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REAL ESTATE, BUILDING - ALLIED TRADES itiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiitiiiimiiitiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiii^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS UU1LULK3 Coppoletta Bros. Inc. BUILDERS General Contractors Cliffside Park, N. J. _* J. GULLIKSEN Builder—Contractor Cor. Lawton and Hilltida avea. GRANTWOOD PHONE CLIFFSIDE 1888 Mamber of the/Builders' Association of the Palisades E. HOLMDALE Builder and Contractor GRANTWOOD. N. J. Phan. Cliff .id. till Member of Balld.re Aee'n. of Palis.d.e GEORGE BOVE Builder and Contractor Bergen Boulevard and Trolley PALISADE. N. J. Phone Cliffside 1749 Phon. Cliff aide 1861 GEORGE OLSEN Carpenter and Builder Estimate. Furnished '458 Nelson Ave. Grantwood, N. J. PETER KNUTSEN Building Contractor 451 N.laon Ave., Grantwood, N. J. Phan* 207 Cllffilde BUILDING MATERIAL Charles S. Shultz & Son Daalari la Ma»on'a and Bulldara’ ri Material* 1721 WUlqw A»*. HOBOKEN Phone* Hoboken B98-2B71 CONTRACTORS (GENERAL) John J. McGarry CONTRACTOR OFFICE. EDGEWATER, N. J. Phone Fort Lee 370M C. Maceri and D. Cutrupi GENERAL CONTRACTORS Sewers - Blasting CONCRETE WORK Hudson St. Fort Lee, N. J. Louis DiSciascio. President M. Ferretjans, Secretary Bergen Contracting Co.f Inc. Phone 2008 Cliffaid* 300 Paliaada ave„ CL1FFSIDE. N. J. Richard J. Fox GENERAL CONTRACTOR 367 Pleasant Ave., Grantwood New Jersey * Phone Cliffside 48 1 Frank Battaglia & Sons CONTRACTORS Excavation*—Sewera—Road* ANDERSON AVE. FAIRV1EW Phono CllSalde U8( PERTICARI & RENDA CONTRACTING CO. Daalert in Concrete Rock Excavating tit CHIC Street, Fairviaw, N. 3. TEL. CLIFFSIDE 373M PETER O’ HAR General Contractor and Builder 220 SIXTH ST. CL1FFS1DE N. J. Free.. Sam I.inardl Scc'y. John Vedelli SAM L.INARDI & Co. GENERAL CONTRACTORS Cellars Excavated, Foundations Built, Cement Walks Laid 253 Crescent Lane Grantwood, N. J. Phone Cliffside 267 M Phone Cliffside 396 CAPORALE BROTHERS Contractors Fairview, N. J. Anderson Ave. and Kamena St. JOHN YAWORSKI Builder and Contractor Real Estate—Notary Public 308 SECOND ST. CLIFFSIDE PHONE CLIFFSIDE 78 HERMAN MARTIN Contractor Improvements and road work 395 Broad ave., LEONIA Phone Leonia 1965 HANDWERK BROTHERS Painters, Decorators and Paper Hangers 4 PALISADE AVENUE, Cliffside & 141 25th street, Guttenberg Phone: PALISADE 231C CONTRACTORS’ SUPPLIES The White Supply Co. Contractors’ Equipment Concrete Mixers and Pumps 767 Fairview Ave. Fairview PHONE CLIFFSIDE 1086 ELECTRICIANS 8 - » ^ i FERD. A. WEIS ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Wiping for Light, Heat, Power Motors, Fixtures, Supplies 806-308 Palisade Avenue CLIFFSIDE, N. J. Phone Cliffside 1214R Telephone Cliffside 1276 BONATZ BROS. Electrical Contractors Supplies and Lighting Fixtures Battery Service Radios 430 Anderson Ave. Cliffside Park, N. J. Batteries called for and delivered IRON WORKERS -9 Telephone Cliffside 1622 CLIFFSIDE IRON WORKS E. PINOTT1, Prop. —Structural and Ornamental— 313-315 SECOND STREET Bet. Walker and Cliff Sti. CLIFFSIDE PLUMBERS FREDERICK SCOTT Plumbing & Heating Expert Westview Ave., Ridgefield Phone Moisemere 2225 Membei National Association of Master Plumbers C. LEEGER & CO. MERCHANT PLUMBERS AND HEATING CONTRACTORS All kinds of slate and asbestos roofing sheet metal work, gutters and leaders Lawton Avenue and Trolley Phone: Cliffside 221 Grantwood REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE And Howl In these dn.vs of shifting matrimonial combinations it is diflioult to toll who’s Whose.—Wall Street Journal. M. J. RYAN REALTOR Bergen County Properties Bought—Sold—Exchanged Phone ClifTside 307 673 Palisade Ave. Grantwood Member Real Estate Board of the Palisades P. Lo Bello and Son, Inc. BUILDERS Realtors Insurance Mortgage Loans 622 Palisade Ave. 404 Anderson Ave. Grantwood ClifTside Park Phones: ClifTside 1634—366 BE1RNE and BOHM REALTORS* 253 Grant Ave., Cor. Trolley Line GRANTWOOD. N. J. Members Real Estate Board of the Palisades Phone ClifTside 416 IN. GRANTWOOD SINCE 1899 PHONE FORT LEE 40 Fidelity & Casualty, American Alliance, Sun Indemnity,New Jersey Niagara, Sun GEORGE H. SCHLOSSER KJVL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 206 Main Street Fort Lee CLIFF REALTY CO. Houses, Acreage and Lota Bought and Sold J. H. BORD Lemoine Ave., & Washington