USA > North Carolina > Alamance County > Burlington > Hill's Burlington (Alamance County, N.C.) City Directory [1956] > Part 2
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"It seems that this section of the state was first settled by emigrants from the Rhine River section of Germany, known as the Palatine.
"These early settlers were augmented in 1720 by immigration of settlers from the North, and it was this movement that gave the region its first white
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INTRODUCTION
inhabitants in any number. These came from Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and even the more distant New England. The newcomers were mostly Scotch-Irish, German and English families, the last being mainly Quaker in religion.
Population
In 1930 the population within Burlington's city limits was 9, 737, with several thousand in the immediate suburbs. According to the 1950 U. S. Census, the city's population was 24, 560.
Within a two-mile radius of the City Hall there are now 40, 000, while a four-mile radius will take in over 50, 000, or over 50 % of the population of the entire county.
The following are 1950 population percentages for Burlington:
Native white
88.0 %
Foreign-born white
0.6 %
Negro
11. 4 %
Total native-born
99.4 %
The population of Alamance County during the 1940-1950 decade increased 25 %, while the population of Burlington increased 100 %.
Churches
The essential religious atmosphere of the community and its influence on Burlington's citizenship are indicated by the presence of 37 churches (32 white and 5 colored), including all leading denominations, this being a ratio of one church to every 650 of the population. Total membership in local churches is around 18,000.
Education
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES -- Within a two-hour automobile ride of Burlington, within North Carolina, are at least seventeen white colleges and universities of the first rank, and several within this radius in the neighboring state of Virginia, making a total of more than twenty. Of these, four are State institutions and ten are denominational. There alsoare a number of Negro edu- cational institutions, State, denominational and private, within the same area.
Elon College, supported by the Christian Church, islocated four miles from Burlington, and is one of the best equipped educational institutions in the state, as to buildings, strength of faculty, and equipment.
CITY SCHOOLS-The Burlington city public schools rank among the best in the state. The local school district has eighteen buildings, of which thirteen are white and five Negro, the district embracing Burlingtonand its suburbs. At the close of 1955 the faculty consisted of 256 teachers, the enrollment of students being a total of 6, 330. Classroom and laboratory equipment, library, audito- rium, gymnasium and playground facilities are adequate.
The public school system is governed by a local board of education and a superintendent under the supervision of the State School Commission, and is financed principally from State funds, the State having assumed the support of all public schools through a state-wide system setupin 1933 by legislative act.
Burlington has a business college giving commercial classes, bookkeeping and stenographic instruction.
There are also several private kindergartens and a parochial school.
LIBRARY-A public library, supported by the City and County, has 35, 298 volumes, while the circulation for home use in one year totaled 228, 682. This does not include use within branch school libraries.
Recreation
Burlington is within a few hours' ride of the noted beach resorts along the
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INTRODUCTION
coast, the nationally-known sandhill resorts around Southern Pines and Pine- hurst, and the far-famed summer mountain resorts surrounding Asheville, in the western part of the state.
There are many game preserves in the area. Bear and deer are found in coastal and mountain counties. Raccoons, foxes, opossums, quail and rabbits are available throughout the state. Brant, ducks, geese and other migratory birds winter in large numbers on the coast and there is also excellent fishing along the coastal sounds and in the lakes and streams of the interior.
Within an easily-accessible distance of Burlington are excellent hunting and many streams and lakes for fishing.
Alamance Hotel
Within the city are playgrounds at each of the schools, baseball and football fields, several parks, a number of tennis courts, the Alamance Country Club with an excellent 18-hole golf course, new 18-hole public golf course, "Sham - rock", four theatres, and a year-'round recreation commission program. A large park with stadium, swimming pool and complete recreational facilities are available for the public.
COMMERCIAL FEATURES
Trade Area
Burlington's retail and wholesale trade area covers a radius of fifteen to twenty miles, including all of Alamance County and parts of the five adjoining counties, this area having a population of over 125, 000.
The volume of retail business in Alamance County, was $64, 163, 000 last year, and of this amount, Burlington's stores did a retail volume of $46, 462, 000. Burlington ranks twelfth in population in the state, but rated eleventh in retail sales. Per capita annual income for Burlington is $1, 693, and per family, $6, 045. The city is rated among North Carolina cities in effective income fifth per capita and fourth per family.
