Judge, 1925-09-26 · page 6 of 37
Judge — September 26, 1925 — page 6: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This illustration depicts a seaside golf scene with a humorous exchange. Two golfers appear to be playing near dramatic white cliffs (possibly Dover or similar coastal location). The caption reads: "CADDY—Gee, mister, ye missed it. 'I did not!'" The joke relies on a simple premise: the golfer insists he didn't miss his shot, contradicting what the caddy (and presumably the reader) clearly witnessed. This represents a common early-20th-century satirical theme mocking golfers' self-delusion or dishonesty about their poor play. The illustration style and setting are typical of Judge magazine's leisure-class humor targeting affluent readers who golfed. No obvious political commentary appears present—this is straightforward recreational satire about sporting vanity rather than social commentary.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Cappy 3 be § y & s x S x 3 < a ~~ “I did not!” comicbooks.com