Judge, 1925-06-06 · page 8 of 36
Judge — June 6, 1925 — page 8: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page contains two editorial cartoons satirizing British coastal life and working-class concerns. **Top cartoon:** A frustrated fisherman or boatman exclaims "Oh, for Gawd's sake!" while gesturing at the sea, likely commenting on poor fishing conditions or maritime hardships affecting working people. **Bottom cartoon:** Two figures examine a dilapidated boat near a cottage, with one saying "A little paint certainly makes a lot o' difference, don't it, mum?" This appears to satirize false economic optimism—suggesting that superficial improvements (literal paint) mask deeper structural problems in working-class life. The ramshackle setting emphasizes the gap between cosmetic fixes and genuine poverty or neglect. Both cartoons use working-class British dialect and seaside settings to critique social conditions or government policy, likely from the early 20th century.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
“Oh, for Gawd’s sake!” rest... Sea SSS OOF ame prey Fe +, vitae a Bi san sane aes Ne —_ ee comicbooks.com