Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / April 26, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 Site Astamlle (fmvettp Nemt THE ASSOCIATED LAST EDITION 4:00 P. M. Weather Vartmat: Partly cloudy; Hhowcrs; light front PRESS DISPATCHES V0L.XV. NO. 66 ASHEVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 26, 1910. 3c PER COPY G0.yUGHESNAMED FORShx REME COURT He Is Chosen by Mr. Taft Succeed Justice Brewer, and Announces His Acceptance. to WILL NOT CHANGE JOBS UNTIL IN NEXT OCTOBER general Opinion U It Eliminates Him from Fall Political Cam paign in New York. Albany, April 26. Messages in the mnnlirrs poured Into grin i (Mcutlvo chamber today bearing con gratulations to Governor Hughes upon his nomination to a place upon the United States Supreme court. Washington. April 26. Late yes terday afternoon It was announced Out Governor Charles E. Hughes of Kew York had been offered and had accepts the nomination to succeed gfjjfjf on the Supreme Court bench. The President's Statement. The following statement was Issued from the White House: "The president by letter of April 22 tendered the appointment to the Su preme bench to succeed Justice Brew er to Governor Charles K. Hughes of New York. By letter of April 24 Governor Hushes accepted. In the president's letter to Governor Hughes he told him that as the Supreme court would adjourn its hearings this week the iierson appointed would not be called upon to discharge nny judicial functions until the opening of the October term on the second Monday In October and that therefore if Gov ernor Hughes could accept he might continue to discharge his duties as governor until his qualification on the day of the opening of the court in October next. This was a material fcctor In Governor Hughea' accept lace. Accordingly If the nomination confirmed, as there ia every' reason to believe it will be. povernor Hughes' wtatfiM Ul nut take place until October." The general opinion here Is that the appointment of Governor Hughea will eliminate him from the state cam paign thlf fall. The campaign will be on!v fairly under way at the time the Rovcrnor will be called upon to take oath of office and enter upon his Judi cial duties. About the first piestlon heard after theannouncenu .it of the selection was concerning the attitude of the new member of the court on trust prob lem.', as Involved In the dissolution suits against the standard Oil and the tobacco corporations. The general opinions were that the record of the New Yorker shower he came to the court without prejudice, having fought corporations wherever he thought them guilty of wrong doing and protested their rights where ho. considered them persecuted. t OF SWINDLERS CMes Moran Caught After Many Years of Daring Operations in "High Finance." Chicago, April 26. Charles Moran, tttr known as "Chappie" Moran, f y 1(","m inspector Stuart "C"IpKo and Inspector J. T. Cor 7u 0( I'htladelphla t0 the ocan American swindlers, is under ar " awaiting removal to Phllndel Pwe. Tin arrest WB, maa f. y but was kept secret until the ar "Y1 01 Inspector Cortclyou. "i the uurt 20 years Moran'e alleg ri J. . are "la to aggregate ZT t0 u million dollars. He never lrated ,, tt ima when "specters Moore and Elston of Chi io touna Moran he was occupying " "lntv suite of three rooms In aristocratic hi,,i -i w him and had plenty to do caring 'or his master's extensive wardrobe. M . ' " " isT . ""d 10 he known on both ' l"e Atlantic, having In his "'Her day, pled the profession of 'he big liners. Later he e!L,m,B known daring and uc wire upper. He Is said to nsv original,,.! ih. ".i.l, i ' " Bit n -iikilll'-'i wining swindle, his flrst trial of this ul. navln netted him S4S.000. ttu.H I' "la b lhPctors tlZ ,a"d rrtlyu to be In every 5w K-'ery ,n ,h" country and xotk for years to arrest on sight .,Km, ,t According to tort'-tv,,,, m .. " Iron grain " "inn mane large sums NUlnJl Yok . roviaence, New nd Phllsdelphla. rrinlned to Commit Sul.