Judge, 1914-02-21 · page 2 of 24
Judge — February 21, 1914 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine, February 21, 1914 The left side of this page is an advertisement for the "Studio of Pictorial Art" (established 1903), promoting art instruction. The image shows what appears to be a sculptural head in profile. The right side is the magazine's masthead and table of contents for Vol. LXVI, No. 1688. The contents list numerous articles, editorials, and illustrations typical of Judge's satirical humor, including pieces on dancing, capitalists, women's suffrage, and social commentary. Without seeing the actual cartoon illustrations referenced in the contents, I cannot identify specific figures or explain particular satire. However, Judge was known for mocking political figures, social pretensions, and contemporary controversies. The "Suffrage Snapshots" entry suggests commentary on the women's suffrage movement, a major issue in 1914. To fully explain the satire would require viewing the actual illustrations.