INK SLINGS. —Just as the trout-fishing sea- son goes out hunting season comes in. Former President Taft appears anxious to be the man that put “fuse” in confusion. — The main trouble with Phila- delphia is that the people there have too long allowed Dave Lane to select their public officials. —Every day the opposing Senators and Congressmen are making new apologies and getting ready to back track on the League of Nations. —The longer Henny Ford testifies the more we understand why he start- ed that peace ship off to get the men out of the trenches before Christmas. —If the price of clothing keeps on rising the fellow who is “all dressed up and no place to go” might become 2 headliner in museums and vaude- ville. — Really it is too bad that Japan didn’t suppress publicity of her inten- tion to return Shantung to China un- til after the Republicans had made a little more capital of the incident. —If you are working for an individ- ual or a corporation and can’t say a good word for your employer get another job. That would be the de- cent thing to do. Nobody has much respect for the fellow who isn’t loyal to his employer. — Again we take the opportunity to remark that all the opposition to the League of Nations is political. People who love peace and want peace are for it not exactly because they are sure that it will produce peace, but because nothing better is presented. Surprising and gratifying as it may be it is nevertheless a fact that with all the wet weather very little of Centre county’s grain crop has been damaged. Farmers, themselves, have been unable to explain how their crops came through such an unfavorable period without material loss. — Soldier boys should keep their equipment. All of them are precbably tired enough of the khaki now, but a few years hence it will be different. Then every man who has been in the service will see something new in his old uniform and equipment. It will be a present reminder of the greatest experience of his life and something really worth while for his family to cherish. —In proposing federal supervision of newspapers William Jennings Bry- an is probably trying to set the stage for a “come-back.” If he or one of his friends could be put in charge of such a bureau a careful censorship of all the things unpleasant that might be said of the once Secretary of State could be maintained and the way back to fame and grape juice banquets be made easy. —Col. Spangler should feel very much flattered that our friend Tom Harter takes his opinion on great problems as the last word. We admit a little surprise when we heard the journalist made this admission to an assembled crowd at Chautauqua for if our memory serves us right we are of the opinion that the files of the Ga- zette will show that Tom hasn’t al- ways written as he recently talked. — Professor Garner’s plan to devel- op the ape to the point where it will have sufficient intelligence to perform menial tasks might be made a very easy one if he were to cage it beside some humans who are attempting menial and other tasks now. The in- stinct of the ape, without any develop- ed intelligence, would show it at a glance that hanging by its tail in the jungle is real work when compared with what some of its evoluted breth- ren do in return for a fat pay envel- ope. — Today the law hoists a tablet on the banks of every trout stream in the State and on it the angler might read “requiescat in pace.” For that is what the poor little trout are doing. Every year there are fewer fish and more fishermen and, strange as it may seem, the trout are getting thinner and thinner. This, some experts say, is because the few that are left in the streams have been hooked so fre- quently that their mouths have grown so sore they can’t eat. And we almost believe this story. Missouri farmers have gone to court to get relief for ther cattle which they claim are being disturbed by the flight of aeroplanes. Missouri cattle are probably afflicted with Mis- souri human desire to be shown and spend their time with their noses in the air instead of in the grass. Now Tom Beaver’s cattle never do look up and aviators have to jazz around the field in order to make a landing just like the motor driver has to worm his way through a drove he happens to meet on the highway. — The returned soldiers of River- side, N. J., have declared war on street loafers who swear. The mayor is backing them up by imposing a fine of one dollar per cuss word on every culprit brought before him. Aside from the fact that this is a very unique, as well as wholesome, cam- paign it is interesting because of the fact that soldiers are foremost in sup- pressing street profanity and vulgari- ty. Time was when the returned sol- dier was in a class by himself when it came to up-to-the-minute profanity but probably the passing of the army mule and the “mule skinner” has eliminated the provocation and brought a new order of soldier home to us. More power to them. And every community will bless them more than ever if they succeed in breaking up a habit that is as useless as it is detestable. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. 