Judge, 1928-02-25 · page 1 of 36
Judge — February 25, 1928 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Cover Analysis (Feb. 25, 1928) This is Judge's cover advertising their "Liberty Number" issue. The illustration shows a man sitting reading Liberty magazine while a woman stands nearby holding a child, seemingly trying to get his attention. The headline "For the Love of Pete!" and the teaser "Everything But The Kitchen Stove" suggest satirical commentary on domestic life. The joke appears to mock husbands' absorption in reading Liberty magazine—a popular weekly publication of the era—to the neglect of family responsibilities. The woman's gesture of exasperation suggests frustration at being ignored. The phrase "everything but the kitchen stove" was a common 1920s idiom meaning "almost anything imaginable," implying the magazine contains such varied, engaging content that it distracts men from domestic duties. This satirizes both magazine culture and gender dynamics of the period.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
JUDGE ‘pLiberty Number cA Weakly for Everybody For the Love of Pete! IN THIS issuE EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN STOVE comicbooks.com