Local Stores
A recent survey of the nearby trade area indicated the decided preference of customers within Burlington's area for patronizing local stores, because of the excellent quality and service, the variety and the prices of commodities, which compared favorably with those of cities much larger. There is a very small percentage of mail-order and out-of-town shopping. Approximately 88.4 % of those in the Burlington area buy in Burlington.
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INTRODUCTION
Hotels
The city has two commercial hotels-the Alamance, with a capacity of 200, there being a total of 85 rooms (24 double and 61 single), all with bath, on the first floor a dining-room, on the mezzanine a private dining-room, and a ball- room on the second floor; and the Piedmont Hotel, with a capacity of 100, having a total of 68 rooms, of which 53 are single and 15 double, some with bath and some without.
There also are a large number of private rooming houses and boarding houses, as well as ten apartment houses.
Financial Institutions
Two commercial and two industrial banks. Two building and loan associa - tions. Six personal small-loan companies within the city, which are in position to handle local commercial and financing needs along sound lines.
Transportation
RAIL -- Railway passenger and freight service over the Southern Railway lines connects with all other rail routes, there being three passenger trains each way daily, with through Pullman and sleeper service to important points. Burlington is only one night out of New York by rail.
Freight service time between Burlington and New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore
Knoxville .
Two days
Savannah and Atlanta
Three days
New Orleans
Four days
Memphis
Four days
Chicago
Five days
AY
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Street Scene
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Bees
Bees
Bees
Beeg
Bees
Beef
Bees
"The Bees, " Burlington Baseball Club
Scene at South Main Street City Park
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INTRODUCTION
Six package cars operate daily to junction points. Daily through freight serv- ice is furnished on three of four trains each way. Local freight service both ways every other day, switching service to and from Greensboro each day ex- cept Saturday. Local side-trackage sufficient for some 600 cars.
EXPRESS -- Adequate express facilities are furnished by the Railway Ex- press Agency. Express delivery time: Between Burlington and New York City, 16 to 17 hours; Washington, eleven hours; and other major points on schedules equally prompt proportionate to distance.
BUS -- Hourly passenger bus schedules are maintained in every direction, making connections for all points, while several short-line bus services are in operation to nearby towns and a local bus service operates on regular routes within the city and to nearby industrial sections. There is, of course, adequate local taxicab service.
MOTOR TRUCK -- Twelve long-distance motor truck freight lines with local terminals operate from or through Burlington on daily schedules north and south to the larger cities, making connections for Western and Eastern cities.
AIRPLANE-A commercialairport, operated by the Burlington Flying Serv- ice, located two miles west of the city's business section, is equipped with two hangars, and has repair service and other supply facilities, telephone, taxi and bus connections with the city, with several passenger planes available on the field, making possible connections with the major established air mail and pas- senger routes. Fairchild Field, east of the city, is operated by the Alamance Flying Service.
INDUSTRY
Alamance County's industrial history dates from the year 1837, when Edwin M. Holt, who was born and reared in the county, established a cotton mill on Alamance Creek, four miles southwest of Burlington.
About 1854 this mill began the production of colored woven cotton fabrics, the first in the South to produce this material.
In 1887, when Burlington acquired its name, there were three cotton mills, one coffin factory, and a few smaller plants. Today there are 30 hosiery mills, 15 other textile and 33 miscellaneous -- a total of 78, in a community with a popu- lation of 24, 560. There are 41 other plants, principally textile, located in the remainder of the county.
Industrial expansion has been steady. The Lafayette Mills were established in 1881; the E. M. Holt Plaid Mills in 1883; the Lakeside Mills in 1893. In other parts of the county the older plants include White Furniture, in 1881; Durham Hosiery Mills, in 1898; Virginia Cotton Mills, in 1894.
Burlington has become known as one of the leading hosiery-mill centers of the country. According to latest available census data, only five cities of the U. S. outrank Burlington in production, only one of these being in the South, while Burlington leads the South in number of plants. The first hosiery mill here, the Daisy, was established in 1896, followed a few years later by the Burlington Knitting Co. , the Whitehead Hosiery Mill, the Sellars Hosiery Mill, the May Hosiery Mills, and the McEwen Knitting Mills -- the last being the first in the section to manufacture full-fashioned hose. These were followed by many others, most of which are still operating.
