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ry TO SEE > SINYER HANGED n, Women and Children About Jail Yard to Witness Execution. URDERER KILLED 4. ” Required by Law Took Form of Fence 5 Feet High. | TUPMLO, Miss, Aug. 11—Five "thousand people, practically the population of the county, In- eluding old women and little ohildren, ground a fenoed-in scaffold Jail yara here yesterday after- an ‘to see Charlie Marshall hanged. _, At was an unprecedented holiday in # istory of this town. made fa- already as the home of the late John M. Allen, former Con- | | | Many among the spectators had geen hangings before, but they were igeneraily common lynchinks, This 4 an ‘a legal execution, and especially fe intereoting because of the crime. Marshall murdered four members tthe Robert Miller family at Miss. He set fire to Miller's and then threw dynamite into . Bo he had to die, and the people dem feto of it—probably the y holiday since the burning a Balem witches. The train that | rh Marshall himself to Tupelo ) Slso brought a throng of excurstonists ‘Ko wee him die, They came from all the scarby villages and farms. REGULAR “CIRCUS DAY” FOR COUNTRY FOLK. . | Thay were dressed in their Sunday Diack and there was a great display shirts, They came in and “canopy top” surreys and hay ricks. The frugal brought shoe- ‘Dox lunchdons. Opportunists, seizing ‘Bhe chance to profiteer a apes sold upd the basketful, ‘Onade stands sprung up as mary village aiong the parade Sas! & circus comes to town. law of Mississippi says ta 1 u shall be “private,” and th nig that thousands witnessed this De does not mean that the law was. It was obeyed to the totter | ‘to the totter only. i "When he scaffold had been a | @ the jail yard the Sherift ordered ‘@ fence built wround it, The fence five feet high—high enough t a claim of “privacy,” but not enough to interfere with. the “qeigeea for tn order to hang a man | “Yt le necessary to get him up in the | air a bit. Besides. the fence was no ‘obstacle at all to those tn the wagons ‘and buggies, who could stand up and "‘fook over., So the “private” hanging "was seen by everybody, and nobody | thinks it burt the prospect of the Sheriff's re-election when his term expires. ATHLETIC EVENTS ENTERTAIN | eae THE CROWD, “The crowd began gathering in the early morning, Business both here @nd at Amory was suspended. oe ‘open wpace around the jal] was filled < : fs never ‘before. And in order that ,Dublie ihe port of oat oe raniena © time should not hang too heavily on of the convoy acrows tne sed, The re- the hands of the crowd the Tupelo jpots wu We a severe arreieneent of the Germa.., is 1 part as follows: england Solr aren | “The Pranklurt and the three de- wrestiing matches and some te "duns June hy tly. Thay being Falsed the ships were -akeu to Rooyth, "At 1 o'clock in the afternoon, when | the Lg Sor Snes bend hoe vod eae de eeeeyety had finished eating and | PO OT ich wo found tiene, yensela | the remnants had been stowed away cannot be exaggerated. What had uot "ta the shoe boxes and the semonade been sivicn was Wrecked. The yan- Ny were threatened with ex- | dalism found on all ships rr? id fe on of supply, the word went very careful preparauon and usual thoroughness of the si yound that “they're going to do it | execution. “now.” “The Ustfriesland, witch was the flagship of the first battle equadron Marshall was brought out of the Cr ihe German fect in the battle of Jail Into the inclosure. There was @ Jutiand, was the only ship which hv _ erush of humanity about the fence, | not been seuttled In spite of the “iand the Sheriff's deputies made a fact that tt was' towed, they had an ‘ | unnecessarily large crew on board S Bterdy show of forcing people back.) and jater developments would tend to ‘Pathers and mothers lifted their indicate that thin large crew was Ba children above the fence line to let | sent with a view of looting every- © them look over. Marshall himself th -posiisai eT was paid to be improsved by the at- “fention be was getting, and he is BOLSHEVIKI SEND as saying: | TROOPS TO TURKEY > I'm willing to hang if that’s ‘what the people want.” | ‘Phere was a little delay at