Pass F f 44 Rnnk M U( 7 2 . *^OFFICIAL PROGRAMME^ NEWUnti AHNIVERSA INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION ▼• MAY l3''-JUNEy' 1916 In Celebration of The 250th Anniversary of the Settlement of Newark, New Jersey lO Cents REO 2 TON TRUCK Chassis, $1700, Complete — ^Delivered With Driver's Seat and Cab SWING THE AXE ON THE HIGH COST OF DELIVERIES THE YEARS OF SERVICE ARE BUILT IN AND GUARANTEED CATALOG UPON REQUEST REO MOTOR CAR COMPANY Factory Branch for New Jersey 37-39 WILLIAM STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephones Mulberry 3030-3031 REO QUICK DELIVERY $1,120 Complete— Delivere<' with Body, Top, Windshield, Electric Sta) i;er and Lights immB ^ a^a^B NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION In Celebration of tKe 2504i Anni\)ersary of Axe Settlement of Newark, Klew Jersey €1 Auspices of the Committee of One Hundred Direction of Manufactures and Trades Committee MANUFACTURES AND TRADES COMMITTEE AUGUSTUS V. HAMBURG, Chairman. EDWARD E. GNICHTEL, Treasurer J. SMITH, Jr. R. C. JENKINSON F. L. EBERHARDT R. A. HENSLER R. DENBIGH MERLE LEACH DOWNS. Managing Director J.J. SCANNELL, Publisher, Paterson, New Jersey FIRST REGIMENT ARMORY MAT 13fK to JUNE 3rcl, 1916 \ iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiii .NC]S|72 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY H. D. INIiNOR, Proprietor NANKIN GARDEN Restaurant Company "America's Greatest Oriental Restaurant" CABARET de LUXE from 7:00 to 12 p. m. Private dining room For Banquets and Theatre Parties SOCIETY DANCE Every Evening except Saturday and Sunday The first restaurant to be awarded 100% by Newark's Board of Trade MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR FRIDAY NIGHT CARNIVAL INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION CONTENTS PAGE ANNIVERSARY PROGRAM (MAY 1st TO OCTOBER SOtii) 129 COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED (List) 13 COMMITTEE OF FIFTY (List) 125 EXPOSITION— Building 103 Exhibitors (Alphabetic List) 115 Floor Plans 105-107 Program 109 HISTORY OF NEWARK 17 INDEX TO ADVERTISERS 137 MAYORS OF NEWARK (Terms of Office and Pliotos) 93-95 NEWARK'S— Churches 61 Fire Department 89 Park System 69 Police Department 83 Schools 53 THE INDUSTRIAL CITY ( Newark) 33 ILLUSTRATIONS PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON 5 FRANKLIN MURPHY 7 UZAL H. McCARTER 9 OFFICERS, COMMITTEE of ONE HUNDRED ii AUGUSTUS V. HAMBURG 15 EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, HANUFACTURES AND TRADES COMMITTEE 97 MEMBERS, MANUFACTURES AND TRADES COMMITTEE 99 ADVISORY COMMITTEE, MANUFACTURES AND TRADES COMMITTEE 101 NEWARK— First Map of 21 First Picture of 25 Birds-eye View of, 1790 29 Birds-eye View of, 1892 31 Birds-eye Views of, 1916 45-47-49-51 City Buildings 35-37-39-41 Group of Churches 67 Group of Schools 59 , DR. ADDISON B. POLAND 53 : REV. FR. JOHN A. DILLON 57 ' MICHAEL T. LONG 83 PAUL J. MOORE 89 REV. AARON BURR 63 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY A "THATCHER" Combination Range for Coal and Gas in- sures a Cool Kitchen all Sum- mer with the latest improve- ments for Cooking Comfort. The "Thatcher" Newark Plant in 1916 A "Thatcher" House Heater insures a warm house all winter We are proud of Newark's growth and of the part that Thatcher has taken in it. Three generations of Newark housewives have learned to depend on "Thatcher" Heaters and Kitchen Ranges — since 1850 THATCHER FURNACE COMPANY General Offices and E^xhibit Rooniis: 131-137 AVEST 3oTH ST.. NEW YORK Round the world the Shooks they go Made by Hill & Mount you know. WMF. CARTER AUTOMOBILE SHEET METAL PARTS RADIATOR V IF YOU DESIRE FIRST CLASS WORK We will be pleased to serve you 265-267 Halsey Street Newark, N. J. Telephone Market 8612 HILL & MOUNT ESSEX BUILDING NEWARK, N. J. MINER'S Transparent Rouge The Ideal Rouge for All Occasions Will not wash off while Bathing. Not affected by Perspiration. At Drug and Dept. Stores. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY AN IDEAL HARDWARE STORE A place every visitor to Newark sboiild see — -a min- iature I^xposition in itself. 16,000 articles on display. E^xhibitiuisr the product of 90 Newark manufacturers alone. AVe specialise: FACTORY SUPPLIES BUILDERS' HARDWARE TOOLS FOR ALL TRADES A hearty vrelcome to all. LUDLPW &5QUIER PXPERTS IN HARDWARF 07-99 MARKET STREET 239 WASHINGTON STREET Official Photographers to the Committee of 100 The fact that we have been selected to make the portraits of the Cele- bration Committee of One Hundred and to make photos of Exhibition Exhibits should satisfy anyone — everyone — of our ability and stand- ing as high class artist photographers. We make photos of people, places, objects and events — indoors and outdoors. KOENIG'S STUDIO BROAD STREET, Cor. William NEWARK, N. J. TREFZ "Taste Tells ff INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION Franklin Murphy Chairman of the Committee of One Hundred NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY HAHNE& Co. BROAD, NEW AND HALSEY STREETS NEWARK, N. J. Distributors of Dependable, Desirable Merchandise for Every Member of the Family and for the Home. This store is building for the future on deeds of the present. The center plank of its platform is SERVICE. — Good Service in Quality of Merchandise. — Good Service in Correctness of Style. — Good Service in Fairness of Price. — Good Service in Variety. — Good Service in Newness and Freshness of Merchandise. We buy in world markets for as little as we can and sell for as little as we can afford. From pins and needles to the complete equipment of the home, you can buy from our large stocks with assurance of getting articles worthy of your money. This is "The Store Helpful." WELCOME to use the many store conveniences. You can spend an entire day in this big store without once going out- side — pleasantly and profitably. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION UzAL H. McCarter Chairman of the Executive and Finance Committee of the Committee of One Hundred 10 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY NEWARK'S NEW MILLION DOLLAR HOTEL BUILT FOR NEWARK'S BIRTHDAY THE ROBERT TREAT Operated mider directiuu of United Hotels Company Management, CHARLES A. CARRIGAN Named after Ihe founder of the City of Newark. Built and opened to commemorate the 250th Anniversary, May, 1016. A Metropolitan Hotel in all its appointments; conducted with the idea to please Commercial, Permanent and Tourist patronage. Erropean Plan. HOO Rooms. 275 Baths. Rates: $1.50 per day and upwards; with Batli, $2.00 per day and upwards THE UNITED HOTELS THE ROBERT TREAT, Newark, N. J. The Bancroft Worcester, Mass. The Nonotuck Holyoke, Mass. The Lawrence Erie, Pa. The Ten Eyck Albany, N. Y. Hotel Utica Utica, N. Y. The Onodaga Syracuse, N. Y. Royal Connaucht Hamilton, Ont. The Portage Akron, Ohio The Jefferson Peoria, 111. The Tutwiler Birmingham, Ala. Make Special Reservations during Anniversary Celebration, May to October INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 11 IIkxhy Wellington Wack Executive Adviser Matthias Stratton David H. Merbitt Secretary Treasurer OF THE COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED 12 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY BALUNTINE'S W BREWERIES Freeman, Ferry, Ox- ford, Christie Streets and Fleming Avenue NEWARK NEW JERSEY Malt Houses and Grain Ele- vator Front and Rector Streets and Passaic River Buy Your Wrapping Paper FROM A NEWARK HOUSE The J. E. Linde Paper Company is a Newark Corporation, employing Newark citizens and owning its own warehouse in the heart of Newark. FULL LINE OF WRAPPINGS, TWINE, TOILETS, TISSUES, Etc. J. E. LINDE PAPER COMPANY 48-50 LAFAYETTE STREET, NEWARK, N. J. PATRONIZE HOME PRODUCTS Telephone Market 7926 INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 13 COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED CITY OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Franklin Murphy CHAIRMAN D. H. Merritt TREASURER Matthias Stratton SECRETARY FRANKLIN MURPHY CHAIRMAN COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED James Smith, Jr. VICE-CHAIRMAN Alexander Archirald HON. SECRETARY James R. Nugent COUNSEL UzAL H. McCarter CHAIRMAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Henry Wellington Wack EXECUTIVE ADVISER His Honor Thomas L. Raymond MAYOR Former Mayor Jacob Haussling HONORARY MEMBER UZAL H. McCARTER CHAIRMAN EXECUTIVE AND FINANCE ALEXANDER ARCHIRALD GEORGE B. ASTLEY CHARLES BRADLEY GEN. R. HEBER BREINTNALL ALRERT H. BIERTUEMPFEL JOSEPH B. bloom PHILIP C. BAMBERGER ANGELO R. BIANCHI EDWARD T. burke STANISLAUS BULSIEWICZ JAMES F. CONNELLY JOHN L. CARROLL RT. REV. MGR. PATRICK CODY WILLIAM H. CAMFIELD JOSEPH A. CARROLL FRANK W. CANN WILLIAM I. COOPER FORREST F. DRYDEN DR. WILLIAM DIMOND JOHN H. DONNELLY RICHARD DENRIGH ALFRED L. DE VOE PATRICK J. DUGGAN HENRY M. DOREMUS DANIEL H. DUNHAM LABAN W. DENNIS J. VICTOR D'ALOIA MRS. HENRY H. DAWSON FREDERICK L. ERERHARDT CHARLES EYTEL JOHN ERR CHRISTIAN W. FEIGENSPAN REV. JOSEPH F. FOLSOM rabbi SOLOMON FOSTER JOHN R. FLAVELL WILLIAM H. F. FIEDLER LOUIS A. FAST HENRY A. GUENTHER ALBERT T. GUENTHER JOHN F. GLUTTING EDWARD E. GNICHTEL GEORGE J. GATES AUGUSTUS V. HAMBURG HERMAN C. H. HEROLD WILLIAM T. HUNT C. WILLIAM HEILMANN RICHARD A. HENSLER HENRY HERELER MRS. HENRY A. HAUSSLING MISS FRANCES HAYS RICHARD C. JENKINSON LEOPOLD JAY MRS. FRED C. JACOBSON NATHANIEL KING GOTTFRIED KRUEGER WILLIAM B. KINNEY DR. JOSEPH KUSSY J. WILMER KENNEDY WILLIAM O. KUERLER RT. REV. EDWIN S. LINES, D.D. CHARLES W. LITTLEFIELD CARL LENTZ FRANKLIN MURPHY UZAL H. MC CARTER D. H. MERRITT REV. T. AIRD MOFFAT WILLIAM J. MC CONNELL ANTON F. MULLER JOHN F. MONAHAN JOHN H. MC LEAN JOHN METZGER JAMES R. NUGENT JOHN NIEDER PETER J. o'tOOLE WILLIAM P. o'ROURKE JOHN L. o'tOOLE EDWARD J. o'bRIEN PATRICK C. O'rRIEN benedict PBIETH LOUIS PFEIFER MICHAEL J. QUIGLEY THOMAS L. RAYMOND JOHN F. REILLY DR. SAMUEL F. ROBERTSON GEORGE F. REEVE FRED. H. ROEVER MORRIS R. SHERRERD EDWARD SCHICKHAUS JAMES SMITH, JR. GEORGE D. SMITH JULIUS SACHS ERNEST C. STREMPEL A. A. SIPPELL J. GEORGE SCHWARZKOPF RERNARD W. TERLINDE CHARLES P. TAYLOR FRANK J. URQUHART DR. A. G. VOGT CHRISTIAN WOLTERS, JR 14 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Stewart Hartshorn Co. MANUFACTURERS Spring Shade Rollers WOOD :: TIN for Window Shades, Awnings, Car Shades, Porch Curtains Main Factory EAST NEWARK, NEW JERSEY branch factories : Muskegon, Mich. Toronto, Canada LINDE & GRIFFITH COMPANY CONTRACTORS Foot of Fourth Ave., Newark, N. J. BISHOP & BISHOP Successors to Bercfei.s & Co. MANUFACTURING JEWELERS Patentees of Pearl Setting Without Clamps 336 Mulberry Street, Newark, N. J. N. Y. Office: Maiden Lane Safe Deposit Co. 170 Broadway A. YESKEL Wholesale Dealer and Manufacturer of JUTE, COTTON AND BURLAP BAGS Second-hand Bags of all kinds Bought and Sold Potato and Flour Bags a Specialty 11 Peshine Avenue, Newark, N. J. Telephone 2773 Waverly 'Phone Connection 0pp. Market Street Depot BOICE & PLAIN PATTERN MAKERS Dealers in Pattern Letters, Leather Fillets, etc. 15 Aeeing Street, Newark, N. J. H. J. RUESCH MACHINE CO. Jewelers' and Silversmiths' Machinery 401-411 MULBERRY STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Rolling Mills, Draw Benches, Wire Drawing Machinery, Power Screw Presses, Drop Presses, Foot Presses, Rotary Shears, Gang Slitters Telephone Orange 128 Six Miles Ride from Newark McCLOUD'S TAVERN MUSHROOM AND CHICKEN DINNER OUR SPECIALTY Fresh Mushrooms and Broiled Spring Chicken MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR TABLES MT. PLEASANT AND PROSPECT AVES., WEST ORANGE, N J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 15 Augustus V. Hamburg Chairman of the Manufactures and Trades Committee of the Committee of One Hundred 16 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Newark 0ppekheim,6liins&6 Broad and William Streets QamerUxCsjoremosi Spedadsis Women's, Misses', Juniors' and Girls' High Grade Wearing Apparel The "buying power" created by the six wonderful establishments of Oppenheim, Collins & Co. NEWARK NEW YORK BROOKLYN PHILADELPHIA BUFFALO CLEVELAND Places them in a position to offer the best and smartest to be had in style, material and workmanship AT MODERATE PRICES 'F. &W." Fitting Cesspool with Bell-Trap The "Lynn" Drain Trap CENTRAL FOUNDRY CAST IRON PRODUCTS Cast Iron Soil Pipe and Soil Pipe Fittings "F & W" Fittings— take the place of two or more ordinary fittings Universal Pipe — "Joint" and "Pipe" are "one." Tlie "Lynn" Drain Trap for Automobile Washstands, Hospitals, Breweries, etc. Manhole Frames and Covers; Valve, Ser- vice and Roadway Boxes; Cesspools; etc. Ornamental Lamp Posts and Lighting Standards Ask for Literature CENTRAL. New York — 90 West Street. Newark — Foundry at Ft. of Lockwood St. Six other Foundries. Soil Pipe Fitting Universal Pipe Manhole Frame AND Cover INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 17 ^VS^/JCtirt'' r^I- History of Newark NEWARK'S KNACK AT MAKING THINGS Written by Frank J. Urquhart Photos Loaned by Dr. Wm. S. Disbrow EWARK has always known how to make things. There is no more gainsaying this than there is disputing the fact that the town came into being in mid-May, 1666. It has been "in the breed," to use a homely old expres- sion, since the beginning. Moreover, there is proof enough at hand that the founders expected, sooner or later, that the community was going to do one kind of manufacturing or another. The sharp and comprehensive glances of the very pioneer committee of the settlers, who came here and traversed the ground at least once before the actual settlement, saw the possibilities that abode in the almost innumerable brooks and stream- lets splashing down the nearer hillsides, affording ample water power. There was also a certain deftness about them that the close reader of their Old Minute Book soon detects. Whatever they did they did well. Three-quarters of a century ago, men engaged in re- moving the last surviving traces of ancient homes — habitations of the second or third generation of Newark folk- — took special note of the extreme stability of even the crumbling ruins. The ob- servers, good workmen themselves, mar- veled at the traces of excellent work- manship that they were able to discern. We all of us know, today, by our re- markably well laid out Broad Street, by its ingenious accommodating of itself to the contour of the blufif which still sur- vives along the river front, and by its gratifying width — that the founders were no ordinary men. They saw far — very far — ahead, and they utilized every physical advantage they discovered in this wilderness, thus permitting us to realize their breadth of vision and their capacity for doing whatever it seemed meet and fitting for them to do, far better than most of their neighbors. They were neat, orderly and system- n.tic in their work. This is not hearsay ; the Old Minute Book proves this for us. over and over again. They had system and method. They at once went at the draining of the marshes— and the marsh was all about them, in the very center of the town. They told oflf the able-bodied Contmucd on page ig NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Established 1845 'NEWARK'S OLDEST REAL ESTATE FIRM' E. E. BOND & CO. Real Estate and Insurance FACTORIES, SITES 764 BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N. J. IN BUSINESS OVER EIGHTY YEARS C. B. SMITH & CO. Wholesale Druggists and Dealers in Manufacturers' Supplies ACIDS, CHEMICALS, OILS, Etc. and Makers of EMERSON'S DEAD SHOT For Worms in Horses and Cattle EMERSON'S LIVER TONIC SMITH'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS H. B. FLAVORING EXTRACTS 57-59 Green St., Newark, N. J. One of the Largest Buyers in the United States of Butcher and Packer Offal. Always in the Market STANDARD TALLOW CO. Tallow, Grease, Hides Skins, etc. General Oeeice and Rendering Works : BLANCHARD STREET, NEWARK Telephone 3575 Mulberry Highest Prices paid for Shop Fat, Suet, Bones Telephone Call will bring our Wagon LATHER BRUSHES Tlie Bristles anchored permanently in a solid settingof Hard Rubber rw TRADE ^ Write for Descriptive Literature GOLF HEADS Non-Absorbent Made of "Condensite" The Driver or Brassie with a 10 per cent. more "go" in it. THE HARDRIGHT CO. :: Belleville, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 19 men into squads to ditch the pubHc lands, seeing to it that each did his full and proper share. They fined hini if he failed in this ; the "slacker" had no rest, lie could not live in idleness upon his own acres. It was necessary that he should ditch his own land, in order that the few highways and the lands of others might be relieved speedily in times of Hood and in prolonged rainy weather. So it was also when it came to building the roads (which was largely "Wake-up Drum" — 16G6 a matter of widening and straightening and "short-cutting" the Indian trails) ; each man did his part. On "burning" days — when the salt meadows were to be cleared by flame and when brush was to be similarly disposed of in clearings — the proper sort of day, after a rain, with the wind from the proper quarter and after due notice to the town by drum- beat, was an imperative necessity. When it came to the building of their first grist mill (on the north side of the ]:)resent Clay Street, a short distance to the west of Broad Street) they were ex- ceedingly particular that it should be done in the best manner. Two or three tried to build it, and the town shook its head — the builders did not measure up to the high standard required. At last Robert Treat took the job into his own hands — and the mill was soon in o]:)era- tion. This was one of the last public services Robert Treat gave to the com- munity before returning to Connecticut. Ten years or so after the settlement, the town meeting voted a fine upon the luckless shoulders of anyone who should mar or otherwise seriously deface one of the trees which the town's officers had set aside to be kept inviolate (mani- festly for the beautification of the town). They would not tolerate slovenliness nor untidiness any more than they would laziness. They were striving for a comely, well ordered village — and they surely got it. A hundred years later, during the first three or four decades after the War for Independence, travelers who found their way to Newark, many of whom were cultured Frenchmen and Englishmen, wrote with great enthu- siasm in their books of the village. One counted it the most beautifid village he had seen in his travels over a large part of the world, and many spoke of it as beautiful. All this was the fruitage of the earnest, high-minded efiforts of the first generations, who gave Newark a masterful push along right lines. But to return more closely to the making of things, to the early, albeit faint, manifestations of the people's trend toward the industries. Newark had a tannery as early as 1698, and a son-in-law of Robert Treat, Azariah Crane ( son of Jasper the Founder, who probably laid out the town) built and owned it. Newark had one or more boat builders from the very beginning. It had coop- ers and men of other trades. Sometimes it subsidized skilled mechanics to settle here, by giving them land, free. It was not long before the town could manu- facture almost everything it needed in the way of utensils ; farm implements and such things that it could not make it got from New York, bartering its farm produce for the goods. Early in the Eighteenth Century, the thrifty Newarkers discovered that the red sandstone, of which there was an abundance and which they had already begun to use for foundation stones for their homes, was marketable. Where was their first quarry? No one can be absolutely certain today, but we may rest assured it was not very far from Mill Brook (First River) — the stream upon whose banks Robert Treat erected the first grist mill. Once upon a time Coiitiiutcd on page 25 20 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Packard Cars for Hire HOUR— DAY— WEEK— MONTH ESTABLISHED TWELVE YEARS BEST AND CLEANEST SERVICE Telephone Mulberry 789 AUTOMOBILE RENTING CO. 11 EAST KINNEY STREET, NEWARK, N. J. J. S. KiNSEY, President L. C. KinsEy, Treasurer American Oil & Supply Co, OILS, GREASES, ACIDS CHEMICALS 52-54-56 LAFAYETTE STREET NEWARK, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 21 22 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Teleplione 3639 Mulberry Entrances: 575 Broad Street 3 Central Avenue Factory on Premises OPTICIANS 575 BROAD STREET CORNER CENTRAL AVENUE NEWARK, N. J. BOEGER-MEYER MACHINE & TOOL CO. Engineers :: Machinists :: Manufacturers Machine Tools, Automatic and Special Machinery, Gear Cutting, Tools, Dies, Moulds 59-65 McWHORTER STREET, NEWARK, N. J. "BETTER THAN IVORY" Hyatt-Burroughs Billiard Ball Co. Manufacturers of Patented Bakelite Billiard and Cue Balls 141-149 COMMERCE STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephone 1298 Branch Brook JAMES G. BRIERLEY ;; Mortuarian Son of the Late JOSHUA BRIERLEY 402 BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Private Chapel Attached Automobile Service INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 23 The following is a key to the map on preceding page, with the names of the owners of the various plots designated upon the map S. E. SECTION A— Robert Treat* B — Abraham Pierson C — Robert Denison D — Thomas Johnson E — George Day F — Nathaniel Wheeler G — Joseph Riggs H — William Camp I — Martin Tichenor J — Stephen Freeman K — John Curtis L — John Baldwin, Sen'r M — Thomas Staples N — John Baldwin, Sen'r O — Michael Tompkins P — Jonathan Tomkins Q — Ephraim Pennington R — Seth Tompkins S — The Tailor's Lot T — Thomas Pierson, Jun'r U — Samuel Harrison V — John Brown, Jun'r W — Edward Riggs X — Hugh Roberts ♦Azariah Crane S. W. SECTION A — Meeting House Lot B — Capt. Treat's Recompense C — John Johnson D — Parsonage Home Lot E — John Brown, Sen'r F — Stephen Bond G — Zachariah Burwell H — Ephraim Burwell I — Thoam Ludington J — John Brooks K — Thomas Lj'on L — Joseph Johnson M— John Treat N — Samuel Lyon O — Henry Lyon P — Joseph Walters Q — Samuel Camfield R — Robert Douglass S — Francis Lindsley T— Mathew Williams N. E. SECTION A — Lauranc Ward B — John Catlin C — Samuel Kitchel D — Josiah Ward E — John Rogers F— Robert Kitchel G — Jeremiah Peck H— Obadiah Bruen I — -The Seaman's Lot J — -Thomas Richards K — John Harrison L — Aaron Blatshly M — Stephen Davis N — Samuel Plum O — John Crane P — Jonathan Sergeant Q — Robert Lymon R — Jolin Davis *and Abraham Pierson, Jun'r N. W. SECTION A — Samuel Swaine B — Richard Harrison C— Edward Ball D— John Morris E — John Ward, Sen'r F — Mathew Camfield G — John Gardner H — Jasper Crane I — Thomas Pierson, Sen'r J — Benjamin Baldwin K — Thomas Huntington L — Alex Munroe M— The Elder's Lot N — John Ward, Jun'r O — Ricliard Laurance P — Delivered Crane Q— Hans Albers R — Samuel Rose S— The Miller's Lot T— Samuel Dod U— Daniel Dod V— The Corn Mill Continued on page 25 24 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Dooner & Smith Chemical Co. CHEMICALS, TANNING MATERIALS ACIDS, ALCOHOLS, AMMONIA PAINTS, OILS, BRUSHES MANUFACTURERS' SUPPLIES 374-376-378 MULBERRY STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Established 1875 THE CHARLES BURROUGHS CO. Machinery Complete Plants for Manufacturing and Moulding Compositions 141-149 COMMERCE STREET, NEWARK, N. J. S^e/^VourOrd^^^ Telephone 190 Mulberry COUSE & BOLTEN Manufacturers of Pure Oak Tanned Leather Belting The Bolten Waterproof Leather Belting 42-44-46 LAFAYETTE STREET NEWARK, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 25 there were ancient quarry holes along the north bank of Mill Brook, nearly up to the present Branch Brook Park. One of the most ancient quarries, however, was on the north side of Bloomfield Avenue, a little west of Belleville Avenue. This was long, long before the Clifton-Bloomfield Avenue quarries were so much as dreamed of. Well, all the stone taken out of these they found the outcroppings in abun- dance. One could literally fill his saddle bags with the ore, just picking it off the ground. So they moved their earthly possessions up the trails through the Caldwell and Roseland region, and be- yond, and sat themselves down, per- manently, on the banks of the Whippany River. Soon their forge fires were alight, and they burned without cessa- Oldest Picture of Newark — Original Trinity Church, Erected 1744 quarries for market was rolled or hauled down the hillside and to the dock near where Mill Brook lost itself in the Pas- saic. Thence it was deposited upon the staunch, light-draft boats of the period. All this made a sort of business centre at what is now the Broad and Clay Street neighborhood, and it looked at one time as if the business heart of the community would fix itself there. About the year 1700, possibly two or three years later, enterprising Newark men learned, presumably from the Indians, of what for that time were rich deposits of iron ore on the hills of Morris County. They got the Red Men to show them where the iron was. and tion until the War for Independence and for a goodly time thereafter. Thus the present Whippany w^as be- gun — yes, and the flourishing Morris- town, also — by Newark folk. It is said that when Washington first found his way to Morristown, and rode his horse out into the neighboring country, nothing interested him so much as the forges. He knew that from these he was to get cannon balls for his guns. He noted, further, that the men at the forges were fine, muscular, upstanding chaps. "I must have some of these men for my army." he is reported to have said — and no doubt he got them. Continued on f^age 27 26 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Organized 1855 This Company in addition to the Fire Business, issues Tornado Policies Firemen's Insurance Company OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY ASSETS Bonds and Mortgages.... State, County and Municipal Bonds 276,640.86 Railroad Bonds 602,550.00 Miscellaneous Bonds 387,500.00 Railroad Stocks 930,486.00 Bank Stocks 362,125.00 Miscellaneous Stocks 215,250.00 Real Estate 1,074,129.63 Cash on hand and in bank 198,592.70 Agents' Balances 481,851.96 Interest and Rents due and ac- crued 52,842.89 Re-Insurance due on paid losses 6,635.01 STATEMENT, JANUARY 1, 1916 LIABILITIES $2,491,700.00 Capital Stock $1,0-0,0,000.00 Reserve Re-Insurance Fund 2,955,812.47 Reserve for Unpaid Losses and all other Liabilities 382,113.55 Net Surplus 2,708,837.43 Gross Assets $7,080,304.05 Assets not Admitted 33,540.60 Total Admitted Assets $7,046,763.45 Total Liabilities $7,046,763.45 A successful record of 60 years. Losses paid during that time exceed $17,000,000.00 Daniel H. Dunham President John Kay Vice-President Neal Bassett Vice-President Albert H. Hassinger Secretary * H. B. Good, President R. C. Good, Vice-President and Treasurer J. 0. Amberg, Secretary MAX HERTZ Leather Manufacturer GOOD BROS. LEATHER CO. Tanners and Leather 54-78 OLIVER STREET Manufacturers NEWARK, N. J. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Jacob Schaefer, President Ira T. Dolson, Treasurer Compliments of Independent Tallow Co. HESS, HARBURGER & Dealers in DRUCKER HIDES, SKINS, FAT, BONES Leather Manufacturers AND BEEF SCRAPS C8-82 Amsterdam Street Office: 601 FERRY STREET, NEWARK Newark, N. J. Factory: Meadow Street 65 DuANE St., New York, N. Y. Teleplione Market 1831 INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 27 With the opening of the War for In- dependence, all these stirrings of early industry came well nigh to a standstill in and near Newark. War was too close to her doors. She was on the edge of hostile territory, from the time New York fell into the hands of the British in the fall of 177G, until the Declara- tion of Peace, in 1783. The able men, the men of red blood, as we would say, were in the regiments of the Continental line or were serving for longer or shorter periods in the militia. The soil had to be tilled, in order that the people might have food. So all industries, except farming languished. But throughout all those grim, dark years, men of brains and initiative were moving here and there about New Jer- sey, men of the Continental Army, the bright young gentlemen of the Generars staff — Alexander Hamilton and others. They were "live wires" ; they hustled. They had to, to keep up with their chief, Washington. They saw the possibili- ties of the region, and when peace came and the creation of the industries was recognized as vital if the new country was to get up on its feet, stand erect and maintain its dearly-bought inde- pendence — these men were ready with facts and with figiires to stir the people to the new order of things. To start an industry in the first two or three decades after the War for Inde- pendence, was to create a patriotic en- terprise. The shop or mill owner was looked upon as, in a sense, a public bene- factor. Hamilton, in Washington's Cabinet, jireached eternally the great need for manufacturing, the fostering of the useful arts. Mis gospel was that of hundreds of other men ; so the wheels began to turn. Hamilton remembered Passaic Falls, from his old campaigning days. He remembered Newark, too. He came here, repeatedly, to confer with some of the leading men of this town as to the establishment of a manufacturing com- munity. Many of these conferences were held in the home of Klisha Bou- dinot which stood on the site of the new Public Service Terminal building. They decided that their proposed new town should be named after the then Governor of the State, Paterson. The town had a name, when it was still a toss-up in the present Springfield, in the section (then far out of the town of Newark) along the Passaic, near the present whether it should be built on the brook Fourth Avenue ; or at Passaic Falls. Hamilton favored the Falls, and he won. In the meantime, new shops were springing up, feebly, to be sure, but in- creasing steadily in numbers, here in Newark, around our beloved old Four Corners. And an interesting fact about that beginning is that the Newark men in the van in all of these innovations were almost without exception veterans of the then very recent war. Why was this? The writer will let the reader figure it out, contenting him- self only with reminding him of what has already been said, that the in- dustries created after the war were looked upon as patriotic enterprises. The men who had risked their lives that America might be free, were real pa- triots. They now turned the same splen- did courage to that best of all uses of which the world has any knowledge, the fostering of peace through work, through industry. Moses Combs, who really put the town's industries on a well organized and practical basis, beginning with his shoemaking plant, was a soldier of the Revolution. Captain Pennington, who became Governor of New Jersey, was a hatter before the war and returned to his trade for a short time when it was over. Elisha iJoudinot, already men- tioned, was connected with the Conti- nental Army. The real organizer of the stage coach lines here and for many years a sort of transportation magnate, was Lieutenant Colonel John Noble Cummings. and there were more of pre- cisely the same stuff. Newark has never done them half enough honor. The first Inde])endence Day celebra- tion in Newark of which we have any record was in 1788. The account of the festivities is mo.st instructive. The war was but five years behind the people. They were sick and weary of the clash of arms. The comnnmity was just stag- gering back to its feet after the fearful ContUiiicd on page 2Q 28 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY GOOD COAL FOR ALL PURPOSES FAMILY TRADE OUR SPECIALTY 502 BROAD STREET NEWARK, N. J. ESTABUSHED 1857 COOK & GENUNG COMPANY Everything in Masons' Materials Main Office: 16 JERSEY STREET, NEWARK, N. J. I FOUR YARDS 16 Jersey Street, Newark, N. J. Cottage St. and L.V.R.R., Irvington 434 Ogden Street, Newark, N. J. 1:34 UHie Street, Newark, N. J. . o u 2*5 z =» >-" >• ^'"S H « OS 4> §c« H >■ = M H W ^1 to -a OS .5 2iE • o u S s Z u- ^ J g O H ^ § js P-H u ^ « •^ >■»<» g 1— 1 Q ^ o c o z -s T3 •-1 . o P z" U) ^ g. .age 31 30 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY ZIEGEL, EISMAN (Sf CO. Manufacturers of ^y Genuine Kangaroo Shoe Leather IN ALL GRADES AND FINISHES Tannery— NEWARK, N. J. Salesrooms— BOSTON, MASS. VAN KEUREN & SON Paving Contractors :: Building Material 501 PASSAIC AVENUE, EAST NEWARK, N. J. A. THEOBALD Rendering Plant HARRISON AVENUE, KEARNY, N. J. TURNER MACHINE COMPANY Hat and Fur Dressers' Machinery Machine Tools, Turner Turrets, etc. Special Machines 28-40 EAGLES STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Danbury, Conn. DiiNTON, Manchkster, England. Stockport, England INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 31 All that vanished, when the bridges were open. Newark now came into its own. Its shops and factories ninltiplied. Several lines of stages carried people into and out of the town, six days a week. Wagons and drays moved out the finished product and brought in the raw material in ever-increasing volume. Soon came Newark's wizard of m- vention, Seth Boyden, from New Eng- land, only a youth, to devise machinery for the making of better goods, and cheaper and in greater volume. Labor There is but one thing more to say, and this in conclusion. With the coming of the industries the pretty village of Newark sickened. The Newarkers of a hundred years ago and more had, somehow lost the neatness and orderli- ness of the founders and their immedi- ate successors. The new generations, following the War for Independence, be- came too intent on their work ; they piled their rubbish high about them. Broad Street became a wallow of mud. The people prospered, but they neglected Newark, 1892, Looking Southwest from Clark's Chimney came down from the countryside in re- sponse to the demand. Then the early immigrants, the industries, increasing steadily, decade by decade. In the early Thirties of the last century the first railroad poked its clumsy length into Newark by the way of the first Centre Street bridge, around into Market, up to Broad, down into Broad and William Streets, and still further down later. It was closely followed by the Morris and Essex, which, for years hauled its trains with horses down Broad Street, through Park Place to Centre Street, thus to the line of the original road. Development followed swiftly after that. We know the result today; we see it all around us. their town. It was most regrettable, but Newark was simply following the order of things incidental to almost every other American village that had sprung suddenly out of quiet, easy-going ways, into a feverish striving in industrial activity. But we are changing all that today ; we have been changing it for the last two decades or so. Newark is now learning how to be rich and powerful and prosperous and at the same time attractive to live in. The new and greater, broader era is now with us. Newark is going to be a beautiful city. Indeed, it is so already to a far greater degree than most of us seem to com- prehend. 32 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Telephone 2210 Harrison SCHWARZ BROS. COMPANY Removers of Dead Animals Dealers in Hides, Skins, Fat and Bones 1100 HARRISON AVENUE KEARNY, N. J. ESTABLISHKD 1885 CHRISTIAN LUTZ Cafe 323 HALSEY STREET NEWARK, N. J. SUPERIOR LEATHER CO. Upholstery Leather NEWARK, NEW JERSEY F. A. SHAEFFER Manufacturer of Fancy Colored Leather 55-63 RERGEN STREET NEWARK, N. J. Progressive Paper Box Co. P)U^-|) AND Seventeenth Avenue, Newark Specialty Paper Box Co. 216-228 HicH Street, Newark, N. J. United Paper Box Co. ;!() Bedford Street, Newark, N. J. DAVID SCHIFFENHAUS Paper Boxes 7:!-7r Nichols Street, Newark, '.:. J. SPECIAT. DROP FORCINGS as good as can be made. VALVE STEMS forgkd solid from VALVE STEEL Twenty Sizes Carried in Stock STRIEBY & FOOTE CO. :: Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 33 Newark, the Industrial City OH NEWARK'S KNACK AT D()IN(; THINCiS Bv William E. Sackeit IE genius that made a Sett- ers' holiday of the opening (if the first grist mill and of tlie first saw mill in Old Xewark, was instinct with the prophecy of a proud industrial des- tiny that the New Newark — the Newark of today — has more than fulfilled. And there is greater yet for her behind the veil of the future ! By the time her next quarter-millennial feast is due she will have become that American Metropolis which Alexander Plamilton glimpsed on the west shore of the Hudson, away back in the Revolutionary days when he wrote the charter of the Society for the Promotion of Useful Alanufactures. It is not a far cry to the time when all of Essex will be Newark ; and the ag- grandized city, now the fourteenth in population in the country, will reach out for Jersey City and Hoboken, over there; for Paterson and Hackensack, up there ; and for Elizabeth, down yon- dt ^ and gather them all under her wing into one great municipality that will challenge even Greater New York's metropolitan supremacy. Bifj Business Figures r>ut that is prophecy; and prophecy is not the purpose of this book. The Newark of today has indeed, already achieved a greatness that the dream of the prophet is not needed to glorify. She has let nothing stand in the way of her resistless march to pre-eminence. When the seas defied her expansion, she wrested the meadows from them and planted her mills where the waters had been. She has pressed herself, through marsh and across meadow, into 23y^ squares miles of territory ; and, on the front of the bay and river which vainly challenged her efforts at expansion, she has a wharf frontage of IOI/2 miles. The tonnage of the business she does at that front reached nearly five millions last year, and its estimated value was close to forty millions. And, restless ever, she is now again planning, on her bay front, a new industrial city with a new water expansion that will give her a new station among the humming cen- tres of the nation. Her water freightage is, of course, but a part — and a small part — of her in- dustrial activity. The Exposition her manufacturing captains opened in the First Regiment Armory, three or four years ago, showed that. It was varied and imposing enough to attract 175,000 visitors ; and the profits enabled the Board of Trade to get out a large vol- ume exhibiting the details of the city's busy workshops. That volume, sought all over the world for its pointers, lists ?.")2 distinct lines of industrial endeavor in which Newark is engaged. Her manufacturing industries, indeed, en- gaged a capital of $175,000,000, and distributed $00,000,000 among their 75.000 operators last vcar. In their shops thev transformed '$150,000,000 of raw material into $250,000,000 of the finished product. Twenty-three freight delivery yards were needed for the hand- ling of their stuff, and 254 freight trains daily for its transportation. The ton- natre delivered in the citv last year reached the fine total of 3.785.027. and that which went out aggregated 1.122.- 072. Six railroads helped to carry this inland freight of hers ; while the under- river tubes, and twenty-three admirably- Continucd on page 35 34 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY The New Jersey Fire Insurance Company Capital $1,000,000 HOME OFFICE: 40 CLINTON STREET, NEWARK, N. J. DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF NEW AND SECOND-HAND BARRELS Let us know what you have to otter and what you have to buy John Ebersberger NEWARK AND PATERSON Telephone 7244 Market N. J. LAMP WORKS All Kinds of Auto Radiators, Lamps, Fenders, etc.. Repaired Eind new ones made to order All Work Guaranteed 21 WILLIAM STREET NEWARK, N. J. Compliments of EDWARD C. MOORE COMPANY INDUSTHIAL EXPOSITION 85 AL 36 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Established 1787 Telephone Mulberry 3277 JOHN L. & WM. PASSMORE MEEKER Monuments 196 MARKET STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephone Harrison 5610—5611 Factories: Harrison, N. J. NEW JERSEY TUBE COMPANY Roll and Sheet Brass Tubing and Brass Rods NEWARK, NEW JERSEY L. LAWRENCE & CO. Copper Work of all descriptions SCORED CYLINDERS Repaired by Patented Electric Process. Filled with a silver and nickel alloy (eliminates grinding). No warping or enlarging of cylinder bore. Same piston and rings used. Reshipped 24 hours after received. 292 HALSEY STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Branch for Repairing Scored Cylinders: 1522 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ile. Telephone Mulberry 2479 MODERN PRINTING CO. Printers Engraving, Lithographing, Bookbinding, Electrotyping 653 Broad Street (Next to Arcade) Newark, N. J. Telephone Connection HERMAN LUTTER Manufacturer of Wagons and Automobile Bodies Expert Repairing and Painting 141-143 Frelinghuvsen Avenue Newark, N. J. TlllltllMllllltlMIIIII INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 37 managed trolley lines carry her busy populace back and forth, and up and down, and all around. Shopping and Feeding These figures tell the story of a mag- nificent, as well as of a bustling, com- munity. And Newark is a big one — with nearly fifty-six thousand buildings within her boundaries. The last annual ninet}'-six dry goods stores. It takes 1,489 grocers, 537 butchers and 244 bakers to feed them ; 77 milk dealers to wet their morning porridge; and 1G5 shoe dealers to keep their feet off the ground. They need 480 doctors to keep them well ; have their prescriptions filled at 171 drug stores and their teetli at 187 dental parlors. And, although they have 69"3 confectionery stores to keep Free Public Library rcportof herbuilding department showed an investment of $10, !)()(», 000 in new buildings in 1914 — and that was a modest accretion ; in 1913 she had added $lG.OOO,000's worth to her homes and business structures. .\t the moment of this writing, she Iiad a population of three hundred and ninety-nine thousand ; bv the time it gets into print, she will probably have acquired the one thousand more needed to bring the figure up to the four hundred thousand mark. They shop in eleven well-appointed department stores and two hundred and them sweet, they find it necessary to maintain 504 lawyers in good style to see that they don't get into scrapes. The statistics in all other directions keep pace with the magnitude of these details. Her financial in.stitutions em- brace nine national banks, nine trust comi)anies and five savings banks. .\ trust company and a savings bank are in the first rank of their kind. Their combined cajntal exceeds $30,000,000; and their deposit accounts with 220,000 Contmucd on page S9 38 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY THE WARD-GEHIN COMPANY Firemen's Insurance Building Broad and Market Streets Newark, N. J. MANAGING AGENTS FIREMEN'S INSURANCE BLDG. KINNEY BUILDING NATIONAL STATE BANK BLDG. Especially Equipped for Appraisals and Management of Realty Investments Telephone One Hundred Market Compliments of D. PRICE & CO. SPECIALISTS IN Ladies' Outer Apparel MARKET STREET, COR. HALSEY NEWARK, N. J. Compliments of PLAZA THEATRE 400 Springfield Avenue Newark, N. J. CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO TRADE f^^i^v^ MARK AMERICAN ALUMINUM WARE CO. MANUFACTURERS Household and Cooking Utensils ADVERTISING NOVELTIES :: METAL SPECIALTIES GENERAL OFFICE AND FACTORY 374-380 JELLIFF AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 39 40 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Established 1881 JOHN J. CAVAGNARO Engineer and Machinist SPFXIALTIES: MACHINERY FOR SILK FINISHING, CALENDERING AND EMBOSSING, MANUFACTURE OF ALIMENTARY PASTES, WATCH CASE MAKING, WIRE WEAVING, ETC. HYDRAULIC PRESSES SPECIAL MACHINERY AND PARTS N. Y. Office and Shop: Main Office and Shops: 255-257 CENTRE STREET FIFTH AND ESSEX STREETS NEW YORK HARRISON, N. J. 'Phone 1212 Spring 'Phones \ ,„„f, > Harrison Calile Address : "Johcavag/' Western Union Code INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 41 pi- fc , 5>3 f "3^ , .