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ai, $ zt | Bommitteemen with the election district as a unit, while the Democrats Wr not his party shall have a boss. stor at by the Prees Publishing Company, No. 8 to @ Park ftow, New Tore Dotered at the Port-Ofice ai New York as Second-Class Maj) M 'OLUME 47... "NO 6,468, | THE GATEWAY TO POLITICS. to politics, All that a voter can do on tickets Primaries are the gateway official bailot. The only once a year) shall be and whether iN day is to choose between the time to exercise his suffrage if he is going to v it the primaries in deciding who the ca k by himself‘cither on general election day Of course a voter car the primaries. cil and fill in what names he in the blank column on the fficial ballot. He can name a pri- mary ticket of his own. But for practical effect a man to accomplish | anything in politics must work through the machinery provided by the Primary Election laws. In the rural communities through- out the State, primary elections ere not held as they are in New York City, to their disadvantage, because the official primary enables the voters of the party better to ex- Press their will than the unofficial former practice under which snap Caucuses and packed primaries were both possible and frequent. Before a man can take any part in the primaries he must be enrolled, it the last election every voter received an enrolment blank which he fad the option of marking. Only eiirotied Overs Tay VOW TOIROROW.) Lists of the enrolled voters in each party are prepared by the Bureau pt Blections. The section atticers act at the customary polling. places. For primary purposes two ¢lection districts are joined. The Republican ee Officials receive the votes of Republicans at one of the two poll- Places and the Democratic inspectors receive the votes of enrolled Democrats at the other polling place. The voting is not for district leaders or for the candidates, but only for delegates to the conventions and for the committeemen who consti- ute the party organization. The Republicans choose their delegates and He can take a lea Plect their committeemen and delegates with the Assembly district as a fit. So in a Republican factional fight the delegates to an Assembly’ dis- frict convention may be divided, while in a Tammany district fight one Bide or the other elects ils whole ticket The Evening World’s Coming sald. WAG THe Sreeuess WONDER THE WORLDS GREATEST SWORD SWALLOWER Daily Magazine, Monday, September ! 1S GENUINE “we FAT ODEL 34 MR \ 17, 1906. The FIFTY GREATEST _ EVENTS in HISTORY By Albert Payson verhune No. ¥8.—Arnold von Winkelried; the Freeing of Switrerland. ' THED tr The Greatest Show on Earth. By J, Campbell Corey. yO" rT miss t | SX _# HIS } L- - 4 ges ‘ s 4 sive moun= we States differ between reve ttle, try made +e . ; industries, lan and & hendred didky patriotic and ted tn thelr com- nd freedom wht by centuries of nfederation of united powers LADY? Germany and France welded into (GHE HAS BEEN CROSSED In Love) At atom nea pe " Antone ‘ entury THE SLEEPING BfsuTY WE WAS SLEPT SO LONG THAT SQME PEOPLE CONSIDER HiP4 4 OERD ONE ~ « Valley, and tre not an empire, in the early stages of the © the Hapsbures by The Hapet ed bn Switzerland. The hardy of tyrar And soon few to arms aga. out as foremost in banting 6 inva ¢ deeds of one or : we deeds In 185 an Austrian G Gessier by name, was put in charge of the of Bwitaer + acts of au b od on a pole ¢. Wititem >vernor The First Blow Against Upprassion. manded Tell, « pei WooD RUFF THE HUMAN HOGEY GREATEST Living ps inw Si was certain t p IK Archduke Li aded Sw ¢ inves with nearly 20,000 wise gathered to oppose t men top at the the a! the defenders, Af the Austrians we History attracted other HE AMUSES . THe BABIES | ? The Slogan: “Make { numbers they made headway against the wea ” nd left ho weak piace in thetr barrier of 8} _ Way for Liberty! points through which the patriots could