comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1883-05-26 · page 3 of 16

Judge — May 26, 1883 — page 3: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — May 26, 1883 — page 3: Judge, 1883-05-26

What you’re looking at

# Political Cartoon Analysis: "Tempora Mutantur" The main cartoon depicts a young woman from Savannah who was "stuck up in her manner" because her father was "only a tanner." The Latin title "Tempora Mutantur" (Times Change) signals the satire: social circumstances shift, and pretension based on inherited status proves foolish. The accompanying article about extradition discusses whether Irish assassins who murdered Lord Frederick Cavendish and Mr. Burke should be extradited from America to Britain for trial. The piece argues these were "political murders" rather than common crimes, creating legal and diplomatic complexity. It notes America would demand extradition if a criminal (like Guiteau, who attempted to assassinate President Garfield) fled to Canada—establishing precedent for mutual cooperation. The "Midnight Marauder of Fulton Street" appears to be a serialized fictional story about Native Americans ("Duda-dah-da tribe") encountered near a river at night. The page reflects late-19th-century *Judge* magazine's mix of social satire, political commentary on international law, and entertainment fiction.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

REGARDING EXTRADITION. Civinizat ion S can entertain but one opine of the Irish assas- sentence upon them. Un- all the criminals are garding the black si and the righteousne: that has been pronounc fortunately, howeve not in the hands of the British government, of them have taken refuge in this The question of whether they and some country. shoukt be handed over to justice or not i for these men, th can scarcely be termed murderers in the eyes That the ‘avendish and in Phoenix wurders can scarcely be | coldblooded, indefensi- | they w committed for delicate « of international jurisprudence. murders of Lord Frederick Mr. Burke twelve months 4 Park were political d. Cowardly s they we ons and on the persons of men | 1 ofticial It is se psition, ely pr ta sit , outside hed ha anksof pr will defend the ¢ Irishman to-day full of fanatics from whom al murderers are recruited, e, but America ha look at it from a broader standpoint; she to vindicate her elaim en for the opp I eri > be regarded as ther nations ; terms of. her if Guiteau | had sneceeded in escaping to Cansla after the murder of Garfield, and if the English authorities had refused to surrender him, the sto live up tot wn extradition: treaty. o doubt, » would have been much bad feeling en- Lin this country, and a refusal on the part of the government to surrender the Park murderers would engender much bad feeling in land. Still there | ntiment, which took back as the Revolu- and which was fostered by the cager- rd belligerent rights to wey in-eur own civil war, that | gend nd Phoenix ud toace the Confede mur people to allow every latitude to the En) It isa my and way our ish crown. quest whichever ernment decides, the consequence sore serious than most people imagine. MaNy an egotistical literary adventurer rts out hopefully to conduct a train of ht, who ere long discovers that he only hit, loaded with goods more bulk and weight than valu ade, who had very humble s rge of a light- illed “with many parcels of 13 notable while aspiration it wealth. A New ENGianp physician says that if every family would keep a box of mustard If of the doctors would st that every family keep ans are not They compar nwith acar-load of Sw : pol- ished in their 1 : favorably tho going West. A May recently broke a boiled egg and found a tack in it, This lie is told by an exchange, but we haven't time to stop and nail it. THE JUDGE. HIERE-WAS-ASYOUNG:/AI55-IN: SSAVANNAN . ee hh Who-was-Vesy -STUCKUP : IN-HEB-/\ANNES 4, : Serenwnsuna mitt! ak 1 You wave-te1ouda A HER + A QUEEN: ~Bur-nes-rarnes 3) “ONLY: A“TANNERL. TEMPORA MUTANTUR THE MIDNIGHT MARAUDER OF FULTON STREET. BY GRO. L. EMRYLL cloudy, rather than d. tinnally swe r | The vast bride Dent in one Tne night wa The stragylin pross 1 moon's: fi reacherons and wneertain. and silent river sometime gloomy field, then separated as a flood of ys 8 ithe rents in the vapory 5 » the East River seemed o collect the lights upon its surface, and re- flect them with a phosphorescent glow. as sometimes is seen npon the oe the moon shining without The glistening face of the noble stream was only rufMled when the plash of alon a ring of tiny, wideni cles in motion, tesque hitherto had come and gone in the bose the river like the figure in a mirror. Around a canip fire were some forty or fif- were rolled up and fast delicately-embroidered blan- others silently smoked their cigars. ‘They were part of the notorious Duda-dah-da tribe eh- erous, bloodthirsty nation, whose home was on the beautiful banks of New-town creek They had been on a buffalo hunt in respect rk during the day, and were now resting from the fatigue incidental to that innocent, enteel recreation. nt such an when obscuration. shore of On a soap-box in the rnddy gl camp fire sat a young Indian Warrior silly thought. “On his dainty feet he wore cloth-top pointed-toed button gait his narrow-gauge legs were eneased in ¢ 1. ingly light pants, which, from frequent Iu- brication, were soiled with the tion of powdered soapstone and v pended from his aquiline nose, i i solitaire diamond, swayed fe, in sympathy with his eful movements. In the full light of the mp fire the diamond looked like a ball of Suddenly the brave young warrior opened his mouth and yawned, and the dia- mond scemed to diminish, and resembled the flames of a candle in a brewery vault. Lei- surely removing a tobacco box from his pis- tol pocket, he took a huge chew, and said he well-oiled g: sed he'd turn in with the rest of the . « . . morning, and in the uncertain li ev dawn a solitary horseman du street, ‘Te continuation of an be found in number Weekly Gravesend Pall- nd best family paper in Ask your newsdealer for twenty-two Bearer, the the United St No. twenty-two. an by the name of Hulett will nist Mac r for being by the natives. "Twould per for the Madagaseans to red him ¢ her daughter after Chawles He was sich 'a sweet specimen of the amust have been hone Moopy and Sankey’s hyms have been pub- lished in many la It would seem quite appropriate Hold the Fort” in Sion, A FASHION note will be much worn by children this season. We know it, We used to wear ours consider- ably: principally at the knees. says that bright “TP snocnp hive thought this soup would have all got lost before we ever got it,” said Boodle. “Why?” asked his girl | +B cause there’s so much leek in it, my dear.” Tue: present aspect of Republican “ har mony” reminds one of the handshaking just y-seven mil- how many in- pe may create always the ps 1 who bought new sewing ma- eo had got ow feller. in disgu ise them. Boits are blessing you can properly di provided Come to stay—the whalebone. comicbooks.com