Several buildings stand along one side of a dirt street in this 7" x 4 3/4" black and white photograph. The buildings are all made of wood, except for a large brick building at the end of the block. A wooden sidewalk runs in front of the buildings, and there is a small patch of grass between the sidewalk and the street. The building on the far left side has a partially visible painted sign. Many of the buildings have awnings overhanging the sidewalk. A small group of people can be seen in the distance, near the brick building.
The buildings in the photograph are a millinery shop, a cafe, Stryker's furniture store, the Holderness Building (which was later Bull's Grocery Store), Weber's barbershop, Kubick Drugs, and the Leader. Mr. Weber, the barber, was featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not for having shaved H.H. Judd every morning for 45 years. Traveling men planned to stop at Weber's for a shave. On Saturdays, Weber worked until midnight, shaving farmers who made weekly visits to town. In 1941, Weber retired from work at his barbershop, which he opened in 1886.