The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Ed. 1 Saturday, August 25, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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STATESNIAN, SATURDAY. avaUST 25, vos.
NEW TICKET BROKER WAR.
H
Q
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na
1
1
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Fa
A. F. BEALL PROMOTED.
03
$
.
K
Always buy the genuine — Manufactured by the
1
1
%i
i.,
A
<
PROMINENT SOCIALIST DEAD.
the day after the accident, and it is
)
Garrabran
called thp
attenti
b
।
Peck L,ak Wiped Out.
Denison,
state.
r
REFORM endorsed.'.
SPELLING
This was satis-
the. negro
Au
"We were camped near
think either can be called in .question.
S:
Roosevelt meant what
BANANA TRAIN WRECKED.
LOI
PUR
■
\
York Times.
3
I
Mortuary
\
Promt
LAWYERS' DIRECTORY.
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89
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002
Ek
i’
>
OPEF
b
E
8
I. & Q. "
CRYS
SUNDAY EXCURSIONS
I
r
$1.50
SAN ANTONIO and Return....
I
75c
NEW BRAUNFELS and Return
TRAINS LEAVE AUSTIN AT 3:35 A. M. AND 7:05 A. M
AVE
h
P. J. LAWLESS, Agent
I V/ILE
1
.-vioN
I
A
5
r ■
।
t
a
Dispels colds and
headaches when
bilious or con-
stipated;
For men, women
and children;
soldiers could get it.
factory and was done.
There is only
one Genuine
Syrup of Figs;
to get its bene-
ficial effects
ser
Gr
Rank Building.
AUSTIN. THXAS.
That kee
out, last
24.— The rhe
Indian Terri-
& .
an
tra
At
•2
we
Tf
ly
W«
i ।
system,
Effectually
and Gently;
AU.
Man
deal
Fire
men i
X
*,
■
UV
--
Bunch of Kids.
BY W. P. MARRINER. 6
f"
s
Gre
eas
Uni
fiel
dial
mai
bef
F.
$12(
com
lege
in (
Gre
seve
Gra
AUSTIN WHOLESALE HOUSES.
WALTER TIPS.
Wholesale Hardware.
Ideal Windmills.
e
. •
-
up tar ammyt
WEBB. TAYLOR & PERRY,
Wholesale Hardware.
Paper and Paper Bags.
The
403 Cong.
CON
Finest W
Loc
DUI
Fine W
Club Roon
tion.
Corner Cc
AU!
Passing of Frank Leitner at Ban An-
tonio After Long illness.
-
‘YY
I
Great Loss of Fruit by Destruction of
Seven Care.
r
Arrest at San Antonio on the Charge
of Swineling.
Roosevelt Orders Publio Printer to
Adopt New Forme.
than the flesh of an ordinary negro.
It la not the color of burned flesh, such
as marks the course of the bolt down
the' victim’s neck and back.
spelling. 7
HEAD CAUGHT^ON HOOK.
Man Falls Upon Hanger and Goes Into
Delirims.
77.
Lw
(SYRUPOFKGS
h "2g9 ame, ,— --— -—-A
MEm
(030
Everyt
yer ci
bar. Sc
Beir. (
Ba,
From Either Point of View.
She—Isn’t a railroad wreck a terrible
thing?
He—Yes, It Is—especially when you
happen to own stock in the railroad.—*
Translated for Tales from "Meggene
dorfer Blatter.”
ih—
083
.iy00
exACT cow or VnAPPEN.
‘L
49
titled at the strange turn his case has
taken. The lower part of the victim’s
body It is said, has turned black. The
skin below his waist began to darken
l.
i! (
subject implies a doubt either of his
word or of his firmness. We do not
sergeant, who down. In some quarters it is resented,
a pig swilling I and those who innocently engage in it
P
Promotes DigesanCbeerfuH
nessandRescontains neither
psumMosphine nor Maeral
NorNAHCOTIC.
•___
Encounter in Santa Clara.
Havana, Aug. 24.—The first encount-
er in Santa Clara province occurred
this morning. A detachment of rural
guards attacked an insurgent band
commanded by Manuel Gonzales, be-
tween Santo Domingo arid Colon. The
Insurgents were scattered anti gome of
their arms and ammunition were cap-
tured.