Beginning in 1923, with the establishment here of the Burlington Mills, the rapid expansion of this group of plants, now numbering seven in and near the city, with some twenty in other cities in the area, has brought the weaving in- dustry to the forefront, making the city known for dress goods, art silk, tap- estries, and other cotton, rayon and silk fabrics, as well as for hosiery.
The E. M. Holt Plaid Mills, which have celebrated their 60th anniversary, also entered the rayon and silk-weaving field a number of years ago, and have several plants in Burlington and the county. This plant was purchased by Bur- lington Mills in 1939.
These groups and several others have made Burlington one of the country's leading centers in this textile field.
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Homes in Burlington's Residential Section
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In 1942 Fairchild Aircraft Corp. established a plant here, which produced war planes during the war. In 1946 Western Electric Company established a plant here which produces electronic equipment and works about 3, 500 people.
Other industrial lines represented by local manufacturing plants are lumber, building material, brick and stone, insecticides, disinfectants, caskets, soft drinks, ice, mixed feeds, dairy products, baking, printing, proprietary medi- cines, cosmetics, gas, paper boxes, foundry and machine shops, foods and textile supplies.
Among the 3, 073 counties in the U. S., Alamance ranks 216th in number of manufacturing plants, and 203d in number of wage-earners.
INDUSTRIAL PAYROLLS in the Burlingtonarea average well over $80, 000, - 000 annually, with 18, 700 persons employed. Indicative of the steady industrial growth, in the past fifteen years, the average number of new plants per year was eight.
THE FUTURE-SOME COMMENTS
During the severe economic crisis of 1930-34, this sturdy city fought the depression and conquered it.
"No town in the state has shown its ability to come back better than the city of Burlington, " declared a newspaper man from another Carolina city, and Burlington citizens have made that reputation possible, both by individual and collective community effort.
The late Franklin K. Lane, one-time Secretary of the Interior made the following statement in one of his addresses: "The region of central North Caro- lina, stretching from the Blue Ridge Mountains to a point about Goldsboro, is destined to become the greatestindustrial area in the U. S., because of its great industrial advantages and economics." Burlington and Alamance County are situated midway in this region and bid fair to prove the validity of his statement.
The late Irvin S. Cobb said: "Let some statistician tell a tale in exultant terms of bank clearings and enlarged bank deposits, exports, advancement of wealth and production. Going only by what these two eyes have seen, I proclaim that North Carolina today is the foremost state of the Union in material prog- ress, in public spirit, in educational expansion, and optimism of outlook. "
Burlington's development, although not as rapid as some other cities, has not, like many of them, been of the "boom" type, or "one-sided, " but rather a steady, sound, substantial one. This underlying economic soundness has borne fruit.
With vast markets awaiting the products of Burlington's industry, diversified farming assuring its agricultural progress, and established retailers equipped with facilities and the experience to serve best their customers' needs, the city can reasonably look forward to the greatest era of firm expansion in its history during the coming years.
The city invites and will welcome and cooperate with those firms and people who believe that character and economic soundness are paramount to mere size in development.
Projects Under Way, 1956
(1) Money has been appropriated for two new public schools.
(2) Plans are ready and the money available for the erection of a Museum at the City Park.
(3) The City of Burlington recently purchased property on E. Davis Street to be used for a new City Hall and other municipal facilities.
(4) Several projects are underway for the development of through streets to alleviate the traffic problem.
ADDITIONAL STATISTICS, 1954
City
Retail volume Bank debits Resources, building and loan associations
$46,462, 000 $287,453, 195. 63
$8, 340, 000
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ADDITIONAL STATISTICS, 1954 Cont'd
Water consumption Postal receipts Postal money-orders Postal savings
City
$1,402, 196, 000
$502, 623.02
$580, 000 $812,405
Alamance County (including Burlington)
Population (1950 Census)
71,220
Value of farm property
$22, 684, 000
Manufacturing plants
129
Industrial wage-earners
18,700
Wages, industrial Number retail outlets . Retail sales
$71,345,000
849
$64,163, 000
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When You Want to Know:
-where a person lives.
-what his occupation is.
-who lives at a certain number on a street.
-where a street is located.
-the correct spelling of a name.
-the officers of a corporation.
-the partners in a firm.
-the solution to any of scores of prob- lems that pop up unexpectedly to annoy and baffle you.
-you can quickly find the answer in the City Directory.
