New Jersey industrial directory. 1909, Part 36

Author: New Jersey. Bureau of Industrial Statistics; New Jersey. Bureau of Statistics and Records
Publication date: 1901
Publisher: Union City, N.J. [etc.]
Number of Pages: 674


USA > New Jersey > New Jersey industrial directory. 1909 > Part 36


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70


Netcong is situated on the Morris Canal, which furnishes a valuable water- way for the transportation of bulky freight, and the entire surrounding country is, by reason of its healthful mountain air and natural beauty, an ideal location for either residential or industrial purposes. Netcong is practically the business center of an important part of the iron district of Morris county, and the iron trade is the basis of all the industrial activity which prevails there.


The soil of the outlying country is good, and the land is quite well culti- vated. The foreign immigrants in the vicinity are limited to from 75 to 100 Italians, mostly employed as laborers. Fire protection is provided by high- pressure street hydrants and several volunteer companies. The U. S. Mineral Wool Company has a plant here in which 16 men are employed. The product is a species of wool made from furnace slag.


For further particulars, address the mayor of Netcong.


Netherwood (H 4), Union County.


On the main line of the Central Railroad of New Jersey. A fine residence section of the city of Plainfield, which since its incorporation with that town,


19


290


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


has retained its original railroad name and station. An almost exclusively select residence district, with sewers, water supply, and well kept streets lined by beautiful shade trees and fine residences. Trolley lines connect with all towns east and west, and the schools, churches, police and fire departments of Plainfield, serve the needs in these respects of the residents of Netherwood.


Newark (1 4), Essex County.


All of the following named railroads have one or more stations in the city of Newark: Pennsylvania; Central Railroad of New Jersey; Delaware, Lackawanna and Western; Erie; Lehigh Valley; Newark and New York, and New York and Greenwood Lake, fourteen stations in all. Population, 357,000. A banking town, with seven national banks, five savings banks, five trust companys with banking powers, and one hundred and three building loan societies, with 32,000 stockholders and $16,500,000 assets. National and international money order post office, with several sub-stations. Unlimited telegraph and telephone connection available in all parts of the city. Ex- press service, Adams, United States, National, Wells-Fargo, and numerous local companies doing business between New York, Jersey City, Newark and other Hudson and Essex county towns. Tax rate, $1.63.


Distance to New York City by rail eight miles; by water via Passaic River and Newark Bay, fifteen miles. The water frontage of the city on river and bay is eleven miles in extent, and good docking facilities exist over the greater part of this line. The Federal government has been for some years back improving this important waterway, and a broad channel sixteen feet at low water now connects the city with the Kill Von Kull and New York Bay. This great work, together with the canal of corresponding depth, de- signed to connect the southern section of the city with the river and bay, will in the near future place Newark in a high position among the im- portant commercial centers of the country.


Newark's water supply is drawn from the Pequannock Valley water shed, a distance of twenty-six miles from the city. There are nine reservoirs, with a maximum storage capacity of 9,923,500,000 gallons. The average daily water supply is 50,000,000, and the average daily consumption is 35,000,000 gallons, or approximately 100 gallons per capita of population. There are 352 miles of water mains, and 2,752 fire hydrants. Water is supplied to the city under two systems of pressure-one for ordinary purposes, ranges from 25 to 75 pounds ; the other designed mainly for dealing with fires, ranges in pressure from 90 to 160 pounds. Cost of water to consumers who use meters, $1.121/2 per 1,000 cubic feet, which is equal to 7,500 gallons. The water supply plant is the property of the municipality and cost $11,957,000. The water is pure, soft and satisfactory for all purposes.


Newark covers one hundred and eighty-one and one-half (1811/2) miles of paved streets and eighty-seven (87) miles of partly improved and un- paved streets. Underlying these streets ar seventy-five and one-half (751/2)


29I


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


miles of brick and concrete sewers, one hundred and seventy-eight (178) miles of pipe sewer, and three thousand, two hundred and fifty-one (3,251) catch basins. These sewers drain all parts of the city, and have outlets suited to all sectional requirements.


The trolley lines of Newark provide facilities for inter-community and suburban travel equal in all respects to the best to be found elsewhere in the country. All sections of the city enjoy this service, and five cent fare with transfer privileges, entitles patrons to ride anywhere covered by these lines, within the city limits.


The number of lines operating within the city is twenty-one (21), the number of miles of track is one hundred and three (103) and the number of cars in constant use is five hundred and forty-three (543).