LIGHTNING TURNS HIM BLACK.
Badly Shocked Man Assumes the Hue
of an Ethiopian.
AMee table Preparationfor As-
smiiauing weoodandRegula: ■
tingthe Stomachs andBowelsof
aearauansuczrcu
Amthsad-
To sweeten,
To refresh,
To cleanse the
than likely that representatives of the 1
departments will fall in line with the i
president's Ideas and have their offi- 1
cial documenta printed in the new :
sicians Recommend Castoria
from Captain Chandler, that officer
called to a sergeant—as black as the
shades-of night—and told him to ar-
range a detail o take the wood to our
OH
That's
clean, c
perishal
di t ion
All hou
of its r
being s
not? w
of patro
write or
eur serv
Acts best on
the kidneys
and liver,
stomach and
bowels;
ROGAN * SIMMONS.
Rooms 9, 10 and 11. First National
slop, and who for the time being didn’t I a rebuked by friends of the preat-
ssceamnuchoronamittaaxserenyyeronrdent, who insist that the matter was
ders, but don’t ye think data a leetle I settled when on the night of his elec
risky thing ter do, ter carry his heah tion he declared in the most explicit
wood to dem Texas mumes?" And with manner that he should not agaln.be a
this wise precaution the sergeant sug- cgenei it is
gested that his men cany the cord candidate for the pre id J.
wood to the guard line, where the white I held| that o speculate now Hpon the
cj„Louisville, Ky. - anran Cisco,Cal. HewYork.NY.
" The genuine Syrup of Figs is for safe by all first-class
[ druggists. The full name of the company—California
k Fig Syrup Co. — is always printed on the front
V of every package. Price Fifty Cents per bottle.
For a cold glass of Lemps or Schlitz on draught and all kinds of
Bottled Beer, see
MAX DAVIS
121 EAST SIXTH STREET—OPPOSITE DRISKILL HOTEL.
Jug Trade Solicited. Both Phone, 365
; ■
\
Worms Convulsions Feverish-
at— aadLoee ofSump. '
"Sazzpaaz
/ NEWYORK.
Edit
Meridian, Miss.. Aug. 24.—A north-
bound banana train on the New Or-
leans and Northeastern was wrecked
tonight near Mozelle Station, Miss.
Particulars here are meager but it
is known that seven cars and the
caboose, as well as the fruit, will be a
complete loss. It is not known
whether anyone was killed or injured.
their homo.
Gin Fire From Exploding Globe.
Victoria, Texas, Aug. 24 —A fire in
Fox's gin started in a peculiar way,
but was quickly extinguished, caus-
ing a loss of about 112. An electric
light globe in-the lint room was struck
by one of the workmen and exploded,
the current in the wire setting Are t°
the old lint on the socket and wire and
in a flash the fire had reached the
rafters overhead, where it was put out
before 1 much damage was ] done.
Snakes Are Numerous.
Waco, Aug. 24-An unusually large
number of snakes, some of them quite
poisonous, have been killed right in the
city in the past few months. A few
persons have been bitten, also. It is bet
ileved that one cause of this is that
weeds have grown more rapidly than
ordinary this summer. owing to con:
tinuous rains. The city has cut down
weeds and so have individuals, but m
spite of this they have grown rapidly.
The weeds afforded a harboring place
for snakes.
\8y
< wgt
7 --30335(5
2022
Ke
nge
squad of the old First United States
to have made th© Twenty-fifth Infan-
try soldiers at Fort Brown behave
themselves like trained dogs.”
Ville.
Dry Dock Dewoy in Use.
Washington, Aug. 54—The navy de-
partment has been intormed that the
dry dock Dewey was utilised for the
nrst time when the army transport
Mead was docked.
" • "Ma
agor,, "J
T " 2har‘
Dr. B. Halstend Scott, of Chicago, Ils., saya: “I have prescribed your
castoria often for infants during my practico, and find it very satisfactory:
Dr. wiiam Belmdbt, of Cleveland, Ohio, saya: "Your Castoria standa
nrst In its Clue in my thirty years of practico I can say I never have
found anything that so filled ths place."
Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y„ says: “I have used your Castoria and
found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for
many years. The formula is excellent."
Dr. R. J. Eamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: “I prescribe your Castorla
extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children a
troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always
see that my patlente got Fletcher’S."
Dr. Wm. J. McCrenn, of Omaha, Neb., says: “As the father of thirteen
children I eertainly know something about your great medicine, and asido
from my own family oxperience I have in my years of practice found Cas-
toria a popular and emelent remedy in almost every home."
Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Cas-
toria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the
presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse-
ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and
believe it an excellent remedy."
Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., gays: "Physicians generally do not
prescribe proprietary preparations, but In the case of Castoria my experi-
ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an ex-
coption. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found it
to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physi-
cian who has raised a family, as 1 bare, will join me in heartiest recom-
mendation of Castoria."
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bean the Signature of
,<4
Tie IM Ton Saw Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TMS otoraun couranv. tr munnAY ornEET ««W VOSS eiv"
Mr. Roosevelt in 1908.
The discussion of Mr. Roosevelt’s
possible candidacy in 1908 will not
regiment about two or three weeks, I Sensible men must be agreed that Mr.
and during this period every time a’________- ________ ■
guard of the old First immunes expectation, the .belief, or the theory
would discharge his Springfield, you that he may again accept the republi-
could hear a volume of ’o-h, L-Or-d: can nomination is based, we presume,
rise from the camp of negroes like a upon two considerations. One is that
green bush fire smoke. Prior to the the compelling need of his party. es-
time the First United States pitched , peclally if Mr .Bryan be the democratic
its camp near the negroes the peo- i nominee, will constrain him to accept-
pie of lower New Orleans were greatly lance; the other is the impression that
frightened by the antics of the negro he s temperamentally incapable of a
soldiers, but after we camped there the voluntary renunciation of that power
negroes were as meek as the proverb- in public affairs which he has enjoyed
lal lamb. 1 and so conspicuously exercised.—New
"It would have taken just one —
Transfer Clerk at Union Depot Will
Go to Fort Worth.
Denison, Texas, Aug. 24.—A. F. Beall.1
who has been transfer clerk for the
railway mail service at the union de-
pot for the past four years,. has been
transferred to Fort Worth to take a
position in the office of Superintendent
8. M. Gaines of the railway mall ser-
vice.
Mr. Beall will be relieved at the
nnion depot tomorrow, and will then
take his annual vacation of fifteen
days, after which he will report at Fort
Worth and will be assigned to duty.
Sinee his residence here Mr- Beall
has made many friends who will re-
gret his departure. They will be
ph ased to hear of his, promotion, how-
ever. In his new positioh the pros-
pects of advancement are good, and
as Mr. Beall is one of those who take
advantage of opportunities, his friends
expect to see him mount to the top.
Joseph I. Read has been assigned to
temporary service at the union depot
transfer office.
Conviction For Embezzlement.
Beaumont, Texas, Aug. 24.—In the
Fifty-eighth district court O. M. Wad-
hams was convicted of embezzlement
and given a term in the penitentiary.
There will be no other criminal cases
tried this week.
_ <7^. j, ,,e2 blades and then, tearing out.
Oyster Bay, N: Y., Aug. 24Presi* l.na A• •n heen ne the
dent Roosevelt today announced his
endorsement of the Carnegie spelling
reform movement when he Issued or-
ders to the public printer that here-
after all messages from the president
and other public documents emanating
from the white house should be printed
in accordance with the reform.
The correspondence of the president
will also be spelled in the new style,
yhaid the ordr to the printer today
80 not contemplate any immediate
en-s
1ates the food: Tip——It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil.
It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio
and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Batemans Drops, Godfrey‘8
Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how-
ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day
for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. lo
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by
regulating the system-not by stupefying it—and our, readers are entitled to
the information--Hall‘s Journal of Health.
Letters from Prominent Physicians
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
Trainmen Hurt.
Strawn, Texas, Aug. 24.—The caboose
on an east bound train jumped the
track about twelve miles west of here
this morning. Conductor Stuart was
seriously injured and Brakeman Wels-
ler badly bruised. The cause of the
accident is not known.
