L'lkin.N. C, Thursday, Nov. 21, 1010 No. 3D STVE KILLED AND MANY INJURED IN WINSTON-SALEM THANKS OFFICERS AMERICAN ARMY MOVES TOWARD GERMAN BORDER AND MEN OF ARMY IN THIS COUNTRY VV w - -i ! , . n i ; i - . I t ,fr . : ' TT""r " ' ' ' l - . ' - - ,v. ' . - r , ' ; ? Vin.ston - Salem, Nov. IK. tie fleath toll in the riot here to night, which followed efforts of ii mob to storm the city jail ami lynch a negro prisoner, had been increased at midnight to five a girl spectator, a city fireman and three negroes. The police be lieve that a detailed search to morrow will show that at least seven persons and maybe more were killed. Upwards of a score of persons are believed to have been injur ed, five or six of them seriously. They are mostly white persons and include two members of the .home guard, which was called out when the mob made its second visit to the jail after shooting a negro and accidental ly wounding a white prisoner in the afternoon. Winston-Salem, Nov. 17. At least two persons are known to have been killed and probably a score of others injure'!, several seriously, in a riot hero tonight which resulted from the efforts of a mob of several thousand men to storm the city jail and lynch a negro accused of shoot ing J. I'. Childress and Sheriff Flint and attacking Mrs. Child ress last night. I,ate tonight firing still was going on in different parts of the city, the mob finally having broken into small g.oups. Ft forts of the home guard and the police to restore order were un availing even at that time and Governor Lickctt was asked to intervene, lie ordered home guards from GrcerisUtro and ar ranged to have a company of regular soldiers sent from Camp I'olk, near Ualeigh. The known dead are: Lachacl I,evi. a young woman bystander, and PoUit Young, a f.reman. The more seriously injured in clude Marge-ret George. 1 .in wood Heeler. Johr. ifJjmpler. citizens, and Frank O'Lrien and K. T. Hawley, members of the home guard. Itachaci Ixn i, a young woman bystander was shot through the lung, and Robert Young, a fire n.TW. al o was shot. Number Injured Unknown Five of the more seriously in jured, including two members of the homo guard, were taken to hospitals, but many others were treated at their homes. I he total nnmlwr of injured was not known and the polic would not even ha.ard an estimate. Tin liloh lust formed litis afternoon aliout 3 ::'.) o'clock and stormed the jail. Three shot weiv fired and the negro accused of shooting the two men and at tacking Mrs. Childress was seri ously wounded, while a white prisoner named Tragg also wa hit in the arm by a stray luillet After some difficulty the po lice succeeded in clearing th crowd out of the building and the mavor called out the home guards. Quiet reigned for time, but later the report went around that the negro shot was not the man that had Ihtii sought. P.y nightfall the mol had re-formed and starlet inarching to the jail, which was surrounded by home guards. Hai dwarf Stores Lrokcn Open Hardware stores were- broken into and revolvers, shotguns nn other weapons and ammunition taken. As the mob marched, it increased in size and when its objective was reached it mint bored several thousand. The mayor sought to address the crowd, but could not be heard .In the meantime fire companies had arrived and when the mob broke for the jail the fireman turned water on them. Firing immediately followed and Young was shot dead. bullet hit Miss Ixwi, who was watching nearby . The home guards answered the volley but he mob quickly ovci"powcre 'in and went into the jai Two members of the guard were badlv huil by being thrown bodily down a stairway whic they were guarding. Apparently the mob did not find the negro it sought, for no Washington, Nov. 1(5. Sec- ctary Laker today formally ex pressed his inanKs lo onicors ttid men of the army in the 'nited States for the zeal shown in preparing for overseas duty. Mr. Laker expressed confidence tat the standards of discipline mil bearing will be maintained y the men in training until de mobilized. This statement fol- ows : "The signing of the mili iry armistice enables us to sus- end the intensive military pre- aration in which the country as engaged. It does not, how- ver, signify the formal end of le war and it w ill, therefore, be nece.-sarv lor us lo keen under inns a substantial army until e are certain what the military needs of the country will be. The men in service in the I'nited States will be demobilized a.s apidly as is consistent w ith the needs of the government. "In the meantime, I desire to xprcss lo these officers and soldiers under arms in the I'nit- 1 States the appreciation of the epartment for their patriotic tl and service. That they were not called upon to go abroad and not permitted to participate in the historic struggle in France ave.