Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Ed. 1 Saturday, August 30, 1919 Page: 3 of 6
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LARGEST CIRCULATION IN CENTRAL
RAL TEXAE
KING of the KHYBER RIFLES
(Continuea From Yemterday.)
informal
he
5
vest.
Labor
wake.
in lmnaginatii
Day
YOUR LAST CHANCE
nwi
Unit
roes
ited States army during the war;
.:.8502
million
ol hair that conjure u
university
cam* out into th* starlight to
STORE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY
and pick hia way reeling with
Governor
day
(Continued Tomorrow )
lan tie City and other eastern points.
mc
■as
thia week by Mrs. N. O Breniser.
80XG.
King
in
his
the tent pegs. King holding
-=2
J. M F) tap a trick and
M. Fitz-
X shall
reaming through the twilight
volume of bust
The first, the imperative duty of this country,
have taken up this question with ardor.
fuel administrator.
"•ff"
"All
waiting
been con
k la just begun
stampeded by the President’s plea for
from the conference the Senators will not be
The Digest” are:
A
e"
How the Consumer Boosts Prices
Rusian Salad Dresing.
►
or
him
Many Inttmting Illuttratione, including Cartoons
Every issue contains the announcements of America’s great
complete.
hold
gh
bel
Ing what she wm almost
few compantes are to
called "oil field business, ’ and these
She might
Sale To-day—All News-dealers—10 Cents
t,
ah= ' 21
Must We Ratify Treaty
To Save the World?
Austin American’s
Helpful Recipe
Get you a cool Suit at a bargain. All Palm Beach
Suita, Cool Cloth, Dixie Weaves, Worsteds—in plain,
fancy and dark patterns—
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
IN DEMAND ALL
OVER THE WORLD
self alive behind hert
He rather thought she
and
bend
$10.00
$12.50
$15.00
$20.00
$25.00
$30.00
fighting
second
among
ales
NERARY
D;TEXAS
T INCLUDED
White Palm Beach Pants....
White Hats................
and
ly
another
together
do
brou
yawn
veari-
Labor
Monday-
inwpeetion
emption,
recelved i
Th urday.
Austin American’s
Morning Laugh
X shall not mee the Rhadowa:
I shall not feel the rain;
prove
that
sure-
th*
Austin American’s
Society News
instant
life
ould dare
thought
the
an
be-
an
DR SALE
IN SHIPMENrS
Mra. J. Webb and son of Fan An-
ten Io are in Austin at the Driskill.
share" the desires of those who want a Peace League, but "
" but rather defeat, for them in this murky covenant."
Other articles of compelling interest in this number of
thoughts, and in a second upset ev-
ery argument!
Austin American’s
Poet s Corner
Steel Extraordinary
Our Inflexible Brains
Blimp Photography
The Actors’ Strike
Plight of the Y ounger British Novelist
German intellectuals Speak Up
Cardinal Mercier Explains the Pope’s
Attitude
Why the Jews Are Not Missionaries
Cooperative Religious Instruction
News of Finance and Commerce
Officials See In Colored Request
Move Toward Jim Crow
Extinction.
for
they
At the now famous White House conference with the Committee on Foreign
Relations President Wilson emphasized the moral obligation resting upon the Senate to
ratify the Peace Treaty as it stands.
THE LITERARY DIGEST of August 30th cites numerous leading newspapers which
ot
ex-
Ask your deaie-4
for your favorite mize
Three
dreasing
Two 1
One 1
Safe
Milk
For Infants
& Invalids
N.Ceektng
A Nutritious Diet for All Agee
Quick Lunch at Home or Office
Avoid Imitations and Substitutes
LOOK
MU WEIGHTS
Suits....
Suits....
Suits....
Suits....
Suite....
Suits____
Barker’s Bakery
Now Open
Take Home a Loaf.
$04 Congress Ave.
NEW UKAI NFELS TRirs
SCHEDULE ANXOUNCED
r hl* strength
a maman’s
IM GERMAN FAMILIES
SEEK HOMES IN TEXAS.
TEXAS COAL SHORTAGE
PREDICTED BY WILEY
AUSTIN MAN IS NAMED
ON “DEMOCRAT’ BOARD
Ring
And di
Mil their grain,
of the deAlers.
NEW AUSTIN DWELLING
FOR BLANCO STREET
Hobby
speech
TEXAS OIL LAND DISPlTE
IS NOT YET SEITLED
TEXAS GOVERNOR’S SPEECH
GEIS AUSTIN COMMENT
dora The Ranrnr gnve a moan and
let th* knifo fall.
