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Judge, 1904-12-03 · page 4 of 16

Judge — December 3, 1904 — page 4: what you’re looking at

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Judge — December 3, 1904 — page 4: Judge, 1904-12-03

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page contains mixed editorial content rather than explicit political satire. The main sections include: **"Judge's Favorites"** features Dorothy Tremaine with a poem about college life—typical light social commentary. **"Why He Resisted"** presents a courtroom dialogue where a judge questions an officer about arresting someone during a "rush-hour" arrest. The humor hinges on the officer's admission that the arrested person "fearfully violent" and fought them—suggesting the arrest itself may have been unnecessarily rough. It's social criticism of police conduct, albeit gentle. **"More Truth Than Poetry"** offers brief humorous anecdotes about everyday life. The bottom illustration shows children playing, captioned about selling a car—simple domestic humor. Overall, this appears to be a lighter entertainment-focused issue without major political targets, emphasizing social observation and domestic comedy typical of early 20th-century Judge magazine.