919. VOL. 64. Some of Mitchell Palmer’s Troubles. | There is something like poetic jus- | tice in an incident developed in Washington, the other day, when the confirmation of Mitchell Palmer’s ap- | pointment as Attorney General was | held up in a Senate committee on a! charge made by Leslie S. Kennard, of Indiana, a clerk in his office while he was Custodian of Alien property. Mr. Palmer informed the committee that Kennard “was an inconspicuous, $2000.00 clerk,” but at that his be- trayal of his late chief was base in- gratitude. Still Mr. Palmer has no just right to complain of ingratitude. He has himself revealed that detes- table characteristic. It will be re- membered that the late Senator Hall financed his early political ambitions vet he maligned that gentleman most outrageously before he died. One of the charges made by Mr. Kennard against Mr. Palmer was that he appointed “inconspicuous men as the trustees for enemy property.” As a matter of fact Mr. Palmer con- verted that bureau, or whatever it was, into a sort of an asylum for po- litical “lame ducks” and after Mr. Joe Guffey, of Pittsburgh, had been overwhelmingly defeated for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Pennsylvania last year, Mr. Pal- mer consoled him by appointment to one of the most important and prcba- bly the most lucrative offices at his disposal. Political lame ducks are not a very dependable type of men, and possibly Kennard belongs to that category. Anyway Mr. Palmer got him to make an affidavit “admitting that many of his charges were un- true.” Of course Mr. Palmer’s confirma- tion ought not to be defeated upon the statement of an ingrate who was willing to swear subsequently that he had lied and Kennard’s affidavit submitted by Mr. Palmer is complete proof on that point. Mr. Kennard is probably a Republican. At least his charge against Palmer was given to a Republican Senator and used to aid a Republican purpose. Another claim that Palmer is disqualified for the office because the “Department of Justice must pass on many acts and claims of the Alien Property Custo- dian’s office,” is equally without mer- it. The courts may be depended up- on to hold the Attorney General to the lines of the law. But other rea- sons against the confirmation of Mr. Palmer might have been brought for- ward. Between the Bolshevists in the cities and the Senators in Congress the United States are slowly but sure- ly moving along in the direction of anarchy. The people are patient and long suffering but there is a limit to human endurance of evil. Rather a Good Precedent. In vetoing the bill “requiring the Fish Commissioner, within a year, to certify whether an adequate fishway has been built in the McCall’s Ferry dam, and instructing the Attorney General to proceed to action if it has not been constructed,” Governor Sproul has disappointed a great many good citizens of Pennsylvania. That meritorious piece of legislation was forced through the recent session in the face of a most formidable lobby. It has been a subject of contention in the General Assembly ever since the erection of a dam some fifteen years ago. It will probably continue to be so for a long time to come because of the corporation interests involved. Previous to the construction of the McCall’s Ferry dam, the Susquehanna river was a prolific source of food supply fer a vast number of residents of the State. All kinds of fish were plentiful in both the great branches of this historic stream from Sunbury to the Northern border on the east and from the same point to the New York line on the west. From Sunbury down to tide water the main stream was equally productive of food, pleas- ure and romance, before the building of that dam. Thousands of shad were taken from its waters every spring and an equal number and in great va- riety of other game and food fishes were caught in it every year. But the dam has put an inglorious and lamentable end to all the pleas- ures and profits of fishing in the Sus- quehanna. Of course McCall’s Ferry dam is a valuable acquisition to the industrial life of the Commonwealth. It has proved a great force and pro- duced much wealth. But it is believed by many intelligent people that an adequate fishway might be construct- ed so as to avert the evils which have resulted from it, without impairing the advantages. That was the pur- pose of the legislation the Governor vetoed on the ground that “it would make a mischievous precedent,” with- out stating how. Precedents that ac- complish good results are not mis- chievous. — Former King Constantine, of Greece, is reported to be “hard up.” Well, his brother-in-law, former Kai- ser William, who got him into his present predicament, has plenty to provide luxuriously for both families. BELLEFONTE, P Significance of the Contest. There can be no misunderstanding ratification of the Peace treaty. The treaty is the product of the labor of | the leading statesmen of the world to guarantee present and future genera- tions against a recurrence of destruc- ' tion, devastation and slaughter, such as had convulsed civilization for a period of four years. It is not a per- fect instrument and may disappoint public expectation as to its efficiency. There were five great powers and , some thirty lesser nationalities con- cerned in it and