Flor de
T"E CigARg
The High Cost of Strikes
Passing of the War Labor Board
Mexico’s Latest Bid for Attention
Mr. Ford and His Six Cent Verdict
Canada’s New Liberal Leader
Proposed Dominion of Ireland
Siberian Side-lights on the Omsk Government
A European Coal Famine
The Education of the Semisighted
Dusty Fields
Current Poetry '
( iterry Digest
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK ’
An Illuminating Demonstration That the Buying Public’s Demand for Silk Shirts, Jewelry, Musical Instru-
ments, and Other Expensive Luxuries is At Least Partly Responsible for the Soaring Coat of Living
By TALBOT MUNDY
Copyrigh:
MALLORY HATS
The Hat with the Union Label and of Highest Quality
$4.50, $5 and $6
Mn. R D Whitten of Waco is a
guest in Austin of her mother, Mrs.
W. I.. Chapman, and daughter.
the signal corp*,
rent immedlately,
veraeas replace-
leads. Md
r service In mJ
Siberia replace
Presidio. San
STEBBINS & JAMES
The Home of Hart Senaffner & Marx Clothes
Sity and Little
o Farther
August 30th Number on
"I7:52
LABOR
DAY
nd it will
Flor de
MELBA
The Cigar Supreme
At the price FLOR DC MELBA, is better bigger
and more pleasing than any mild Havana cigar
144 Pages-MOTOR ISSUE-August 30th
in the motor world the advertising news service of The Digest is most
If gear deeler canr you. ut.
1. LEWIS CIOAR MFO CO. Newerk, N.J.
Largesr independent Coger Feclor in the World
Mr. and Mrs. John B Taylor and
their daughter, Mra. M. M. Martin,
cntertained a number ef frienda
Thursday evening at their home. 1411
in Austin on
Erection of
the goods re-
sbtpment hasg
purchasers.
That oeth not rise or set
Haply I may remember,
And haply may forget.
DETACHMENT IN AUSTIN
TO SECURE RECRUITS
Mr. Fitzpatriek was a member of
the Thirty-fifth legisiature, but re-
signed to enter the army.
tablespoonfuls olive oil.
tablespoonful Bunkist lemon
This requirement of a certificate
of exemption or inspection is waived
upon meats or meat products going
to countries other than those named.
TEXAS PErROLEUM RATES
MAY EE INERHASED
some of us see no hope,
CORONA or lAc
SELECTOS SIZE IV Straight
OTHER SZEs DIFFERENr PRICES
nut of
, Mrs. Theo Hillyer returned to Aus-
tin Friday from a trip to Colorado
and Kansas City.
we all respect and
freshman, having
Dress
Up
For
companies who do write this busi-
ness are said to find it quite unsat-
isfactor) .
consider an application filed by all
insurance companies writing oil and
petroleum business in rexas for new
rates and schedules to apply to such
risks.
Under present circumstances very
STAR PROGRESSIVE
TOO “PROGRESSIVE"
CHARTER DENIED
■ servtce in the
rise corps will
year and others
--
exactly.* said
Bishop Patridge is a collector of
anecdotes about ministers, and he
said the other day:
"I once asked a minister how he
art of
Wilmot
joined
i the diapatehing
baser* l* on at
e owing to the
Antonio depot
upples falling
helped put i had got through a certain service.
They spent the greater
the summer with Mrs. E. P.
certificate of
the consumers
Garden sir—1. with
porch dance.
The house was
Ail of another day and part of an-
other night he tolled among the sick,
wondering when a menage would
I come back it was nearly midnight
when he bandaged his lent patient
manufacturers and that of August 30th is particularly rich in its quota of
Truck, Tractor, Trailer, and Motor Car advertisements. Many new acces-
sories and conveniences are described and, if you are a truck or motor
car owner, you can not afford to miss this issue.
his back straight and
lief might be justifiable, nut as
exnlnnation It failed to sntisy..
commission will
Wednesday, Oct.
fire insurance
a conference
is to make a
in Fort Worth
I not surprise
service in the
A shortage of coal in Texas during
the winter months is predicted by
Wiley Blair, former Texaa federal
■It was
, arranged passage to this country and
• will find their way to frienda in
for the cold weather to lay in their
supply of coal
"It is plain that cohgestion will
result. both at th* mines and on
the railroads—with no coal for th*
public."
