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Home » Uncle Sam (Symbolic character) (x) » Lapie, M. (Pierre), 1779-1850 (x) » United States (x) » Discovery and exploration (x) » 1915 (x) » 1940-1949 (x) » Japan (x) » 1910-1919 (x)

Islandora facets

Issue Date

  • 1905 (1) + -
  • 1921 (2) + -
  • 1937 (1) + -

Topic

  • International relations (1) + -
  • Politics and government (1) + -
  • Postwar reconstruction (1) + -
  • Shipwrecks (1) + -
  • Treaties (1) + -
  • United States. Navy (1) + -
  • World politics (1) + -

Geographic Area

  • Mexico (1) + -
  • Russia (Federation) (1) + -

Time Period

  • 1900-1909 (1) + -
  • 1920-1929 (2) + -
  • 1930-1939 (1) + -

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(1 - 5 of 5)
JM-295: Sunken ships are historic trouble-breeders
Title
JM-295: Sunken ships are historic trouble-breeders
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a group, including FDR, examine sinking of U.S. gunboat Panay.
JM-075: The polite arts of diplomacy
Title
JM-075: The polite arts of diplomacy
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Baron Uchida, an ambassador of Japan stationed in the United States, and President Taft facing each other. Uschida has a secret treaty with Mexico in his back pocket, and Taft has a photograph of the secret treaty in his back pocket.
JM-211: Will Japan want a "no limit" game?
Title
JM-211: Will Japan want a "no limit" game?
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting Uncle Sam threatening a Japanese diplomat over fair naval ratios in a proposal and showing the diplomat how the ratio would look with unlimited naval competition.
JM-212: Movies for the conference
Title
JM-212: Movies for the conference
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting a Japanese figure watching a movie with Uncle Sam. Film shows both the victorious nations and the defeated ones being crushed underneath debt, suffering, and unrest; war sits in a field filled with gravestones.
JM-106: Two ways by which peace may be restored without casting Russia a kopeck
Title
JM-106: Two ways by which peace may be restored without casting Russia a kopeck
Summary
Editorial cartoon depicting two panels, each with a different solution to promoting peace. In the top panel, Rockefeller comes forward to Komura and Dewitte with carriages full of money. In the second panel, Carnegie purchases rights to build a library on Sakhalin Island from Komura, making himself poor, but allowing the two men to walk away from each other.

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