each had particular interests to conserve. But it is the best that could be obtained in the circumstances and is the result of es, unselfish and intelligent ef- ort. Those Senators in Congress who fa- | ‘nearly six months before the bank | vor the ratification of the convention honestly desire permanent peace throughout the civilized world. They are not convinced that this hope will be fulfilled. They are not fully per- suaded that the people of every country concerned will comply with the conditions it creates for all time. But they firmly believe that it will serve the purpose for the time and that as passions give way and ani- mosities are softened, it will afford a foundation for a peace pact that will endure forever. That is a magnficent aspiration. It is the highest aim of christian civilization. It promises the consummation of the greatest hope of the Saviour, “on earth peace, good will to men.” Those who oppose ratification rep- resent the antithesis of this. It may be that they are influenced by politics, by prejudice against an individual or by the selfish hope of enriching con- stituents engaged in the manufacture of war materials or munitions. In any event they are retarding, if they do not actually defeat, the fulfillment of the highest hope of the Prince of Peace. If the treaty fails of ratifica- tion the thousands of lives of Ameri- cans killed in the war will have been sacrificed in vain. The United States representatives in the peace confer- ence were the principal agents in the achievement and if this country fails to ratify, their labor of love is lost to the world. No just person will deny the right of asylum to the Crown Prince but there would likely be a’ wide difference of opinion as to wheth- er it should be of the insane or feeble minded variety. Action Rather Than Talk Needed. Former Speaker Champ Clark, in a speech in the House of Representa- tives on Monday, declared that “the cost of living must be remedied, soon, or there is going to be all sorts of trouble in this country. Individually,” he added, “I am in favor of sending to the penitentiary every profiteer in the land. I do not care whether he is big or small,” he continued. “He is on a par with thieves and robbers.” That is exactly the right line of talk, but what is wanted is not talk but ac- tion. Mr. Clark might talk his head off without influencing a single profit- eer to mend his ways. But if he will take some step in the direction of sending the pirates to the penitentia- ry, some good may come of it. There is no substantial reason for the prevailing prices of the necessar- ies of life. While the war was in progress and the government was compelled to provide for the mainte- nance of the army, all or nearly all the products of the soil, the mills and the factories, at any price asked, there was some excuse for high prices. But hostilities ended more than eight months ago and prices are still going upward. Mr. Clark as- cribes this anomaly to the operations of profiteers and a great many others concur in his opinion. If it be true the profiteers ought to be stopped and it those charged with the making of the laws are not able to provide a le- gal way of achieving this result another way will be adopted. It is said that the government is in possession of surplus stocks of food and fruits of an aggregate value of nearly one hundred and thirty million dollars and that it is being withheld from the public in order to avoid a disturbance of values to the disadvan- tage of the big dealers. But in con- serving the interests of the big deal- ers the vital interests of the people are being sacrificed. That being the | case these stocks should be shrown on the market and sold to the highest bidders, and the big dealers should be excluded from the sale. There are more foodstuffs now than ever before and no good reason why prices are so | high or necessaries of life so inacces- sible to consumers. The Peace Conference might have made things a good deal harder for the people of Germgny. Suppose, for example, it had organized an an- ti-Saloon League over there. ——Every pan-German in or out of Germany is in complete sympathy with Senator Lodge in his fight against the League of Nations. A, AUGUST 1, 1! North Penn Bank Goat. It is plainly a settled purpose to | of the contest in the Senate over the make Ralph Moyer, cashier of the wrecked North Penn bank of Phila- delphia, the “goat.” in January Governor Sproul had re- moved Charles A. Ambler from the office of Insurance Commissioner for the reason that he had deposited a large amount of State funds in a bank of questionable solvency. In a later statement from the same source it is alleged that the first intimation unsound was on July 9th, ten days be- : fore the closing, when bank exam- | iner Ferguson made an examination in { his official capacity “and found out | that it was unsound.” Ambler was removed in January, was closed for the declared reason that he deposited State funds in an unsound bank and subsequently bor- ' rowed for personal use large sums of | money from the bank. If that was | the real reason for the removal of | Ambler it was the palpable duty of | the State Banking Department fo ‘ make an examination