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Daily Magazine, World's October 24% 1906) @wblished by the Press Publishing Company, } Ca ae Park Row, New Yorm® "Entered xt the Post-Oifice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. VOLUM NO. 18,600, —— One-tenth of present market y tions, paid t * Tess, rents wi eer ealte make-these <rett 13 Since the: Fr: franchises of these railway ompar payers. tn--equity ion. of the-tr. The total ac sessed. The ual inves! York 4.51 per cent. annually. q The franchise tax constitutionality have been sustained by the courts, was not paid when due. Taxes are a lien prior to any mortgage, Why do not officials of New York City enforce its lien impartially against all defaulting tax- OS Shy taxation. -— these two it has capitalized at $105,500,000. franchise tax the amount they were-obli rated to and license fees to pay the percentaz either’ side of their track: : together these defa ~000,0 O, OF abotit one-quarter of on: mot-paid—the—-renerat ta ng pubic + pended it It is such gross lawlessness as tht August Belmont and Anthony Most persuasive arguments of d rder TT The Theatre Scramble. A. poor_m wlik-somet commotion wast tho audiences saw t ing to THREE LEADING ANARCHISTS. he taxable wealth in New York is represented by ghe} ilway If these corpera- xdy else would be one-tenth aper. 4 re-important duty than their taxes, d; seven years ago, the] s tally lev: wer: low, the’ assessment for only °$182,000,000. e faxes thus assessed amount to- $48,060,000, been paid on them {s $3,100,000. s,_the street _car—companies; have’ paid» only one-sixth of their taxes, leaving the other five-sixths) tobe a burden upon the ‘small tax- all-that-has+ corporations} ould: be much more highly as-} ion merger in Manhattan and the; The. balance, is the capitalization of their franchises, which under the pres- ent tax law are taxable as real estate, and should pay the City of New ses haye-been-carried_to_every_court In_thid! State and to the United States Supreme Court. Their validity and their Why does-not-the-city-coltect the money due it? |" ‘The little taxpayer has to pay his taxes in full, and t pay the Comptroller advertises his property and sells it at public auction, | _ exacty-as-the mortgagee would foreclose if the interest on the “morttgage The latest claim in evasion of taxes was made by Mr. Belmont’s Interborough- Company-this week. It objects to paying \any-taxes at all_on the ground that the Subway. and its equipment are exempt from oe ee A Political Paradox. .By J. Campbell Cory. “This ends your career, my frie You are mistaken," retorted Garibaldi, cc fulfilled. Italy's not yet free. €d that continent, and repeatedly won fame by lis. effo: the weaker side. He was taken prisoner by the I caped, Cloped with a_beautiful Creole, cattleman, ship broker and teacher of mathematic legion and served as naval commander for Mé with Buenos Ayres, Then he returned to regular troops, again harried the Austria: SS Italy was divided into a number of indep-ndent and ‘sen{-independent 4? principalities, fncluding a group of States under the direct temporal rule #7 of the Pope, “But the northern part of the while neerly all of jt was more or less unde bullied and oppresaed the hapless Jand cruelly. As o result, Mazzini and "ee other patriots formed a horde ot secret societics with the hops of fro their downtrodden fatheriand and joinmg {ts s:parate Stotes into one +¥ strong union. In 182 be.crushed with an {ron ‘hand. $- ~~ & to the Revolutioniets) sent a French army to the Pope gallantly held Rome o Inst forced to evacuate the citr-—Agat The FIFTY GREATEST _~ EVENTS in HISTORY js By Albert Payson serhune No, 44—GARIBAI,DI, and the Freeing of Italy. STOCKY, bearded man was arrested on a charge of s0-called trepson. He was Giuseppe Garibaldi, son of a poor Italian fisherman, and him- self-a sallor by. occupation. In 1S84,;whon only twenty-seven, he Joined the “Young Italy’) Society, was linplicated In a plot to free hig country from the Austrian yoke, and was condemned to death, remarked one oc olatory jattor. [4 Uy. “My cdostiny {is not 1 live,"* wou got nis wor TACADINE THOM DPSON, TE Tou Tis” way UR » where he pinnged at onceinto iho warfare that con= 3) in behalf of} an Government, .es- 3° 1 up a living an han ized an’ Itaflan }oy eon the latter's war sae ising a body of im ‘Pi - wh 13, was in Austria’s banda, © jan domination. Austria: on and stmilar-—patrt- B- 1834 and at other times revolts sprang up, only to He The -Carbanarl, “Young Tta’ oars tS The Canin } lle