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San Francisco (Calif.). Police Dept.

Police and peace officers' journal of the State of California (Volume Jan. 1948-Dec. 1948)

. (page 26 of 92)




EXbrook 2 0805



suiter 1-5274



CALIFORNIA VULCAN MACARONI CO.



SAN FRANCISCO



44S Drumm Streel at Paci6c



SAN FRANCISCO DUPLICATING CO.

Incorporated



26 OTARRELL STREET



SAN FRANCISCO



Phone CArfield 1-8332

DEANS AND HOMER

INSURANCE GENERAL AGENTS

340 PINE STREET SAN FRANCISCO 4. CALIF.

LANDIS AND COTTLE

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
Telephone DOuglas 2-6947 - 2-694«



369 PINE STREET



SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



Phone CArfield 1-0306

BEIER AND GUNDERSON CO.

NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE
7 7 BATTERY STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.

ST. JULIEN RESTAURANT



140 Battery Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



SAINT MORITZ

530 Broadway



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Tel. ORdway 3-4230 PENINSULA SERVICE

HIGH GRADE FRENCH LAUNDRY

Bourdet and Castagne, Prop.
LACES AND LACES CURTAINS A SPECIALTY

1558 BUSH ST.. near Van Ness Ave. SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

ROSSI AND COMPANY



627 Vallejo Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



1790 JACKSON APARTMENTS



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Phone MArket 1-4422

MISSION HOTEL

300 MODERN, SUNNY ROOMS
520 Van Ness Ave. South



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Phone PR. 5-0355



THE CLARK HOTEL



ISO NEWLY FURNISHED ROOMS
ALL BATHS OR CONNECTION



217 EDDY STREET



SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA



SAN FRANCISCO



THE TRAP

COCKTAILS
133 Turk Street



CALIFORNIA



WAInut 1-875 7



SAN FRANCISCO



KARL'S SHOE STORE

1527 Fillmore Street



CALIFORNIA



PALACE GARDEN

LUNCH AND SHORT ORDERS
CRYSTAL MARKET



CALIFORNIA



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



April, 1948



POLICE AND PEACE OFFICERS" JOURNAL



Page 47



Now, Mr. Taxpaying Citizen, be honest with yourself.
Would you be perfectly satisfied to have such a tragically
unfitted and unprepared person as your sole dependence
in some emergency when it might be that your life was
at stake? At best, the police officer might be an acquaint-
ance — he could be a close friend, who would do all in his
power to help you. But even his supreme effort might not
be good enough. He might not he trained to furnish the
kind of help you most needed.

At least for the moment, let us forget the assumed
"infallibility" of all police officers. Let us consider this
matter fairly and logically. If he were not a good surgeon,
you would not blindly trust your acquaintance, or even
your closest friend, to perform an operation for the re-
moval of your appendix; and common sense insists that
no more could you expect the same wholly-unfitted ac-
quaintance or friend to serve you well in some other
grave crisis demanding the ultimate skill of a highly
trained specialist. And in addition, the chances are that
the callow rookie patrolman would be a total stranger.

The position of law enforcement in the United States
today is curious, to say the least, in view of what is ex-
pected of peace officers, and the unreason of such expecta-
tions. The credulity of popular opinion in this matter
is amazing.

In our complex social system, it is plain that efficiently
conducted law enforcement is a highly specialized pro-
fession. But, unfortunately, at the present time, there
are but few highly specialized professionals enforcing the
law. This is regrettable, but by no means hopeless. When
the American public has been made to realize that com-
petent performance can be expected only from competent
persons, popular demand will raise the standards for
selectees in police service. This, however, is not the only
requirement. As already pointed out, many more educa-
tional programs must be set up which will provide enough
suitable men when they are needed. Police education
must be placed on a nation-wide basis; full-time courses
in police-science training must be made a part of all up-
to-date teaching programs in America.

