Pennsylvania State News Kutztown will install six automatic traffic signals on Main street, The new State highway from Ham- burg to Lenhartsville was opened. The Chester Day Nursery gave an outing to children at the Philadelphia Zoological Garden. The Berks Teachers’ Institute went on record as favoring additional state ald for rural districts, Professor W. H. Barto of Weather- iy has been elected principal of the Pine street school at Hazleton. Charles A. Baer, of Reading, held up by three bandits, struck a blackjack and robbed of §20. Philadelphia real estate men have purchased the Thurlow tract of land at Ninth and Flower streets, Chester. Fined on a charge of selling short weight coal, Warren O. Brey, of Read- ing, said he would take an appeal to Court, ‘ The Campbell property, a Potts. town landmark, has been sold to Thomas R. Stalker, who will convert it into apartments. Chester public school xpect the largest enrollment er in the history.of the city the schools reopen. The colored citizens of Bucks coun- ty will hold their annual! picnic on September 12 at the Booker T. Wash- ington clubhouse at Buckingham. Bennevelle Dreher, aged eighty, of Leighton is in the Palmerton Hos pital receiving treatment for a broken hip for the second time within a year, A portrait of the late Adjutant Gen eral Thomas J. Stewart will be pre. sented to the new junior high school at Norristown bearing the General's name, The Center Valley Dramatic Socle- ty will present an Sherutie. “The Windmills of Holland,” in Spring- fleld high school auditorium Septem. ber 12. Norristown council will half a mile of the lower end of Main street, one of the worst hes of the Ridge pike between ladelp and Reading. As the result of playing namite cap Andrew fou and Joseph nine, are In a Reading ing been fully injur exploded, Thirteen Brewery at county, were for Federal Smith oa charges of violating hibition laws. Dr. Henry Wils tendered resignation as superintendent of County Home and Hospital at Somer. set, due to the refusal of the of the poor to make some ments he advocated and to his salary. was with authorities of pu when the resurface strat girel Phi hia rteen, hospital, pain ed when employees of Simpson, La held in $1000 Court by Con cka Ball the pro 1 has ns an estimated attendance of at 150 more pupils gain is expected to be further creased in the first few months of the fall term, with new families constant. ly arriving. Several thousand Fairmount, Clarksb Run field attended a union mass meet ing at Monongah where several In ternational representatives of the United Mine Workers addressed the meeting, one of the largest in more than a month. After 35 years of work B. Frank Dehart, veteran Reading letter car rier, retired. Work had been started on the ex- tensive remodeling of the Mauch Chunk National Bank building. The Hazleton school board has de- cided to issue $600,000 im bonds to finance a new senior high school The iron bridge crossing the Schuylkill river at Birdsboro, former ly used by the Reading railway, is be- ing dismantled. Of the $256,000 pledged to the Reading Community Chest {n the re. cent campalgn more than $100,000 has been paid in cash, Nineteen hundred and sixty-eight boys and girls between six and six teen years of age will be enrolled in the schools of the West Shore district this year, Building is adding $1,500,000 to the value of real estate in Pottsville an- nually, stated City Assessor Charles Meyers, who completed the triennial assessment, A trafiic expert will be employed to solve Lancaster's Lincoln Highway traffic puzzle, if the suggestions of the highway committee of the Cham- ber of Commerce are followed. The Montgomery county commis sloners have awarded to Irvin T. Stoudt the contract for a onespan reinforced concrete bridge over Min- o creek In Limerick township. An inspection of the site of the proposed new bridge over the Alle gheny river at New Kensington was conducted by Paul Didler, assistant eagineer for the State Public Service Commission, The Cumberland Valley has pro duced a bumper crop of grasshoppers this year. damage to peaches in Franklin coun- ty and parts o! York county, accord: ing to reports reaching the depart ment of agriculture, The Bureau of Animal Industry has authority to formulate rules to con. trol itinerant butchers who find it more convenient to do their