Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / July 30, 1916, edition 1 / Page 1
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UN. BAY CITIZEN THF WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY. H i ASITEVILLE, N. 0., SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 30, 191 G. Q VOL. XXXII, NO. 281. PRICE FIVE CENTS. ' ' ' " O II EXPLOSIONS SHAKE WHOLE OF MANHATTAN ISLE Windows All Over New York Are Shattered by Force of Detonations. TELEPHONE LINES UNDER RIVER DOWN QExplosion is in Jersey and New York is Unable to Learn Where. NEW YORK, July 30. All Manhattan island Brooklyn and cities in New Jersey were shaken shortly after 2 o clock thi3 morning by a terrific explosion Frantic efforts were made by the police to locate the scene of the evident disaster, The most reliable report received up to 2:30 o clock was that the Eagle Oil works y locatec litendinj rHN. j., located on a peninsula ex tending from Communipaw, into New York bav, If had blown up. I Windows Shattered. n The force of the explosion if was so frreat that thousands of heavy plate glass win dows in office buildings in lower Manhattan and Brook lyn were shattered. Streets for many blocks in the downtown section were lit erally strewn with broken glass. inousanas oi persons swarmed into the streets in all parts of the citv from - BuHdm'igubway exjts and railway stations, running about jn a panic Many wom en became hysterical. Po lice whistles were blown frantically but the police themselves did not know" what it was all about. Second Explosion. The first explosion was followed by a second at 2:39, slightly less violent but which again shook all New York and shattered many Qmore buildings. Nearly all the fire appa ratus m Brooklyn was called (Continued on Pace Five.) SENATE ASKS CLEMENCY T AFTEH LENGTHY DEBATE iAsks President Wilson Transmit Message to Great Britain. to COMMITTEE UPSET WASHINGTON, July 2. By a ote of forty-six to nineteen, the sen ate today adopted, a resolution re questlng President Wilson.; to trans mit to the British governm-cnt an expression of hope that it would ex ercise clemency In the treatment of Irish political prisoners. The senate adopted the "following resolution submitted by Senator Pitt mien: - , . "Resolved, that the senate, express the hope Chat the ; British govern ment may exercise clemency in the treatment of Irish prisoners and that the president be requested to trans mit this hope to the British govern ment." The rote was preceded by a debate during- whloh Senator Phelan led the peaking for the resolution and Sen ator Williams opposed it. Thr Engliwhmlntstry wouftrtm madmen to execute Sir Roger base ment," he said. "They would be luna tics to do such a thing and show themselves not even .possessed of the ordinary shrewdness of a peanut poli tician. I believe that, left alone, Eng land will commute Casement's sen- , tenoe to Imprisonment and that after tne war ne win do paraonea.- Three democrats, Fletcher, 'Pom erene and Williams voted against the resolution. Senator Lodge Borah, McCumber Oliver and Btandegee, all republican members - of. the foreign relations committee Toted .against It. Chairman 8tone and Senator PJtt xnan, democratic members of the loommlttee voted foe It. HEAVY COUNTER ATTACKS OF GERMANS AGAINST WE DELVILLE WOOD REPULSED Germans Evidently. Attach Much Impor tance to Possession of This Wood. Rus sians Push Forward in East as Mies Hammer Teutons on Western Front. LONDON, July 2 The importance attaohed by the Germans to the pos session of Delville wood la shown by the desperate character of their coun- ter-attacks on this wood since It was captured by the British. These counter-attacks, according to the British roports, have been repufeed with heavy German losses. Near Posleres the British and Ger mans continue In the closest grips, and the severest hand-to-hand fight ing is going on Incessantly. The Brit ish, however, maintain their advance toward the remaining portion of the rising ground between , Posleres and Bapaume still in the hands of ths Germans. Troops Taken from Mease. Many German Infantry units with. drawn from the Mouse area hav been recognized in the forces opposing the progress of the British. This is the probable reason why the flehtln around Verdun, as shown bv the French reports, has developed Into almost purely artillery engagements. Intermittent minor Infantry attacks, however, have occurred there, initi ated alternately by either side, In which the French report some suc cess with a gain In ground. The Russian armies under Gennralu Brussiloff and Letchltikv have nuahed further forward in a penetrating