INK SLINGS. Deport the radicals. ¢ =——Christmas is ‘just days off. « —At this time two years ago every- thing was frozen up and there was snow on the ground. . —It is just one year today since the first brick -was laid on the new pav-. ing of south Water street. * —_Public schools in many parts of the county were closed at this time last year because of the flu epidemic. “Z_A lot of people who are riding the progressive hobby these days rieed not be surprised - if it carries them into the camp of bolshevism. /—The coal strike having been call- ed off there is nothing to prevent thirty-four ‘ mining coal in the Central Pennsyl- = yania field but the disinclination of the miners to go back to work. ¢Jf we would all make up our minds to live within our means for a period of six months or more we be- lieve there would be no high cost of living problem at the end of that time. «The successful non-stop flight of aviator Stevens, from Cleveland to New York, on Saturday, presages that Bellefonte will ultimately become a mere flag station on the aerial mail route. -_The President declared that he preferred the defeat of the peace treaty to the kind of ratification the Senate offered to give it. He insisted that such ratification was really nul- lification and we beileve he was right. ‘Very careful observation in this community warrants the statement that those whose pay envelopes have been fattened the most are the ones who make the most'ado about not be- ing able to live on what they are re- ceiving. . —Parlor socialists, soap-box, pro- gressives ‘and cart-tail = reformers might well turn in alarm and beseech the conservative element in the coun- try to help stay the avalanche of un- vest that their misguided theories has started moving with such ominous portent. ‘—Sad the lot of the 1919 foot ball hero. “Breaking training” brings with it no thought of clinking glasses over a post-season banquet table. All the “breaks” are gone from “break- ing training” and, say what you will, ginger. ale and coca-cola are misera- ble substitutes. : "Of course the Democratic Sena- tors in Congress can afford to assume the responsibility of the defeat of the peace treaty. If Republican Senators could emasculate it as they did, out of pure partisan malice, without fear of public condemnation there was all the inore - reason why Democrats should refuse to so accept it.. “~The ' “Watchman’s” advice to lawmakers, educators, would-be phil- anthropists, and all others engaged ir giving impressions that the condition of our people is not just as it should be, is to can such stuff until the pub- lic mind is tempered enough to grasp what they are really driving at. Everything is distorted now and over- feeding the brain is sure to wreck it entirely. ~The Prince of Wales is to leave our shores tomorrow. He has had a fine time touring the States and has made a most favorable impression. Being full of the enthusiasm of youth and democratic enough to mix well he has shattered the illusion of many a mind that royalty is super-human. In the last analysis, folks is folks. Only some of them show the refining influences of education and associa- tion while others persist in refusing to lift themselves out of the rough. — Bellefonte no sooner begins to consider the necessity of buying mod- ern fire fighting apparatus than four alarms are rung in in quick succes- sion. We might think there was some connection between the two were it not for the perfectly natural conflagrations that occurred. Years ago we had to buy steam engines be- cause the buildings grew too high for the natural pressure of the water. Now the steam engines are obsolete because there are mo horses at hand to pull them to the fires. And it is almost a ten to one shot that the chemical trucks that look like a ne- cessity now will be in the discard ten years hence. —Having noticed a report from Minneapolis to the effect that one large brewer in that city had poured thirty-four thousand gallons of beer into the Mississippi when the federal courts of Chicago made an adverse “wet” ruling, we wondered what the river looked like and ‘whether the fish got a jag. The incident also recall- ed a spring flood on Spring creck some years ago. It was Sunday afternoon and we had about two feet of amber colored water in the press rooms of this office. We have rarely seen a flood so frothy on the surface and so red from newly plowed fields. An old friend, once a member of Bellefonte’s “pooh, pooh” gang, hap- péned along and was watching the swollen stream from the bridge just outside the window from which the writer was viewing it. There were very visible signs that he was carry- ing a “hang-over” and having a sus- picion that his “coppers. were hot” we said: “Doesn’t it look like beer, 7” He glued his swollen eyes on the stream for an instant and re- marked, without looking K up: “By gad, I wish it was. It wouldn’t be as high as it is.” : VOL. 64. Judas Iscariot Outclassed. The peace treaty, mutilated to sat- | isfy the malice of Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, and the vicious mind | of Senator Reed, of Missouri, was re- jected by the Senate on Wednesday by a vote of 38 to 53. - After