The evening world. Newspaper, January 24, 1911, Page 3

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<—— : ; THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24 CORSET COATS, TIGHT “PANTS” IS TAILORS’ DEGREE Customs Cutters In Conven- tion Decide New Style for Men This Year. FIX ON COLORS, TOO, The “Underexaggerated” Man of Mode Will Revel in Grays, Brown and Blue, Men of generous girth are aad to-day he news from St, Louis, where the ational Customs Cutters are dop- ing out men's styles for the coming spring and summer, that the oor fs to be the one best bet for males, Accoriing to official announcement, a man to be stylieh when the robins nest again must resemble an animated ex- clamation point, The women who have been wrestling with hobble ekirts for many months are paragons of grace and comfort to what the men will have to make the laugh on them, but there are also the trousers to be reckoned with. The new style trousers will fit 0 intimately {twill be necessary to re- move the shoes to take off the gar- ment. Gent! ge | with overdevel wee TT dal extremities 1 {t necesesary to use talcum and shoe horns. “Underexaggerated.” es the new styles the sar- yorate explain that we have ft i, oVer-exaggerated 1 are now in for a siege of the x ated man They deny w isis that the adoption by ouser skirts” had anything mination to send extreme. bulging i shouldered, ied man will not be by wife or sweetheart r gets through with him, more like a walking sare of them lke hour glasses, of how the American man uny of those who must suffer ep in mode are the ones who have fun at the expense of the hobble skirt. Run to Colors. at a pretimtnary ent makers in imnual convention In y oveer all com- have arranged tration week be- Open alr meetings will sylvia Pankhurst, the will be the star et of the Step “Safely” and “Profitably” Well as s “Lively. for the almighty dol- ne, ofttimes, to make ugh haste, prejudice dollars are risked a} "WwW 1 many is a sad step, indeed. \s safe and profitable a step as al mon can take is to invest In a } lot, farm or other “real” ‘Tho World Printed Advertise- World Realty Ads. Show How To Make Saved Dollars Grows Rreacamere esr” nove nese ) | 3 of history have proved it! 1911 Hobble Skirt and Hipless Figure in China Now THE WHO FOOLED gn First Result of Open Door in Celestial Empire COURT AND JURORS Chinese Woman Physician, Here With Little Miss Pai, First Manchu Maiden to Set Foot on American Soil, | Tells Interesting Facts of the Orient. Girl Arrived Only Yesterday, but Already She Has Tried| Western Dress On to See How It Makes Her Look—Likely to Adopt It. | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. The first Manchu maiden to set a tiny Chinese foot on American soil reached New York yesterday after- noon, It was the unbound foot of modern China, and its owner, Miss Hsui Lan Pai, is a very modern Chi- nese girl of eighteen, who has come here to study nursing. With her {s Dr, Yamet Kin, the foremost woman physician of China, who obtained her medical degree in the United States and who is now director of the State Hospital at Tien-Tsin, But though the Orient may come to us for its de! grees, it brings its own fashions with it. f Ye China has fashions to-day, though never bet fore, for, as Dr, Kin laughingly pointed out to me yesterday, her own Chinese coat of soft mulberry satin had not the narrow lines and the small sleeves of the harmony in black and grey worn by little Miss Pai. “Tt ta the fashion to be slim in Chinajeven more than doctors, I have brought now, as everywhere Dr. Kin ob- | Miss Pai over here to study, and I shall served. ‘The young girls get the effect {take a nurse back with me. I told Miss of slenderneas, though they don't wear| Pai that her education would be a mat- corsets, How? Well, our conte have|ter of years and that she might get very | very broad shoulders, and that makes| homesick, but she was resolute and her {t easier for us, and though we have|father seemed very pleased and proud | not the corset, the young girls get to have her come. She is of @ Chinese jame effect by binding themselves, Manchu famtly, and the only sén died Open Door Lets In Hobble Skirt. {Shortly after the Hoxer rebellion. Then Buch is the influence of the insidious | her father sald to Ler, ‘You are all the West. The Open Door has let in the/#0n I have now; you must be a son to hobble skirt and the hipless figure!