Judge, 1890-08-02 · page 19 of 20
Judge — August 2, 1890 — page 19: what you’re looking at
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JUDGE A MIDSUMMER LECTURE |_,,232,.is ti, state the proper 5 ep | temperature for court- By Allan Forman, Editor of the New York Journalist. | SPENT fOr court SS Oa CHIC RAM T he No chain is stronger than its weakest link. ulld, men o} i i e i fg uae a very calling sho Ateneo Accident insurance to be good for anything la that doesn’t belong to P rh. , cc m: ha lesen peichage the must be good all through. No other accident company lost columns of a news- gives insurance to be compared with that aoseittsaiee: | BOSE furnishea by THE UNITED STATES ars MUTUAL ACCIDENT ASSOCIATION, which is the Gushley—"A man who largest, because the public have is disappointed nowadays A d bate cannot throw away, bis ccli e nt learned that it is the best. $5,000 ife in battle, as jilt 5 ries tt i heroes did in ‘the ae full indemnity insurance costs a member $15 per year if Kushby —* That is u : spat heviaae made in one payment. 13 years but what is the matter with getting a position as I hsurance of success: $2,000,000.00 losses a. base-ball_ umpire ?"— Chatter, paid; $100,000.00 emergency fund deposited with the Tramp —" Dear mad- | Atlantic Trust Company. something to varm me | CHARLES B, Pret, James R. Prrener, ?" Lady —" 1 should . Me eee ay ale toate President. Sec’y & Gen’l Manager. 920, 322 & 324 Broadway, New York. Mr. Ailan Forman, editor of the Journalist, each week di a lecture on some topic in the columns en Hares of his interesting and popular paper, and in the issue | "amp didn’t wait to hear of last week he took for his subject, "A Look Ahead.” | More.— Boston Herald. This is what he said : Newspaper werkers have, justly or unjustly Rained the repu- teeomnlaed bythe sore tnisiggent portion ef tne pubtie ast An exchange says that ‘ta model wife is one who Rewanaper iren, as & rule; ear good salaries, the ea of she Bookseller —"Yes; we sell them by | thinks her husband knows more than her kin.” ‘This seedy reporter and the outof-elbows editor, s0 carefully {os- | the thousand.” ‘the women appreciate them, eh?" | may be true, But to come up to the requirement would tered bee losg-earet newspaper: pulloon, is rapidly ent **Oh, the women don't buy them ; their husbands do.” | put an awful strain on the wives of some husbands.— Te po often true. I the accounts ofthe charity fund of = 7 ine New Vous Breas Clb could be mage public they Would tel = “eS BUSH'S FLUID FOOD Perry tery area papel fl inet el oo laid at rest iy Tt is not probable that any man seriously contemplates the possibility of having his wile and family dependent upon the ress Club or the charity of his fellow-workerss. The very sanguine, hopeful, resttent temperament which makes him care- jesse not perhaps of to-morrow, but certainly of the day after, Aind’as for the possibility of deaih fa the near or even the distant ‘ature, never enters his head, Hebas a vague feeling that he will live as long as he sces anybody else alivey and in the mean- time that hucky stroke. that fortune, which fe always dancing “ wwilkol-the-wispelike in’ the future, will be secured, but ti er dies, the we-kly ary has been spent,and the wife and | “THE acutely sick as well as chronic invalids are starved daily while using beef tea, calf's-foot jelly and the peo are the si leree cabs MERIC Oa toate ie various f extracts made by application of heat. None of these things contain a particle of nutrition, results fonter the general opinion ef jaurnanaue taervidenes: | nor do they contribute anything for the support of the vital processes, but act solely as stimulants—not lie Jour naciathas steadily and earnestly urged thenecessty, | restoratives. holds in| solution the albuminolds, and salts of lean raw the duly of insurance upon its readers. At the risk of being | meat, prepared by a cold process preserving the life-sustaining and tissue- ranked as a crank, I have utilized every available text and 7 Py * Preached the insurince scfimon Uatil it seeasa very trite theme | Duilding properties of the meat itself. Consult your doctor about it. eed. That my perisient efforts have had some effect Tam | ———~ ratibed to know, Bat hardly a week passes that from some faryol the country the subject is not forced upon my notice be used as a luxury for its exhilarating fafluence and as a ters from widows—pathetic letters—asking for work and remedial agent in Debility, Languor, Rheumatism, and SS urging the fact that the dead husband was a newspaper man, Weakness of the Joints, for Tender Feet. Nasal Catarrh, bften not so much for the purpose of arousing sympathy a8 a \ th BATH etc. Extracted directly from the "foaming billows” by By simply dissolving this Salt in ordinary water, This can Sort of guarantee of fitness and experience. Letters which are Evaporation. at coe of tho most anlubrious, epots,oai the so carhest, 99 appealing, and offenses eo hopeless: “Tbe fret 4 erapormuin,\=t coe{otihe mont salubricenispess)oa\ thy qqsstion which rags (0 dne's mind under such circumstances i. svatet; at the same time it is purised and entirely freed ofall as he insured?" And the letter furnishes the rely, Itiseot | AT HOME, 2 res habuettes oneh co Dreleenatn teed te suceer!s probable that any one of these" good fellows” who have left > oo “ those near and dear to them to face the hard strugarle with the % A. J. DITMAN, Druggist, world had any idea Of doing so They fully intended to. pro- BY USING Broadway, Corner Barclay Street, Now York. Vide for them **some time." “Te is so easy to put off life inaur- vas ance. "Tt isnot a pleasant thing to contemplate; itis a sort of a nuisance to go through with the prescribed forms, but it is a source of solid comfort when it isdone. There is a ( of i confidence, a pleasirg sensation of a duty performed, which f more than pays for the trouble. AS to the expense, that should not and need not enter into the = 42 consideration.. Life insurance in these days is not expensive, é ie marae hare hs Mo er MANGES “Sughtto be done? Sse cn tren gt ape ober he reat Ry — Ought stands for nothing’ Aariifria ans partie cane eee § The house ought to becleaned- Seeger oa caste opening cepa er paper ied A EAR A creas Ly Angst ntaher mare "rit at ensue Toe peed next house-cleaning and be convinced. for a newspaper man. Finally, there is one good time to insure ; that is oz, ie aA eee “IGNORANCE ("aid ignorance ie eee fees bain Pte no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better Surplus... Fanon clean them in the old way than not at all; but the modern New: Ammuranes as::is3 soe and sensible way is to use SAPOLIO on paint, on floors, on Ineome: vores B39} 28828 windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To be _H. B. HYDE, President. JAMES W. ALEXANDER, Vice-President. ignorant of the uses of SAPOLIO is to be behind the age. Press oF Fiess & Rioae, FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YorK. comicbooks.com