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be. FEAR NEGROES - AFTER SHOOTING TWO POLICEMEN Reserves in Two Stations Prepare for More Trouble. MANY SHOTS One Black, Seeking Revenge, Shot the Keeper of a | ° Tenderloin Dive. Following the shooting of Detective James Scott and Roundsman John Walsh, both of the West Thirtieta street station, and the wounding of John Jones, the negro manager of & resort in West Thirty-second street, last night, the police roserves of the ‘West Thirtieth and tne West ‘fhirty- weventh street stations were gathered at the Tenderloin station to-day, ready to take a hand in what they believed might be a riot of the angry bi ‘The roundsman, the detect: negro Jones were all shot in which followed an attempt made by Lucas. a necro, once convicted of mur- @er to kill Jones, Lucas went to the “Black and Tan" i as {t was called managed by Jones. with he inteation of Killing him, A hundred nesroes ¢20k sides in the fight, The building was wrecked throughout {ts four stories. For «en minutes battles razed on every floor. Many Wounded Escaped. How many negroes were injurea in the fighting that went on throughout the bullding {s not known, because in the confusion many of them escaped. Scott, only /sesterday transferred to the Tenderloin stution from the Twen- ty-sixth Precinct, was shot through the left shoulder, the bullet shattering the bone, He will probably lcse his left arm. He is a patient at the New York Hospital. Wajsh was stot in the hip, not ser!- ously! He was attended and sent to his home. Jones fell with a bullet in his back. The ‘wound is not serious, The police have no doubt that many of the ne- groes fighting on the upper floors and the roof were injured. ‘The “Black and Tan’ is one of the low- es: dives in the upper section. Lucas fs such a bad man that he was barred even from this den. He armed himseif with two 44-callbre revolvers last night, and went to the place, boasting that he was going to kill Jones for barring him. The doorkeepet Of the resort fled when Lucas poked the two revolvers under his nose. “I've Come to KIII.” Luris sauntered up to the bar and Bwept the glasses off with a wave of his revolvers. “I have come to kill you, Johnny Jones,” he yelled, laying his revolvers on the bar. The room became as quiet as death on the instant. Jones and Lucas stared at each other. Lusas fired. Jones fired. Both shots went wiid. Lucas seized a table as a abield. Jones sneaked back of the bar to the rear room and got a table him- WILL HIS BRAIN PROVE STRANGE CRIME THEORY? Remarkable Case of a Philadel- phia Criminal Who Left an Odd Bequest to Scientists. PHILADELPHIA, March 16,—Prelim!- nary examination of the brain of Ed- ward W. Dunlap has been made by Dr. Greenman and other anatomists of the Wistar Institute, with the result that already a part of Dunlap's claim that this organ would be found abnormal has been proved. According to Dr. Greenman, the brat: fs unusually jarge and shows pecullariy deep fissures, which may or may not indicate the reasons that made its own- erin life the strange contradiction he proved to be, ¢Edward Dunlap died recently in Jef- ferson Hospital shortly after his re- lease from prison for burglary. He had spent many years in the jalls of Penn- sylvania, where he was looked on as the most remarkable of convicts, He was a man of education and many talents, be ing a fine artist end a clever writer of verse. During his last two terms in priso: Dunlap had been busy on a scientific treatise in which he sought to prove that his inability to be law abiding was due to some pecu brain. E declared that with his tainments and strange mental arran, ment he would have been a man of ar formation of h at- ne class of Sir Francis Drake !f he had ved in those umes, Or, under different circumstances, he thought, he might have developed into a financier of note, for it wus ils idea that he was pos- essed of the desire for financtal co: quest. He left his manusevipts to Dr. Green- | man, and also his brain, with the re- quest that it be dissected and carefully examined to see if his theories that crime 1s a disease could not be proved. Dunlap came of an excellent famii: Was a graduate of Princeton, a soldier with a fne civil war record,’and could have been an ornament to society, But he always insisted it was impossible— that he could not possibly help being the criminul he always was. During his terms in prison hé made ccnsider- able money by his paintings and by IN DEN.) THE WORLD PAPA M’KNICKERBOCKER CELEBRATES. ¢ OH! MOTHER, MOTHER, MOTHER, PIN A SHAMROCK ON ME By Maurice Ketten. SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 