A man sits on a wagon piled high with chopped wood and pulled by two horses. Behind the cart is a Canadian Northern railway car with two men inside it. The Goose Lake Grain & Lumber Co. elevator can be partially seen on the left-hand side of the photo.
A man stands on a dray wagon pulled by two horses. The wagon is parked in front of W.M. Anderson's General Store, located on what is now called Worthen Street in Zealandia, delivering materials to the business from the train.
Two men and a hunting dog sit on the ground in front of an antique car covered in ducks they successfully hunted. A "Zealandia" flag is sticking out from the front right tire of the car. The car's tires help date this photo as being taken sometime after 1915.
A row of shops on 1st Avenue in Zealandia. The livery stable is at the end of the row just behind the windmill. A man places bricks along the side of a building in the forefront of the photo.
A man stands in front of the Flour and Feed Store in winter, located on Railway Avenue in Zealandia. Photo taken facing east. Another man stands in the side doorway.
Four men bundled up for winter in hats and long jackets stand in front of a train. One boxcar says "Canadian Pacific" and the other says "Canadian Northern." The train would be on the CNR track that ran by Zealandia on the north side of town. There is snow on the ground and two of the men are smoking cigars.
A man leans against the counter inside a general store. The chairs and tables along the left-hand side of the photo suggest the store may have also doubled as a diner or other meeting place.
Twelve men and a dog pose inside a hardware store loaded with inventory. There are hammers and other tools on the left wall, shovels and rakes at the back, and a stove on the right. Note the pile of hockey sticks in the forefront under the table.
Two men stand inside a harness shop. Gloves, harnesses, leads, and more hang and are stacked throughout the shop. Identities are not known, but there was a Harness & Saddlery shop owned by a W.A. Messner in Zealandia in 1913.