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* | Their Candidates. COLER Is to the Republicans. "em. man.” ‘wafely, however. ‘Fifth ave: @eratic majority time Rim to win in.” and parts of the Ghotto’ of New York."" to-day. “I'll wei Adler “Win nothin’,”’ wan, Tammany in, “Bay, (@resbma: garry nothii | Beneca House, in Fourth gunning Tammany Dem Twenty-fifth. ling on the “gol ked"* st in the effort blican majority rederick L. C. 10 of 2 geventh and Twent: Districts, where more Harrison Is Hus! Francis Burton Harrison Rapid = Transit “solved the problem” evolving the Manhattan @nd of Mrs. Burton Warriso tinguished novelist. He has of e Scannell, 'wenty-fifth, says. three of the azing up at at cor ‘Tammany ‘the for all wi on against ‘that was caught in the "slump." “Baistocratic old Washington square for “Ms heart and conservative old lower “De Atte’ has been carrier by ‘' fg Charles" Adler against a 2,000 Dem- and again, Ader is out for larger game this year, and placards all over the distri Gonfideritly, “Watch for Issy Cohn's ma- fority.” Isidor Cohn is the Tammany andidete against Max Franklin. Charles 8. Adler 1s running for Con- gress In the Ninth District, “cut out for It takes in the Eighth Twelfth, flecond, Tenth and Sixteenth Assembly Districts and includes practically the hole of what Rabbi Hirsch calls “the en ra the n, rt: gill have a mags-meeting at Madison Square Gar- @en Concert Hall Thursday night, LRT aa ae 9. OPE T0 CAN In District and Congressional { Fights the Democrats Have f thee Chances All Favoring OVER - SURE. |. The Republicans of Manhattan and the Bronx labor under the disadvantage of already holding an unprecedented gumber of districts for Assemblymen, Genators and Congressmen, having won for these local candidates in the great Bryan slump. The consequence Is that qwherever there is a stiff fight, if any ehange occurs, it must be one of loss In the Fifth Asembly District, where award R. Finch !s the Republican can- idate to succeet himself, Leader Ber- Martin, of Tammany, says: Young Harold H. q jonnor will be our next Assembly- The district is ordinarily Republican The Fifth ts not one It has Fourth, “Win? Surest thing! I've got to win!" carry Bighth, of course, and the rest are dead «)$eune Me,” Says Florrie, snorted Florrie Sulll- leader in the Eighth. “I've got $1,000 to bet against $500 that Loarry the Eighth against Adler, and TWH pet him any amount that Judge “Henry M. Goldfogle 1s our next Con- ¥ ‘Charlie’ Adler can't Julius Keller, the proprietor of the ue, Howard Conkling, a scion of the house that has een honored by Roscoe and Alfred R. on the Republican and Frederick Conk- cratic side, in He and ‘8 are making a personal can- break down a . Keating is running for Banator: in She Fifteenth, maleni de up of the Twenty-tith, Twenty- eev > ninth Assembly a alone ies ° ) @han in all the rest of America put, to- ether, and the districts gave 2,406, 2.300 2.400 Republican majority, each, In Ta ny candidate, Is @ son of an emin wyer, member of the city’s earliest Commission, of their time by system, the dis: wh the Indorsement of an imposing list “big men’ of both parties. nent is James WW. Perry, and although Re leader In Tt is a walkover His op- . aman in Broad- fine banner strung Worth Monument, ich were excellent portraits In oll of Harrison, Keating and Keller, herole but say the NO [WATCH OUT FOR AHILL OM, The Senator Advises an Inquir- er to Listen to His Speech To-Night and He Will Hear News. WON'T GIVE OUT A‘ “TIP.” A polite request from an Evening World reporter to David B. Hill, at the ‘Hoffman House, for a “press view" of the next act In his play of “David and the Republican Gollath,” brought his stenographer, “Al.” Bryan, down to the reporter, “Governor Hill requests me to say that he is busy in the preparation of his speech for to-night, and that, really, he has nothing worth saying for pub- Ucation, “Go hear his speech to-nignt at Madl- ware Garden. There will be news in ft. Bird 8, Coler left the hotel early, going .to Brooklyn, Chairman Dunn, of the Republican State Committee, declared his utter in- difference and lack of curiosity as to Just what kind of "bomb" Senator David