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Inventory of the John T. McCutcheon Papers, 1834-1996; bulk 1889-1950
Machine-readable finding aid encoded by Alison Hinderliter, Pamela Olson, and Monica Petraglia, 2005. ©2004. |
Descriptive Summary of the Collection |
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Creator |
McCutcheon, John T. (John Tinney), 1870-1949 |
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Title |
John T. McCutcheon Papers |
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Dates |
1834-1996, |
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Dates |
bulk 1889-1950 |
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Extent |
87 cubic ft. (114 boxes, 1 oversize folder, and 47 volumes) |
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Abstract |
Collection of correspondence, works, drafts of works, subject files, and personal information by and about John T. McCutcheon, editorial cartoonist and newspaper correspondent for the Chicago Record and the Chicago Tribune. |
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Language |
Materials are in English. |
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Repository |
Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections |
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Collection Call Number |
Midwest MS McCutcheon |
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Collection Stack Location |
3a 41 5-9 |
John T. McCutcheon Papers, Midwest Manuscript Collection, The Newberry Library, Chicago.
Gift, Mrs. John T. McCutcheon, 1958; with subsequent donations from family members.
Alison Hinderliter, Pamela Olson, and Monica Petraglia, 2005.
This inventory was created with the generous support of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this inventory do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The John T. McCutcheon Papers are open for research in the Special Collections Reading Room; 1 box at a time (Priority III).
The John T. McCutcheon Papers are the physical property of the Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs or assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections.
Artist, illustrator, reporter, editorial cartoonist, and adventurer who traveled the world from the 1890’s through the 1930’s, both for his own pleasure and to report on events for the Chicago Record and the Chicago Tribune newspapers. He was The Chicago Tribune’s editorial cartoonist from 1903-1946, and won a Pulitzer prize for one of the cartoons in 1931.
John Tinney McCutcheon was born May 6, 1870, near South Raub, Tippecanoe Co., Indiana. In 1889 he graduated from Purdue University, and moved soon after to Chicago to work for the Chicago Morning News (later to be known as the Chicago Record, and then the Chicago Record-Herald.) His first trip abroad was in 1895 with his good friend and fellow Purdue alumnus George Ade. After getting a taste of travel in Europe he decided to expand his horizons, and in 1898, acting as an artist-reporter for the Record, he embarked on a world tour aboard the naval ship McCulloch. Because of the outbreak of the Spanish-American War, however, McCutcheon instead spent almost two years in the Philippines, covering the conflict for the newspaper. In a short break in those two years McCutcheon was also sent to the Transvaal, South Africa to cover the Boer War. When McCutcheon left the Chicago Record to work for the Chicago Tribune on Jul. 1, 1903, he continued to travel widely, covering World War I events among others while still drawing front-page editorial cartoons on an almost daily basis. His long tenure at the Tribune, from 1903 to 1946, helped to win him the title “Dean of American Cartoonists.” He won the Pulitzer Prize for his 1931 editorial cartoon captioned, “A Wise Economist Asks a Question,” and his cartoon entitled “Injun Summer”, first run in 1912, was so popular it was occasionally reprinted by the Tribune, as well as other papers, for decades.
McCutcheon married Evelyn Shaw, daughter of Chicago architect Howard Van Doren Shaw, on Jan. 20, 1917. They honeymooned on an island in the Bahamas that McCutcheon had recently purchased, called Salt Cay (informally renamed “Treasure Island.”) They had three sons (John Jr., Shaw, and Barr) and one daughter, Evelyn (called Shirley in one letter) who died while still a small child. The McCutcheons settled in Lake Forest, Illinois, and were members of many prominent social clubs around Chicago. John T. McCutcheon retired from the Chicago Tribune in 1946, and died Jun. 10, 1949. Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon died in 1977.
Editorial cartoons and drawings, literary works, correspondence, scrapbooks, clippings, photographs, personal records, and family records documenting the life of John Tinney McCutcheon, primarily from his college days at Purdue University through the time of his death in 1949. The largest portion of the collection is his cartoons and illustrations, both originals (mostly on large card stock board) and reproductions, which come in a variety of formats. McCutcheon’s main output, the editorial cartoons for the Chicago Tribune, are represented completely in a set of 33 volumes of scrapbooks (including the Chicago Record as well), clipped from the newspapers. There are approximately 650 original drawings of Tribune cartoons; this is an incomplete set, as McCutcheon and the family donated original cartoons to various people and institutions over the years (see the Special Collections Department’s Information File for details on the disposition of the other original cartoons). McCutcheon is not as well known for his essays, articles, and memoirs, but he was a prolific writer as well as artist, and his published and unpublished writings are an impressive portion of the collection.
McCutcheon’s life, his family and friends, and his travels and adventures are well-represented in the remaining series of the collection. Through correspondence, travel souvenirs, biographical information, family correspondence and records, and information about his Bahamanian island, the researcher will be able to discover an artist and character who led a very unique and interesting life.
There is a large overlap of the materials in the scrapbooks series with the materials in every other series in the McCutcheon papers; the researcher is advised to consult both the loose materials and the scrapbook materials for information, photographs, and drawings.
Narrative descriptions of the subject matter, types of material, and arrangement of each series are available through the Organization section of the finding aid.
Papers are organized in the following series:
Ink drawings and pencil sketches, on paper and on board, of editorial cartoons and illustrations by McCutcheon. The editorial cartoons for the Chicago Tribune make up the bulk of this series, but there are also editorial cartoons he drew for the Chicago Record. Subjects for the editorial cartoons vary widely, from local issues (Mayors Harrison, Thompson, etc.; Judges and other local officials; weather; Organized crime; and Congresses such as the Eucharistic Congress, 1926) to national issues (Presidents Roosevelt, Taft, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, etc.; Presidential campaigns; The economy; William Jennings Bryan; John D. Rockefeller; and World War I Registration) to international issues (the Russo-Japanese War; Czar Nicholas II and Communism; Kaiser Wilhelm; the Panama Canal; World War I; the post-World War I arms race (1921); League of Nations; Reduction of the Navy; Japan’s invasion of China; Resistance to joining World War II; and subsequent support of the American troops during World War II). McCutcheon was interested in other topics as well, including many cartoons on charity (both charity balls and helping the poor), on New Year’s Resolutions, and on voting.
The series also includes illustrations he did for stories that ran in the Record and the Tribune newspapers, magazines like Cosmopolitan, Hearst’s International, and Liberty, among others. The illustrations may have been used for stories written by McCutcheon himself, or for other writers like George Ade, Peter Benchley, or Vachel Lindsay. There are also miscellaneous original illustrations McCutcheon did for various projects, such as advertisements, greeting cards, portraits of people (mostly quick sketches and doodles), and sketches made while traveling. The series ends with a group of sketchbooks, mostly filled while traveling abroad, but the first two relate to Chicago people and places.
See also Series 3 (Works – Writings) and Series 13 (Scrapbooks) for original drawings scattered therein.
The series is organized into different sections: Editorial Cartoons (Chicago Record then Chicago Tribune, arranged chronologically); Illustrations (arranged alphabetically by title of periodical and/or title of serial story, e.g. Bird Center, Raglan Patchmore, with miscellaneous filed at the end); and Sketchbooks (arranged chronologically).
Printed reproductions of McCutcheon’s editorial cartoons and illustrations for magazines and other publications. McCutcheon’s drawings, as well as being used to illustrate magazine articles, were printed on postcards, greeting cards, travel brochures, program covers, advertisements, invitations, calendars, dinner menus, sheet music covers, and memorials and testimonials to others. Much of the work McCutcheon did for the more miscellaneous items were for charity organizations, or to support the war effort.
See also Series 3 (Works – Writings) and Series 13 (Scrapbooks) for reproductions of drawings scattered therein.
The series is organized in three sections: Illustrations for articles, arranged alphabetically by magazine title; Illustrations for organizations (such as the Indiana Society of Chicago and Sigma Chi), arranged alphabetically by organization; and Illustrations, miscellaneous, arranged chronologically.
Manuscripts, typescripts, printed items, and reprints from McCutcheon's lifetime and after his death in 1949. This series includes articles, essays, speeches, notes, small sketches, revisions, and introductions to other writers’ works. Also included are a number of articles from the Chicago Record and the Tribune newspapers, Cosmopolitan, Hearst’s International, and Liberty magazines, which contain illustrations or cartoons by McCutcheon.
The “Africa” folder consists of manuscripts relating to the newspaper series “With McCutcheon in Africa” and the subsequent book “In Africa”. "Diaries and Notebooks" contain detailed writings about McCutcheon’s travels in Central Asia, the Philippines, Mexico, and elsewhere, and are occasionally accompanied by small sketches. Some diaries and notebooks contain expense logs; other expense books can be found in the Legal/Financial Files.
The drafts of “Drawn from Memory,” occasionally called “Opus” by McCutcheon, consist of some material appearing elsewhere in this series. These drafts have been kept in the order in which they were found, and include notes and final revisions by Evelyn McCutcheon. The oversize box entitled “Stories of Filipino Warfare” contains original articles as published in the Chicago Record from 1898-1900. A printed compilation of some of these articles is catalogued separately under call number Case Y 244.159.
“Unidentified” materials lack titles and publication information, while “Untitled” items contain publication information but lack titles. Both types of materials are identified by the first line of the work.
See also Series 13 (Scrapbooks), for scattered short printed works. See boxes 46-49 for Oversize Works - Writings.
Arranged alphabetically by title with speeches, unidentified, and untitled works grouped by subject.
Short stories, cartoons, speeches, and articles by authors and cartoonists other than John T. McCutcheon. A large portion of this series consists of works by George Ade.
Arranged alphabetically by author.
Awards, newsclippings, diaries and engagement books, degrees, publicity about McCutcheon, obituaries and memorial information, and other miscellaneous items reflecting the personal life of John McCutcheon, as well as summarizing his professional life as an illustrator. The series includes publicity about McCutcheon’s appearances as a lecturer, his participation in art exhibitions, and his work in theatrical productions, both as an actor or set designer in the production, and the adaptation of one of his works into plays.
Arranged alphabetically.
Correspondence from John T. McCutcheon to friends and business acquaintances.
Arranged alphabetically by correspondent with one folder of unidentified correspondence at the end.
Correspondence to John T. McCutcheon from friends, politicians, business associates, and other acquaintances. There is ample correspondence in regards to the organizations that McCutcheon was associated with such as the Chicago Zoological Society, the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Record, The Chicago Historical Society, the Art Institute, and The Newberry Library as well as other Universities and libraries that received original drawings. After the alphabetical run of correspondents there are several folders of letters grouped by similar subject, such as fan mail, requests of various kinds, congratulations, permissions to reproduce McCutcheon’s works, and condolences in regard to McCutcheon’s death in 1949. Correspondence to Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon after 1949 that was in regard to John T. McCutcheon is filed in this series. Other correspondence to Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon is filed in the Family Papers.
Arranged alphabetically.
This series includes cancelled checks, tax information, insurance and investment documents, land deeds, bank records and other financial documents. The bulk of the series consists of real estate documents and bank books kept by both John and Evelyn McCutcheon. Several folders contain financial papers regarding John T. McCutcheon's relatives, including his father and grandfather, as indicated. See Oversize Box 103 for oversize materials, including two land grants signed by Andrew Jackson.
Arranged alphabetically by type or subject of document. Box of cancelled checks is at the end of the series.
Clippings, correspondence, announcements, pamphlets, programs and other printed matter grouped into a variety of topics. Includes items regarding the publication of and payment for McCutcheon’s works, travel documents and correspondence, and materials about the numerous clubs to which McCutcheon belonged, such as the Indiana Society of Chicago and the Sigma Chi Fraternity.
McCutcheon was a world traveler and adventurer, even though until he was 18 he had never left the state of Indiana. He made his first trip to Europe with friend George Ade in 1895, and for the next 45 years he traveled extensively throughout the globe. Some travels were work related: he was sent by his employing newspapers as a correspondent to the Philippines for the Spanish-American War and Filipino Insurrection; to the Transvaal during the Boer War; and to France, Belgium, Greece, the Balkans (primarily Serbia), and Germany during World War I. Other times he traveled for pleasure and adventure, beginning with his 1897 trip to Asia preceding his stint in Manila, and including an African Safari, a “pirate cruise” to the Caribbean, and several trips around the world, the last of which was in 1935, accompanied by his wife and son John T. McCutcheon Jr. wherein most of the travel was done by zeppelin.
Folders related to his travels include ship's lists, bills, receipts of purchases made on travels, letters of introduction, permits, visas, temporary passports, press passes and the like; also entertainment programs and menus (many with his sketches and doodles inside), miscellaneous lists and notes, firsthand accounts (see also Works series), itineraries, newssheets and newspapers, and various printed souvenirs.
Of special interest is material from Europe during World War I. McCutcheon was a correspondent on the German side at the beginning of the War. In October, 1914, he sailed on the Lusitania from Liverpool, which was bombed 7 months later by the German Navy. From 1914-1916 he was in France, in Greece, and in the Balkans. He left in late 1916 and then returned in 1918-1919, spending time in Belgium, France, England, and Germany.
See also Series 12 (Photographs) for passports and photographs of his trips, and Series 13 (Scrapbooks).
Arranged alphabetically.
Written reports, accounts and articles about the island, sketches, notes, songs, poems, guest books, correspondence, legal documents, leases, maps, a "portfolio" (scrapbook), and some artifacts. Includes letters from guests, tenants, and island staff, as well as "agent reports" from staff and friends, letting the McCutcheon family what was going on at the island when they weren't there. Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon put together a "portfolio" with many interesting photographs and souvenirs of their time entertaining family and v.i.p.'s on the island. There is a pack of 10 cigarettes in their original cardboard box, all printed with the island's insignia and called "King John / The First / Treasure Island / Cigarettes".
Arranged in the original order as foldered by John T. McCutcheon, Jr. or Susan Dart McCutcheon. One of these individuals also wrote detailed notes about all of the materials in this series; the notes are available in the first folder of the series. Other pertinent items were added to this series from various other series in the collection: Incoming correspondence, Legal/Financial files, etc.
Correspondence, genealogy information, report cards, memorabilia, works, and clippings by and about John T. McCutcheon’s family members. Incoming and outgoing correspondence between family members is interfiled and arranged alphabetically under the name of the sender. Correspondence of family members to or from non-family members is filed under the name of the family member. Extensive inventories of John T. McCutcheon's cartoons and correspondence in the collection were compiled by Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon and these inventories are filed under her name.
Arranged alphabetically by family member.
Photograph albums, an autochrome, lantern slides, photoprints, negatives, stereographs, glass negatives, prints, and slides detailing the life and work of John McCutcheon. The strength of the series is in the documentary travel photographs (in lantern slides and prints) taken by McCutcheon on safari and in his travels to Mexico, Europe, the Middle East, and the Far East. Also of interest are lantern slides of Salonika and Serbia during WW I and prints of the U.S.S. Michigan in Vera Cruz during the time of the “Vera Cruz Incident”. There is a certain amount of overlapping among subjects between formats; for example, the first two photograph albums, which cover McCutcheon’s life in full, contains hundreds of photographs of family, friends, travel, and reproductions of McCutcheon’s illustrations, that can be found in most of the other formats and parts of the series. All formats should be consulted for the various subject matters. In addition, there are photographs scattered in other series, especially in the Scrapbooks series, the majority of which are paper materials and ephemera but do contain some photographic images.
Arranged by format, and by subject thereunder. Images are in black and white unless indicated.
41 volumes, the bulk of which are collected clippings of McCutcheon’s editorial cartoons for the Chicago Record and the Chicago Tribune. The last eight scrapbooks are on various topics; two being fairly complete collections of clippings about McCutcheon’s life. Other scrapbooks include clippings, letters, ephemera and many loose items from McCutcheon’s days at Purdue University; clippings of work by and about McCutcheon from the magazine of Sigma Chi, McCutcheon’s fraternity at Purdue; copies of works and articles about McCutcheon in a large scrapbooks labeled, “Blue Portfolio; Lakeside Press;” and a small scrapbook labeled “Album A,” containing very diverse contents: McCutcheon’s tickets from attending the World’s Columbian Exposition as well as executions at Cook County Jail, his 1903 contract with Chicago Tribune, letters, envelopes, travel-related material, Salt Cay related material, and posthumous information about John T. McCutcheon High School in Chicago. There is also a large portfolio of clippings, photos, correspondence, poems, sketches, etc. assembled by Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon about Salt Cay, the island in the Bahamas that McCutcheon purchased in 1917.
There is a large overlap of the materials in this series with the materials in every other series in the McCutcheon papers.
Scrapbooks are organized in two groups; the bound Cartoon scrapbooks are first, and the remainder of the scrapbooks follow. Each group is arranged chronologically.
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Newberry Library's public catalog. Researchers desiring additional materials on a particular topic should search the catalog using these headings.
Series 1: Works - Drawings - Originals, 1889-1949 |
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| Ink drawings and pencil sketches, on paper and on board, of editorial cartoons and illustrations by McCutcheon. The editorial cartoons for the Chicago Tribune make up the bulk of this series, but there are also editorial cartoons he drew for the Chicago Record. Subjects for the editorial cartoons vary widely, from local issues (Mayors Harrison, Thompson, etc.; Judges and other local officials; weather; Organized crime; and Congresses such as the Eucharistic Congress, 1926) to national issues (Presidents Roosevelt, Taft, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, etc.; Presidential campaigns; The economy; William Jennings Bryan; John D. Rockefeller; and World War I Registration) to international issues (the Russo-Japanese War; Czar Nicholas II and Communism; Kaiser Wilhelm; the Panama Canal; World War I; the post-World War I arms race (1921); League of Nations; Reduction of the Navy; Japan’s invasion of China; Resistance to joining World War II; and subsequent support of the American troops during World War II). McCutcheon was interested in other topics as well, including many cartoons on charity (both charity balls and helping the poor), on New Year’s Resolutions, and on voting. | |||||||||||
| The series also includes illustrations he did for stories that ran in the Record and the Tribune newspapers, magazines like Cosmopolitan, Hearst’s International, and Liberty, among others. The illustrations may have been used for stories written by McCutcheon himself, or for other writers like George Ade, Peter Benchley, or Vachel Lindsay. There are also miscellaneous original illustrations McCutcheon did for various projects, such as advertisements, greeting cards, portraits of people (mostly quick sketches and doodles), and sketches made while traveling. The series ends with a group of sketchbooks, mostly filled while traveling abroad, but the first two relate to Chicago people and places. | |||||||||||
| See also Series 3 (Works – Writings) and Series 13 (Scrapbooks) for original drawings scattered therein. | |||||||||||
| The series is organized into different sections: Editorial Cartoons (Chicago Record then Chicago Tribune, arranged chronologically); Illustrations (arranged alphabetically by title of periodical and/or title of serial story, e.g. Bird Center, Raglan Patchmore, with miscellaneous filed at the end); and Sketchbooks (arranged chronologically). | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 1 | 1 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record (?) - [Joseph Medill being lectured by a judge], [before 1899] | |||||||||
| 1 | 2 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record (?) - Campaign portraits and poems by famous politician; or Mr. Hill's portrait of himself and Judge Parker, August 16, 1896 | |||||||||
| 1 | 3 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - Summer styles coming in, May 15, 1897 | |||||||||
| 1 | 4 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - Aldermen in a literary mood; or Summer school at home, June 12, 1897 | |||||||||
| 1 | 5 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - The coal investigation, January 10, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 6 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - Sherlock Holmes analyses a perfect stranger, January 16, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 7 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - None; begins The girl who heard him talk when he didn't have his company manners, February 15, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 8 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - Mr. Morgan's 66th birthday, April 18, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 9 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - An evening party during the Laundry Workers Strike; The first morning after moving into the new house: where am I?; Suggestion for a presidential ticket to suit Wall Street [three cartoons on one sheet], May 2, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 10 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - Have you ever noticed this peculiar fact about murder cases?, May 16, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 11 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Record - An incident in the anti-mashers crusade, June 4, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 12 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Gov. Yates - Take me, I'm yours., September 23, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 13 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The gay young bridegrooms of the Senate, October 28, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 14 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - none; begins Herbert, don't you feel sorry for those poor fellows-nothing but work, work, work, year in and year out?, November 8, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 15 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Emperor Willimas health, December 18, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 16 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Which side will win?, December 29, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 17 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - After the ball begins to roll, December 30, 1903 | |||||||||
| 1 | 18 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Caught in their own trap, January 3, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 19 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Learning his lesson; or Learning and teaching a lesson, January 5, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 20 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Colombia, Hey there! I'm going to fight, too, maybe, perhaps.; or Colombia, Hey, pay some attention to me. I'm going to fight, too, maybe, perhaps., January 9, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 21 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Portrait of the world (drawn from telegraphic description), February 23, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 22 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the Japanese Hobson arrives home, February 27, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 23 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Papering the back parlor, April 9, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 24 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - These are busy days for the Baltic fleet, June 8, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 25 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mayor Harrison is now engaged in getting his signature on 5200 municipal bonds, June 30, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 26 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Judge Parker a year ago and Judge Parker today, July 10, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 27 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The situation on September 21st, September 21, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 28 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A cartoon on the values of setting a good example, November 13, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 29 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The latest style of injunction, December 4, 1904 | |||||||||
| 1 | 30 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An x-ray of Wall Street (drawn from telegraphic description), December 10, 1904 | |||||||||
| 2 | 31 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Alderman Buttinski and what happened to him, December 14, 1904 | |||||||||
| 2 | 32 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The war cloud now seems to have a silver lining, January 4, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 33 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An awkward time to have internal pains, January 22, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 34 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Czar's crooks have at last won a victory; or The Little Father has answered their appeal, January 23, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 35 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The power behind the throne; or The spirit of the first of the Romanoffs seems to be the power behind the throne, January 24, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 36 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Easier than fighting Japs; or Russian troops have at last won victory, January 24, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 37 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - none; begins Lost at the Winter Palace… one Golden opportunity to win the confidence and gratitude of my people…Nicholas the 2, January 28, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 38 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Poor little Arizona! He'll have to wear short ones a while longer, February 10, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 39 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Nicholas: Will this procession never end?, February 19, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 40 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Serving two masters: Senator Elkins: Any orders today, sir?, February 23, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 41 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Hooray! Four more years [of?] Teddy?, March 4, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 42 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mrs. Scadsworth goes away for her health, March 12, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 43 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - One way to break up the strike breakers [re: black labor replacing white labor], May 4, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 44 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Where the Union man's family suffers, May 16, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 45 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The sympathetic strike, May 23, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 46 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - I wonder what Russian conditions of peace would be if they were the victors, June 12, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 47 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Yellow Peril, the White Czar and the Red Terror; or Still one way to escape, June 30, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 48 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Catch him coming and going; or Great team work; or the Human punching bag, July 3, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 49 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When She goes away, July 23, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 50 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mr. Bryan is preparing to go round the world; He will tell the other nations about the Yellow Peril, otherwise the Gold Standard, July 31, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 51 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The metamorphosis of Portsmouth, September 5, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 52 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A cloud on the Rising Sun, September 13, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 53 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Why Mr. Rockefeller bought a wig, September 14, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 54 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Melancholy days for the high old financiers, September 23, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 55 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An x-ray photograph of Summer, showing remarkable preservation of backbone, from a photo taken throughout the middle west yesterday afternoon at 3 PM, October 10, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 56 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Captain: More oil, your majesty, October 28, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 57 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Power behind the throne, November 2, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 58 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The educational influence of modern football; or Thanksgiving day on Marshall Field, November 29, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 59 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The diary of Congressman Pumphrey, no. 2, December 7, 1905 | |||||||||
| 2 | 60 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Christmas spirit in poor unhappy Russia, December 12, 1905 | |||||||||
| 3 | 61 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Money is tight in New York, December 30, 1905 | |||||||||
| 3 | 62 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Autumn lingers in the lap of winter, January 7, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 63 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A Rogers Group entitled The Majesty of the Law, January 8, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 64 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As long as we cannot get American laborers to work on the Panama Canal, why not use our criminals. That wood soon reduce our output of crime and get rid of an objectionable class, February 26, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 65 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - All in the day's work of the druggist, March 18, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 66 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Society ladies are fighting the flesh during Lent, March 20, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 67 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - San Francisco -Well, it might be worse; or San Francisco - Hooray, we've saved those from the ruin, April 24, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 68 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - On the eve of the great base ball contest [inscribed to Christy Walsh], October 9, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 69 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In the feverish base ball days, October 14, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 70 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Still alive and kicking; or It was pretty good for an off year but I wish he had been buried a little deeper, November 8, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 71 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Boni (?) - Ah, I am heart broken! I think of you every hour! Without you I shall die!, November 10, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 72 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Congressional salaries, 12/15/1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 73 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A little Christmas play in four generous acts, December 24, 1906 | |||||||||
| 3 | 74 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Capital and labor, January 14, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 75 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Scarlet fever: a study in cause and effect, January 19, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 76 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Congress has completed its arduous labor of raising its salary, March 4, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 77 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cheer up! Mr. Hearst and his corps of missionaries have come from New York to tell us how to run our city, March 27, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 78 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In Madrid, April 20, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 79 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The spark that failed, April 23, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 80 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Why Jones left the farm; being an episode in the life of a rash young city chap who went out in the corn belt and criticized the hot weather!, September 18, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 81 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An incident of the mystic shriner's jubilee; it's a wise son that knows his own father when Daddy is in the regalia, September 27, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 82 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The man who has the money to buy automobiles these days, October 8, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 83 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - One game the Cubs still have ahead of them, October 14, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 84 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Chicago bankers during the New York financial flurry, October 25, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 85 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How the President lost a friend, December 3, 1907 | |||||||||
| 3 | 86 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Two ways of cross examining a witness, January 22, 1908 | |||||||||
| 3 | 87 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Reduced to the ranks, January 31, 1908 | |||||||||
| 3 | 88 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How's that, Uncle Joe?; or I don't like those last four lines, February 17, 1908 | |||||||||
| 3 | 89 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Running for office, April 4, 1908 | |||||||||
| 3 | 90 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Two souls with but a single thought, April 18, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 91 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The advance agent of posterity - Hey! Wake up and protect your property!, May 14, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 92 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Campaign contributions will be small this year, May 27, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 93 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - At the Denver Bryanfest, July 2, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 94 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Bryan-Guffey Incident July 6, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 95 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The influence of weather on disposition, August 6, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 96 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Costro!, August 27, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 97 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Got him over all right, September 16, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 98 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; begins More oil letters missing. Standard officials say many taken from archives have not appeared in the campaign. September 28, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 99 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mr. Roosevelt's crowning achievement, October 8, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 100 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will he swap?, October 23, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 101 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When Whilhelm goes up in Zeppelin's air ship, November 12, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 102 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Suggestions for Christmas shoppers, November 17, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 103 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - John D's study in oil, November 20, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 104 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When winter awakes, December 1, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 105 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Congress prepares to attack, December 6, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 106 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Oh, Mr. Ward, you really needn't be so mean!, December 11, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 107 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; [man waking up, daughter and son at sides of bed], December 25, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 108 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As the new year comes in, December 31, 1908 | |||||||||
| 4 | 109 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Senator Hopkins is looking for Speaker Shurtleff to write him to a caucus, January 18, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 110 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Great business chance for Missouri, February 3, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 111 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Officer-seeking; Mr. Taft Hallo the house! Anybody in there who wants to be Secretary of the Treasury?, February 11, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 112 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The strangest thing they saw on the cruise - a merchant ship flying the American flag, February 25, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 113 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An Englisman's home [re: suffragettes], February 26, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 114 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will Uncle Abdul abdicate?, April 20, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 115 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The nightmare of the tariff-boosing congressman, April 30, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 116 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What will the Senate do? Hold up or uphold the sugar trust?, May 20, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 117 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Is this why the police don't catch the bank thieves?, June 29, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 118 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The sane fourth, July 6, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 119 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Speaker Cannon's idea of a city beautiful, May 20, 1909 | |||||||||
| 4 | 120 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A reality that philosophy cannot reach, May 21, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 121 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As the Roosevelt parade passes Wall Street, June 19, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 122 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - His present to the bride, June 20, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 123 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It's going to be a big day today, July 4, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 124 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A sane fourth creates more patriotism that shooting off a lot of arms and fingers; or The school of patriotism is now in session on the Lake Front, July 6, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 125 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some fight pictures that would be desirable, July 7, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 126 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Our streets will be tickled when they get the subway, July 12, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 127 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - There are spies at the Camp Dickinson Army Maneuvers!, July 14, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 128 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Such carryin' on!!; or The terrible ride of Ivan the Terrible [inscribed to Stanley Pargellis], July 31, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 129 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The inevitable topic at all gatherings, September 18, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 130 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The crack mathematician of the class of '85 helps his son out in a problem in algebra, October 16, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 131 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Don't spend all your Christmas money for jewelry [luxuries], November 20, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 132 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Something lacking, November 24, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 133 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The folly of changing the building height ordinance every few years, December 3, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 134 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Making his will, December 30, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 135 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Good luck, and a safe voyage, old man! [re: anti-drinking], December 31, 1910 | |||||||||
| 5 | 136 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Do your shoveling early, January 6, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 137 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will they fortify the Panama Canal from airplane attacks?, January 23, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 138 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Guess I can't use that water again [re: beef trust], March 23, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 139 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Carter - I like this Chicago climate better than the California climate, April 5, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 140 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The voice of duty [re: voting], April 10, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 141 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Changing mayors; Busse - And now, Carter, before I leave you to your troubles, I want to wish you success in your chosen profession., April 17, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 142 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Interrupting the peace conference, May 3, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 143 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - He ought to be glad to get it over with [re: meat packers trial], May 13, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 144 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Naval maneuvers disturb the literary calm of Oyster Bay, July 20, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 145 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Jogo at Niagara - Magnificent! The roar of the waters reminds me of war and the rushin' fall reminds me of the Battle of the Sea of Japan, August 11, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 146 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Thrilling moment in the bomb throwing contest, August 18, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 147 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will the Democratic campers assist?, September 2, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 148 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Chauffeurs will begin to take precautions against strange passengers, September 7, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 149 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A chance for another arbitration treaty, September 9, 1911 | |||||||||
| 5 | 150 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Eventually they'll have to come to it [re: suffrage] (cartoon is torn), October 14, 1911 | |||||||||
| 6 | 151 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When China becomes a republic, November 10, 1911 | |||||||||
| 6 | 152 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Passing the buck to the Democrats November 14, 1911 | |||||||||
| 6 | 153 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An exciting moment in the corral, November 16, 1911 | |||||||||
| 6 | 154 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Out-patients of Bedlam, November 30, 1911 | |||||||||
| 6 | 155 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How Santy lost an admirer December 23, 1911 | |||||||||
| 6 | 156 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Gov. Harrison is Visiting in Illinois (?), January 12, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 157 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Have you noticed that every straw vote invariably shows an overwhelming preponderance of Roosevelt sentiment?, January 14, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 158 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Not entirely harmonious in the Democratic camp, February 25, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 159 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - America revisited (Being the impressions of a traveler, home from the seas), March 11, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 160 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A Roosevelt speech, as delivered and as quoted, March 22, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 161 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This is where the Colonel loses the King and Vice President vote, March 29, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 162 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; [ship Carpathia returns with Titanic survivors] April 19, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 163 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A grim teacher [re: Iroquois, Slocum, and Titanic disasters], April 20, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 164 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The New York Editor; or The Editor of the anti-Roosevelt paper, May 24, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 165 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The poetic moose is working on campaign songs, August 21, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 166 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Saturday half-holidays in the summer for shop girls, August 31, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 167 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In the National Golf Tournament, September 7, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 168 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Trying to work during aviation week, September 17, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 169 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The young man who is to cast his first vote should carefully study the candidates, the platforms, and the people who favor the various candidates, September 22, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 170 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Trying to please everybody, October 6, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 171 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Can this local democracy hold this pose while Gov. Wilson is in term? October 10, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 172 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Live stock show, November 30, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 173 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some Christmas hopes, December 5, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 174 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Wouldn't a real Santy have his troubles these days?, December 15, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 175 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A law for the conservation of appendixes, December 28, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 176 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Greeting the New Year, December 31, 1912 | |||||||||
| 6 | 177 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The model for 1913, January 1, 1913 | |||||||||
| 6 | 178 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The scenery around William Rockefeller's house in New York, January 3, 1913 | |||||||||
| 6 | 179 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Oriental Ball, January 8, 1913 | |||||||||
