USA > Michigan > Saginaw County > Saginaw > Polk Saginaw, Michigan city directory, 1921 > Part 1
USA > Michigan > Saginaw County > Saginaw > Polk Saginaw, Michigan city directory, 1921 > Part 1
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RIP SLINGER BROS
Coal, Coke s and Wood
300 Carrollton
THE
American
State Bank
Capital and Surplus $300,000
Resources Over $4,500,000.00
4% Interest Paid on Certificates of Deposit and on Savings Accounts One Dollar Will Open An Account
REMER BROTHERS
Fuel and Builders' Supplies
HARD AND SOFT COAL, GAS HOUSE AND SOLVAY COKE, POCAHONTAS COAL, WOOD
West Side Yard 300 Madison St.
East Side Yard 401 S. Water St. Bell Telephone 305 Valley Telephone 306
Bell Telephone 2813 Valley Telephone 2613
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN
OLDEST BANK IN SAGINAW.
ESTABLISHED 1871 The Second National Bank OF SAGINAW, MICHIGAN
Capital, $500,000.00 Surplus, $500,000.00
OFFICERS
President
ARTHUR D. EDDY
Vice-President Vice-President
ALBERT H. MORLEY
EDWARD W. GLYNN
Vice-Pres. and Cashier
R. PERRY SHORTS :: ALFRED H. PERRIN
: Vice-President Assistant Canbier
DIRECTORS
George B. Morley , Arthur D. Eddy;
Stanford T. Crape
Peter Corcoran
Frank D. Ewen
James D. Peter Wm. H. Wallace R., Perry Shorts + Edward W. Glynx
SAVINGS AND TRUST DEPARTMENTS
WHOLESALE HARDWARE AND KINDRED LINES
MORLEY BROTHERS "At Your Service Since 1863" SAGINAW, MICHIGAN
RIPSLINGER BROS Building Supplies
300 Carrollton
SULLIVAN SUPPLY CO.
Electrical Apparatus, Mill Supplies and Machinery Automobile Accessories, Garage Equipment
George II. Boyd
Chan. A. Bigelow
Frederick Carlisle
Elmer J. Cornwell
, AmiNex M. Rest
James T. Wylle
3. W. Symons, Jf.
SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS
GEORGE B. MORLEY
2
THE COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK
115 N. Hamilton St., Saginaw, W. S., Mich. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $200,000
COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK
1900
OFFICERS
G. A. ALDERTON, ] J. W. FORDNEY, V. J. F. BRAND, V-Pre R. T. MAYNARD, C M. E. CURRAN, Ass
ROGER R. HILL, P
Hill-
H
Loans Negotiated
Public Libraries Saginaw, Michigan
Tout -Publis Library
DIRECTORS.
J. F. BRAND A. C. MELZE J. W. FORDNEY G. A. ALDERTON A. A. ALDERTON R. T. MAYNARD
ARMAN, Sec-Treas.
any
s for Investment
Management of Property
Real Estate Conveyancing City, Farm and Ranch Properties
Fire, Liability, Automobile and Plate Glass Insurance Surety Bonds
Liberty Bonds Bought and Sold
Full Information in Detail Furnished Upon Request
Both Phones 1470
-
GEN
FOUR
Populatio Inhal
Alabama
Birmingham. 178,270
60,151
Mobile .. Montgomery. 43,464
Arizona
Phoenix 29,053
Arkansas
Fort Smith ..
28,811
Little Rock. 64,997
California
Alameda ...
28,806
Berkeley
..
55,886
Fresno
44,616
Long Beach.
Los Angeles.
Oakland 216,361
Pasadena .
45,354
Sacramento .
65,857
San Diego ..
74,683
San Francis-
CO
. .
San Jose ... .
39,604
Stockton 40,296
Colorado
Colorado
Springs 30,105
Denver
256,369
Pueblo . . 42,908
Connecticut
Bridgeport ..
143,538
Hartford
138,036
Meriden
29,842
New Britain
New Haven.
