Judge, 1882-02-25 · page 2 of 16
Judge — February 25, 1882 — page 2: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1882-02-25. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
THE JUDGE PUBLISHING CO, Nos. 13 & 16 PARK ROW, N. Y. PUBLISHED ONCE A WEEK. | TERMS TO SUBSCRIBERS. UNFrED STATES AND CaNaDs.) One Copy, sx t One Copy, for 13 weeks Aa Fost REE. “GO Address Tur Jepor Pemisus 2, 13.815 Park Row, N.Y The “806” Sap-Heads. ‘THe commemoration of a national disgra by the presentation of medals to 306 delegates toa Presidential Convention who attempted to defy the will of the members of a dominant party is an event which is actually to take place in this land of the free and home of the x third-term idea which was ried into the Chic: aroused the indignation of the warmest ad- sof General Grant everywhere, and the movement to violate the Constitution of the United States, so brazenly and. so fi made, brought down upon the 306 who cast their votes for the man the Presidential chair for two terms the exe erations of honorable men of all. political par- ties. Covered with honors at home and I for the y him war for the Union, the great soldier might well have been willing to retire to the shades of private life with such honors thick upon him, and probably would have done » Convention of 1880 iously phe lorious record made had it not been for the rascals who had thrived ministration as President, and und who the mon -y-bags of the nation, ‘The whole world is familiar with the specta- which 306 would-be destroyers of the Con- stitution presented in the Chicago Convention, and their signal defeat was an evidence that the voice of public opinion must be heard and obeyed even in political conventions, Bold, audacious, scheming, selfish men, with no thought of the public good, and seeking pi sonal aggrandizement only, the 306 strode out of the Convention cursing their illluck, and continuing to blaspheme against the bet element of their own party. Disgraced inthe eyes of men who love their country and her institutions, they now seek to perpetuate their infamy by displaying to public gaze medals specially man Grant cut away from these men when they rst planned to make him their cav’spaw, a brighter page in the history of his latter days would have been reserved for him, It is not denounce the wi of these medals, and to show the peop honored him th; for those who tr of the land. ate for him yet too arers who he has no place in his heart nil to violate the Constitution THE JUDGE. Waking the Dead. Benoup our old, sad-eyed, and almost for- from their graves when Blaine, of Maine, be gotten friends risin; prictors of political cemeteries erritories may now a “plumed knight” and that the dry bone head statesmen of other days are al beginning to rattle in th being called by the man from Maine, and the time has come for resurrection of those who were, in the ver- the political world, “badly left” in the terrible The smiling Colfax, of | Associations, adership of the intrepid warrior 1 frauds who continue to grow fat in | of them all the stories of | th -books, but has not | of retirement, and future open up for him? representative of the Polar positions of power, may r the now mildewed chee chuyler served his t does not a gloric artistic feat balmed him in the b will have an oppo who dive deep into the public tre him of the golden ea ‘The boisterous Batle shams of Be ls | who had filled | the staid old acon Hill, and demanding the | of the Baked F the banner of Blaine march triumphantly to t n who have thrown broken glass in his path will find it to the tage then to paste in their hats the lines which the bold Benjamin is said to every night before retiring to his armory: 1 another opportunity to trifle with | ‘Time at last makes all things even, There never yet was bi That could evade, The patient search an OF him who treasures up a wre now discontinue pub- lishing the Evening Stockwell, of Ann street, to return to the paper mills, the ancient piano, Carl, Blaine and victory. Stanton and S\ leaves of the music nd bang away in B. Anthony turning th book, and singin, ” a picture will be pre: en the way down, well sentiment of the whole country. <0 rash as to predict def , While Schurz and his sweet singers follow in his wake? Peter Cooper with his air-cushion will, of course, give the new movement his n port, and will again terrify his the ex-Mayor of New York, by marching with man from Main tured to glorify their shame- | ful proceedings in that Convention. Had | e—the man whe k to any Due f Madison | respondent was writing a paid-for puff of the ous and jubilant Georg «1 for five yea man beings exc Square—the once jo} neis Train, who made the whole world ring | with his shouts of * I will be dictator,"—he, too, will shake his locks as of old time for the man of the hour—Blaine The march through the politic of America to the White House may well cause the crowned heads of Europe and South Amer- iea deep concern; and is it at all surprising that the aceredited representatives of those countries at Washington are just now prepar- ing to tly to their native lands? and thi of Maine. ave-yards i Wuat becomes of all the verdicts of censure that are rendered by coroners’ juries? ry little while some individual or cor- ion is censu in killing a or smaller number of p ple, and then society breathes freer, But what becomes of these verdicts? How many 1 of afterwards? Do go to that pigeon-hole bourne trom nee no censure ever return iduals and corporations buy them up to make serap-books of? Happy thought ! tT ur | A Pertinent Question. | ed for criminal carclessn re ever he wh or do the in at must be the secret of it, and what jue scrap-books these solemn ce must make ! on the brow of the saintly Hayes has em-| Roughs and toughs are not considered part of the amiable Dana, tunity to write | cither rough or tough by their companions until they have “knocked out their m ld not 1: rporations be act ment? We will take it for granted that this is so, but why make the farce so expensive ¢ Why hold inquests whe in,” wless landlords and ated by the same senti- and why sho ch men and corporations ie retaries could just as well make the proper to be considered? Their own priv vate sc timeand public 1 this is all these verdicts of censure are to amount to, why not Iet these “knockers out” of human lives stand the expense of making the scrap-book ? entry into these dks, and Nt thereby save m Tue Sun has blown up Sammy Tilden to smbles the C v's eye), and is about as r such dit € liable, degree that he now re (in Dai rs AN exchange asks: “Is there anything that is good that can be said of George V ington?” Certainly; we chip this. He was a nice man; never hazed anybody in colleg | never went ont between the acts to change his breath; and he wore a wig and kne breeches without appearing a Dit like Os Wilde! Let the echoes ring: «First in war, first in pe Firat in the hearts of his countrymen!” ce, AND now comes Adrian, Mich., with her | bogus water bonds. It is thought they were | mostly absorbed by New York whisky bonds. | M. Zona has commenced the publication of astory called The Pot-Roiter in a Paris paper, | anda correspondent who has read it, says: ‘The opening chapters are full of nasty prom- ise,” which makes it look as though the cor- novel, comicbooks.com