Bonovra Wacom INK SLINGS. * —Next week the green hunter will be passing the buck right. —If you can’t have turkey eat roast pork on Thanksgiving day and be mighty thankful you've got that. ——1It is not proposed to reduce ar- mies, probably because France would throw a fit if such a thing were men- tioned. —Butchering season is at hand and isn’t it too bad that a lot of road hogs can’t be thrown into the scalding trough. —We have been wondering ever since Secretary Hughes laid our cards on the table whether he put the joker down too. —Naturally the ship builders and ordnance makers were most dazed by Secretary Hughes’ proposal for dis- armament. ——If children had the power to determine the matter Marshall Foch would easily be the most popular man in the world. —Secretary Hughes’ proposal left no doubt in the mind of any of the foreign members as to what disarm- ament meant. ——Of course it may be only an ad- vance impression but it looks as if Japan’s representatives in Washing- ton are doing most of the talking. ——Postmaster General Hays has “told it to the marines.” He told them to kill or be killed when they meet anybody trying to rob the mails. —Probably not more than one out of every ten of the youth of Pennsyl- vania who know all about Hugo Bez- dek could tell you who John M. Thom- as is. ——The proceedings of the disarm- ament conference will be intensely in- teresting, no doubt, but all other news ought not to be crowded out of the papers. —Disarmament will reduce the bur- den of taxation but it won’t neces- sarily decrease the possibility of war. Little boys fight just as much—and more most times—as grown men. —The snow of Saturday night and Sunday reminded us of course that winter is approaching, but we hope it doesn’t get here before we have had a bit of the loveliness of Indian sum- mer. ' —Of course the fellows who make the ships, the guns, the powder and the gases are not for disarmament, Pi wa eZ k wii but the fellows who have to make the | money to pay for them all are and we are one of them. —Surely Christ was very close to that little company that gathered in the court house in- Bellefonte, last Friday morning, for a reverential ob- servance of Armistice day. It could not otherwise have been so over- whelmingly impressive. — Eighty-four cents out of every dollar of revenue the government col- lects goes to pay for our wars of the past, present and future. What a millennial day it will be when the whole “buck” is spent in making this country a better place to live in. —Maybe we'll all be more thankful the day before than we are on Thanks- giving day. The merchants of Belle- fonte are organizing for a great mark down sale next Wednesday and cheap- er commodities sounds better to a lot of us than fat young turkey. —The recount of the contested votes for judge in Blair county gives the Hon. Thomas Baldridge a majority of 342 over his opponent, Robert A. Hen- derson Esq. Judge Baldridge had a close shave for re-election and it is thought in some quarters that if the campaign had gone a week longer he would probably have been defeated. —We are strong for disarmament. We were strong for a League of Na- tions. We're strong for anything that will work toward the prevention of wars and the reduction of taxes. Narrow Republicans kept us out of the League of Nations because they thought it would be too crowning an achievement for a Democratic admin- istration. We are not of that ilk. Let all the glory be theirs. Let the great heart of the American Republic sing peans of praise to them forever. Only let us have peace. Lasting peace. —More power to the parent-teach- ers of Bellefonte who are moving to have more demure dressing adopted by the school girls of Bellefonte. Girls will be girls and one must dress just as well as the other regardless of the parental earnings. Few of them realize it, but we venture the assertion that many are living in rented houses today because their clamor for finery has to be silenced by the dissipation of the little funds that their parents hoped to lay aside against the purchase of a home of their own. —The next Legislature of Pennsyl- vania will have to appropriate mil- lions for dormitories and department- al expansion at The Pennsylvania State College unless some team can be found to beat that blue and white football aggregation. They will be turning thousands instead of hundreds away there next fall if something isn’t done to get those Nittany Lions out of the limelight. They work fifty minutes on a Saturday afternoon and get pages of publicity for the institu- tion and Dr. Watts and his staff of scientists work fourteen years devel- oping a variety of wheat that will produce fifty bushels to the acre and get three inches among the “Farm Notes.” Such is fame. | powers in exact ratio. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NO. 45. “VOL. 66. BELLEFONTE, PA., N OVEMBER 18, 1921. Limitations Conference in Action. of welcome to the foreign delegates in the Limitations Conference and Sec- retary Hughes’ frank satement of the purposes of the government of the spires hope of achievement. Presi- dent Harding said: “Gentlemen of the conference, the United States wel- harbor no fears; we have no sordid ends to serve; we suspect no enemy; we contemplate or apprehend no con- quest. Content with what we have, we seek nothing which is another’s. We only wish to do with you that fin- er, nobler thing which no nation can do alone.” Secretary Hughes propos- ed not only a naval holiday but a sub- stantial decrease of naval forces. an international movement for a pres- | ent decrease and future limitation of armaments, which is the principal purpose of the conference. The Sec- retary’s plan, moreover, is scrupu- lously fair to all concerned. It con- templates the reduction of the pres- ent naval forces of the three great The propor- tion of the strength of each now will exist then, if the plan is adopted, and the enormous expense of maintenance of the present forces and of carrying out the programs of increase will be correspondingly reduced. That is a consummation devoutly to be wished. But nothing in the speech of the President or the statement of the Secretary gives promise of the avoid- ance of future wars. No promise of enduring world peace can even be in- ferred. The covenant of the League of Na- tions provided for the decrease of armament on both land and sea and best hopes of the Limitations Confer- ence are fulfilled, therefore, the re- suit will fall short of those which the President Harding’s adroit address United States in the enterprise, in-. comes you with unselfish hands. We This was an auspicious opening of : the prevention of future wars. If the! | Beidleman to be Shunted. As might have been expected the result of the election has caused ' another shifting of scenes by the Re- publican machine. When Senator Crow was appointed to the vacancy in the United States Senate the signs plainly indicated the nomination of Lieutenant Governor Beidleman for | Governor. The Sproul machine ap- peared to be triumphant and invinci- ‘ble. With W. Harry Baker in control ' of the machinery it seemd as if the opposition to the loquacious Lieuten- ant Governor wouldn’t have “a look in.” But the horizon has changed. The profligacy of the Sproul admin- istration, as revealed by Judge Bon- niwell, has so horrified the public “mind that even the machine leaders ! are badly frightened. . Mr. Beidleman being closely asso- i ciated with the Sproul machine is sus- ceptible to a share of the blame for the recent iniquities of Harrisburg, | and that fact has saggested a ques- | tion as to his availability as a candi- i date for Governor while the subject | is fresh in the public mind. In a few years, it is reasoned, the crimes of the , present will be forgotten, and Mr. | Beidleman may then come into his re- ! ward. But now his nomination would ' be a hazardous adventure and the wiser minds of the gang are working out a plan to shunt him off the track. Last Sunday Senator Vare, of Phila- delphia, and Senator Leslie, of Pitts- burgh, spent a day trying to solve the problem. But they have not succeed- ed as yet. Vare and Leslie are “two of a kind.” They are as destitute of con- science as a frog is devoid of hair. But they are unable to agree on a candidate. Vare insists that tax re- ceiver Kendrick has all the qualifica- tions. Kendrick is the “pet aversion” : of Senator Penrose, which may be the reason Vare has picked him. Leslie wants John A. Bell, a rich Pittsburgh- er, who has been a liberal contributor to the slush fund recently, as the can- didate, and holds out that he would not be offensive to Penrose. But it looks as if Penrose’s preferences are League of Nations promised. Great Britain or Japan will be as capable of making war after as before the adop- tion and, ratification of any agree- ment arrived at.. The small nations created under peace freaty will be as helpless after as before the work , man on the machine. In any event of the conference is completed. None | the outlook promises an interesting of the thousands of American soldiers who lie buried in France and Flan- | ders gave his life to reduce arma-| ___Great Britain accepts the prin- ments. The declared reason for our | ciple expressed in Secretary Hughes’ entering the world war was not to re- | plan of decreasing armaments but has duce armaments. It was for the | not adopted the methods proposed. | greater achievement of preventing fu- | Probably Lloyd George will come ture wars; to make the world better | around when he gets a closer view of and safer for humanity. | the question. If, as the result of the great worid | war, the world has gained nothing | more than a reduction of the naval | forces of Great Britain, Japan and | There are unusually interesting les- the United States, the magnificent | sons to be learned from the results of ceremonial attending the burial of the | the recent election in Pennsylvania. unknown hero at Arlington on Armis- | From a review of the field published tice day was an absurd mockery. His | in the Philadelphia Record of Sunday life was not sacrificed for that. He | we learn that