17, 1908. ( PRES. DWYER DENIES RACE nding chub Philip J. g bill, of the was made. a word of truth in the storv that an agreement to regulate betting on the track bets of a personal kind, the same that have been inade for ten years, will continue. “It 1g ridicuious. If John W. Gates, for instance, wants to bet $50,000 on & |vace who is to say that he shall or shall not do so? Betting cannot be regu- tated? I might suggest to Mr, Gates not [to bet so muca, but that Is all I or any otaer man could do. It Is evident that the people of this State want race- tracks and betting, but if the Legisla- ture says we can't have race-tracks and betting then that settles it. We will close up shop—that's all there is to It.” Mr. Slicer was emphatic in his relter- ation that an agreement as stated ex- ists, and he detailed it. According to him, August Belmont called on him Thursday last, following the meeting of the race-track stewards, at which, it was agreed ,with the clergyman that certain reforms should be instituted regarding race-track gambling. Mr. Bel- mont said he approved of the action of the stewards. Mr. Slicer added: ‘The bookmakers will now be at a greater disadvantage tered into contemplates radical changes in the betting system.” In exchange for thelr promise not to support the Cassidy bill the clergymen, it is sald, agreed with the stewards that they would not advocate the present bill, providing minors and irresponsible 8 and women were not permitted a! t big wagers, euch a Lewisohn and Ryan crowd sh: self. The two men advanced on each other, behind thetr shields. The doorkeoper had run to the cor- ner, where he met Houndsman Walsh, Detectives Scott and Rayne joined them and they all ran to the place, The revolvers were cracl:ing all through the building. The policemen ran into the rear room, with drawn #uns, At the sight of the three men, a dozen negrocs emerged from tables and began to fire et Lucas, His table served well as a shield, He yelled at the police ue they entered, turned his second revolver on them and fired. "I am done!” cried Walsh, sinking to the floor. Has Bad Record, Before Lucas was arratened in the Jefferson Market Court to-day he was taken to Police Headquarters to be pho- he was convicted In May, I8¢5. dering Charles Ms in a dance hall was sentenced to He was pardoned on Sept. 23 1803, and came to New York. The police do not know the detaila of the second alleged murder, but they say he has been Tecognized as a “bad man" in the black belt of the Tenderloin for ten years, —<$<$_»—___ GREATEST SHOW MOVING. Cireus Will Open, in Garden, Forty- of mur- imprisonment. third Aunual Senson. ‘This is moving day for the Barnum & Bailey Circus. For the forty-third year the cirous will open its season In New York in Medison Square Garden Possession of the Gard: tographed. His picture was already in but it wax thought advis- e a new portrait. Lucas is sald by police to have been twice arrested in the South for murder. It is a matter of record, they say. that | | work all night, to-night at mMnight, wh of men will be set to aerial rigging and adapting the prem: ises to the various acts. They w to be succeeded by new force at 7 o'clock in the morning. a CUT “UNCLE’S” INTEREST. ill Reducing Pawnbrokers’ Rates Passes Assembly Unanimously, ALBAN 1 ve the cent. March 1 rday w a hou ‘The Assembly _ ——— “The Party Wall.” Compi. | series. this splendid reproduc- tion of a Gibson drawing with the Art Supplement of any other ney paper and you will order the Sun- day World for the remainder of the Commissioner Joins All Other Department Heads in Advo- cating Evening World’s Idea. Borough President Ahearn’ to-day made public a report of Park Commis- sioner Herrman approving in the strongest terms The Evening World's proposal to tear down Chinatown and | make a park and playground for the | | teeming people of the surrounding dis- trict in place of the plague spot which now menaces the city's safety by fire and pestilence, as has been shown by) ports from every department of the city government. | When the Borough President fixed | next Tuesday for a, public hearing on | the proposed Chinatown park pian het fficial report, and until that was made Mr. Herrman kept silent on the sub- Ject. Now that this report has been made public he {s at Mberty to speak, and to-day gives his strongest indorsement) to The Evening World's proposition, This adds the last stone to the struc-! ture of approva ias been reared | ound the plan. department in- rested in public safety, health and the expenditure of money has given the| plan unqualified approval, i Only Approval Heard, When the hearing 