the last , mainte. The prisoner was waiting | @md the rope was ready, but the P Agherit?, who lacked oxperionce in| hs. nangings. aid not know exactly how ©) the knot should be tied to assure 18 | deg an agreement with Armenia by Proper slipping, This perplexity was | which the provinces Karabdr and Zan- aplieved when Mack Crawford came | xogour, in Southern Apmenta, will be vere and recalled the fact that he | neutralized, once assisted at the hanging of | Entento circles here aro alarmed, re- Megro, and said he reckoned he | garding this convention, which they’ be- make the knot. He did. Fieve is caulyaient AD Permission by Are \e lor the Bolshev cross > HELD BACK OF FENCE |oouniry from Baku Minto Anatolia: WITH REVOLVER! The B cavalry regiments a! "Hust before the “drop” there was [it VANDAL-WRECKED, GERMAN WARSHIPS CANT MAKE CRUISE Condition of oF “Tiophies, ” Says Daniels, Prevents Country- wide Showing of Them. WASHINGTON, Aug. 21,—Because of vandalism tn looting and wrecking the engines and control» of the Ger- man warships recently brought to the United States as “trophies” the ships } will remain tn New York until Amer. joan naval officers have,made a thor ough inspection and the navy is ready to use them as targets for the guns lof the Atlantic Fleet. ‘This statement was made by Seare- | tary of the Navy Daniels in expressing ‘regret at his inability to comply with the requests that the five ships be sent to various ports for exbibition, At the same time Mr. Daniels made ues Make Agreement With Armenia Which Causes Alarm in Entente Circles. CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug, 21 (Asso- lelated Preas).—Soviet Russia has con- od Soutl ‘ Ar- ‘A rush against the fence that the iy with’ the Turkien Nationalta datos Grew revolvers to defend the ers of Mustapha Kemal Pasha at Bal fearing that the eggehell Bet, according to advices received hers would be crushed in, But it “ and at 1,20 o'clock Marshall was 4 dead. Then the children and presently hilarity was general again to the fence top to through the crowd ‘body swinging from the| Farmers were reminded by «thelr wives that it was high time to start had been a strained silence for home if the milking was to be that moment, but when the done before supper, Ho were oom, Set that the law had “taken hitched up again, Crying babii were there was relaxation. A quieted, some with candy, others with throat « “unny spankings, Boys and girls wero ad~ over it. eben dh jfearers, monished that the fate of Mapahall ought fo he @ lesson to them, Every- ‘Up, body went hime, NS MAKE Gupsy py hae Whose Betrothals M'DONALD WINS WEIGHT THROWING OLYMPIC CONTEST (Continued From First Page.) of the Olymple games here to-day with 14601-2 metres. Jannsson of Sweden was secopd with 14.48 metres, Almlof of Sweden third with 14.27 metres Sabling of Sweden fourth with 14.171-2, Sherman G. Landers, Chicago A. A, fifth, with 14.27, and Dan Ahearn, Ilinols A, 'C., holder of the world’s record in the event, sixth, with 14,08. At the close of the ninth event of the decathlon only two Americans, Brutus K. Hamilton, Universlty of Missouri, and Lieut, G. L. Vidal, United States Army, had survived the eljminations and with elmht Buropeana competed in the last event, the 1,600-metre run. Because there are only a few points’ difference between Looland of Nor- way and Hamilton, who are leading the decatifion, the committee ae eviaw the figures by a complicated system and the resuite will be an- nounced to-morrow, Six American runners and an tm- mense field of athletes of other na- tions are entered in the classic Mara- thon to be run to-morrow, the feature of the seventh Olympiad. dune gre Arthur V, Ross of Derches-| | ter, Maes.; Carl W. A. Linder, Quincey, | Mass; J. L, Organ, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Charles D. Melior, Logan Square A. C.,| Chicago; Frank Zuna, Newark, and,J. P, Weber, Pittsburgh, Pa. ‘The other nations represented in the event are England, South Africa, | Holland, Canada, Italy, Chill, Den- mark, Czecho-Slovakia, Finland, Swe- | den, India and Belgium, The American team, consisting of walk nt the Olympic games in 18 minutes 141-5 seconds. of Australia finished #e Jmer, American Walkers Clu, Momaster, South A four Maron St. Anselma A. C.. Am frth, 4 ¢. 