Skip to main content
MU Digital Library, University of Missouri
MU Header
Contact Us
|
Login
Main menu
Browse
About
Search
FAQ
You are here
Home
»
World War (1939-1945)
(x)
Islandora facets
Issue Date
1930
(1)
+
-
1939
(2)
+
-
1940
(1)
+
-
1941
(1)
+
-
1942
(8)
+
-
1943
(8)
+
-
1944
(2)
+
-
Topic
Armed Forces
(2)
+
-
Assembly-line methods
(1)
+
-
Bombers
(2)
+
-
Cabinet officers
(1)
+
-
Casinos
(1)
+
-
Christmas
(1)
+
-
Christmas decorations
(1)
+
-
Congresses and conventions
(1)
+
-
Draft
(1)
+
-
Economics
(1)
+
-
Fighter planes
(1)
+
-
Food supply--International cooperation
(1)
+
-
Freedom of the press
(1)
+
-
International relations
(3)
+
-
John Bull (Symbolic character)
(1)
+
-
Marriage
(1)
+
-
Mathematics
(1)
+
-
Meetings
(1)
+
-
Naval battles
(1)
+
-
Nazis
(1)
+
-
Patriotism
(1)
+
-
Peace
(2)
+
-
Politics and government
(1)
+
-
Recruiting and enlistment
(2)
+
-
Savings bonds
(1)
+
-
Taxation
(1)
+
-
Treaty of Versailles (1919 June 28)
(1)
+
-
Type VII U-boat
(1)
+
-
Uncle Sam (Symbolic character)
(8)
+
-
War
(2)
+
-
War -- Public opinion
(1)
+
-
World War (1939-1945)
(23)
+
-
World relations
(1)
+
-
Show more
Geographic Area
Atlantic Ocean
(1)
+
-
France
(3)
+
-
Germany
(4)
+
-
Great Britain
(5)
+
-
Hawaii
(1)
+
-
Illinois -- Chicago
(1)
+
-
Indiana
(1)
+
-
Italy
(3)
+
-
Japan
(3)
+
-
Kentucky--Fort Knox
(1)
+
-
New York (State) -- New York
(1)
+
-
Pacific Ocean
(1)
+
-
Russia (Federation) -- Volgograd
(1)
+
-
Solomon Islands -- Guadalcanal
(1)
+
-
Soviet Union
(1)
+
-
United States
(14)
+
-
Washington (D.C.)
(2)
+
-
Show more
Time Period
1930-1939
(3)
+
-
1940-1949
(20)
+
-
Advanced Search
Field
Title
Subject
Creator/Author
Contributor
Street Name
Notes and Abstracts
Full Text
ID number
Genre/Type
Publisher
Author
Search terms
Search results
(1 - 20 of 23)
Pages
1
2
next ›
last »
Title
JM-321: The ideal ally
Summary
Editorial cartoon set after WWI. While the spoils are broken up, Uncle Sam wishes for one island, but the spokesperson stepped out. Now Japan holds most strategic islands.
Title
JM-324: Is peace really as popular as war?
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicts a coffin of "War" carried by Big Four in graveyard of hope.
Title
JM-315: Storm clouds on the Axis front
Summary
Mussolini, Hitler, Hirohito see powerful U.S. fists.
Title
JM-W016: The money question clouds over Fort Knox
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Morgenthau of the Department of Treasury and the International Food Conference both demanding money. Fort Knox is shown heavily guarded, with large question marks floating over the top of the building.
Title
JM-323: The bonds of matrimony and government war bonds
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicts people rushing to get married. They are unsure whether to invest in war bonds.
Title
JM-307: The anti-war Americans, being in the great majority, have a right to be heard
Summary
Uncle Sam and majority oppose war, peace rally is held at Soldier Field.
Title
JM-W023: News of the 120,000th bomber plane from the Ford assembly line
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Henry Ford at a table surrounded by women and men holding sheets of paper. A man from the assembly line comes in and shares the news that the 120,000th bomber has just been produced.
Title
JM-319: Cartoons of the day
Summary
Editorial cartoon in three panels: taxpayer complains; Senate votes on draftees; war action.
Title
JM-312: The changing world
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting three scenes of U.S. military and problems caused by foreign states.
Title
JM-318: Our east front and our west front
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting government strategists looking out windows to Stalingrad and Guadalcanal.
Title
JM-W018: Uncle Sam does the math of war
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam sitting at a table with many sheets of paper, as well as Calculus and Algebra books in front of him. Boxes above his head show the "problems" of troops and demands that he is trying to figure out.
Title
JM-W014: Ten Santas appear at home on Christmas during war-time
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting the living room, which is decorated for Christmas. Ten Santa figures are crowded on one end of the room. The boy and girl stare wide eyed at the Santa figures while the older woman and man, who is in a military uniform, both have a hand over their mouths as though yawning.
Title
JM-W024: In the Allied camp
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Churchill and FDR looking at a map of Europe in the top panel. In the bottom panel, Hitler, Togo, and Mussolini worry about the plane production in the U.S. as the "unpredictable" factor compared to their U-boats.
Title
JM-W022: After you, my dear Air Force
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam staring at a map of Italian islands where a U.S. soldier is stepping. He says to wait for the bombers to "soften it up."
Title
JM-272: Make him show his cards
Summary
Germany, playing poker with Allies, offers to divide the pot, then quit.
Title
JM-313: What beautiful winter weather we're having
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting FDR announcing shake-up of Churchill's cabinet to U.S. cabinet.
Title
JM-W025: The straws show which way the wind is blowing
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Hitler and two others watching as a Berlin monument of victory falls down, while banners show the reasons for the collapse.
Title
JM-W011: Before and after
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a mother and father expressing their disappointment in their son, who is shown smoking a pipe and relaxing. In the next panel, the boy is depicted in a military uniform, and the mother and father express their pride.
Title
JM-301: If the satisfied haves and the troublesome have nots ever have a conference
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Hitler asking how much land Britain has given to promote peace.
Title
JM-W015: Freedom of the press is quarantined
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a line of men and women waiting outside an International Food Conference. Soldiers stand in front of the door for both the Conference and a Casino, both of which have signs that spell out the limits of what the press can and cannot do, or when they even may enter the building. Another banner proclaims that Freedom of the Press is quarantined, not guaranteed.
Pages
1
2
next ›
last »