Green Gable gas station at Fountain with Green Gable Night Club. The gas station attendant stands outside. Advertising signs include Schmidt's City Club beer. A sign in the window reads "Dine and Dance".
T. J. Johnson farm at haying season with crew posed for photograph. One hay wagon is being pulled by two white horses. The second hay wagon is hitched to what may be a Huber tractor. Hooked to the back of this wagon is a hay loader. A side delivery rake is being pulled by two black horses.
Small herd of cattle standing in the Preston business district near the corner of Fillmore and St. Anthony street. Tibbett's House Hotel can be seen in the background.
Early settlers of Highland Prairie pose in front of Tarkjill Landsverk's whitewashed log cabin. Pictured are two rows of gentlemen, one seated in chairs and the other standing.
High water on Root River with ice dam. The scene faces north towards the village of Peterson with its high school, creamery, and feed mill in background. A 1936 Chevrolet drives on Highway 16. The bridge built in 1898 was replaced in 1963.
Irving Ellestad is pictured at homemade wireless station that he built with brother Gerhard in the basement of the family home in Lanesboro. The key and headphones were handmade. The companion station was located in the Ellestad store a half-mile away.
The Jem Theater building on Main Street in downtown Harmony. Flanking the awning-topped front window are movie posters for The Bride Walks Out starring Barbara Stanwick and The Great Buck Jones. A vehicle parked across the street can be seen as a reflection in the window. The building next door is Pederson's Meat Market.
A juvenile band under the direction of teacher Miss Elstad, poses while dressed in costumes of capes and headbands and holds their hand percussion instruments. At center front a young band director lifts his baton.
Workers husking sweet corn by hand at the Lanesboro Canning Company plant. Built in 1903 along Mill Pond, the company ceased operation during the Great Depression. Their product was called Lanesboro Pride Corn.
Headshot portraits of thirty men who comprised the Lanesboro Singing Society. The original photo was taken by Theodore Bersagel and reproduced by Mathias Bue.
Interior shot of the Langlie Olson Fladager Company store in Lanesboro. Shelves of dry goods line the back wall. Toledo counter scale and meat wrapping paper rolls are visible.
Large crowd of people waiting outside the doors of Langlie Olson Fladager Company in Lanesboro on a cold winter day; the store was billed as Fillmore County's greatest general mercantile holds closing sale as it prepared to quit business.