the city of Scranton bared his breast to the bullet of the | elected a Democrat, John Durkin, as Hun for a higher and a nobler pur- i mayor, and Lackawanna county a pose than that of saving money. In| Democratic sheriff. Berks, Northamp- addressing the multitude assembled in | ton and Lehigh counties gave nearly reverence to the memory of that he- | old-time Democratic majorities and ro President Harding said: “He | Perry, Cumberland and York counties fought and died believing in the in- | have returned to the fold. Franklin disputable justice of his country’s! county, which has been a Republican cause. Conscious of the world’s up- | stronghold for years, elected a Demo- heaval, appraising the magnitude of | cratic treasurer and Chambersburg a a war the like of which had never hor- | Democratic mayor. Lancaster city rified humanity before, perhaps he be- | elected a Democratic mayor and lieved his to be a service destined io | Schuylkill county gave Judge Bonni- change the tide of human affairs.” well a majority. In other words, this nameless hero | These results are significant for the reel Lessons of the Election. of no value and Vare To Fores Hiv by oi i as well as a bitter fight. = died in the hope and for the purpose of preventing the recurrence of a war, “the like of which had never horrified humanity before.” And his reward for this supreme and sublime service to the world is what? The money grubbers who survive him will be saved a few dollars which would have been required to pay the expenses of a foolish rivalry among silly nations to exceed in armies and navies and de- vices to destroy life and property. It is a poor recompense but the only one possible since the malignancy of the Republican Senators prevented the ratification of the Versailles treaty and the covenant of the League of Nations. ——“The Girl, a Horse and a Dog” reason that they show the trend of public sentiment in favor of the Dem- ocratic party, notwithstanding the en- tire absence of a Democratic organ- ization throughout the State. In Schuylkill county, for example, the Democrats placed no county ticket in the field because there was no Demo- cratic organization and no hope. But Bonniwell made several speeches in that county exposing the profligacy of the Republican machine and not only carried the county himself but a Democrat, running as an independent, carried the county by a substantial ! majority. After an intense contest | Cambria county elected a Democrat, { John H. McCann, judge of the courts. i Everybody knows that the Demo- crats of Pennsylvania were utterly is the name of 2 new serial story | unprepared for the campaign. While which will begin in the “Watchman” | there are State committeemen in every next week. It is by that well known | county to be used by the treacherous author, Francis Lynde, and one of the | party bosses in organizing the State most interesting and captivating sto- | committee, the party is absolutely ries ever put out by this writer. The | without working organizations in at interest begins in the first chapter least three-fourths of the counties. and continues through to the very end. | Notwithstanding this fact, however, If you are not a regular subscriber of substantial gains were made in every the “Watchman” it will be worth your | county and the victories above enu- while to enroll at once, just to get { merated achieved. If there had been every installment of this story. efficient and honest party organiza- tions in all the counties it is safe to re fp emer ing season is less than two weeks been elected. Such organizations may away, and deer hunters all over the be acquired for the more important county are beginning to get their campaign of next year if the Demo- camping outfits in shape for a week crats so desire. of two in the mountains. —Let us have a law prohibiting the organization in Philadelphia some- rt fy A en ——— use of “cut outs” on any motors used . thing like that which occurred in iin Pennsylvania. Schuylkill county might happen. The opening of the deer hunt- ! say that Judge Bonniwell would have | If there were no Democratic Wrangling Without Results. { Another week has passed and the revenue bill is still in the air. For | more than six months Congress has been wrangling but without result. | Before the election the country was ‘ assured that within a few weeks after the inauguration.of a Republi- can President tax rates would be cut “to the bone,” and a great part of the burdens of the people removed. When Congress assembled in May the work: was begun. But it was begun badly. The schedules were ¢ut down but no attempt made to reduce expenses. Then the more intelligent called at- tention to the fact that cutting off revenues without reducing expenses would create a deficit which would be more menacing to prosperity than high taxes. The tariff bill has been abandoned, practically. It passed the House of Representatives some months ago but was drawn in such a slipshod | manner that it had to be re-written in the Senate, which work has not yet been completed. But it is well