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A7892-4

Model Bakery trucks photographed for International Harvester in February of 1939. The delivery trucks have signs advertising the bakery's Star Loaf bread. (filed with Argentum)


Model Bakery (Tacoma)--Associated objects; Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7892-1

A Model Bakery truck driver delivers "Star Loaf" bread to Washburn's Market. Wallace and Ella Washburn opened their meat market and grocer store here in 1917 when the building was first constructed. Clesent and Eleanor Washburn continued to run the store until 1966. Dr. Julius C. Bohn opened an office on the second floor in 1921. He closed his office in 1956 after 55 years of practice. The dedicated physician was named "family doctor of the year" in 1951 by members of the Pierce County Medical Association. The building was demolished in 1967 to build a Union 76 service station. In 1991, a new two-story building was built on the site and once again food stores and offices occupy this popular corner in the Proctor District.


Grocery stores--Tacoma--1930-1940; Butcher shops--Tacoma--1930-1940; Washburn's Market (Tacoma); Bohn, Julius C.; Physicians; Medical offices--Tacoma;

A7892-1

Model Bakery trucks photographed with their drivers for International Harvester in February of 1939. The delivery trucks have signs advertising the bakery's Star Loaf bread. (filed with Argentum)


Model Bakery (Tacoma)--Associated objects; Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7892-3

Model Bakery truck for International Harvester Co. The vehicle is parked along side of Washburn's Market at 2602 No. Proctor. It appears that some baked goods, probably Model's Star Loaf brand, are being delivered to the I.G.A. grocery on February 1, 1939.


Model Bakery (Tacoma); Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940; Washburn's Market (Tacoma);

D7892-5

Model Bakery truck for International Harvester Co. The delivery truck is parked directly in front of Washburn's Market at 2602 No. Proctor on February 1, 1939. The driver has the rear door open and is in the process of taking out goods sent from the bakery. Model Bakery advertised its "Star Loaf" as Tacoma's finest bread.


Model Bakery (Tacoma); Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940; Washburn's Market (Tacoma);

D7885-3

This photograph of the Mountain Lumber Company, located at 919 East F Street on the Tacoma tideflats, was taken on February 3, 1939. Paul Billings, born in Lyndon, Kansas, moved to Tacoma in 1920 and opened the Mountain Lumber Co. in 1924. The mill was rebuilt after it burned in a spectacular fire in 1931. In January of 1950 Mountain Lumber was purchased by the Dickman Lumber Company.


Mountain Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Lumber industry--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7885-4

Mountain Lumber Co. Stacks of lumber with large crane in between them.


Mountain Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Lumber industry--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7885-5

The Mountain Lumber Company, February 1939. The Mountain Lumber Company, at 919 East F. Street, was built in 1924 and began cutting lumber in February of 1925. The main mill building was destroyed by fire in July of 1931. The company re-opened before the end of the year, and they were part of Tacoma's busy waterfront until the mid-1940s.


Mountain Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Lumber industry--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7885-7

A workman at the Mountain Lumber Company stands on a stack of boards as a crane swings them through the air in this photograph from February 1939. The Mountain Lumber Company, at 919 East F. Street, was built in 1924 and began cutting lumber in February of 1925. The main mill building was destroyed by fire in July of 1931. The company re-opened before the end of the year, and they were part of Tacoma's busy waterfront until the mid-1940s.


Mountain Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Lumber industry--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7885-2

Mountain Lumber Co. Paull Billings - Manager. Small building in front with trestle and lumber piles around it.


Mountain Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Lumber industry--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7885-8

Exterior of Mountain Lumber Company with piles of lumber. Paul Billings, Manager.


Mountain Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Lumber industry--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7895-1

In February of 1939, three of the officers responsible for the construction of McChord field were photographed standing under the "Field Office C.Q.M. McChord Field" sign. They were identified in the Tacoma Times as, left to right, James B. True (chief engineer), Lt. Col. Frank W. Wright (commanding officer) and Capt. E.P. Antonovich (construction quartermaster). The modern airbase was being constructed on land formerly occupied by Tacoma Field, the municipal air field. (T. Times 2/8/1939, pg. 3)


Building construction--McChord Field; McChord Field (Tacoma); True, James B.; Wright, Frank W.; Antonovich, E.P.;

D7908-4a

Looking down on Pacific Avenue at 11th Street from upper floors of old Pacific First Federal Building. Rust Building at left where two buses have stopped to pick-up passengers. Automobiles. People crossing street at intersection. (T. Times, 2/8/1939).


City Views - Tacoma - Pacific Avenue Buildings - Commercial BuildingsTransportation - Buses - City Buses

D7908-6

Looking down on Pacific Avenue at 11th Street from upper floors of old Pacific First Federal Building. The Rust Building is at the left, buses and automobiles; people on sidewalk. (T. Times, 2/8/1939).


Business districts--Tacoma; Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940; Buses--Tacoma; Automobiles--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-1A

Pacific Avenue at 11th Street. Rust Building at left, Bank of California at right. People cross the intersection and head toward one of 95 buses operated by Tacoma Railway and Power Company. (T. Times, 2/8/1939, p. 21)


Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-2A

Looking up 11th street hill with its large high rise buildings--Tacoma Building (Weyerhaeuser), Washington, Rust and Fidelity Buildings. The street is void of activity and traffic. (T. Times, 2/8/1939.


Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-2

View from Court C down 11th Street toward bridge. Fisher's Department Store on right, Rhodes Department Store, Fidelity, Rust, Washington, and Tacoma Buildings on left. Pedestrian and vehicle traffic downtown business district. (T. Times, 2/8/1939)


Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940; Department stores--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-9

Looking down on Pacific Avenue at 11th Street from upper floors of Pacific First Federal Building. One of 95 Tacoma Railway & Power Company's buses stops at bus stop for passengers. Buses replaced Tacoma streetcars in 1939. (T. Times, 2/8/1939).


Vehicles - Automobiles, Buses Transportation - Mass TransitTraffic CongestionBus StopsStreets - Commercial Streets

D7908-7

Two buses are stopped at the corner of 11th and Pacific in front of Peoples Store to pick up passengers in early February of 1939. Modern bus transportation had replaced the old streetcar system in mid-1938. There were now 95 up-to-date buses operated by the Tacoma Rail & Power system in the city. Routes operated over 76 miles of Tacoma streets carrying 35,000 passengers daily. A group of people dressed in suits and coats prepare to cross Pacific where the old streetcar tracks and brick pavers are visible. (T. Times, 2/8/1939, p. 21-alt. photograph, p. 22-article).


Peoples (Tacoma); Department stores--Tacoma--1930-1940; Buses--Tacoma--1930-1940; Mass transit--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-4

Pacific Avenue at 11th Street. Bank of California and adjacent structures. In Tacoma's busy commercial center, shoppers stand-in-line to board one of the city's 95 buses operated by Tacoma Railway & Power (T.R.& P.) system.(T.Times 2/8/39, p. 21)


Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940; Business districts--Tacoma--1930-1940; Bus stops--Tacoma; Tacoma Railway & Power Co. (Tacoma); Buses--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-1

This view of Tacoma from Court C looking down 11th Street toward the Murray Morgan Bridge (11th St. Bridge) dates from February 1939. A corner-mounted sign for Fisher's Department Store hangs over the sidewalk at the right. On the left, descending the hill, are the Rhodes Department Store, the Fidelity Building, the Rust Building, the Washington Building, Kegel's Inc. and the Tacoma Building. The Fidelity Building was torn down in 1949 to make way for the F.W. Woolworth Co. Building. The bus coming up the hill is one of the new busses that replaced the 11th Street cable car after it went out of service in 1938. For Corky Mabin. (T. Times, 2/8/1939, p. 29).


Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940; Department stores--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7908-8

View from Court C down 11th Street toward bridge. Fisher's Department Store on right, Rhodes Department Store, Fidelity, Rust, Washington, and Tacoma Buildings on left. Four new buses traverse the streets replacing city streetcars. (T. Times, 2/8/1939)


Streets - Tacoma - South 11th StreetBuildings - Commercial BuildingsVehicles

A7899-1

Knights of Pythias Hall, located at 52nd & So. Tacoma Way. Congregation photographed at bible lecture. The lodge was built in 1926 to serve members in South Tacoma. The building was sold in January of 1937. Photograph ordered by Mr. Bentz. (filed with Argentum)


Knights of Pythias, Lodge #59 (Tacoma);

D7872-2

Sibelian Male Chorus. Sixteen men dressed in tuxedos. Artistic camera view from above of men lying on floor head-to-head in two circles. This type of choreographing was popularized in motion picture musicals of this period. (T. Times).


