Judge, 1882-12-09 · page 2 of 16
Judge — December 9, 1882 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of This Judge Magazine Page This page contains a lengthy editorial titled "Slaves to the Jews," attacking Jewish men—particularly a man named Levy working in the District Attorney's office—for allegedly exploiting young women employed as domestics and seamstresses. The article makes sweeping accusations that Jewish employers systematically seduce and abuse vulnerable girls, then abandon them. It demands District Attorney McKeon investigate and prosecute Levy and other Jews in his office. **Context**: This appears to reflect late-19th-century antisemitic conspiracy theories portraying Jewish men as predatory toward Christian women. The piece conflates individual criminal behavior with ethnic/religious identity, using it to justify broader prejudice against Jewish people. The accompanying illustrations (a caricatured face at top) appear designed to reinforce these stereotypes visually. This content represents the casual, virulent antisemitism that Judge magazine sometimes published, reflecting prejudices common in that era but now recognized as bigotry.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
THE JUDGE. | courts THE JUDGE PUBLISHING CO., 34 and 36 North Moore Street, N.Y. BLISHED ONCE A WEEK. Use Aikiress Tue, Jenin Pewtsitsa Contrib Valuation mpon the ar Wes 1x). Of nitomssStarops Gai Me write Inctosest for return p with, mataegiebadiry Fifty Thousand Strong. Tue Jur at r nd at the preaetit writins, for our with the Thank: supplement, reaches t anmber in | circulation that It ha: namely We con f who y thousand. lers, every on hav ‘nuine interest in the success of our paper, We ation than the sand all the IL for aulvertisers to bear in » not claim to have a New York e whieh little f American comic Sin, Wut we would be Finy th Slaves to the Jews. neral Jewish race as that witnessel Mail pravity of the trial of Jessie and in the Court of all ther The trial engthen Tie ks up will be au com that Jews manki wl Jepan's belief nan merely as an amd cast aside at any mome Tur Jt the inbuman oll Fa poor, friend er hailof hl and of his determination to r tas Tue Jt ortuni: 2 neal not recall U sickening details of Maillard. It is the w Tying in walt ry of the cheap and cunni of his success in blastin A life of himself of 3 scirl rs pectability ¢ by foul means, I ok has called atten cas pried hinn Able District-Attorney John Me Mr, MeKeon ist must be held re Tricks that cou Keon to the bar and ynsible for the of this county comluct of his office, I have origi a Jew were performed by his Maillard nated only In order that Je might Ie Jed” means did the the machinery of the district-atto Tur Jeour knows that Me. MeKeon’s hands are He inane will not in all probability ever ¢ . He hopes to do his full duty while Uistrict-attorney aud leave @ record. which shall be the envy of all fatare distriet-attorney& He cannot, there fore, afford to be bandicapped in his good work by evil, gning and corrupt assistants If the Jew, Levy, found % possible to accelerate the persecution of th girl through the nse of money in the district-attorney’s oie, Mr. MeKeon should know i'and'promptly pat an 04.16 the offetal career of subordinates who acchpted the Jew'g, matey. ns to prison. we, Levy, get possession o y's offle recOnis ot th? pollge courte: pork wt x1 to the magistrates that they a pildlren, that the fatty to the poor girls who have been in the as domestics In costly: resi- dences or as seainstresses in clothing establishments, wesses for wi and see th employ of Jews, either ries of ther fat and m the them adrift. sareemployed and gaze upon path of virtue, and who c Goto tl ments where m: the Jews who engage their services, Observe with What care the scoundrels select only t n and features, Once in their employ the that they tust submit to the insults or lc tunity to ose of pleasines rls find the oppor irl in the loys one of » truth in how little of w and misery of the very poor service of 9 Levery Jew who em girls, knows that Tie Jonae this matter. But how little of the trut atic an be told! THe Junie bis female ees subinisst It would be mt t is possible even fallen Into hi f the these the deep the sorn at the Jew to hia debauched dh anity pl that an ins a Jew to go us far as that at many have traps Is as trae anit sett rl in his empl the w fan that ” fall control New York the pr f to do with her as he of phil then Tur Sepak appeals in