It is probable that no enterprise exists with more diversi-
fied demands than those in police work. During today's
routine of law-enforcement activities, the police officer, at
one time or another, will be expected to perform duties
in every department of human effort. Obviously, the

BAY SHELL CO-

S03 Market Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



BEAR PHOTO SERVICE



330 Grove Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



HOTEL GOVERNOR



Turk at Jones Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Compliments

ROMA MACARONI CO.



199 Francisco Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



PACIFIC SHOE CO.



451 Washington Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Phone ORdway 3-2265

DI MAGGIO'S RESTAURANT

FISHERMAN'S WHARF
LUNCH AND DINNERS DAILY

POTTERY CLASSES OUTSIDE FIRING

NIXON CRAFT STUDIOS

Phone EXbrook 2-3474
531 DAVIS ST. at PACIFIC SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

General Insurance Co. of America



206 Sansome Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



VENETIAN BAKING CO.



Powell Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



EX. 2-1534 HOT WATER - SHOWERS

ALBION HOTEL

WORKINGMEN - SEAMEN
25 CLAY STREET SAN FRANCISCO

NEWBERRY'S

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA

GRAYSON'S

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA



FRANKLIN HOTEL



Fourteenth and .Noe



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



GOLDEN GATE SAUSAGE CO.



3 04 Davis Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



ROBINS HOTEL



71 I Post Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



GLENDALE GUEST HOUSE

$14.50 WEEK, MEALS, RECREATION HALL INCLUDED

960 Haight Street

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA



PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS CO.

MORCK BRUSH DIVISION

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA



Page 48



POLICE AND PEACE OFFICERS' JOURNAL



April, 1948



efficiency with which these duties are discharged, and
the consequent quahty of service rendered, will depend
upon the officer's ability and training. And this fact gains
added importance, since the final issue frequently will be
a matter of life or death.

To be successful, the police scientist, like any other,
must understand crime's factors, causes, symptoms and
solutions. Such competence is not acquired casually.
Furthermore, despite his qualifications, even the trained
expert is confronted with a public which does not under-
stand his problems nor share his enthusiasms. Obviously,
in order to effect any general improvement, it will be
necessary not only to educate the police officer, but also to
educate the public as well. To many peace officers, all
this is an old story, and we ponder the solution. It re-
quires a deal of crusading to arouse public consciousness
from its habitual lethargy. Nevertheless, such a crusade
is being conducted by many of the more dynamic leaders
in our field, especially in California, and it is possible to
report considerable progress.

Primarily, however, our program of education must be
directed at the police officer. An educated person has
been described as one who knows everything about some-
thing, and something about everything. This is especially
desirable in police service, as well attested by the highly
specialized demands now made on the officer in police
science. Foreign and domestic research in delinquenc>i
has long since proven that effective crime prevention must
start with the juvenile. "Behavior problems" are far
more difficult than the most puzzling cases encountered in
the medical field. Coordinating councils, child-guidance
centers, parental schools, adult education, public-relations
work, and many other excellent measures can be made
to play a vital part in crime prevention. Yet, with little
or no scientific training in the fundamentals of crime con-
trol, the peace officer, even with the best of intentions,
can do little more than falter when faced with this prob-
lem—a problem that concerns every person in America.

Narcotics, gambling, prostitution and all other forms of
vice are a large and constant source of difficulty, and
any attempt at suppression or removal must be intelligent
and scientific if it hopes to succeed.

Industrial and social friction in the form of labor
troubles, race riots, and all similar disturbances, which
have become more common during the current conditions
of unrest, are a high responsibility on those who are sworn
to the protection of life and property, and the preserva-
tion of the peace. In the past, incipient bickerings have
flared into large and bloody conflict as a result of some
over-zealous or ill-timed act on the part of the police.
Many such tragedies could have been averted, or mini-
mized, by more tactful and suitably trained personnel.

The educated and trained officer will note and evaluate
both major and minor details. He will recognize, classify,
and employ that which the uninitiated may not even see,
nor could appreciate if he did. The uninformed indi-
vidual could not be expected to realize the importance
of all the specialized or less obvious factors of a situation.



