USA > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco > Polk's Crocker-Langley San Francisco city directory, 1932 > Part 2
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The harbor is controlled by the State of California and is governed by a board of harbor commissioners appointed by the Governor. Of the 48 piers, most of them are assigned to steamship companies having their own fleets and operating their own schedules. Repairs and maintenance average $1,500,000.
The water-borne commerce of San Francisco has trebled since pre-war days and now ranks second of all ports in the United States. San Francisco, according to the U. S. Department of Commerce, at the close of 1930 ranked fourth among the 49 custom districts of the U. S. in the value of imports and exports. Arrivals and departures of vessels show the following increases :
Registered Tonnage
1923 1930
Arrivals 6792 7332
Registered Tonnage 15,049,446 19,193,905
Departures 6830 7370
14,802,870 19,171,600 1930 $147,935,000
Exports Imports
155,573,000
The principal exports are mineral oil, gasoline, canned and dried fruits, barley, raw cotton, automobiles, cigarettes, tobacco, rice, flour, canned milk, redwood, canned salmon.
The principal imports are raw silk, coffee, copra, burlap, sugar, tung oil, newsprint paper, tea, cocoanut oil and tin.
The 1930 report of the U. S. Army Engineers shows that while foreign trade is important, it does not begin to approximate the enormous volume of domestic trade.
Total tonnage, Port of San Francisco, 1930.
38,162,118 Tons 4,366,278
Foreign tonnage Inland waterway tonnage Domestic Coastwise tonnage
12,874,831
25,287,287
Besides the movement of commodities by water, there is a large rail traffic in San Francisco. During 1930 it reached 212,234 carloadings in and out of the city, not including less-than-carload business.
San Francisco is also the ocean port for the great inland empire of California, 500 miles in length, 50 miles wide and containing 16,100,000 acres of irrigable land, 5,000,000 acres of which is under irrigation. Approxi- mately 33 per cent of the tonnage of the port is received from points on the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, which drain a large portion of the "back country."
San Francisco is the port of call for 137 steamship lines. Of these 20 are intercoastal; 13 Trans-Pacific, Hawaiian and Oriental; 17 United Kingdom and Continental Europe; 13 Central and South America ; 6 Australasia; 18 coastwise; 1 Alaska; 1 Africa; 5 round the world. The remainder are owned and operated by oil, lumber and fish interests.
San Francisco is served by four transcontinental railroads, which also operate north and south on the Pacific Coast and throughout the State of California.
INDUSTRIES-The 1929 preliminary Federal Census of Manufacturing showed the following condi- tions to exist in San Francisco and the territory included in what is known as the Metropolitan Area: San Francisco-Number of establishments, 2521; wage-earners, 45,098; wages, $66,461,917; value of products,
13
SAN FRANCISCO-THE CITY OF HOSPITALITY
$475,618,387. Metropolitan Area (nine counties)-Number of establishments, 4413; wage-earners, 106,537; wages, $150,254,302 ; value of products, $1,293,565,331.
The principal industries are : Printing and publishing, coffee and spice, meat slaughtering and packing, bread and bakery products, motor vehicles, men's and women's clothing, foundry and machine shop products, canning and preserving, furniture, confectionery, ice cream, flour and grain products, rice, chocolate and cocoa products, structural iron and steel, electrical machinery, tobacco, cigars, cigarettes, tinware, lumber, jute bags, paper boxes, shoes, leather goods of all kinds, etc.
Industries ranked by the annual value of their production in 1927 included :
Printing and publishing
Value of Output $39,157.504
Coffee and spice . .
31,275.785
Canning and preserving 21,369,584
Slaughtering and meat packing
20,015,907
Bread and bakery products
16.033.343
Men's and women's clothing
12,130,070
Foundry and machine shop products
11,142,131
Furniture
10,733,296
Confectionery
7,472,801
TRADE-Trade at retail in San Francisco, amounting to $499,060,416, was reported by the U. S. Census Bureau as result of 1930 census. The report shows 11,034 retail stores with a total annual business of $499,- 060,416, a payroll of $70,362,231 and full-time employment of 44,562 men and women. The per capita sales at retail amount to $788, compared to $576 in the State.