| 6 | 180 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Birdseye view of Illinois January 9, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 181 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Lady, wearing $1,000,000 worth of jewels, going to Oriental Ball. Auto bandits beware!, January 10, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 182 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Turning from wars to valentines; or It's love that makes the world go round, The whirling makes us dizzy, And that is why the License Clerk and Ministers are busy., February 14, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 183 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In the Nation's spot light [re: Wilson's inauguration, suffrage], March 4, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 184 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In merrie England [re: suffrage], April 5, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 185 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Abandoning the Philippines, April 17, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 186 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In a fault-finding vein, April 29, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 187 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - For example, May 14, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 188 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - There ought to be schools for the instruction of women voters, June 16, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 189 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Poor fellow! He should have carried some life insurance like mine, July 3, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 190 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Romantic possibilities of the flying boat on Lake Michigan, July 5, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 191 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A mosaic of the day's news (as told in headline English), July 9, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 192 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The overshadowing issue [re: Mexican crisis], August 10, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 193 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The woes of an altruist, August 12, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 194 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If Sen. Penrose is so anxious to intervene in Mexico, why doesn't he put some armor on his old one cylinder steam roller and sail in, August 23, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 195 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The isle of safety [re: harsh weather], August 25, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 196 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The handwriting on the wall [re: Mexico], August 27, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 197 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The evolution of the convict under the honor system, September 5, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 198 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will the new tariff rescue him from his nemesis?, September 16, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 199 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The wets and the women voters [re: suffrage], November 6, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 200 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Why we are having June weather in November, November 22, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 201 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Halt! Here comes the bride!, November 25, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 202 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Off for the Isle of Perfection!, December 31, 1913 | |||||||||
| 7 | 203 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This summer's attempt to fly across the Atlantic, February 22, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 204 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How the country stands on canal tolls, March 9, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 205 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the Flag is insulted [re: Mexico], April 15, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 206 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Between the Devil and the deep sea [re: Mexico], April 16, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 207 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The only way is to make a complete job of it [re: Mexico], April 24, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 208 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This is how I stand, Gentlemen! [re: Mexico], April 27, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 209 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Young men should avoid the orderly places where they are likely to meet their fathers, May 3, 1914 | |||||||||
| 7 | 210 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; [Uncle Sam dreams of foreign trade expansion], December 2, 1914 | |||||||||
| 8 | 211 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Which is better? [re: World War I], December 12, 1914 | |||||||||
| 8 | 212 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The woman suffrage question, the liquor question, and congress, December 15, 1914 | |||||||||
| 8 | 213 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It's a long, long way to January, 1916, January 2, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 214 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - There's a pedestal waiting for the right man; or Wanted - a man to fit the pedestal, January 14, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 215 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Why our protests are disregarded [re: Mexico, World War I], March 2, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 216 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Is civilization reverting to the code of the cave man?, March 8, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 217 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Spring poetry, etc. etc. [re: World War I], March 9, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 218 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The pleasures of ocean travel, March 14, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 219 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Thoughts for St. Patrick's Day, March 17, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 220 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Italy on the verge of war [re: World War I], April 11, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 221 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Coming our way, April 19, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 222 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mr. Barnes and the hornet's nest [re: Roosevelt], April 24, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 223 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Watchfully waiting, May 14, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 224 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The peace movement in Italy, May 19, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 225 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The war in terms of dollars and cents, June 8, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 226 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Heroic work on the farm; saving the oats crop, July 22, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 227 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What will he give us next? [Devil - World War, Lusitania, Eastland, Weather, Mexico, Strikes], July 30, 1915 | |||||||||
| 8 | 228 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some un-Americans, March 7, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 229 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - American citizens who were entitled to our protection even if they were not in armed belligerent ships; or Some Americans who would have been protected if they had been on an armed belligerent merchantman, March 10, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 230 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The old guard's dream of an invasion, March 22, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 231 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Back from Trinidad, March 27, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 232 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Our two most sensitive citizens are getting used to crises, March 28, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 233 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Would we die as cheerfully for the rights of Americans to travel on belligerent ships in the war zone? April 13, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 234 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Getting together, May 13, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 235 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The three conventions, May 18, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 236 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Should we turn the clock ahead an hour during the summer months?, May 23, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 237 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The favorite son versus the prodigal son, May 27, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 238 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - June, the month of brides and roses, June 1, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 239 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the Deutschland goes out, July 27, 1916 | |||||||||
| 8 | 240 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Where intelligent autocracy would be welcomed, August 10, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 241 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - There had to be some indigestion after years of this; or Capital, Labor, and war prosperity, August 18, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 242 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The ladies' Training camp at Catsburg, August 21, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 243 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What has become of the - [old fashioned…], August 26, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 244 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When an American interferes with the United States mail, September 15, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 245 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Too gigantic to comprehend [re: World War I], September 18, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 246 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Politics first!, September 30, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 247 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Three unfortunate misfits, October 7, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 248 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The prosperity that depends upon the distress and suffering of others, October 21, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 249 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Lest you forget!, October 22, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 250 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Have you ever looked at it this way?, October 27, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 251 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Nationals are like individuals; the more they yield, the more they'll be given opportunities to yield, November 3, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 252 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The king is dead, long live the king! [with poem re: Santa], December 26, 1916 | |||||||||
| 9 | 253 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When attrition meets attrition, January 16, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 254 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Twenty-five days of the Volunteer Army Plan, April 27, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 255 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Solving the U-Boat menace, May 11, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 256 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Watchers in the registration booths, June 4, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 257 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Registration Day, June 5, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 258 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Many are called but few are chosen, June 7, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 259 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The power of the United States June 10, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 260 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Billions versus Bill [re: Kaiser Wilhelm], June 16, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 261 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Fighting U-Boats without range finders, June 20, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 262 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A Seine fourth, July 5, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 263 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If anybody had made this prediction three years ago today, July 29, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 264 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Doesn't seem to attract him, August 7, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 265 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Another enemy at home, August 9, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 266 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will the anti-aircraft guns get her?, August 15, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 267 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If the peace conference ever meets, August 16, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 268 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The loyal tenants ought to protect the reputation of the place, August 19, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 269 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Conscription of wealth would be all right if - we could be sure that only the short sighted ones were soaked good and hard, August 23, 1917 | |||||||||
| 9 | 270 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Short sighted [send Negro regiments to southern cities], August 25, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 271 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Inbad, the Mayor, September 6, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 272 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An explanation wanted!, September 10, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 273 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When doctors disagree, September 12, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 274 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mr. Lansing turns on the search light, September 15, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 275 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - World peace or downfall, September 23, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 276 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - American military news then and now, September 24, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 277 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Steel is being slashed; or When Uncle Sam begins to operate, September 25, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 278 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The World championship - Democracy versus Autocracy, September 29, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 279 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Meatless, wheatless, and sweetless days, October 22, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 280 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Iron Cross, [re: anti-Socialism], November 5, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 281 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Awaiting the election returns, November 6, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 282 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Venetian sketches. A war-time possibility, (drawing is torn), November 10, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 283 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Holding the Russian front, November 21, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 284 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - For this cause will we battle until the last gun is fired, December 5, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 285 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Redeemed! After seven hundred years; or Christianity's Christmas gift [re: Jerusalem], December 11, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 286 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Eventually - why not me?, December 15, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 287 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The case now goes to the jury [re: prohibition], December 19, 1917 | |||||||||
| 10 | 288 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A banner day for women's rights; or Hands across the seas [re: suffrage in US and UK], January 11, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 289 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The winter of our discontent, January 14, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 290 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In the 1918 homestretch, February 2, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 291 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Spurred!, February 8, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 292 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The rising tide [re: World War I], February 10, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 293 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some valentines, February 14, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 294 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - St. George and the dragon [re: World War I], April 24, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 295 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Uncle Samdow, May 6, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 296 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The fallen ace to the ace of aces; Thanks for sparing me so long, May 21, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 297 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The war has moved over here, June 4, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 298 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The boulevard link should be Lincoln Boulevard, June 10, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 299 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How long will his reserves stand these checks? June 12, 1918 | |||||||||
| 10 | 300 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Universal military training, June 24, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 301 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The past and the present are in deadly grapple, from the President's Independence Day speech, July 6, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 302 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Kaiser's shocked troops, July 19, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 303 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A game two can play, July 20, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 304 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - After seeing Farré's wonderful air battle paintings, July 21, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 305 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A place in the sun, July 23, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 306 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The magnifying glass, July 29, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 307 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mrssrs. Schwab and Hurley will soon make this a dry country, July 31, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 308 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will they front east or west?, August 3, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 309 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Service stars, August 25, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 310 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mayor Thompson's war record - no. 4, September 6, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 311 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Closing in on him, September 11, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 312 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Soldiers and sailors rebel against their nicknames, September 15, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 313 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Of course she would say NO, September 18, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 314 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Speaking of epidemics; the influenza attacks are nothing compared to the allied attacks [re: World War I], September 25, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 315 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The avalanche, October 2, 1918 | |||||||||
| 11 | 316 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Election post-mortems April 3, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 317 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: prohibition], April 7, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 318 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world, [re: US & British politics], April 28, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 319 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Congress convenes tomorrow, the offensive passing to the G.O.P.'s, May 18, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 320 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Carnage at the helm, May 20, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 321 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Winnipeg labor right to take a look around first, May 29, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 322 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mankind doesn't seem to have gotten rid of the fighting spirit [re: Willard-Dempsey fight], July 3, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 323 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - We hope there won't be any jealousy; or Is she a rival?, July 4, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 324 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Gay New York, September 4, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 325 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Can it be localized? [re: industrial war], September 23, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 326 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day, October 9, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 327 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: education, writing, wealth], October 20, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 328 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: courting, prohibition], October 27, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 329 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: economy, savings, mortgages], November 3, 1919 | |||||||||
| 11 | 330 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: politics, leisure], November 24, 1919 | |||||||||
| 12 | 331 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The spirit of unrest in the Balkans; or The international boat rocker, December 12, 1919 | |||||||||
| 12 | 332 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The spirit of unrest / the spirit of rest, April 8, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 333 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The vicious circle [re: wages & cost of living], May 19, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 334 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A war baby and some peace babies, May 20, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 335 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If the big profiteers were jailed, May 21, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 336 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A Thrilling man hunt; the police are trying to find Geary the gunman, June 1, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 337 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Relative importance of great public issues [re: prohibition], June 26, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 338 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the democratic orator goes vote hunting, July 13, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 339 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Getting together in the third party, July 15, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 340 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When John cheers the shamrock [re: Ireland], July 16, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 341 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The League of Nations, September 3, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 342 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: school, politics, unions], September 7, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 343 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Still goes marching on [re: Italy], September 9, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 344 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The sail that shoes the way the wind blows [re: Cox, September 15, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 345 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The movie heroine, September 19, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 346 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - American industries under democratic rule, September 21, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 347 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The profiteer, September 30, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 348 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: agriculture, the dollar], November 30, 1920 | |||||||||
| 12 | 349 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The creed of a philosopher, January 4, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 350 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The harder he works the more he will have to pay January 25, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 351 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When they impanel the jury of women, April 26, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 352 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A compact which would greatly benefit the present and future of the country, May 6, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 353 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Edison's comments on college graduates, May 7, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 354 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What is Normalcy?, May 25, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 355 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The gorge is over, June 2, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 356 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Bed golf, June 12, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 357 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What they would like to do, June 17, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 358 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This waste will be cured by the new budget system, June 22, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 359 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Envy or bitterness?, June 26, 1921 | |||||||||
| 12 | 360 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cause and effect [re: arms buildup], July 12, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 361 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The President's vacation; he is spending the weekend at the Potomac camp of Mr. Edison, Mr. Ford, and Mr. Firestone, July 25, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 362 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - They'd better check their armaments [re: arms buildup; German reparations], August 15, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 363 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will he accept? [re: Ireland], August 16, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 364 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The real ambassadors of peace [re: Olympics], August 18, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 365 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: vices, fashions, economy], August 23, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 366 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A far reaching decision, September 8, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 367 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Lord Northcliffe's picture; The Anglo-Japanese alliance is anti-United States and tends to provoke war, Lord Northcliffe's statement in Shanghai, Nov. 21, November 22, 1921 | |||||||||
| 13 | 368 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The army of the unemployed, January 8, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 369 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Politeness: The stuff that makes the world run smoothly, January 19, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 370 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Skating all around him; they have an advantage over him, January 24, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 371 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The man who talked this way [re: soldier's pensions], January 27, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 372 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Spring floods, April 15, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 373 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - His annual visit, April 16, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 374 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Road hogs, April 22, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 375 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What are the wild waves saying, sister?, April 29, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 376 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What will you do with your extra hour? [re: daylight savings time], April 30, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 377 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The big ones got away, May 19, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 378 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - On the road to re-election [re: Harding], May 23, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 379 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - June, June 4, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 380 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How it feels when you and your wife start out in your touring car on a hot summer evening, June 25, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 381 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Jeopardizing his lead, July 7, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 382 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The New Yorker's idea of the United States, July 27, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 383 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Doesn't he know it's loaded?, July 29, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 384 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A lot of people who went away for the summer and-- August 31, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 385 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Breakin' the bric-a-brac, September 27, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 386 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Another king soon to be dethroned [re: football over baseball], October 3, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 387 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Fire prevention week, October 6, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 388 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Distinguished visitors and local pride, October 11, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 389 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A comedy in three acts [re: alcoholism], October 22, 1922 | |||||||||
| 13 | 390 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When our soldiers come home from the Rhine, October 24, 1922 | |||||||||
| 14 | 391 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Our foreign entanglement, October 25, 1922 | |||||||||
| 14 | 392 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Our policy of isolationism, October 26, 1922 | |||||||||
