Judge, 1883-11-24 · page 2 of 16
Judge — November 24, 1883 — page 2: what you’re looking at
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THE JUDGE. $24, 326 and 328 Pearl St, NEW YORK (Franklin Square.) PUBLISHED ONCE. A WERK TERMS ‘TO SUBSCRIBERS. Ask TARE SonicR THAT THEE pws REx. WHERE STAMPS TILDEN AND HENDRICKS. * Suake. brother! What * Brother, what a at possibilities for Mr, Tilden; what a efor Mr. Hendricks, What a | of being requisite for the latter: what | | shake!” vista. of | | a loyal ting: a sense ot Tt would 1 struct a conver indispens y for rthe former, We JUDGE to con- tion of mutual ca admird between th THe Jepoe f to construct interviews of whole cloth; he leaves that to his enterprising friends,’ the dailies, But asa hint to Mr. Henry Watter- son, it will be no harm to jot down what Tilden might have been supposed to say, Wat vivid will bundantly fill in all the requisi tails, | Tilden feels now, that his party cannot do | without him. He fully realizes what a mess | they would be apt to make of it if they tried. He feels that he comes high, but they must have him; and he renews his youth like the eagle—not us Mr. Watterson renewed it for him, by the rejuvenator of rs ink adolescent feel- prospects and most anything. and ecstatic congratulation two distinguished men; but an- not bring hims and conversations out on's imagination unsubstantial but in a real, a hopes, high boundless capabilities for And Hendricks! Do you suppose he docs not feel that the Mayoralty of Brooklyn would ‘uve fallen into different hands if that other Hendrix could have finished his sign: ture with a “cks” instead of with ths THE JUDGE. aboriginal * Brother, Me: Hendricks feel that they far-reaching importutive brother.” | Tilden men of very are PURELY POLITICAL. Wet, the turn anxiety—a it is all over now; the strife and il, the heart-burning and the least a little while. ‘The people have risen in their might and spol words that cannot now be for gainsaid or con- the polls are swept away; the athing of the past; the defeated may sit down and nurse the the intoxicati or fe It cannot be election i their wounds and victors may drain to the dregs + but for good | bruises; cup of suce ill, the contest is over. said that the result of the The polls has developed many surprises. fact that Maynard ran so far behind his ticket only goes to show that it does not pi fora Democrat to be a tempera that is, when his temperance leads him to what good De he licen ee Man— nsider the wrong side | John Kelly’s trad. | nd-he has prob- | could » question ing was judiciously done, ured for Ta have been expected. ably s amany as mucl ‘There will be a potent | ment of sun- | and though use for aldermen in th dry fat jobs in the 1 the rw fut rrying of an aldermanie ¥ be a very showy or brilliant snec with it some solid none can judge bette Hfence the tradi: nd hence a very sub- antial assortment of Tammany votes on Republican tickets, in return for the assis e which enabled John Kelly to snatch sundry wards from Irving Hall and the Hay Seed Brigade. It really looks as if the days of Republican. ism and Democracy, as distinct and utterly antagonistic elements in In the Republi find far more real rivalry, right political hatred existing between the Stalwarts and Half-Breeds than we do be- tween Republicans and Democrats prope And in New , at least, any of the Demo- cratic factions would rather see a Republican come tothe front than the nominee of a rival | clique in their own party. How far this | feeling may extend in the future, or to what | results it y lead, is not easy to predict. | If the disintegation were confined to one | party, it would be safe to predict that party’s | overthrow; but, extending as it does through | both. the result may merely be to im prestige and tighten the insignificant ties of faction at the expense of the broader bands | of party. Probably, both Democrats, and Republicans have to thank the quatriennial recurrence of the Presidential election that nization has subsisted as long as it nerals say that there is nothing so good for the discipline of a disaffected army | asa hard-fought battle, and the same rule | re: rd may not . it brings dvantages whose weight than Mr. John Kell. politics, were numbered. » ranks we good, down- their org: | fight hard | may be | else, | presented | she. | greatness. sd in polities. Where as it is ina Presidential for it; and aside to lay time, internecine Much publican at least, thy of the nd uninter haa been party aid of the ay 1 ofa long but, whenever their pted series of successes; once in four years, of the chair is seriously menaced, and but little d of the y the ry tenure we se asion in th rty pre is little, h the political seer in a Presidential prophecy. Mass: y its rejection ef General Butler, has shortened the bead roll of pos- sible which Presidential candidates by one was recently too often—but name heard there are plenty more where he came from— and elsewhere. THE RURAL CONGRESSMAN. We have a brand of legislator peculiar to nd growing country, We find else; which, on the whe regarde fortunate for now! Mr. Ben, Woolf, of Boston, thou this particular kind of legislator very comical, wrote sd him * Bardwell Slote Florenc him nowhere o he about him and ea and when Mr. between . the publ and laughed loud this Thersites upon the st very funny toc the ru subject for ill- timed levity. On the contrary he isa g man, and the future of the nation depends very largely upon him. He is willing to be President and expects to be be ssman is by no mei ore he dies, He generally keeps on expecting; and is still expecting when death overtakes and van- quishes him after a hard struggle, for your But he is a and he knows it. for there as him- rural Congressman is tough. very great man at home, At Washington he is not so great, he finds other men almost as self; and perhaps those to think that Never mind. is stilent ne of is a Congr mupers choose them are me He and has a Ile is conscious of his it destiny. He is not unmindfal of the day when he chopped logs to fit himself for his great destiny, and when a pretty lobbyist puts a pair of white arms round his neck, and tells him how great and good and noble he is, he fully believes her, that she lc him for himself alone. remembers that he has a vote, Ah well; the rural Con; flesh and blood after all; turns home, and resumes er. 3 nd is conscious Ie and so does ssman is only and when he his uneventful , he is solaced by the memory of his winter in. Washington, and by the inward conviction of his own Of course, we have a great many rural Congressmen, but that only shows what re- labors of chopping wood comicbooks.com