T, , ' 4 in- imm llutiiuMiS North Carella Ucal thn denhewer Tmdj aad prh ' bly Wednesday VATCI LIl Men op!wii a4 VOL. CXII. KO. 21 SDCTEEN PAGES TODAY. RALEIGH. N. C; i TUESDAY MORNING. JULY V 20; : 1920 ; V SIXTEEN PAGES TODAY. PRICE: FIVE CENTS DEMOCRATIC PARTY TO National Committee Meets To - day at Columbus To Organ' 4 : Ize The Campaign LEADERS COUNSEL WITH GOV. COX AND ROOSEVELT . Presidential Nombee Declines , To Beply To Hardinj'f U1U matum On Foreign Policy ' Selection of Campaign and . Committee Eeads and Other f Business UpTodi. - ' Columbus, Ohio, July 19. Democratic leaden gathered hr today to eoaaaal with Governor Cos end Franklin D. Roosevelt, the party's presidential and via presidential nominee!, om their aa. uoaal political battle. - Te Demoerstie Batioaa! committee meets at IX o'clock tomorrow to orga Us the campaign. Much preliminary work was done today in conferences. Selection of a commltteo ; chairman to manage the campaign, naming of headquarters, ehooeing am ezeentiTo sub- committee, plane for financing the cant' paign, arrangement for notification date for the two nominees and their itinerariea wero the major affaire to be considered at tomorrow's Mooting. Declines to Answer Hardin. woTernor vox uecunea vo respona 10 .. .. r, . 1 tt . ' a- . me request 01 oenaicr naraing, vn Bepubliean nominee, for detail of the governor' conference with President Wilson Teaterdnr en the Leairaa of Na. tion. Th governor said ho wonld i answer anything desirable in his ae- CHIEFS GATHER DISCUSS CArilPAIGf J eeptanee address. Diainelinatia of Ed' X mnnd H. Moore, national committeeman from Ohio, and Governor Cox' floor ; manager at th Ban Francisco eonven tion, to aaeum management of the cam paign left unsettled tonight the election of a national 7- committee chairman. Governor Cox said that in a telephone conversation Mr. More indicated that he did not desire the place,' but wished to serve in other and unofficial eapaei tics. . ' ' "The qnestion will be left to the com uitee, said Governor Cox. Mr. Moore's jeasons for sot wishing to manage the eompalgu wero aaid v by does friends to be personal, based large ly on necessities of his law practice at ioungstown,- - -, - t v.. .. Chairmanship U-DUwais The committee chairmanship also was discussed late today by Governor Cox wish Homer 8. Cnmmlngs, of Connecti cut, the present chairman. Mr; Cum m inn has stated that he wished to avoid th responsibilities and labor of another campaign, but many committee Members were urging that ho bo 'draft ed by re-election tomorrow. Bepresen tativo Cordell Hull, of Tennessee, also was being urged as an eligible. A number of committee women chosen tndor the new rule giving women equal representation were her for tomorrow's meeting and there was a disposition to giv them places on th executive com mittee, possibly electing on woman vice chairman. Women ruff rags leaden also are to urge th committee to make an other, move toward ratification of the Federal suffrage amendment. Koran E. Mack, New York committee leader, is to offer a resolution urging tho Tennes see and North Carolina leg is la tares to ratify. ' Sentiment regarding notifica tion of the nominees appeared settled in favor of date early in August, in order that both candidates may soon begin speaking tours. Tentative Speaking Piano. Tentative plans call for a tour of , about three weeks in eastern and central states by Governor Cox. beginning about the middle of August, while Mr. Roose velt spends a like period in tho West. Afterwards it is proposed that they transfer territories for aaother three weeks' trip. Both candidates are pec ted to close their campaign in their kom and nearby states. ' Governor. Cox said he was being urged strongly to visit th Pacific coast and that he hoped to comply. Virtually all of the visiting commit tee members are giving th governor and Mr. Boosevelt optimistic reports on tbs outlook in their states. , ' New -York' Prospect Good. Mr. Mack said that Democratic pros peeta in New York were, good." . -in party in the state never was more united, he said. ' Isidor B. Doekweiler also gave a hope ful view of the California situation, in which he said factional - Bepubliean troubles figure, whil