Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Dec. 11, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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LAST EDITICII 4:00 P. U. Weather Forecast: ' ' - Ruin; colder. tV1ea DKPATCHE3 VOL. XVI. NO. 262. ASHEVILLE, N. C.j MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 11, 1911. So PES COPY Ilk-...-. , : . FIND 16 VICTIMS ! OF MINE BLAST Hope Abandoned That Any of f the Hundred or More Trapped at Brice ville Live. . RESCUERS OVERCOME BY NOXIOUS GASES Thousands of Miners and Spec tators from All East Tennes- see Gather in Stricken I ' Village. . Brlcevdlle, Tehn., 11. With Mourn as Dead Girl Long Gone .1 . $ -, J - K A Yeas Ago. Tomorrow, Miss Dorothy Arnold Strangely Disappeared, Leaving No Clue. - New York, Dec. 11. Miss ' Dorothy Arnold, whose mysterious disappear ance from her home here puzzled the police of two continents, will have been missing Just one year tomorrow. Her absence was first made public January 26 and since .then various conflicting; reports ,, concerning the search for her have kept the public In a state of bewilderment. . John B. Keith, the. Arnold' family's lawyer, says the family believe the girl is dead and no other explanation can be conceived, as absolutely no clue to what became of her ever has been found. sixteen bodies recovered Ind Identified rescue parties today renewed digging In an attempt to force the big cross mountain mine, to surrender its dead. With three miles of the main shaft explored and most of the mine's cross entries brattlced, rescue crews hourly expect to stumble into corpse-strewn chambers. One hundred or more are believed to be dead In the mine. t The first body discovered this morn ing was that of Andrew , Johnson, found In a sitting posture in one of the Interior chambers. It Is estimated the explosion rendered Bt ' women widows and made 184 children or phans. ' ' :. All hope of rescuing any who went into the mine Saturday has been aban doned. Weeping wives who were made widows by Saturday's dust blast crowded the shaft, entrances this morning to meet their dead. In a warehouse n r the mine entrance are great numbers of coffins awaiting their occupants. Of these corpses found last night, three sat bold upright In a mine car and five lay on the ground. . , Blatic Damp Develops! ' . Black damp developed late Sunday and retarded progress but the silent force pushed dauntlessly on, some of them .till they .were carried out over come by the noxious gases. Thousands of the morbidly curious nocked Into the village and crowded I about -the main, entry. .of tfce-,mlnn. Thar Mlftibthtnr bucause -there wae nothing to see but the pitiable grief of the stricken families. All of the bodies recovered have been Identified. Among them was . that of Will Farmer, assistant foreman of the mine. The top of his head had been blown off. He Is survived by a widow and two children. . There Is hardly, a family in the entire Coal Creek valley that has not felt the touch of death. The prob lem of caring for the widows and or phans will be a grave one, requiring Immediate solution. Certainty Brlce ville will be unable to care for her liv ing with most of her wage earners numbered among the dead. The first of the burials occurred yes terday afternoon In the graveyard lo rated upon a commanding elevation in rear of the little church opposite the Brlcevtlla depot. The remains laid to rest were those of Lee Polston, Taylor and Eugene Ault Rev. R. H. Wlxra. pastor of the Baptist church at Brlcevllle. offered a brief but fervent -prayer In behalf of the victims, their surviving loved ones and friends. The prayer was the ex tent of formal religious ceremonies held over the remains. The advent yesterday of ITS coffins was the signal lor a renewal of the rief suffered by the loved ones In the many fatherless and husbandless homes. This was Intensified as tne gruesome pine boxes containing the coffins were piled high, In front of -the Improvised morgue. The relief work has been systemati cally and effectively organised under the direction of George P. Chandler, president of the Tennessee Coal com pany. Volunteers from practically 1 every mine In the Coal Creek and Brloevills region arrived Saturday night and yesterday. Others aura came from mines at Jelllco Oliver Springs, Mlddlesboro and even from tip in the southwest Virginia coal belt. , Work Under Difficulties. Mr. Chandler marshalled the relief volunteers In squads of about fifty men each. These squads are being sent Into the mine In shifts, working two hours each. The atmosphere and debris In the mine preclude the poset blllty of continuous working. 