|me.’ And when she goes back to China Maybe the Boxers were right, after all, |Perhaps she will be better than a son—a I expressed some of these observations | Modern daugiiter."" HUSBAND,” GIRL DEMANDS OF WIFE “I wear the Chinese costume because | I find {t much more comfortable,” ene said, “but Miss Pai will probably yield Visits Home of James Heaney and Is Arrested After Making Threats. to Western influences when she goes ool and dress like the American Sho has already tried on Western dress and she was much surprised to seo how much larger it made her look. But she is large anyhow. ‘The women of Northern China are }much larger and plumper than the | southern women, and I believe Miss | | Pal ts the first Manchu girl to visit the United States, She does not speak any English yet, and before she enters Johns Hopkins ehe will study the lane guage at an American school. Little Miss Pai's Wonderment. While Dr, Kin talked little Miss Pat sat with folded hands in the parlor of the Martha Washington Hotel, her black eyes wearing the muffled look of} one who Istens but does not under- stand. Incidentally Dr. Kin speaks English without an accent and with @ rare and choice vocabulary which com~ paratively few women in New York possess, I asked her if the New Woman | had invaded China, “It's a fino thing,” declared Mrs, James Heaney in Harlem Police Court to-day, “to have a young snip of @ girl come around to your house and claim your husband and point a revolver at you and threaten to shoot you if you | refuse to give your husband to her."” Wife Says He Wants Her puch Animal, Also an Actor, Tum- bled Down Three Flights When Miss Marte Bergere, who sings and dances, to-day, she found @ dead horse tn her! to-day John Adolf Nilson, a passenger, dressing-room. The horse was an actor) made such startling representations to too and came to a tragic end this morn- ing when he was being hoisted up to the It waa decided to detain him for R YAMIN FO M'ss ACTRESS FINDS: DEAD WORSE IN DRESSING. ROOM | of Stairs in Theatre. got to the Sa ‘Theatre| Trinadad, was to have rehearsed his part in an| Island. act called “Old Horses Made New.” ‘The runway passed an fron railing that) proofs of his assertions he was perm!t- \1 am and he hurriedly tho horse| pier in search of the first boat bound for | protected the the dressing-room. slipped off the runway broke the guard railing jbled down three narrow flight The horse took the banisters ‘and part| ticer of the 1 the stairway with through the doorway Into the dress room in such @ way that his #1 fractured, of \c ‘on by che But airway leading down to| ted to 1 Somehow against and) ¥ and then tum-| 5 t na. him. He An agent for hte 8. P. ©. A. | interested to see a woman With Manat l¥rench heels on @ train, She thought Money. |e a wis ten |mmat sho walked Just like an old-fash-| Hpiteptic fits do not furnish « ground of the cbleetion, att ison. \toned Chinese woman with bound feet. for the annulment of a marriage, pa a" \But perhaps your men are responsible cording to § t Justice Me-| yerien j for that too. | Call, who declined to-day to free Joseph| “Miss Pai is In America to become a! Wiener of 29 West One Hundred | | trained nurse,” Dr, Kin explained when and Sixtee’ street from his wife |1 asked her to tell me something of the Sadie on his complaint that she waa #0 | young girl who was watching us with | afflicted. solemn wisdom, Father Proud of Girl. ed May 9, 1909, The couple were and it was while they were on their c 001 Atlan City, Wiener ‘phere are less than a dozen women Renevmoon | jn At Tet aire hysicians in China, but there ts only Poiiéptic tits. He was heartbrok: duate nuree, She graduated gooused Mrs. Wiener of “tr fr Guy's Hospital, London, and is {nto marriage by concealing attached to my hospital at Tien-Tsin, Hon. Jared he wou Women physicians are very popular nong their own sex in China, There | were $0,000 general cases in my hos- [pital