iiiuvsnieni mrougn tne Austro-Uer- man line and their success is ad. mined in the Berlin and Vienna re ports of today, which say: "North westward of Lutsk the enemy succeeded- In penetrating our lines, and we withdrew behind the river.'' A delated Turkish official reDort be littles the Russian successes in ths Caucasus and describes the capture of Batburt and Erzingan as of little importance to the general Turkish scheme of operations. Hammer Teutons. Armies of the entente allies con. tlnue to hammer the lines of the cen tral, powers on all European fields. On the western front the British and French are holding back German forces, and British troops have made additional progress on the .hard- fought Somme battle ground. 'With Brody lh their hands the Rus sians Report lkita .or . io;.aoavit, Ja northern Galieia. . In southern- Cauda, however, the Muscovite armies are pushing forward toward Stanislau an important' railroad 'center,' which is not far from Hallcz, also a railroad center. ,- The capture of Brody and the re treat of the Austrian army Is equaled, if not surpassed by the Russian sue. cesses east, and southwest of Lutsk. This advance, if unchecked by General von Llnsingen, seriously threatens Vladtmir-Volynskl and makes the rail road junction of Kovel less tenable for the AustrOiGermans. While admitting the Russian pene tration of the Teutonic lines northwest of. Lutsk. Berlin declares that the advance west of Lutsk has been stop ped by a counter-attack. More Prisoners. Petroxrad claims tne capture of more than 20.000 Austro-Germans in the recent fighting in northern Gallcia OF AFFAIRS ARISES FROM ' EXECUTIOHF FHYATT Britain Wants Complete Re port on Circumstances at Once. CALLS ON AMERICA LONDON, July If Captain Charles Fryatt, former commander of a British merchantman, who was put to death by the Teutons for alleged attempts to ram p submarine with his vessel, was shot by the Germans because he took steps which appeared to affdrd the only chance of saving his shin ' and the lives of his men, from the attack of a U-oat, a serious condition ' of affairs has arise!, the British foreign office has announced in a communication to American Am bassador' Page, made public here to day. ,The communication, which re quests that -n Wren t inquiry be made by the American embassy In Berlin for ail facts concerning the trial and execution of Captain Fryatt reads as follows: . . His majesty's government finds it difficult to believe that a master of a merchant vessel, -who after German submarines had adopted ths practice of sinking merchant vessels without warning and without regard for the lives of the passengers or crew, took the step which appeared to afford the onbtchanceof savlngnot only his vessel, but the lives of all on board, can have ; been shot deliberately in cold blood for this action. ' If the German government has In fact perpetrated such" a crime in the case of a British subject held prisoner bv them It is evident that a most seri ous condition of affairs has arisen. "The foreign- secretary- therefore Is obliged, on behalf of the government, to re an est that an urgent inquiry mar ba made by the United States embassy in Berlin as to wnetner tne report of the shooting of Captain yFryatt la true, in order that the wnuah gov ernment' may have, wlthoilt delay, a full and undoubted -accojlnt of the facts before them. aligned) "Foreign Offlqk Julr li." and Volhynla. According to estimates of Russian army officers, the number of prisoners taken In the first half of the present campaign by the Russians totals. 330.000. Tne same auinori- ties estimate the Austro-Gernian losses, including killed, at 800,000. North of the Somme, In France, the British have Rained some ground In the vicinity of Pozleres and the Hlgr wood. The British have beaten off German attacks against Delville wood and the French have stopped German attempts to advance at Vermando villers, south of the Somme. Berlin reports little activity on this front, with the exception of the failure of British attacks in the vicinity of Po zieres. Fighting also continues around Ver dun. German attacks on both the right and left banks of the Meuse have been repulsed. Parts asserts. French troops continue their advance near Thlauruont work, on, the right bank of the river. There has been no great change on the Austro-Itallan front nor on the S&lonikl front where the Serbian troops began an offensive several days ago. 'Sofia claims the Bulgarians stoDDed Serbian attacks, while the Serbians' claim to have imposed heavy looses on the Bulgarians. In the Caucasus ths Russian aa vanes against Kharput and Sivas, the Dresent objectives or urana uuk Nicholas, continues successfully, Pet- rograd reports, FRANCE PROTESTS. PARIS, July 29. 