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Judge, 1926-09-18 · page 9 of 36

Judge — September 18, 1926 — page 9: what you’re looking at

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Judge — September 18, 1926 — page 9: Judge, 1926-09-18

What you’re looking at

# Judge Magazine Cartoon Analysis This cartoon depicts two vintage automobiles on a mountain road, with one driver (identified as "Justinian") asking another driver (named "Rosamond") about a "dinky little white line" on the road. The satire appears to reference the **novelty of road markings**—likely center line paintings that were relatively new infrastructure in early-to-mid 20th century America. The joke is that these drivers don't understand the purpose of the white line dividing the road, suggesting the public's unfamiliarity with modern traffic safety innovations. The cartoon mocks both ignorance of new driving conventions and perhaps the slow adoption of standardized road safety measures. The title "JUDGE" indicates this is from the satirical magazine of that name, known for social and political commentary.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

JUDGE Justinian—Hey, Rosamond! What's the dinky little white line for? “Search me!” z comicbooks.com