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Judge, 1886-10-23 · page 10 of 19

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© Times aff®so harrud, Missus Bro Ind Oi wud ti I hushand, rest his sew Judge’s Charge. THE LATER CLAIMANT. What a despicable wretch that little man Benzine is!) Why. he actually has the impu- want his own wife, and that too after ement of her. By-and-bye he will have the impu- denee to claim his own children FAIR PLAY. The tts of mond. last week stood by ac twithstanding the ited by the nly main has as good as he used to have t labor at Rich loved dele 1 to him: pr hits of labor. This after all, the blac 1 hisown living ing of others nort was m1 PHELPS AND THE COURT. Phelps says ‘that cle against Mr. Bayard ong Umitted to the presence of t] gulations of her maj nd Minister P' t is lamentable that 1 then: Minist ne oman rules and re must be revised must do the revising. that gentleman was not called in te up. DON'T. There must be no union of church and state. There must be no fusion of polities and hys ulies who are working for Henry . but what would it profit 1a mayor and temporarily lost their sense of pr wh if they lost the ety toot Gent it would be nem but what if you made specel that a have the right to let vou vote : to the sacrifices most? How mueh 3 tle you would gain ! THE BABY AND THE WOMAN. “Twas jed by the baby and the woman,” whispers somebody in the awe ourt’s VT) phy, it's a pity ye don’t sell the t same, Missa Cazey, ownly ther face iv animal,” him remoinds me iv me poor ~) "Oh, Can Well, one by in the innocence T said Tsang ‘Rock of Ages. cleft for nd heavy. The baby ip to its part of the performance ned, but it nid with « myself. * L wi a asic t 1 tire out t in Me wasn't qui T paused for breath it filled in those unavoid. ludes with a vehemence that I shall There no pause between rs or words of verses or pieces. The be went right on. [ imagine the baby. reco; nized the fact that there v A FAMILIAR SAYING PROVES TRUE. No room for argument. __jhim with too pe and was determined to win it. [tis an infer nally bright baby. 1 went from ‘Rock of : nd from that to * Old Hun- ow T lay me which isn't a piece except as I sin i behold you! the baby took that deli 18 a resounding insult and whacked at me with a commingling of Offenbach and Vou Bulow, with snatches of psalms and ballads improvised. t) . Which took the very soul out of me. Well, by George! I | wanted to throw up my engagement and to bed.” The court understands the situation. proposes rebuke. The gentleman wl plains is so irritable that he can’t be reasona- ble. If the left the rock of ages with its awfully penetrating voice, it did not necessa- rily cleave it forthe sole benefit of its pa. That i individual has the most insufferable of all \tism. He assumed too much in the beginning lof the argument. The baby cleft the rock ages for the benefit of all mankind—he ou to have known enough to know that. an,” moreover, is not t If the moth nd it com: Hit sing to the bab; Canaan” s: Kes the singer re yy land | when shall I ng is said or inferred with The singer sings in the first person, singular number. He wantst to Canaan, and it isa natural inference that proposes to. re the baby. He is so ex: ated that he isn’t fit for home, Canaan : yet he cl ws that Canaan other person's—not even the baby's The court drops this part of the question, wever, The happy. While he baby as the bi tru a baby | go to thee ? regurd to the wi was to. If as unjust to the it istindoubtedly his heart he pitied the 1 and hated himself be: to temporarily 1 he mother prot nt in ay dow he yi by. Then, te in marks. “Charles,”> she probably said,“ you can't quiet the baby that ways Your disturbs me so that T can't of the baby continued, the thind corner. you'll find shelf of the buttery, | between the vermifuge and th —that abominable butte two flights down, and those incomprehen: bottles, and that intolerable shelf, and eve servant off to some miserabl includi the nurse who nev (never sits up todo the slightest thing for the baby. The jury will observ It will not forget, I ‘considerations or the hear in mind the |; the jsyrup lefthand st both si of the case. . the intervening yelose, twill at comes It nestles in the mother Both conspirators tured to the dim ap The look of what see cence, of unqite standing the recent faces—though ni | disarm a profess | He considers | the woman and the baby v There isnobody.” continues Charles. © who is wholly Twill spare them.” Hesleeps and in about two minutes, as it seems to hi | the bell rings the awful morning warning. is time to get up, Then the hab man—thongh mostly the baby arms. re Their faces are confidence notwith ravation, on both their on the baby's—woulk sin. Charles relents. E afterall, It ad the wo: