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Judge, 1920-10-30 · page 1 of 32

Judge — October 30, 1920 — page 1: what you’re looking at

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Judge — October 30, 1920 — page 1: Judge, 1920-10-30

What you’re looking at

# Judge Magazine Cover Analysis (October 30, 1920) This cover illustrates the phrase "Put Yourself in the Poor Girl's Place," depicting two young children at a vanity mirror. The child on the left wears an ornate, decorative hat and holds fancy accessories, while the child on the right gazes at her reflection, admiring or envying the finery. The caption reads "Cutting a Shine." The satire appears to mock class pretension and children's mimicry of adult vanity culture. By showing poor or working-class children playing dress-up with elaborate hats and cosmetics, Judge satirizes either: - The aspirational materialism of lower classes - Adults' indulgence of children's vanity - The fashion industry's excess The phrase "put yourself in the poor girl's place" suggests ironic sympathy, inviting readers to contemplate what drives such acquisitive behavior across social classes.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

OctoseR 30, 1920 Price 15 Cents ‘*CutTTInG A SHINE™ comicbooks.com