrest and has given us prosper ity at home and peace with honor abroad.” Poftstown. Confronted by a negro burglar who drew a revolver and threatened to blow out his brains if he did not comply with his demands for Money, Joseph Simmons parted with $40. Oft Clty. ~Working In an excavation for the new junior high school, Ed- ward Siegel, 20 years old, was caught beneath a heavy fall of earth and was dend before he could be extricated, Shamokin~-Stepping In front of a locomotive in the yards here while starting work for the day, Daniel H. Bavidge, aged 65, a veteran track Loreman, was Killed, i Reading —Dr. Levi W. Mengel, di. rector of the Reading Public Museum at the high school for girls In appre ciation of the services of girl stu dents in obtaining thousands of sign. ers to petitions for a new bullding for the art display. Twelve citizens have scholarships, and the fund will be perpetual, since the girls will repay the money from time to time, Harrisburg.--The office of the state highway department superintendent In charge of maintenance work In Co- lumbia, Montour and Northumberland counties has been moved to Danvlile, Quarryville—~Arthur B. Waltman, 8 years old, was severely bitten by a Bethlehem. —M'ss Jennle A. Grow, a 15-year-old girl, died from a burst her head. After the local Hallowe'en re- turning from headache, Over-exertion Is believed to have led to her death, Reading. —At the quarterly meeting of the Philadelphia visiting committee faith, oR. Mary Jackson Shoemaker, of Phila. delphia, was secretary. Pittsburgh ve robbers, armed and masked, entered a McKees Rocks held up Edward the proprietor, and {wo customers and escaped In an automobile with 5000 Erie.—When an automoblle carry- ing five Erie Coreen, James John Anderson occupants of the minor hurts, Uniontown, ax John Edwards, of New machine York, was Constable Ball ed that Edwards approached number of times concerning a report market ordered the man to deliver four delivered the whisky he was arrested Bloomsburg. tomoblle Millard He was exploding slightly hurt. machine, whieh, refused owing to the cold weather, when exploded, pieces of the cylinders being blewn through the hood. It set fire his but the the Roming cranking ' fo harn, damage Harrishur® Siate hanks banking companies, trust panies, savings banks and unincorpor ated banks may no longer surety upon the bonds of public and county offirers, General to Secretary of King, announced, Harrishurg Application Pennsylvania raliroad to abandon it» stations at Khire Onks and Houston Run, Washington county, and lish a new station, to be known asx (on! Bluff, midway between incorpor the of estab publis service commission announced Pittsburgh —John Semmner, an ploye In the Neely nut and bolt plant om entangled In an automatic cutting ma chine, stopped his body was cut In two Reranton George Smith, aged a hunting accident While hunting rabbits at Nicholson, Pa, with uncle and other relatives, he stumbled soon after heing taken to a hospital Pittsburgh. Two men, policeman, were held for morals court in connection alleged attack upon Thelma Perry, 16, who testified she was lured to a room. ing house by Patrolman Anthony Riz. zo and Clyde Hawthorne, Rizzo in ad. dition was charged with conduct un becoming an officer and will be given a hearing before the police trial board, Harrisburg. Collections of gaso- line tax in October, for July, August and September, totaled $1,539,500, State Trefisurer Snyder announced The treasury also collected $188405 delinquent taxes on sales made prior to July 1 at the old rate of one cent a gallon tax. The report is the first since the new tax became effective. The tax collected in Philadelphia, £224,208, headed the list. Allegheny with $£222.085 was second, and Erle, with S48885 third. Collections in other counties Included: Adams, $9706: Berks, £30,651; Bucks, $17,500; Chester, $24800; Columbia, $8254; Lackawanna, $30,486; Lancaster, $36, 871: Lehigh, $40,547: Luzerne, 842. B77; Northampton, $31,217 ; Schuylkill, $27,008; York, 885.4038; Dauphin, $30, 150. Altoona. ~~Four hundred violations have been returned by members of the citizens’ safety council In three months, Harrisburg. Governor Pinchot an- nounced the appointment of J. Turn er Moore, of Reading, as a member of the board of trustees of Wernersville State Hospital, Hazleton A parade of the 7000 school pupils was held to boom the £600,000 loan proposition for the erec tin of a new high school. Rockport. Two fawns, killed with bird shot, evidently by hunters who were out for pheasants or rabbits, were found on the woods near here by Elmer Young, state game warden, Lewistown, ~The postoffice has add. ed another mall carrier to its city force, 5 Hazleton ~~Mre. William H. Boyer gave a dinner to frhads in observance of the fiftieth anniversary of living In one house, court in 1—Mrx, Coolidge planting the 1h Hef soclety, SUnUS wi learning to fapceoin Memorial in Washington. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Bavarian Monarchists Attempt to Start a Revolt. but Are Easily Suppressed. LUDENDORFF IS IN PRISON By EDWARD W. PICKARD close aon eacited ward the Geniuany was civil the verge of orrespondents War, and eabled that the re attack of the pelered monarchists Then It The which all was started by of the Bavarian Fascist] Erie von Ludendorff, «ol staff of the German arales dn out revoit Adolph Hittier war, was easily suppressed, srnment under Chancellor was declared to be Ludendorff of Strescmann than who fins hie stronger ever OHM something Hitter, s rn pous wounded aa Was in WHS rep wind dispateh he also was 8 prisoner Mu f the into a political nich, proclaimed the overthrow « government of German government and the nrrest Ff Premier von Knilling and Minister of the Interior esting in and ordered Buvaria Sehweyer Stresemann Hittler then himself to be the new national tor and appointed General von Luden forff war mister and commander in dicta “rmy made extraordinary aor of Bavaria. General von Baravin war minister premier of Ravaria But Kahr were unwilling plot, aud as soon as possibic together and made They found the Bavarian loyal the Berlin and =o directed It retake the public Kahr was rover: {ossow and | Yon L.oswon Yon and participants in the they pot plans to frustrate to government and the police to buildings that Hit Yon Ludendorff prisoners. There killed and wounded, and then the Fas cist] gave up. Hittler troops in Augsburg alse at tempted to bring off a coup like that in Munihe. armed them. Abeortive puisches In Martial law was declared for Bavaria and It was announced death sentences would be executed, had counted on the support of the monarchist troops under Erhardt along she Thuringian border, his men stood firmly behind General Yon Seeckt, whe had been named su preme military dictator of Germany by President Ebert, and would obey his orders. Former Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria declared him. self strongly opposed to the revelu- tionary movement jn Bavaria, and France let the Germans know she would not permit the overthrow of the republican government. At the request of the allied council of ambassadors, the Duteh government has forbidden former Crown Prince Frederick William to leave Wieringen, ““ OT so good” fairly sumupmrizes for adoption of the Hughes repars. tions plan at this writing. They are not broken off, however, and there is still a chance that France will see her way to joining Great Britain in the formal invitation to the United States to tuke part in the suggested exam ination of Germany's capacity to pay. Just now thizx ali seems to hinge on whether the proposed committee of ex- nerts shall be restricted to determina: tion of Germany's “present capacity,” und just what period that word “pres. at” should cover. If MM. Poincare is fairly liberal in bis inferpretation of tgs restriction, making the the, say, two years, It is likely America and the allied governments will | consent wo it. Ambassador Jussernnd con ferred with Secretary Hughes several times long jast week and communications from Neither has yet made any public state ment, but it is understood the French are not disposed to press at this time Poincare man reparations Is Impossible unless the debts of France to Grent Britain likewise down, Mr. Hughes | willing to concede are was sald that the to other questions pertaining to it should be declared the jurisdiction lof the committee of experts, though he cannot see Germany's ability io pay can without into consideration the ity of the Ruhr, London dispatches assert! gium and Italy have joined | Britain In the demand that the in- quiry into Germany's financial and | economic condition ghall be free and F unlimited, and that If United ! States and France cannot come { an agreement, the three nations | shubly such an investigsa (Certain correspondents are in sistent in that France with outside how he explored {ing that Bel the to will unite In their reports | is about to be isolated, but of them the wish may be father lo the thought Pelgium officially ad thut ' | mediator art As ® of estab she and is mits is seeking to “hopeful England.’ Ambassador to France, In arin farm where the fought beside army. seemingly od States to the duty Europe. Raid he: hands on to run the know if the solved, and justly Herrick, an address al Just Gouraud’s the Unit re General committed of helping establish “We put and are through, for { problem is not our the plow we ready we present and have fought the war in This stirred { ables” a bit, wins understood that vain up the “irreconcil but In Washington it Mr. Herrick expressing his own views was merely Parise government take a hand in European affairs. main Ivy because it is convinced that Jduring the coming winter America must pro vide Germany with hundreds and thousands of bushels of wheat on long. time credit te prevent wholegale star { ation. The council of allied ! demanded the reestablishment of | allied control over German military | equipment, which has been in adbey- hinted that France might be take military measures “reactionary mill { and forced to | protection against a considerable part of Germany.” | clally French and Peiglan, in uniform to check up the armed strength of | pannot take the responsibility proceeding with the work. F THE recommendations of the im- perinl economic conference in Lon- don are adopted by the British pariia- ment, and they probably will be, the United States will be given a strong ose of the tariff medicine it has been administering to others for many years, These recommendations are that Great Britain put a tax of five shillings a hundredweight on raw apples from foreign countries; a duty of ten shillings a hundredwelght on canned salmon: a duty of six pence a gallon om fruit juices, and a 25 per cent duty on foreign tobacco, The first, second and fourth of these pro- posals would hit America especially, It was pointed out that the whole basis in considering these questions wag whether dominion trade can ex- pand rapidly enough to supply all British needs, and In the case of ap ples It was stated thut the supply would easily equal fhe demand, DVANTAGE In the elections of A net Tuesday was claimed by both the Republicans and the Democrats, The former recaptured the Twenty. fourth congressional district of New York, where Benjamin Fairchild was elected, and won in Vermont, where