Judge, 1924-05-10 · page 13 of 36
Judge — May 10, 1924 — page 13: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Cartoon Analysis This page contains two satirical cartoons about marital infidelity and polygamy. The **top cartoon** shows a man at what appears to be a social venue, telling someone he's searching for his wife rather than seeking entertainment—a joke about marital obligation. The **bottom cartoon** mocks "Mormon Smith" traveling with multiple women simultaneously. The humor relies on anti-Mormon stereotypes prevalent in early 20th-century America, specifically referencing historical polygamy practices in the LDS church. The phrase "carrying a spare" treats wives as interchangeable objects, like replacement automobile tires. The cartoon's satire targets both the man's casual approach to multiple marriages and—through exaggeration—criticizes polygamous practices generally. The artist appears to be Cesare, based on the signature visible in the image.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
“What's your pleasure, sir?” “None. I'm looking for my wife.” “There goes Mormon Smith on a honeymoon with his latest wife.” “But why is he taking one of the others along?” “He believes in always carrying a spare.” ~ comicbooks.com