'France today sent an official note to the -neutral powers protesting against the action of tne German authorities towards the popu. lotion in the French departments oc cupled by Teuton forces. The note is accompanied by a mass of testimony concerning the seizure for work In fields of thousands of women and young girls. The docu ment says that the events, which' oc curred in Lille, Koubaix and Turcolng were only the application of the cruel system of work forced on the popula tion and, describes the various forms of violence the Germans are accused of having practiced. , The note says: "A woman who was removed from B Ardennes affirms that ier husband- was shot for refusing to obey an order, to requisition supplies, and that shejjerself was imprisoned for, two day,"'-; ytgjn' '3(v "in w " Meurtne ana Moseus, work assigned to the mayor being un. completed in time, he was suspended from a tree by means of a rope passed under his arms and he was left in this position about an hour." The note cites cases of men seventy to eighty years of age made to work; of women forced to labor under the fire of French troops and of others compelled to dig trenches. It also makes a charge based on the testi mony of a witness, that in October, 191 the Germans took from the de partment of Pas De Calais a party of inhabitants, that they used them as shields against the fire of the French and that forty were thus killed. The document says the German gov ernment on January 24, 191. denied mistreatment of inhabitants, but, says the French note, "sworn testimony re garding measures taken In April at Lille shows the degree of faith which can be placed in their denial." CARRANZfl FORCES ARE T OF VILLA BY SUPPLIES Horses Are Unable to Keep Up With Blooded Mounts of Bandits. VILLA STILL FLEES CHIHUAHUA CITY', July Franclsca Villa several times has been enabled to escape tho net of Carranza forces because of the Inability of Car ranzlsta mounts to endure the strain of the long distances required. In the chases after the outlaw, General Tre vino today was informed by General Ramos, who is commanding the ban dit campaign in Chihuahua and Du rango. General Ramos reported that practically no food or forage for his troops can bo found in the region which he is operating and that the condition of the inhabitants is piti able. His inability to secure supplies quickly enough, he says, hampers him in attempting to keep up, with the out laws, who are more lightly equipped. Villa, he said, is now in the canyons of the Penoles district. Ramos said that Villa lost much prestige at the Cerro Gordo, Chihua hua engagement, when with fifty men of his personal bodyguard, he desert ed the remainder of his command and fled toward the hills for safety. A Carranttsta detachment sent in pur suit, he said, killed thirty-three Vll. listas but because of the broken coun try was unable to catch up wjth the bandit chieftain or members ofhis start who were mounted on blooded antmals. The dispatches reported the death of Pablo Salinas, former Villlsta lead er in ths Laguna district, who early In Mar s - charged with attacking a Torreont train bearing several Ameri can women refugees. ,. Ramqs added that he had received overtures from a number of leading Vllllstas ' looking toward . their sur render. General Ramos asked rati, ficatlon of his act in giving to ths poor of the Penoles district a herd of l.l'OO cattle which he seized from the bandits and also In detailing troaps to orotect tho inhabitants until ther harvest their com crop, HAMPERED "For THOMAS EDGAR STRIPLING, THE NOTED GEORGIA CONVICT, IS GRANTED A FULL PARDON BY THE GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA ; T- Stripling, Serving Sentence of Another Name, Served Four years as Chief of Police at Danville, Va.Free Fourteen Years, He Was Finally Re-captured. 