Daily Graphic (New York) (34:3469), front cover. Full-page editorial cartoon by Miranda, showing Chester A. Arthur being thrown off his horse in front of a herd of cattle labeled Blaine delegates. Hansen database #4500
Judge (5:129), page 8-9 in complete issue. By Frank Beard, six lines of verse below: "Oh! the deaths of our poor children,/Oh! What is it makes them die?/Poison milk, or poisoned candy,/Paris green, or rock-and-rye,/Poisoned air from overcrowding,/Cigarettes and chicken-pie." Six or eight scenes with lots of good details. Hansen database #1867.
Judge (1:19), page 8-9, in a complete issue. By J. A. Wales, four scenes, one in each quadrant. Upper left is Bergh vivisecting the vivisectors; lower left is a girl punished by Judge for wearing boys' clothing to get better work. Page 2 had some text in column called "Questions of the Day." The final paragraph reads: "The Judge believes it fair play for everyone and proposes that even Henry Bergh shall have a chance. The vivisectors who have trifled with his feelings, and who have apparently resolved themselves into a mob to drive him from pillar to post should also have a chance. Then let Mr. Bergh use his scalpel upon them, just for a change, and we venture the prediction that he will be encouraged by the shouts of the people, `Let the good work go on'." Hansen database #1816.
Daily Graphic (New York) (34:3417), front cover. Full-page editorial cartoon by F. J. Willson, showing a boorish, fat Republican wearing a blindfold labeled "bigotry," dismissing General Sherman, whose wife is a Roman Catholic. "No! You may be a gallant soldier, you may possess culture and capacity, you may be honest --but your wife is a Roman Catholic!" An example of Willson's style and of the graphic presentation of prejudices in that era. The boorish guy resembles the caricatures of working-class Irish, usually associated with the Democratic party. Hansen database #4501
Puck (8:196), page 226-227, center. By J. Keppler, Jewish peddler is thumbing his nose at three men kicking him out. "I have thriven on this sort of thing for Eighteen Centuries--Go on, gentlemen, Persecution helps de Pizness." On the ground are seen rocks labelled "prosecution," "Hebrew success at crime," "bigotry rampant." Judge Hilton keeps him out of Saratoga hotel; Corbin from Manhattan Beach; Bismarck, janitor of Hotel Berlin, which has sign "No Jews Allowed." Peddler's pants are labelled Endurance; his carried box of Prosperity held up by straps labelled sobriety and industry. The box contains literature, poetry, music, science, patriotism, statesmanship, and promissory notes. Hansen database #242.
Puck (7:165), page 150-151, center. By J. Keppler, shows the press distracted by the electric light, while other dangerous products and activities are being overlooked due to Edison's shell game. Cartoon also appears in advertisement, see #560. Hansen database #238.
Puck (7:165), page 150-151, center. By J. Keppler, shows the press distracted by the electric light, while other dangerous products and activities are being overlooked due to Edison's shell game. Cartoon also appears in advertisement, see #560. Hansen database #238.
Daily Graphic (New York) (4:374), cover of complete issue. Cover is picture of people and animals being swept away; story is about Mill River Valley flood caused by collapsed dam. Hansen database #4385.
Daily Graphic (New York) (34:3485), page 803. Three-part illustration on the upper half of page, with a column of unrelated text on either side. The main caption includes "from L'Illustration." Illustrations are "Cage for inoculated dogs," "Effect of inoculation" showing a monkey in a cage, and "M. Pasteur in his Laboratory" showing Pasteur between two rows of rabbit cages. Hansen database #4398.