"Sure, I told you the silks were worth four hundred dollars."
"Well, I know those kind of people; they are small people and they never did that amount of business in all their lives, let alone one month." Or,
"Don't you know that neighborhood; all the cars speed up whenever they get there."
"Why, yesterday I was getting off a car and the conductor pulls the bell, etc., etc."
"No, I ain't prejudiced against the railroad; I ain't got nothing against the railroad."
"Of course, we ain't going to decide this case on sympathy or prejudice. But that boy's Irish and he looks like he come of good honest people."
"Vy, I don't see no difference whether he is Irish—or Yiddish; vot ve vant is justice."
"Now see here, my friend, if you think you're going to make this a racial matter you're mistaken. Just because that boy's Irish you needn't think he ought not to get nothing. You're prejudiced, that's what you are."
"Oh, let's get down to the evidence anyway; what we want is to decide."