'ATLANTA. - Qil1 July !. Thomas Edgar Stripling, who served as chief of police of Danville, Vs., for almost lour ot me jourisen years taai ne was an escaped convict, was granted a full pardon by Governor Nat. E. Harris at o'clock tonight. Sinoe the first 'day that "Chief K. EL Morris," of Danville was ibrought back la Georgia to resume his life sentence aa Stripling, 'Influential at tempts were tnad through three state administrations -to have him pardoned. All these failed, however, until rXfwvfnn T?M nrU , wnt to Mil- '" resii '" ! ,""tTT., n a.n sndeal. of trlallns els-nt CMim-en.' a gin ot six, ran to mm in ine .prison grounas mnA hAttifiillv nleaded - to "olesse let my papa out because he is sick and we all need him so bad." The inci dent touched the aged governor and he promised "to send your father back to you sometime ' during ms term." J Sends letter to CliUd. Governor Harris tonight dispatched letter to little Bessie Stripling and completed the case in its last Sentence with "After all, it Is the offering from the governor's heart to the love and innocence of a little child." Stripling on November 4, 1897 shot and killed W. J. Cornett, his neigh bor in Harris county, Georgia. He fired through a window of Cornett's house. He surrendered at Columbus, Q, a few days afterward and even FOR FLOODSUFFERERS Generous Response " Meets Appeals For Aid in Mc Dowell County. MARION N. C. July 19.-With the arrival of John Sprunt HUU a repre sentative of the state relief committee sent out hy te governor to Investi gate personally the conditions in ma flood, stricken counties, the McDowell county .relief committee, held a Joint meeting" to hear reports from special ' committees and - from the county officials. Absolutely reliable reports place the number of fam ilies in distress at 600. - Persons who have traveled through the stricken districts report a loss of ninety per cent of all good crops and of other property beypnd estimate. Mr. Hill will make a speclanreport to night to the governor toy wire. The local committee reports the following contributions; J. Q. Wil key for George W. Helms company, $200; First National bank, 1100- A. B. Blanton, 100; Clinchfleid - Manufac turing company, 150; Marion Manu facturing company, 80; Merchants and Farmers bank. $60;' B. B." Price, $25; J. W; Pless, $25; ,V. M. Goodson, $25: D. E. Hudglns $26: W. T. Mor gan, $25- T. F. Wrenn, $26; J..W. Steetman, 5; J. -. Loghridge, $6; J. W. Wlnbourne $S: S. C.'Whitten, $2; G W. Giles, $5; Marlon Pharmacy, $3 B. L. C. Gibson, $5: R. A. Cooper, $10; O. H. Wenchell, .$6; Beaman Lumber company, $5; R.- J. Noyce, $2.60; J. J. Fritz. 2.50; W. M. Mc Nairy, $2.60? Payne and Decker; $10; G. W. Kirpatriok, $2.10. , , COLUMBIA G1,TS BRAPSHAW. COLUMBIA, 8. C, July. I J.-rtfhe Columbia South Atlantic league club tonight announced the purchase from tbs Ashevllle North Carolina league club of Inflelder Bradshaw. Ths player will report Monday, to take the plaes of Shortstop George Braun, -who broke his leg in a, game Friday, M, . fr.':;. -v THE WEATHER. - WASHINGTON. July 2 -Forecast for North Carolina:- Partly -cloudy Sunday, orobablr shower west pot- Hon warmer ia Interior; Monday Xlr- It's Always Good Weather" Life Imprisonment for Murder, tually! was found guilty and sentenced to life lAprisooment. Stripling testified at the trial, and It was corroborated, that Cornett had Insulted both his wife and married sister, that Cornett had threatened to kill him and that when passing Cor nett's house the night of the killing, he could not restrain himself from shooting when he saw Cornett pass ing a window with a light in his hand. Hs claimed self-defense aa he said he believed "it was either Cornett's life or mine sometime." - Escaped from Jail. Ho escaped from ths Harris county awsuiag- ms outcome of an appeal. He remained hidden about two months at the horns of his uncle la Harris county, and then made his way to North Caro lina, where his wife joined . mm in 1899. Under the name of R. E. Mor ris hs did different kinds of work In several towns for a nu ruber of years. Finally he was employed by the Southern railway as a special agent. That work took him to Jjanviwe, where he had ibeen about ono year ihAn h obtained .a place on the police force. Nine months later hs was elected chief of police. Stripling has said there were two mn in Danville who knew his life story, but they remained silent. Flnal iv b. man well known In Harris county saw him and soon afterwards reports as to Stripling's wnereaoouis were heard. These reports seemea, w w. W. Smith, a private detective, to war- TRIBUTE PAID MEMORY : OF ZEBULONBAIRD VANCE North Carolinians Make Ad dresses in House in Honor of Famous Senator. . WASHINGTON, .Tuly 2. Tributes were paid to the memory or tne laie Zehulon Balrd Vance, former United States senator from North Carolina, in addresses mads In the house to day 'by several members) ot the North Former Senator Vance's status was recently unveiled in Statuary Hall in the capltoi. Representative Btedman made the principal address and was followed by Representatives Small, Kltehln, Hood, Pou, Page, Doughton and Brttt A resolution, offered by Mr. Klteh ln. was adoDted authorizing ths print- lng of '10,000 copies of the proceed ings at the recent ceremony at whloh the Vance statue