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"J.D. Moore Company Belle School Buses."
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad carts sit on the tracks behind building.
School children take a group photo outside of the school on a warm December day.
An interior look inside the cottage which holds the electrical apparatus machinery.
An unidentified boy is pictured beside the machinery.
The nurses in the forefront hold flower bouquets. Behind them, physicians and staff are dressed in suits.
Anderson and his two associates pose with their rifles, showing off the dozens of rabbits brought back from a hunt.
A nurse holds a baby in each arm. On the right of the photograph, a child sleeps in a crib.
A nurse checks on a patient. The photograph shows two patients in bed.
Four women pose outside of a house. Two of the are in bathing suits. Subjects unidentified.
Man identified as C. E. Wiseman poses with one pant leg pulled up, exposing his prosthetic leg.
An unidentified man leans against the vehicle with his arm rested in the open window. The name on the envelope that this photograph's negative is contained in is labeled "Muriel Lanham."
Duesenberry speaks to the horse as she walks it along a trail.
The Knights Building hosts a variety of businesses, including Carson's Millinery, Household Finance Loans, Richman Bros. Clothes, The Baby Shop, The Loop Restaurant, and Capital Plan Loans.
View of the building from the runway.
Interior of a store selling home goods such as decorative items, appliances, and tools.
Street view of the store's entrance. The store sells home decor items, appliances, and tools.
Street view of Sanitary Meats, a butcher shop selling a variety of meats.
The church was constructed in 1914 at the intersection of Birch Street and Bigley Avenue. The building was torn down from 2012-2013 and replaced by a Family Dollar store.
Conlon Bakery, home of Butter-Krust Bread, is an example of Art Deco design and was, at one point, the "world's most modern bakery."