M. Barasch ^ MilUrd

B & M AUTO SEAT COVERS



400 So. Van Ness at 15th
Phone UNderhill 1-9744



READY TO INSTALL - TAILORED
Wholesale and Retail



13 54 Post Street
PRospect 5-4512



WEst 1-0828 Established 1898

PIERCE-RODOLPH STORAGE CO., Ltd.

UNITED VAN LINES, Inc. YELLOW VAN CO.

John S. Currie, General Manager

1450 EDDY STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

Phone: ORdway 3-5124 - 3-5 125

JACK RANIS AUTO METAL 'WORKS

RADIATOR, FENDER AND BODY REPAIRING
LACQUER REFINISHING

163 4-1644 PINE STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

Phone ORdway 3-1261

A. RAMAZZOTTI

REGISTERED PLUMBER - JOBBING AND CONTRACTING
ESTIMATES GIVEN - ALL WORK GUARANTEED

1473 Vallejo Street, Between Polk and Larkin ^„„,.

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA



KUNST BROTHERS



419 Bayshore Blvd.

SAN FRANCISCO



1033 Mission Street

CALIFORNIA



PAGE'S CLUBS



800 So. Van Ness Ave.
SAN FRANCISCO



2531 24th Street

CALIFORNIA



Telephone HEmlock 1-5567

GRANZ AND ERMANN

FURNITURE AND UPHOLSTERY AND APPLIANCES
228 Fillmore Street, near Haight Street

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA

PATRONIZE

SHUMATE'S PHARMACY, Inc.

Stores Conveniently Located Throughout San Francisco.

Look For Your Nearest Shumate Store.

SPECIAL PRICES TO MEMBERS S. F. P. D.



Phone VA 4-5506

ST. FRANCIS FOUNTAIN

HOME MADE CANDY - ICE CREAM - LIGHT LUNCHES
2801 Twenty-fourth Street

SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA

BILTMORE FRENCH LAUNDRY

3469-71 Eighteenth Street, between Mission and Valencia
Phone MArket 1-1672

CALIFORNIA



SAN FRANCISCO



Phone ATwater 2-5737

JOSEPH'S

MEN'S SMART FURNISHINGS
SLACKS AND SPORTWEAR - PHOENIX HOSIERY

2 3 76 MISSION STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

R. MOHR AND SONS

883 Market Street
SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA

O. CASPERSON AND SONS

BUTTERCUP BUTTER CASPERSON EGGS

TOPS IN QUALITY

340 NINTH STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



THE MOTH 8C FLAME

1400 California Street
SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA



April. 1948



POLICE AND PEACE OFFICERS' JOURNAL



Page 49



whereas the man who knows the science of his profession
builds upon his knowledge for success.

These are some of the reasons why the requirements in
police work demand scientific training. With considera-
tion of only a few of the many duties in modern law en-
forcement, it is self-evident that the American police
service is in urgent need of professionals. However, little
betterment can be expected until radical changes have
been made in our present police system. To be competent,
the future police officer must be trained and educated; nor
must that training and education be left to hit-or-miss
lessons from experience. It must be formal, pre-employ-
ment, college training in police science, for, like the ig-
noramus attempting an appendix operation, the untrained
officer will be certain to fail disastrously in high require-
ment. Lacking aptitude, he will be irresolute when a
second's delay spells calamity. Untrained as an investi-
gator, he will overlook, damage, or even destroy vital
CMdeace. And with human life in peril, his tragic bungling
luay cause death.

Let us suppose, for the sake of argument, that all of
the physicians and surgeons in America were replaced
by ordinary persons with no medical training, and with
no promise of improvement save the hope of developing
the needful skill through "experience." The utter chaos
which would result has its counterpart in the American
police service as it is today, wherein the only training ever
acquired by a large majority of police officers is their own
experience after appointment.

True, it would be unfair to belittle the virtues of prac-
tical experience, but it still is plain that few policemen,
regardless of their length of service, could expect to come
into informative contact with all of the experience neces-
sary to provide a liberal education in every phase of law
enforcement.

These are some of the reasons why the criminal is still
victorious in America — why crime costs are soaring to
fantastic heights — and why you and I, and all other
American citizens, are in danger of being numbered
among crime's victims. Obviously, the solution of a
problem so complex will require several lines of action;
but it also is plain that no other single strategy could
have such a profound effect upon crime reduction as
that of elevating the American police to a recognized
profession ; but in order to do this, as earlier pointed out,
an important job will be to "sell" the general public on
the idea. In this connection, there need be no concern
about the possibility of added expense in taxes. On the
contrary, with professionals enforcing the law, the saving
in crime-cost reduction promises ample margin for this
and for many other constructive purposes, as logic can
readily understand.

In simple terms, the problem can be solved by a three-
point program: (1) education of the general public to
demand better law enforcement; (2) suitable state and
national legislation fixing higher requirements and sal-
aries, coordinating law enforcement, and standardizing the
requirements for all selectees in the law-enforcement field;
(3) and finally, amplification of the educational facilities.



WILKINS LIQUOR STORE



3273 Sacramento Street

SAN FRANCISCO



West 1-3124

CALIFORNIA



Telephone WEst 1-9952

CALIFORNIA WINES - GOLD BEER

LEXINGTON MARKET

GROCERIES - MEATS - CHICKENS
VEGETABLES - FRUITS IN SEASON

2 79 1 BUSH STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



Phone WE 1-3952



RELIANCE MARKET

1919 McAllister Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Phone EVergreen 6-9723 G. C. Thomasson, MgT.

HOTEL CLEMENT

OUTSIDE ROOMS - REASONABLE PRICES

524 CLEMENT STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

Phone BA 1-5S17 P. A. Garcia, Prop.

INDEPENDENT MEXICO CITY CAFE

WE SPECIALIZE IN MEXICAN DISHES
Op?n 11:30 A.M. to 8 P.M. Closed Mondays

1792 Haight Street SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

Phon; MArket 1-2377

THE CHERRY BLOSSOM BAKERY



SAN FRANCISCO



1573 Haight Street



CALIFORNIA



Etnil Ziegler



Jacob Schmidt



QUALITY PORK AND SAUSAGE CO.

Manufacturers of

HIGH CLASS SAUSAGE AND MEAT SFEC'ALTIEb

Factory and Store Pho-.e: MArket 1-7432

401 Div.sadero Street. Cor. Oak Street SAN FRANCISCO. CA'.'l-.



MERRILL DRESS SHOP



129 Montgomery Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



S & W BRANDS



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



GLADDING McBEAN & CO.

SAN FRANCISCO -::- LOS ANGELES
CALIFORNIA

SE. 1-9842 Harry Pomin, Prop.

PARK GATE ASSOCIATED



19th Avenue and Lincoln Way



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Alterations and Repairing



Call and Delivery Service



PERFECTION CLEANERS

3339 Steiner Street, Next to New Marina Postoffice
WAlnut 1-4124



ALTA ROOFING COMPANY



OCDEN. UTAH
97 7 Binford



976 Indiana Street
SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



and unification of their methods, to provide the highest
possible type of selectee for police work.

These are the steps to be taken, and promptly, as the
only logical defense against the increasing onset of crime.
If we expect to win, we must be superior to our enemies.
But that supremacy can be gained only through educa-
tional strategy. And not until such time as these measures
are put into practice can we hope to be successful in the
continuous battle for law and order.



Page JO POLICE AND PEACE OFFICERS' JOURNAL April. 1948

Some Are True and Some Are False — Rate Yourself



L The bulletin "Uniform Crime Reports" is published
by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

2. Among the crimes most commonly and consistently
reported to the police are murder, robber>', burglary
and auto theft.

3. The Uniform Crime Reports show that the crime class-
ified "Auto Thefts" consistently is numerically larger
than other classes of crime reported to the police.

