
And now he wants somebody to tow him
An image labeled "1920" depicts a man in a convertible (Russia. Soviet recklessness) speeding around a horse-drawn wagon (Bolshevik scare) driven by a man (rest of us), who tries to calm down the horses as a basket of fruit falls off the wagon. A second image, "1927," shows the convertible upside down (financial upset) and the driver (Soviets) asks for help as the wagon pass by. Meanwhile, both the driver and horses laugh.
1927-11-08
1927
18.4 x 15.8 cm
Tribune Company
grayscale
- English
- Anti-communism--United States--1920-1930
- International relations--United States--1920-1930
- International relations--Soviet Union--1920-1930
- still image
- text
- These materials are either in the public domain, according to U.S. copyright law, or permission has been obtained from rights owners. The digital version and supplementary materials are available for all educational uses worldwide.
- The Janet A. Ginsburg Chicago Tribune Image Collection
- Chicago Daily Tribune (November 8, 1927), Section One, p. 10
- application/pdf
- image/jpeg

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