Life, 1902 · page 1 of 3
Life — 1902 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Content Page Analysis This is a **table of contents** from Life magazine, not a cartoon or editorial page. It lists article and cartoon titles with their page numbers, organized alphabetically. Notable entries suggest Life's satirical range included: - Political commentary ("I Think I'll Walk [President]," referencing a sitting president) - Social criticism ("Marrying a Poor Man," "Infant Industry") - Literary/cultural commentary ("LIFE's Theatrical Primer") - Economic satire ("Money Talks," "Millionaire and Connoisseur") The presence of entries like "No Love Lost" and "Mesquite-Minded Man" indicates typical turn-of-century American humor targeting social pretension and contemporary mores. **Without seeing the actual cartoons or articles**, I cannot identify specific figures, caricatures, or explain particular satirical points. This is purely an index to content published elsewhere in the magazine.