Polk's Crocker-Langley San Francisco city directory, 1933, Part 2

Author: R.L. Polk & Co
Publication date: 1930
Publisher: San Francisco, Cal. : R.L. Polk & Co.
Number of Pages: 1480


USA > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco > Polk's Crocker-Langley San Francisco city directory, 1933 > Part 2


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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The principal imports are raw silk, coffee, copra, burlap, sugar, tung oil, newsprint paper, tea, cocoanut oil and tin.


The 1931 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, 1931 35,480,230 Tons 3,603,484 10,382,881 21,493,865 16


Foreign tonnage Inland waterway tonnage Domestic Coastwise tonnage


Besides the movement of commodities by water, there is a large rail traffic in San Francisco. During 1932 it reached 126,756 carloadings in and out of the city, not including less-than-carload business.


13


SAN FRANCISCO-THE CITY OF HOSPITALITY


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 133 steamship lines. Of these 17 are intercoastal; 14 Trans-Pacific, Hawaiian and Oriental; 16 United Kingdom and Continental Europe; 11 Central and South America ; 6 Australasia ; 18 coastwise ; 1 Africa, 2 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 Final (latest available) Federal Census of Manufacturing showed the follow- ing conditions to exist in San Francisco and the territory included in what is known as the Metropolitan Area; San Francisco-Number of establishments, 2526; wage-earners, 45,482; wages, $67,911,982; value of products, $483,712,296. Metropolitan Area (nine counties)-Number of establishments, 3903 ; wage-earners, 93,797 ; wages, $138,059,176; value of products, $1,165,683,465.


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.


San Francisco industries ranked by the annual value of their production in 1929 included :


Value of Output


Printing and publishing


$43,936,817 Coffee and spice (1929 not shown separately) (1927) . 31,275,785


Canning and preserving 20,120,881


Slaughtering and meat packing


18,762,951


Bread and bakery products


17,925,420


Foundry and machine shop products


13,649,755


Men's and women's clothing


11,050,639


Ship and boat building


8,901,259


Furniture


8,752,853


Confectionery


7,255,773


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 11,304 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 $1,784,174,952, was reported by 1930 census. This volume led all other Pacific Coast cities by more than 400 million dollars. The reports show 3154 establish- ments engaged in trade at wholesale, a payroll of $77,535,544, and employment for 37,545.


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, the third 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 Ex- change and a San Francisco Mining Exchange. The fifth largest bank in the United States has its head- quarters here, and six of the banks in San Francisco are among the first fifty banks of the nation. The figures following were furnished by the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce: Bank clearings in 1932 totaled $5,- 053,854,000; bank debits for 1932 totaled $7,742,014,000.


BANK CLEARINGS-FIVE YEARS 1930. . $9,558,594,000 1931 . . . . $7,142,113,000


1927 . ... .$10,117.987,269 1928. . . . . $11,491,219,374 1929. . . .$10,938,052,000


BANK DEBITS-FIVE YEARS


1927. $15,051,200,000 1928. $18,384,203,000 1929. $16,987,478,000


1930. $15,044,143,000 1931. . . . $11,178,630,000


San Francisco Stock Exchange and San Francisco Curb Exchange stock sales for 1932 amounted to 8,- 460,732 shares. Insurance-$273,000,000 worth of insurance business covering the entire West clears through


14


SAN FRANCISCO-THE CITY OF HOSPITALITY


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 1932 was $5,650. Postal receipts in 1923 were $7,040,036; and 1932, $8,006,085.


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. (5) War Memorial group of buildings, as a part of the Civic Center, cost, $4,000,000, consisting of opera house, American Legion halls, etc. A Federal building is under construction and will cost $3,000,000.


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 Sev- enth and Mission streets; Ferry Building, at the foot of Market street on the waterfront, built by the 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 Buildings repre- sent 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 Washing- ton 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. Two gigantic bridge projects are underway, the Golden Gate Bridge and the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. The combined cost of these bridges amounts to $107,815,000.


PARKS-San Francisco is noted for its beautiful and extensive parks: There are 48 parks and 50 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 Franciscos 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, aquarium, 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 448,824 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 Group, consisting of the Opera House and the Veterans' Administration Building, houses 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.


