Judge, 1886-02-27 · page 11 of 16
Judge — February 27, 1886 — page 11: what you’re looking at
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4+ OME et Re oe a The Court is in doubt as to what constitutes perjury. A legitimate be excused; but th yor is inv used to be regarded not merely as an evasion of law but as the erime which is properly pun ished no where this side of state prison Here, cured for 1 bsence of memory is to absence that is purely ited to serve a purpose who se chise for which responsible parties had off million dollars in vain. The vill the franchise was vetoed by tl was passed over tl ta meeting of the held. The outside bribery beyond a veto aldermen. surreptitiously evidence shows very lang doubt; yet when Mr. Sharp is called to: testify he hin nds that his memory has. fons nd i thata who deals in millions should keep no books! usmuch as he kept no books an there is no evidence to fasten upon him and the ve bribed the crime of which muilty. Well, gentlemen he: vught to be some w men he must h th assuredly does that end it? to fasten upon Jacob Sharp the perjury, with its penalty, tfulness which ix wholly d—which everybody knows must be ned. A man who deals in pennies rather than dol h are rs would be railroaded to. prison if had such a shockingly bed nd in the present case a million people 1 been robbed instead of the one or tw might be other, ( men, let us consider the question of perjury. Isit any better on the part of the great financier than on the part of the small individual whose lie hurts self? When aman says he can’t remember a transaction amounting to some hundreds of thousands of dollars he lies. He lies with such tremendous force, energy and circumference that itis won- derful the heavens do not crack with the con sequent reverberation, mory ast involved in’ the obody so much The Court sought during the excitement which prevailed with respect to the riot of the mechanics” in London to emph size the fact that there had been no riot of a kind of mechanics or any kind of wor! but that the disturbance was that of soci whose motto is blood or bee “al days following the disturban London papers and people were execrating themselves for their idioey wise, Gentleny Free trade nd workwoman to a pretty low condition, Thousands of these 7 Je would look upon the Amer nh workma table emblematic of the gorgeous repasts of Di keeps up the old idea of a righteous inequality between this man and that, tips the hat of in believing other consider on or two things. as reduced the British workman JUDGE. i to the contempt of pam-| the good of the Lord—there was that greed of 1 forbade nybody else. labor obsequious pered idleness, all con- This, is the faith that is insanity; but al opinion that is bred of narrowness that has a e is the thing and its horrible The Court proposes that with the of faith go the doctrine of personal ind the disposition to fight individuals. re able to de Let these the slaughter of babes and go David—with no slings, how tion to hit below the belt livans and the Goliaths 1 Queensbery rules, Other: y are the meanest of cowards, a rotten borot fu sit noble and the purpose out end. nglish election & nd sustains and strengthens the propo: rullian strain makes serf from the beginni These are the unavoidable results of free trade nd; but it does not follow | just that man is a man of the who smashes windows nd commits other out hare refused end themselves, int me ass as another, the bet owners ion is as prope I themselves by good nani ter to disguise their v of the nan thereof, ful strike is prope will of the rioters, or of the mob, is a th be put down with cold steel approy bee dino The pew cruel coward can ever enter the kingdom of heaven: There is such a thing as too much faith The babe of a woman sat down ina tub of hot water. The woman put the child to and prayed the Lord to. save it whbors called in a ship in order to give pape his whole atte ry cases the disposi paper in behalf of off emoluments, and journalism ¢ atment mer will becom t become poor is th Tn too r no such It is true that Mr s the edit district attorney vurt prefers to think that no sondid shad todo with his. seda vector, contemptuous t dressed the child's injuries and now the won the doctor are to. Ul well, that woman in hot wi ould save herself by but the consid perhaps, to tr experiment P whether ae most excellent:judgment and Probably she would how! stead of praying, but her worse than that I —The PROGRESS IN EDUCATION. The students of Y They get intoxies ties to which they are not invited. ladies toe e made the child sutfer. Yourt is reminded by this of a num have a new game. dand go te dancing par There they re with the gainst L knock down such of the gentle we their barbarity, In f this kind, which was ing, the exercises we various helpless innoc that nc me or shout, 0! their will, a men press » Lo suppor t amount arise from c the first experiment " the other eve not entirely healthfu pacity, and the proposition | ene finally kie Almighty proposes crime that good | of ‘ it is not rational. When Abre- | ham proposed to offer up Isase there sto ave been noe the feelings of that promising youth; and ina number of | jiappen to remain out of jail ce—notably that of the Masstchu ple who buteherwd their children for | ry his love by s rate his lov tim, Self-lo The may The students et and some ill, there are educational amusement, ‘eno doubt: th ses will be by such of th he wrongs his vi e is the m ed into the st them were badly hurt. 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