i' f 1 ■- > i 1 i c^ u V "3" ^V r. ^A V. nV 'ct- o-> X; \V' '^^ " ' '--^^. ' '■■ ' a\ ' . V. I B I, V: ■~ N^^ . ^ ./C^ ^"^^ ^V ^ ^ .^ -% . ^ ,^ ' =r J ^ : "^ ,^ ,^XV . ^* <^ ^'^ .Vs^ .X^\ ''^., o,^\ -Js^ > . V 1 8 „ ''■ "o. •^oo^ ^-^ ■ ' '' - '^^ -^ <^ •% T. R. IN CARTOON Collected and Edited By Raymond Gros Four Hundred Illustrations BY LEADING CARTOONISTS OF THE DAILY AND WEEKLY PRESS ALL OVER THE WORLD ^ THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY New York AKRON, OHIO Chicago D COPYRIGHT, 1910, by THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY. dD- ©CI.A265706 ■- Thorndike in the Philadelphia Pres^. TO THEODORE ROOSEVELT THIS BOOK IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED / Homer Davenport. HE'S GOOD ENOUGH FOR ME!" THE CARTOONIST AND T. R. Cartoons are the salt of the pubHc press. It is the cartoonist who gives savor to the daily newspaper or the weekly review all the world over and caricature, in spite of its buffoonery, exaggeration, satire and even occasional violence, remains the best account of an epoch and the truest biography of a public man. Epochs in American history are counted by presidents, and of all the men who have attained to that honor none has been so much the favorite subject of the world's cartoonists as Theodore Roosevelt; certainly no man after retirmg from the office has been kept so frequently in the public eye by their clever art. The reasons for this are best sought in the man. Perhaps he has in his own words given the key: " If I am somewhat popular," he once said In the Piffsburg Index. ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ president, " it is ht patriots consider me almost a complete specimen of the national type. I was a civil magistrate; I became a soldier when it was necessary, and to-day I am again a civil magistrate. I have six children. In every way I am a good American, and all my countrymen know it." In depicting Theodore Roosevelt, the cartoonists have three preferred )ecause my com- THE " DELIGHTED " POSE. Naughton in Minneapolis Tribune. when the boss is away, the mice will play. poses: the famous ferociously ener- getic " Delighted " pose, the " Preaching " pose, with almost vio- lent gestures, and the " Big Stick " attitude, but always in all countries and by all cartoonists, the accom- modating teeth (which fit either a laugh or a scowl). American art- ists, who are subject to no censor save their editors, have never stooped to vulgarity or hate in depicting Mr. Roosevelt, not even those whose pub- lications are politically opposed to him and his famous policies. Possi- bly because of the fact that Mr. Roosevelt has always enjoyed the cartoonists' art, and has laughed at the delineations of himself with as much glee as the public, he has ever been proof against ridicule. Foreign cartoonists, who are so often irrev- erent, abusive and even vulgar in their treatment of European mon- archs, have seemed to have a particu- lar pencil for Colonel Roosevelt. They have pricked him, it is true, but never viciously. Edward VII. of England they caricatured as a gross fat person fond of sporting pleasures and fleshly indulgencies; they have satirized Emperor William as a THE " BIG STICK " POSE. on the stage of human affairs as petty, childish, selfish, lustful and profligate. But even when unkindest toward Mr. Roosevelt, they have never been brutal or exhibited per- sonal or national dislike. In studying the cartoons in this collection made during the period THE "PREACHING" POSE. scarecrow, a troublesome boaster and an erratic simpleton; they have de- picted the Czar by turns as a pol- troon, a coward crazed by fear of bombs, a tyrant and a murderer of his subjects; the Sultan they have held up to view as a deceitful and sanguinary monster; and other mon- archs according to their importance Gregg in the Atlanta Constiiuiion. SUPPLICATING THE TOTEM POLE. when Theodore Roosevelt was President, it will be noticed that the foreign cartoonists frequently represent him as " Uncle Sam," or, at least, dress him out in striped trousers and starry coat, and al- most invariably sketch the flag into the picture somewhere. It is difficult for the European cartoon- ist to pin a tab on a man, who, although ruler, and commander- in-chief of army and navy, never wears a uniform, but always ap- pears in the conventional garb of his countrymen according to the Lovey in the Butte Inter Mounlain. OCCaSlOn and the hour of thc day. " The Will o' the Wisp " of foreign diplomacy In Europc, whcrc rulcrs are dcco- is represented as leading President Roosevelt into the .J JLIJ il JL mire of complications. ^^ted and hold actual and honor- ary commissions in many armies, it is easy to portray the individual by means of decoration and uniform., The American cartoonist gets around this difficulty easily by making libera use of the cowboy attire and rough rider uniform, and the European artis^ is commencing to do the same. The love of Roosevelt for hunting and his amusing experiences during a carefully prepared Southern bear hunt from which he returned empty- handed, much to the delight of the cartoonists and the amusement of the public, followed by the introduction of that amusing toy, the Teddy bear, inspired a considerable number of cartoonists with the idea of introducing a diminutive bruin in their daily cartoons. The first to introduce this idea was Robert W. Satterfield, a Cleveland cartoonist, whose work has won national attention. " Sat's Bear " is a feature of Cleveland's daily life. In his role of mediator between war- ring Russia and Japan, President Roose- velt furnished a most lucky windfall to the cartoonists, especially to the foreign ones. The Big Stick and the Dove of Peace for a time suggested cartoons of incomparable drollery. This period was followed by the anti-Japanese riots in California. The President's intervention furnished fresh material for the lively pen- cils of the cartoonists of the world, and through all these stirring times he con- tinued to pour forth messages to Con- Bradley. Chicago News. gress, to the immense delight of the car- Mother Columbia has the kettle boil- toonists. In their uninterrupted succession, .'."§.'" .Washington. With little T. R. .1 1 ,1 . . I . Vim she will straight away prepare they merely saw the amusmg side agam, some legislation. v« Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. THE PEOPLE'S CHOICE. and then forever the ad- vice of the President, opinion of the President, recommendation of the President. To be elected by the American people is no sinecure, above all, when the White House harbors a man who passes his time seeing everything, hearing everything. Trusts, Senate, the House, voyage to Panama, New York elections, the yellow question, negro question, Harriman, all passed before his gaze as in a cinematograph; one affair scarcely terminated until another began, and so to the last day of his admin- istration. Never were the caricatures so gleesome, witty, cutting, highly- colored. The exaggeration natural to satire was not at all improbable. Caricaturists in the United States perhaps never before presented to the i public such well-made designs, overflowing with art and full of observation. Germany is respected, her Emperor criticized; America is criticized, her President praised; incontestable facts shown by the foreign caricatures. John Bull has nearly disappeared from satire, being replaced by King Edward, so much anathematized as Prince of Wales, but who made himself popular by his policy, carried on by fine and skillful diplomacy, quietly, almost in the shade. However, cari- cature has never represented him with the President of the United States. The peasant Michel, on the contrary, who is the incarnation of the German nation, vanishes com- pletely to yield his place to the Kaiser. In the cartoons the latter is seen sometimes with Uncle Sam, sometimes with Mr. Roosevelt. There exists a well-marked affinity between the two men, a spirit ad- venturous, audacious, acute, ani- mated, virile, original, smcere. Side by side with political cari- catures (which are not always mirth- ful) of President Roosevelt, the artists — many American as well as foreign — in many cases have amused themselves at the expense of their model. But — notwithstanding the Philadelphia Press. LOOK OUT FOR THE ERUPTION. De Mar in the Philadelphia Record. The train wrecker (Railroad Trust) caught in his own trap. caturists see nothing but them) are not exaggerated; they have only a mock-heroic flavor. The seven deadly capital sins which contribute so many satirical subjects for carica- ture enter but rarely into the com- position of cartoons of Roosevelt. Caricaturists who are at liberty to express what they please, seem to show a sort of respectful deference to their model; their designs reveal their purpose so