| 14 | 393 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If justice were done, January 24, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 394 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The supreme court's liquor decision [re: prohibition], May 2, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 395 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: transportation, golf, chipping away at the constitution], May 4, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 396 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The chief trouble lies in the selection and distribution [re: immigration], May 16, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 397 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It's funny how; some girls can be so shy and backward, while other girls can be so sudden and forward [re: spring and summer], June 5, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 398 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It's fortunate peoples' tastes don't all run the same direction, June 13, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 399 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Stories of government waste and extravagance take practically all the joy out of paying taxes, June 15, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 400 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: automobiles, immigrants, France vs. Germany], June 19, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 401 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Washington in the hot season, June 21, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 402 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The morning after [re: Shelby, MT, after Dempsey-Gibbons fight], July 5, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 403 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: war reparations, automobiles, Presidential campaign], July 21, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 404 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Now is the time for a demonstration of the League's power, August 3, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 405 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - On the shores of the Pacific [re: death of Warren Harding], August 4, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 406 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mussolini defies the League, September 6, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 407 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Tottering [re: German economy], September 8, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 408 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the news of the big fight reaches Shelby, Montana, September 16, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 409 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Making the punishment fit the crime [re: drunk driving], September 27, 1923 | |||||||||
| 14 | 410 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Daugherty isn't helping Cal's courtship a terrible lot [re: Calvin Coolidge], March 25, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 411 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Our neighbor's dog [re: Japanese immigration], April 16, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 412 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Political bunk will not hold the radio audience, May 6, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 413 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It looks better than the present court [re: League of Nations], May 10, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 414 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Mother's Day, May 11, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 415 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - In the 1924 foot ring, May 14, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 416 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Yellow Sea; As the Japanese statesmen discuss the exclusion law, May 27, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 417 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When father knickerbocker entertains the delegates, June 20, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 418 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Madison Square's greatest fight [re: politics], June 21, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 419 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Just as the sun went down - thrilling scene at the end of the ninth reel, in the vivid, soul stirring drama entitled All for love of a lady, was showing in Madison Square Garden, July 1, 1924 | |||||||||
| 14 | 420 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Lo, the bridegroom cometh, but when and how and in what condition, no one seems to know. When last heard from he was engaged in a battle royal down in Madison Square Garden, July 2, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 421 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Europe ten years ago today - when only those in the chancellerie knew of the imminence of war, July 20, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 422 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The prime essential of a vacation is change, July 21, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 423 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The U.S., as seen by an English spectator, August 3, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 424 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Playing no favorites, August 8, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 425 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As Mr. Davis prepares to accept the nomination, August 11, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 426 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Prince of Wales' visit, August 25, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 427 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Intense interest in the campaign, September 17, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 428 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - He thrives on 'em [re: La Follette], September 18, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 429 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If the election is deadlocked, September 22, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 430 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - After La Follette, what?, September 28, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 431 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This would not be an act of aggression [re: Japanese immigration], September 30, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 432 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If the accumulation of wealth is as important as some men consider it, why can't they have this kind of monuments?, October 7, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 433 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The ZR3 arrives from Europe with a cargo of laurels [re: zeppelin], October 16, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 434 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Democracy must decide, November 8, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 435 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the amateur decides to get aboard the stock boom, November 20, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 436 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A demonstration of the League's futility, November 25, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 437 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Ready for the plunge, December 7, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 438 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Loopholes in the immigration barriers, December 12, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 439 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The vacant chair re: death of Samuel Gompers, AFL], F488 December 15, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 440 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The best economy, December 27, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 441 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The year in retrospect, December 31, 1924 | |||||||||
| 15 | 442 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It is proposed to have thirteen months in a year, January 4, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 443 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Our last line of defense, August 13, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 444 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The great national rodeo [re: organized crime], August 15, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 445 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The textile industry meets and masters a grave crisis August 24, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 446 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If we show an appreciation perhaps we'll get some more like her, September 1, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 447 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Trying to civilize the barbarous ruffians, September 6, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 448 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Labor Day, September 7, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 449 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Another trojan horse [re: World Court], September 20, 1925 | |||||||||
| 15 | 450 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The new member [re: Air Force], October 1, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 451 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An unholy alliance [re: crime and politics], October 16, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 452 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Gran'pa, Papa, and the Kid [re: Versailles Treaty, League of Nations, World Court], October 22, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 453 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A thrilling moment in today's game, October 31, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 454 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A study in comparative hero worship, November 7, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 455 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A suggestion for ending the gang war killings [re: Soldier Field], November 24, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 456 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The challenge [re: church, crime, the law], November 29, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 457 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The unification of our defense forces is proposed, December 10, 1925 | |||||||||
| 16 | 458 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Over the top [re: weather], February 1, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 459 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Is this to become the test of fitness for high office? [re: prohibition], May 18, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 460 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Relief is in sight! [re: organized crime], June 3, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 461 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Christian spirit [re: Eucharistic Congress], June 18, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 462 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: religious pilgrimages], June 20, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 463 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - No place for him [re: Eucharistic Congress], June 22, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 464 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The tariff registers concern, June 25, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 465 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Europe's most popular American and escort go abroad for the summer [re: American dollar], July 18, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 466 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: business, leisure, piano/radio], August 23, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 467 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - We're rich enough to afford at least one great liner, September 1, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 468 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Seeing the big fight from the outer rim of the arena, September 20, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 469 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Sending in the old reliable ground gainer, October 26, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 470 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Greeting the queen, November 19, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 471 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It looks as though the squirrels were right about this being a long, hard winter, November 24, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 472 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Thanksgiving soliloquy of Uncle Sam, November 25, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 473 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Two valuable lessons in patriotism, December 2, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 474 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Big Brother's thankless job [re: Nicaragua civil war], December 27, 1926 | |||||||||
| 16 | 475 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Out of the woods, January 2, 1927 | |||||||||
| 16 | 476 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Smutty plays, April 14, 1927 | |||||||||
| 16 | 477 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will this be the political situation next year?, April 18, 1927 | |||||||||
| 16 | 478 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - You can't scare 'em! [re: Lindbergh's flight], May 13, 1927 | |||||||||
| 16 | 479 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Nothing apologetic about this American, June 1, 1927 | |||||||||
| 16 | 480 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Aviation notes, June 9, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 481 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Is the President thinking of trying to break some kind of a record?, June 12, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 482 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The little White House in the west, June 16, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 483 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Polar championships [re: pole-sitting fad], July 6, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 484 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - He never looks backward [re: Lindbergh], August 22, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 485 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Too long drawn out [re: Sacco-Vanzetti case] (cartoon is torn), August 23, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 486 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As France prepares to greet her guest, August 25, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 487 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Then and now [re: Dempsey-Tunney fight], September 20, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 488 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Crusader, October 15, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 489 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The administration's most sacred tool, October 29, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 490 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A picture for the University of Wisconsin, November 9, 1927 | |||||||||
| 17 | 491 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Al Smith doesn't seem to be afraid of the draft, January 13, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 492 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It was high time Chicago acted [re: organized crime], April 14, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 493 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Just as they are singing him to sleep, April 16, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 494 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Paul Revere up to date, June 4, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 495 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will the keynote state the real purpose of the Convention?, June 8, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 496 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Al adds a postcript to the platform [re: Al Smith], July 2, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 497 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Political repartee, August 30, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 498 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Physically, Labor has the best of it, September 3, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 499 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - London is trying to break an old established monopoly [re: women's fashion], September 6, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 500 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Alfred in Wonderland [re: Al Smith], September 17, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 501 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Not likely to desert [re: blacks in the North & South], October 10, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 502 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Interest and curiosity are non-partisan [re: Al Smith], October 18, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 503 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The drift, October 20, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 504 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A promise of better roads ahead [re: Hoover and farm relief], October 29, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 505 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The President tells them a few plain truths, November 13, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 506 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The ship captain's predicament, November 15, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 507 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Prophets, past and present, December 7, 1928 | |||||||||
| 17 | 508 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Perhaps, eventually, but not yet [re: pacifism], January 5, 1929 | |||||||||
| 17 | 509 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An interesting study in phrenology [re: Hoover], January 20, 1929 | |||||||||
| 17 | 510 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Sir Austen Chamberlain give the cruiser bill a boost, January 28, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 511 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When you're playing the blue chips, a good hand makes you feel comfortable even in a friendly game, February 2, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 512 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The pace-maker, February 7, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 513 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The electoral college had its post-season contest yesterday, February 14, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 513 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A Valentine from a bond salesman, February 14, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 514 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What would the British Ambassador say? (cartoons has paint splatters), May 17, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 515 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It is remarkable that the Zeppelin -- which in allied countries was a symbol of terror in the Great War should now become a most potent promoter of friendly feeling between France and Germany, May 25, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 516 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Alone at last [re: Lindbergh], May 29, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 517 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - He is becoming uneasy, June 11, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 518 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The passing show, August 1, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 519 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An international university, August 11, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 520 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Zep puts pep in the ship designing business, August 12, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 521 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - none; [skydiver jumping from plane, The Frisco-Tokyo flyer], August 15, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 522 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How some fortunes are made, September 15, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 523 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - When the President and the Prime Minister meet to talk it over, September 18, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 524 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A constructive hero [re: US airmail & Lindbergh], September 24, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 525 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Clemenceau, November 25, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 526 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The real audience is in the gallery [re: Hoover], December 4, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 527 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As Uncle Sam starts back to Europe, December 10, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 528 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Redecorating St. James Palace for the Naval Conference, December 27, 1929 | |||||||||
| 18 | 529 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Picking the good ones from the bad ones, April 7, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 530 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Please excuse it if we seem to have our moments of skepticism, April 12, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 531 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Ohio prison horror, April 23, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 532 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: France's wealth, the secret ballot, fashions], April 26, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 533 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Motorists should be more careful in vacation time, July 5, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 534 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Coronation of King Corn [re: drought], August 6, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 535 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A buyers' strike, August 17, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 536 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - You'll need your loudspeaker at the air races, August 24, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 537 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Probably it's the beginning of school, September 2, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 538 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A most successful questionnaire, September 4, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 539 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The influence of business upon nerves and dispositions, September 7, 1930 | |||||||||
| 18 | 540 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Argentine tango is coming back into favor [re: wheat prices], September 8, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 541 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - An anxious moment, September 9, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 542 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As the community fights its defensive war against crime, September 17, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 543 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - She's been a lovely girl, though a trifle ardent at times [re: weather], September 20, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 544 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - They are just about over [re: drought], September 21, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 545 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The absent-minded professor [re: daylight savings time], September 28, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 546 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Last year's champion has the floor [re: stocks], October 1, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 547 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - John Bull reflects upon his air tragedy, October 6, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 548 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: prosperity/depression], October 24, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 549 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Washington's death day, December 14, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 550 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The race for the chimney, December 15, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 551 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A breeder of radicalsim, December 17, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 552 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - As congress broadcasts its noble motives, December 18, 1930 | |||||||||
| 19 | 553 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Playing politics with human hopes; or Not a very good year for that kind of politics, February 3, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 554 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The oasis, April 5, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 555 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Spring will soon drive him away [re: depression], April 12, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 556 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some professional advice, June 1, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 557 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A suggestion to the Lindberghs, July 28, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 558 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A powerful personage is tried in an English court, August 1, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 559 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - I may be a harsh teacher and my methods may be very disagreeable but you can learn a lot from me if you have the sense to profit by the stern lessons I am teaching you. If you learn it now, you won't have to learn it again. [re: depression], August 16, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 560 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Chicago's greatest need just now is a self-starter, August 18, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 561 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The Dream of Labor, September 7, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 562 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Crazy suggestion no. 65 - An all star baseball team that would fill the unemployment relief coffers, September 29, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 563 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The two promoters and the melancholy autumn days, October 27, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 564 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Their farewell song is received with tremendous enthusiasm. They made the biggest hit of the year, December 31, 1931 | |||||||||
| 19 | 565 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A devilish industry that is growing [re: kidnapping], July 13, 1933 | |||||||||
| 19 | 566 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A gangster lawyer gets the shock of his life, August 6, 1933 | |||||||||
| 19 | 567 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Ladies' choice, August 26, 1933 | |||||||||
| 19 | 568 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Best good wishes to the third challenger [re: prohibition], December 5, 1933 | |||||||||
| 19 | 569 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - There will be a great political battle for the credit of restoring business recovery, December 12, 1933 | |||||||||
| 19 | 570 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Which would you rather be? [re: poverty], January 11, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 571 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Why? [re: American spelling, portraiture, etc.], February 4, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 572 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A very pat map of the world for yesterday, March 18, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 573 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It looks as though we might have a busy summer ahead of us, April 22, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 574 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The high cost of foreign entanglements, July 15, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 575 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: election, France/Germany, ship construction], September 13, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 576 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - England may be prefer to win aviation cups, September 27, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 577 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: Mrs. O'Leary's cow, auto industry], October 9, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 578 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: insanity defenses, divorce, football], October 18, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 579 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A question we'd all like to be answered [re: Chicago doesn't get first-run movies], October 30, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 580 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - He beat the red light by a second [re: traffic safety], December 13, 1934 | |||||||||
| 20 | 581 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Today they are trying to settle a dangerous situation, January 13, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 582 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Looking for more trouble [re: World Court, League], January 15, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 583 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: Florida cold snap, constitution, new Secretary of Transportation], January 22, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 584 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The thoughtful husband; the rarest work of man, March 24, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 585 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Senatorial dignity, April 23, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 586 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: veterans, politics, FDR], April 25, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 587 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The struggle for bigger and better tourist cabins, July 14, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 588 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - One of the most extraodinary characters in American history [re: Huey Long], September 12, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 589 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A discussion of war debts, December 15, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 590 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Uncle Sam's crowning humiliation [re: Lindbergh], December 24, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 591 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Christmas aftermath, December 26, 1935 | |||||||||
| 20 | 592 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The heroic traffic cop [re: British], May 5, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 593 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Causes of great national prosperity, May 21, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 594 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - We have with us today, June 9, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 595 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The stop Landon movement, June 12, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 596 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The west is in the saddle, June 13, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 597 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - They are about to open fire from the city of brotherly love, June 23, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 598 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Hi hum, July 7, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 599 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The spirit of contest is in the air, August 11, 1936 | |||||||||
