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 

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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, August 3, 1909
The above is a special design of eyeglasses for the use of policemen looking for lid-lifters.
At the time there were a lot of Sunday “blue laws” (religion-based laws that prohibited a lot of things,...   High-res

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, August 3, 1909

The above is a special design of eyeglasses for the use of policemen looking for lid-lifters.

At the time there were a lot of Sunday “blue laws” (religion-based laws that prohibited a lot of things, mostly drinking, prostitution and gambling, but also stuff like playing baseball). You were supposed to “keep a lid on it” on Sundays. If you weren’t, you were a “lid-lifter”. It came to mean someone or a group of somebodies who were attempting to circumvent “dry” laws in general, not just Sundays, whether that was with legally through legislature or illegally with bootlegging, secretly keeping your saloon open when it shouldn’t be or just drinking. On the other hand, it sometimes meant someone on the side of the law who was trying to uncover unseemly things, sort of like a muckraker.

Around the 20s there was a popular burlesque group who called themselves the Lid Lifters. I think more recently (from the 30s forward at any rate) it’s been used to describe the opening game of a baseball or other sports season.

The Evening World, New York, February 23, 1921
The order of Commissioner Enright that summer trousers of members of the police force have two and a half inch cuffs has roused some of the cops to levity. The picture offers suggestions that may enable...   High-res

The Evening World, New York, February 23, 1921

The order of Commissioner Enright that summer trousers of members of the police force have two and a half inch cuffs has roused some of the cops to levity. The picture offers suggestions that may enable the Commissioner further to embellish his men sartorially.

He could require a Broadway uniform - something nifty in a wide stripe or check, hat band to match, with a feather stuck jauntily into it. The very latest style uniform could be of any modish cloth, with cane and spats, while the policeman on duty after 6 P.M. could have regulation evening dress, except his cap.