-l.le. a m,rh ?d' Apr" Arthur Ford. hhl,r , r ,hlrd '"""P1 ' "'' iToh. ;; w-k' r m '"nanum polsontnaj. iold Meat Ahmad. April laTen million was sent to England "nprlnsessln Cecil PARENTS DRUNK; BIY SMOTHERED Little One Found Dead in the This Morning Had not Been Sick. Bed A shocking story of the drunken ness of a married couple, Mr. and Mrs. Waubaugh on Tlernan avenue, and the death during the night of their thrco or four months old baby, came to the ears of the police de partment this morning and Patrol men Fred Jones and Fender Investi gating found that the report was true; that the husband was "timber drunk;" that the Wife had been drunk and was Just getting over intoxica tion; that the baby was dead. Coroner Morris was notified of the affair by Police Captain Lyda about 7:30 o'clock this morning and the coroner later in the morning went to the scene. Patrolmen Jones and Fender, acting under instructions from Capt l.yda that the coroner said no one should touch the baby or Interfere with the surroundings until the coroner nrrived, remained on duty at the place until they were forced to attend Superior court. The officers learned from the lady in whose house Waubaugh and his wile and their two children lived thnt the baby was til right last night, and that this morning it was dead. The child hail blue or purple marks on its face and idently some time during the night it was either smothered to death or crushed. The police officers sac that when they went to the house this morning they found Waubaugh limber drunk and his wife recovering from a state of intoxication. The mother this af ternoon stated to two ladies who went there in the Interest of humanity that she heard the child making some un usual noise between 4 and 5 o'clock this morning; that she got up and struck a match to see what was the matter and found the child dying. The mother aald that she was from Newport. Tenn., and expressed a de sire to return to that place at one". She desired the assistance of the Flower Mission and Associated Chari ties.. The baby thlr afternoon was bathed and robed In clean linen. THE QUESTION OF Matter of Losses Incurred Through Failure of Knight Yancey, & Co., May Lead to Litigation. Liverpool, April 26. The question of the responsibility for the local losses incurred through the failure of the Alalmma. cotton llrm of knight Yanrev & Co., will lead, it Is expect ed, to litigation with the American banks. English cotton llrms believe h American exchange buyers are responsible to the acceptors of tin bills of lading in Kngland, because, In mnnv cases, they acted as princl- oii Is and not agents. Liverpool bankers have refused to ngreo to the suggestion of the losing llrms, that they should dishonor ac ceptances. ItKSOIiI'TION TO INVKKTIGTK TIIK KXCHANGK IS Kll.bKD New York Assembly lief unci, to Draw Tomb-. MiMirc from Itgeon Imle In Committer. tltstny, April 26. The New York assembly today refused to withdraw fom the ways and means commuieo the Tombs resolution for appointment of commlsloiiB to Investigate the New York stock and Consolidated ex changes and all otner nrniw" throughout the state. Tnts sins ine meusure. vi ski i, with ritr.w ok ih: HAS I'lUmAHI.Y BEKN mi Kt Johns. N. r"., April 88. The .rol.nl.le loss of the liritun sealing vessel Aurora, with a crew of mn. was rsDorted today by 1S7 the Uanlhle. The Aurora has !.,.. n mlnalnir since April I No more definite news Is expected ..-til h. arrival of another vessel from the Ashing grounds. After Meat Trust, Nd Cotton Pool, flavnjinah. Anrll 2S. It Is suthorl i,.i,,..v stated that the purpose of convening a Cnlted States grand Jury- tomorrow Is to probe !he meat trust so-rallsd. and not to probe the cotton pool, as was first announced. Peary Kails on Uyluir Tour. New Y'ork, April II. Commander Robert K. Pearw sailed today for i lei hue tour of England snd the con ttnent. Van Home Hestgnx. Montreal. April . lr William Van Hoane has resigned as chairman of the hVsrd of directors of the RESPONSIBILITY Canadian Pi rail" i He Calls Gould-Drexel Vulgar Philadelphia Clergyman Criticises the Bride and Groom, and Stir Up Spirit of Anarchy Predicts Divorce Court Correspondence of The Gazette-News. Philadelphia, April 25. Character izing the Drexel-Gould wedding as a "vulgar and sensational" event, the Rev. Dr. George Chalmers Richmond, in his sermon yesterday In St. John's Episcopal church, pointed out the les sons he thought should be drawn from the circumstances attending the alliance of two of America's wealth iest families. "What an awful sight that was." he said, "at the Gould-Drexel wedding In Now York! Thousands of women Scrambling for a place to view the pageantry of thut sensational and vulgar affair. Crowds of women were dashed against the wedding party, fought with the police, tore one an other's hats, simply to see a very or dinary sight. "The bride was a girl who Is un known in our great world of moral upbuilding and reform, a girl who In THE BANK CASE District Attorney Holton Today Visited Clerk's Office and Went Over Case on Appeal. District Attorney A. B. Mollnp reached Ashovllle early this morning and during the day paid a visit to the office of W. S. 1 1 