91 - 105 of 319 records
JM-039: The radio vote of America

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting a politician giving a radio speech. After the speech, his derogatory comments about the American people are overheard, and he is defeated by the greatly populated "Radio Vote", which is shown in the last panel.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-121: Come on in, Boys! It's Finable Out There.

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting good men, sheltered by the letter of the law, calling to unhappy criminals outside in the rain.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-008: "I wish I had waited"

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes of men who purchased land, stocks, or furniture in the first panel only to express their disappointment in the second panel, when things are rough and what they have has decreased in value.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-237: Labor day

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting a Labor Day parade with a flag that has a Swastika made of hands on it.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-279: The politicians idea of relieving the distress of unemployment and the burden of over taxation

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam trying to think of a way to give the unemployed jobs. Politician suggests to Uncle Sam that unemployed collect new taxes.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-321: The ideal ally

Description: Editorial cartoon set after WWI. While the spoils are broken up, Uncle Sam wishes for one island, but the spokesperson stepped out. Now Japan holds most strategic islands.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-017: Three scenes pertaining to a political convention

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting three different scenes revolving around a political convention. In the first panel, men cheer and remark how they have been cheering for thirty-five minutes for someone and are trying to reach forty. In the middle panel, a man receives his bill at a restaurant and says that he will have to either go home or go hungry when he next goes to a political roll call. In the third panel, a KKK member appears to a platform maker while he is in bed warning about mentioning the group.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-W007: They all belong to the same union

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting figures labeled "Women", "Labor", "Capital", and "Fighting Men" all reaching towards an American Flag above them.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-205: Contention in Progressive Party candidates in 1912 and 1924

Description: Editorial cartoon depicting two panels set at different presidential elections. In the top panel, Robert La Follette sulks inside while Theodore Roosevelt marches outside in a 1912 Progressive Party parade. In the bottom panel, the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt accuses La Follette of having no right to carry the Progressive Party banner in a later parade, also with representatives from the Socialist Party and the Farmer-Labor Party. In 1912, La Follette was hoping to be the presidential nomination for the progressive wing of the Republicans, but his supporters abandoned him in favor of Theodore Roosevelt when the former president announced his return to politics, and Roosevelt became the 1912 presidential candidate for the Progressive Party instead; La Follette supported Wilson in the election. When the Progressive Party re-formed, after World War 1, they chose La Follette as their presidential candidate at a convention in Ohio in July of 1924; the Socialist Party and Farmer-Labor Party joined La Follette's progressive platform.
Member of: McCutcheon Editorial Cartoons - ALL (Collection)
Resource Type: Still Image
JM-210: Some angles of the threatened railway strike

Description: Editorial cartoon split in to three panels, each one showing a possible consequence of the impending railroad strike. In the top panel, Uncle Same driving a truck labeled "U.S. Business Conditions" and a truck labeled "Winter" stopped on the road by detour signs with the railroad strike causing the disruption and need for a detour. In the middle panel, a man representing the United States is in bed sick and resting while the doctor tells him he should be fine as long as no complications set in; running towards the house is a boy with a newspaper proclaiming the railroad strike. In the bottom panel, striking railroad workers stand around a train which is carrying relief for workers suffering from armament competitions.
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-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
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