^'^V-' """: - -—-. ~'---'^*.v>i^ >^ Post Office depositors, reach a total of $140,000,000 ; their loans approximate $70,000,000. The Billion Dollar Mark Allied with these, financially, are two big life and three fire insurance com- panies. The combined resources of the city's national and state banks and trust and insurance companies go above the billion dollar mark ; it's the first time in her history when the city has been able to boast of her ten-figure greatness. There are, besides, more than 200 build- ing and loan associations which have become the savings banks of nearly 70,000 shareholders; and these take in a trifle short of $30,000,000 a year. Her municipal equipment is on the same scale. It costs her $10,000,000 a vear to "keep house." But her ratables reach a total of $420,311,000 and her own 95 public buildings, parks and pro- pertv of other classes are valued at up- wards of $70,000,000. This does not include some millions advanced on ac- count of the big flume with which she is Continued on page 43 42 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY THE J. H. LADEW CO. Tanners SOLE LEATHER BELTING BUTTS Lincoln Highway and Passaic River NEWARK, N. J. Oscar Barnett Foundry Co. Lyons Avenue and Coit Street Irvington, N. J. Handsome, Durable FRon OLD CARPETS Also Weavers of RAG CARPETS WRITE OR CALL FOR CIRCULAR. Oriental Rug Co. Hackett St. off Plane h4EWARK. N.J. Geometric Lathes and Transfer Presses for Bank Note Engravers Foot Presses for Jewelers or Sheet Metal Workers MACHINERY BUILT TO ORDER WILLIAM H. CHAPMAN 227-229-231 MULBERRY ST. NEWARK, N. J. Cable Address: "Chapman," Newark, N.J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 43 to restore the i'assaic River to its mountain-stream purity. Her city hall, accounted one of the finest municipal buildings in the coimtry, represents a value of $3,000,000 ; the handsome pub- lic library, of $700,000; and Centre Market, of $900,000. These, with assets of other kinds, such as improvement assessment arrears, make her public debt of $;39.O00,OO() secure, with a total of nearly $10(),U()(),000 of possessions. The city had 255 miles of paved streets at the beginning of last year; and her 85 miles of brick and concrete sewers and 220 miles of pipe sewer tokened an outlay of $5,770,090 when the last published figures were made up. The reservoirs of her new water plant have a storage capacity of 9,285,700,0(M) gallons ; and the plant is equal to a gravity supply of 50,000,000 gallons per day ; the present daily consumption is 42,000.000 gallons. She is lighted by 1G2 flaming arcs, 2,565 arc electrics. 2,000 c. p. lamps, 207 incandescents and 2,037 gas lamps. Recreation Spots But it is not all work and no play with Miss Newark. She likes her recreation ; and the County Park Board has pro- vided her, in Branch Brook, with a splen- did reserve that landscape artists every- where rank as the finest artificial park in the country. Of her own parks — those she owns — ^Military Park, in the heart of the city, is the largest, and. more than all the others rich with his- toric associations. The city holds that grateful breathing spot at a value of $6,000,000. Washington Park, a little to the north of it, is set down as worth about $2,000,000; and Lincoln Park, at the other end of Broad Street, is quoted by the appraisers at $1,200,000. These are. however, only three of the city's recreation centres. There are 18 others, besides the public playgrounds which she has opened for her little ones. For the rest, Newark, with a death rate of 14.3. can hold her own for health, and it is a new assurance of her growth that her birth rate is more than twice as big. And with a mean tem])eraturc of 53.1° she is a decidedly salubrious ])lace to live in. Still the WONDHR CAR of 1916 CAR COMPLETE DELIVERED $680 "25" ASK ANY OWNER Remember! "We Sell Satisfaction" WILSON -WARD MOTOR CO., Inc. OI'I'ICIC AND SALKSROOMS : 12 14 Wn>LL\M ST., NEWARK Service Station: 12-14 Chapkl Ct. (45 Steps from Broad) Telephone Mulberry .")41 44 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY A moderate sum now provides a box for the cas- ket that will keep the casket per- manently safe from dampness, decay and weight of earth. Ask Your Undertaker about the American Cement Burial Case Made in Newark by MEAD-SUYDAM COMPANY Delivered direct to the Cemetery and set and hermetically sealed by our own experienced men. SERVICE IS OUR POLICY GRAY & DAVIS SERVICE STATION STORAGE BATTERIES ^WilllrJl^ I STARTING AND JGHTING SYSTEMS STARTER & BATTERY SERVICE CO. 230 CENTRAL AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 45 46 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Telephone 1167 Mulberry Material for Sale ROBERT HAMPTON & CO, Contractors t »i|aHt|aif ROOFING AND WATERPROOFING mam ^Meric^' Rock Asphalt and Cement Work 138-140 NORFOLK STREET, NEWARK, N. J. NATIONAL OIL & SUPPLY CO. Oils, Greases, Soaps, Acids Chemicals 174-180 FRELINGHUYSEN AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. Ask for "CORDOVAN''~ihc best wearing leather in shoes H. HAHN & STUMPF MAIiniSON, N. J. Ideal Brand FOOD PRODUCTS Will Please Your Trade j Why Experiment i I ORDER EROM YOUR GROCER | PENN PAPER BOX CO. (iO McWuoRTHR Stuki:t, Newark, N. J. MORRISON FOUNDRY CO. Iron Castings 101-111 (loTTHART St., Newark, N. J. J. H. APPLEGATE :: Coal 158 Elm Street, New^ark, N. J. ISBELL-PORTER CO. Foundry NEWARK, NEW JERSEY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 47 1 "jw* w .s:!.- 48 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY You Can Celebrate the Celebration in no better way than by promptly making arrangements at our offices, or at our Exposition Booth (Space No. 3, Sec- tion E), to do your financial business with the strong, long- established, conveniently-located and carefully managed Fidelity Trust Company PRUDENTIAL BUILDING, NEWARK, N. J. With a capital, surplus and undivided profits of more than ^6,000,000, resources of .$28,000,000, and deposits of .$20,000,- 000, this institution is the largest of its kind in New Jersey. It pays interest on deposits in its Banking and Saving De- partments, loans money on collateral and on bond and mortgage, acts as executor of wills and as administrator of estates, guarantees New Jersey real estate titles, buys and sells Public Service Corporation investment securities and conducts the largest and best equipped Safe Deposit Vaults in the State. You are invited to talk these matters over with our officers UZAL H. McCARTER, President Frederick W. Egner, Vice-President Jerome Taylor, Vice-President Edward A. Pruden, V.P. & Trust Officer Frank T. Allen, V.P. and Publicity Mgr. Louis Hood, General Counsel Paul C. Downing, Treasurer James H. SilacklETon, Secretary Clarence G. ApplETon, Comptroller Henry Schneider, Asst. Sec'y-Treasurer Edward W. Campbell, Asst. Sec'y-Treas. Charles G. Titsworth, Title Officer Simon P. Northrup, Asst. Title Officer Francis Laeferty, Solicitor Theodore Hampson, Asst. Trust Officer Herbert R. Jacobus, Asst. Trust Officer Edward E. Felsberg, Supt. of Vaults INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 49 i)0 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Telephone Market 3309 The Interstate Smelting and Refining Co. Fine Silver and Silver Solder. Sweep Smelters. Refiners of Gold, Silver and Platinum. 23-25 Commercial Street Newark, N. J, New York Boston THE MOTOR CAR EQUIPMENT COMPANY Automobile Accessories, Tools and Hardware, Shop Equipment at Wholesale Only 21 Halsey Street, Newark, N. J. 1868 48 Years in Business 191f> J. BROCKIE & COMPANY, Inc. Originators of Guaranteed Awnings 8 RAILROAD PLACE NEWARK, N. J. Selected by the Committee of One Hundred to erect the Bunting Decorations for the 250th Anniversary INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 51 52 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY SCHNEFEL BROS. Manufacturers of Manicure Implements and Sets Surgical Forceps 684-686 SOUTH 17th STREET NEWARK, N. J. Our Autos Everywhere BEYER & SON Dry Cleaners - Dyers Office: 233 FERRY STREET Works: 2-10 ALYEA STREET NEWARK, N. J. Open Evenings Telephone 6903 Market EXECUTOR ADMINISTRATOR FEDERAL TRUST COMPANY C. W. FEIGENSPAN, President Capital and Surplus, $2,137,661.25 Resources, $8,514,217.44 GUARDIAN TRUSTEE "NEWARK'S BEST" THACHER GARAGE, Inc. MODERN FIREPROOF— 22,000 sq. ft.— CONCRETE STEEL CLINTON AND BADGER AVENUES, NEWARK, N. J. Repairing — All Makes SPECIALIZING POPE HARTFORDS Big Stock of Repair, Parts on hand. Desirable "Used Cars" bougiit and sold. "See us — it Pays." INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 53 Newark's Educational Advantages Concise Description of the School Facilities of the City of Newark ROM the start, Newark has realized the worth of the school. The Puritans who founded her caught the in- fection from the Puritans of the East. She had not yet coined the word, but that "Efficiency" of which one hears so much nowadays, was the up- building idea that entered into all her enterprises. She thought that her children ought first to be shown "How," if they were to be fitted to "Know How" ; and as soon as she had made a clearing for her cabin homes she began to think about the school. Within ten years of the time when she had felled the first tree, she had her little classroom for the new population Dr. Addison E. Poland city superintendent of schools of the colony. John Catlin was not an Elliott or a Hibben, or a Butler, by any means. The times did not call for it. The primitives schooled their children in reading at home ; the school room was only for writing and 'rithmetic and the trowser-dusting birch. But Catlin's name will live immortal in our annals as that of our first School Master. A tab- let at Broad and Commerce Streets marks the spot where he swished the rod of discipline. Burr and Princeton And, as typifying her expanding edu- cational aspirations, the starting of the great Princeton University of today, by the Rev. Aaron Burr, in the old Meet- ing House on Branford Place, was a fete-day event. The Reverend was the father of the Aaron Burr who is famous in American history as the duelist with Hamilton, and later became Vice-Presi- dent of the United States. He was, when he founded the college that has grown into Princeton, the pastor of the old First Church on Broad Street, and afterwards the College's first President. And so, with incidents of more com- mon place character, the school idea has broadened and deepened and lengthened here till Newark has — well, one might say, accumulated — one of the proudest educational establishments in the coun- try. Her school properties are worth between ten and eleven millions of dol- lars. Under the eye of Dr. Addison B. Poland, selected as her School Superin- tendent fifteen years ago because of his pre-eminence among the educators of the country, are 4 High Schools. 5.^) Continued on page 55 54 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Geo. W. Maulbetsch /^JoSDE M4^fc^«v Richard L. Whittemore President /^^^{c^^ ^'^^ Secretary-Treasurer Established 1886 ("^fc:!^/)^©:^^) Incorporated 1902 MAULBETSCH & WHITTEMORE CO. Cases and Satchels for Musical Instruments CORNER CROSS AND SPRING STREETS, NEWARK, N. J. Wholesale Only Long Distance Telephone ESSEX CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Inc. Building Construction 85 AND 87 ACADEMY STREET, NEWARK, N. J. A. G. Reimold, President J. V. Chapot, Secretary A. G. H. Reimold, Treasurer F. Chapot, Manager REIMOLD, CHAPOT & COMPANY Manufacturers of Fine French Chamois and Fancy Leather Producers of Moellon Degras, Kid and Sheep Shoe Leather 108-116 ADAMS STREET, NEWARK, N. J. a. G. Reimold Ed. F. O'Rourke A. G. H. Reimold President and Treasurer Vice-President and Secretary Assistant Treasurer and Manager WOBURN DECREASING COMPANY Largest Extractors of Grease from Leather A Necessity to the Successful Tanner WOBURN, MASS. HARRISON, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 55 Elementary Schools, and 2 Industrial Schools. The opportunities the elemen- tary and high schools open to the com- munity are known of all men. The children bring the tidings of them home to us every day of the week. Those in the vocational schools are quite as varied and mavbe even more valuable in the Boys' Industrial School practical work of life. In the Boys' Industrial School pupils are tutored in woodwork, printing, electricity, etc. ; and in the girls they are given lessons in sewing, dressmaking, millinery, cook- ing, and in other things every woman ought to know. Besides, there are 10 classes for defec- tives, 7 for the deaf and the blind, 1 for cripples, and .") for open-air work and study. Summer schools are maintained in 2 High and 30 Elementary School buildings, and the experiment of all-year schools is being tried also. The ambition of her young folk who can devote only their evenings to learning "How," makes it necessary to conduct evening high school classes in six schools, besides other classes in the two industrial schools and in seventeen of the ele- mentary schools. $3,000,000 a Year For the instruction of the 70.000 who flock to these great educational cen- tres — for some of them are among the most pretentious and ornate and well- equipped in the United States — the city maintains a corps of 1,810 teachers for the day classes, 441 for the evening classes, and 132 for the all-year institu- tions. And it costs Newark a pretty penny too! The balance sheet of 1915 exceeded $3,000,000. Of this imposing total, the railroads contributed $437,725 ; $53,500 came from the State Fund; $1,450,000 from the State School Tax. and Newark City paid the rest of the bill. Of course she is also heavily repre- sented in the state tax and state fund contributions. But Newark holds it among the very best of her investments and pays the bill with smiling satis- faction. The 70,000 enrollment repre- sents 19% of the city's population. In 1880 the ratio was only 13%. New rigors in the enforcement of attendance laws account for the nearly fifty per cent, better showing. All the modern ideas are incorporated in the splendid system thus briefly sketched. There are school playgrounds, gymnasiums, vocational instruction, evening lectures, that are every one a treat, for the masses ; nurses to watch the youngsters and physicians to cure them of their ailments ; and Dr. Poland South Side Hich School Auditorium is trying, in the Cleveland School, a modification of the much vaunted Gary System that he expects to increase the school capacity, if generally employed, fifty to sixty per cent. It is a system of alternating classes by which the school Continued on page 37 56 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY V IS THE PRIDE OF GIANTS "^■■"Mif The world's largest producers of Electrical Devices for Ignition — Magnetos, Coils, Spark Plugs, Starting and Lighting Sys- tems, Ammeters, Batteries, etc. SPLITDORF ELECTRICAL CO. NEWARK, N. J. Telephone Mulberry 1124 THE PITTS COMPANY Krueger's Celebration Beer The Modern Treat INCORPOUATRD Slag Roofing, Cement Work 58 PARK STREET NEWARK, N. J. "The Home Beaiitifier" Victor Liquid Wax Dressing CLEANS, PRESERVES, POLISHES Floors, Ftirniture, Auto Bodies, Linoleum, Leather Goods Easily Applied. Rapid and Efficient. Use Victor Polish and Dusting Mops MADE IN U. S. A. BY VICTOR SPECIALTY CO., Inc. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 57 children, set oil in groups, rotate in their class work. Boys Lodyiny House School The first of the public schools was in the old "Boys' Lodging House," in which the Rev. C. H. Yatman was the moving spirit. The distinction of being the most venerable of the standing pub- lic school buildings is divided between that on State Street near Broad, and that on Market Street opposite the Court House. They have survived since 1847. The contrast between them and the imposing Central High School on High Street, and the more ornate and quite as imposing South Side High School, tells the story of the greater city picturesquely. The latest of the build- ings to be completed, the AIcKinley in the heart of the Italian Colony, is, too, a model of educational completeness. These notations are not invidious. The city is studded with temples of learning that outshine the university of even modern days in some larger cities. Nearly $700,000 was spent on the Cen- tral Manual Training School on High Street. The South Side High is valued at nearly $150,000. The block-long Normal School on Belleville Avenue at Fourth, which the city built for its own use, but turned over to the State, repre- sents an investment of $375,000. The schools on Burnett Street and the Lafay- ette, Morton and Newton Schools have a value exceeding $300,000 each, and there are a half dozen others close to that line. The Parochial School Aid The city's free school equipment is supplemented by a parochial system that aids it substantially in its duty to its young. Under the fostering and en- lightened care of the Rev. John A. Dil- lon, Superintendent of Schools in the Newark Catholic Diocese, the parochial schools have grown enormously in effi- ciency and power. They are graded as our city grammar schools, and their diploma opens the door of the City High Schools to their graduates. They relieve the communities in this Diocese of the instruction of more than fiO.OOO pupils. More than 13,000 of the total are tutored in the 26 schools in Rev. John A. Dillon SUPERINTENDENT PAROCHIAL SCHOOLS, NEWARK CATHOLIC DIOCESE Newark, by a corps of about 250 teach- ers, carefully trained for their lifework in the Catholic Normal School at Con- vent Station. Their equipment here runs up into the millions in value and money has not been spared in providing facilities for the army of little students. The St. Rose of Lima School building on Orange Street in the Roseville Sec- tion, cannot have cost less than $150,000. That of St. Columba's School on South Street represents another outlay of $100,000. St. Benedict's is a type of many other edifices that come up to the $75,000 mark. And altogether, they make a splendid — indeed, in view of the pressure for public school room a needed — complement to the system the city has built up to prepare her rising citizenship for the luring possibilities of the vears ahead of it. 58 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY 1843 1916 I MEEKER FOUNDRY CO. Malleable Iron Castings I 95 CLAY STREET I NEWARK, N. J. Gardner Meeker, President David M. Meeker, Vice-President Stephen M. Miller, Secretary and Treasurer Telephone VVaverly 133 Family Trade a Specialty TEGEN & WIEBKE COMPANY Dealers in All the Best Grades of Coal Pockets: 99-127 Badger Avenue, Newark, N. J. Office: Clinton Avenue and Bergen Street QUALITY FIRST QUALITY LAST QUALITY ALWAYS Quality is the Watchword in the production of DUBOIS BEER Telephone or write for a case. Know for yourself. Be Your Own Expert. DU BOIS BREWING COMPANY 310-312 JELLIFF AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. Prompt, Efficient Service for Family Trade. Telephone Waverly 1181 INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 59 60 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY NEWARK BRUSH CO. Brushes of Every Description The Section The Brush Reliable Sectional WHEEL BRUSH for Practical Polishers 12 inch diameter Brush. 2y2 inches face made with Four Sections, Malleable Iron Flanges, vSteel Hub. 253 MULBERRY STREET NEWARK, N. J. \: "V.^^^ SECURE— a.s strong as the Lathe that runs it. SAFE EFFICIENT Three times the wear of ordinary wheels. ECONOMICAL Established 1852 BALBACH SMELTING & REFINING CO. Smelters and Refiners of Ores, Bullion and other materials containing Gold, Silver, Platinum, Copper and Lead NEWARK, NEW JERSEY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 61 Newark at Worship A Little Talk about her One Hundred and Seventy-nine Churches; the People who go to them, and the Others who don't Written by William E. Sackett N Newark's early history the Church was, so to speak, the Municipal Building also. The pioneers of 1666 were a well-established congrega- tion of Presbyters from Branford, Con- necticut, that came here to build a church and a city for the church to con- trol. The church went up on Broad Street, about opposite the place which gets its name from the old Connecticut town ; and became — to be more exact, was made — the centre of the new town's Old First Church civic and political as well as of its reli- gious activities. One could not vote in the Town Meeting unless he had a "First Church" membership card. The Theocracy — about the last of its kind to be attempted in this country — ran things here for many years. Its atmosphere lingered till the Theocracy expired in giving birth to the Presby- terian College which has grown into Princeton University. The old church's pastor of that day was the Rev. Aaron Burr — a name made even more famous in American annals by the wit and polish and exploits of the pastor's son, who first slew Hamilton, next became Vice-President of the United States, and wound up a career, as romantic as it was brilliant, with a plot against the life of the nation that had so honored him. The chief distinction of the elder Burr rests on his having become the first Presi- dent of Princeton College. And even to this day, the tradition of the city's religious birth is reflected in the preponderance of its Presby- terian Churches. Some More Reminiscences So, if space pennitted, one might go on weaving romances about the beginnings of scores of the one hun- dred and seventy-nine churches, chapels and mission houses that do so nmch for the uplift of the people. There, for instance, is the Old House of Prayer, up near the Lackawanna Station — well, the pop- ular nunor that it was once a Washington headquarters is a mere superstition ; but it is true that the Hessians housed in it on their way to the drubbing Washington gave Continued on page 63 62 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Louis ScHLESiNGERjNc. NEWARK,N.J. IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. THE RECOONIZED LEADING AND BEST IIPPED REAL ESTATE OFFrCE IN TME STATQ ESSEX BUILDING KEp The First National Bank BELLEVILLE, NEW JERSEY Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $154,000 Total Resources $1,370,000 "The Bank where you feel at home" Commercial and Savings Departments Model Storage Warehouses, Inc. 54-56 BELLEVILLE AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. 