B Hill was to hurl at Gov. Odell next “We are tending to our knitting hero, and getting ready to celebrate Gov. Odellg re-eection next Tuesday night,” sald Col, Dunn, “There is no news, ex- cept that our reports from up-State get better and better, and it {s only a ques- tion as to the size of Gov. Odell's ma- Jority.”” In smiling good humor Chairman Frank Campbell took Executive Chair- man J6hn N. Carlisle by the hand and led him out early to-day for another gambol among the lambs and lions of Wall street, Their mission was money. Campbell, the “Haron of Steuben.” has ben aston- ishingly successful, it is said, this vear, and has gathered Into his’ doughbag more than $200,000 to help along the Coler campaign, But he wants more, for that 1s more than the Democrats have seen In ten years. S155, BOOM, AN-H FOR DEMOCRACY. is Will Play and Orators Hold Forth in Great Array at Mad- ison Square To-Night. the The wife of Chief Judge Alton B. Parker, of the Court of Appeals, with a party of friends in @ box opposite the speakers, and David B. Hill at the tall of a long programme with an explosive campaign bomb to set off, will form the leading feature inside and brass bands and fireworks outelde Madison Square Garden to-night If the lavish expenditure of money on scenic effects can produe it, the Madison Square mass-meeting to-night, in behaif of the Democratic candidates for Con- gress, under the auspices of the Na- tlonal Assoclation of Democratic Clubs, will be the most stupendous political demonstration New York ever saw. The fireworks display, it 1s sald, surpass anything afore given where in the world Madieon Square Garden will be out- toh will any- fe. said: AcWell. th t's about (All those young /}ined in fire, and there will be a set men will get out of lece vu! roportions e roo In the Twenty-third, or Washington |P! f gigantle proportions on the roof, Heights District, the Democrats are} while workmen have been engaged all making a determined hustle to elect|day in setting up the timbers for set ee ee erat plecea and sky fireworks in the centre Prank E, Shoter ‘to Cong of Madison Square Park. Harvey T. Andrews, and if the story Orators and Bands Galore Id from the Thirty-first, in the same A gressional district, be true, Shober A band will play all evening from @ a stand opponite the Worth Monument n on the Fifth ue and Broadway wn from West Democratic candidate % i exclalmed: for Justice. Protective Association are Mee of the Supreme Court. ‘Thomas F. Martin presi /ganization pledged to him ie Newspaper and Mall Deliverers’ m, No. 9,463, also favors the reten- ‘of Justice Steckler on the Supreme rt bench. ent-Beater. ld Magistrate Crane in 6 twenty-two years ——__. “SHOULD BE FLOGGED.” | the ester, where he In the ‘against Senator fe Bot Mills beaten to a standstill,’ ¥ Fa SEES ~ NEWSMEN FOR STECKLER. > i Association Pledges Support <The members of the New York News- balers and Stationers’ Benevolent and , supporting “the candidacy of Alfred Steckler for Jus- Ata regu- Var meeting of the association, at which do and M. Golde officiated as Secretary, the record sof the Justice was indorsed and the or- trate’s Forcible Talk to Pai Pit gives me pleasure to lock you up,” it Court to-day to Thomas Will- | old, of No. 9} Street, Willlams was charged by father with disordérly conduct, phe became intoxicated. a ave no sympathy for any man who anid the Court. pareats,”” akers " i says Thomas has been in the| leader. ‘of beating him and’his wife when- | Gut I want to forgive him,” sald the |B. | and parent-bestera ed, 1 will hold the pris- ‘Of $300 bail for examina- side of the park, this stand, as well as auother at Twenty-Afth street and Madison avegue, will be used as speak- Ing stands for overflow meetings, white 1. shed aside for Andrews, ant th’s and the. pronounced |@ long list of orators, beginning with mlarity of ret ad Shober make | ator Jones, of Arkansas, Chalrinan the prophets At Harlem COME '| of the National Committee, and run- BBxddenator (3) P. MeCieliand, | ning through Senators, Congressmen and statesmen from all over the coun- try, chief of whom will be the vene able ex-Vice-President Adlal E. St enson, will wind up with David B. Hill, the ma. of the New York State cam- paig a- Free Seats After 7.45, These will speak to an audience of tn- vited guests, admission belng only by E. | punta these men with thelr families or friends: William B. Hornblower, Nixon, John De Witt Wari Belmont, O. H, P, Belmont, F. Sheehan, Vernon M Riddi Hu MeLau eh Me J O'Br Straus, John G. Carliste, dents Cantor, Casaidy |John L. Shea and’ James Shevlin, P: on, Robert A. and Augustus ¢ Butt, E Driggs, Will- amuel Untermeyer nhelmer, stand will be on the Twenty-seventh street side of the #ma- phitheatre, and directly opposite Bird 8 Coler and’ Charles F” Murphy will oc- cupy boxes specially decorated In honor of the candidate and of Tammany's krey ssex The In adjoining & Congression Sullivan, H, E Rider, pert, Jr. Francis B. Shober ‘and A, Goulden, of Manhattan and Bronx; LAndasay, Rogers, Wilson, Basset, Faker and Fitzgerald, of Brooklyn and Queens, and Scudder, of Suffolk. ——<———— MUST CLEAN STREETS, de- Court of Springfield sustained the or- ticket up to 743 o'clock, After that the doors will be opened wide and those who enter may take hold any seat in the ‘great amphitheatre, boxes, arena seats or gall | ‘The boxes will nave for thelr occu- a. und Hatten; . | arrest CHICAGO, Oct, 27.—The State Supreme @inance requiring street-car companies in Chicago to clean the atreets occupied txncks. “THE WORLD: MOND NAIR ERC EA AIEBAR SAE SARIN AOA RAITT? SPN GE AERA Me SMARTER Nt cen MIDGET JOCKEY EARNS MORE Have Been ‘i The standing of the Jockeys at this) time shows little Arthur Redfern at the | head of the Ilst. Without counting his | Chicago win he has been first 85 times, | second 9 times and third 68 times. More | than @ per cent. of his mounts have deen in the money. One race a day at) Aqueduct will bring his wins up to the| century mark. Up to Saturday Red-| fern'a outside mounts had brought him! BIDIERV THAN BANK PRESIDENTS. Sixty Per Cent. of Arthur Redfern’s Mounts n the Money.” PROTO BY Fae” in a little more than $17,000. Add to this his salary from the Pepper Stable, and it will be seen that he Js in receipt of an Income In excess of that of many of our bank presidents The boy Is careful of his money, too, and It 18 betng invested for him‘ in a way to put him in possession of a com- fortable fortune when the inevitable day of retirement for Jockeys comes to m with welght and age. George Odom stands next to him in the number of winning mounts. TAKES HS LIFE Made Despondent by Visit to Her in Asylum, Brooklyn Man Drinks Carbolic Acid to End His Woes. ———— NO ONE TO CARE FOR BABES. — a Frederick Webb, of No. 142 Van Sick- len avenue, Brooklyn, committed sul- cide this morning by taking carbolte acid. He died on his way to St. Mary's ‘Hospital. Grief because his wife was insane and his children separated from him !s Delleved to have caused the act. Webb has been boarding with a Mrs. Lydia Lantry at the address given and she savs Webb has been very de- spondent for some time. About two years ago his wife became insane and was sent to the asylum on Ward's Island, where she {s still confined. ‘This left Webb with five small child- ren to care for and he was forced to place them in a charitable institution. ‘This Is sald to have grieved him very much and he spoke frequently of his troubles Yesterday he went to the asylum to see his wife and expressed the hope be- fore going that he would soon be able to bring her home. He found her no better, and upon his return to his board- ing-house seemed greatly depressed. He seemed more cheerful this morning and after breakfast sald he wag going out to buy some candy in anticipation of @ visit to his children. He returned in a few minutes and went to his room. Shortly after le was heard to descend the stairs and go into the front room. Then moans were heard and Mrs. Lantry hurried to the apartment to find Webb lying on the floor. apparently in great agony. An ambulance Was sent for but Webb died before it could reach the hospital. He left a note asking that hie father, Benjamin Walsh, of Clinton, Ont, be notified. vado to Friends in Court- Room on Hearing the Sen- tence of Death. Patrick Conklin, who murdered his wife In her candy