April 1, 1913. 



REVIEW OF REVIEWS. 



159 



WHY, Fol? /PERCYS 

 STt,P THAT OlSCRACtrUt 



ftow OM YOUR OEATf 



Journal THE POT AND THE KETTLE. [Minneapolis. 



(Uncle Sam woauiers wliy the Powers caTinot preserve jjeace in their hemisphere, and the Powers 

 caH his attention to the disturbances on his own side of the world.) 



tracted party whose j^hysiognomy helps 

 the caricaturist save that evergreen old 

 protectionist and food taxer, Chaplin. 

 The Labour paper, the Daily Citizen, 

 which, despite all prophecies to the con- 

 trary, still continues to appear in Lon- 

 don, has often clever ideas in its car- 

 toons, but they are wretchedly executed 

 as a rule. 



The taxi cab strike, b\' the wax', has 

 been settled on a basis of 8d. a gallon 

 for petrol, but whilst it lasted, London 





streets were unwontedly safe for the 

 harassed pedestrian, whose life since 

 the advent of the taxi and the motor 

 bus — two tons hurtling through the 

 streets at ten miles an hour, with a two 

 inch margin — has been in daily dan- 

 ger. The Pall Mall Gazette, which 

 violently opposed the Insurance Act, 

 appears to have altered its opinion since 

 the benefits began to be paid. The 

 Lepracaiin, the clexer Irish comic paper, 

 emphasises the wa\' in which the Irish 

 party has constantly had to save the 

 Liberal Government from defeat. 



■OySTEK B.\y'S IDEA OF GETTING TOGETHER. 



— Berryman in tho Washington Star. 



A3 rnOTECTIONI.STS SEE niM 



—Harding in Iht Brookl>Ti EjsU\ 



