Judge, 1918-08-10 · page 1 of 32
Judge — August 10, 1918 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Cover Analysis **Date & Context:** August 10, 1918—near the end of World War I. **Image:** A soldier (American, based on uniform) carries a young woman on his shoulders while she holds up papers, apparently legal documents or letters. Two civilians—a man and woman in civilian dress—stand nearby smiling. **Title:** "A Tribute from France" **Meaning:** This appears to be satirical commentary on American soldiers' romantic entanglements with French women during WWI occupation. The "tribute from France" likely refers sarcastically to the young woman—suggesting France is "offering" its women to American servicemen. The papers the woman holds may represent marriage documents or romantic correspondence, playing on contemporary anxieties about soldiers forming relationships abroad and the social complications this created. The cartoon reflects American attitudes about their military presence in France during the final year of the war.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
The Nation’s Perpetual Smileage Book udge Aucust 10, 1918 Price 10 Cents In € 15 Cent Copyright, Judge, New York City, 1918 te Drawn by Nowmax Rockweur A Trisute From FRANCE comicbooks.com