BLOGKAUERS FIGHT OFFICERS From The News of Henderson county George Candler, in Murphy after Officers and blockaders engaged an illness of several days duration i! a small battle last Wednesday The body was brought to Dillsboro night near the headwaters of Shoal and the funeral services were con Creek and as a resltv there were ducted at the Methodist church t iree arrests and the destruction of there; of which she had been a a big plant and the seizure of sev- faithful member for many years ' eral galloa Of whiskey. -, v : Wednesday morning by Rev. Dr.' Will Floyd; Wiley Lockaby and ,,lenn. Interment was in the Parris Brock Freeman were arrested and Cemetery. brought to town and tried before Mrs. Candler was the widow of Mig'strate B. F. Hood. Shipman the late Dr. J. M. Candler of Dills and Lockaby were bound over to boro and was prominently connect to court under $500 bonds and ed in Western North Carolina. Sur- Floyd under a $2.b0U bond. The successful raid was made by 0f Murphy, Dr. Charles Z. Candler Deputy Sheriffs Vernon Ly da and 0f Sylva, Herschei Candler an at Jess Sexton and Posse3men Joe torney of Athens, Tenn., Walter H. Hamilton, Bug McCall, Meridy King Candler of Chicago, and James and A;' 0. Jones, They located the M. Candler of Hickory, plant and hid until daylight and Having lived in Jacksqj county when the call for surrender came the greater .part of her life, Mrs. the men put ' up a big fight and Candler ha3 a host of friends here Floyd is said to have fired on the who join with her family in their officers several times. The men in grief at losing an excellent mother the fight tumbled down "a slippery aRd a true friend. The large hum- rock ana it appearcu un --wuuc that some had- been wounded as they tumbled ana sua over ine rock for several feet Three men escaped. ' Another raid was made Monday morning and twojstills were destroy ed near the fcame place. ; J. M. WtAVER DEAD Franklin Press. Mr. James M. Weaver died at nis nome sevcu imics nu.ii x a- v i trno mm5ud .oiwnt lm last Wednesday mormag-about U 2 o'clock. Mr. Weaver had been con fined to his room several ' months prior to his' death; His daughter Mrs. Long from Wayiresvitte? and two sons, R. R. Weaver of New York City, and Charles, Weaver of Charleston. S. C were with him at the time of his death. CLERKS WANTED FOR WORK IN THE CENSUS BUREAU Washington, D. C A special Civil Service examination will be conducted early in the fall to secure eligibles for appointment to clerk ships n the Census Bureau at Wash ington tor the task of taking the decennial census in 1920. About 3500 temporary clerks will be named to serve from one to two UVIU VMW W v 1 I and a half years. Basic pay will be TTrt of the fourteenth census, the bureau's force at Wash- ington will be expanded from about i i unn Anna aii 700 clerks to more than 4000. AH , , . - .,, . , i nf tha annninroao will ho frrm rlVll :::r.L;'Z:.;; Of these visors and enumerators. who will do the field will be about 85,000. work, there AIRPLANE FOREST PA1R0L Washington, D. C. Two addition al airplane p atrols for national for estshave been established during Jane. They are operated from Math er Field, near Sacramento, Calif, op erating over the Sierras. A trial patrol recently undertaken . was successful in detecting fires in heavy timbers at elevations of from six to ten thousand feet, CHEAPER FERTILER. Washington Following a series of conferences of officials of the De- Dartmenrnf AdriPiilnir with fer- tilizer manufacturers, the depart- ment nrpdirts that th fflrmera of the cou ntry Will be able to buy their mixed fertilizers f6r the 1919 fall the military units reacned by tnese day. iney tore the three states season about 30 per cent lower than speakers farmers' clubs were organ- men from their escorts and almost the prices prevailing' for the spring season just passed Sam Cannon was here the of the week from Spruce Pine. last IKttE CANDLER DIES Mrs. M. E. Candler died Tuesday morning-at the s home of her son . viving are five sons, George Candler j ;.er Q mends who congregated to pay tneir iast tribute and the many beautiful floral offerings attested I esteem and love in which she was held. IMPRISONED IN MINE News was received here Wednes day that Z. A. Jamison and his son Enoch Jamison had been imprison- ed in the Grassy Ridge Mine by the tunuel caving in behind them, and r nnnaA ni. JVU& lJf wi6auiun a i .Q hafMek tua nnrt Xa4 u ojrivo panjr icn ucic a telegram was received from Mr. Jamison that he and his son haa they were confined as the mine .is rather inaccesable, few people pass- ing that way, and neither of men have returned to Sylva. the ROAD PROJECTS APPROVED BY SECRETARY HUSTON wasmngton, uu- uunng May, Secretary of Agriculture Houston ap- proved project statement for 124. Federal aid projects involving the improvement of 750,87 miles of road at an estimated cost of $15, 120,771, of which $6,382,081.26 will be paid from the Federal treasury. During the month, 81 road , project , -I odrppmpntQ wprp pvpniitprl fnr thP r"""" " 3 F . ' . .. . . ro nosi a.aa.oo.o oi wmcn zdi wil1 b the Fefal governmen-1 . - Up to and includrng May 3 state- mentsfor 1188 road projects had . . . r , , . . been approved. They involved 11, rf-" J 350.10 miles of road costing $108 295,320.15. Federal aid for this work amounted to $43,076,176.63. CARD OF THANKS We desire by this means to ex press to the people of byl va and the surrounding community our ap preciation of their kindness and thoughtfullness uuring our recent breavement. Mr. and Mrs. James Harris MORE THAN FJUTtHOUSAND. SOLDIERS IN FARM SCHOOL Washington The farm school of hostilities than of complete and un the American Army university es- alloyed satisfaction, tablished at Beaune, France, for The ceremony came to a dramat members of the A. E. F., has an en- roiimeni oi more man mur mous- ii . l r . 