Beat Us If You Can
Halloween Heads—Girl with Jack-O'-Lanterns, 1972
Fallen from the Crust, Jacksonville, Florida, Marc…
Fallen from the Crust, Jacksonville, Florida, Marc…
Heads of the Class of 1915, New Castle High School…
Heads of the Class of 1915, New Castle High School…
Heads of the Class of 1915, New Castle High School…
Heads of the Class of 1915, New Castle High School…
You Are the Gorilla My Dreams
Pomeroy's Juvenile Hour Performers
Leave It to Beaver Rocket to the Moon Space Game
Good Humor Man Mask
Pretty Bubbles in the Air
Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907
Aren't You Also on the Pig?
Looking through the Newspaper
Sonny's Stone Head
Thank You! Each Loaf You Buy Is a Vote for Me!
Emmett A. Thomas, Mosquito, Newark, N.J.
Ron Drake Bird Watching Society
Seeing Blackpool
Phone Us for Convenient, Careful Service
Hurrah! Hurrah! The Fourth of July!
Two Jolly Good Fellows
Knoto the Contortionist
Hi CBer! Bud Werts, KJI-3440, Renovo, Pa.
See also...
" Cartes postales et photos historiques de partout dans le monde / Historische Postkarten und Photos aus aller Welt "
" Cartes postales et photos historiques de partout dans le monde / Historische Postkarten und Photos aus aller Welt "
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Breaking News
A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of adage illustrated (a photo illustrating a common adage—please identify the adage).
The old adage about two heads being better than one turns out to be true when it comes to a photo like this one. This is a nineteenth-century CDV showing two young women with their heads sticking out through the torn pages of a newspaper.
And why did they pose like this? They were perpetuating a photographic joke that was popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. They're literally breaking the news or perhaps just looking through the paper.
For other examples, see Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907 and Looking through the Newspaper.
The old adage about two heads being better than one turns out to be true when it comes to a photo like this one. This is a nineteenth-century CDV showing two young women with their heads sticking out through the torn pages of a newspaper.
And why did they pose like this? They were perpetuating a photographic joke that was popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. They're literally breaking the news or perhaps just looking through the paper.
For other examples, see Breaking the News, Lititz Express, July 4, 1907 and Looking through the Newspaper.
Smiley Derleth, Deborah Lundbech have particularly liked this photo
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Alan Mays club has replied to RicksPics clubThanks so much, Alan. These are all delightful.
Alan Mays club has replied to Deborah Lundbech clubSign-in to write a comment.