Mr. J. W. Morrow, Governor Cox aaid, predicted that Ore gon, Idaho, and Montana were sure prospect for th Demoerstie column. Charles Boeschenstein, Illinois commit teeman, also told th governor that his state wa by no means a Bepubliean prospect, , - REPORT ON COTTON SEED AND ITS PRODUCTS MADE Washington, D. C- July 19. Tho cot ton seed snd cotton seed products report for the 11-month period August 1st to June 30th, announced today by the Census Bureau, shows: i Cotton seed, crusher, SflOtfiM tons. Product manufactured; Crude oil, 1,207,579,931 pounds; refined oil, 966,- pounds; eakexand meal, 1,812,158 tons; .inters, vrvvi bales. i Stocks, June 30th.: Seed (at plants) J - M,sra tons; crude oil, 43 ,500,682 pounds; refined oil 326,069,628 pounds: cake and meal, 178,332 tons; linters, 212.2P baits. Exporter -Oil, 148,755,372 pounds; cake and meat, 210,801 tons; linters, 9,549 bales. ' ' , . BAD WEATHER PREVENTS , ALASKAN PLANES STARTING trie, Pa, July 19. T a r e a t e a in g weather prevented the four army plsnes on the New York to Nome, Alaska; 'ex pedition from attempting the next Jump So Grand Bapida, Michigan, today. . Feeling of Pessimism on Eve of Rail Decision of Railway Labor Board To, Be Given Out at Chicago Early This Morning; Estimated the Award Will Average From 50 to 60 Per Cent of Amount Asked By Men; Brotherhood Chiefs Possibility of Strike. . Chicago, July 19. (By the Amsoeiated Press. Th Bailway Labor . Board, created under th Each-Cammiag Trans portation Act, will hand down tomorrow morning it first award, increasing, th pay of virtually all the W000 rail: road employes of th country.-, - ."vir Tonighv, on tho ovo of tho decision, reports front reliable . quarter indi cated th award would average front 60 to 9 per cent of the amount asked by th man, or between , 1500,000,000 and 600,000100 of the billion dollar total they sought. Judge B. M. Barton, chairman of tho board, admitted "that is not far off, when shown tho report. Tho board decided today, at the re quest of newspapers, to announce "its decision nt 8:30 o'clock -Instead of 10 m, as first planned.. . No Comment sty TJnioaa. Whether nn award on tho basis re ported would bo acceptable to tho men no union offleer tonight was prepared to sar. Nearly 1,000 brotherhood ehairmsa and executives bold- na nil-day session to discuss union affairs and adjourned State Supreme Court Justices Order Immediate . Release Declaring that the Stat of North Carolina cannot recognise a eapiaa is sued in Tennessee,. Chief Justice Walter Clark of the Supremo Court of North Carolina yesterday ordered tho uncon ditional discharge of D. Sam Cox, a prominent Baleigh business man who wa released a 1100 bond Saturday night by the chief Justice on writ of habeas, corpus after' he had been held for six hour in a cell at the city poliee station. The arrest was maae oy omcer x. n. Crabtre under authority of a capias instanter issued by the Clerk of the Criminal Court of Davidson county, 'It i my turn aow and I shall oor- talalr riv th city of Baleigh aom advertiaing in return for this high hand ed outTaxe." said Mr. Uox alter the proceedings yesterday. , Be intimated that he intended to institute, a suit for damages against the City of Ba leigh, but aaid h would not make any definite statement until alter no naa fully vindicated himself in the Ten nessee courts. Associate Justice W. A. Hoke sat with the Chief Justice at tho hearing yesterday and both justices signed th rder of discharge wnien states tnat ''the arrest and ' imprisonment of the defendant was wholly illegal." Willia G. Briggs, City Solicitor, ap peared in behalf of the city and asked thst the case be continued until aa or fleer could arrive from Tennessee with requisition papers and ' the matter be argued-before Governor Bickett. Mr. Brigss read a telegram from Nashville stating that an oSBeer would bo aant for Cox, and said that that Tennessee authorities hsd been advised to send extradition papers. A. J. Fletcher, at torney for Mr. Cox.: stated that his client would bitterly resist extradition Although the hearing had been -set for three-thirty, o'clock. the hour of three o'clock hsd been inserted, through inadvertaaee, in th v-rittea order and witnesses bad been