Judge, 1923-01-20 · page 6 of 36
Judge — January 20, 1923 — page 6: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This appears to be a satirical cartoon from Judge magazine depicting two women in conversation. The dialogue suggests social commentary about marriage choices: **Flossie Footlytes** asks whether her friend is marrying "one of those tired business men." **Tottie Twinkletoes** responds negatively, stating she'd prefer a husband who wants her to "sing and dance for him all the time." The cartoon satirizes early 20th-century attitudes about marriage and women's roles. It mocks both the stereotype of exhausted businessmen as husbands and the frivolous ideal of women as entertainers rather than partners. The elaborate costumes and theatrical styling reinforce this commentary on superficial expectations in courtship and matrimony. The satire targets shallow attitudes about what constitutes a suitable marriage match.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Flossie Footlytes—Are you going to marry one of those tired business men? Tottie Twinkletoes—Gracious, no! He’d want you to sing and dance for him all the time. comichooks.cem