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Judge, 1931-07-11 · page 4 of 36

Judge — July 11, 1931 — page 4: what you’re looking at

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Judge — July 11, 1931 — page 4: Judge, 1931-07-11

What you’re looking at

# Analysis This page is **primarily an advertisement**, not satire or a political cartoon. It advertises Probak razor blades, a real brand that achieved commercial success around the early 1920s. The ad's headline—"Here try a real blade"—emphasizes the product's superior quality. The text claims Probak blades won "world-wide popularity in little more than a year" due to their shock-absorbing construction and machine manufacture, which prevented edge distortion. The photograph shows two men in a barbershop setting, demonstrating the blade's performance. The pricing ($1 for 10 blades, 50¢ for 5) and guarantee ("You get far better shaves or your dealer refunds your money") were typical sales tactics of the era. This is straightforward product marketing, not editorial content requiring historical context for modern readers.

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

* Herve try a zeal blade ” EN discove superior blade—told their friends— sensational double-edge, double-ser construction and automatic 1 tine manufacture make Probak a marvel of shaving distortion by dispersing bending stra Probak is guarante ou get far better shaves or your dealer refunds your money —$1 for 10, 50 for 5. SHOCK-ABSORBING BLADE comicbooks.com