A Mess of Potatoes
Shipping a Few of Our Peaches
Harvest Home Display with Minister
Harvest Home Display with Canning Jars
Harvest Home (Detail)
Harvest Home
You Are the Apple of My Eye—We Should Make a Good…
May Your Thanksgiving Blessings Be Ripened by a Su…
Some Good Size Murphys
Merry Lemony Christmas
A Merry Halloween—Corncob Jack-o'-Lantern Scarecro…
People Picking Pumpkins (Cropped)
People Picking Pumpkins
Harvest Home Greetings, Methodist Church, Strasbur…
Harvest Service, Lutheran Church, Strasburg, Pa.,…
Greetings from the Grange Encampment and Fair, Cen…
The Lemon
Cattles and Apples! Sale at the Greenawalt House,…
Wishing You a Happy New Year
Memorial Day
Our Kind of Cantaloupe—How We Do Things at Lancast…
A Witch with a Veggie Chauffeur in a Halloween Mel…
Squirrely Thanksgiving Greetings
I'll Eat Oranges for You in Los Angeles — You Thro…
Potatoes and Barrels
Potatoes and Barrels (Cropped)
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 "
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
154 visits
Too Much Pork for Just One Fork
The caption on the front of this exaggeration postcard is "Feeding Time," but I borrowed "Too Much Pork for Just One Fork" from Southern Culture on the Skids, who used it as a song and album title.
This is a photomontage by Kansas photographer William H. Martin (1865-1940). For more examples of Martin's work, see Good Corn Makes Good Hogs and A Mess of Potatoes.
This real photo postcard is addressed on the other side to Mr. Richard Storey, Medora, Ill., but there's no stamp or postmark.
Handwritten message: "5/15 1910. They raise 'em like this in Indiana. J.O.B."
This is a photomontage by Kansas photographer William H. Martin (1865-1940). For more examples of Martin's work, see Good Corn Makes Good Hogs and A Mess of Potatoes.
This real photo postcard is addressed on the other side to Mr. Richard Storey, Medora, Ill., but there's no stamp or postmark.
Handwritten message: "5/15 1910. They raise 'em like this in Indiana. J.O.B."
Deborah Lundbech has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- 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.