In that same
not hear the nightingale
on. as If in pain;
been one of th* honor graduates at
th* Austin High school th* past
June.
belong to the state and that severat
million may be secured thore during
"rito "hat is jihe nre of the field
next Wednesday,
ke his first ad-
olumbus, Ohio.
announced Fri-
ouse.
M Will be deliv-
s Thursday eve-
resecs will be as)
tablespoonfuls mayonnaise
Mrs. Sully Roberdeat and little
In Atlantic City, who
ness back to th* mullah's ear* He
had given his bag of medicines and
implements to a man to carry ahead
of him and had gone perhaps ten
paces into the dark when a strong
hand gripped him by the wirst.
"Hush!" Mid a voice that seemed
fam i Bar.
He turned swiftly and looked
straight into the eyes of the Rangar
Rewa Qunga!
st Friday and
i these ordered
come
m* to the depot
sfactory answer
Al officials he
be forthcoming
AUSTIN'S ALWAYS BEST NEWSPAPER
ing vessel, without a certificate
l^non-'He^ )
4Ra /
AUSITN AMERICAN, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST M, ISIS.
recruiting office
nmediate service,
and in organiza-
n bordrr la the
• operator*, re-
ators and tele-
daughter. Virginia Roberdeau, i
turned to Austin Saturday from
decorated with
it must have been aAtiafactory. In-
as much as I wasn't Asked to come
men are by no
it vf the world’
scale* they hav^
the criterion by.
the mullah ngalnst her
believe that with him
wav the mullah would
Ton million people want to migrate
to the United States from the debt
ridden countries of Europe and about
150 families want to come to Texas
from Germany, is the information
which has come to Texas state of-
ficials from a former resident of
Texas, now in the country of the
late' enemy.
A still larger number of French
colonists are said already to have
would seek vengennee on
t reassurance. Sha would dare
trip which included a stay in At-
Mrs. J. A. Smylie and children of
San Antonio and Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Porter and eon spent Tuesday in
Austin with the family of W. I.
Eyre*, coming through the country
in their car.
Texas if arrangements can be made
to ears for their needs as to homes
and lands and employment.
Texas has many waste areas that
would appear as the richest of farm-
ing lands to many of those people—-
and with the right sort of encour-
agement, thousands of them eould
be attracted here to make their
homes
The state of Texas, through Acting
Secretary of State C. D. Mims, has
refused to grant a charter to negro
residents of Austin, Greenville, and
other Texas cities for an organiza-
tion to be known as the Star Pro-
gressive aasociation.
The acting secretary of state held
that so many different objects are
included in the purposes of the
planned association that under the
Texas laws he is not authorised to
file such a charter.
Information is that this organisa-
tion was to be composed largely of
Sunday round trip excursion rates
to New Braunfels from Austin are
$1.54, including war tax, according
to nnnouncement made by W. R.
Smith, district freight and passenger
[agent, on Thursday
The rates are effective Aug. 11
and continue through the month of
September.
The schedule of trains is:
Missouri, Kansas A Texas, 4:40 a.
m., 5:06a m and 1:30 p. m
International & Great Northern.
:10 a. m.
BERIA
Hr BY ARMY
were down
Perhaps she saw her own peril
Perhaps she contemplated —gosh!
what a contingency! - perhaps she
« ohtemplated bolting into India with
a story of her own. and leaving the
mullah to his own devices! In such
n case, beforo going eh* would very
likely try to have the one man j
stabbed who could give her away
most completely. In fact, would sh*
Care escape into India and leave him.
Recruits for the 4th field battery
and other branches of the service
are sought by Lieutenant Resin P
Johnson of the medical corps. 4th
field artillery, and a party of three
enlisted mnen, Malcolm Meed, Battery
C, Paul MeDonald, and Harry Smith,
of the medical department of the 4th
battery, who arrived in Austin Thurs-
day to conduct a campaign.
Enlistments are for one year
Th* men can be seen at the army
recruiting station. Sixth and Congress
avenue.
The Texas state attorney general
will probably make no decision re-
garding the claim of a vacanacy in
the Liberty county oil field until
actual examination of the ground
with a surveyor.
There is too much at stake, say
Texas officials, for any snap judg-
ment when It is considered that al
ready several hundred thousand dol-
lars worth of oil have been taken
from the strip which is asserted to
4 Mias Dorothy Evans left San An-
ton in yesterday for Albany, Ala., to
be the guest of Miss Madge Bullard.
Mias Evans and Miss Bullard will
return to Austin about the middle of
September. In time for the opening
of the University of Texas, which
they will attend this year.
