Yesterday's Print

A collection of old photographs, historic newspaper clippings and assorted excerpts highlighting the parallels of past and present. Featuring weird, funny and baffling headlines, articles and advertisements! Visit www.yesterdays-print.comĀ 

Liked Posts

Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, New York, September 13, 1896
I look me back adown the months
Now in the silent past
And see my sweetheart, but ah me!
Not as I saw her last!
Ah no!
She then
Was coy,
Demure,
Unwilling, quite, to flirt,
and always...   High-res

Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, New York, September 13, 1896

I look me back adown the months
Now in the silent past
And see my sweetheart, but ah me!
Not as I saw her last!

Ah no!
She then 
Was coy,
Demure,
Unwilling, quite, to flirt, 
and always dressed in simple garb - a shirtwaist and a skirt 

But time, the old iconoclast,
Brings changes, good and bad,
My sweetheart of the present day
Has got the biking fad -

She eyes me with 
The scorcher’s glance,
And manner, oh! so pert!
Now bloomers linger loosely where she
Used to wear a skirt!

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, July 14, 1895

Don’t be a fright.

Don’t stop at road-houses.

Don’t say “Feel my muscle.”

Don’t cultivate “bicycle face.”

Don’t talk bicycle at the table.

Don’t go out after dark without a male escort.

Don’t chew gum. Exercise your jaws in private.

Don’t wear a garden-party hat with bloomers.

Don’t ask “what do you think of my bloomers?”

Don’t use bicycle slang. Leave that to the boys.

Don’t discuss bloomers with every man you know.

Don’t try to ride in your brother’s clothes to “see how it feels.”

Don’t ride a man’s wheel. The time has not come for that as yet.

Don’t carry a packet of cigarettes in the pocket of your pantalets.

Don’t sneer at the lawn tennis girl, or maybe she will not ask you to be a bridesmaid. 

Don’t scream loudly because you see a strange man in the field  - it may be a scarecrow.

Don’t lift up your skirts suddenly to astonish people by showing them your bloomers.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, July 5, 1896
The Queerest of Bicycles.
The above is a faithful reproduction of a bicycle railroad patented by a Patterson, N.J., man. It is not meant for long distances or general traffic. It is intended to be used...   High-res

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, July 5, 1896

The Queerest of Bicycles.

The above is a faithful reproduction of a bicycle railroad patented by a Patterson, N.J., man. It is not meant for long distances or general traffic. It is intended to be used on short trips from city in suburban points. It consists of a single rail and a double track which can be used going and coming. The driving power is applied to the front wheel as shown, in cut.