yams, clerk of the Culled States District and Circuit court, where he went over tile case on appeal of W. K. Breeae and J. E. Wickerson. commonly known as the "First National Hank of Ashovllle case. Mr. Holton rouna me case well made up and expressed himself as entirely satisfied. It Is understood that the defendants have also gone over the case on appeal and have placed thereon their stamp of ap proval. Recently Judge GofT of the United States Circuit court granted an exten sion of time for the case on appeal to be docketed Ml the United States Cir cuit Court of Appeals at Richmond. and this extension expires May 1. This means that unless the case, is docket ed In the higher court on or before May 1 the defendants' appeal will abate, and they will be subject to the imlirmeiit of tho lower court. The case on appeal Is ready to be trans mittcd to Richmond and of course it will reach there in amide time to be docketed by May 1. It Is said that the appeal of the case, including the printing ot the record and the transcript, etc.. will cost the defendants somewhere in the neighborhood of $1000 to S1200. The two defendants were tried before Judge Newman hero last summer a trial lasting live weeks on a charge of conspiracy to defraud the defunct First National Hank of Ashovllle. They were convicted and sentenced to two years each In the fedrral prison at Atlanta and each heavily lined. From the Judgment of the lower court the defendants appealed. The msking up of the esse on ap peal has given Clerk llynms a great deal of work, and the able manner In which ho has accomplished this task reflect credit upon the clerk and his office force. The record Is ciuito large and contains much Of the evidence taken during the trial of the eases before Judge Newman as well as ex ceptions, etc. BOTH HOUSES TALKING ON THE RAILROAD BILL Hot Shot Poured into tt by Senator Clapp Many Opponents in Lower Branch. Washington, April 2. The rum- men e court provision of the railroad bill provoked much opposition from both democrats and republicans when the measure today was taken up In the house for amendment. Clark of Missouri, Muron of Arkansas, Aaam- son of Ueorgln. Madden of Illinois. Hubbard of Iowa ana I'eiers ot Mas sachusetts opposed the measure. Senator Klkius got the rallrouu mil under ay In the senate today, and half an hour after the body convened Senator Clapp was on the floor pour ing "hot shot" Into the measure. IIHKADXOI MIT NOW IN TIIK ATLANTIC t'lJOCT New York. April J. The battle ahlo Michigan, the nrst American battleship of the all big gun type to enter New Turk narnor, arrivrn Tuesday. She Is the flrst Dread iiousht to become a pan of the At lantic fleet. Hate Itrtiirnod to Work. Pittsburg. April XI. On thousand loren-irre who struck for Increased wages And shorter hours st the Pressed ilteel Car plant turned a work te 'ay. f IS CONSIDERED and Sensational" Event herits wealth largely made grandfather whoso methods not be countenanced in these days of finer moral vision and larger human sympathies; a girl who has nothing to boast of except this money. "She was married to a youth who has never helped any .social, religious or moral movement of his elty In any 1 exceptional degree, as is expected of I one whose inheritance along financial I lines calls especial attention to his i power. "I am surprised that these people allowed their weddlim gifts to be ad vertised in the newspapers. It was bad taste, to say the b ast. I gin sorry' thnt these so-called high tilers did not set a better example. "In the end the pair will probably land in the divorce court; a bad and sensational beginning means a bad 1 ending. inis arrogant display ol plulo- Wickersham In Severest Language Governor Comer Takes Occasion, to Mobile, to Denounce the Cotton Pool Prosecution After a Cold Night, Sunshine Cheers Old Soldiers, Mobile, April 2l. The annual re union of the United Confederate Vet- rana was formally open, , today. The cold weather of yesterday gave way to sunshine, and the morning trains brought several thousand more vet erans from all parts of the south. In his welcome address Governor Comer of Alabama severely criticised Attorney General Wickersham for his prosecution of men who U Is alleged operated a bull cotton pool. He charged that the attorney general Is "instituting legal process for the ar rest of citizens who are trying to break the power of speculative cll ques which, throusA the New York exchange, bav fattened by using mil lions of money to force the price of cotton up anil down and without re gard to the effect on the growers