Dr T. Denson of Cameron, Milam
county, who is in Austin at the
Driskill, is here on businees connected
with the state health department.
urgency.” Senator Lodge hints at delays in his statement that
Th* Texas state
1. to take up and
It was plain that the moment he
had returned from his message to
the Khyber the Hangar had been
sent on this new murerous mission
if Yasmini had told the truth a let-
ter had gone into India dree ri King
him. King. ae a traitor, and from
her point of view that might be
supposed to cut the very ground
away from under his feet.
Then why so much trouble to have
him killed? Either Rewa (lung* had
never taken the first letter or—and {
this seemed more probableYasmint
had never believed the letter would
be treated seriously by the authori-
lies, and had only sent it in the
hope of footing him and undermin-
ing his determination. In that case,
especially supposing her to have re
elvd his ultimatum on the mullah s
behalf before sending Rewa Gunga
with the dagger. she must consider
juice
One tablespoonful tomato catsup
One tablespoonful chopped green
pepper.
Two drops Tabasco sauce.
Add all the ingredients in order
and very slowly to mayonnaise dress-
ing, stirring constantly.
MEAT SHIPMENT STOPPED
TO CERTAIN COUNTRIES
University of Texas free bulletins
have been sent to Mexico, twain,
Portugal, England. the West Indies.
France, Egypt and India within the
last week.
These buplletins were all asked for
by people in these countries.
The bulletin by Professors F E.
Glesecke and « P. Finch on The
Properties of Dense Concrete as Do- I
termined by the Relative Quality of I
Cement. has had perhaps the most i
extended circulation, having gon*
within the week to th* West Indies.
Portugal, Spain. Egypt and India.
"Play and Athleties"" also is in
great demand, not only having a very
wide circulation in all parts of Amer-
ica, but in France and India.
The catalog of the university has
been requested in England and Mex-
ico this week, and from Mexico has
come a request also for the model
oil “and gas contract.
Th* bulletins on various phase* I
of geology, issued by the Bureau of
Eeonomie Geology ald Technology, |
have also proved among the most
popular issued by the university.
Th* head librarian of the L.os
Angeles public library wrote this
week that the bound files of the va-
rious bulletins on geology, issued by
the university were in such great do- l
mand in his library that he needed
another bound file of the bulletins.
Miss Anne Hill is the bulletin libra-
rian of the university, and F. W
Graff is chairman of th* publica-
tions committee.
Don’t take chances with impure
drinking water. Drink Polar Distilled.
McMamare Bros. Phone 1997.—Adv.
two-story frame
dwelling place valued at $2000 begins
soon for F J. Compte at >11 Blanco
street, who took out a building per-
mit in the offiee of City Collector
Fred Sterzing Thursday afternoon
W B Abadie. Jr. SOS East First
street, will soon begin the construc-
tion of a small one-story frame build-
ing which will cost 1100
W. A Aiff begins the construction
of a wood and glass greenhouse at
1010 East Nineteenth street, which
will cost him nearly $100.
Reeling from fatigue (he felt like
a man who had been racked, for
the Rangar s strength was nearly un-
believable). he started toward where
the mullah eat glowering in the
cave mouth. Me found the man who
had carried his bag asleep at the
foot ef the ramp, and taking the
bag away from him, let him lie
there And it took him five min-
utes to drag his hurt weary bones
up the ramp, for the fight had taken
more out of him than he had guessed
at firt.
The mullah glared at him but
let him by without a word. It was
by the fir* at the back of the cave,
whero he stooped to dip water from
the mullah's enormous crock that
the next disturbing factor came to
iight. Ho kicked a brand into the
fire nd the flame looped its light
sbonc. on a yard and a half of ex-
qulsitely fine hair, like spun gold,
that caressed his shoulder and de-
scended down one arm. One thread
shadow among shadows
King got up and feit himself all
over, fur th*) had fought on stony
ground and he was bruised But I
bruines faded into nothing, and wear
inena >a well, as his mind began to
dweil on the new complication to
hla problem
cording to information
the Austin poetoffice
many if he shall then give an out-
line of his future plans, either as to
his candidacy for governor or a» a
candidate for private citizenship.
-----e ms e
PROBLEMS OF COTTON
ARE UP IN AUSTIN
Colonel R. M. Mixon, manager of
the American Cotton Association, will
be in Austin this Saturday to dis-
cus* cotton problems.
Mr. Mixon is now in north Texas,
where he is making plans for Texas
organizing of his association.