summoned for the earlier hour. Before the honr for the hearing arrived, the consultation room wss so crowded that it was decided to have the proceedings in ths court room proper. Jars. Cox appeared in court with her husband and they were sur rounded by a number of friends. W. B. Drake, Carey J. Hunter, W. N, Jones axa w H. Williamson nil ap peared in court as character witnesses for the defendant, but none of them were called to stand. Mr. Cox also presented a bank statement showing that sum aggregating more thsa SljOOO had beea deposited in the bank on (Continued On Pager Poor.) CHARGE CONSPIRACY TO DEFRAUD BYDEAL IN OIL Two Men Held Tor, Defrauding Shipping Board of $9,000 '. In Transaction New Tork, July 19. B. H. Bowman, eh ief engineer of the United States Shipping Board vessel Die, and a former fuel oil agent for the Standard Oil Com pany of New Jersey, whose name it withheld, ara being held here fori the Federal grand jury on a charge of con spiracy to defraud the Shipping Board of more than 19,000 through a fuel oil transaction at Bio de Janeiro, Brazil, Assistant Cnited States Attorney H. F. Kelly announced hero today. ' ' Bowman,, according to the Federal prosecutor, having 400 tons of "un- ogged oil" in the Dio's fuel tanks. Is alleged to hsve arranged with the Stan dard Oil agent for delivery of 000 tons ot oil and presented, a bill for 1,000 tons, which was paid by F. M. Johnson and Company, Shipping Board agents. Payment, Mr. Kelly said, was made with a draft on a Brazilian bank, which was cashed in . Bio de Janeiro, where th "deal4 wa arranged. Th defendants. Mr. Kellv arW. hsv made voluntary confession of the transaction ' and offered to return the money received for the 400 tans mt delivered oil. ; I COX IS DISCHARGED UNCONDITIONALLY Wage Award Uather to .Await Decision; . ;'.' .Mv.,;,.. v f-':-:- until tomorrow morning, when they will receive th board a report. . ' .Foetiaa- of Pllsaw '- Feeling of pessimism was evident when the union leader met, and pri vately they, did not hesitate to declare that n general strike was a possibility. Tonight, however, It was virtually cer tain that tho anion chiefs themselves wonld not call a strike, but would sub mit th question of accepting or reject ing ths board's award to a referendum. Copy of Award Stolen- . The labor board began aa investing tion -today of the looting of its office last night, when some one broke in snd stole among other things, a copy of the rward. 1 Two copies had been prepared, one for the board's files and th other for -the printer. It wsi th former which was atolea. - Th printed, decision . cover - twenty page, making about 6,000 dorda in alL Immediately upon vthe- announcement of th award tomorrow th grand conn oil of the brotherhood will.be called in th first session in more than a year. Sixteen groups of railworker will be represented and they will act upon the award section by section. Quotes Col. House As Saying Peace Treaty Should Have Come First Ill l.H I IIIW J-""'" Marion, 0 July 19. Senator Harding'- offeaaive against th .."foreign committments'' - of President : Wilson, initiated yesterday in n volley of qnes tion for Governor Cox, was developed today toward a' new quarter. In his second attack on tho subject in twenty four hours, ths Bepubliean nominee declared the Bepubliean con ception of what should hare beea done "L . r nt . i - . i . . a . ersaiiie naa oecn. . Tinaicaiea oy Colonel House, the friend and adviser of th President. He quoted, the Colonel ss saying that negotiations of a peace treaty before creation of a league Of, nations was suggested by. European powers and would have bee the ob vious' thing to do. r ,. , . . , Foreign Policy " Paramount. ' 'The ardor, with, which the Senator pressed his attack , waa Interpreted by his associates here as meaning that he aow- regards the Wilson forehju policy as having assumed -a position of para mountry I th campaign and that he is determined to take . th aggressive and hold it aa th fight develop. There wa no indication that his policy of a "front porch: campaign would be modified, but his advisers declared th term would b far: from , synonymous with quiescence. ... HI. Fighting Blood Up. On the queation of unqualified ap proval