1900 Sixteen Years FURNITURE HANDLING SPECIALISTS 1916 Proper Handling of Household Goods is an art. We are artists in our line. Packing, Storing, Moving and Shipping Household Goods is our business. The smallest job is none too small, or the largest none too large for us to handle. Well Organized. Highly Efficient. Telephone 706 Branch Brook Silver and Safe Deposit Vaults HOERL FRICTION CLUTCHES and GAS ENGINES Manufactured by Newark Gas Engine and Mfg. Co. 676 NORTH SIXTH STREET, NEWARK, N. J. S. WILDSTEIN 218 Waverly Avenue, Newark, N. J. Dealer and manu- facturer of Bags, Bagging Burlaps and Barrel Covers A1.SO all kinds of Scrap Bagging Tel. 4234 Waverly Trusses, Abdominal Support- ers, Elastic Stockings and Surgical Appliances "46 Years of Practical Experience" Reinhold Schumann 23 William Strkkt, Nkwark, N.J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 63 them in Trenton a little later. On the portals of Old Trinity — up in Military Park — a plate, implanted there by pat- riotic S. A. R., tells how, in 1776, "Washington and his army passed be- neath this tower on their masterly retreat to the hills beyond the Delaware to gather strength for the bold blow at Princeton and Trenton," that turned the tide of the Revolution. So it goes. The older of the church buildings "look" the history there is in them. From the Old Church at Lyons Farm came the First Baptist congrega- tion that founded what is now known as the Peddie Memorial. The Halscy Street Methodist is the mother church of the line of beautiful places of wor- ship that faith has scattered all over the city. From such beginnings as these, the denominations grew and grew ; one church no longer answered ; and many, and more, had to be provided for them, till now the city is studded with temples that make it at once beautiful and good. Of the 179 places of worship there are 35 Presbyterian Churches, 31 Catho- lic, 35 Baptist, 18 Methodist Episcopal, 17 Episcopalian, 11 Synogagues, 10 Lutheran, 8 Dutch Reformed, 4 Evan- gelical, 3 Congregational, 2 Christian Science, 2 Independent, 2 Greek Ortho- dox, 2 Seventh Day Baptist, a Metho- dist Protestant, a Reformed Episcopal, a LTniversalist. and a Christadelphian. For the rest, there are two "undenom- inational," and 3 African Methodist Episcopal Churches. The colored folks have also three of the array of Baptist Churches. A few of the edifices are small ; they are for new congregations or in mission fields. But the great, great majority of them are expensive and ornate edifices that contribute grace- fully to the perspective of the city's landscape. The investment they repre- sent runs up into many millions — twenty would be a conservative estimate. The Church Population The number of churches is not, how- ever, a wholly reliable guide for a com- parison as to attendance. At the altars of the 31 Catholic Churches more de- votees gather than around the pulpits of Rev. Aaron Burr founder of princeton college the 125 or more Protestant Churches. The congregations in the Catholic Churches exceed the Protestant congre- gations, in the item of membership, by maybe twenty thousand. There is nothing like an accurate church census anywhere. But the approximate figures collated by the Rev. Dr. Davis W. Lusk are quoted everywhere as authoritative. According to them. 50,000 represents the actual membership of the Protestant churches in the city. To these may be added another 50,000 representing rela- tives who go to church with them. That makes a total of 100,000 for the local Protestant community. The Catholics count all who have been baptised into the faith as members ; there were 120.000 of these in the city last year. As each parish is assessed according to its membership, it may be taken for granted that the total, offi- cially furnished, is not exaggerated. Tt may even be a bit under the mark ; and the Catholic poptdation may actually exceed the 120,000 mark. Presides the Catholics and Protestants who thus account for 220.000 of our 400.000 ix)i)U- Coiitiiiucd on page 65 64 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY See Our Shaper Run at the Exposition We are manufacturers of 'High Duty' Shapers and Automatic Gear CuttingMachineryand invite you to visit our plant. 95-111 NEW JERSEY RAILROAD AVENUE NEWARK, N. J. Telephone Connection JOHN RYAN :: Cooperage SOUTH, ADAMS and CLIFFORD STREETS NEWARK, N. J. Telephone Branch Brook 3785 HEWITT BEARING METAL COMPANY Brass Founders Manufacturers of the Hewitt Bearing Bronze Composition Brass. Acid Metals. High Tensile Strength Manganese Bronze Heat Resisting Metals and Babbitt for General Machine Work BERKELEY AVENUE and NORTH SIXTH STREET, NEWARK, N. J. C. FRANZ, President and Treasurer R. G. HOLBROOK, Vice-President and Secretary INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 65 lation, there are about 5, 000 church folks of uiiscellaneous denominations — hke those of the Greek Church, whose Pope is the Czar of Russia. In the background is an unafliHated population of some 115,000 that does not go to church anywhere. There are not many of them, however, without their religious leanings, x^s the Catholic system is rigid, and that of the Pro- testants loose, in the matter of gathering the faithful to the fold, the assumption is that if these were forced into either Church, far the larger number would go to the Protestant side. Those thus brought within the Protestant atmos- phere have been estimated as high as 100,000. But that is an outside esti- mate ; and indeed there is no way of telling anything about it — it is all specu- lation. There may be some infidels and scoflFers in the vast unattached throng; but even they would not care to be count- ed entirely out of the church atmosphere. Sixty Thousand Hehvews These speculations are all on the as- sumption that the estimate of G(),ooo Hebrews in the city approaches ac- curacy. The Jewish population grows quite as rapidly, proportionately, as tlie Catholic. An estimate of ten years ago i:)laced their number at only 50,000. They are quite as devoted to their tem- ples as the Catholics to theirs, and can claim few of the community of 115,000 unattached. The men are as regular in their attendance at the synagogues as are the women ; and the Men's Forward Movement, by which the Protestant de- nominations are trying to induce the husbands to go to church with their wives and participate in church work, is hardlv necessarv in the ITouse of Israel. North Jersey Motor Vehicle Co J. B. Stobaeus, Jk., President 313 CENTRAL AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. 66 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY MADE IN NEWARK RPHY c^HOE The Johnson &MurphyShoe WORN ALL OVER THE WORLD NEWARK, NEW JERSEY U. S. A. Cable Address : "GlEakidd, Newark' Western Union Code Frankfort General Insurance Co. One of the oldest, largest and strongest in the world. All kinds of Liability, Automobile, Workman's Compensation, Accident, Health and Burglar Insurance JAY & JAY, General Agents Fire Insurance Specialists KINNEY BUILDING, BROAD AND MARKET STREETS, NEWARK Established 1848 Incorporated 1900 J. WISS & SONS COMPANY Manufacturers of High Grade Shears, Scissors and Razors Cutlery, Pruning Shears, Tinners' Snips, etc. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY TNDUSTRIAI. EXPOSITION 67 68 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Before You Leave the Exposition Be Sure to Visit Murphy Varnish Company Space 6, Section K, Main Floor and see the beautiful model of their Newark Plant, at Chestnut, McWhorter and Vesey Streets There are other interesting things to see and some one who can answer questions Murphy Varnish Company Founded by Franklin Murphy FRANKLIN MURPHY, Jr., President INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 69 Places Where Newark Plays Big Parks and Little Ones and others not Parks al all inhere Iicr people sport in "off hoars" — their Facilities, their Trees, and their Monuments UT then Newark can play as hard as she can work — and maybe with even more zest. Playroom is one of her neediest needs ; and, in pro- viding herself with it, she thriftily hits a second bird with one stone. Her play- grounds provide, beside the recreation centres, a group of breathing spots for run — or rather in the short run, because they soon jump values up all around them and so win back for the city in taxes more than she risks to get them. Newark has a lot of these fine in- vestments, to say nothing of the play- grounds and minor recreation centres ; and her Shade Tree Commission is doing what it can to give the whole city IIfj.lKk Par k WAV the homes that have them none too abundantly. She finds it pays to keep people well as well as to make them happy. The well man is likely to be a happy man, the happy man to be a well one ; and the happier and healthier they are the greater the power of their arms and the longer the endurance. Plans that make for the either that brings both have their economic, as well as their sanitary, aspects ; they find compensa- tion in the workshop, in the counting room, and in all the varied activities of her busy life. And the breathing spots pay for themselves, too, in the long a park-scape aspect. Two of the great- est parks in the State are within her limit. One of them is noted among land- scape artists everywhere as the most beautiful artificial park in the country. Neither is under Newark's immediate control ; neither is therefore part of her numicipal equipment; a specially created County Park Board is named by the Supreme Court Justice presiding in the local circuit to manage them. But it nmst not be forgotten that the bulk of the county bills are footed by Newark, and that the fund tliat mam- Continued on page 71 70 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Established 1864 LYON & SON'S Brewing Company BREWERS OF Lager Beer, Ales and Porter. Kent Ale, Brown Stout. MOST SANITARY BOTTLING Office— 97 CANAL STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephone Market 4700 Bottling Department — 109-111 Commerce Street Telephone Market 5574 Establsihed 1868 Capital $400,000 New Jersey FIDELITY AND PLATE GLASS Insurance Company Automobile, Burglary and Plate Glass Insurance %VCECti^ C. W. FEIGENSPAN, President H. C. MITCHELL, Vice-Resident and General Manager Telephone Waverly 74 NEWARK RUG WORKS MANUFACTURERS 01'' Rugs from Old Carpets Carpet Cleaning 146 Avon Avenue, Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 71 tains them is derived in large measure from iier taxpayers. So that, both from the geographical and financial stand- points they are quite as local to this community as if they were all the com- munity's own. Three other parks within the city limits but also within the County Park Commission's dominion, are fine ex- amples of what the park builders happily call "Neighborhood Parks." They are the East Side, the West Side and the River-bank — laid out and operated with redolent, every foot of it, of the his- torical past, and part of the city's glory. The reference is now of course to Military Park, the elm shaded Com- mon of the old settlers. If that little patch of green were not so dear to the taxpayer's heart, it might be accounted a bit too dear for the taxpayer's purse. It is less than the hundredth part the size of Branch Brook, let us say for the contrast, but it is worth more than twice as much. The $6,000,000 Newark holds it to be worth is but a tithe of the wealth Winter Sport, Branch Brook Park special regard to the immediate local surroundings and needs. The East Side is down on Adams Street toward the Newark meadows ; West Side is on "The Hill" ; River-bank on the Passaic front near Market Street. The twelve and a half acres in East Side Park have been laid out at an expense of $124,372 for land and $53,878 for furnishings. There are twenty-three acres in West Side and the Park Board has spent all told something around $400,000 on it. The Historic "Green" The city herself has now twenty-two parks, all of the neighborhood variety, save the one, in her very heart, that is they would pour into her treasury if her tradesmen could only have it set ofiF to them in 35 x 100 lots and made part of the commerce that swells up all around it But even they wouldn't take it if they were given a chance ; and the community gladly tolerates even its array of seedy "benchers" for the senti- ment of local loyalty its lawn of velvet, its towering elms and planes, its ancient church and its old liberty pole inspire. l'>ranch Brook Park is the largest of the Comity parks within tiie city limits, and, as has been intimated already, the most ornate. Viewing the 380 acres reserve as art has made it today, one Continued on page 73 72 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY THE HISTORY OF NEWARK would be incomplete without the story of the M. & B. Clothing Store — an institution that has clothed the men of Newark to their satisfaction and profit — an establish- ment that has been 51 YEARS AT IT 51 years at the same old stand — 51 years selling good cloth- ing for men and boys — 51 years building a reputation second to none in New Jersey. VWamhaimall CLOTHING, HATS, SHOES, FURNISHINGS 807-813 BROAD STREET (Near Market), NEWARK, N. J. Telephone 3051 Market Open Day and Night HUBERTS TURKISH BATH Private Rooms, Swimming Pool 50 x 16, Artesian Water, Electric Light Batlis, Turkisli Bath, Electric Massage, Barber Shop Ladies' Day, Tuesday only, 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. FRANK RUBER, Proprietor 10 WEST PARK STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephone 1366 Branch Brook JAMES L. TOBIN & CO. Manufacturers of Apparatus for the Laboratory 277-283 Oraton St., Newark, N. J. THOMAS \V. TOBIN, Proprietor Newark Purse Frame Mfg. Co. Purse and Bag Frames and Fancy Metal Goods 548-556 South Euventh Street, Newark ORPHEUM THEATRE Moving Pictures 69 Pacific Street, Newark, N. J. LEADER THEATRE Moving Pictures 990 South Orange Avenue, Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 73 would never suspect that all that garden of flowers, of running stream and lake, of woodland patches surrounding great fields of velvet green that appeal to one's sense of magnitude, of nooks and crannies, of arbors and rustic refuges, could have been evolved from anything so unpromising as the swamp it was. There isn't a spot in it that is not worth visiting for the pleasure of seeing — It would be idle to attempt to picture the beauty spots where all is so beauti- lul. The park has cost the county some- thing over $3,500,000 ; and its care with that of the others has grown to be so mighty an undertaking that the Com- mission has found it necessary to have a fitting administration building. That is going up now — a $70,000 home ot brick and terracotta that fits in with the Swimming Pool, Bk-.-knch Brook Park thousand-hued flower beds terraced from the hill tops to the lake-front; rustic bowers and summer houses ; a patch of refulgent rhodendrons that fairly light the wayside and the chrysanthemum and begonia show recurring season sights. And so it goes — everything that is brightest, showiest, most restful, in nature. And for the more restless, the busier things of sport — nets for tennis ; wickets for croquet ; bases for "the fan" ; goals for the kicker; links for the golfer; boats for the gondolier and a winding panorama of water to go on ; the bandstand on the lake-edge for the multitude that flocks there as often as the cornet blows the signal ; swings and turn-stiles ; side-bars and slides and punching-balls and all the gym-cracks the youthful soul is devoted to. landscape about it. A fieldhouse in the upper mall makes a pleasing perspec- tive, too. At the other extreme of the reserve is the picturesque fountain for which the city is inexcusably reluctant to sup])ly the water ; and over towards the Rosevillc corner is the big stone that tells how the "Boys in Blue" camped there on their way to "the front" in the days of the Civil War. Race Course for the People Weequahic. in the Southern section of the city verging on the Elizabeth line, is one of the younger brood of County Commission parks With time to grow it will be eventually as handsome a re- serve as Branch Brook. It is almost as Continued on page 75 74 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY We are Better Equipped than ever before to Serve You We now have much greater and better facilities than ever before in our history — which means that L. S. Plant & Co. acknowledges no superior in the State of New Jersey. The completion of our New Main Floor Annex has enabled us to expand most of our departments so that now they are completely equipped to handle their patronage. For dependable merchandise at moderate prices visit L. S. Plaut & Co. Women's Apparel and Furnishings, Men's Furnishings, Clothing and Furnishings for Boys and Young Men, Dry Goods, Home Furnishings, Jewelry, Toilet Articles, etc. Visit our New Soda Fountain and Candy Department. THE SHOPPING CENTER OF NEW JERSEY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 75 expansive, with 315 acres ; but, with only about $800,000 spent on it so far, it is not as expensive. It has however, special features that attract particular throngs. There's its race track, for in- stance, its exclusive feature. Much of the park land was in use for many years as the Fair Ground of the State Agri- cultural Society ; and the race course is the heritage of the Commission from that Association. But it has all been made over, and re-topped into the fast- est half-mile course in the East; and a caron games, checkers, roller-skating and all the other et ceteras. Houses on the ground are furnished with lines of indoor games; the girls are tutored in sewing, rafia work and reed weaving; and clubs for music, oratory and the drama are encouraged among the young of both sexes. The Recreation Commission super- vises all of these increasingly popular play places that are doing so much for the pleasure of little ones whose lives would be cheerless without, and to keep A Bit of Phillips Park when the Snow King's on the Job circle inside the running track for ath- letic games, too. The Road Horse As- sociation airs its trotters there often ; and the track has become so popular that the old grandstand is no longer equal to demands upon it. The Commis- sion has therefore added to the track equipment, at an expense of $40,000, a grandstand of concrete, 2,371 feet long and 71 feet wide. Both engaged in recreation and beau- tification work, the Play Ground and Shade Tree Commissions are close allies of the park chiefs in city and county. The play ground idea is to utilize the waste places for the outing and amuse- ment of the youngsters ; and they are fitted with all the appliances that make for youthful sport. In most of them are the parallel bars, swings, teeters, slides, great strides, sand boxes, basket ball, bowley ball, baseball, shuffle board. all, of whatever station, out of the street life that is so demoralizing. One of them, that at Vailsburg, just acquired, cost $15,000. And, then, there's the bath house facility for the refreshing and invigorating plunge. These bathing resorts are completely equipped. One of them, the Montgomery Bath, cost $110,000. It is claimed to be the finest in the country ; safe to say it is one of the finest, at any rate. All the City a Park These beneficent enterprises of the other departments are handsomely cli- maxed by the work of the Shade Tree Commission. Those other departments are devoted to the making of parks in spots ; the aim of this one is to make a park-site of the whole city, with tree Continued on page jj 76 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY BERKOVITZ, GOLDSMITH & SPIEGEL MANUFACTURERS OF Sheep Skins, Skivers & Goat Skins of every description for Traveling Bags, Suit Cases, Belts, Poeketbooks, Caps, Shoes, Bookbinding, and Leatlier Novelties Factoriks: NEW YORK AVE., McWHORTER and GARDEN STS. NEWARK, N. J. Office and Salesroom : 35 Spruce Strkf.t, New York City Cable Address : BERKGSPir'.r., A. B.C. Code. Write for Samples and Quotations ESSEX FOUNDRY Makers of "Fittings that Fit" NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Soil Pipe and Fittings, Steam and Drainage T'ittings, Flanges and Flange Uttings, Roller Stands, Wash Tray Legs, Cesspools, etc. ^ ^ ELECTROTYPER :: NICKELTYPER PRINTING PLATES for all purposes in Copper and Nickel-Steel 22-24 PROSPECT STREET (Mundv Building), NEWARK, N. J. Satisfaction Guaranteed Telephone 4110 Market INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 77 planting as its chief activity. The tree is a fine investment in itself. A strip- ling that can be put down and framed around for $4, grows to be worth $100 all by itself, in a few years. You have to cut its hair and trim its beard and amputate a limb once in awhile ; but the cost of it all is a bagatelle as com- pared with the profit of its nursing. The policy of the departments in both county and city is not to transplant but to put down seedling trees, from the department nursuries and set them out where they are to stay forever, when The kindliest thing God ever made, His hand of very healing laid Upon a fevered world, is shade. His glorious company of trees Throw out their mantles, and on these The dust-stained wanderer finds ease. Green temples, closed against the beat Of noontime's blinding glare and heat, Open to any pilgrim's feet The white road blisters in the sun ; Now half the weary journey done. Enter and rest, O weary one ! And feel the dew of dawn still wet Beneath thy feet, and so forget The Inirning highway's ache and fret. This is God's hospitality. And who so rests bcncatli a tree Hath cause to thank Him gratefully. — Theodosia Carrison. in Everybody's Magazine. Park Avenue they are two or three feet high. That's why some of our old streets look so young; and why we have to wait for our parks to grow up to us. They are not all like Military that came to us with a heritage of great elms. Every- body is jealous of those; no one sees one fall without a sigh. .