Judge, 1931-02-28 · page 14 of 36
Judge — February 28, 1931 — page 14: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1931-02-28. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
JUDGE Harp to Piease “The appellant was con- victed of forgery, his punishment fired at two years’ confinement in the penitentiary, and he is very much dissatisfied.” ss.v. Com- ralth (Ky. 270 S. WW. A New Svastitete vor Butter “The defendant, Mintz, will be re- strained from selling pickles, but not from serving them with meals as a substitute for butter. lem v. Borger N.Y. Law Jour- nal, June 20, Crearty Descripep “From the days of Socrates and Xantippe, men and women have known what is meant by nagging, although philology cannot define, or legal chemistry resolve it into its elements. Soft words but increase its velocity, and harsh ones its violence. Darkness has for it no terrors, and the long hours of the night draw no drapery of the couch around it....In the words of Solomon, ‘It is better to doell in the corner of the house: top, than with a brawl- ing woman in the wide house. Wilkinson v, W. iL kinson (Ga., 1925), 125 S.E. 856. Bitt’s Error “Bill Burdette had for- merly been a resident of Kansas, and while there placed a pretium affec- Ff tionis on a set of har- “Ox witht tir Dance” and in conse- “Both defendant and decedent at rhe was foratime tended this dance. There was also present in per- forcibly secluded from son that ubiquitous guest, ‘John Barleycorn,’ with- ordinary social inter- out whom it would seem to be impossible to properly course.” —State v. May carry on or ‘pull off’ the genus country dance with (1897), 142 Mo. 140. the ‘requisite pomp and circumstance.”—State v. Conley (Mo., 1914), 164 S.V. 193, NOBLE DECISIONS 12 comicbooks.com