store, No. 47 West Sixteenth street, on June 9, was to-day sentenced by Recorder Goff to dle In the electric chair during the week of Dec. 1 in Sing Sing. Conklin was con- victed last Thursday and remanded to the Tombs until to-day. In imposing sentence the Recorder re- frained from referring to the detalls of the case, having previously expressed | his repugnance for the erlme for which | Conklin will give up his life. As the condemned man was being led out of court by Sheriff O'Brien, to go immedl- ately to Sing Sing, he waved his hand in bravado to several of his former friends seated in the rear of the court- ‘oom, “Gonklin is thirty-five yeara of age. His crime was the shooting of his wife, who many times had him arrested for cruelty On the morning of Monday, June 9} nklin went Into her candy store | Sixteenth street, and fired four ots at her from a niver, one en- i her . one penetrating her throat and one her breast. Her right hand was ttered by the fourth bullet. Counsel for the murderer has argued from the first that the woman committed sutelde. = a AOBBED FRIEND IND BONDSMAN, Mullen, a Few Short Hours After Leffler Bailed Him, Entered His Store. Eugene J. Mullen, twenty-four years old, of No. $8 Atlantle avenue, Brook- lyn, will remain in Jail for an Indefnite period If Phillip LeMer, clothter, of No. 354 Atlantle avenue, can Influence Kings ty Justice, He cites Mullen to-day shining example of ingratitude moral depravity, Vith David Ruff, of No. 458 Gold et Mullen wae arrested tate yester- afternoon, rged witr shooting in Atlantle avenue, near the lat- ss home. At the Bergen street police | station they were Informed that in: the nt they furnished $200 ball for their arance at court in ¢he morning 'y would be released. “I knew young Mullen's parents, sald Lefer to-day, “so when some of | hi 1s asked me to go on his bond 1 congented.* SIx hours after Mullen was released day Policeman McMara heard a wintow smash on Atlantic avenue. He ran and saw two men fleeing from the ylein- | ity of Lemer's After a chase the overtaken and placed under r the store was found a containing a new overcoat and a f trousers, ken window was in Leffler's stablienment and the garments were [identified as having been taken from the store, When the prisoner was taken men w WIFE MURDERER RABBI A SUICIDE TO DIE IN CHAIR.) ON WEDDING DAY Fireworks Will Splutter, Bands| Conklin Waves His Hand in Bra-|Old Man Left a Note for His Son Saying He Loved His First Wife Too Well to Marry Again. MRS. PARKER TO BE THERE.|SHOT WOMAN FOUR TIMES.|WOULD GO TO JOIN HER. ‘Thre hours before the time set for his wedding Rabbi Joseph Getz, of No. 144 Stanton street, killed himself by drink- ing carbolle acid. He left a note for his son, saying that he loved his frat wife too muoh to marry again and was going to Join her. Rat! Getz was sixty years old. On account of il] health he had no regular charge. Eleven months ago his wife dled and he went to live at his son's home. The loss of his wife and a physt- cal ailment made him melancholy. Sev- eral months ago he underwent an oper- ation, At the time he prayed fervently that he would die on the operating table. Later he met Mrs, Friedman and he concluded he would marry again. H> told his son of his Intention, saying he felt that he had to marry again or the realization of the loss of his first wife would drive him Insane. His son tried to dissuade him, urging that he should walt at least a year out of re- spect for his wife. He would not listen to argument and went on with prepara- tions for his wedding. Yesterday he went to Mrs, Friedman's home and gave her money to purchase the wedding supper. When his son Max Went to his father's room to accompany him to Mrs, Friedman's home he found the old man gone and this note on the taph “I shail end tt all, my son me, nodle one, that my act Is to be and the disgrace It may bring you. I earn- estly desire to linger‘no longer in this lite. I wish to be in the other world, | Where I may rejoin’ my beloved wite, hat our walks and talks to; be resumed unending, weet MAY 1 am in the cellar." e son an his father IStng onthe Hoge tte wag ‘iy’ still alive, ‘but dying from thi @ large dose