at once, in or- { der to protect the State as well as the ' other depositors in the bank from | loss. But nothing was done in this i direction until the affairs of the con- | cern had become so involved that the { loss of considerable money to the ‘ State was inevitable. Another state- ‘ ment indicates that the State authori- | ties hoped to get the State funds out | of the bank before its tottering con- | dition was known to the public. The chances are that Ambler was i removed from office because he was ! identified with the Brumbaugh fac- tion of the past and supported Denny O'Neil for the Republican nomination for Governor last fall with more zeal than discretion. The investigation into the affairs of the bank since the failure indicates that Ambler will be able to extricate himself from the wreckage and it will be necessary to provide a “goat.” Moyer had been in- dulging in practices which pointed ‘him out as the logical “it” and the State. authorities will likely try to “save their own faces” by fastening the culpability on him. Probably he . deserves this sinister distinction for slovenly banking is inexcusable. ———Probably England won’t be ready the next time Germany attacks : France, but it will be a good while be- | fore Germany will be ready for such | an enterprise again. Victor Berger's Foolish Notions. t Victor Berger, of Wisconsin, who is ! still trying to “jimmy” his way into | Congress, is showing no signs of re- pentance. In a statement before the | committee investigating his claim, the ' other day, he expressed a preference i for the Industrial Workers of the i World as a labor organization to the | American Federation of Labor. He | also characterized the recent world war “as the greatest crime ever com- | mitted,” and said that while he was i “in favor of intervention in Mexico, "in 1916,” he was “greatly opposed to the draft and its effect in forming ' the army in 1917.” Mr. Berger's s#ason for opposition | to the American Federation of Labor, "is Samuel Gompers. That distinguish- | ed labor leader has always advised | against violence and the destruction ! of property while murder and sabot- "age are the principal instruments of ithe. W. W. and the A. F. A, has | been consistently loyal to its obliga- | tions of patriotism while the other ' has been invariably “agin’ the govern- ment.” Naturally Mr. Berger, who is | under conviction and sentence for | treasonable actions, under the espion- ‘age law, favors the organization of _ evil impulses. In 1916 every enemy of the United States at home or abroad, favored in- | tervention in Mexico for the reason i that such an enterprise might so tax | the military resources of the United | States as to make intervention in the world war impossible. Careless think- ers pretend to believe that the inva- . sion and conquest of Mexico would be ia sort of holiday diversion for the | United States. But Victor Berger is | under no such delusion. He knows ! that undertaken in 1916 it would have ' required vears of time, millions of men and billions of money to settle | that trouble. And that is precisely the reason | that Mr. Berger favored intervention {in Mexico. While our armies and en- ergies were being wasted in the pur- suit of Mexican bandits the armies of Germany, Austria and Turkey would be overrunning and devastating ‘Eu- rope and completing plans for the conquest of America when their other tasks were finished. In view of these facts, Victor Berger has no right to occupy a seat in the Congress of the United States and we sincerely hope that the present Congress will so de= termine. If the recent Washington out- break could be ascribed to that pes- tiferous old sinner, John Barleycorn, everything would be easy. When the bank | was closed by the Commissioner of |! ! Banking announcement was made that the authorities got that the bank was NO. 30. The Issue is War or Peace. From the Philadelphia Record. Senator Harding, of Ohio, may be | securing instructions from his constit- | uents. He would not do anything against their wishes for the world. He has been in a state of considerable uncertainty as to the path of duty— and popularity—in the matter of the peace treaty. However, he has gone with the Republican crowd against the treaty, but public sentiment, quite as much Republican as Democratic, is plainly becoming more impatient of the factious and partisan hostility i to the only possible means of giving ‘the world reasonable assurance against war. It is getting to be a | dangerous thing for a Senator to ! stand out for war when there is a | possibility of securing permanent | peace. i Mr. Harding’s constituents are re- ported to be adopting resolutions and | signing petitions to him to abandon his policy of obstruction, and if these petitions are general enough we are confident that the Senator will grace- fully accede to them. It is not im- possible that the prudent Senator is getting himself instructed so that he can cut loose from the narrow, parti- san and reactionary crowd that he is i n. Whatever Mr. Harding’s attitude really is, there is no question that the world expects the United States to sign the treaty; that our good name in the world is compromised by the attitude of