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Life, 1892-02-18 · page 10 of 18

Life — February 18, 1892 — page 10: what you’re looking at

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Life — February 18, 1892 — page 10: Life, 1892-02-18

What you’re looking at

# Political Cartoon Analysis This political cartoon satirizes D.B. Hill's management of political affairs as worthless "junk." The central figure (likely a politician or party leader) stands amid a literal junkyard of discarded political materials—broken wheels, debris, and refuse—suggesting his administration has produced nothing of value. Key symbolic elements include: - A sign reading "D.B. HILL'S POLITICAL JUNK" - A liquor bottle labeled "LIQUOR VOTE," referencing prohibition-era politics - A goat scavenging the debris, implying even animals won't touch this "junk" - Scattered waste representing failed policies or broken promises The cartoon mocks Hill's political record as entirely useless and corrupt, reducing his governance to literal garbage. The exact historical context requires knowing when Hill held office, but the message is clear: his political legacy amounts to nothing.

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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

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