the consumer, or the manufacturer." In helping iliem, the governor said, the attorney general forgets the in terests of the tolling masses of the south, the poorest paid labor In Americu. He a astonished at any officer thus attempting to Injure the citizens of the south for the benefit of speculators In the south s greatest product. When Miss l.ucy White Hayes, granddaughter of the ex-president of the Confederacy, was Introduced to the convention, the veterans all arose, swayed toward the platform and gave the old "rebel yell." One by one the grizzled and bearded officers on the platform crowded up and kissed her hand. The first business session of the re- IS THROWN FROM A FREIGHT CAR A. D. Asman, Brakeman, Met With Accident Yesterday and Is at the Mission Hospital an A. D. Annan, i hrakemnu In the employ of the Ashovllle division of the Southern railway, Is In the Mis sion hosplflil suffering with a bad fracture on the side of the head and also a fracture at or near the base of the brain, as a result of an accident yesterday afternoon near KMoher's when a car on which he was riding was derailed and he was thrown head first to the gr I. Dr. W. D. Mil liard, who is attending the Injured man. said today lhat the result of the injury could not yet be told; thst por tions of the broken skull on the side of the head bad lilted, but that noth ing could bn floiin for the injury at the I rise of the brain. It seems thai Mr. Aaman was riding on the rear cur of the "cut-off" ears of freight train No. (t from Lime siding near Fletch er's when the ear was suddenly de railed and turned over. Mr. Asman was thrown violently to the ground and dangerously If In fact not fatally Injured, Ml N M.I III I TKNT ULOWN DOWN MM KM, US; MAN KM I I 1 1 ScvitsI Other Were Injured, and Animal Cages Were Scat tered About. New York. April tl. During a heavy thunderstorm this morning the big tent sheltering menagerie In Jersey City was blown down, killing one man. Several others were Injur ed, and animal cage were scattered aboui ih,- tent. Nomination Seat to M-natc. Washington. April It. President Tsft today sent to thai senate i he nom ination of Nelson II. Henry to be sur veyor of customs at N. York ill and James H. Cox to be United States attorney for the eastern district of Tennessee1, Wedding Says Such Things Tend to Ending for the Story. by ajcralic wealth stirs up the spirit of would anarchy In the hearts of our warn- earners and tollers, who today never expect to eat off silver plates and who have not tasted a good meal In years. The affair wis not of the kind to please a lover of genuine democracy; It mode one 'hink of Russia. Such a weddin should have been cell bralcd uuletl after (lie divorce court proceedings which have recently brought disgraci to the whole Gould family "So far an the Tirxel family is con eerned, we never bear of tlieni doing anything to help our political or social life out of Its disgrace fill condition. These people are not our great citi zens. They are the remnants or an old order of industrial prosperity; they are our social Idlers; they can give dinner parties and yachting Jaunts, but their moral and spiritual output is of little value in tin., unbuildim: of our civic life. Criticised in Welcoming the Veterans union was thai of the ladies memo rial association. It won presided over by Mrs. Electro Simins Cons tans and besides n lot of mere men who bade the ladies welcome, was addressed by the president. Mrs. W. J. Mohan, Mrs. Virginia V. McSherry, president of tho Daughters of the Confederacy, and Mrs. J. C, Long. Tho Confeder ate choir and a woman's orchestra furnished the music The Hons of Veterans held their opening session last night. It was in the nature of a social session in which half a dozen addresses of welcome were made by local men. There was music, instrumental and vocal, and then the consuls of France, Spain and Kngliind were Introduced. The only olficlal business transacted was the namlmr of the committees on credon- Itials. Then Gov. Sanders of Louisiana s presented to the sons, the spon sors, mnids and matrons, who are at tached to the different divisions. The tented city on the bay was a gay place last night. Thousands of yellow government tents, each hold lng three veterans, were in service. Camp tires spluttered and roared In grateful warmth in the company streets. War songs and sacred hymns were beard above the din, while now and then the tinkle of the banjos ami "coon" songs told of the efforts of the dusky entertainers to amuse the city's guests. The weather was cold, but mi application