162,537
New London
25,688
Norwalk 27,743
Stamford 35,096
Waterbury
91,715
Delaware
Wilmington: 110,168 District of Columbia Washington 437,571 Florida
Jacksonville. 91.558
Miami
29,571
Pensacola
31,035
Tampa
61,608
Georgia
Atlanta 200,616
Augusta 52,548
Columbus
31,125
Macon
52,995
Savannah
83,252
Illinois
Aurora 36,397
Bloomington
28,725
Chicago .... 2,701,705
Cicero
44,995
Danville
33,776 43,818
66,767
Elgin
27,454
Evanston
37,234
Joliet
38,442
Moline
30,734
Oak Park ...
39,858
Peorla
76,121 Duluth 98,917
Minneapolis 380,582
St. Paul 234,595
Missouri
Joplin 29,855
Kansas City 324,410
St. Joseph ... 77,939
St. Louis ... 772,897
Springfield 39,631
Montana
41,611
Lincoln 54,934
Omaha 191,601
New Hampshire
Manchester 78,384 Stubenville 28,508
28,379 Toledo
243,164
Warren 27,050
Youngstown. 132,358
Zanesville 29,569
Oklahoma
Muskogee
30,277
ma
91,295
Hoboken
68,166
Tulsa
72,075
Oregon
258,288
Portland
Pennsylvania
Allentown 73,502
Altoona
60,331
Bethlehem . . 50,358
Chester 58.030
Easton 33,813
Erlo 93,372
Harrisburg 75,917
Hazleton
32,277
Johnstown 67,327
Lancaster
53,150
Mckeesport .
46,781 New Castle .. Norristown 44,938 Borough 32,319
Philadelphia. 1,823,779
Pittsburgh
Reading ...
Scranton
...
137,783
Wilkes-Barre 73.833
Williamsport
36.198
York 47,512
Rhode Island
Cranston
. .
29,407
Newport . .
30,255
Pawtucket 64,248
Providence 237.595
Woonsocket 43,496
South Carolina
Charleston
67,957
Columbia
...
37,524
South Dakota
Sloux Falls, 25,176
Tennessee
Chattanooga 57,895
Knoxville 77,818
Memphis
..
162,351
Nashville ...
118,342
Texas
Austin 34,876
Beaumont ..
40,422
Dallas
158,976
El Paso
77,543
Fort Worth.
106,482
Galveston . .
44,265
Houston
138,076
San Antonio.
161,379
38,500
Wichita
Falls
40,079
Utah
Ogden
32,804
Salt Lake
City 118,110
Virginia
Lynchburg . 29,956
Newport News 35,596
Norfolk 115,777
Petersburg 31,002
Portsmouth 54,387
Richmond 171,667
Roanoke 50,842
Washington
Bellingham 25,570
Everett 27,644
Seattle . .
315,652
Spokane 104,437
Tacoma 96,965
West Virginia
Charleston 39,608
Clarksburg 27,869
Huntington
. 50,177
Wheeling 56,208
Wisconsin
Green Bay 31,017
Kenosha
40,472
La Crosse 30,421
Madison 38,378
Milwaukee 457,147
Oshkosh 38,162
Racine 58.593
Sheboygan 30,955
56,727
Clifton
36,230
Kansas
Kansas City. 101,177
Topeka .. 50,022
Wichita ....
72,217
Kentucky
Covington .. 57,121
Lexington 41,534
Louisville . .
234,891
Newport 29,317
Louisiana
New
Orleans 387,219
Shreveport 43,874
Maine
Bangor 25,978
Lewiston . .
31,791
Portland
Maryland
Baltimore 733,826
Cumberland 29,837
Hagerstown 28,064
Massachusetts
Boston 748,060
Brockton
66,254
Brookline 37,784
Cambridge 109,694
Fall River ..
120,485
Fitchburg 41,013 Rochelle 36,213
New York
City
.... 5,621,151
Manhattan
Borough 2,284,103 Bronx
Borough 732,016
Brooklyn Borough 2,022,262 Queens
Borough
Richmond Borough
115,959
Newburgh
Niagara Falls 50,750
Pough- keepsie 35,000
Rochester 295,750
Schenectady
Syracuse
Troy 72,013
Utica 94,156
Watertown 31,285
Yonkers 100,226
North Carolina
Asheville 28,504
Charlotte 46,338
Wilmington 33,372
Winston- Salem
48,395
Ohio
Akron
208,435
Canton 87,091
Cincinnati 401,247
Cleveland 796.841
Columbus 237,031
Dayton
152,559 East
Cleveland .