| 20 | 600 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Soviet Russia in the role of hero is somewhat unbelievable, October 22, 1936 | |||||||||
| 21 | 601 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The inquiring reporter; He asks, Do you think Presidential campaigns are too long?, November 8, 1936 | |||||||||
| 21 | 602 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The only industry in a changing world that doesn't change, go out of style or lose its customers [title does not correspond to caption list], February 14, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 603 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Suggestions for making fight predictions more dependable than heretofore, June 22, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 604 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The escape [to Vacationland], July 11, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 605 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Vice President Garner and Cactus Jack Garner, August 17, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 606 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - It will dog his footsteps every time he goes near the Supreme Court building [re: Ku Klux Klan], September 16, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 607 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The nine power conference inaction, October 28, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 608 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The two major casualties of the election, November 4, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 609 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Come over, Edward! Let us show we can give you a good time, November 9, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 610 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The congressional mileage allowance of twenty cents a mile, December 9, 1937 | |||||||||
| 21 | 611 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: executive salaries, divorce, japan / china], January 11, 1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 612 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Is it a foolish newspaper tradition [re: critics leaving halfway through the play], January 27, 1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 613 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Grooming the new entry in the Presidential derby [re: third party], April 26, 1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 614 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some June activities, June 5, 1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 615 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The doctor - pro and con [not used], 8/--/1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 616 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A cat that's about down to its last life, August 16, 1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 617 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - How long can the tail wag the dog? [re: Japanese invasion of China], December 7, 1938 | |||||||||
| 21 | 618 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The statesman and present day war, January 22, 1939 | |||||||||
| 21 | 619 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - What Next? [re: Spanish Civil War], January 26, 1939 | |||||||||
| 21 | 620 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Some observations on an eastern motor tour, July 9, 1939 | |||||||||
| 21 | 621 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; [portrait of Cordell Hall, Secretary of State], September 5, 1939 | |||||||||
| 21 | 622 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This should be less hard to answer in 1939 than it was in 1914-15 and 16, September 14, 1939 | |||||||||
| 21 | 623 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - X-Ray of an alien-minded American October 26, 1939 | |||||||||
| 21 | 624 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Lord Beaverbrook does his bit, January 11, 1940 | |||||||||
| 21 | 625 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Cartoons of the day [re: winter in the south, weather, politics], January 25, 1940 | |||||||||
| 21 | 626 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - President Wilson demanded a solemn referendum in 1920 on the League of Nations and the Wilson Administration; How about another solemn referendum on the next election day…., [to enter the war or not], April 30, 1940 | |||||||||
| 21 | 627 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This is a dangerous time for old-established and long-cherished traditions, June 30, 1940 | |||||||||
| 21 | 628 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The suffering of children touches every heart, September 24, 1940 | |||||||||
| 21 | 629 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A brief pictorial history of Wendell Wilkie, November 3, 1940 | |||||||||
| 21 | 630 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Dangerous to be seen with when you want to borrow money, November 28, 1940 | |||||||||
| 22 | 631 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Uncle Sam sets a good example, January 2, 1941 | |||||||||
| 22 | 632 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - If an when the ambassadors testify is certain to interest historians, January 16, 1941 | |||||||||
| 22 | 633 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Trying to palm a poll in a friend of Uncle Sam, June 3, 1941 | |||||||||
| 22 | 634 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A man may well bring a horse to the water, but he cannot make him drink without his will, September 19, 1941 | |||||||||
| 22 | 635 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Eager to start shooting the Nation's greatest blessing, October 12, 1941 | |||||||||
| 22 | 636 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; [martians sending a cosmic ray to warring earth] October 27, 1941 | |||||||||
| 22 | 637 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Donner Mutter (?)! There's no end to it! [re: war costs], January 8, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 638 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A snowball in hell [re: World War II], January 25, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 639 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Joe ought to be satisfied with that record front [re: Stalin and Churchill], June 3, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 640 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The evolution of a sporadic friendship [re: Japan], June 7, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 641 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - History: Well, sir, the next six months are going to be the most critical since I was a boy!, June 26, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 642 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Before and after - you hate to see them go but how proud you are when they do, July 15, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 643 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The war is reaching a point when both sides have to win, August 16, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 644 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The battleship, the luxury liner and the humble freighter are all threatened with extinction, September 6, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 645 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The changing world [re: prosperity vs. war rations], September 20, 1942 | |||||||||
| 22 | 646 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The first lesson Uncle Sam ever taught us, January 3, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 647 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - A mighty hard problem to solve [re: the draft], May 5, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 648 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The gold in Fort Knox must be getting nervous, May 26, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 649 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Wreathes and blossoms for our far-flung battle lines, May 30, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 650 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Henry Ford goes back to work, June 4, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 651 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Will the Dad's Draft be taken as a sign of weakness?, September 12, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 652 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Moscow Salvo, November 3, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 653 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The disadvantages of a second front Thanksgiving Day, November 26, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 654 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - Post War air travel, when we will be trying to get away from it all, December 5, 1943 | |||||||||
| 22 | 655 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - None; [about the Democratic and Republican conventions] January 12, 1944 | |||||||||
| 22 | 656 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - There would have been much less war if our democratic administrations had been as frank while getting us into war as they were when the war was over…, August 6, 1944 | |||||||||
| 22 | 657 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - This is the target! Riddle it with your votes! It is un-American! [re: fourth term], August 13, 1944 | |||||||||
| 22 | 658 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - San Francisco prepares to entertain near and far diplomats, April 1, 1945 | |||||||||
| 22 | 659 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - The outward march of the American billions [McCutcheon's last Chicago Tribune drawing], February 10, 1946 | |||||||||
| Editorial Cartoons - | |||||||||||
| 22 | 660 | Editorial Cartoons - [Reject?] Untitled [2 men seated, one standing; panel 3 is Hitler, panel 4 is question mark, 4 panels in 2 sheets], ..1940 | |||||||||
| 23 | 661 | Editorial Cartoons - [Reject?] Supposing - Having lived through the many disillusionments of the World War and its provocative aftermath, you can hardly expect us to be as trustful of international honor as before ..1941 | |||||||||
| 23 | 662 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - [Reject] - Dream of the Anglo-American Unionists; or Dreams of the Union Now boosters, February 27, 1941 | |||||||||
| 23 | 663 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - [Reject] - Chairman Flynn sounds the keynote of the Illinois Democratic campaign, August 5, 1942 | |||||||||
| 23 | 664 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - [Reject] - War and Peace, March 12, 1944 | |||||||||
| 23 | 665 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - [Reject] - When your vote doesn't count, May 21, 1944 | |||||||||
| 23 | 666 | Editorial Cartoons - Chicago Tribune - [Reject] - The Changing World [re: US entanglements in Europe], March 9, 1945 | |||||||||
| 23 | 667 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Alone with his conscience, [re: the voter], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 668 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Automobile speed in the future, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 669 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The constitution follows the flag; or The new ikon [re: Russian constitution], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 670 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The Danger of wishing [re: rich and poor], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 671 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Eggs is Eggs, and Eggs is high, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 672 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The Election in the Fifth Supreme Court District, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 673 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The Fifth of July - calling the roll, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 674 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Going after the South American Trade, some prominent drummers are trying to land the business, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 675 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The heroic dream of the straphanger, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 676 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - How the depression will end, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 677 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - My Work is done. Now I must leave you [Uncle Sam and John Bull], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 678 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - October Ninth - Mrs. O'Leary's cow - The horse may be the whole thing now, but he wasn't thirty six years ago today., [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 679 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - On the preference primary stream [Taft in a canoe going towards waterfall], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 680 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The real race will now begin [re: city elections], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 681 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - The reputable citizen who doesn't go to the polls tomorrow - will be the one who will be most indignant if low grade judges are elected, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 682 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Scene in three hundred Illinois towns just now [re: prohibition], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 683 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Some news items of the future [re: airplane news], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 684 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Some results of the November landslide [re: President Harding], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 685 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Strong friends [Uncle Sam, Chinese soldier], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 686 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Tampering by telepathy?, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 687 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Two ways of looking at it [Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 688 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Why, what's the matter, my little man? Why are you so downcast? He's had eight terms and I've had only four [Harrison, Diaz (Mexico)], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 689 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [caveman images, 4 panels] [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 23 | 690 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [1914-1924; British Empire in stocks and in car] [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 691 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [Banners for John Mill Stuart [sic.], and Hon. Asbestos K. Bunk] [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 692 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [Father Time at leisure, in a hurry, 2 panels] [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 693 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [German Kaiser in chair, bomb underneath] [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 694 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [Rich man in carriage going through street] [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 695 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [re: Illinois Central Railroad, 6 panels], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 696 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [The New Nationalism, Freedom, Era, Deal], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 697 | Editorial Cartoons - Unidentified - Untitled - [man drinking between societal pressures, 6 panels], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 24 | 698 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - One-Two-Three-Four; Author finds it hard to do daily dozen (2 drawings on 1 board), November 3, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 699 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - The mystery of the parley; Some statesmen rarely eat home cooked meals (2 drawings on 1 board), November 10, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 700 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - The effeminate jungle; movies have made sissies out of lions (2 drawings on 1 board), November 24, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 701 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - One set of French dishes; cost only 3c each, but how to get them?; They bring about a mental earthquake, December 1, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 702 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - Hey waiter!; An episode in the life of Mr. Peters in which our hero is made conspicuous (2 drawings on 1 board), December 8, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 703 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - Mr. Peters is shushed; it seems he interferes with a solo (2 drawings on 1 board), December 15, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 704 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - Just a minute, please!; Delayed pass play gets on one's nerves (3 drawings on 1 board), December 22, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 705 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - The Sunday afternoon menace; what to do problem is perplexing when pall descends over whole world (3 drawings on 1 board), December 29, 1929 | |||||||||
| 24 | 706 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - The menace of the bathroom revolution; Catalogues on plumbing bring a hot protest (2 drawings on 1 board), January 12, 1930 | |||||||||
| 24 | 707 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - Mrs. Peters gets a fixation; an excursion into modern psychology (2 drawings on 1 board), January 19, 1930 | |||||||||
| 24 | 708 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - Going Up!; Being the sad story of a man in a hurry; Mr. Peters is delayed in his trip skyward (3 drawings on 1 board), January 26, 1930 | |||||||||
| 24 | 709 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune -Benchley series - Audience with the king; The wonders of science as heard over the radio that personal message early in the morning (2 drawings on 1 board), February 16, 1930 | |||||||||
| 24 | 710 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - The theatrical season is now opening, August 29, 1904 | |||||||||
| 24 | 711 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - Bird Center Society to take a trip abroad, July 20, 1905 | |||||||||
| 24 | 712 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - Bird Center at Niagara, July 30, 1905 | |||||||||
| 24 | 713 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - Bird Center at London, August 7, 1905 | |||||||||
| 24 | 714 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - Bird Center at Paris, August 9, 1905 | |||||||||
| 24 | 715 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - Bird Center at Rome, August 14, 1905 | |||||||||
| 24 | 716 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Bird Center series - Bird Center at Venice, August, 1905 | |||||||||
| 24 | 717 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Crossed Wires series - I'm glad you notice an improvement, sir, July 11, 1926 | |||||||||
| 24 | 718 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Crossed Wires series - Wells was on his knees before her, August 1, 1926 | |||||||||
| 24 | 719 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Crossed Wires series - Mrs. Crayton got her check book, August 8, 1926 | |||||||||
| 24 | 720 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Crossed Wires series - It would be terrible! And think of Henry Rasher!, August 15, 1926 | |||||||||
| 25 | 721 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Crossed Wires series - It is magnificent, Madam, the most beautiful place I have seen in America, August 22, 1926 | |||||||||
| 25 | 722 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Crossed Wires series - Followed Celeste without a word, September 5, 1926 | |||||||||
| 25 | 723 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Dunne Series - Mr. Dooley on the Education of Woodrow Wilson (2 drawings on 1 board), February 11, 1912 | |||||||||
| 25 | 724 | Illustrations - Chicago Record - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the cold weather, February 19, 1903 | |||||||||
| 25 | 725 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, November 8, 1913 | |||||||||
| 25 | 726 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, February 15, 1915 | |||||||||
| 25 | 727 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, July 16, 1921 | |||||||||
| 25 | 728 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, August 10, 1922 | |||||||||
| 25 | 729 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, February 2, 1923 | |||||||||
| 25 | 730 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, June 28, 1923 | |||||||||
| 25 | 731 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Lugubrious… series - Mr. Lugubrious Blue and Mr. Smiley Gladd discuss the situation, January 13, 1924 | |||||||||
| 25 | 732 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Patchmore… series Mr. J. Raglan Patchmore in city; Declines to be interviewed on Local, Domestic, or Foreign affairs; Talks learnedly on Golf, September 21, 1923 | |||||||||
| 25 | 733 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Patchmore… series Noted expert discourses on Santa Claus; Patchmore states position; exclusive interview with Rest Magnate, December 10, 1928 | |||||||||
| 25 | 734 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Patchmore… series J. Raglan Patchmore himself; talks on budget, national debt, drought, and financial situation, November 15, 1936 | |||||||||
| 25 | 735 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Pirate Cruise series - The Great Blackbeard and Other Pirate Chiefs - The Great Blackbeard mediating his chief [mischief], May 12, 1912 | |||||||||
| 25 | 736 | Illustrations - Chicago Tribune - Pirate Cruise series - Cat Island and Christopher Columbus - We were objects of interest to the little black Cat Islanders May 26, 1912 | |||||||||
| 25 | 737 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables in Slang, Sept. 1912 | |||||||||
| 25 | 738 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables in Slang (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Nov. 1912 | |||||||||
| 25 | 739 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables in Slang, Dec. 1913 | |||||||||
| 25 | 740 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [the American People, throwing stones at statues], Apr. 1914 | |||||||||
| 25 | 741 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables, Nov. 1915 | |||||||||
| 25 | 742 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables, Feb. 1916 | |||||||||
| 25 | 743 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables, Jun. 1916 | |||||||||
| 25 | 744 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Jul. 1916 | |||||||||
| 25 | 745 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Sept. 1916 | |||||||||
| 25 | 746 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables, Oct. 1916 | |||||||||
| 25 | 747 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables, Sept. 1917 | |||||||||
| 25 | 748 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [man in bed with woman carrying vase, scowling man seated across from three other men] (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Sept. 1917 | |||||||||
| 25 | 749 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ade's Fables, Mar. 1918 | |||||||||
| 25 | 750 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [two men seated in office, facing each other, Apr. 1923 | |||||||||
| 26 | 751 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - A Cruise to the Pirate Island, May. 1923 | |||||||||
| 26 | 752 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Big Moments (12 illustrations), Jun. 1923 | |||||||||
| 26 | 753 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [untitled essay] (4 illustrations + proofsheet), Jul. 1923 (?) | |||||||||
| 26 | 754 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Synthetic Adventure (6 illustrations + proofsheet), Sept. 1923 | |||||||||
| 26 | 755 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [dinner party, 4 women and 4 men alternating at table], Nov. 1923 | |||||||||
| 26 | 756 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Strange Case of James Haswell (5 illustrations + proofsheet), Dec. 1923 | |||||||||
| 26 | 757 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Ambassador Beasley (3 illustrations), Feb. 1924 | |||||||||
| 26 | 758 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Heroes Then and Now (4 illustrations + proofsheet), Mar. 1924 | |||||||||
| 26 | 759 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Mind Reader, The (5 illustrations), Apr. 1924 | |||||||||
| 26 | 760 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - Around the Well-Known World (81 illustrations in 1 scrapbook: See Box 28, Folder 783), 1925-1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 761 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [man in crowded classroom, Knowledge is Power written above him], Feb. 1925 | |||||||||
| 26 | 762 | Illustrations - Cosmopolitan - None; [illustrated quatrains about famous people] (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Mar. 1925 | |||||||||
| 26 | 763 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - None; [couple at campsite in woods; man seated, woman with cookpot, both smoking], Jan. 1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 764 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - None; [men at roulette table], Feb. 1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 765 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - None; [two men sneaking into a hospital, alley entrance], Apr. 1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 766 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - I Like Crowds (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), May. 1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 767 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - Little Scheme of my Own, A (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Jul. 1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 768 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - I Knew Them When (?), Dec. 1926 | |||||||||
| 26 | 769 | Illustrations - Hearst's Cosmopolitan - None [various action illustrations] (3 illustrations + proofsheet), Nov. 1927 | |||||||||
| 26 | 770 | Illustrations - Hearst's International - The Texas tyke follows the Frederick Remington model, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 26 | 771 | Illustrations - Hearst's International - The Texas climate is not good for growing Republicans, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 26 | 772 | Illustrations - Hearst's International - Texas; as big as all outdoors, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 26 | 773 | Illustrations - Hearst's International - Cobb, Irving; article on New Jersey (3 illustrations on 3 sheets), Oct. 1924 | |||||||||
| 26 | 774 | Illustrations - Hearst's International - None; 1924 campaign pictures, LaFollette, Wheeler, Davis, Bryan, Coolidge, Dawes (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), Nov. 1924 | |||||||||
| 26 | 775 | Illustrations - Hearst's International - None; [men and women strolling on a promenade outside large mansion, Feb. 1925 | |||||||||
| 26 | 776 | Illustrations - Liberty - None; [people holding magazines as banners facing man under banner, $25000 for a Name [on verso: 1st cover of Liberty Magazine], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 26 | 777 | Illustrations - Liberty - None; [3 men seated; one man in foreground elbowing another], [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 26 | 778 | Illustrations - Liberty - None; [stadium people cheering on football players in pileup, ambulance, medical profession, et al. rushing in to help, [n.d.] | |||||||||
| 26 | 779 | Illustrations - Liberty - None; [fortune teller predicting radio, 3,000,000 marks for a beer, etc. to 4 laughing men]; The Audience Thought the show was over.], [2 illustrations; both say Jan. 3], [ca. 1923?] | |||||||||
| 26 | 780 | Illustrations - Liberty - He was handsome, the best dressed boy in town, from Fullerton, Hugh. Who is Your Model, 1924 | |||||||||
| 26 | 781 | Illustrations - Liberty - from Bennett, James O'Donnell. Sayings of James A. Reed - [two portraits of James A. Reed] (2 illustrations on 2 sheets), 3/10/1928 | |||||||||
| 26 | 782 | Illustrations - Liberty - from Lindsay, Vachel. The Jazz Age, 2/2/1931 | |||||||||
| 27 | - | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - with George Ade - All About it - [individual box] (11 illustrations in 1 book), ca. 1898 | |||||||||
| 28 | 783 | Illustrations - Around the Well-Known World 1925-1926 | |||||||||
| 28 | 784 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - with George Ade - Artie - includes fragment of poster for book in oversize ca. 1896 | |||||||||
| 28 | 785-789 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - with George Ade - Stories of the Streets and of the Town (101 illustrations in five folders), ca. 1894-1900 | |||||||||
| 28 | 790 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Advertisements (see oversize box 32), n.d. | |||||||||
| 28 | 791 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Christmas card (see oversize box 32), 1924 | |||||||||
| 28 | 792 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Portraits n.d. | |||||||||
| 28 | 793 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Scenes n.d. | |||||||||
| 28 | 794 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Travel, first trip abroad (9 illustrations), 1895 | |||||||||
| 28 | 795 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Travel (see also oversize "box" 32) n.d., 1898-1919 | |||||||||
| 28 | 796 | Illustrations - Miscellaneous - Unidentified (see oversize "box" 32), n.d. | |||||||||
| 29 | 797 | Sketchbooks - Early Chicago Sketches, 1889 | |||||||||
| 29 | 798 | Sketchbooks - Dinner at French's - Chicago Daily News - sketches of various reporters and Daily News staff 1891-1894 | |||||||||
| 29 | 799 | Sketchbooks - Chicago Record (or Morning News), portraits ca. 1892-1896 | |||||||||
| 29 | 800 | Sketchbooks - 1st Trip Abroad, 1895 | |||||||||
| 29 | 801 | Sketchbooks - Europe, McCulloch, Khyber Pass, 1895, 1898, 1899 | |||||||||
| 29 | 802 | Sketchbooks - Ships of the line; Concord, Sofiro, etc., 1898 | |||||||||
| 29 | 803 | Sketchbooks - Philippines - mostly ships and street scenes, 1898-1900 | |||||||||
| 29 | 804 | Sketchbooks - China - Chefoo, The Great Wall (one of Africa; some loose sheets), 1899 | |||||||||
| 29 | 805 | Sketchbooks - China - Tilad Pass, 1899 | |||||||||
| 29 | 806 | Sketchbooks - Madagascar, Mozambique, 1900 | |||||||||
| 29 | 807 | Sketchbooks - South Africa, Zanzibar, Port Said, Stromboli, 1900 | |||||||||
| 29 | 808 | Sketchbooks - Africa Safari (many loose sheets), ca. 1909-1910 | |||||||||
| 29 | 809 | Sketchbooks - Europe, 1918-1919 | |||||||||
Series 2: Works - Drawings - Reproductions, 1894-1962 |
|||||||||||
| Printed reproductions of McCutcheon’s editorial cartoons and illustrations for magazines and other publications. McCutcheon’s drawings, as well as being used to illustrate magazine articles, were printed on postcards, greeting cards, travel brochures, program covers, advertisements, invitations, calendars, dinner menus, sheet music covers, and memorials and testimonials to others. Much of the work McCutcheon did for the more miscellaneous items were for charity organizations, or to support the war effort. | |||||||||||
| See also Series 3 (Works – Writings) and Series 13 (Scrapbooks) for reproductions of drawings scattered therein. | |||||||||||
| The series is organized in three sections: Illustrations for articles, arranged alphabetically by magazine title; Illustrations for organizations (such as the Indiana Society of Chicago and Sigma Chi), arranged alphabetically by organization; and Illustrations, miscellaneous, arranged chronologically. | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 30 | 810 | Illustrations for Articles - American Magazine, n.d., 1907-1909 | |||||||||
| 30 | 811 | Illustrations for Articles - Chicago Record, 1896-1902 | |||||||||
| 30 | 812 | Illustrations for Articles - Chicago Tribune and Little Tribune (See Also: Scrapbooks and Oversize), n.d., 1904-1955 | |||||||||
| 30 | 813 | Illustrations for Articles - Collier's, 1906-1928 | |||||||||
| 30 | 814 | Illustrations for Articles - Cosmopolitan, n.d., 1912-1926 | |||||||||
| 30 | 815 | Illustrations for Articles - Harvard Crimson, 1936 | |||||||||