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XXII
Typical Questions
Your City Directory Will Answer
ABOUT AN INDIVIDUAL
How does he spell his name? What is his middle initial?
Is he married? What is his wife's name?
Where does he live? Does he own his home or rent?
Has he a telephone? Who are his neighbors? What does he do for a living? Where does he work?
Is he the "head of the house" or a resident?
Does he own a business? Is he a member or officer?
Who else is in the same business or profession?
Is the woman single, married or a widow?
ABOUT YOUR CITY
What is the city's history?
What are the latest population figures?
What is the latest statistical and general civic information?
What are the leading industries and activities of the city?
What are the names and locations of the schools?
What are the churches and where located?
Who are the pastors of the churches?
What are the locations of the hos- pitals, homes and asylums?
ABOUT A LOCALITY
How is the quickest way to get there?
Who lives at a given address?
Is there a telephone at the address or nearby?
What is the character of the neigh- borhood?
Is it a "home-owners" section? What is the nearest street corner?
What is the nearest store, church, school, garage, shopping center, parking lot, etc .?
Where are the public and office buildings?
If it is a business location, what business?
If an office building, what firms or professional people are in what rooms?
ABOUT A BUSINESS CONCERN
What is the nature of the business?
What is the correct name and address?
Is it a Proprietorship, Partnership or Corporation?
Who are the partners, owners, or officers?
Who else in same or similar lines?
XXIII
POPULATION OF U. S. CITIES OF 30,000 OR MORE IN 1950 (AS PER FINAL FIGURES OF THE 1950 U. S. CENSUS REPORT)
ALABAMA
31.056
Anderson
46.820
Annlaton
328.037
East Chicagn.
54.263
Birmingham
55.725
Evansville
128.836
Mobile
129.009
Fort Wayne
133.607
Montgomery
46.396
ARIZONA
Phoenix
106.818 45.454
Tucson
ARKANSAS
47.942
Little Rock
44.097
Pine Bluff
37.162
CALIFORNIA
Burlington
30.613
Alameda
64.430
Cedar Rapids.
72.296
Manchester Nashun
82.732 34.669
NEW JERSEY
Adande City
61.657
Bayoose
77.203
Belleville
32.019
Compton
38.177
Ottumwn
33.631
Bloomfield
49.307
Camden
124.555
Clifton
64.511
Enai Orange
79.340
Cranston
55.060
Nutchinson
33.575
Kansas City
129.553
Topekn
78.791
Wichita
168.279
KENTUCKY
Ashland
31.131
Sacramenta
Covington
64.452
San Beroardino
Lexington
55.534
San Diego.
Louisville
369.129
San Francisco
95.280
San Jose. .
41.782
Santa Ann
45.533
Santo Barbara
71.595
Alexandrin
34.913
Baton Rouge
125.629
Lafayette
33.541
Jackson
30.207
Knoxville
124.769
Memphis
396.000
Nashville
174.307
Oak Ridge
30.229
Albany
134,995
Amsterdam
32.240
TEXAS
Abllena
45.570
Amarillo
74.246
Austin
132.459
Beaumont
94.014
Brownsville
36.066
Corpus Christi
108.287
Dalina
434,462
El Paso
130.485
Fort Worth
278.778
New Britain
73.726
Arlington
44.353
Boston
801.444
Brooklyn
2.738.175
Nouelon
596.163
Laredo
51.910
Lubbock
71.747
Port Arthur
57.530
San Angelo.
52.093
San Antonio
408.442
Tyler
38.968
Waco
84,70€
Wichita Falls
68.042
DELAWARE
Wilmington
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Washington .
802.178
FLORIDA
Daytona Beach
30.187
NORTH CAROLINA
Asheville
53.000
Alexandrin
61.787
Danville
35.066
Lynchburg
47.727
Newport Nowe
42.358
Norfolk
213.513
Petershura
35.054
Portsmouth
80.039
Richmond
230.310
Roanoke
91.921
West Palm Beach
43.162
Watertown
37.329
Weymouth
32.690
Worcester
203.486
Albany
31.155
Everett
33.849
Seattle
467.591
Augusta
71.508
Ann Arbor.
