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Puck began publication in 1876 as a humor magazine representing the sound-money, tariff-reform wing of the Democratic Party. In 1896 and 1900, the magazine chose principle over party when it opposed the election of Democratic presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan. Puck’s publishers and cartoonists considered Bryan’s advocacy of free silver and other populist policies to be too radical, economically unsound, and socially dangerous. It did not support Republican William McKinley in either contest, but was an equal-opportunity critic. In 1904, Puck backed the Democratic presidential nominee, Alton B. Parker, a conservative who reflected the magazine’s political perspective. |
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