to lend blankets met with a ready and generous re sponse and no one slept cold In the tented city. INDICTMENTS ARE Twenty Negroes Arrested in Havana, Charged With the Crime of In citing a Rebellion. llavina. April Indictments were returned tooay against usual au varttte Kstenet. the negro leader, and iZ others, charging them with the i rime of Inciting a rebellion and Instigating the snti-whlto violence. The evidence Indicated that extensive preparations were made for a general uprising against the government. PROPOSES TO DIE A NATURAL DEATH Ed. Keaton, 110 Years.Young, Bitten by a Rattlesnake, but Ooesn t Really Mind. Natehes, Miss.. April 26. Ed Kes ton. one hundred and ten years old, Is determined to die a natural tleatn. Keaton was bitten by a raltlrmako last night, but tho doctors declare he will get well. AlUil'MKNT KOIl MHS. SM.Vl) llabra- Corpus Its- fcujMR of Aunt of trroy . Sueiul. iillm of "llalli Tub Myster." Trenton, N. J April !. Argu menu were hesrd todsy liefoie Fed ersl Judge Limning In halwa corpus proceedings to secure the release of Mrs. Msry W. Lnead, under Indict ment In connection with the slleged murder of Oeey W. Baead, her niece, the victim of the "bath tub" mystery. RETURNED TODAY DEMOCRATS mm HCMI "(JM This, Declares Sullivan, Will Follow Elevation of Hughes to the Supreme Court. IT LIKEWISE REMOVES A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Sullivan Says Hughes Was the Only Man Who Might Have Led New York Republicans to Victory. Chicago, April 26. "It means a dotneratio government for New York next lection," was tho comment of Roger C. Sullivan, democratic national i committeeman, of Illinois, oo the I appointment of t;.ovcrnor Hughes to the Supreme court Mr. Sullivan lidded. "Hughes appointment also removes a probable candidate for the presidential nomination two years hence. In New York Hughes was the only man who had the slightest chance lo lead the republicans to victory. With Mr. Hughes out of the way I regard democratic success in New York stale as a certainty " . Of course republicans dissent I'nim the Sullivan point of view. Organiza tion men are well pleased, W fact, over the prospective retirement of the governor. "An Able Champion of the People. " Jefferson City, Mo., April lili. Com menting upon Hughes' appointment to the Supreme bench Governor liad ley today atitdr "I am glad President Taft appointed him to this important position. The people will have an able champion in him." tiood for the Democrats. St. Louis. April 1!G. "I am glad from a democratic standpoint that Cloven1 ,r Mushes is -llnilnated r-(,n partisan politics." said former Gov ernor Francis. Governor Hughes Is one of the most forceful advocates of republican principles, but 1 place a fearless and incorruptible judiciary above partisan politics." Mr. llrvan Does Not Approve. Lincoln, Neb., April 26. W. J. Dr., an commented last night on the appointment of Governor Hughes as associate justice of the Supreme court, in part as follows: "The appointment of Governor Hughes to the Supreme bench will be rega nled by many as a popular ap pointment. He has been put forward as a reformer, and seems to be con sidered one by a great many good peo ple, but his reputation as u reformer rests upon a few official acts which show him opposed to grafting and to the individual vices. Hut no ono who will examine his record, can doubt that he Is in cloae sympathy with the exploiting corporations. "He is acknowledged to be a close personal friend of Rockefeller and the published reports show that trust magnates have contributed liberally to his campaign funds He lias not hesitated to show that he acknowledg ed his Indebtedness. "It Will he remembered also that In was the llrsl prominent man to oppose the Income tax and Pis opposition came arter Mr KocKeieiier nail an-1 uounc d hostility to the Income tax amendment What would he do on the Supremo bench If any question arose affecting the Income tax? His speeches show that he feels no hos tility toward private monopolies and there is no reason to doubt that his decisions, would bo III llnu with his speeches. "Governor Hughea exemplifies the Individual virtues and naturally de mands honesty in the public service, but he is a shining Illustration of that peculiar type of rltlicn developed in this country during the present gen eration the clttsen who personally opposes vice and Is a punlsher of smnll crimes, hut shows no indigna tion at the larger forms of legalised rnbbcrv ." IN F NICE'S GftY CftPITAL He It a Good Deal Mixed up With Aeronautics Recievei a De