Search
The Rare & Early Newspapers Hobby
Receive the Newsletter
Buy Historic Newspapers
-
Recent Posts
- FDR Fireside Chat… Building “The Arsenal of Democracy”…
- Announcing: Catalog 363 – Released for February, 2026 – Rare & Early Newspapers…
- Two Discoveries, One Powerful Reminder – It Started with the Pony Express…
- The reason I collected it: an accordion fold newspaper…
- January Newsletter (2026) – Timothy Hughes Rare & Early Newspapers…
Most Viewed Post
Recent Comments
- January Newsletter (2026) – Timothy Hughes Rare & Early Newspapers… : History's Newsstand Blog on Who’s Who in Newspapers? Lewis H. Latimer edition…
- A rare, colonial “2nd forgery” with an intriguing backstory… Cape Fear (part II)… : History's Newsstand Blog on Snapshot 1775 – North Carolina Declares itself Independent!
- Jan on Nobody like me, everybody hates me… 1863…
- Holiday Newsletter (2025) – Timothy Hughes Rare & Early Newspapers… : History's Newsstand Blog on From Passion to Legacy: 50 Years Strong… and Counting…
- Holiday Newsletter (2025) – Timothy Hughes Rare & Early Newspapers… : History's Newsstand Blog on “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus”…
Blogroll
Categories
Archives
Tags
18th Century 19th century 20th century 1700's 1800's 1865 Abraham Lincoln assassination baseball black americana catalog Catalog announcements civil war collecting newspapers Confederate Food for Thought George Washington Great Headlines harper's weekly historic newspapers holidays humor humorous illustrated newspapers Inventions Jewish journalism Judaica just for fun literature London newsletter newspapers old newspapers old west politics President Lincoln Presidents rare newspapers Revolutionary War slavery sports war of 1812 WWII www.rarenewspapers.com
Perhaps we should increase the size of our coffins…
February 5, 2011 by TimHughes · Leave a Comment
I’m sure most have read about the origins of the phrases, “Saved by the bell”, “Dead Ringer”, and “Graveyard shift”. This interesting tidbit, which appeared in the “Scientific American Supplement” of February 3, 1906, might have offered yet another solution:
Filed under: The 20th & 21st Centuries, Unusual, Fun & Bizarre
Tagged: 20th century, common phrases, humor, illustration