slaugh- tering on farms than In a central ghamble, Frank [| Gollmar, deputy attorney general, held In an opinion to Sacretary of Agriculture Frank P. . Willits miners from the urg and Scott's i 1—Fresident Coolidge Directors of the anthracite strike; the United Mine Workewms; dling of traffic in the principal cities Bedford school below: Golden and James Gleason, medals to New C. J. Ean for proficiency in English, 2 8—8ir Henry P. May- in the United States studying han. NEWS REVIEW OF | CURRENT EVENTS Dirigible Shenandoah and Honolulu Flight Plane Lost—Nineteen Dead. By EDWARD W. PICKARD i D OUBLE disaster befell the navy's alr service last week. The Shen andoah, military dirigible, lies in fragments in the corufields of Ohlo The PN-O No, 1 1s the waters of the Pacific I 19 of men huge dird seaplane lost the best h, on her wi wn Was the Middle suddenly three turn into the controller cabin, the 13 men in the cabin were all Kill Among them was the com the gieigile, Lieutenant Lansdowne, A near the first, and ‘ drifted eq pieces lan yy rd tion, sec long, balloon Sharon, crew miles, falling Two £ { Besides Lieut 3 county. red. include mander Louis Har R. Houghton. P N$ No. 1 cock . se if the » was one of the two se attempted the nonsto] Cisco 0 H ind John Ro with a crew of four others out over the Pacific at apparently going well two hundred Then its one of stationed along supply was San Fr by Commander gers and surged speed was onl its goal. lessed to were the route ti gas J08t gone, wns compelled to descend to the ox soon after. This was at nig! 3 heavy sea was running. Crulser stroyers and submarines at once gearching for the plane, and as possible three naval seaplanes took off from the island of Maul to help in the hunt. By that time the ocean had calmed down and the weather had = cleared that the aviato rs coul d gee for pany miles, but 56 trace of the plane or its crew had been found to the time of this writing. The second plane, which started at the same time under command of Lieut. A. P. Sno was forced d by a broken oll feed pipe when about 300 miles out. No one was injured and the plane was towed back to San i Francisco, A third seaplane, the PB-1, was expected to start on the attempted flight to Honolulu at the same time as the others but was de layed by the necessity of replacing its motor. ¥ some niles f com the Warsi alo as lost | up wv on | xs wn OL. WILLIAM MITCHELL is de termined that the American peo ple shall know the truth about the alr service as he sees it, and last week published his boak, “Winged Defense” telling the story of the development of military and commercial aviation. The War department at ohce began an ex. amination of the work, but Colonel Mitchell asserted he had disobeyed no order, though admitting he had pub lished the book without submitting it to his superiors. “The truth of our deplorable situ. ation is going to be put before the American people come whut may,” he declared. “If the War department wants to start something, so much the better. ‘Then I can get the case before congress and the people and we will have a chance to remedy this anfor tunate condition. This book 18 Just the beginning. I am preparing n series of articles that will ‘rip off the cover’ of the deplorable situation, One fourth of the shortcomings of our air service have not yet been told, but they are going to be” NIVERSAL Interest, “snoopy” per- haps but quite natural, attended the throwing open to the publie ‘of the tncome tax returns, In accordance | wit h the present law, E ed to know what the men pald on thelr last maybe more at his paid tot very one want- nation's richest year's Income, and especially acquaintances Most euriosity, print lists, in the ecountr now wh neighbors | pers catered iis a few retused the largest paym the Ford Motor company of £160,408,160. Henrs individually pald f2.008. 