| 30 | 816 | Illustrations for Articles - Hearst's International (See Also: Cosmopolitan and Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan), n.d., 1923-1924 | |||||||||
| 30 | 817 | Illustrations for Articles - Hearst's International (See Also: Cosmopolitan and Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan), 1926-1928 | |||||||||
| 30 | 818 | Illustrations for Articles - Liberty Magazine, 1924-1929 | |||||||||
| 30 | 819 | Illustrations for Articles - Saturday Evening Post, n.d., 1903-1914 | |||||||||
| 30 | 820 | Illustrations for Articles - Sigma Chi, The Magazine of, n.d., 1930-1959 | |||||||||
| 30 | 821 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, A-B, n.d., 1898-1930 | |||||||||
| 30 | 822 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, C, n.d., 1911-1962 | |||||||||
| 30 | 823 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, D-H, n.d., 1902-1945 | |||||||||
| 30 | 824 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, L-N, n.d., 1895-1939 | |||||||||
| 30 | 825 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, O-R, n.d., 1907-1941 | |||||||||
| 30 | 826 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, S-W, n.d, 1905-1944 | |||||||||
| 30 | 827 | Illustrations for Articles - Miscellaneous, Unidentified, n.d. | |||||||||
| 30 | 828 | Illustrations for Organizations - Indiana Society, n.d., 1911-1941 | |||||||||
| 30 | 828a | Illustrations for Organizations - Liberty Bond Mutual Benefit Association (See: Oversize-Plus), 1917 | |||||||||
| 30 | 829 | Illustrations for Organizations - Onwentsia Club, Pow Wow Programs, 1910-1929 | |||||||||
| 30 | 830 | Illustrations for Organizations - Sigma Chi, n.d., 1911-1915 | |||||||||
| 31 | 831 | Illustrations for Organizations - Sigma Chi Pledge Manuals, 1934-1949 | |||||||||
| 31 | 832 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous, n.d. | |||||||||
| 31 | 833 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous, 1894-1909 | |||||||||
| 31 | 834 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous, 1910-1919 | |||||||||
| 31 | 835 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous, 1920-1929 | |||||||||
| 31 | 836 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous, 1930-1939 | |||||||||
| 31 | 837 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous, 1940-1949 | |||||||||
| 31 | 838 | Illustrations, Miscellaneous - A Boy In (Springtime, Summer-Time, Fall-Time, Winter-Time), Postcards, 1903-1905 | |||||||||
| 32 | - | Oversize - Originals and Reproductions n.d., 1897-1939 | |||||||||
Series 3: Works - Writings, 1888-1950 |
|||||||||||
| Manuscripts, typescripts, printed items, and reprints from McCutcheon's lifetime and after his death in 1949. This series includes articles, essays, speeches, notes, small sketches, revisions, and introductions to other writers’ works. Also included are a number of articles from the Chicago Record and the Tribune newspapers, Cosmopolitan, Hearst’s International, and Liberty magazines, which contain illustrations or cartoons by McCutcheon. | |||||||||||
| The “Africa” folder consists of manuscripts relating to the newspaper series “With McCutcheon in Africa” and the subsequent book “In Africa”. "Diaries and Notebooks" contain detailed writings about McCutcheon’s travels in Central Asia, the Philippines, Mexico, and elsewhere, and are occasionally accompanied by small sketches. Some diaries and notebooks contain expense logs; other expense books can be found in the Legal/Financial Files. | |||||||||||
| The drafts of “Drawn from Memory,” occasionally called “Opus” by McCutcheon, consist of some material appearing elsewhere in this series. These drafts have been kept in the order in which they were found, and include notes and final revisions by Evelyn McCutcheon. The oversize box entitled “Stories of Filipino Warfare” contains original articles as published in the Chicago Record from 1898-1900. A printed compilation of some of these articles is catalogued separately under call number Case Y 244.159. | |||||||||||
| “Unidentified” materials lack titles and publication information, while “Untitled” items contain publication information but lack titles. Both types of materials are identified by the first line of the work. | |||||||||||
| See also Series 13 (Scrapbooks), for scattered short printed works. See boxes 46-49 for Oversize Works - Writings. | |||||||||||
| Arranged alphabetically by title with speeches, unidentified, and untitled works grouped by subject. | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 33 | 839 | 1938 A. D. (Vaughn Shoemaker's Cartoons) - Foreword, 1938 | |||||||||
| 33 | 840 | Africa MS (re. meeting Roosevelt, elephant hunting), 1909-1910 | |||||||||
| 33 | 841 | Ambassador Beasley (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1924 | |||||||||
| 33 | 842 | Arizona Tramp, n.d. | |||||||||
| 33 | 843 | Around the Well Known World (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1925 | |||||||||
| 33 | 844 | As Seen By the Man In the Street (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, 1930 | |||||||||
| 33 | 845 | Ballad of Beautiful Words, The (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, 1931 | |||||||||
| 33 | 846 | Barney and the Giant (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, Public Safety Magazine, 1932-1933 | |||||||||
| 33 | 847 | Baseball (includes illustrations), Appleton's, 1908 | |||||||||
| 33 | 848 | Battle of Manila Bay, United States Naval Institute Proceedings, 1940 | |||||||||
| 33 | 849 | Bird Center, Announcement of Halloween Barn Dance, 1903 | |||||||||
| 33 | 850 | Bird Center, The Entrance and Exit (?) of Ernest Pratt, ca. 1903 | |||||||||
| 33 | 851 | Bird Center Argosy, Vol. 0-1, 1904, 1906 | |||||||||
| 33 | 852 | Bird Center Beefs, The Little Tribune, 1904 | |||||||||
| 33 | 853 | Brief Autobiography, 1924 | |||||||||
| 33 | 854 | Brothers Under the Pen, Collier's - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1925 | |||||||||
| 33 | 855 | Bud Carter - Notes, n.d. | |||||||||
| 33 | 856 | Campaign Orator, The, Appleton's, ca. 1907-1908 | |||||||||
| 33 | 857 | Cartoon and the Campaign, The, (includes illustrations) Saturday Evening Post - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1904 | |||||||||
| 33 | 858 | Cartoon Prophet, The (includes illustrations), Saturday Evening Post - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1905 | |||||||||
| 33 | 859 | Central Asia - Draft and Notes (incomplete), 1906 | |||||||||
| 33 | 860 | Changing Presidents (includes illustrations), 1909 | |||||||||
| 33 | 861 | Chicago Zoological Society Year Book - Foreword, 1934 | |||||||||
| 33 | 862 | Company for Dinner, and Other Casual Verse by Arthur Frederic Otis - Foreword, 1943 | |||||||||
| 33 | 863 | Crossed Wires (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1926 | |||||||||
| 33 | 864 | Deserter, The, by Richard Harding Davis - Introduction, 1917 | |||||||||
| 33 | 865 | Diaries and Notebooks, n.d., 1888 | |||||||||
| 33 | 866 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1889 | |||||||||
| 33 | 867 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1892, 1895 | |||||||||
| 33 | 868 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1897, 1901 | |||||||||
| 33 | 869 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1898 | |||||||||
| 34 | 870 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1899 | |||||||||
| 34 | 871 | Diaries and Notebooks, Jan. 1900 | |||||||||
| 34 | 872 | Diaries and Notebooks, Jan. 1900-Mar. 1901 | |||||||||
| 34 | 873 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1903, 1906 | |||||||||
| 34 | 874 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1906, 1909 | |||||||||
| 34 | 875 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1909-1912 | |||||||||
| 35 | 876 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1913 | |||||||||
| 35 | 877 | Diaries and Notebooks, May-Sep. 1914 | |||||||||
| 35 | 878 | Diaries and Notebooks, Sep.-Oct. 1914 | |||||||||
| 35 | 879 | Diaries and Notebooks, Aug.-Dec. 1915 | |||||||||
| 35 | 880 | Diaries and Notebooks, Domino Scores, Addresses, etc., 1915 | |||||||||
| 35 | 881 | Diaries and Notebooks, Domino Scores, Addresses, etc., items removed from diary, 1915 | |||||||||
| 35 | 882 | Diaries and Notebooks, Dec. 1915-Feb. 1919 | |||||||||
| 35 | 883 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1919-1926 | |||||||||
| 35 | 884 | Diaries and Notebooks, 1935 | |||||||||
| 36 | 885 | Discussing the Primary (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, 1932 | |||||||||
| 36 | 886 | Doing the Grand Canyon (includes illustrations), 2 versions reprinted from Appleton's, 1909, 1922 | |||||||||
| 36 | 887 | Drawn from Memory - Bird Center Draft, | |||||||||
| 36 | 888 | Drawn from Memory - Central Asia, first draft, 1906 | |||||||||
| 36 | 889 | Drawn from Memory - Clipping, A Visit to Dawes Arboretum, 1942 | |||||||||
| 36 | 890 | Drawn from Memory - Crossing the Gobi to Urga, Draft (2 copies), n.d. | |||||||||
| 36 | 891 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS, folder 1, n.d. | |||||||||
| 36 | 892 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS, folder 2, n.d. | |||||||||
| 36 | 893 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS, folder 3, n.d. | |||||||||
| 36 | 894 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS, photocopy (folder 1 of 4), n.d. | |||||||||
| 37 | 895-897 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS, photocopy (folders 2-4), n.d. | |||||||||
| 37 | 898-899 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS and MS, n.d. | |||||||||
| 37 | 900 | Drawn from Memory - Draft TS and MS, Editorial Notes and Correspondence, n.d., 1948 | |||||||||
| 37 | 901 | Drawn from Memory - Drafts and Notes, n.d. | |||||||||
| 38 | 902-904 | Drawn from Memory - Drafts and Notes, | |||||||||
| 38 | 905 | Drawn from Memory - Dummy, ca. 1950 | |||||||||
| 38 | 906-907 | Drawn from Memory - Final TS, pages 1-300, 1950 | |||||||||
| 39 | 908-911 | Drawn from Memory - Final TS, pp. 301-700, Revisions, 1950 | |||||||||
| 39 | 912-914 | Drawn from Memory - Island Drafts, 1916-1940 | |||||||||
| 39 | 915 | Drawn from Memory - List of Biographical Detail, ca. 1925 | |||||||||
| 39 | 916 | Drawn from Memory - List of Biographical Detail, ca. 1938 | |||||||||
| 40 | 917 | Drawn from Memory - Notes, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 918 | Drawn from Memory - Original Copy, TS, Introduction - p. 113, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 919-920 | Drawn from Memory - Original Dictation to Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon, MS (2 folders), n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 921 | Drawn from Memory - Preliminary Outlines, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 922 | Drawn from Memory - Studio in the Fine Arts Building, MS, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 923 | Drawn from Memory - Suggested Illustrations, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 924 | Drawn from Memory - Unused Items, Alternate Accounts, and Source Material, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 925 | Elegant Eighties, The, by Herma Clark - Foreword, ca. 1941 | |||||||||
| 40 | 926 | F. D. R., 1944 | |||||||||
| 40 | 927 | For Boers' Last Stand, Chicago Record, 1900 | |||||||||
| 40 | 928 | Fragments, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 929 | Gen. Villa's Rise Skyrocket Kind, Chicago Daily Tribune (incomplete), 1914 | |||||||||
| 40 | 930 | General Dawes: The Vice-President as He Looks to One of His Friends, The Century, 1928 | |||||||||
| 40 | 931 | George Ade, reprinted from Appleton's - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1907 | |||||||||
| 40 | 932 | German Atrocities Fiction. . ., MS and reprint in Chicago Daily Tribune, 1914 | |||||||||
| 40 | 933 | Goin' Barefooted (includes illustrations), Good Housekeeping, n.d. | |||||||||
| 40 | 934 | Great Hemp Deal, The, Reader (includes illustrations), 1904 | |||||||||
| 40 | 935 | Hand-Shaking, The Magazine of Sigma Chi, 1936 | |||||||||
| 40 | 936 | Happy Endings (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1924 | |||||||||
| 41 | 937-938 | Heir at Large, An (includes illustrations) - Scrapbook of clippings, Chicago Tribune, (2 copies), 1921-1924 | |||||||||
| 41 | 939 | Heir at Large, An - Summary, ca. 1925 | |||||||||
| 41 | 940 | Heir at Large, An - Play Adaptation by Mary Aldis, TS, ca. 1924 | |||||||||
| 41 | 941 | Heir at Large, An - Play Adaptation by Mary Aldis, Old Tower Press, 1926 | |||||||||
| 41 | 942 | Heroes (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, n.d. | |||||||||
| 41 | 943 | How Fortunate that Tastes Differ! (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, 1938 | |||||||||
| 41 | 944 | Humorists of the Pencil (includes illustrations), Saturday Evening Post - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1903 | |||||||||
| 41 | 945 | If President Wilson Had Kept Us Out of War (includes illustration), Chicago Tribune, 1936 | |||||||||
| 41 | 946 | In Africa - Draft TS, Chapter 22, ca. 1910 | |||||||||
| 41 | 947 | In Africa - Notes, ca. 1910 | |||||||||
| 41 | 948 | In the Boer Capital (includes illustrations), Chicago Record, 1900 | |||||||||
| 41 | 949 | In Pretoria's Port, Chicago Record, 1900 | |||||||||
| 41 | 950 | Ingomar in the Provinces (includes illustrations), South Shore Country Club, 1918 | |||||||||
| 41 | 951 | Injun Summer, reprints - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, 1941 | |||||||||
| 41 | 952 | Injun Summer, Special Feature Exhibit for Indiana State Fair (See Also: Oversize), 1936 | |||||||||
| 41 | 953 | Interview with E. K. Veniselos in Athens, ca. 1936 | |||||||||
| 41 | 954 | John McCutcheon's Book - Make-Up - SEE OVERSIZE Box 46, ca. 1948 | |||||||||
| 41 | 955 | John McCutcheon's Book - Original Manuscripts, ca. 1944 | |||||||||
| 41 | 956 | John McCutcheon's Book - Original Plan/Cartoon Lists, 1944-1945 | |||||||||
| 41 | 957 | John McCutcheon's Book - Outline, 1945 | |||||||||
| 41 | 958 | John McCutcheon's Book - Preliminary Notes by Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon, ca. 1944 | |||||||||
| 42 | 959 | Kenesaw Mountain Landis, Judge (includes illustrations), Appleton's, 1907 | |||||||||
| 42 | 960 | Kipling's Old Home, Chicago Record (includes illustrations), 1899 | |||||||||
| 42 | 961 | Lecturing in the O'pry Houses (includes illustrations), Collier's - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1911 | |||||||||
| 42 | 962 | Leonidas Jones Catches Up (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, 1930 | |||||||||
| 42 | 963 | Letter to Editor of Curtain Rises, 1939 | |||||||||
| 42 | 964 | Lists, n.d., 1923-1943 | |||||||||
| 42 | 965 | Looking for Trouble, 1905 | |||||||||
| 42 | 966 | Mango Trick and The Deadly Upas Tree - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1898 | |||||||||
| 42 | 967 | Manila Materials - Drafts and Recollections, n.d., 1900 | |||||||||
| 42 | 968-969 | Master of the World (includes illustrations) - Collection of Articles, Chicago Tribune (2 copies), 1927-1928 | |||||||||
| 42 | 970 | McCutcheon, Beloved Cartoonist, Takes Peru-Amazon Trail (includes illustrations), The Grace Log, 1929 | |||||||||
| 42 | 971 | Memorandum on a Conversation This Afternoon, 1931 | |||||||||
| 42 | 972 | Mexico, 1914 | |||||||||
| 42 | 973 | Millennium Get-Together Dinner, The (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune, 1938 | |||||||||
| 42 | 974 | Mind-Reader (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1924 | |||||||||
| 42 | 975 | Mit Roosevelt in Afrika, Morgen Journal New York, 1910 | |||||||||
| 42 | 976 | Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons - Notes, 1905 | |||||||||
| 42 | 977 | New Zoo, The (includes illustrations), The Chicago Visitor, 1931 | |||||||||
| 42 | 978 | Notes - En Route to South America on the Graf Zeppelin, 1935 | |||||||||
| 42 | 979 | Notes - Historical Material (includes sketches), 1938-1940 | |||||||||
| 42 | 980 | Notes - Ideas for Stories, ca. 1924 | |||||||||
| 42 | 981 | Notes - War, 1914 | |||||||||
| 42 | 982 | Notes and Reminiscences by George Ade and McCutcheon, excerpt (first used at Sigma Chi dinner, 1934), 1940 | |||||||||
| 42 | 983 | Now Which Is Success? (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1924 | |||||||||
| 42 | 984 | Oom Paul Makes a Speech to the Boers (includes illustration), Chicago Record, 1900 | |||||||||
| 42 | 985 | Patchmore - Draft of cartoon (incomplete), n.d. | |||||||||
| 42 | 986 | Pipe Dreamers' Club, The (includes illustration), Microbes and How to Destroy Them, Record-Herald - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1902 | |||||||||
| 42 | 987 | Pipe Dreamers' Club, The (includes illustration), various publications - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1902 | |||||||||
| 42 | 988 | Pirate Cruise - Articles, Sketches and Notes about Pirates (See Also: Oversize Box 47), 1912 | |||||||||
| 42 | 989 | Plot for a Movie Scenario, 1921 | |||||||||
| 42 | 990 | Practical Work of a Cartoonist, The (includes illustrations), Brush and Pencil, 1903 | |||||||||
| 42 | 991 | Property Rights (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1923 | |||||||||
| 42 | 992 | Q. C. Weakly SOB, Quadrangle Club, 1916 | |||||||||
| 42 | 993 | Reviews - Flying Gypsies Is Full of Thrills for Chicagoans, 19-- | |||||||||
| 42 | 994 | Reviews - Napoleon Third Villain in Life of Maximilian, Chicago Daily Tribune, 1934 | |||||||||
| 42 | 995 | Rhyme of the Restless Rover, The (includes illustrations), 1916, 1930 | |||||||||
| 42 | 996 | Rich Farm and the Spreading Thistle, The (includes illustration), Chicago Tribune, 1930 | |||||||||
| 42 | 997 | Rise, Fall and Rehabilitation of Grover Cleveland (includes illustrations), Appleton's, 1908 | |||||||||
| 42 | 998 | Romances of India, Some Hindu Fables Exposed (includes illustrations), Chicago Record, 1899 | |||||||||
| 42 | 999 | Roosevelt as Cartoon Material, Saturday Evening Post (includes illustrations) -SEE OVERSIZE 47, 1909 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1000 | Roosevelt Lion Quest (includes illustrations), Appleton's, 1908 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1001 | Roosevelt in Political Cartoons, Notes, ca. 1909 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1002 | Sails Tropic Seas, (includes illustrations), Chicago Record, 1899 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1003 | Santy (includes illustrations), 1907 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1004 | Short Sketches (stories with illustrations), 1886-1888 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1005 | Sole Survivor by Samuel Hopkins Adams, adapted from McCutcheon's story, n.d. | |||||||||
| 42 | 1006 | Some Anti-Foreign War Talk (includes illustration), Chicago Tribune, 1938 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1007 | South America - Dispatches, MS and Article, Chicago Tribune, 1929 | |||||||||
| 42 | 1008 | South American Series, Chicago Tribune (See Also: Oversize Box 47), 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1009 | Speeches - Acknowledgment after Injun Summer Pageant, Chicagoland Music Festival, 1941 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1010 | Speeches - Adventurers' Club, Slide Show on South America, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1011 | Speeches - American Club of Buenos Aires, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1012 | Speeches - Autobiographical Reflections, University of Missouri School of Journalism and Inland Daily Press Assoc., 1939 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1013 | Speeches - Berea College (Kentucky), Commencement Address, 1938 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1014 | Speeches - Biographical Travelogue of Medill McCormick, 1916 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1015 | Speeches - Broadcast - Citizens of Tomorrow, 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1016 | Speeches - Broadcast - Fox Movietone (1 page missing), 19-- | |||||||||
| 43 | 1017 | Speeches - Broadcast - From Rio de Janiero, WGN, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1018 | Speeches - Broadcast - Sounds and Smells, Purdue, 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1019 | Speeches - Bruce Rogers, The Man, National Institute of Graphic Arts, 1938 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1020 | Speeches - By Air to South America and Europe, Commercial Club of Chicago, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1021 | Speeches - Cartooning in Wartime, Cliffdwellers Cartoon Exhibition, 1945 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1022 | Speeches - Chicago Association of Commerce, Slide Show of Trip to South America, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1023 | Speeches - Chicago Zoological Park, Talk on Zoo for Inter-fraternity Club, n.d. | |||||||||
| 43 | 1024 | Speeches - Chicago Zoological Park, Opening Ceremony (Toastmaster), 1934 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1025 | Speeches - Chicago Zoological Park (Society), Slide Show for Trustees - Zoos in South America and Europe, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1026 | Speeches - Chicago Zoological Park, About the New Zoo, ca. 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1027 | Speeches - Chicago Zoological Park, Address to Real Estate Board, 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1028 | Speeches - Chicago Zoological Park, Annual Meeting, 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1029 | Speeches - Dawes Arboretum, Remarks at Dedication of Tree, 1928 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1030 | Speeches - Early Days of the Club, Wayfarers' Club, 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1031 | Speeches - For Clare Briggs, Tribute to Briggs When He Left Chicago, 19-- | |||||||||
| 43 | 1032 | Speeches - Forty Years with the Tribune, 1943 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1033 | Speeches - Francis Parker School, n.d., 1939 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1034 | Speeches - From '89 to '39, Fiftieth Reunion at Purdue, 1939 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1035 | Speeches - Geographic Society of Chicago, Slide Show on South America, 1935 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1036 | Speeches - George Ade Is One of My Ten Greatest - Sigma Chi Dinner, reprinted in Magazine of Sigma Chi (includes illustrations), 1934 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1037 | Speeches - George Ade Is One of My Ten Greatest - Sigma Chi Dinner, reprinted in Magazine of Sigma Chi (includes illustrations), 1944 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1038 | Speeches - Half a Century at Sigma Chi, draft, 1937 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1039 | Speeches - Half a Century at Sigma Chi, reprinted in the Magazine of Sigma Chi, 1938 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1040 | Speeches - Hall Bedroom Twins, The, TS and Reprint of Speech at Sigma Chi Dinner Honoring George Ade, 1911 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1041 | Speeches - History of Indiana - for Seventh Annual Banquet, Indiana Society, 1911 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1042 | Speeches - Hoosier Salon, Presentation of Prizes, 1929 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1043 | Speeches - How I came to Draw Injun Summer, Chicagoland Music Festival Luncheon, 1941 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1044 | Speeches - Illustrated Talk, Farewell party for Janet Fairbank, n.d. | |||||||||
| 43 | 1045 | Speeches - Indiana Society, Introduction of Toastmaster, Sixth Annual Banquet, 1910 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1046 | Speeches - Indiana Society, Waterways Report, 1928 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1047 | Speeches - Indiana Society, Welcome Home Luncheon, 1914 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1048 | Speeches - Introducing George Ade, Chicago Musicland Festival Lunch, 1939 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1049 | Speeches - John McCutcheon, Back from Europe's War, Narrates Newspaper Correspondence, Association of Commerce, 1915 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1050 | Speeches - Looking Back on Seventy Years, Indiana Society, 1940 | |||||||||
| 43 | 1051 | Speeches - Manila, Speech at Purdue (?), n.d. | |||||||||
| 44 | 1052 | Speeches - Manila and Naval Warfare Now, Luncheon for Stanley Johnson, 1942 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1053 | Speeches - Memorial for Charles T. Atkinson, 1943 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1054 | Speeches - Memorial for Gaar Williams, Hoosier Salon, 1936 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1055 | Speeches - Memorial for George Ade, 1944 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1056 | Speeches - Milton Academy, Commencement, 1935 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1057 | Speeches - My Brother George, Midland Authors Luncheon, 1945 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1058 | Speeches - On Cartooning (for ministers), 19-- | |||||||||
| 44 | 1059 | Speeches - Pre-War Wedding Trip, Indiana Society, 1917 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1060 | Speeches - Press Club, n.d. | |||||||||
| 44 | 1061 | Speeches - Purdue, Chicago Branch of Purdue Alumni, 1893 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1062 | Speeches - Purdue, incomplete draft on cartooning, 1910 (?) | |||||||||
| 44 | 1063 | Speeches - Purdue, Progress Convocation Address and Toastmaster, 1936 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1064 | Speeches - Purdue, At the Dedication of the Purdue Field House, 1937 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1065 | Speeches - Purdue, Toastmaster at Dave Ross Testimonial Dinner, 1938 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1066 | Speeches - Return to Reunion by Air, 1919, Purdue Homecoming, 19-- | |||||||||
| 44 | 1067 | Speeches - S. S. Cedric, Presenting Prizes, 1909 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1068 | Speeches - Silver Anniversary, Sigma Chi Testimonial Dinner, first draft, 1928 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1069 | Speeches - T. R. and the Progressive Party, 1912 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1070 | Speeches - Travelogue on Indiana, Indiana Society, 1924 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1071 | Speeches - Tribute to a Canadian Artist (John Wilson Bengough), n.d. | |||||||||
| 44 | 1072 | Speeches - Two World's Fairs, 1893-1933, for the World's Fair Correspondents, 1933 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1073 | Speeches - Wagon Wheel Gap, Wayfarer's Club, 1937 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1074 | Speeches - Welcome Home to the Akeleys (dinner at Blackstone), 1911 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1075 | Speeches - Why George Ade Never Married, Indiana Society, 19-- | |||||||||
| 44 | 1076 | Speeches - With the Germans (with introduction), Indiana Society Tenth Annual Banquet, 1914 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1077 | Speeches - With the Germans, Indiana Society Tenth Annual Banquet, 1915 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1078 | Speeches - YMCA, Introduction to a cartoon lecture re. Central Asia, 1906 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1079 | Speeches - Collected Speeches (typescripts), 19--, 1945 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1080 | Stories of Filipino Warfare - Articles from the Chicago Record - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1898-1900 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1081 | Stories the Great War - Scrapbook of clippings from the Chicago Tribune - SEE OVERSIZE Box 48, 1914 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1082 | Stories of the Streets and of the Town - Introduction to Caxton Club Reprint, 1940 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1083 | Strange Case of James Haswell, The (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1923 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1084 | Surrender of Manila, The, Century Magazine, 1899 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1085 | Synthetic Adventure (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1923 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1086 | Taking the Right Turn, Demcourier, 1939 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1087 | Tales of a Cartoonist (includes illustrations), Saturday Evening Post - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1904 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1088 | Tales from the Wanderings of a War Correspondent (includes illustrations), Saturday Evening Post - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1904 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1089 | Tells About Saigon, A Small Paris in Asia, Chicago Record, 1899 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1090 | Thanksgiving Soliloquy of Uncle Sam (poem) (includes illustration), Chicago Tribune, 1932 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1091 | They Stand Out from the Crowd (includes illustration), The Literary Digest, 1934 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1092 | Tourists, The (includes illustrations), Cosmopolitan, 1923 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1093 | Tribute to a Faithful Friend (includes illustration), Chicago Tribune, 1930 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1094 | Tribute to James Whitcomb Riley, after 1916 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1095 | Tribute to Larry Downs (includes illustrations), The Magazine of Sigma Chi, 1937 | |||||||||
| 44 | 1096 | Turkey Story, n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1097 | Unidentified (article) - The country has re-elected me because I kept it out of war. . ., n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1098 | Unidentified - Every spring the great American invasion of Europe begins. . ., n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1099 | Unidentified - General C. H. Grosvenor arrived from Europe. . ., n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1100 | Unidentified - I was born in West Virginia. . ., n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1101 | Unidentified - In the wooded bottomland of the Wabash. . ., re. Tecumseh Trail, n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1102 | Unidentified - It sometimes seems that the interest in islands. . ., 1947 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1103 | Unidentified - Notes, n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1104 | Unidentified - A number of years ago, before the Great War. . ., n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1105 | Unidentified - We have acquired the Roosevelt habit in our daily reading matter. . ., 1909 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1106 | Untitled - The Chief purpose of this trip is to shoot at wild game. . ., Christian Endeavor World, 1910 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1107 | Untitled - The Gulf Stream flowing northward. . ., Pan American Magazine, 1935 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1108 | Up the Andes and Down the Amazon, The Trib, 1929 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1109 | Vacation (includes illustration), Appleton's, 1908 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1110 | Visit to Earl Li, A, Chicago Record, 1899 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1111 | Voyage of the Graf Zeppelin, ca. 1928 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1112 | Wait for a Passport, Chicago Record, 1900 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1113 | War Debt - Research Materials, 1932-1936 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1114 | Where I Am Monarch of All I Survey (includes illustrations), Hearst's International, 1925 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1115 | White City, The (poem) [authorship unknown], n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1116 | Who Shall Drive the Band Wagon (includes illustrations), Appleton's, 1908 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1117 | With McCutcheon in Africa: The Last Word in Lion Hunting (includes illustrations), Chicago Tribune - SEE OVERSIZE, 1910 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1118 | With McCutcheon in Africa - (Two Scrapbooks - includes correspondence), Chicago Tribune - SEE OVERSIZE BOXES 47 and 48, 1909-1910 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1119 | Wonderful Valor of Heroes, n.d. | |||||||||