8 Dowson, Eng an‘, | sixth The competition i# new event dnd consequently no previous time has been recorded Frigerio outclassed the field Parker alternated with the Ttalian in setting Rr third: Pr the pace until 100 metres from the tnpe, where Frigerlo dashed into at forty-yard lead which he held to the end. bent Remer iby about the | game distance, the latter ihetng ten | feet ahead of MoMastor, who was rapidly overtaking the American at the end, ‘The finals in the Greco-Roman wrestling were held this morning Finland scored 19 points, Sweden 7 Denmark 3 and Norway 1 point eunbine Hb bas R. BELGIAN DOCKERS REBEL. BRUSSELS, Aug. 21.—The Antwerp officially to-day that Nagel The Amert-| STATE ‘DEPT. ASKS RECALL OF NAGEL Envoy From \Letvia ‘Regarded as Undesirable and Is ‘De- tained Here. WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.—Letvia has been asked by the United States to re- call Alfred Nwzel, bearing credentials as Letvian Secretary of’ Legation, who ig ‘betng detained at New York by the | immigration authorities. It was stated was re- garded by the American Government as an undesirable residen: and would not) be permitted to enter the country, The State Department and the Immi- are working, In accord officials said. gration Burea in Nagel's caw ‘ime ago a cablegram was sent to Riga, asking that Nngel be not permitted to leave there for New York, oe , GIRL FIGHTS TO LIVE FOR SAKE OF BABY Desiree Clark, Who Drank Iodine, Shields Man So Wife Will Not Suffer. Desiree Mary Clark, who tried to kill herself last Tuesday by drinking to- ine, declared to-day at Lincoln Hos- pital, where she has been nursed back to health, that she now wants to live for the sake of the baby that ds com- ing soon, Miss Clark ts an orphan J.| from Newburgh. “I met ‘Bille,’ the man who made me want to die, at a dance in Mount Beacon, N. Y.,"" she declared. * | told me he was singte and that he loved me, I pelleved hhn until @ ew days xo, when I found out that he \s ma tied and is the father of three chikiren, H. H. Brown, Ivan C.)1 don't want to hurt his wife or her Dreuser, New York A, Gz A. A.|children, 1 hate ‘him now, for he is Shard, Chicago A. A.; Michael A.| Worse fan # sooundrel, |) oy Devaney: MUTORG Ac As ANG MM: Lelie Diy aun g ewe, eT cant Bnd Shiclds, Meadowbrook Club, /Phila-| send me hp gt Gelphis, qualified for the finals in going £0 face the world now and fght the 8,000-meter-team race. In their|hard for my bal heat of the final the Americans will) have the French team as their only opponent. Sweden, England ‘tna | VISITING HOURS | FOR FLEET. taly also qualified for the finals. Miho agnarioan teain, Charles W,| Gse Warships Paddock, Los Angeles A. C.; Loren M. Murchison, New York A. C.i J. V.| Visitors’ hours on the North Atlantic Hoholz, Univeraity of Missourt, and|iect now in port were announced by M. M. Kirksey, Olympic Club, “Ban 'ehe Navy Club to-day. The battleships Franciego, saaily qualitied for the 1, “pennayivania,’ Arizona and OK. Ee a Oe ae neo rey tuts ihoma will anchor in tho Hudson, off ne ei econd suis 4 finished @econd, but later was dis-|Weat 00th Street, The ae a" qualified for irregular passing of the err West 129th Street and the Florida [baton and Luxembourg took second off Weat 79th stre |piace, ‘The French, Hnglish, Swedish | Visiting hoara will be trom 2 P.M. to and Danish teams also qualified in ee Me day and 2: Meta hess eoneyaes nounced later, Th ‘are about Figerto of Italy won the 8,000-metre $1000 officers and men in the crews of 6 seven ships, Find the answer tn Sweethearts for Three By Roger Batchelder A Gripping Novel of it Side, West Side, dock workers have refused to continue loading munitions aboard the American | veonal Warszawa to be transported to Poland, according to the Naoion Bolus. ‘The new. adds that thirty car loade ot munitions went by the Amerl= oan (arm the Rhino have been a to Follwea aidings. 