thus dis- posing of the treaty Senator’ Lodge introduced ‘a resolution proposing that Congress declare the war with Germany at an end, but as such a res- olution would require the concurrence of the House, which had already ad- journed, it was not acted upon. The Senate finally adjourned sine die at 11:08 o'clock, and it is now a mooted question as to whether the Senate’s action is final on the treaty or wheth- er it can be withdrawn and submitted to the next Congress by the President when it meets in December. The failure of President Wilson's great effort to crown the splendid victory achieved on the bloody fields of battle in France and Flanders by the armies of the Allies with an equally brilliant victory for peace is aseribable to a few Senators, traitors alike to their party and their country. Senator Reed, of Missouri; Senator Gore, of Oklahoma; Senator Walsh, of Massachusetts, - and Senator Shields, of Tennessee, voted with the Republicans on every proposition, and Senator Thomas, of Colorado; Sena- tor Smith, of Georgia, and Senator King, of Utah, all elected as Demo- crats, were at the sinister service of . the ‘conspirators whenever their votes were needed to defeat the righteous purpose of the President. The Republican Senators who have betrayed their obligations to justice and civilization were probably influ- enced by the mistaken belief that the mutilation of the treaty would give their party some tactical advantage in the ‘approaching Presidential cam- paigh and being scurvy politicians were willing to make the sacrifice But the Democratic traitors had no such incentive to follow a false lead and pursue a wrong course. In their cases it was plain perversity of mind and purpose and each of them should be marked with a brand of infamy that will endure to the end of their worthless ‘lives. + Reed, Gore, Walsh, ers are traitors to party and county. ——The statement that Senators in Congress are suffering’ from over- work excites little sympathy in well- informed circles. They are welcome to quit work any time and rest as long as they like. Railroad Legislation Lagging. Though six months have been con- sumed in tinkering the present ses-: sion of Congress is likely to adjourn without enacting any legislation for the regulation of railroads after the government relinquishes control on the first of January next. At the be- ginning of the session the President gave notice of the intention of the government to turn the railroads over to the control of their private owners on January 1st, 1920, and urged that appropriate legislation be promptly enacted in order that wage scales and other essential matters be adjusted. The government operation of the roads had entailed vast expenses be- yond the earnings and the purpose was to make the change without re- ducing wages. But Congress has done nothing of practical value though the time limit is rapidly approaching. Several bills have been introduced and much talk indulged in, but to no purpose. On Saturday last, however, a Republican member of the House made a sugges- tion from which an inference as to the cause of delay may be drawn. “Possible defeat of the peace treaty in the Senate,” he said, “would re- quire that the House join in the pas- sage of a resolution declaring that the war is at an end.” In other words, important legislation in which the whole country is vitally interested is made an instrument for making a separate peace with Germany, a thing the country is pledged to not do but the Republicans in Congress are de- termined to do if possible. But the tinkering operations during the long drawn out period has made one thing practically certain. It is that the bill, whenever it is enacted, will restore to the speculative rail- road managers all the pooling ’ and other privileges they enjoyed before the Interstate Commerce law was en- acted. An effort was made the other day to write into the measure a rigid rule to prevent this but when it was declared “that such a rule would de- stroy rate structures throughout the country without benefitting. the in- termountain country,” the effort was abandoned. The Congress was made Republican for just such legislation as the speculators want and it may be predicted that they will get what they wan. —DPrice boosting of all kinds has come to the point where it is being done on the principle of boost while the boosting is good rather than be- cause of any real necessity for it. Virginia’s New Senator in Congress. The appointment of Carter Glass to the vacancy in the Senate caused by the death of Senator Martin, of Vir- ginia, will add considerably to the ef~ ficiency of the minority in that body. Not that Senator Martin was a weak- ling, for as a matter of fact he was a tower of strength during the period of the war. But during nearly all the time since the cessation of hostilities he has been suffering from infirmities caused by overwork during that stren- uous period. Both in committee and upon the floor of the Senate he labor-, ed assiduously and intelligently in support of the administration and his unanimous election to the important post of floor leader of his party in the last and present Congress shows he was