lFirBini(Dihi '" "3 M3 VOL. XXV, NO. 50 HENDERSON VILLE, N. C. THURSDAY. JANUARY 9, 1919 PRICE FIVE CENT, I p3 mi PS" ii r B 8N 1 a a k 8 1 1 1 a 81 B I LB 3 s 1 54. M P!io:o by Ainjericin Press Association. FORMER PRESiDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT. Th heodore Roosevelt, Twenty-sixth ' Present of the United Sates, Died in Morning, January 6th, Hill, Oyster Bay, N. Y. Death is Believed tO have i inended to the ho jvs naval affairs cr m ' ' , - m, ioiitee today by Rear Admiral Jidd- Been due tO FlhsuniatlSITl Ol the Meart. 1 he Funeral was Prayer at the Roosevelt ' , , rrl 1 i Were held at Christ Episcopal Church, Where he - i And his Family had Worshipped for many Years, j . ' ., O J ' And the Body of the Former President was buried j On a Knoll Overlooking Plot Selected by Himself After he Left the White T,onfin.p Rooeveit. was born inrineichborhood, Roosevelt was tutored , o7v. nt nn. rew I oris. Vji-Jf - ler,-185S. The Roosevelt family has heen prominent in the life of New York for many generations, and is cf Dutch origin. Mr. Roosevelt's mother, Martha Bullock, came from a fatuity of Scotch-Irish and Hugenot origin equally prominent in Georgia. " V -Mr. Roosevelt spent much "of ; his boyhood at Oyster Bay, the country home of his father, on Long Island Sound, where he" began with a dla tinct purpose, unusual among boys of his age, to build up a naturally frail physique by rowing and swimming in the watens of Long Island Sound, and by riding over thc hills and tramping through the woods cf Long "Island. Boyhood and College. ' vkail that he was not privileged i lite. . . . i, ' ai VrtTt in llic1 APPOI3fT2IEXT OF - COUNTY PHYSICIAN. v "vV. S. Shitle, Secretary of the Hen v derson ;County Board of Health, an nounc&s that on Monday, January 13th " a meeting of the board vi II be heK 1 for the purpose of appointing a County f physician for the coming year. Phy i 'i sicians interested in the announce j f - ment are requested to fila with Mr. f Shitle, prior to this meeting, a state- ment of the terms on which they will undertake the duties of this oiRce. 54 SJLnU his Sleep Early Monday at his Home on Sagamore "L 1J iT AAr Unnrv RtU Afr held VY ednesaay, laniiary Otn. -IIICa , vt , j j Home Funeral bervices - Long Island Sound in a and Mrs. Roosevelt soon a House. J privately, in New York and during privately, in travels on vhich his parents took the i children abroad. A Dorch gymnasium at his home provided him with phys!-fones cal- excritoes vitix which- he combattea a troublesome ' asthma. . His father, a glass importer and a man of means, was his constant companion ; he kept a diary j he read so much history and fictional bookg of - adventure that he was known as a bookworm; he took boxing lessons; he was an amateur naturalist; and at the age of seven teen he entered Harvard university. There, he was not prominent, in an athletic way, but his puny body had undergone a metamorphosis and be fore graduation he became one of the champion boxers of .the college. This remarkable physical development was . I-. tt I empnasisea snortiy. airer ne ien nar- vard in 1880, when he .yent to Europe, climbed the Matterhorn.-and as a rs- (Continued oiFage 7) FIRST BANK & TKUST COMPANY . DECLARES EEGUI.A R YWE D. At the ! .December meetLng of the di rectors of the First Bank and Trus:: Company the regu!ar."ser.li-annual divi dend of three -per cent" was declared and checks were nailed to the sicci- holderg on New Year's Day- The oankj has just .closed a year , of extremely satisfactory' growth and prosperity, and, Tith deposits of $552,000, has a Surplus and Undivided Fronts Account of $23,000, COUNTY COSDIISSIGNEIIS' HOLD MONTHLY MEETDfG. The Henderson County .-CcmisslOn- ers hold their regular monthly meet-, ing last Monday, January 6th, the en tire Board being presnt. The com raissioners are: J. N. Russell (Chair man), J. A. Maxwell, S. J. Whitaker. Clerk, A. O. Jones. Mrs. Sallie Johnson, who has been in charge of the County Home sct the death of her husband, J. H. John son, tendered her resignation effective March 1st, which date terminates the contract made by her with the com missioners. Persons desiring to se cure -the position of manager are no tified to file application with A. O. Jones before January 18th, and to ap pear in person before the commis sioners. A petition was received from voters of Pleasant Hill School District for an election to levy a special school tax in that district for the purpose of ex tending the present school term of four months and making- the- term- six months- The petition was approved "and the election ordered for Febru ary 15th next. . A petition, by voters of Green River. TownBhip was presented