Judge, 1921-05-07 · page 3 of 32
Judge — May 7, 1921 — page 3: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine, May 7, 1921 This is primarily an **advertisement for apartment rental**, not political satire. The illustration shows a couple sitting in a furnished apartment with the sign "FOR RENT $150 per Month" prominently displayed above them. The caption reads: "Disposed: And yet they say 'All the world loves a lover.'" **The joke**: The satire targets housing scarcity and high rents following World War I. The couple appears evicted or displaced—they're literally sitting among moving boxes and household goods. The ironic caption suggests that despite romance being universally beloved, landlords and economic circumstances show no such affection for lovers. It's social commentary on the postwar housing crisis and its impact on young couples trying to establish homes.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
JUDGE “THE HAPPY sAIEDIUM” L comicbooks.com