Judge, 1920-04-03 · page 3 of 36
Judge — April 3, 1920 — page 3: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Page Analysis This is a single-panel cartoon from Judge magazine (April 3, 1926) drawn by Waiter DeMaris. It depicts two women in a bedroom setting—one standing in an evening gown, one seated at a vanity mirror—in what appears to be a commentary on changing social mores during the 1920s. The dialogue reveals the joke's point: one woman asks why "Eddie" no longer takes her out to supper, and the other responds that he said "without wine he'd lost all interest in women and song." This satirizes Prohibition's impact on dating culture. The cartoon mocks how the ban on alcohol supposedly eliminated men's romantic interest, suggesting the era's social life and courtship had become dependent on illegal drinking. It's social commentary on the unintended consequences of Prohibition policy.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Volume 78 J U D G E Number 2005 $7.00 a Year 15 Cents a Copy “THE HAPPY eMEDIUM” Entered as at. 388 New York, Aprit 3, 192¢ Drawn by Warten DeM anes “Why doesn’t Eddie take you out to “He said without wine he'd lost all interest in women and comicbooks.com