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Judge, 1932-05-14 · page 1 of 36

Judge — May 14, 1932 — page 1: what you’re looking at

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Judge — May 14, 1932 — page 1: Judge, 1932-05-14

What you’re looking at

# Judge Magazine Cover Analysis - July 14, 1932 This political cartoon satirizes the **1932 presidential campaign** during the Great Depression. The large "JUDGE" letters dominate the composition, with a tall, menacing figure (likely representing a political opponent or threat) looming over smaller caricatured figures below. The scene depicts chaos and conflict—a man in formal dress appears to be kicking or fighting against others, suggesting political turmoil. The smaller figures likely represent ordinary citizens or political rivals being trampled during this turbulent election period. The totem pole on the left suggests Native American imagery, possibly commenting on American traditions or values under threat. Overall, the cartoon criticizes the violence and disorder characterizing 1932's contentious presidential race between incumbent **Herbert Hoover** and challenger **Franklin D. Roosevelt** amid economic crisis.

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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

¥ 14, 1932 i (Lenn comicbooks.com