IS IMSTOM EE PUBLISHED TWICE A WEEK-WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS 'VOITXXVI. No. 18" ( N SISTER ! OF VICTIM SPRINGS THE' FRENCH IN MFN M VMMW . L-l ...a i- . - w vwwm f 1 W : W BRIUJANT FIGIfT CLAN fE W DIE Judith Edwards Says Her Brother Abused Defend ant Before Killing' SHE'D SUniKONED SLAYER 0 -4 A !.-. Was Fiancee at Time Dra- maticV Evidence Epstein ; Cries and Emotional Fem v inine Spectators Shed Tears With Him HAUREPAS IS TAKEN CLASH OF REVENUE Advanced In Three Lines, Overwhelming the Tefl " ton Defense i (Specal U The Free Prens.) Goldaboro, t Aug. 25. Counsel' speeches are bejng heard in the Epstein ease thjs afternoon .Ele ven are to be. made. The Jury will not get the case before Sat era afternoon, probably. Gaklsboro, Aug., 25. Miss Judith Edw.rl on the stand in the rial of Human Brate-in, charged with the murder of Miss Edwards' brother, Leonard Edwairds, .Thursday after noon, surune the bis sensation of the case when she bore out t'te state ment of the, defendant that .the vie tins had accosted and cursed him. Miss Edwards was Epstein's fiancee when the killing occurred a few ' months agorae had been ordered by Edwards not to, come to the house. , Attractive Judith Edwards "stated that, she had telephoned, Epstein to com, to, the Edwards home, and that ahe was in the yard when her. brcth satd on the stand that Edwards, the larger man of the two, had manhan dled' him. Miss Edwards did not witness the shooting. f i, Alias Mary Wooten told of passing the- Edwards home and hearing curse and a pistol shot There were two men standing in semi-darkness; One had on a light suit. Sho saw the man in the light suit, his hands ever Iris heart, standing in the street after the shot. The other man stood i the, edge of the cidcw.ilk. ., Ilynjttfi Epstein tried as H. B. pWketoId of hearing the shot, how Edward l was carried into ills home and laid out, and of a conversation with the young slayer. . Many women were in the court room and mos tall of these added their team to Ep stein's. . . a : ALLIES ARE ADVANCING i ..i . iv ii:. 1 , Upon Two Important'Hoints In West-Slavs t Driving Turks Before Them ? In Caucasus Offensive Bit- lis Being Evacuated (Cy the United Press) Lynchburg, Va, Aug. 23. Rev enue officers from Mount Airy. N. C and Martinsville, Vi., are hastening tm the scene of a shoot ing between revenue men and al leged moanshiaera, near Stuart. Va., in which Revenue Officer B. H. Maya was probably fatally wounded. Mays, with a posse trailing a wagon of liquor across the. State line, called at the home of Wil liam Smith, demanding Smith's surrender. The Smith clan open ed tire on the posse. William Smith was arrested hat the oth ers escaped. CANSLER NOMINATED FOMlAiuR ATLANTA 4H Atlanta. Oa.. Aue. 24 Asa Candler, millionaire soft drink man ufacturer, was nominated by mayor of Atlanta in the Democratic prim ary today over Jesse Armist, mem ber of the city council. . MANY HURT WHEN BOLT STRUCK SHOE FACTORY Brockton, Mass., Aug 24.Nine p'.r eona Were injured, four seriously and nearly a score suffered minor hurts when a bolt of Jighta'iti struck a shoe factory here today, causing a vat. of denatured alcohol to explode and set fire to the building. (By the United Press) London, Aug. 24. The Russians have resumed their advance is the entire Caucasus theater following the recaoture'of Mush, says a wireless message from Petrograd. The Turks are evacuating Bitlis. Capture of Maurepas. Paris, Aug. 25. The French have advanced to within a mile and a half of Combles, an important railway center, in furious fighting following the rapture of Maurepas. The town been under a terrific bombard ment for three days. French infan try is advancing just south of Com- blcs-to pocket up the Germans, in the same manner that the British are closing in on Thiepval. Infantry at tacks follow cannonading. Artillery has 'bathed the