\ plucky woman drove the axe-man away from the big elm at the head of East Park Street some years ago; and the noble old tree stands there yet. as a monu- ment to her heroic public spirit. XcuHirk's Moiiiinu'iits Glimpses of monuments here and there give an added touch of art to the tree and flower decorations of the town. jMore than that, some of them tell of the achievements of Newark's great sons on the larger stage of life. A statue of Erederick Frelinghuysen at one end of Military Park and of "Phil" Kearny in ihr mid.st of his guns at the other, re- mind of Newark's eminence in states- Con fi"»rrf on page 79 78 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY TAe CoalTha^ Satisfies The Coal T/iat Satis f/es r/ie Coal nat Sat/^f/es T/ie Coal T/2ai ^ai/sf/es T/?e Coal That Sat/sf/es T/?e Coal T/?a t sSat isf/e s The Coal Thai 3a^/sf/es The Coal T/ial Sa.tisf/e& The Coal That Sat/sf/es The Coal Th(Zt ^aiisf/es Tlie Coal That Sal/sf/es The Coal Th^t Sat/sf/es The Coal Thai Sat/sf/'es The Coal That Sal/sf/es The Coal TAat Satisfies The Coal That Sal/jf/es The Coal That Sal /sf/'es The Coal That Saf/sf/es T/?e Coal That 3ah'shes The Coal That Sahsf/es The Coal That Sat/sf/es LEHIGH VALLEY ANTHRACITE Th e Coal That Sailsfles The Coal That Sallsf/e s The Coal That Sah'sf/es The Coal That Sails f/es The Coal That Sat/sf/es The Coal That Sat/sf/'es The Coal That Sal/sf/'es The Coal Thai Sat/sf/es The CoclI Thai Sat/sf/es The Coal T/ial Sal/sf/^s The Co 0.1 Thai Sat/sf/cs The Coal That Sat/sf/es The Co(zl T/74.1 Sat/sf/es The Coal Thai Sal/sf/es The Coal That Sal/sf/es The Co a. I Tha I Sn t/sf/'e s The Co dl That Sat/sf/es The Co a. I Tha,l Sat/sf/es The Coal That Saf/sf/es The Coal That Sat/sf/es The Coa.1 Thai Sat/sf/'es INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 79 menship and in war. The Frelinghiiy- sen name has been blazened on the scroll of American scholarship and state-craft for more than a century. One of the family was Burr's successor as President of Princeton College ; and two generations of the family have given New Jersey two noted figures in the United States Senate. He whose monu- ment adorns Military Park was one of these honored two. As a Senator he won nation-wide recognition for the finish of his oratory. President Hayes gave him a seat in his Cabinet with the portfolio of Secretary of State ; and his statue stands in front of the family's homestead now occupied by his son, President Frelinghuysen of the Mutual Benefit Insurance Co. of this city. As for Kearny, every veteran knows the story of his wild cavalry dashes during "The War." The monument in Mili- tary Park, was kicked around and neg- lected in the dust of the corridors of the State House in Trenton for many vears till the S. A. R. rescued it, dusted it off, and set it up with military honors under the liberty pole. The figure in bronze of Vicar General Doane, just outside the park gates, com- memorates the work of a Prelate of great civic and church activity. In Washington Park, a bit up the street, is the statue of Seth Boyden, famed as the inventor of the malleable iron process. The equestrian monument of General Washington at the Washington Place corner, is the handsome gift to the city of Amos H. Van Horn ; and C. W. Feigenspan is to erect in Clinton Park an even more imposing monument of General Bartolomeo Colleoni, on horse- back — a reproduction of a historical creation of Andros Verricchio, the Venetian sculptor. The Hikers" monu- ment at Madison Park is a notable con- tribution to the city's statuary ; and one roaming through Branch Brook Park occasionally encounters amid the leaves the chiseled face or form of one im- mortal in art or music or literature, or arms. ONE OF NEWARK'S OLDEST KNIT GOODS MANUFACTURERS NEWARK KNITTING WORKS OTTO SEISS, Proprietor Branch of Herman Seiss, Apolda, Germany, Maker of Fancy Knit Goods Makers of High Class Fancy Knit Goods 587 SOUTH TENTH STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Ladies , Men's and Children's Pure Worsted Sweaters Shetlands and Angora Sweaters a Specialty Boston New York Chicago 80 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY World Wide Service Money sent to all parts of the world Funds transmitted by Cable, Telegraph or Wireless Letters of Credit and Trav- elers' Checks issued, avail- able in all parts of the world Prompt and Satisfactory Service Guaranteed AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK SPRINGFIELD and BELMONT AVES. NEWARK, N. J. SOW YOUR LAWN WITH THE "Forbes" Lawn Grass Seed FROM NEW JERSEY'S LARGEST SEED STORE Delivered to you at 3()c. quart, 4 quarts for $1.00 ; $G.OO a bushel (20 lbs.) J. F. NOLL & CO. SEEDSMEN 115 MULBERRY STREET, NEWARK 'Phone 4579 Market HARDMAN TIRE Sc RUBBER CO. 30 WILLIAM STRELET- NEWARK,NEW JERSEY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 81 A Bit of Clinton Park 1. Fountain designed by H. A. Capara, Consulting Landscape Arcliitect. 2. A Close View — Sparrows at Bath. 3. Winter Aspect — Jack Frost, Non-Consulting Landscape Arcliitect. 82 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY 1 1856 Established in Newark 1916 SIXTY YEARS DIXON & RIPPEL Manui'acturEhs of High Grade BRUSHES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION High Grade Painters' Brushes Special Brushes Made to Order Sole Manufacturers of the Original Celebrated DIXON & RIPPEL PATENT AND ENAMELLED LEATHER BRUSHES NEWARK. NEW JERSEY SPECIAL AND DECORATIVE EFFECTS BEAVER ENGINEERING CO, Electrical Contracting Engineers NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Official Decorator for this Exposition INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 83 Newark's Police Protection The Transformation of the "Leather Head" into "The Finest" — Modern Methods that have made the Policeman the Friend of the People KWARK began her police business with a constable. That is orthodox ; all new c(iinmunities start out that way. The glamour that hangs around every first of his line hovers over the memory of Thomas Johnson whom the Town Fathers, in January, 1668, named, first of his kind, "to beare the Ofifice of Constable in Our Town for the Year Insuing." One con- stable kept "Our Town" in order for five years, when a second one was ap- pointed ; but by 1684 it had become so inconceivably wicked that it was found necessary to increase the force to eight. The first of the Constables was, in a way, a general utility man for the com- munity. He was not only to arrest people, but was a sort of "whip" for the Town Fathers. He came around for a fine from every non-attendant at the Town Meetings, and generally busied himself in making life as uncomfortable as he could for his fellow men. From th's primitive conception of the police function, the idea has branched out into the beneficence that makes the police- man of today the friend of the people, rather than the terror the unsophis- ticated picture him. He guides us, awake; guards us while we sleep; finds our little ones when we lose them (feeds them too, sometimes), and keeps the jo- -ider" from crushing us under his naut at the street crossings. Chief Oi rolice, Michael T. Long, indeed, counts the trafiice service his men ren- der at the points where vehicle and way- AllCHAEL T. LONC. CHIEF OF POLICE farer swarm, as one of the most humane of his department activities. The "Leather Heads" But the city has not jumped from her constable swathes into the great uni- formed service of today. She has reached it progressively. Next after "Our Town's" constable, came the "Night Watch," as they were officially called, but the irreverent populace dub- bed them "Leather Heads" because they wore helmets like unto that which dis- Continued on page 85 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY *^; f* Wholesale and Retail LUMBER Manufacturers of BOXES CRATES SHOOKS National Box and Lumber Co, INCORPORATED 348-356 SOUTH STREET, NEWARK, N. J. ( Machinery MATCH ^ Splints ( Chemicals AMERICAN SPLINT CORPORATION We furnish any material used in Manufacturing Matches Works at Aspen, Town of Kearny, N.J. Sales office: 141 Broadway, N. Y. E. W. McCLAVE & SON INCORPORATED PROMPT SHIPPERS Yellow Pine, Hardwoods White Pine, Douglas Fir for Export and Domestic Trade Offices, Distributing Yards and Mills: 18 Broadway, New York City Harrison, N. J. East Newark, N. J. Norfolk, Va. Mobile, Ala. D. WAHLERS Manufacturer of Birch Beer NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Merigold Electro Plating Company Klectro Deposits of Gold, Silver, Nickel, Copper, Brass, Rose Gold, Green Gold, Silver, Oxides, Bronzes, etc. Works: 97 Chestnut St., Newark THE KOLBA WRECKING CONSTRUCTION CO., Inc. 28 Peshine Avenue, Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 85 figures the fireman's form divine. This was the only token of their pre-emin- ence among the citizens. It was not until 1846 that they were given the club that has since won world-wide recogni- tion as the token of their authority. And only when "Our Town" had be- come a city did she add a uniform to the helmet and the club, and so dress her "Finest" up for the modern day parade. The town had meanwhile been divided in Roseville, and enjoys the distinction of being the first Police Chief in the United States to reach the position as the result of a Civil Service examination. Under his command are 761 men, with 13 Captains, B2 Lieutenants, 55 Ser- geants and 11 Matrons, and the cost of maintenance last year was $1,026,432. The record of their work in the sup- pression of crime is the most notable, even if it be not the most interesting, feature of the Chief's annual report. Mounted Squad into "Watch Districts." When she was incorporated in 1836, she started in with a captain and twelve of the "Leather Heads." It was not till 1854 that they were designated as "Police" and decor- ated with the shields. Three years later the city had her first Chief of Police in the person of Henry A. Whitney ; and, under the administration of fifteen suc- cessors, the department has grown into the great machine for good it is today. Chief Long is the fifteenth of his line. Within the last month he has struck the thirtieth anniversary of his advent into the department. He had served with the detective bureau for some years before he was made captain of the Police Precinct Last year they bagged six brokers, four artists, twenty-two doctors, a dozen law- years and even five clergymen. There were three Japanese, eight Turks and even a native of Africa in the list. The Russians, Poles and Austrians made up the bulk of the police court crowds. Thumb-Print Sensations Newark was the first city in the country to adopt the Bertillon thumb- print system of identification. The Chinese used the thumb-print for signa- ture fifteen hundred years ago ; but it is only within the last fifteen or twenty years that the worth of the finger-mark began to be appreciated in police work. Continued on page Sj 86 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY COMPLIMENTS OF Christian Feigenspan A CORPORATION BREWERS AND BOTTLERS OF Lager Beer, Ale and Porter CHRISTIAN W. FEIGENSPAN, President and Treasurer EDWIN C. FEIGENSPAN - Vice-President J. AUGUST STENGEL - - Secretary Visitors are cordially invited to inspect our model plant INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 87 Boston tried it first on this side of the sea, and Newark was next to follow suit. Superintendent Schwartz is full of stories of the effective operation of the system in fixing guilt. The first con- viction in the United States on thumb- print proof was on evidence procured by our local department; and the first murder fixed on its perpertrator in the country by fingermarks was in the courts of this county. A remarkable instance of the worth of the system was furnished in connection police sleuths and is now serving his term in the State's Prison for the crime. But arresting men has been after all a comparatively inconsiderable propor- tion of the work of the department. The police help in so many directions that the men of the force have to be not only level-headed and cool-headed but in- formed. There is hardly a minute in the day when an officer is not confronted by the question of should he act, and how far can he go ? He is the moment- ary judge and juror in every new situ- Measuring and Photo Galleky Bureau of Identification with the robbery of the house of Ex- Senator Ernest R. Ackerman, of Plain- field. "Second-story men" got away with a necklace worth $17,000. Supt. Schwartz inspected the porch-posts down which the thief had slidden when escaping, and detected finger-marks that, upon an examination of his records here, proved to be those of a "crook" of na- tion-wide activities. That man had never been even so much as suspected ; and w^as even then away off in Chicago. He was hunted in his haunts by the ation. So he must know "The Law and the Gospel," the law of the land, the law of humanity, the law of discretion and the law of force. His requirements for the information that fits him to do his fullest duty and yet never exceed it, has led to the establishment of a De- partment School where he is tutored and advised, warned and inspired. Chief Long is particularly proud of this "Col- lege," and lauds it as his chief aid in keeping his department up to the stand- ard of any other in the country. NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Established 1880 Telephone Mulberry 344 UNION STEAM LAUNDRY Shirts, Collars and Cuffs Our Specialty We also have a Rough Dry Department in which we do a high grade class of work 888 BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N. J. New Jersey Toilet and Towel Supply Co. Blauvelt & Farrington, Inc. CLEAN TOWELS SUPPLIED Offices and stores supplied with a fine Oak Cabinet, Comb, Brush, Whisk Broom, Soap, Clean Towels, etc., at reasonable rates. Satisfaction guaranteed. Write or tele- phone and agent will call. WE KEEP THE CITY CLEAN 69-73 New Street, Newark, N. J. Telephone 363 Mulberry Telephone 2947 Waverly Carl Schoenert & Sons INCORPORATED AUTOMATIC HIGH-GRADE MACHINE TOOLS. EXPERIMEN- TAL WORK. ALL LABOR-SAVING MACHINERY AND TOOLS. 631-633 South 20th Street Newark, N. J. Established 1865 CHAS. W. WALKER'S SONS & CO. Manufacturers of Oak Tanned Leather Belting 274 Market St., Newark, N. J. Telephone Mulberry 2017 Telephone Market 10277 Mercer Russian & Turkish Baths The most Utxurious baths in the State Sleeping Accommodations for 150 Men 32 Mercer Street, Newark, N. J. HENRY G. TRAUTWEIN 109 Peshlne Avenue Don't wait for this to happen METAL CEILINGS are applied over old plaster in Kitchens Dining Rooms Bedrooms Bath Rooms Halls, Sto.-es Garages, Etc. Tel. Wav. 8044 or write us WIGDER MFG. CO. Everything in Manicure Line 360 Fourteenth Ave., Newark, N. J. THE PARKES FILE CO. Manufacturers of Fine Files 115-117-119 Verona Ave., Newark INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 89 The Fire-Fighters of Newark The Blaze of 1836 would not have eaten out the City's Heart if she had been equipped as today I^WARK has had some not- able fires, and some appeal- ing ones, too, as for instance, that of two or three years ago, that cost the lives of twenty-seven young women. But she has had none that stunned her civic senses as the great blaze of 1836. Sweep- ing the block bounded by Market, Broad, Mulberry and Mechanic Streets, that ate out her very heart. A boarding house blaze in the same locality in 1845 gave the town a fresh fright ; and someone of a flamboyant frame of mind, made a lurid picture of the showy blaze that has got into history. But the epoch making blaze of local annals was that of 1836. The City's Equipment If the city had had at command, at that visitation, the splendid fire fighting machine over which Fire Chief Paul J. Moore presides, the flames might have been stayed wdiere they began. If the ravages of the Fire Devil had demanded, he could have rung to the rescue 16 horse-drawn engines, 4 horse-drawn steamers, 21 combination chemical en- gines, 2 horse-drawn hook-and-ladder trucks, 6 motor-driven fire engines, a motor-drawn combination chemical en- gine, and an electric-drawn hook-and- ladder truck. There are many mighty machines in the department; and one among them, the Amoskeag in No. 3 Engine House, with a capacity of 1,300 gallons a minute, can pump a three-line one-and-a-half inch nozzle stream some feet higher than the shining tower of the Prudential Building. But the periled colony of 1836 had only a volunteer force — enthusiasts, but only amateurs after all — with a wheezy engine or two to fight the flames. The department records do not show when the half-paid service came into being. But when the steam fire engine replaced the old hand-pump contrivance, the volunteer had to make way for the com- petent engineer; and the old timer sur- vived only to man the machine and stretch the hose and climb the ladder. In 1889 the city put them out of com- FiRE Chiei- Paul J. Mooku mission entirely with the all-paid depart- ment that has grown in proportions until it has become what it is today. The present force consists of 466 trained men ; has, besides the Chief, 2 Deputy Chiefs and 5 Battalion Chiefs for its administration ; and is divided into 39 organized companies housed in 33 buildings. The value of the plant is a trifle short of $1,500,000; the cost Continued on page gi 90 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY C AWLEY, CLARK & CO. MANUFACTURERS OF Dry Colors, Pulp Colors and Chemicals Office and Works: NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Branches: CHICAGO, ILL.; SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. UNIVERSAL Caster and Foundry Co. The oldest and largest Caster Manufacturers in the world Casters for Every Purpose NEWARK, NEW JERSEY ELECTRICAL GOODS Telephone Mulberry 144 IIIIIIIMIIHIIMIMIIIIIIIlfi Telephone Market 5297 NEWARK APRON CO. Mfrs. of Aprons and House Dresses 73-77 Nichols Street, Newark, N. J. MAXWELL & SON Mfrs. of Saratoga Potato Chips Chipmunk Brand Nut Meats Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 91 of maintenance, $713,430 ; and it was effective in keeping the year's losses, on 1,795 calls, down to less than a million dollars. A Man and a Horse Scarce a man in the department has reached his position except through his baptism of fire ; and the Commissioners keep even these seasoned and practiced heroes abreast with the times in the "Dick" matter of fire fighting science by requir- ing them all to attend the department "College" once a week. The Dean of the force, as one might say, is Captain Thomas of No. 19 Engine Company — a naval veteran of the Civil War, serving in Captain Cushing's Man-of-Warsman Schokokon, who entered the service in 1873. Of course he is one of the figures in the department. But the talk of the firemen is not all about the men. Their horses are their pets and pride. There are 142 of these; but one of them is specially notable because he holds the record for "runs." That's old "Dick" of Engine Company No. 12's team of three ; and, each horse being known by a number, his is 5G. Paul Moore, now the Chief of the Fire Department, helped to initiate him when he came into the service fifteen years ago. A feature of the fiftieth anniversary fete of the paid Fire Department of New York a year ago, was a procession of horses that had made records in the matter of the number of responses to alarms. The l)est of them was about 1,700; "Dick" beats that, two-to-one, with a record of 3,700. During the years he has been in the department he has not been "absent from duty" except for 33 days when recovering from injuries sustained in the service. He was laid up once by a nail in the foot and again as the result of a collision. "Dick" is a flea-bitten gray, nineteen years old, fifteen and a half hands high, and 1,400 pounds in weight. "And," Chief Moore says, "he's as good a fireman as the best of us." If there only were space to exploit department lore ! But there is'nt ! And yet, where is there a richer field for it than a firehouse? STUMPF & BINDER Manufacturers of Fine Gold and Platinum Chains Swivels, Spring Rings and Snaps in Gold and Platinum ALSO GOLD PLATFD 50-58 Columbia St., Newark, N. J. RICHARDSON BUILDING, FOURTH FLOOR Telephone 7289 Market 92 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Telephone Waverly 2624 Irvington Motor Car Garage JAMES MONAHAN, Proprietor Renting, Repairing, Storage Supplies STANDARD GASOLINE. POLARINE OILS 1084-1088 CLINTON AVENUE, IRVINGTON, N. J. WM. H. HKICHENTIIAL, Piopuelor Established 1893 Telephone 3SS1 Bianch Brook Manhattan Carpet and Linoleum Co. CARPETS :: RUGS Special — $1.10 Inlaid Linoleum, 79c. sq. yard OILCLOTH AND LINOLEUM Window Shades, Mats and Mattings of All Kinds JUNCTION OF BROAD ST. and BELLEVILLE AVE. Newark, New Jersey ONLY ONLY SCHALK BREWERY, Inc. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY ONLY Choice Hops :: Barley Malt Beer ONLY ONLY INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 93 Photo Loaned by Albert H. Hewes 94 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY German Savings Bank 772 BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Assets over $8,400,000. Surplus $495,000. 4 and 31/2 PER CENT. INTEREST Deposits made the first three business days of every month draw interest from the first of the month. Officers GOTTFRIED KRUEGER, President JOHN FISCHER, First Vice-President AUGUSTUS F. EGGERS, Second Vice-President WM. G. TRAUTWEIN, Secretary and Treasurer William H. Barkhorn Joseph M. Byrne Herman Bornemann, Jr. Augustus F. Eggers Trustkes Wm. H. F. Fiedler John Fischer Christian W. Feigenspan Gottfried Krueger Wm. F. Hoifmann Robert A. Osborne Gustavus Staehlln Edward Schictchaus Herman C. Schuetz Wm. G. Trautwein FRANKLIN I B 04 B ROAD SAVINGS B A. iM k: STREE T IVlerrItt G. Perkins WInton C. Garrison John P. Contrell Joseph M. RIker MANAGERS Henry IVI. Doremus Herbert P. Gleason Adrian Riker William Scheerer Jay Ten Eyck Assets $6,600,000 George W. Jagle Daniel H. Dunham Carl H. Lebkuecker Edgar J. Haynes Wm. G. Brenn 4% INTEREST TO $1,000. Deposits made by third business day of any month draw interest from the first of that month 1 eleph lie Mulberrj n67 HASTINGS & CO. Formerly with Richardson Bros. Practical Saw Makers All Kinds of Saws Repaired in the best possible manner Knives and Springs of every description made from the best sheet metal Sheet metal cut to order. Jig and Band Saws made to order and repaired. Jobbing given prompt attention. Job grinding. Ivory, Pearl and Metal Saws a Specialty. Lawn Mowers sharpened. 41-49 Commercial Street Newark, N, J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 95 Powers of the Mayor ^E may give permission to examine public records. He has 3 power to revoke general licenses, to sign temporary loan (5(] bonds, to sign record of engrossed ordinances, to approve ^ bills allowed by Council, to approve all resolutions passed by •^^'^ Council, to sign all warrants. To grant the following permits: For street stands during the holidays; to allow banners across public streets, and for fireworks exhibitions. To appoint the following olhcers subject to approval by tlie Council: Tax Commissioners, Police Commissioners, Fire Commissioners, Comp- troller, Auditor, Members of the Board of Health. To appoint the following officers not subject to confirmation by Council: City Counsel, City Attorney, Assistant City Attorney, Excise Conunis- sioners. Trustees of Free Public Library, Assessment Commissioners, Police Justices, Private Secretary, Clerk in Executive Department, Member ex-officio of the following connnissions: Sinking Fund, Public Library, Newark City Home, Finance Connnittee. Term changed lo two years, 1857. Newark was incorporated in 1836. Made a Port of Entry in 183^^. 