-. them none the less a part f the great army of our nation md entitled to the thanks of th e nation for their readiness to eive. .Ml officers and men can ely upon the sympathy and tiityofthe department in their early return home. Loth officers and men w.'l realize that is their duty to continue with th i raining and v. oik. and to maintain in the highe t degree the discipline and soldierly bear ing which is the great glory of the army, of which they are a art." AERIAL MAIL ROUTE TO CROSS NORTH CAROLINA Washington. Nov. 10. The Histt.ffite department will es- abash an aerial mad route irro-s North Carolina to the far south. At least one step will ie made in the state. This will give North Carolina connection bv air with New Yik and make possible for im- it.it.int mail and registry letters o Ik- delivered several hours Kilter. The dcpait merit plans to tw aldish then routes over the en tile count iv so that all central mints will be connected. From New Yolk to Chicago, to San Francisco: from New Yoik to Jacksonville, Fla., and New Orleans, military truck mail service, to make lor speed ier delivery in remote sections, is to be expanded. This will be especially important to the rural sections and require thousands of armv motor trucks and driv crs. North Carolina will have truck routes. more of the prisoners were fired i'lon. After an hour or more, the mob left the jail and started marching through the business section of the town, (irudually it broke into groups headed for the negro quarters. ltte to night, however, there had been no cl.ish between the whites anc blacks. Iite tonight the following names were added to '.he list of wounded : tliarles. White, shot ami mi ously hurt ; Jules Stith, Cecil Al ley, J. J. Adams. Troops on Special Train Leave Charlotte . A special train left Chai lotto soon after midnight for Win ston-Salem with !"." troop aboard for service in connection with riot conditions there. The troops were ordered to Winston Salem by Col. A. C. Malcomb commander of the camp, at the request of Mayor L. W. Gorrel made through Mayor F. II. Mc Ninth, of Charlotte, by long dis tance telephone. Hi t 4. i i tin. n. r n! -i ', : IC i f I III' I o III. -' VlfA ,.f III.' I.: I :: .i i. r. .. .. i 21 AMERICAN DIVISIONS TOOK PART IN BATTLE Paris, Nov. 17. (Ly the Asso ciated Press.) Out of the con fusion and ''az'. ol the crowd ing military eve'its on the v e. t- rn battleline since 'ate in Sep tember, when btltie fo.'ewctl Verdun there was ceaseless ra tion, it is now peiTtiissilile to out- inc to a certain extent the p u t played by the American armies in the final decisive battle of the 1 t I war, winch ended wun me arm- stice of last Monday. Mililarv reasons heretofore tave prevented accintuatirtR the accomplishment. of the Amen- an -, except in a most general tt i i. l f manner, ine tu.spaicitcs noni the field have been necessarily ragmen t a ry and possibly were oversh:u!tiwed by the accunts of the more dramatic operations over the historic battlefronts to the west. Lut it now may lie stated that two American divisions, totaling more than 7"iW00 American ombat troop.s, participated in the action beginning September known furiously as the battle of the Argonne and the battle t f the Meiisf, but which history mav call Sedan the battle that rotight Cermany to her knees i e i and as tar as numan loresigni goes ended the world's bloodiest and costliest war. Crux of the War In order to understand the military situation which made the Argonne oeration the crux of the war, it is neccs,iry to go iack to the reduction of the St. Mihiel salient in the middle of September. This brilliant Ameri can acliievenunt is still fresh in History. It cut otT at one stroke a menacing enemv s oeienstve nojection toward 'cldun and weakened the enemy's defensive v threatening Metz. and of Germany's two greatest advance railway centers for distributing tumps and supplies along the Montmedv-Sedan line. Metz nKo was the pivot on which the enemy swung through Lelgitim into France and there fore obviously it wrts the pivot on which his retirement must hinge. The Argonne, the next step below here, threatened the great railway arteries running westward from McU. (in man Power 0crcome With the conclusion of the St. Mihiel action, the steady inflow of American forces caused a dis placement of power as between the allied and (iciman armies. Thus it no longer was necessary to pursue a jnilicy of reducing a saiientor nibbling at it. The American troops had shown what they could do. A broader policy of general attack along the entire line was then adopted and the high com mand called upon General Per shing to take the Argonne .sec tor, admittedly 0112 of the most if not entirely the most, diffi cult on the whole front. The broken terrain, the topography and the lack of roads made a problem difficult to describe. Germany had in four ) ears forti fied it to the last degree of mili i it J I. it l.i'iil; uf ili- Uliiiii' ilini pf-it I ii t onilrol nf ulllri hy tli li-rm tf f 1 1 . -' i . !'i i lit- fur'Hi'il l-!,ni'l lit. ti tin1 iiiutitiiiim oiilliir of llii' ('."T '' r. Jr.. i , i,. tin- l'i:lii ' W;ir W 'i.rk iinii.ili.ii w lid tln n I . I nf h r.fniiiiit. tary skill, with superb roads, lotli rail and motor, connecting up to the rear positions and bases. The outstanding feature of the Argonne forest is a long chair of hills running north and south, covered with a dense growth of trees and under growth, making an advance dif ficult and offering superb defen sive qualities. Virtually no roads exi. t in the forest except for a few transversal passes run ning e.t :ind west. The soil is such that the least rain covers it into a slippery, miry mess. In other winds the physical condi tion is Mich that the line of at tack for an advancing army is limited to valleys, chief among which is that of the Aire river. Montmedy-Sedan Line Taken From the edge of the forest, where the resistance was vici ously strong, the enemy possess ed innumerable flanking posi tion's. Lut bl'NOIld this ilifikult legion lay the Montmetly-Sedan 1 line, which was recently caplur ' ed. A German order dccribed it as "our life artery." It repre sented one-half of the German rail supply on the western front. It