Somme ' front with hundreds of thousands of shells. The French left their.itreiiches at sundown last evening and scrambled over ruined, German trenches in three waves that overwhelmed the Ger mans, capjturuig Maurepas in exactly thirty minutes. General Haig's Eng lish drove forward for three hundred yawls 'south of Thiepval, taking a German trench on a four-hundred yard front, , . . French Repel German Attacks. Paris, Aug. " 25. The French lasl ight consolidated the positions, won yesterday's advance north ' of Maurepas, and (repulsed a violent at- ck on hill 121 south of the village, it is officially said. Three hundred i (jiisoners hive been taken since ye erday morning on the northeast front Verdun. The Germans ': attached the village of Fleury, in force but vcre stopped in the region of ApTe- mont. Italians Near Trieste. With the Italian Army npar Gor- Hz, Aug. 25. General Cadorna has pushed his lines to within fourteen miles of Trieste, gradually progress ing in difficult mountain country. where the .Austrians are resisting with' utmost tenacity. Monfalconc, like the other villages of the Carso, has been leveled by artillery. The Carso plateau is strewn with corpse'! of horses and men, torn by ehell fire, in RUN-OFF PRIMARIES IN TEXAS FIGHT BETWEEN THE WETS AND PROHIBS. Dallas,. Texas, Aug. 25. Individu ality will be largely lost sight of to morrow in the run-off primaries for the Democratic nomination for U 3 4 Senator. Tomorrow's balloting will be a battle between wet and dry forces, with odds favoring the lat ter, politicians say. Senator Charles Culberson and O. B. Colquitt, former goveanor, .iaw the principals in today's votng. In the regular Democratic primaries on July 26 Culberson got 80,000 votes to Colquitt's 107,000, and the present Job-holder only beat Dr. S. P. Broo?iS. former president of Baylor Universi ty, by about ,000. But the nomina tion fight even then had resolved it self into a prohibition and anti-prohibition issue wits Coluitt favoring the antijwand Culberson and Brook the proa. The -prohibition vote split on its two candidates. Submission of prohibition at a gen oral election to follow the next ses sion of the Legislature, carried in the primaries, The drys are expect ed to unite behind Culberson, and despite his defeat by Colquitt in the first primaries ihe is admitted by pol iticians to have the best of it "on paper." ' EXECUTIVES ON OTHER PRESIDENT AND BROTHERHOODS ON ONE SIDE AND RAILWAY IN DEADLOCK OVER THE STRIKE QUESTION Neither Will Give An Inch Employes Becoming Impa ticnt Union Heads Charge Nation-Wide Lobby; Show Telegrams Excitement When President Calls Broth- erhood Men Into Conference Talked for Ninety Min utes but Accomplished Little or Nothing Wilson Wil Stand Firm in Cause of Men, Leaders Say No Com promise by Enginemen, Trainmen and Others North ern Pacific Pays for Telegrams Favorable to Magnate's Side, Alleged LEO ROWE SECRETARY at , MEXICAN COMMISSION Washington, Aug. 24. Leo S. Rowe, professor of political economy at the University of Pennsylvania, who was secretary of the recent Pa nama financial congress, will be sec retary of the American group of the joint commission which will seek a solution of Mexican difficulties. ' JUDGE DEVIN NAMES . ' TILLEY COURT CLERK IN DURHAM COUNTY THREE KILLED IN AN OCCIDENT ON L& ME. . Easton, Md., Aug. 24. Three train men Were killed in a wreck on the Lehigh and New England Railroad near here The tender of a locomo tive jumped the track on a steep grade and five coal cars piled on top of the engine. , ; V A theris Government Tcllo Kaiser Grecho Vitl Hot. Stand For tie Invasioh Judge Devm, oondoeting Court here, Thursday night mailed to Durham the appointment of E. I filiey to the Clerk of Superior-Court in 'Durham county, which county is in Judge Delia's district. Clerk Tilley auceer m the late Clerk Caleb" Green, who died recently after many years in office. 