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Judge, 1921-04-16 · page 3 of 32

Judge — April 16, 1921 — page 3: what you’re looking at

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Judge — April 16, 1921 — page 3: Judge, 1921-04-16

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Cartoon, April 16, 1921 This cartoon depicts a domestic scene with three figures: a man in a suit confronting another man while a woman observes. The caption reads: "AND YOU'RE THE DAUGHTER OF THE WOMAN WHO ACCEPTED ME!" The joke appears to be a generational quip about marriage and acceptance. The man on the left seems to be discovering or commenting on the paternity of the younger person in the center, connecting them to "the woman who accepted" him—likely meaning a woman who accepted his marriage proposal years earlier. This is social satire about familial relationships and the long-term consequences of matrimonial choices. The specific historical or political context remains unclear without additional page context, but it's typical of Judge's domestic humor from the early 1920s.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

©cB491531 121991 JUDGE “THE HAPPY AIEDIUM” New Yor, Aprin 16, 1921 “AND YOU'RE THE DAUGHTER OF THE WOMAN WHO ACCEPTED we!” 3 comicbooks.com