well that frequently they require no explanation. violence of a few — we find nothing gross, as I said before; m reality, they never delineate Roosevelt in a ridicu- lous or deformed aspect. Even in scandals where as Chief of State, he has played the role of reformer for some, of sponsor for the other, Roose- velt, cowboy, colonel, or citizen, bears always the manner of a gentleman; his visage, gestures, bearing, are per- haps stamped with joy, anger or dis- appointment, but he never appears ill-favored; his defects (and the cari- THE " MEDITATIVE '• POSE. THE " DEFYING " POSE." Other men, after retirement from the Presidency, have dropped completely from public view so far as the cartoonists were concerned. Not so with Theodore Roosevelt. The cleverest and drollest things the cartoonists have indulged in have had to do with his hunting expedition to Africa. It was a great and un- worked field. The opportunities to make the wild animals parties to the fun were without limit, and the cari- caturists have had a wanton revel for more than a year, to the continuous delight of all the world, and the chil- dren in it. The return from Africa, and the signs of the wielding of the Big Stick in Egypt and Europe have only served to give the cartoonists further occupation, until one wonders what will be the effect of it all on a people susceptible to the preachments of the pictorial art, as Americans are. But whatever the effect, and how- ever riotously the cartoonists give themselves over to their subject, it is certain Theodore Roosevelt will go on unperturbed by ridicule or praise, appearing when and where he chooses in his favorite poses — " Delighted," " Preaching " and " The Big Stick." THE " FIGHTING " POSE. Raymond Gros. Pittsburgh, June 1, 1910. WHEN TEDDY HEADS A WILD WEST SHOW. Sinclair in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. Bridgeport, Conn., Feb. 1. — Believing that he has found just the thing for President Roosevelt after the latter retires, James M. Atlas, a hotel man of this city, says that he to-day wrote to the President and offered him a 30-weeks' engagement at $10,000 a week to head a new wild west show under the name of " Roosevelt's Congress of Rough Riders.' PUBLICATIONS REPRESENTED. In preparing the work for the pubhsher, it was found to be imprac- ticable to reproduce all the drawings so generously sent to me, and therefore only about four hundred of the most varied and interesting have been em- ployed. These four hundred pictures represent the cartoonists of the United States, England, France, Germany, Austria, Italy, Spain, Cuba, Australia, Holland, Hungary, Japan, Switzerland, the Argentine Republic, Chile, etc., etc. As I am not a citizen of the United States, and therefore without partisan or political bias, I have studied to give the widest possible range to the selec- tion, so as to include every variety of expression of praise and blame. It gives me great pleasure to thank the hundreds of cartoonists who have taken a keen interest in contributing their best drawings for this book, and to say that I hope their splendid art will go on to increasing triumphs and new powers. My thanks are also due to Messrs. W. P. Beazell, H. W. Bernard, Arthur G. Burgoyne, Eugene LeMoyne Connelly and Miss C. H. Davis for their valued help in the production of this work, and especially to my friend, W. T. Mossman, without whose generous interest and assistance it would have been impossible for a stranger to have brought this book to press. R. G. Gage in the Philadelphia North American. BEFORE AFTER THE ELECTION. Jack in the Glenwood, Colorado, Post. Roosevelt LA follEtte Folk hOch weaveR jeroMe UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Vtlanta Consiiluiion. (allimore Sun. Jinghamton Press. Joslon Traveler. Jrooklyn Eagle. Jutte Inter Mountain. !!hicago Dail^ News. !^hicago Inter Ocean. hicago Record -Herald. Cincinnati Post. leveland Leader. ^leveland News. Cleveland Plain Dealer. leveland Press. olumbus Dispatch. Columbus Ohio State Journal. Denver Neivs. Denver Republican. Des Moines Register and Leader. Detroit Journal. Detroit News. Duluth Evening Herald. Duluth News Tribune. Girard Appeal to Reason. Glenwood (Col.) Post. Ithaca Saturday Clobe. Louisville Courier- Journal. Louisville Times. Memphis News-Scimitar. Milwaukee Sentinel. Minneapolis Journal. Minneapolis Tribune. Newark Evening News. Newark Morning Star. New Orleans Times-Democrat, New York American. New Yorkf Co//ier's. New York Dai/i; News. New York Evening Mail. New York Evening Telegram. New York Clobe. New York Harper's Weel^l^. New York Herald. New York La Follia. New York Literary Digest. New York Success Magazine. New York Times. New York [Vorld. Omaha World Herald. Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia North American. Philadelphia Press. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Philadelphia Record. Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. Pittsburg Dispatch. Pittsburg Cazelte-Times. Pittsburg Index. Pittsburg Leader. Pittsburg Post. Pittsburg Press. Pittsburg Sun. Pueblo Star Journal. Rochester Herald. St. Louis Post Dispatch. St. Louis Republic. St. Paul Dispatch. Salt Lake Herald. San Francisco Call. South Bend Tribune. Spokane SpoJiesman-RevieV). Tacoma Ledger. Toledo Blade. Topeka Slate Journal. Washington Dispatch. Washington Evening Star. Washington Herald. Washington Post. EAGLE TILTING. MR. ROOSEVELT WINS. F. C. Gould in the IVestminsler Cazelie, London. Mr. Roosevelt : " I thought they might have wanted me over there in Scandinavia, but it appears to be all right now. Philadelphia North American. Roosevelt : " Sit down, gentlemen, and let us talk this matter over calmly." ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Buenos Ayres Caras ^ Carelas. Rio Janeiro Malho. AUSTRALIA. Sydney Bulletin. AUSTRIA. Vienna Der Floh. Vienna Figaro. Vienna Humorislische Dlaiier. Vienna Neue Cliihlicler. CHILE. Valparaiso Succesos. • CUBA. Havana La Discusion. DENMARK. Copenhagen Klods-Hans. Copenhagen Hver 8 Dag. ENGLAND. London Pall Mall Cazelie. London Punch. London Punch's Almanach. London The SlanJard. London Weslminsler CazeUe. FRANCE, s L'lllusiralion. s Le Rire. s La Caricalure. s New Yor}( Herald. TfT^ ^j°::.-^^^^ GERMANY. Berlin Kladderadalsch. Berlin Lusiige Bldtler. Berlin Ulk- Munich Jugend. Munich Simplicissimus. Stuttgart Der Wahre Jacob. HOLLAND. De Amsterdammer Wee}(hlad voor Nederland. HUNGARY. Budapest Bolond hlolf. Budapest Borsszen Janlfo. ITALY. Milan L'Uomo di Pielra. Turin // Fischielto. Turin Pasquino. JAPAN. Tokyo Puc\. SPAIN. Barcelone Hojas Selectas. Barcelone La Campana de Cracia. SWEDEN. Stockholm Puclf. SWITZERLAND. Zurich Nebelspaller. greeting:; ' '"^i j^/^-\ ARTHUR G.BURGOYN C^ . £ot ^ «^^, o. ct/i. ■ '' • K ■'"lif^^ //' ^1,^/i^ 7-^ ,?a,;itiH Jlv£i E. W. Kemble in Collier's, New York. (By Permission of P. F. Collier & Son, New York.) 16 T. VESUVIUS ROOSEVELT. Verses by Wallace Irwin. The ordinary hill which remains forever still. All covered o'er with specimens of botany, Is hugely safe and sane; but its heights seem rather plain And its silence breeds political monotony. I myself prefer a mount with a crater as its fount. Dropping firebrands like the thunderstorms of Pluvius — There is something half satanic in conditions so volcanic. Yet we're proud of our Political Vesuvius. With a curious, sulfur eous Rumbling, grumbling roll of thunder Teddy's going to erupt — Stand from under! Where the grafter sleeps content, suddenly the air is rent With a blast like that which buried Herculaneum; Railway lobbies cough and choke in a cloud of flame and smoke. And the Conscript Fathers get it in the cranium. Now Chicago beef is shook, now the poor old Spelling-Book Shouts: " Have mercy, sire! your heat will crack the shell o' me!" Now the mountain heaves its shoulders and upheaves a ton of boulders. While the sparks descend and roast the luckless Bellamy. With a hectic, apoplectic Howling, groTvling roll of thunder, Teddy^^s going to blow up — Stand from under! Though there's sometimes scarce a puff from his lid, that's just a bluff. For his calmer moments never mean security. And the Prophets yell: " Look out! he's intending for to spout — There'll be trouble in the very near futurity." No, we can't foresee just what, but his crater's getting hot. And the coals will soon be dropping, as they must, again Singeing up the Tariff's tatters and the mossy old Standpatters — There's no telling where Vesuvius will bust again. With a jouncing, nation-bouncing. Bumping, thumping roll of thunder, Teddy s going for to spout — Stand from under! 17 Wazques in La Campana Je Cracia, Barcelone. THE ARRIVAL OF THE THREE PRESIDENTS. This is the visit that we would Hke Spain to receive. 18 IT';*' — " G. Brandt in Kladdcradaisch, Berlin. ROOSEVELT. THE TRANSMARINE ORATOR. 