| 45 | 1120 | World Puzzle Pictures (includes photographs), The Illustrated Outdoor World - SEE OVERSIZE Box 47, 1912 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1121 | World War I Articles - SEE OVERSIZE Box 49, 1914-1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1122 | World War I MS - Untitled, It was at this time. . ., (includes sketches), 1914 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1123 | World War I MS - After Armistice - American G. H. Q. no. 2, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1124 | World War I MS - After Armistice - After Armistice - The American Grave Registration Service, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1125 | World War I MS - After Armistice - English Football at the University of Bonn, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1126 | World War I MS - After Armistice - The Hotel de Crillon, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1127 | World War I MS - After Armistice - Making Themselves at Home in Germany, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1128 | World War I MS - After Armistice - Meeting the American Peace Delegates, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1129 | World War I MS - After Armistice - Our Outermost Outpost in Germany, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1130 | World War I MS - After Armistice - The Rhine from Above, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1131 | World War I MS - After Armistice - The Salle de l'Horloge, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1132 | World War I MS - After Armistice - The Watch on the Rhine, 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1133 | World War I MS - After Armistice - Untitled, In the great quadrangle of the Service. . ., 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1134 | World War I MS - After Armistice - Untitled, Northern France, in these districts where the war has surged. . ., 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1135 | World War I MS - After Armistice - Untitled, Souvain is being rebuilt. . ., 1919 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1136 | Wrong Girl, The, Cosmopolitan, 1924 | |||||||||
| 45 | 1137 | Yo-Ho-Ho and a Bottle of Rum, n.d. | |||||||||
| 46 | Oversize | ||||||||||
| 47 | Oversize | ||||||||||
| 48 | Oversize | ||||||||||
| 49 | Oversize | ||||||||||
Series 4: Works - By Others, 1902-1972 |
|||||||||||
| Short stories, cartoons, speeches, and articles by authors and cartoonists other than John T. McCutcheon. A large portion of this series consists of works by George Ade. | |||||||||||
| Arranged alphabetically by author. | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 50 | 1138 | Ade, George - And Now They Are All Famous, Heart's ?, 1927 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1139 | Ade, George - As I Approach the Gloomy Seventies, Magazine of Sigma Chi, 1935 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1140 | Ade, George - At Long Range, Purdue Alumnus, 1929 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1141 | Ade, George - Cap. Fry's Birthday Party, MS - SEE OVERSIZE, 1904 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1142 | Ade, George - Cap. Fry's Birthday Party, TS, 1904 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1143 | Ade, George - Cartoon Suggestions, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1144 | Ade, George - Fable in Slang, A - The Attenuated Attorney Who Rang in the Associate Counsel, Journal of American Bar Association, 1920 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1145 | Ade, George - Fable of Perplexed Parents and the 2 Pulchritudinous Problems, Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan, 1930 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1146 | Ade, George - For the First Time in My Life I'm Going to Talk About Myself, Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan, 1925 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1147 | Ade, George - Fountain of Youth, The (poem), The Magazine of Sigma Chi, 1933 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1148 | Ade, George - George Ade Checks Up at 70. . . Purdue Alumnus, 1946 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1149 | Ade, George - Have I a Home or a Headquarters?, The American Home, 1929 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1150 | Ade, George - Implications of the New Deal, The Forum, 1938 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1151 | Ade, George - Indiana, My Native State, TS, 1916 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1152 | Ade, George - Introducing George Ade, A Bachelor, The Illustrated Love Magazine, 1932 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1153 | Ade, George - James Whitcomb Riley, The Convocation Address, SEE OVERSIZE, 1922 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1154 | Ade, George - Lessons of Travel, The Cherry Circle Magazine, 1921 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1155 | Ade, George - Microbe's Serenade, The, 1906 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1156 | Ade, George - My Own All-American Team, Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan, 1927 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1157 | Ade, George - New Fable of the Toilsome Ascent and the Shining Table Land, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1158 | Ade, George - Peggy from Paris (partial), MS, ca. 1902 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1159 | Ade, George - Polaris' Mackinac Race, Chicago Yacht Club Bulletin, 1911 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1160 | Ade, George - Recalling the Early Tremors of a Timorous Playwright (in program for the County Chairman), 1936 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1161 | Ade, George - Regarding Battle Ground, Indiana and Our Sporting Cousins, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1162 | Ade, George - Regarding Mr. Franklin Head's Story of the Celebrating Case of the Olmstead vs. Astor, TS, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1163 | Ade, George - Riley, The Most Lovable Hoosier, Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan, 1927 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1164 | Ade, George - Sigma Chi Tramp, A, MS, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1165 | Ade, George - When I Sowed My Wild Oats, Hearst's International-Cosmopolitan, 1926 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1166 | Ade, George and Mann, Nat D. - My Sulu Lulu Loo, sheet music, SEE OVERSIZE, 1902 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1167 | Agar, Herbert - General Principles Underlying the Newspaper Column, 1942 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1168 | Akeley, Carl E. - Hunting the African Buffalo, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1169 | Akeley, Delia - Notes on African Monkeys, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1170 | Beveridge, Albert J. - Marcus A. Hanna, 1904 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1171 | Beveridge, Albert J. - New Orleans Speech, 1912 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1172 | Beveridge, Albert J. - Shiloh Address, 1903 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1173 | Brotts, Em H. - Cartoon for McCutcheon, 1903 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1174 | Cooper, F. G. - New Year's Card - SEE OVERSIZE, 1917 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1175 | Hunter, --, As If Some People. . .SEE OVERSIZE, 1920 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1176 | King, Frank - Newspaper Artists' Baseball Game, Poster - SEE OVERSIZE, n.d. | |||||||||
| 50 | 1177 | Krawiec, Walter - His Monument, Polish Daily News - SEE OVERSIZE, 1949 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1178 | Little, Richard Henry - Untitled poem, ca. 1934 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1179 | McCormick, Robert R. - Address and Announcement, 1942 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1180 | McGaughey, Elizabeth Helen - John T. McCutcheon Philippine Drawings, 1898-1899 (thesis), 1970 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1181 | O'Donnell, J. Hugh - Untitled cartoon - SEE OVERSIZE, ca. 1949 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1182 | Platt, Charles Dennis - No Greater Love Can History Tell, 1918 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1183 | Sattler, David R. - Pssst. . .May I See That When You're Through? - SEE OVERSIZE, 1972 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1184 | Smith, Dorman H. - All Yours, John - SEE OVERSIZE, 1940 | |||||||||
| 50 | 1185 | Unidentified - Drawing, Fortieth Anniversary, n.d. | |||||||||
| 51 | Oversize | ||||||||||
Series 5: Biographical / Personal Files, 1885-1980 |
|||||||||||
| Awards, newsclippings, diaries and engagement books, degrees, publicity about McCutcheon, obituaries and memorial information, and other miscellaneous items reflecting the personal life of John McCutcheon, as well as summarizing his professional life as an illustrator. The series includes publicity about McCutcheon’s appearances as a lecturer, his participation in art exhibitions, and his work in theatrical productions, both as an actor or set designer in the production, and the adaptation of one of his works into plays. | |||||||||||
| Arranged alphabetically. | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 52 | 1186 | Awards - Chicago Press Club, Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame, 1980 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1187 | Awards - College Fraternity Editors Association - Best Original Cartoon, 1940 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1188 | Awards - Mystic Order of the Koko Bowl (with clipping), 1926 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1189 | Awards - Pulitzer Prize, 1931-1932 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1190 | Biographical Notes, n.d. | |||||||||
| 52 | 1191 | Birthplace - sketch of map by McCutcheon (copy), n.d. | |||||||||
| 52 | 1192 | Bookplate (pirate), n.d. | |||||||||
| 52 | 1193 | Business Card (Lafayette, IN), n.d. | |||||||||
| 52 | 1194 | Certificates, misc., 1897-1918 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1195 | Clipping re. McCutcheon's Dog, n.d. | |||||||||
| 52 | 1196 | Clippings About McCutcheon, n.d. | |||||||||
| 52 | 1197 | Clippings About McCutcheon, 1897-1908 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1198 | Clippings About McCutcheon, 1910-1948 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1199 | Clippings About McCutcheon, 1949-1985 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1200 | Clippings, Musical Programs, etc. re: Injun Summer, 1934-1950 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1201 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1900, 1902 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1202 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1904-1905 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1203 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1905-1907 | |||||||||
| 52 | 1204 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1908-1909 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1205 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1910 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1206 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1911-1912, 1914 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1207 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1915-1917 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1208 | Datebooks/Engagement Books, 1924-1925 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1209 | Degree, University of Notre Dame, 1931 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1210 | Drawings I Studied From, n.d. | |||||||||
| 53 | 1211 | Essays About/Tributes to McCutcheon, n.d., 1941-1946 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1212 | French Postcard, with brown wrapper, n.d. | |||||||||
| 53 | 1213 | Guests at My Studio Party (List), ca. 1903-1905 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1214 | Invitations, Menus, Programs, etc., misc., n.d., 1897-1935 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1215 | Medical Information, 1900-1901, 1949 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1216 | Memorial Issue, Sigma Chi Magazine, 1950 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1217 | Memorial Programs, 1950-1951 | |||||||||
| 53 | 1218 | Memorial Resolution, Board of Forest Preserve Commissioners of Cook County, 1949 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1219 | Memorial Resolution, Chicago Zoological Society, 1949 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1220 | Obituaries, Jun.-Jul., 1949 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1221 | Poems to McCutcheon, n.d., 1901-1908 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1222 | Program and Speeches, Testimonial Dinner for McCutcheon before his marriage, 1917 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1223 | Programs, Testimonial Dinners, 1910, 1937, 1940 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1224 | Publicity - Announcements of Lectures or Appearances, n.d., 1897-1943 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1225 | Publicity - Art Exhibitions featuring images of McCutcheon, n.d. | |||||||||
| 54 | 1226 | Publicity - Art Exhibitions featuring McCutcheon's artwork, n.d. 1897-1941 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1227 | Publicity - Book Announcements, n.d., 1897, 1939 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1228 | Publicity - Chicago Tribune - SEE OVERSIZE, n.d., ca. 1910-1942 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1229 | Publicity - Magazine Announcements, See Also: Oversize, 1907-1926 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1230 | Purdue U., Class Day Exercises; Paradise - an Allegory. - SEE OVERSIZE, 1889 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1231 | Schedule Work, Apr. 6-13, n.d. | |||||||||
| 54 | 1232 | School Notebooks, See Also: Oversize, 1885-1889 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1233 | Theatrical Performances - Cap. Fry's Birthday Party/Surprise Party, See Also: Oversize, 1904 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1234 | Theatrical Performances - McCutcheon as actor or set designer, n.d., 1902-1941 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1235 | Theatrical Versions of McCutcheon Works, 1904-1926 | |||||||||
| 54 | 1236 | Vanity Shelf Excerpts, ca. 1904-1942 | |||||||||
Series 6: Outgoing Correspondence, 1894-1947 |
|||||||||||
| Correspondence from John T. McCutcheon to friends and business acquaintances. | |||||||||||
| Arranged alphabetically by correspondent with one folder of unidentified correspondence at the end. | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 55 | 1237 | Adams, Franklin P., 1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1238 | Ade, George (mostly copies), n.d., 1898-1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1239 | Armour, Norman, 1930 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1240 | Atkinson, Charles T., n.d., 1894-1942 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1241 | Barnes, Ray, 1941 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1242 | Barrett, Mrs., 1942 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1243 | Beck, E.S. (Ned), 1932 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1244 | Blackwood, R. E., 1949, 1949 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1245 | Blake, Tiffany (from Evelyn), 1941 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1246 | Brice, W. Kirkpatrick (Kirk), 1907-1912 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1247 | Britten, Fred A., 1927 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1248 | Brownell, George Hiram, 1938 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1249 | Consul of the United States, 1898 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1250 | Campbell, Frank, 1938 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1251 | Casselberry, Allen (letter of recommendation), 1947 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1252 | Chambers, David Laurence, ca. 1930 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1253 | Chicago Athletic Association, 1935 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1254 | Chicago Record, 1898-1899 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1255 | Chicago Tribune, 1906 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1256 | Cox, John S., 1898 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1257 | Dawes, General Charles, 1930 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1258 | Dawes, Mrs. Charles G., 1918 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1259 | Dennis, Charles H., 1899 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1260 | Dewey, Miss, 1900 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1261 | Dickinson, Mr. (resignation from Aero Club), 1932 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1262 | Dodson, Joseph H., ca. 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1263 | Doubleday, Russell, 1913 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1264 | Draper, Arthur (The Saturday Digest), 1934 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1265 | Egan, Martin, 1931 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1266 | Elliott, Edward (Purdue University), 1930-1945 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1267 | Ferrin, Mr., 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1268 | Field, Stanley, 1948 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1269 | Flanders, Mrs. Maude K., 1919 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1270 | Fulter, Mr. (in re: movie rights), 1923 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1271 | Garland, Hamlin, 1916 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1272 | Gillette, John A., 1927 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1273 | Grayson, Joan (Famous Players/Lasky Corp), 1920 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1274 | Gregory, Walter L. (Indiana Society), 1929 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1275 | Grosvenor, Gilbert (National Geographic Society), 1936 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1276 | Hall, Mr., 1919 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1277 | Hamill, Alfred, 1942 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1278-1279 | Harden, Edward and Ruth (Eduardo), 1899-1947 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1280 | Harrison, Carter (all copies), 1930-1937 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1281 | Healy, George W. Jr., 1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1282 | Henning, Arthur (Chicago Tribune, Washington Bureau), 1915 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1283 | Hockema, F.C., 1942 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1284 | Holland, L.B. (Library of Congress), 1933 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1285 | Howland, Hewitt, 1909 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1286 | Hubbard, Muriel McCormick, 1934 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1287 | Hubman, H.A., 1923 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1288 | Hungerford, Cyrus C., 1937 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1289 | Inverchapel, Lord Archie (Clark-Kerr), n.d. | |||||||||
| 55 | 1290 | Jessurum, A.E. (Jerry), 1909-1925 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1291 | Keeley, James, 1910 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1292 | Keplinger, Mrs., 1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1293 | Liggett, Ethel, 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1294 | Landis, Kenesaw Mountain, 1934 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1295 | Lark, Charles T., 1939 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1296 | March, Peyton, 1948 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1297 | Matthews, William (Bill), 1939 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1298 | McColloch, Dr., 1925 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1299 | McCormick, Adah, 1941 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1300 | McCormick, Robert (Bert), 1919-1946 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1301 | Moos, J.B., 1904 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1302 | Murchie, Mr. And Mrs. Guy, 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1303 | Oppenheimer, Max H., 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1304 | Orr, Carey, 1944 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1305 | Otis, Arthur Frederick, 1933-1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1306 | Owens, Mr., 1944 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1307 | Parsons, Elsie Clews, 1911 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1308 | Patterson (?), Joe, 1916 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1309 | Patten, William, 1933 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1310 | Phillips, Roland (Cosmopolitan), 1913 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1311 | Pyke, Charles and Hetty, 1912-1921 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1312 | Rohrig, Horst, 1947 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1313 | Roland, J.H., 1913 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1314 | Roosevelt, Ethel (copy), 1913 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1315 | Roullier, Alice, n.d. | |||||||||
| 55 | 1316 | Rush, Mr., 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1317 | Russell, Mrs. E.A. (includes sketch), 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1318 | Sabath, Dr., 1933 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1319 | Schraubstadter, Carl Jr., 1889 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1320 | Selfridge, Harry Gordon, 1938 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1321 | Shore Acres (resignation), 1942 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1322 | Sidley, Mrs. I.E., 1914 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1323 | Slott, Mollie, 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1324 | Snyder, Franklin B. (Northwestern University), 1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1325 | Streit, Clarence K., 1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1326 | Watkins, Mrs., 1912 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1327 | Wells, Samuel R. (illustrated with self-portraits, people, camel, etc.) (see oversize box 112), 1898 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1328 | Westhoff, Gisela, 1940 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1329 | Wilhelm, Kaiser of Germany, 1914 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1330 | Williams, Wyeth, n.d. | |||||||||
| 55 | 1331 | Winn, Marcia, 1943 | |||||||||
| 55 | 1332 | Unidentified 1918-1947 | |||||||||
Series 7: Incoming Correspondence, 1895-1954 |
|||||||||||
| Correspondence to John T. McCutcheon from friends, politicians, business associates, and other acquaintances. There is ample correspondence in regards to the organizations that McCutcheon was associated with such as the Chicago Zoological Society, the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Record, The Chicago Historical Society, the Art Institute, and The Newberry Library as well as other Universities and libraries that received original drawings. After the alphabetical run of correspondents there are several folders of letters grouped by similar subject, such as fan mail, requests of various kinds, congratulations, permissions to reproduce McCutcheon’s works, and condolences in regard to McCutcheon’s death in 1949. Correspondence to Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon after 1949 that was in regard to John T. McCutcheon is filed in this series. Other correspondence to Evelyn Shaw McCutcheon is filed in the Family Papers. | |||||||||||
| Arranged alphabetically. | |||||||||||
| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 56 | 1333 | A.C. McClurg and Co. (J.J. O'Connell), 1945 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1334 | Abbott, Lawrence (National Security League), 1918 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1335 | Abramson, Ben (Argus Books), 1951 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1336 | Ackerman, Carl W. (Columbia University), 1932-1937 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1337 | Adams, Franklin P., n.d., 1903-1944 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1338 | Adams, Sam H., 1907 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1339 | Addams, Jane, et. Al. (Progressive National Committee - Thank you), 1912 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1340-1342 | Ade, George, n.d., 1895-1943 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1343 | Affleck, Mr. And Mrs. Banjamin Franklin, 1943 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1344 | Akeley, Carl E. (Ake), 1909-1920 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1345 | Akeley, Delia (Mickie, Mrs. Carl), 1910-1921 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1346 | Akeley, Mary (Mrs. Carl), 1937 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1347 | Aldis, Mary (includes permissions for Heir at Large), n.d., 1924-1937 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1348 | Alexander, Ollie, 1938-1940 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1349 | Alexander, W. A. (insurance), 1915 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1350 | Alexander, W. A. (Indiana University), 1926-1942 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1351 | Allardyce, W.L., 1917-1920 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1352 | Allen, Gladys, 1938, 1945 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1353 | Allerton, Robert (includes condolence), n.d., 1940, 1949 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1354 | American Academy of Arts and Letters (R. W. Johnson, includes invitation), 1912 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1355 | American… 1919-1949 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1356 | Ames, Jessie, 1907 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1357 | Amsden, W.O., 1900 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1358 | Anderson, Larz, 1924 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1359 | Anderson, Peggy C. (Mrs. R.A.), 1925 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1360 | Anderson, Robin, 1905 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1361 | Anderson, William France (includes condolence), 1947, 1949 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1362 | Andrews, Roy Chapman, 1935, 1937 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1363 | Andrus, S. Glen (in re: Ben), 1914 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1364 | Angle, Paul M. (Chicago Historical Society) (includes condolence), 1949, 1951 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1365 | Anthony, Bessie, 1902 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1366 | Antrim, Elbert M., 1943, 1946 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1367 | Appleton-Century Company, 1919-1940 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1368 | Archibald, James F. J. (Jimmie) (includes work about), n.d., 1915-1927 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1369 | Argyle-Magnolia Boys and Girls Club (Walter Krembs), 1941 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1370 | Arliss, George (invitation acceptance), n.d. | |||||||||
| 56 | 1371 | Armour, Allison, 1911, 1917 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1372 | Armour, Lolita (includes condolence), 1938, 1949 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1373 | Armour, Norman and Myra, n.d., 1930 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1374 | Arps, George F., 1930 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1375 | Art Institute of Chicago, The (in re: donation and treasure chest from Frank Logan), 1931-1945 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1376 | Asch, Stan, 1934 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1377 | Associated Sunday Magazines (Wm. A. Taylor - job offer), 1909 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1378 | Atkinson, Charles T., 1898-1932 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1379 | Atkinson, Martha, n.d., 1916 | |||||||||
| 56 | 1380 | Atlantic Monthly (Edward Weeks), 1933 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1381 | Bacon, George W., 1943-1945 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1382 | Baker, Hollis S., 1948 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1383 | Baldridge, H.A. (U.S. Navy), 1941-1942 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1384 | Balfour, Carrie and Donald (includes condolence), n.d., 1934-1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1385 | Balfour, L.G. (Bally) (includes condolence), 1940-1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1386 | Balfour, [W.H.?], 1898-1899 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1387 | Banks, A.F. (Duke) in re: trip to South America, 1929 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1388 | Banning, Kendall, 1919-1928 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1389 | Barbazan, Solonique (thanks for the photos - in French), 1916 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1390 | Barclay, Eleanor (Mrs. W.W.), 1901 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1391 | Barker, James M. and Margaret (includes condolence), n.d., 1945-1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1392 | Barnard, Harry (Altgeld Centenerary Committee), 1947 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1393 | Barnes, Margaret Ayer (Peggy), n.d., 1933 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1394 | Barnes, Truing, 1938 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1395 | Barr, George, 1940 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1396 | Barrett, John, n.d., 1898-1938 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1397 | Barrett, Mary X., 1939-1942 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1398 | Barry, John H., 1918 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1399 | Barry, Tom (University of Notre Dame), 1938 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1400 | Barta, Elinor C., 1932 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1401 | Bartlett, Alice Johnson (incomplete) (includes condolence), 1934, 1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1402 | Bartlett, Frederic Cly (includes condolence), n.d., 1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1403 | Bartley, E. Ross (U.S. Vice President's Office), 1927 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1404 | Bass, Mr. And Mrs. John, n.d., 1906, 1916 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1405 | Bass, Robert P., 1933 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1406 | Baum, Franz and Abby, 1939 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1407 | Baumann, Ann, Jane, and Gustave, 1935 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1408 | Bean, Ed H. (Chicago Zoological Park, includes obituary), 1935-1948 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1409 | Beaunisme, Sebert G., n.d. | |||||||||
| 57 | 1410 | Beaverbrook, Lord, 1938 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1411 | Beck, Edward S. (The Chicago Tribune, includes anniversary program), n.d., 1915-1942 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1412 | Bennett, James Gordon (in re: World's Fair), n.d. | |||||||||
| 57 | 1413 | Bennett, James O'Donnell (Jimmie, includes work), 1914-1940 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1414 | Berryman, Clifford K. (includes clippings, cartoon, and condolence), n.d., 1926-1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1415-1416 | Beveridge, Albert J., n.d., 1904-1924 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1417 | Beveridge, Catherine (includes condolence), 1910-1949, n.d. | |||||||||
| 57 | 1418 | Bigler, Katharine Soden, 1951 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1419 | Bires (?), Helen Louise, n.d. | |||||||||
| 57 | 1420 | Black, W.F. (Bureau County Farm Bureau), 1920 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1421 | Blaine, Anita McCormick, n.d., 1904-1936 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1422 | Blaine, James G., 1927 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1423 | Blair, Henry T. (to Evelyn), 1950-1951 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1424 | Blair, W. Reid (International Wildlife Protection), 1943-1944 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1425 | Blair, William (The Chicago Club) (includes condolence), 1944, 1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1426 | Blake, Tiffany and Margaret (includes condolence), n.d., 1930-1949 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1427 | Bland-Sutton, John, 1910-1911 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1428 | Bledsoe, S. (The Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway), 1935, 1937 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1429 | Blethen, C.B. (Seattle Daily Times, reproduction of McCutcheon Work), 1928 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1430 | Blount, James H., 1912 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1431 | Blythe, Sam (also telegram with Ade and Beveridge), n.d., 1929 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1432-1433 | Bobbs-Merrill Company (Hewitt Hanson Howland, D.L. Chambers and others), 1906-1951 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1434 | Bond, Dorothy A., 1943-1946 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1435 | Bond, Ralph A., 1943-1947 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1436 | Boone and Crockett Club (includes yearbook), 1937-1947 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1437 | Borah, William E. (United States Senate), n.d., 1925 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1438 | Borland, Chauncey and Harriet (includes legal/financial), n.d., 1940-1947 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1439 | Boss, John F., 1916 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1440 | Bosse, Benjamin (Mayor of Evansville, Indiana), 1916 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1441 | Bowman, Heath, 1941 | |||||||||