sreak. Nba? 1 pn nnn ware TApid nding the Swiss prepanstary to Ung them e¥, when Arnold von Winkelrie a of Unterwaides, rushed forward against the serried line of | Austring shouting Ma " nks thus broken into confusion and fled. The Swiat Aer he hubdred and turning the latter® rite battle of Bempach wes ty break Austria’e power in the 4 Teo youre later the Haphwyies Were again beaten at Narom " b inte during tne entury invaded. Svwtteertand, ne attacked the little free wo hundians were beaten by at Novara is pet t Mh, the Fewne : ; he h 2, and other invaders THE AM wen Mm tHe SLACK re tecos eeding yearn Roowtvet FAN OUS a : | ‘onturies, the little Independent mation, whose watches ~~ | at nched victory from adversity and freedom from the s the United States wae The district leaders are chosen by the district committee, not directly fy the voters, Nominations for office are made by the conventions, twhose delegates are clected at the primaries. This indirect primary Pestricts the voters’ freedom of choice and hinders the honest expression f the popular will. Some States have a direct primary, at which both delegates and @andidates are voted for, the candidate who receives the greatest number Ff votes having the delegates automatically instructed for him, Such a Bystem destroys the power of local bosses more than the New York pri fmary, where the voter has no power to compel the delegates and cammit- Reemen for whom he votes to carry out his wishes Everytdy who is enrolled should vote. Everybody next Novem- Wer should take pains to enroll, To whichever party he may belong and whatever his beliefs on questions of political principle, it is his duty fo vote intelligently, both at the primaries and in November, and to do hhis best to overthrow the bosse mente ty a FOOLISHNESS OF THE “L” LOOP, What measure of relief from the Brooklyn Bridge crush Avould -be {brought about by the building of the Delancey street devated loop? That is the vital question which Chief Enginee¥#Rice disposes of in this report to the Rapid Transit Commission, The report ought to wipe (out the last lingering idea that the loop should be b ; Mr. Rice finds that 80 per cent. of r using the Brooklyn ne Sire dite mw stale eee . ihe ¥ f ‘ z dog w H. iL rn. oI Bridge walk to or from the Manhattan terminal, 65 per ce ving their} ological reader enithtenment re interests cast, south ar hat point. How ve 4 rding the species and ganeral wh i How mar he 15 per} Katyaid.” 1 would he cent. whose busine ¢ north, or of the 20 per cent. who use subway, elevated or surface cars, would find it convenient to be carried fon continuous bridge trains a little further up Park Row and the Bowery mobody can tell, Of persons using th fn. Metropolitan crosstow and east pf the te number might { are carried] Ni south Thee ar ernment Laland. : GR bring 9 ys lf you mean Governor's. Island of so gi write request to the “Commands | ninal nat of Govern ¥" ‘fn tis ve Es Legal | y ! 4 ax an Ath t Whe Evening World of J $ last ™ end of the Brooklyn f : veda : ate with fo / ute pl Dost se Joading and k : Kventow Schools Tench _ Eng Drawing which ‘Tre x | unpr tits MUSING i nh draw money in cor { ; a « ender J of the promise to n f é k faik theta Suni ; sib ie | gineering risks inv’ fe Pr ! | tructure f ie Hiack | € Delancey street to | ige wit kf Np ay ae ate An its private councils Brooklyn Rapid Transit undoubted tnt ~ 7 ie ic ’ Y it the foolishness of the “1.” loop scheme 1 * Sel ionestia ona vol the absurd proposition goes on, however, the any i et me know If the Staten z i a ve La ail i é Ferry Company ever charged t stepping of the practical Poulson plan, adopt { ch would genta for one paamae to St. Geoene It to spend some gf its own money. and to reinforce its Folling-stogk, fram, Maanatian or vise verte, ig % SRE RES th ANA mata at LETTERS FROM fore of the person possessing such knomtede to In clude the “Katydidn't.”