19 Gaido in Pasquino, Turin. THE AMERICAN CRISIS. Teddy, as Baron Munchausen, tries to pull himself out of the mud )y lifting himself by his hair. Will he succeed? The skin is tough. 20 W, C. Morris in the Spokcine Spoliesman-Reviexe. WALL STREET CALLS HIM " THEODORE THE MEDDLER." 21 O. p. Williams in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. IS HE RIDING TO A FALL? 22 C. F. Naughton in the Duluth Evening Herald. Uncle Sam: " Take me In with you, Teddy? " (President Roosevelt has received a pass that will admit him and all his friends to baseball games played by American League teams. — Washington Dispalch.) 23 W. C. Spencer in the Denver Republican. Kaiser Wilhelm says: "Good cooks make the people contented." W. P. Canfield in the Pittsburg Sun. ETERNALLY TEDDY. 24 TWIS 15 HOA/ P>eES'Cf'^'' SeOOSEVElTS cff^XS SAiO Hf kSOUtP ACT WHfN Hi: HAD HIS FiesT. CHANCE OF CrOiNO TO WAfi 3U"» ""^15 IS HOW HE DIP ACr AS SHOWN BY THE PALWA C0tttSB)N(Ott JUST HAOf «>u9tlC W< L. Evans in the Cleveland Leader. 25 Nelson Harding in the Brooklyn Eagle. CHRISTMAS CARDS! 26 Fox in the Louisville Times. IF YOU SAY ANYTHING AGAINST ME— 27 McKce Barclay in the Baltimore Sun. Columbia: "Pianissimo, Teddy!" 28 C. H. Wellington in Memphis Nei]>s-Scimilar. THE MAKING OF A PRESIDENT. By Mrs. Bellamy Storer. * A cartoon following the dismissal of Mr. Storer as Ambassador to Vienna because of Mrs. sr'« activity in the politics of the Vatican. 29 (By Permission of P. F. Collier & Son, New York.) Kemble in Collier's, New York. THANKSGIVING. " For these mercies let us be truly thankful ! 30 Sucesas, Valparaiso (Chile). PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S FORTHCOMING FEAST. \ South American view of the latest appHcation of the Monroe Doctrine. 31 WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON My Dear Ur. Gregs: That Is a firat-clasa plat- form, and I am content to stand on It! I am very much amused and pleased with the cartoon. Sincerely yours. ^J74/La-9C^,^^ Chicago Record- Herald. (Reproduced from the New York Herald, in European Edition, Taris.) Teddy : "This reminds me of San Juan Hill." Allusion to the attacks of the yellow press at the time of the election. 40 THE IDEAL PRESIDENT. American journalists have made the important discovery that Mr. Roosevelt wears trousers bearing unmistakable signs of having been patched (at an extremely precarious place at that). This is considered by them the grandest expression of a true democratic spirit. JugenJ, Munich. We would propose that Mr. Roosevelt appear at the next reception in the White House attired as shown above. American enthusiasm would then undoubtedly know no bounds. Klods-Hans, Copenhagen. THE AMERICAN RULER. 41 Bill Nye in the New York Dai^ Nem. MOSTLY SMOKE. 42 W. C. Morris in the Spokane Spokesman-RevieV). THE NORTHERN LIGHTS. The Aurora Borealis, as a resplendent American flag, lights Peary's ship, the Roosevelt, amidst the Arctic ice. 43 L. D. Bradley in the Chicago A^en>s. HE OUGHT TO KNOW. A glance at Mr. Roosevelt's collection should be enough to satisfy his critics. 44 Le Rire, Paris. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AND OLD EUROPE. 45 Jack in the Pueblo Star Journal. Peacemaker Roosevelt: "I've mended worse rips.' 46 L. D. Bradley in the Chicago Dai7p Nzxoi. AS HIS CRITICS SEE HIM. 47 Golia in Pasquino, Turin. Roosevelt out of the White House will be able to devote himself to his favorite sports which he adores. 48 Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. TEDDY IN ITALY. 4& Gruelle In the Cleveland Press. TEDDY IN VIENNA. 50 Gruelle in the Cleveland Presi. TEDDY IN BUDAPEST. 51 Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. TEDDY IN PARIS. 52 Gruelle in the Cleveland Pres TEDDY IN HOLLAND. 53 ... '<• Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. TEDDY IN NORWAY. 54 Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. TEDDY IN BERLIN. 55 J,m m • it^W 1 i r^i\i^/#^iv i \ ^-XW^Ww^^^^^'**^^ N > V"Skf§ * ^ % * * * x^l^^^ ^ Jt*^P^^!^'X\rm'mdhL (P^^^^^^^ ■*• lAiiiAiiii l■("" "l A 3 ^^ » «jl.,.fl" "tlj ^y ^■■VVtIC^ /^A ^^B V" ^L*' H 1 } m^^ ^^LA^^w'W'w ' ^KKS^^ m ^ ^S^^w^_ I * o ^^^^■■fcS^V^ol ^MnB^^o^^ ^^k. Gruelle in the Cleveland Prea. TEDDY IN LONDON. 56 Shiras in ihe Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. THE PRESIDENT VOTES. 57 Feininger in Luslige Blatter, Berlin. TEDDY'S WAR CRY: "HURRAH! 58 Feininger in Lusiige Bldlter, Berlin. A BIG LITTER OF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES. " What do you say. Uncle? This fat one (Roosevelt) here we will keep. The other three (Bryan, Parker, Hearst) we will drown! " 59 G. R. Spencer in Omaha World Herald. "WELL, WE LICKED HIM, B'GOSH!" 60 F. E. Johnston in li.e Pittsburg Indc STANDING PAT. 61 Caras p Carelas, Buenos Ayres. Roosevelt mounts his favorite steed. His Yolanda of famous breed. Which lends him untold force, Blow^s clouds of smoke into the air. With a most contemptuous stare. Parker bringing up the rear. Sees roped the Presidential Steer For want of such a horse. 62 yi?%^^/A T. McWorther in the St. Paul Dispatch. Those who say " Roosevelt is getting away from the RepubHcan party " are slandering the party. 63 G. Brandt in KlaJderadastch, Berlin. BEFORE AND AFTER THE ELECTION. Gently. Brutally. G. Brandt in KladJeraJalsch, Berlin. DRAW POKER. He was not ready for the surprise. 64 J. L. De Mar in the Philadelphia Record. MAPPING OUT THE PLAN OF CAMPAIGN. IF CROKER WERE EMPEROR. (Published in the New York Herald and the New York Evening Telegram during the lipaign of 1900. Reproduced from the New York Herald, European Edition, Paris, Nov. 7, 1900.) 65 H. Harmony in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. HE DIDN'T GET THEM ALL. 66 Ryan Walker in the Girard, 111., Appeal to Reason. Uncle Sam: "The whole bunch is blood kin.' 67 Homer Davenport in the New York Evening Mail. THE IMPORTANT INTRODUCTION. 68 Homer Davenport in the New York Evening Mail. CERTAIN OF HIS ELECTION. 69 C. R. Macauley in the New York World. THE TRAINED ELEPHANT. 70 ; , . ^ . Vni\\W\i.i C. R. Macauley in the New York World. 71 Hy Mayer in the New York Times. A PRIVATE LESSON. H. J. Westerman in Ohio Slate Journal, Columbus. THE RESULT OF THE 1906 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS. ^^^^S^^^^^i^^^^^^^ C. L. Bartholomew (Bart) in the Minneapolis Tribune. COINS AND COMMINS OF THE POLITICAL STAGE. A. L. Lovey In the Salt Lake Herald. THE NEW REPUBLICAN GAME. 73 F. E. Johnston in the Pittsburg Leader. STEP LIVELY. 74 L. D. Bradley in the Chicago Da{l\) Ner»s, BLIND (?) MAN'S BUFF. Chorus: " And he's peeking ! " 75 J. L. De Mar in ihe Philadelphia Record. A DELICATE TASK FOR THE PILOT. 76 F. E. Johnston in the Pittsburg Leader. A SONG AND A DANCE. 77 F. Finch in the Denver News. Roosevelt to Cannon : " When you grow a little older you will be * big enough to fill my clothes." * One of the rare cartoons where Cannon is represented without his traditional cigar. 78 Nelson Harding in the Brooklyn Eagle. DEE-LIGHT-ED. 79 L. Earl in the Binohatnton Press. WILL NOT DEVIATE FROM HIS COURSE. 80 1 J. H. Cunningham in the Washington Utrald. THE ARTIST. 81 Golia in Pasquino, Turin, Italy. THE ELECTION OF TAFT; or, ROOSEVELT'S LAST ANE BIGGEST BUBBLE. 82 O. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. MIXED VS. STRAIGHT. 83 R. D. Handy in the Duluth NeiDs Tribune. WILL HE GET THROUGH THE LINE? 84 ORIGIN OF THE " BIG STICK." The first association of Theodore Roosevelt with the phrase, " the big stick," dates from a speech dehvered by him at Chicago in 1902. On that occasion he said : " There is a homely old adage which runs, * Speak softly and carry a big stick, and you will go far.' " The New York World, in an editorial published September 29, 1 904, revived the speech, contrasting it, in parallel columns, with Roosevelt's Pacific speech to the delegates of the Interparliamentary Peace Union, September 24, 1904. _ The first cartoon embodying the '* big stick " idea was published in the World of October 12, 1904. It represented Roosevelt mounted on a fiery steed, throwing a lasso around the flying Angel of Peace and carrying a cudgel bearing the words " big stick " upon it. It is interesting to notice the varying changes in cartoons in the char- acter of this stick. At first it was simply a long, round stick of uniform thickness. It later changed to the knotted club or bludgeon type, and now it is often seen with a spear protruding from the large end. This latter form was derived from Roosevelt's emblem and the " mailed fist " of Emperor William. William's symbol typifies Power and Force — nothing else. Roosevelt's " big stick," although formidable, means peace — but peace backed up by the ** big stick." — Success Magazine. 