| 57 | 1442 | Boylan, R.J., 1895 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1443 | Bradley, Chester (in re: genealogy), 1932 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1444 | Bradley, Herbert, 1931-1947 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1445 | Bradley, Mary (Mrs. Herbert), 1924-1945 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1446 | Brandenburg, George A. (includes condolence), 1946-1950 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1447 | Branner, Martin M. (to Chester Cleveland), 1940 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1448 | Breasted, Charles (Chuck), 1935-1944 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1449 | Bredell, H.C., 1901 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1450 | Bredt, Catherine, 1943-1944 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1451 | Brice, W. Kirkpatrick, 1898-1917 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1452 | Bridges, Robert, 1916 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1453 | Brisbane, Arthur, 1909-1934 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1454 | Britten, Fred A. (in re: Spanish American War Memorial), 1927 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1455 | Brochlehurst, Courtney, 1934 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1456 | Brooklyn Museum, The (in re: loan), 1940 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1457 | Brooks, Wayland (U.S. Senate), 1942 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1458 | Brown, Henry, 1917 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1459 | Brownell, George Hiram, 1938-1944 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1460 | Bryan, William Jennings and Mary Baird, 1896-1923 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1461 | Buckingham, K.S., 1934, 1954 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1462 | Budd, Britton, 1937 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1463 | Budd, Edward, 1936-1937 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1464 | Bullock, George (to Howard Van Doren Shaw in re: Porcupine Club), 1916 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1465 | Bunting, Harry, n.d., 1946-1948 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1466 | Burck, Jacob (The Times Chicago) (includes condolence), 1940, 1949 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1467 | Burford, C.C., 1951 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1468 | Burke, Kathleen (in re: Purcell Jones), 1918 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1469 | Burke, Mildred (includes condolence), 1941-1949 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1470 | Burnham, Daniel H., 1907 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1471 | Busse, Fred A. (Mayor of Chicago), 1907 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1472 | Butcher, Fanny (Chicago Tribune-includes condolence), 1924-1949 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1473 | Butler, E. H. (American Newspaper Publishers Association), 1929 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1474 | Butler, Henry C., 1932-1937 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1475 | Bynner, Witter (Hal), 1905-1935 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1476 | Byrnes, Gene, 1943-1948 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1477 | Cable, John L. (Congressman), 1930 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1478 | Caldwell, Brown, n.d. | |||||||||
| 58 | 1479 | Cameron, Anson (in re: Ben McCutcheon's Medical Bill), 1937 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1480 | Canavan, M.J. (The Editorial Press Bureau), 1949-1950 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1481 | Caniff, Milton A. (includes condolence), n.d., 1935-1949 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1482 | Cannon, J.G. (Congressman), 1916 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1483 | Cannon, Helen A., 1926 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1484 | Cantwell, Robert E., 1941, 1944 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1485 | Capple, William L., 1950 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1486 | Carden, Godfrey L., 1946 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1487 | Carlton, W.N.C. (The Newberry Library/Wayfarer's Club), 1919 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1488 | Carpenter, John Alden and Ellen [daughter], 1916-1951 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1489 | Carson, Charlie, 1943-1946 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1490 | Cartoonists of America (Eugene Bisbee), 1927 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1491 | Casey, Daniel V., n.d., ca. 1917 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1492 | Castani, O., 1915 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1493 | Castle, Charles S. (Bankers Club of Chicago), 1914 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1494 | Century Magazine (R. Johnson, Hewitt Howland), 1899-1928 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1495 | Cermak, Anton J. (in re: Forest Preserve Commissioners), 1926, 1933 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1496 | Cesare, O.E., 1917-1918 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1497 | Chalmers, Joan and William, 1916-1933 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1498 | Chamberlain, Henry Barrett, 1934 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1499 | Chapman, Gerard, 1946-1948 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1500 | Charles Ray Productions (in re: Heir at Large), 1922 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1501 | Charles Scribner's Sons and Scribner's Magazine, 1897-1917 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1502 | Chase, Mary and Samuel T. (includes condolence), 1916-1950 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1503 | Chatfield-Taylor, Hobart (includes memoriams for Rose Farwell Chatfield-Taylor), 1918-1943 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1504 | Chatfield-Taylor, Otis, 1942 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1505 | Chatfield-Taylor, Robert, 1932-1935 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1506 | Chatfield-Taylor, Rose (includes photo of Rose at Coleman Lake with four unidentified men and women - note on reverse: Cleveland died while they were up there), 1903, 1908 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1507 | Chicago Historical Society (receipts of gifts included), 1935-1955 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1508 | Chicago Public Library, 1950 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1509 | Chicago Tribune (Wm. H. Field, Guy F. Lee, Arthur Crawford, Bert MacFarlane, Frederick Babcock, Mabel Bryant, Genevieve Burke, John Evans, Pat Maloney (J.L.), Phil Maxwell, Louis Rose, H.M. Hodgson - includes clippings), 1910-1950 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1510 | Christie, Harold and Virginia, 1941, 1948 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1511 | Clark, Herma (includes condolence), 1940-1949 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1512 | Clark, James L. (Jimmie), 1910-1937 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1513 | Clarke, Arthur L., n.d., 1893 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1514 | Clarkson, Hunter, 1931 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1515 | Clarkson, Ralph, 1917 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1516 | Claypool, Charles E., 1917, 1941 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1517 | Clemens, Cyril (Mark Twain Society), 1938-1948 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1518 | Clemens (?), J.J., 1947 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1519 | Clementsen, J.G., 1900 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1520 | Cleveland, Chester W. (Chet) (includes condolence), 1933-1951 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1521 | Cleveland, Grover, 1902-1903 | |||||||||
| 58 | 1522 | Cleveland, Helen B., 1897 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1523 | Clifford, Alice, 1934-1935 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1524 | Clinnin, John V. (Society of the Army of Santiago de Cuba), 1945, 1947 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1525 | Close, Graham and Scully, Inc., 1913 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1526 | Clover, Samuel T. (Chicago Evening Post), n.d. | |||||||||
| 59 | 1527 | Cloverius, W.T., 1933 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1528 | Cobb, Irwin S., 1914-1935 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1529 | Coblentz, Harry Evan (Purdue memories), 1943 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1530 | Cockrell, Monroe (includes condolence), 1948-1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1531 | Coe, Charles Francis (Socker)(to Bloody Bridles), 1928 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1532 | Coffin, Elizabeth Murray, 1913 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1533 | Coffin, Florence, 1902, 1917 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1534 | Coffroth, Bess, 1910, 1916 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1535 | Colefax, Sibyl, 1933 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1536 | Collier, D.C. (letters of introduction to South American dignitaries), 1929 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1537 | Collier, Robert J., 1910, 1917 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1538 | Collier's (Norman Halpern, Mark Sullivan, Albert Lee - includes receipts of payment), 1909-1927 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1539 | Collins, Charles (The Tavern Club/Chicago Tribune), 1936, 1940 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1540 | Collins, R.M. (Reuters Telegram Company) in re: The Cartoons that made Prince Henry Famous, 1902 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1541 | Collisson, Charles F. (includes condolence), 1947-1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1542 | Colman, Alexix (in re: Thomas Nast), 1938 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1543 | Coloroto Weekly, The/Coloroto Corporation (Harvey Deuell, John N. Wheeler), 1923-1924 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1544 | Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts, 1933-1934 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1545 | Connor, Phyllis Crandall (Stand Rock Indian Ceremonial, in re: producing a live reenactment of Injun Summer), 1943 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1546 | Connor, William Durward, 1934-1947 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1547 | Coolidge, Mr. And Mrs. Calvin, invitation only, 1926 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1548 | Coolidge, Harold J., 1939, 1948 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1549 | Coontz, R.E. (acting secretary of the Navy), 1923 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1550 | Cooper, Sally A. (Mrs. Henry Allen), 1913-1914 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1551 | Copeland, Kathleen, 1911 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1552 | Cornelius, J.F., 1931 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1553 | Corrigan, Laura, 1917-1937 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1554 | Cortelyou, George Jr., 1946 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1555 | Corwin, Arthur M. (in re: Akeley dinner), 1911 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1556 | Cosmopolitan Magazine (Roland Phillips, W.G. Gibson, Ida Verdon), 1912-1924 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1557 | Coulter, John G. (in re: Dean Stanley Coulter), 1940 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1558 | Cox, James M., 1917 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1559 | Cram, Norman L. (Caxton Club), 1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1560 | Crane, Charles H. (letter of introduction to Mr. Siemerroff), 1906 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1561 | Crane, Richard (in re: Salt Cay), 1916 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1562 | Cromwell, Rosalie, 1899 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1563 | Cronkhite, Albion (Union League Club of Chicago), 1942 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1564 | Crowinshield, Frank, 1934-1943 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1565 | Cudahy, Jean and Joe (Chicago Historical Society) (includes condolence), 1916-1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1566 | Cudahy, John, 1941-1942 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1567 | Curtis, William E. (includes biographical info on Curtis), n.d., 1897-1908 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1568 | Cutting, Helen and Suydam (includes condolence), 1941, 1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1569 | Dallman, V.Y. (Illinois State Register), 1937-1938 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1570 | Damrosch, Walter, 1910 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1571 | Daniels, Josephus (U.S. Navy), 1914, 1918 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1572 | Danielson, Richard (The Sportsman - in re: Purdue), 1932 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1573 | Darling, Jay N., 1926-1950 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1574 | David, Vernon C.(includes condolence), 1940-1950 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1575 | Davidson, Mary and Howard, 1945, 1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1576 | Davis, Charles B., 1916 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1577 | Davis, Cecil C., n.d., 1941 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1578 | Davis, James J., 1923-1940 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1579 | Davis, Oscar K., 1902-1917 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1580 | Davis, Pauline J., n.d. | |||||||||
| 59 | 1581 | Davis, Richard Harding (includes works), n.d., 1909-1916 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1582 | Davison, F. Trubee, 1937 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1583 | Dawes, B.G. (The Dawes Arboretum-includes condolence), 1939, 1949 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1584-1585 | Dawes, Charles G. (includes works, funeral address, and condolence) (2 folders), 1913-1951 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1586 | Dawes, Dana McCutcheon, n.d. | |||||||||
| 59 | 1587 | Dawes, Jean Palmer, 1913 | |||||||||
| 59 | 1588 | Dawes, Rufus (Century of Progress), 1933 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1589 | Deering, James, 1917, 1919 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1590 | Delacour, Jean, 1936 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1591 | Denison, H.W. (regrets), 1904 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1592 | Dennis, Charles H. (Chicago Record/Chicago Daily News), 1898-1941 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1593 | de Packh, Cecile (Mrs. Paul), n.d., 1932 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1594 | Derby, Ethel Roosevelt, n.d., 1912-1940 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1595 | Deutsch, Herman B. (The New Orleans Item), 1943 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1596 | Dever, D.E. (Imperial German Consulate), 1902-1903 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1597 | Dever, William (in re: Chicago Recreation Commission), 1926 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1598 | Dewey, George (includes menu from Dewey Dinner, 1906), 1898-1916 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1599 | DeYoung, M.H. (San Francisco Chronicle), 1894, n.d. | |||||||||
| 60 | 1600 | Dick, George F. (includes condolence), 1933-1955 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1601 | Dickinson, Charles, 1934 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1602 | Dickinson, J.M., 1910-1911 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1603 | Dillingham, Louise Gaylord (includes photograph), n.d., 1907-1950 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1604 | Dix, Dorothy, 1942 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1605 | Dodd, Loring Holmes (Fan), 1950 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1606 | Dodd, Mead, and Company, (Edward Dodd, Lewis Buddy, R.T. Bond), 1911-1944 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1607 | Dodson, Joseph H., 1940 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1608 | Dolley, Sumner, 1942 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1609 | Doney, Henry E. (in re: Mrs. John R. Thompson's estate), 1947 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1610 | Donnelley, Thomas E., 1932-1949 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1611 | Donnelly, Antoinette, 1916 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1612 | Doran, George H., 1914-1941 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1613 | Doubleday, Doran and Company (F.W. Doubleday, Russell Doubleday, Effendi), 1898-1933 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1614 | Downes, John and Agnes (includes condolence), 1942, 1949 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1615 | Downs, Larry A. (Illinois Central), 1935-1939 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1616 | Drake, C.K. (Illinois Central System), 1945 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1617 | Drake, Tracy (Drake Hotel Company), 1911-1928 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1618 | Draper, Ruth, 1915 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1619 | Drew, John (to Medill McCormick - fan), n.d. | |||||||||
| 60 | 1620 | Dunas, Edwin C. (The Chicagoer), 1945 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1621 | Dunne, Finley Peter, 1903 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1622 | Dyche, William A. (Northwestern University), 1929-1934 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1623 | Earhart, Amelia (thank you to Mrs. McCutcheon) 1928 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1624 | Ebel, Charles W., 1949-1950 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1625 | Eckels, James, 1906 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1626 | Ed, Carl (includes biographical information), n.d., 1943, 1949 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1627 | Eddy, Alfred (regrets for Wayfarer's dinner), 1910 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1628 | Eddy, Catherine Spencer, n.d. | |||||||||
| 60 | 1629 | Edson, Gus, 1940 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1630 | Edward Prince of Wales, 1941 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1631 | Edwards, Edward James (Society of American Wars), 1900 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1632 | Egan, Martin and Eleanor (includes condolence), 1907-1950 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1633 | Elliott, Edward (Purdue University) (includes speech about McCutcheon and condolence), 1926-1956 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1634 | Ellsworth, Fred W., 1931-1947 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1635 | Ely, Gertrude, n.d., 1933 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1636 | Emmerson, Charles, 1947-1950 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1637 | Emmerson, Louis L., 1917-1931 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1638 | Ennis (?), Ehtel, 1909 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1639 | Ernst, Fritz, 1934-1945 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1640 | Erskine, Nellie F., n.d., 1940 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1641 | Evans, Evan A., 1911, 1937 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1642 | Evans, Ray (The Columbus Dispatch), 1933 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1643 | Fair, Alice M., 1897, n.d. | |||||||||
| 60 | 1644 | Fairbank, Janet Ayer, n.d., 1933-1945 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1645 | Fairbank, Natalie (includes photo of Natalie with John Pillsbury), 1908 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1646 | Fairbanks, Charles W. (U.S. Senator/U.S. Vice President), 1903-1910 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1647 | Fairchild, L.H., 1934 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1648 | Fairchild, Marion H. Bell, 1937 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1649 | Fairley, W.E. (Imperial Bank of Persia), 1907 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1650 | Famous Players-Lasky Corporation (Joan Georgson, Harry Durant, Pauline Foeney), 1920-1922 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1651 | Farwell, John V., 1931 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1652 | Farwell, Mildred, 1916 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1653 | Field, Henrietta, 1897 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1654 | Field, Marshall, 1934 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1655 | Field, Stanley and Sara, 1938-1951 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1656 | Finan, Edward J. (Pioneers of the Skyways), 1955 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1657 | Finley, John H., 1902-1935 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1658 | Finn, Joseph H., 1942-1943 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1659 | Finnegan, Richard J. (Dick)(The Times, Chicago), 1943, 1946 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1660 | Fisher, Warren L., 1911 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1661 | Fitzpatrick, D.R. (To Chester Cleveland), 1940 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1662 | Foraker, Louise, 1907 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1663 | Foran, W. Robert (Bob), 1946-1947 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1664 | Forbes, Archibald M. (Archie), 1916-1951 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1665 | Ford, Henry (thank you), 1936 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1666 | Fort, Gerrit(?) (Raymond and Whitcomb Company), 1928 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1667 | Foulke, William Dudley, 1928-1929 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1668 | Fox, Fontaine (congratulations and condolence only), n.d., 1949 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1669 | Francis, Henry Sayles (Cleveland Museum of Art), 1932-1933 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1670 | Frank Presby Co. Advertising, 1912 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1671 | Frazier, Maud (George F. Nixon and Company), 1925 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1672 | Freeman, Charles Y. (Commonwealth Edison Company), 1942 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1673 | French, W.M.R. (The Art Institute of Chicago), 1909 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1674 | Frey, Charles Daniel, 1946 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1675 | Fritch, L.C. (Illinois Central Railroad Co.), 1908 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1676 | Frost, Donald McKay, 1923 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1677 | Fuller, Henry Blake (fan), n.d. | |||||||||
| 60 | 1678 | Fulton, Robert Jr. (Pan American Airways, Inc.), 1935 | |||||||||
| 60 | 1679 | Funston, Frederick, n.d., 1902 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1680 | Gale, Edmun (Los Angeles Examiner) (to Chester Cleveland), 1940 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1681 | Garfield, James R., 1904, 1914 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1682 | Garland, Hamlin (to Mr. McCormick), n.d., 1912 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1683 | Garland, William May (Los Angeles Art Association), 1934 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1684 | Gary E.H. (U.S. Steel Corporation), 1926, 1927 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1685 | Gassette, Grace (includes catalog for exhibit), 1914, 1916 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1686 | Gaylord, Louise (Dillingham), 1907 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1687 | Gibson, C.B., 1914-1941 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1688 | Gibson, Charles Dana, 1913, n.d. | |||||||||
| 61 | 1689 | Gibson, John (Society of Manila Bay), 1904 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1690 | Gielow and Orr, 1912, n.d. | |||||||||
| 61 | 1691 | Gilder, Jeannette (The Critic), 1904-1905 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1692 | Gillette, Howard F., 1934-1939 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1693 | Gillette, John A., 1949 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1694 | Girouard, Percy (Governor of East Africa), 1910-1911, n.d. | |||||||||
| 61 | 1695 | Glenn, William (includes drawing), n.d., 1914 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1696 | Goodspeed, B (?) Charles, n.d., 1933 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1697 | Gordon, Nancy McKay (for Mrs. Palmer), 1893 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1698 | Goth, Marie, 1940-1947 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1699 | Goza, Sam D., 1946 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1700 | Graham, Edwin B. (in re: S.A.R.), 1936 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1701 | Graham, Marian (to Jessie), 1901 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1702 | Grant, Frederick, 1911 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1703 | Gray, Harold (Gray and Gray) (includes condolence), 1942-1949 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1704 | Green, Harry G., 1931-1947 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1705 | Greene, Joe, 1942-1944 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1706 | Gregg, Clifford (Chicago Natural History Museum/Field Museum), 1946 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1707 | Gresicki, Albert A., 1935 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1708 | Griffith, John L., 1910 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1709 | Grow, Harold B., 1930-1932 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1710 | Guck, Homer (Chicago Herald Examiner), 1933-1942 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1711 | Gumbart, Louis F., 1930-1948 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1712 | Gurley, Katharine E. (Mrs. William F.E.), 1943 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1713 | Haag, Frederick, 1946, 1949 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1714 | Hadley, Herbert (Thank You), 1909 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1715 | Hagedorn, Hermann (Roosevelt Memorial Association), 1921-1948 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1716 | Hamill, Alfred, 1941-1950 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1717 | Hansen, Harry (Chicago Tribune), 1914-1916 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1718 | Hansen, Harry (hate mail), 1941-1942 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1719 | Hapgood, Norman, 1912-1924 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1720 | Harbord, J.G., 1919-1928 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1721 | Harcourt, Brace and Company (Elizabeth Bragdon), 1944 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1722-1725 | Harden, Edward W., (includes condolence), n.d., 1897-1949 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1726 | Harden, Ruth (includes condolence), 1937-1950 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1727 | Hare, James (Jimmy) (Includes information on Jimmy Hare dinner), 1912-1916 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1728 | Hare, Meredith, 1912 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1729 | Harkness, Ruth (in re: Mei Mei), 1938 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1730 | Harlan, Roma, n.d., 1945 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1731 | Harper and Brothers (Edward Penfield, William Briggs, Frank MacGregor), 1898-1944 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1732 | Harris, Charles B. (U.S. Consulate in Nagasaki), 1898 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1733 | Harrison, Carter and Edith, n.d., 1901-1951 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1734 | Harvey, Harry, 1912-1938 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1735 | Haskell, Harry, 1936 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1736 | Haswell, Jim, 1925 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1737 | Hay, John (includes letter of introduction), 1900-1904 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1738 | Hayes, Helen W., 1944 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1739 | Haynes, James P. (Chicago Association of Commerce - includes condolence), 1937, 1949 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1740 | Hays, Will H., 1921-1945 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1741 | Hayward, Walter S., 1940 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1742 | Healy, George W., 1943-1950 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1743 | Hearst's International, 1923-1924 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1744 | Henning, Arthur S. and Lillian (Chicago Tribune, Washington Bureau - includes condolence), 1914-1949 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1745 | Hess, Julius, 1933 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1746 | Heymans, F.A., 1901 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1747 | Hiersemann, Karl W., 1916 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1748 | Higgins, Anna C., 1945 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1749 | Higgins, Ned Ames (in re: Dewey Medal), 1900 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1750 | Hill, C.K. (to Mr. Nelson in re: Su-Lin), 1938 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1751 | Hill, Edwin B. (Frank Holme emorial Group), 1941-1942 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1752 | Hitchcock, Frank (Postmaster General), 1909-1934 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1753 | Hixon, Alice (Mrs. Frank P.), n.d. | |||||||||
| 61 | 1754 | Hockema, F.C. (Purdue University), 1938-1947 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1755 | Hogan, Thomas, 1934 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1756 | Hollin, W. Stanley (U.S. Consulate), 1901 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1757 | Holloway, Edward M. (Indiana Society), 1910 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1758 | Holmes, Burton, n.d., 1941-1947 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1759 | Holt, George H., 1915 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1760 | Hong Kong Daily Press, 1898 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1761 | Hoosier Salon Patrons Association (includes invitations), 1931-1945 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1762 | Hoover, Herbert, 1917-1948 | |||||||||
| 61 | 1763 | Hoover, J. Edgar, 1936 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1764 | Hopkins, John Henry, 1935-1938 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1765 | Horgan, Stephen H., n.d., 1893-1935 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1766 | Horlick, William Jr. (Horlick's Malted Milk in re: cartoon alteration), 1927 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1767 | Horner, Henry (Governor of Illinois), 1934-1938 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1768 | Houghteling, Lawrence (includes condolence), 1929-1949 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1769 | Hovde, Frederick L. (Purdue University), 1946, 1949 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1770 | Howard, John J., 1947-1948 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1771 | Howe, E.W., 1911-1937 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1772 | Howe, Warren D., n.d., 1911 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1773 | Howell, Mary (Chicago Tribune, Genoa, Italy - includes work by McCutcheon), 1928 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1774 | Howland, Charles R., 1899-1918 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1775 | Hubbard Kin, 1910 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1776 | Hubbard, Muriel McCormick, 1932-1934 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1777 | Hughes, Edward J. (Secretary of State, Springfield), 1933-1942 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1778 | Hull, Edith, 1895-1900, n.d. | |||||||||
| 62 | 1779 | Hull House (LaVerne Wilson), 1939 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1780 | Hunt, Leigh, 1909 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1781 | Huntington Library, The, 1936-1937 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1782 | Hurley, Edward N., 1931-1933 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1783 | Hurland, Joseph (in re: The Dancing Highlander), 1924 | |||||||||
| 62 | 1784 | ||||||||||