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Employees (from left to right) Jim Bob Christian, Wes Surber, Mr. Christian, Ab Wiseman, unidentified, C.O. McGhee, unidentified, and Emmitt McLaughlin.
Looking at the building from across the street. Silo Ice truck pictured on the right. Located on Block C #7.
Located on Block C #7, the depot was built ca. 1905.
Inside the store located on the corner of 3rd Avenue, between Ballengee and Temple streets. Employees behind the counter are identified, from left to right, as Lorene Jones, an unidentified man, Mary Eades, and Maycle Scott who is the mother of Jack Scott.
Street view of the building located on Ballengee Street.
View of the building from the street. Window advertises West Union and Dr. J. W. Stokes office.
A group poses in front of the court building. The front line pose with their instruments. Subjects unidentified.
Goff, a fishing buddy of Edward Turner's, smiles with a large fish. Sports Mart sign pictured in the background.
Hartley, left, and Kiser, right, pose behind a cut-out that makes them appear as if they were in a hot air ballon. The banner on the poster reads, "Over Cincinnati". Hartley was a C & O Railroad train dispatcher and Kiser was a telegraph operator.
Two women and a group of children are pictured on top of rocks beneath the toll bridge.
Unidentified workers and equipment are scattered across the construction site.
Stokes pictured walking into the Laing Humphries building entrance where Citizens Bank used to be located.
View of home lived in by Harold, son of Edward Calvin Eagle.Edward C. Eagle served on the local Hinton bar for nearly a quarter of a century after paying his way through West Virginia University. Mr. Eagle served his first term as prosecuting attorney of Summers County from 1902 to 1904 and for the following twenty years was the United States commissioner at Hinton. In 1920, he was elected prosecuting attorney on a platform that called for the suppression of moon-shining and law-breaking in general.
Keller pictured by the small-scale waterfalls below the city.
Two men in the background walk along the river bank.
View of Robert Summers Neely home located on Ballengee Street. Neely was a local dentist and chairman of the republican county committee.
Pictured in the front, from left to right, is W. E. Price and Paul Price. Lula and Youla Deaver pictured in the background.
Keller pictured beside the water than flows down the rock wall.
Three cows graze over the rock and litter by the river.
Two unidentified men stand beside a large rock that has painted on it, "Plumley-Hulme: Sell it for less." The Plumley Building was located on the corner of 2nd Avenue and Temple Street, built by William Plumley.