putation, etc. etc. Paris, April 26. This sfterneon at the American embassy Theodore Roosevelt received n deputation from the French parliamentary group for International arbitration, headed bv former Premier Rourgeols jnd Raron Eetournellra de Constant. Mr. Roosevelt spent the morning In the military aerostatic park at Mue don. where the army and navy are making extensive experiments with dirigible balloons and aeroplanes La'e this afternoon the former presi dent will go to Issy Los Moulinraux. where as the guest of the Academy ot Sports he will witness aeroplan (tying. Tonight s dinner In his honor will be given by Ambassador and Mrs. IV con, HE GOLD WAVE Considerable Ice Formed Last Night and Much Damage Was Done, It Is Feared. THE CLOUDY WEATHER SAVED THE GEORGIA CROP The Planters of Louisana and Missis sippi Are Now Confronted With the Grave Problem of a Seed Shortage. Winchester, Va., April 26 The cold wave has reached the Shenandoah valley and today Ice was reported at Mlddlelown, Harrisonburg, Staunton, and much damage has resulted. In the low r valley it is reported that fruit and vegetables escaped the kill ing temperature. binds saved Georgia. Atlanta, April 26. The cloudy weather lust night saved Georgia from a killing frost, which would have un doubtedly completed the destruction of fruit and vegetables, which have been damaged to the extent of hun dreds of thousands of dollars. The weather continues cold, with a tem perature of forty degrees. ltcports Not Kxaggcratcd. New Orleans, April 26 Reports from all pnrls of Louisiana and Mis sissippi indicate that earlier estimates of damage to the cotton crop as a re sult of the cold, were not exaggerated. With the cotton acreage damaged to the extent of not less than fifty per cent. Including a total loss In many quarters, planters today turned their attention to replanting, only to be con fronted with the grave problem of a lack of seed. Worse, In Alabama. Montgomery, April 26 Heavy frost In this part of AMtam last night It believed to have killed what re mained of the young cotton crop. Kour to Ten Inches of Snow. Correspondence of The Garette-News. Sylva, April 2T. Snow to a depth of froum four to ten inches fell on the high top last night, and today in the valleys rain lias prevailed Interspersed with " caslonal blusters of snow and sleet. Cattlemen who during the warm weather carried their stock to the range are packing corn to feed them through the snap. Frost has been plentiful for several mornings killing vegetation, especially early corn and beans. TIIK WEATHER. For Asheville and vicinity: Partly cloudy weather, with possibly showers tonight or Wednesday; probably light frost tonight, with a minimum tem perature of ubout 3u degrees. For North Carolina: Generally fair, except showers In western portion to night or Wednesday; frost tonight. Moderate west winds. Shipper's forecast: Protect ship ments to northward against tempera tures of about 30 to 32 degrees. Mr. Hill of San Francisco Knew Well the Man Who Subsequently Be-IW came Known to Fame. William H. Hill or Rim Francisco is a guest at the Hotel llerknley for a few days. Mr. Hill lived st Virginia City, Nevada, at the time the lale Samuel I Clemens, "Mark Twain." tlrst went west, and for a time en gaged in the mining business. Mr. Hill is a great admirer of Mark Twain grj was a great friend of Ills when he was in the west He welj remembers Mark Twain when he was a reporter on the Enterprise, ale: doing his first literary work, beginning In 162. Charles C. Goodwin was editor of the paper ot that time, later becoming a Judge, and Mr. Hill had a clipping from s newspaper giving statement from Judge Goodwin to the effect that Mark Twuln was born November 30. 1H30. making him 10 years of age. whereas Mark Twain has given his age as 7.", years. Mr. Hill also knew Mark Twain very well after he left Virginia City ii ii 1 went with a newspaper In Han MET MARK TWAIN AT VIRGINIA CITY Francisco. He tells many Interesting stories about Twain's early efforts In the west. OYKKWHEKM1NG VHTOH I OR T AUG ART AND KRIKNI Indlunapolts, April 26. An over whelming victory, won by Thomas Taggart and his friends In the prima ries here for the selection of dele gstes to the democratic state con vention, v hloh opens tomorrow night, has sdd ' strength to the movement for the state-wide primary to choose a randlate for the !'nlt-d states senate.
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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April 26, 1910, edition 1
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