The Coffeyville Daily Journal, Kansas, January 9, 1897
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The Coffeyville Daily Journal, Kansas, January 9, 1897
The Coffeyville Daily Journal, Kansas, January 2, 1897
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, November 24, 1895
We are a pair of you know what
And let us state right on this spot,
Though some think baggy things like us
Unworthy of much talk and fuss
We have a right to speak we guess, we’re shapely too
As most confess and swelled with pride we’re glad to vex
The prudes and cranks, of either sex, who have no shapes
To nether limbs, whose chests are flat as tire rims The
Fairy curves that we encase next Venus Milo give a place
And over road and hill and dale through city
Country, turf or trail we speed while wholesome
health we bring, and hear the whizzing
spokes that sing of ills now gone, and
clearer brains the absence of all aches
and pains, now those who laugh are
fools at best we bring the nerveless
gentle rest Away with skirts
hurrah for us Down with this
Silly wicked fuss We’ve come
to stay and on the bike
will cling as long as
ee’r we like
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, December 27, 1896
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Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota, March 25, 1914
Search Lights on Health: Light on Dark Corners: A Complete Sexual Science and a Guide to Purity and Physical Manhood: Advice to Maiden, Wife, and Mother, Love, Courtship and Marriage, 1894
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, June 30, 1895
Semi-Weekly Standard,
Raleigh, North Carolina, July 26, 1851
But now when we are tired of skirts,
And wish to change the fashion,
These mawkish, gawkish, dandy flirts,
All get in such a passion.
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Harrisburg Telegraph, Pennsylvania, February 19, 1869
The Canton Advocate, South Dakota, November 2, 1882
The question is raised if woman has not a better right to the trousers than has man. Indeed, the claim is made that they are hers by discovery and priority of use; that man is the usurper of an advantage her first perceived by imitation.
It will be a crushing blow to the pride of the lords of creation to learn that they are parading in a cast-off fashion of despised woman..
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Polite Society at Home and Abroad, 1891
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Polite Society at Home and Abroad, 1891
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The Ladies’ Book of Etiquette, and Manual of Politeness, 1873