85 K. L. Russell in the Washington Post. THE POLITICAL BLACK HAND. 86 I J. E. Whiting in the South Bend Tribune, STILL IN THE GAME. 87 J. L. Dc Mar in the Philadelphia Record. MORE TROUBLE FOR THE INTERNATIONAL POLICEMAN. Oyster Bay does not appear to be precisely a place for a rest cure. 88 Scar, New York Clobe. NOW WATCH THE DIRT FLY. 89 Thomdike in the Philadelphia Press. (The packers who smiled over Judge Humphrey's ruling in March nov have something else to think about.) 90 C. p. Bolmar in the Topeka Stale Journal. BEWARE THE BIG STICK. President Roosevelt : " I hope, Mr. Castro, you will not com- pel us to resort to extreme measures." 91 Terry in the San Francisco Call. THE RETURN OF SAMSON. 92 Homer Davenport in the New York Evening Mail. VISIONS. 93 J. N. Darling in Des Moines Register and Leader. " 'Ted' with his pipe did play with such skill that no one who heard him could ever stand still." 94 Figaro, Vienna. THE TRUTH ABOUT THE PANIC OF '08-'09. " Teddy in the heat of his eloquence, beating the table, caused to fall a number of banks, ich were already worm-eaten. Seizing the advantage of this accident, he began to thunder ainst business corruption. Yet during nearly eight years of his ' reign * he did nothing to suppress ;sc corrupt practices. He escaped at the end of his term by stirring up a great scandal. " Teddy, you fool nobody. We all know that your anger is put on to assure you a fine nd-up." 95 mju- ' C. R. Macauley in the New York WoxU. THE FOX. 96 F Graetz in Der Floh. Vienr ROOSEVELT IN THE FIELD AGAINST THE MILLIONAIRES. |hief Roosevelt, the "Thundering Tongue," on the warpath against the ] gold-devouring palefaces. 97; J. Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. President Roosevelt sent three special messages to Congress Mondayj He has several more ready which he will transmit this week. 98 J. Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. ROOSEVELTEO" AND " TRUSTIET." They certainly love each other. (The modern Romeo and Juliet.) 99 J. L. De Mar in the Philadelphia Record. THE CALEBRA CUT. 100 F. Opper in the New York American. SEE MY TEDDY BEARS. (The common people, tax-payers, consumers, wage-earners, small lealers, all are partisans of Roosevelt, and, in consequence, ** little Teddy Bears " are at the mercy of the trusts.) 101 J. E. Whiting in the South Bend Tribune. Roosevelt's last message will be " Characteristic." — News Item. 102 u E. A. Bushneli in the Cincinnati Post, JIU-JITSUED. 103 Bart in the Minneapolis Journal, A SURPRISE FOR THE FAT BOY. 104 j. S. Clubb in the Rochester Herald. " At length he came close to me, and then he kneeled down again, kissed the ground, and laid his head upon the ground, and taking me by the foot, set my foot upon his head : this, it seems, was in token of swearing to be my slave forever." — RoBINSON CrusOE. I 103 C K. Beiryman in the Waililngton Evening Star. 106 1/ C. K. Berryman in the Washington Evening Star. 107 I'* J. S. Clubb in the Rochester Herald. " ON THE PAN." 108 L. D. Bradley in the Chicago Dail^ NeKs. STILL WAITING FOR THE CHANGE. Chorus: " Yes, this IS hot enough for us." 109 L. D. Sradlcy :n the Chicago Daily !'\'e'ws. THAT PAINFUL MOMENT. When you begin to realize that a mustard plaster is hot. 110 ^xt^ V L. D. Bradley in the Chicago Daily Nervs. ^HERE ARE PLENTY OF FIGHTING MOROS NEARER ^ HOME. Not worth while to go to the Phihppines to embroil himself; the ^resident can put his strategic knowledge to use in the Senate. Ill Gaido in Pasquino, Turin. THE FEAST OF THE OFFENDERS. Roosevelt : " Since the millionaires repulse me, I am c?elighted with your cordial reception. Who knows that you will not some day, by persevering in your noble course, become millionaires yourselves? " | 112 Der Wahre Jacob, Stuttgart. Saint Theodore preaching to the sharks : " You must always endeavor to be honest and upright; you will never covet your neighbor's property; will cease to oppress the weak and to devour them. On the contrary, you must love them, help and sustain them. If you obey not, the All Powerful will punish you severely and utterly destroy you." And the sharks withdrew and continued the carnage. (The shark is labeled ** Rockefeller.") 113 * W. A. Wellner in Luslige Blatter, Berlin. Out of Pandora's box misfortunes manifold and human ills came t< this mundane ball; alas, the worst misfortune did befall man, when h< received the gift we here behold! H 114 Th. I leine in Simplicisiimu^, Munich. THE CHICAGOAN PIG-STY. Even the hogs blushed with shame when President Roosevelt revealed them the hideous fate awaiting them at American stockyards. ii; yj?-^4i L. D. B.adley in the Chicago Daily News. UTILIZING THE sQy] :al. Music as a coming by-product. 116 C. F. Naughlon in the Duluth Evening Herald. Dr. Roosevelt: " Think I'll have to remove the lump." 117 (J. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph, PILGRIM. 118 I ^ C. K. Berryman iii ['..z V. a:li!n'T'on Evening Star, THE KIND OF FOOTBALL HE'D LIKE TO SEE. 119 (Copyrighted by Harper & Bros., New York.) ^ ^ ^^^^^^ .^ ^^^^^^.^ ^^^^^^ TO A FINISH. 120 J. C. Terry in the San Francisco Call. THE RETIRED CHAMPION. 121 K. L. Russell in the Washinglon Post. REPORTS FROM THE POLITICAL OBSERVATORY. Li other words, the earthen pot against the iron one; the strong and th( weak cannot go together. 122 Gaido in Pasquino, Turin. THE MILLIONAIRES VS. ROOSEVELT. Roosevelt: "It is easier to fight with millions than against millions.' 133 Johann Braakensick in Dc AnulerJanuncr IVeel^blaJ voor NeJcrlanJ. Uncle Sam to President Roosevelt: " Before you can bring about world peace, you must establish peace in your own land by killing the Trust monster." The same satire is often found in foreign caricatures: "Sweep your own threshold before you try to clean another's." 124 J. Gruelle in the Cleveland Press. TEDDY AND THE DRAGON. E. A. Bushnell in the Cincinnati Post. *' You may fire when you are ready, Gridley ! " 125 Suturday Clobe, Ithaca. A NAUSEATING JOB, BUT IT MUST BE DONE. President Roosevelt takes hold of the investigating muck-rake himself in the packing-house scandal. Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, NEXT! 126 Bartholomew m the Minneapolis Journal. IN THE AMERICAN JUNGLE. ^' Leip in the Detroit NeJvs, GRACIOUS. BE HASN'T CHANGED A BIT! " 127 Manca in Pasquino, Turin. Teddy is asked to free the Statue of Minerva, Goddess of Wisdom. from the rodents which attack her. 128 O. p. Williams in the Philadelphia North American. CANT PRY HIM LOOSE. 129 111 ipp O: R Walker in the Girard, 111., Appeal to Reason. 130 Look Tk& Qi^EA-rMoiUCODOU! ' R. Walker in the Girard, 111., Appeal lo Reason. 131 -T^ r- T. RoOjtl^ELTi R. Walker In the Girard, III., Appeal to Reason. 132 F. E. Johnston in the Pittsburg Leader. NOT FOR TEDDY. 133 F. Morgan in the Philadelphia Inquirer. YOU'RE NEXT! 134 - ^ -• .-.^^•/•^f*^ W. A. Rogers in the New York Herald. STRENUOUS. The octopus — is it necessary to say? — represents John D., who, in every caricature, personifies the Standard Oil. 185 7^ [^ A. Dick in Newark Morning Star. SOME CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS. 136 // Fischietlo, Turin. THE MIGHTY HUNTER RETURNS. The lions are slain — now let the trusts tremble! 137 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Roosevelt's interest in the preservation of Niagara Falls and his plans for power plants cause commercialism to see a new face in the mist. C. p. Bolmar in Topeka State journal. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT HAS THE PROBLEM OF HIS LIFE. 138 Gaido in Pasquino, Turin. ROOSEVELT'S FIRST HUNTING. Before going to hunt in Africa, Teddy wants to practice with his Redskins (Senate and House). 139 Ulk, Berlin. TEDDY'S LATEST CONCLUSION. Not even the sunlight will I have in conimon with the other nations of the world." 140 Ryan Walker in the Girard, 111., Appeal to Reason. OUR POLITICAL MOVING PICTURE SHOW. • The American mechanic and farmer have a free exhibition given to them of Roosevelt's opinion of " drunken cowboys." 141 J. S. Clubb in the Rochester Herald. The Donk: " I believe he's after my collar, too." Allusion to the comments of W. J. Bryan, who declared that Teddy had appropriated ail his political plans. 142 W-s'Vl^2"^ J. S. Clubb in the Rochester Herald. JUMPING A HIGH ONE. 143 n Tii , i| M.,, iif ,M iB iM i n i M l| Miinii, i , i| M>u iLiiMmil'M ll_n_^|^f[|l,i Hir 'I'l Nelson Harding in the Brooklyn Eagle. "AFTER YOU!" Senate) .. ^ ^ , . House \ lou go hrst, my dear sir. 144 C. K. Berryman in the Washington Evening Star. COUNTING THEIR DAYS OF LIFE. 145 C. Kessler in the St. Louis Republic IF JEFFERSON SHOULD COME TO LIFE. 146 1 <^ ^^ ^^uj-i^^TJ '^- ' ^• •• ^ AS IT LOOKS rm THE SENATE Nelson Harding in the Brooklyn Eagle. TWO POINTS OF VIEW! J 147 J. E. Whiting in the South Bend Tribune. ROPED. I4i McKee Barclay in the Baltimore Sun, THE UNWELCOME BUST. 149 Ole May in the Pittsburg Gazette -Times. IF T. R. BECOMES SPEAKER. 