27,292
Hamilton 39,675
Lakewood 41,732
Lima 41,326
Lorain 37,295
Mansfield 27,824
Marion
Newark
Portsmouthı .. Springflela
Nashua . . .
66,083 New Jersey
Atlantic City 50,682
Bayonne
76,754
ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY
3 1833 00068 8066
TATES
5,000 O
Des Moines.
LOVITVY
39,141
Elizabeth
YO,VOU
Irvington 25,480
Jersey City.
297,864
Kearny
26,724
Montclair
28,810
New
Brunswick 32,779
Newark
414,216
Orange
33,268
Passaic
63,824
Paterson
135,866
Perth Amboy 41,707
Plainfield 27,700
Trenton
West
Hoboken
40,068
West New
York
29,926
Albany 113.344
Amsterdam 33,524
Auburn
. .
36,192
Binghamton 66,800
Buffalo 506,775
Elmira 45,305
Jamestown 38,917
Kingston
26,688
Mount
Vernon 42,726
New
53,884
Holyoke 60,203
Lawrence 94,270
Lowell
Lynn
Malden
49,103
Medford
39,038
121,217
46,054
Pittsfield
41,751
Quincy
47,876
Revere
28,823
Salem 42,529
Somerville 93,091
Springfield. .. 129,563
Taunton
37,137
Waltham ...
30,915
Worcester ..
179,754
Michigan
Battle Creek 36,164
Bay City ....
47,554
Detroit 993,789
Flint 91,599
Gd. Raplds ..
Hamtramck
48,615
Highland Pk
46,499
Jackson
Kalamazoo .
Lansing 57,327
Muskegon 36,670
Pontiac
34,273
Port Huron 25,944
Saginaw
61,903
Minnesota
Quincy
35,978
Rock Island.
35,177
Rockford
65,661
Springfield
59,183
Indiana
Anderson ... East Chicago
Evansville
Fort Wayne Gary
Hammond
36,004
314,194
30,067
36,524
Richmond
South Bend.
Terre Haute. Iowa
· Cedar Rapids 45,566 36,162
Coun. Bluffs Davenport . . .
29,767
35,967 85,264
86,549
55,378
Indianapolis. Kokomo
Muncie
26,765
70.983
Camden ... 116,309
26,470
466,811
30,366
Rome 26,341 88,723 Waco
171,717
137,634
48,374
48,858
Decatur
E. St. Louis
69,316
Haverhill
112,759
99,148
New Bedford Newton
Dubuque ...
Sioux City .. 71,227
Waterloo ...
Gc 977.402 Sal8p 1921 Saginaw, Michigan, city directory
55.593
576,673
508,410
588,343
107,784
69,272 New York
119,289
Superior
39,671
27,891 26,718 33,011 60,840
Butte Nebraska
MOTOR
BRENNER
SALES
DEALER IN
DODGE BROTHERS MOTOR VEHICLES
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN
MORE GOODS ARE BOUGHT AND SOLD THROUGH THE CLASSIFIED BUSINESS LISTS OF THE DIRECTORY THAN ANY OTHER MEDIUM ON EARTH
POLK'S SAGINAW DIRECTORY
1921
COMPRISING AN ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED LIST OF BUSI- NESS FIRMS AND PRIVATE CITIZENS, A STREET AND AVE- NUE GUIDE, A MISCELLANEOUS DIRECTORY OF CITY AND COUNTY OFFICERS, TERMS OF COURT, PUB- LIC AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS, BANKS, INCOR- PORATED COMPANIES, A MAP OF THE CITY, A COMPLETE DIRECTORY OF HOUSEHOLDERS,
CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY
and a
"Buyers' Guide"
The DIRECTORY
IS THE COMMON
Vol. XXXVI
INTERMEDIARY BETWEEN
$10.00
BUYER AND SELLER
R. L. POLK & CO., Publishers SAGINAW, MICHIGAN
Member of the Association of North American Directory Publishers
Copyright, 1921, by R. L. Polk & Co., Detroit, Michigan
3
INTRODUCTION
The volume presented herewith embodies R. L. Polk & Co.'s 1921 edition of the Saginaw City Directory. It has been compiled with care after a thorough enumeration of the citizens and business concerns of the city. The publishers have sought to maintain the high standard established in previous issues, and in this endeavor have utilized their unrivalled organization and efficient methods, desiring to offer the com- munity what is best in this most necessary and indispensable of refer- ence works in business and social life. The Directory is devoted to the advancement of all of the city's vital interests, and has in each issue kept pace with its progress. The publishers offer the assurance that no effort on their part has been omitted to insure completeness and accuracy, thus affording the best Directory service. The statistical data, which follows this Introduction is impressive as showing the expansion in civics, com- merce and industry, of this wealthy, prosperous and progressive city.