the majority party in the Senate, and that the grounds of oppo- sition are puerile. The rights of the United States are amply safeguarded in the covenant of the League of Na- tions, and it is the knowledge of this fact that inspired Republican indig- nation over the Tsingtao cession. Afraid to make any longer fight over the League of Nations, the Republi- can Senators have discovered that China was wronged by Germany 21 years ago, when the Republican party controlled the government, and the protection of China was not consider- ed by any one. Every Senator who fights against the treaty, whether on account of the League or of Tsingtao, knows that the treaty and the League constitute the only possible protection of the world from another such calamity as that of 1914. He knows that the United States is perfectly safe under the treaty, and that no nation would com- mit suicide even if it were so provid- ed in a treaty. If the treaty proved from what it appears to mean, the United States would promptly with- draw from the League. Every Senator who opposes the treaty, on whatever ground, is doing all in his power to perpetuate war. Save the Airplane Service. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Whatever may be the nature of the Assistant Secretary of War, on the future of aviation in the United States, Congress should certainly look against the ruling party that it is al- lowing America’s air service to go fo pieces. It is certain the country will not excuse Secretary Baker if by rea- son of pique over the indifference of Congress to his elaborate suggestions for an airplane service he should let things slide just to prove his political opponents in the wrong and then face the crisis on the Mexican border with an inadequate and badly equipped aerial force to handle the problem. The country is in no temper to stand dallying of this sort, and yet, if cer- tain undenied statements be true, Congress and the Administration have reached an impasse from which only the worst may be expected. This is certainly not common sense; it is not military science; and in view of what we ought to be doing in avia- tion, it approaches very nearly being open-eyed folly. If it is true that, somewhat belatedly, Secretary Baker has come to a realization that some- thing must be done to save the situa- tion in aviation, it would seem that the comment that has been made on the fatuousness of the policy of doing nothing has struck home. Certainly if the Administration does present the entire situation to Congress without partisan bias, it is a foregone conclu- sion that the country will not let Con- gress pass the buck back to the War Department, but will insist on action. The House committee seems to be aware of this phase of the issue and it ought not to let any € Secretary Baker in a hole interfere with the necessities of the case. Obstructing Peace. From the Savannah News. It will be embarrassing Germans can point to the United States and charge that on account of the refusal of a handful of obstinate partisan Senators the great nation which was champion of world-peace stands alone in the way of peace. If Foch Had Made Peace. From the Columbus Dispatch. In view of the speed he was show- ing when the armistice halted him, we feel sure that Foch would have got peace more expeditiously, if it had 41 been left to him, than the Peace Conference did. Might Take Him Up. From the Ohio State Journal. About everybody of supposed im- portance in Germany has now offered himself as a vicarious sacrifice for the Kaiser, except Count von Bernstorf, and we imagine he’s afraid we might really take him up. to mean something very different special report of Benedict Crowell, | | i | | | | to it that no charge can be brought | desire to put | if there | shall arise a situation in which the | SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Stephen Palshisko, in ending his life at his home near Winburne, lighted a fuse attached to a can of powder, and, stand- ing immediately over the can, waited until the explosion ended his life. He leaves a family of six. —Joseph H. Tuffs, of Pittston, had no faith in banks. He placed his savings, amounting to $390, in his sock and locked up money and sock in his trunk. He went to work and came home to find his trunk broken open. The sock was there, but the money was gone. —Acting Chief of Police A. K. Hutchin- son, of Greensburg, is suffering from an attack of blood poisoning caused, it is said, by being bitten by a prisoner he ar- rested on July 17th. Hutchinson was ar- resting Roy Shoaf, a suspicious character, when the prisoner bit the officer on the right hand. —While emulating Benjamin Franklin and flying a kite during a thunderstorm late Saturday Andrew Loyak, of Scranton, was killed when a bolt of lightning fol- lowed the kite string from the skies. Loyak was struck in the back of the head and all of his hair burned off. Death was instantaneous. —State Game Commission officials de- clare that there has been a record demand for hunters’ licenses. The Legislature passed a law which advanced the season for hunting blackbirds from September 1 to August 1, because of the damage done to fields and orchards by the birds and also took the