4. The offenses classified under Part 1 "Offenses Known
to the Police," include the crimes: Criminal Homicide,
Rape, Robbery, Aggravated Assault, Burglary, Lar-
ceny and Auto Theft.

Ihe F. B. I. has jurisdiction in the following cases:

5. All cases involving interstate transportation.

o. All cases of counterfeiting of currency and other negO'

tiable instruments of the United States.
7. All acts of wrongful use of U. S. Postal facilities.
9. All cases invloving traflic in drugs.
10. The patrol force is the backbone of the poHce depart-
ment.
H. It is the function of the police sergeant to see that the
men under him perform their duties properly.

12. The satisfactory control of vice and gambling is a dif-
ficult police problem.

13. It is generally agreed that police patrol on foot is un-
necessary in large cities since the inception of the mo-
torized patrol system.

14. Most complaints to the police originate by telephone.

15. Police records are a means of supervision and control
over police officers.

16. All "Police Records" are included in the following
three classes: Complaint records, arrest records and
personnel records.

17. Arrest records originate at the time of hooking.

1 8. A correct written record should be made immediately
of all significant events in police work.

19. Case records are not required in actions initiated by
the police.

20. A police communication system enables the supervis-
ing officers to maintain contact with the personnel at
their command and translate into action those mea-
sures necessary to protect the lives and property of
the community.

2 1 . Modern police commynications such as radio and tele-
type have made the patrol box an obsolete device.

23. The teletype is not essential in an organization equip-
ped with modern radio apparatus.

24. The purpose of modus operandi file is to have a record
whereby criminals can be quickly located by the names
they go by.

25. The purpose of co-ordinating councils is to secure the
co-operation of various public and private agencies in
combating delinquency problems.

26. An effective program of traffic control includes the
elements of Engineering, Education and Enforcement.

27. The police department is concerned with only the



function of "Enforcement" insofar as traffic control
is concerned.

28. There can be no efficient control of the accident prob-
lems without adequate facts regarding accidents oc-
curing.

29. Accident investigation serves as a basis for intelligent,
effective traffic law enforcement.

30. The teletype produces a written record at the receiv-
ing end automatically.

CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION

31. Suggestive questions are generally agreed to be the
recommended form for investigators to use when ques-
tioning persons about a crime.

32. Before the suspect is questioned the investigator should
be in possession of as many facts regarding the case as
possible.

33. Scars, moles, tatooing are considered more valuable
than fingerprints.

34. It is possible for two different persons to have identical
fingerprints.

3i. Fingerprints may enlarge due to growth, but no
changes take place in the number or arrangement of
the friction ridges.

36. The firing pin of a pistol leaves an impression in the
percussion cap which is sometimes characteristic of the
arm but often varies according to the hardness of the
metal in the cap.

37. Marks from the breach block of an automatic cannot
be depended upon in determining whether or not a
particular shell was fired from a particular automatic.

38. Shells from revolvers are more likely to be found at

Phone Mission 7-0322

BOYSON'S PHARMACY

VIRGIL G. PRATHER, Prop.



198 VALENCIA STREET
Corner Twenty-firsl Street



SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



Phone VAlencia 4-3573

PAUL'S TAVERN

Paul and Marie, Props.
3346 MISSION STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

Phono Mission 7-9318 Open II A.M. to 2 A.M.

LAN WAH CAFE

CHOP SUEY - AMERICAN AND CHINESE DISHES

2 32 3 MISSION STREET, near l<)lh St. SAN FRANCISCO

GRAYSON'S LADIES WEAR



2630 Mission Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Phone Mission 7-4263



Steve Kristovich, Prop.



MISSION GRILL AND RESTAURANT

First Class Service- Popular Prices - Banquet Rooms for All
Occasions - Our Specialty: Sea Food

2834 MISSION ST.. near 24th SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.

Phone EXbrook 2-5864

IRWIN FRIEDMAN

AUCTIONEER - LIQUIDATOR - APPRAISER

764 MISSION STREET SAN FRANCISCO 3. CALIF.



April, 1948



POLICE AND PEACE OFFICERS' JOURNAL



Page 51



the scene of a crime than are shells from an automatic.
39. A bullet usually is fired from the same side of a win-
dow from which the flakes of glass are missing.