Ave. COYTESVILLE Phones Fort Lee, 1670—1671 FRANCIS A. BANVILLE REALTOR AND INSURANCE Office: 319 Palisade Ave., ClifTside (Old P. O. Building) Phone ClifTside 365J Secretary’s Office of ClifTside Building and Loan Asa’n. P. W. Limouze & Associates Real Estate—Insurance 558 Anderson ave., Grantwood PHONE Cliffside 1819 or Union 4000 North Jersey Title Insurance Co. Guaranteed Mortgage Investments Titles to Real Estate Insured Capital Funds.... $1,000,000 Hackensack Morristown Old Floors Renovated To equal new; 20 years’ experience, parquet and hardwood floors laid, scraped, finished. W. F. Bernard, 217 44th St., Union City Phone Palisade 3382 E. SCHUMANN & SON’S Roofing - Sheet Metal Works Telephone Union 607 Modern Ventillating, alsb, by Experts. For practical roofing of every description 113-IIS 38th street. Union City, N. J. Best For Skin and Com o<<r because it thoreugbl cleanser. Its refreshing/^ antiseptic lather pern-'^^ tratea the pares and msm poisenous Batter. Yen will find it mast efficient far si skis trsaUes. la use far 71 pears. / Gouraud’s > Medicated Soap Smd lOc. hr Thai Sltt (f 2 I FEUD. T. HOPKINS & SON. New Tarh City ] West New York Goal Company Cot Idea From Bat The ordinary folding fan was In vented In Japan In the Seventh cen tur.v by a native artist, who derived the idea front the way In which a hat closes Us wings. Honor and Richea A gracious woman retaineth honor: and strong men retain riches. The merciful man doetli good to his own soul; hut he that is cruel troubleth his owu flesh—Proverbs 11:10, 17. PRIVATE GARAGES $145. UPWARDS Steel, wood, stucco or any mater ial. Steel biuldings for commer cial purposes are fireproof, belter, cheaper, than other material. De ferred payment plan. Metal Building & Engineering Co. Pohne 174W Ft. Lee West Englewood Homes Company NELSON M. AYRES. Prmt. Home Builder*—Real Estate Windsor road (near Rutland ave.) WEST ENGLEWOOD, N. J. PHONE ENGLEWOOD 3763 GRANTWOOD Stationery & News Service United Cigar Store Agency CIRCULATING LIBRARY 671 PALISADE AVE. Phone 726 Cliffside 666 •is a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It kills the germs. Famous Frenchman Peter Abelard was a furaous Frencl scholar and theologian. He secret 1,' married Heloise, a French abbess. Ht died in the year 1142. State and County News In Brief The Hackensack Lodge of Elks on Monday announced the purchase of the property on Union street, Hack ensack, on which a new $.'500,000 Elks’ club will be erected. The property in question is that formerly known as the Harris prop erty. The tract runs through from Union street to Park street. The i Union street side was owned by Mine. E. GrasWay, and on it stands the old Harris homestead, now unoccupied. It is about 250 feet south of Passaic street. George Baskerville, 47, colored, who lived on a coal barge tied up in the ■Hudson river at the dumper coal docks in Edgewatcr, was slain late last Saturday night in an argument .with David Hill, white, 50, captain of the coal barge John Dickson, also tied up at the dumper docks. Hill made a complete confession to the Edgewat cr police. Three men were named for the Ber gen County traffic police department by the Board of Freeholders at last week’s meeting. They were Edward McCracken, a member of the Bogota department; Thomas Madden, of Palisades Park, and Jacob Admirand, of Wallington. The three will start duty immed iately giving the department eighteen men for service through the busiest traffic season of the year. Learning of the existence of a war rant for his arrest, former District Court Judge Francis II. McCauley of Weehawken, on Monday, surrendered to the Union City police and was re leased in $1,000 bail for a hearing at Flcmington, September 20. McCauley’s arrest was on a war rant issued by Justice of the Peace David Crampton of Hunterdon Coun ty on complaint of Dr. Edgar Hunt, (f Glen Gardens, who charges that / Telephone Cliffside 31 C. RICHARD A. BACHETTI President Treasurer Cliffside Park Construction Co. Contracts Taken for Buildings of All Kinds Houses, Apartments, Factories, Theatres, Churches, Stores OFFICE: 356 PALISADE AVENUE, CLIFFSIDE PARK, N. J. Drainage Problems SATISFACTORILY AND PERMANENTLY SOLVED BY USING THE RAPID DRAIN PIPE Manufactured by Herman Walker Realty Company Main Officel 72 24th St., Cuttenberg. Phone Union 245 Factory: Little Ferry Phone Hackensack 