The public park lands within the city have an aggregate area of five hun- dred and ninety-eight (598) acres, divided into nineteen city and four country reservations. By far the larger part of this land has long been beautifully developed, and work on the embellishment of the remainder is constantly going on.


Newark has a particularly rich endowment of institutions of learning, and all matters relating to education enlists the warmest interest of the entire community. There are sixty-one (61) schools, including primary, grammar, high, normal and training schools. There is also one school of technology and one art school, both of which are part of the public school system. The total value of public school property is $4,643,000. Of private and parochial schools and academys there are six-one (61), and in addition to all these there are six business schools engaged in training young people to enter business life.


The public library-one of the finest buildings of its kind in the State- contains at the present time upwards of 125,000 volumes of choice literature, and works on scientific and technical subjects. The library building was erected and furnished at a cost of $415,000. That this fine institution meets a real public want is demonstrated by the fact that its circulation for 1907 reached the enormous total of 630,000 volumes. The maintenance cost of the library is approximately $92,000 per year.


Newark is well provided with fire protection of an unquestionably efficient kind. Its paid department consisting of three hundred and fifty-three (353) men, is equipped with twenty-five steamers, nine hook and ladder trucks, nineteen chemical engines, and one water tower. The annual maintenance cost of the department is $540,862.


The churches of Newark are divided denominationally as follows: Pres- byterian, 32; Catholic, 27; Methodist Episcopal, 23; Baptist, 23; Episcopal, 15; Lutheran, 10; Jewish, 8; other denominations, 28; which makes a grand total of 166 places in the city devoted to religious worship. There are five orphan asylums, II hospitals, and 52 organizations for the purpose of carrying on charitable work in one or another form. Of newspapers and periodicals there are 4 dailies; 10 weeklies; I semi-monthly, and one monthly.


292


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


The fraternal and social element of community life has attained a high degree of development in Newark. Within the city limits are 57 social clubs and 576 lodges, and other societies representing in their many forms the practical application of the great principles of benevolence and mutual assist- ance which underlie all fraternal orders.


In population, variety and total annual value of manufactured products New- ark is the first city in New Jersey. In the value of manufactured goods it ranks eleventh among the cities of the United States. The Board of Trade reports the total amount of capital invested in manufacturing establishments -- great and small-at $130,000,000; number of wage-earners employed, 61,000, and total value of annual products, $175,000,000.


Newark has a Board of Trade composed largely of public spirited citizens who are identified with its large mercantile and manufacturing interests. This organization exerts a powerful influence in directing municipal policy to ends most conducive to the commercial and industrial interests of the city, and its officers are ready at all times to furnish such information as may be desired relating to the municipality and its material interests.


The passenger and freight transportation service enjoyed by Newark is unsurpassable. The trunk lines having one or more stations in the city run approximately 550 passenger trains and 125 freight trains daily, and the num- ber of passengers carried to and from the city annually is reported to be 14.000,000. All the utilities of home, social and business life may be en- joyed in Newark, equal to the best offered by the largest cities of the coun- try. Fine department stores and office buildings, well paved streets, an un- limited supply of pure soft water, banking facilities equal to all demands, perfect postal, telegraph and telephone facilities, unsurpassable steam rail- road service for passenger and freight traffic to any part of the continent, a perfect network of trolley roads extending to all parts of the city and its suburbs and less than twenty minutes' ride to New York City.


It is claimed for Newark that the lines of manufacture carried on within its corporate limits are more numerous than those of any other city in the country ; tramed workmen can therefore be readily obtained here for prac- tically every known industry. The phenomenal growth of Newark as an industrial center fully vindicate the judgment and foresight of the enter- prising and energetic men who laid its foundation many years ago and also that of their latter day successors under whose guidance the industrial in- terests of the city have grown to their present imperial proportions. The accommodations for new industries are practically unlimited. Entire build- ings or floor space with steam or electric power adapted to all requirements can be secured by purchase or lease, and, as before stated, any quantity of labor-skilled or unskilled-may be readily obtained. Land for factory building purposes with direct steam railroad connections can be secured at reasonable prices and a few sites on the water front are still on the market.


The following list gives in alphabetical order the names of the principal factory industries of Newark:


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


293


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximate


No. of Persons Employed.


Albrecht, Albert


Jewelry


15


Adams, T. W., & Company.


Jewelry


30


Ade, Martin


Ice boxes and fixtures.


IO


Agatine Shoe Hook & Eyelet Company.