41. Comparison hairs from the scalp of living persons,
dead bodies and furs should not be cut, but pulled out
with the aid of forceps so that the roots may come out
with them.

42. Indentification by means of hairs is one of the most
easily accomplished methods of identifying the perpe-
trators of crimes.

43. When a tool is placed against plastic materials such as
paint, the characteristic ridges of the tool will be mold-
ed into the paint leaving a more or less perfect cast
of such tool.

44. All modern revolvers and pistols have rifled bores.

45. Due to various movements in walking, footprints are
seldom exactly the size of the shoe which made them.

46. A motor car traveling in a straight line usually leaves
only traces of its rear tires.

47. Photographs of original teeth and tooth markings are
far more accurate means of identification than casts.

48. It is easier to determine that blood originates from a
certain individual than it is to prove that it does not
originate from a certain individual.

49. Alphonse Bertillion is noted for developing the system
of identification through fingerprints.

50. Sketching the scene of a crime is no longer done in
criminal investigation since the rapid strides made in
photography.

(To be continued)

ALTTHOWE & CO.

PRINTERS

ADVERTISING AND COMMERCIAL PRINTING

Telephones EXbrook 2-3504 - 3505

344-346 FRONT STREET SAN FRANCISCO

2 1 CLUB

201 Valencia Street



Telephone Fillmore 6-9734 LES and AL

CHESTER'S CAFE

ITALIAN DINNERS

WINE - BEER - LIQUORS

3136 FILLMORE STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

ALL NATION'S CAFE

"FOOD THAT HITS THE SPOT"
168-170 Fourth Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



Phone sutler 1.6993

THE WINE BARN GROCERY

WINE - LIQUORS - AND GROCERIES

225 SIXTH STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

LOOP BOWLING ALLEY

1031 Kearny Street
SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA



HON YUEN CAFE

850 Kearny Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



MICKEY'S BILLIARD PARLOR

POOL AND BILLIARDS - CIGARS AND CIGARETTES
SOFT DRINKS

944 COLUMBUS AVENUE SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



SAN FRANCISCO



THE GOLD SPIKE

RESTAURANT
527 Columbus Avenue



CALIFORNIA



BOND CLOTHES

Post and Kearny Streets



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



DOuslas 2-1194 L. M. Fernandez, Prop.

BANTAYAN SANITARY CLEANERS

DRY CLEANING - PRESSING - DYEING - FIRST CLASS LAUNDRY

AGENCY - HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED
605 KEARNY STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.

THE LITTLE COFFEE SHOP

L. D. ALLEN, Proprietor
41 California Street



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA



ANTHONY'S

CALIF. FASHIONS -::- SPORTSWEAR
MADE IN CALIFORNIA

1130 HOWARD STREET SAN FRANCISCO I.CALIF.



Telephone WEst 1-3073



Complete Insurance Protection



A. C. HARDWOOD FLOOR CO.

FOR RESIDENCE AND BUILDING

2071 UNION STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



Telephone ORdway 3- 1600

HOTEL PENZANCE

ROBERT W. HEAGY, Manager



We Call and Deliver



EXbrook 2-9970



ELVIN HOLLAND CLEANERS



BETTER CLEANING
PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE



179 SUTTER STREET



SAN FRANCISCO 9. CALIF. 67 FRESNO STREET



SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.



CRANE CO.



ROOMS — REASONABLE RATES -::- CHILDREN ACCEPTED
COMMUNITY KITCHEN FREE



SAN FRANCISCO



SUN SET HOTEL



CALIFORNIA



153 MARKET STREET



SAN FRANCISCO



CALIFORNIA CANNING
PEACH ASSOCIATION



WILLIAM H. STREHLE CO.



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