808, while s son, Edsel, pald 32,158,055. The individual was Joli ntribut tO ent y was hy 2575 008, His As n Jr. who on OR 420 ial thing the assessments on i 411 jires ore 1 p £301. movi it ily two were s the 240.0060 These were Fairbank £132,114, and RT OTS Mary Plek- note fxsessnent gngelist, was £10. As was pald by Tom Taggart iiners the work ac rder Septem. NTHRACITE coal to umber of 150.000 qui ording to or 1 Ti ines and their strike ¢ suspension shut coll . wheo of pry taste ; 20s feries « by tion ¥ on ang rans ing to oo ners tha M. Ing tte, mine tenis train crews on ¢ ' losing of shops Presi othe r lent Ot leclara ope n operati an of t Lewis’ that Wires Was to the m ne, W, he operators’ suspend Nr tye wad * said “There was a way open rotors have comm that the op over and over again pro- namely, that operations should go on while negotiations for a new contract were pending the miners cannot work unless they have a contract Is unsupported by ren- son or practice. All workers continue on thelr jobs that sooner contract will be | later another made.” include measures for avoiding strikes In the Indusiry. Dis patchea from Swampscott sald Presi dent Coolidge, being convinced that the only way to protect the publle from constant menace of coal strikes is hy government Interference, will ask the next congress to enact legls- ination giving the Chief Executive pow- er to take decisive action when a strike threatens. He expects to urge legiglation embodying practically all the recommendations made hy the fed- eral coal commission In 1928 strike SENATOR WATSON of Indiana con- ferred with President Coolidge inst week on rallway legislation and It wns agreed that the administration should urge congress to so modify the Lech-Cumming act that rallroad con. solidation will be forced after a period of goven years, Meanwhile they are desirons that voluntary groupings of railronds be brought about and think approval of the Van Sweringen con solldntion scheme would clear the way for these, Sravisn and French forces In Mo rocco Joined in a great attack on Adjlr, capital of Abdeel-Krim, and re. duced it to a mass of ruins by shell fire and bombardment from squadrons of airplanes, The RIM leader with his staff of Turks, Germans and Russians hud previously moved to n safe piace in the mountains Heavy reinforce | ments are ' roge and Marshal Petain's big sive against Krim Is well under In Syria the French are so well, for the rebellious Druse tribes. men have captured the fortress of Suedia with its garrison of 700 men, after destroying a rellef expedition. { General Sarrail, In command there, has been handicapped by the necessity | of protecting Damascus and the slow- offen. way. COMMERCIAL Weekly Review of Trade an Market Reports. BALTIMORE ~~ Wheat — No. 2 red spot, $1.63; do, garlicky, domestic, $1.40, Corn—Domestic yellow corn is quot- able at $1.10@1.11 per bushel for No. 2 in car lots on spot. Oats—No. 2 white, 46c asked; No, 2 white, 40 ‘asked. Hay—-No. 1 timothy, per ton, 22; Na. 2 timothy, per ton, 21; No. 3 timothy, per ton, No. 1 light clover mixed, per ton, @20; No. 2 light clover mixed, ton, $17@18; No. 1 clover mixed, ton, $18.50@19. Straw-—No, 1 wheat, 2: No. 1 oat, per ton, Millfeed—8pring wheat gern, per ton, in 100-pound sacks, Western middlings (brown) in pound sacks, Eggs—Western, { no bids. | Butter | do, | do, $21.50 $20.50 «© oh @1is,; $19 per per $11@ per ton, 126113 12913. bran, West $34; 100 - . offered dic, Creamery, 44@ 45, 460 4%; | ladles, 26@ 38; | vania i choice, prints, roils rolls, 34@ 25 { land, Virginia ¢ | prints, 34026 Live Poultry { 4% Ibs. and | medium, 3 98 Gy 07 wn oi ‘hickens per 15 to 4 lbs, smooth, aller . \ 1% over, 33., {per Ib, 2 22; old roo { chickens, | mixed colors, | reinforcements. WH Aristide ! the council of of Na- The bhig- the Lengue tions in gest question for msideration was the dispute betweed the British Turks over possession of the sul vilayet. This rich oll formerly a part o Turk but Great Britain contends | comes withid vhich Britain holds the The ider the wething sthing convened Geneva its o« { the region ish Was pire it the 4 Irak date expects rope but this until ne to some the borders of league, league also of Eu about security reement of Great Britain, um, Italy on for preliminary of the rest dent iF sxal ex France, Bel. met in Lon of the FODORS ad pa Mean Loebe of the German ichstag “g gd & boner” In Vienna aroused anes apprehensions of France. Addressing Austro- Germany People's union at a demonstration, Herr Loehe sald: Germany becomes a of Nations, able to use f« with Austria.” government and Gerry Mny discussion terms et. hile Pr the the “After member of the France will be un. to prevent a union immediately the French announced indirectly uzh its newspaper mouthpiece that it could not accept a security pact un less France were