Removals, Alterations and Additions


Abot Alex emp Women's City Club r1241 Bush | Bianchi L P r Hotel Olympic Abrahamson Building 319 Grant av


Academy Building 356 Pine


Acanthus Apartments 120 Pierce


Accornero Clara A bkbndr Utilities Co r82612 Alabama


" Pierina P bkbndr Bankers Utilities Co r82614 Alabama


Ackerman A C r Hotel Olympic


Ackers Emily F clk R G Dun & Co r Okld Adams Beulah E sten T A Strobridge Inc 1338 23đ av


" Ellsworth with Jas Houlihan Inc r Concord " Leland D v-pres Leslie-California Salt Co r 1960 Vallejo


₩ Louis clk r335 Hyde


Ahern John elev onr r155 Colorado


Akins Elene r329 24th av


" Margt nurse r329 24th av


Albert Apartments 2027 Hyde


Alberts Mildred M typist r415 Jones


Allegri Fred sec Allegri Import Co r308 29th av " Import Co Ltd Harry Lichtenstein v-pres Fred Allegri sec art goods 245 Post Allison Roy R (Edith) engr r167 8th Almar Court Apartments 337 Hyde Almarel Apartments 1025 Sutter


Altschuler Saml B jr adv h847 32d av


American Finance Service V G Wise mgr 625 Market R610


Amerio Francisco J (Teresa) lab r630 Kansas Ames Harriet M sec W R Ames Co r Los Altos Anderson Chester factywkr r706 35th av


" Fern L clk r1467 Lombard " Harry W (Alma L) caulker h850 Innes av Anzac Apartments 854 Fell


Arcadia Apartments 522 Hyde


Arena Jos sten Pac Coast Paper Co r Burlin- game


Armory Building 14th and Mission


Armsby Building 629 Howard


Artists Building 535 Sacto


Associated Dental Supply Co F D French pres C L Ponsford sec 835 Howard 3d fl


Badvelian Deran stockmn U S Rubber Prod- ucts r127 Ellis


Baehr Walter H with San Francisco Bank r San Mateo


Bailey Walter E clk r925 Sutter


Bally Adda slswn r192 Duncan


Baboa Park San Jose av cor Ocean av


Baldwin Apartments 1036 Polk


Bamut Fred W hair drsr r226 Moraga Barbara Hotel 125 Mason


Bardwell Judson E reporter R G Dun & Co r Sausalito


Barry Wm r3718 24th


Bates Dudley S (Elsie B) agcy dir N Y Life Ins Co r13 Presidio ter


Beagles Chester A (Lois) ins agt r780 Post Beauchamp Fredk A (Hamilton Beauchamp & Woodworth} r Bkly


Beguelin Gerald with DC&H Co r37 Cornwell Bell Paul T agt N Y Life Ins Co r Okld Belshaw Building 142 Beale


Belton Edwina D Mrs sten Coml Credit Co r1959 Oak


Benn Matthew D with San Francisco Bank r2802 21st


Bennetts Albt E (Alice R) h906 Central av Beresford Jos with San Francisco Bank r1556 Hampshire


Bernal Park Precita av bet Alabama and Fol- som


Blely Jos cond r461 Spruce


Biedebach Wm F v-pres Leslie-California Salt | Co r Los Angeles


Blake Fred E (Gertrude) engr r2466 Geary Bliesath Lena r274 Roosevelt way " Margaretha r274 Roosevelt way


Blohm Herman dept mgr R G Dun & Co r563 7th av


Bode Chas H clk r1709 Jones


" Lester G clk 11709 Jones


Bolger John E sec Shipowners & Mchts Tug Co r737 Lake


Boock Cecilia M sec Jenkins-Half Index Card Co r547 26th av


Brandenstein Building 88 1st


Brockle Wm I (Eliz) lab h465 Hoffman av


Brosnan Julia clk r120 27th


Brown David W clk r633 Irving


" Erle M analyist R G Dun & Co r Okid


" Embert M sismn r633 Irving


" Lavinia B clk Collr of Customs r1295 42d av " Steve sismn Willys-Overland Pacific Co r 1158 Sutter


Bruce Eugenia Mrs bkpr Pac Coast Paper Co ₸4229 21st


Brummett Sylvan H lino opr r318 21st av


Buckley Raymond J (Grace) sls mgr Coml Credit Co r149 Idora av


Bugner Arth F clk r1548 Page


Building Trades Temple 200 Guerrero


Burmester Carl F reporter R G Dun & Co r Okld


Burney Laurens K reporter R G Dun & Co r Sausalito


Cabell Nora r3441 Washn


Cailteux John H mach h334 Burrows


California House Auditorium Turk and Polk " Insurance Building 550 Calif


Callahan Building 1112 Market


Campbell Marion S r1930 Gough


Canton Bank Building 500 Montgy


Casa del Rev Anartments 1134 Jackson


Chalmers Florence E sten N Y Life Ins Co r378 28th


Chapin Cath M r2108 Washn


Christiansen Leo E clk r104 Guerrero


Cini Anita r71 Garcia av


Clement Alyce C priv sec N Y Life Ins Co r Sausalito


Cody Jared M (Bertha) cash N Y Life Ins Co h627 43d av


Coenen Nellie V nurse r1842 Fell


Cole Louis M aud Coml Credit Co r2677 Larkin Coleman Frank J (Frances) dept mgr Am Engr & Color Plate Co 13360 24th


Collins Ella M sten r663 Fell


Cope John E (Grace R) slsmn Golden State & Miners Iron Wks r19 16th av


Coyle Kathleen tchr h495 17th av


Crawford Benj T steelwkr r707 10th av


Currie Robt A (Elsie) (Pacific Heating Co) h 630 36th av


DaSilva Alvaro F E with Loyalty Group r Corte Madera


Denvir Suzanne A smstrs r380 Ellis


Dilger Karl (Halperin Sheet Metal Works) r750 Fell


Dividend Building 354 Pine


Dolliver Building 617 Mission


Driggs Baughn B credit mn Coml Credit Co r267 Niagara


Dryden John R r2473 Jackson


Dunleavy Jos G (Mary E) acct h36 Levant


Dyas Emma r565 8th av


Dyke Edw clk r39 Excelsior av


Eastman Jack W x16 Camelia av


" Marian D r18 Camelia av


" Royal C (Laura F) h16 Camelia av


Edmonds S T (M Agnes) plumber h3946 Calif Ellis Ronald R printer r160 Eddy


Erickson Edw (Mabel) jan h287 Guerrero Fall Ruth clk r875 45th av


Fannucci Danre (Assumptina) boilermkr h849b Bryant


Feeley Edw electn r846 45th av


Ferry Bake-Rite Co (O V Burrell Walter Town- send) bakers Ferry bldg


Fick Frank with DC&HCo r1542 Union


Finnigan Maud Mrs h542 Bowdoin


" Ruth kodak fnshr r542 Bowdoin


Force Wm M collr R G Dun & Co r190 Al- hambra


Fowler Chas jan 1876 Harrison


Frazer Noval clk r231 Ashbury


French Eliz r1450 Hayes


Fridiami John (Edvige) ins agt h1273 Union


Fritcher Sidney C aud Coml Credit Co r Bur- lingame


Gail Theo baker r349 18th av


Garcia Jos G (Gaviette) lab h1353 Kearny


Gilfillan Jas C (Lorraine) electn h1760 Golden Gate av


Gillett Henri stevedore r3301 San Bruno av Glen Park Chenery sw cor Mizpah


GLOBE & REPUBLIC INSURANCE CO OF AMERICA, Wallace-Phipps General Agency Inc Genl Agts, Ground Floor Insurance Exchange Bldg, 427 California, Tel KE arny 6456


Goodman Arth P (Winn & Goodman) r Okld Greene Chas C jr credit mgr Coml Credit Co r San Mateo


" Robert C (Jessie) solr Coml Credit Co h848 31st av


Guisto Agostino formn W R Ames Co r2530 19th Harris Carroll T v-pres-treas Mackenzie & Harris r Redwood City Hinrichs Henry E (Rose C) (Stamm-Hinrichs Agency) h209 Lincoln way


Hobbs Margt nurse r1842 Fell


Hogan Danl M (Alice) electro h2399 Bryant


Holland A F eng r542 Bowdoin


Holt H D sls mgr Westn Litho Co


Hughes Geo T electro r7 Delano av


Hunt Chas A (Nellie) electro h925 Geary


Hurd Cora bkpr Easterday Supply Co r845 O'Farrell


Hu Wai Kee (Kum Nui) ins agt h1056 Clay Immel Ernest S aud Coml Credit Co r Bkly Jansen Cecelia beauty opr r1275 7th av


Kingman Alan sIsmn R G Dun & Co r Bkly Krueckel Frank A (Annie) clk h1418 Steiner


