Judge, 1932-02-20 · page 11 of 36
Judge — February 20, 1932 — page 11: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of "Judge" Cartoon This single political cartoon depicts a chaotic scene at what appears to be a royal palace or formal court setting. A disheveled figure runs frantically through the grounds while formally-dressed officials and guards stand about, seemingly confused or indifferent. The caption—"Who the hell is the Keeper of the Royal Hounds?"—suggests the cartoon satirizes governmental incompetence or administrative chaos. The running figure likely represents either a loose dog or someone in disarray, while the composed officials represent bureaucratic indifference to disorder. The cartoon critiques how authority figures fail to maintain proper oversight or control, appearing complacent amid obvious problems. Without the publication date visible, the specific political target remains unclear, but it's characteristic of *Judge* magazine's satirical approach to governance and institutional responsibility.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
‘ < ~~ —— < > ay rH ds?” “Who the hell is the Keeper of the Royal Houn comicbooks.com