leagues continued thelr efforts, and in 1815 Garle ¥ eR CAPS UTS, baldi and hig fellow-revolutiont captured Rome, of Rome. forcing the Pope to fy to Gaeta. They formed a re- Ott , public fn which Garibaldi and Mazzi © supreme, © But Negoleon IIL Gwhé*had earlier pledged his support © ald. Garibaldt 3% ays, Dut was at 72 1 to flee from 19 minst the stranger foe for thirty chances of " fn geciistene ——~ Charles Albert, King of Sardinfa, had ‘strive: yoke, but was beaten, 1349, at Nova Hr field of battle in favor of his son, Victor Enrm father of the present King of Ttatyy, 1m mountaineering and hunting to the pomnp of = | slavery to forcign power. But in 1869 Victor command to disarm his Httle kingdom, nia Together at Solferino, Ma ceded to own ances principalitics—Beloena, Tusexny med being one of the “Papal States {The Pope promptly excomniunicated eve put the rising wave of Free ty such a bi Garibaldi Jett ily ceclusion and, with 1,000 “'re In less than three months he had freed the Ista hero on ‘his return to Italy, but refused all Sener The Conquest of Naples, an opp rh: i mannel’s mile. To the Count | muchas to Ptroops stills! temporal In 181 4 Italy; and In 1870, when the C lan war cynsed the withdrawal | nanexed the t of the of French troops from Rome, J The city paid for and owns the Subway. The equipment, costing} - i fess_than $20,000,000, is all the Interborough Company) provided. i ~ Besides this, it owns the Subway lease, the lease of the elevated road, and THE “Why should not the Interborough pay taxes on the value ofits lease- holds, the same as any private landlord or private tenant? The street railroads had allowed them as deductions from their! jwithout thou f things fr re pay for for percentages on their receipts. After securing this deduction they ich_they deducted, ‘ They also refuse to pay for the repaving between and two fi Farr pinchtiy aie I know every cent I have, and I'm'five dollars shy." ont exaape fio wonder you toss your E carrying It In your trousers po A nico row you would make ks, as required by the general-street railtoadinw: is of the street railroads ama: ‘year’s tax levy. =I tt to-over £20,-- tese taxed are ; : ust make up the deficiency, i “because the city has borrowed the money on revenue bor \ex swo-years_nga- charges $a now you are so sassy hes when I went to bed last night. fs genet? ever had five dollars tn yout pocket last night{* sald airs, ‘ow, I poe what you are trying to do!"’ sa ve Idst somo m ‘ou should bo a ‘ 6 not to ¢lyo} n't know how much | which makes Thomas F. Ryan)\| N. Brady the leading anarchists and the "I bet you ten doll: will take the bi aie at pe Letters from the People. you at least mig’ floor and be blown out 2 Sarr, tinmon: you can have the five dollar exclaimed Mrs, Jarr, exultantly, {tiand throw 4 acknowledz: “Tt isn't Ave, it's ten!'? ten dollars more that you just bet m: Mr Jarrowas_tnken aback. inakiag | you UEdstathe UDm-tired-of the-war-yo taking Ave collars out of your 4; and then-away, JARR FAMILY %& 3% By Roy L. McCardell ID you take any money out of my pocket this morn- ‘On, Ing? asked Mr, Jarr quiet “Why do you ask mo au Jarr with somo aaperity. oformed. you and stole your. wal as and righ monay I do ne that's cut it IW Garibaldl, jueantimé, had won fresh fatne by tnvadt war of 1866, and had fought gat declinin This-man of the people” In the long st3 J for the house, fo! Tred some you deny yourself a: |The New Broom in the Street-Sweeping Department, 5 to let it go, dollar bil In my fn the room but you, Nobody 3 I ald!" replied Mr. {4 Mrs. Jarr quick! And going over to "and you owe me “Woll, you _keop the ten then, and we'll callie Mrs-Jarr—as-she-tucked-tho- ‘rent dump heap where 6¥ President Roosevelt Refused to Accept Two Hamburg Storks Sent to the White House. ‘The Snub Jolus Caesar, f The, Event Caesar. to ha Jetters si Why Girly Enter Dust ni: No the Editor of T The os aalesgirl, fn “of poor parents girls studied fe as their p aving fale and food and apect, ev n business that a humble Aut. Bi they carne Bast Side teeming, we could do? usc of going where there's such Of petting a Wn thistown as from Hamburg, now that ‘And put’ the bird? Wo surely & anaes Tim, {s not our game, there's no placo No doubt tho noble Theodcre“{s sorry that ho spoke, +& joke."