for the country that it is so. Instead of re- ducing the burdens of the people that absurd measure would vastly increase them. But that is not the worst. It { would completely paralyze interna- tional commerce and cripple, if not , altogether destroy, industrial enter- : prise. Taking one consideration with another the country has been benefit- ted by the impotence of the Republi- can Congress. Of course the Limitation Confer- ence may point a way to relief from the onorous tax burdens, unavoida- i ble heritages of the war. Scrapping a large number of war ships make possible a considerable reduction in the personnel of the navy, thus sav- ing the salaries of officers and wages ' of mén. The ten year naval holiday , will also cut out a considerable chunk of the expenses of the government. | But these improvements cannot be | felt for some time to come and it | would, be folly to cut down revenues | until ®xpenses are decreased in the | same ratio. Much money might have been #94 ies in the departments, but ; such economies would have impaired ' the happiness of the “lame ducks.” The scrapping process will be expensive but after all it may be a good way to get rid of a navy. Ger- many sunk hers. Tribute to Woodrow Wilson. The outstanding figure, the one man outside of the coffin of the unknown hero, at the Arlington ceremony of Friday, who received the reverence of the public, was Woodrow Wilson, for- mer President of the United States. It was his first appearance in public since he left the White House on March 4th, a broken victim of parti- san malice, envy and revenge. As an invalid of the war he participated in the ceremonies attending the burial of the unknown, in the capacity of a private citizen. But everywhere he was “given a demonstration,” accord- ing to the Associated Press reporter, and after the event an ovation in front of his home. There were conspicuous figures in that mourning cortege who willfully and malignantly contributed to the impairment of his health and there is i justice in the circumstance that though holding high office, they mov- ed silently while he was applauded and acclaimed at every point along the line because the people under- stand that the known and unknown dead of the war gave their lives for the high ideals which he represented and for which he is now suffering. The applause which greeted him everywhere was a manifestation of that understanding and an apprecia- tion of his patriotic work for liberty and humanity. No man in this country, no Ameri- can of any time, has suffered and en- dured as he has since his election to the office of President. There are in public life a lot of venomous crea- tures who imagine that none except Republicans have a right to election as President, and when Woodrow Wilson was elected the second time their spite became uncontrolable. But the people, those right-minded men and women of America who love jus- tice and appreciate merit freely and cheerfully, pay the tribute of their admiration and affection to that great invalid of the world war, Woodrow Wilson, whenever and wherever they can. ——Sunday’s snow fall was a gen- tle reminder that winter is coming and everybody will be looking for en- tertainment and amusement indoors. The one place you can find both is at the Scenic, watching the motion pic- tures. The Scenic’s reputation for tablished that there is no need to dwell upon that. Good programs can be seen any evening in the week. ——Come here for your job work. ! A Decade of Naval Holiday. From the Philadelphia Record. There is nothing lacking of defi- niteness in the proposal submitted by Secretary Hughes to the Limitation Conference at the very beginning of its deliberations. It need not grope around for some tangible proposal to study and discuss. In behalf of the United States government Mr. Hughes proposes a suspension of na- i val construction for ten years, and the immediate destruction by America, | England and Japan of 66 capital ' ships, with a tonnage of nearly two millions. These are ships projected, or in process of construction, or the older and nearly obsolete ships. With- in three months the capital ships of the United States would be reduced to 18 of a tonnage of half a million; those of Great Britain would be re- duced to 22 of a proportionately larg- er tonnage, and of Japan to 10 with a tonnage of about 300,000. The re- placements would allow the mainte- nance of such forces, except that Great Britain’s tonnage would be re- duced to half a million. Subject to | the ten-year naval holiday, the capi- tal ships could be replaced when 20 years old, and no replacement ship would exceed 35,000 tons. A propor- tionate tonnage of cruisers, flotilla leaders and destroyers is proposed for each of these nations, and there is a limitation of the submarines of each Power. The United States is favorably sit- uated for making these proposals to England and Japan. We offer a great- er reduction potentially than we sug- gest to them. We have the resources of providing the greatest navy of all. An analysis of the building programs of