meant death if cut. The hih command told Peih- ingtocut it. The American first ! many instances from other por army was put in motion from St.ltions of the line, in an effort to Mihiel. In nine days it was on 1 hold an enemy which he deri the Argonne ready for an at- sively said lat spring, could not tempt, the failure of w hich 1 1 e broiight to Furope. and if so might mean disaster and the j would not light, and even if he success of which would give tin-tried to fight would not know told results. This quick movement of enormous Unly of nu n, the Ml tabli.shment of a ii"W line of sup-j morning of November I. which ply and a!! the complicated mili-j l-egaii the second phase of the tary preparations, wr.s regarded j Arognne battle, was the death with pride by th- Amet ican blow to the German army. Le commaitdeis. twe-n September 2t) and Octo- The American kin -w uhatjber :U, enemy divisions t the confronted them. They realized j number of :'.(' were identified as that this was no second St. Mih- being opposed to the Americans iel. but an cfiteipii.se at w hich IP other armies had balked for four years. They knew tint their was to In fought a fight to rank with the first battle of the Maine, with Verdun, with the Somme and the Chemin IVs Parties, and they knew that on them depended the fate of the great attark on the rest of the front. If forrod back here the enemy must give wav to the wot. If he held he could hold elsewhere. Leg an at Ia break It was at daybreak of Septem ber lit w her the Americans went in. t'sing nine divisions, for the preliminary attark and under vigorous artillery support they advanced five kilometers the first day. Lut the enemy was not taken wholly by surprise. The second day he threw into the line five counter-attack di visions he had held in close re serve. They were his best troops, but they failed not only to push the Americans back, but they failed to check the gradual advance of the Americans over the difficult terrain. The first phase of the action ended October .11, during which the Americans' gains were not large but they compelled tho enemy to use a large number of divisions, which became slowly exhausted and thus were unable to parry the hammering he was receiving from the French and 3 Lritish on the west. Fighting in Woods Litter It was bitter fighting in the woods, brush and ravines, over a region perfectly registered and plotted by the enemy where his guns, big and little, could be used with the greatest efficien cy. The original nine American divisions in some cases were kept in the line over three con secutive weeks. The Ameiican reserves then were thrown in until every divi sion not engaged on another part of the line had been put into ac tion. It i.s a fact commented upon with pride by the American com manders and complimented by the allies that seven of these divisions that drove their way through this hard action never before had been in an active sector, while green troops, fresh from home, were Kiurcd in as replacements. The Associated Press dis- patches from day to day told what these men did; how the (iti nty was slowly pushed back from his strongest and most vital positions, through one de fense system alter another, us ing his finest selected troops, which had been withdrawn in 'how to n so Death Llow to II tins The attack delivered the dl this sector. Le ?tween Novem ber 1 and Novemer G the enemy threw in 1 1 fresh divisions, but all in vain. Fighting every foot of the way the American advance aver aged five kilometers daily over terrain constantly grow ing more difficult, with the lines of com munications and supply daily lengthening and attenuating, while road maker. for the trans port and other supply organiza tions woiked day and. night at their ta.sk.. Day by day the official com munications and the telephone even to the farthest advance line told the Americans that for every mile the Germans gave way he I ore them they were yielding another mile to the Lritish and French on the left; that the American pressure wa felt like an electric current throughout the line. American Lroke Through On the morning of November 2 the German official communi cation told the Americans they had won, because for the first time in the war the enemy offi cially admitted that the Ameri can attack had effected ft break through. The Americans knew that what finally happened on the morning of November 11 when the armistice was signed was only a question of days. With the Allied Armies in Franco and Lelgitim, Nov. 17. (Ly the 'Associated Press.) The allied armies have begun their march towards Germany. The Lelgian forces have already occupied Antwerp, which was evacuated by the enemy on Fri day and immediately taken over. Lrussels w as expected to be free of German soldiers today. With the American Army in France, Nov. 17. 