Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
Philadelphia’s Phillies Now Nestling In 6th Place
JOF DIMAGCIO KNOCKS 2 HOMERS
AS YANKEES NAIL TIGERS, 10-8;
BOSOX TAKE TWO: BROOKLYN WINS
BY JOE REICHLER
Associated Press Sports Writer.
Baseball fans, ever ready to cheer for the underdog, have switched
their allegiance from Tom Yawkey’s millionaire Boston Red Sox to
Bob Carpenter’s from-rags-to-riches Philadelphia Phillies, who
threatened today to bolt the National League’s second division where
they’ve held an ironclad lease for 13 years.
- The Blue-Jays, only once a
pennant winner, have ventured
out of the darkness of the second
division only once since 1917.
“ Less than a month ago, the
Phils were languishing in their
familiar cellar abode with eight
victories and 24 defeats, and
Philly fans were resigned to an
other eighth place club.
Since that date, May 29, the
Phils have won 17 of 23 and
have climbed to sixth place, only
one and a half notches away
from fourth place and the first
division. ; ‘
Not since the halcyon days of
the Athletics of 1931 have Phila
delphia fans shown so much en
thusiasm. They have flocked to
Shibe Park in such large num
bers that already the atterld_z}nce
Save On
CIGARETTES
ALL STANDARD BRANDS
Guarandeed Gredh
ee $ 39
::‘:h-o&k or money I
MiNiMUM 3 CARTONS CARTON
- i oo e o
EDWARD SALES CO.
Dept. 0 Hammeond, Indiana
ATHENS' FINEST ENTERTAINMENT
Direction LUCAS & JENKINS
TODAY - TUESDAY
“DEVOTION”
Paul Henried
Ida Lupino
OLIVIA
DeHavilland
Feature Starts
12:56, 2:58, 5:00,
7:02, 9:04.
-
: TODAY - TUESDAY
“THREE
STRANGERS”
SIDNEY
Greensiweet
GERALDINE
Fitzgerald
Feature Starts
12:18, 2:06, 3:54, .
5:42, 7:30, 9:18.
%
STRAND
TODAY - TUESDAY
“ROMANCE OF
THE WEST”
EDDIE DEAN
JOAN BARTON
RITZ | |
TODAY - TUESDAY
“LEAVE HER
TO HEAVEN”
GENE TIERNEY
CORNEL WILDE |,
“MAKE IT A MILLION!"
THE ARMY GROUND FORCES
WILL TEACH YOU A TRADE
A GOOD JOB FOR YOU
U.S. Army
CHOOSE THIS :
FINE PROFESSION NOW!
Room 9
P. O. Building
Athens, GCa.
in 25 home games has topped
last year’s season total by more
than 125,000, A standing-room
only crowd of 33,949 paid admis
sions watched their favorites earn
a victory and a tie in their dou
ble-header with the Cincinnati
Reds yqsterday.
Overtime Duels
Both contests were overtime
duels, with the Phils winning the
first game 5-4 on Jim Tabor’s
12th-inning home run for their
fourth in a row, and the second
halted by Pennsylvania’s Sunday
curfew law with the score tied at
3-3 at the end of 11 frames.
The American League leading
Red Sox appear to be back in
their winning stride after their
double drubbing of the Cleveland
Indians. 5-1 and 6-0.
Bill Zuber, veteran righthander
obtained only last week from the
New York Yankeés via the wai
ver route, hurled a splendid
three-hit shutout in the after
piece following Mickey Harris’
six-hit performance in the open
er. :
The sweep enabled the Red Sox
to increase their first place lead
to seven games over the Yankees.
although the Bronx Bombers de
feated the Detroit Tigers 10-8 in
11 innings. Tommy Henrich’s
two-run homer, his second of the
game, settled the game in the
11th. Joe DiMaggio alsoc hit two
homers. g
Brooklyn increased its National
T.easue lead to two and a half
games over the runner-up 8t
Louis Cardinals by taking the
rubber game of the three-game
series with the Redbirds 4-2.
Cubs, Giants Square
The third place Chicago Cubs
emerged all even after a torrid
slugfest with the New York
Giants by winning the -second
game 9-4 after dropping the firsf,
15-10. In all, 55 hits were made
by both sides, 16 for extra bases,
including five home runs.’ After
Marv Rickert and Ed Waitkus
had hit successive inside-the
park homers to put the Cubs into
the lead in the opener, Mickey
Witex climaxed a tremendous
nine-run fifth inning by smash
ing a grand-slam homer to insure
victory for the Giants.
