PENNSYLVANIA STATE ITEMS Fairview Village.——~Lockjaw, devel- oping from a cut inflicted by a corn cutter, caused the death of John Slo- wak, 6 years old. Exchange.— Stepping into hole five feet deep while swimming, Henry Ros- vacki, PD years old, drowned while small companions tried in vain to res- cue him, Chester.— Falling from a milk wagon Clyde Toomer, 18 years old, was trampled by the horse drawing the vehicle. He is in a serious condition at the Chester Hospital. Swedeland.—Ben jamin to have been leaning for out automobile in which he was struck on the head Davis, said of an was riding, and Lebanon.— William Wynn, aged a razor. Altoona.——George A. Blakely cil to fill a vacancy. Lancaster.—The ninth suicide in five weeks In Lancaster coumy oc- curred when Christian Mohr, aged 62, a retired cigarmaker, shot himself. Tamaqua.—Workmen excavating for still in excellent condition, Shamokin. January 23 from a broken back, sus- tained when run over by ears at liery, Michael Joyce died in the Hospital. Lancaster .- been named Lancaster torium. Danville.—The Chamber merce has protested to the underwrit- ers against an increase in Insurance rates. Harrisburg.—T. A. Ruckle, aged 59, a foreman for the state highway de partment, dropped dead from acute indigestion while working between between Benton and Nordmont Sunbury.—June brides In berland county increased from last year, 278 sued month, a year ago, a col Dr. T. B, Appel has medical director of the county tuberculosis sana. of Com- Northum- per cent licenses being against 137 In June a is- last Catawlissa.— Stabbed accidentally in her 4-year-old was playing with the hack while he by brother scissors, teedy, Is In a serious condition. Mt. Carme!.~- Peter Novrotski, wus shot throwgh the brain and vile Novie Wasolskl was ghot arin, by hoidur men. ng Ruspects, kills 5, Five are In fall The men were playing cards when I. is said the masked hau- dite entered with drawn guns and de- meaded thal money. Wasolski, it suid. picked Lp a chair and led an ot tack on the bandits, who opened fire. Skippack. -- Sixteen-year-old Will- fam Kline died after a hard fight against death since he was injured last November. Kline, who was learn- ing the plumbing trade, was sent into place to mmke some repairs early one morning last November. The owner thieves, the tho th who factory and when Kline opened door the gun was discharged. The hullet struck the boy, injuring hig back that he became paralyzed from his to his feet. Duneannon.-—Raeing alongside of his locomotive, Bruce Hoffman, of Harris- burg, a Pennsylvania railroad fire man, snatched a 15-months-olg child from the path of the train near Cove Station, four miles east of here. The child, Ear! Burris, is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry IL. Burris. Four cars were wrecked by the sudden application of the alr brakes. The child was noticed on the track as the train approached id Engineer W. D. Bowman, of Har- risburg, suddenly applied the brakes Both he and Hoffman realized that it was virtually impossible to stop the train reaching the haby, 820 waist before 80 ran ahead of the train and snatched up the child just an Instant before the locomotive reached the spot where he had been. The train finally was stop- ped 100 feet beyond. her heart, placed there In the most formed in Washington to close a knife wound, Mrs. John Widmar, aged 52, of Avella, Is convalescing In the Wash- ington Hospital with chances for re covery very favorable. Mrs. Widmar is sald to have inflicted the wound in an attempt upon her own life, using n penknife. A rib over her heart was fractured by the foree of the blow, but the blade penetrated between two other ribs been brought to the hospital here from Avella, a distance of about 18 miles, she had lost a large amount of blood and an immediate operation was the only haope of saving her life, Allentown.—A Bible printed early the property of the Philadelphia His. torical under the will of Al fred H. Sell, of Upper Saucon town- ship, probated at the register of wills fice here, The Bible wns brought to this ecomntry from Ewitzerland by Peter Soll in 1740, West Hazleton A school loan £70000 and a borough loan of $60.000 having earried by aMarge vote at a pecinl + council began plans for Improvements Society and severs! streets will be paved Mni- of Centralla.—Mrs. Catherine V. ford is the first woman overseer the poor Ir this part ¢f the state, Moar: Penn—W, R. Burchfield was sworn In as a member of the Board of Health, vice Josiah Lein- bach, resigned. Morgantown, The rebuilt St, Thomas Episcopal Church at Morgan. town will be consecrated by Bishop Talbot. Helfenstein,~ Elva, 4-year-old daugh- ter of John Keamer, burned while playing with burning paper, died In the State Hospital at Mountain Springs. Stroudsburg.