I
. Texas, Aug.
of Washite rivr in the'
San Antonio, Aug. 24.—Frank Leit-
ner, a well known citizen of San An-
tonio and prominent in soclalistic cir-
cles, is dead, aged 49 years. Ho had
been in III health for the" past year.
He is survived by a widow, two sons,
Joseph and Frank Leitner, and a
brother,/Albert Leitner. The deceased
always took an active interest in so-
cialism and has delivered a number of
lectures on the subject and has also
defended the cause of socialism In a
number of public debates. Ho held a
position as city salesman for the Good-
man Grocery company and was well
known among traveling men over the
...... ...v ....... ion of fellow physi-
cians to I is path nt's queer condition.
Sherman, Texas, Aug. 24.—A mes-
sago was received here yesterday
morning by Mrs. J. A. Domke. Inform-
ing tier of a serious uocident Rhat
happened to her son, Buren Howland,
at Gainesville, Tho young man, 21
years of ago, was employed in a
butcher shop. Ho was hanging meat
f from a ladder and was a considerable
1 stance from th floor when ho fell |
‘ from the ladder. As he fell ho was
caught by one of the large hooks used
for holding meat. The hook first
caught him between the shoulder
ades and then, tearing out, caught
his head at the base of tho brain.
Tho skull was fractured and young
Howland is in a raving delirium. His
mother and brother left for Gaines-
A Painter’s Fame.
Mr. Belt has left one of his famous
Reynolds pictures, "Mrs, Boon© and
Her Daughter,” to Germany. The other
"Lady Cockburn and Her Daughters,”
he gives to the National gallery. This
we believe is the great picture which
drew from Reynolds the boast that he
would go down to posterity on the
hem of Lady Corkburn's gown.—Lon-
don Saturday Review.
said. The
Pictures That “Pay,”
The late Mr. Woods, for over half a
century associate*! with the great firm
of Christie's, always Insisted that he
was not a collector. He simply bought
a picture now and then because he
liked It or because' he happened to have
a blank space on one of his walls.
The result is that he scarcely ever
made a mistake.
In 1859 he bought a Romney head
of Lady Hamilton for £10, which now
realized 300 guineas; In the sixties he
gave £6 16s for a Drouals portrait of
Madame de Pompadour, and this now
sold for 170 guineas; 25s for a T. do
Keyser, portrait of a lady, which now
sold for 100 guineas, and 7s for a pair
of vases of flowers by Baptiste, whigh
sold for 54 guineas. In the seventies
he gave 26 guineas for Reechey's por-
trait of I July Whitbread, which now
realized 520 guineas: 50 guineas for
Reynolds' portrait of Mrs. Robinson—a
version of the picture in the Wallace
collection—and It has now realized 480
guineas, and so forth. But his great-
est triumphs were Hoppner’s portrait
of Lady Waldegrave, which he acquired
in 1881 for £23. as against 6000
guineas it brought at his sale, and .
Lawrence’s Miss Emily C: Ogilvie,
which cost about 200 guineas and now
sold for 3000 guineas.
The gentleman whose five pictured
were sold at Christie’s on June 30, and
included Turner’s "Rape of Europa,""
was also not a picture collector In the
usual sense of the word. He bought
a picture just now and then, at un- .
extravagant prices, hut with exceed-
ingly good taste and, apart from any
consideration of future profit: the five
pictures, which cost him £ 1685 ($8425),
brought £8547 ($42,735). to say noth-
ing of the Intellectual enjoyment of
possessing them for about thirty years,
— London National Review.
camp.
" 'Boss,’ said this
looked as serious as
tory has v iped out Peck Jake, one of
the beat known lakes to sportsmen
in the southern part of the territory.
The river cut into the1 lake and drained
it. Peck lake was about a mile long
and a quarter of a mile wide. It was
formed by an overflow of the .Washita
a number of years ago and was filled
with fine fish.
reform in the spelling of official docu-
ments from the legislative departments
Force of Habit.
“That new farm hand of yours use
to be a bookkeeper.”
"How do you know?”
