Judge, 1926-05-08 · page 2 of 36
Judge — May 8, 1926 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This cartoon from *Judge* magazine appears to be a social commentary about a woman named Kelly from Springfield who "won't skid" — likely a reference to safe driving or avoiding accidents, given the automobile and railroad tracks visible in the scene. The humor seems to play on a contrast: a well-dressed woman stands confidently near a utility pole and train tracks, while a farmer expresses surprise at seeing her there, identifying her as "Miss Kelly from Springfield." The joke likely hinges on Kelly's reputation for safe, cautious behavior ("won't skid") being tested or contradicted by her presence in this potentially dangerous location. The cartoon satirizes either feminine propriety, reckless behavior, or the emerging automobile culture of the early 20th century, though the specific social reference remains somewhat unclear without additional historical context.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST NUMBER OF JUDGE Reser Oerson wologer tg LFELLOWS. FARMER—Who was that lady I seen you with? “That was Miss Kelly from Springfield.” comicbooks.com