48.251
Battle Crook
48.666
Bay City
52.523
Cleveland
914.808
Cleveland Height
59.141
Columbus
375.901
WEST VIRGINIA
Charleston
73.501
Boise
ILLINOIS
Alton
32.550
Aurora
50.576
Kalamazoo
57.704
68.071
WISCONSIN
Appleton
34.010
Eau Claire
36.058
Green Bay
52.735
Kenosbn
54.368
Lo Crow
47.535
Madison
96.056
Danville
37.854 66.269
MINNESOTA
Duluth
104.511
Minneapolis
521.718
SL Paul
311.349
Jo Bet
51.601
MISSISSIPPI
Motine
37.397
37.425
Oak Park
63.529
Jackson
98.271
Peoria
111.856
Meridian
41.893
Quincy
41.450
Rockford
92.927
Rock Island
48.710
Columbia
31.974
Muskogee
37.289
Honolulu
248.034
Springfeld
81.528
Independence
39.963
Oklahoma City
243.504
162.740
3-54
Waukegan
38.945
Joplin
38,711
Tulsa
Eugene Portland Salem
35.879 373.628 43.140
856.796 66.731 39.892
PENNSYLVANIA
Allentown
106.758 77.177
Billinga
31.834
Bethlehem
68.340
Bulto
33.251
Chester
66.039
Grent Falls
39,214
Easton
35.832
Erle
130.803
Harrisburg
89.544
Natelton
35.491
Omaha
251,117
Johnstown
63.232
Lancaster
83.774
Mckeesport
51.502
Now Contle
48.834
Norristown
38.126
Philadelphia
2.071.605
Pittsburgh
876.806
Reading
109.320
Bakerheld
34.784
Council Bluffs
45.429
Berkeley
113.805
Davenport
74.549
Burbank
47.991
Dubuque
49.671
East Bakersfield
91.669
Sioux City
83,991
Waterloo
65.198
KANSAS
Elizabeth
112.817
East Providence 35.871
Noboken
50.676
Irvingion
59.201
Pawtucket ..
81.436
Oakland
104.577
Pasadena Pomona
35.405
Richmond
99,545
Linden
30.644
Woonsocket
50.211
SOUTH CAROLINA
Charleston 70.174
Columbia
86.914
Orange
57.702
Paterson
139.336
Perth Amboy
41.330
Plainfield
42.366
Trenton
128.009
Union City
55.537
Went New York
37.683
Stockton
70.853
COLORADO
Colorado Springs
45.472
Denver
63.685
MAINE
Bangor
31.558
Lewiston
40.974
Portland
77.634
Bristol
35.961
Fairfield
30.489
Greenwich
40.835
Hartford
177.397
Manchester
34.116
Nngersiown
36.260
MASSACHUSETTS
Bronx
1.451.277
Galv inton
66,568
Now Naven
30.551
Brockton
62.860 Manhattan
1.960.101
Norwalk
74.293
Cambridge
120.740
Chelsea
38.912
Chicopee
49.211
Poughkeepsie
41.023
West Hartford
44.402
Weet Naven
32.010
Fall River
111.963
Rome 41.682
Schenectady 91.785
220.583
Troy
72.311
UHcn
101.531
Watertown
34.350
White Plains
43.466
Lynn
99.738
Malden
59.804
Medford
66.113
New Bedford
109.189
Fort Lauderdale
204.517
Charlotte
134.042
Durham
71.311
Miami
249.278
Rovere
36.763
Salem
41.880
Orlando
52.367
Somerville
102.351
Springfield
162.399
Taunton
40.109
Waltham
47.187
Winston-Salem
87.811
NORTH DAKOTA Fargn
38.256
Bellingham
34.112
Atlanta
331.314
MICHIGAN
Akron
274.605
Canton
116.912
Columbus
79.611
Macon
70.252
Savannah
119.638
Dearborn
94.994
Detroit
1.849.568
Flint
Grand Rapids
176.515
Eant Cleveland
40.047
Clarksburg
32.014
Namtramck
43.355
ElyTin
30.307
Nuntington
86.353
Highland Park
46.393
41.396
Wheeling
58.89L
Jackson
51.088
57.951
Lima
50.246
Lorain
51.202
Bloomingion
34.163
Pontiac
73.68
Mansfield
43.564
Marion
33.817
Chicago
3.620.962
Royal Oak
46.898
Cicero
67.544
Saginaw
92.918
Wyandone
36.846
Norwood
35.001
Milwaukee
637.392
Portsmouth
36.798
Oshkosh
41.084
East SL Loula
92.295
Springfield
78.508
Rncino
71.193
Elgin
44.223
Steubenville
35.872
Sheboygan
42.365
Toledo
303.616
Superior
35.325
Warren
49.856
Wausau
30.414
Youngstown
168.330
Wauwatosa
33.324
Zanesville
40.517
OKLAHOMA
WYOMING
Enld
36.017
Cheyenne
31.935
MISSOURI
Lawton
34.757
161.721
Tacomn
143.673
Vancouver
41.664
Yakimo
38.486
IDAHO
Dayton
243.872
Euclid
Hamilton
Lakewood
Belleville
32.721
Lansing
92.129
Berwyn
51.280
Muskegon
48.429
Champaqu
39.563
Port Nuroa
35.725
Middletown
33.695
Newark
34.275
Decatur
Evanston
73.641
Galesburg
31.425
Woot Allis
12.959
Pensacola
43,479
Raleigh
65.679
St Petersburg
96.738
Tampo
124.681
INDLANA
MISSOURI-Continued
OREGON
Kansas City.
