Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / Jan. 23, 1913, edition 1 / Page 1
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(Iff FULL ASSOCIATED PEESS SERVICE , BY LEASED WIRE. LAST EDITION 4:00 P.M. Weather Forecast BAIN; COLDER rat VOL. XVII., '296. ASHEVTLLE,4N. C, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 23, 1913. PRICE THREE CENTS TE5 V' TURKS TO GIVE UP GREAT FORTRESSES in wa Lloyd-George Tell3 Delegation of Working yfomen that Equal Suffrage May -Come. Monday. SIMILAR ASSURANCES ARE GIVEN BY GREY Government Ready to Stand or ; ; Fall by Asquith's Pledge of Extension of ? " ' Franchise. . Adrianople, Janina and Scutari to Go along with he Ottoman Empire in Europe Turkey and Greece to" Cease I " .. ' 1 ' Hostilities At Once. .!'! - ' ' . By Associated Press London, Jan. 23. "I hope we' shall ; win on Monday," David Lloyd-George, . chancel lor of the exchequer, today told a deputation of ', suffragettes representing the working wo men of the British Isles whom he and Sir Edward Grey, the foreign Secretary, received at into the testimony presented before the treasury department. Jae Heara 01 tne ,rcu,t cou" ,,T . i i ii , the case of Mrs. Grace Brown Her- s 'I certainly shall do ; myj bort..Guggenheim-wahi, in her suit VCVV best t6 See that the amend- , for the setting aside of the divorce of , , i t William Guggenheim of New York ment to the franchise retonn'may b0 taKen up by the Brana jury. bill ; Clihinating the word, The suit recently was dismissed By Associated Press. . London, Jan. 23. The immediate consequences of the decision of the Turkish grand council to conclude peace with the Balkan allies will be the cessation of hosilltles between Greece and Turkey and the surrender of the Turkish fortresses of Adriano ple, Janina and Scutari. At each fortress the Turkish : garrisons will withdraw with the honors of war. Difficulties may'- arise concerning the fate 'of Scutari, as no one knows to whom it Is, to be surrendered, whe ther to the Montegrlns, to a provi sional Albanian government or to representatives of the powers. - King Nicholas of Montenegro insists that he must enter Scutari at the head of his troops. Otherwise he says the reign of his family In Montenegro Is doomed becauti he, contrary to the advice of his' generals, refused to try to take Scutari by storm, at the be ginning of the war in order to avoid the certain"; heavy; losses which his small army would have suffered. He preferred the temporizing policy of laying sieges to the ' fortress and should Scutari for this reason be lost to the Montenegrins he alone would be considered responsible. Members of the Turkish peace delegation in London Bhow signs of depression but they are satisfied that the terms ar ranged by the powers must now be regarded as finally closed. They say they are convinced that the powers will support them in rejecting de mands of the alies for a war indem nity. . .." , '. -All fears of a resumption of the war having been removed the allies are now planning the early withdraw al of large bodies of troops. The de legates In London, however, think that a month may pass before the final signatures are put to the peace treaty as te settlement of exact frontiers. the questions of indemnity and . the guarantees in regard to the mosques FEEUDE HIGH ; III ASSEMBLY CITY'S INVITATION 'PiWY DIRK , ' r TUUIILI UllllLU Excitement on Floor as Jus tice Resolution and Wil-, . Hams', and Reavis'. Bills Voted Down. President-Elect's Wife and Daughter Receive Delegation at Their Home and Later Asheville Men Visit Mr. Wilson at State House. STEEL TRUST 1 WILLIAMS DENOUNCES : EX-SPEAKER'S MOVE Charges Covert Attempt to Further Initiative and -'' ,(.-. - . Referendum to Hurt ' ,.SS. ., .: , ,- - v : :"; .- ' of Legislation. Special to The Gazette-Newt. . Trenton, N. J Jan. 23. The Ashe ville delegation visited Princeton this morning and were received at the Wil son home by-Mrs. Wilson and Miss Jessie Wilson, who are greatly Inter ested In the Invitation for the family to make Asheville their Bummer home and the summer capital of the Unit ed States. Later the party motored to Trenton, and the invitation was presented to Governor Wilson' by Congressman James M. Gudger, jr. ' The affair was entirely Informal. The governor's re marks Indicated a deep interest in the subject of a future summer home; . : Wilson May Visit Panama. . . By Associated Press. Trenton, N. J. Jan. 23.- President elect Wilson indicated today he was not especially anxious that a recep tion or any other substitute be pro Special to The OasietH-Newt. Raleigh. Jan. 21 The house voted 54 to 60 against Williams' substitute I vided for the Inaugural ball, which he guarantees in .. resolution at 2 o'clock and then opposed. He was told that some doubt and sacred places of Adrianople-still Joint resolution &i t o ciocg ana tnen hh r mmhrQ have to be arranged. . Asks Grand Jury Inquiry Into Guggenheim Evidence By Associated Press Chicago, Jan. 23. An investigation voted down the Reavis amendment to add Col. Roosevelt's name to the Jus tice resolution.. The original Justice house resolution, then went to defeat 50 to 65, amid scenes of wildest ex citement' on the floor In the lob bies. Williams of Buncombe offered a new house resolution to invite Wil son. Bryan and Underwood. It is to come up as unfinished business Fri day. - : '; ' Raleigh, Jan. 23. The.house Is lh had been expressed by members of the congressional Inauguration com mittee as to whether a reception In the rotunda of the capitol could be Former President of Corpora arranged, as the governor recommended- tion Reveals World-Wide "I shall be perfectly content with . . any arrangements the committee' Agreement in Armor makes." said Mr. Wilson. igreWIWIH Ul JriSimr "Suppose they are unable to arrange Tloo Bn-i.o.. a reception either?" he was asked. : MWJ BUSinesS. . "I shall be perfectly content." The governor was urged again to- -. day to visit the Panama canal before Tr. rtnTiyTTl-PTTTTnuT tad it is filled with water and indicated w vwu uitiivii i uu that he would try to go. "It all depends on how long the extraordinary session of congress i lasts," said the governor. . XTnlfnnnl Pnm m I ttac&vn n n TAannhii. ' Daniels of North Carolina, came to . United States and Bethlehem Trenton today with a delegation to offer the president' elect a summer home at Asheville. The mission of Representative Wil liam Kent, a progressive republican i leader from California to President elect Wilson today, was to talk con servation. , This conference was the first Gov ernor Wilson has had with a progres sive republican "since his election. WARSHIP BUILDING Companies and Several Foreign Finns Mem ; ters of Combine. , Sectional Division Over Cotton Tariff Reduction rhiof Tuati. A Jesse Bnldwln. of the the midst if a, sharp fight over the I Circuit court, is said to have mailed house resolution by Justice to Invite a letter to - States Attorney Maclay I Bryan, wnson ana mroneue ui au-i tinvnk nokino- anph u investigation .' dress the house on the Initiative and I TndirA nnlrtwln admitted todav that referendum. The house bill was of- h hnrt sent b letter to the state's at-' fered after the senate killed the Joint By Associated Press. Washington, Jan. 2S. Proposed re due Hon of the cotton tariff was again under fire at the hearing today before r- ( .. , L I in lluun V unillllln.IJ -t i. n n..u torney regarding the puggenhetm suit resolution. ; , came ..p as u,mm.w meang There werfl a number of wIt, and said the contents were of sufficient ' ' 1 nesses left ove imnnt.ni.A in Homonrt nii i n vest I irn . I Williams or ouncomoe oiiBreo . a tlon but he refused to discuss the substitute joint resolution that Wilson matter, 'male' is passed by the house of commons. Since 'I' liave been in the cabinet I have be come a: moire convinced sup- 'porter of women s sultpage thun ever. '. , . Mhib'tor iroy's VVHriiliiic.: . i "My experience during the passage of the stufo losurnnce lcglalallon has pcr xmuled me, that one of the grentcat pieces of injustice In public life Is that women have no. voice In the d terminatlon of matters which affoct then more closely than men. ' am convinced that wo shall win very soon." . .... ' ; Tho "chancellor of - the' exchequer then went on to say that the liberal government was ready to Bland or fall HEBREW UFIIQN TO ELECT . EXECUTIVE BORRD 10DHY Interesting Report on Activity of ' the College Presented i .- -' !-,v; ' ; by Kohler. Cincinnati, O., Jan. 23. Tho pro gram for the closing session of the twenty-third council of the Union of American Hebrew congregations to' fill IS IN READINESS FOR CORN EXPOSITION nesses left over, from yesterday's pro gram and a short list of supplemental witnesses. . - Southern and northern manufactur ers do not agree on the extent , to Exhibits are Placed and City . Decorated for. Event aty : , Columbia .. ; .:;", .::.. i .-.'' , ! By Associated Press. " Columbia, 8. C, -. Jan., 23. Every? thing Is in readiness for the opening of the fifth national corn exposition EDITOR EXPLMNS LETTERS' PUB E Duty to Publish Archbold :. Correspondence. " ' '' By Associated Press.' '-.- Washington, Jan. 23. Charles P. by Premlor Asouith's pledge that if day inciuuca me selection oz u mom tho house of commons approved the' bo of tho executive board and the extension of the franchise to women me of a place, of meeting In 1915. the government would support it.'- , Previous to the selection, of execu. Kir Edward Grey gave similar as-" tlvfl board members, an interesting re surances to tho deputation, but warn- I port ,,f the activity or the Hebrew ed thq women that the opposition to union college was presented by Dr. bo overcome wa very formidable and I Kohler, Its president.,' The college that It could hot be done by menace a registration of seventy-five stu or personal annoyance. . FISHER IN OIL LEASE dents and faculty of eleven professors and lecturers. It has graduated 125 pastors, many of whom occupy pulpits In all parts of this country, Canada and England, v. -; i i ; . , Tho newly-elected, executive board wns scheduled to meet after -the ad' Journment of the council and organ iiie.- . ', .', i -r; "-i Indians Repudiate Action of J) Tribal Council which Pro ; , posed Blanket Lease. X iN IS AND FOUL PUT FEARED By Associate!) Press. .; Pawkuska, Okla., Jan. 23. Indians of the Osage nation at a tribal meet ing here, yesterday, repudiated the proposed scheme to grant a blanket leaso to 300,000 acres of oil and gas lundp, owned by the tribe and by prac tically unanimous vote sustained the position of Kecreliiry of the Interior Klshor and President Taft, who held thHt the hind should be opened to in dividual lessees, the amount of land D. E. Etherington of Raleigh Disappeared a Week Ago and no Trace Found. Bnrrlnl la The Gaiett-NcW. Rulelgh, Jan. 23, No, trace has yot hen found of rr. E. Etherldge, the vounc aleman who loft Raleigh last granted any of the lease buyers to be Thursday and disappeared at Selma H,.,U,I Tho l.nHn ira n noil Bt ISO.- fir nnvlnif nls noiei.Diu. no 000,000.' I honest and sober and there Is no reason k'ri.d IjK.koiit whji ..lai'ted nrlnclpal . for h i strange conduct, li is Denev-eu hv h i emulfiyers, tne rurner-1 osi company, thst he has met with foul Bryan and Underwood be Invited to address the assembly Instead of the house alone "and on any subject they desire. Williams insisted that the Jus tice resolution has created Ill-feeling between ' the senate and house and that they mvist not be permitted, es pecially at this critical stage of legis lative work. He thought the ulterior motlye of giving aid to the initiative and reterendunV Jthrough the resolu tions should not be countenanced and that to Invite LaB'olleUe and extol turn as In the Justice resolution might irlvn thn rAmihllr.ann. "eamnnlcrt thuni. cler" against the democrats In the f u-1 MOOney Contends It WaS A lure. - "The initiative and referendum was sure to be an issue In this legislature but It Bhould be met fairly as other issues arc," he '.aald,'''-"Tho people want progressive legislation but there ore many important progressive issues Bryan, Wilson and Underwood might want to discuss. 1 P.nMiunlallvtt n.evl. ..niiKIIoon here Monday morning at 9- o'clock. I o'ffered an amendment to the justice I J- Mooney, editor of the Memphis Nearly all of the exhibits have been resolution that Col. Roosevelt be In-1 CommerclalrAppeal ana xormeriy i.j --a .t. , .... ,iuinn ....eluded Instead of LaFollette and ln-lmanaging editor of the New York ; ... . .i. . . 'slsted that no party politics should be I American, told the senate campaign cently completed at the fair gtounda 1ljected 1nt0 tne con8tltutional amend- fund investigating committee today displays a magnitude of agricultural I nfent Issue. . - .I about securing copies of some of the implements and machinery far ex-1 Speaker Connor opposed the Jus-1 Standard OU letters published by W. ttlce resolution and vsuDDorted Wll-1 R. Hearst. ceeo.ng w " llam8. eubstltute. He thought that If Mr. Mooney testified he negotiated xne main ouiiuing w i( uy xew renublican was to be invited he for copies of only a few of the Arch the feature i being a mural painting Bhould be the choice of the' minority, bold letters; that they were brought which encircles the' building, being jje declared Justice's purpose seemed to the American offices by a white over 1100 feet long. ". . ' , i to be to force an expression by the man whose name he did not know and The city is already crowaea witn house on the Initiative and referen-1 that he paid less tnan i&uv. early . visitors and, .representatives ot,4Um ; c,,, i mt 'WCSSS1 ( ' "l believed that with letters con- the exhibitors and is elaborately de-l i tn th hnn Rector. reDuhlii-an. in-ltalnlng matter Of this sort, it was corated, several scores pf decorators troduced a bill to create an Industrial I some one's duty to make them public having been engaged during the past commission, composed of the commls-IThey showed 'thit senutors and repre week in putting bunting and, flags i ' i0ner of Insurance, commissioner of I sentatlves, sworn to protect the puh labor and printing and secretary oflllo Interests, were committing treason the state board of health, to supervise I against the people, Mr. xuooney ioiu commercial enterprises generally as I the committee. the corporation commission supervises I He testified that when he became public service corporatlone and a bill I managing editor of the New York to nrotect- the lives and health of em-1 American in 1U1, Jonn z,aay, previ nlnvAn in fnctorles. .. ' louslv city editor, turned over to him la. number of photographic copies of Thome bill to nrohlblt keenlnir llauora I Standard OH correspondence with pub ubout tobacco warehouses to be given I lie men. As to how those were ob- awav and referred It to the judiciary I Ulned, Mr. Mooney could give no In committee. Senator Weaver offered a I formation. Lter a man ne couia noi bill to protect the watersheds of cities I name offered him more letters and from fires. I wanted Mr. Mooney to buy them, as- Raleigh, Jai... 28. The child laborlsurlng him he had "come by them hill introduced in the house hv Reo-1 honestly." Mr. Mooney made some resentative Williams of . Buncumbe I photographic copies. will have Kood engineers In both I "I was later assured by counsel, branches of the assembly. In the I said Mr. Mooney, "tnat u woum nave senate Senator J. C. Little of Wake been entirely proper for me to nuy will take charge of It, and the friends I original letters containing Watter oi of the measure expect Its early adop-lsuch a criminal character. I aid not tlon Inln Is w. The hill nrnvldes for I want them, hower, and I ma not the abolition of night work In the I care to have them remain In my pos By Associated Press. New ' York, Jan. 23. Tho United States Steel corporation and the Bethelehem Steel com pany participated ' for four years in an international pool in armor plate which divided up the business : of 'neutral mnvlrnfo William V. ' fWir which tho committee should go m - cutting the cotton tariff, it has been lormer president ot the hteel indicated that the committee' might U-i;.. t. ffTfi tnAav drop the minimum ad valorem rate w I'"1 " on cotton cloths to ten per cent, at UeannirS in ttlP govem- LSS suit to dissolve the eor- men are disposed to concede com promise eductions, the northern men are fighting for retention oi the tariff at approximately the present figures. ANOTHER ACQUITTAL IN BOYCE MURDER GRSE up. , - r , MISSING MORGAN HOUSE EMPLOYE BEFORE PlIJOICOMMIITEE thief of the nation and Edgar Mc Carthy hli asalxtant. Eight council men were also elected. The successful- lti:l!t was designated as "pro- The election pren nt. d a unbiuc , ENGLAND TO DEVELOP . spot tui le. Tne full mooun, wrappeu In their blanket of lnling colors, and accompanied by their wiutiws with jmpoiisis slriipped on their backs, vnlkfd Miltintily Into the voting pbice, sllintly handed the Indian judges thi lr ballots and solemnly walked out t"'nln. play. Mr. Etherldge is originuny irom Norfolk, SUDAN COTTOH LANDS Oral Hearings in the Money Tru3t Inquiry Probably End Tomorrow. , poration. :It was the first dir-..' ect testimony the government has been able to obtain as to the existence of such a pool. Mr. Corey, wha resigned as president cf the steel, corpora tion in 1910, was unable to re call today that the armor pin t . pool had existed until his mem ory had been refreshed by the Man Accused of Complicity reading of the minutes of the With Sneed Is Freed by arn,e hteel ?y ''l10 " 1 . . o joining with the "armor com bination" in the erection ot an armor nlant in Jannn. This Memphis, Texas, Jan. 23.-Beach was in' 1902, shortly after the Epting. charged with complicity in organization of the steel cor- the killing of Al. G. Boyce, Jr., who ,. was shot to death by John Beal Sneed, pOHltlOn. was found not guilty by a Jury here The Markets Apportioned, .v today. Sneed killed Boyce in Amaril- - . -,. ,. testified that a lo on Spptember 14, 1912. Epungwas , charged with having assisted Sneed combination of armor plate manurai ln his alleged plana for the shooting turers In England, France and (Ser in tho trial, Epting testified that he many and the United States had ex went to Amarlllo with Bneed as his gted a8 ,at a ..m4 or 1905." The Carnegie 8teel company and the Bethlehem Steel company were the 'had misled sen's nt and that Sneed him Sneed will be tried soon for the kill- Amerlcan members of the comblna ing or Boyce. ne nu aireauy own i tlon ne m actiuittea OI a cnarge oi muruennij A. O. Boyce, sr., whom he shot at Fort Worth January 13, 1912. Both shootings were the outgrowth of the elopement of Mrs. J. B. Sneed u'th Al. Boyce, Jr, IATHY Sullltan Adjudgcil Incompetent. ' Hy Associated Pfss. New Yoik, Jnn. 2H. Tlrnr.thy I). K;illlv:m, conk,r"'UiHn-el, t frotrt thin fit v. ''it-iilny wit adlu'lKed n tn- (ii.i.cli nt by n nhi-rllT s Jury. l'onr nronounrcd lilul lm:nMl'I.' 1 1 ll M lit IIHf f l.lldllli It e' 1 1 j i : . ! . urn tt IiIh plop ! in ,f w oi l h ' I'ly. hi. Ii ill I I.IM'M. ii V nl Hv Associated Press. London, Jan. 21. Introduction Into parliament of a bill guaranteeing n 1 11,01)0,000 loan for the development of cotton growing In tho Sudan Was promised b premier Asipiltli ' this morning In an address to the British Cotton Growing association. Perjury i linrgo ltlHinlsMtl. Py Associated Press. Atliintii, Ca., Jnn. 23. flmraes of licrliirv HKnlii.it l.ouls H. Mudld In i on'ii.-rilon wl'h bis suit to l.rcnk (he M:t-i;'ir of th I ticorn" HhIIwhv anil r,,.T conif.uiv, a ., (Min.ono rorpor- W 1. ,1.' Wl'l'' l! !MH if'-'l-ll 111 till' , By Associated Press. Washington, Jan. 23. With the list Of proposed witnesses cut down to a half dozen of the most Important, the house money trust committee today planned to conclude oral hearings to morrow. Counsel T-'ntermyer said that at least f0 witnesses whose testimony was desired would not be called, to allow the committee to finish Its work. Thomas W. Joyce, an 'employe of J P. Morgan, was' the first witness examined. Honry P. IMvison, one f the members of tl)e llrm of Morgan St Co., and members of Boston banking ano brokerage houses were to be ex anilned before the. committee closes Its hearing tomorrow. LKAVFS 'VO.rmn FOH iil'.OHGIA TO COM HAT W IITTK PHtiCE By Associated Press. Atlanta, (la., Jan. 23. Fifty thou- pund dollars to be used In the exlcr initiation of tuberculosis In Georgia w hs li lt by the late lllli ni O. llaoul railroad magnate ami philanthropist according to thn will filed for prolmte here yesterilii y. The codicil proyUlon for the lull miosis fund whs aildcd In the i mills by women and children under IS years, for a board of child labor session or In the paper's possession.1 Mr. Mooney denied the statement In commissioners conoeed of the state Ian affiduvlt by Charles Stump, pre- supcrlntendent of public Instruction, the president of the A. and M. col lege, the secretary of the state board ented to the committee last Week, that "Mr. Chamberlain and Mr. Mooney" had Inspected letter books By Associated Press. Savannah, Ga., Jan. 2 J. Lying face I contracts In armor plate shall be giv downward In a little road about 100 1 en only to American manufacturers, yards from the Ogeechee road, four I was the reply, miles from Savannah, H. c. I'lmer, a prominent planter, was found mur dered this morning and his faithful dog was lying by his side. The shot was heard last night about S o'clock Mr. Ulmer went coon hunting with Joseph Drayton, a negro boy, last night and was walking ahead carrying the lantern. The fatal shot was fired at close range, almost blowing off one aide of Mr. ITlmer'e head. After the killing Drayton, it Is at, of health, the commissioner of labor I taken from tho Btandard Oil offices. and printing and one manufacturer I He said he never saw any such books annointed hv the governor. The board I and that he had never negotlatod will elect a factory Inspector at 1150 1 with Mr. Chamberlain for any letter a month and an assistant at $100 a I He added runner tnat ne nan never month, these officer to Hie their re. I talked with Mr. Hearst about the cor poris with the commission and to I respondent and had. never bought leave them oocn to nubllo Insoectlnn. any of the originals. Members of the board will not receive I Mr. Mooney branded the statement any consideration. . I that $84,000 was paid for copies of A bill has boon prepared for Intro- the Standard Oil letters na "an ab duction In the general assembly to al-1 surdity." When asked for his Jndg low the department of agriculture to ment as to the statement that $4600 erect a building for lis purposes to I was paid, Mr. Mooney replied that cost not more than $150,000. The I'"' n,w" nolnt "f vl,,w that price money shall he raised by the depart-1 Would not hv "eer, excessive. ment out of lis surplus. Frank R I The committee took an Indefinite Simpson of ftalelKh drew the plans. I recess. which cull for a flve-t'iry structure. the n"e"Mon of brick or slone to be I determined by the hoard of agricul ture. Srimlo, lllll Iiiiroiluccd. Two Of family Horned to Heath Wh rl- !te f". T.I prole i lire. ,v ..,. C'lteMtH of Ihe By Associated Pre ' Canfleld, Ohio, Jan. 2 that destroyed a fnrm h-m. Inilny cnuwd the ih u 'n rhnf, r anil Hi Im!: i . ;u- hut iii I : nai' o l.-llin ' in n r hi of Cm SLAIN BY riEGRQ What was the agreement of those . In the pool?" asked Judge J. M. Dick inson, attorney for the government. I was not familiar with the rte- . tails," eald Mr. Corey, adding that Col. Millard Hunsicker.. representative of the Carnegie company abroad, con ducted the negotiations. The witness testified that during the existence of the agreement the Amer ican members had not to his knowl edge, attempted to compete for armor plate either In England, France or Germany. . "Did the foreign firms bid for Unit ed States govern ment Contracts?" ho was asked. 'I believe It was provided by law that the United States government SHIELDS IS ELECTED TEHSSEE SEMLl By Associated Press. Nashville. Tenn., Jan. 23. The Ten- leged, went to the house, stole a pair 1 nesee legislature today elected Chief of shoes, and hitching up Mr. Ulmer's I Justice John K. Shields of the Slain horse and buggy drove It to the llm-1 Supreme court United States senator Its ot Savannah and left It Favors Tariff Commission. Washington, Jun. 23. The National Chamber of Commerce today adopted resolutions favoring the creation of s permanent tariff commission, the es tablishment of a new banking and currency system, and recognition of the republic of China. Favoring the tariff commission created some dis cusslon on the ground that It mlchl be unwise because Its political aspect might embarrass the work of tl chamber. for the term beginning March 4. John Knight Shields, elected I'nll -d States senator today, Is a native of Grainger county, Tenn., and 55 ye.irrf old. He was admitted to Ihe bar tu 1879. He served s chancellor, lv!i.!- 1894; was Selected riSHm lnto Justice of the stale Supreme court In inn:', an I re-elected In 1910. HuliKeiocnh.v I was elected chief .lust Ice. Suffrage Hcw'lulliiil l'n St Alhnov. More "Arviii TruM' liiilicli Ft A .!, Wr4 New Vol k, .Inn. 7. I ! i i' ' dlctmenls were fnuicl 1 f noon by the hp- i Jul f I i tUral iutf New V i' i n 1 of the he!,. I Oi i;- 1 : i-iil ,'. I nilv a .cl( b.-r..i. h i! h ' ' 1
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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Jan. 23, 1913, edition 1
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