150 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. It looks to Congress like too much Roosevelt in official Washington. R. M. Brinkerhoff in the Toledo Blade. Roosevelt: "Now, old man, you quit your foolin'!" 151 L. D. Bradley in the Chicago Dai7\; News. THE REAL HERO Is the one who sticks to his desk at such a moment. 152 i ~/y,iAi!?t^^'^^~:Y. Nelson Harding in the Brooklyn Eagle, SNOW BALLS! 153 r^^^' C. R. Macauley in the New York World. 154 C. L. Barl in the Minneapolis Journal. OTHER REFORMS. ALSO. The Fat Boy: " I fear me there's more than reformed spelHng in that message." 155 C. F. Naughton in the Duluth Evening Herald. CONGRESS OPENS. 156 Krotowski In Ull(, Berlin. THE RECORD! Another American victory has been reported! Roosevelt's message the American Congress was ten times longer than the longest address r made by any potentate! Sovereign rulers of Europe, regain your stige ! 157 E. Linley Sambourne In Punch, London. THE STATIONARY CRUSADER. President Roosenelt: "Follow me!" (or 35,000 words to tha effect.) [See the President's Message to Congress.] 158 notiPMr wiTz$ A Mi:^SMr' ro cono-fe^xi ANon/oF nrs^/iGir. wromY WLMESm mup^MT rPWMY 3TILL ANor^p C. Kessler in the St. Louis Republic SOMETHING DOING EVERY DAY! 159 C. H. Wellington in the Memphis Newi-Scimilar, " THE DOG THAT ADOPTED A MAN." News Item: President Roosevelt insists that there is nothing to ad to his declaration that he will not accept the presidential nomination agaii Ex-Congressman Grosvenor insists that he has no right to refuse. 160 L. Earl in the Binghamton Press. lORUS: " May you have pleasant dreams and sweet repose, a nice soft bed and all the clothes." 161 C. K. Benyman in the Washington Evening Slar. DR. DEPEW PRESCRIBES A THIRD TERM COURSl OF TREATMENT. 162 C. K. Benyman in the Washington Evening Star, THE CONSTANT CALLER. 163 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. AND NOW TO BUSINESS. 164 ^ ^~'^^'' i^5 •^s^ w /^? . -, Philadelphia Public Ledger. NO THIRD TERM. 165 Muo » iimjm€ »i i > vyonWJ^!«ti » .^'^J^^:sy. ' ^" ' . E. S. Reynolds in the Tacoma Ledger. President Roosevelt: "I hereby announce, once and for all, tha will not be taken in by this movement," .^ma^ J. N. Darling in the Des Moines Register and Leader. Gracious sakes, Theodore, if you ain't goin' in, please get off the springboard." 166 C. K. Berryman in the Washington Evening Star. mbitious presidential timber being assured, to their joy, that Roosevelt really will not run for re-election. 167 F. Giaetz in Der Floh, Vienna. THE LORD OF THE NEW WORLD. " And the Lord saw everything that he had made, and, behold, it waj 'very good' ! '* 1C8 A. Johnson in Kladderadasch, Berlin. Sweet Christmas chimes are softly ringing. To earth the Angel now of Peace descends; His smiles foretell the blessings he is bringing. And yet — who really knows Ti>hat he intends! 169 Jeney in BolonJ !slof(, Budapest. Roosevelt: " Can I offer you a light for your peace pipe? '* Premier Witte: " Thanks. I'll light it with this new paper (Ports mouth treaty with Japan)." 170 Laci von F*''* in Humorislische BliHtcr, Vienna. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, THE PEACE SHOWMAN. " Here, ladies and gentlemen, is the newest attraction. This bear, a ravenous beast of prey subdued by Togo and Oyama, is now so tame that he subscribes to anything that is dictated to him." 171 Tlie advencunes of NibThcodorHolger^onRoo^evelr onViii journey (b die North Pole Pucl^, Stockholm. PAX TRIUMPHANS! 172 A. Schmidhammer in JugenJ, Munich. ROOSEVELT & CO. Teddy : " Hurrah ! At last the iron mouth of the cannon is silent ! ** Jap : " Yes, but now the tin voice of the Czar will be heard so much plainer! " 173 Ludwig Stutz in Kladderadaisch, Berlin. Having succeeded in being permitted to participate m the negotia; tions of peace, China is informed of Russia's determination to conside only those conditions which would be entirely consistent with her dignity China acquiesces and withdraws, relieved from the field of diplomat! operations. 174 Opisso in Hojas Selectas, Barcelona 175 (Courtesy of Georg Kalkar [Hvcr S Dag] ). Klodi-Hans, Copenhagen. END OF THE CONFERENCE. 178 Johann Braakensick in De Amslerdammer IVeel^blad voor NederlanJ. Roosevelt to Wilhelm Voigt (Captain Koepenick) : " Come, /oigt, take this wallet. You have done much more for the cause of peace han I have." 177 Farago in Ul^, Berlin. GRATITUDE. The Angel of Peace: " Dear Uncle Teddy, you have been sc good to me — just as if you had actually been benefited by the transaction." 178 Gustave Brandt in Kladdcradaiich, Berlin. THE PEACE-MAKER. Before " cuttin? " I will see if I set something out of the " deal. 179 Ludwig Slutz in KlaJderadalsch, Berlin. PEACE NEGOTIATIONS. Having received the formal declaration from Russia that she would only withdraw from the seat of war in an absolutely unimpaired condition, it has become the duty of the peace conference to be regardful of this decision and to countenance as much as possible Russia's advance to the rear. 180 Lyonel Feininger in Ull(, Berlin. PAPA, THE PEACE-MAKER. Roosevelt, addressing Alice and her betrothed : " Bless you, my children! Try to live always in peace; otherwise, I shall be compelled to call another conference to Portsmouth." 181 Fritz Gehrke in Ul}(, Berlin. AT THE PEACE AGENCY. Witboi: Would you be good enough to bring about peace between myself and Trotha? I would likewise agree to pay no war indemnifications whatever. TKe above refers to the uprising of the Bouzelswarts under their chief, Witboi, in German East-Africa. This uprising was finally suppressed by von Trotha, then in charge of the military affairs of the colony. The sign reads: " Creai Internalional Peace A gene]). Orders carefully and promptly executed. Medals, diplomas and testimonials from several Crowned Heads of Europe." 1S2 ' ■ ;. - aj:w,^'.;^-~^aMy-va:'r.iJ'.'g--t-" ^'SS^ST^TT^^TS^^Sr-^a ■-tef_ •; FRIEOENSPREISGABF-^ ■.^»*.« ..^x^ 1.1k, Berlin. Roosevelt's return gift to Sweden for the award of the Nobel prize should be an oil painting representing him as rough rider and fighter on the bloody field of battle. 183 TELEGRAMMES. M. Roosevelt a re^u bien d'autres telegrammes que ceux qui ont ete publics. Merci!... je ne croyais jamais revoir mon isba! — Des milliers de soldais russes. Grace a vous, je conserverai mon autre jambe! — Des milliers de Japs. Mes felicitations. . . Si j'en retrouve les debris, je vais tacher de reconstruire ma maison! — Des milliers de Coreens. Enfin ... les fonds russes vont peut-etre remonter. — Des milliers de Frangais. Peche par les Japonais ou par les Russes, c'est kif-kif . . . mais, du moins, on ne sera plus embete par les torpilles. — Des milliers de poissons de Sakhaline. 184 PAR HENRIOT. Finie, Tannee de la Comete! Allons au Caucase! — Plusieurs families de voulouTs mandchous. Zut. . . nous n'aurons plus d'operations a suivre. . . — Un lot de strategistes en chambre. M. Roosevelt, vous nous ruinez ! — Le syndicai des fabricants de jambes de bois. M!^A5.^ Plus de canards, que voulez-vous que je mette en manchette de mon journal? — Les direcieurs du. . . Enfin, je vais preparer la revanche et faire mon education! — Vn general russe. Tachez maintenant de faire signer la paix entre eux par nos nationaux ! — Vne quantite de chefs d'Etat. L' Illustration, Paris. 185 (Copyrighted by Harper & Bros., New York.) W. A. Rogers in the Harper's Pfee^/p. THE BUSY SHOWMAN. Show's all right— but Ben, the old Elephant — man will prowl around outside. 186 ^SUT WHERE. DID ROOSEVetr Oer HIS DOCTRINEi?. Hi GOT THEM^F/iOM THE OEMOCAriC PLATFOR*^. ANO IWRorS THS HAHK/iySEtF H. Harmony in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. 1?7 Torriente in La Discusion, Havana. THE MAN OF THE HOUR. The Cuban People: " I also congratulate you. I have cause to know the sentiment that you have." 188 Johann Braakensick in Amsterdammer WeeJ^hlad voor NeJerland. 189 //'ff O. C. Shiras in the Pitisburg Chronicle Telegraph. LIKELY TO BE ON THE JOB. The lineman gets busy. 190 Humorisliche Blatter, Vienna. ADVICE STILL NEEDED. Roosevelt: " See here, Mikado, I am a man who can always give good advice when needed." Mikado : ** Is that so? I wish you would advise me how to get over your peace intervention," 191 Jugend, Munich. ROOSEVELT AS THE ANGEL OF PEACE. " Peace in the name of humanity and of civilization ! Peace, dear friends! Peace! " (Aside) " The Jap is getting too powerful, the Russian has received the licking he deserved, therefore: * make peace!' " * In English in the original. 192 Jugend, Munich. THE ROUGH RIDER'S PIPE OF PEACE. One end to be taken by Japan, the other by Russia. 193 L'Uomo di Pieira, Milan. ROOSEVELT, THE PEACE-MAKER. " Since none of the erreat European Powers dare make a move, I thinl will make you conclude the Peace. 194 Fciningcr in Ull(, Berlin. St. Teddy preaching to the fishes: " In the name of humanity, I itreat you to make peace! After the war, however, I would recommend you my complete stock of goods." Opisso in Hojas Seleclas, Barcelone. Veil! be good, boys, and throw yourselves at the feet of this divinity." 193 E. Wilke in Jugtnd, Munich. AUNT FRIEDENSBERTHA AND THEODORE ROOSEVELT. "Will you really break up those naughty toys, my Angel?" *' Yes, Auntie, dear." Aside : " The old woman actually believes || Allusion to the peace advocate, Bertha Suttner (author of "Arms Down"). 196 Lionella Cima in L'Uomo di Pietra, Milan. GIANT'S WORK. Democracy (personified by Roosevelt) winds up the tangled threads of peace. Pasquino, Turin. ROOSEVELT, THE PEACE-MAKER. Does it seem to you that I am not a friend of Peace? Do you not observe that I have sent a squadron to the Pacific? " 197 /'Y'^'^ W. C. Morris in the Spokane Spo\ciman-R€\'ifa). PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S IDEA OF THE DOVE OF PEACE. Be it remembered, moreover, that such a fleet is by far the mos potent guaranty of peace which this nation has or can have." — Presiden Roosevelt, in a letter to the House Committee on Naval Affairs. 198 Dorsszen Jan^o, Budapest. IN DOUBT. President Roosevelt: " I don't feel quite certain that I can separate those fellows with this branch." 199 A. Wcisgerbcr in Jugend, Munich. ROOSEVELT AND THE PEACE DELEGATES. Roosevelt addressing the delegates of Russia and Japan : " Befor going to the peace conference, I would respectfully ask you one questiow ' Did you check your revolvers at the cloakroom? »W Neue Cliihlicler, Vienna. THE ONE THING LEFT. The Czar does not get war laurels. He does not want the palm of peace offered by Roosevelt. Nothing, therefore, remains for him but a beating. 201 ..f. V — Coclier, ruo Roosevelt... — Ou o'est-il, 5a ? — Imbecile ! il ne salt paa que oa veut dire lae de la Paiz ! Henriot in L' Illustration, Paris. APPEARING AT THE TIME OF THE PORTSMOUTH PEACE CONFERENCE. 202 L'Uomo di Pielra, Milan. A CAP MORE POTENT THAN TWO CROWNS. Roosevelt : " Now, will you make an end of horrifying this world with the spectacle of your war, yes or no? " 203 Jamieson In the Pittsburg Dispatch. WHO SAYS THERE'S NO SANTA CLAUS? 204 p. B. McCord in the Newark Evening Ner»i. "TEDDY THE GOOD" IN A NEW ROLE. " It is a very laudable purpose, but would anybody but Theodore Roosevelt ever think of dedicating a Christmas windfall of $40,000 for such a purpose? " — The Brooklyn Times. 205 L. Earl in Binghamton Frees. ••DEE-LIGHT-ED." 206 Amslerdammer. (Reproduced from the Literary Digest, New York.) Roosevelt : ** My dear neighbor, I hope that next year the Nobel Prize may be yours." •'^,07 O. P. Williams in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Uncle Sam : " Very fine prize — very. But what's that gruesome rattling sound I hear? " 208 H. Harmony in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. 209 Golia in Paiquino, Turin. Roosevelt : " With the advent of permanent peace, would I risk the loss of the Nobel Prize? " 210 H. S. Oibo.n in the Milwaukee Sentinel. "A NOK-OUT BLO." A travesty on reform spelling, advocated by Roosevelt, Twain, Carnegie, Brander Matthews and others. Jii J. L. De Mar in the Philadelphia Record. ROOSEVELT AS A SCHOOLMASTER. Uncle Sam takes a lesson in the New Spelling. 212 C. H. Wellington in the Memphis N eJifS'Scimilar, KIDNAPPED? 213 %?H insxn Ralph Wilder in the Chicago Record'Herald. THE "REFORMED" SPELLING COMES BACK FROM CONGRESS. Mr. Carnegie: " He seems to have been among some bad company, Theodore." 214 TrisI in the New Orleans Times Democrat. W. C. Morris in ihe Spokane Spo}(esman-Revieii>. KIKT-OUT. Nearly all the cartoons apropos the new orthography adopt a more or less fantastic spelling. 215 F. C. Gould in Westminster Gazette, London. The Word-Eater (Logophagus Roosevelti) on the leaves of the Dictionary tree. F. C. Gould in Weslmimler Gazette, London. Professor Roosevelt gives an example of the new spelling of Cuba. 216 George Roland Halkett in Pall Mall Cazetle, London. THE WHITE ELEPHANT. Theodore the Studious : " Say, old man, if you're goin' to interrupt my studies I guess I'll have to annex you." 217 R. M. Brinkerhoff in the Toledo Blade. Carnegie: " He's always been a sickly child and people don't seem to take to him somehow." 218 r- ^ 3 t \ 1: V. m T m ft; m'm^ ^ T t^ i 1^ ^t # T •t m \. Jg M »' 'i « ^tt ^'• ^sr," m^^t ^i li: ^^ O. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT IS READY TO FIGHT CONGRESS. 241 O. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. VAIN REGRETS. 243 G. Brandt in KladJeradalsch, Berlin. It is one of Teddy's greatest pleasures to listen to the records of two speeches made by his friend, William II., and when he hears the following utterance: "Considering the vastness of the world and the diminutivcness of man, it would seem impossible that we are really the pivot of the uni- verse," a happy smile wreathes his features. 243 0!e May in the Pittsburg Cazeiie-Timei. THE PEACEMAKERS! 244 O. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. ROOSEVELTS AND HOHENZOLLERNS CHAT AFTER LUNCH. 245 l^ioxlJlrpi'ilii L. C. Gregg in the Atlanta Constitution. WILLIAM II. TO THEODORE; Shake!" 246 ' f'ATrf/tftyA- R. W. Safterfield in the Cleveland NtVi. TEDDY AND THE KAISER. J47 J. L. De Mar in the Philadelphia Record. HEIRS APPARENT. 848 Robt. Minor, Jr., in the St. Louis Post Dispatch. SEEING ROOSEVELT. 249 Pucl(, Stockholm. THE TALL AND SHORT MEETING. Depicting the meeting of Roosevelt and the Crown Prince, who is very tall. 250 C. R. Macaulcy in the New York WorU. ANDY AND TEDDY. Whaur's Your Teddy Roosevelt Now? Mr. Carnegie having been decorated with the cross of the Legion of Honor for hii work in behalf of universal peace. 251 Manca in Pasquino, Turin. Roosevelt: " In the name of America, I urge you to disarm! " The Sovereigns (in chorus) : " My dear fellow, commence yourself! " 253 J. H. Cunningham in the Washington HeraU. THE REAL THING IN DENMARK. 253 F. C. Gould in the IVestminsler Cazetie, London. ONLY A LETTER. John Bull: "Thank you, Mr. Roosevelt, for the prompt kindness of yeur Navy and your People in this terrible disaster at Jamaica ! I know your own ideas about spelling, but you and I are not going to allow a single letter to make any difference to our friendship." Pertinent to the letter from the English Governor Swettenham to the American Admiral Davis at the time of the Jamaica catastrophe. 254 George Roland Halkett in Pa// jV/a// Gazette, London. A CHRISTMAS TOY FOR THEODORE. " It is known at Washington that Mr. Bryce's appointment (as Brit- lish Ambassador to the United States) has given Mr. Roosevelt the greatest pleasure." — New York Correspondence. 255 E. T. Reed in Punch, London. FIRST IMPRESSIONS. Pres. R-S-V-LT: " My! if he ain't just a daisy! Most attractive personality, I do declare! Hope I shan't get kind er hitched up in them eyebrow 'rrangements! " Prof. Br-CE: " H'm! nice pleasant expression. One who was not a purist in language might almost describe him as a ' peach.* Development of the teeth suggests tenacity and strength of character. Well, well, we must try to avoid them! " 256 Alfred Schmidt in Hver 8 Dag, Copenhagen. Roosevelt: "Do you mean that I have done nothing for the world's peace? Have I not sent my whole fleet to the Pacific? " Podbirlski in Lusiige Bliittcr. Berlin. AT THE PROFESSIONAL PAWNSHOP. GermANIA: " I come from the Alma Mater. Would you kindly re-exchange this professor? " Referring to the exchange of university professors between the United Stales and Germany. 257 Jugend, Munich. PRINCE HENRY'S VISIT TO UNITED STATES. Social Handshakes and Commercial Interests. It is always better to give your friend a hearty handshake before stepping; on his toes: it looks better and it will hurt him less. Jugend, Munich. Prince Henry on alighting from his special train made the remarkl ^ that he had never traveled at a greater speed, even in England. " You will certainly receive better speed here than you did in Eng land," replied Roosevelt, with a significant smile. Allusion to the lukewarm reception extended to Prince Henry In England previous to hi visit to the United States in 1902. 258 FREDERICK THE GREAT TO PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. Jugend, Munich. " And no place can be had in Washington for my statue? " — " No, sir," replied the President. " One hundred square feet occupied by a European monarch ! — Why, that would be a violation of the Monroe ) Doctrine." PLUTARCH UP TO DATE. Jugend, Munich. A certain gentleman from Berlin appeared at the White House to take leave of President Roosevelt. " Dear Mr. President, would you permit me to send you a souvenir From Berlin as an expression of my gratitude for the cordial reception you lave extended to me? " " Certainly, with pleasure ! But no more monuments, no more monu- Tients! " I Allusion to the indifferent and frigid attitude of the press occasioned by Emperor William's ![ift of a statue of Frederick the Great, offered to the American nation as an expression of hit personal favor. 