last year, But we need nurses iA New ARSENE LUPIN Story. A New ARSENE LUPIN story, by 4 Maurice Le Blane, on Riverside Drive, | will begin in aE ey wr NTCT | Thursday's Fven- CARTER GLASS SENATE | ing World, It CANDIDATE IN VIRGINIA. | | Lady” and on! Qatar Glass of Lynchburg has au-| tains the most nounced his candidacy for the seat now held by Senator Swanson, Mr. Swanson | a4 appointed to succeed the late John | W. Daniel, whose term will expire in Maren, The Lesislature will not meet until next January ~ torious of the French “thief genius’ adventures. It {sa story you have no right to miss. Tillle Smith, No. Ror $s blind, the lodine un had taken up the ine | oe fe TOOK POISON BY MISTAKE. |: 4 ugh, Ing Police tempted sulelde, of jodine at her home séveral days o The young woman euld she hurry to twe y , of Linden street, ns » Que ’ ay arraigned to-day In I ish= fa swallowed a 4 cen on Sh a charge Wiitam of the I ot, was taon by ough pott Magistrate Amith dis of $5, , who also conferred upon ty is ves on is |. passed through land, has granted on foun rt meet thet u a Mrit Barge 1 Meyer ip? f their Ww coal “LAN PAT sh / ~ENSIONED BY KING AFTER MESSINA, HE IS THOUGHT CRAZY. Bri ish Saiior, Who Gets $5,400 Tiree ™M. a Year From Italy, Released When He Proves It. When the steamship Suriname, from Quarantine one of the immigration physicians that | courtroom when he produced newspaper left r heroism during the Messina earth- f stairs.) quake of 198, Nillson, who ts chief of: | “lish fretghter Cayo Man- b an annual 400 by King Victor alae Hurrying to England When the tun aster Hurt. fifty years « 3 Garden The DONCHES with a bosom that will bulge out of the waiste when you sit down. $2.00 and $2.50 Cluett, Peabody & Co,, Troy, N.Y Makers of A\ not oat Collars TER isa CLUETT Dress Shirt special stage on @ narrow runway. The horse|@xamination as to hts sanity at Ellis Sipped GETS LAW'S LIMIT Ernest A. Weller Sentenced to Five Years in Prison for | Robbing Mr. Grice. Judge Swann Apologizes to the Complainant for Criticis- ing Him. @amuel A. Grice of No. 0? Amstentam avenue, @ busin . who was cen- sured tn the oneral Sessions Jnat Friday by J insisted that ar jehould be igo Swann because he an who had robbed him hed, wan vindicated to- day tn the mame court by the same | dua Ernest A. Weller, who stole $00 |from Mr, Grice. was sentenced by Judg Bwann to nerve five y ng Sing. | When Weller was arraigned for sen- tence last Saturday he claimed that he MA Se with locomotor ataxia, He! tifut for and | pe y that by had never heen ‘onecvished | of a orlme before. Mr, Grice, who knew ‘Weller, insisted that the should wend him up, He denounced the pelf- | confensed thief as a faker Quickly Rearrested. Nevortholoss, Weller got off on a mis pended sentence. ‘Then the Court learned that Weller was an ex-convict who had 41 several merchants while working mercy for them as bookkeeper, He was re- {arrested last night at No. East Mmy- Jweventh street and rearmipned before : Ke Swann to-day 1 Court wag ine ‘ormed that Weller $s not #uffering from or ataxia, 1 fudge Swann to the 1 were right and wo | wrong. This man didn't fool you, ]but he fooled the policeman who ar. ted him, the fooled the pre ‘and he fooled the Court |1 find «hat he served a ter violated his parole and st than you, Gives Him Full Penalty. “He eo far imposed upon us in the je from others that the jurora took up a l collection for him y, but for tunately they were unabie to find hin jat the addrese he gave, You were within your rights when you demanded that this defendant Oe punished, and Ww going to inflict the punish. he | ment dexerves."" Wel no mpt to excite smpathy had the goods Jon him who Was Instrus mental in having sentence stispended on him last week, declares that she knew nothing ato al record. > TOO MANY CHURCHES Decoration of the Order of the Crows | MEANS SLIM ATTENDANCE. “There has been a @reat awakening! The remark of Mrs, Heaney followed wag summoned to the theatre and shot’ of ttaly and made him a Cavaller of the among our women,” sne replied, “and the arraignment, on a summons, of Ade-|the horse, order, Novel Views on Practical Religion great extent the