all, which has recently been pub- lished by an unofficial authority, in- dicates that in 1924, which is not far distant, our navy will be considerably greater than that of Great Britain. We have the larger wealth and the lighter taxes, and if this naval race shall continue we shall in less than three years have considerably the largest naval force in the world. Under Mr. Hughes’ proposal we would waive our intentions in this di- * SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Run down by an automobile while crossing Third street, Clearfield, on Satur- day, Mrs. Kate Hechberger died at the Clearfield hospital some hours later. H. B. Snyder, driver of the car, was arrested and held in $1000 bail for court on a charge of manslaughter. —One hundred and seventy-five arrests for failure to license dogs have been made in Westmoreland county by agents of the State Department of Agriculture, under the direction of James G. Fox, the special agent. The agents found many of the unlicensed dogs were on farms. —Lebanon county by resolution of its board of county commissioners is pledg- ed to the expenditure of $80,000 for the improvement of roads providing the State expend a like sum in the undertaking. The commissioners have adopted a reso- lution petitioning the State to co-operate in the work. —Howard S. Jones, 20 years old, who was born and lived at Kane until a few weeks ago, was electrocuted at his home in Erie Friday morning. He was search- ing for a pair of boots in the cellar of his home and took hold - of an overcharged wire. Death was instantaneous. He is survived by a widow, —Skunks are not only numerous but “friendly,” in Tioga county. Arthur Judd, of Elkland, was down on his knees repair- ing a cellar wall when he felt a cat jump on his shoulder. When he turned to ca- ress the animal he found it a beautiful fat skunk. Arthur put the beast down gently so as not to “spill” anything, and made his get-away safely. ' The most severe sentence ever impos- ed by Mayor Hugentugler in the York po- lice court was that Saturday . afternoon when Wilbur E. Slade was ordered to pay fines totaling $250 or spend ninety days in jail. He was charged with insulting wom- en the public highway, resisting an officer, drunkenness and disorderly conduct. The prisoner was committed to jail. _ —Herman Froebel, of Dingman Run, Potter county, when attacked by a vicious bull as he entered his barn, was saved from certain death by two sets of heavy harness hanging in the building. They fell on the bovine as he bore Froebel to the floor, and so entangled the beast’ that Froebel, though badly injured, got away. The bull was immediately killed. ; —Four pouches of mail were opened by burglars who broke into the freight sta- tion and depot of the D. L. & W. Railroad at Plymouth early on Saturday. The pouches arrived from Northumberland in the early evening and were not delivered at the postoffice because the Plymouth of- fice was closed in observance of -Armistice” ° day. ‘The value ‘of the mail stolen cannot be determined until postal inspectors from Philadelphia arrive. —Q@eorge Lafferty and RBdward Yon, convicted of murder in the second degree at the October term of criminal court for their part in the murder of William E. Niehaus, at Altoona, were sentenced to serve mot less than nineteen years and six months nor more than twenty years in the within the last two years | & rection. Of the vessels building or ’ v en western penitentiary by Judge Thomas J. projected which it is proposed to Baldridge, at Hollidaysburg, Monday. In abandon 30 are ours and 36 belong to | addition they were fined $50 each and sen- England. and J apan. Under this PIO- | tenced to pay the costs of prosecution. gram a ean. an Brigg nel ‘iMrs. ©atherine Cardon was shot to 18 Spon: su Y- a “desth as shé sat rocking her five year old 2 maser of fact, c e Qo 2% a Head 30 daughter to sleep Saturday night, in her gr avy as ‘area Lritsm, € home at MeKees Rocks. The baby was : : i lave tow onlyie Py and ‘also fatally wounded .by the bullets, fired . | through a window, in revenge for Mrs. materials. Bu By country, our r in he ge of ; Cardon’s failure to pay $500 demanded in mone ani d our present rank Fg | threatening letters. Neighbors saw two val Yeon OE us un Fhe oo rind men flee in an automobile... Police are Vary ee sya 0 aT] th | seeking James Bruno, a Philadelphia Ital- g p y ian, suspected of being one of a gang showing good pictures is so well es- same force upon the seas that Great | Britain has. | The Japanese navy is now much in- ferior to ours and the British, and the | limited resources of Japan, and its re- | stricted need, justify leaving that country’s naval force a third, with a large interval between it and the two | great fleets. To cut our force below that of Great Britain, or to allow much expansion of the Japanese fleet, would materially alter the relative po- | sition of the three countries, and no | agreement to that effect could be ex- pected. The status quo cannot be much altered. It is idle to speculate about the chances this program