Judge, 1928-11-24 · page 12 of 36
Judge — November 24, 1928 — page 12: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Cartoon Analysis This cartoon depicts a car heavily laden with rocks, driven by someone addressed as "Jones," who is confronting an angry man about damage to his "new paint job." The vehicle appears overloaded with cargo, and scattered on the ground are various automotive parts and debris—suggesting either a collision or the vehicle's deterioration from carrying excessive weight. The satire likely critiques overloading or misuse of vehicles, possibly reflecting early 20th-century concerns about automotive care or labor practices. The ironic humor centers on Jones's apparent obliviousness: he's damaged the car through negligent overloading, yet complains about the paint damage—prioritizing cosmetic concerns over mechanical abuse. Without additional context, the specific social or political target remains unclear, though it appears to mock either carelessness or misplaced priorities.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
JUDGE Now see what ye’ve done to my new paint job! 4 z 10 comicbooks.com