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Life, 1888-12-20 · page 9 of 14

Life — December 20, 1888 — page 9: what you’re looking at

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Life — December 20, 1888 — page 9: Life, 1888-12-20

What you’re looking at

# Analysis This appears to be a satirical illustration about charitable giving during the holiday season. The visible text urges readers to "GIVE $10 WHERE IT WILL DO SOME GOOD," emphasizing the satisfaction of helping those in need. The image shows a wealthy woman in elaborate dress and jewelry, reclining in luxury among fashionable furnishings and cosmetics. The contrast between her opulence and the message about charitable giving suggests social satire—likely critiquing the wealthy for their self-indulgence during holidays when others suffer poverty. The illustration's style and composition imply the cartoon mocks upper-class complacency and appeals to readers' conscience regarding economic inequality. The specific target or occasion remains unclear without the full article context.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

MIND ON IT. HOLIDAYS. ‘LE IMBN, WHY NOT GIVE $s0 WHERE IT WILL DO SOME GOOD? atisfaction of being of some use in the world. comicbooks.com