Trade at wholesale in San Francisco, amounting to $1,579,456,811, was reported by 1930 census. This volume led all other Pacific Coast cities by more than one-third of a billion dollars. The reports show 2777 establishments engaged in trade at wholesale, a payroll of $68,980,644, and employment for 32,996 people.
FINANCIAL-San Francisco has been made the Financial Center of the West as a result of those insti- tutions which have centered their operations here. Fifteen hundred national firms have established Western headquarters in San Francisco. The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco is the headquarters of the Twelfth Federal Reserve District, now the fourth largest district in the nation. One of the major regional Stock Exchanges in the United States is maintained in San Francisco. There is also a San Francisco Curb Exchange and a San Francisco Mining Exchange. The fourth largest bank in the United States has its headquarters here, and eight of the banks in San Francisco are among the first hundred banks of the nation. The figures following were furnished by the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce: Bank clearings in 1930 totaled $9,558,594,000; bank debits for 1930 totaled $15,055,143,000.
BANK CLEARINGS-FIVE YEARS
1926 $9,799,768,677 1929 $10,938,052,000 1930 ... $9,558,594,000
1927 .... .. $10,117,987,269 1928 ...... $11,491,219,374
BANK DEBITS-FIVE YEARS
1926 $12,598,486,000 1927 . . .. .$15,051,200,000 1928 .. . . $18,384,203,000
1929 . . .$16,987,478,000 1930 . .. .$15,044,143,000
San Francisco Stock Exchange and San Francisco Curb Exchange stock and bond sales for 1930 amounted to $518,323,126. Insurance-$273,000,000 worth of insurance business covering the entire West clears through San Francisco annually. Eight internationally known outside insurance companies have constructed their own buildings in San Francisco. Per capita wealth-Based on total value of all property in the city, the per capita wealth in 1931 was $5,075. Postal receipts in 1923 were $7,040,036; and 1930, $9,090,597.
PUBLIC BUILDINGS-First comes the group in the Civic Center, declared by the Duke of Connaught to be the finest thing of its kind in the world. The group consists: (1) City Hall, of classic design, sur- mounted by an immense dome, higher than the dome of the Capitol at Washington. Cost, $4,000,000. (2) Exposition Auditorium, seating capacity of 12,000 in the main auditorium, with numerous small halls; cost, $2,000,000. (3) San Francisco Public Library ; cost, $1,500,000. (4) State Building; cost, $1,000,000. There is now being built a War Memorial group of buildings, as a part of the Civic Center, to cost $4,000,000, consisting of opera house, American Legion halls, etc. A Federal building is also planned in the near future, to cost $3,000,000, and a Health Department building for the city.
California Palace of the Legion of Honor, in Lincoln Park, overlooking the Golden Gate, is a replica of the Palace of the Legion of Honor in Paris. It was presented to the city. The structure cost $2,000,000. United States Mint, located at Fifth and Mission streets, built in 1874; Post-Office Building, corner of Seventh and Mission streets; Ferry Building, at the foot of Market street on the waterfront, built by the
14
SAN FRANCISCO THE CITY OF HOSPITALITY
State in 1896 at a cost of $1,000,000. It is 659 feet long and 156 feet wide, and in addition to serving as a ferryboat terminal, contains many State offices. The Customs House and United States Appraiser's Build- ings represent an expenditure of more than $1,000,000. In Golden Gate Park are located the De Young Memorial Museum, Academy of Sciences, Steinhart Aquarium, Museum of Anthropology. At Kearny and Washington streets is the Hall of Justice, erected in 1910 at a cost of $1,000,000, containing police courts and the criminal department of the superior court.
PARKS-San Francisco is noted for its beautiful and extensive parks. There are 48 parks and 46 play- grounds, with a total acreage of 3000; others are under development. In addition to the municipal parks, the several government reservations, the largest of which is the Presidio, comprising 1542 acres, all go toward augmenting the aggregate area of the city parks. The area given above does not include the numerous golf courses in and about the city. More than $15,000,000 has been expended on municipal parks since 1870. All of San Francisco's parks are "man-made." Originally only sand dunes marked the spots where today are gardens of rarest flowers, shrubs and giant trees. Even lakes, streams, waterfalls, hills, valleys and dales were worked out by man, to say nothing of the miles of walks, bridle paths and boulevards traversing the parks. Golden Gate Park is one of the world's most noted playgrounds. It comprises 1013 acres and is about 3 miles long and a half-mile wide, extending from Stanyan street on the east to the Pacific Ocean on the west and lies in the midst of San Francisco's choice residential districts.