men have laide Cor! ra old, @ pretty! But after the animal had been i NVhan the: Mablisie:. aceved eoaay| Pt aa Ga a out. They wish to see the ste: vho lives at No, Man-| there was no way of hoisting out the xitison tokl of the presence of his ves- | Given by Don C, Seitz Before Chinese woman take her rightful place. hattan street, ‘Two days ago Miss Corte! carcass ‘The 6. P. ©. A. agent couldn't! gol at. Messina when the earthat sake} = New York Universalist Club, | They know tt {s best for the family and went to the home of James Heaney an | puggest any way and adv 4 the MAN!) ton, plac He ana her officers, he| Bome nove) views otical religion Te” Gantry, Everything ia being employee in the Appraisers’ Stores, at/ager of the theatre to send for a con-| sald, put out sinall bouts and rescued | wore air ee Meh thrown open to women-—the echoole and No, 131 East One Hundred and Twenty- /tretor. A series of derricks will have 9 173 persons, whom they took aboand| tniversaliat Club at. its 145th meatinn colleges. They are appointed Commis- third street ar meed to Mra. ne used, ane va wha part Hy 191 sid) and gave enaiter andimemonl old [In truetaues Pulkon biveste lass ntunn TT | stoners of Prisons and are given places Heaney F and otra 2 ara paracee) aes Baved Cur Vicerooneul: Re eset Ta: . nencil|/on charity and schoal boards, I am she had o or Heane} : ’ |p Nittson aatd ne personally rescued | ing, Ils subject | “pencil on charity and schoo’ wort in the take him away with her, | TWENTY-SIX YEARS’ BILL | Nitson suid he personaity renewed | ing. "Te auvioot : ors. |Government Hospital. Such a thing has) Mrs, Heaney and Mra, Brooks ¢nan- | FOR BOARD, THIS SUIT. |e eared ggea Bade ira’ Rial ¥ooes'| aan Bea tate gic iuaee aa ; tiara 7H Ba ceiver rH lee | never been known (a) Chine UStOre, (Sg Gcllgbiulipanede nay Revedi tipi ys —————— aboard the vessel | too ny churches and chose as an dt Aide to be a close second: | -<rhese things show the wider liberty ing Ben nuas ans Ppedpetteray ya lord Time Bowery Merchant Wants {ison was accompantod here by|tustration his old town in Maine. That er ¢ Saeed All of the Chinese Woman much more surely they hur the pole : | ae | Victor Victorson, assi#tant engineer of| town, he auld, had about 2,000 inhabl- to Ae io saave ‘olther|than the fact that she can go about @ summons for the young woman. In Retired Real Estate Dealer | ms Cayo Manzanttlo, They related how| tants and the two thousand maintained 10 of thelr own or|alone or fhat she goes now to public tho interval between (that happening to Pay $28,430, they took a seventy-foot motor launch|two churches. 4 thlid of the popu- ta places of amusement, ‘Those things and the arraignment of: Shia Corie to- J p ¢ the |ffom Havana to Port au Spain, ‘Print. ed th A Methodist mise eh ina pa, ia ott et understand. that there 8 no more Miss Corle admitted In court that ahe| Old Bowery merghante begrasy aioe, | storms lant December, taking twenty-|church was butlt, 1 ; Baptist | * Pudding will be placed about | binding of feet,” I remarked, had called at Heaney's home. She ee sie ee ew" | threo daya when they should ‘have ne (BP, next an Hplacopal edi- t instead of on the shoulders as Feet Bound to Ple Men. him seven months axo, she satd, on an a AB gy ses JA yal eet pbrsagetmasipd| PS the trip in fourteen, igavahe that thee Ase All Bal ey wish 1 could say that you are!" train and fell in love with thim af-) 1 Wat ne ooee ° the: Gs When the Cayo Manzantito left Lon-| added, “nobody goes to any of them, Cuffe on Trouser Fn De. Mim repos. ‘Theve in tose ter several mubsequent mestings, Haan. | in Justos Keeky ie part ol 3 don for Havana, dt carried am freight a | Me » has to contribute acon ‘sd, potaty | tent’: Dr: i aes ey assured her, she said, that he was | Court to-day for the recovery of $28,400, | Hon for Tlavanss it Baruled an frit f | [d, Coane Vs ¥ | binding of the feet, but there Is some. gingig and won hi tide due for board and lodging from 1883 u 7 “4 | ehuret rn 1 at the e eutaway"’ |mne gimeulty ts perhaps with the taste “She was ryaterical, sho sald, when she | «i, last year |company in ‘Trini@ad, At Havana the harehes in te resemble (0! oe tne men. They admire artificiality. ' visited Heaney's wife, but declared that | “Grager, now in his seventieth yenr, ten-| launch was mado ready to be went oo fecha conta nine a te fae those of bon| All men do, don't you think so? The she did not have a revolver. Magistrate | tified to-day that Cohen has not paid Jad, but no engineers or navigat- built on the basis of require-| ' by if rs f the ma-| Chinese man likes the hound foot and Breen paroled het 4n the custody of her | him a cent of board or rent for t ty-| ora could be engaged there. ment & good polley to 4 ft Ame v'men will continue to the mincing step it entails just as your Counsel but will renew the examination | gix yekra, In the four Pinos ces Crager hus| Nillson and Victorson volunteered to | tax ehurc , axation might re. . € men Ike big hats, elghteen-inch waists to-morrow when Heanéy will be in ‘ed in ‘Manhattan ain \ press this tendency toward “vagabond| , “ts Toe nea matet tO} and extraordinary clothes. Home of our ooniyt, ‘i phgpeea tl pelea yl aces : the gee eu cuite |women who do not bind the feet get 23 Cohen LM sratl ha 1 eae at taney | the same effect by wearing a very high EPILEPTIC FITS NO CAUSE [street in 1 Py eg toe | management. of heel inside the small Chinese shoe. Tiat EQR DIVORCE, JUSTICE SAYS. |e Nee eee tle, caclesuaa| cist alorma. il CAN Oe Sea leaves only a small pointed toe showing. Bowery pla om Cohen, paying him | Year's day ohe be a! Campnten Week, | There is not much difference between a month rental. {t was Imponsl! Zianton Hiatch, who ta|ghat practice and the French heels some Refuses to Free Joseph Wiener—| plaintif stated that he od | tect or prepare the nd t (of Mra.lof your women wear, Miss Pal was| to F \ Montross Gallery al 550 Filth Avenue, above 45th Sircet Paintings by Elliott Daingerueld |; Now on View Gallery open Week-days--? A.M. to 6 P.M NEAL NGA RT | | Constipation | | Vanishes Forever |! CARTER'S LIT LIVER PILLS never fail, Purely veget | able—act surely but gently on the liver. Stop alter dinner distress— | cure indi. ! | gestion inprove the completion — brighten he eyes, Small Pill, Sauall Sese, Small Price | Genuine mute: Signature | GPL, | OT HIS FIRST OFFENSE. | Prompt Relief--Permanent Cure |! So MICH 70-MORROW, Wednesday, Jan. 25th, °15 Caracul Coats $ 6% NOW is the time and Bedell’s is the place to purchase the in- dispensable long coat. To-mor- row you may choose a genuinc $15 garment of Caracul, Kersey or Mixture Cloth Full of snap and style—every line betraying their superior tailoring. Many reproductions of foreign models. The Cara- culs splendidly lined throughout, the black Kerseys effectively braided or severely plain, and the Mixtures of true London cut. All of enduring quality. Alterations FREE SALF *T ALL THREE STORES Bedell, 14-16 West i4th Street—New York 400 and 462 Fultca Hol Am 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J 3 ¢ 3: 3S AN URGENT APPEAL for HELP to save thousand of BABIES in New York City from DYING for lack of proper FOOD and CARE. A Fund of $300,000 must be raised immediately and continued until (he cily makes more adequate appropriation for this work. — ~ a Thousands of babies die in New York City | impatient at the slow progress of a every year because their mothers have no | baby, withdrew from the supervision off breast milk and, in sheer ignorance of what j station and fed her child on grows to do, feed them improperly. | Reports come from various milk In two hot weeks last summer there were | thropies comparing favorably to the 1,091 funerals of babies under one year of age |from the maintained by Mr, in New York City, the greater part of them | Straus, the Diet Kitchens, the Good being regarded by physicians as due to im-|tan , the Nurses’ Settlements: proper feeding. | Babies’ Dairies, the Morning Out of 125,000 babies born in New York | and ot! »1g9 thers, tT abd Lyrerenle Wt oe the bed for municipal milk depots, only five are to be located in hy These depots, together with those now maintained by philanthropic agencies, enouth, te care for more iat the babies ing aid in tl aaa To save the babies who die needle in Manhattan each year, sixty