Judge, 1927-12-17 · page 12 of 36
Judge — December 17, 1927 — page 12: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Satire Page Analysis This page contains five unrelated comic panels satirizing early 20th-century American life: 1. **"Telephone booths for New Yorkers"** mocks cramped NYC public phone booths by showing figures squeezed into a tiny structure. 2. **"Design for a fountain"** jokes about a man eating grapefruit—likely satirizing nouveau riche or pretentious dining habits. 3. **Trick mirrors cartoon** ridicules a husband who installed deceptive mirrors throughout his house, claiming the expense was "worthwhile"—the humor likely refers to marital discord or vanity. 4. **"Myth America" joke** plays on "Myth" vs. "Mith," a simple pun about American mythology or tall tales. 5. **"Rented dress suit" cartoon** depicts someone struggling awkwardly in formal wear, satirizing social pretension or the discomfort of dressing above one's station. The overall theme addresses contemporary anxieties about class, urban life, and social performance in Jazz Age America.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
_\\ man gearing i ; (£ VA GRAPEFRUIT [1 ., U<--F Design for a fountain, This crafty husband installed trick mirrors. throughout the house some time ago and reports that the expenditure was well worth while. Boneartz—What is your fa- In vorite myth? Monanan—lI have always ii liked Mith America. How to appear at your ease in a rented dress suit. 10 comicbooks.com