Judge, 1929-01-26 · page 2 of 34
Judge — January 26, 1929 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
This page is primarily an **advertisement for Texaco Golden Motor Oil**, not political satire. The top text promotes the oil's superior lubricating properties, claiming it flows instantly and contains "no cold-sensitive elements"—addressing a common problem with inferior oils that would solidify in cold weather. The imagery shows two men in winter clothing on skis in a snowy mountain landscape, presumably demonstrating the product's reliability in harsh conditions. The central diagram displays the oil's "full body in all grades," visualizing viscosity across temperature ranges. The ad directs readers to Texaco stations (identified by the Red Star with Green T logo) and mentions their gasoline product. This is commercial content rather than editorial cartoon material.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
tep on the starter. This oil flows! ( Instant- ly, every bearing gets a life-saving stream of pure lubricant. ( Not so with all oils. Some of them will actually solidify, and require time and engine heat to melt’ them, and all the while the moving parts are scuffing and scraping with little or no protection. @ Clean, clear and full-bodied Texaco Golden Motor Oil contains no cold-sensitive elements. , ’ ’ ’ 7 | Stop today where you see the Texaco Red Star with the Green T for Texaco Golden Motor Oil, the one oll that protects the engine trinter and summer —and the new and better Texaco Gasoline, the high test easy starting fuel. Texaco Petroleum Products —h_ Poe TEXACO GOLDEN MOTOR OIL<<<< THE TEXAS COMPANY comicbooks.com