depots are ie annual cost of these it milk distribution and relief (not the City appropriation), is $300,00 City annually, 16,000 die under one year of | age. Of these, so records show, more ¢ 4,000 waste away for lack of proper food tnd care. Tt has been fully proved that these babies need not die is their mothers can be taught how to feed and care for them; if pure and properly prepared milk can be supplied at prices which they can afford to pay; and if mothers, who have been robbed of vitality poverty and hard work, are nourish enabled to teed their infants at the bre ‘This is the work of milk depots, which are |further City appropriation is a pronounced by Dr. Emmett Holt next year, we propose to raise hy funds *' a Inost effective agencies in. reducing infant | ask your’ help now in order that the Ny mortality.” “Through such agencies,” said | may begin before the hot weather witht : Dr. Holt, in a paper read before the American | frightful infant mortality comes omiy Medical Association in June, 1909, “I be- | depots will be located, established and lieve more can be accomplished than iy any |tained by us with the co-operation other plan yet devised. An extension of this pike pga a ‘As far as best work would, in my judgment, do more than | of methods of any other means proposed to reduce infant mortality in surmmer.” Dr. Holt's statement is borne out by the facts. Last summer, out of 100 babies, rich and poor, in New York City, 17 died. In the infants’ milk depots, maintained by the New York Milk Committee, only 20 babies | and died out of 350, and only one died from im- proper feeding, which was responsible for the z Ef of the ee Bacal assuming the of this work. ve have divided the city inte each district to depots nepded ia th 00 wall 0a 00 to the general fund for the support of great number of infants’ deaths throughout | in the poorer sections, for other the city. In this case the mother becoming Work See upon ae the tives of am . t 4 bas on the “wily you da part to maintain us epen at WHAT 1S NOW |""Will you contribute a definite eum ang until the city assumes the burden? : BEING DONE, AND| This is « life and death matter. I NeEDING your help. Every added dollar meand WHAT WE Cables lives saved. Do not let shia pass unheeded, Let your response PROPOSE TO DO | and tet it be as substantial as the rleed i Total number of babies born annually in Manhattan “i Number of babies needing a milk depots i Number of babies now aided by exist: ing milk depots (Less than halt these hables r 65,000 12,000 4,000 (Stoned) tao . COMMITTEE FOR THE ‘yeaa ’ OF INFANT MORTALITY © . (Ot the New York Milk Committee), Goprnar R, Pisex, M. D., Chatman Mus, OmanureO. Avcmncioss, Du. 8. Josmraine BaKen, Mas. G. iH. Mara, Mus. Goupox Noxarm, Mas. NB, Portan, Mus. Beumont Turrany. Miss Donoray Warrney, Number of babies not. yet receiving aid of milk depots in Manhattan rber of existing milk stations in 8,000 30 | MEDICAL COUNCIL os AnnanamJacont,M.D.,Chatrmam, L. Euacert Hour, M.D, Wiitsaa P. Nontwnvr, M.D, BK. La Perna, M.D, | N. 1B. Nostow,M, D, by FLorpOnanpala, M.D, | W. Liste Cana, M. Dy HOW WE “egret TO RAISE $300,000 ©. Keauay, M.D, 5,000 ic tit m RowtanpG, Parmuan, M.D, 4 60018 will | Henay DwiowrOnart,M, D, 8 eae Joun AgW vets, M.D, ' | Morningside Dispensary Number of net milk depots needed in Manhattan ®Now being It 40persons give 1.av0 Le wil 8.9, GoLpwaren, M.D, ft SOpersonsgive S00(t will make. It MOpersons Tovlteiiimane, jo/gu0 | Make ehecks payable to I ten esteee Slt wiilmake MARSHALL L, WARRIN, If 1,000 person: 25itwillmake. 25,000) United States Trust Company, Witwil 15,000} ‘47 Wall Street, New Sitwillmake. 14,000 | make, 10,000| Communications should be | Mis. J, BORDEN HARRIMAN, a ae $300,000 United Charities Building, 105 Contrib fer $1 Wilt” aly be gratotully’ re | Street, Yor! Information Bureau, Tel, 457 Incorporated 1910, 105 Bast. NEW YORK MILK COMMITTEE Marshall L. Warna, Telephone Gramercy 445. Stephen G. Phillips, Secretary Organized 1906. Williams, Chairman, iT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED os _ 7A “WORLD WANT” WILL GO at ¢

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