allowed a free hand inst Germany In case the suddenly annexed Austria. League ree thousand veterans | E feeble In body but strong In spirit, the fonal in Army nat of parade of the Grand Republic on the It parade of the organization of the members are longer the effort the last equal to MERICANS who have heen vaca unauthorized strike of However, numerous In England, ports in great numbers, seamen uit their jobs, ERT E. HANEY of Oregon, a Dem: ocratic member of the shipping quest of President Coolidge. quest was made in the following tele gram from the President: “It having come to my attention that you are proposing to remove Admiral Fleet corporation, contrary to the un. derstanding | had with you when I re appointed you, your resignation from the United States shipping board is re quested.” Commissioner Haney, insisting that there was no express understanding as to the continuance in office of Mr. Pal- mer, but that, on the contrary, he had advised the President fully as to why he was opposed to the present head of the fleet corporation, declared In a let ter to the President that he could not resign because such action would “carry an implication which 1 cannot permit” It is understood that Commissioner Haney does not intend to wage a con. troversy with the President relative to remaining as a member of the board, but that he feels that he could not comply with the President's re quest In the form made because of the Implication Involved that he had broken a promise made to the Presi dent, A White House spokesman sald that other members of the board might be asked to step out unless they dropped their opposition to the President's economy campaign, fancy, medium, 8G 2%; mmon 41 216y26; spring chickens i mouth mixed dium, 26@ 27; © Leghorns, 25 ay breeds, fancy, fowls, NEW YORK Wheat { No. 1 dark Northern spring, « | New York, lake and rail, $§1.72%,: No | hard winter, f. 0. b lake and rail, £1,661 No. 2 mixed durum, | $1.4915: No. 1 Manitoba, do., i $1.60. { Corn—Spot firm; No. | track New York, all rail, 2 mixed, do, $1.13%, QOats—8pot steady: §7%e. Butter—Firm: receipts, 16.786 tubs, higher than extras, 46%. @ 46c; do, Spot iL. 1. No. 2 yellow, ¢ $1.145%; No. 2 white, 47¢; do, extras (92 score), 9 $5 we ing stock, current make, No, 3514. Eggs—Fresh gathered extra firsts, 1, @36% ce; do, storage, 34@ 35; fresh gathered, firsts, 32% @34; do, storage, 324033; do, fresh gathered, seconds, 30% @ 32; do, storage, 20831; nearby hennery whitas, closely selected, ex tras, 60@62. Cheese-—Steady; State, whole milk flats, fresh, fancy to fancy specials, WEG 24%e; do, average run, 22%. LIVE STOCK BALTIMORE-Cattle— Steers, choice to prime, $10.76@11.50; good to choice, $106010.50; medium to good, SHOE 9.25: common to medium, $6.506 7.25; common, $5@'6. Heifers, good to choice, $7.50@8; fair to good, 36.500 7.26; common to medium, 34.7506. Bulls, good to choice, $5.50G6; fair to good, $4506 5.25. Cows, good to choice, GC BUSINESS FIRST Willis—You look as if you'd been in a fight, Nillig—1 hs didn't treat Willls- Nillis~ out, snd me dent! ive, and fair. How was Knocked opponent me #4. then had the bill for $2, saying Aother Was No » Cook “Gerald,” sald the ticing how heartily wife, no- ing. as mono A “Once beg Daring Invitation $5.20006.25; fair to good, $4.20@6. that necktie you are wes “Jim, ring will you, VERY SHORT ay 18 feet Poor Thing ing girl, A 3 work 93 ot Ehe's ring overtime faz © Painter He'll Have No Competition 3 — $11 ne. put that parrot doors 1 close Golfer The; I to sfraid A play andl Natural Aversion Friend--1 hear that kindly law. Jig Lawyer (grimiy)—Perha nldn’t, either, if you'd been times for violating traffic ir son doesn't to the DE you “rrest- Nees, ABLE TO EXERCISE Ww Old Aunt-—So0 your husband aint really able to dig in the garden any more?! Don’t he play golf? «Niece—Oh, yes; but that's exercise, suntie dear. Be Sure You're Right Friend, do not be a guitier, With fear within your heart; Unless you are a finisher Of things you shouldn't start. Losing Weight Crist—-My wife is reducing rapidly. She called me on the phone from downtown today. Blake--What of that? Crist—~It means that she can get into a telephone booth now. 5. PC. A Supporter “Maw, isn't paw kind to animals? “Suppose so, Why? ing ree 1 huiird him ¢ kins that he'd come over a feed the kitty If you'd let him ont.” * %