"Everv time he stops work for N
minute he tries to put the pitchfork
behind his ear.”—Translated for Tales
from "Fliegende Blatter.”
“Logger” in Commissiona
_______ ____________... _ _________ Orange, Texas, Aug. 24.The boat
in Washington, it’is regarded aw mor# "Logger" recently constructed by J ...» ..... .... ................- • -
* •* McCran and H. L. Montanden, has said that it has now become blacker
sailed for Galveston and will ply be-
tween that point and points on the
Brazos river as a freight and transt
portatfon boat. The vessel is neatly
Constructed and will serve the pur-
pose well for which It was construct-
ed. The families of Messrs. McCran
and Montanden will make the boat
A BIT OF HISTORY. I Strange Indian Remedies.
____ I Great virtues are ascribed to th©
How One Negro Regiment Behaved inclaws and horns of certain, animal
’ . I Tigers claws are in great demand witn
New orleans the common people. Ono or two claws
Fort Worth, Texas,Aug. 24.—"What may poswornan darethe Rnsberuthe ror
the people of Brownsville should have tunate owner rakes a garland of
had during their troubles with the them and wears them around' ids neck,
negro soldlers was a company of theanergccnmt snmnroripotnsnanaesWali
old First United States volunteers of ings. A more curious use is found
the Spanish-American war, close at for the same substance: it is some-
hand. Then the negroes who ran amuck times made into.a powdenwhtcnted
would have never gotten their depre la- wrwoned The joints taken from the
tion hi th© newspers. said a Span-1 long and slender tail of the black
ish war veteran this morning. “At one I scorpion are supposed to keep illness
time the First United States volunteers at arm’s distance when children wear
were camped at the old race track in I them on their waist thread.
New Orleans. Colonel Vrane’s regi- | a red or swollen eye is cured by
ment of negroes was also camped on having it touched with the bolt or
this same piece of property. The tents I chain of a door. A remedy which I
of the negroes were: pitched about ahave seen applied with considerable
mile from the tents of the white sol- I effect In more than hue epileptic fit B
diers. I to place a bunch of keys in the palm
"The negroes were in camp first, and of the sufferer. I have heard it said
had a first class camp, too, thanks to I that the fit passes away as readily it
the splendid ability of olonel Crane, the keys are placed on the head. A
When we arrived on the grounds we I rather quaint remedy in the case or a
had our tents pitched before our quar- I sprained neck is to use an iron meast
termaster had arranged for fuel. I ure for a pillow.
paid a visit to Captain Chandler of tho I Hore throat is cured by spitting on
Ninth—the captains and higher offi-I red-hot iron—quite the simplest an
cers were white, while the lieutenants least expensive cure known to tn©
were negroes of that regiment—and | native doctor. Peacock’s flesh ana
made arrangements to secure noughpig’s ghee are the best medicines ror
wood to cook suppr and breakfast. acute rheumatism. ,”5
"When I had borrowed the woodacute rheumatism.—Madras Man.
o
V__
Imanis < mi DII D
Distinctly a Bor©.
Gladys (at the seashore)—Are you
having as many proposals as you had
last season?
Mayme (wearily)—Oh, yes, but
they’re all from the same man I was
engaged to last summer.—Detroit Free
Press. ___ ...___t_
Good Id©©.
Mr. Henry James' descriptions of
the cities he has visited have arousea
»u cin attehtlon that they may 76 l
translated ' into English.—Baltimore* ■
American, 3
Noise and the Law.
At a conference in the house of com-
mons on Wednesday it was decided to
draft a bill for next session giving
powers to the local authorities to deal
with street noise nuisances. We are
glad to meo that Sir Henry Primrose,
whom nobody tan accuse of faddism or
unpractical politics, is strongly In favor
of legislation. He declared at the con-
ference that no other civilized com-
munity suffered such street nuisances
as London does.
