Based on reversing those numbers of winners through the odds of winning, you can see that they sold around 95,000 tickets. That's $475,000 in the till.
The state's on the hook for the $100,000 prize and below. According to the prize fund allocation, Pennsylvania keeps about 18% of the take for their share of the prizes. Based on those sales, that's $85,500. One 2nd level prize winner of $100,000 means Pennsylvania goes into the minus pool that night. If people buy 95,000 tickets, there's only a 3.5% chance (1-((2695217/2695218)^95000)) of that happening.
Pennsylvania paid out about $70,000 without that big 2nd level prize, meaning the lottery earned about $15,000 for that week's work and dodged bullets that the 2nd & 3rd level prizes weren't hit. If either of those had been hit, they're in the minus pool.
TL;DR - At only 100K tickets being sold, it's not financially safe to play or sell this game with the current fixed prize structure. Parimutuel prizes make it safe, but unappealing to players. It's going to have to be retooled to survive the actuaries.
/Damn, I love probability analysis.