The Boston Braves moved into
fourth place with a double vie
tory over Pittsburgh, 4-3 and 4-0
while Washington and St. Louis’
Browns split a twin bill, exchang-~
ing 7-4 scores.
After absorbing an 8-1 lacing
by the Chicago White Sox, the
Philadelphia Athletics came back
to win the second game, 6-1.
e 8 ‘
Crackers Divide
. - .
Twin Bill With
.
Chattanooga Nine
(By The Associated Press)
Nashville swept a doubleheader
from Birmingham yesterday, 10-4
and 5-1, but the rest of th 2 Sou
thern Association clubs broke
even. The twin triumph gave the
second-place Vols a game and
one-half lead over the Chattanoo
ga Lookouts, who divided with
the league-leading Atlanta Crack
ers.
The . Lookouts broke a five
game winning streak for the
Crackers in the opener, 5-1, but
bowed in the nightcap,, 8-4. New
Orleans, fighting the -Memphip
Chicks for fourth place, remained
a few points ahead by taking the
second game, 7-5 after dropping
the opener, 11-3.
Mobile edged Little Rock in the
first game, 5-4, but the Travelers
took the Bears in the second tilt,
4-1, despite being outhit, seen
to four.
1 Monight’s Games
Atlanta at Chattanooga.
Mpbile at Little Rock.
Birmingham at Nashville.
New Orleans at Memphis.
SHORT AND LONG TERMS
Beginning with Rutherford B.
Hayes, in 1877, the time in office
for Presidents of the United
States has averaged four years
for Repubflicans. and more than
nine vears for Democrats.
You may leam any of 200 different
interesting skills or trades—and pre
pare yourself for a successful, well
paid career either in the Army or
civil life —if you enlist now in the
new Regular Army Ground Forces.
Over three-quarters of a million
have. joined up already. MAKE IT
A MILLION! All the facts are at your
nearest Army Camp or Post, or U, S.
Army Recruiting Station.
Speaking of a Guild—
| ; :
g,
\ 1
N AT / s A
' /’“ 11 PN
VI 2 e
|AP S -
| &> - N &
g P . , o f
f. g 3 | - . e
Vi G 0 P corow TR 2
,;f')‘ e 2 e ?
- v 7 N ..
T e o/
i ~r.’ » b > AN
; ~5 - R ¥
: CA A
| o W QO TvE RE 'y
w Al GNP e
W o)y A< % V/‘N /‘:._/Jr
oy ,// ;1 7’/s’-‘67;/s&’.
AT d s P N L
. O 3 : — . 7
C e (Y > B s -’;’é i,
¢ e \ . I Rese 0 L 4 ¢ -
WA —o ke & R CV;A / i ol
\\ Ts e -,\‘ - - LB 0
"-"- ey
D . AR gt v SS ¥ ’?1’1 KATTIOWAORAN: 7 L 2Clyz3o
Ben Hogan And Jimmy Demaret Score
Win Over Byron Nelson, Jug McSpaden
By HAROLD HARRISON
TOLEDO, Ohio, June 24—
(AP)—Jimmy Demaret of Hous
ton, Texas, stood on the 18th
green at the Inverness Country
Club yesterday afternoon and
sang “All Through the Day”—
and it was noted that he and
Ben Hogan = shot birdies all|
through the day to win the 1946
Inverness Invitational Golf cham-!
pionship.
The dapper Demaret and the
slugging Hogan came up from‘
behind to pass Byron Neison of
Toledo and Harold (Jug) McSpa—}
den of Sanford, Maine, in the!
stretch of the colorful. 126-hoie
golf derby and pick off the $3,000
first prize with a plus score of
120 holes won. |
They were a hole behind Nel
son and McSpaden going into the
final two rounds of the four-day
tournament and then licked their
closet rivals one up, and came
right back to knack off Bob Ham
ilton and Dick Metz of Chicago
3 up. s wyYWIY
Meanwhile, the Nelson-McSpa
den combine not only took that
trimming from Hogan and Dema
ret but also dropped a two-hole
decision to Sam Snead of Het
Springs, Va., and Vie Ghezzi of
Knoxville, Tenn, in their final
match.
Here is the way they finished
and the prize money each team
collected. :
Hogan-Demaret, plus 20, $3,000.
Nelson-McSpaden, plus 14, sl,-
700.
Lloyd Mangrum of Los Ange
les-Lawson Little of Monterey,
Calif., plus 6, $1,300.
Herman Keiser of Akron, Ohio
‘Chandler Harper of Portsmouth.
Va., plus two, SI,OOO.
} Snead-Ghezzi, minus one, S9OO.
Hamilton-Metz, minus 'seven.
SBOO. ;
Toney Penna of Cincinnati-
Herman Barron of White Plains.
N. Y., minus 14, S7OO.
| Byrd-Harrison, minus 20, S6OO.
Worry of
Slipping or Irritating?
Don’'t be embarrassed by - loose
false teeth slipping, dropping or
wabbling when you eat. talk or
laugh. Just sprinkle ,a little FAS
TEETH on your plates. This
pleasant powder gives a remark
able sense of added comfort and
security by holding plates more
firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty
taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non
acid). Get FASTEETH at any
See For Yourself: Why You Can Discount War Talk
‘ P “;‘;g\ . = ' - . T 4
56 t-7gi ) §IA i \ 4 ' - P e
v AR | T e s 78 i v i o 7
v » 8.9 ‘ %‘,' p .:1| Z*\;' 5 ¥ ‘ ot ..?‘E ? f: y e
T A ,’(fl SAR A \ /\/_/’ i & 1540 B
a jp—y. . | “( T __W :t\\“ \“‘S A i — y 1> § 5 - -
SNOy SONRRN |/) A/ N\ |[ el S
/' [:. B !' Bhy -J A e ;>: ;n' 73 / ‘@4/";2 ) \ ‘ i s i\ o
[ ks At il | 2 2 / D\ . R
| P A 4 | 7 7 ”o “&\ = S G =
= , T Lkl | < ¢ S r% Ly
N el | W ANt
Cone Sy |l |= " Y ENGLAND\ |KS @ @°
eo A (2 o : gy O
»‘\: ~ “;i-f_“‘\:iil : ——A\(E—E“E"t‘ ,_ / N /j F‘_X‘———‘-\ &
% i ”{\%i R /‘ eyl A 40 ‘
e S\ NEN "
fi&?fi O s "\‘;‘r&tfi N ,-/\ \\U S' ‘— ‘ e ‘
EVEN BEFORE WORLD WARTL WAS FORMALLY ENDED, = @ l:li)- .‘_"‘-
THERE 1S WIDESPREAD TALK OF ANOTHER WAR = 4 A MAJOR WAR WOULD INVOLVE
FOUGHT WITH ATOM ROMBS, GERMS AND OTHER RUSSIA, BRITAIN, THE U.S. BUT NETHER
PEVASTATING WEAPONS. BUT EXPERTS SAY OF TWE BIG THREE, RUSSIA, DEVASTATED, DOESN'T | | COUNTRY NOW HASTHEBASE TO .
SUCH TALK IS WRONG —AT LEAST NOW. WANT WAR . BRITAIN, DEVASTATED,DOESN'T WANT | | ATTEMPT AN ATTACK ON ANOTHER.
: . i e WAR, US, RECONVERTING TO PEACE, DOESN'T WANT WAR. | | ,
4P Newsfeaturas « . i%) £ b e
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
Billy Talbert
Defeats Parker
In Sou. Singles
LOUISVILLE, Ky. June 24—
(AP) — Billy Talbert of Wilm
ington, Del.,, upset National
Champion Frankie Parker of Los
Angeles for tha men’s singles
title of the -Southerh Tennis
championship here yesterday,
6-4. 6-1, 0-6, 4-6. 6-4.
Mary Arnold Prentiss of Los
Angeles defeated Shirley Fry of
Roiling College 35-2. 7-5 for 'the
women’s singles championship.
The nationai doubles champ
ion team of <'albert and Gard
nar Mulloy of Miami whipped
the Chicago team of Seymour
Greenberg and Gardner Larned
f~» the men’s double crown, 6-2,
-0,
The gi-ls’ singles caampion
shin went to Nancy Morrison of
Palm Beach, Fla.. who defeated
Dorie Jensen c¢f Des Moines,
Tlowa. 6-2. 6-0.
Veterans’ Singles
William Macassin of New Or
leans trounced Sid Appel of
Louisville for the veterans’ sin
glee championsnip, €-1,.6-0.
The women’s doubles team of
Barßa~a Scofield of San Fran
cisco and Nancy Morrison will
meet Shirley Fry and Mary Ar
nold Prentiss in a final match
ot tae Ttri-State Tournament
today at Cincinnati.
The mixed doubles team of
Beity Ruth Hulbert of St. Louis
ang the University of Miami
and Alejo Russell, Buenos Aires,
downed prentiss and Charles
Fubbard of Long Beach, Calif.,
in the final. 6-0.
Yesterday's
—Stars—
Dixie Walker, Dodgers—Batted
in a run with a triple and scored
another as the Dodgers defeated
the Cards 4-2.
Jim Tabor, Phils—Homered in
the 12th inning to give the Phils
a 5-4 victory over the Reds.
Tommy Henrich, Yankees—Hit
a two-run homer in the /thh in
ning off Hal Newhouser of the
Tigers to give the Yanks a 10-8
win. .
Bill Zubebr, Red Sox—lLimited
the Indians to three hits with a
6-0 shutout win.
BENSON FACES GEORGIA POWER COMPANY;
DIXIE MEETS CLIMAX, IN GAMES TONIGHT
There are two games sched
uled for the City Softball League
ihig evening, both games start
ing promptly at 6:30.
Dixie Canner Co., will invade
Lyndon House field for a tilt
with Climax Hosiery Mill. These
teams are currently two among
a four-way tie for second posi
tion in league standings.
In another game, Benson’s
powerful team, undefeated =so
far. will tangle with Georgia
Power. C 0.., who will play most
in a game at Dudley Field.
This marks the beginning of
ihe second week of play for the
newly formed softball league,
and much interest has been
shown in the first week tilts and
it is expected to gather speed
as time goes along.
League standings:
Team— W L Pet.
Berson's: .25 9 1,000
Rosenthal’'s ....... 2 0 1,000
BREIAE s el o .500
Oy o 0 o Laag sl 500
Piwte .w 4 500
€34 Power. o o d 500
Gia Motos - ovve -8 52 2000
Ataens Mfg. ...... 0 2 000
Sports Roundup
NEW YORK, June 24—-(AP)l—‘
Last ear 40 players competed in
the intercollegiate golf champion
ship at Columbus, O. This week
at Princeton, N. J., 40 schools
have entered 160 golfers and by
the time they finish taking the
Springdale course apart you may
find some contenders for the Na
tional Amateur title . . . . There
are any number of college golf
‘ers who can whip through an oc
casional round in the low 70’s,
but none was good enough to
qualify for the open this year . . .
Tex Coulter, who couldn’t repre
sent West Point in any big track
meet this spring because of scho
lastic deficiencies, wil] not get a
fling at the A.A.U. shot put title
this week for the same reason . . .
incidentally, the Giants’ Steve
Owen claims that three years pro}
footbal] would make Coulter the
greatest tackle of all time . ... If,
Tex goes through with his_ plan
to become a wingman at Georgia
Tech, you can say plenty of op
posing backs will come to a bad
end.
All In The Viewpoint
Jersey Jones, who maintains
the Louis-Conn .inbroglio was a
good exhibition of boxing (as dis
tinguished from an exciting fight) |
wants to know how present-day
fans would react if they had to
sit through something like thel
‘amous Corbett-Jefferies fight at
Coney Island in 1900. “For 23'
~ounds it was a big, lumbering
Juy like Jefferies chasing a little
man who stabbed and ran away,”
say Jersey. “If they had anything
like that now it wouldn’t be just
one congressman suing Mike Ja
cobs but the whole darned Sen
ate.” o>
| PRI e SOB
Cleaning The Cuff
Wilder, Idaho, the smallest
city staging one of the 48 state
non-professional baseball tourna
ments sponsored by the National
Baseball Congress, has a popula
tion of only 507 but expects to
draw at least 10,000 fans at the
tourney.
ANCIENT PRINTING MACHINE
A carved stone slab weighing
’more than a ton, believed to be
~one of the world’s earliest print
\ ing machines, and estimated to be
more than 2,000 yvears old, has
’been brought to England from
China.
TAX-EXEMPT
There is more than $4,600,000,-
000 worth of tax-exempt proper
ty in New York City alone. The
city owns $3,400,000,000 worth of
this, while the remainder is pri
vately owned.
> ITCHING
‘y@é AN
O BLACKHEADS
25¢ .
Pabmons SIS LI
SKIN SUCCESS OINTMENT
Hopp Opens New
Fl .
i
ield With Homer
By JOHNNY HOPP
Braves Outfielder
Jumping from Class D Norfolk
to Rochester of Double A in one
year is thrill enough, but I'll
never forget my International
League debut against Jersey City
in '387.
The Red Kings were the first
visiting team to set foot in brand
new million-dollar Roosevelt Sta
dium. In my first official time at
bat in the third frame I whacked
the first pitch far over right field
fence, 375 feet away.
Rounding- the bases before the
biggest crowd I ‘had ever seen,
34,000, tickled this cotton-~top.
. .
Dennis Pails
2 .
Major Hazard For
»
American Claymen
LONDON, June 24—AP)—A
powerful United States tennis
team today begins the defense of
all five titles in the Wimbledon
Championships with a good chance
of repeating the 1939 American
grand slam—if they can repel the
challenge of Dennis Pails of
Australia.
Pails, a salesman whose nick
name has been “Dinny” since an
official misspelled it on a tourna
ment program, is the major hazard
to American chances.
The best tennis stars of 22 na
tions have come to Wimbledon for
the “world series of tennis.”
BSTAND
STAND
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Team— W L Pet
Brooklen © ..... ... 37 .%2 837
St L, B2y 588
Chicago @, .. .%..~n 9L 28 oße
Bogiolh 3 .00 w 3 Bl AR
Cibelonablt .. ... 20 20 418
Philadelphia ...... 26 30 .465
New York ...7.:.. €5 36 410
Pitlehiargh . o 20 84 408
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Bepton: bo N 4D 1T . a 6
New Yok ........ 'B9 25 009
Dateol. 00 oox 38 20 50D
Washington . . ..... 81 .28 ~B2b
Sttonisg .. ... .08 34 482
Clevelhng © 0727 85 485
Chicsee .o .55, 28 38 A9T
Philadelohia ...... 18 43 .205
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Atlanta .0 000 4T 728 . Bb3
Nashwille ... .. 36 30 54
Chattanooga . .>v. ... 87 3¢ 514
NMemphie .2 - S 8 98 BBOT
NMobile .. 00, 82 8t 405
Birmingham ...... 28 42 .400
Little Roek. .. ... " 26°"41 888
TODAY’S BASEBALL .
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Washihgton at Chicago.
New York at Cleveland.
Boston at Detroit.
Only- games scheduled.
Cincinnati at Brooklyn.
Chicago at Boston.
Only games scaeduled.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston 5-6. Cleveland 1-0.
New York 10, Detrait 8 (11
i7nings.
~ Washington 7-4, St. Louis 4-7.
- Chicago 8-1, Philadelphia 1-6.
| NATIONAL LEAGUE v
. Brooklyn 4, St. Louis 2.
New York 15-4, Chicago 10-9.
‘Boston 4-4, Pittsvurgh 3-0.
Philadelphia 5-3, Cincinnati
4-3 (First game 12 innings—
second game 11 innings, halted
by curfew.) 5
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Chattanooga 5-4. Atlanta 1-8.
Mobile 5-1, Little Rock 4-4.
4 Nasaville 10-5, Birmingham
-1. » ’
L ;\/lemphig 11-5, New Orleans
‘%i
#% Winturop-Jrs.
4 \4"&: -~ .’.\‘ i7:‘ Py -“o #ao & /!
zg . Mané‘t)’;_c:ouuea\Jur~uuys %(,fi
, {Felld;f here’s a new angle 7. shoes for. 4
you, styled just like Bad’s. Winthrop give? 4‘%’
i ‘them the same rugged quality, the sam ah)
(77 he-man good looks that make |/ °
zv;~->,\ him such a Winthrop fan.' %/g
S 0 ’\\, Sizeslto 6 | ’%‘
:ff.v " h fi ,{,q:.‘ 4 k 3 /g
iy G . 51
; n.‘?’;[{“g:'{':“'-i‘fii*fiizv._z";?:':}fi% ‘%%‘ya
SHoes PO o i E
.;;;.‘: 1= %’%ézj
S e L % . \?@: ;
2 < iy o
b L i 4 Z', : ,-{.,J ,5
o i SHOES o QUALITY 5 ;'%*s
T L TS S eB B R R e
i G oki N S R
| MOVIZ PROGRAMS
|FOR THE WEEK
’PALACE—-
Mon.-Tues.—*“Devotion” star
}ing Ida Lupino, Paul Henreid,
Olivia De Havilland, Sidney
‘}Greenstreet. News.
~ Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat—“Do You
Love Me,” starring Maureen O’Ha
ra, Dick Haymes, Harry James!
News. Bored of Education and
Tenderfoot Trail.
GERGIA—
Mon.-Tues.—“Three Strangers”
Geraldine Fitzgerald, Peter Lorre,
Sidney Greenstreet. News.
Wed.-Thur.—“The Virginian’’
Berbara Britton, Joel McCrea.
News.
Fri. -Sat—“Murder In Music
Hall” Vera Hruba Ralston, Wil
liam Marshall. “Tyial ©of Mr,
Wolf”. News.
STRAND—
Mon.-Tues..—“Romance Of The
West”. Eddie Dean, Joan Barton,
Dick Stabile & Orch. Booby Socks.
Picture Pioneers. :
Wed. — “Stranger Of The
Swamp,” Rose Mary La Planche,
Robert Barrett. College Queen.
Fin’n Feathers.
' Thurs., — “Cornered”, Dick
Powell, Mecheline Cheirel, Kids
in a shoe.
Fri.-Sat. — “Alias Billy The
Kid™—Sunset Carson. Alum &
Eve. Phantom Rider No. 4.
RITZ—
Mon.-Tues. “Leave R Her To
Heaven,” Gene Tierney, Cornel
Wilde”. Quentin Quail.
Wed-Thurs—“Song Of Arizona
Twin husbands, Lost City of the
.4/ g 5 28\
, § '\.
S FOR | MOLIE }
10 JMEPSF
Y : ; ;ff"‘i
AL‘T Y WlO Wb 081 Orh Afi f
Q P
o W «/‘"/," A
. "fim‘:‘ & (= \;\\‘, A : I i ; 7..
R o 7
————————TT o
51 (Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y. |
Franchised Bottler: PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CG., Athens, Gé
NAVY AIZFOKCE
vl 970 w a
S. ‘
Al ) 5, 17632
- CCOMBAT)
g ;
R Pkt
- >
4 ~ %
N 1| BousH EsTimATE
e
S ot
S ® W\
il &F %) ok
USSIA HAS NO NAVY OR AIR
FORCE TO SPEAK OF, AND US.
EQUIPMENT WAS NEEDED TO
HELP HER ABMY AGAINST THE
GERMANS.
MONI?AY, JUNE 24, 1946,
I i
l ENTER the EXCITING
; 'EMACME POWDI v {
First $ o
prize Q 022 cas
41 other valuable prizes
) afofs
. OLA
A A ~,';,,RS
PEED A SHE
R 4
Mail a B-B wrapper or reos
onable facsimile, with 25 words o
less on "l prefer B-B because—"#
B-B Headache Powder, Atlanta, Ga
: IR
4 TS .IOC dealer
Jungle No. 2.
—Roy Rogers. Beauties. Unusual
Occupations, Broncs & Brands
Fri.-Sat.—“Trai] To Vengence'
—Kirby Brant, Fuzzy Knigh,
EMT’YRE AF(‘T!(EI-JI)
The Roman Empire was au
tioned off to the highest bi
in 193 A. D. Didius Julianu
bought it, and ruled the em]
for several months until the arm
turned against him and executed
him.
f
= e
ESy N S
F Jr)‘-’“\) b\,]»..»l
=il %\) ,%5"““
Wi A A
s [ AEDY .-
o AR bil
- T i\
v " i | :k‘*i\
NR % e
3 A B o
o %) W 2‘
\ ’\4‘ ' &.@: ;
AN SR .ouad
e\ J/ T
Sy bl A
N FIVE YEARS OR MORE, WHEN
THE WORLD HAS PARTLY KE*
COVERED, THE SITUATION MAY
BE DIFFERENT. THEN THE 7?2‘
MY BE PAID FOR DIPLOMATIC
ERRORS MADE TODAY.