be vt ploy of Jews, Let the tion, and when It of J her people hos c, honest. earnest men and women, half of th machinery of the t nt it may b Lsewhs nine wish libertines all I ons, then pass that a few seo f to obtain a girl w serv vectfal fA Western wi Bag eda Hash © Jitdratgee! and ita }al etteet ful mind. NG¥i we hag th ally chronicling $h® mifintestns k Satie Other of the |: Wevate informedtbroa: ewayers “of pat enjoying hi tie Missouri. He hasgll that hear of course, freeiom v He dwells in a fire-pr rioas apartments, ands supplies! with all lamented Mr. Je b the columns of tt bly wiofal James fs greatly exceptin or opera. in delic nor Osear Wilde than have ated to Mr, 4 jaire Jens “I with the the f the piano, the harp, the a su an Las he sita iy his easy-chalr and sn him by th and the sees, Uhro) Senate of the vernor, the attorne I cities of the sta ns of himself in th and bears Limeelf sp m Mi lor of his are there to min ni th 1 ator f en of as “the uri oully he walks th on to greet the blushing dam- severy want, Like $ newspaper re- worl, that witbin a yrt days he will step forth in all bls manbood and uprightness and take bis place as a leader among his fellow-citinens in his reat state. and we are assured by the port fow sl who jot down his slight After the Feast was Over. Last week we had something to ay about our great National Thankagiving festival, and just on the eve of its celebration—just as people were going from the clty hack to thelr elitidhoodhomes, there to partake of the bounties which the season has vouchsafed, those sematks ere, Tux Jeoge falters bioel, priate, na : = Bal alast. there is ahi f.ns $0 Found. as.we: Hiheral indaks nich food Wand a too ° no matter what th sentiment nding it may be, always downed wit The festival was bright and beautiful Americans, and aa Americans we wen most of it. And this is the b att cannot the pictur But the next sile begins to | Tue could but notice thts at o cipal depots, each morning train tow loads of these people from the country where they And what different expres What a vast ni perhaps before thea the mn up. e of our pi broust ail been feastin: ions each and every © » bore! ibe closely fitting waist How many anv’ Who, to look at them basiness in town, would ever auspect that they had been toa antenan anda! W ne faces ms hands clasp distended ablomens 1s they return to homes and And what a harvest the doctor's reap after the fea ing Is overt is all in a life anyway withont a a: at i md what shout we nal ste of Modern ancold A Bit Criticism Winer gi plied with eyes 2 met, 80 to speak, t et for a long lenstlt of period. thinig fn the shap We more px an of verse we h append a samph “The scintillamt aeplivrs gia’ The Files over the rack, And the mermatis curt the the red moon awordal : = fume ty’ be MRR Qven-carst the oficher we read Uke lines, deeply are we impressed wih their subtle There is IndeSpable something about. the poem thats absdlgtety impossible to define; susurren€ rhyu admit ing com pfetitied ofthe —of of the bewydivanent of 11 hewildepds _1f Nf: moi Ther pas be tine poews fithe Reglish language, but’nohe ju whieh 1 weir ul refreabilog phrasings of the author ate 50 s0-Sgo nlterl spontaneous, as it were, and replete wii delightfat and overwhelming surprises;. Ao clearly nun festln:; the purposes of the metapbors, whic 6 manifest to those who absorty their wealth of un rentness, or Otherwise, The charming conceits perv the production remitid us somewhat forcibly of the an refrain of Wait Whitman's puzzling and plaine e muse, istermixed with the soft cai erness of the enlgmaticism of (! Lionary mnentaltoo-tooativeries call the lofty and empyrean flizhts of the late M Milton to eclable extent. Harlly. The poet ha fi , ever What production of the divine » Permit us to ask, has wot? Bat there faults not glaring,‘and are amply ned by the almost supernataral Jucidness of the luchti { the author's theme, that is scurcely and the sablime tmagery of 1 noon swords its sheath.” We We poetry wt deli bly portrays the bewilde: ‘nces and Osearwilt but they dow ingale singing eweet requiems o'er hia grav tons of soil on top of him to keep him down, Ay exchange says: ** Ice six feet thick has alre formed in some parts of Lake Saj thick may not be too thin, bat 1 rior.” Tee six To tind ont Qvestiox In’ minin how much you have been swindled, Ges. Surcew to Civil Service Reforin: + nn here [Carry the news to Carroll.] How to build a house for noth AX open ques ar comicbooks.com