10,000 Prople Vbnt Scene. Brlcevllle was the mecca of Innu. marabie visitors from Knoxvllle Bun- day. The early morning trains were taxed to their utmost rapacity. In addition, the pike road, tS miles from Knoxvllle to Brlcevllle, was alive throughout the day with automobiles mnA other vehicles. It Is estimated that not loss than" 10.000 people have visited the scene of the disaster. Joiin Ifn of Atlanta, u... representative or the Red Cross society, reached the scene . last night. In the meantime, the Kel Cross fluff had been conspicuously stis pinned from the foderftl mine rescue car and Its attendants were prepared to administer relief of a medical or surgical nature If called upon. , The work of Mr. Logan probably will be first to Investigate as to the . need of nece-ltles of life among the women and children and take steps to supply these. Larders are empty and stores have exhausted their supplies of provision EXPLODiriG BOMB B1ERY CASE say mm isTini 1 TRUST Preliminary Examination of I Securities Commissioners Rec- Bert H. Franklin, Charged ommend Thai the Light Be With Jury Tampering, Comes up. Turned on; All Rail road Financing. T SCIIEKIIOS 4 Supreme Court of United States Declines to Upset Decree of Circuit Tribunal. M'MANIGAL TO TESTIFY AT INDIANA INQUIRY I THEY OPPOSE FEDERAL CONTROL OF ISSUES Lawler in Conference with Say Congress' Should Pave Witnesses Summoned to - . Appear Before Federal Grand Jury. . , Way for Roads to Ex change State for Na tional Charters.. t Washington, De 11. The railroad seourltlea commission, headed by President Arthur T., Hadley of Yale, KILLS AND Eight of 63 Injured at Motion Picture Show Had Legs Amputated. Llefte, Belgium, Dec. 11. A bomb explosion during a cinematographic exhibition today caused . two deaths. Sixty-three . were Injured. Eight of the victims had their legs amputated, ANT. HOUSEWIVES' .PEST, 7 ' BOLL WEEVIL'S ENEMY Scientist Discovers Insect , Is me iuiiuu uruwer 8 mow . Effective Ally. PETITION WAS MADE BY THE INDEPENDENTS Recognition of Leaf Tobacco Board of Trade as a Party to the Suit Denied. Los Angeles, Dec. 11. With the McNamara brothers at the state peni tentiary, the dynamiting case divided itself Into two parts today, one being has reported that it would be practi ce preliminary examination of Be- IW tmnraaihla at this time to nlaee H. Franklin, charged with bribing al, , - iL ,., ' - - prospective Juror, and the other the """"" . ."M , oenference between Oscar Lawler. federal control. : 'me commission rec- speclal government prosecutor, and I ommends that ; enforced publicity several witnesses summoned to appear! for all railroad financing Is the most tomorrow before the federal grand I effective weapon against stock water- Jury to tell what they know about the ling wlch-the government has at Its alleged dynamiting conspiracies. The I command.. announcement that Ortie E. McMan- The commission was created In 1810 Igai confessed dynamiter, soon would when the senate, refused to accept go to Indianapolis to lay the founds-1 house amendment "to - the ' pending tion for an Inquiry there was taken to railroad bill providing 'that all fu mean here that the grand Jury would ture Issue Of stocks and railroad seco- conclude consideration of the consplr-1 rltles be placed under the control of acy subject by the ena of tne week, the Interstate commerce commission. Many ' of - the senate democrats op posed , it as an .Invasion of states. rights. , President Taft, at the time told republican leaders the ' party was committed to such a measure but. when it appeared, 'Impossible to pass It, the president, agreed to have the clause eliminated, .with the. under standing that a commission to study the subject would; be allowed. This nr.. ilnn. nn f ha nyitnmlulnn hmrnn lOndemnS I work in the autumn of 1910. Public hearings were hem and Chairman Hadley studied th problem abroad. The commissions report Is distinct ly adverse to the legislation, proposed in.the railroad, .bia CONCERT MOVE FOR ROOSEVELT Hyde Case Juror Has Disappeared Guards Find Transom Torn Open and Harry Waldron Gone Mistrial May Result. Kansas City, Dec. 11. Harry Wal drop. Juror In the trial of Dr. B. Clarke Hyde, accused of murdering Col. Thomas H. Swope, has disappear ed and the trial has been halted in consequence. Deputy marshals guard ing the Jury In a hotel found the transom torn from over Waldron's door this morning and Waldron was gone. ' A mistrial may result Washington, Dec. 11. The United States Supreme court today declined to Interfere at this time with the de cree of the United States Circuit court for southern New York approving the reorganization plan of the "tobacco trust." Attorneys for the leaf tobacco board of trade of New York city Monday asked the Supreme court to review the decree and require the lower court to vacate Its order approving the decree and compel It to recog nise the leaf tobacco board of trade of New York as a party to this liti gation,. ' . --'.V.:-- STATE'S TROPHIES FROM APPLE SHOW Grand Sweepstakes and Other Prizes Brought Back by Mr. Hutt. WASTE DF PUBLIC MONEY RESULT OF ARMY SYSTEM Secretary Stimson Present Plan of Widely Dis tributing Troops i New Orleans. Dec. 11. After ex. tensive experiments Father Albert Clever, the Jesuit scientist, today an nounced that the Argentine ant, which Is the despair bt Louisiana housewives, Is the most effective enemy of the boll weevil in the south. It was found that the ant will destroy young weevils and eggs, , - The scientist thinks eventually the ant will be able to attack the grown up weevils. . POSTAL SURPLUS SHOWN III HITCHCOCK'S REPORT Washington, Deo. 11. "For the first time since 1881 the annual financial statement of the postofflce : depart ment shows a surplus Instead of a deficit." This is the burden of the annual report of Postmaster General Hitchcock, He Indicated that the placing of the postal service -upon a self-sustaining basis meant an Im provement and extension of facilities and, at no distant day, a one-cent letter postage. ' President Taft ,li- transmitting the report to congress '.today, declared Washington, Dec 11. In his annual that he heartily concurred In the rec report to the president. Secretary of ommendations. War Stimson declares that the con-l The Commission's Conclusions. tlngency of war with a first class The commission's principal conclu power ; would find the army or tne I aions are: United States practically unprepared. That any attempt by congress to He attributed this largely to the adopt the policy of federal reguia. fact that the army was "scattered out tion to the exclusion , of state regu over the country" in too many posts, I latlon, would be; premature. THEY "CANNOT ACCEPT" An officer of the Wachovia Bank and Trust company In an Interview this afternoon stated to The Gaxette News that "for the good of the plan tliey did not think It wise to say more than that tliey could not accept the Grove proposition as submitted to them.- ' t , "We have no statement to make,' said an official of the' Battery Ptork bank, "further than that we have written a letter to Ma Grove, explalu- ing our position." ; . and tOi lack of reserves.. The army on the place footing habitually main tained, with miniature companies and troops, he. Characterized as Ineffective for any serious war service. As, to the unpreparedness of the army In artillery . and ammunition, Secretary Stimson says that "at the present rate of appropriation it is es timated that it would take more than fifty years to secure a reasonable sup ply of field artillery guns, carriages That for- the present,- state author ities should make a concerted effort to harmonize existing requirements. That congress should prepare for the future by giving consideration to a federal incorporation act which would permit interstate railroads to exchange their state charters for na tional ones. The commission takes the ground that constitutional questions involving the acooe and extent of federal au- and ammunition that would be neces-1 thority are unsettled and will remain sary In the event of war.' The report makes the somewhat startling statement that at a conserva tive estimate the expense per effective riflemen In the United States army Is between two and five times as much as so for some time; : and that while such a condition exists, to superim pose federal regulation upon state regulation would add to the conflicts and complexities, which In the public interest, should rather be diminished any first-class power on the continent I than Increased. of Europe.. This comparison Is made I "Unless the constitutional power of after excluding from consideration the I congress to regulate securities of In higher pay and better subsistence mat i terstate railroads is definitely estab- American soldiers receive. This fact Is I iighed as being exclusive of , state GOTHAM ENTERTAINS WESTERN EXECUTIVES Governors Formally Welcomed to the City by Mayor Gaynor ine Program. stated as an illustration, Secretary Stimson declares, of the extravagance of the existing system of wide distri bution of the army. V- , .. CHARLTON VERSIFIES AS CASE HANGS FIRE New York, Dec. 11. The western governor's party was formally wel comed by Mayor Guvnor this morning. The program of entertainment provid ed for the state executives inciuoea a visit to Grant's tomb, a water trip on. one of the municipal department steamers and an exhibition of work by (Ira boats. control;, either the federal govern. ment and the states will come to a general understanding as to the prin ciples to be adopted In the control of security issues, or the railroad ays. terns will be given the opportunity to exchange their stats charters for fed eral ones," says the report. Until such exclusive Jurisdiction can be established the creation of i separate administrative body sub. Jectlng the railroads to a new system of concurrent supervision, in aam tion to the many old ones which now Jersey City, Dec. 11. Porter Chart ton, after waiting In Jail a year and half, charged with murdering his wife at Lake Como, Italy, In June. 1110, Is facing another It months of inaction In his case. Indications are I exist does not seem just, expedient or that his appeal to the Supreme court I economical. against extradition will not be reached I Recommends Complete Publicity, before 11 S, and neither the prison-1 For the present, the commission er's family, nor Major Scott 'brother! reuommends that complete publicity of the slain woman, seems Inclined to lbs required to surround all Issues of attempt to hasten action. I securities and that any Interstate Charlton la well supplied with funds I railroad Issuing stocks and bonds be and speisls his time reading, compos-1 required to furnish to the Interstate Special to The Gazette-News. Atlanta, Dec. 11. January 7, 112, certain of the prominent southeastern railroads will place on sale at their principal ticket offices ' a form of transportation order; designated "In terchangeable Penny Brlp Books, which will be honored by. practically all the railroads In the southeast Each book will contain at time of sale S500 coupons of the face value of one cent each, or 125 in the aggregate, but will be sold for $20, The coupons of each book, when attached to the cover and contract thereof and pre sented to ticket agents by the original purchaser, will be accepted In the pur chase of transportation between sta tions In the southeast for his own use at the rates and under the regulations set forth in. the tariff governing the sale and use of this form of transpor tation order. -. . The Southern Railway company will sell and honor these scrip books In addition to the present two cent per mile Interchangeable mileage tickets of Z and ZZ which the Southern Rail way has had on sale for the past sev eral years, thus making no change In the existing forms and rates inter changeable mileago books by Southern railway, the scrip book arrangement simply being as far as the Southern railway Is concerned, an additional transportation facility. Ihg verse and smoking cigarettes. Girl of 1 Mystery Ki??cd S trangely By Gas Fumes ' r -- Tragic Death Reveals That Mary F. Harmon, Aged 18, Cul- tured, Talented and Supposedly Wealthy, Was Daugh ter of Her Mulatto Maid and an English Singer. Philadelphia, Dec. 11. The polk' ( are Investigating the mysterious death of Mary F, Harmon, aged IS. who was found In a bedroom In her apartment this morning supposedly dead from gas asphyxiation.. Near her on the floor was the Unconscious form The lack of sufficient, of the girl's negro maid, aged 40. roods inn to supply the demand was The strange fea ture or tne case is foonmuns m u, i . ..h. k. whit iha irtrl was aunnomdlv wnen uiu- -...- - . . ' whit,, and the mmn a mulatto, n slrl really hsd negfo blood in her veins and whs he dwurhter of l ......huaiud Sunday went hiinnry because or Inability to t,r or bt-M food. Knoxvllle Is send t, (pNtsnm nd other rltles are ex- . i t !- !;Mw!, women who lived wltti r n vt( tit. TM IkiIL c -.v t'. w.'rl r commerce commission a full state ment of the details of the Issue,, the purposes for which the proceeds are to be used, and an accounting for the expenditures of such proceeds. 'Accurate knowledge of the tacts surrounding the Issue of securities, and the expenditure of. the proceeds Is the matter of most Importance, the commission says. . "It Is the one thing upon which the federal gov. ernment can effectively Insist today It Is the fundamental thing - which must serve as a basis for whatever regulation may be' desirable In the future. 'If full publicity b given we shall also lessen the fraudulent creation of debt It Is the degree of publicity was choir master In a Baltimore rather than the stringency of the law church. The girl was educated In a leading seminary, passed as white and was a good musician. ' The mother Is unconscious In a hos pital. If she recovers she may throw light on the mysterious case. Among the girl's effects werf) IS pawn tickets showing I22S had beon borrowed on Jewelry. Five bunk books were examined. These showed that In one Bnltvmore bank. In 1907 (he flrl hud 100 on deposit. Kh, h'il Inriift flfnixlts In otlwr lumks. All which gives to the people any real protection.' A stringent law Inade quately enforced and secretly evaded Is the worst thing that can be pos slbly offered to the public, because It gives color to claims which have no foundation and fart'" In determining the physical value of railroads In relation to their avert rltles now outstanding, the commis sion puts aside as entirely out of the attention .any attempt to srale down miutunrtmg securities ,rt the groun ttiot Pt..tt.t".t'it " -"-n!l!.,, Dulilf All Attempts to Disguise Boom for His Nomination for the Presidency Are ' Dropped. HIS SUPPORTERS SAY , HE WOULD TAKE IT Party Leaders Confer 'with Him in New York and Go to Attend Committee Meeting,' ' ' t Washington, Deo. 11. All attempts to disguise the fact that a concerted -movement is on foot looking to the nomination of Col. Theodore Roosevelt as republican candidate for president m 1913 were apparently dropped to- day, when it became knows that the J national committee members were be. ing sounded as. to their view of the; feasibility of "forcing" a nomination on the former president. On the eve of the assembling of the national republican committee In ' quadrennial session here tomorrow, , ineuiei XUlieiSll. If h.a hnenmo tnnw h.t ' jaicis" . Inrnm inant rpnnhllnnna nn thnK wdv aAM. tnllfrls.nl lamiasi . a A . KalnD- I " J OUiiifJ iuiiuvcii wuw " -,... I tn. Want! nirrnn in ottnn th wfm- , , . - . . I ' o vvu vw a. wiiu tail? vuium ,. maae mesa auys ana ynen vwu ence, stopped over In New York and old members the only ones whose lnn ,lk, UH rt terms will expire next year offer lor th.t nfh.r mnH. re-election. It Is expected that a real ee him elther at New Tork or Rt 0yB. uveiy campaign u n.o ..u.i. ter Bay following the meeting of the oome oi me ieuei m jsratlonal committee, H-M ani" a.7tne time" ' "oosevelt WouUI Acceept. W. N. Hutt. state horticulturist re- nooseveii supporters now nere aro tiirn.il Bnnriav from SL Joseoh. Mo., basing all their arguments in his bo where he attended the national hortl- halt on the claim, that while Roose- tultural congress .and brought back I velt na announced that, he is not a for North Carolina the grand sweep- canaiaaie, ne nas noi siaiea mat ne ntukMi and several other nrlzes of the would not accept the nomination if It first and second order. He related were lenaerea mm., iney Claim inai the nuumlnK fact that the Iowa ex-1"8" good American ciUaen, Roose hibltors bought, a lot of the Carolina veIt culd " do otherwise, than ac- annlea tn caxrv home for the ouroose t Pl snouia tne convention acfe r r . I fa, ...... .1 .1 V. of shewing apple growers, in that " i'i. .t.t. t...t . T.r Heel Wtxa tn- made to bring Roosevelt -sentiment to li44 -.e,vndiUv. eweetad thtKXocJ3" "OWJThe hope ..pt Jttls sun th reaiilt of Mortrl-Curollna's show-1 potiera-.is io at nievo victory in in ,., ihi. ,.ni,n.i. win ha manv I convention. They are pressing the thousands of dollars Invested In this argument that delegates should go to .. a u Bh.w u. Hi.tf. aaaiat. conveniion umnsiruciea ant, has also returned home. TO BE I OF 3 BULB Friends of Taft are meeting Roose velt Sentiment everywhere and assort that the' movement is a well-directed one. They are urging Taft's re-nom- Inatton on the ground that to refuse to Indorse his administration would be discredit to the party. Program Agreed Cpon. ' As a result of the many confer ences held the following program seems to have been agreed upon: Chicago will get the national con vention apparently beyond all ques- New York, Dec. 11. Three days of tion of doubt and It probably will be big doings tn baseball circles opened held the last week In June. with the meetings . today of the There will be no nght for chairman- National Baseball commission and of ship of the committee at this time. the Eastern league. The new rank- Former Governor John E, Hill of Ins- of the American association and Maine, the vice chairman, will be of the Eastern and Pacific Coast I elected to serve until the presidential leagues In class leagues comes before nomination Is made. William Hay the commission for ratification. This I ward, formerly of Nebraska but now reclassification necessitates several of New York, will continue as sec re- amendments in existing agreements, tary. After the convention a chalr- The two big leagues begin their