-—-John Miraglio is In a hospital here with a fractured skull, He was struck by a car on Main street, The driver of the car did not stop. Reading. —That the 1 per cent tax rebate {s popular i8 shown by the fact that on the figst day for col lection of school taxes more than 1000 | persons pald $37.900 and unopened mall amourted to more ‘han $50,000 Reading. Edward Stegman, of Hol lenbach street, and Perry Moyer, of | North Thirteenth street, were seri: | ously burned when they eame In con tact with a cable carrying 23,000 volts Reading. Mabel Heckman, of i Frush Valley, started suit against | John Knauer, Jr. of Reading, re- cover $7028 for injuries sustained in { an accident while riding in Knauer's to | car. Bloomsburg—Ten-room dwelling ad- | Jolalng Susquehanna Inn, on the Sulli { van Trail and Berwick was burned loss, Pottstown D elected a member of council, { than Pollock, resizned | JCannonshurg.—Mrs. Blmer Welss, of | Hamilton, O., was killed and five other persons were !njured, three seriously, { late last night when Welss' automobile wig struck by a freight train at Mea dow Lands. Weiss, who was driving, suffered fractures of both legs and his two small dagghters, Ruth and Helen | sufferad and bruises | Thelma and Martha Hanley, 19 and respectively, of Hamilton, also were { hurt. All injured i Pittshurgh involuntary ruptey petition was filed in court against the Interstate Pipe Com pany, of which John A. Bell, Jr, Is and futher n P. J. Alexander, an attorney, ed by The of the {th Wheeling Corporation the Spang Chalfant Con tors The elder Bell is the Camegle Trust April by { banking department loyertown In an auton near Gllbertsville, four Philadelphis had a narrow escape from death { Charles Brendlinger, Eighteenth street | and Therps lane: Willlam Bulger, Jr No, 654 Ardsley street; | Garner, No Miller, No. O02 j out of the way of | trolley rails and turned over. were thrown in front of a trolley ec | which was stopped In the nick of time {All were taken to the Pottaville Hospital, Breadlinger suffering | concussion of the brain. Reading. first of | Sunday twilight services | City Park under the Ministerial Assoclation Grimsville of Bloomsburg STH0 Smith vice Na- hetween George FOOTE gOVOre cuts 18 are in hospital An han | president his director Was nam receiver Judge Schoonmaker was filled hy Trust C Q y Steel petition Carnegie any Company | was closed last ohile Opal street, turning he the held in auspices of the was At the dedientory exer Bethel Zion's U nott ad neiteq Now Tin wtographs, meals and the occasion Automobiles Hanis, of Cleveland, Stewart, of | elses | Church, gales of ' venirs of i Corry | speed by Harry and Alexander G tansburg, tion the new highway, wag killed James A. Sewart, was bad nion was from the £00 driven at high Npar- road interses Erie and here collided nt ’ at a on Corry state near toxin y Stewart instantly ar his father, hurt occupants of the hio ear Hankins, his wife, Mr Richard Mudge and thelr Ruth, Donald and Rachel, all They were taken to Corry pital, badly hurt. Reading — Emily Klesi { old, died in a hospital here from paris green, taken with suicidal Intent, Clifton Meights and and Mrs children of Erie Hos the 18 vears stop telling residents that slots { illegal and that the house | they were gelling were in accordance | with government regulations, State Hill.—-The dedication of the headquarters of Chamber Ne. 79, Order of Knights of Friendship, was featured with an addresg by former District Attorney Harvey F. Heinly. Reading. Warren Horst, aged 9 No. 522 Gordon street, is in a hospital with a fractured left leg. sustained in | falling off the foot bridge across the | Lebanon Valley Railroad at Tulpe- hocken and Green streets Horsham —The Grace Union econ- gregation will use the lot on Meeting House romd for the construction of a house of worship, Reading. While attending an out. ing near Sinking Spring, Bertha Long, No. 722 Moss street, was accidentally wounded with a shotgun. Ashley.—Dr. Hugh H. MeCleary has retired from the Medical Torps of the army after a contin ious servee that dates back to the Spanish-American war Mount Carmel. After his sister had been married and left on her honey. moon. John Petusky dropped dead. Wilkes-Barre, — Congressman Car penter has recommended the reaps pointment of Postmaster Mannear, | whose term expires on August 24, New Hope. Thomas J. Walker has | purchaseed from the Roberts estate the store and apartment which ba oo | uples HORII We SY SY pri ik = wy 1a) z . ne ir HER en a oad gs LAF Hout t la. 2 “Sn quantities exports. of agricultural 3-—-Twelve-foot statue of ( Orilla, Ont, on NEWS REVIEW OF | CURRENT EVENTS Evolution Trial in Dayton, Tenn., Draws Attention of the Civilized World. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. ESFITE all the jokes laughter, the Jast week of Dayton, Tenn. neers evolu opened in but (if Jennings throughou ica world course on trial is No that trial. gecurate o 1 bys them will Mr. Bryan, was called the Tennessee prohibits from using the public pury substituting religion for the religio: not defense, who his did please the constitutionaiity of and religion se John R. Neal, Scopes, sald: “We seek the Inv wine! Cougary. issue senlor con regard Mr. Bryan's speech as | remarkable made by a lawyer just trance into a of a most utterance ever | before his en trial criminal cass defense pot to confine the test of the | of the constituti of Tennes tes, but, tation on in stead, to put og trial the truth or lack truth of the theory of evolution; conflict between religion, 3 as he aud having demo science apparently least to his satisfaction and that it own evolution is untrue that Mr. Bryan's arrival in Dayton was | He was greeted as a hero, to temporary home by a long parade and banqueted by the leading club of the before | which he did a lot of of the Scopes case, his village, i advance arguing | The attorneys for thelr experts nisters—also ar 3 some of --gelentists and m rived in the town. Wu volby, who was to be lainbhridge associnted with Professor Neal, Clarence Darrow, Dud ey Field Malone and Arthur Garfield Hays in the defense, telegraphed that | he was detained case in New Jork. He may up later if his services are needed. Earlier in the eek the defense made a somewhat perfunctory attempt to get from Fed oral Judge Gore in Cookeville, Tenn. an injunction to halt the trial, citing the fourteenth amendment to the Con- stitution. The judge denied the peti “on on the ground that he had no power to interfere with state courts except in bankruptcy proceedings, that the allegations were Insufficient and that he was not in the district where the alleged offense was com. mitted. Needless to say, this ruling vas a great relief to Dayton. Perhaps fresh ammunition for the Beopes defense Is provided In a new. ly published report of biological re searches at Johns Hopkins, in which it is stated that Dr. Herbert Spencer Jennings, director of the biological labor.tory, {8 the first man “actually to sec and control the process of evo. luticn among living things.” Accord ing to the report: “The evidence of evolution had been rend In the rocks and the structures of plants and animals, but under the mi- croscope Doctor Jennings was able to follow evolution not as a theory but ns a thing that was actually taking place.” : “Intensified study,” Doctor Jennings declares, “reveals that the hereditary characteristics do become changed by external conditions, Through such di versities, continuing for great nam bers of generations, single stocks, uni form In their hereditary character \sties, gradually differentiate © into by a show many faintly differing hereditary fea tures “In higher knowledge satisfactory. the state of appears less organisms point But the ev on this idence, fur us it gees here indicates that processe are agreement with those orgunisme. in iN MINISTER TCHITCHER { his colleagues see: Ge sreat ituation, arding Downing Liotes and have street with the ocutive of Ih arrested in Shanghal, of and release sger, the jurisdiction the mixed tribunal his challenging crise nging finally whole status f British subjects extraterritori protest government ng of relations between Germans Arrest * Lely } Hig ¢ British ca! and Foreign vhat reassur in nt break net (OOK ious members « that the was not y break with however, that it was closels current previous ament b) government off relations ang tha: ain lberty of events, the reiterated a assertion the government “must ret The Reds up visited averiook no stir When a fleet Norway, last the Communists there appealed t nbers of the crews, u in revolt your government if shel trouble. slo, rging them rather than mel FOU are ore make war on From Rig {ga con asked Germoan) in cor staff's his alds from Sv and has all the documents German general transport ing of Lenin and in 1017 of money Bolshevik re to be much we the wenken the authority ix ty paris the § disclose them to Moscow this 10 disclosures and restiz nist Poland number new difficulties with Recently there have been a posts, and more than two hundred So viet been arrested eastern Poland within a few days. fe in emissaries have T BEGINS to look as If France would have to send hundreds of thousands of troops to Morocco as re inforcements, if Abd-el-Krim is to be -and maybe even that would not do it. The Riffian leader, who calls himself sultan of Morocco, has been making a series of flerce attacks on the French line between Taza and Fez and his troops are not far from the latter city, his mais objective. His propaganda among the tribes hith- erto friendly to the French is taking effect and some of them have joined his standard, while others have been disarmed by the French. Should Krim be able to take Fez and overthrow Sultan Muley Youssef there would al most certainly be a general uprising throughout Morocco in favor of the Riff leader. Realizing this, Marshal Lyautey is hurrying tanks, artillery, cavalry and machine guns to the line north of the capital to hold Krim back until reinforcements arrive frow France, Premier Painleve has said the RifMans are aided by Turkish and German officers, and now a govern ment newspaper in Paris gives details of the German, Russian and Turkish intrigues in the Riff. Among other things, it says 100 Moslem officers from Batum were landed secretly oun the RIff coast not long ago from no Turkish ship. Spain and France have agreed on a combined land blockade of the RIF war zone to supplement the sen blockade, and also hade reached an accord on political co-operation in Morocco, ‘They will offer Krim auton. omy In the RIF under a Spanish pro tectorate, Gen, Stanislaus Naulin has been made French commander in-chief in Morocco, 4 SUERIRT erent plans on huge gralo iinion day. CCCESSFUL become 8 over the « sSOme means Those of robber, I F! DERAL prohibitios of Lake Ontario Inst shore ro BTHEEE © Epes on gent ore T ouas LEE whi name was familiar throughon ntry a few years ago when he was ct attorney of Los Angeles, Cal, Los Angeles sensatic is des at Lis home in 3d nal ac on Keo- he trials of Madalynne the murder of J nedy, and for a minent fGgure in California Obenchaln, Belt time u of i1¢ Was n politics. ong con if the Cap- ch It was Marketing that mbitious 0-0 perative enterprise several Middle and dissolve. The trib which took over grain companies of the West, is to liquidate large and business con ited * Component concerns w re already Bros meml Rosenbaum to and ain Mar company, it was snnounced, pay its bank debt and indebtedness as it matures, “The plan to sell the properties to farmers £aid Emanuel F. direc tor of the concern. “There was cone siderable doubt as to whether the properties were worth £16.000,000, There isn't much doubt that some of elevator values were inflated” Directly resulting from the non success of this enterprise came the failure of the big Chicago and New York brokerage house of Dean, Ona- tivia & Company, which handled the Rosenbaum stock in the concern. It went into the bands of a receiver with liabilities of approximately $35,000,000, but it was believed the net loss would not exceed £5.000,000, Creditors of the company and bankers made a de termined effort last week to rehabill tate it, other e was too ambitious” Rosenbautn, export the — RESIDENT COOLIDGE plans te spend some of his vacation time In trying to develop a farm legisiation program that will satisfy all groups and stand a chance of getting through congress next winter. He has invited a number of Middle West senators, rep resentatives and farm experts to con for with him at White Court. One of the first of these to visit the Pres! dent will be Senator Curtis of Kansas, ——— PEAKING of grain and farming, it is Interesting to read thdt the rulers of soviet Russia are planning to export Immense quantities of grain from that country next winter, de spite the nearfamine that prevails every sear in various districts, With that end in view the authorities have been Importing a vast deal of agri cultural implements and are encourag- ing the farmers to raise large crops However, the peasants may hang back for they do not relish the way i which the government takes thelr COMMERCIAL Weekly Review of Trade an Market Reports. — SALTIMORE Wheat car No, 2 red winter, (domestic), $1.42; 5,000 bushels red winter, garlicky, delivery, $1.42 new wheat, by sample $1.25, $1.30, $1.21, and $1.37 per and condition brought $1 25 per Corn—-Domest ic in car lots is per bushel als No white, 66 asked Hay—No. 2 1 @19; No. 3 1 lzht clover mixed Bales garlicky Ju. Dag ols $10 $1.32, ¥1.34, %i Dusnel, as to quali One bushel No. 2 quotable domesi) of at $1.15 Sales ot by vel w al ab nominal 1 clover, clover, mixed No. 2 wheat er ton No 1 $12@ 13 41 87 score goOre New York, 23@ 24c Live Poultry-—-Fowls, fancy Plymouth Rocks, 306c; medium, 27@ 29: mixed breeds, fancy, 27@E 28; me dium, 26026; common fowls, 23@ 24; leghorng, 20624; spring chickens, Plymouth Rock, broilers, 2% @3 pounds, 40@G 42. LIVE STOCK BALTIMORE. —Cattle—Steers, good to choice, $10.256@ 10.75. medium to good, $8.25 9.7%; common to medium, T.50@8.50; coramon, 36@ 7. Heifers, good to choice, $8.506 9; fair to good, $7.50 8.25; common to medium, $5.50 @7.25. Bulls, good to choice, §6@ 6.50; fair to good, $35@ 5.75; common to medinm, $4@4.75 Cows, good to choice, 88@ 7; fair to good. 5@56.75; common to medium, $2.25@ 4.50, Sheep and Lambs—Sheep. $3206.25; lambs, $1085 15.25; extra, $15.50. Hoge-—Lighta, $14.80; heavy, $14.85; medium, $15; pigs, $14.40; light pigs, $12.7%; roughs, $850@ 12.50; Western hogs 10 cents higher, Calves—Calves, $§4@ 11.50. Cheese whole fresh, cream fod iat PITTSBURGH. - Hogs ~ Heavies, $14.100 14.20; heavy Yorkers, 314.40@ 14.70; light lights, $140014.25; pigs, $13.75¢ 14. Sheep and Lambs—8heep, $5 £6; clipped lambs, $11; epring labs, $14.50, t Calves—Top, $12.50. \