In the park are many museums, monuments, an aviary, acquarium, music temple, stadium, tennis courts, baseball grounds, football grounds, trotting and pacing horse track, athletic field and running track pad- docks, and children's playgrounds. There are more than 25 miles of improved driveways in the park. Wild animals of many species are to be seen, while every bird and squirrel known to California roams or flies at will through the dense woods and shrubbery. At the western end of the park is to be seen the sloop "Gjoa," the only vessel that ever navigated the Northwest Passage, and which was given to San Francisco by its owner and explorer, Captain Roald Amundsen, discoverer of the South Pole also; the gift was accepted by San Francisco June 16, 1909. The ship was hauled upon the beach and is protected by a high iron fence.
SOCIAL-San Francisco has upward of 250 churches representing many denominations and 589 listed societies, clubs, lodges, and fraternal groups, including Literary, Historical, Military, Religious, Sporting, Miscellaneous and Foreign. The cosmopolitan character of the city is reflected in the diversification of these groups and in the congregation of the churches, which include English, German, Italian, Spanish, Scandinavian, Russian, Japanese, Chinese and Indians.
There is a variety of interesting and unusual events constantly taking place, lectures, concerts, readings, recitals, Symphony Orchestra, and special exhibits of drawing, painting, sculpture and other art material, and many are free, or admission very nominal. Two public art galleries are always open, and several, semi- public, offer changing collections.
There are a number of libraries both public and private in character. There are 424,656 volumes in the city library.
The Municipal Auditorium, seating 12,000 and containing a magnificent organ, is in use for a variety of events daily throughout the year. The War Memorial Building, now under construction, will house opera, the Symphony and a permanent War Relics Museum.
HEALTH-San Francisco is a clean city with a cool, bracing, equable all-year-round open climate. The Daily Mean Temperature is 62.1 degrees, with an average daily range of 12 degrees. A study of the air conditions in twenty-three prominent cities in the United States places San Francisco in the front rank, second only to Boston. The sun shone sixty-four out of every one hundred possible hours, according to the Weather Bureau Records, for a period of more than 20 years.
Miscellaneous Information
Information pertaining to City, County, State and Federal Government, Churches, Consuls, Parks, Public Schools, Secret and Fraternal Societies, State Societies, Trade and Labor Organizations, etc., will be found in Alphabetical Section or under proper heading in Classified Section.
Removals, Alterations and Additions
Abbott Jeanette res phys Children's Hosp Abel R r Fairmont Hotel " Wm C clk h205 28th Abney Jacob K (Eugenia) emp PT&TCo h370 11th av
Abraham Christ plmbr h1693 Polk " Gaylord B eng PT&TCo r Ala
Abrahams Louise Mrs r Fairmont Hotel Aceret Herbt F (Anne) Indywkr h1319 14th av Acme Fast Freight Service H N McEwen v- pres 244 Calif R702