1s opened next Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock the local board will fts hands the ap- proval of ponsible department entitled te an opinion on the subject. wle head dey wen heard to oppose the plan, member of the board will Wit ar not a be against It pears it will be by some in Ble ested pi or by politicians who i an interest in maintaining the “rabbit warrens” of Chinatown for use in elec- tion times, This was suggested to the Borough | President to-day. He laughed at the! {dea. “I am not able to belleve,” suid President Ahearn, “thet any man will be found so low down as to oppose! the plan on such grounds. It may be erty owne drawing anatomical charts for many of tie Philadelphia hospitals, In many respects Dunlap was a re- markable criminal, not the least inter- esting thing about lim being the fact that he Invented the most successful Durglar-alarm now on the market, and was captuted on one occasion by break- ing {nto 4 house whore one of his alarms was installed, = stants tae the district has been used by poll- ticlans in the past for illegal pur- poses, but if that {# true it has nevi come to my knowledge, and now such @ thing would be impossible. Even if {t were possible, there would not be enough in it for anybody to want to do it,” A report-of the Senate Committee jon ‘Public Health made to the Legis HERRMAN APPROVES CHINATOWN PARK PLAN WIPE OUT DISGRACEFUL SECTION OF CITY AND MAKE PARK, SAYS HERRMAN, By PARK COMMISSIONER MOSES HERRMAN. As the Horougi: President has niade public portions of my report favoring the park proposed by The Evening World to take in the area now known as Ohinatown, I am at Liberty to express I have reported favorably on the proposition and h be allowed by the loval’ L slum now disfigures the cli I cannot understand how ard to inte any sig! manifestly for the benefit of a large pop ou: the extensive Impru ements now Bend Park {s totally Inade Iam of the opinion that the dest itory described wo y, and would go far toward ri long. another, and ! hel'ov most sens:blo and fe: ple. lature at Albany this week states that there are white girls in Chinatown living with Chinese. or kept by them foy \mmoral purposes, and that of that number 6) per cent. are cocaine fiends. Law Will Not Reach It, As a result of this exposure the committee offered a bill making {t a felony to sell or give away oplum or opium or| aine except on a physician's pre- |serlption, This will beco a law but that will not affect the sale of oplum in Chinatown, as tong as the! place exists as it Is to-da drug {a not sold openly there ade i opium and This Is is entire s snug of the uptown places, oplum dens than there most of ar least the 13. preserved »se places for im smoked sof the true are mo: fourth st town, but wh ‘Thirty- | In China- in houses nee of dee | is lured ral purposes, and is regularly app ay > one to th imported and sold and bought In the open market. No woman is dragged to one of those places and made to smoke | slaver: In Chinatown it is different. ‘The same repore of the Senate Committee | says some of the girls held in China- town are under fourteen yea yet are slaves of tho habit. ‘These gi Were taken to the dens mere children, with no knowledge of what they wers being Ied into, ‘They were carried to dens where the light of day never pene- not supposed to know the day of th week or the hour of the day or night. Terrible Slave Traffic, All is forgotten tn these filthy ivon ‘asst the ‘saschas'ocne tate saeey 1d result tn aa Imm the my on rfere ¥ being plinned for No ‘section of the city needs a part e to the demands of thi the old rookeries in the ter; tes over a large ness interests of mire thal ehabill ting the bus! the subject. ‘ope th making a ps fy that prop se asked the Park Commissioner for 30/4 nothing will rit where that minded person can oppose a plan so ation, aud sv necessary in carrying the munteipality. oped. ton. Mulberry have permfited that slum to fester there so which must be wiped out in one way or the plan proposed by The Evening World to be the until he spends all he has or leaves for the hosptta’ hausted | he allow shado to th late co: Pp to them by flown loved at He po When ninatown ir fame the ‘. Generally few days his money 1s ex- or nours, for the pensive, and he ds ‘put ou stnoker s shown. | hope is a woman no such She is giv rookery within easy r i 1 that ts the end of de-! for her, 250 of thes suble of them) of age a viitions that rtually su ones Would, dy and tear down th slaves are whit rookerle are torn no place where China. shave the om The negro: trafficked were soon puns ness had time, and was limited. but It