Daily Graphic (New York) (2:104), cover. Full-page drawing by Bellew. Manufacturer gives his race horses a rest, but not his factory workers. Bucolic scene, with small inset of several women and one child at work in a factory. Hansen database #60.
Daily Graphic (New York) (2:104), cover. Full-page drawing by Bellew. Manufacturer gives his race horses a rest, but not his factory workers. Bucolic scene, with small inset of several women and one child at work in a factory. Hansen database #60.
Daily Graphic (New York) (1:98), cover of a complete 8-page issue. Drawn by Wust. Mentions cities Nashville, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Washington, and Philadelphia. Wall behind men carries this text "Telegraphic Despatches. March of the Cholera. In Memphis, 59 deaths; Nashville 40, Cincinnati 10, Pittsburgh 5, Washington 3, Philadelphia 1." Hansen database #2186.
Puck (8:189), page 108-109, center. By Keppler, title is a play on the word "epizootic," with a sick donkey representing the Democratic Party. Donkey is being treated with elixir from bottle labeled "Butler's Party Killer" and clyster labeled "solid south solution." Also includes barrels labeled "Allopathic" and "Homeopathic." Hansen database #241.
Puck (8:189), page 108-109, center. By Keppler, title is a play on the word "epizootic," with a sick donkey representing the Democratic Party. Donkey is being treated with elixir from bottle labeled "Butler's Party Killer" and clyster labeled "solid south solution." Also includes barrels labeled "Allopathic" and "Homeopathic." Hansen database #241.
Daily Graphic (New York) (30:3015), front cover. Implies problems will get worse if tax abolished. Includes pipe bowl as a skull; gravestone with "Smokers Take Warning"; man confined with straitjacket in asylum. Artist is Steele (first initial unclear, middle initial is probably O). Related editorial on page 248 in Pictures of the Day." Column 2 of page 248 contains one paragraph untitled article about a Philadelphia newspaper helping to catch 3 grave robbers. Hansen database #3327.
Daily Graphic (New York) (30:3015), front cover. Implies problems will get worse if tax abolished. Includes pipe bowl as a skull; gravestone with "Smokers Take Warning"; man confined with straitjacket in asylum. Artist is Steele (first initial unclear, middle initial is probably O). Related editorial on page 248 in Pictures of the Day." Column 2 of page 248 contains one paragraph untitled article about a Philadelphia newspaper helping to catch 3 grave robbers. Hansen database #3327.
Judge (29:733), page 284-285, center. By Gillam, a drowned Tammany tiger from a wrecked ship is laying over a barrel labelled "The Rum Question." A paper on the ground says "Drowned in the tidal wave of 1894." Dana from the New York Sun tries to give the tiger a spoon of "N.Y. Sun Cholera Mixture" while politicians and publishers give advice. Hansen database #42.
Daily Graphic (New York) (34:3493), front cover. Full-page editorial cartoon by Miranda, showing well-off families leaving on vacation, luggage labeled Saratoga, Newport, and Europe, with a young girl giving money to a nun collecting for the poor. An example of Miranda's style and of sympathetic presentation of religious charity. This era has plenty of anti-Catholic cartoons, often mocking donations to the church as going for corruption or terrorism. Since the Daily Graphic cover of March 27, 1884, by F. J. Willson (here #4501) is critical of anti-Catholic bias, it suggests that Daily Graphic might have been particularly sensitive on this issue and sympathetic to Roman Catholicism. Hansen database #4498
Daily Graphic (New York) (34:3493), front cover. Full-page editorial cartoon by Miranda, showing well-off families leaving on vacation, luggage labeled Saratoga, Newport, and Europe, with a young girl giving money to a nun collecting for the poor. An example of Miranda's style and of sympathetic presentation of religious charity. This era has plenty of anti-Catholic cartoons, often mocking donations to the church as going for corruption or terrorism. Since the Daily Graphic cover of March 27, 1884, by F. J. Willson (here #4501) is critical of anti-Catholic bias, it suggests that Daily Graphic might have been particularly sensitive on this issue and sympathetic to Roman Catholicism. Hansen database #4498