has in the con- ference. Ten years is a long time to bind any nation. There may be some demur to this. Great Britain may in- sist that it should be allowed a larger fleet than the United States, but if there be no limitation by agreement, it is possible for us to exceed Great Britain. The British delegates can- not be unconscious of this. France and Italy are omitted from the Secre- tary’s memorandum. Presumably their standing would be third and fourth in the list, with Japan ranking fifth, but Japan has intense national pride, and its navy is greatly endear- ed to it. It may demur to being out- classed by four Occidental Powers. emmy eee. The Publicity Expert. From the North American Review. Twenty-five years ago the press agent was known to newspaper men as the genial distributor of circus tickets, and as the facile chronicler of the wonders of the jungle and the ro- mances of the fat woman. He kept reporters apprized in gorgeous fash- ion of the coming of new plays and took a kindly interest in recovering actresses’ lost jewels. For the rest, he left the reporters to go their way unaided to get their news as best they could, and to present it with that ap- proximation to truth that comes from the detached appraisement of conflict- ing statements and dug-out facts. He was the scarcely recognized poor rela- tion of the journalist. Today the press agent belongs to a numerous, well-recognized and well- { paid profession. His handsomely fur- nished office is next door to that of the | president of the great corporation; he | is the consultant of the organizers of | great philanthropies, the mouthpiece | of political leaders, the window dress- jer of government departments. He ‘lays upon the desks of the leading | newspapers every day enough copy to fill their pages, news, editorial and | advertising, twice over. And he suc- ' ceeds in getting enough of this print- ed to earn his salary to the satisfac- tion of employer, to establish his own importance in the eyes of publicity seekers, and to color effectually the | picture of American life in its sup- rosedly spontaneous movements pre- sented to the American people. i i ders known as the Good Killers, similar to the Black Hand. —Two men are dead and two others are in the Northumberland jail, accused slay- ers, as the result of a quarrel at Kapps Heights, a suburb, of Northumberland, Sunday night. The dead are A. Toni Fagi and Guisseppe Rosso, while Ben Carabello and Nickola Rosso, a brother of the dead man, are under arrest. Fagi was shot and stabbed to death and Rosso died late on Monday at a hospital in Sunbury as a re- sult of bullet and knife wounds. The fight was the result of Fagi's infatuation for losso’s fifteen year old bride. —Lying in a pool of blood, flowing from gunshot wounds in his back, Antho- ny Thuroway, aged 42 years, of Mahanoy City, a bridegroom of three weeks, was found by hunters Saturday in a clump of bushes near the mining village of Buck Mountain. Thuroway died shortly after his removal to the Iountain Springs State hospital, without being able to make a statement. He had left his home early on Saturday to hunt. It is believed he was shot by another hunter accidentally. His two hounds were lying beside him when he was found. —Jesse Nyhart, 29 years old, six feet, six inches tall, purchased a hunting li- cense Thursday at the office of county treasurer W. P. Shearer, at Lewistown. Nyhart is a brakeman on the Pennsylva- nia railroad, running from Enola to Wil- liamsport, on the Central division. He has grown six inches during the past year, grown out of two suits of clothes and is now so tall that his fellow workers say he is gaining an advantage over them by be- ing able to stand on the bumper of an or- dinary box car and give signals to the en- gineman by simply waving his hand above his head. —William H. Reed, a Concordville far- mer, who did not believe in banks and carried his money wrapped up in a piece of cloth in a pocket, lost all he possessed, $650, at West Chester on Saturday, and the police are investigating. Reed went to West Chester on Friday and went to Mar- shallton to visit a friend. After spending the night there he went back and took a trolley car for Philadelphia, and before traveling far discovered his loss. He re- turned to West Chester and revealed his loss to the police, who paid his car fare home. He had no idea when the money was lost or stolen, but said he had it when he left Marshallton. — Fannie Wilcox, of New Albany, Brad- ford county, mother of three children and convicted murderer, will not have to go back to the State hospital for insane in Allentown. She was freed forever from the likelihood by the State Supreme court, which refused the plea of William G. Schrier, district attorney, from the sen- tence of Judge William Maxwell, of Brad- ford county. Mrs. Wilcox was convicted two years ago of shooting to death C. Geo. Mattesen, of New Albany. She pleaded in- sanity and was sentenced to the State hos- pital, but was released on Maxwell's or- after three months. The Supreme court now upholds that order.