1 and soldiers- In one week of April, twenty specialists from agricultural colleges at home lectured or gave snort-course laiKs to more r n a lzetL AU oue eiiron: ment was more man iouu. Mrs. Helen Allen is here from Franklin visiting relatives, ill ik . -v !- sr v NEWS OF THE WEEK PEACE SIGNED Versailles, June 28. World peace was signed and sealed in the his- toric Hall of Mirrors at Versail'es this afternoon, but under circum- stances which somewhat dimmed the expectations of those who had worked and fourf,it during long ' - , , years oi war ana monins 01 negoua - r. r . ,.. & , tions ior its acnievemeni. The absence of the Chinese dele- gates, who at the lasxnwmenjejfjto thie Shantung settlement, and left the eastern empire outside "the for . mal purviews of peace, struck the first discordant note in the assem bly. A written protest which Gen eral Jan Christian Smuts lodged with his signature was another dis- anmintmpnf tn thp mnlcprs nf th treaty But; bu,king ,arger, was the at. tituae,0f Germany and tl.e German plenipotentiaries which left themj as evident from the official program of the day and from the expression of M. Clemenceau, still outside and formal reconciliation and made ac tual restoration to regular relations I 3 - - . . . . aa1 intercourse with the allied nations dependent, not upon the signature of the "preliminaries of peace" today but upon ratification by the national assembly. M Clemenceau's stern warning in his opening remarks that they would be expected, and held, to ob serve the treaty provisions legally and corapletely, the German dele- gates, through Dr. Haniel Von Haim hausen, replied after returning to the hotel that had they known they would be treated on a" different status after signing than the allied representatives as shown by their separate exit before the general Qf the conferencet they uever would have signed. . Under the circumstances, the gen eral tone of sentiment in the his toric sitting was one rather of re lief at the uncontrovertible end of ic close, in fact, reached its highest oramauc piicu-wmi me wna en I j .. xi 'it thusiastic reception of President Wilson, M. Clemenceau and Mr. Lloyd George by the crowds Outside n me paiace. wno ignored ana disre wntucu uwu uuuny m meir pro- gress mrougnine cnateau grounas, to watch the playing of the ftftin- Uains-a part of the nrndrarn which ( had been planned as a dignfi&d tate processional of alt the pi ni-ftdtentiaries. I King George has sent the follow figamessage to President Wilson: this glorious hour when the Ion struggle of nations for right, justice and freedom is at last crown- e(? Dy a triumphant peace, I greet yu Mr- President and the great American people in the name of rho RnHl, . h. ..a.s At the time when fortune seem- ed to frown; and the issues of the h ind of fellowship to those, who on this side of the ocean were battling for a righte3usx cause. Light ana our he arts, and a new day dawned "Together we have fought to a happy end; together we lay down our arms in proud conscienceness of valiant deeds nobly done. "Mr. President, it is on this day one of the happiest thoughts that the American and British people, brothers in arms, will continue for ever to be brothers in peace. Unit ed before by language, traditions, kinship and ideals, there has now been set upon our fellowship the sacred seal of common sacrifice." Dr. Theobold von Bethmann-Holl-weg, former German chancellor, has formerly asked the allied associated powers to place him on trial instead of the former emperor. The former chancellor says that he assumes re sponsibility for the acts of Germany during his period of office and places himself at the disposal of the allies. . Brest, June 29. President Wil son, the treaty with Germany sign ed, sailed from Brest today on his return to the United States. The U. S. S. George Washington, carry ing the presidential party, steamed from the harbor at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon. NATION DRY War time prohibition went into effect July 1, except for the sale of light beer. BUYKRUPPS ; The Krupp works at Munich have been sold to Americans, according to dispatches from Mu nich quoting iroui newspapers there. It is added several industrial con cerns in the Bavarian capital also has passed into American hands. EARTHQUAKE IN ITALY Earthquake shocks in Tuscany, Sunday, caused the death of 127 people and injured thousands of others. LAND QUtSTIONAlRES 10 BE MAILED Under the provisions of the re valuation act reassesment of real estate in this county will commence within a short time. County Super visor Coward will mail a question aire to each land owner in the county and he and his assistants will make a complete canvas to de termine the actual cash value of every tract. - Iu order to avoid any confusion the questionaires will be mailed to real estate holders in only one town ship at a time, beginning with Sylva. It is important that every question- aire be filled in and questions an sweied truthfully and candidly so that the assessors will not lose val uaple Ume, and in order that the purpose of the law be not defeated The law is not intended to increase taxes; but to equaMzethem.by get ting all property; "assessed at it's actual value, and thereby reducing the tax rate. . GIVE SHEEP MORE IMPORTANT PLACE By the use , of .best methods of breeding, management, and plant ing the sheep industry where it will flourish the best, it should become a more vital part of American ua tional life than it is to-day. . The sheep is inherently an effi cient creaturev which has won for itself a place in the history of civil ization. When the Armenian refip gees returned to their homes in the Near East these oppressed people were furnished with sheep to help reestablish the country and to en able them to become self-support-ini If sheen are so valuable in the j nspi ration to every American be cause of r the extensive industrial levelopment in this country." Sheep, which serve mankind, env body democracy. And possibly in these gentle creatures there may be a iuiiniimeni oi me pruuiisc mm t ie meek shall inherit the earth. In any case they should be given ever opportunity to ao so FaRESL PROTECTION URGED TO CONSERVE TIMBER SUPPLY Washington, D. G Exportation of American lumber on , the scale likely to result lrom the European demand will seriously deplete the supplies needed by home industries, unless provision js made for re- growth, warns Henry S. Graves, chief of the Unites States Forest Service. Prior to the war. the United States exported about three and a half billion -board feet Nrf lumber and saw logs, or about ten percent of the total cut. Europe's emergen cy need for lumber, above its con sumption in normal times, is put at about seven billion feet a year for the near future, Chief Forester Graves urges more adequate forest protection and the use of such methods of cutting as will make possible forest replace ment by natural reproduction Such a policy, the Forest Service urges, coupled with a broad policy of public acquisition of forests, na tional, state and municipal, will make safe the encouragement in a large way of the export of forest products. - ' WAR DEPARTMENT TO SELL Washington The War Depart ment is offering for sale 17,000,000 yards of cartridge eloth, which can be processed and used as silk fab rics, suitable for dress goods, suit: ings, tapestries and other uses re quiring a silk texture of heavy warp The ordnance . program, based on the needs of the array oversear, called for six million yards of silk oer month. There was a three months' supply on hand at the sign i ing of the armistice. MUST DISTANCE PHONE Franklin Press. . . One of the first long distance tel ephone systems in America was built between Franklin and Webster Jackson County; 188a Mr. RL Porter, Mr. Joseph Bifmfc cetera had charge of laying tb'ir1re3 be tween Webster and Fraoidi : The ackievement of these men ia thus laying thik first long distance phone wire was one that cannot ' be too highly praised and one that I should always be held in glorious remberance. This feat came long before the invention of the radio, the submarine, the X-Ray, the nu merous improvements by which man has subdued the air and the scientific methods by which medi cine has got a comprehensive inv sight how to guard against and pre vent disease. C . The residents of Franklin and the citizensaf Maco i County should need.no monument of bronze to keep in indelible memory the feat that these men of big caliber have accomplished. ' v CHEAPER POSTAGE July first the order reducing pos tage to the antebellum rates went into effect Post cards can be mail ed for one cent and letters for two jents. SAEES OF WAR UATER1AL NET EltHSHOURPEBCE.TOFCOST Washington Sales of surplus war material by the War Department luring one week of June amounted ;o $11.53S4902ay The sales ranged ;ativas to $881 1 realized "mm itocks of woo! sold ar public auc tion in Boston. ' From January I to June 13 sales f surplus-war stocks netted $30O 157,583.63. which was 84 per cent , of the original cost of ths material ro the governmep . - : 0RLD WAR'S TOLL PRE THAN $7,500,00 LIVES The world war cost the lives of 7,582,000 soldiers of all countries; the money cost was between $185, 000,000,000 and $195,000,000,000; in shipping, the toll was 23,005,333 tons of merchant vessels and 1,882,- 125 tons of war vessels. These figures were compiled by the War Department at the request of Senator McCumber, Republican, of North Dakota, and were made public. by him as the most telling reason why there should be a League of Nations. CATTLE ulJST BE INSPECTED Beginning July 1, 1919 the ship ment of cattle interstate without haying them properly, tuberculin tested will be prohibited with a few exceptions by a regulation issued byUhe Secretary of Agricult ures The mforcement of this new regulation will, if is believed, be of': great assistance in preventing the . f urther spread of tuberculosis among live stock, and having the work practically under State and Federal supervision at all times will serve to bring about uniformity. MILLION UORE fAiiilS Washington, D. G Based on data assembled by the Census Bureau, it h estimated thai there are 7,300,000 to 7,400,000 farms in the United States, an increase of about one railUOQ over the number shown by the census of 1910. YQU NEED NOT TRAVEL It is safe to say that as many persons have secured relief from hay fever and asthma at home by tax ing Foley's Honey and lar-as have been benefited by gomg jojhealth,; resorts,: It issass ana sootnes , me . chokmg,Mst'ulied-upttsensaiioiLGood : for all colds, coughs and croyn. on tains uo opiates. i Sold everywhere. , V