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BROWNING-B003

Five women and one man stand in front of a building whose large awning promotes Tacoma Biscuit & Candy Co.'s "good things to eat" including its Everbody's brand and an ice cream parlor. Tacoma Biscuit was located at the corner of E. "F" and 25th St.

BROWNING-B002

Undated photograph of a parade in process; the color guard leads the way followed by long lines of soldiers. Public Market at left with the Rector Cafe on the ground floor. V Invest poster on cafe's window probably means that this picture was taken during the period of or shortly after WWl.

BROWNING-159

Tacoma High School students parade to "Boost the Stadium." The campaign to raise $100,000 to build a beautiful high school stadium next to the school was successfully launched on October 6, 1908, when 2,000 school children ranging from 7th-8th grade to high schoolers marched in the "Boost for Stadium" parade. The school district cooperated by making the day a half-day so that the youngsters could march from Tacoma High School (later renamed Stadium High School) to the Union Club and then onto the downtown business district. Led by the Tacoma Musicians Union, who provided their services without charge, the marchers chanted "Boost for the stadium, stadium, stadium" and "Stadium, stadium, stadium, stadium" throughout the long walk. Paraders canvassed the business blocks of Commerce and "C" (now Broadway) and Pacific and would go on to canvas residential areas after school the next day. They asked businesses to contribute $10 promissory notes payable to the Board of Education. Each $10 entitled subscribers to one seat in the stadium for all entertainments there for the next five years. Supporters of the new stadium aimed to have it completed and ready for dedication and use by May 1, 1909. (TDL 10-6-1908, p. 5-article; TDL 10-7-1908, p.1-article)

BROWNING-158

ca. 1913. A view of the west side of the 5200 block of South Union (now South Tacoma Way) looking north. The Bobbi Burns Wine House was at 5238 South Union. A boy stands by a water fountain.

BROWNING-157

ca. 1915. Members of the McLintock's Band of South Tacoma, dressed in various costumes pose for a photograph in front of a bakery in South Tacoma. Photograph taken in front of the Pennant Billiard Hall at 5438 So. Union Avenue (later So. Tacoma Way).

BROWNING-156

ca. 1908. Five men are standing next to the side of a wood frame building. Two of the men are holding bicycles which are partially obscured by foliage. Two are standing on the wooden steps that lead from the door in the side of the building.

BROWNING-155

ca. 1908. Two men in a horse-drawn carriage in front of a blacksmith shop in South Tacoma. The building on the corner behind them is the Northern Pacific Hotel at 5201 South Tacoma Way.

BROWNING-151

1910/09. Two young men dressed as "cowboys;" one holding a six-shooter, the other with his gun in a holster. They are in front of a plain wood building. On the wall over their heads is a sign, "$100 reward for the capture of "Texas Bill." Photograph was taken in September of 1910.

BROWNING-147

ca. 1908. A group of men, women and children are standing, with nine bicycles, in front of two wooden buildings. The group is identified as the Orilla Amature Bicycle...(Club?)

BROWNING-143

ca. 1908. The note with this negative said, "Smith home - first house near Gravelly Lake, 1908." It shows two men outside a lean-to shack. One man is standing next to an iron stove that is standing on the ground outside the lean-to. The second man is pushing a wheelbarrow.

BROWNING-142

ca. 1911. Al G. Barnes Wild Animal Circus wagon with a small brass band on top and African lions inside is pulled down a street in South Tacoma. Probably taken Sept. 13, 1911.

BROWNING-141

ca. 1906. A flower decorated float, with a sign on the side that says "So. Tacoma Yeomen," sits in front of the Metropolitan Market and several other buildings in the 5400 block of So. Union in So. Tacoma. This section of Union later became So. Tacoma Way. There are four large horses hitched to the wagon/float. Each has an American flag stuck into its harness.

BROWNING-140

ca. 1908. The South Tacoma Mill Company warehouse with wagons and piles of lumber. The Northern Pacific shops in South Tacoma can be seen in the background. According to the 1909 Tacoma City Directory, the South Tacoma Mill Co. was at So. 54th and Washington. J. R. Addison was the president of the company.

BROWNING-139

ca. 1908. An unidentified man, holding straw in his hand, stands in a field with a small herd of cattle and two horses. There is a grove of trees beyond the field. A fence and a building can be seen beyond the trees.

BROWNING-138

ca. 1908. A self-portrait of Amzie D. Browning in coat, vest and cap. He stands in front of a large tree with a small dog at his feet. A pin on the lapel of his coat spells out the letters "WASH."

BROWNING-137

ca. 1908. Eight couples in a room. Three of the young women are sitting in the laps of three of the men. These are the same young men and women that are in BROWNING-020. Several also appear in BROWNING-022 and BROWNING-023. This photograph is possibly a "Parlor play."

BROWNING-135

ca. 1908. Houses and buildings in Tacoma. A sign on the roof of one of the buildings says "...Tacoma Mill Co." Could be the South Tacoma Mill Co. Dirt road is pitted with large puddles of water.

BROWNING-132

ca. 1908. A little dark haired girl, with a bow in her hair, sits on a highchair. The chair is in front of the porch of a house. There is a sheet or blanket hanging behind the girl serving as a backdrop. A white basin and cloths are adjacent on the wooden porch.

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