4 The Durham bar endorsed Mr. Til- ley. He is an attorney, and has been deputy clerk of the Court for some time. In that office he had made good and earned the regard of his fellow lawyers and the publk genertHy.i. (By the Unite Press) Washington, Aug:. 25. With President Wilson and the railroad presidents apparently at loggerheads for the t;me being, the President todav stirred up excitement by snaaenly calling the heads of the brotherhoods to the White House for a Conference. The conference lasted an hour and a half. According to the workers' representatives, the talk left the situation unchanged. They were not asked to ac cept i t mpromise, they said, and gave the impression as they left the White House that the President may.be ex pected to stand firmly by the proposal which they ac cepted but the railway heads reject. The brotherhood chiefs while at the White House pJac d before the President a charge that a nation-wide lobby is being conducted to influence sentiment to favor, the roads. Thav presented telegrams showing that the Northern Pacific is paying for favorable messages for warded to Washington. - Pressure from their members for prompt disposal of the issue is becoming stronger, the brotherhood head told the President. .The brotherhoods, they said, refuse absolutely to compromise further than in compliance with the President's plan. . , , ' Bialfetlns (By the United Press) TWO DIE I?f DUEL ON ROAD. Fraiianin, Ala., Aug. 25. G. V. Smith and Robert nail, prom ' ine'nt men of Wilcox county, are dead as the result of a pistol fight on a public highway. DEATH W MRS. CARRIE M. FORDHAM AT NOON Mrs. Carria M. Fortlham, a well known woman, died in Memorial hos pital at noon today, following a long period of ill health. Recently she joffcred a broken hip in a fall, and that nwy thave hastened her death, it is thought. Mrs. Fordham ' was about 80 years of age. She was the wklow'of the late Dr. A. J. Fordham, who died about eight years ago. She U survived by one brother, J. H. Piigh of Clinton, and one sister, Mrs. Mary Wooten, who resides at tha east end of King street, this city. It Was wit the latter that Mrs. Ford ham made her home, and from the Wooten residence the funeral will be conducted Saturday at 5 p. m. Kev. Superior J E. N Harrison of Caswell Street Methodist church will officiate. Mrs. Fordham was a woman of an excellent type, a devout Christian and of lovable disposition. : She wa3 member of the Jethodist church. BRYANT SANDERSON GOES FREE IN CASE - . (y tM United rmsl " v London, Aug. 25.-Germany has ordered Bulgaria to discontinue the Balkan advance and evacuate Greek ter ritory, fearing Greece will enter the war on -the side of tj"? Allies, an unconfirmed wireless report from Rome tss. ; Several Greek generals have refused to obey orders to evacuate Macedonia, the dispatch said. Instead of preparing to defend tne eastern forts, the .t t i u: i SECOND RAID UPON ENGLAND IN A DAY FOILED BY AIRMEN (By the United PreM t London Aug. 26-A ceoond air raid within 24 hours, when six aeppe Im bombarded tha east coast, wai firpplf cmvprnrnwit U snir1 in. have laid this information r anti-air ; craft guwu A fnr.a nJAr ,of nnWiV initrTjnfinn io c "viator who dashed in at cW range tne report said. - . . . ; r WOULD HAVE GOTTEN , TBY ALL RIGHT," BUT TAKING NO CHANCES William Atkinson, colored, farm tenant, stood charged with larceny; larceny of a watch in Superior Court hero Thursday. : There was tome doubt as to his guilt; so much that the Solicitor agreed to a sub mission to a charge cf simple tres pass. William was not ewa'-e of what was in progress, probably. .William Atkinson sat there in the courtroom and heard a couple of de fendants soaked for 12 months each. That had a very depressing effect up oa William, who was tinder bond and Atkinson's counsel, having effected liberty to go where he pleased, the change .whereby he could adroit trespass and pay for H and go n Wilryuta's nerve had failed him and he was gone. . He had not come oat of the woods tbic morning. His coos The jury in the Sanderson case about 3:15 this afternoon brought in verdict of "not guilty." Man slaughter, was the most that the State had asked for. The jury took the case against Bryant Sanderson, charged with the killing of Amos Becton,,t about a quarter to 1 o'clock this afternoon. The case was commenced Thursday afternoon, and ell the evidence was in before adjournment. Argument was heard today. In thi3 case Sanderson, a young farm tenant, is the defendant. Bec ton was one of the wealthiest plant ers in. Jones county. 11a was killed !n an affray with Sanderson on his plantation on this side of the Lenoir county line several months ago. Tes timony had Thursday afternoon was to the effect that Bee Ion had made as if to attack the other and his throat was cut in the fracas. Boston was an elderly man. He was a bachelor and had a reputation for indulging in immoral pleasure. It was at the home of a negro tenant that the fa tal fight occurred. . The prospect this afternoon is that tho August . term of Superior Court will bo brought to an end tonight. Cases disposed of Thursday were: Thad. Tyndall, Sunday , aolling and nuisance, not guilty. lobe Mayo, re tailing, not guilty. George Caven augh, having whiskey for sale, guilty; judgment not pronounced. . CARR WOULD DREaI) TO SEE HUGHES IN WHITE HOUSE, SAYS Declares Republican Candi date Is Trying to Stir Up Sectionalism That Would Damage South Wilson Called Great Durham, Aug. 25, Wilson is the greatest President since Washington, tho wisest since Jefferson, in . the opinion of General Julian S. Catr, multimillionaire owner of the largest hosiery mill in the world. "Our dear Southland would have littla to hope for in tha event of it of sectionalism, inimical to the He said Hughes was kindling a spir nughes' election," he declared today. South, which he thought had been bariad with the Spanish war. CHAS. CARTER KILLED; TRAIN STRUCK MACHINE Eocky Mount, Aug. 24. Suffering a fractured skull, shattered hip and internal injuries when his euto was struck by eatbound Atlantic Coast Line passenger train No. 68 about aoea today, Charles A. Carter, a plan, ter. lumberman and merchant of Wes try's, Nash county, was given injur ies from which he died three hours later. - m ; '. ,- . ALLEGED SLAYER IS TAKEN AFTER FORTY FOUR YEARS, REPORT A&heville, Aug. 24. After eluding the officersifor 41 years, Andy Wise white man, charged with tho mur der ef John Rogers of this county, has been arrested at Williamson, W. Va., according to A telegram rcceiv Bd hy Sheriff E. M. Mitchell this morning. immediately after the alleged mur- jeryWie was arrcated by Sheriff Plemmons, who was shoriff of Bun eombe county at that thns, and was Drought to Asheville to be placed in tho county jail. Sheriff Plemmons drove up to the old county courthouse with his (prisoner, and as he was pre paring to hik-h hia horse to tho post, tha alleged murd.cror- nrrado a hreak for lilerly, and had not heen seen nor heard of eince by any of the suc ceeding sheriffs in tho intervening 14 years, until Stove Rogers, the aon of the murdered man, ,run.hed into Sheriff Mitchell's office on' April lot, Jtating that Andy Wise, the man who had killixi his father, had been seen the French Broad neighborhood. Sheriff Mitchell procured an automo bile and hastened immediately , to French Broad township, ' only to find that Wise had caught the train out Alexamier the morning before, After getting a good description. f Wise, from the persons who saw him on his brief stay, Sheriff Mitchell had a large number of circulars print ed and sent them into the surround ing States, resulting in the arrest ef Wise at Williamson. GUARDSMEN WALKED FlW-THREE MILES iNTWd'Dte Battalion of Third Infaritr