121 - 180 of 319 records
JM-032: Stock jugglers hold up panic head to a man with a sword

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three stock jugglers holding up a "panic" head on a stick to attempt to ward off someone seen only as a shadow on the wall, seemingly holding a sword. The shadowy figure appears to be heading toward a sign pointing to "Good government."
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-289: Dancing to the spring song

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting men representing nations dancing around "war" organ grinder. The League of Nations watches from a window.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-224: Cartoons of the day

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three different things in three separate panels: a man suggesting Constitution Week and Uncle Sam refusing, the same man imposing limitations of air armament on top of naval limitations in the U. S., and a personification of Germany on trial forβostensiblyβwar crimes.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-079: A good New Year's resolution

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a hand writing out a check from the National Bank of Chicago for the "Italian Relief Fund." Behind the hand, figures representing New York, St. Louis, California, and Chicago all carry bags or baskets labeled "Relief for Italy."
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-198: Congress is all out investigatin'

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting two men on a porch watching multiple Congressional committees investigating various things, such as a crime wave, railways, the peace plan, the "Tea pot dome oil lease scandal", charges against Bolshevism, and several different propaganda groups.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-305: Trying to prove that all things come to him who waits

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting nine men waiting outside FDR's door.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-266: Confidence

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Hoover, holding a "Continued Prosperity" banner, leading the G.O.P. elephant across the "Bridge to the Presidency".
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-066: How to raise more taxes

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three different scenes. In the first panel, women re-entering the United States with Mexican divorce papers are charged a tariff on the divorce. In the middle panel, a nobleman is leaving his wife, an American heiress, at home to go and buy some cigarettes. In the bottom panel, two men discuss going home if the exchange rate gets any worse.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-078: Three scenes of Uncle Sam excluding immigrants

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes in three different panels. In the top panel, Uncle Sam stands in a garden of Americanism surrounded by crows labeled "Unassimilable Asiatic Immigration" and "Undesirable European Immigration." In the middle panel, Uncle Sam is putting up two signs along the coast: "Exclusion of Chinese" and "Exclusion of Japanese Immigrants" while a figure representing Japan, a country who also has exclusion signs for China and Korea, watches. In the third panel, the same figure from Japan gestures with an angry face and Japanese Emigrants behind him, while Uncle Sam proudly shows off a sign welcoming only particular groups of Japanese people: tourists, students, scientists, etc.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-314: Victories and defeat

Description:
Editorial cartoon in two panels: U.S. wins battles in Pacific, loses them in Atlantic.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-228: All aboard the grand experiment

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Robert M. La Follette Sr. trying to get people to hop on his bandwagon along with Discontent, Labor, and New York Socialists.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-290: Death's new favorite

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting "Speed Mania" totals up more deaths than wars.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-108: If this weather continues, all the girls at the Charity Ball will wish they had worn the Russian costume

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a group of women in national costumes standing in a space filled with icicles. They all look at the woman wearing the Russian costume.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-038: Hindered progress when horses are different houses

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting the president and Uncle Sam appearing happy when both horses pulling their carriage along are Republican, signifying a Republican Senate and House. When the Senate is a Democrat horse, the carriage is at a standstill and both the president and Uncle Sam both have annoyed, unhappy expressions on their faces.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-231: A New Sign at the White House

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Calvin Coolidge cleaning house in the aftermath of the Harding administration.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-043: Wilson expanding the Monroe Doctrine while Uncle Sam worries about America

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting President Wilson standing on a globe and acting as a policeman of the world. Uncle Sam grabs his arm and says, "America first!" All over the globe, signs depict new orders and laws based on Wilson's expansion of the Monroe Doctrine. Wilson is credited with expanding the Doctrine to allow for "Missionary Diplomacy" in locations such as Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-296: Problem of conduct

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three American businessmen profiting from WWI. In the next panel, they turn away from promise of wealth and say "Never again" since the costs to nation not worth it.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-242: Chairman Butler reports to his chief

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting William M. Butler reporting to Calvin Coolidge.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-012: Some idle thoughts on the law

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting six unrelated panels. In the top one, a judge and his staff each point at the person smaller than they are as the person responsible for the leak. In the next panel, Theodore Roosevelt is shown saying he has nothing to say that is fit for publication. In the panel next to him, a large man points to his hand, titled "subsidiary committee" as to the place the blame should go to. In the next panel, a man is being charged $5 under "Anglo-Saxon Law for Chicken Embezzlement". the next panel shows a man, representing a corporation, sitting in a jail cell with his hand hanging outside the bars so only part of the corporation is being punished. The last, bottom panel shows a man on a cart pulled by a donkey waiting for a large train to travel past him.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-094: At the office of the Harriman Rex Railroads

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three panels showing the office of the Harriman Rex Railroads. In the first panel, a newcomer enters the office and speaks to Harriman. In the next panel, Harriman and the other men in the office throw up their hands and smile at the new man, who is established in the office with his own desk in the last panel. E.H. Harriman was known for his prowess as a railroad executive and especially for being the "savior" of failing railroads, including the transcontinental Union Pacific Railroad.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-304: Different depictions of Dewey

Description:
12 portraits of Dewey with different hair and mustache styles.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-233: One of the mysteries of golf

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting golfers being judged by onlookers in Chinese.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-203: Big Bills

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes showing the reparations against Germany preventing the country from holding civilization again, the crime wave hitting Chicago even when one man believes he has ended it, and the G.O.P. elephant looking for a candidate but finding Taft being friendly with Wilson.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-317: Those purge tactics are hearing an awful political kick-back

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a man reading primary results: purge politics not patriotic.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-C010: The changing world: Books that caused fear now and then

Description:
Editorial cartoon consisting of two scenes. In the first scene, a Victorian woman is recoils from a "Ouida" book presented to her by a man. In the second scene, a woman in 1920s attire shows a sweating man a book titled "Sex Problem". "Ouida" was the pseudonym of the English novelist Maria Louise RamΓ©, who was known for her literary salon and the scandalous books she published toward the beginning of her career.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-200: Our foreign relations after the war

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam eating a large meal while kings wearing tattered robes look in through a window.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-085: The war department - "Great scott, that dispatch must mean ladrones instead of insurgents. There are no insurgents out there."

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a military man confused by the wording of a special dispatch about fighting in Manila. Three pictures hang on the wall behind him distinguishing the perceived differences between an "Amigo," an "Insurgent," and a "Ladrone." The special dispatch claimed that the fighting was started by "Insurgents" instead of the "Ladrones" classification the man remarks that the report must have meant.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-028: "Call Judge Landis!"

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting six scenes of people in difficult situations calling for Judge Landis. In the first panel, Organized Baseball is lying in a hospital bed and onlookers call outside the frame for someone to send for Judge Landis. In the second panel, locksmiths having difficulty with a Building Deadlock call for Judge Landis. In the third panel, a figure labeled "Stocks" tells Wall Street that he isn't feeling well and asks for Judge Landis. In the fourth panel, the 18th Amendment claims to have too many doctors and calls for Judge Landis. In the fifth panel, the Grain Exchanges flinch away from the painful dentistry of Farmers and ask for Judge Landis. In the last panel, two men are gearing up for a fight and wonder if they should call Judge Landis. Landis is the same judge referred to in JM-213: https://dl.mospace.umsystem.edu/mu/islandora/object/mu%3A419248 .
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-287: Uncle Sam will soon be alone with his recovery diet and digestion

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam bloated by huge output of legislation by 73rd Congress.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-274: Guiding hands

Description:
Radio guides plane; British officer beats Indian; Hoover calls extra session.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-W002: New York expects you to do your duty

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a group of men and women standing at the banks of the Hudson river with a war drum and banner. They are calling across the river at Westerners to urge them to join in the war.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-320: Mr. One World Wilkie interrupts

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Willkie interrupting Fourth of July ceremony to introduce "Superstate" to "Columbia."
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-053: As he would have looked in modern garb

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a portrait of George Washington in an early 20th century suit.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-259: When Keynoter mentioned the Secretary of Commerce, the convention looked very much like Hoover

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a scene of a large convention hall being addressed by a speaker. The word "Hoover" is written over the heads of the crowd.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-093: Sen. Aldrich's wonderful troupe of performing senators.

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting tiny men in suits around a seated figure labeled "Aldrich." Some of the small figures say that they agree with Senator Aldrich. On the wall behind all of the figures, there is a map of the United States with states in the North-Eastern area enlarged. Nelson W. Aldrich was one of the major decision-making Republicans in the United States Senate by the 1890s.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-C006: Monthly calendar of food

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a human figure standing inside a circle divided into the months. Each month has a corresponding food, which is connected to the man's exposed intestines.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-W020: Why not cut out the "un" and make it the "written law"?

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam holding a marker and pointing to the cornerstone stating that one should only run for president two terms. Behind him, a group of people from different states wave a banner asking for it to be allowed that a person can run for a third term.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-300: In time we may get used to these crises

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam reading about crises occurring in Ethiopia, Spain, etc. He vows non-involvement.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-254: Cornerstones of the full dinnerpail

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting four cornerstones holding up a full dinnerpail. The stones are labeled: "Protective Tariff", "Restrictive immigration", "Economic farm relief", and "National defense". An elephant holds a sign explaining that the ensemble is meant for President Hoover.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Text
JM-221: Resolution of the Board of Governors National Democratic Club meeting

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting the Board of Governors' National Democratic Club writing up a resolution to recommend New York as the location of the 1924 National Democratic Convention that passed unanimously. Henry Ford is seen driving in a car with ladies representing ladies from the Solid South, the Western Democrats, and the Middle Western Democrats.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-229: The South Dakota primary endorsement

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Coolidge throwing his hat in the ring at the South Dakota primary.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-276: Cartoons of the day

Description:
Editorial cartoon consisting of three panels, with each panel depicting a different cartoon. In the first panel, Mexico cheers Col. Fierro; in the second panel, King Carol of Romania arms; in the third panel, Stimson shows Uncle Sam the Navy treaty
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-293: Light and dark colored mottoes for the businessman's office

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting two walls with old-fashioned and modern styles business mottoes.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-225: Campaign shenanigans

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting the 1924 presidential election. Charles G. Dawes attacks Roger M. La Follette Sr., the Progressive party nominee, with constitutionalism. John W. Davis and Charles W. Bryan, who both ran on the Democratic ticket, play the piano and confuse both sides of the country.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-W018: Uncle Sam does the math of war

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam sitting at a table with many sheets of paper, as well as Calculus and Algebra books in front of him. Boxes above his head show the "problems" of troops and demands that he is trying to figure out.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-125: When Uncle Adlai goes a-wooing

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Adlai Stevenson I calling on Miss Illinois accompanied by a personification of his war record, Roger Charles Sullivan, and a personification of the Golden Circle record. Stevenson ran for Governor of Illinois in 1908, at the age of 73, and lost by a narrow margin.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-280: Three scenes pertaining to Groundhog Day

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes related to Groundhog Day. In the first panel, men discuss the calendar day and express a need to hurry. In the second panel, a man holds an umbrella over a groundhog hole so that the groundhog will not see his shadow. In the last panel, workers at a sausage mill hurry to pull the blinds down so that the sausages do not see their shadows.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-223: The changing world

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting the funeral of former U. S. President Warren Harding.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-214: We hope he wins the hole

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Harding golfing for a strike settlement held by the public while railroad executives and strikers squabble. Hard times hopes that Harding will miss so that he can win.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-267: Uncle Sam asks the country questions about defense

Description:
Uncle Sam is shown asking a crowd representing the American people three questions about opposition to war, if the country ought to defend itself, and if it should be prepared to defend itself. The crowd stands in support of the first two questions, but a small group sits down when he asks the third.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-257: Both equally to blame for dragging religion into politics

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam saying that both the man who is for Smith since Smith is a Catholic and the man who is against Smith for being a Catholic are both being religiously intolerant.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-W014: Ten Santas appear at home on Christmas during war-time

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting the living room, which is decorated for Christmas. Ten Santa figures are crowded on one end of the room. The boy and girl stare wide eyed at the Santa figures while the older woman and man, who is in a military uniform, both have a hand over their mouths as though yawning.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-W017: "I'll have to tighten your belt, Uncle"

Description:
A figure labeled "New Deal" severely tightens Uncle Sam's belt, while Uncle Sam protests. A portrait of the "New Deal" on the wall behind the two figures has the label: "God's Gift to Britain."
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-022: How we have changed!

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Pinckney refusing one cent for tribute and proclaiming that all money should go to defense. He is contrasted with another figure who is proclaiming that all the money should go toward political gain and none toward defense.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-264: According to the autopsy, she was constitutionally and economically unsound but meant well

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting the "Farm Relief Forces" as mourners standing by the grave of the "Equalization Fee".
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-208: A busy day at the county jail

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting prisoners breaking out of jail right in front of the guards.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-W024: In the Allied camp

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Churchill and FDR looking at a map of Europe in the top panel. In the bottom panel, Hitler, Togo, and Mussolini worry about the plane production in the U.S. as the "unpredictable" factor compared to their U-boats.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-252: The Nation Will Be All Ears Tonight

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting J. Edgar Hoover accepting the position of Director of the Bureau of Investigation.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-087: Undisputed sovereignty

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam looking across the Panama Canal while the U.S. flag flies above it.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
JM-020: "Which do you love best?"

Description:
Editorial cartoon depicting a pollster bearing a resemblance to Uncle Sam asking Ohio which of her favorite sons she loves best. A group of other people watch from the other side of a fence.
Member of:
McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type:
Still Image
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