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Judge, 1925-10-10 · page 3 of 37

Judge — October 10, 1925 — page 3: what you’re looking at

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Judge — October 10, 1925 — page 3: Judge, 1925-10-10

What you’re looking at

# Analysis This Judge magazine page satirizes a judge's curiosity about the fates of various public figures and institutions. The headline lists prominent subjects of speculation—individuals like Andrew Volstead, Billy Sunday, and Charlie Hughes; entities like "The Democratic Party" and "Hollywood"; and issues like Prohibition and the fate of Vice-President Dawes. The cartoon below depicts a married couple on a sofa. The husband says he "must have been crazy to marry you," while the wife retorts that *he* was the one who "said so every evening for months" before proposing. This domestic scene serves as the actual "joke"—a commentary on marital regret and how courtship rhetoric contradicts post-marriage behavior. It's a commentary on changing attitudes within marriage rather than political satire, using marital discord as comedic fodder typical of early-20th-century humor magazines.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

EAA AAR ‘“*LIFE LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS’? JUDGE WANTS TO KNOW WHAT’S BECOME OF— ANDREW VOLSTEAD? BILLY SUNDAY? HIRAM JOHNSON? DAYTON, TENN? WILLIAM McADOO? MAYOR HYLAN? CHARLIE HUGHES? JACK DEMPSEY? MA FERGUSON? THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY? HOLLYWOOD? PROHIBITION? THE OLD LADY IN DUBUQUE? VICE-PRESIDENT DAWES? Huspanp—I must have been crazy to marry you. Wire—You were, dearest—I remember you said so every evening for months. comicbooks.com