Larson Louis A dept mgr R G Dun & Co r Okld Levy Hayland (Alice M) clk h225 Fell


Mackenzie Geo W pres-genl mgr Mackenzie & Harris r Okld


" & Harris Inc G W Mackenzie pres-genl mgr C T Harris v-pres treas typesetting comp 659 Folsom


Martin Violet r4208 Mission


Masters Lillie r4208 Mission


Meredith A Gordon clk r1007 Sutter


Meyer C M Mrs nurse 2655 Broderick


Moffatt Arnold V reporter R G Dun & Co r598 Bush


Moulton Dorothy sten Coml Credit Co r2020 Calif


Moyer Violette C r462 33d av


Myer Nanette W ins agt 2480 Washn


Nugent Anna r1431 Castro


Miscellaneous Information


Information pertaining to City, County, State and Federal Gov- ernment, Churches, Consuls, Parks, Public Schools, Secret and Fraternal Societies, State Societies, Trade and Labor Organiza- tions, etc., will be found in Alphabetical Section or under proper heading in Classified Section.


YOUR CITY DIRECTORY


Is Something More than- A Book of Names and Addresses A Catalogue of Trades and Professions A Street Guide


It is A Service that brings you daily in closer touch with your customers and friends


It Enables You to address them each and everyone To avoid the offense of incorrect spelling and addressing


To find new customers


To find local sources of supply for hundreds of articles


It Will Save You time and money both in buying and selling. It will make you more efficient and protect your standing as an accurate and progressive business man


Your directory gives you an accurate bird's-eye view of your city, its institutions, inhabitants, government and buildings


Always Use the Latest Edition


POLK'S CROCKER-LANGLEY STREET AND AVENUE GUIDE SAN FRANCISCO 1933


Copyright, 1933, by R. L. Polk & Co., of California


EXPLANATIONS


In the following list the streets are arranged in alphabetical order.


According to the method adopted in this city for numbering buildings, Market Street is the starting point for numbers on all streets running from it in a northerly, southerly or westerly direction, and the water front for all streets running therefrom in a westerly or southwesterly direc- tion. The numbers on all streets not commencing at Market Street or the water front run in conformity with the numbers of the main streets run- ning parallel with them, except in the case of a few streets which are numbered in an Irregular manner.


On all streets between the water front and Central Avenue the even numbers are on the right-hand side, and the odd numbers on the left, starting from the point of beginning. Beyond Central Avenue most of the streets have been numbered in a contrary manner. One hundred numbers. or as many thereof as are necessary, are allotted to each block bounded by main streets; for instance, Montgomery Street commences at Market, and the main streets crossing as you proceed north are Sutter, Bush, Pine, etc. Therefore, any numbers between 1 and 100 will be found on the right or left-hand side of the street between Market and Sutter, between 100 and 200 from Sutter to Bush, between 200 and 300 from Bush to Pine.


In the streets which are numbered, a dash (-) indicates that the cross street does not extend to that side; (o), the street borders on the bay, or public park, cemetery, etc., consequently there are no buildings on blocks thus designated; (c), the street is not opened through the block, or is Interrupted in Its course at that point by a public square, cemetery, etc .: (e), end of street.


Abbreviations-N, north; E, east; S, south; W, west; Av, avenue; bet, between; nr, near.


ABBEY-From north side Seventeenth bet Dolores and Church


ALADDIN TER - From east side Taylor bet Union and Filbert


ALAMEDA-From the bay west to Daggett and from Caro- lina west to Harrison north of Fifteenth


Cross Sts N


S 1


Channel


2


101


200


201


Kansas 300


301


Vermont ...


400 401


Douglas


.800


801


San Bruno av. . 500 501


Hoffman av


000


901


Utah 600


601


Grandview av


. . (e) (e)


Cross Sts E


Fulton


2


1


Grove


100


101


Hayes


200


201


Fell . (c)


(c)


Oak .