was unveneu. Representative Baker acted as speaker In the absenoe of Speaker Clark, who Is visiting-n WUdwood N. J. PRESIDENT OW CRUISE. FORTRESS MONROE, Va., July 2. President Wilson arrived here this afternoon on the naval yacht May flower. The yacht anchored in -the roads and, the nresldent did not come ashore. Soon after the Mayflour ar rived the armored cruiser, which has been patrolling outside the capes en neutrality duty steamed In and drop ped anchor within hailing distance. Therefollowed a long exchange of messages between Fortress Monroe, tttioMayflower, and t he-North Caro-1 Una, wigwagging continuing until darkness when lights were substi tuted. RECEPTION FOR DODD. i HEADQUARTERS AMERICAN PUNITIVE EXPEDITION,. - Mezioo, July 2. -Approximately one hundred officers of the regiments stationed at the headquarters of tho punitivs ex pedltlon here attended a farewell re ception' today to Brigadier General George A. Dodd, retired, -5 .- Nesro soldiers swept the field in nearly every event at as athletic meet I today- Escaped From Jail, and Under rant investigation. He obtained re. qulsltlon papers from Governor Brown and proceeded to Danville. Smith es tablished ths Identification beyond doubt. Re-election Assured On March 4, 1911, the Danville council was to elect a chief of police and It U said Stripling was practical ly assured of - re-election notwith standing some opposition had arisen because he killed a young white man who had resisted arrest, killed a negro who was attempting to rob his horn and shot another negro while resist ing arrest. He , was exonerated , of vn ins aiiernoon or marcn s, now ever, Smith presented the requisition papers to Danville autnontiesv . strip ling was confronted with the fact and admitted his Identity. . Stripling re quested the mayor and member ot oouncil who at that time were un aware of his plight, to meet that night as he had an Important statement to make. Before the body that probably Would have elected him cnier for an other term ths next night, hs stood handcuffed and told ths story of the shootlnsr of "Bill" Cornett, of his es cape and movements during the near' ly fourteen years of freedom. Hs still wore his uniform when placed 4n Jail in Georgia. His family movea to Miiiengevmie soon after he was sent to the prison and has resided near ths prison farm since. Stripling is now represented as being thoroughly (broken physically, OEUTSCHIAND READY TO Report Indicates Concern About Her Safety While in American Waters. BALTTMORiE, July 29. The Ger man sub-sea freighter Deutschland which arrived at this port from Ger many three weeks ago tomorrow night," with a cargo of dysstuffs lay snuggled In her 'barricaded berth at Locust Point tonight, ready to start on her perilous homeward voyage. The tuj Thomas F. Ttmmlns which met the Deutsohland at the Virginia capes and convoyed her to Baltimore was close by with steam up. Officials of the Eastern Forwarding company, the submersible' American agents re fused to comment on the Washington dlsptach sent out late today, concern ing ths probability of her sailing to morrow or'the intimation that protec tion was desired ror tne Deutschland In American waters. -That they are concerned about the boat's safety dur ing her run down the Chesapeake bay seemed to be Indicated in a re port, regarded as reliable that it Is planned to have a second tug accom pany the submarine atJ(j the Timmtns as far as the capes to guard against tne possimuty of accidents" en route. One of the Deutschland's navigat ing officers and several of th crew were on shore leave. tonight with or ders. It was said to return airoardshlp by midnight. I HEAT KILLS AT CHICAGO. CHICAGO. July 2. Excessive heat killed one person every thirty min utes here today, according to reports made to the police and- the coroner's office. Heajrotratlons were re ported by the scores and many acci dents and deeds of violence were at tributed to the high temperature. The maximum reached was 0a de grees. At 10 o clock tonight the mercury stood at ninety degrees In Chicago, In an effort to maks sleeping easier. Fire Marshal Thomas O Conner or- dered that Are engine companies sprinkle streets and sidewalks In ev ery part of the city. This is ths first time that suoh in order has been Is sued here. . - At that hour the number of. -deaths attributed to the heat In today's re- porta to ths police and coroner had geached tortysl V BRITISH OWNERS ARE GIVEN nPPI . By COURT DECREE Judge Waddill Holds That Vessel Reverts Back to Its Owners. GERMAN" DECISION WITHOUT BEARING Appam Will Probably Be In. terned For Remainder of War. NORFOLK, Va,. July 