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Crates Of Harvested Onions Line The Fields At C. F. Krummrey Farm In Stockbridge, September 1939 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Crates Of Harvested Onions Line The Fields At C. F. Krummrey Farm In Stockbridge, September 1939 image
Year:
1939
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 20, 1939
Caption:
STOCKBRIDGE FARM PRODUCES ONIONS BY CARLOAD: You could smother enough hamburg steaks for an army with the onions raised in one year on the C. F. Krummrey farm near Stockbridge. Two of the approximately 150 persons--most of them from Kentucky--given employment on the farm each year are shown "topping" the onions in the upper left picture. They are, left to right, Joan Richardson of Pontiac and Helen Fletcher of Stockbridge. Lower left is Calloway Minix of Jackson, Ky., who has been working in onion fields in this area for more than 10 years. Some of the thousands of crates filled with onions in the fields are shown at the upper right, and bottom right is a view of the culling operations, in which inferior onions are extracted before the product is bagged for shipment.

Men Inspect Harvested Onions For Quality At C. F. Krummrey Farm In Stockbridge, September 1939 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Men Inspect Harvested Onions For Quality At C. F. Krummrey Farm In Stockbridge, September 1939 image
Year:
1939
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 20, 1939
Caption:
STOCKBRIDGE FARM PRODUCES ONIONS BY CARLOAD: You could smother enough hamburg steaks for an army with the onions raised in one year on the C. F. Krummrey farm near Stockbridge. Two of the approximately 150 persons--most of them from Kentucky--given employment on the farm each year are shown "topping" the onions in the upper left picture. They are, left to right, Joan Richardson of Pontiac and Helen Fletcher of Stockbridge. Lower left is Calloway Minix of Jackson, Ky., who has been working in onion fields in this area for more than 10 years. Some of the thousands of crates filled with onions in the fields are shown at the upper right, and bottom right is a view of the culling operations, in which inferior onions are extracted before the product is bagged for shipment.

Joan Richardson & Helen Fletcher Topping Onions At C. F. Krummrey Farm In Stockbridge, September 1939 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Joan Richardson & Helen Fletcher Topping Onions At C. F. Krummrey Farm In Stockbridge, September 1939 image
Year:
1939
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 20, 1939
Caption:
STOCKBRIDGE FARM PRODUCES ONIONS BY CARLOAD: You could smother enough hamburg steaks for an army with the onions raised in one year on the C. F. Krummrey farm near Stockbridge. Two of the approximately 150 persons--most of them from Kentucky--given employment on the farm each year are shown "topping" the onions in the upper left picture. They are, left to right, Joan Richardson of Pontiac and Helen Fletcher of Stockbridge. Lower left is Calloway Minix of Jackson, Ky., who has been working in onion fields in this area for more than 10 years. Some of the thousands of crates filled with onions in the fields are shown at the upper right, and bottom right is a view of the culling operations, in which inferior onions are extracted before the product is bagged for shipment.

Seesaw Sitters at the 4-H-Kiwanis Picnic, July 1937 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Seesaw Sitters at the 4-H-Kiwanis Picnic, July 1937 image
Year:
1937
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, July 27, 1937
Caption:
Scenes At Kiwanis 4-H Outing: Typical of the program and contests participated in by 250 Ann Arbor Kiwanians and their guests at the annual picnic sponsored by the service club yesterday at Newport beach, Portage Lake, are these scenes snapped by the News photographer. At the top left County Agricultural Agent H. S. Osler is shown just before he took second place to George Cooper in the 'human pump" race. The center picture shows little Lois Ruhlig of Dexter huddled in a blanket; she was in the blanket because her clothes were hanging on a line to dry out as the result of Lois' fall into Portage lake just before the festivities started. At top right two girls are racing neck and neck in the hop, hop contest. At the left in the middle row of pictures, Roger Freund, Ann Arbor Y.M.C.A. director, is demonstrating to the girls the intricate maneuvers in the "novelty walk," and in the center photo the girls are doing their best to match his graceful posture. Three 4-H girls from the Dexter area are interested spectators of the games in the picture at right [this photo], and in the bottom row at the left the younger children are shown in the last lap of the centipede race. At the right Mrs. Myra Spike of Whitmore Lake Rd. has just kicked her slipper into the air in the women's kicking contest, and she is watching its flight.

A Tricky Game at the 4-H-Kiwanis Picnic, July 1937 Photographer: Eck Stanger

A Tricky Game at the 4-H-Kiwanis Picnic, July 1937 image
Year:
1937
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, July 27, 1937
Caption:
Scenes At Kiwanis 4-H Outing: Typical of the program and contests participated in by 250 Ann Arbor Kiwanians and their guests at the annual picnic sponsored by the service club yesterday at Newport beach, Portage Lake, are these scenes snapped by the News photographer. At the top left County Agricultural Agent H. S. Osler is shown just before he took second place to George Cooper in the 'human pump" race. The center picture shows little Lois Ruhlig of Dexter huddled in a blanket; she was in the blanket because her clothes were hanging on a line to dry out as the result of Lois' fall into Portage lake just before the festivities started. At top right two girls are racing neck and neck in the hop, hop contest. At the left in the middle row of pictures, Roger Freund, Ann Arbor Y.M.C.A. director, is demonstrating to the girls the intricate maneuvers in the "novelty walk," and in the center photo [this photo] the girls are doing their best to match his graceful posture. Three 4-H girls from the Dexter area are interested spectators of the games in the picture at right, and in the bottom row at the left the younger children are shown in the last lap of the centipede race. At the right Mrs. Myra Spike of Whitmore Lake Rd. has just kicked her slipper into the air in the women's kicking contest, and she is watching its flight.