Porter Dale wis chosen United States sonater. ‘The Democrats elected three ‘governors — Ritehle In Maryland, Fields In Kentucky ang Whitefield in Mississippl, and Tammuny was victori- ous in New York city, routing both rhe Republicans and Williams Kandolph Hearst in the judicial contest In the next congress the senate will Republicans, 43 Democrals and 2 Farmer-Laborites. The lineup in the house will be: Republicans 225, Democrats 205, Socialist 1, Independ- ent 1, and Farmer-Laborite 1—a Re publican majority of 17. with two ve- canties still to be filled feated sn avowed wet, but In general the results were accounted a by the anti-Volstead law element was especially true In Maryland Kentucky, In many Kian was an cases the Klan won. This and (3 OY ERNOR WALTON of ma sought the intervention af the federal courts to halt the impeachmen! proceedings against him, but diction In the ease. However, the gov date not yet set, Walton through coun- governor's lawyers Insist eharges before voting on a verdict. A report to the President the War other producing tries at lower prices than are satis factory to American growers, and the system. The Istter, the directors of plan the uncertain functioning of the specu The report expresses strong opposi- an increase in the tariff on wheat, gov snd governien! wheat. banking controversy, reserve board has ruled, as a condi tem of state banks, that the appiicant is located. This policy goes into effect ed by the board declared that estab produced an inequitable situation for national banks, which cannot establish tranches without permission of the controller of the currency, IR ERIC DRUMMOND, secretary \J general of the League of Nations, was received the other day by Premier Mussolini, and came away with the as surance that Italy had mo prejudice agninst the league and that the pre- mier favors its principles. Mussolini, however, informed the secretary gen: eral shat Italy required that her posi- tion as one of the great powers and one of the founders of the league and a principal signatory of the Treaty of Versailles should be “adequately estab lished.” FE budget bureau has received the department estimates for the next fiscal year, pared them to the bone and submitted them to President Coolidge. The total sum asked by the bureau ls $1.700,000,000, this representing a sav. ing of $126,000,000 from the amount be- ing expended In the current fiscal year. Of course congress may see fit to change some of the items. N A decision announcing the prinel ples to be applied in determining American claims against Germany, the mixed claims commission upholds broadly the claims growing out of the torpedoing of the Lusitania, numbering o18 and aggregating about $22,000,000, The comission refuses to assess ex. emplary, or punitive, damages, holding they are penal In nature and not aw thorized by the treaty of peace. It dis missed 80,100 clalme, totaling about 340,000,000, for the recovery of insur ance premivius paid by Americans for protection aguinst war hazards. BLIGHTLY NERVOUS An English barrister, after a particy larly trying day, came home with his nerves on edge, and at once sought refuge In his own study, well away from the noises of the household ma chinery, He sat down by bis fire and was gradually getting calmed down when the cat, which had been sitting there, too, got up slowly and walked scroes the room, The master turned on her and ssid indignantly: “Now, what are you Why Does it? The head of the office was in a ulty the fig “Just “The figure is a 7, sir,” said “Then,” roared the old man, does it look 97 —York- the clerk, ike 8 Curbing Their Eloquence. First Attorney—Your honor, unfor Second Attorney—My learned friend Judge (sharply)—The counsel vill {1i.Chosen Metaphor, Were | 8 raindrop and you a He She—Why, you'd evaporate, pose. And so I'd be rid of youn. 1 sup THE REASON. For breath our Eas bills never pause, Those sprinters fast and fleel, Perhaps they run sO fast be- cause They have many feet BO Same Old Human Nature. No green-goods man can bring dismay. But-—whisper—jars must have their iarks jot of us bought German marks Time Will Egualize. Do vou know that Ida's hus several years younger Maud band is herself? Marie than Oh, time will change that Playing the Races “1 suppose 1 was foolish to take a tin fromm a bootblack, but 1 thought one tip was as good as another. #80 11 is Just about,” A Big Ors. Have von heard the atest Optimus Ford joke? Cynicus—Yes; he wants to be presi dent. Feet and Shoes. Mr. Oldbi—I ain a self-made man sir. 1 began life as a barefoot boy. Rennard--Weil, 1 wasn't bora wita Costly Aire, “It keeps me poor.” “What does?” “Trying to make other people think I'm rich” EXONERATED. You come home of the all hours night. No, only each dear, hour my one night Art and Nature. A people by dissension struck Exciaimed, “We revel In hard luck We have no sarthquakes ready-made let's wreck the lend without ther ala!” New Use for Mookworms, “They tell me,” sald Jackson, “that he is an expert angler.” “Yes, maybe, but he doesn't know anything about fishing.” sald Johuson. “Why that guy Is so dumb that he thinks hookworms are used for bait” The Artiste. “A fine stenog you are! Call your self a typist and don’t know how to put a ribbon in a typewriter” “Does Paderewski know how to tune a plano -Life. On the Safe Side. Husband—My wife does nothing but ask for money-it's £5 one day, 88 the next, and so on, Solicitor—-What does she do with all this money? Husband--Nothing, to her. 1 don't give It An Inventor, “a. whet is an inventory” “An inventor, my boy. Is usually a man who has thought 35 a way th do with machinery some task that be is tired of doing himself” \ it he