Inside A Vintage Newspaper


While there are those who collect the newspaper, in its entirety, those yellowed, crumbling pages of an old paper have something to offer other collectors as well.

Advertisements are a huge part of what keeps a newspaper afloat, and collectors will find all sorts of items marketed in piggly-wiggly-full-sized-ad-small.jpgnewspapers. Because newspaper broadsheets are much larger than even the Life- or Look-sized magazines, making up for lack of color with size.

Newspaper ads tended to be for less glamorous items than the glossy magazines offered. Daily- wear clothes, food and housewares, and locally- produced items. As a “local collector,” some of the biggest finds are the addresses — while I do have some old city directories, unless I know what I’m looking for it’s unlikely to run across a particular business. In the newspaper, the ads jump out at you.

That’s not to say bigger-scale advertisements don’t appear — local car dealerships advertised the new years’ cars, electronics shops advertise the newest toys, and department stores get out the word about new styles straight from New York. Depending on the publisher and the product, the ad 1956-powerstyle-chrysler-ad-small.jpgseen in the small-town newspaper may be identical to the one in the New York Times, distributed as part of the media kit by the manufacturer. The local business gets to add their name, but the rest is the same no matter where the ad is published. If you’re a hardcore collector, that might be a detriment: Take the 1956 Chrysler to the left. If you went looking for ads and the only one you found was identical to this, you’d keep one, maybe a couple — until you found that unusual one, the one that diverged from the main path, and showed the car in a different light. Newspapers can bring that far better than pulling an ad from a magazine.

Advertisements aren’t for everyone — and, remember, the newspaper isn’t all about the ads. Collectors of all kinds can find articles referencing their passions, although it might feel like looking for a needle in a haystack. Newspapers with entire sections devoted to a topic — like sports or local news — will fare yogi-berra-story.jpgbetter than something with a less newsworthy collection, but it all depends on the newspaper and the time. If the fun is in finding that rare and unusual article, then jump right in. A nationally-relevant article can be easier to find than you think. The AP (and other) news- wires did their best work when their articles were repeated by smaller papers across the country. An article may have only been run once in a single paper, but it could appear any of number of places, on any day after its release, in any paper.

Media collectors have something to find in a newspaper to augment their collection. Book reviews, music reviews, advertisements, and schedules all appeared in newspapers. I can almost guarantee that your favorite movie, on its first week in theatres, had a large, visually-striking were-no-angels-ad-small.jpgadvertisement in the newspaper. In a small-town library, I’ve even seen the local newspaper’s review of a book taped inside the front cover, to help readers decide if it’s worth checking out. The Times ran larger ads for books, but back when local bookstores were more important to a community, they ran ads for local signings and launches like any other event. Bands had to announce their concerts, plays had to let the public know when auditions are, and both radio and television released their broadcast schedules to the public. Newspapers put out pages and pages of information, relevant to their readers and advertisers, every single day — it’s foolish to assume that it loses all value once a new stack of neatly folded papers is dropped off for the paperboy at 4am the next morning. There’s always going to be something neat to be found inside an old newspaper, if you’re lucky enough to find one, and have the time to go through it.

These scans came from the October 21, 1955 Fargo Forum and the October 22, 1955 Moorhead Daily News.

 
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Thursday Thirteen: Vintage Ads From 1956


Thursday Thirteen

Thirteen Vintage Advertisements

All of these ads were taken from a June, 1956 issue of Woman’s Day. (As always, click the images to see larger scans.)

We’ll begin our look — as many people start their day — with muffins. No ordinary muffins, but rather pampered muffins who get their way despite their informal, nearly uneducated speech. “Us muffins love nuffin’ but Allsweet …so will you!”

Vintage Allsweet Margerine Ad

This ad for Woodbury shampoo boasts, “A famous laboratory proves: Hair washed with new Woodbury Shampoo holds curl better, keeps set longer,” and claims this special “curl-keeping” ingredient also means your hair “can’t dry out”. I suspect this special ingredient is wax.