by J. 0; Bell, asking for re-location of the Bob's Crook Road from Green River Bridge to the head of Green River up near the Transylvania County line. The petition was ordered posted, and hear ing on it will be had at the next monthly meeting on February 3rd. The Commisioners notified the State Highway Commission that Henderson County would guarantee the raising of a sum equal to the amount of the allotment of highway road funds to this county, about $18,000, this guarantee being necesary to secure such allotment. Many small items were disposed, of which the claims orderd paid vrill of course appear in publication cf the. regular county statement. RECOMMENDS SINKING OP SUREEXDERED GFUJIAX SKIPS. Atfmirsl Rodman Advises Tctjil De-SrTin.!oi-, Seti'ctr.rt VDii?cJ Op posed lo idea. Says Use Csvn be Io and" for CapfEr-'l War YVsself. 'Tashington. Jan 3. Destruction of ail capital ships of the German navy mU rendered to the .lies was recc-ni- man, who commanded the American n v. ;A' - "During the war the combined I Ti 1 oh on1 A rn ripo n flootrj liova Vio ; such a predominating superiority over A. T 1 .! a i.1 i. ' . " A. 1 - 1 vjennau ueet tuat it aarea not come out and fight us," Admiral Rodman said. "If that supremacy could be maintained when the German Seet was ex'ste"Pce, v,rhat would be the ob- ject of adding the German ships to oar lur'jes wnea zne ctanger- oi ineir ar- tackins us has been removed? "The expense of maintaining the ships would be enormous. The types jare entirely diSerent from those of the British and American fleet. They are equipped with different guns and use a different kind of ammunition. "Furthermore, there is no object for ..the aiii-es to keep theia or protection y the time Germany can build newCross in New York has been wonder - andJ Jf50 0TPm i fw'r the vcr.d s - iarge;t -est, iesw ships will have become obsolete and would have to be thrown away any how." ,' Admiral Rodman said the ships should be "token out in the North, sea and sunk "?o . that they never could be four.-. ain," adding that if the allies kept n. :m. thgywould soon And that they "have annexed a herd of white elephants." Yashington, Jan. 4. Secretary Dan iels today expressed himself as being personally opposed to sinking German surrendered warships. He thought the older tvess even of the German war craft might be used like the old American battleships Iowa, IVIassa chuetts, and Indiana, as training ships, and if no other use were "found they njin-ht b used as targets to tsst new irans i. o: o. f. The "following officers have been elected for the term ending June 30, 1S19. S. M. Garren, N. G. ' ,T. Si Kyde'r, V. G. A. C. Jones Sec'y. A. F. P. King, Treas. - J. M. Stepp, "Warden. W. T. Drake, Chaplain. All. Odd Fellows are requested to be present next. Tuesday night for the installation of ofiicers. J. C. BROW, Seb. VAS BREAKS OUT IX OLD BLUE EIDGE. At a hearing before Magistrate B. F, Hood last Tuesday mornin Jesse McGraw, Furman Stepp, James Step?, F. G. Blackwell and Thomas Parris were each bound oVer under $200 bond to the March term of the Superior Court, the charge in each case being assault with a deadly weapon. The affair from which the charges resulted occurred on Mr. McGraw's farm in the Hungary Creek section or Blue Ridge Township last Saturday afternoon, and seems to have been a general engagement of no small pro portions. The testimony was to the effect that McGraw was husking corn at his crib, and that the other parties came along the road and remarked to him that they had just cut up his blockade still and stopped his whis key making, and that Blackwell had been appointed a deputy marshal, and that McGraw made reply to the effect that he guessed he could fix the still up again. So far the testimony was not conflicting, but right here it di verged sharply. McGraw states that he had been squirrel hunting that morning, and had his shotgun leaning against the crib, and that after the ex change of the remarks noted, he pick ed up the gun and started toward his house; that he heard a rock strike the side of the crib and stopped and turn ed around, and that thereupon the other parties commenced firing upon him with pistols. The other parties to' the affair state that McGraw fired item. When the supper itself had the first sliot. Anyway, the testimony Deen comfortably stowed away in the come3. together again here, and all J respective interiors of the members hands agree that at this stage the j present, and the cigars and cigarettes best tactics of European military '"were being handed around and lighted leaders were adopted by both sides, up, and chairs were being moved and the warfare of open movement . around a little for easier and lazier gave way to the warfare of fizel po- 'listening, C. 53. Bland, retiring resi sitioas, with McGraw in a heavily "or- I dent, opened the business session tifiec Bosition behind a small post - oak, and the enemy strongly entrench ed in the ditch alongside the road. In pife of the terrific artillery fire main tained by both sides as long as ammu nition held out. the casualties Vere comparatively light, all of them beinSlBarn son's European. Speeches an5 sustained by Furxnan- Stepp vho -sto?-. p retiouhj'ejmii as "Evilse Sed-se S sbt with his head arid! Prophet." Roughly Handled b In- another vth his shoulder. In add!- tion to the bond of $200 set by the court, McGraw and Furman and James Stepp are also under $300 bond to keep the peace until the case is heard at the March term of Superior Court, The armistice being thus arranged, it is hoped by friends of both parties j fire" demonstration . started in La that a treaty of peace may be ratified j Fayette park by "sentinels" of the na- ent even if it fails to set up a league , of nations. xiss anne oates in TEKVlfc-VTED IN CHARLOTTE, j and their banners destroyed, while an j urn in which the "watch fire" was Charlotte, Jan. 5. Miss Anne Oates, burnin3 waa destroyed. After the po of Kendersonviile, who has been in the lice had restored order the WOmen city for two days, leaves today. Miss ; lishted s nev fire in OR9 of thc hig Oates coe from New York where shejarns ia the p?rk and Qye of them were Las been since September last, in Red arrested by tilQ police for . this vioia Cross work, being a member of the;tinn nf nrr reKtation ' Thpv Pft ambulance corps. "I find the work j fuged tQ furnish bond and were hel(t intensely interesting," said Miss Oates, at a precinct station, yesterday. "The corps did wonderful! During the afternoon the, women work at the Morgan explosion at burned COpies cf the speeches deliver Perth Amboy. Yes, ve wear uniforms j ed fcy president Wilson in Europe but they are not objectionable. Weand ag tne last one was destroyed the could not very well work in regulation j sesjtinela unfurled a banner bearing female attire. The work of the Red ful in ope and as perfect in organi - -ion a3 lo .pestle fcr any organized I effort to be. I am going back Satur day to continue my work and can't ,say just when I'll be home again. The demobilization of the army vrill bring its work of no less interest than dur ing the war period. The coming home of the wounded, and the care of them Is what the society is now planning for. This latter work will be of in- tense interest and beside its aid-to-the ! injured side, there is also the side of I After thG "ych fre had been put uplift and benefit to those who givejout togi the WOmen lighted anoth themselves to the cause. It is a great )er and party leaders announced that privilege to feel that you are relieving ii to . x " t the sufferings of others Miss Gates, came to Charlotte to see her grandmother, Mrs. David V . Oates Later the five women were released and aunt,-35rs. H. N, Pharr, and is at jby the FOlice and told-to appear in'po the Pharr home' on Church street. lipe cnurt tomorrow moraine to ans- iss Gates Ms the sister of William Oates, who was aen prisoner by the i Germans and who. is now in Paris j hoping to. come home soon. Charlotte Observer. -. . KED CROSS J.1BETING. ' v - , x, , A called meeting of the Executive j Committee '.of the Red Cross Caanz3r meeting oi tne chapter wm wnww a. t 3:30. All officers and others interest ed are requested to be present. Dr. A. C. Teteou, Acting Ch'm. Henry F. Ptewart, Acting Sec. i m v- TT.li try j. will be heia tne icy nan wur- ch day afternoon at. 2:80. January 11th. j ' . . w it - ,. . waite house . m . sed tne Board Of Enjoys Clarence Latham President. A. S. Tru :: Re-Elected Secretary and Treasure, and Honored by Gift, Steps Taken to Locate Georgia Military Academy, Discussion of County Roads In spite of a temperature that was bers, and made an earnest plea for reaching the zero mark and promis ing work for the plumbers next day, the largest and most successful meet ing In the history of the Henderson ville Board of Trade was held at Ken- '"tucky Home last Friday night. . Be- tween fifty and sixty members and several guests gathered In the big din ing room where a short invocation was made by W. A. Smith. To say that the supper was held at Kentucky Home is to say that every item on the menu was delicious, that there were plenty of items, and plenty of each 1 "with a hearty welcome to the mem- SUFFBAGETTES RAISE BIG ROUGH HOUSE. dignant Spectators in Frost of White House. Washington, Jan. 2. Riotous scenes were enacted tonight in front of the f white house when soldiers, sailors and