Show i In a most learned dissertation on the I character of men who should be selected for Judges a near contemporary says I To Judge means Justice Not necessarily neces-sarily Our neighbor Judges dally but I to call its Judgments justice would be unforgiveable rashness With it to I Judge is merely to put its prejudices to work to call up Its baseborn instincts and to give them voice und if there Is any chance for partisan bias then our neighbor becomes as blind as the blind I goddess herself and no weight can be I laid upon Its scaly brain that can in I iluenco it in the leasL Indeed through I Its long apostrophe upon what Judge should be one can read between the lines a plan to push certain men to the front and to denounce others unless un-less they are of the ancient Bourbon faith and as narrow In theirenviron ments as Is the writer in our contemporary I con-temporary i i |