259 La Caricature, Paris. LYNCH AND LUNCH. " Have a lynched negro cutlet, fried, dear Roosevelt? " " In petroleum? No, Uncle Sam, our tastes differ." 260 L. Stutz In KladJeraJalsch, Berlin. EXCHANGE OF PICTURES. OR SMALL GIFTS PRESERVE GREAT FRIENDSHIPS. Roosevelt: " You massacre your Jews; I lynch my niggers." 261 A. Johnson in the Kladderadatich, Berlin. On the Left Side: Edward embraces Leopold (Belgium) and flirts with France, who is supporting Russia with her right arm. To THE Right: Teddy with the helmet of Emperor William II. 262 J. Braakensick in Amslerdammer JVee1(blad voor Nederland, THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES AND THE ARBITRATION BILLS PROPOSED BY ROOSEVELT. Roosevelt to Jonathan : " There, that is how you spoil all my work; I can't present one of these treaties." Mariane (The French Republic): "A fine thing, indeed! and I who depended on it." 263 Malho, Rio Janeiro. ROOSEVELT AND ROOT IN BRAZILIAN EYES. Commenting on a minor incident growing out of local political ani- mosities in Argentine reports the followmg alleged conversation between President Roosevelt and the Secretary of State: Roosevelt: " How is it Brazil gave you flowers and her neighbor nation stones? " Root (calmly) : " Each one gives what he has, Mr. President." Mr. Root's visit to South America was the chief topic of the cartoonists among our Latin neighbors to the South during July and August, 1906." — American TRevien) of Reviervs. 264 fnBTi-wiftrf^-^ Der Floh, Vienna. LORD OF THE NEW WORLD. Roosevelt: "Take that statue of Frederick the Great away, until a statue of Monroe has been set up in BerHn." 265 out? Jugend, Munich. KEEPING THE LORD'S DAY IN AMERICA. " Teddy, your fish has swallowed the bait; why don't you pull him " Because I want to wait until the Peace-Congressional Church is out." 266 Luslige Blatter, Berlin. The President of Colombia: " My hat, my hat! " Roosevelt: "Don't yell so, my old friend. I'll fish it out for myself directly." 267 An Amusing Book! L. C. Gregg in the Atlanta Constituii ,J AN AMUSING BOOK. How a Southern cartoonist regarded Roosevelt's invitation to Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House. 268 L. C. Gregg in the Allania Consliiution. " TWO SOULS WITH BUT A SINGLE THOUGHT. 2iin H. T. Webster in the Chicago Inler Ocean. THE PRESIDENT INSPECTS THE PANAMA ARMY. 270 Opisso in Hojas Seleclas, Barcelone. TWENTY YEARS AFTER. That's what you call arriving in time! Nobody can deny that I am up-to-date." 271 Gimenez in Carai J) Carelas, Buenos Ayrcs. THE PEACE HERALD. " My trip, Mr. President, has produced fortunate results. Everywhere I went peace and concord followed." 272 Caronte in // Fischietto, Turin. ROOSEVELT'S ASPIRATIONS. Friend Theodore longs for universal peace, the fraternity of nations, disarmament, arbitration, and other fine things. But he still takes delight in the flavor of a fine Havana direct from Cuba. ?r3- Caras p Carelas, Buenos Ayres. ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO THE FILIPINOS. "My young friends, here is my New Year's gift. You may depend that I will always protect you as I do to-day." ^^m Fill III ^^Pn 11* III ^WTi' Ml III ^^'" "1 IM r Golia in Pasquino, Turin. IN CENTRAL AMERICA. Teddy no sooner turns his back than the children begin to make trouble. 375 G. R. Spencer in Omaha World Herald. THE NEW PROTEGE OF THE PRESIDENT. 27fi R. M. Brinkerhoff in the Toledo Blade. "Don't you think you've flattered her? " 277 L. D. Bradley in the Chicago Dail^ NeVls. ON THE WAY TO PANAMA. Daily diversions on shipboard; the President is It. 27S Jugend, Munich. PLUTARCH UP TO DATE. President Roosevelt informed the delegates of the Interparliamentary Peace Conference that he would in the near future invite the delegates to a second conference at The Hague. " What would happen should America again desire another annexa- tion? " queried a cautious delegate. " But, man alive, that would certainly not occur before the presidential elections! " replied the President, with a sly wink. Trisf in the New Orleans Times-Democrat. THE PRESIDENT RETURNS. (He finds a number of people waiting to see him.) The cartoonist of the Democratic paper supposed that the colored gentlemen have come to ask the traveler returning from Panama an explanation of the disbanding of the colored regiment at Brownsville. 279 Torriente in La Discusion, Havana. The Policeman: ' Let us mobilize the army? Let us concentrate the fleet? " Roosevelt: " No; show them the monuments of our great patriots." A Cuban satire at the time the Revolutionists in Cuba wanted to invade the United States. 280 *'^ ■Vrir f'/iAWff' C, R. Macauley in the New York World. THE NEW RECRUIT. 281 Feininger in Lustige Dldiler, Berlin. A SOLEMN MOMENT. The Alarm Clock: " B-r-r-r-r-r-r-r " Roosevelt: "Thunder! Six o'clock; oh, yes? Must press the button * * * * opening of the International Exposition (St. Louis).' 282 \ W. A. Ireland in the Columbus Diipaich. ROOSEVELT AND FOOTBALL. " I have no sympathy whatever with the overwrought sentimentaHty which would keep a young man in cotton wool. Don't flmch, don't foul; hit the line hard! " — Mr. Roosevelt's address at Harvard, 1907. 283 /■■ ^o L. D. Bradley in the Chicago DaW'g Netus. If our anti-race-suicide President wants to show his sincerity, he migh turn the White House into flats that wouldn't exclude children. The President would enjoy his rest immensely if he adopted the amusing idea of the artist. 284 O.C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. OF COURSE NOT. T. R. was born a man and does not want to make himself a monkey. 285 E. T. Reed in Punch's Almanach, London. WHAT WILL BECOME OF ROOSEVELT WHEN HIS TERM OF OFFICE IS CONCLUDED? Will a Music Hall Syndicate offer a three-years' engagement in Europe, at £500 a week, for a fifteen-minutes' turn of bronco-bust- ing, revolver-shooting, etc.? Will the Bishop of London, in recognition of his muscular Christi- anity, give him a curacy in the Shadwell or Wapping district, with the prospect of working his way up the river to something better? 286 E, T. Reed in Punch's Almanack, London. Will he become a City Alder- nan and eventually rise to the title ind dignity of Sir Theodore Roose- velt, Bart., Lord Mayor of Lon- don? Or will he accept an invitation from the Emperor of Sahara to act as Deputy Emperor, under the name of TEDI-ROZW-el-TIN during His Majesty's visits to Paris? 287 Enrico Caruso in La Follia Ji Nem Yorl(. BON VOYAGE! AND GOOD LUCK IN AFRICA. S88 '!]j) ly^^-^'^^ Homer Davenport in the New York Evening Mail. WHEN THE CAT'S AWAY. THE MICE PLAY. 2«9 H^'/^ ^ Robt. Minor, Jr., in the Si. Louis P05/ Dispalch THE KING IS DEAD; LONG LIVE THE KING! 290 ^c^ ^^^^^^^^^^Z" :>:^- Robt. Minor. Jr., in the St. Louis Poil Dispatch. IMMUNEl 291 Pasquino, Turin. MEETING OF SOVEREIGNS IN THE CENTER OF AFRICA. His Majesty the King of the Desert: " In the name of that Nobel whose prize covers you with glory, O Teddy, I implore you to spare other thousands of my subjects." 292 Burton Link in the Pittsburg Press TEDDY AT HOME IN AFRICA. 293 " T U -g^ ' J >:;IV^lWl-'iW ' R'-. Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. " Gosh, this tastes good ! I haven't had anything to eat since mother disappeared! " Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Roosevelt: "Let me see, there's one for each member of the Cabinet and — two for Taft! " 294 K " ■ '--»■ — - — -»i Ji-t -'< Payne in the Pittsburg CazeUc-Timei. This conception of Payne's refers to the imaginary rage and dis- appointment of Mr. Roosevelt when he came away from his Louisiana bear hunt without getting a single shot at bruin. The coon in the cartoon ex- claims: '* Ain't this the wild place! " 295 ^^ Payne in the Piltsbuig Gazette-Times. A SUPPOSITION IN THE ABSENCE OF DETAILS. 296 ^■.^^•ii«^^«^-vP^"^' --^■'-■^■rimr 'HT^^ S^ J. S. Clubb in ihe Rochester Herald. THE ARRIVAL. Apropos Roosevelt's bear hunt in Texas and how the game had warning. 297 Olc May in the PMtsburg Cazeile-Times. AND HE WAS A MIGHTY HUNTER. 298 r.y^ ji\i J. N. Darling in Des Moines Register and Leader. Roosevelt (in camp) : " I wish I could get some one at the White House who could cook liks this." 299 \ ictor in Pasquino, Turin. TARTARIN IN ITALY. The Stuffed Wild Beasts in the Museum: " Look out! Tartarin is coming." 300 c^.^.^^^^ C. H. Cunningham in the Washington Herald. COMING EVENTS CAST THEIR SHADOWS BEFORE. .101 Nelson Harding in the Brooklyn Eagle. "WHILE VM IN ITALY." Manca in Pasquino, Turin. WHAT ROOSEVELT HUNTS AS A JOURNALIST! (Canards.) 