Acornero Arth (Helen) batterymn h125 Sanchez Acuna Danl S (Merry L) car bldr h198 Cayuga av
Adami Gabriel (Geraldine) chauf h6923 Calif Adams Chas W Pacific Coast sis mgr Savage Arms Corp r Ala
" Cashes (Clara) lab h920 Wawona
# Frank W (Cath) clk h1437 7th av
" H M r Fairmont Hotel
" Lester E (Viola) auto mech h1059 Post
" Robt D mining eng 408 Stockton R400
Wm F sec Cereal Products Refining Corp r Sausalito
Addison Jas L pkr h2510 Van Ness av
Afanassief Pola labty asst Mckesson-Langley- Michaels Co r1360 Post
Agbuye Henry (Lauriana R) car bldr h1252 Ellis Agnew Theo R clk Dean Witter & Co r Okld Agullar Gerardo (Margarita) truckmn h3345 22đ Ahern John trucker r3825 21st
Ahlberg Ruth E bkpr r Okld
Ahlborn Otto slsmn Roos Bros r Bkly Ahpel Henry Mrs r Fairmont Hotel
Aitchison Helen B bkpr Western Hdw Co r Ala Akey Olen M eng PT&TCo r Burlingame
Albatros Steel Furn Co Ltd 39 Natoma
Albers A H warrant officer USA r295 27th av " Clement photog r1240 7th av
Albert Edw J clk SPCo r San Bruno
Alberts Chas (Rose) truckmn h514 Madrid Albury Geo formn Bodinson Mfg Co r129 Capistrano av
Aldas Arcadia A r1170 Turk
Alexander Amasa slsmn Sherman Clay & Co r2535 Balboa
" Egbert clk Board of Trade r Burlingame
" Eugenia J bkpr Forderer Cornice Wks r Bur- lingame
# Louis L firmn Raphael Weill & Co r1499 Sutter
" & Lavenson (J H Lavenson) whol elec supp 715 Bryant
Allen Claude D dist mgr Garlock Packing Co r Burlingame
" H Mrs r El Cortez Hotel
# Rawley C clk U S Customs r2236 15th Allenwood Agnes clk r1345 4th av Allie A J r980 Bush
Allied Petroleum Corp J B DeMaria pres 114 Sansome R623
Allmond Allen E slsmn r816 Fell
Allott R M Ist It USA r Presidio
Alloys Co M H Newell mgr chemical mirs 343 Sansome 12th Al
Allred Eug A (Irene) bellmn h275 Turk # K P r305 Hyde
# Melvin (Laura) mach h751 Clayton
Allyn Clyde F (Hazel) slsmn Western Loose Leaf Co h990 Bay
Alonso Jose (Carmen) factywkr h3149 Harrison Altshuler S Bud jr mgr Budda Advertising Co r847 32d av Alvarado Peter (Nana) fire bldr SPCo h1205 Guerrero
Ambrose Vernon G (Annabelle) v-pres Delray Corp h170 San Leandro way
American Multigraph Sales Co H D Kippin div mgr 821 Market R937
Andersen Theo A (Barbara) mech h3755 23d Anderson Bruce registrar Heald Coll r866 Ur- ban dr
" Hilda registrar Heald Coll r770 O'Farrell
Marquette D with S F Bank r San Mateo " R B v-pres T A Strobridge Inc r San An- selmo
# W G Mrs r Fairmont Hotel
# Wm P (Margt) clk h1430 Plymouth av Andrade Jos (Verna) wtchmn h78 Ney
Archibald Glen A eng PT&TCo r740 Leaven- worth
Argonaut Petroleum Co W S Bayless pres D J Murphy v-pres J E Krueger sec-treas 235 Montgy R1655
Arias Antoni (Elsle) pntr h2580 Howard
Armenta Manuel (Alejandrina) lab h145 Fill- more
Asher Grant W bkpr Hammond Lbr Co r Bkly Ashton Valve Co E C Kenyon rep 198 2d
Asimakis Jas M slsmn Mangrum-Holbrook Co r695 Sutter
Associated Physicians Laboratories Ltd J E Colston mgr 870 Market R230
# Retail Credit Men of San Francisco Stockton
15 Aultman Jack (Anna) tailor h230 Eddy
Automotive Tariff Bureau F J Coulter mgr 870 Market R340
Avery Wm H r Fairmont Hotel
Ayres Stewart asst cash McDonnel & Co r Okld Babcock Evelyn C clk r459 Broderick
# Seymour R supt George Reproduction Co r Redwood City
Babin Jessie M sten r851 Calif
Baehr Walter H with S F Bank r San Mateo Bagnasacco Emilio D (Serfina) waiter h1440 Vallejo
Baird Jackson r Fairmont Hotel
Baker Benj F (Helen) emp PT&TCo h115 Gough
" Clarence E asst librn Call Pub Co r275 Parls " Della L bkpr L H Bennett Co r Okld
Baker Jackson D (Julia M) with S F Bank h415 | Berry Hotels System Herbt Choynski pres B S Carl
# Kath Mrs forewn Mission Knitting Wks r226 San Carlos av
" Robt J store mgr Manning's Inc r Sausalito Baldanzi Jas (Helen) tile str h1550 Irving Baldwin Chas H r Fairmont Hotel
Ball Grace E tchr Dorothy Durham Sch for Secretaries
" Ballard Geo C clk Board of Trade r Okld Ballien Rae O (Julia) tel installer h1261 30th av Bamberger Julius Mrs r El Cortez Hotel
Banfield Dorothy G clk Board of Trade r Kentfield
Bangasscr Fred M firmn Am Tr Co r Ala Banta Almena A cash Provident Mut Life Ins Co r Ala
# Chas F jr clk Am Tr Co r Ala
Barber Harold B (Evelyn) slsmn Roos Bros h225 College av
Barbera Rosemary C clk r818 Bay
Barcelo Ramon (Petro) lab h48 Woodworth av Barnett John W asst purch agt Univ of Calif r Albany
Barr Geo eng GECo r Burlingame
Barry John J clk SPCo r Okld
Bartle Rose siwm r190 O'Farrell
Barton Geo F acct S H Frank & Co r Mill Valley
" Robt C eng PT&TCo r Ala
Baskett Howard B cash Bodinson Mfg Co r Bkly Bateman Lafayette K (Ruth) auto mech h715 Clementina
Batterton Frances M bkpr St Mary's Hosp r2892 Folsom
Bauer Gustave A (Bertha) electn h2279 26th av Bauman Roy clk Am Tr Co r138 Anza
Baumann Frank with W P Fuller & Co r506 Eureka
Baumeister Fred G (Nadine) sIsmn McLeod Mercantile Co h3446 19th
Bauter Dale D (Kathryn) cngr h2711 Sacto Beacom Arth J staff asst PT&TCo r Okld
Beard Walter C (Madge) eng PT&TCo h1039 Santiago
" Willard (Lucille) clk h3757 Clay
Bearing Specialty Co R R Reim mgr bearings 165 Fell
Beattie Agnes acct Ins Co of North Am rl133 Fell Beatty Dalsy labty techn Children's Hosp r651 Scott Beau John A sismn Walworth Cal Co r1429 4th av
Beauchamp Hortense L clk Natl Fire Ins Co r Bkly
" Victor P slsmn Pac Foundry Co r Bkly Beaver Geo L sismn GECo r Bkly
Beck Edna M bkpr Auburn Fuller Co r3101 Gough
" Lester clk Mckesson-Langley-Michaels Co r Mill Valley
Becker John B formn SPCo r Bkly
Bedford Geo J Rev asst pastor St Mary's Cathedral r1100 Franklin
Bedolfe Florence with S F Bank r2363 Van Ness av
Beeson Jack sismn r230 Eddy
Beeton Harry L bkpr Am Tr Co r Okld
Belau Rudolph with S F Bank r1051 Divisadero Belden Harry F clk Am Tr Co r Ala
Bell Edith bkpr McDonnell & Co r Sausalito " Eliz N asst to program mgr KPO r717 Bay Beloy Antonio cook h1170 Turk
Belrose Bernice tel opr Fagan Eastland & Co r Okld
Beltz Bessie M Mrs statistician Roos Bros r465 28th av
Bence Robt V program dept KPO h734 Bush Bendinelli Nello bkpr Am Tr Co r3015 Geary Benedict Melvin (Alta) elev dir h965 Geary Bening Hazel K bkpr Knight-Counihan Co r Bkly Benjamin Electric Mfg Co M F Steel mgr lighting fixtures 448 Bryant Benjamin Percy E Pac Coast agt New England Steamship Co r Burlingame
Benn Jas J slsmn W P Fuller & Co r Okld " Matthew D with S F Bank r2802 21st Bennett Claire R lt col USA r Ft Mason
