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THE JUDGE PUBLISHING CO, rl St., Franklin Square. ONCE A WE TERMS TO SUBSCRIBERS. UStrep State aX Casati) Avkite Tie sen Pemuasiis, 4 (antgeet to 8 pr eit valoation apon the articles they tichesesl foe Fete Ps Destroying Their Goddess. O'Donovan h towards the British that the Tuk, believers <sa's dynamite policy government exultingly declare jon in Parliament etreet don, on the 15th inst., was the work of man seeking to free Ireland from Enzlish rule, We have read of the utterances of Rossa and his friends, and while some of nly to admit that the plot was they intimate that such was that the jon did take me of them that lives were ope is entertained that in the fature. Rt hted implores silence hatebed in this country the fact, and alt rejoic place. It is regretted by not lost, and th work will be d features are his shoulders he rakes in U leas Irish men a ance Of his alleged scheme It isnot necessary for THe Jcnar to repeat what has so often appgared in these columns, that Tue Ivor is in bearty aympathy with all oppr ples—the as all others however, at this time to repeat th Ieoae has also frer effective Hy harsh with smiles, and as he shrugs mons his admirers, pulsiv send to him for the further- » money whieh i and thou el peo It is becoming, which THe, Irish, as we 1 should not be hoodwinked by the Rosans and | 1 that they are working for Ir and who'thus gain their’ ime when England was p guns who pret freedo ands | thy and hard- earnings. pared to do j nil the civilized world was starthed by the information that Barke and Cavendish had been mardered in Phaenix Park, Dublin. Then nd hese tated. It was claimed by Irish orators in Great Britain and America at that time that the assassins t Irishmen. Now everyboily knows by th tongue of an Irish informer that the orators were f taken. While the better class of Irishm of the farious declarations made by t Sheridans, end others, demand that the world shall believe that the explosion was not brought about by Irishmen, the world will not accept that belief, but will say to the poor deluded sons and daughters of Ire hearken no longer to the ravings of Rossa and men of his kind if you wish to gain the sympathy and respect of other nations in your appeals to England for liberty! By assassinations and the destruction of life and property by dyuamite explosions Ireland ean never be made a free country. Men like Parnell and Sullivan have good reason to deplore the existence of Rossa and his followers. If it were possible for the average Irishman to be calm and thoughtfal for a few mo- menta, he would see that the dynamite policy means the destruction of his goddess of liberty, and may we hope that he will have such moments ? Rossas, Crows, Poor Oakey Hall! It ia ‘now the proper time for some symp: to say, “Poor Oakey Hall!” thetic soul A brilliant genius taken THE JUDGE. » the camp of Tweed, Sweeney, and Connolly when plunderers ruled New York was made their th uresheal hy be the City Hall, Tammany Ring, with th a foreizn I friends, | an whe turned a portion of the infam J when it was destroyed went Tweed died in prison ; Con {Hall still lives in the elzy of bis triumphs defeats. When his political career was ended, and Asia soon discovered! th nviction in a court of justice to the practice of the J won fame und. tortane, He him, and becoming thoroush- tentic criminal Lawyer hoped t law o1 is foo pe f nl attempted the n tor. On the staze he was a lamen be createv!.a decided sensation by m: to England, and by mysteriously York. He once more souht the p found there was little f ly dhsconra, of a pre 4 e failure. Then ously fering returning to New of the law Then he City. Editor Editor he actic 3 than ever before snapped at an opportunity offered by the the New York World. Me was made the Of that remarkable newspaper. As He it wed inte a small room where City was erratic and disagreeable tion of the duties of his yx workings of th Me until a few a of the Workd 1 it, and it era, h had no more eon Ww has of phone created a riot in and was hu Sago, he was the walking encye ment. The failing fortanes of the tated the cutting down of the sulary- publicly announer! that Hall, with oth. wl frou ila That who was once Mayor of t and who narrowly es caped being made Governor of this State, should be psition on the Worl staif is indeed a humiliation, deeper and m funy of tl pean abl 4 been dismi rvice a man bounced out of a subordi damning 0 has ever been the fal x-Mayors of w York. The Art of Book-Keeping NOT BY THOMAS 1H wh at the nself, th A uirenary friend of and who isa little * to can say a