appreciated by his colleagues. But the new Senator, Mr. Glass, is younger, more vigorous and equally gifted. For many years he stood among the foremost in the House of Representatives and as chairman of the House committee on Banking and Currency took a leading part in all the splendid legislation that has giv- en the United States the best finan- | cial system in the civilized world. Upon the retirement of Mr. McAdoo as Secretary of the Treasury, a year. President Wilson called Mr. ago, Gliss inte his Cabinet to administer the laws he had practically prepared and successfully championed. Fol- | lowing McAdoo is a big man’s job. in any event and it may be safely said that Carter Glass measured up to the STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA.. NOVEMBER 31, 1919. Lesnar mld El tbh ¢ Selecting Constitution Makers. Word comes from Harrisburg that Governor Sproul is busy at present picking out suitable men for the Commission “to study and recommend révision of the constitution of Penn- sylvania.” The Legislature during its last session authorized a Commis- sion of twenty-five for that purpose, and the Governor has been giving the subject considerable attention. It is stated that Attorney General William 1. Schaffer will head the Commission as the special representative of the Governor. He is a neighbor of Gov- ernor Sproul and enjoys his full con- fidence. It may be added that he is an able lawyer and entirely worthy of the confidence reposed in him. Be- sides he is a student of constitutional law. ; i . During his term of office Governor Sproul will hardly have a more im- portant service to discharge than that of selecting this Commission. It is true that the work of the Commission will be subject to review but the rec- ‘ommendations of the Commission are i likely to form the basis of the funda- mental law which is contemplated. In preparation. for the present constitu- | tion the most distinguished gentlemen of the State were chosen irrespective lof politics. Nevertheless = some cranky notions insinuated themselves into the provisions of the instrument | and before it was five years eld the i work of tinkering began and has been . ' kept up with little if any intermission The Legion's Power. From the Williamsport Sum. = The American Legion has just come , through the great Minneapolis con- i vention firmly re-pledged to the sin- | gle plank upon which the measure of its influence in the United States is to be determined, that it stands for pol- icies, not polities. Legion and" post ing home that point before all of their fellow members, as from the moment the great force of the Legion is swung into politics, it begins to lose its true influence. Not that the members of the Legion are expected to hold them- selves aloof = from politics. That course would be foolish. The Legion represents 4,000,000 virile American | men upon whom the nation is’ now placing a large responsibility for as- sistance in operating. the government and keeping national thought and ac- tion in the right channels. As indi- dividuals they must assume their du- ties in American politics and at times when causes, foreign to the principles for which the American government stands, are advanced by selfish or ig- norant interests, they must strike at them with all their might. It will tru- ly be a difficult task to distinguish just where the province of policies runs into the boundary line of poli- tics, but the country has sufficient confidence in the wisdom and common sense of the American Legion not to attempt to map out a program or a line of action for. the organization which has already proved to the sat- isfaction of the nation that it knows | when to speak and when to. keep si- lent, when to act and when to stop. ‘The Legion now holds the confi- dence and respect of the American requirement. . The Treasury Depart- ever since. : | people, The fact that such is the ment has never had a more capable Governor Sproul has had large ex- | case should strengthen its influ- manager. at | perience in public life and at one time | ence over the men. eligible for In assuming his place in the Sen- ate Mr. Glass will bring to the serv- ice of the country in that important branch of the government a wide ex- perience in, parliamentary practice and a superb equipment in intellectu- al force. Robust and alert physical- ly and mentally he will make the se- nile Lodge and the lethargic Penrose sit up and take notice from the begin- ning and behave themselves better in the end. The Governor of Virginia has performed a valuable service to the country in naming him to take the seat of the lamented Martin. It is a. sign that in Virginia, at least, t 1 SK 1! | faults of the press { the Dentocratic party is not only har- | fat inserted at the in monious but is wisely led and we in the North may well hope that Senator , Glass will live long to adorn the of- fice into which he so auspiciously en- ters. ——1It is gratifying to learn that “one-hal? of the known coal-reserves are in the United States.” But if the coal miners charge a dollar an hour ! for getting it out of the mine it will not do the public much good. Animus of Republican Senators. The purpose