Shoe hooks


30


Ahrend, Herman, & Son.


Trunk and case locks.


25


Alling & Company


Jewelry


52


Allsopp Brothers


Jewelry


40


Allsopp & Long


Jewelry


20


American Button Company


Buttons and emblems.


90


American Can Company .


Cans and tanks.


40


American Chicle Company


Chemicals


125


American Cigar Company


Cigars


356


American Colortype Company


Art & business calendars.


400


American Cresoting Company


Wood paving blocks.


50


American Hame & Bit Company


Bits and harness.


30 25 40


American Instrument Company. .


Enam. & patent leather.


60


American Platinum Works


Gold and silver refining. Leather goods


IO


American Porpoise Lace Company.


Electrical appliances.


American Undergarment Company


Steel and copper wires ..


25 6


Arbuckle, James N., Company.


Tallow


IO


Arch Crown Manufacturing Company


Jewelry


25


Archibald-Klement Company, The.


Silver goods


35


Armitage, John S., & Company.


Varnish


IO


Art Metal Works


Art novelties


125


Aschenback, H., Harness Company.


Harness and saddles


20


Atha Steel Casting Company.


Steel castings


700


Atha Tool Company, The.


Artisans' tools


350


Atlantic Leather Company


Patent and enam. leather


35


Atlantic Window Shade Company


Window shades


6


Atlas Engineering Company.


Regulators, pump gover- nors.


7 20


Automatic Clerk Company


Chemicals-gums


IIO


Automatic Weighing Machine Company


Auto. weighing machines Water motors


32


Baeder, Adamson & Company.


Hair felt


28


Baier & Conrad


Sheet metal works.


30


Baker & Company, Incorporated.


Platinum ware


50


Baker, Alfred


Buttons


12


Baker, J. J.


Leather specialties


28


Baker Printing Company


Printing & bookbinding.


125


Bal, William


Trunks and case locks ..


25


Balbach Smelting & Refining Company


Smelting and refining ... 600


Ballantine & Sons, P ...


Brewers


550


Bannister, A. F., & Company.


Cutlery


140


55 25 500 20


American Transformer Company


Ladies' underwear


American Wire Cloth Company ..


Anchor Lamp Company


Incandescent elec. lamps.


Anglo-American Varnish Company


Varnish


Atlas Refinery


Neats foot and lard oils


75


Backus Water Motor Company.


Hat leather.


American Hat Leather Company


Elec. measur'g instrum'ts.


American Patent Leather Company


294


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximate


No. of Persons


Employed.


Bannister, James A., Company.


Boots and shoes


700


Barclay Corset Company


Corsets


13


Barlow Foundry Company


Malleable and gray iron


castings


130


Barnet, Fred. M.


Bits and saddlery hard- ware


30


Barnet, L., & Company.


Jewelry


25


Barnett. Oscar, Foundry Company.


Castings


100


Basch & Greenfield Company


Shoddies and flocks.


75


Battin & Company


Jewelry


32


Bauman, H. L., & Company.


Picture frames & novel- ties


40


Beck, A.


Dress suit cases


I8


Beckwith-Chandler Company


Varnishes


35


Belgian-American Fur Cutting Co., Limited .. Hatters' furs


100


Benfield & Milne Manufacturing Company


Enamel letters, signs, etc.


14


Bernstein Brothers


Leather


45


Bernz, Otto


Plumbers' tools & ialties


spec-


50


Best, L. H., Company


Dresses and skirts.


I25


Bevan, Joseph


Saddlery hardware


5


Biertumpfel Cork Company, The.


Cork specialties


15


Bimble, Parry


Harness goods


I2


Bioren Brothers


Lodge jewelry


20


Bippart, Griscom & Osborn.


Jewelry


I25


Birkenhauer & Bauman Old Fashioned Brg. Company


Lager beer


9


Bishop & Bishop


Jewelry


7


Blakeman, Charles


Pearl buttons


20


Blanchard Brothers & Lane.


Patent and fancy leather Cigars


35


Blauvelt Knitting Company


Knit goods


20


Bleeker, Joseph


Sheet metal goods.


14


Bless & Drake


Sad irons


100


Blevney, J. C.


Friction clutches


IO


Bonney & Vehslager Tool Company.


Artisans' tools


8


Boyden Shoe Company


Shoes


350


Brabson Brothers


Builders' hardware


38


Bradley, Parker H., Incorporated.


Composition for leather.