650W I Also walker concrete bricks and blocks in any shade. Walker roofing Tile in Spanish and French Designs in any color Its A Bobber Shop Now “Joe’s Barber Shop,” was what we read upon his sign, When Joe unlocked at 6 a. m., and closed at night at nine, It use’ to be worth while—that shop—a feller could drop in An’ trade the latest racing dope while Joe scraped on his Chin; But times has changed, an’ Joe’s changed too—upon his wall you sec, A gilt-edged sign—“Ladies’ Hours from 10 a. m. to Three.” A body use’ to have a chance to rest awhile in there, An’ chew his fine-cut while he talked with someone in Joe’s chair; We kept up with the baseball scores—an’ argued politics, But times have changed, and times that was an’ timesj that was won’t mix; But Joe ain’t the same at all—he’s getting pretty gay, An’ wears his Sunday suit to work—all sptuecd up—every day. One morning we was settin’ there—three, four of us, you know, With Joe Coughlin tellin’ us about a burlesque show, He’d seen the week before, while he’s on a little trip, When in walked that school teacher—she’s a pretty little snip; She climbed up into Joe’s plush chair, in front of all our mob, Says, business-like as all get-out, “I want a shingle bob.” Joe looked at us—we looked at him—he took and cut her hair, And ’fore that day was over, they was three more come in there; It wasn’t long till Saturday—them wimmen—I be durn! They kep’ old Joe so busy that no man could get a turn; An’ Joe! Doggone his treachery—he swep’ his shop out clean, An’ had his wife put fancy shades behind the window screen. Well, one by one, we quit Joe’s place—we won’t loaf there again, Until he learns they’s got to be some place reserved for men; Why, all th’ time them wimmenfolks keeps goin’ to his door, An’ now lie’s got the walls all cleaned—an’ rugs put on the floor, He’s turnin’ sissy, too! Las’ time I went in, wha’d he say But, “Will you try a Russian clip or classic bob today?” Everything has changed, the blacksmith’s ain’t no more, When you walk up and down the avenue, it really gets you sore. To think the grocery ain’t got chairs, where a feller can set down There ain’t a single place a man can loaf an’ talk in town, It won’t be long until some day, we’ll see th’ worst, an’ stop To read a new sign on th’ door—“Joe’s Bobber Shop.” —W. D. N. the former jurist was fraudulently retaining $4,000 worth of Liberty bonds. The doctor claims ; that the lawyer, acting for him in litigation pending in the Supreme Court, ob tained the bonds by representing that an order had been issued for that amount by the court. At the time of his surrender to cus tody, Judge McCauley would not dis cuss the case, but later issued an ex planation to the effect that the court had issued the order so that the man who brought the action would be pro tected for judgment up to $5,000 in the event that Dr. Hunt should leave the jurisdiction of the court and thus attempt to avoid payment of the judg ment if allowed. Colonel Charles Lindbergh flew his Spirit of St. Louis to Mitchell Feld, Long Island, from the Teterboro Air port Tuesday afternoon. ’J' ' i This was preparatory-for the air journey upon which lie started on Wednesday to tour the United States. It became known, on Tuesday that Joseph F. Fitzpatrick, secretary of state, had a narrow escape from death late on Monday when the car in which he Was driving with Max L. Simon, I of Passaic, crashed into an enbank ment. ... . Sal Sirianni, 21, of 955 Willis ave !nue, North Bergen, and Anthony Im beloni,,2.':, of 41.1 Murphy place, West New York, were fined $5 each when arraigned before Judge Abram Lebson in the Interstate Park police court on Wednesday afternoon on charges of using their automobiles as a dressing room. Communication To the Editor: In ^view of the fact that I am a candidate for councilman this year, 1 feel that the citizens are entitled to know whether or not, if elected,. I will luive the good old name of the “Bor ough of Fort Lee” changed to the “Borough of Public Service.” It seems to be the opinion of a great number of citizens that this is gradually be ing accomplished, against the best in terest of the borough at large. It is my opinion that the Public Service corporation is to be congrat ulated upon having such able men who can come to Fort Lee and get the majority of the officials to do their bidding although nothing of interest