better thing ver fell the loss of many of them to friends who hi Cr J crawled away camped, his Waverley Novels hart got off Scott free, his Rousseau nad taken French leave, Moore had beea Swift to follow, aud that Time, meaning Pollock's (of) Course, for him no More. I and was particularly sorry to lose H away, a Bacon; and he wondered W and if his friends had been mean en them To show him 1 was that [knew be was a great Love must Payne him to lose ao any instituted a Thoreaa Hur Lytton some of them. he was a very phyunny sets up for a wit, wh really quite was bemoal a few d through loaning His his Walker bad de- 4 best books, J never returned them, he, he said, 1 was e had loved his Motherwell, that ah to Hook s Smart as he was, 1 replied of books, and Howitt of them; but if he had after them, he might have tT told him, although L How, I had read something like this Prior to bis telling me, and that be needn't : to Hood-wink me into believing that his remarks o original. told him, ander Locke and Key, where they would he ‘as secure as if he were to Stowe them away in Save, 1 one would be able to Steele any more’ of t thonght it A. Marvell, I said, that he should appear so Gay and be eo Lamt-like, and not become Savage over his Loss-ing. He thereapon told: me to go to the Dickens, mad because | was Whittier than he w Hey An Eccentric Magistrate. Ir will never be known how great a factor Jude Lynch has been and continues to be in the develop ment of American civilization. Grim and implacable he holds outlawry on a string, and, whenever he pulls, there's bound to be an end of the argument, its imme- te cause having ceased to exist. His Hosor's eir- cult Is quite an extensive one. It embraces all of our nthe Executive Chamber of If he would always Keep his books, | sparselyinhabited States and Ter ile Uni Th vies, aned ought to Hed as the most prominent in th celal partner i th hempe | this by whieh, tak als of Fur Wester 1 thing: for society. Realizi mewhere, he draws invariably sober, as the proverbial jud, former on the It’s a pic Thin and his jury ni | the slack. If you have been swell taut you will read | ily » this, His n startling bnt effective. Wh cond dure | with nin ly | + Lynel is invisible be Nowwii Hoan in his eye ness hours, in suspense she ‘U blow about du naught for parade or in after busi stand was born with and € nts, r has been known te mer intimate friends, at other ti tion bi ves toh ntiw stranger into a posi Lby th people in the aking for myself, but 1 fortane th ut down trate. Iv ahove that oeeupic aly woukl rather be eat up hy mi uoiy. 1am 1 be « veeentrie, inex: | by ub m Visiting Aldermen. Wuo shall say that ablermen from neighborin; ot always satisfied with their visit to the 1 Artists and jour many occasions to picture the alderman fron cities sts have attempted th departure for New York and bh and it nit in colors the an, Th wis of the aldermanie nul while we do not expect that the vote of thanks to THe Jean | bers of th or prior turn to bis has remained for Tuy Jepar, to pre life of «1 un aldern end by the fri heroes, ant will pass a we trust that the tbody will thud food for thought in Ives as others see them, thn s Board of Emi- will havedone son to its credit when it drives the gration out of power. Sunny Avexaxper V. self to be the right ma Davinsos is proving bun- in the right ph As and is bee elaewhere 10 1101 tiring editor-in-chief of the New York Times, we mit that Mr. Howard) Carroll is the equipped fe that off the underta inate some one to succeed the re- gentleman fully Mr, Carroll was reared in ls the importance of the position, and fally ui lent Arthur that be has dinirers in the matter of re- Tux attention of the Brooklyn police authorities ie respectfully called toa statement made by John B. K that he has invented a balloon bom) for use a dark. Tuwoven the persistency of Mayor Low aff erning the conatraction of th tien 10 Know every facts Brooklyn Bridge, and his d Jay's progress of | th sree, it is likely that the great structure | will he opened for ceneral travel by June 1. Th M 1 sleservea the thanks of th this city, and the votes of the eitizens November. termin workin; pans. people of { Brooklyn nest or of Brook SMixe Freddi the New York newspapers that Mrs, Lanstey closed in Toronto the greatest dra at ever filled there. If Fred cin this statement, other dramatic companies may as well leave Tore their route. Schwab teh 10 Trisnwex in England ing thems re just now especially dis- tinguis! ves for cowardice if we are to judge from the accounts of the dastardly attack upon Lady Florence Dixie at Windsor the other day. comicbooks.com