IO


Brass Founders' Supply Company.


Brass foundry equipment


6


Breeze Carbureters Company (Incorporated) . Carbureters and valves.


28


Bride & Tinckler


Jewelry


30


Briscoe Manufacturing Company


Metal ware


125


Brooks, Clarence, & Company.


Varnishes and japans. .


25


Brooks, E. J., & Company.


Metal goods 125


Brown, George, Company.


Cut stone


150


Budish, B.


Hats


57


Buehler, Laudmesser & Herman.


Hat blocks, dies


28


Buerman, August


Saddlery hardware


25


Burns, T. B., & Company.


Curtains & lambrequins.


50


Burroughs, Charles, Company, The.


Presses and pumps.


20


250


Blanchard, Frank


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


295


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximite


No. of Persons Employed.


Butterworth-Judson Company


Chemicals


30


Caffrey, M., Leather Company.


Pat. & enameled leather.


25


Caille. P., & Company


Traveling bags . .


15


Calumet Iron Works


Structural iron work.


16


Campbell Tobacco Company


Tobacco (chewing)


40


Carrington & Company


Fine jewelry


2I


Carter, Howe & Company


Jewelry


300


Cawley, Clark & Company.


Paints and colors.


IIO


Celluloid Company


Celluloid goods


1,300


Central Dyestuff & Chemical Company


Coal tar colors.


I6


Central Foundry Company


Cast iron pipe.


225


Central Stamping Company.


Tin goods


850


Chambers & Company .


Brass founders and fin- ishers


28


Champenois & Company


Jewelry


43


Chase, Edward O.


Special machinery


12


Chatwin, C.


Jewelry


35


Clark, James T.


Iron castings


150


Clark Thread Company


Thread


2,497


Cleveland, W. H., & Son.


Carriages and wagons ..


8


Climax, J. H. W., Company.


Locks


21


Cogswell & Boulter Company.


Infants' and children's


Cohn, J. & M.


Ladies' waists


26I


Composite Typebar Company


Carriages and coaches. . Typesetting machinery .. Shears, scissors, razors.


75


Conery, A. F.


Brushes and buffs.


20


Conlan, B., & Company


Leather and metal novel- ties


60


Connett, E. V., & Company.


Fur hats


250


Consolidated Color & Chemical Company


Chemicals


20


Consumers' Brewing Company ...


Beers, ales and porters ..


I2


Cooper, Charles, & Company, Incorporated. . Cooper Iron Works


Structural steel and iron


100


Cort, Charles


Boots and shoes.


30 175


Cort, Thomas, Incorporated.


Shoes


Cory Brothers Company


Jewelry


Courtois, Bush & Garrigues.


Jewelry


I3


Couse & Bolten


Leather belting


IO


Crabb, William, & Company


Silk mill supplies.


150


Crabbe Harness Company ..


Harness


26


Crane & Theurer


Jewelry


I3


Crescent Cut Glass Company.


Cut glass


30


Crescent Watch Case Company, The.


Watch cases


400


Crown Novelty Company ..


Leather novelties


20


Cumming, M. & M., Company.


Leather


I4


Currier, Cyrus & Sons


Machinists and pattern-


makers IIO


Dahn, J. C.


Jewelry


25


Clifton Art Pottery


Art pottery


dresses, etc.


450


Colyer, J., & Company.


50


Compton, W. H., Shear Company.


Chemicals


I40


296


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximate


No. of Persons Employed.


Daly Hat Company


Soft fur hats.


75


Dalzell, J. D., & Company.


Jewelry


26


Davis, Thomas & Sons


Pearl buttons and novel- ties.


25


Day. Clark & Company.


Jewelry


75


De Bevoise, Charles R., Company.


Corset covers


100


Deiterle, Anton F.


Paper boxes. . 14


D. E. Knit Goods Company, The.


Jackets, sweaters


15


Delaney, Daniel & Son.


Carriage and wagon


springs.


50


Delsarte Manufacturing & Supply Company.


Corsets.


45


Dennis, Martin, Company, The.


Tanners' chemicals.


II


Devoe, F. W., & C. T. Reynolds Company


Varnishes and japans. Pants. .


75


Diffany & Company


Metal goods.


25


Ding & Teuscher


Sheet metal goods.


18


Dixon, Edward J.


Brushes.


5


Dixon, William, & Company.


Brushes.


. .


Dixon & Rippel


Painters' brushes


30


Dodd, David O., Company


Jewelry.


