Judge, 1923-05-12 · page 3 of 36
Judge — May 12, 1923 — page 3: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page (May 9, 1923) This page contains humor pieces and illustrations rather than political cartoons. The main cartoon, "The Curb Market" by C.T. Meyses, depicts a woman street vendor selling goods from a car—likely referencing the informal markets and street commerce that existed during the early 1920s. The text includes humorous anecdotes about college life, courtship, and social observations. Pieces like "On Women" and "The Campus Cynic Says" offer satirical commentary on dating customs, marriage, and female behavior typical of 1920s collegiate humor. The overall tone is lighthearted social satire about modern manners and youth culture rather than serious political commentary. The magazine targets educated, college-educated readers with witty observations about contemporary social conventions.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
MAY -31523 ©cqgszeqq0 Suggestions by Art Bragg, Stanford ’24 “THAT'S enough the pickpocket wallet. ‘oiled again. it was being w rike me,” where you light “I've seen the the first of June. When a man’ mean that he hi Grate sport—ec by Joe from you,” remarked as he removed his vic- cried the nickel cigar as pped up. said the match, “and see last of Mae,” said he on well corned does that nsitive feet? ning out the fireplace. Auto-suggestion is all very well in its way, but it’s hard to convince yuur- you were just scratching your head when you tip your hat to the wrong girl. “Two heads than one,” rem professor as he matched his last quarter with the. janitor. Les Conklin, C lumbia '23, tt Then: From Stone Age to Iron Age to Gold- en Age took cen- turies. Now: From Bar Age to Dry Age to Hootch age in five years. Boy, the world sure does mover: these d Sidney K.E wood, Carnegie Tech. ree They wer ing the street. It was muddy. She exclaimed: “We'll get mired in the mud!’’ To which he 1- lantly answered, “Y mean I'll get mired youll get admired. Edna M. Traylor U. of Denver ’ ery cross- and Frosh—I thought you had a case on her. ph—I did, but circumstances alter “B. Diffenbaugh, Franklin and Mar- Drawn by riends of Mine Colman Ryan, U. of Notre Dame Me window shopping. Nor can I see Miss Lula Himes. C. T. ME “The Curb Market.” 1 WITH WHICH IS COMBINED LESLIES WEEKLY RNGIRVIN~R~ On Women (As Aristotle by Peter G. Denker, C. three categories thought of: Women as a sex; women in general; and women in particular. Of women as a sex—as opposed to men. little can be said except that they are opposed to men, either by inclination, by fashion, or by simulation. Hence we have the institution of marriage. Of women in general still less can be said, except that, generally speaking, they are—generally speaking. Of women in particular least can be said, except by women in general and men who are not particular. In fine, of women nothing can be said, except what has been left unsaid by men in gen- eral, men in’ particular and men who understand them. And the last declined as civilization advanced. ttt The Campus Cynic Says by Roland D. Hussey, Boston U,'23 not neces- ary to wish a many happy of her twenty - first birthday. She’ll have them any- way. ‘A girl’s father may object to your burning the gas inside, but his daughter | doesn’t care how much you burn outside. A girl can be the picture of health without being painted at all. A five-cent girl is always cheap. The only bonds of matrimony that interest a girl are financial ones. There's very little diffe ence betw the spellings finance and fian —and less than that in the meaning. st The next person found tampering with our canary bird is going to be sorry for it. Just last week some one fed the poor thing bird-shot and he sang bass for a week, might have written) women be Northeutt Ely, Staaford '24 comicbooks.com