Of course there are robustious folk
who Ilk© n din all day and half the
night In the streets, as there aro oth- -
ers whoso eyes are delighted by the ad- .
vertisements of quack pills and soaps
that disfigure the fields along the rail-
way lines, or whose lungs thrive on a
yellow or black London fog. But a
strong publle opinion if forming against
these modern barbarisms. Medical men
decidedly favor the cause of quiet. Sev-
eral well known doctors took part in
the discussion on Wednesday and made
practical suggestions. Unless some-
thing is done before long we may all
have to adopt Herbert Spencer's plan
and use ear-stoppers. He used to say
that he could barricade himself abso-
lutely by this method from digpleaing
noises, chiefly the talk of bores.—Lon-
don Saturday Review.
Truex suffers little pain and the
paralysis .that followed the shock has
almst , ■ #sappeared. Dr.. Clarence
~ ' , who is attending him, has
F. K. Hippie.
Philadelphia, Aug. 24.— F. K. Hippie,
president of the Real Estate and* Trust
company and a prominent figure of thro
city, died suddenly today.
Americans at Stratford.
What promises to bo the heaviest
wave of American visitors on record
is now advancing on Stratford-on-
Avon. Hundreds of "tailor-made”
American women anti dozens of Amer-
ican men throng the ’footpaths of
Shakespeare's birthplace dolly.
"I find the latest type of American
visitor is a vast improvement on the
old,” said a gentleman connected with
th© Shakespeare's Birthplace trust ves-
terday. "‘For the most part they are
cultured ' people who suffer no delu-
sions as to the possibilities of the 'al-
mighty dollar’ purchasing national rel-
ics. It is years sine© an American
was caught red-handed carving a chip
from a door in Shakespeare's cottage.
We still get some occasionally who dis-
play emotion and kiss tho furniture,
but the type of visitor represented by
th© dear old American • lady who. find-
ing it impossible to bui a relic of
Shakespeare's, rubbed her;-black kid
gloves on the flpor of the room where
the poet mas born, saying: ‘At leant
I will take this dust with me/ comes to
us no longer.’*—London Mall.
Unci© Sam’s Soldier's.
According to George B. Winter, the
London military tailor, who was en-
gaged by the United States govern-
ment to reorganise the uniform? of the
. American anny, that army "contains
th© pick of American manhood. The
soldiers are as hard as nails, lean and
muscular. They are indeed a magnin-
rent iut or ntnietes and are cupavie o
ntanding any amount of hardship."-
London Mail,
I
>
Atlantic City, N. J., Aug. 24.—Phy-
sicians who have been marveling I
. th© wonderful escape of William W.
Treux. a blacksmith, who survived be-
ing struck by lightning in his boat
during a storm, nr© still more mys-
aeti • Atekay.Say, four ree. iryenea don’t i irvuuimrznne
tot® 4 quit br#g%5 around flat yyse knows i “Say, Mister, ter decide a bet, now
■otter get mo pletur m© I'll bleak ©very pan© of glans la yer / often does yousejeat a nyi l six.
. facol Beet teen ties and Johnnle about tenl"
■
_____-- —:---
siaf‛aRr*T.25‛rcdi/Ny8t6?*" "
.N
from eloppin’ over into th© ©xy.”
Oil Rebate Indictments.
Jamestown, N. Y., Aug. 24.—The
federal grand jury for the western dis-
trict of New York returned indict-
ments today against the Standard Oil
company and the New York Central
Railroad company charging violation
of the Interstate law in giving and
accepting special rates in the ship-
ment of oil.
San Antonio# Texas. Aug 24.—On
a charge of swindling. Constable Stev-
ens has placed K. L. Rayland, who is
connected with a ticket brokerage
concern doing business here. This is
ths first gun fired in the renewal of the
war on ticket scalpers. The com-
plainant in the swindling case is EU*
nora Keys, a negro girl, who claims
that several days ago shA bought a
ticket to St. Louis from Ragland, pay-
ing him 320. She haV not received the
ticket, she said, and was worrying be-
cause she was summoned to St. Iouis
by the illness of a relative. The con-
stable arranged to be. present when the
girl called for her ticket and it was
given to her. He then took the ticket
to the conductor of the train at the
Southern Pacific depot and the con-
ductor told him the ticket was E i
good. The girl claims that she de-
manded that the money bo refunded
and that Ragland refused to do so.
t
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Ed. 1 Saturday, August 25, 1906, newspaper, August 25, 1906; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1455642/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .