Hellman, Haas & Co., was one of the first grocers in early Los Angeles, beginning in the early 1870s as a partnership of Abraham Haas, Herman W. Hellman, and Bernard Cohn, and a predecessor company of Smart & Final. In the 1880s and 1890s the business was located at what was then 218–224 N. Los Angeles Street, immediately south of Mellus Row. This was the heart of the city's business district in the 1870s and 1880s. The store sold "everything from drugs to explosives." Food staples were sold by weight, in bulk. The store was one of seven names in the city's first phone directory. In the 1880s, Herman Baruch, who was married to Abraham Haas' niece, Jeanette Meertief, and his brother, Jacob Baruch, who was married to another niece, Jeanette Weiler, bought out Herman Hellman when Hellman took the position of manager of the Farmers and Merchants Bank, a bank which grew out of Hellman's being so trusted that early Angelenos entrusted their valuables to him for safekeeping.