Judge, 1932-02-06 · page 7 of 36
Judge — February 6, 1932 — page 7: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Judge Magazine Page Analysis **Top Cartoon ("Hi, Hatch!"):** This depicts what appears to be a political or judicial figure being carried aloft on a platform, surrounded by supporters with raised implements (possibly torches or weapons). The caption "Hi, Hatch!" suggests this references a specific public figure named Hatch, though the exact identity and event remain unclear without additional context. The triumphant imagery could satirize overconfidence or excessive celebration. **Bottom Cartoon:** Shows a domestic scene where someone in bed expresses regret about "buying that Great Dane." The humor is straightforward—purchasing a large dog created household complications, likely referencing space issues or costs. **Left Column:** Contains brief satirical commentary on baseball salaries, Hollywood depression films, banking law revision, and other contemporary topics, characteristic of Judge's social commentary style.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Detonation That great burst of indignation you don’t hear these days is the public's reaction to the shocking reduction in baseball players’ sala Then there's the Hollywood pro- ducer who was heartbroken because none of his directors knew how to make a movie of the depression. Revision of New York's banking laws is again being asked. Our idea would be to make it a felony to sell a cashior a suitcase Nowadays the bull in’ the china shop is mostly the clerk's sales-talk. And if the cities continue to pub- lish public-enemy lists, we will soon have compiled «a Who's Hoodlum in America. Another thing the 4 iploved ip hockey spend the rest of the winter in comfortable hospital beds. could do is take If this weather doesn't agree with you, remember one. It forceasters cither, muioare not the only vosmtagree with the weather “1 certainly made a mistake in buying that Great Dane.” “Hi, Butch!” icbooks.com