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Puck, v. 64, no. 1649

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Taft to-morrow

Taft to-morrow

William H. Taft and William Jennings Bryan play on a seesaw. Bryan, on the upper half, holds papers labeled “Speech in reply to Taft,” and Taft, on the lower half, is writing “Memo for reply” on a pad of paper.

comments and context

Comments and Context

A month before the presidential election, and the nominally (or traditionally) Democratic magazine Puck continued to tweak the Republican William H. Taft and the Democrat William Jennings Bryan with equal middle-distance solicitude and, basically, gentleness. The journal never could accept Bryan’s radical policies nor his lack of political sophistication; and it had cordially endorsed many of President Theodore positions, which Taft implicitly pledged to continue if elected.

The boss bear trainer

The boss bear trainer

President Roosevelt, as a hurdy-gurdy player, grinds an organ labeled “Party Harmony” among a group of bears labeled “Elkins, Parsons, Dick, Platt, Penrose, Woodruff, Foraker, Barnes, [and] Odell,” each holding a large club across their shoulders.

comments and context

Comments and Context

“The Boss Bear Trainer” is a rare cartoon from the career of President Roosevelt wherein bears are cartooned characters, but related to teddy bears, either as hunting trophies or as children’s plush toys.