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Puck, v. 56, no. 1443

2 Results

The rising tide

The rising tide

The governor of New York, Benjamin B. Odell, is tied with a rope labeled “Contracts” to a submerged barge labeled “$255,000,000 Barge Canal.” He is up to his neck in water labeled “Popular Indignation” and cannot touch the “sand” with his feet.

comments and context

Comments and Context

It was perhaps indicative of Puck Magazine’s pessimistic outlook on the 1904 presidential election that one week before voters went to the polls, the magazine devoted its front-page cartoon to a tempest in a teapot in state politics in New York.

Uncle Sam’s hallowe’en

Uncle Sam’s hallowe’en

At center, Uncle Sam looks into a mirror while descending a stairway in a hall. “Swallow” and “Watson” are standing in the hall, holding candles. In the vignette at lower left, the presidential and vice-presidential candidates, Roosevelt, Fairbanks, Parker, and Davis, arrive in costume. On the lower right they are unmasked and engaged in a game with Columbia. On the middle left is “Bryan” as “An Old Timer,” and on the middle right “Taggart” and “Belmont” play a prank on an elderly woman with a “Bogie Man” labeled “Militarism.” At top left, bobbing for “Campaign Funds” are “Taggart, Bliss, Cortelyou, [and] Belmont,” and at top right “Odell, Shaw, [and] Hill” are “Jumping the Issues.”

comments and context

Comments and Context

Puck, a major Democratic publication, seems extremely unconcerned with the outcome of the imminent presidential election: little more than a week before balloting, its center-spread cartoon — traditionally a forum for powerful, persuasive political cartoons — instead published genre cartoons on a Halloween theme. Yes, with politicians as the characters, but more humorous than partisan. It possibly saw the writing on the wall, a massive Democratic defeat.