Judge, 1921-01-15 · page 1 of 32
Judge — January 15, 1921 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Cover, January 15, 1921 This silhouette illustration by J.K. Beyans depicts a woman in a tattered, ragged skirt with a bird perched on her hat. The accompanying verse references "Grandma" who "never was a flirt" and wore no "saved-off skirt," yet "showed 'em just the same." The satire appears to comment on **changing women's fashion and morality** in the early 1920s. The contrast between the grandmother's modest dress and the contemporary woman's scandalously short, torn skirt suggests anxiety about rapidly evolving female dress codes and social behavior during the post-WWI era. The verse implies hypocrisy: older generations judged women by clothing while modern women ignored such standards. This reflects widespread cultural debates about flapper fashion and women's liberation during this period.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Only Regular People Permitted to Read this Number € > January 15, 1921 y U Price 15 Cents | 4 ) . Ht} | ( | i i | My Grandma never was a flirt, i Prude was her middle nume; ut , But though she wore no sawea-off skirt, 7 K. Bayan ste Onpariolt,: 198: elens Nee Loree She showed ‘em just the sume. Drean:by'}..K. Bavans { comicbooks.com