7 All Around New York.” Beginning Mond: August 23 In The Evening World ie | and festive ribbons were not a whit PSE i 1 it GAY CEREMONY Little Girls in Gorgeous Array Centre of Celebration at | Tuckahoe Camp. WILL WED IN SIX YEARS. Strenuous "Preliminaries Force Postponement From -Morn- ing Until Afternoon. | Two why little gypsy girls, arrayed in gorgeous colors and wearing neck laces, bracelets and armlets of gold coins estimated to be worth from $1,200 to $1,600 each, are the centre of attraction to-day at the large gypsy | encampment three miles out of Tuck. ahoe, N.Y. For this is the day when with «a pomp unknown outside Romany circles they are to become engaged to two little boys of the camp. ti The engagement ceremony was to have taken place this morning, but | what with having danced all night, as a preliminary warming up for the | big event, the 260 gypsies in the} thirty tents forming a semi-circle in a clearing in @ picturesque wood set- ting, were so tired that they disre- garded the sun, acting as an alarm | clock, and turned over to take an- other snooze, So the ceremony was postponed until this afternoon. Not a few of the children scampered about the camp without so much as a one-plece garment. These, it was hinted, may go #a far as to have their faces washed in festive prepa- ration as guests, The Costello family is very much interested in the engagement, for each of the two couples whose for- mal betrothal is being celebrated is surnamed Costello. Cousin will marry cousin ix years hence. Tom Miller Costello and Rosie Costello, each 14 years old, son and daughter of Nicholas Costello, ‘are being be- trothed respectively to Mary, 14, daughter of John Costello, and An- tonio, 11 son of Mateo Costello. mil Mitchell, Chief Romany, will oMfciate at the ce: , assisted by the fathers of the little grooms-to-be, while gypsy musicians render on their violins melodies redolent of wood scents, A feast of large proportions le to follow the betrothal ceremony, washed down (sh-h-h-h, or Sheviin'll be an uninvited guest) with a bever- age that never heard of William H. Anderson, Andrew Volstead or Will- ‘am J. Bryan. Then the dancing, be- when Morpheus chased revellers go their beds, will be re- sumed, for the ceremony she outshone all the was of flaming red and the skirt ‘a bright pink. Ribbons of gold, yellow, G. GA44OSOBSDOOd4 PP LIRD POOP] Bon bSOEOS OOROSIE D0 0SSOSSSE SES ESOD IESE Gas in Hotel. aviator who was #hot, later tor ponsioncea tographer in Wheeling, W. Vi gas jets were turned on. the aviator were the war. Recently she left her join Ferry, They Venetos, superintendent of Washington Avenue, He of wrists were decorated with the chains lon Aug. 7. of gold coins from many lands visited ‘by the gypsies, On her head was a really beautiful crown of wild flowers, A similar floral crown set off the dark locks of Rosie, whose skirt of bright yellow, white georgette waist behind Mary's in picturesqueness. When six years from now Tom and Antonio take Mary and Rosie as their brides, the fathers of the girls have promised to give their son-in-law tents, housekeeping outfits and Ford cars. aie WINDSOR ENTRIES. The Windsor entries for Monday's ‘aces are as follows: eatSE, BACK 41.500: v9, Sear, 118. ‘Maxi, 4 tii: Niaacen Pola te; Me x Poe ae eh, ti iert, L168: 116. Also Jatoon,” dat; Hlaen, iG; Puntalette Lake. 18, SEOUND ACE 81,500; two-yeur-olde H ing bred mao: x, junior Henin ten, i sXivle Grown. ia: Weert, 1 i Tie:"balarny thoy: : three ‘Decree ae and, up: crinite ot Wi i 6; Ly R Leva, 110 “Tunny ved, Lid; it ¥ "rhurman, 112; also eligible a Hin nas Due "De Guiee, 114 Old ein 7 added, Hewblan, 107, UMTH Rat e- bes Bolle Mead two-year bs S00: ‘sino ear, tint fie, clark OA RDH RACE Three so $1,009; ,clalmlig, calle go, tele hs Meats tren ecu His and wwant: peda sistemnth. "= Keou d. caital ‘4; | at ae ators Sve 100; tha, Riou, jeonmn, {OTs Pair Ori George et, ‘on gelauick Pacare ffene Port Lee family home, No. 78 - lis W. Ferry, an offic ing Company. Ferry met years ago in West 49th St Mrs, Deveraux Fort Green Place, Brooklyn. “90 Steps from Broadw IDA M.—i'Beolng in the Dark, BP. M.—"*Phrough My Lattloe." Preacher P OASD Lattin Tee BIE Sirkay; rewaed, tt Sucther, vi Weat Port Comp, {arene DIED. STURM.