of the Republican Senators in voting reservations upon the peaee treaty is revealed in the texts of the reservations adopted. It is a settled and for that matter a vie- ious purpose to subvert the constitu- tional powers of the President. To what extent this purpose is attributa- ble to hatred of President Wilson is conjectural, of course. But it:may be assumed as considerable for the rea- son that the President’s re-election in 1916 practically wrote the epitaph on the tomb of the Republican party. Since the Civil war the Democrats had been unable to make one Demo- cratic administration succeed another previously and therefore the capabil- ity of the party to govern could not be tested until now. It may be assumed with equal cer- tainty and reason that lust for power influencing The present and patronage was an agency to some extent. Republican party was erected upon a foundation of spoils and absence from ! the pay roll for a considerable period has made the leaders desperate. Spe- cial privilege and graft are essential to Republican party prosperity and’ President Wilson has been from the beginning of his service in the ‘White House the inexorable and uncompro- mising foe of special privilege and graft. Therefore the element of ha- tred of the President is concealed even in the lust for spoils that is plainly shown in every act of the Re-' publican majority in the Senate with respect to the peace treaty. . Nearly every reservation vests In Jongress or the Senate the power of | determination. Under the constitu- tion such power is lodged in the ex- ecutive and from the beginning of the government the President has exer- | cised it. But if the pending treaty 1s ratified with the reservations propos- | ed by the packed Senate committee on Foreign Relations and adopted by the | j ! snow the day after the election. The | Senate on Saturday, the President will have no authority in the matter which will be determined in the im- mediate future by such rattle brains as Borah and such demagogues as | Hungry Hi Johnson. This is a sub- ject for the American people to con- template. If perpetuated it will mark the beginning of the end of constitu- tional government in the country. ——Senator Lodge appears to think that he is making the United States safe for the Republican party. jor another has come into personal ! contact with most of the leading men ‘of the State. For this reason he is better qualified than most men to per- form the duty which the Legislature has imposed upon him. He is a sting partisan and the only source of doubt that he will meet the best hopes of the public in the selection of the personnel of the Commission has its seat in that fact. Partisanship should be excluded absolutely and fit- ness made the only standard of choice. not be forgotten that { ; t constitution oh ran SE I re 1818. | © — County _ Commissioners-elect SE Hk | George H. Yarnell and Harry P. Aus- ' tin held a meeting last Saturday and . | selected Rash Irwin as their ehief clerk and Harry C. Valentine as sec- ‘ ond clerk. ! ——There has been considerable comment during the week on the ne- ; cessity of improved fire fighting ap- ' paratus for the Bellefonte firemen, At the same time it should most of the 1 i | sons ‘ally themselves with it. In that atti- tude they are losing more themselves than they can ever hope to deprive the Legion of. The events of recent days, the open attacks on American- ism perpetrated by foolish and vicious radicals, that occurrence in the State of Washington that . has ' served to crystalize a dormant patriotism and sentiment against the enemies within our gates, ought to summon every red-blooded American soldier and sailor to the support of Legion. No one organization or group of in- dividuals stands as a brighter symbol of = Americanism than the Legion whose nbers: fought and suffered F Ry SO 2 , der or followed the American flag in- -:40 ‘battle, ought now be enlisted. ; Forcing Germany to Pay. ‘ From the DuBois Kxprebs. Whether with or without authori- ‘ty from the German government, its agents have deliberately violated the {terms of the armistice. ‘The most | ~, flagrant instance of this was the care- , ful-schemed and skillfully executed : sinking at Scapa Flow of more than officers cannot be too forceful in driv- _— SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —New picking machinery is being im- stalled in the Fleetwood silk mills to im- crease the output of the plant. 