merely required that suppressed, in years, known for more than thirty ft, be ‘The existed {0 as th en going on only for a known slay de as pt it they w who held them wht t y desi In bre the mumber to be e traffic forty jown thet on Christian ho: and ne make them ti dens wher nfined, dens will ¥ en can ¢ on ey do new, It i) be discovered, their slay the west Veht will t heir busi~ hort f thelr victims and an Chinatown has It has been rs, It numbers hundreds of victims e herself into insensibility and perpetual | and yet It Is permitted to exist. Charles Baolgalupo, ery year, an undertaker who burles all these women at the ex- pe thelr own one hundred and benevolent of thelr Chinese masters, or of | fund. is the an- old, and! thority for the statement that at least | fifty of ¢itese poor white girls die every year. Two years is th slaves, average and Father ife of one of ‘these Coppo, of the Churoh of the Transfiguration, says they trates, ‘and where the attendants are|average that only under favorable cir within ‘po, te) ale Oe and © | cumstances, ee ae Jarave bien? a e firat year,” eaid Father Cop- ‘and where they smoke and ‘arink, a amo bale” tof aren hee S Jew ‘of them die opposition the decreasing the rate of in- ’ pawnbrokers may charge | from 20 per cent, a year to 18 per cent, It reduces from 3 to 2 per cent. a month interest. which pawnbrokers may charge for the first six months, and for the second six months from 2’ to 1 per one of their be tolerated. Other stipulat made by the clergymen to which the stewards agreed At the cor usion of the conference, . it Was agreed by the Mr. Slicer dec! several points ‘were clergymen that ied which will be to the advantage gals . | of Situation {rom a moral stand- point. In the absence of any corrobora- tive statement from a of the Ww ards or 0 bers of the Jockey Club {t was stated by Joseph Auerbach, attorney for the Jockey Club, that Mr. Belmont will prubably issue a state. mi to-day. This {s anticipated as supporting the statement made by the Rev. Dr. Slicer that an understanding has been reached between the clergy- meh and the Jockey Club. TRACK BARGAIN Jockey Club Made No Agreement with Clergy, He Asserts, aintains 1 Brooklyn Jockey Club, denies vhat any agreement President Dwyer says: ‘There ts not has been entered into be- tween the stewards of the Jockey Club ang the State Conference of Religions It) the Cassidy-Lansing bill is not passed than ever before. The agreement en-| they dumped him into the waste-paper BOY “MANAGER” WIRED AWFUL TALE OF THUGS Western Union Got His Story of Raid and Hold Up. late night Charles Cooper, sixteen years old be and rator in the bran of the Western Union Telezranh Company at No. 43 West One Hundred and Sixteenth street, is at home in bed, recovering from the hazing he got early to-day at | the hands of some of the other and older operators. For a time to-day the main offices of the company hummed with stories of robbery, murder and other crimes that streamed in over the wires from the factle fingers of Cooper. The regular night operator was sick last night, and Cooper, who has just been graduated from the ranks of the | messenger boys, was sent to act as sub- stitute. The word passed, and early to-day three young fellows strolled into | the little office and behind the high | desk that screens the operstor from the | public. They made themselves com- fortable with cigars and a small but potent bottle, The substitute night operator glared at them and then burst into words. “What do you mean by coming Into this office.” he shouted, “behind this desk, where you have no business? | Get out at once.” The three looked at one another ously, ‘Then they laughed long merrily, and one asked to whom had the honor of speaking. i sald the dignified Cooper, “am | the night manager.’ ‘The three bat- | tened on this Iast til one of them con- celved the idea of hurling an Ink bottle standing on the désk in front of the “manager.” He ducked, and the next | minute the. trio nad bim in their | cutches, They tossed him in the air, | they stood him on his outraged head, Joy- and they basket, and finally plumped him on top of the big counter, set an inkstand on elther alde of him, gaye him a pen !n either hand and made him row aa if for his life. ‘The three sat comfortably back fn thelr chairs and commented pleasantly on the methods of their protege. This palled and they tossed more ink bottles, The young operator, in an cp | portune minute tapped a kev and sent in word to the main office thai he was |held up. ‘The trio heard the mess: and decamped, Cooper then’ enlarged on the details of his treatment, and tie main