The five essential features of the work are set forth in the order fol- lowing:
1
The Miscellaneous Department is contained in pages 32 to 46; it comprises data concerning city and county officials, Federal officers, · banks, building associations, cemeteries, churches, clubs, courts, hospitals, homes, libraries, schools, convents, newspapers, parks, public buildings, halls, postoffice data, etc. This department covers every phase of civic and social activity.
The Buyers' Guide is embraced in pages 49 to 112 inclusive. It gives the progressive business men represented therein an opportunity to de- scribe their lines more fully than is possible in the necessarily condensed descriptions in the body of the Directory. It shows not only the more progressive and alert business men, but in compact form it becomes a "Who's Who" in the business life of Saginaw.
The Street and Avenue Guide and Directory of Householders is in- cluded in pages 113 to 248. This Department embraces a list of all the Streets and Avenues in the city alphabetically arranged; the houses and buildings being arranged in numerical order, with the name of the oc- cupants or householders placed opposite each number.
The Alphabetical List of Names of citizens and business concerns, is embraced in pages 249 to 774.
The Classified Business Directory is contained in pages 775 to 853; this department exhibits the various manufacturing, mercantile and pro- fessional occupations compiled in alphabetical order by headings and this feature constitutes an invaluable and indispensable epitome of the busi- ness interests of the community. "The Directory is the common inter- mediary between Buyer and Seller."
SAGINAW The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan
Its Commerce, Finance and Industry
(Furnished by The Saginaw Board of Commerce)
S AGINAW is the fourth city in Michigan, with a population of 65,648 (U. S. Census 1920) and surrounded by fifty villages and cities within a radius of 30 miles; has astounded the business and in- dustrial world by its rapid and substantial growth the last five years. Many new industries, particularly the General Motors, have been located and retail and wholesale trade has extended in great volume.
SAGINAW CITY HALL
The city has kept pace with its new population by the large number of new homes, schools, churches, and such environments as are neces- sary for a happy, contented community of home owning labor.
Saginaw is located within easy shipping by water, rail, and electric power, and good roads, of Detroit, and other large industrial centers. The fact that Saginaw lies over the heart of the bituminous coal mining district of Michigan, that electric power in unlimited volume is accessible from the Au Sable dam project, and that industries are encouraged and fostered by the Saginaw Board of Commerce and the city and the com- munity in general has had much to do with the magnificent growth the city has enjoyed.
1
1
20
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
Banking, for which Saginaw is the clearing house for all of eastern and northern Michigan, has been an accurate barometer of the growth enjoyed. Deposits have increased by leaps and bounds. This is con- sidered the best test of a substantial growth.
.
JUNIOR SCHOOL
This is a picture of the proposed Junior High School which the east side Board of Education would erect The plans, drawn by Cowles & Mutscheller, call for a three-story structure. 282 by 173 feet, em- bodying the latest ideas In school construction obtained by an exhaustive study ot similar buildings throughout the country.
The General Motors has located five plants, employing thousands of workmen. This is but one of the industries that has been located here.
Saginaw is the hub of a wheel of good roads, which radiate to every section of Michigan. The city is committed and already has launched and completed many of its permanent and asphalt road projects, this being thought necessary for the heaviest arteries of travel.
There are three electric and four railroads feeding transportation in and out of the city.