of the President's conduct of foreign affaire, it was said, the nomi nee'a fighting blood is up. It was in dicated that in hi speech of accep tance he might be expected . to carry his attack a step further snd to enliven the fight with some constructive sug gestions of bis own on th league ques tion." " ' . After two weeks of confinement In . preparation of his acceptance speech, the Senator adopted a program of more recreation today and in the afternoon motored to Mansfield, forty miles away, for a golf game. It was ths first time sine his rotor to Ohio that he had been on the link, knd hs appeared to enjoy it immensely. Earlier in the day he 'conferred with B. K. Hynieka, Bepubliean national committeeman for. Ohio, and during th evening Jamea G. Darden, of New York, one of those active in working for Mr. Harding t nomination, was guest at the Harding borne. SOVIET REPLY REJECTS ARMISTICE PROPOSALS font'on, July 0 Tho reply nt tht Russian Soviet government to the Brit iih note concerning an armistice with Poland rejects in subttsne th British peace proposals, according to the Ion don Times, which today publishes a summary of the Soviet answer, FREIGHT CAR DAMAGES , 8TEAMEB AT WILMINGTON. Wilmington,' July 19. Ths American steamer -Cerro Gordo i docked at th plant of a local marine railway for repairs as a result of damages reeelvedj wnen a ireignt ear on awitcning line left the. rail and : crashed into the steamer s side..' t ITALIAN STEAMER AGROUND ON CAPE FEAR BAR FLOATS. Wilmington, July 19. Ths Italian, steamer Ansoldo, that went aground on ths-Cap Bear bar early Sunday mora- ing, arrived in Wilmington this after noon. . Th stesmer wa floated . early this morning. . . ' , ; ' BOL8HEVIKI TROOPS BEGIN , INVASION OF ARMENIA. Teheran, Persia, July 1 (Havas) Th Armenia government, bar ing refused to obey an Ultimatum ml tho Russian Soviet government, the Bolshevik! army has received orders It advance "and already ha occupied the province of Ksrsbagh. The Bol. shevikl are coatiasing their advance la order to operate jointly with the Turkish nationalist, forces of Mast, pha Kernel Faaha, - -. HARDING ATTACKS YUAN POLICY HARDING OUGHT TO BE SATISFIED IF HE VANTED REPLY Governor; Cox Makes it Plain There Is No Pussy Foot ing On League . MAKES POSITION CLEAR NO GUESSING ABOUT IT Republican Politicians Com- pletely - Flabbergasted by ' Latest Turn of Events ; Want ' To Dodge League of Nations But Can't Do It Now ;' Hard. ing Must Camouflage . - News, and Observer Bureau, 803District Natioaal Bank Building. : By R. I. POWELL.-': " (By Special Leased Wire.) Washington, July 19. Senator War ren G. Harding's published "anxiety' that there be no pussy footing on the part of Governor Jamea M. Cox with respect to the League of Natons ought to be by this time ubundautly relieved. That is what th politicians summering in the eapitsl and those visiting from the States think about three statements that came out of the White House eon ferenee yesterday morning. -The Republican ar at sea a a suit of this ''splendid accord" be twee a two great men, referred to by Frank lin D. Booserelt. Some of them admit frankly that they are flabbergastd. Some of them hsd confidently ex pected (and among them those ' who still insist the President is a complete paralytic), to see Governor Cox and his running mate come away from tho con ference with the President by wax of the roof rather than through the usual The only comfort they are able now to get out of the situation is to "point with alarm" to ths "complete capitula tion of the Democratie candidate t the Wilson foreign policy. .The more violent critics, probably recalling the Chicago convention's monopoly on th divinity, ar attacking th three eon force for engaging in a political dis cussion on the Sabbath. Afraid of Beaguo Is. In spit of th fact that during th long, weary months' of treaty debate in th Senate th Bepubliean leaders time nd time again asserted their eag erness to secept tho Leagn of Nations as th dominant issue in tb campaign now. under way, they are going to' ex treme lengths to prevent it becoming the dominant note. ' Senator Harding' speoen ol seeeptasee, which will be de livered at Marion, this week, will ua. doubtedly bristle with