‘The politician who seeks to in-
vad* the ranks of the American Cot-
ton Association to ply his vocation
is going to be swatted soundly," says
Mr Mixon
"We will devote this organization
to the emancipation of the women
and children of the south's cotton
farms by establishing cotton pro-
duction on a cost of production .plus
reasonable profit basis."
be aft Hid? U so her game was loot
already'
bright colored sennias aad retreesh-
meats of pink and white lee cream
and cake were served out of doors.
Dancing to a Victrola was enjoyed
on the porch by the following
Mr and Mrs. George Norvell.
Sam Hargraves
Billie Carston.
Rad Platt.
Mra. Lee
Mrs. Mathis.
Mr* Martin.
Miss Louis* Randick.
Miss Morley.
Miss Hattie Mangelsdorf.
Miss Genevieve Quinn.
Mr MeDonald.
Carey Taylor.
Johnnie Butler.
Mr. Stone.
Dr. and Mrs. KB lie Campbell and
children are enjoying a vacation at
Corpus Christi and will return to
Austin next month in time for the
opening of the university.
Miss Alics Campbell will enter the
And the armv veterans, who had
been converted by King's talk of par-
dons. almost reconverted by the ser-
mon. shook their heads at the talk
of taking Khinjan. Why waste time
trying to do what never had been
done, with her to reckon against,
when a place in the sun was waiting
for them down in India, to say noth-
ing of the hope of pardons and clean
living for a while? They shook their
heads and combed their beards and
eyed one another aidewise in a way
the "Hills" understand.
That night, while the mullah glow-
ered over th* camp lke a great old
owl. with leaping firelight reflected
in his eyes, the thousands under the
akin tents argued, so that the night
was all noise. But King slept.
Meat or meat products, except for
personal use or for the ship's store,
cannot be bent to Argentina. Peru.
Mexico, the French Antilles, or any
European country by steam or sall-
Louts: Beptember
D.; September 6
a with addresa
6, September 8,5
maha. Nob , and
Houx City. 8. D ;
pul and Minne-
0. Bismarck. N.
Forenoon add res*
mi ng address in
ember 12, fore-
r d'Alene, Idaho.,
ess in Spokane,
11 and 14. Ta-
address is Seat
September 154
mber IT and 184
ember 1*. after-
San Diego; Sep-)
oa Angeles; Sep-,
Nev; Septemberj
eptember 14. late
Cheyenne. Wyo
in Denver: Sep-
adress in Den-
ddress in Pueblo,
forenoon addrssof
ening address in
September 27,
mi in lattle Roek.
ess in Memphis:
). Louisville.
"How did you get hereT* he asked
in English.
"Any fool could learn th* pass-
word into this camp. Como over
here, sahib. I bring word from
her "
Th* ground was erise-crossed like
a man's palm by the shadows of
tent ropes
The Hangar led him to where the
tent* were forty feet apart and non*
was likely to overhear them. There
he turned Bke a flash.
"Rhe sends you this?" he hissed.
fully uneasy, and yet brought a
thrtU with it. la all eastern lands,
love scorned takas to the dagger Me
had half believed her when sb*
swore sb* loved him!
The man wno could imagine him-
•elf loved by Yasmini and not be
thrilled to his cor* would ba inhu-
man. whatever reason and caution
and caste and creed might whisper
If Hews Gunga had been near
enough to her and intimate enough
with her not only to become sceted
with her unmistakable perfume but
even to get her hair on his person,
then gone was all imagination of
lied from first to last! Then she had
lied from first t olast! Then she had
tried to make him love her that she
might use him. and finding she had
failed, she had sent her true love
with the dagger to make an end!
In a moment he imagined a whole
picture, as it might ahve been in a
crystal, of himselt trapped and made
to don the Roman's armor and
forced to pose to th* savage "Hills"*
—or fooled into them—-as her lover,
while Hewa Gunga lurked behind
the scenee and waited for the har-
vest in the end. And what kind of
harvest ?
ihe utla Amerisaa.
Aug. 29.--Presl-
tsit thirty cities
the country In/
peace treaty and
Washington un-
Among Austin politicians Friday
th* speech of Governor Hobby In
Van Horn Thursday afternoon, was
the principal item of conversation.
Comments were freely made on the
governor's reference to the new party
formed recently at Fort Worth, and
it was predicted by many that the
Van Horn speech ia but the prelude
to an announcement for governor by
the preaent executive.
promised them they should all be
free of Khinjan caves within a day
or two, to come and go and live
there at their pleasure Mo prom-
ised them they should leave their
wives and children and belongings
safe in the caves while they them-
selves went down to plunder India.