Marched From Camp Glenn f to Sportsmen's Camp Not Far From New Bern-Stood It Well' ; 7 (Special to The Free' Press.) Camp Glemv N" C Aug. 2i. A battai ionfour . tompan ie of . the Third infantry returned to camp lata yesterday after the longest hike taken by troop in thie State eWe the War Between the 6Utes they marched 53 miles rn'twp 'days;'' 27 was done :' yesterday. The battalion tramped to Camp Bryan, between Newport and Kew Dam. Two supply wagons and an ambulance accompanied the outfit, which was under command ef Major S. C. Chambers. The (men were in good condiiioH when they . arrived here. The regimental'-hand played Ihem into-camp from d'stinre he- yend the reecirvation. FJfty-three miles in 48 hours xi rather unusual fer men ia ' nwM'cliing - - equipment.; Thirty miles would be considered fair. forty good. . . ' Company A of engineers, newly-or ! gani&ed,, is expected here from Wil- ulngtdn tomorrow. , Another rengi cr company is soon to arrive from Charlotte. Corp. Leo Komegay of Company -., Second Infantry, has been trans ferred te the headquarter company of that regimwit. Harry Paul, who has , been wrestling in the Middle West as Young' Gotcih", hae enlieted in the RowmU; he has been attached to Com pany B, lafter to go inte h tuppry, company. , , s GOING ON IN OTHER TOWNS AND COUNTIES OF EASTERN CAROLINA Mrs. Mary Carter of Belhavcn, her two children and another child whom she is caring for, were stranded in 753 TOWNS DESTROTED SINCE BEGINNING OF. THE WAR '''''' , , -I,, r' v , Paris, Aug. 26. Statistics - from he Ministry of the Interior availa ble today: show that 753 towns have been destroyed since military opera tions were begun and up to June 30. New Bern en route home from Fler Kla. . The Salvation Army stepped in ami secured them . temporary quar ters and cet about the huainej of raising funds for them to got home. Th Third Infantry hand and about a hundred soldiers visited Oriental Thursday, trying to secure recrniU in Pamlico county. , r.-.-1- Wlnterville High School was bum-: ed when a bolt of lightninc ignited the belfry tearly . Thmday. w.Th building WJ8 a mass of ruina in aa" hour's time. Te . furnUuro n . the i firet floor waa eavad.. The achool term had opened only day or two . before. Building wad content . were valued at $8,500, wit $1,000 inaur-' anee. There ia ipractically no deubt ) that the school will he replaced. : It, wai under Baptist control. , Friday Sustains Its Record As Big Sales Day On Local Tobacco Market-400.000 Lbo. mm scl frankly laid the facts before the court and Judge Devm allowed the altered charge to stand. i, . ' A white man whose sub-tenant Wil liam is. Is trying to find the darky and reaasttfe him. . Any estimate at this writing of the tobacco break on the Kinston market today is but guesswork. These fuesses run from two hundred and fifty thousand to half rrlillioh pounds. The Free Press puts the figures be tween three fifty and four hundred thousand. The prices . oiiutv iHuiuuu ui Atumij;. m uie upuuon 01 some Tyne grades thrbughout the sales today would not average up "" to those on some previous days, when the sales were much smallerand for that reason the average price might not be the highest of the season. This is merely speculative, and it is conservative to say that prices wero entirely sat isfying and in many instances exceeded what the sellers . : expected. The first sales consumed most of the morning, ?nd tho dinner halt was taken in the midst of the second iales; it will be well on in the afternoon before the third and last sale of Uie day is concluded. Friday i always a-big day on the market and tha quantity today was more than double any previous day cf tho present season. Good breaks are expected daily f rein row on and by the end of the coming week it will net to surprising if the "criers' " voices. doa't bein to "feci t1 - effects" ox the, day work, : -'A - '-V.y