of carbolic acid, meet? OF \X ran into the street” shouting. elghbors summoned Dr. Gottsman, whose office’ was only a few doors away, and Dr, Poliock came with a Gouverneur Hospital ambulance. They worked over Forgive SHOT HINSELF AT THE FAST. Alfred Petersen Bade Friends to a Banquet, Drank a Toast to Fatherland and Ended His Life. EMULATED NERO’S FAVORITE. ‘The vody of Alfred Petersen, a Swed- ish plano maker, !s in the Morgue to- day as a result of a suicide party given by Petersen in his flat at No. 461 Third avenue. Petersen had been out of work for some time and his leisure was spent in reading “Quo Vadis.” The account of the sulcide of Nero's favorite, who invited her friends to a banquet and had a slave open her veins while her guests were enjoying their dessert, made a great impression on Petersen. He had decided to die and he determined to make an event of his auicide, Sophie Sondendranner, Svenka Fraley and Mary Olsen and ‘their best beaux AY EVENING, OCTOBER 27, 1902, WIFE INSANE, HE |AMERICAN FACES (MR, ROOSEVELT 1S FORTY-FOUR TO-DAY POISON CHARGE, LONDON, Oct. 27.—George Chapman, who came from America in 1893 and who now {s the landlord of a South- wark saloon, was arraigned at a polic’ court to-day charged with poisoning a young woman alleged to have been his wife. It transpired that this was the third woman who had dled within five years in houses owned by the prisoner, and it Js said the affair may de & manner similar to that of the ce! brated Nelll-Cream poisoning case, which created so much sensation in 1892. Both of the other women mentioned as dying in Chapman's houses are sald to also have been his wives. The police intimate that they may exhume the bodies, Thomas Neill, a Cream, M.. D., was convicted in London of the murder of Matilda Clover, an unfortunate wom- an, by strychnine on Oct. 21, 1892, and WAN executed Nov. 15, of the same year, He was accused of the nrurder of three other women. WASHINGTON, D. C., friends, ship, while the otner children, consultii President as he sat at breakfast. Mr. Roosevel steps to the office he now hol of this State in 1881; Republican candl- date for Mayor of New York in 1886; member of the U. 8. Civil-Service Com- mission, in 1889; President of New York Board of Police Commissioners in 1895; in 1898; Governor of 1898; Vice-President of Preside: New York in the United States in 1900; nt in 1901. Stern Brothers Swiss Ribbed Silk Mixed Vests,~ with fancy crochet fronts, Swiss Ribbed Silk Vests, with hand crochet fronts, Plain and Fancy Pure Silk, Extra Fine Pure Silk Swiss Ribbed with handsome hand crochet fronts, Gauze China Silk Vests, lace trimmed and embroidered, Filled with down, silk lined, covered with Tapestry, Velour and 500 TAPESTRY SQUARES in assorted designs and colorings, Bra White Enamel, Brass, White Enamel, Bedsteads { { Cribs were bidden to the feast and they made marry about the talble for several hours, It was midnight when Petersen arose and sald: “T'll give you a to to it When the glasses were filled Petersen jumped up. His wine glass waa up- lifted In his hand, ‘Here's to our dear fatherland, to which my spirit will fly. I place this to my head and bid you all good-by.” As he spoke, he drew a revolver from his pocket, placed it to his temple and pulled the trigger. His last words were drowned by a shriek of horror from his friends. They sprang forward, but too late. The bullet had ploughed ita way into his brain, and Petersen dropped dead. On the dresser in his bedroom was found a well-thumbed copy of ‘Quo Vadis. at the passage describing the sensational suicide of Nero's favorite at the ban- quet table, $a Bryan on the Colorado Cirouit, GRAND JUNCTION, Col., Oot. 2. William J. Bryan, who arrived here from the West at midnight, addressed a large audience in the Oj House it. Drink hearty the rabbi, but he died minutes after thelr arrival. within a few)! pera thia morning. He departed this morning in a spectal train on a short speaking tour in this State. Walkin and fan to the Bergen street station one was found to ve Mullen, “How could you do Itt’ sald LeMer. Mullen bung his d, In the Butler Street Police Court to- day Mullen and Ernest Miller, of No. 365 Atlantic avenue, wehe charged with besy apd held under §1,00-eack. _ Monte Carlo Jackets of cheviots, value $20. About 100 Ladies’ High-Class g Suits, in the season’s most fashionable styles of cheviots cy tweed mixtures, $15.00, mm $15 It isn’t all clothing wears well that looks well. It’s the make behind the looks that counts. Just so with our MEN’S SUITS « $15. The: ear well posal every, stitch is made with ‘a purpose, and that purpose is to make them hold their shape and re- main always new-leoking. If you prefer CLOTHES TO ORDER, e question of beihg satisfied in ft and quality fmol eof in our new Sults ‘ud’ overcoats, $12 up, Write for our Fashion Catalogue of New Fall and Winter Styles, Guarantee CLOTHING COFIPANY, Urers 127th St, and 3d Ave. FACTS ABOUT NATIONS, Army and Navy Statistics, &c., are contained in the World Almanac for 1902. “The Book that Tells Everything.” 1,000 Topics Tersely ireetes Mie Rep rtbobadeed ees hetletis wi ay teins © © newsdealern © = Broadway and 24st St. Swiss Ribbed Vests and Corset Covers, Madras, in a large variety of colorings Exceptional Values To-morrow in Women’s Silk Underwear Value 95c §9¢ Value $i.as 79° Valuesiso 98° Vests, Value $2.75 $1.95 vatue $4.28 92.05 Sale of Couch Cushions $1.98 $2.85 48° Value 600 Bedding Dep’t << thira moor NEW AND EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS IN’ ° from $25.00 to 100.00 from $4.50.to 14.00 from $28.50 to 40.00 from $4.85 to 12.75 Pure South American Hair Mattresses, Spring Underbeds, Feather Pillows and Bolsters. West Twenty-third Street. JAMES McGREERY & CO. Ladies’ Suits, Zibeline cheviot shopping suits, with stitched cloth collar, belt and cuffs, Unlined pleated skirt. 18,50 Oct. 37.— President Roosevelt will celebrate the forty-fourth anniversary of his birth te- day in an entirely informal manner by Junching and dining with members of his family and with a few intimate Alice Roosevelt presented her father with a gift of her own workman- after Mrs. Roosevelt. selected va- rious presents which they handed to the Public career began twenty-one years ago, The various are thus grouped: Member of the Assembly Tailor-made “shopping” dress, made of black or blue Thibet wool,—un- lined skirt, 23.50 Scotch mixture _ street dress;—with velvet ‘eol- lar, new shape sleeves and cuffs, Fashionable model. with silk, 39-50 Broadcloth suits, Blouse model coat,—with or without collar. Pleated skirts, Lined with silk, Colors:—blue, black and brown, Lined 45,00 Twenty-third Street. a ey JAMES MeGREERY & CO: “ Upholstery. Draperies and Hangings Poplin, Armure, Damask Brocides ‘and Brocatelles 2.00, 3.00, 4.50 and 6.50 per yard, About 450 pairs,—handsom velours. portieres, —solil colors in “all over’ de signs, or embroidered ani decorated in contrastin; colors. ‘‘New art shades 12.50, 15.00 and 19,00 Usual Prices 18.50 to 27.50 Real Point ‘d’Arabe lace cus - tains, 13.50, 22,50° 35.00 and 48,00 per pair. Sash curtains'to match. Point d’Arabe “ Motifs”,— suitable for vestibule: sets panels, cushions, tray covers, and general decos ative lace work. 2.25 to 5.00 each Usual prices 4.75 to 10.00 Bedsteads 75 pairs brass bedsteads,— “twin” size,—continuon; foot rail,—richly mounted finished with best English lacquer. 50,00 and 75.00 per pair Usual prices 65.00 to 95.00, 45 new sample models,—ful! size, 27.50, 35.00 and 60,00 each Usual prices 35.00 to 85.00. Mattresses, u pholstereé springs, pillows and bol sters to order, Twenty-third Street, JAMES McGREERY & CO, Sale of Silks, On Tuesday, October 28th, Twelve thousand yards ol Moire Velours. Colors,—white, cream, pink, mais, nile, lilac, brown,— turquoise, cadet, goblin, marine and navy blues,— jasper and black. 65c, per yard. Novelty velvets, suitable for waists or trimmings. 65c. per yard, Twenty-third Street. a JAMES MeGREERY & CO. Corsets. “La Princesse” Corset, an exclusive model, designed with long, close fitting hips, made of coutil, broche or batiste soie. The “Antoinette” corset pad, —the latest Parisian nov- _ elty. On Tuesday, October 28th, Straight front, fine corsets,— white, pale colors or black, 3-45 to 11,50 Valué 5.25 to 19.50, . Twenty-third Street, ‘Tho Sunday World Want section’