96 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY HIGH GRADE PEARL BUTTONS MADE IN NEWARK, NEW JERSEY ACKNOWLEDGED The Leading Style Factor for Triiinning This Season's Garments Novelty Pearl Dress Buttons Staple Pearl Dress Buttons Pearl Dress Slides and Buckles Our exhibit illustrates some of the interesting processes in the mamifactnre of our product Hamburg Button Co, NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Salesrooms: 1140 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY CHICAGO OFFICE: 337 West Madison Street Address all correspondence to the New York Office INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 97 Newark's Anniversary Industrial Exposition MAY 13th to JUNE 3rd, 1916 EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Auspices of MANUFACTURES AND TRADES COMMITTEE OF THE COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED © KoEMdL Studio ^ 1916 98 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY . A-T-SCHLICHTING ^, Glassware -— ^ Bar AMD Hotel Supplies BeerPumps,Etc. 263 Market St.. N ewark. N.J. Phone 1234 Mulberry Copyright .19I5,BY A. T.ScHLiCHTiNG. SLICK - SHINE SILVER PASTE Gives the Brilliancy of Newness to SILVERWARE SLICK - SHINE FURNITURE POLISH Makes your Furniture, Piano and Woodwork LOOK LIKE NEW GEISER & PLUM 845 BROAD STREET NEWARK, N. J. New Jersey Real Estate FACTORIES SITES LOFTS WATER FRONTS GARAGES STORES Appraisals of Property Expert Testiinoni] Our service includes advice of trained factory force familiar with construction, equipment and shipping facilities. Telephone 5681 Branch Brook PARK THEATRE The House of Good Pictures and Music ARNOLD DAVIS, Manager Bloomfield Ave. and Ridge St. Newark, N. J. Telephone Mulberry 1838 Ludwig Achtel-Stetter RESTAURANT and CAFE 842-844-846 Broad Street Newark, N, J. Banquet Halls C. R. R. Depot 'Phone 3547 Mulberry Established 1872 NEWARK NICKEL PLATING CO. W. IT. Rergfels 6t Co., Proprietors Electro Platers in Gold, Silver, Nickel, Brass and Copper Tableware of all kinds re-silvered equal to new, Brass Bedsteads, Chandeliers, Fenders, Brass Tables and all kinds of Brass Goods refinished Rear of 40 Walnut St., Newark GOODWIN THEATRE Paramount Pictures 863 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION yj MEMBERS MANUFACTURES AND TRADES COMMITTEE 100 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY SEE OUR EXHIBIT BEFORE YOU LEAVE The Motors and Fans that made the Star Famous MADE IN NEWARK STAR FAN AND MOTOR WORKS 245-247 NEW JERSEY RAILROAD AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. 3^5 to 1 h.p. Direct Current All Voltages from 6 to 500 Also Dynamos and Charging Sets Telephone Branch Brook 2882 KANOUSE-BLUDWINE Co., Inc. Kanouse — the Perfect Spring Water Bottled at the Springs Drink BLUDWINE The New Sparkling Refreshing Beverage The Softest of all Waters. No Drugs. No Alcohol. 10 BELLEVILLE AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. 1,000 WATCHMEN in Your Plant or Store Assures of FIRE PROTECTION "Automatic" Sprinklers extinguish thousands of fires each year Ask for Booklet "Pursuit of Safety" ''Automatic'' Sprinkler Co. of America Department Office: 416 ESSEX BLDG., NEWARK, N. J. H. S. NiEMiTZ, Dept. Manager INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 101 ADVISORY MEMBERS Manufactures and Trades Committee © g) l^cMid. Studio 102 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Dine at the Most Popular RESTAURANT in Newark NOTED FOR ITS SEA FOOD SPECIALTIES THE HOME OF REAL CABARET 14 — Well-Known Artists and Performers — 14 Continuous Cabaret Rusiness Men's Lunch, 11:30 to 2:30 Eight -Course Dinner, 5:30 to 9:00 A la Carte at all hours. Dancing Every Evening Johnson's Restaurant and Cafe GEORGE JOHNSON, Proprietor PLANE STREET, Just North of Market, NEWARK, N. J. WARDROBE TRUNK $20.00 Roomy — not bulky. Rig enough — yet small enough. Holds six suits or twelve dresses. Only trunk with a removable gar- ment rack. Can't cost excess. The most-for-your-money trunk on the market. For sale by all leading stores. Manufactured by Neverbreak Trunk Co. NEWARK, NEW .lERSEY Official Sculpture and Plastic Decorations of Newark's 250th Anniversary Pylons and City Hall Decorations by DOMINIC A. WALSH Sculptor NEWARK and RELLEVILLE New Jersey INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 103 Pr^ET? 1 iJi ."'i P. 1^ i 104 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY SBlunShoe ELEVEN BIG BEST STORES The elements of quality are built into the class styles of today just as thoroughly as into the good old- fashioned shoes we made fifty years ago. Newark's representative families find the shoes and the service satisfactory at our well-located store. 689 BROAD STREET, opp. Military Park NEWARK, N. J. f5daranteesh6e<:o1 Ten Stores in Greater New York Factory: 511-519 East 72nd Street, New York. BAKER PLATINUM WORKS BAKER & CO., Inc. MURRAY and AUSTIN STREETS, NEWARK, N. J. Refiners and Workers of Precious Metals h- C. Becker L. C. Becke;r, Jr. L. C. BECKER & SON Building Contractors 415 Thirteenth Avenue Newark, N. J. Telephone Market 8608 HiiiiiitiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiin Telephone Waverly 3856 New Amsterdam Theatre and Auditorium Fine Iviquors, Rumanian Lunch. Catered affairs my specialty I. ITZKOWITZ, Proprietor 83-85 Sixteenth Ave., Newark, N. J. Newark's Most Popular Auditorium for Dances, Receptions, Entertainments, Banquets, Amateur Theatricals, Etc. TURNBULL AUDITORIUM 283-285 Market St., Newark, N. J. Two blocks from corner of Broad & Market Sts. For information apply to J. S. WARD. Telephone Market 4311 INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 105 106 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY The D. L. & W. Coal Co. SUMMIT POCKETS NEWARK POCKETS HARRISON POCKETS MONTCLAIR POCKETS BLOOMFIELD POCKEITS PATERSON POCKETS Our Trade Mark is a Guarantee of Quality- our Facilities an Assurance of Service S. G. MEMORY, Sales Agent NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Wm. H. Brown H. E. Krumnow Call Market 1181 and ask for MALE — H K L P— FEMALE The Employment Exchange 29 CEDAR STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephone 5772 Market BECKER CONSTRUCTION CO. Builders Mason, Concrete and Carpenter Construction Office: 361 GROVE STREET NEWARK, N. J. COLONIAL STAMPING WORKS All Kinds of Metal Stampings METAL BEDSTEAD TRIMMINGS Newark, N. J. J. E. STEVENSON & CO. Wholesale Dealers in Fruit and Produce 44 Commerce Street, Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 107 H] ^\ c ZT ^T CI ZllTIOl riTZri^l 9 ^ p gMO X r. Tf ly j-gi O 108 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY E. S. WARD & CO. HUGH SMITH & CO. Established 1879 Established 1862 General Leather Co. Tanners and Manufacturers of All Grades LEATHER FOR MOTOR CAR, VEHICLE and FURNITURE TRIMMING NEWARK, N. J., U. S. A. Merchants National Bank 770 BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N. J. AT THE FOUR CORNERS This bank has ample CAPITAL and SURPLUS to render it firm in any emergency. Its service is prompt and sure. It has every department and equipment necessary for the transaction of banlcing along modern lines. Open a deposit and checking account, rent a Safe Deposit Box. Send your Household Valuables to our Storage Vault while your aoartment or home is closed. Let our Trust Department attend to the drawing of your will. JOSEPH M. RIKER, President J. S. RIPPEL, Vice-President ARTHUR L. PHILLIP, Cashier WILLIAM H. WARREN, Assistant Cashier WM. C. MORTON, Trust Officer and Supt. Safe Deposit INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 109 nsbUS TRIAL EXPOSITION FIRST WEEK'S CONCERT PROGRAM Voss' First Regiment Band INFANTRY N. G. N. J. Andrew E. Voss, Chief Musician PRESIDENTIAL DAY — Saturday, May 13th Opening Exercises at 4 o'clock Addresses by AUGUSTUS V. HAMBURG, Chairman Manufactures and Trades Committee; HON. THOMAS L. RAYMOND, Mayor of Newark, and HON. NEWTON T. BAKER, Secretary of War, who will official^ open the Exposition. Saturday Evening, May 13tli Jubilee Ch. Bach Selection— Reniick's Hits, No. 16. .B. Lampe Balance of program by selection or request Overture Selection— Robin Hood R- de Koven COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED DAY Monday Afternoon, May 15th Monday Evening, May 15th GvERTiiRE-Bride Elect ]. P. Sousa OvERTURE-Zampa '^"t'"''', SELECTION-Chin-Chin Ivan Caryll SELECTION-The Firefly R- Fnml SELECTION— Broadway Review B. Lampe Selection— In the Limelight L. heist Balance of program by selection or request Balance of program by selection or request NEWARK TRAFFIC CLUB AND RAILROAD DAY Tuesday Afternoon, May 16th Selection — Carmen B/re( SELECTION— Sari E- Kalman Medley Overture — Remick's Hits. .8. Lampe Balance of program by selection or request Tuesday Evening, May 16th Overture — Poet and Peasant Sitppe Selection— The Blue Paradise Eysler Descriptive — A Hunting Scene. .. .Biicca/ossi Balance of program by selection or request Wednesday Afternoon, May 17th Overture — Der Tambour der Garde A. E. Titl Selection — Sunny South Lampe Medley — Popular Hits Berlin and Snyder Balance of program by selection or request FOUNDERS' DAY Wednesday Evening, May 17th Selection — Metropolitan Opera House Tobani Selection — The Highwayman..../?, de Koven Descriptive— A Sleighride Party .. .Mic/iuc/is Balance of program by selection or request FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS' DAY Thursday Afternoon, May 18th Selection — II Travatore y^rdi Selection— The Wizard of the Nile. .Hcrfr^rf Selection — Popular Potpourri WHmark Balance of program by selection or request Thursday Evening, May 18th Overture- Jubel ^''f'' Selection— Katinka R- Friml Descriptive— Return of the Scouts. . .C/ement Balance of program by selection or request Continued on page iil 110 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY THE ROYAL RESTAURANT ^ ^ ^ New Jersey's most up-to-date American and Oriental Restaurant 98 MARKET STREET, NEWARK, N. J. American Dinner, 12 to 4 p. m., 25c.; Chinese Dinner, 11 a. m. to 7 p. m., 3.5c. Have Your Galvanizing done by New Jersey Galvanizing and Tinning Works Hoops, Band Iron and all kinds of Castings Galvanized and Tinned Avenue D and Murray Street Newark, N. J. 'Phone Waverly 734 Estimates Furnished S. J. Connolly F. J. Briscoe Members of Builders' and Traders' Exchange W. H. CONNOLLY CO. INCORPORATED Builders 495-497 TwELETh AvE., Newark, N. J. 'Phone 377 Mulberry Established 1886 Compijments of SEILER BROTHERS Sanitary Milk and Cream Co. 273 Plane Street and Cor. Waverly Ave. and Somerset St. Newark, N. J. JOHN E. ORTNER & CO. M A N I' !•• ACT TREKS O J* Fancy Metal Goods Bag and Pocket Book Trimmings Trimmings in Gold and Sterling Silver of all descriptions. Electro-Plating 481 Washington St., Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 111 fl IlSDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION "? F> g. O G R. AJVL COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS DAY Friday Afternoon, May 19th Selection — Faust Ch. Gounod Selection — The Blue Paradise. .. .Ed. Eyslcr Medley — Remiek's Hits B. Lampe Balance of program by selection or request Friday Evening, May 19th Overture — Raymond Mm. Thomas Selection — The Prince of Pilsen...G. Luders Descriptive — A Hunting Scene. .. .Bucca'ossi Balance of program by selection or request LABOR DAY Saturday Afternoon, May 20th Saturday Evening, May 20th Overture — Poet and Peasant Suppe Overture — Light Cavalry Suppe Selection — Princess Pat V. Herbert Selection — Prince of Woodland Weberbauer Descriptive — Cavalry Charge G. Luders Descriptive — Forge in the Forest Michaelis Balance of program by selection or request Finale — Newark Knows How F. C. Voss SECOND AND THIRD WEEK'S CONCERT PROGRAM BY Theo. J. Vincentz's Band Theo. VincEntz, Conductor BUY IN NEWARK DAY Monday Afternoon, May 22nd Monday Evening, May 22nd Overture — Poet and Peasant Snppe March — Newark's Exposition. . .F. Bogenhard Selection — Maritana Wallace Overture — Morning, Noon and Night. .Suppe Potpourri — Remick No. 16 Lampe Selection — Adele Briquet Descriptive — The Jolly Blacksmith. . . .Suckley Balance of program by selection or request (with all effects) BUY IN NEWARK DAY Tuesday Afternoon, May 23rd Tuesday Evening, May 23rd OvERTi'RF — Fest Leutner Overture — Orpheus Offenbach Selection — Wang Morse Popular Selection — Remiek's No. 15 Lampe FANTASIA of Students' Songs Douglas Descriptive — The Midway Plaisance. . . rofcan/ Balance of program by selection or request (with all effects) GOVERNORS' DAY Wednesday Afternoon, May 24th Wednesday Evening, May 24th Overture — Jubel von Weber Overture — Raymond Thomas Grand Fantasia — Martha Flotow Selection — The Princess Pat Herbert Selection — Shameen Dhur Olcott Operatic Potpourri — Broadway Review Lampe Balance of program by selection or request Balance of program by selection or request AUTOMOBILE DAY Thursday Afternoon, May 25th Overture — Pique Dame Suppe Selection — Prince of Woodland Weberbauer Hichland Patrol — TheWeeMacGregor Amers Balance of program by selection or request Thursday Evening, May 25th Overture — Romantique Keler-Dela Selection — Faust Gounod Descriptive — A Hunting Scene . . . .Buccalossi (with all effects) MAYORS' DAY Friday Afternoon, May 26th Overture — The Jolly Robbers Suppe Selection — II Trovatore Verdi Popular Songs Remick Balance of program by selection or request Friday Evening, May 26th Overture — Light Cavalry Suppe Selection — The Grand Slam Witmark Hesitation — First l.ove Hohmann Balance of program by selection or request Continued on page iij 112 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Manufactured by WAYNE MFG. CO. Newark, N. J. RICHMOND BROS. CO. Manufacturers of Buttons and Small Metal Novelties 173-177 Chestnut St., Newark, N. J. Founded 1860 Edward K. Wetherill, President Lewis E. Huff, Vice-President Allen C. Sinclair, Secretary and Treasurer CALL ON US IF YOU CAN ADAM HEBELER & CO. Wholesale Produce Dealers Always a Full Line of Seasonable Produce 46-48 Commerce St., Newark, N. J. Telphones 9400-9401 Market Newark Industrial Stocks We make a specialty of the Stocks of the Celluloid Co., Crocker Wheeler Co., National Lock Washer Co., New Jersey Zinc Co., Singer Manufacturing Co. J. S. RIPPEL 18 CLINTON STREET, NEWARK, N. J. POST & FLAGG MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Investments :: Stocks :: Bonds KINNEY BUILDING (2nd Floor), 790 BROAD STREET, NEWARK Telephone 1970 Mulberry Alfred L. Dennis, Resident Partner INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 113 ^'' H-'^ Industrial EXPOSITION "^' ^ F> g, O Q R,A.TVI LADIES' DAY Saturday Afternoon, May 27th Saturday Evening, May 27th OvKRTURE — Semiramide Rossini Overtire — Turner's Motto Kiesler Selection — Chin-Chin Caryll Fantasia — ADreaiti Pictureof theSouth Lampe Grand March — Tannhauser Wagner Descriptive — A Hunt in the Black Forest Volker Balance of program by selection or request (with all ePfects) SUBURBAN DAY Monday Afternoon, May 29th Overture — All America Loscy Popular Selection — Along the RlaUo. . .Feist Sextette from Lucia Doni:ctti Balance of program by selection or request Monday Evening, May 29th Overture — Tambor der Garde Till Selection — The Only Girl Herbert Descriptive — The Jolly Blacksmith. . .Sucfc.'c}' (with all effects) ARMY AND NAVY DAY Tuesday Afternoon, May 30th American Republic Shie!e Grand National Fantasia Batens Potpourri — The North and South. .. .Bendix Balance of program by selection or request Tuesday Evening, May 30th Promenade — Come to Newark and Have a Jubilee Fecher Overture — All America" Losey Descriptive — Battle of San JuanHill. . .Su'cef GUEST DAY Wednesday Afternoon, May 31st Wednesday Evening, May 31st Overture — In Smiles and Tears Coiiradi Overture — Ungarishe Lustpiel . . . .Ke/er-Be/a Fantasia — Martha Flotow Selection — Gems of Stephen Foster. .Tobani Potpourri — Around the World Klein Humoresque — Moorish Processional Luscomb Balance of program by selection or request Balance of program by selection or request ELECTRICAL DAY Thursday Afternoon, June 1st Thursday Evening, June 1st Overture — The Golden Hive Brespant Overture — Stradella Flotow Oriental Caprice — Arabian Twilight Luscomb Selection — Mile. Modiste Herbert Selection — Louisiana Lou Jerome Concert VALSE--Estelitta W'itmark Balance of program by selection or request Balance of program by selection or requist FLORAL DAY Friday Afternoon, June 2nd Friday Evening, June 2nd Overture — The Champion Wiegand Overture — The Night Vi'anderer Aledo Fantasia — Uncle Tom's Cabin Lampe Selection — The Opera Mirror Meyrellis Selection — Sparklets Glogan Characteristic — The Porto RIcans. . .Mi'ssuJ Balance of program by selection or request Balance of program by selection or request CLOSING DAY Saturday Afternoon, June 3rd Overture — Tonight VC'e Say Farewell Anderson Descriptive — A Hunting Scene Bucolossi Selection — Sari Kalmann Balance of program by selection or request Saturday Evening, June 3rd March — Take Me Back to Dear Old Newark Selection OF American COLLEGE SoNCS Tobani II eberbauer Descriptive — Frolics at Music Temple Overture — Tone Pictures of the North (with all effects) Wachsman-Jacobi and South Bendix "America" Balance of program by selection or request 114 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY How to Spend the Day Is there a lull in the program — a gap you would fill to best advantage — something to make the holi- day complete and yet not tiresome? Try a Trolley Trip. Become acquainted with the ex- panse of the greater Newark. Ride out to Eagle Rock, to picturesque Caldwell, or stop off at Verona Lake. Fast Line for Perth Amboy with connection for shore resorts or trolley express service to New Brunswick, Trenton, Camden and Philadelphia. Visit Public Service Terminal Be Comfortable at Home Learn of the innumerable conveniences and comforts of gas and electric appliances. The electric fan at the turn of a switch will banish all stufTmess; the gas range, ready on the instant, makes no unnecessary heat; the gas water heater will have the refreshing bath ready just when wanted. There are many more gas and electric devices for cooking and other household uses that save in time and energy, and at a minimum of cost. Visit Public Service Show Rooms INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION II f) Newark's Anniversary Industrial Exposition FIRST REGIMENT ARMORY, NEWARK, N. J. May 13th to June 3rd, 1916 GENERAL TELEPHONE through which all exhibitors may be reached — Mulberry 3830 Public Telephone Booths and Operators Main Exposition Floor, Kast Side, near Main Entrance SPACE E3 Office of the Manufacturers and Trades Committee Main Floor, near luitraiice Lobby. Telephone Branch Brook 400 Office of Merle L. Downs, Managing Director Main Floor, near Entrance Lobby. Telephone Branch Brook 400 Receiving and Shipping Clerk Office Dickerson vStreet Entrance. Telephone Branch Brook 401 Manufacturers and Trades Committee Augustus V. Hamburg, Chairman; Edward E. Gnichtel, Treasurer; James Smith, Jr., Richard C. Jenkinson, Richard A. Hensler, Richard Denbigh, Frederick L. EbErhardt, Merle L. Downs, Managing Director Advisory Members Benjamin S. Whitehead, Curtiss R. Burnett, James M. Reilly, James L. O'Tooee General Staff Claude E. Holgate, Press Representative; Theodore Fettinger, Advertising Representative; Duncan M. Robertson, Secretary; John A. Smith, Floor Superintendent; John A. Reitz, Lieutenant of Exposition Police. Decorations designed by and installed under the direction of James A. Betelle, of Guilbcrt & Betelle, 665 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. Carpenter work made and installed by Schaedel Bros. & Co., 118 Bruce Street, Newark. Decorations and Booths made and installed by M. A. Singer, Decorator, 206 E. 27th St., N. Y. Signs made and installed by Hapward Sign Co., 282 Market Street, Newark. Electrical effects made and installed by Beaver Engineering Co., 59 Mechanic St., Newark. Floor coverings furnished and laid by Hahne-Stagg Co., Broad Street, Newark. Ellis Adding Typewriter used by the Management. Sculptor work by Dominic A. Walsh, 243 Cortlandt Street, Belleville, N. J. The exhibition is protected againt fire by a system of Gamewell Auxiliary Fire Alarm Boxes and special box 742, connected directly with the City Fire Alarm System. This system fur- nished and installed by New Jersey Fire Alarm Company, 776 Broad Street. Newark, N. J. LIST OF EXHIBITORS ALLSOP & ALLSOPP ; C-T 4 Manufacturing Jewelers. 13 Columbia Street, Newark. ALPHA ALCOHOL UTENSIL CO R-14 Cooking Utensils. 107 Hamilton Street, Newark. ANTI-HYDRO WATER PROOFING CO P-17 Waterproofing Materials and Methculs. 178 Washington Street, Newark. ART METAL WORKS S-1 Art Metal i'roducls. 9 Mulberry Street, Newark. ATLANTIC ELECTRIC VEHICLE CO S-U. 12.13 Electric Motor Vehicles, 893 Frelinghuysen Avenue, Newark. NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY //, <^'/iV. NEWARK When you help to celebrate Newark's great birthday, remember Newark's Famous Bottled Beer Brewed from the best materials obtain- able, under absolutely san- S^Tr > itary conditions. The finest i'-i/^iX productof the brewer's art Keep a case on hand at home Geo. W. Wiedenmayer, Inc. 596 Market St. Newark, N. J Telephone 7976 Market Established 18.57 LOOK FOR THE RED HORSE THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED HARNESS SHOP IN NEWARK 5S Years Making Good Harness and Still At It Mfrs. Harness, Canvas Goods & Strap Work G, M. Aschenbach Harness Co. 349 PLANE STREET (Cor. Branford Place), NEWARK, N. J. SEND FOR SAMPLE YES, SIR ! SEND FOR SAMPLE 'Phone 7519 Market Reasonable Rates We will send a man to apply your Initials or Monogram on your Auto- moliile any time, any place, $1.50 com- plete. 21 styles, sizes and colors to pick from. Guaranteed beautiful and perfect work. Applied in 20 minutes without any annoyance or delay. Decalcomanie Transfer Designs made to order for Name Plates or any purpose. Auto-Monogram Supply Co. 185 Mahket St., Nkwark, N. J. SALESMEN WANTED See the MODERN STORAGE ROOMS S. Cantek, Manager Furniture Stored, Packed and Shipped Auto Vans for Long and Short Distance Moving Office : 54-56 Academy St., Newark, N. J. tNDtlSTRlAL EXPOSITION 11/ LIST OF EXHIBITORS- r:o/if//?er Goods. New and Colden Streets, Newark. FIDELITY TRUST COMPANY X-2, 3, 4 Banking Room. 963 Broad Street, Newark. 118 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY N. W. HOVLAND COMPANY, Inc. Manufacturers of SHOE LASTS Do you want to see how good a Shoe Last can really be? Do you want to see how much style, snap and general character a Last can have? If so, just write — that's all. SPECIAL CARE GIVEN TO REMODELLING, ALSO 860-862-864 SUMMER AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. BEAVER MACHINE AND TOOL CO. MANUFACTURERS OF Special Machines and Tools, Jigs, Fixtures and Dies Estimates given on all work 13-15 Franklin Street, Newark Telephone 2931 Market ERNST GIDEON BEK MFG. CO. Manufacturers of High Grade Sterling and Gold Bags 5 Oliver Street, Newark, N J. DAY, CLARK & CO. MAKERS OF Fine Jewelry 449 Washington St., Newark Marshall N. Shoemaker M. AM. SOC. C. E. Architect and Engineer 810 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. PERCY B. TAYLOR MEM. AM. SOC. M. E. Consulting Engineer Essex Building, Newark, N. J. Telephone 7946 Market W. A. BIRDSALL & CO. makers of the Gibraltar and Waco Boilers Jobbers of Equipment for Heating, Plumbing and Vacuum Cleaning 44-46-48 Mechanic St., Newark INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 119 LIST OF EXHIBITORS—Continued FEDERAL BUTTON CO L-7 Buttons and Pearls Goods. 