such Senate eon- eeived phrsse as w gladly accent tbi challenge" and "th Bepubliean party is' willing to staid or fall on its posi tion. But it is to bs seriously doubted thst the Republican position will bs stated. It cannot; intelligently, b said that the candidate stands "pat" on the Bepubliean platform. Obviously, that would be adding inault to the injury already done the progressive element of tne o. o. P. s Such a declaration, given ths most liberal interpretation, could only mtan that the Kepubllcansr intend to pursul ODea nnd share hnmrA tha urn it pursued under cover in the Senate that of killing the treaty. Any plat form plank affecting the etague of Na tion acceptable to Hiram Johnson and Borah is a sharp knife of itself ana in the hsnds of a candidate running on th platform intended to cut the heart out of the covenant. Cox Bute HI Position. Governor Cox has clearly and un mistakabls mad his position known without giving away the meat of his speech of acceptance. Ho avoided th temptation of improprieties but demon pnstrated for ths benefit of Senator Harding "and all th world" that ther will be bo pussy footing in ths uemoeraue campaign. Democratie politicians In Washington sro well pleased with the conference. It is well for the party, they think that na so wnoicnesrtedly committed it self to ths ratification of the treatw with the league covenant without nullifying reservations. Finely drawn deductions and conclusions of Republican, .logicians do not in the least concern the practical uemoerats. The league is a moral is sue, they ssy, of such overwhelming importance thstH will not admit of aaii splitting over its phraseology. Rings Trie on Suffraxe Th first domestic question of note On which Candidate Cox's position was iongnt Drought prompt nnd positive e tion on the part of the Democratic aominee. He was ssked to uige the ratification of th suffrage amendment aad ho did so without in th least spologising for invading th nreroa-a. tives. In th Whit Hons conference with th newspapermen yesterday, he indicated that he would take th North Carolina situation up, If by so doing it will havo a tendency to soften Tlte opposition of Democratic lenders in .he Tsr Heel State. Hs hss pleased Senator Morris Shen- pard, Senate champion of th dry law, ana mis engnt so d a Dig oeip m bring ing ilt. Bryan' heart back from the grave. It is generally known thst Gov ernor Cox will initiate no legislation isvorabie to toe wine and beer inter ests. He is pledged to the enforcement of the statues, including the much talk-, d about Volstead law, but his strength with the damp votcri lies chiefly in ths belief on their part that he will not veto any liberalisation act th next Congress passes- . a For this resson, th threatened tight of tb Anti-Saloon lesgu will, not s- sum serious proportions so far as Gov ernor Cox snd 1ft. Roosevelt are con cerned, i Their chief interest wilt be in keeping in Congress those dry mem bers who havo aided them in their tght for National prohibition aad pre venting the election of those Congres- iCoatlnnti ot Pag Twj) !..J PHOTOGRAPH SHOWING SCENE OF : FIRST RACE FOR AMERICA'S CUP ti!' s if IK - v 5 ,Ji . r 1A f ' r --," 1 " - i V. --t " --a- 'L-9r - , - . - - AS. h ' A, v, f,,: tv- . i os .-l i"" .a-r, fit- I - " y , "V f i Copyright, 'Press Publishing Co, from Kadel Herbert. . , ' New Tork. This remarkable photograph of the first race .(July 15th) be tween Sir Thomas lip ton's Shamrock defend Beolut"upper) was taken yacht woa the ant race wnen ue itesoiuws uroar. halyard snapped.! . SUSPEND ORDER TO STOP DISTRIBUTION Prevent Order Restraining Dis tribution of Coal Cars Be . coming Effective Aehevllle, .July 19. An Injunction issued by.ir, 8. District Judge Dayton, recently at Phillippi, West Vs., restrain ing ths Baltimore and Ohio and all other railroads 'east of ths Mississippi river from distributing special coal cars in ths mining territory as an emergency step in th fae of tb present coal shortage wss stayed and suspended bar today by the United States Circuit court of sppeals. Tho order was written by Judge J. C, Pritchard of this city, senior circuit judge presiding, and concurred in by Circuit Judges Knapp of Washington, D. C, snd Chas. A, Woods of Marlon, 8. C, and United States District Judge Henry A. M. Smith of Charleston, 8. C, sitting in aa advisory capacity. Under the order of District Court Judge Dayton the injunction was to have become effective Tuesday morn ing. ' ; ; , Tonight after devoting almost two days to the motion for appeals, tb cir cuit judges were unsble to reaeh a de cision. Realizing that tb order would beeomg effective, in a few hours and taking cognisance of Its far-reaehiog result, they decided to stay and sus pend ths injunction until th appeal, is finally determined. Importance of the ease was secent- nated today by th presence of Assist ant Attorney General Ksterlin and P. J. Farrrell, chief counsel for th Inter state Commerce Commission, appearing a am lei curia (friends of the court). The title of the use was ths Balti more and Ohio Bnilroad, appellant, vs. tho imfert Bun Coal Company, George M. Hoffhelmer of Clarksburg, W. Va- and Herbert B. Preston of Bal timore, for the appellant, and by John A. Howard , of Wheeling, W. Va.. and Rush C. Butler and Frank E. Hark- ness of Chicago for the appellee. The railroad are said to have sent the special ears into the mining dis tricts uader aa order issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Tbi order was the chief point of decision, the commission holding it was empow ered to issue such an order under sec tion IS of the Interstate Commerce Jaws. - . ,v MEXICAN TROOPS TAKE OVER AMERICAN RANCH Laredo, Tet July 19. Mesiesn troops eommnndjd by Lieut. Col- Miguel Mar tines' entered a ranch owned by Alfred Matthews, an American, and command- ered scvc.t.i horses, other equipment snd elothing, according to official informa tion: given out late today. .United State Consul Bohertson has reported w Ui6ienl.tfl.VhiJigt0J, ...A .-. , i X " .' y' -w j-1- - ( .-irl'?t lis'" i r OilTj'iriin.oiW' IV (in foreground) and the American cup from a seaplan S50 feet above. Lipton's German Committee Says Unre stricted U-Boat Warfare Was Grave Mistake ( Berlin, July 19. Th report of th second sub-eommitte of the committee of investigation on President Wilson's peae effort during the winter of 1918- 1917, prepared by Professor Einsheimer, former Socialist member of the Beiehr stag, draws tht conclusion that Presi dent Wilson's action msdo peae over tures possible, but that the German government, not availing Itself of them, instead took a stand for - unrestricted U-boat warfare. The report, made public here today, ia signed by six members of ths differ ent political parties. It is a grave in dictment of Germany s military diet' tors st tho time. The report shows how the economists jof Chancellor Von Beth mann-Hollweg's civil government, even Dr. Karl Helfferich, then minister of finance, did not believe unrestricted U-boat warfare could enaure Germany victory. As the gravest mistake, the report mentions the fact that America's resources . were completely underesti mated. ' The report mentions " notably Von Papon's message to Gen. Erich Von Falkenhaya, former chief of the Oar man staff, "if you fail to keep the Unl ted States out you have lost the wsr. WOMAN FINDS HUSBAND IS HER REAL FATHER Baltimore, Md- July 19. An unusual story ia told ia a bill of complaint filed in circuit court Number Z today by Anna Belle Jones, through Arehey C, New, attorney, for the annulment of heT marring to Win. M. Jones. The ease is that of a wife and mother who says that she has learned that her bus band the father of her two children whom sho sapposed to b her itopfathor, waa her real father, rnd that hi im proper conduct towards her younger sis ter caused- ths latter to leave their home. ." ' . Mrs. Joaes declares in the bill that before her marriage she lived wibh her parents without being aware, of her supposed rtepfather s identity. Another unusual feature of the story is th as sertion of Mrs. Jones that the revela tion of her supposed stepfather's iden tity cams to her in a dream. Two chil dren were born of the marriage, boys, sight and three. years, who are said to bo entirely aormsl and healthy. ' CUNARD LINER TO HAVE GREAT TERMINAL ON THE HUDSON k, Trenton, N. J, July 19. The Canard Terminal Company .will Shortly erect for th Cunard Lin what it Claims Will