1 —After pleading guilty to twenty-eight robberies, William C. Brown, of Lancas- ter, . was sentenced to serve nineteen years in the eastern penitentiary. Willian Horn, who was his accomplice, was. sem~ tenced to sixteen months, and. sixteen yeax old Joseph Schurter was sent to the Hunt- ; ingdorn reformatory. : 3 —An epidemic of measles is seriously, interfering with school attendance in Alf« toona. Principals in the elementary schools report from 10 to 35 per cent. of the enrollment ‘absent on account of the malady, or are confined in homes quaraa- tined. It is estimated that 500 students are victims of the disease. | "—As an evidence of how the Susquehan- na trail booms business for the garage proprietor on the route, E. W. Brion, of Liberty, Lycoming county, one of the smallest villages on the trail, has sold nearly 60,000 gallons of gasoline since the trail was established three years ago, and his garage is one of three in the town. . -—Chester. county sportsmen are lining up solidly against the recent Act of the Legislature in protection of the red fox im Chester, Delaware and Montgomery coum- ties and if any arrest is made of any per- son for violating the new law the sports-. i men will line up in his or her support iw order to get a decision as to the constitu-_ tionality of ‘what they cali class legisia-~ tion. —Mrs. ‘May Heck, of Harrisburg, com-. | victed a year ago of being a commom ; scold, was sentenced to three months im ! jail, because she could. neither hold her tongue at home, in court, nor in the Dis-. trict Attorney’s office. District Attorney M. KE. Stroup asked Judge J. M. McCar- rell to impose sentence because he was | worried continuously by the woman's visits. —Harry F. Thompson, of Armstrong ‘county, ‘is the owner of a sow, half Po- land-China and half Chester White, that gave birth to 24 pigs on September first . last. This litter made seventy-two pigs she had given birth to, and she is only twe , and one-half years old. The September . first litter was her fourth litter. The first - she had was 14 pigs; the second 18, and the third 16. ~—~Hearing a commotion as he stepped up~ on the porch at his home in Williamsport, Friday night; George Allen, finding the: door - locked; peered = through a window and was horrified to see his mother, Mrs. Emma Allen, eighty-four years old, fight- ing. off the family’s pet bull dog. Smash- ing the window, Allen went .to her réscue ( and beat the dog off, but not before it had badly lacerated her hands and arms and broken: her right arm, with which she pre- tected her throat. 3 . =:WWithin two blocks of the Altoona city | hall, an ilMeit still was making moonshine . whiskey untii ‘raided by the police. last week, and Vaso Millicovic and his wife ar- | rested. A barrel of whiskey was found in the cellar; and jugs and bottles were filled - with ‘the stuff, which was made from rai- sift mash, four barrels and three tubs. of which were in various stages of férmenta- tion. More than 3000 pounds of unused - raisins were in stock. The moonshine was sold to miners near there, police say. : Dr. J. Allen Jackson, chief resideat physician at the Philadelphia hospital for the insune, was. last week elected superin- tendent of the Daiiville State hospital for - | the’ insane at {meeting of the. board. of i trustees held at the institution. He: will lenter upen his duties’ on January 13th, : and will succeed Dr. H. B. Meredith, who : has been superintendent of the hospita | for twenty-eight years, and who recently - | resigned. John R. M. Curry, of Danville, | was appointed treasurer to succeed Alex- ; ander Foster, of Danville. | —Charles II. Mauk, one of the oldest | undertakers in Harrisburg, was convicted i t tin court. last Friday of fraud in not bury- ing Howard H. McCracken, of Altoona, as represented. MeCracken died last fall dur- . caused, of course, by the disastrous a score of German war ships which | ing the influenza outbreak, and it is al- fire at the aviation field and the sev- eral other fires that followed in rapid succession. * So far as the fire at the | aviation field is concerned, it burned : so quickly that from the time the { alarm was given until it was burned | down was only a matter of minutes afloat they would have been a matter | had been surrendered by the enemy iand were in charge of German crews | pending the final settlement of peace. | The sinking of these vessels was a i criminal act of bad faith. The loss ; of the ships does not matter so much i to the allies. If they had remained i leged .that Mauk charged for a { shroud and other expenses, including a | minister. Instead, the body, when exum- ° | ed, at directions of Millard MeCracken. a , brother, is said to. have shown burial in “a pine box, in underwear. Investigation established that no services were held. coffin, ~—~Walter Headrick did exceedingly well | and the best equipped fire department of dispute and perhaps ill feeling on | while confined in the Dauphin county jail, ‘in the world could not have gotten . on the ground in time to save it. The only other fire necessitating the aid of | the firemen was the one ai the Acad- emy on Monday morning, and Mr. Hughes, himself, vouches for the prompt response and efficient work of | the firemen. But this is no reason, of | course, why Bellefonte should not . have the best equipment possible that the town can afford, and the writer knows that the borough council not only feels that way about it, but is . now working on a plan for the purch- ase of such equipment at as early a : date as possible. — Mr. Lewis, acting president of the United Mine Workers of Ameri- ca, made the mistake of his life when ' he handed out an ultimatum to the government of the United States. Russia is trying to find herself according to an estimated contem- porary and when she succeeds we hope the principle of “finders keep- ers” will be promptly applied. Republican Congress peace would ‘have been restored months ago and | prosperity would now be cavorting about everywhere. The Russian organization which has for its motto: “Without God, without master and free of au- thority” will make little headway in this country. Centre county had its first i the part of the governments which would later have undertaken their : division, But the fact that the Ger- i man war fleet was a liability and not {an asset from a purely international | standpoint, in no sense mitigates the | outrage which treacherous German seamen committed. | It may be impossible or inadvisa- | { ble to float the sunken ships. They | are now only a mass of rusted steel | and are perhaps beyond salvage from ! | a maval standpoint, but Germany { should be made to pay for them and should be made to understand before | final peace with her is made and be- | fore she is admitted to membership ‘in the league of nations, that she ‘must live up to her obligations if she I. pay full value with interest. She {is to live on terms of friendliness | with the nations of the world. | Already Great Britain is preparing | to submit a bill to Germany with the | consent of the allies. She will de- | mand the delivery of several hundred : thousand tons of docks, cranes, tugs { and dredges among other things in | payment for the naval tonnage which { was wantonly wiped out by lawless | crews aboard the enemy warships. . She will demand merchant ships and | other warships, and Germany will | She should be made to understand | once and for all that she cannot keep | on committing offenses against de- Soney without having to suffer for : them. How It Looks. ! From the Nebraska State Journal. | Plenty of wheat, so much meat the { price slumps and corn to sell to Eu- | rope. But there is a coal famine, steel is unobtainable, clothing is | scarce and railroads are unable to move crops. Are the farmers the only | second flurried around on Wednesday | people in the United States equal te | but neither one was anything to wor- | their job? ry about. . : | Do Not Need Additions. —__Bad as Bolshevism is in this | i i 1 3 jolis News. | country and elsewhere it ought not be | From the Indianapolis ‘made an excuse for the reorganiza- | Rea, uggestions het the Japtured | tion of Know Nothingism. | be considered, as the Mexicans appear | | very well satisfied with their own brand of anarchy. | ___Probably if the Anti-saloon . League would expend some of its en- ee sree | ergy on D’Annuncio things might be ——They are all good enough, but "different. | the “Watchman” is always the best. { the police announced recently, when it was - ! learned through finger print Iidentifica- { tion that he is under arrest in Philadel- { phia for automobile thievery. Ileadrick | made $700 while sérving his sentence by | fleecing his fellow prisoners. He was sen- y tenced for stealing automobiles and escap- : ed through a coal chute. When taken back to complete his sentence three years: later he made the $700 profit by trading on his escape among prisoners and telling them that he could secure their release. —@Governor Sproul has issued a state- [ ment in which he asks for the observance of tuberculosis day in the schools on Fri- day, December 5; in the synagogues, Sat- ‘urday, December 6, and in the churches on Sunday, December 7. The observance will be during the Christmas seal cam- paign. Dr. Thomas E. Finegan, superin- tendent of public instruction, has sent a | Jotter to the 44,000 school teachers in the | State, calling attention to the seal and tu- | berculosis campaign, and asking that De- cember 5 be set aside for observance im i the schools. Pastors of the State are ask- | ed to preach on the white plague on tu- ! bereulosis Sunday. | ——A drive is under way at Hazleton for | the raising of $50,000 to supplement an ap- | propriation of $25,000 made by the State | Legislature for the erection of a nurses’ —If the people had not elected a | have to pay just as she ought to pay. | home at the Hazleton hospital. About one- i half of the amount has been subscribed ‘and it is hoped to get the rest before the Holidays. Ever since the establishment of the hospital, nearly twenty-five years ago, | the nurses have been without suitable ! quarters and appeals to the assembly | were futile until the last session and then | only a small amount could be set aside for | the project. Subscriptions are being re- | ceived from the coal companies, other in- | dustries and thousands of individuals. , -——With 62,600 pies to her credit in the { last sixteen years, Susan Lisby, head cook | of the Pennsylvania military college, Ches- | ter, has a valid claim to the title of cham- pion pie baker of the world. A student with a statistically inclined mind has fig- | ured that her pies, placed one yard apart, ! would reach from the Philadelphia City Hall to the Doylestown public library. For ten years Susan Lisby, stout, gener- ous and good natured, baked pies in Swarthmore College—-and plunged that in- stitution into gloom when she resigned te go to the Chester institution. ‘ She refused to reconsider her decision, though meet- ings were convened and resolutions passed imploring her to remain in Swarthmore. _