Judge, 1925-04-25 · page 5 of 36
Judge — April 25, 1925 — page 5: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page is primarily **advertising and lifestyle content** rather than political satire. The main elements include: 1. **"Old Town Canoes"** advertisement (top left) promoting affordable canoes for vacation leisure. 2. **Musical instruments ads**: A Buescher saxophone and Popular Radio magazine promotion, targeting middle-class consumers. 3. **"The Fragrance of Fresh Cut Lilacs"** - a perfume advertisement for Ed. Pinaud's Lilac Vegetal. 4. **"Art Prints"** section (right side) advertising "The Curse of Drink," a three-color reproduction print about alcohol's dangers—a temperance-era social message. The page reflects **1920s consumer culture and moral reform concerns**, with ads targeting leisure activities and products. The temperance art print suggests Judge's engagement with Prohibition-era social issues, though the overall page emphasizes commercial advertising over political commentary.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
| | — Days that merit fond reflection Days when the lake is sky is cloudless overhead—these are such days as vacation dreams are made of. Get an “Old Town.” Here is a sturdy canoe of unusual beauty. “Old Towns” are low in price, $64up. From dealer or factory crystal clear and the The 1925 catalog shows all models in It is free. Write for your Oto Towns Canoe Co., ourth St., Old Town, Maine, U.S.A. True-Tone Saxophone Easiest of all instruments to lay and one of the mest autifal. Three Gret lessons BENNIE KRUECER Director Bennie Kroeger and He Orchestra, Bruns- wick Kecords, nig 4 nt and Orchestra Instrument eae Buescher BLocn ee EKART, uA “POPULAR RADIO is without question the best radio magazine” You will understand when you see it how very interesting and valuable it is to every owner of a radio receiving set and to every one considering the purchase of a set uu The complete lamppost. They drink ice water. Later, water's children flow in, but get their Seet wet and are changed into babbling brook:s.) Thyroid—AM_ this is very inter- esting, but it lacks mutuality. It is not equitable. Warum sollen wir hier bleiben? Yet T dislike Germans. They're too. Myra—Je ne sais quoi. (A trained goldfish walks in accompanied by three Finns and a young Swedish safety match. The fish strikes the match and the latter flares up finally | drowning the fish in the flour barrel.) | Chorus by Company—Hurray for Ring and ting-a-ling and all this silly sort of thing, but it pays. (The curtain falls. Niagara Falls. Sioux Falls and falsetto.). Arthur L. Lippmann ice Weather Lore “Did you e winter than thi “Yes; one. “When was that?” “One summer that I Duluth.” —John Smith in Buffalo Eve. News er sec a pleasanter spent. in sae | He—I say, I wish you would not call me Mr. Jenkins. She—Oh, but ['ve only known you for such a little while: but (sweetly) why don't you wish me to call you Mr. Jenkins? | “Merely Robinson.” because my name is Tit-Bits (London) Do You Know gem.) 2 The Fragrance of Fresh Cut Lilacs is in ED. PINAUD’S LILAC VEGETAL ED. PINAUD BLDG. ~NEW YORK ART PRINTS THE CURSE of DRINK By Maud Tousey Fangel This popular reproduction in three colors should be framed and hung conspicuously over the table at which you mix your cocktails. Size 9° x12." Sent postpaid to any address for 25 cents JUDGE Art Print Department 627 West 43d St., New York, N.Y comicbooks.com