29 Posses slon of the British liner Appam, brought Into Hamptora Roads last February by a German prize crew, was awarded today to her English owners, the African Steam Navigation company, y Judge Waddill of ta Federal District court. An appeal will be taken when ths opportunity la given next Wednesday, and ths final decision In the libel proceedings probably will bo given by the Su premo court. In the meantime ths Appam will stay at Newport News In ths custody of the United States marshal or will be turned over to her owners under bond. Her cargo has been sold for 1834,0100, and the money is being held by the court. Berg's Status. What Is to become of 'Lieutenant Berg, the prise commander, and his crew of twenty-two men, must be de termined by the state department at Washington. . They have been living aboard the Appam, claiming her . as the property of the German govern, ment. but the general belief here Is that they now will be Interned along with the men. of the German raiders laid up here. , Judge Waddlirs decision.' srivsn af ter months of consideration, held that the Appam lost her status as a prise when shs entered American territorial waters to remain Indefinitely. - He re- -Jected the German contention that the Prussian-American treaty of 17M per mitted German prises to be laid up in American waters, and hsld that Prlies could be brought in only by a war vessel acting, as oonwoy and then only lor tne temporary causes recognised' by International law. v An opinion giv en by Secretary Lansing to tho Ger. man .ambassador 'i to the same effect was quoted at length by-lhe court. rwuttout JBSWfc.s '-' , A decision by a German prise court 1 that , tho . Appam was a lawful prise was hsld to bo - without offset upon: proceedings of- the oourts - of the United. States, t Ths i same .t German court recently adjudged prise money,; some 1750,000 In gold, taken from the Appam when shs was captured off the coast of Spain by the raider Moowe. ' 1 j IJITFJINMENT PROBABLE " WASHINGTON, July. irt-Intern.-ment. at. ths German prlza .crew of the Jlnsr Appam until tho and of tho European war, state department offi cials said Informally tonight, probably will ollow ' the Federal court's de cision at Norfolk awarding tho cap- I turod ship to her British owners. . in tn aossnco oi ootn secretary Lansing and Counsellor Polk., how over, officials were reticent about die-! ciuwlng the legal and diplomatic prob- . (Continued on Fags Five.) II, FOR ; THE ; ENTENTE. ALLIES So Declares Russian General Reviewing tfoe; Europen . Situation. LOOKS FOR VICTORY PETROGnAD,"Julj;" 29. The pres ent strategic situation gives ground :- for ths conviction that a complete vic tory in the European war will be won' ' by the entente allies, declares General D. & Chouviaeff, the minister ot war. ? In a statement made to The Associated Press on the military situation at the. close of the second year of the Strug-:, gle. STRATEGIC JITUATIO "XTnlnteiTuptedly preparing1 during v.-, forty years for an attack upon neigh boring countries, the Austro-Germans ' In the first period of the war.'t said General Chouviaeff. "were naturally superior to their opponents in the quantity of the means ot warfare pre-J pared by them. But a desire to break s th' enemy created a great spirit ot ' . enthusiasm among the people of the ' countries of tho anti-German group, . which oeoiile. ardently taking up the . work of providing their armies with ' : (ne necessary supplies, uuui up wieu- j, in a short time new military Indus trial Enterprises many times increas ing the former production. i-' The end of the second year or the- war was marked by the results of this patriotic upheaval among the allies, v - which found expression in a success-: ful adoption of the offensive by their -Y ' lea, now abundantly supplied wlla war material and powerful artillery. "In complete unity with all the al-v lies, the Russian army a month and half ago dealt a destructive Mow 1 from Hs left flank, and from that time - uninterruptedly continued one " blow after -another against -tho Aus- t re-Hungarian In the same way, our Caucasus troops ars persisting in dnv-: lng the Turks from supposedly. Im pregnable heights in Asia Mlnbr. "Tnus at mo Beginning ex tne inira year of ths war. strategic conditions which have now become favorable for the allies on all tho fronts, more than ever give ground for the conviction that complete vtctorr will bo rained vet thfrtnemy,
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
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July 30, 1916, edition 1
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