458.8 22 78.588
St. Joseph
35.646
SL. Loula
Springfield
Ualveralty City.
133.911
Tuscaloosa.
Nammond
87.594
Indianapolis
427.173
Kokomo
38.672
Lafayette Marton
30.081
NEBRASKA
Mishawaka
32.913
Muncie
58.479
Fort Smith
102.213
South Bend.
115.911
North Little Rock
Terre Naute
64.214
Reno
NEW HAMPSHIRE
JOWA
Alhambra
51.359
Clinton
30.379
Scranton
125.536
Wilkes-Barre
78.826
Wilkinsburg
31.418
Williamsport
45.047
York
59.953
Freson
95.702 46.185
Inglewood
250.767
Long Beach
1.970.358
Los Angeles
384.575
Jersey City Kearny
39.952
Warwick
43.028
Montclair Newar's
438.776
New Brunswick
38.037
Passaic
Spartanburg
36.795
Owensboro
33.651
Paducah
32.828
Sioux Falls
52.696
TENNESSEE
Challanoogn
131.041
NEW MEXICO
Albuquerque
96.815
New Orleans
570.445
Shreveport
127.206
Pueblo
CONNECTICUT
Bridgeport
Buffalo 580.132
Elmira
19.716
Jamen town
43.354
Mount Veroon
71.899
Cumberland
37.679
Newburgh
31.956
Mariden
164.443
Now London
49.460
Brookline
57.589 Queens
1.550.849
Stamford
33.428
Waterbury
104.477
Eversti
45.982
Rochester 332.488
42.691
Haverhill
47.280
UTAH
Ogden
57.112
Salt Lake City
VERMONT
Burlington
VIRGINIA
Newton
81.994
Jacksonville
30.851
Pinafeld
53.348
Lakeland
Quincy
83.835
Fayetteville 34.715
Greensboro
74.389
High Point 39.973
Wilmington
45.043
WASHINGTON
GEORGLA
оно
Spokane
503.998
Cincinnati
163.143
34.393
Nolynke
54.661
Lawrence
80.536
Lowell
97.249
152.798 Yoakers
33.155
--
.
-
Elkhart
Gadsden
106.525
Gary ...
MONTANA
Altoonn
Lincoln
98.88
Richmond
39.539
NEVADA
32.497
78.577
Des Moines
177.965
Glendale
46.764
Riveralde
137.572
334.387
775.357
Newport
31.044
San Mateo
44,913
Santa Monica
South Gate
51.116
Lake Charles.
41.272
Monroe
38.572
415.786
Auburn
36.722
Binghamton 80,674
MARYLAND
Baltimore
949.708
Now Rochelle 59.725
New York 7.891.957
Ningarn Falls
90.872
Stratford
Fitchburg
Syracuse
110.356
182.121
36.328
158.709
44.088
LOUISIANA
299.017
Providence 248.674
43.927
63.058
38.811
Greenville 58.161
SOUTH DAKOTA
NEW YORK
ANODE ISLAND
Newport 37.564
35.568
MCCLURE FUNERAL SERVICE
TERRITORY OF HAWAII
Miami Beach 46.282
Richmond 191.555
XXIV
GENERAL ABBREVIATIONS
acct
accountant | drsmkr
adj
adjuster
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