400


401


Pare


500


501


Harrison (e) {e )


ALAMO SQ-Bet Steiner. Scott. Hayes and Fulton ALBANY-From Flint west to Fairbanks


ADAM-From Army bet San Bruno av and Holladay av. south to Eve


ADDISON-From Bemis West to Castro


ADELAIDE PL-From west side Taylor bet Geary and Post


ADELE CT-From north side Jackson bet Stockton and Powell


ADELINE - From Moreland northwest to Diamond ADLER-From east aide Co- lumhus av bet Pacific and Broadway, west to Grant av ADMIRAL-From 4150 Mis- sion west to Alemany av AERIAL WAY-From Ortegs het 11th and 12th avs south to Pacheco


AGATE AL-From north side Post bet Taylor and Jones AGNON AV-From Crescent av nr Mission southwest to Jus- tin dr


AQUA WAY - From Teresita blvd 2 blocks east Portola dr bet Evelyn way and Rock- dale west to Chavez


AHLER'S CT-Sonth aide Fil- bert bet Buchanan and Web- ster


AILEEN-From north side Fifteenth bet Guerrero and Dolores


ALABAMA-From Division bet Florida and Harrison sonth to Esmeralda av Cross Sts


Division


2


Alameda 100 101


Fifteenth 200


201


Sixteenth 300


Serenteentb 400


Mariposa


500


600


601 701


Twentieth 800 801 901


Twenty-first 900


Twenty-second .. 1000 1001


Twenty-third .1100


1101


Twenty-fourth .1200 1300 1301


Twenty-fifth


.1400 1401


Twenty-sixth Army 1500 1501


.1600


1601


Montcalm


Norwich


Rutledge


Ripley 1800 1801


Waltham Esmeralda (e) (e)


ALVARADO-From west side San Jose ar bet Twenty-sec- ond and Twenty-third west to Grand View av


Cross Sts N 2


S


San Jose &F .


1


Guerrero


(c)


(c)


Dolores . (c)


(c)


ARIZONA (South S F)-From the bay south to Indie Basin ARKANSAS From south side Sixteenth bet Connecticut and Wisconsin south to Tu- lare


Laguna .....


GOO


601


Buchanan (e) (0)


ACME AL-From Seward nr Douglass, southwest to Grand View av


ACORN AL-From west side Leavenworth bet California and Sacramento


Potrero av 700


701


ACTON-From 5900 Mission south to County Line


York 900 901


Bryant 1000 1001


Florida .1100 1101


ALVORD-From Evans av bet Ship and Boalt southwest to County Line


AMADOR (South S. F.) - From the bay south of Islais to Arthur av


AMAZONAV-From 5101 Mission east to Moscow


Wyoming


Ohio . 2


1


Oklahoma 100


101


(0) (.)


Massachusetts . . 300


301 401


ASHBURY TER-From south side Piedmont southeast to L'pper ter


Maryland ...


500


501


Louisiana . ...


600


601


ASHTON AV-From Lake View ar west of Jules ar north to Ocean er


Michigan ...


800


801


Illinois . 000 901


Third .1000 1001


Tennessee 1100 1101


Minnesota . 1200 1201


Indiana 1300 1301


Iowa . 1400 1401


1500


1501


Mississippi . Texas


Missouri 1800 1801


Connecticut . .. 1900 1901


Arkansas . 2000 2100 2101 2200 2201 2001 AUGUST AL-From north side Green bet Powell and Mason north to Union Wisconsin . ... .2


Carolina . . . . .


De Haro 2300 2301


Rhode Island ...


2400 2401


Kansas . .....


Vermont . . .. . .


2600 2601


San Bruno ar. . . 2700 2701 Adam Andrew . 2800


Cross Sts N


8


Larkin 2


1


Polk


100 101


York


2900


Van Ness av. . . 200


201


Precita ar 2901


Bryant . 2950 2951


. 3000


3001


Alabama


3050 3051


3101


Folsom


3200


3201


Shotwell


Howard 3300


Mission 3400 3401


Bartlett 3450


Valencia 3500 3501


. 0


San Jose ar .. .3600 3601


Guerrero


3700


3701


Dolores . 3


Church . . 3900


3901


Sanchez .4000 4001


Noe .4100 4101


Castro 4200 4201


Diamond . .4300 4301


Douglass . 4400 4401


Hoffman av . . . . 4500 4501 Burnham . 4600 4601


...


Burnett av ... . 4700 4701 La Place ar ... .- - 4801


ARROYO WAY-From Mari-


etta dr southwest to Bella Vista way


ARTHUR AV - From Water Front northwest to Islais


Creek


ASH -From point east of Gough bet Fulton and Mc- Allister west to Buchanan Cross Sts N S


Van Ness av. . 200 201


Franklin . .. (c)


(c)


. . . Gough . (c)




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