de liberations tomorrow. DROPS DEAD AT 7IRE man and other officials agreeable to the candidate will be elected by the new committee. The question of selecting delegates at presidential primaries, or by the I customary delegate conventions will New York, Dec. 11. After prevent, be left entirely to the various states In a nanln hv anlnff amonat and re-l oeiermine lur immKi n unrin. rrtahtened tenants of a burn-1 dent Taft Is said to have favored this i .n.rtm.nt hnnse. Samuel Best Tl 1 uajpoamun oi mo iraiiwr, v..ra .III an .i.haltallon chief of the I ne committee win not act on me J " " - - , 1 , v-.w Vnrlr flra denartment died from roauiunon lor a reuuciiuu ui auumci u h.art failure at mldnlrht while representation, declaring this to be a watching the firemen battle with stubborn blase. Bryan at Colon. Colon. Dec. 11. William Jennings Bryan arrived here today. He leaves for the United States Thursday, via mMter-General Hitchcock's Jamaica. question for determination by 1 the convention Itself. Hitchcock's RetdgnatUsn to Be Ac cepted. Colonel Harry B. New, of Indiana, will probably head the all-powerful sub-committee of Ave to make ar rangements for ths convention, . Post- reel gna- .1 Woman of"PoisonedPeri Faces Accusers in Court Miss Harriet DeWitt Alleged to Have Almost Disrupted Church by Writing Hundreds of Defamatory and Im proper Letters Involving Its Pastor, Rev. Snyder. Philadelphia, Dec It. Miss Har riet Dewitt of Easton, Pa., accused of wielding "the poisoned , pen" that caused trouble in Easton church cir cles, was plaoed In trial In the Unit ed States District court - here today. Judge MeP hereon presiding. Miss DeWitt Is charged with depositing In the malls obscene letters. Ths letters which she Is accused of sending to various persons were de famatory and were penned during a period of about 10 years. Their par ticular mark was Rev. Elmer E. Sny der, pastor of Christ - Evangelical Lutheran church, Easton. All the letters were printed, seme covering eight to 10 pages. During 19 years the defamatory letters were received hy married men, their wive, young hrlilos and innocent at! Is. They cre- companied by her father and mother. flhe was quite tastefully dressed. Hne Is little more than SO yearn old. Iter. Mr. Snyder Ftrat Witness, , Rev. Mr. Bnyder was the first wit netts. He said ha was It years old I the committee. Hon as chairman will be accepted. It was tendered Immediately after he en tered the cabinet 'and la declared to iiave no strings whatever attached to It President Taft will entertain the committeemen at dinner tonight This dinner probably will be the most Im portant politically given at the white house during the present administra tion. The committee will not bar federal office holders as delegates to the convention, taking the ground that this question, like that of southern representation. Is one for the conven tion to decide. The representatives of the southern states are expected to discourage office holders from seeking election is delegates and President Taft It Is said, will approve this program. The question of presidential pilma' rles had promised to be the most In teresting and far-reaching in Its polit ical effect of any to be brought before Its apparent amicable and was single when he took charge adjustment "out of court" was attend ef the church In 101. Miss DeWitt led by unusual circumstances, the lived opposite the parmnace. He first most significant of which was the fear met her at a church social affair. la of friends of Colonel Theodore Ronse ths 10 years period, he said, he re- velt that the primary system If adopt - eeived 100 or 100 anonymous letters, ed at this time might cut off the all of an Improper nature. Bnyder possibility of nominating the former married last June. I president for a second electlvo term. What have been Miss De Witt's ac-1 No attempt Is being made here t Hons toward you the last year or so, he was asked. "If I passed her on the street she would throw her head up and some times make faces," Several times. Snvder testified. Mlm DeWitt hissed t hint as he pniwed flown the street He sold she scleit iiiaultfrmly toward disguise the fuct that there Is a will defined movement In favor of the nomination of Colonel Roosevel. The men behind this movement feel th.u their hope of succeas lies in wnrk i up ths proper amount of . r . t Mf-l-tl new iri'l t ie !' ' r - ; . J if te1 ,t ter.-Hl acanrial. y.-A 1 h Wi!t rrlvi"1 In trl,
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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Dec. 11, 1911, edition 1
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