365 Market Street, Newark. GALARD COMPANY Carteret-13 PlumlMng Accessories. 335 Sixth Avenue, Newark. GAMON METER CO F-U Water Meters. 282 South Street, Newark. GENERAL ELECTRIC CO T-1 Electric Machinery and Apparatus. Newark. GOLDSMITH, L., & SONS P-9 Trunks and Leather Goods. 169 Mulberry Street, Newark. GOULD & EBERHARDT X-7 Machinery and Tools. Green Street and New Jersey Railroad Avenue. HAMBURG BUTTON CO L-4 Buttons and Pearl Goods. 149 New Jersey Railroad Avenue, Newark. HANKINSON, HENRY B Stratford-9 Stained Glass. 154 Wright Street, Newark. HAUSSLING SODA APPARATUS CO M-1 Soda Apparatus. 60 Arlington Street, Newark. HARTSHORN, STEWART, CO R-15 Spring Shade Rollers. Grant Avenue, East Orange. HASTINGS, A. J., & CO Milford-18 Machinery and Tools. 41 Commercial Street, Newark. HELLER BROS. COMPANY W-6 Files and Rasps. 865 Mt. Prospect Avenue, Newark. HETZEL, ESTATE OF J. G P-15 Rooiing Materials and Methods. 67 Main Street, Newark. HILTON COMPANY H-1 1 Men's Clothing. 793 Broad Street, Newark. HOLT, FRANK, & CO E-8 Silversmiths. 739 Broad Street, Newark. HORSTMAN CO., THE F. W W-7 Machinery. 196 Coit Street, Irvington. HOWE-BAUMAN BALLOON CO F-8 Rubber Toy Balloons. 187 Mulberry Street, Newark. IDEAL FIRE DETECTOR CO T-5 Fire Detecting Systems. 374 Plane Street, Newark. INDEPENDENT ORDER OF FORESTERS Carteret-12 Fraternal Organization. 535 Morris Avenue, Elizabeth. W. F. Bingham, Secretary. JOHNSTON & MURPHY T-8 Boots and Shoes. 42 Lincoln Street, Newark. JONES & WOODLAND CO CT-1 Manufacturing Jewelers. 2 Garden Street, Newark. KANOUSE-BLUDWINE CO., Inc E-1 Carbonated Beverages. 10 Belleville Avenue, Newark. KAUFMAN, K., & CO P-10 Leather Bags. 169 Mulberry Street, Newark. KERR, THE W. B., CO CT-7 Manufacturing Jewelers. 144 Orange Street, Newark. KOENIG'S SONS, E. G Carteret-16 Photographers. 875 Broad Street, Newark. KREMENTZ & CO CT-2 Manufacturing Jewelers. 49 Chestnut Street, Newark. LARTER & SONS CT-5 Manufacturing Jewelers. Parkliurst and Austin Streets, Newark. LAUTER COMPANY R-4 Pianos. 593 Broad Street, Newark. LOCK JOINT PIPE CO E-7 Lock Joint Piping and Fittings. 2 Rutledge Avenue, East Orange. LOEWENBERG CO., THE K-4 Sporting Goods. 58 Colden Street, Newark. 120 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Electrical Indicating Instruments Standard of the World! An A.C. or D.C. Instrument for every purpose — laboratory, central station or for any form of commercial electrical measurement or testing. The Weston A. C. Switchboard Instruments are unrivalled with respect to mechanical and electrical design and workmanship and hence with respect to performance. Competent engineers know that these Weston Instnmients are the only types that perfectly meet the practical requirements of service, and they likewise know the initial cost is little, if any more, than the cost of inferior instruments, and that because of their continuous accuracy and serviceability these Weston Instruments are much more economical to adopt than in- struments of any other make. A. C. S«'itchboar€l Wattmeter, Model IG" Model 1 Portable D. C. Voltmeters are guaranteed to an accuracy of ^^ of 1% (in terms of full scale length). They are dead-beat. The knife-edge pointer travelling over a mirror, readings may be made within Ho of a division of any part of the hand-calibrated scale. In external appearance they are very handsome. The metal case has an ex- ceedingly durable royal copper finish. The base is of selected mahogany, highly polished. Model 1 Weston A. C. Switchboard Instruments are fully described in Catalog 16. Model 1 and the various other D. C. Portable In- struments are described in Bulletin 501. No matter what your requirements may be, state them and we will forward appropriate Bulletins. Weston Electrical Instrument Company Waverly Park, Newark, N. J. NEW 10RK BOSTON CHICAGO DETROIT MONTREAL BUFFALO PHILADELPHIA ST. LOUIS TORONTO BERLIN CLEVELAND PITTSBURGH DENVER WINNIPEG LONDON CINCINNATI RICHMOND SAN FRANCISCO VANCOUVER PARIS PETROCRAD, JOHANNESBURG, S. AFRICA INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 121 LIST OF EXHIBITORS— Co/7fz////rf/ LOVELL & McCONNELL MFG. CO V-5 Electric Horns and SiMn^il-^- 1-^4 Writ>ht Street, Newark. J ' JDLOW & SQUIER S-9 Small Tools and Hardware. 97 Market Street, Newark. MANUFACTURERS CAN CO., THE S-6-7 Motalware and Containers. 426 Mulberry Street, Newark. MARSHALL & BALL H-9 Clothiers. 809 Broad Street, Newark. MORRIS MANUFACTURING CO Milford-16 Elevator Closing Devices. 10 Cross Street, Newark. MEAD-SUYDAM COMPANY p.ll Undertakers' Supplies. Park Avenue and North Thirteenth Street, Newark. MONROE CALCULATING MACHINE CO P-6 Calculating- Machines. Mitchell Street, Orange, N. J. MURPHY VARNISH COMPANY K-6 Varnishes, Paints and other Wood Finishes. 224 McWhorter Street, Newark. NATIONAL OIL & SUPPLY CO X-8 Oils and Greases. 174 hrelinghuyst-n .\venue, Newark. NELSON, L R., ELECTRIC REPAIRING & MANUFACTURING COMPANY.. P-S h.lectric Machinery and Repairs. 1 Bond Street, Newark. NEWARK MADE LEATHER T-11* Newark Leather Manufacturers. Essex Building, Clinton Street, Newark. NEUBARTH, SAMUEL F-14 Charlotte Russe and Peanut Butter. 171 Market Street, Newark. NEWARK LEATHER MACHINERY CO T-10 Leather Manufacturing Machinery. 125 New Jersey Railroad Avenue, Newark. NEVIN, FRED E E-9 Newark Made Fountain Pens. 537 West 123d Street, New York. NEWARK WIRE CLOTH CO r.12 Wire Cloth and Screens. 228 Verona Avenue, Newark. NEWARK SIGN COMPANY r.16 Advertising. 27 Treat Place, Newark. NEWARK EMBROIDERY WORKS H-8 Embroidery and .Vrt Needle Work. 78 Shipman Street, Newark. NE^A^ARK CUT GLASS COMPANY K-5 Cut Glass. 21 Academy Street, Newark. ORIENTAL RUG COMPANY E-5 Rugs and Carpets. 25 Hackett Street, Newark. OHLSON, J. OSCAR 4-Milford Health Bread and Crackers. 383 Broad Street, Newark. ORIGINAL LINOLITH COMPANY 15-Milford Composition Floors. 4 Twentieth .-Xvenue, Irvington, N. J. OSMUN-COOK COMPANY E-4 Dental Ealjoratory Equipment. 7 West Park Street, Newark. PADDLEFORD COMPANY, CO L-8 Antiseptic Liquid Preparations. 154 Wright Street, Newark. PARKES FILE CO ll-Carteret Manicure Sets. 117 Verona Avenue, Newark. PEERLESS COMPANY, THE p.4a Raincoats. 54 Clinton Street, Newark. PHOENIX LOCK WORKS p.l4 Locks and Hardware. Third Avenue and Fourth Street, Newark. PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATION L-2 Household Equipment. Newark, N. J. PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATION M-3-4-5 Gas and Electric Service. Newark, N. J. PRUDENTIAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA K 1-8 Life Insurance. Newark, N. J. 122 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Call the Borden Wagon and ask the salesman to serve you regularly. Then you are sure that you arc getting the purest, the richest, the most nourishing milk you can huy. Give your family the best. PASTEURIZED is rich, creamy milk — full of the body- building elements that you and your family need. Borden's Grade "A" Milk is produced and handled under the most rigid sanitary regula- tions. It is pasteurized to destroy all harmful germs and served to you in bottles that have been thoroughly cleansed and sterilized before filling. You can depend on the high quality and uniform richness of every quart of Bor- den's Grade "A" Milk. When Buying Milk or Milk Products, always ask for BORDEN'S INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 123 LIST OF EXHIBITORS— Co/zr/zzf/rrf RIKER BROS CT-3 .Mamifactiirins' Jewelers. 42 Court Street, Xevvark. RIVOLI SILK HOSIERY CO H-7 Silk Hosiery Manufacture. 461 Mulberry Street, Newark. RUBBERSET COMPANY L-9' Ruliher and Celluloid Articles. 56 Ferry Street, Newark. SACKS IRON FOUNDRY X-1 Machinery and Castings. Haniliurg^ Place, Newark. S. B. R. SPECIALTY CO r.7 Autoniol)ile Accessories. 17 llamburg Place, Newark. ST. MUNGO MFG. CO. OF AMERICA F-9 "Colonel" Golf Ralls. 121 Sylvan Avenue, Newark. SCHALK BREWERY, Inc K 2-3 Brewing of Beer. 13 Lewis Street, Newark. SCHLESINGER, LOUIS, Inc S-2 Real Estate. 31 Clinton Street, Newark. SCHOULER CEMENT CO 9-MiIford Cement Building- Construction. 154 Frelinghuysen Avenue, Newark. SLOAN & CHASE MFG. CO W-2 Special Machinery. 351 Sixth Avenue, Newark. SOMMER, JOHN, FAUCET COMPANY 15-Carteret Wood Faucets. 30 Morris Avenue, Newark. SOCIAL SERVICE EXHIBIT, THE A-B-D Social Welfare. 90 Treacy Avenue, Newark. Rev. Rabbi Solomon Foster. SPLITDORF ELECTRICAL CO L-1 Electrical Accessories. 98 Warren Street, Newark. STANDARD OIL CO. OF N. J R.6 Oils, Greases and Waxes, Oil Stoves and Heaters. 31 Clinton Street, Newark. STANDARD WIRELESS EQUIPMENT COMPANY 12-Milford Amateur Wireless Equipment. 11 Pavonia x'\venue, Arlington, N. J. STAR FAN AND MOTOR WORKS 10-Milford Exhaust Fans and Motors. 93 Chestnut Street, Newark. THATCHER FURNACE COMPANY 0-5 Furnaces and Heaters. 36 St. Francis Street, Newark. TONKS BROS L-5 Buttons and Pearl Goods. 227 High Street, Newark. UNIVERSAL CASTER & FOUNDRY CO S-8 Furniture and other Casters. 574 Ferry Street, Newark. WADSWORTH CHOCOLATE COMPANY F-4 Chocolate. 276 Jeliff Avenue, Newark. WAGNER PASTRY COMPANY F-5 Pies and Pastry. 18 Johnson Avenue, Newark. WARD BAKING COMPANY F-5 Bread and Cakes. Fourth Avenue, East Orange. WEBSTER LOOSE-LEAF FILING COMPANY P-2 Ofifice Filing Systems. 582 Broad Street, Newark. WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CO L-3 Electrical Apparatus. 165 Broadway, New York. WHITEHEAD & HpAG COMPANY S-14 Metal and Celluloid Novelties. Susse.K Avenue and First Street, Newark. WHITESIDE & BLANK CT-1 Manufacturing Jewelers. 19 Liberty Street, Newark. C. T. WILLIAMSON WIRE NOVELTY COMPANY F-7 Wire Novelties. 60 Badger Avenue, Newark. J. WISS & SONS COMPANY R-13 Cutlery and Small Tools. 33 Littleton Avenue, Newark. 124 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY EsTABUSHED 1858 L. LELONG & BROTHER GOLD AND SILVER Refiners, Assayers and Sweep Smelters OF JEWELERS' AND SILVERSMITHS' SWEEPINGS, Etc. Bullion of any grade of fineness and Coarse Bars Refined Fine Gold and Silver and Anode Gold and Anode Silver always on hand HALSEY, MARSHALL AND NEVADA STREETS, NEWARK, N. J. A. M. JACK Mfr. of Fine Gold Jewelry From Factory to Consumer (Save One Third) Special Order and Repairs 45 Lawrence Street, Newark, N. J. B. J. Riley, President E. C. Baldwin, Treasurer The B. J. Riley Mfg. Co. MANUFACTURERS OF METAL GOODS Telephone 7182 Market 249 N. J. Railroad Avenue, Newark, N. J. Automobile Repairing and Machine Work in all its branches Full Line of Accessories, Tires and Tubes Washing and Polishing Done Night and Day Washington Park Garage Co., inc. Paue F. Devine, General Manager Telephone 840,^ Market 9-13 LOMBARD Y ST., NEWARK Just a Step from Broad Street Established 1895 WM. H. TAYLOR & CO. manufacturers of FANCY PUTINUM CHAINS Also Swivels, Snaps and Spring Rings in Gold and Platinum OFFICE AND FACTORY : 08 ORCHARD ST., NEWARK Teleplione Market 6:")9r) INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 125 THE COMMITTEE OF FIFTY MRS. GEORGI-: BARKER CHAIRMAN MRS. GALEN J. PERRETT VICE-CHAIRMAN MISS J. ISABELLE SIMS SECRETARY MRS. HENRY YOUNG, JR. TREASURER MRS. JOHN I.. CONTRELL CHAIRMAN HOSPITALITY COM. MRS, FREDERICK S. CRUM CHAIRMAN SCHOOLS COMMITTEE MRS. SOLOMON FOSTER CHAIRMAN PHILANTHROPY COM. MRS. JOHN W. HOWELL CHAIRMAN RELIGION COMMITTEE MISS ALICE KIRKPATRICK CHAIRMAN PAGEANT COMMITTEE MRS. FRANKLIN MURPHY, JR. CHAIRMAN ENTERTAINMENT COM. MRS. L. H. BOBBINS CHAIRMAN PUBLICITY COMMITTEE MRS. FRANK H. SOMMER CHAIRMAN women's CLUBS COM. MRS. HENRY G. ATHA MRS. LOUIS V. ARONSON MRS. JOSEPH M. BYRNE MRS. FREDK. C. BREIDENBACH MBS. JOS. B. BLOOM MRS. JOHN L. CARROLL MRS. A. N. DALRYMPLE MRS. HENRY DARCY MRS. R. DIEFFENBACH MRS. SPAULDING FRAZER MRS. CHR. FEIGENSPAN MRS. H. R, GARIS MRS. R. ARTHUR HELLER MRS. CHARLES F. HERR MRS. R. C. JENKINSON MRS. NATHAN KUSSY MRS. WILLIAM B. KINNEY MRS. JENNIE B. KINGSLAND MRS. ALBERT LYNCH MRS. ROBERT M. LAIRD MISS MARGARET MC VETY MRS. E. ERLE MOODY MRS. FREd'K H. MOONEY MRS. UZAL H. MC CARTER MRS. WILLIAM P. MARTIN MRS. JAMES R. NUGENT MRS. BENEDICT PRIETH MRS. CHAUNCEY G. PARKER MRS. CHARLES J. PRAIZNER MRS. A. ROTHSCHILD MRS. EDWARD S. RANKIN MRS. E. J. STEVENS DR. SARA D. SMALLEY MRS. FRANCIS J. SWAYZE MRS. T. MANCUSI UNGARO MRS. A. VAN BLARCOM SLOAN & CHACE MFG. CO., Ltd. Manufacturers of Precision Machinery Bknch Lathes and .\ttachmEnts Bench Milling Machines Bench Drill Presses Bench Tapping Machines Fixtures, Jigs and Gauges Gun Barrel Rieling Machine Sixth Avenue .\nd North Thirteenth St. NEWARK, N. J. RosEviLij': Avenue Station Lackawanna Railroad Gear CiTTiNG Machines Pinion Cutting Machines Rack Cutting Machines Punches and Dies Special Machine Work Caktridce Vent Drilling ^Machine 126 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Styles Satisfy IduMen The HILTON CO. Succesors to Geo. Watson Co. 793 BROAD ST., NEWARK, N. J. Stores also in New York, Brooklyn, Boston, Providence, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Chicago They express the vir- ility of youth with the dignity of distinctive conservatism-in other words, they are DIF- FERENT. And remember, they are the original work of the HILTON CO.— and not the product of some wholesale house burdened with two separate profits, one for the maker and one for the middleman who sells it to you. Suits and Overcoats $12.50, $15, 18, $20, $22.50, $25— up to $40 J. A. & S. W. Granbery (a corporation) MAKKRS OF Gold Jewelry 31-33 East Kinney Street Newark, N. J. Telephone Farragut 9525-9875 coLAizzrs Table d'Hote and Restaurant A. J. CoiAlzzi, Proprietor 37-39 West 24th Street New York, N. Y. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 127 Telephone 7455 Market THE BORDEN PRESS The Best Printing in the City 245 MARKET STREET, NEWARK, N. J. At the Sign of the Hobbv WE PRINTED THIS PROGRAM •Phone 1904 Wav. Residence: 131 Schley St. KIRCHNER, Inc. G. KiRCHNF.R, Proprietor Iron, Steel, Ornamental and Structural Work Stairways, Fire Escapes, etc. Repairs Concrete Filled Columns Shop : 140-142 Corr St., Irvington Near Clinton Avenue ENGRAVINGS Line, Half-Tone, Color and Benday Plates MADE TO PRINT PERFECTLY Newspaper and Commercial Work SERVICE AND QUALITY Art Photo-Engraving Co. Star Eagle Building Branford Place, Newark, N. J, Telephone Market 2336 BREWSTER SONS COMPANY Manufacturers of "DAIRY MAID" CHOCOLATE AlVD COCOA TRADK 5_ Q_ g_ MARK Scannell s Original Service I published this book for the Committee Publisher of Historical and Statistical Records for Boards of Trade and Industrial Exposition Programs I will go any place. Write or wire for me. J. J. SCANNELL, Proprietor / can publish such a hook for luuj Committee References Paterson Industrial Expositson, Paterson, N. J.. Chamber of Coinmerce . National Silk Style Show, Paterson, N. J., Chamber of Commerce Newark's Anniversary Industrial Exposition, Newark, N. J. Committee of One Hundred and hundreds of others PATERSON, NEW JERSEY 128 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY 'Vh! What a Treat ff HENSLER'S POPULAR BEER ON DRAUGHT AND IN BOTTLES INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 129 Newark's 250th Anniversary MAY TO OCTOBER, 1916 Under the Auspices of the Committee of One Hundred COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED. Officks: Kinney Building PROGRAM OF EVENTS Watch Newspapers for further changes May 1. 8 a. m. — Salutes, Music, Church Bells and Factory Whistles. 10 a. m. — Parade of Local National Guard —Boy Scouts and Other Organizations, Gen. Edwin S. Hine, Commanding. 2 p. m. — Historic Ceremonies in Proc- tor's Palace Theatre, formally opening the 250th Anniversary of the Founding of Newark in 1666. Overture — By Newark Musicians' Club Orchestra. Assisted by Local No. 16, American Federation of Musicians — C. Mortimer Wiske, Conductor. "America" — - Newark Musicians' Club Chorus, Orchestra and Audience Invocation — Rt. Rev. Edwin S. Lines, D. D. Anthem — "Union and Liberty" Horatio Parker Newark Musicians' Club Chorus of Sixteen Voices — Direction of Frank C. Mindnich. Dedicatory Address — • Franklin Murphy Chairman Committee of One Hundred Address — The City — Hon. Thomas L. Raymond, Mayor Address — The State — His Excellency, James F. Fielder, Governor of New Jersey. Address — Brief Reminiscences of Fifty Years Ago Hon. James L. Hays Overture — By Orchestra Weber Celebration Ode — • Reading by the Author, Lyman Whitney Allen, D. D. Historic Address — Hon. Francis J. Swayze, Justice of the Supreme Court of N. J. President of the N. J. Historical Society. "Festival March" — By Orchestra Henry Hadley "Star Spangled Banner" — Newark Musicians' Club Chorus, Orchestra and Audience Benediction — Rt. Rev. John J. O'Connor. Assisted by Rt. Rev. Monsignor Isaac P. Whelan. May I. Opening Day. Musical Festival, to last until May 4, inclusive. Six perform- ances. First Regiment Armory. Addresses on the opening night by Franklin Murphy, Mayor Thomas L. Raymond and Uzal H. McCarter. Invocation by Rabbi Solomon Foster. May 3, 4, 5. Ordinary Agencies' (Prudential Insurance Company) Eighth Annual Con- vention, bringing in delegates from all parts of the United States. May 4. National Championship Wrestling of U. S. (Trials). National Turn Verein, 211 Bruce Street. May 4-5. Improved Order of Redmen, Grand Council Convention. May 6. National Championship Wrestling of U. S. (Finals). National Turn Verein, 211 Bruce Street. May 6. Second Annual Dual Athletic Meet, Central Com. and Manual Training High School, and East Orange High School, Weequahic Park. May 5, 19. First Presbyterian Church Par- ticipation. May 8, 9. Volunteer Newark Tour through the State of New Jersey, under the aus- pices of the New Jersey Auto and Motor Club. May 9. Banquet to Sporting Editors of New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, etc. May 9, 10. Congregational Conference of New Jersey at the First Congregational Church ; with unveiling of a tablet placed to the honor of the "Founders" of Newark by the Conference. May 10. Dedication of three Civic Monu- ments, at Puritan Landing Place, Bran ford Place and at the Public Library. Unveiling of a Tablet marking site of the parsonage of Dr. Aaron Burr, Broad and William Streets, by Princeton Club. May 12. New Jersey Day. Musical Pageant, First Presbyterian Church. May 13. President Wilson's Day, Open- ing Newark's Industrial Exposition. Banquet to the President, by tlic New- ark Board of Trade, Robert Treat Hotel. Opening of the Robert Treat Hotel, Newark. 8 p. m. — Gymnastic Championships, of the A. A. U. of tlic United States, at Y. M. C. A. Annual Paradp, The Road Horse Associa- tion of New Jersey. Reception by the Women's Committee of Fifty to the Wives and Daughters of the Committee of One Hundred and the Com- mittee of Three Hundred and other Ladies. — The Washington, 4 to 6 p. m. 130 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Russell-Loewus & Froehlich, Inc. Blenders and Wholesale Liquor Dealers 49-51-53 MECHANIC STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Cari. H. Wolf, President Wm. J. WoESTENDiEK, Treasurer NEWARK BAY SMELTING & REFINING CO. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Buyers of all Copper Bearing Material Producers of Brass, Composition and Copper Ingots Telephone Market 6172 U. S. AUTO COMPANY 226 CENTRAL AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. N. J. DISTRIBUTORS "EMPIRE" EASTERN DISTRIBUTORS "DIXIE FLYER" I I I i i £ I I I W. F. DAY & BRO. j I I I Catering I ICE CREAM AND CAKES | I 899 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. i I I I I FEDERAL BUTTON CO. Manufacturers of Ivory, Pearl and Composition Buttons 365 Market St., Newark, N. J. INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 131 May 13, 17. Congress of Sons of the Amer- ican Revolution. May 15. Knights of Columljus — Night Pa- rade. May 16. Knights of Columbus — Convention Day. May 17. Founder's Day. 2 p. m. — Parade of New Jersey National Guard and Civic and Fraternal Bodies. Hon. R. Wayne Parker, Grand Marshall ; Major Wm. H. Campfield, Grand Marshall, Civic and Fraternal Bodies. 8 p. m. — Special Religious and Historic Ceremonies in First Presbyterian Church, His Honor Mayor Thomas L,. Raymond, Rev. Wm. J. Dawson, D. D., Gov. Marcus H. Holcomb of Connecticut, Gov. James F. Fielder of New Jersey, and Former Gover- nor Franklin Murphy, Chairman Commit- tee of One Hundred, will speak, and other distinguished men and women, including descendants of Robert Treat and the Founders of Newark, will attend. Special Music ; an oration by Dr. Dawson ; prayer. May 17. Knights of Columbus Banquet. May 18. Tall Cedars of Lebanon parade, ceremonial and banquet. May 18-19. Special services Friday evening and Saturday morning — Temple B'nai Jeshurun. May 18, 19, 20. Amateur Boxing Cham- pionship A. A. U, Palace Ball Room. Aus- pices A. A. U. May 19. Nova Caesarea Chapter Daugh- ters of American Revolution to place me- morial tablet. Camping Ground, Woodside Phillips Park. May 16th alternative date. Opera under auspices of the Prudential Insurance Company Athletic Association, "The Sultan of Sulu." May 19, 20. Know Your City Day — .■\uspices Committee of Fifty. Visit the City's philanthropic, educational and pri- vate and public institutions. May 20. Unveiling of bronze tablet by South Side High School, on Divident Hill, Weequahic Park. Field Games, Princeton Club of Newark, Weequahic Park. May 20, 21. Special Anniversary Services in all Churches and Synagogues. May 21. Union Jewish Service Temple B'nai Jeshurun. 9 a. m.— G. A. R. Parade. May 22. Convention New Jersey State As- sociation Master Plumbers, and Exhibits. May 23. Banquet and Ball of aliove. May 24. Exhibits of above. May 25. Knights of Pythias Field Day and Parade. May 25, 26. Golf Championship of the City of Newark, Forest Hill Links. May 27. 3 p. ni. — Bohemian Clubs and L'd.nes Parade. May 27. 1 ]>. m. — Parade Essex County Ju- nior Christian Endeavor Annual Rally. May 28. Open-air Union Religious Ser- vice, Weequahic Park, at Pageant Am- phitlu-alrc. capacity 40,000. May 30. 9 a. m.— G. A. R. Parade. Essex Troup, J. O. U. A. M. Recreation Dept. 2 p. m. — Parade Italian-American State League. State Association of P. O. Clerks entertained by Branch 17, United National Association of P. O. Clerks. May 30, 31, June 1, 2. 8 p. m.— The New- ark Historic Pageant. 4,000 actors, a liand of 92 pieces, amphitheatre, capacity 40,000. Seats on sale at Lauter's. 593 Broad Street. i June 1. Close of Newark Anniversary Poem Competition. June 2. Parade, ceremonial. Salaam Tem- ple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. June 3. 