Singing--Tacoma--1930-1940; Sibelian Male Chorus (Tacoma); Singers; Choirs (Music);

D7897-3

At the tender age of 18-months, Ronald "Ronnie" Ferch was already roller skating across the hardwood floors in his parent's home. The Tacoma Times ran a photograph of Ronnie on his skates on the front page of the February 8, 1939 paper. The toddler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin L. Ferch of 3907 No. 24th, probably qualified as Tacoma's youngest skater. In December, Ronnie had been visited by his older cousins who brought their special gifts from Santa Claus, new roller skates. Unobserved by his mother, they taught Ronnie to skate. After having to wrench their skates from him on their departure, Ronnie's dad went out and bought him his own skates. Once supplied with skates, the tyke used his home as a regular rink. (T. Times, 2/8/1939, p. 1).


Ferch, Ronnie; Roller skating--Tacoma;

D7872-3

This striking photograph of sixteen tuxedo-dressed men was taken for the Tacoma Times by the Richards photographers on February 8, 1939. Unfortunately, it was not published at that time. The men are identified in the studio records as the Sibelian Male Chorus. The photograph mimics the high angle views made popular in the Busby Berkeley musicals of the 1930s. (T. Times).


Singing--Tacoma--1930-1940; Sibelian Male Chorus (Tacoma); Singers; Choirs (Music);

D7900-5

Margaret Suiter (Mrs. Lloyd Suiter), Mrs. John Kaufman, and Mrs. Frank Graham (L-R), dressed in leather jackets, ties, and riding pants, posed with their prize-winning hunting dogs in February of 1939. All three dogs had competed at the West Coast Field Trails where the women performed as the as dogs' handlers. Mrs. Suiter, with her "Suiter's Lady Deluxe," won the all-age group at the West Coast Field Trials. Mrs. Kaufman's "Jodowah" placed second in the trials' puppy event while the "Golden Calodine" of Mrs. Graham won the puppy event. (T. Times, 2/9/1939, p. 15-alternate photograph).


Suiter, Lloyd--Family; Kaufman, John--Family; Graham, Frank--Family; Hunting dogs--Tacoma; Dogs--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D7905-9

Celebration of the 1939 National Boy Scout Week. Sea Scout Willard Hoveland of Ship 110 is illustrating to Cub Scout Kenny Johnston of Cub Pack 6 how rope knots are tied. Knot tying instruction was one of the planned activities for the weekend celebration of Scout Week. Scouting was founded in 1907 in Britain by Robert Baden-Powell. It was established in America in 1910. (T.Times, 2/14/1939, p. 1)


Boy Scouts (Tacoma)--1930-1940; Sea Scouts (Tacoma); Hoveland, Willard; Johnston, Kenny;

D7905-3

National Boy Scout Week. Boys gather around Scout Commissioner W.W. Glenn at the First United Presbyterian Church. The church serves as sponsor for the troop. Boys are Lawrence Myers, Jack Thompson, Howard Perkins, Bryce Jensen, Ross Everett, Bob Barnett and Duane Dennis. (T. Times, 2/14/1939, p. 1)


Boy Scouts (Tacoma)--1930-1940; Presbyterian churches--Tacoma; First Presbyterian Church (Tacoma); Glenn, W.W.;

D7905-6

National Boy Scout Week. Donald Fowler, left, and John Hewitt of Troop 53 are talking over a tree problem in Wright Park. Over 2,200 Tacoma area Boy Scouts, Sea Scouts and Cub Scouts, representing the 110 organized scouting units in Tacoma, gathered during the weekend to celebrate National Boy Scout Week. (T. Times, 2/14/1939, p. 1)


Trees--Tacoma; Boy Scouts (Lakewood)--1930-1940; Boy Scouts of America, Troop 53 (Lakewood); Fowler, Donald; Hewitt, John;

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