—THEODORE. CAMPRBDLI. NERAL OHURCH CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 19 (Asso-} elated Press).—Advices to the French | Mission here report the capture of, Tarsus, Asia Minor, on Aug, 12 by! French troops. Hope now is held out for the Amert: | volts, relief work: who have bee - Kanna since June. 30° "Tare y ie tae between: Mor- | FUNERAL DIRECT:.18 FRANX H. CaMrnnit. © “THE FUNERAL CHURCH" hac. (nom-Bectarian) 1070 Broadway et 66th St. Oiihen, Zid Bi & Br A Mollat's restaurant , Manhattan, accord- ing to Mrs, Ethel Frasier of No, 444 Last PICTURE IDENTIFIES WOMAN FOUND DEAD WITH WAR FLYER IN SUICIDE PACT IN BROOKLY BEDEHEGDLOE OLS SHED HOODIE EB I-G4 DOODLE DOGEH4GEOOPOEDD Harold E. Ferry and Mrs. Alice Devereaux End Lives With A tailor’s tag found in the clothing of a man and a picture dug out of a trunk in the room he was occupying with a woman who committed suicide with him, to-ddy enabled the police to identify Harold Eustace Ferry, an gassed and service Europe with the A. E. F,, and “Mrs. Alice (P. Deveraux, the wife of a pho- The two were found dead in a foom at the Mohawk Hotel, Brooklyn. Gix According to the police, the Woman, wounded, are under arrest to-day as who was forty-elght years old, and result of an early morning riot re- sweethearts before Sulting from a clash between about a hus- band and came back to New York to were apparently de stones were thrown, and heads were gun last night and interrupted only|spained of her obtaining a divorce broken before police responding to riot the wearyland the suicide agreement followed, calls broke up the fight. ‘The bodies were discovered by J. the When Mary Costello was dressed | apartment hotel, which is at No. 397 noticed a gayly attired Romany girls. Her waist |paper wad in the keyhole of the door and broke into the apartment. :|two were known to Venetos as Mr.| blue and purple festooned her gar-land Mrs. Berry ments, while her neck, arms and|sicned the register under that name ‘The Berlin. They ‘The aviator’s widowed mother, Mrs. Jennie B. Ferry, was found at the idwood Ave- nue, Flatbush, and war so overcome by the shook of the news that she could not go to make the identifica- tion, but sent her companion, Mrs. Harriet Cleveland, who gave the po- lice the man’s history. ‘According to Mra. Cleveland, Ferry entered the Royal Canadian Flying Corps in Toronto in 1918, and was transferred to the United States sor- vice at Fort Worth shortly after this country entered the war, He was sent overseas in a bombing unit, this service ho received the injuries which made him a semi-invalid and national charge after bis return. He iT fk |had accepted his lot cheerfully, ac- Xork. | cording to Mrs. Cleveland, and had 18; | seemed to be recovering. Ferry was, the son of the late Wil- of the New York National Enamelling and Stamp- four in ‘April, she said, Mrs, Deveraux visited Peat egre jet Te alias Wackeworth AUT on 8h: —_—— a Fu: in {HOLD UP 2 BANKS: N IN SAME sn Bandits Force arte Casters Into Vaults’ and Flee in Auto With $5,000. PORTLAND, Conn, Aug, 21—Four | men with revolvers to-day held up George F. Cramer, cashier of the Port- land National Bank and Oliver Bils- worth, cashier of the Freestone Sav- ings Bank, in the same tullding. The cashiers were forced into the bank vault and the door closed. The rob- bers then scooped up about $5,000 in bila and fled in an automobile. The hold-up and robbery would have been a sient affair had not the nren discharged their revolvers in and out of the bank building before de- parting. Some citizens aay that there were as many as twenty-five shots * fired, Half an hour before the pay- rolls for several local concerns had teen made up and sent out. In the bank at the time of the inci- dent was a woman clerk who got out @ rear entrance as Cashier Cramer was being driven into the vault. She ran back into the bank when’ the machine drove away and finding the + vault lever up she swung the doons open and Cramer and Blisworth came out after being imprisoned but a ¢ew minutes, teal dai HAYS REPUDIATES BARNES’S BOOK; Says Republican National Commit- tee Has ‘No Connection ‘With It > or With Subscriptions. If any of the mitiionaire