12


Domestic Novelty Company.


Metal specialties.


20


Domestic Sewing Machine Company.


Sewing machines


302


Dorner & Company


Hatters' furs.


200


Doolittle, Henry N.


Wood and paper boxes.


35


Dorsch, William, Shoe Manufacturing Co.


Men's shoes.


104


Douglass & Mooney


Paper boxes ..


52


Downs & Plum Company


Paper boxes .. 25


Dudley, W. W.


Corsets.


14 125


Durand & Company


Jewelry


Duranoid Manufacturing Company. The.


Novelties.


75


Eagle Brewing Company, The ...


Beer, ales and porters ..


40


Eagle Leather Goods Company.


Leather goods.


IO IIO


Eckelhofer Brothers


Trunks & traveling bags


7


Eckfeldt & Ackley


Jewelry


20


Edge, W. C., Jewelry Company.


Jewelry


50


Edwards, James


Pearl buttons & novelties Jewelry


15 25


Electric Hat Rounding Company. .


Hatters' fur


IO


Electric Motor & Equipment Company


Electric novelties, etc. .


I6


Ellis Adding Typewriter Company.


Adding typewriters. 75


Elm Manufacturing Company


Jewelry


12 8


Engel, L., Company


Bookbinders & makers .. Jewelry


I8


Ennis Rubber Manufacturing Company.


Auto and bicycle tires. .


60


Essex Cornice & Skylight Works.


Sheet metal goods


15


Essex County Brewing Company


Lager beer. 30


Essex Foundry


Cast iron pipe.


165


Essex Press


Printers.


100


Machinery.


IO


De Roy & Reiss


Jewelry


25


20


Diefenthaler, William


Eastwood Park Company


Silver goods


Ehrlich & Sinnock


Enderlin, Ferdinand, Jr.


.


Dennis Manufacturing Company


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


297


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximate


No. of Persons Employed.


Excel Electric Heating Company.


Heating devices. .


25


Faber, A. W.


Stationers' rubber goods


50


Feigenspan, Christian


Ales, beers and porters.


285


Felger & Felger


Jewelry


25


Felter & Company


Shoes.


175 6


Ferris Brothers Company, The.


Waists.


330


Ferry, Weber & Company.


Hats.


52


Finn, Benedict


Cigars.


IO


Fisch, Joseph


Hats.


60


Fleissner, Christian


Undertakers' supplies . .


40


Flood & Conklin Company.


Varnishes and japans. . Steam & valve specialties


75


Freeman, Arthur W.


Saddlery hardware.


14


Freudenthal & Adler


Cigars.


27


Fried, Kalman


Overcoats.


50


Frisch Brothers


Gold mounted combs & fobs.


15


Fritsch Baking Company


Bread, rolls, etc ..


46


Fritzsche, L., & Company.


Jewelry. .


24


Gauch, William, & Son.


Paper Boxes, etc.


II5


General Electric Company


Incandescent lamps.


204 30


Germania Electric Lamp Company.


Electric lamps.


Cork pullers, lemon


38


Glutting, Adam, & Son


Cigars.


Glutting, Joseph G.


Cigars.


8


Goeller Iron Works


Structural iron and steel


125


Goertz, August, & Company


Metal novelties.


400


Goldsmith, O. A ..


Brass castings.


I6


Goldsmith, L., & Son.


Trunks & leather goods.


150


Good, R. C. & H. B.


Leather goods.


38


Gould & Eberhard ..


Machinery and tools ..


300


Gould, M., Son & Company


Trunk and bag hardware


175


Granberg, J. A., & S. W.


Jewelry. 60


22


Graecen, Walter, & Company.


Coach & harness mount- ings.


I6


Greene, O. E., & Son.


Brushes.


65


Gross, A., & Company.


Candles.


150


Grossner, F. W.


Saddlery hardware ..


I2


Grover Brothers


Stationery and blank book manufacturer. ...


26


Gumz, Herman, Boiler Works.


Boilers, tanks & stacks ..


5


Haas, W. G.


Leather goods.


3


Hahn Jewelry Company


Sliver goods


. .


Hallock & Denton .


Food products.


18


Halsey, J. H., & Smith, Limited.


Patent and enam. leather


185


Hamburg Button Company.


Pearl buttons and novel- ties.


60


Leather.


IO


Flood, Edward F., & Company


65


Foster Engineering Company.


Gilchrist & Company, The.


squeezers.


I6


Graves File Company


Files and rasps.


Fergg, John


Brewery


298


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximate


No. of Persons Employed.


Hamburg, Cordovan Leather Works, The .. . .


"Upper" leather


600


Haucher, M.


Saddlery goods.


I2


Hanovia Chemical & Manufacturing Company.


Chemicals. 12


Hanson & Van Winkle Company. .


Dynamos. 125


Hardham, L. J., Printing Company


Printing.


15


Harenburg & Ritt


Leather-bookbinding and pocket books. .


4


Harness Manufacturing Company


Bridles, sadles and har- ness.


IO


Harper, Walter J.


Harrison, E. H., & Brother.


Brass & bronze castings Cabinet work.


20


Harrison & Knight Manufacturing Company ..


Drills, punches.


35 15 5


Harrison Manufacturing Company. ...


Inks. .


Hartig Standard Gas Engine Company


Hartung, Lewis


Havell Manufacturing Company


Sheet metal goods.


"H. & W." Company, The.


Corsets and underwaists Structural steel and iron Jewelry


500 14 250


Heck, Louis, Electrical Manufacturing Co .. Hedden, C. M., Company.


Soft fur hats.


Hedden, I. C ...


Hats.


. .


Hedden, V. J., & Sons.


Building


200


Hedges & Brother


Faucets.


30


Heineman, O., & Company


Heinischi, R., Sons Company


Shears.


100


Heller Brothers Company


Files and rasps.


250


Heller & Merz Company, The.


Colors, dyes and paints.


175 65 30


Henerlau, O. L., Company, The.


Jewelry.


80


Hermann, Morris & Company.


Dry colors.


Hess & Harburger .


Leathers.


100 70 250


Hill Bread Company


Bread bakery 157


Hill, Richard, Manufacturing Company


Sporting goods. 40


22


Hollander, A., & Son.


Fur skin dressers and


dyers. 95


Holske, George W., & Company.


Jewelry.


7


Home Brewing Company


Ales, beers and porters.


62


Hooton Cocoa & Chocolate Company.


Cocoa and chocolates. . .


I25


Hopkins Varnish Company


Varnishes. . IO


Horton, Charles, & Sons.


Bits, spurs and stirrups


2


Howell, T. P., & Company.


Patent and enam. leather


275


Hoyt, Obrig & Geiger Company


Jewelry


21


Gas and gasoline engines Paper boxes.


7 15 125


Hay Foundry & Iron Works.


Hayes Brothers Company, The.


Headley & Farmer Company.


Trunks, suit cases, etc .. Carriage & leather cloths 30


Heath, Edmund F., & Son


Hedges, A. J., & Company.


Jewelry.


Mirror plates and bev- eled glass.


IO


Heller Tool Company


Artisans' tools.


Heusler, Joseph, Brewing Company, The. Herpers Brothers


Lager beer.


Settings and ornaments


39


Hewes & Phillips Iron Works.


Steam engines


Hoff, Johann


Malt extracts.


190


Electrical machinery. 20 125


70


INDUSTRIAL DIRECTORY OF NEW JERSEY.


299


NAME OF FIRM.


CHARACTER OF BUSINESS.


Approximate


No. of Persons Employed.


Huebel Manufacturing Company, The.


Hardware goods.


25


Huebner, E., & Sons Company.


Metal buttons.


IIO


Huger, Williams & Company.


Jewelry


IO


Igoe Brothers


Wire nails and wire ... . .


70


Illinois Leather Company


Hair felt.


28 60


Imperial Manufacturing Company.


Typewriter ribbons, type


10


Imperial Varnish Works


Varnishes & compounds Window guards, railings Icemaking and refrig.


12


Isbell-Porter Company


machinery.


200 75


Jackson, T. W., & Company


Underskirts.


Jaenecke Printing & Ink Company, The.


Inks and dry colors.


40


Jenkinson, R. C., & Company.


Sheet metal goods.


Johnes & Benjamin


Corsets. .


Johnson & Brother File Company.


Johnson, William


Johnston & Murphy


Vehicle wheels.


Jones & Woodland Company.


Jewelry


Joralemon, A., & Son.


Jewelry.


Joseph & Bondi


cloaks.


Josts, Edmund, Sons.


Kastner, F. J., Company, The


Katz. J. W.


Hatters' furs


29 40


Kaufherr & Company


Shoe leather.


Kaufmann, K., & Company.


Traveling bags.


Kautzmann & Company .


Jewelry.


Keller, Charles, & Company.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.