office began to conceive pictures of robbery and murder, It telephoned to Polic Headquarters that its operator was be- ing assassinated, and Headquarter: | communicated the fact to the West 0: | Hundred and Twenty-fifth street s tion, which sent elght of the reserv to the scene. They found a very ill- tempered and impatient youth cleaning up ink bottles and muttering profanely of certain phases of rowing. The re- serves went back in disgust. IN NATURE'S Buried deep in our American foresta, many years ago, Dr. Pierce foond a beautiful, blooming plant the root of which possesses wo! erfully. efficacious es as a stomach and general fone, a also as an alteratiye or blood purifier and liver invi rator, having an especial affinity for mucous, surfaces upon wl b it exerts a most salutary, soothing and healing influence. This sturdy little plant is known to botanists as Hyaraatie Casadenels Da has several local English names, being enerally known as Goiden Seal. Dr. Fieree found the root of this common forest plant to possess medicinal prin- ciples of great potency, especially when combined, in just the right proportions, with Queen’s root, Black Cherrybark, Stone root, Mandrake reot and Blood- root, the properties of aach being ex- tracted and preserved in chemically pure glycerine of proper strength. This compound Dr. Pierce named his “Golden Medical Discovery,” in honor of the sturdy lithe Golden Seal plant. So little used was the root of | this plant by the medical profession at that time, that it could be purchased in the open markets for from fifteen cents to twenty cents a pound. The use of many tons of this root every year in Dr. Pierce’s two leading medi- cines—for it enters into both “Golden Medical Discovery” and also into Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription 4s one of their most important ingredients—has aused the price of the root to advance nti] to-day it commands upwards of 1 dollar and a half a pound. DR, PIERCE'S FAITH. Dr. Pierce believes that in our native forests are to be found an abundance of most valuch!: medicinal planta for the cure of many distres ing and most fatal maladies, if we would only seek them out, test them and learn how and for what diseases to use them. Furthermore, he believes that the veg- etable kingdom ie the one to resort to for the most harmless remedial agents. They act most kindly upon the bu- man system and are eliminated or car- ried out ot the body by the natural functions without injury, even in cases where it is neceseary to make protracted use of them in order to experience per- manent cures. Dr. Pierce's medicines being purely vegetable, are perfectly harmless. In other words, while they are potent to cure, being purely vege- table in composition and containing no alcohol, they leave no bad effects be- hind. This is not generally true when mineral medicines and those containing large percentages of alcohol are taken into the system and their use protracted over considerable periods of time. Many years ago, Dr. Pierce discov- ered that chemically ure glycerine, of proper strength, is a r solvent and preservative of the medicinal principles residing in our indigenons, or native, medicinal plants than is alcohol; and, | fnthermore, that it possesses intrinsic medicinal properties of its own, being demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and a most efficient anti-ferment. “GHEY STAND ALONE. fact that neither Dr. Pierce’s LABORATORY. ons, over-worked and broken dowr women contains any alcohol, entitler them to @ place all by themselves They are neither patent, medicines nor secret ones either, for every bottle oi Dr. Pierce's world - famed medicines leaving the great laboratory at Buffalo, N. Y., has printed upon ite wrapper all the ingredients entering into ite composition. _ This is why so many unprejudiced physicians now prescribe them and recommend them to their patienta when they would not think of advising the use of # secret nostrum. They know what they are composed of, and that the ingredients are those ep- dorsed by the most eminent medical authorities of all schools of practice. ALL RIGHTS PROTECTED. The exact working formule for mak- ing Dr. Pierce’s medicines without the use of a drop of alcoho! and preserving them unimpaired in any climate for ay length of time, cost Dr. Pierce and bi assistant, chemists and pharmacists a tedious course of study amd experi- ments, extending over several yeara. With the use of chemically pure glycer- ing, of just the right. ctrengt and with laboratory apparatus an ‘sppilanoes specially invented and designed to carry on the delicate processes employed, Dr. Pierce