eubscribers toward financing Wiliam Barnes's book, “Republicaniam of 1920," thought they’ were making dack-door subscriptions to the Republigan National Campaign Fund, they were mistaken, according | to Will Hays, Chairman of the Repub- llcan National Committee. It is not on recond that the solicitors employed by Mr. Burnes'’e managers ever directly stated that any part of the collections were to go to the Re- * publican war chest, but some subscribers certainly gathered Intimations to that effect from the language of the young men who visited them in the interests { “Republicanism of 1920." fr, Hays announced to-day that the Republican National Committee hes had no connection with the Barnes pub- | lication or with the collection of eub- scriptions, aE tea GEORGE C. VAN TUYL WEDS. Financter’s Bride ™ © Gladwell, ‘The marriage of George C. Van Tuy! | Jr, fonmerly State Superintendent of Banks, and Mrs. Lela La Motr Gladwell © jet this city was announced to-day. Mrs, Gladwell 1s the widow of Lewir Gladwell of this city and a daughter of | the late Dr. Isaac La Mour of Oneonta N.Y. Mr, Van Tuyl was head of the banking Department under Gov. Dix. having been selected in 1911. He te paident ol the Metropolitan act Company and a director in other dna Chal institutions. Mr. and Sire. Van TTuyl were formerly residents of Albany. Mr. Van Tuyl's clubs are the Metropoll- tan, New York Yacht, Bankers’, Recess, Ardsiey and others. ol FUNERAL FOR MAN OF 104. Cornelius Lived All Hite ! Long Life at ™ Mw We Funeral services for Cornelius Nabie, ‘ who was 104 years old Aug. 4 last, were held to-day at his home at Tappan, N. ‘ P9GL2ODDDDF-DPM EP IEDOGIOG-DIIHDFI-VOILD DHHS GOOITGT 19 BD GOH" her husband in West Virginia, but re- turned in July, saying she did not care to live with him longer. In the latter part of July, Ferry and Mrs, Deveraux moved into No. 562 Washington Avenue, where they stayed two weks. In that time, ac- cording to Mrs. Jeanne Davis, a trunk came for a Mrs. Curry, She sent it back and it returned labeled for a| Mre. Finney. Later it came back ad- dressed to Mrs, Ferry and was claimed by Mra. Deveraux. ‘The dead woman has been twice married, the police | oon, Fredei lok, iwei 1 bp-State with his mothers family, RAILWAY STRIKERS tN. RIOT. One Man Wounded, Seven Arr Faction Fight in Chicago. | CHICAGO, Aug. 21.—Seven men, bne Lela La® hundred railroad men and an equal number of strikers, Scores of shots exchanged, botties, sticks ana The riot was an outgrowth of fre- quent attacks by striking railroad men on the workers who refused to walk out last-April m the unauthorized rail- road The two factions met at Dist St in the early morning hours and opened fre. Man Hart in Auto Disappear. John Flynn, twenty-elght years old, No, 211 West 67th Street, was a pas- wenger In a tax! which was struck by another automobile early to-day at Am- sterdam Avenue and 64th Street. The drivers of both cars disappeared and the police are looking for them. Flynn was taken to the Roosevelt Hospital, where it wns found that his head and neck were severely lacerated. hy Driver: ¥. } Steps in Philadelphia to Help| Nable was born within « hundred | Wemen te’ Qualify. feet of the house where he dled, which } PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 2L—The City]/he built in 1640 when he was a fere- 1 |man of carpenters for the Erie meer | road, He had charge of much of | construction of the Piermont Termine’, long since abandoned. In 1880 he, be- came a locomotive engineer. eyesight forced him to retire; for ry Inst sixteen years he has been entirely blind. He was affectionately known to Council 1s expected $165,000 for the to appropriate purpose of assessing and registering women of voting ag when {it meets Monday. House house assessment of women will prob- ably start the Wednesday following. i bed mio} | ‘This work should be completed in five|his neighbors by the nickname of Casey. days, city officials sald, - NO DELAY When a Wholesale Buyer Gets to Town THE WORLD MORNING EDITION Prints His Name at Once Read the Most Complete, Accurate Lists of ARRIVAL OF BUYERS BUSINESS TROUBLES SHIPPING NEWS DAILY IN THE WORLD