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Judge, 1923-03-03 · page 4 of 36

Judge — March 3, 1923 — page 4: what you’re looking at

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Judge — March 3, 1923 — page 4: Judge, 1923-03-03

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This appears to be a satirical cartoon about wealth disparity and greed, likely from the early 20th century based on the art style. The image shows a wealthy, rotund gentleman (wearing glasses and patterned clothing) being attended to by multiple servile figures. One figure holds an umbrella over him; others appear to be his servants or subordinates in various poses of submission or service. The caption references "want buy a cow?" with a punch line about "There is no one at my place to take care of the brute. What matter, your wife ain't." The satire mocks wealthy industrialists who accumulate excessive servants and possessions while treating their dependents—particularly wives—as merely another commodity or burden to manage. It critiques both conspicuous consumption and marital exploitation among the elite.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

lace to take care of the beast.” “Dearie me, no! There is no one at my p “What's matter, your wife ailin’?” “Wanta buy a cow?”