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Judge, 1926-03-27 · page 4 of 36

Judge — March 27, 1926 — page 4: what you’re looking at

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Judge — March 27, 1926 — page 4: Judge, 1926-03-27

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page 2 This page contains several pieces of light satirical humor rather than pointed political commentary: **Top cartoon**: Shows two men in bowler hats; the caption "Well, how's papa's boy been behavin' himself to-day?" suggests gentle mockery of an adult man being treated like a child by another. **"Don't Bet on Fights"** and **"Certain Places Are Named"**: These are humorous verses by Bill Sykes and Jack Shuttleworth, using clever wordplay (Native American place names; advice against gambling). **"Krazy Jacks"** and **"Stepping Out"**: Brief joke segments about marriage and domestic humor. **Bottom cartoon**: Features a woman with a bicycle and appears to reference "white wing" street cleaners—depicting a female street sweeper, likely satirizing early women's entry into previously male-dominated labor roles. The page emphasizes domestic humor and workplace satire rather than electoral politics.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

Don’t Bet on Fights No, don’t bet on fights, And don’t bet on races; But use your own judgment When you hold four aces. Certain Places Are Named Tuscarora San Louis Obispo Kankakee Okeechobee Ashtabula Patchogue Albuquerque Yonkers Tunkhannock Wahpetone Menominee So’s your old Pullman. Bill Sykes Ke Ff Serrous-minpEp Waite Winc—Aw take it fr'm me, George, another Moonshine Db: you remember, darling, When I swore there was no one but you? And held you tight, in the pale moon- light And promised to always be true? Do you remember, dearest, When I called you the light of my life And swore to my love by the heavens above And asked you to be my wife? Do you remember, darling, What you told me in reply? For the moon was full when I tossed that bull, And so, sweetheart, was T. Jack Shuttleworth Jemima | and Odessa’ kissing “Odessa little bit.” Stepping Out When a married man steps out he general steps right back again. Few husbands object if the wife makes it hot for them every morning —if it’s really good coffee. | ’S Quite All Right | | thing I don’t have nothin’ t' do with, an’ that’s wimmen! It'd play hell with my work, comicbooks.com