Judge, 1883-10-27 · page 2 of 16
Judge — October 27, 1883 — page 2: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1883-10-27. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
THE JUDGE. 324, 26 and 328 Pearl St., (Franklin Square.) NEW YORK punts! NCE A WEEK. TERMS TO SUBSCRIBERS, Wsiren Srares asp Casaba) 1St, New York. SPEAN AGENTS ‘Tue Estexsationat Ne srasy, 1 Ba Lose 1s, ENOLasD. NOTICE. CORRESPONDENTS. VOLUME V. Ir is with feelings of no ordinary pride and pleasure that ‘Ti JUbGE steps to the front AV. is we have noticed—only ade- and presents his friends with a V. always welcom gree less welcome than an X.—and if our re Jers will be patient they will be in due n presented with an X, and plenty of Meanwhile, as to the V. It will be genuine—you may take THE Jepor’s word them. for that—and will be as good as we can make it: and the public has testified. in a pretty substantial manner durin ng the last coup years that they believe Tur JupGe both ean and will give them a pretty good article when he puts his mind s And the V. number will la narely down to it. that we pmmence with this you longer th any V. you ever had in your life before, and you will get more fun out of it, too. Tuy Jevor enters on his Fifth with bright prospects and high hopes. Volume with a warm corner of gratitude in his kindly, rugged old heart for the public that has stood by him so liber y and so steadfa ly, and with a strong determination to merit the same kind recognition in the futu: s0, with every confidence in the friends we _ | the ha Rey | fearlessly” AAG | future, which is to be marked \ N by this THE JUDGE. | * | have had more | population of upwards | sonably flatter himself that he has a subject And | | more fashionable tha have made, and a rapid but warm shake of | advent of the Corean embas nds all round the constantly extending ‘Tne Jupce steps off “boldly and into the unknown vista of the nd vivitied . Votume V. UNCLE SAM'S LEADING MAN. Next year Unel somebody to put at the n will have to choose ad of the country | nd we sincerely and of his Government, hope that his choice will fall upon somebody that is a little more than a figurehead. Tire JvpGe does not wish to insinuate anything; but he is inclit J to the opinion that we ary on the » was built, va} fifty millions to and it will be hard Inck if we cannot find a Tue dene thinks it very likely that the people could find and elect just the man they want if the politic- ians would let them—but these politicians ! ‘They are the.real difiiculty. Never mind the , n in both—and pol- But Uncle s have not been numerous. we choose from, , worse luck! m is of making an important selection | and THe JUDGE hopes he will be suffered to choose with his eyes open. THE REVEREND TALMAGE. Wuex Alexander the Great wept because | there were no more worlds for him to con- | quer, China had not yet been discovered. | ‘That is where the Rev. vantage of Alexander. being exhausted age has the ad- | Sensational subjects Mr. Talmage does 1 fall back on moodiness and tears—no, | Kles China. He takes the vilified abused Mongolian under his protecting fies Dennis Kearney and all his works rather, Dennis Kearney and all h for the doughty champion of th was ulways stronger “the work.” and is, and de- or, words— sand lots on the talk” than on ‘almage may Mr. now rea- which will last him for the remainder of his | natural life, for when he ha Chinaman in the abstract, exhausted the | ays go on to details, and it will requi ber of sermons to run through a three or four hundred millior is always Mormonism as a The | Latter-Day Saints ways be reckoned on to supply targets for a certain amount of pul- [ pit ammunition; hionable to exe- | crate them. » after all, it is in the Mongolian field that Mr. Talmage may disport himself to a practica tent. There i yellow brothers; an argument with hum- ation of And there | ue. anyhow. ly unlimited ¢ much to be ss about our | got into » the Celestial is Then, too, the has given East- never. Reocetved on | ed. ern civilization a boom, and the Herald‘ sof the C Brother Pre gratulated on having struck ty may help On the . our pet inexhaustible lead of orthodox sens DEMOCRATIC OHIO. Every one knows that whisky is strong, that rum is powerful, and that ls mighty to prevail—but exactly how strong, and how mighty those con- suspected till Judge Hoadly came triumphantly to the head of the polls in Ohio last week. one was more astonished th und the pwans of rejoi throug beer is how powerful stituents are, no one Probably no in Hoadly him- that sound nthe Democratic ranks are proof of the hopes that the result in Ohio has insp! Certainly such a triumy of a Presidential electio the Democratic sel heart th and breadth of the country. will renew his youtl Sammy Tilden Dana will infuse The Rep or into his er: and even General Butler may be- all ge of base. And ne thin there that are more interesting than buck- fter all. et his cha this frem Ohio! eye STEAM AND STREET RAILROADS. A rrw days Philadel pt into kindlin; railroad train ran into a eet car, knocking the ve wood, and killi \ nd maim It have been expected sm the occupant th ar was one of those w economi- cal company runs without conductors, and the driver was inside collecting the fares. Ie entrusted the lines and brake te happened to be on the inside th Mong and added a few annually sacrific rate a boy who stepped locomotive ca ‘ame the » to the long list of lives Lin this ec . Now, should not be suffered to pa ntry to corpo- chan dent as this without some of the morals with which it is burdened being brought prominently and repeatedly before the pablic. In the first pl no traveled road, much less any strect should be suffered to cross ad track on the same level. | The system of running trains and vehicles ledy over the h “1 the same grade fruitful source o sting to read the statistics of and property destroyed in as tinue to be would be inte lives lo state . ample,—by this means alone in the course of a year. In tho next place, it should be me upon every stre car compa 8 well a wy to furn driver for each of its The comfort and convenience of the passengers demand this, and it now seems as conductor a cars. if it were a matter that concerned their safety as well. It is certainly an outrage to expect the public, which valuable conceded priced exchange : from ‘The H. W. Wilscu Co. comicbooks.com