* sun, comes opt and Mand the pay for Barren.Jst on his “advertised pot at to do with It ‘ms know svheroto turn, our chances: if we gat the dime framt you will Butwigh that he would take us'Jf te cannot take y time they elip on a bit of rind. top ‘Laughing! jong wuz y’ ‘ exclaimed a man. “What|. lady tuned anq glared} mind Your own ta! WARDAS*| patrb, tr Pe ew By Louis Rosenberg Butopay! no attention to thom Be a real new broom and make our’ pathe cleag and strateht. g There Are 15 Varieties of Osculation. CCORDING to the diction of a religious conclave there are Mite of oscull h as unhy The dictionary Informs the breathless, seeker after truth | that a kisy ts “a form of salutation expressed by tho contact, willy pressure.tof the Ipa—which definition, though clear and concise, seems to leave something be desired. 0 ) Tt is probable that cyery mother’s son of vs—and daughter, too—hax some sort of Iden of what a kiss Is, in spite of the reticence of tho Ianguage Salons, §\' ut {t is doubtful if any one ever clothed the {dea more appropriately than 4 ‘aver Who In. 1679 wrote the opistle from which.the following extract 189), Weat jaja kiss? A kiss ts, as ft were, a seal expr achment; the pledge of our future unlon; audible, language ofa living heart; a present, which at uy given is taken from us; the Impression of an ardent attachm coral press; the striking of two filnts against one another; a for a love: the mouth; welch does not same time; the aulckest cxchango of questions and answers of two lovera; the fourth degree of love." , i The monks of tho Middle Ages divided the kiss Into fifteen distinct and separate orders—the decorous, or modest kisa; the diplomatic. or kias of polley; the spying Kiss, tovascertain if a avoman-has drunk wine: the sl kiss of treachory—n church penance, tha slipper kiss, ‘practiced toward tyrantay tho Judicial kiss; the feudal kiss; the religious Kiss (cies academical kiss (or Joining a solemn brotherhood), U Kise; the medical kiss—for the plirposo of healing allcuatte:the:kisa of Jove—the only, real kiss, ~~ for. tiera had been ‘countless 4 He Was almost pe and in South America, ho would never P+ raft’ both enrich himself at others’ expense, and Ilyed and died poor. He now came |b? to New York, where he nomained ‘for over a year, working as qcandle-maker Me and Hving on Staten Island. Water he was captain of a Pacific merchant. FY In 1854 he returned to Italy snd bought a {arm on the Island of %% Caprero, off the Sardinian coa. But he was not alowed to remain long is the Austrian {9 od hai But—forVietor Pemnanvel and with Napoleon y infllen t terrifie renta and and won the war, the dinia, while Victor Emmanuel, al duchy of Savoy to. France. ned over his ned, Other (he last annexed themselves to Sard ned in the nfor m hed gathe an quietly back to his, farm low a more papal-provi Tan of Sicily. 2 provinces, waa ’a » Cavour, the nd Gartbn Ay ower, : when Prussia and Italy fought Austria, Venctia was ceded to States, guarante-ing spiritual independence to the Pope, and himself ng first King of free and united Italy- =the Tyrol inthe no war, Still med to his Franco-} ered him ntly- int the office, ranks and hi farm, where. crippled and libert: was also the ninetrenth cen= 4 Righest aan oe mare regen es a seh Straight Galks to f ™ The Men in the News: By Nixola Greeley-Smith. 4 KAR —Mr_MeDor You_are- such #5 new: D vroom In tfe : Department that tt’ hardly fairfto adjure you.to sweep clean so soon. I'M simply. omer F sioner, and toughest job in equare inch {han theraari Fraay-this tine on je—paring in will be upon your York and t a peel br you collided with o job with-mo kicks to the of tho np>and less thanks rests between Ne r, Your bans “stung” for it, But ot least you have served a gocd apprenticeship, “CHiven: For erer-sines Col: Waring'a time you have looked “+ after the city’s tnterests at Barron here that blows bodiw with this winter, Mr. Cr n, and men ‘and t0Tses sip throug 11 the released odors of a bi city ien_all the thousands of men you put to work ¢4 ; he papers fr y how many inyaes } 2 pead-atnea tt fatty glupe dt When the f) “wars bark: ipa from ‘haying seen what bee i ntle of Col. V © New_York -¢ aka wil write lo you=anaybe you think Dm proving It now—bit T mety, et all sorts of letters from people who want you to give the city. arm: ‘carpot-sweepers’ Instend-ot- brooms,—or who hand—sou—a temas Venger a ) varieties | Sclence goes furbner into the matter and stamps tho kiss {| saya the Pittsburg Dispatch: tha same Ume game {imo it is nt on an ivory 4 mson datsany ¢ rounded heart; a swest bite of tho lip; an affectionate pinahing: of a delicious dish which Js eaten with scarlet rpoons, a sweetmeat 4 tisty hunger: a frult which {s planted and fathered at the our sincere ate $|) a dump, bi } yo kiss}! thi g the cross); the