Judge, 1883-09-29 · page 1 of 16
Judge — September 29, 1883 — page 1: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# "Try the North Pole" - Judge Magazine, September 29, 1883 This political cartoon satirizes a proposed fight between two boxers named Shade and Mitchell. The caption suggests the North Pole as the only suitable location for their bout, likely implying the fight was so controversial or problematic that it needed to happen in an isolated, uninhabited place. The cartoon depicts a giant figure (presumably one of the fighters) towering over smaller characters in a mountainous arctic setting, with bears present. The exaggerated scale and harsh landscape emphasize the absurdity of the proposed match. Without additional context about Shade and Mitchell's specific identities or the contemporary boxing controversy referenced, the exact nature of the dispute remains unclear, but Judge's editors clearly viewed their rivalry as requiring extreme measures or removal from civilization.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
ek RRA AAA T OFFICE AT NEW YORK AS SECOND CLASS MATTER. COPYRIGHT i881 BY THE JUDGE PUBLISHING CO. NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 29, 1883. 10 Cents. Vaanmun SOUA®E LTH CO MEW YORE TRY THE NORTH POLE. If Slade and Mitchell really want to Fight, there is only one place where they can have it out. comicbooks.com