Description:
New York: Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1907. First Edition. Very good, a bright image. Original color lithograph by Frank A. Nankivell, the plate measures 10" x 13.75";. Illustration shows in six panels TR doing unlikely things, photographing a bear as opposed to hunting one, breaking up a fight between two boys etc.
Puck Magazine Cover "Arms and the Men. A Difference Of Opinion to What Will Fit the Lady". April 25, 1906 by Puck Magazine - 1906
by Puck Magazine
Puck Magazine Cover "Arms and the Men. A Difference Of Opinion to What Will Fit the Lady". April 25, 1906
by Puck Magazine
- Used
- first
New York: Keppler & Schwarzmann, 1906. First Edition. Very good, a bright image. Original color lithograph by J. S. Pughe, the cover measures 10" x 13.75"; We have used the image from the Library of Congress, our piece does not have the library stamps pictured on that copy. Illustration shows President Theodore Roosevelt standing on one side of a scaffold, holding a large sculpted arm with a huge stick labeled "The Big Stick" for placement on a large sculpture of a female figure labeled "Inter-State Commerce Laws"; on the other side of the scaffold is a man labeled "The Rail Road" directing Nelson W. Aldrich, Stephen B. Elkins and Joseph B. Foraker to use instead a much smaller arm labeled "Delay" and "Fines". Puck was the first successful humor magazine in the United States of colorful cartoons, caricatures and political satire of the issues of the day. It was published from 1871 until 1918.
- Bookseller Austin's Antiquarian Books (US)
- Book Condition Used - Very good, a bright image
- Quantity Available 1
- Edition First Edition
- Publisher Keppler & Schwarzmann
- Place of Publication New York
- Date Published 1906