. Review of reviews and world's work. <ni^ DAVID B. HILL IN HIS NEVr ROLE AS THE ROUGHEST RIDER.—From the Times (Denver). THE TAIL NOW THREATENS TO WAGGLE THE DOG. From the Times-Democrat (New Orleans). CURRENT HISTORY IN CARICATURE. 161. Bryan : Two tails are better than the Journal (Minneapolis). Mr. Brjans Vice-Presidential partnerships are afford-ing the cartoonists the sarae kind of amusement thisyear as in 1896, when the gentleman from Nebraska wasassociated with Mr. Sewall, of Maine, on one ticket,and with Mr. Watson, of Georgia, on another. Thisyear, it is Mr. Stevenson, of


. Review of reviews and world's work. <ni^ DAVID B. HILL IN HIS NEVr ROLE AS THE ROUGHEST RIDER.—From the Times (Denver). THE TAIL NOW THREATENS TO WAGGLE THE DOG. From the Times-Democrat (New Orleans). CURRENT HISTORY IN CARICATURE. 161. Bryan : Two tails are better than the Journal (Minneapolis). Mr. Brjans Vice-Presidential partnerships are afford-ing the cartoonists the sarae kind of amusement thisyear as in 1896, when the gentleman from Nebraska wasassociated with Mr. Sewall, of Maine, on one ticket,and with Mr. Watson, of Georgia, on another. Thisyear, it is Mr. Stevenson, of Illinois, and Mr. Towne, ofMinnesota. Possibly before this issue of the Reviewappears it will have been decided to have Mr. Towneretire. Mr. Stevenson is represented by some of thecartoonists as in the process of transformation from anold-fashioned Democrat to one of the modern Populisticsort. Mr. Hill, who escaped the Vice-Presidential nomi-nation, is represented in the last drawing on this page,as sitting in an astrologers anteroom, with GovernorRoosevelt, eager to ask questions about 1904.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidreviewofrevi, bookyear1890