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Judge, 1925-01-10 · page 11 of 36

Judge — January 10, 1925 — page 11: what you’re looking at

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Judge — January 10, 1925 — page 11: Judge, 1925-01-10

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page contains two separate cartoons satirizing early 20th-century American life. **Top cartoon:** Two clergymen discuss a stained-glass window that allegedly increased church attendance by fifty percent. The satire mocks churches prioritizing aesthetic improvements or gimmicks over genuine spiritual substance to attract congregants. **Bottom cartoon:** An enthusiastic man asks a motorist about crossword puzzles while the driver appears frustrated with his car's mechanical problems. The humor contrasts the era's new fad—crossword puzzles—with practical automotive concerns. This likely satirizes how quickly Americans embraced novelty trends while ignoring more pressing matters, or mocks an oblivious enthusiast interrupting someone with urgent problems. Both cartoons reflect Judge magazine's characteristic social commentary on contemporary American behavior and priorities.

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

Extuvstast— Pardon me, Mister, but do you know anything about erossicord puzzles? ” comicbooks.com