Which preposition to use with cartoons
"Modern newspapers are illustrated, and have cartoons of the leading events of the day.
By A. G. SPALDING PRICE, $2.00 NET A book of 600 pages, profusely illustrated with over 100 full page engravings, and having sixteen forceful cartoons by Homer C. Davenport, the famous American artist.
Page (at Rome) advised the cartoons for the frescoes, and gave laws for the colors and disposition of the draperies.
The Artistic department will be in charge of Henry L. | | Stephens, whose celebrated cartoons in VANITY FAIR placed | | him in the front rank of humorous artists, assisted by | | leading artists in their respective specialties.
The newspapers had no facilities for printing cartoons at that time.
R100851, 13Oct52, Harry E. Hooker (C) HOOVER, ELLISON. Cartoons from life; foreword by Robert Benchley.
In No. 273 of the Mirror, P.T.W. has noticed the Cartoons of Raphael; and I therefore solicit the reader's attention to the subjoined remarks on that master's unsurpassed genius.
We have every reason to regard the composition of this Cartoon as the central point in Michelangelo's life as an artist.
© 22Aug24, A800627. R97954, 28Jul52, John Garrett Underhill, Jr. & Susan Underhill Eltinge (C) BENCHLEY, ROBERT Cartoons from life.
The loss of the Cartoon to the city was no slight one, and Baccio deserved the blame he got, for everybody called him envious and spiteful."
Vava's gesticulations and grimaces were unerring cartoons without paper or ink.
His Hymn to the Light of the World; with a short Description of the Cartoons at Hampton-Court, Folio, 1703 III.
Well, then, while the palace was in tumult and confusion through this revolution, Baccio went alone, and tore the Cartoon into a thousand fragments.
I wish to Heaven you wouldn't have Cartoons about Czars and Jews just when I'm at Peterborough, I mean Petersburg; same name, different place.
From 1876 to 1913 Mr. Punch's cartoons on the Near East are one continuous and illuminating commentary on Lord Salisbury's historic admission that we had "backed the wrong horse," culminating in the cartoon "Armageddon: a Diversion" in December, 1912, when Turkey says "Good!
Sir,If you continue to publish cartoons with a pronounced Radical bias I am afraid you will lose at least one. OLD SUBSCRIBER.