He overlooked the fact that Khinjan
caves foi centuries had been a secret
to be spoken of in whispers, and that
prospect of Its violation came to
them as a shock.
Half of them did not belleve him.
Such a thing was impossible, and if
he were lying as to one point, why
not as to all the others, too
‛s sake drink
lor. McNamara
easier prey for her And
patrick of Wsco
businecs.
least dangerous Could she
E Cartledge of Austin was notified
Friday of his appointment as a mem-
ber of the "old-line democratic ad-
visory committee."
The appointment was made by
Charles F Greenwood of Dallas,
chairman of the board
Mr Cartledge is exported to at-
tend the meeting of the committee
in Dallns this Saturday morning
Campaign plans will be discussed
at the Dallas session.
Monday being Labor Day the
Iadles" Auxiliary of the First Baptist
church will meet Tuesday afternoon.
By Christian Georginia Ronsetti.
When I am dead, my dearest.
Ring no sad eong- for me;
Plant thou no rose at my head.
No shady eyprees tree;
Be the green grass above ms
With showers and dewdrops wet;
And if thou wilt, remember.
And if thou wilt, forget.
Fred E. Rightor and family
motored from Austin to San Antonio
Thursday to spend several days.
soothing because over half the con- ...
gregation went to sleep It was It appears orders for coal have
moving becnnne half of the other not been placed during the summer
half left before I was through And
mullal before doing anything else
Then wry the dagger for himselft
Rhe mus believe him in league with
Jerhape the jealousy
ene m in his efforts, foi
cnme hark to him AS
And because jealousy is poison King
did the wrong thing then. He
oun ei ■ n the knife instead of on
| i ► He eculd have ques-
l knelt on him and p^r-
1 । haps forced explanationn from him.
says the Jersey City Journal, is to make the Treaty effective and then “to join the other
civilized countries of the globe in an honest effort to make peace lasting," and the
Philadelphia Inquirer maintains that America "can never return to a sane basis until the
Peace Treaty is disposed of and actual peace is brought about.” The opposition view is
voiced by the Hartford Courant, which feels that while "benefit all round should result
He answered grirmy:
" "Well, bishop th* nervice x
soothing, moving and satisfactory,’
“ ‘Yes,’ I said a little puzzled.
sad that the real purpose of it is
to secure social equality.
It is said th* organisation was
planned in France, where the negro
soldiers enjoyed social equality of all
kinds, and where they determined
to secure such equality in the United
States upon their return.
Th* charter contains no hint of
this real purpose behind the move-
ment.
This is not the same organisation
which sent John R. Shillady to Aus-
tin and a beating at the hands of
officers recently: but that and other
charters have been refused on like
ground*—that they are contrary to
the interests of Texas and Texas peo-
ple.
Judge Mims says the negro news-
papers of the state are evidence of
a strong effort to alter the statues
of the negro and to do away with all
Jim Crow laws in this state.
More, he needed them. So
th* Rangar’s wrist with both hands
and struggling to break it. and the
Hangar striving for another stroke
The dagger he held had missed
* King’s ribs by so little that his
sktn yet tingled from its touch. It
was a dagger with bronze blade and
a gold hilt—-her dagger it was
her perfume in th* alr.
They rolled over and* over, breath-
ing hard King wanted to think
before he gave an alarm, and he
could not think with that seent in
hia nontrils and creeping into his
Iungs Even in th* strem of fight-
ing he wondered how how the Ran-
gar s clothe* and turban had come
to be Arenche in It He admitted
to himself nfterwar that it was
nothing elee than jealousy that sug-
resten to him to make th* Rangar
prisoner and hand him over to th*
mullah
That would have been a ridiculous
thine to do for it would have forced
his own betrnynl to th* mullah. Rut
as if the Rangar had read his mind
he suddenly redoubled his efforts
and Kinr wenry to the point ofslek-
hnd to redouble his own or die
Hur with a sudden swift effort like : again.' "—Loe Angeles Times.
A stakes Hangar freed himself and! — e <* ■ ----—
was up and gone before King could ; ______
struggle to hl* feet gon* like a " TTT
There wan an alternative, the very
| •’ ght of "hieh made film fggr
anything And that
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Cressey, Kendall B. Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Ed. 1 Saturday, August 30, 1919, newspaper, August 30, 1919; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1465098/m1/3/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .