Newspaper Page Text
TO SCOUR FACTORY FOR NEW CLEWS
The Atlanta Georgian
Read for Profit---GEORGIAN WANT ADS---Use for Results
VOL. XI. NO. 235. WEATHER: SHOWERS. ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, MAY 6,1913. 2 CENTS EVERYWHERE p ^°
Mobile Opens With a Pair of Runs on
Clarkes Double, After Blanking
Smith’s Crew—Bausewein and
Hogg Opponents on the Mound.
MOBILE. ALA., May 6.—Mike Finn's
Sea Gulls trimmed the Crackers here
this afternoon and succeeded in taking
the third straight game by a score of
6 to 3.
Hogg was a complete puzzle for the
Crackers, while Bausewein was wild
and ineffective
THE GAME.
FIRST INNING.
Long flied to .Jacobson. Agler popped
t stoci-:. Alperman tlied to Campbeii.
lil'X;-. NO HITS.
Stock walked. Starr grounded to Bis-
i i ; and was safe on the shortstop’s
(if v.' throw to first. Stock went to sec
ond. O'Dell fanned. Jacobson popped
to S mith. Clarke doubled to deep cen
ter, scoring Stock and Starr. Robertson
grounded out, Bausewein to Agier.
TWO RUNS, ONE HIT.
SECOND INNING.
Welchonce singled to left. Smith
sacrificed. Hogg to Robertson. Bisland
died to Campbell. Rohe popped to Rob-
krtsnn. NO RUNS, ONE HIT.
Campbell doubled to right. Schmidt
singled to center. Hogg walked, filling
the bases. Stock singled to right, scor
ing Campbell. Schmidt went to third
and Hogg to second. Stan* grounded to
Bausewein, forcing Schmidt at the plate.
O’Dell singled over second, scoring
Hogg. Stock went to third and Starr to
second. Jacobson grounded to Bause
wein, who threw Stock out at the plate.
Clarke faned. TWO RUNS, FOUR
HITS.
THIRD INNING.
Graham grounded out, O'Dell to Rob
ertson. Bausewein grounded out to
Robertson unassisted. Long singled to
right. Agler walked. Alperman ground
ed out, Stock to Robertson. NO RUNS,
ONE HIT.
Robertson flied to Welchonce. Camp
bell walked and stole second. Schmidt
popped to Bisland. Hogg grounded to
Smith, who tagged Campbell. NO
RUNS, NO HITS.
FOURTH INNING.
Welchonce grounded out, Starr to
Robertson. Smith singled to right.
Bisland popped to Campbell. Rohe
fanned. NO RUNS, ONE HIT.
Stock lined to Smith. Starr walked.
O’Dell grounded out, Bisland to Agler.
Starr went to second. Jacobson ground
ed out, Bisland to Agler. NO RUNS,
NO HITS.
FIFTH INNING.
Graham grounded out, Starr to Rob
ertson. Bausewein popped to Schmidt.
Wing grounded out, Stock to Robertson.
RUNS, NO HITS.
Clarke flied to Welchonce. Robertson
flied to Rohe. Campbell popped to Bis
land. NO RUNS, NO HITS.
SIXTH INNING.
Agler grounded out, Stock to Robert
son. Alperman grounded to Stock and
was safe on Robertson’s error. Wel
chonce grounded to Starr, forcing Alper
man at second. Smith fanned. NO
K*. I NS, NO HITS.
Schmidt grounded out, Smith to Agler.
Hogg grounded out, Bausewein to Agler.
Stock grounded to Smith and was safe
on Agler’s error. Stock stole second
and also third. Starr walked. Stock
and Starr tried a double steal, but Stock
was run down between third and the
plate. Smith to Bisland to Graham. NO
RUNS, NO HITS.
SEVENTH INNING.
Bisland flied to Campbell. Rohe also
flied to Campbell. Graham singled to
right. Bausewein singled to right and
Graham went to third and scored on a
wild pitch. Bausewein went to second.
Long grounded to O’Dell and was safe
on O’Dell’s low throw. Bausewein scor
ing. Agler grounded out, O'Dell to Rob
ertson. TWO RUNS. TWO HITS.
O’Dell singled to left and was out at
second trying to stretch it, -Long to Al
perman. Jacobson
RACES
RESULTS.
AT PIMLICO.
FIRST—Six furlongs: Brynary 109
<J Wilson), 4.30, 3.10, 2.60, won: Little
Jupieter 107 (Butwell), 6.00, 2.80, second;
Bryan 106 (Sterling), field including
Mary Scribe. Turkey in the Straw.
Couer d'Alene, 3:30, third. Time 1:15 L-5.
Schaller, Mary Scribe, Henpeck. Uncle
Oble, Turkey in the Straw. R. H. Gray,
Clothes Brush. Fairy Godmother, Couer
d’Alene also ran.
SECOND—two-year-olds, 4** furlongs:
Flittergold 107 (Ferguson), 29.10, 8.10,
3.30. won; xGainer 117 (J. Wilson), 2.40,
2.10, second; Trade Mark 109 (Robbins),
2.50, third. Time :55 3-6. xGallop, Can
nock, Peacock, Executor, Canticle. Nan
cy Orme, Centaurl also ran. x-coupled.
THIRD—Selling, three-year-olds and
up. mile: Donald MacDonald 116 (J.
Wilson), 2.90, 2.70, 2.30, won; Hoffman
109 (Robbins), 6.30. 3.20, second; Alta-
mah 109 (Wolfe), 2.60, third. Time
1:42. Col. Cook, Lewis. Judge Monck,
Frank Purcell, Elwah, aPton also ran.
FOURTH—Owners Handicap, steeple
chase. four-year-olds and up, 2 miles:
Bill Andrews 154 (Tuckey), 4.10, 2.60,
out, won; King Cash 137 (Kermath),
3.10, out. second; Elbart 342 (Jackson),
out, third. Time 3.55 3-5. Mr. Specs fell.
FIFTH—Oriole Handicap, three-year-
olds and up, 7 furlongs: Light O’ Mv
Life 114 (Butwell), 6.70, 4.20, 3.60, won;
Kleburne 104 (Turner), 8,40, 6.20, sec
ond; Lochiel 107 (J. Fraseh), 6.20, third.
Time 1:27 2-5. Shackelton, Penobscot,
Springboard. Sherwood. Co. Holloway,
The Rump, Superstition, Perthshire,
Sandhill also ran.
SIXTH—Three-year-olds and up, mile:
Tale Bearer 103 (Montoilr), 13.50, 5.20,
4.30, won; Cogs 103 (Connolly), 3.20, 2.1)0,
second; Robert Bradley 104 (Dreyer),
31.70, third. Time 1:42. Judge Walser,
Star Gaze, Hasson, Discovery, Bryndon,
also ran.
AT LEXINGTON.
FIRST—Purse, six furlongs: A1 Blocn
103 (Henry), 5.90, 3.80, 2.90, won; Just
Red 112 (Steele), 4.00. 3.00, second; Clin
ton 103 (Buxton), 3.70, third. Time 1:14.
King Box. Garter, Booby, Oriental Pearl,
Mae Taft, All Red, Aloha and Lassie
also ran.
SECOND—$350 maiden two-year-olds,
colts and geldings, 5 furlongs: Magnet
112 (Oans), 25.60, 14.10. 4.70, won; Dr.
Samuel 109 (Brayton), 10.50, 4.10, sec
ond; The Norman 132 (Glass), 2.80. third.
Time 1:02 2-5. Natchez, John MacGin-
nis, John Gund, Candy Box, Kaintuck
also ran.
THIRD—Handicap, purse $400, three-
year-olds and up. 5^ furlongs: Sprite
119 (Glass) 2.70, 2.50, 2.20, won: Florence
Roberts 104 (Kendris), 3.70. 2.60, second;
Round the World 115 (Kirschbaum), 2.70,
third. Time 1:07 2-5. Jim Basey, Mor
ristown, Curlicue also ran. Jim Basey
and Florence Roberts, Scheiber entry.
FOURTH- The Camden Handicap,
three-year-olds and up, mile and a quar
ter: Flora Fina 103 (Buxton). 6.80, $4.00,
3.30, won; Manager Mack 107 (Goose),
7.90, 4.50, second; Gowell 103 (Martin),
7.10, third. Time 2:05 2-5. Donerail,
Any Port and Lord Marshall also ran.
FIFTH—Purse $300 for two-year-old
colts and geldings, 4% furlongs: Im-
perator 109 (Steele), 3.30. 2.30, out, won;
Roamer 109 (Ganz), 2.40, out, second;
Bird Man 112 (Loftus), out, third. Time
:p4 3-5. Mac also ran.
filed to Long and
was safe at second on Long's error.
Clarke grounded out. Bausewein to
Agler. Robertson tripled to right, scor
ing Jacobson. Campbell grounded out,
Alperman to Agler. ONE RUN, TWO
HITS.
EIGHTH INNING.
Alperman fanned. Welchonce doubled
to center. Smith singled to center, scor
ing Welchonce Jacobson let. the ball
get by him and Smith went to second.
Bisland grounded out, Hogg to Robert
son. Rohe flied to Jacobson. ONE
RUN
Schmidt hit a home run to right field.
Hogg fanned. Stock flied to Long
Starr out to Agler unassisted.
NINTH INNING.
„ Graham hit to Stock and whs safe on
A wild throw. Dunn, batting f.>r Bause
wein. popped to Hogg Hogg tossed to
Robertson, doubling Graham off first.
frier popped to Robertson.
Race Entries on Page Two.
Waycross Girl, 15,
Vanishes in Woods
Country Searched for Pretty Lee
Hall, Believed Insane or Victim
of Foul P\ay.
WAYCROSS, GA.. May 6.—Pretty
Lee Hall, a 15-year-old girl, yesterday
suddenly left her home a mile north
of Waycross. rushed into the thick
woods bordering Kettle Creek anl
disappeared. It is feared she may
have been a victim of foul play. The
entire county is being scoured for the
missing girl. She was seen entering
the woods, and when her father called
she broke into a run. Hall states no
man Is involved as far as he knows,
but thinks his daughter has lost Ht
mind.
BASEBALL
AT MONTGOMERY—
CHATTANOOGA 001000020-3 ..
MONTGOMERY 000100000-1 ..
Coveleskie and Street, Manning and Donohue. Umpires, Wright and
Breitenstein.
AT MEMPHIS—
NASHVILLE 2000000..-. ..
MEMPHIS 0 1 0 0 0 0 0. - . ..
Beck and Noyes; Harrell and Seabaugh. Umpires, Hart and Stockdale.
New Orleans-Birmingham game off; wet grounds.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
AT NEW YORK —
CINCINNATI 010011120-6 13 1
NEW YORK 1 1 0 4 0 0 2 0 X - 8 16 2
Suggs, Brown and Clark; Tesrau and Meyers. Umpires. Brennan and Eason.
AT BROOKLYN—
CHICAGO 030000000-3 32
BROOKLYN 02000020X-4 70
Cheney and Archer, Ragon. Rucker, Miller and Irwin. Umpires, O’Day
and Em8lle.
AT BOSTON—
PITTSBURG 1000000100-273
BOSTON 0 020000001- 3 92
Hendrix and Kelly; Perdue and Brown. Umpires, Rlgler and Byron.
AT PHILADELPHIA—
ST. LOUIS 000000201-3 11 0
PHILADELPHIA 000001000-1 5 2
Steele, Harmon and McLean; Brannon, Seaton, Mayer and Killifer and
Dooin. Umpires, Klem and Orth.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
5 DIE IN KENTUCKY MINE.
HARTFORD. KY., May 6.—Five
men were killed by black damp in a
deserted shaft at a mine of the Tay
lor Mines Company near here to-day.
The dead, all of whom were white,
are: John Villers, J. P. Ramer. C.
F. Frazier, F. Birk, Jim Porter,
No games scheduled.
Jack London Faces
Charge of Assault
Writer Accused of Beating Man He
Disarmed and Ejected From
His Ranch Home.
SANTA ROSE, CAL., May 6.—Jam
London, the famous author, traveler
and landowner of Glen Ellen, and his
guest, John J. Burns, of San Fran
cisco, must answer to a charge of
battery next Monday as a result of
trouble on the London ranch.
Mrs. J. H. Shepard and her sister
had tome words, according to Shep
ard, and because Burns, who wa»
pres. at. refused to interfere on behalf
of Mrs. Shepard. Shepard is alleged
to have made a demonetration with a
revolve..
London and Burns are said to have
taken the weapon from Shepard,
grappled with him and forcibly eject
ed him. Shepard declared London
wfrwkws and abused him.
Slayer of King of
Greece a Suicide
Assassin Leaps to His Death From
Window of Police Building
In Athens.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, May 6.—A news agency
dispatch received here to-day from
Aliens states that Aleko Shines, the
anarchist who assassinated King
George of Greece in Salonika on
March 18, jumj>ed from a window In
the police building and killed him
self.
How the prisoner eluded the jailers
is not told in the dispatch.
Schinas killed the King by firing
point blank into h!s back while ne
was walking along the streets of Sa
lonika. He gave as an explanation of
the crime that in 1911 he had applied
for assistance at the King’s palace
and had been driven away.
CRACKERS
.... 000 000
1
! ©
s
3
GULLS . . .
... 220 000
11
X -
6
CRACKERS—
AB.
R.
H. PO.
A.
E.j
Long, If
5
0
2
1
1
1
Agler, lb
....... 4
0
0
8
0
1
Alperman, 2b
4
0
0
1
1
0
Welchonce, cf
...... 4
1
2
2
0
0
Smith, 3b
3
0
2
3
3
o (
Bisland, ss
4
0
0
2
3
1,
Rohe, rf
4
0
0
1
0
0
Graham, c
4
1
1
6
0
0
Bausewein, p
3
1
1
0
5
0
Totals
.... 34
3
8
24
13
3
' GULLS—
AB.
R.
H.
PO.
A.
E. ]
Stock, ss
4
1
1
1
4
1
i Starr, 2b
3
1
0
1
2
0
O’Dell, 3b.
4
0
2
0
2
1
Jacobsen, cf
4
1
0
2
0
1
Clarke, If
4
0
1
0
0
0
Robertson, lb
4
0
1
13
0
1
Campbell, rf
3
1
1
5
0
0
Schmidt, C;
4
1
2
4
0
0
Hogg, p
3
1
0
1
3
0
Totals
. .. . 33
6
8
27
11
4
SUMMARY:
Two-base hits—Cli
rke, Campbell. '1
hree-base hits
-Robert-
son. Struck out—By Hogg 2, Bausewein
2. Bases on
balls-
-Off ;
Hogg 1, oft Bausewein
5. Sacrifice
hits-
-Smith.
Stolen bases— (
Campbell, Stock (2).
Umpires, Rudderham and
Fifield.
SOUTHERN
LEAGUE
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
McCormack and Krabs; Ridgeway and
lenefee. Umpires, Barr and Moore.
Lowrey and Wells; Wilder and Cueto.
Robertson and Gelbel; Voss and Burns.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Youn^and Smith; Nicholson and Mar.
•hall
mplrea, Murray and Handlboe.
Other games not scheduled
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Ensman and Higgins; Lush and Be*
022000000-481
BUFFALO—
0 1 0 1 2 0 0 2 X -6 10 2
McHale, Brandon and Sullivan; Ful-
lenweider. Mains and Gowdy. Umpires.
Hayes and Nallln.
AT ROCHESTER
BALTIMORE—
001000002-340
ROCHESTER—
000020000-232
Shawkey and Egan; Quinn and Blair.
Umpires, Flnneran and Quigley.
AT MONTREAL.
PROVIDENCE—
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 5 -8 12 1
MONTREAL—
300100010 -5 90
Bailey, Wheatley and Onslow; Mason
and Burns. Umpires, O’Toole and Car
penter.
Villages War for
Railway Station
Wiley Claims 23 People and Is “Cow
Center"—Mathis Depends on
Natural Beauty.
Rabun County Is at white heat, and
the old feud between the towns of
Wiley and Mathis is at its height. The
vital question of which place gets a
regular railroad station with an agent
in charge in to be determined this
week by the Georgia Railroad Com
mission.
Wiley claims the greater population.
Within a radius of one mile from
Wiley there are 23 persons living. It
has been shown conclusively. It claims
also to be "the natural center of the
cow movement,” whatever that may
mean.
Mathis claims that It is due to be
come a great summer resort because
of the beauty of the lake created there
by the Georgia Railway and Power
Company’s dam.
Photographs of the surrounding
country, letters from almost every
State between Ohio and the District
of Columbia, a mass of evidence and
many personal appeals have reached
the Railroad Commistfon on the sub
ject.
THE WEATHER
Forecast for Atlanta: Showers.
Temperatures: 8 a. m., 73 degrees;
10 a. m., 77 degrees; 12 noon, 83
degrees: 2 p. m., 86 degrees. Sun
rise, 4:43; sunset, 6:26.
NOT fET PUBLIC
Body of Slain Girl Exhumed and
Bloodstains on Factory
Floor Analyzed.
SHI HELD
■
NEW theory announced Atlanta Police Do Not Believe He is
I m d l i c a t e d in Tragedy-=- Letters
From Women and 50 Photographs
of Girls Found in Prisoners Trunk.
Solicitor Believes Victim May
Have Been Thrown, Still Alive,
Down Elevator Shaft.
The force of detectives working
under the supervision of Solicitor
Dorsey Tuesday night will make an
other searching investigation of the
factory basement of the National Pen
cil Company.
The search for clews will be con
ducted under the glare of a string
of electric lights that have been in
stalled in the last twenty-four hours
for the express purpose of revealing
the obscure corners and dark places
that hitherto have been illumined
only by the unsatisfactory light of
ordinary lanterns and the few flick
ering gas lights that are in the base
ment.
All of the new evidence obtained
will be presented at the resumption
of the inquest Thursday morning.
That there already is new and
startling evidence seems true, but
just what it indicates the officials
refuse to say. and the reporters,
therefore, are/ merely guessing at
what may be. or may ty6\ be. the ac
tual facte.
Solicitor Is Reticent.
Solicitor Dorsey was reticent about
the nature of the most recent dis
coveries, but his guarded statements
indicated that he considered the dis
closures which have been made b>
the force of detectives, physicians and
'•Demists working under his direction
as having a most important bearing
on the solution of the crime.
Mr. Dorsey issued this statement:
I see In an interview attributed
to Quinn that I asked him if he
was not paid by counsel for Frank
to protect Frank.
This statement, so far as I am
concerned, is absolutely false.
Throughout my talk with him I
did not mention the name of coun
sel nor did I intimate that counsel .
had been guilty of any such con
duct.
It is known that a more thorough
and minute examination of every lo
cality and every article having any
connection or possible connection
with the slaying of Mary Phagan is
being made now than was undertaken
in the first few days of the mystery.
Blood Stains Analyzed.
Under the direction of Solicitor
Dorsey, chemists have made a new
analysis of the blood found on the
factory floor, where the Phagan girl
evidently struggled with her assail
ant.
Dr. H. F. Harris, director Of the
State Board of Health, is making a
second examination of the body of
the slain girl, which was taken from
the grave in the cemetery at Ma
rietta.
Whether it was from any one of
the sources that Solicitor Dorsey ob
tained his new lead In tracking down
the slayer, he would not say. He
would only repeat that every clew'
that offered the slightest ray of hope
would be followed to the end.
May Have Been Hurled Down Shaft.
A startling theory announced by
the Solicitor is that the body of Mar,.
Phagan was thrown, alive, down th«.
elevator shaft from the eeoond floor
to the basement. He has found thtt
the soil at the bottom of the shaft is
soft and that the girl might not hav3
been seriously injured by a fall of
this distance. He w'ould not be sur
prised if subsequent developments
proved that the girl was alain not
on the second floor of the factory, but
in the basement at just about the sp)t
where the body was found.
To insure that not the imiallest par
ticle of evidence is overlooked, Solici
tor Dorsey is continuing his rigid in
vestigation of the factory itself. Elec
tric lights have been strung in every
nook and corner of the basement,
where before it was black and gloomy.
Te dirt and trash covering the floor is
being searched painstakingly in the
hope that some tell-t^le clew may be
discovered—that the girl’s iniseing
purse may be found, or that some ar
ticle disclosing the identity of the
slayer may he turned up.
I he Atlanta police and State officials say they place little im
portance in the arrest of Paul P. Bowen, the former Atlanta youth
who is being held by the Houston authorities.
In Bowen's trunk was found a mass of clippings telling of
the Phagan killing, and st least 50 photographs of girls and young
women. Several times while he was being questioned, Bowen is
said to have contradicted himself.
Bowen stoutly maintains his innocence. Relatives and friends
of his in Atlanta say his arrest is preposterous.
Atlanta detectives have investigated thoroughly Bowen's his
tory in Atlanta and declared Tuesday afternoon that they have
virtually established ail alibi for him. Having satisfied themselves
of the probability ot Bowen s innocence, they are continuing on
their original line of investigation and have abandoned the theory
that Bowen could have been involved.
The local authorities.have asked, however, that Bowen be held
until a more complete investigation can be made. They think he
will be able to prove his innocence and say that they have letters
in their possession which practically establish that Bowen could
not have been in Atlanta on the date of the crime.
One letter, addressed to Charles tfhfiljjrt?; a efiftk in the South
ern Railway office, was postmarked April 23 at Lukin, Texas, and
did not reach Atlanta until April 27, the day after the killing in
the National Pencil Factory basement.
Another letter, which is in the possession of Solicitor Dorsey,
was written by Bowen to an Atlanta friend and was mailed at Tv
ler, Texas, April 20 as Bowen was on his way to Texarkana, Ark.
These letters lead the local authorities to believe that Bowen can
not reasonably be supposed to have come the hundreds 'of miles
just m time to commit the crime and then immediately jump a train
to return Westward.
HOUSTON, TEXAS, May -6.—Paul P. Bowen, arrested be
cause of the suspicion of the local authorities that he was con
nected with the murder of Mary Phagan in Atlanta, denied Tues
day all knowledge of the girl and the crime except as he read of
it in the newspapers.
A score of clippings telling the story of the little girl’s death
were found in the young man’s room. His only explanation was
that Atlanta was his home town, and he was particularly inter
ested in the crime because of that.
The police here regard as more significant than the clippings,
the stories of Bowen’s actions in his room at the St. Jean Hotel,
and later at a rooming house. Roomers in adjoining rooms are
said to have been disturbed by his moans and mutterings and bv
his constant pacing of the floor.
TV by did T do it? Why did
I do it?” he is declared to have
repeated to himself incessantly.
Complaint was first made to the
Hotel authorities and later the
police were notified
Bowen was arrested last night by
Chief of Police Davison, Chief of De
tectives Peyton and Detective Hilton
at 1520 Texas Avenue.
"A night of terror." as officers term
it, led to the detention of Bowen.
Sunday night in room 214, at the
St. Jean Hotel, the young man paced
the floor and moaned. Persons in ad
joining rooms were unable to sleep,
and reported to the management that
something was wrong in the room.
An investigation disclosed Bowen
poring over letters and newspaper
accounts of the murder and crying
aloud.
"Oh, why did I do it?" he is said to
have cried.
“I would not have done it. I ought
not to have done that. If I had tt
to do over I wouldn’t do it,” were re
peatedly heard by thoee who listened
and who frequently walked through
the hall in an effort to ascertain some
cause for the peculiar actions of the
man.
Monday the young man wa# shad
owed and the matter was reported te
the detective department. About i
o’clock he registered off and moved te
Texas Avenue and Crawford StTeet.
There he engaged a room for Qitffftfkg
Old Man Struck and
Dazed by Automobile
J. R. Russell Run Down by E. N.
O’Belrne at Broad and For
syth Streets.
J. R. Russell, a pedestrian, was
struck by an automobile driven by
E. N. O’Belrne, 314 Empire Building,
at Broad and Forsyth streets Tues
day afternoon. Dazed by the fall,
Mr. Russell was unable to give his
residence address. He was sent to
Grady Hospital, where ft was found
his injuries were not serious.
It was dearly an accident and Po
liceman E. J. Florence, officer on the
Broad Street beat, made no arrest.
According to W. H. Rhett, in the car
with Mr. O’Belrne, and T. J. Dicker-
son and W. T. Webb, who saw the
accident, the automobile was moving
slowly. It was said Russell, who is
advanced in years, attempting to es
cape another car, stepped directly in
the path of Mr. O’Beirne’s machine.
ASQUITH SAYS HE WILL
QUIT IF NOT SUPPORTED
LONDON, May 6.—In opposing the
woman's suffrage bill in the house
of commons to-day Premier Asquith
said he would resign if his colleagues
In the cabinet ever sugegsted that
they did not feel justified in follow
ing a government the head of which
w-as opposed to them.
fa
f '
HI