Vintage Woodbury Ad

I do believe James Lees & Sons Company was slightly mad in the 50’s and this isn’t the first ad of theirs I’ve seen. This one has you thinking ‘magic carpet ride’ as her legs are hanging over the edge as the couple feasts, but instead, they go for “How to have your cake — and — those heavenly carpets by Lees.” (Where’s the “too”?) Then they say that the heavenly floating carpet is “just 3 dimes a day” — but neglects to say for how long… But overall this ad wins for it’s sweet illustration style.

Lees Carpeting Ad from the 50's

The amazing thing about this ad for Breeze detergent is the promise of the free, full size Cannon kitchen towel. A twenty-five cent towel is mind-blowing (that’s nearly one day’s carpet payment!) but it reminds me of all those similar TV commercials for floral towels that I saw as a kid — during As The World Turns, no less!

Vintage Detergent Ad

This next ad I found a little strange for it’s placement in Woman’s Day. With a presumably female readership, it seems odd to find an advertisement pushing meat thermometers for bridal shower gifts as “A gift to please the groom”. Then I read more closely and it all makes sense: “This Taylor Dial Roast Meat Thermometer tells even the newest homemaker when any roast is done the way HE likes it.”

Vintage Taylor Dial Roast Meat Thermometer Ad

You can’t pick up a magazine from the 50’s and not find cigarette ads, like this one on the back cover which has Phil Silvers (as Sgt. Bilko) inviting you to, “Have a Camel — It’s a pleasure!”

Vintage Camel Cig Ad

Dennis The Menace wasn’t new in 1956 (he debuted in 1951), but Woman’s Day was sure excited that he would be appearing in the July issue. There were several ads for Dennis in this issue, but this was the largest. Most boasted “My son Dennis the Menace” as opposed to just “Dennis the Menace” — or stating who was making the claim. Anyway, it’s cool to see the mag so excited.

Dennis The Menace Ad For Woman's Day Magazine

This old Wrigley’s Spearmint Gum ad disguised itself as magazine content by offering both a recipe for punch and another for Tasty Meltaway Cookies. Given a choice between Mom’s homemade cookies and gum I’d go for the cookies, but the ad isn’t for me — it’s for Mom who can refresh her hot-in-the-kitchen-baking self with the lively flavor of Wrigley’s. (Go ahead, Mom; take a pack and make me some cookies!)

Vintage Wrigley's Spearmint Gum Advertisement

There are few color pages in this vintage magazine — fewer yet, slick or glossy pages — but the Glass Container Manufacturers Institute was willing to go on an advertising spree to promote glass bottles. It seemed weird enough to see glass bottles pushed like plastic is today, but the corny “This is what makes the party, soft drinks bottled in glass!” was over-the-top adorable. Mom, grab a stick of gum, make me some cookies, and bring on the bottled soft drings ’cause we’re gonna paaarrrty!

Vintage Glass Manufacturers Institute Ad

Quick Elastic… A laundry starch? Sure, ‘elastic’ sounds more comfortable; but starch is supposed to be stiff — stiff enough to be “dirt-resisting”. Now doesn’t that sound grand? :shudder:
Vintage Starch Ad

Soft-Weve, by Scott, fancied itself a real luxury. Not only was it showing off their lovely color palette as a fashion accessory (shown here in another color — go see it, it’s a hoot!), but it never once called itself a toilet tissue. Instead it repeats its mantra that Soft-Weve is of the finest “facial tissue” quality.

Vintage Toilet Paper Ad

Here the lovely Metropolitan Opera singer Risë Stevens, who pimped lots of products, shows us how she uses Murine eye drops for tired eyes… Hmm, she drops little drops of the product in her eyes… Interesting…

Rise Stevens for Murine

Enjoy Jane Parker Bread — or the A&P will disembody you, just like they did this little girl!

Old A&P Jane Parker Bread Ad

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