302 C Hager in the Seattle Posl'InielUgencer. ** I beg your pardon, is this New Orleans? " Reference to President Roosevelt's visit to New Orleans to inspect the proposed campaign against mosquitoes bearing the germ of yellow fever. Leip in the Detroit Neva. TWO SOULS WITH BUT A SINGLE THOUGHT. 303 R. M. Brinkerhoff in the Toledo Blade. "NOT BAD, EH, OLD MAN?" 004 Robt. Minor, Jr., in the St. Louis Posl Dispatch. THE ROOSEVELT FAREWELL PARADE. McKee Barclay in the Baltimore Sun. TROUBLE'S BREWIN'! There'll be the dickens to pay in the Fourth Estate before long! 305 Thomas in the Detroit Neti>s. VALENTINE'S DAY IN AFRICA. 506 Ole May in the Pittsburg Cazelle-Timet. GONE. BUT NOT FORGOTTEN. 30- Punch, London. A SITTER; OR, BIG GAME TO THE LAST.' Mr. Roosevelt: " Steady, Kermit. We must have one of these." (The cable reports say Mr. Roosevelt was delighted with this cartoon, and expressed a desire to have the original drawing.) — Reproduced from the Literary Digest, New York- 308 R. W. Salterfield in the Cleveland NtWi. 1799_1910. 309 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. AS EGYPT SEES HIM. 310 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. THE WRONG TUNE. 311 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "TALK ABOUT BEING PRESIDENT!" 312 Leip in the Detroit News. .UXOR, May 22. — Roosevelt rode to the tomb of the Kings on a donkey. May in the Detroit Journal. Roosevelt: "And I'm cHmbing Pyramids! " 313 J. C. Terry in ihe San Francisco Call. "CIVILIZATION AT LAST." 314 Ole May in the Pittsburg Cazelle-Timci. WHISKERS? NOT EVEN IN AFRICA! Oyster Bay, N. Y., March 18. — Ex-President Roosevelt will be his own barber in Africa during the year he will spend there at the head of the Roosevelt-Smithsonian-African expedition. He does not intend to grow a full beard, as has been reported and pictured recently. The ex-President has purchased a dozen sticks of shaving soap at a village drug store and has been practicing the use of a razor since leaving Washington. At first it was difficult for Mr. Roosevelt to manipulate the razor because, during his seven years' occupancy of the White House, he had been shaved at his office there by a negro barber who was employed on the executive office staff. 315 Porter in the Boston Traveler. HANDLE WITH CARE! 316 :;^/osv^ J. p. Rigby in the Pittsburg Press. THE RETURN. 317 4^^r ^^^ fc^^y ^^^ ''^^^^3^/' ^f^^ i ^/. $^ Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. SIGHTSEEING IN EUROPE. 318 C. Terry in the San Francisco Caii. THE CONCERT OF THE POWERS. 319 C\^^ *",'"' "^ , H. Cunningham in the Washington Herald. THE COMET. n^o Terry in the San Francisco Call. THE NEXT COMET. 381 Robt. Minor, Jr., in the St. Louis Posi Dispatch. THE BIG SHOW. At the Top of the Tent. 32s: H. Harmony in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. IF TEDDY SET THE STYLE. 323 C. H. Winner in the Pittsburg Post. ON THE ANXIOUS SEAT. 324 Minor in the St. Louis Post Dispatch. JUST LOOK! 325 "W. p. Canfield in the Pittsburg Sun. PINCHOT AND TEDDY. Little Drops from Above. 326 J. C. Terry in the San Francisco Call. THE MODERN NAPOLEON AND MARSHAL NEY. 327 C. H. "Winner in the Pittsburg Post. THERE'LL BE ANOTHER ERUPTION WHEN PINCHOT MEETS TEDDY. 328 C^J^'^-TTCHrtey^^ R. W. Satterfield in the Cleveland Nevi. 320 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Mt. Etna: "Guess I'll let up for awhile; here comes Teddy." :i:iO C. H. Winner in the Pittsburg Post. " THE MOST STARTLING FIGURE NAPOLEON." . SINCE Will History Repeat? 331 J. C. Terry in the San Francisco QaW. THE HUNTER AND THE HUNTED. 332 LINES IN YOUR HAND MRTAFT THAT YOU WILL 6E THE. REPUBLICAN W. p. Canfield in the Pittsburg Sun. THE FORTUNE TELLER. 333 O. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph, ONE TIME THAT THE KAISER WAITED. Emperor William of Germany was compelled to wait 20 minutes for Theodore Roosevelt yesterday at the University of Berlin. Royal etiquette requires that his majesty be not kept waiting. The incident worried the courtiers, but Colonel Roosevelt wasn't fazed a bit. 334 Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. TEDDY AND MONSIEUR FRENCHI IN DEAR PAREE. 335 Ole May in the Pittsburg Cazeile-Times. THE TABLES TURNED. 336 Ole May in the Pillsburg Cazellc-Times. A PAUSE. 337 O'.e Mav in the Pittsburg Cazelle'Times. BACK AMONG THE OLD FOLKS. 338 Thomas in the Detroit A'cnii. TEDDY IN THE LAND OF HIS ANCESTORS. 339 Amsterdammer. (Reproduced from the Literary Digest, New York.) Dame Holland: " Welcome to the home of your fathers! 340 McKee Barclay in the Baltimore Sun. The Faunal Naturalist: "If ever in my life I felt that I believed in the conservation of Internal Resources, it is at this very moment." 341 El Fischiello, Turin. This would be the most appropriate exit from Europe for T. R. 348 E. W. Kemble in Collier's, New York. tBy Permission of P. F. Collier & Son, New York.) TEDDY'S COMING BACK! " 343 W. p. Canfield in the Pittsburg Sun. WHEN TEDDY COMES HOME. 344 Donahey in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, A FUTURE GUEST AT THE WHITE HOUSE. ** My, how this place has changed." 345 W. p. Canfield in the Pittsburg Sun. DEE-LIGHT-ED! 349 Rowland R. Murdoch in the Pittsburg Press. HOW THE ARTIST UNDERSTANDS "T. R. IN CARTOON." 347 INDEX O. C. Shiras in the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. Barclay. McKee 28, 149, 305. 341 Bartholomew, C. L. (3art)..73, 104. 127, 155 Berryman, C. K 106, 107. 119, 145, 162. 163, 167 Bolmar. C. P 91. 138 Boscovitz, J. F 237, 238 Braakensick, Johann . .. . 124, 177. 189, 234, 263 Bradley, L. D vii, 44. 47. 75, 10?, no. 111, 116, 152. 278, 284 Brandt, G 19, 64, 179, 243 Brinkerhoff, R. M 151, 218, 277, 304 Bushnell, E. A 103, 125 Canfield, W. P 24. 326, 333, 344, 346 Caronte 273 Caruso, Enrico 7, 238 Cir 12 Cima, Lionella 197 Clubb, J. S 105, 103, 142. 143. 297 Cunningham. J. H 33. 81. 253, 301, 320 Darling. J. N 94. 166. 299 Davenport. Homer iv. 3. 68, 69. 93, 289 DeMar, J. L ix, 2, 65, 76, 83. 100. 212. 236, 248 Dick, A 136 Donahey viii, 126, 138, 151, 164, 294. 310. 311, 312. 318, 330. 345 Earl, L 80. 161, 206 Evans, W. L 25 Farago 1 78 Feininger, Lyonel 58, 59, 181. 195, 282 Finch. F : 78 Fox 27 Gage xi Gaido 20. 112. 123. 139 Gehrke. Fritz 182 Gimenez 272 Golia 48, 82, 210, 220, 223, 224, 275 Gould, F. C xiv, 39. 216. 254 Graetz, Friedrick 37, 97, 168 Gregg, L. C vi, 4, 5, 32, 246. 268. 269 348 Leip in the Detroit News. ROOSEVELT IN COPENHAGEN. Gruelle, John B 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 98, 99, 125 Hager, G 303 Halke, F 222 Halkelt, George Roland 217, 255 Handy, R. D 84 Harding, Nelson.. 14, 26, 79, 144, 147, 153, 302 Harmony, H 66. 187, 209, 323 Heine, Th 115 Henriol 184, 185, 202 Hop 221 Ireland, W. A 283 Jack xii, 46 Jamieson 204 Jeney |70 Johnson, A 169. 262 Johnston, F. E 61. 74, 77, 133 Kemble, E. W 16. 30, 343 Kessler, C 146, 159 Krotowski 157 Laci von F**» 171 Leip 127. 303. 313, 349 Link, Burton 293 Lovey, A. L vii, 73 Macauley. C. R 70. 71. 96. 154, 251. 281 McCord. P. B 205 McWorther, T 63 349 'And in his time a man plays many parts." — Shakespeare. I Cowboy. 2 — Historian. 3 — Police Commissioner. 4 — Assistant Secretary of the Navy. 5 — Rough Rider. Mahoney, FeUx Podbirlskl 257 Manca 128, 252, 302 Porter 316 May. Ole 11, 150, 244, 298, 307, 315, 336, 337, 338 Reed, E. T 232, 256, 286, 287 May 231, 313 Reynolds, E. S , 34, 166 Mayer, Hy 72 Rogers, W. A 120. 135, 186 Mayol 8 Rigby J- P 317 Minor, Robert, Jr Russell, K. L 86, 122 38, 249, 290, 291, 305, 322, 325 Morgan, F , . . 1 34 Sambourne, E. Linley 1 58 Morris, W. C 21, 43, 198, 215, 350, 351 Satterfield, R. W 247, 309, 329 Murdoch, Rowland R , . . . . 347 Scar 89 Schmidhammer, A ' ' 3 Naughton, C. F V, 23, 117, 156 Schmidt, Alfred 257 Jsjye, Bill 36, 42 Shiras, O. C v, vi, ix, X, xiii, XV, 57,83,85, 118. 190, 202, Osborn, H. S 211 241. 242, 245, 285, 334, 335, Index, 353 | Opisso 13, 175, 195, 271 Sinclair ^ Opper, F 101 Spencer, G. R 60, 276 Spencer, W. C 24 Payne, C. M 10, 295. 296 Stutz. Ludwig 174, 180, 239. 261 350 6 — Governor of New York. 7 — Vice-President. 8 — President. 9 — Peace- Maker. 10 — Mighty Hunter and Author all the time. (Drawings by W. C. Morris in the Spokane Spokesman-Review.) Terry. J. C..15, 92, 121,314, 319, 321, 327, 332 Thomas 306, 339 Thorndike iii, 90 Torrienle 188, 240, 280 Trisi 215, 279 Victor 300 Walker. Ryan.... 9, 35, 67, 130. 131, 132, 141 Wazques 18 Webster, H. T 270 Weisgerber, A 200 Wellington, C. H 29, 160. 213 Wellner. W. A 114 Westerman. H. J 72 Whiting. J. E 87. 102. 148 Wilder. Ralph 214 Wilke. E 196 Williams, O. P 22. 129, 208. 233 Winner. C. H 324, 328. 331 POEMS. Burgoyne. Arthur G 1 Irwin. Wallace 17 351 The Omaha World Herald. THE TWO DOVES OF PEACE. 352 353 ^ii 'f- >-*' .^^- A' <^^^ xV % v-^' Si o A. -^ ■ ■X^'" "■':■> '.: v> ci-, - -^- .,N --<./, o\' '.0^ :^ "v. ^-P .# ^0■' v*?-' v 0- v^ '^ ^, .V m 1 '^w