Judge, 1934-08 · page 9 of 36
Judge — August 1934 — page 9: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis for Modern Readers This page from *Judge* magazine contains satirical commentary on gender relations and social behavior circa the early-to-mid 20th century. **"Slightly Sour Grapes"** mocks men's hollow promises before marriage—husbands claim they'll allow wives independence and poker nights, but the sarcastic tone suggests this won't happen. **"Warning"** offers cynical "advice" to women: those who enjoy luxury (mink coats) avoid housework, while men who use terms of false endearment are pursuing other women. It's social commentary on male infidelity and female materialism. **The two cartoons below** satirize domestic chaos: the first shows an intoxicated man being denied a ride ("too drunk to drive"), and the second depicts a comically chaotic moving company collision with a police patrol car. Both mock incompetence and recklessness, likely commenting on Prohibition-era drinking and general social disorder. The overall page critiques marriage, gender dynamics, and working-class mishaps with the satirical tone *Judge* was known for.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Judge Slightly Sour Grapes W HEN we are married well have fun, dear, We'll be h nd devout ; You'll play poker with T can have a few nights out. ppy P) the boys and IRLS who offer consolat Become the mothers of the I S all your fault eve h once Warning IRLS who like the feel of mink Leave the dishes in the sink N EN who call you “little pal” Are a for some ¢ gall iveLyNe Love Coorer. “You can't have it—you're too drunk to drive!” DoLLy BUSSFUDGET MOVING & STORAGE > PHONE JUKNBUG 90-0000 “Come on you dummies, step on it!” 7 comicbooks.com