finally found that all the medici- nal principles residing in the several native medicinal roots could be more rfectly extracted and better preserved. rom fermentation than if aloohol wr employed. ides the glycerine, of itself, pos sesses the propery of Breatly pobencine the efficacy of the several medicinal agents employed, whereas alcohol is well known to be objectionable in any medicine to be employed in chronic or lingering diseases, where, at best, treat- ment must be continued over a consid- erable period of time in order to make the cure complete and’ permanent. The exact proportion of tle several ingredients used in these medicines as well as the working formula and peculiar process, apparatus and appliances ployed in, their manufacture, are withheld from publicity that Dr. Pierce’s proprietary rights may not be infringed and trespassed upon by ane nein imitators and those who may be pirati- cally inclined. In favor of Dr. Pierce's medicines is the frank, enanding: open, honest statement, of their full eoauponltien) giving every ingredient in plain Bnglish, without fear of sucessful criticism and h confidence that the good sense of FIVE MORE SUNDAY WORLD PICTURES DRAWNSCD.GIBSON Here are five more of the $1,000 apiece series of Gibson Pic- tures which are being given Free with the Sunday World THE PARTY WALL. All athletes will want this picture. Splendid Portrait of Jim Jeffries, Sunday, March 25 sak are included in MELON, the drawing below. Special Supple- ment Sunday, April Ist} | | | } AT IME MATINEE. A humorous incident which Gibson thmks may some day come true, Free with the Sunday World April 8th CALLED OU%, You certainly cannot afford to miss EMPTY SLEEVE, Sunday World under a special arrange- ons of a series of articles on pen and Wie ‘There pictures are published by Th ment with Collier's Weekly as tu ink drawings. Co-Morrow’s Sunday World Magazine will contain many interesting features. Among them may be noted Tie RKA RECED SPAT WILL Be f TOF sks LONGWORTH SHE GOL } How sident’s: er will, ride ; at Windsor o and ted_as though sho were a Princess. a HUNGER THE NEWEST NEW YORK DIST jre_ somethin Ht this & yy which y into a man thi ing money? Ain the answers ‘ow's World. She . stills the dove of You will ho “PHAT TARELLING MOMENT" AT on your heart “leaps,” In almost every play there J Tn ane tears crowd yor cys. when you cluteh the arma of eee The anost thriling tomenis tn plays now im New York n most Interesting article. (1 ‘str atid. ) make VBAT IS THE LIMIT OF HUMAN DATIN 3: WATE You ome, tie, 1p oF Banh yen you thought tt had beon itched, Now they are golig to do sowetiing even worse to ma 2 et keachegirs The history of the development of these “elrous thrillers’? makes. thrilling _r ; maken “thrilling te THE GIRL WHO LIVES IN NEW YORK OV 82.50 A WEEK, THE CORT rence urns, the elubwomen ind soctologint, anys, "A gil whe ee only three dollars n week sun do only one of throg. thingee-Bta rps Piuuielde, or go to destruction.” Hero 18 a girl who te athe of there three, And yet she ts bappy AMERICAN DETECTIVE AMEHKmerica boasts. 1 James MeParlan, tho mau and is now repeating his fave deen terrorizing Id i SUERLOCK HO) . tective than Dr. Doyle's foe : who exposed tho terrible 'Moily Maguire Eeeat work by bringing to Justice the men w the afflicted will lead them to sprenete this honorable manner of con! sine to them what they are taking into their % y ®15,000 MILLAIS COME cE ee eradding to. hes. art New N{mportant acqulvition receives critical treatment And 16 rey ZO OUR ART MUSEUM, ensures, ‘The latest, and_jn' some ws stomachs when making ,use of these medicines, A litte book of ’xtracte from man: standard medical works of all the dil- ferent schools of practice, lndoreing in the strongest terms, all the. several in- gredients entering inte Dr. Pierce's medicines and ‘telling what diseases these most ‘valuable medicinal agents will cure, will be mailed free any address by Dr. R.‘V. Pierce, of Buffalo, Quced in-all its original colors in to-morrow's Sunday World. Can You Write a Love-Letter ? 5 ‘A CHANCE FOR YOU SO FARN 820 BY 3 HERE 1G A Wew BURNING THOUGHTS ON PAGER, is vue you do it? Or 1a the art so nearly dead, owing’ to the telephone wa Shich lovers can talk their sweet thoughts, that the New "yrk public can.” # which ager write or appreciate such a missive? If you think you can pena tove-tetter that will fll the bill, here ts your chance. oROoeER N. Y. on rece of request for by letter or p (ts! by ies Dr. ‘Pierce's Pleasant Golten Medien! ttornach tonic, liver invie, | Bivona Breseeplonl Fens largely ed Sexe oF TO-MORROWS SUNDAY WORLD IN ADVANCE. — os Sat