citizens undertook to end a "watch "against the failure of the senate to . - , nass the eaual suffrage resnlutimi; "Women carrying banners were knocked down by the charging crowd intt(,rirAinn .inAr.r.mnc- p-f-t :Wilscn as a.false pr0phet of demo- ; cracy A doZen soIdie:s and sailors i-3vant:y surrounded the "banner and shut it from the gaze of the crowd of several hundred persons. An army captain then stepped in front of the spectators and called for three cheers for the President, "the world's leader of democracy and the best friend ihe women of America ever had." The crowd gave the cheer with a will, but there was no atempt then t molest the "sentinels. ery p0ssibIe effort wouid. be made . . ..... to keep it going until the senate pas3- ed the suffrage amendment. wer formal charges of -violating parte reu!ations At the woman s party headquarters it was said that since rt5ie women had not ; furnished any ibond they would not appear for trial. I V'sshington, Jan. 5. Because cf in- itn 'erence by the police the national ; . ' , . U4. .! v- v-an's party announced tonight . . t. , in w burning in front of the until the senate had pas- Susan B. Anthony susrage . ! constitutional amendment resolution. Four more -of the party "sentinels" were arrested tonight when they un dertook to start another fire to replace that extinguished last night by a crowd of men and they are held in the Trd Big d prea cooperation In the work of the com ing year, and then, called for a verbal report from Secretary and Treasurer A. S. Truex.. This report, showing the general healthy and active condi tion of the organization, and also not ing a cash balan.ee. of nearly a. thou sand dollars In the treasury, met with hearty approval shown by generous applause- After the handling of one or two important items, it was pro posed, seconded, and carried , unani mously, that as a token of apprecia tion of Mr. Truex's energetic and effective work as secretary and treas urer, that he be presented with a Check for a hundred dollars, the carry ing of this motion also meeting with applause. -. -. Proceeding to the election of officer for the ensuing year, the following were elected, every nomination meet- (Continued on Page 3) house o? detention to await trial to morrow. Officials of the woman's party said they recognized that'lt would be iiri possible to furnish women to bulla the. fires as fast as the police could ar rest them," but declared that "no amount of police interference" would prevent the burning in front of the white house of copies of speeches which President "Wilson delivers i:v 1 PnrflT1p - ' ! CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK DECLARES DIVIDEND. Four per cent dividend checks have just ; been mailed out to stockholders of the Citizens National Bank, the regular semi-annual dividend of four ner cent having been declared at a di rectors meeting held December 10th. This bank, which has been successful since its organization in May, 1915, has just closed a year of exceptional prosperity. It has paid a regular semi-annual dividend of four per co-it Since its organization, and now, with a capital of $50,000.00, and deposits of almost half a million, has a surplus of. $10,000.00 and undivided profits of $4,500,00, and has reduced its furnituro and fixture account from $6,000.00 to $4,500.00. The bank owns the bnila ing site at the north-east corner of filain Street and Fourth Avenue, and 'a modern banking office and buiituutf. The offi'cerg of th Lank .?Tt'r.rH: Prcident, C. E are: E. W. Brooks, 1st Vice-President; iiro.vniov one.:' ' 2nd Vice-President; C. S. Fullbrigh,., Cashier; W. A. Young- and E. H.J Davis, Assistant Cashiers- Directors: E. W. Ewbank, Brownlow Jackson, C. E. Brooks, W. C. Rector, R. P. Freeze, F. A. Ewbank, W. S. Ashworth, C. S. Fullbright F. A. Ely, C. B. Glazener W. A. Cannon, Foster Bennett. SELLING FOBDS AGAIN The Rhodes Auto Company has an advertisement in this issue which will doubtless attract the attention of auto ists who have been wondering wh2a they could secure another Henry, and at what price. The Rhodes Company announce that on orders placed now they can make reasonably .prompt de livery on two of the Ford models, the Sedan and the Coupelet, both o which are offered at the same price as last summer. Some days ago a loal Observer remarked that, other signs to the contrary notwithstanding, he would not feel fully convinced that the war was over until he saw Archie Erown hauling a long string of usw Henry's from the freight depot. Co It, would seem that peace is pretty close around the corner. A CABLE FEOM FRANCE Libourne, France, Jan. 6. 1219. W. P. Whitmire, Hendersonville, N. C. Am well. Home soon. Lee "TOiitmire.