High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, May 12, 1930
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
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, May 12, 1930
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, May 12, 1930
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, May 12, 1930
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, May 12, 1930
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, March 14, 1930
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, July 30, 1934
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, July 30, 1934
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, July 30, 1934
High-res
The Scranton Truth, Pennsylvania, January 16, 1915
High-res
The Scranton Truth, Pennsylvania, January 20, 1915
The police are working on the case, which they claim has some queer angles.
High-res
The Scranton Truth, Pennsylvania, January 16, 1915
Even when they know the pictures are retouched until largely bogus, they still are touched; which, come to think of it, is odd.
We don’t gaze with rapture on counterfeit money - at least, not if we’ve parted with good money to get it. Yet we stare and stare and sometimes thrill over the picture of a woman when, if we saw the original, the chances are she’d not command a second glance.
High-res
The Scranton Truth, Pennsylvania, January 15, 1915
The people living in the street say the man appears to be demented. He has been seeing moping through gardens and skulking behind trees and buildings, and slinking away when anyone approached him.
High-res
The Scranton Truth, Pennsylvania, January 15, 1915
High-res
The Scranton Truth, Pennsylvania, January 15, 1915
Cairo, Egypt - Will one of the two gentlemen who visited the pyramids in February and got snapshot of lady astride camel kindly communicate with son. Robert Talmadge, 80 W. 40th St., New York city.
High-res
The Scranton Republican, Pennsylvania, June 27, 1925
“in hope that when they reach that age they will have developed a greater degree of respect and consideration for their father than they have shown during his lifetime.”