A portion of the Federal building, where the U. S. Post Office was in the 1930s, located between Ionia, Pearl, and Lyon, NW. The east side of the building, where there is some reserved parking.
View of Monroe Avenue looking North from Campau Square. Pantlind Hotel is on the left and Chop Suey on the right, also shown are pedestrians, automobiles, and streetcars.
Exterior of the Expert Die and Stamping company, their employee office building at 672 Front Ave. NW, formerly the G. R. Panel Company. The identical photograph as 125-e0682_007 with the "G.R. Panel Company" signage removed.
Photograph taken of the corner of Pearl Street and Ionia Avenue NW, looking southeast. Visible are the Manufacturer's Building at 110 Ionia NW, part of St. Mark's Episcopal Church on Division Avenue, the Federal Square Service Station, advertising Phillips 66 gasoline, Bear Wheel Alignment, "We Stop Shimmy-Hard Steering," and the building on Pearl and Division that included the barber shop with a barber pole, Myron J. White, proprietor, at 10 Pearl Street NW.
A view of a 1926 auto and a "new" 1950 Nash automobile. Nash offered two lines in 1950. The Nash Statesman was offered in the low-medium price field and the Nash Ambassador with automatic shifting in the medium price field.