comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1883-06-23 · page 2 of 16

Judge — June 23, 1883 — page 2: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — June 23, 1883 — page 2: Judge, 1883-06-23

What you’re looking at

# What This Page Means This page contains **political commentary on Republican party troubles**, specifically targeting the nomination of **James B. Foraker as Ohio's Republican gubernatorial candidate**. The text criticizes this choice as strategically weak—Foraker is described as an unknown lawyer and soldier with no particular distinction, nominated at a critical moment when the party desperately needs its strongest candidate. The satire suggests Republicans are so fractured (split between "Stalwarts" and "Half-breeds") that they've settled on a mediocrity. A secondary section discusses **extradition of Irish nationalist Patrick Tynan**, a contemporary controversy where Britain pressured the U.S. government to return the alleged dynamite conspirator. Judge argues his apparent death resolves an awkward diplomatic dilemma: extraditing him would anger Irish-American voters, while refusing would antagonize Britain. The cartoon's accompanying illustration (showing a judge's profile) reinforces the legal/judicial theme of these political debates.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

PURLISIED ONCE A WEEK TERMS TO SUBSCRIBERS. SUMMER. SUM HeK came in pon tts, The j thermoniet week, with a hop, skip and a jump. the npin prine shy the skipping by overheated city folks. whe rushed off to the This is not ay aside and the mieountaines, if ithe. in is Un- menen; or. & phenomenon of periodical r 1 is a hard worke sahol- and takes one, ‘The peculiarity of his renders it imperative that he should urrence, this holiday during the summe: ture as the thermometer touch nd the me th is reached. se 1 do the seaside resorts teem with visit- We have plenty of * little a quiet arl filling up rapidly, In New Y. will be, so far as fashion is eon- cerned, a deserted city, < nine idian ow 1 very brief period OHIO. ablican party is certainly and the ent parts of a hard row to hoe this ye of the const pubticat not making the work amy easier, Sti and Half-breeds at Ik ull over the ¢ of the party either sligt rheads; Democratic anceess the best men 1 or disgusted —all r favorably for the elections. Ohio has been untr this does not pr very results of comin, the latest State to wheel into line with termined attempt to strangle the Republican party within her boundaries. ‘The Republi- of that State have nominated a gentle- man named Foraker as their choice for next That must be eminently gratify ntelligence to the Democrats, but Re all over the country stands anno Just now, ined by the inthe bal- their very strongest men should ean Governor, ing publicanism hast at the at neement when every nerve should b party, when their fate ist ance, wh THE JUDGE. be put forward to tempt the popular v« they neminate—Foraker. Mr. thy gentleman rmiaty We know ne he be a very w inst him—for the « probably, that we know nothing in his fa- vor—h nothing as is an unknown man. Since his nomination we have learned that he is a lawyer Many othe And this is the man who is put forward at a crisis like the pre | publican choice for ( | important State. Ohio h a soldier. in time, auils will come nit ats the done it this time. ON HIS TRAVELS. Having shuttied off the coil of Wall St. Mr. day Koon his yacht and inhale the ocean breeze on the Befor s back he ocean | teh upon ould is re to en hounding ocean, he ith: he may pine for home: he may find und fall of the billows a soul so long attuned to the rise may fi toot that the rise HW upon ni fall of Y find ozone a poor substitute sand he may come to the the water w to dilute stocks is prefers able to the brine of Old Neptune. But we A think Ie a real good tin Ih is a pitiful Hions to millic that has heen wont conclusion rewith he Jaleo will more probably and he has earned chit te see a t—use it, but to minister toy own comfort and enjoyment, ‘There of solid: philosophy, after ark of the Irishman, ** Have time whil time dead. you are alive, for you're ‘Tite: question of extradition, in so far as it affects Tynan his Ideath, government is to be congratu . seems to have died a natu If this be so, our . for it is dilemm: aease in which it would have been ble to please not bein al from a very unpleasant evervbody—everybody, of cou read to include Me Vin one Ww —inthe event of their guilt being clearly proved—to the British Government, would hi Lip an active hostilit not uninfluential el of the community. ‘To refuse to extradite them would have been to throw the sof the Am ‘ynan & Co., who could only be pl leliver these me an flay over ital and nnpro- r that have d ed modern history. If the British government it with visitin, mare exemplary justice on own dominions, and ise the extradition question at all, it will he so much the better for all concern- ed, Of course Tk At | remarks, does not intend te as to the guilt or innocen Mr. Sheridan cence being establishes ins within he * does not :, in the foregoing ssany opinion of Mr. Ty nt of their inne. anor In the & All question af ex! tradition would of course drop tothe g but if tried he: tt the instance of the Brit ish Government, and fonnd guilty, our Ex- coutive Ww Lobe brought face to face witha very embarrassing position THE RIVER AND HARBOR BILL. the Herght pub country setting forth Some days nen in various | their views cl C f written nd predictions regarding: the from the six : ' hing the inte At first reading, the value drawn from them. tariff reform seems to he question most vitally ati sng the writers, | between the lin discover th nestion will be the forty-eighth Co first pice, the from Southern place. from the limited cans Herald supplies, Carlisle of Kentucky all but univer: nd the 1 Harbor Bill will be the most vital ques a “by the next ¢ How orig bill, Hirank from the ion it proveher very important one ajority of these Ie In the se which the find oth the River we John G. sal choic the mublicans. whe ratted this storm of oppo wind taken out of ther will bear to have the sailson this very Demooriey, remuitins to he will be unquestionable by the That however, is measure this their tion, The new South at present takes more question of internal improvement than in been suffering from their an from the floods tof Sav of the ny other. Southern States are suf rivers from the silt channels the here, of the and for example. ‘The | appre tion for one year bas resulted in the inere of the often to wait har to such an extent that steamers have six hours for water sutli cient cross it. Another vear, ifn prop! ition is made to pay for the nothing — but flat-bottomed barges can enter t all, And this is the « in a greater or le south of Ma ring mud-scows and river at all over the South The and Dixon’s line whole countr clam for inter the question will con manner that it cannot With regard to the hue ery raised J against the River and Harbor Appropriation Bill, it was like clamor, le a great deal of popular on and voiced by a few in unthinkingly by the many unjust and generally meaning The Times and Tribune acted as whippers-in for the pack of hounds that bayed at its heels. But the bill a vieie We think not. It schemes of public ment, by whieh the country was one? t with vi improve at large would comicbooks.com