in recent years in reference to fares and service warrants any such prompt approval of their plans. Nevertheless they oidy have to ask, it seems, and they get what they want. It is a very easy matter for any body to write and criticise public of ficials, whose path is usually bare of roses, but I believe just criticism is usually considered fair play. The people of Fort Lee have always had to be satisfied with what the Pub lic Service felt like giving them in re gard to service and fares, which have been juggled around in numerous ways, until now they have the ten-cunt fare. But, with the bridge an assur ed fact, we, in Fort Lee, are now in a position'to do some choosing as to how, and whose busses are to be run on the highways of our borough. It is optional what bus cotfipany runs in Fort Lee, as they urc an im provement if properly operated, but a fare of five cents is sufficient to the ferry. This would mean a saving of $,‘J0 per year each to the steady com muters. The Fort Lee Transportation company operated busses for five cents, but owing to the State ruling concerning “busses running parallel with the trolleys," they were forced to run on unimproved side streets, afid naturally, under those conditions were'! forced to abolish the line. They did 1 ride on Main street, however, for sev eral days during a snowstorm, "when ’ the Public Service did not care much whether the people got to business or• not, although their other lines 'were' running. Some people in Fort Lee are led to believe that the Public Utilities Commission demands a ten-cent fare.' On the contrary—they would not ob ject to a reduction in fare, as the per mission to the Fort Lee Transports-' tion company to operate busses clearly' showed, but they pass on all demands for increase in fares. An independent bus line operates from Grantwood to the Plankroad in Jersey City for a five-ccnt fare, while the trolleys' charge fifteen cents for the same dis tance. This is anothei- case where that false rumor regarding fare regA’ ulation is'groundless. ‘ My position'on the'fare proposition is clear enough, I believe!" Also the stand 'I shall take regarding the granting of permits' and the abolish ing’ of"’t rbl 1 ey ‘ 1me s wiIfiStfP gi vVn'gJ IS people affected by the proposed change a chance to express themselves.' * ; I beg to remain, ... Respectfully yours, , , . ? . JEBERIIARD L. MEYER. New Bus Line Considered ‘ * 3y Public Service Corp. Public Service Transportation com pany is at the present time consider ing a new bus service in Bergen that will give Fort Lee a direct bus con nection with Newark. The plan be ing developed calls for a loop system from Newark through Hackensack and Bogota to connect with another line that would run from the Edge water ferries through Fort Lee to Hackensack. New Stock Issue Planned By Public Service In October A new popular ownership campaign for the sale of six per cent, cumula tive preferred stock will be carried on by Public Service corporation of New Jersey October 1, according to an nouncements made by the company. 4 Public Service corporation of New, Jersey has been unusually successful in its popular ownership campaigns.^ During the twelve campaigns since 1021, subscriptions totaling $47,045, 200 par value, or 470,452 shares, were received from 105,902 subscribers. , As a result of the various cam paigns, and the sale of other classes of stock, the company has increased the total number of individual stock holders from 2,703 in 1021 to 55,253 on December 31, 1020, eliminating all duplications. The stock is sold for cash or on the installment plan of $10 down and $10 monthly per share. [Caruso Visited In Death House By Wife And Family. Mrs. Mary Caruso in the company of other relatives and her children visited her condemned husband in the death house at Sing Sing this past week. She brought back to Cliffside' Park a letter from the slayer to Rev. Ciozzo thanking him and others for the interest they have tuken in the family. He asked that the pastor aid the Caruso defense committee in their elforts to save him from death in the electric chair. * The father murdered a doctor in Urooklyn when his little child died ot‘ diphtheria. Caruso said that the’ young doctor laughed at him. Muny feel that the sorrow stricken father killed the doctor in a fit of temporary insanity. There is much public inter cst in the case.