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Judge, 1918-09-28 · page 6 of 32

Judge — September 28, 1918 — page 6: what you’re looking at

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Judge — September 28, 1918 — page 6: Judge, 1918-09-28

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page satirizes Americans of German descent during World War I, specifically their patriotism and financial commitment to the war effort through Liberty Bond purchases. The top cartoon shows a man being chased by his mother's washtub and washboard—a visual pun on the name "Willie Browns" (a play on "German"). The debate in the text centers on whether German-Americans can be truly patriotic. Characters named Abe and Morris argue that owning Liberty Bonds proves American loyalty better than ancestry alone. The satire mocks the era's suspicion of German-Americans' patriotism while ironically suggesting that financial compliance (buying bonds) substitutes for genuine belonging. The lower cartoon's caption "Hello, Larry! Where Are You Going? With the Blond Beast?" references German militarism stereotypes while depicting soldiers, likely commentary on American anti-German propaganda during the war.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

i é d Drown by ROB, Peucen Witte Brows, Prayinc Tank Win Hts Motuer’s Wasu-Boiter, Fricutens Deacon Aretesack Isto a Rexewat or THe Prence meantime, we would get paid interest on the thousand dollars at four and a quarter per cent. per annum. Now I ask you, Mawruss, ain’t that a wonderful way of paying bill “T bet yer,” Morris agreed again. ‘‘In fact, it makes paying bills so painless, Abe, that you really couldn't tell whether it’s you which is paying the bill to some- body else, y’understand, or somebody else paying the bill to you. Am I right or wrong? yet, Mawruss, there is some people born and raised in this countr and making a living here, which acts so insulted when you ask them to pay the country’s war bills by buying Liberty Bonds, Mawruss, that you might think the Liberty Bond salesman was approaching them with a subscription list to buy a wedding present for the daughter of their nearest competitor.” “Such people is pro- German in their hearts and should ought to be in- terred,”” Morris said. “You mean interned,” Abe corrected. “No I don’t,” Morris declared. “I mean_ in- terred, which last night I stood for half an hour on Lenox Avenue listening to one of them four minute men, Abe, and while I ad- mit that the feller didn’t have no more idea of time limits than the biggest loser Drawn by Jons Coxacnen “Hetto, Larry! in a Saturday night poker game, y’understand, just the same from what he said about the way the Germans is treating our boys which they capture, Abe, a pro- German in this country should not only be interred, but his life insurance should be canceled also.” “And at that, Mawruss, some of them fellers which refuses to buy Liberty Bonds would feel awful insulted if the Liberty Bond salesman called them pro-German in their hearts, Mawruss.” “Maybe they would,” Morris agreed, “but nobody can be pro-American in his heart if he is pro-German in his pocketbook, Abe, and that gocs no matter if his name is Stuyvesant or Sheikowitz, because nowadays you are a whole lot better American if you have one Liberty Bond in the safe deposit box than if you had six ancestors in the Revolutionary War.” “Sure I know,” Abe said, “but ancestors in the Revolutionary War is like blonde hair or a high tenor voice. You get born with them and they don’t cost you nothing, whereas with Liberty Bonds you can only have rem if you pay for them, and everybody ain’t got the money, Marwuss.” “Let 'em raise it then,” Morris said. “ With Liberty Bonds selling for a dollar down, a dollar a week, Abe, there’s no excuse for the great majority of people not owning anyhow one fifty-dollar bond, because practically everybody has got bad habits which they could cash for that much money. ‘Take smoking for instance, and there’s a habit which is practically worth a fifty-dollar Liberty Bond a month to some business men. In other words, Abe, if a feller has the tobacco habit to the extent of buying fifty dollars’ worth of cigars a month, let him exchange it for the Liberty Bond habit and buy fifty dollars’ worth of Liberty Bonds a month. Also if a feller has the liquor habit to the extent of buying fifty dollars’ Wuere Are You Goin’ With tue Bioxp Beast?” comicbooks.com