protection off the red squir- rels for the same reason. William Packard, who is living at a cabin on “Big Mountain,” near Trout Run, Lycoming county, had the scare of his life one night last week when he discovered that a big blacksnake had usurped his bed. He was just about to occupy the bed himself when he saw its occupant and killed the snake. He spent a very rest- less night, imagining snakes all over the place. Many snakes have been killed in that vicinity recently. —Thomas Welch, of Wellsboro, aged 26 vears, while attempting to rescue Dorothy Shatterton, of that place, and her guest, Helen Gingrich, of Rochester, N. Y., after they had gotten beyond their depth in Pine Creek, Sunday afternoon, was seized with cramps and drowned. The girls were rescued by Miss Shatterton’s father, who attempted in vain to rescue Welch. When help arrived, the body was raised, but he was beyond aid. —Superintendent J. K. Johnston, has been reappointed as head of the board of managers of the State Village for Feeble Minded women, at Laurelton, Union coun- ty. The beard named by Governor W. C. Sproul is made up as follows: J. K. Johnston, Tyrone; Joseph W. Cochran Williamsport; Mrs. George H. Earle, Phil adelphia; Philip B. Linn, Lewisburg; Mrs. Elizabeth C. Birney, Philadelphia, and Mrs. Harold M. McClure, Lewisburg. —Mrs. Frank Childs, of Lewistown, has received notice from the War Department that one of the destroyers now building will be named in honor of her son, Lieu- tenant Earl W. Childs, who was lost at sea during the world war. Mrs. Childs will christen the ship. In spite of the fact that more than a year has elapsed since Lieutenant Childs was lost fifteen miles off the Irish coast, the mother still believes he is alive and will return to his home. —Damages for injuries alleged to have been suffered when attacked in police court, July 1, and also for injured feelings. are sought by Edward Robling, a Social- ist leader, in two suits begun against members of the Scranton police, demand- ing $35,000 damages. Robling was attack- ed on the ground that he made slurring remarks concerning the United States, the trouble occurring when four alleged Bol- shevik agents were arraigned before Po- lice Magistrate Williams. -—Last week the Helvetia Milk Condens- ing company, at Westfield, Tioga county, paid over $152,000 to the dairymen of that section for milk. The month showed an average of nearly 173,000 pounds of milk a day or in the whole month about 200,000 pounds of milk more than was re- ceived during the the month of June last year. The total milk received for the month was over 5,200,000 pounds or enough to float a fleet. The list of milk checks for the month number more than 650 names, the longest list of the year. —While playing wild west near their homes at Ludlow, McKean county, Milford Nordine, 13 years old, shot and instantly killed Allen Engman, 10 years old. Dur- ing the past week a medicine man has been in Ludlow and wild west stunts have been numerous in connection with hig spiel. Lassos and guns have been much in evidence among boys and ‘wild west” has been the prevailing theme that resulted in Monday's tragedy. Young Nordine found an automatic revolver in the upper apart- ment of his home and with a number of boys started playing wild west. Nordine, not knowing the gun was loaded, began pulling the trigger. A ball struck Eng- man in the neck. —The State of Pennsylvania has on its preserves hundreds of thousands of dol- lars’ worth of chestnut wood, with no means of getting it to market. Officials of the State Forestry Commission say if all of the dead, dying and blighted chest- nut trees in the State forests could be ! marketed speedily at least $1,500,000 could be realized. Pennsylvania now owns 1,041,491 acres of forest land, in 53 State forests scattered throughout 27 counties. The land cost the State $2,375,110.55. Last year 14,459 acres were added to the pre- serves, and during the first half of this year 9258 acres were bought. An inter- esting fact in connection with the State laws governing forests is that all income from that source goes into the State per- manent school fund and up to July 1st, $191,219.49 had been realized. —Charged with stealing a money belt containing $3540 from Andy Pustay, of Carpentertown, Westmoreland county, oun June 25th, Chares Markus and Pete Waj- dic were arrested by the state police, on a warrant issued by ’Squire J. Q. Truxal. They were taken before him where Waj- dic was able to give bail te the amount of £1000, for his appearance at a further hear- ing. Markus was not able to furnish bail in the same amount and was sent to jail. On the night of June 25th, Pustay lay down to sleep in his bungalow at Carpen- tertown with his money beit around his waist. He slept soundly and two men al- leged to be the two defendants in the case, entered the room, cut the belt and fled hastily with the money. The act of pull- ing the belt away awakened Andy. Pus- tay had been an industrious coal miner and saved his money. He had no faith in the banks of the country and preferred to live near his roll of legal tender. He has formed an idea mow that it is not safe to go to sleep with a belt of nearly, $4000 around him, : -