" Horton G (Gladys) emp PT&TCo h2737 Sutter Benning Vincent H (Lillian A) clk h3896 22đ Bennington Gorden agt Am Natl Ins Co r Okld Benson Cecil R slmn GECo r Burlingame
Bent Wylie C rep Standard Statistics Co Inc of N Y h2137 Vallejo
Bente Wm G asst comptroller W P Fuller & Co r Okld
Bentley Mark bkpr Pig'n Whistle r7400 Geary Benton Alton T (Aurelin) asst mgr Hotel Oxford " Clay with Hanni & Girerd r343 Ralston
Beresford Jos with S F Bank r1556 Hampshire Berger A Mrs r Fairmont Hotel
# Bernadeen bkpr Snyder Bros Knitting Mills r2027 Howard
# Leo (Winifred) clk hl18 Avalon av
" Jas B tchr J S Drew r Bkly
Bergeron Rudolph jr fuel oil atndt SPCo r2017 San Jose av Bergman Lennea bkpr Tiedemann & Harris r935 Sutter
Berkowitz Grace examiner Snyder Bros Knit- ting Mills r3222 Magnolia
Bermardi Antonio (Viola) mach h518 Athens Bernardi Giovanni (Theresa) mach h65 29th " Peter (Anielia) blrmkr h229 Pixley
Bernthal Herbt G with S F Bank r731 2d av
Berry Aircraft Ltd G A Berry pres 1179 Mar- ket R501
" Benj S sec Berry Hotels System h2820 Vallejo " Clarence r El Cortez Hotel
Berry sec 110 Sutter R604 # Margt M sten r1701 Beach
" Ralph D (Mabel V) emp PT&TCo h171 Pine- hurst way
# Wm E chemist r20 12th
Bertelsen Lage clk East Asiatic Co r Bkly Bertilyon Emily clk Getz Bros & Co r Afa Bertram Thos (Isabelle) with S F Bank h34 Santa Rita av
Bessier Chas H music tchr h1616 O'Farrell Best Chas E clk r555 Buena Vista av
Besthorn Mildred emp Fireman's Fund Ind Co r Okld
Beverly Wm J store kpr United Engineering Co r Okld Beyfuss Oscar J (Alice M) ship broker 262 Callf r Mill Valley
Beynon Margerite C sten W P Fuller & Co r Okld
Bias Geo W r Fairmont Hotel
Bickel A F Mrs r550 Geary
Bidwell Ruth S sten PT&TCo r Okld
Bierbaum Earl H ins agt 828 Quintara
Bigger Madelyn Mrs r550 Geary
Bigler Geo C printer Call Pub Co r Burlingame
" Ona labtry asst Mckesson-Langley-Michaels Co r584 Page
Bing Harry labtry asst Mckesson-Langley- Michaels Co r780 Jackson
Bird Clinton F (Charlotte) clk h1895 Jackson
" Robt M dept mgr Sherman Clay & Co h495 32d av
Birkett Ernest J clk W P Fuller & Co r Bkly Bishop Anna K nurse St Mary's Hosp Bitgood F S h110 Frederick
Bittante John (Rose) mach h244 Paris
Bjorklund Mary (wid John) mgr Scholz Erick- son & Co h152 Fremont
Black Elsie M sten Am Tr Co r Okld
Blake Fred E (Gertrude) engr h2466 Geary Blanding Gordon r Fairmont Hotel
Blodgett Hugh A treas Dex Food Products Co r1220 Leavenworth
Blomquist Louis slsmn Manning's Inc r788 Arguello blvd
Bloom Etta Mrs r550 Geary
" Jack (Emma) car bidr SPCo h125 Newman " Lloyd (Adele) with S F Bank h339 Cordova Bloomquist A cptmn John Breuner Co rl18 Andover
Blue Ribbon Products Co Inc G J Harney pres F L Hussey v-pres A J Donaldson sec-treas tea and coffee 498 Natoma
Blum Julius-Carter Co (A J Hayes C W Carter) bldg matl 46 Natoma
Blundell Blanche E siswn r520 Geary
Blunden Jack A clk Honolulu Oil Corp r Ala Bock Harold J with Kurtzman & Waite r248 McAllister
Bohemian Floral Co Harry Dubins mgr 599 Post Bolrard Josephine Q bkpr Raphael Weill & Co r Bkly
Bollier Geo J eng PT&TCo r OkId
Bolmen Percv W radio servmn Sherman Clay & Co r Okld
Bolz Albt W clk W P Fuller & Co r Bkly Bond Drug Co Harry Brundage mgr 151 Market Bonetti A Mrs r Fairmont Hotel
Bonnell Kenneth R engr Am Engr & Color Plate Co r Redwood City
Boolio Carlo (Am) waiter h1748 Leavenworth Booth Edna clk r315 Santa Ana av
Bordet Rene M acct Ins Co of North Am r1140 Pine
Borelli Domonico (Eliz) car repr h354 Edin- burgh
Borin Hal slsmn Sherman Clay & Co r1167 Bush Bortman Edith inspr Hotel El Cortez r434 Mason Bonchillon Dorothy hostess Geo Haas & Sons r811 Geary
Bovelli Jos (Lecy B) car bldr h735 Naples Bovo Jean J clk Am Tr Co r Okld Bowers John P (Lida) pipe ftr h160 Goethe Boyd Geo P clk Am Tr Co r1590 Sacto Brabant Arth J bkpr Am Tr Co r Okld
Bradford Edla cash Waterhouse-Lester-Scovel Co r1206 Valencia
Bradley Wm H (Norma) mech h742 46th av Bradshaw Frank H clk r378 Golden Gate av Bramson Sarah Mrs r550 Geary
Brandvold Daisy V office asst Sav-Oil Ring Mfg Co r32 Southwood dr
Brassy Harry formn Mckesson-Langley-
Michaels Co r Okld
Breemis Mary (wid Henry) r3065 Clay Brian Victor C (Josie) car bldr h743 Carolina Briggs Mildred cash Four Fifty Sutter Corp r840 Van Ness av
Britter Jas R (Helma) clk h1608 Funston av Brockhoff Chas R bkpr Am Tr Co r Mill Valley Brocklehurst E Claire sten Hammond Lbr Co r Bkly
Brown Kenneth L eng PT&TCo r Bkly Browne F A Mrs r Fairmont Hotel " L E r550 Geary
Brubaker Walter S mgr Granberg Meter Corp r Okld
Brul Eddo J (Ray) clk h2242 Polk Brunetti Clo (Palmira) fctywkr r463 Greenwich Buchan John (Mabel) clk h739 Congo Buchanan Robt (Rosalle) lab h1350 Guerrero
Buck Madeline Mrs sten Dean Witter & Co r Bkly
Buckley Chris r Fairmont Hotel
Buell Leone L bkpr Raphael Weill & Co r Okld Buhn Amalla cash Ins Co of North Am r555 O'Farrell
Bull J H Commodore r Fairmont Hotel " Maud H clk SPCo r923a Sacto
Burke Clarence J (Gene) with Dairy Delivery Co h1766a Univ
16
REMOVALS, ALTERATIONS AND ADDITIONS
Burkhart Max F (Frances) Iron wkr h2495a San Bruno av
Burnett John H (Frances) mech h575 Eddy Burnham Kenneth (Mary) tel repr h171 Page Burns Archibald E eng PT&TCo r Okld " Thos A (Florence) solr r92 7th
Bush A C r Fairmont Hotel
Busteede Anna pub sten 690 Market R520 r570 Calif
Cadogan Edw F (Pearl) mach r312 Orient Cahoon C W r Fairmont Hotel
Cain Ira P printer r521 Bartlett
Calderwood Everett M eng PT&TCo r Palo Alto Caldwell Chas H (Margt) clk 757 Leavenworth California Janitorial & Supply Co Inc M Rosenberk pres T Rosenberg sec G Rosen- berg treas 938 Howard
Callahan Louis K (Cath) auto mech r2211 20th av
Campana Angelo E (Louisa) waiter r1416 Ar- guello blvd
Campbell John (Cath) pntr r1166 Brunswick " Robt R photog Call Pub Co r Okld Cannon Jos bkpr r2008 Sutter
Castagna Ralph H r Fairmont Hotel Caughell Robt C eng PT&TCo r San Mateo Chamberlain Arth H r230 Eddy
" Robt C clk East Asiatlc Co rBkly
" Theo with Call Pub Co r Redwood City Chamberlin Jas A eng PT&TCo r Millbrae Chapman Thos (Carman) lab h123 San Jose av Chase Frances A clk Am Tr Co r Bkly Chesser Wm O (Frances) div mgr Call Pub Co h2710 Baker
Child Lorraine sten r22 College ter Chilstrom Maude Mrs tchr r1030 Capp Chopin Aug clo clnr h476 Bartlett
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