"Food Ideas," 1952
Swift Canned Ham Ad, 1953
B&W Ads, 1952/53
Royal Coal/Albina Fuel Co. Card, c1930
Pan American Airlines Ad, 1952
Flavor Magic, c1958
Flavor Magic (2), c1958
Flavor Magic (3), c1958
Flavor Magic (4), c1958
Flavor Magic (5), c1958
B&W Ads, 1950s
Everywoman's, 1957
"A Culinary Cruise of Cuba," 1955
Birds Eye Ad, 1957
B&W Ads, 1953
Jello Pudding Mix Ad, c1953
"Season's Greetings From Thelma," c1950
Ten New Ways To Serve Franz Bread, c1930
Ten New Ways To Serve Franz Bread (2), c1930
Ten New Ways To Serve Franz Bread (3), c1930
Ten New Ways To Serve Franz Bread (4), c1930
Morton Salt Ad, 1955
Snowdrift Shortening Leaflet, c1955
Garden Bulbs In Color (11), 1938/45
Wishbone Salad Dressing Ad, 1962
"Look... a surprise in every pie!" 1957
Heidelberg Beer Ad, 1953
Cadillac Automobile Ad, 1952
White Rain Shampoo Ad, 1952
Elegant but Easy Recipes (6), c1952
Elegant but Easy Recipes (5), c1952
Elegant but Easy Recipes (4), c1952
Elegant but Easy Recipes (3), c1952
Elegant but Easy Recipes (2), c1952
Elegant but Easy Recipes, c1952
Thermador Appliance Ad, 1952
Del Monte Pineapple Juice Ad, 1952
B&W/Duotone Ads, 1953
Theatre Under the Stars Promo, 1956
Theatre Under the Stars Promo, 1956
Certo Pectin Ad, 1952
Paintless Paint Book, 1940
B&W Ads, 1952/53
Garden Bulbs In Color (10), 1938/1945
Garden Bulbs In Color (9), 1938/1945
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
Attribution + non Commercial
- Photo replaced on 12 Mar 2018
-
191 visits
Garden Bulbs In Color (12), 1938/45


L: "A lily 'wild' or native in the eastern United States and Canada... Some gardeners attempt to collect these Lilies in their native haunts but are seldom successful in transplanting them to cultivation. As with most of our native plants, it is best to obtain the bulbs from a reliable nurseryman."
R: "...That famous herbalist, John Gerard, in 1597 called it 'the white lillie,' and gave as its traditional origin that it sprang from the milk of the goddess Juno, spilled when she nursed the infant Hercules..."
R: "...That famous herbalist, John Gerard, in 1597 called it 'the white lillie,' and gave as its traditional origin that it sprang from the milk of the goddess Juno, spilled when she nursed the infant Hercules..."
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.