Allen County Public Library Ft. Wayne, Indiana
HOYT LIBRARY
21
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
Saginaw is a typical city of the re-adjustment period. . Its inception as a force in the industrial life of this country dates from the time of lumber, when giant forests of pine permeated eastern and northern Michigan. Saginaw was the center of the felling and the making up of these forests. This left a large number of wealthy citizens. Unlike many cities, they have stayed in Saginaw because of its natural beauties, its thousands of acres of parks, its wide, well kept, shady streets, its prime educational institutions and facilities, the many churches with which it is blessed, and the general recreational opportunities which are offered. They re-invested their money and started to build anew and laid the ground work for a city that could not help but grow. This growth,
ILIR CF ROLAR
PROPOSED NEW ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL
As the second big step in its campaign for enlarge- ment of Saginaw's hospital facilities to meet the city's needs, the Welfare League has received the above pic- ture of the proposed new St. Mary's hospital. Work on the first unit of the building will be started next year if the League campaign December 2 to 7 is suf- ficiently successful.
The building will be built in several units. The first will be erected directly north of the present hospital. It will include the central portion shown in the pic- ture, together with the north wing. that on the left hand side of the picture. The four story wing in the right hand side of the picture will not be built at first. The present hospital stands on this spot, and will be left practically as it is for the present. Event. ually it will be torn down and the south wing built to replace it.
The picture shows the Jefferson avenue elevation of the hospital as it will look when it is finished. It does not show another wing that will be built on the east or Owen street side. on the site of the present sister's residence-formerly the hospital proper.
The building when completed will have from 250 to
300 beds, and. at present construction costs would mean an expenditure of from $1,250.000 to $1.800.000. It is hoped that costs will decline greatly before the later units are built, and that the whole structure can be put up for much less than this. The first unit will have about 85 beds and will cost from $400.000 to $500.000.
The unit first to be built will be partly four and partly five stories high, with a basement under it. The central part will have five and the wing four stories. It will include finely equipped operating rooms, laboratories where doctors and surgeons may make microscopic examinations to determine their pa- tlents' condition. x-ray rooms' offices, waiting rooms and lobbies well equipped to accomodate the public. dining rooms for the nurses and sisters, and many other features. One floor will be devoted to surgical cases and one to maternity cases.
The present hospital will be left practically as it is for the present, being connected with the new part. Only slight changes will be made in it.
Plans for the proposed new hospital have been worked out by the building committee of the Welfare League. of which H. J. Gilbert is chairman.
while steady and sure, has received its greatest impetus in the last five years with the development and with the merging of all commercial organizations into the present Board of Commerce, which has been able ' to do wonderful things for this city.
22
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
Saginaw is now building a $6,000,000.00 water system by which clear, pure water for drinking, commercial and industrial purposes, will be brought 20 miles from Saginaw Bay.
COMMISSION FORM OF GOVERNMENT
Saginaw has the commission form of government with a Mayor and four commissioners, elected at large, for terms of four years. They are the executive and administrative body.
GREY IRON FOUNDRY PLANT
GREY IRON FOUNDRY
Another of the group which make up the Saginaw Products Company division of the General Motors Corporation
RESORT FACILITIES
Saginaw is the gateway into northeastern Michigan, roads leading to the hundreds of lakes and streams, which attract thousands of visitors each year. In this resort district lie the great hunting grounds of Michigan with an abundance of wild game and some of the most famous trout streams in this country. In fact, Saginaw is the gateway into what is known as America's playground.
SCHOOLS
The schools of Saginaw stand well with university authorities. The students graduating from these institutions are received with high stand- ings in the great educational institutions of America.
FRATERNAL LIFE
Saginaw has hundreds of clubs, both for men and women, and the churches and other organizations foster clean, healthy, mental, physical, and recreational development for their members.
FIRE DEPARTMENT
Saginaw long ago discarded the horse drawn fire apparatus and has substituted, and is using, the most modern system of high powered auto- mobile apparatus brought about at a cost of several hundred thousand dollars.
23
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
MOTOR PLANT
SAGINAW PRODUCTS CO. (Motor Plant)
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TRADE
Because of its strategic position, Saginaw is naturally the center of a large urban population from a district which feeds an immense volume of retail and wholesale trade into Saginaw. The stores are cosmopolitan and eager to develop and cement trade extension and the wholesale firms through a rapid system of motor trucking transportation and courteous treatment have made this city a jobbing center.
WATER TRANSPORTATION
Saginaw is a harbor, and is located on the Saginaw River a few miles up from Saginaw Bay and water transportation is enjoyed by freight and passenger carriers with Detroit and other lake cities.
