In 1911, Anderson, then 18, took a job as a reporter for the Knoxville Journal.
"You wouldn't want a President who was dumb enough to give away the right to buy The Knoxville Journal."
A Hawaiian company has agreed to buy The Knoxville Journal, one of the city's two daily newspapers, The Journal said today.
The Knoxville Journal said it would cease publication as a daily on Dec. 31.
The Knoxville Journal denied a race riot had occurred, but insisted the entire incident was nothing more than the city's "rabble" running amok.
This building was originally the press room of the long-time Knoxville newspaper, The Knoxville Journal.
Before moving to Greensboro, North Carolina, Catanoso had the police and courts beat for the Knoxville Journal for two years.
Rule continued editing this paper, which was eventually renamed the Knoxville Journal, until his death in 1928.
The Knoxville Journal remained one of Knoxville's daily newspapers until it folded in 1991.
Another son, Alfred (1875-1946), continued publishing the Knoxville Journal until 1928, when he sold the paper to senator and publisher, Luke Lea.