be th greatest steamship terminal in th world along th Hudson Biver near tb west shor railroad ferry at Weech jwken, - REPORT ON PEACE STEPS BY WILSON ONE MAN KILLED AHDTWOVOUIiOEO None of Garrison of Jail Hurt , In General Firing : " By Mob '; '! SOLDIERS FIRED UPON i TWICE DURING NIGHT Fire Eeturned at First Assault' . About 9 :30; Another Attack at Midnight . Draws No Se turn Shots From Jail Under Orders From Captain Fow ler, Commanding; Militia , fJrariftm. Julv 19. On a man was killed and others were wounded tonight when the w-k a jjurnam juacnine uun uom- ninv returned the fire nf a mnh around the Graham jail bent on lynching negroes held here nenrlinor inveeHrntAn tn data. mine the assailant of Mrs. A. A. Riddle. Jim Ray standing fifty yards from the mob was killed Ts !t Itf.Ml! W fin a m wnne Willie rniiups ana uiem tfradsher art known to hava been wounded. How many more were, hit by machnie gun outlets is unknown. ; -. Tf urea O .Ort V fired on the machine gun guard in front of the jail. The guard retired to the jail under fire and there the fire wm return. ed. Fifty or more shots' came from the building, while the ahooting from the mob which . 1 . a . Burrounaea me prison on all siaes was general, in one of the garrison, including' 37 members of the Durham company, and a number of armed citizens were ironnded.'': ' Jim Ray,; it was determined later, was killed by a - pistol ball rather than a machine .gun bullet Whether this came from the fail or from the mnh rlrin in several directions is not known. Ray Waa not S mem her nt tne . mohv nor was either of the wounded men. Mob Returns to Assault. After th A rut u .1.. .v . ' nwaHia jauf guull If v 1 m ed from th fall ami !. nnas mA . D.k-m - -- - v m'tiuvu. port wer current tbst ciUxens gener ally were sming Jiemselves for a sec ond stuck after midnight, and of this the garrison appeared to be fearfuL - At midnight the jaU was Ired a gain from a cornfield on one aid,, but th (hot were ,not returned. I have given order that no more firing shall be done from th Jail unless ths mob .nnrno.li.a .k. A , - r - mw vwi, nil W are la imminent danger," said Captain vxwr, wuimanaing us Durham com pany, after the first shooting. -While soma of th ..- . ar urging against more troops, deelar Ing that additional guardsmen will only, add fuel to the firs already burning high gainst tb negroes and against ths militiamen, Captain Fowler at midnight It """urcemenis. .v 1 1llink "toot'oa. elcsred for ino nignt, out mere is no wy of tell ing," declared Captain Fowler. At 1 o'clock this morning ths mob had dispersed and the trouble, it Is thought, appears to be over for tho night- In the meantime th T,,.i,. r . Militia of 125 men U beinr held in readiness for call at the armory. umciais uo To Graham. Adiutant-General Vfott. 1... reived instrnftiniii n - - ---- -.ww uvitrnvr Bickett at Aihnvill. t j - r.w.v-vu . wars to Graham and take charge Of the itt. wua, using nia judgment a to neces sity for additional troops. The djutant-geueral left shortly after midniffht in th nv.,n'. driven by Mr. William Bickett, son ot tho governor, and uvmnfu.lul ) .i - J -- .t.vi.ij v& OUIIC. '"i7 cxpeciea 10 oe in uranam .ja two houra. At thi. una 4m. in...... General J. 8. Manning in Mobane, left or urauam, ; t.j . , v . . Governor Bicfett had no - further lannnirana' wiirv.lQ me Kroop iBS . ii4 IT. v..! -1 3 ..a a .l. - ehine gun eompany to shoot and shoot straight it necessary. It wss ia compli ance with these orders that the gun, ners returned the fire when the assault : All day, it is understood, quiet had Ai!tt In P.r.k.ni Ttt. .nut!.. m been discussed, but it had' been deter mined to keep them In Graham over night for purpose of proceeding with font Iflrttinri nv invstiir!itlnai tn.a mi. ditions should bo restored to normal. KktiA kf In th IMI tt m-n hM lit hai nil h.va, Vftl Km.. ' 4..lAniHA.1 mm K. ' guilty mnn. In fact, considerable doubt is ezpressea in coijuieiont quaners 3 10 wneiner sny one 01 in teres is iu man wanted. - -A 1 -; . - - a-ii.s- mmm in vivv. Durham, July 19-(By the AssocUted c1! a 1 , i. ' , Press.) The 'mob that stormed th Ala. mance jntl Was made up of about fifty ntenV They ' surrounded the jail al Continued oij fsg Ttree.)