24
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
Statistical Facts Concerning Saginaw
Population
65,648
Area
17 square miles
Altitude
581 feet above sea level
Assessed Valuation
$95,382,599
Bonded Debt
$ 2,133,500
Tax Rate, City, 1920, $20.64; State and County, 1920 $7.58
Miles of Streets
290
Miles of Paving
75
Miles of Public Sewers 131
Miles of Electric Street Railway 28.6
Miles of Gas Mains Laid 95
Parks and Parkways: Number of 16
Number of Acres 225
Value $550,000
Water Works: Capacty 46,000,000 gallons
Daily Average No. of Gallons Pumped 15,000,000
Miles of Water Mains 92.7
Value of Plant $1,500,000
Fire Department: Number of Men 100
Number of Station Houses 10
Number of Horses 15
Number of Autos 2
Number of (Auto) Engines 6
Number of Hose and Chemical Wagons 2
Number of Hook & Ladder Trucks 2
Value of Apparatus
$116,000
Police Department: Number of Men
88
Number of Stations 2
Schools-Public: Number of Schools 28
Number of Teachers 370
Number of Pupils 11,500
Value of Property
$3,250,000
Schools-Parochial and Diocesan 18
Schools-Miscellaneous 1 business college
Number of Books in Public Library 80,000
1
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
26
Post Office Receipts 1920 $299,832.35
Number of Banks and Trust Companies 5
Bank Deposits 1920 $34,725,135.07
Number of Theatres and Motion Picture Houses 14
Number of Hospitals 5
Number of Hotels 27
Manufacturng: Number of Factories 125
Number of Operatives 15,000
Wages Paid Annually $ 23,400,000
Value of Annual Output
$118,000,000
Values of Real Estate Transfers 1920
$ 10,174,740
Number of Real Estate Transfers 1920 5,486
Value of Building Permits 1920 $ 2,673,858
1
26
SAGINAW-"The Metropolis of Northeastern Michigan"
SAGINAW _BOARD ; OF ATRADE : AUTO; MAP"
BEET SUGAR PLANT
BOULEVARD
PROPOSRO
AIVEA
1080
OPTIONAL
'UNITED STATES CENSUS FOR 1910 POPULATION 50510; CITY DIRECTORY ESTIMATE FOR 1916 POPULATION 76080 100 MILES OF FINELY PAVED STREETS'
FACTORIL
70 MACKINAW VIA·
3
-
MIOLANO INLANO
ROUTE
INE
FORESTS. CLARE
TO BẢY CITY
EASTERN MICHIGAN PIKE
REESE
GRAND TRAVERSE W
AND NORTH + TAWAS
TO MACKINAW
CARO
ROUTE
ALPENA ONAWAY
CHEBOYGAN
WADSWORTH AVE
STATE STREET
ROUTE
· SAGINAW HAS AN
HIGHWAY
W. GENESEE
AVE
I AREA OF SIXTEEN
COURT ST'
BAY ST. .
34@
JAMES
WITHIN CITY LIMITS.
4
HOUGHTON
A
15
17
YARDS
46
44
ORGAN THEREIN
PIE
RK
NIS ST.
MERSHON-WHITTIER NATATORIUM IS THE
COURT ST T
FINEST IN STATE
1
ROUTE
PAR
AND
AVE
HOLLAND
CLUB
GRATIOT AVE
41
W
b4
EZRA
62
FACTORY
GRAND TRUNK LA
R.R.
66
GRAND HAVEN
YARDS
. ROUTE
.
MICH CENTRAL R
LINTON PARK 70
72
SHERIDAN AVE
OLD
68
COAL MINE
TO FLINTI LAPEER PONTIAC
ROUTE
FACTORY DISTRICT
AVE
MICHIGAN
+ 2 General Motors-4 First Mich. Salt Well
MID
1 Sugar Fac'y
3 Detention Hosp.
STATE
Temple - 12 K. C. Club -14 Saginaw Club
PIKE SAGINAW
9 M. C. Depot
11 World's largest Bean Elev.
16 Board of Trade, 106 Genesee Avenue
PLATE
13 Slind Inst .- 15 General Hosp .- 17 Bliss Park
18 Interurb'n Sta .- 20 Germania-22 City Dock
CO ..
