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Judge, 1927-01-15 · page 9 of 36

Judge — January 15, 1927 — page 9: what you’re looking at

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Judge — January 15, 1927 — page 9: Judge, 1927-01-15

What you’re looking at

# "Judge" Cartoon Analysis This page titled "JUDGE" features a satirical cartoon criticizing modern youth behavior. The central image shows a young woman in 1920s flapper attire observing a lively party scene above her. The caption jokes about calling a "Sunday-school frost" (a modest social gathering) an "orgy"—mocking how contemporary youth exaggerated and used provocative language to describe innocent social events. The satire targets the generational divide of the Jazz Age: older Americans viewed flappers' relatively tame gatherings as scandalously wild, while young people dramatically described ordinary social occasions with sensationalized terminology. The "present-day flapper" represents the new, modern woman defying Victorian propriety through fashion, speech, and social behavior—a key source of cultural anxiety in 1920s America.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

Present-Day Fraprer—Gee! 1” think of calling a Sunday-school frost like that, an Orgy comicbooks.com