Judge, 1925-09-12 · page 2 of 37
Judge — September 12, 1925 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This page is primarily a **reader contest**, not political commentary. Readers are invited to "draw your own conclusions" by completing an unfinished comic strip, with the winning entry to be published in Judge magazine. The three completed panels (numbered 1-3) show a slapstick narrative: a man in a hat jumping between furniture, apparently fleeing or chasing something, culminating in a train scene where he appears to be in peril or distress below a bridge. Panel 4 is blank—reserved for reader submissions. The contest offers a $25 prize and specifies that drawings should be submitted by September 21. This is an **interactive entertainment feature** rather than satire or political commentary—typical of Judge's humor-focused content from this era (1925, based on the masthead date).
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
a DRAW YOUR OWN CONCLUSIONS! JUDGE will pay $25 for the funniest ending to this Comic Strip You do not have to he an artist. TR eee See Wil bes Selector, for its origi- mail to the D. Y. O. C. Editor of Jupce, 627 West 43d Street, New York, nality of idea, humor, and cleverness in drawing. fessional artists are barred. N.Y. Draw your end: in ink, on white paper, the same size as Space No. 4; or if Send as many “endings” as you wish, but none will be returned. Contest closes you preter, make your sketch right on No. 4 space, cut ic out (No. 4 only) and September 21. Winning ening appears in the issue of October 10 Contest No. 7. Y.. under Act of March 3. 1879. $5.00. year. 13ce s. Norman Aatboay. Vice-President « Joseph T. ' to the fact that every article and picture appearing comicbooks.com