C. A .- 30 Federal Park-Post Office-Hoyt Lib.
: TO
-Teutonia - 31 W. S. Masonic Temple - 33 Fort
32 Elks Temple . Jeffers Park-34 Woman's Hosp .- 36 Arbeiter-38 Manual Tr. Sch .- 40 G.
OWOSSO
T. Dep .- 42 M. C. Dep .- 44 Orphans' Home
JACKSON
46 5L Mary's Hosp. - 48 Home for Friendlese
KALAMAZOO INDIANAPOLIS,
.stead-49 Merrill Field +
51 Riverside PL.
CHICAGO .
Cem-56 Home lor Aged-58 Hoyt Park-60 Calvary Cem-62 Eura Rust Park-64 Canoe Club 66 County Fair-'68 Race Track-70 Lin-
STEAM ROADS- ELECTRIC ROADS ..... .. .
ITTABAWASSEE
=51
OPTIONAL-TO FLUSHING ETCA
SHIAWASSEE RIVER
TOLEDO
ton Park -- 72 Webber Park .- 74 Forest Lawn Cemetery - 76 Mount' Olivet Cemetery.
SCALE JMILS TO 1 INCH
RIVER
WASHINGTON AYE.
16
Tablet-35 Mich. Cen. Dep .- 37 Trade School
LANSING
RO
Club-45 Presbyter'n Home-47 Home-
CEMETERY
OUTE
39 1st Mill Site-41 Fordney Pk .- 43 Country
MT. OLIVET
· NOTWITH THE OLD DETROIT. XXXXXAW TRANI
24 Auditorium-Armory-26 Market-28 Y. W.
19 Lutheran Sem'y-21 Cass Tablet-23 Y.M.C.A. 25 Hutman-Fish Lib. 27 Jail-29 Court House
CEMETERY
FOREST LAWN
6 P. M. Depot -- 8 Bobemian Hall-10 Masonic
5 Natatorium 49 7 Grand Trunk R. R. Depot
SAGINA
PARK
EZRA
WEBBER ST.
COUNTRY
TO ST. LOUIS, ALMA,
.
LINE
37
60
LARGE FACTORIES
TO VASSAR AND PT. HURON
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+MUSKEGON,
.GRAND RAPIDS
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43
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DETROIT
HESS AVE.
FACTORIES
DISTRICT AT.
MICH.
CENT. RA
ROUTE
50
54
JEFFERSON
E.
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GENESEE
52
RS
RUST . PARK
WASHINGTON AVE.
CITY HALL
ON
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COUNTY FAJR
DISTRICT
RIVER .
HO
: SIXTHEST
OD F& B.C.
t SQUARE MILES
11
32
PEER
ST.
300 ACRES OF PARKS
13
22-
FOR
BOARD OF TRADE
INFORMATION
BAD AXE
DIXIE HIGHWAY
P.M. R.R.
RM
PERE MARQUETTE RAIL ROAD
P.M. RT
LAKES AND STATE
YARDS
CADILLAC PETOSKEY ...
CARE
HARRISVILLE
BELT
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--
¥19%
1
*
CITY AUDITORIUM IS THE LARGEST IN MICHIGAN WITH A" MAGNIFICENT PIPE]
MACKINAW ST.
FACTORTES
--
MICHIDAN AVE
.M.
FACTORIES
50 Alumni Field- 52 City Hall-54 Brady Hill
TO FLUSHING HOWELL ANN ARBOR
ENOD VOD OV_SEEMANNS PETERS SAGINAW, MICH.,
AUTOMOBILE CITY MAP
-
12
4
TO HURON SHORE NIC,
ROUTE
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN
HARBOR BEACH
ARCTIC-TROPIC
GLASS
-
-
The Saginaw Board of Commerce
The Saginaw Board of Commerce is representative of all civic, com- mercial, industrial and professional interests of the community. It typi- fies a community absolutely cemented in harmony and co-operation and headed toward one direction-fostering legitimate business enterprise and extending the sphere of commercial, manufacturing and social in- fluence. Its officers and directors typify representative business men of the city. The Board solicits correspondence and is prepared to furnish complete data to investors, merchants, manufacturers, working men and homeseekers.
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