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Life, 1928-06-07 · page 2 of 54

Life — June 7, 1928 — page 2: what you’re looking at

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Life — June 7, 1928 — page 2: Life, 1928-06-07

What you’re looking at

# Analysis This is a **Stutz automobile advertisement**, not a political cartoon. The ornate frame contains a photograph of a luxury car from approximately the 1920s-1930s era. The ad's text argues that if refinement and comfort define luxury in America, then high-speed, safe motor cars deserve prominence. The tagline "The safest car has the right to be the fastest" promotes the Stutz brand as combining both safety and performance—claims typical of luxury car marketing during the automotive industry's rapid expansion. The elaborate decorative border and classical typography emphasize exclusivity and prestige. This represents early automotive advertising's strategy of associating cars with wealth and sophistication. There is no political satire present—this is straightforward commercial promotion.