* heard engaged former, a¢ aij ruralitea know. apt i! possible inform street THE MEN IN THE NEWS—Straight To the Only Monarch on Earth That Anarchists ny can fever bind men wh be tree to Them — { soldiers. martia Ar atenda Teer Gatien Brame Mccann wee y Nixola Grecley-Smith MINUTE TALKS WITH NEW YOL-CERS, Talks . divas circle the Coney | in t Joy burdy-gurdys sound your triumph to the ‘ Aren't Hunting with Double-Back-Action Bombs. tnd the Coney eel Fane rity of the Sate abl ¥ a Z : can eagle su P a ss By T. O. McGill. y will personify the aptrit of American fut e HE , ied at * armuseme lenenrne th and rade it cent diversion the greatest have. For f | } je THE PEOPLE. | The Katydlan’e which jo usually tn contradloting the | is which. H.W. isi West One Hundred and Bl us which O Govervor'n Istand cof The evening World > obtain ane for the G: the meeting-p and harmioas mir and most you! wilt be democracy In the world, where thag has give anomalous ¢ abnolute ruler aire and human minnow, me parti-colored confettl, the Co upon the just and the unjust, the stuccond Aten hipa in thouwands, mon in nations pay kings, Your only fleet ia made up rikes who i tor that but In New York the man who we plugs away atone and. men joo ing monarch of one’s health— t has mused the particular obey a welcome armale wputters fine of work m the observation * the hot oorn and every separate makes good at ft & fellow t knew ® have been chawen k etinow stoppin y of Jaw aa noon tor me, we redestined jo daity, ts Mkely Ke and atarted t Island val, Lord Admiral of the to have the spat fan expert in that + of tame and hid he would —ret—divergw: ‘Rawhide Bill ‘is plan #0 long aa he “ik tO pay board and | the etentrety necemerry expenter HW 4 an| Wert Plugwing away at it, for there heiped | Was no tO atop him vaid Matthew Fier’ Fleming js an at Asalatant Corporation Co’ aati Thi Said igi By Heppner Blackman Dae. De| “Very soon he was loat sight of Lawrence Velller and | of by saw rete i tne practical end of that /*% Old acquaintance, but he way Netought-tor and cherished ‘Tene-|™MOving rights along on his determined mene House Department t oer ig The other day I noticed in tt judgment as the prosecuto lions helped the Department the firat breakers of friction with tb lower class of builders. When the de- partment began ite commendable work, 4s tact and perception made @ repu- | ion that attracted the attention of paws had « me for the day-that a big « ined the 1 to hafidle « i In the West them, and the fee way conjectured to be as big for the one case, which can't pomthly consume more than three Months, as an averaue geneead PrAcKitionar Would receiv bao i Teo © for ten years’ His ayatem /has worked out, but took him eigtit years to eet his recog ‘Stop Laughing! rtis(ctt's new tea of mine, T gor) "HOM Dot fortune found btm out, cra rubbing out I venture (© vay that no man whe nd-—-Dear me) excellent | ™AKes hime expert tn any line, whe tea. but what a pity you didn't carry Ww reliable, and sticks (9 New York, ft further. Tater, CAD possibly dodge work and suc: * cette 3° ont.’ Mintrens—Ara you ® pisin cook Bridgot~Well, mum, Officer Hogan wor afther tellin’ me that my eyes wor liotke the Laker #v Killarney.—Hamper« Higher Education, By ~~ argaret Rohe, | ots your wite « dlond or & brunetter Bhe's been at the hair |} "Cun't aay drewer’a for the lest hour."’—Lappin cots. os aS than Why “{ refused thin pom not more bebe weeks age,” said the editor 1 again wabmit 1?" thought pertiape your taste had tm proved by thie time.” replied the with satintactio hie eves Cassell’ snl And why,’ the teacher continued should we bold the aged in reapect?” Cause ie montly the old men that has ali the money,” Tommy answered And the teaober wan't able to offer! funy better rramon,/Tit- TH te dre vie ' "On, ve ® dead sure thing for thia race,” awl Dubley mt the noe | creeks; ‘simply Nt Tose mm j “You don't sors” pt in Wine, “What a it ow: waa that you is tooth” ir iemde nickel tor