2 p. m. — June Walk, Sunday Schools of Essex County. Parade, Loyal Order of Moose. Reception, Huron Club — Krueger Auditorium. Harness Racing, Road Horse Association of New Jersey. June 5. Orphans' Auto Day — Outing — Pa- rade. June 6. Public and Parochial School Pa- rade. Woodmen of the World. Conven- tion, Continental Hotel. Night Parade. June 6-9. Convention International As- sociation Chiefs of Police. Parade, Banquet, etc. June 7. Parade Independent Order of For- esters. June 8. 3 p. m. — Physical Training Exhi- bition, Weequahic Park — High Schools. June 9. 3 p. m. — Physical Training Exhi- bition — Weequahic Park — Elementary Schools. Prudential Golf Tournaments, Jvme and October. Prudential Tennis Tournaments during summer and fall. Prudential Home Office Baseball League of Eight Clubs playing series throughout the summer. Prudential Athletes will enter all open athletic competitions. Possible par- ticipation of the Prudential in parades and in pageant. June 10. Spanish-.Vmerican War Veterans' Day. American Federation of Homing Pigeon Fanciers. June 10. National Interscholastic Track and Field Events, Weequahic Park. June 11-12. Annual Celebration Turners and United Singers of Newark Concert, afternoon and evening. 132 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Don't Fail to Visit the Landing Place of ROBERT TREAT REIN BRAU BREWERY AND FAMILY RESORT COMMERCIAL WHARF NEWARK, N. J. BRING YOUR WIFE AND CHILDREN INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 138 June 13. Exempt Firemen's Association of Newark Parade. June 14. Junior Order of United American Mechanics — Parade and Field Day. June 15. Parade Fraternal Order of Eagles. June 16. N. J. State Organization United Brotherhood Carpenters' Convention. June 16. Prudential Field Day Exercises with athletic events of all kinds, and girls' contests. June 16, 17. Annual Convention Grand Council of New Jersey and Delaware Uni- ted Commercial Travelers. June 17. Surf Casting Tournament. Afternon Parade Lithuanian Society. Night Auto Parade. Afternoon Motor Cycle Parade, auspices N. J. Motor Cycle Club. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. June 19. Independent Order of Good Tem- plars (tentative). June 19-23. Springfield Avenue Merchants' Week. June 24. Elementary Schools City Ath- letic Championships. June 25. Military Field Mass — Weequahic Park — Knights of Columbus. July 3. Polish Day — Polish Falcom Conven- tion, Polish Alliance of New Jersey. Af- ternoon parade (15,000 in line). July 4. Fireworks Display Weequahic Park (under consideration). Prudential Excursion to Seashore early in July. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. July 8. 2 p. m. — United Slavic Societies of Newark — Native costume (8,(X)0 in line). July 8. Championship Cricket match. New- ark Cricket Club and Essex County Cricket Club. July 15. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. July 20, 21, 22. Inter-Club Matinee of the Junior League of Amateur Driving Clubs. July 29. Canoeing — New Jersey State Championship. Aug. 5. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. Aug. 19. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. Aug. 23, 24, 25, 26. International Bait and Fly Casting Tournament. Aug. 26. Scottish Day at Weidenmayer's Park. Award of $1,000 in Cash Prizes, Newark's Anniversary Poem Competition. Sept. 2. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. Sept. 3-4. Seventh Annual Convention As- sociated Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew Associations of New Jersey. Sept. 6, 7, 8, 9. National Convention, League of American Municipalities. Luncheon by Mayor Thomas L. Raymond to attending Mayors. National Convention, American Society of Sanitary Engineers and Plumbing In- spectors. Sept. 8, 9. Field and Track National Championships, A. A. U. The largest 1916 Athletic Events in the World. Wee- quahic Park. Sept. 11, 12. State Convention, Benevo- lent and Protective Order of Elks. Pa- rade, 2,500 in line. Banquet. Sept. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16. International Steam and Operating Engineers' Conven- tion and Exhibition — Krueger Auditorium. Sept. 14. Annual Reunion of Kearny's First New Jersey Brigade Society, com- posed of the surviving members of the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Tenth, Fif- teenth, Twenty-third, Fortieth Regiments of New Jersey Volunteers. Sept. 16. National All-Round Champion- ship A. A. U. Weequahic Park. Sept. 16. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. Sept. 20. Boy Scouts Field Day and Rally — Weequahic Park. Sept. 20. Order Sons of Italy— Celebration and Parade, 3,000 in line. Sept. 30. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. Oct. 14. Harness Racing — Road Horse Association of New Jersey. Oct. 15-29. Exhibition at Newark Mu- seum Association — 3rd floor Library, of Competition prints under auspices of Newark Camera Club. Sundays, 2-9 p. m.; Week Days, 12-6:30, 7:30-9:30. Oct. 20. Newark Camera Club Piiotographic Contest Awards. Oct. 30. Publication Memorial Volume. Dates to Be Fixed — Royal Arcanum Parade. School Exhibits. Art Exhibits. Trades and Industrial Parade. Automobile Parade. Historical and Municipal Parade. 134 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY Complete Organization The Union National Bank invites accounts of merchants, manufac- turers and others seeking the prompt and courteous service of a bank equipped to supply every commercial banking need within its own organization. UNION NATIONAL BANK NEWARK, N. J. '^he largest National Banl^ in New Jersey AUGUST GOERTZ & CO. Metal Specialties 272-286 MORRIS AVENUE, NEWARK, N. J. OPfice Telephone 9334 Market Residence Telephone 3104-J Branch Brook RICHARD KENNEDY CO. Builders Alterations to Stores, Factories and Residences Expert on Boiler Setting, Ovens and Furnaces. Saves Fuel and Expensive Repairs. Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates CENTURY BUILDING (Room 501), 142 MARKET STREET, NEWARK INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 135 Photos by McBride Military Park — To and From the Tube The tides of life flow on, flow on 136 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY AETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF HARTFORD, CONN. Assets, $124,238,552.93. Surplus, $17,977,212.82 Aetna Accident and Liability Co. Assets, $4,383,809.23. Surplus, $2,220,053.96 The Automobile Insurance Co. OF HARTFORD Assets, $2,377,857.39. Surplus, $1,910,443.94 All Forms of Life, Fire and Casualty Insurance Branch Office: ESSEX BUILDING LIFE LINES CASUALTY LINES Term Insurance Automobile — Full Coverage Accident and Health Straight Life Workmen's Compensation Limited Payment Life Liability— All Forms Fidelity and Surety Bonds Endowment Insurance Plate Glass Monthly Income Burglary and Theft Fire — All Forms Group Insurance Miscellaneous Lines LIFE DEPARTMENT CASUALTY DEPARTMENT B. F. Reinmund, Manager Wm. N. Heard, Manager INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 137 ADVERTISERS' INDEX ACCOUNTANTS Page Puder & Puder 142 ACIDS American Oil & Supply Co 20 APRON SUPPLY Newark Apron Co 90 ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER Marshall N. Shoemaker.... 118 ASSAYERS L. Lelong & Bros 124 AUDITORIUM TurnbuU Auditorium 104 AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER SYSTEMS Automatic Sprinkler Co. of America 100 APPARATUS FOR THE LABORATORY James L. Tobin & Co 72 AUTOMOBILES North Jersey Motor Vehicle Co 65 U. S. Auto Company 130 Wilson-Ward Motor Co., Inc 43 AUTO MONOGRAMS Auto Monogram Supply Co 116 AUTO RADIATORS Wm. F. Carter 4 AUTOMOBILE RENTING Automobile Renting Co 20 AUTO TIRES Hardman Tire & Rubber Co 80 AWNINGS & TENTS J. Brockie & Co 50 BAGS & BURLAPS Samuel Wildstein 62 A. Yeskel 14 BAG FRAMES E. Poeter & Co 138 BANKING The American National Bank 80 Federal Trust Co 52 Merchants' National Bank 108 Franklin Savings Institution 94 Union National Bank 134 The German Savings Bank 94 Fidelity Trust Co 48 First National Bank of Belleville 62 BANKERS & BROKERS Post & Flagg 112 J. S. Rippel 112 BARRELS John Ryan 64 BAR SUPPLIES & POLISHES A. T. Schlichting 98 BATHS Ruber's Turkish Baths 72 Mercer Turkish & Russian Bath 88 BEARING METAL Hewitt Bearing Metal Co 64 BIRCH BEER Page D. Wahlers 84 BOILERS W. A. Birdsall & Co 118 BOXES National Box & Lumber Co., Inc 84 BREWERIES P. Ballantine & Sons 12 Du Bois Brewing Co 58 Christian Feigenspan Corporation 86 The Jos. Hensler Brewing Co 128 Gottfried Krueger Brewery Co 56 Lyons Bros. Brewing Co 70 Schalk Brewery 92 Trefz Brewery 6 George W. Wiedenmayer, Inc 116 BRUSH MFG. Dixon & Rippel 82 The Hardrlght Co 18 Newark Brush Co 60 BUILDERS Becker Construction Co 106 L. C. Becker & Son 104 W. H. Connolly Co 110 BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Essex Building Construction Co 54 BUILDING MATERIALS Van Keuren & Son 30 BUTTON MFG. Dorf man Bros 142 Federal Button Co 130 BUTTONS & SMALL METAL NOVELTIES Richmond Bros. Co 112 CAFE Christian Lutz 32 CANNED GOODS Wilkinson & Gaddis Co 46 CARPETS & RUGS Manhattan Carpet & Linoleum Co 92 CARRIAGE BUILDER Herman Latter 36 CASES FOR MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Maulbetsch & Whittemore Co 54 CASUALTY INSURANCE Commercial Casualty Ins. Co 70 New Jersey Fidelity & Plate Glass Insur- ance Co 70 CATERING W. F. Day & Bros 130 CEMENT WORK The Pitts Co 56 CHEMICALS American Oil & Supply Co 20 Dooner & Smith Chemical Co 24 National Oil & Supply Co 46 CHOCOLATE & COCOA Brewster Sons Co 127 CIVIL ENGINEERS Wm. M. Brown 138 The Geo. W. Knight Co 138 138 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY iriiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiii To the Dental Profession Treat yourself to a new outfit like shown in Armory and you will find everything up- to-date in our Salesroom. Be sure and make us a visit. OSMUN-COOK COMPANY 7 West Park St., Newark, N. J. E. POETER & CO. MANUFACTURERS OF High Grade Metal Ware FOR LEATHER GOODS TRADE NEWARK, N. J. WM. M. BROWN Civil Engineer Essex Building, Newark, N. J. Prize Cups, Medals, Badges, Class Pins The Marshall Company 207 Market Street, Newark Telephone 5650 Market HODECKER BROS. ELECTRO-PLATING Gold, Silver, Nickel, Copper, Brass Oxidizing, Bronzing, Polishing and Lacquering. Special Finishing and Fancy Coloring. 373-375 Market Street, Newark ALLSOPP & ALLSOPP makers of Fine Platinum and Gold Jewelry <&> Compliments of Hedden Iron Construction Company New York City West Elizabeth, N. J. Newark, N. J. The GEO. W. KNIGHT CO. Mechanical, Electrical and Sanitary Engineers Firemen's Bldg., Newark, N. J. iilillllllllllllllllllilillF INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 139 CLOAKS & SUITS Page D. Price & Co 38 Oppenheim, Collins & Co 16 CLOTHING The Hilton Co 126 Marshall & Ball 72 COAL J. H. Applegate 46 The D., L. & W. Coal Co. (Wholesale) 106 The Fairlie & Wilson Coal Co 28 Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Co. (Wholesale). 78 Tegen & Wiebke Co 58 COMMISSION MERCHANTS A. Hebeler & Co 112 J. B. Stevenson & Co 106 CONSULTING ENGINEER Percy B. Taylor 118 CONTRACTORS Richard Kennedy Co 134 Linde & Griffith Co 14 CONCRETE PIPE Lock Joint Pipe Co 142 COPPER WORKS L. Lawrence & Co 36 CUTLERY J. Wiss & Sons Co 66 DEAD ANIMALS REMOVED Sch warz Bros. Co 32 DECALCOMANIE Auto Monogram Supply Co 116 DENTAL SUPPLIES Osmun-Cook Co 138 DEPT, STORES Hahne & Co 8 L. S. Plaut & Co 74 DISINFECTING Electric Fluid Disinfecting Co 140 DROP FORCINGS Strieby & Foote Co 32 DRUGGIST (WHOLESALE) C. B. Smith Co 18 DRY COLORS & PAINT MFG. Cawley, Clark & Co., Inc 90 DYERS & CLEANERS Stephen Beyer & Son 52 DYNAMOS 3tar Fan & Motor Works 100 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Davis Electric Co 28 Beaver Engineering Co 82 ELECTRICAL GOODS Agens & Co 90 ELECTRIC LAMP MFG. Clinton Electric Lamp Co 94 ELECTRICAL MEASURING INSTRUMENTS Western Electric Instrument Co 120 ELECTRO PLATING Hodecker Bros 138 Newark Nickel Plating Co 98 Merigold Electro Plating Co 84 ELECTROTYPER Page William Snell 76 EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE Brown & Krumnow 106 ENGINEER & MACHINIST John J. Cavagnaro 40 FAMILY GARDEN RESTAURANT Rein Brau Brewery Garden 132 FAT RENDERING Independent Tallow Co 26 A. Theobald 30 FAUCET MFG. John Sommer Faucet Co 142 FIRE INSURANCE Firemen's Insurance Co 26 New Jersey Fire Insurance Co 34 FOUNDRY Oscar Barnett Foundry Co 42 The Central Foundry Co 16 Isbell Porter Co 46 Universal Caster & Foundry Co 90 FRICTION. CLUTCH & GAS ENGINES Newark Gas Engine Mfg. Co 62 GALVANIZING & TINNING New Jersey Galvanizing & Tinning Works 110 GARAGES The Thacher Garage 52 Irvington Motor Car Garage 92 Washington Park Garage Co., Inc 124 GAS & ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Public Service Corporation 114 GLASSWARE A. T. Schlichting 98 GOLF STICKS The Hardright Co 18 GOLF BALL MFG. St. Mungo Mfg. Co. of America 142 HARDWARE Ludlow & Squier 6 HARNESS MAKER G. M. Aschenbach Harness Co 116 HIDES & SKINS Schwarz Bros. Co 32 HOTELS Hotel Lenox 142 Robert Treat Hotel 10 ICE CREAM W. F. Day & Bros 130 IGNITION— STARTING & LIGHTING SYSTEM Splitdorf Electric Co 56 INSURANCE Aetna Life Insurance Co 136 Chas. H. Henry 28 Flindell & Co 28 IRON CASTING Morrison Foundry Co 46 IRON WORKS Hedden Iron Construction Co 138 Kirchner, Inc 127 JIFFY CHOCOLATE PUDDING Buehler Bros 142 140 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY "Watch Dog" Water Meters EFFICIENT ECONOMICAL DURABLE GAMON METER COMPANY 288-296 South Street Newark, N. J. Literature on Request F. C. Lanoch, Pres. A. DoMiNiCK, Treas. Electrical Fluid Disinfecting Company INSECT EXTERMINATING FLUID Disinfectant Fluid for All Purposes and Sanitary Supplies We are exterminators of all kinds of insects. Contracts made to rid any place of same. All kinds of buildings taken care of on monthly payments. Belleville. N. J. Newark. N. J. Telephone 2172 Mulberry C. B. ZAMPOL Ornamental Plastering 42 Division Place, Newark, N. J. THE GLOBE ART MFG. CO, Silversmiths GOLD AND SILVER ELECTRO-PLATERS AND COLORERS All Kinds of Jewelry, Silverware and Plate Repaired and Refinished like new 69-79 WINTHROP STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephone 3661 Branch Brook WHY KEEP CHICKENS unless they Show a Profit Feed Swift's Meat Scraps and insures profits thru maximum egg production and vigorous, healthy growth of young stock Manufactured by SWIFT & COMPANY HARRISON STATION, NEWARK, N. J. For Sale by Leading Feed Dealers Insist on SWIFT'S Telephone Arlington 500 INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 141 JEWELRY MFG. Page Allsopp & Allsopp 138 Ernst Gideon Bek Mfg. Co 118 Bishop & Bisliop 14 Day. Clarlc & Co 118 J. A. & S. W. Granbery 126 A. M. Jack 124 Tiie Marshall Co 138 C. Rech & Sons 142 Stumpf & Binder 91 KNIT GOODS Newark Knitting Works 79 LAMP WORKS New Jersey Lamp Works 34 LAUNDRY Thos. F. Crowley & Co 88 LEATHER BELTING MFG. Couse & Bolten 24 Chas. W. Walker's Sons & Co 88 LEATHER M'F'G'S. Berkovitz, Goldsmith & Spiegel 76 Good Bros. Leather Co 26 H. Hahn & Stumpf 46 Max Hertz 26 Hess, Harburger & Drucker 26 Reimold, Chapot & Co 54 F. A. Schaeffer 32 Superior Leather Co 32 E. S. Ward & Co 108 Woburn Degreasing Co 54 Ziegel Eisman & Co 30 LIQUOR DEALER (WHOLESALE) Russell-Loewus & Froelich, Inc 130 LUMBER E. W. McClave & Sons, I'nc 84 Hill & Mount 4 National Box & Lumber Co., Inc 84 MACHINERY The Charles Burroughs Co 24 Wm. H. Chapman 42 H. J. Ruesch Machine Co 14 Turner Machine Co 30 MACHINERY MANUFACTURERS Boeger-Meyer Machine & Tool Co 22 MALLEABLE IRON CASTINGS Meeker Foundry Co 5S MANICURE FITTINGS Widger Mfg. Co 88 MANICURE AND SPECIAL FILES The Parkes File Co 88 MANICURING & SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS Schnefel Bros 52 MFG. OF ALUMINUM GOODS American Aluminum Ware Co 38 MFG. OF MACHINE TOOLS Gould & Eberhardt 64 MFG. OF PATENTED BAKELITE BILLIARD & CUE BALLS Hyatt-Burroughs Billiard Ball Co 22 MASONS' MATERIALS Cook & Genung Co 28 MATCH MFG. SUPPLIES American Splint Corporation 84 MEAT SCRAPS Swift & Co 140 MECHANICAL & ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Page The Geo. W. Knight Co 138 METAL CEILING Henry G. Trautwein 88 METAL GOODS Colonial Stamping Works, Inc 106 John E. Ortner & Co 110 B. Poeter & Co 138 The B. J. Riley Mfg. Co 124 METAL NOVELTIES Eckelhofer Bros 142 August Goertz & Co 134 MILK & CREAM Borden's Milk Co 122 Seller Bros. , Inc 110 MONUMENTS J. L. & Wm. P. Meeker 36 MOTOR CAR EQUIPMENT Motor Car Equipment Co 50 MOVING Modern Storage Rooms 116 MOVING PICTURE THEATERS De Luxe Theater 142 Goodwin Theater 98 Leader Theater 72 New Amsterdam Theater 104 Orpheum Theater 72 Park Theater 98 Plaza Theater 38 OPTICIAN Anspach Bros 22 OILS American Oil & Supply Co 20 National Oil & Supply Co 46 Standard Oil Co 38 PAPER BOX MFG. Penn. Paper Box Co 46 Progressive Paper Box Co 32 David Schiffenhaus 32 Specialty Paper Box Co 32 United Paper Box Co 32 PAPER DEALER J. E. Linde Paper Co 12 PATTERN MAKERS Boice & Plain 14 PAVING CONTRACTORS Van Keuren & Son 30 PEARL BUTTON MFG. Hamburg Button Co 96 PHONOGRAPH PARTS Eckelhofer Bros 142 PHOTO ENGRAVINGS Art Photo Engraving Co 127 N. J. Engraving Co 126 PHOTOGRAPHERS R. G. Koenig's Sons 6 PIPES The Hardright Co 18 PLATINUM CHAIN MFG. Wm. H. Taylor & Co 124 POLISH Victor Specialty Co 56 142 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY VICTOR JACOBY, Proprietor HOMELIKE Catering to a discriminating clientele All Modern Appointments Moderate Rates American and European CENTRAL AVENUE (Near Broad Street), NEWARK, N. J. Telephone 880 Waverly MARTIN R. EVERETT INCORPORATED Engineers and Contractors Structural and Ornamental Steel and Iron Works Emmett Street and Avenue D Newark, N. J. Frank A. Eckelhofer President Frederick Eckelhofer Treasurer ECKELHOFER BROTHERS MANUFACTURERS OF Cast Metal Goods & Novelties OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Sprinkler Tops, Atomizers, Powder Tops, Trimmings for Glassware. Special Goods to Order. Handles and Trimmings for Barber Brushes, Bitter Tubes, Screw Caps. Irvington, N. J. Telephone Connection Telephone 7256 Market L. E. BAEDER Wagon Builder :: Automobile Work Machine Forging and General Jobbing. Varnish, Trucks, Whips, Stirrers, etc. 139 East Kinney Street, Newark, N. J. C. RECH & SONS Manufacturers of line Gold Chains 481 Washington Street, Newark, N. J. COLONEL GOLF BALLS St. Mungo Mfg. Co. of America Newark, N. J. A. H. PuDER, c. p. A. H. S. Puder, B. C. S. PUDER & PUDER Account Auditors and Systematizers Essex Building, 31 Clinton St., Newark Telephone Mulberry 1656 Try Buehler's JIFFY CHOCOLATE PUDDING THE DELICIOUS DESSERT DENTAL CREAM C. 0. PADELFORD CO. Newark, N. J. LOCK JOINT PIPE CO. Ampere, N. J. DORFMAN BROS. Button Manufacturers 46-50 Lawrence Street, Newark, N. J. Compliments oe DE LUXE THEATRE 404 South Orange Avenue, Newark, N. J. JOHN SOMMER FAUCET CO. Corner Central and Morris Avenues Newark, N. J. Telephone 1708 Branch Brook INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION 143 PRINTING Page Borden Press 127 Modern Printing Co 36 PRECISION MACHINERY MFG. Sloan & Chace Mfg. Co 125 PUBLISHER J. J. Scannell 127 PURSE FRAME MFG. Newarli Purse Frame Mfg. Co 72 RANGES & HEATERS Thatcher Furnace Co 4 REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE E. E. Bond & Co 18 Geiser & Plum 98 Jay & Jay, Inc 66 Louis Schlesinger, Inc 62 The Ward-Gehin Co 38 REFINERS— PLATINUM Baker & Co., Inc 104 REFINERS & SMELTERS L. Lelong & Bros 124 RESTAURANTS Ludwig Achtel-Stetter 98 Colaizzi's 126 George Johnson 102 McCloud's Tavern 14 Nankin Garden Restaurant 2 Royal Restaurant 110 The Washington Restaurant 50 ROOFING The Pitts Company 56 Robert Hampton & Co 46 RUG MFG. Newark Rug Works 70 RUGS MADE FROM OLD CARPETS Oriental Rug Co 42 SARATOGA CHIPS Maxwell & Son 90 SAW MFG. Hastings & Co 94 SCALES The Fairbanks Co 144 SCULPTORS Dominic A. Walsh 102 C. B. Zampol 140 SECOND HAND BARRELS John Ebersberger 34 SEEDMEN J. F. Noll & Co 80 SHEET BRASS & TUBE MILL New Jersey Tube Co 36 SHOE DEALER I. Blyn & Son 104 SHOE LASTS MFG. N. W. Hovland Co., Inc 118 SHOE MFG. Johnson & Murphy 66 SHOCKS & LUMBER Hill & Mount 4 National Box & I^umBer, Inc 84 SILVERSMITHS The Globe Art Mfg. Co 140 SMELTERS & REFINERS Page Balbach Smelting & Refining Co 60 The Interstate Smelting & Refining Co 50 Newark Bay Smelting & Refining Co 130 SOIL PIPES & FITTINGS Essex Foundry 76 SPRING ROLLER MFG. Stewai-t Hartshorn Co 14 SPRING WATER & NON-ALCOHOLIC DRINKS Kanouse-Bludwine Co 100 STARTER & BATTERY SERVICE Starter & Battery Service Co 44 STEEL MATS Wayne Mfg. Co 112 STORAGE Modern Storage Rooms 116 STORAGE— MOVING— PACKING Model Storage Warehouse 62 STRUCTURAL IRON & STEEL Martin R. Everett 142 SURGICAL APPLIANCES Reinhold Schumann 62 TALLOW Standard Tallow Co 18 TANNER The J. H. Ladew Co 42 TOILET ARTICLES C. O. Padelford Co. 142 Est. Henry C. Miner, Inc 4 TOOL MAKERS Beaver Machine & Tool Co 118 Carl Schoenert & Son 88 TOWEL SUPPLY N. J. Toilet & Towel Supply Co 88 TOY BALLOONS Howe Baumann Balloon Co 90 TRANSPORTATION Public Service Corporation 114 TRUNK MFG. Neverbreak Trunk Co 102 UNDERTAKER James G. Brierley 22 UNDERTAKERS' SUPPLIES Mead-Suydam Co 44 VARNISH, COACH COLORS. ENAMELS Murphy's Varnish Co 68 WAGON BUILDER I>. E. Baedei- 142 WAREHOUSE Modei-n Storage Rooms 116 WATER METERS Gamon :\Teter Co 140 WATER PROOFING Robert Hampton & Co 46 WRECKING & CONSTRUCTION The Kolba Wrecking & Construction Co., Inc 84 144 NEWARK'S ANNIVERSARY A NEW BRANCH HAS BEEN OPENED AT NEWARK 90-92 ACADEMY STREET Scales Valves Trucks Machine Tools Transmission Machinery Gas Engines Pulleys Belting Shafting Hangers Dart Pipe Unions ^ Mill and Factory Supplies You have always known of FAIRBANKS' SCALES Prompt Service is insured by large stocks and motor truck delivery THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY Albany Philadelphia Baltimore Telephone 4982 Market Pittsburgh Boston Providence Buffalo Hartford NEWARK, N. J. Syracuse London Newark Glasgow New Orleans Hamburg New York Paris REO THE FIFTH Four and Six Cylinders The ''Incomparable Four," $920 Completely Equipped — DELIVERED Service, Satisfaction and Low Cost of Maintenance Seats Five Comfortably Timken & Hyatt Roller Bearings throughout CATALOG UPON REQUEST REO MOTOR CAR COMPANY Factory Branch for New Jersey 37-39 WILLIAM STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephones Mulberry 3030-3031 6 Cylinder, 7 Passenger, $1295 Delivered REO THE FIFTH 4 or 6 Cylinders Built for Service, Comfort and Style The new "Sheer-Line" Reo "Six" Seven-Passenger Touring Car, $1295 Complete— Delivered Four Cylinder, $920 Complete— Delivered CATALOG UPON REQUEST REO MOTOR CAR COMPANY Factory Branch for New Jersey 37-39 WILLIAM STREET, NEWARK, N. J. Telephones Mulberry 3030-3031 THE BORDEN PRESS