7:30 a. m. (Ly the Associated Press.) General Pershing's forces" mov ed forward early today in terri tory just abandoned by the Ger man troops. On the old line be twven Mouzon and Thiaucort, lying from the region of Sedan to the south of Metz, the troops had been stationed to await or ders for the advance, and at 5:30 o'clock this morning the patrols irarched out, not 'n line of bat tle, but in columns along the ligh roads, whi.h arc only .lightly impaired. The first steps of the Ameri cans into the region. ho lately controlled by Germany, were not spectacular. The men were key d up rmd keen for the new ad venture, but. like they were on the day of the signing of the irmistice, there were compara tively no demonstrative manifes- ations of their enthusiasm. Many of the men had been new ly uniformed and all of them were "polished" as though for inspection. The men appeared iger for the word to go for ward. Mud Slightly Fr07.cn The relatively small units that ire moving forward as advance guards were sent to the line ie- fore daylight. The night had ieen cold and the mud that yet marks the roads, notwithstand ing there have loen two or three lays without rain, w as slightly frozen. The men shivered as they rested by the roadside. When the command finally was given for the advance, the elements who were to push for ward; in some cases miles apart on the long line U'tvveen the ex treme left and right, moved off into the mists that appear al ways to shroud this part of the country and disappeared. For the first time since the Americans had been ordered to advance into enemy-held terri tory, there was assurance that they would encounter no hostili ty. The intelligent department. which has never ceased to func tion, had accurately reported that the Germans were carrying out their agreement of evacua tion and there was evident the lielief both by officers and men that no trap was awaiting them. No Chances Taken No chances were taken, how ever. 1 he engineers were lite second units to pres. forward, and they carefully In'gan their work of ItHiking out for mines and tainted water. F.very ol- stacle was tested before it was moved in order to find out if it masked explosives. For some time the German. have shown a spirit of co-operation in inform ing the American where mines were located and in themselves destroying them. It was some time after the engineers moved forward before th heavier columns took the road. The entire army finally was moving, and njoving along the lines of peace days. Lut it was in such order that it might quickly be transformed into bat tle array. I'very brigade was covered by 77s, the heavier artil lery follow ing close behind. The flanks of the advancing. columns were vvell protected. It has been impressed on of licers and men alike that is an operation under an armistice; that war still exists and that the possibility remains that at nny time it may be necessary for them to play their part with the same grimncss of the past year. Fraternization, not only with the German soldiers who may be found cither as stragglers or voluntary prisoners, but with civilian population, has been sternly forbidden. Looting and FASTER THAN THE CAMPS CAN TAKE CAR EOF THEM A. K. CKLDIIOF Washington, Nov. 10. F, N. Hurley, chairman of the V. S. shipping board, told me, in an interview today that the ship ping board will bring back our soldiers faster than the war de partment can handle tlh.'ni in this country. While all other government departments are preparing t slow down their efforts, the shipping board will increase its shipbuilding program to build ships, shifts, -md more ships, so our loys can come home at the earliest possible moment. "We now have lfil cargo ves sels and f7 transports," Iturle.1. said, "available immediately for the transportation of troop.s. If necessary, we could bring; ull tlur boys back in three months. Cer tainly we can bring them faster than they can be taken care ol here. "Fach of those cargo vessel, can transport from 1,000 to L 000 men and the transport. will carry three to ten thousand. "The shipping board will iin mediately stop the employment of workmen overtime, and Sun days because the immediate pre., sure has been relieved. Lut we can use 200,000 more experienc ed mechanics from the munition plants and put them into tin shipyards. "The bringing back of the soldiers is not our chief problem. That i.s to feed the population of hungry Furope. Austria, Ilun-gai-y, Germany, Lu!g:uia must be fed, as well as our allies. We must have more ships to d it. Now that the war i over, our efforts will be redoubled." STOPS EXAMINA TIONS OF DRAFT REGISTRANTS Washington, Nov. 111. Pro vost Marshal General Crowder today ordered the discontinu ance of physical examinations of draft registrants, and of all work bv district draft hoards on the classification of registrants. The physical examinations have Ik-ch given only to youths of IK. under orders issued iijon cessa tion of hostilities. District draft Itoard. General Crowder said, have I teen in structed to complete all records of cases Ik.1 fore them which re late entirely to the granting of ( occupational exemptions or th: consideration of appeals from ocal Itoards on dependency claims. All records of the exemption Itoards are to ltc preserved for future disposition, and the class ification of all l'J to 37 year old and IS year eld troops i to lx completed at the earliest possi ble moment. I.KT SANTA BRING W. S. S... ' TO ALL PATRIOTS We must make up for the workers who have gone to the war by greater diligence and ef ficiency among those of us who remain. We must all save lalor. We must cut down the work which other people do for us. Our wants use not only lalxtr but coal and materials and congest the railways. We must produce more and consume lesa, if the Government is to have its requirement in sup plies and service. Let us, there fore, observe a real and flitting war-time Christmas spirit. Let War Savings Stamps he your gifts and messengers of good cheer 1 even souvenir-hunting also have been forbidden the Americans. It has been plainly Impressed upon the men that property is inviolate and that those pereonn with whom they come in contact must le regarded as enemies.