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Judge, 1926-10-23 · page 11 of 36

Judge — October 23, 1926 — page 11: what you’re looking at

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Judge — October 23, 1926 — page 11: Judge, 1926-10-23

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page (October 23, 1926) This page presents a collection of satirical cartoons and jokes typical of Judge magazine's social humor. The main feature parodies a popular joke format ("Who was that lady I saw you with?"), reimagining it as Vanity Fair would present it—suggesting more sophisticated or urbane humor. The page includes several illustrations labeled "George Luks," "Bolia," "Marilo," and "Coveyrubias" (likely artist attributions). These depict fashionable 1920s figures in various scenarios: Egyptian-styled fashion, formal dining, and flirtation—all reflecting Jazz Age preoccupations with style, sophistication, and romantic intrigue. The satire targets upper-class social pretensions and the period's obsession with fashionable appearance and witty banter. The reference to Vanity Fair (a rival satirical magazine) suggests inter-publication rivalry in commenting on contemporary society.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

OCTOBER 23, 1926 That “Who Was That Lady I seen you with’—“that was -~ no lady, that was my wife” #\ | joke as the Vanity Fair lads might do it. comicbooks.com