A jitney is a small bus which got its name because jitney was a term for a nickel and that's what it cost to ride the early jitneys.
This image from the Library of Congress website is a photograph of a New York City jitney in about 1915 to 1920.
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| Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, [reproduction number, e.g., LC-B2-1234] |
Census records show the following addresses and occupations for Joseph Handler:
| Year | City | Address | Occupation |
| 1910 | Cleveland | 2515 Woodland Avenue | None, Factory |
| 1920 | Akron | 644 Bell Street | Laborer, Rubber Works |
| 1930 | Akron | 553 Rhodes Avenue | Salesman, Junk |
| 1940 | Akron | 553 Rhodes Avenue | Industrial Salvage, Own Truck |
But what happened between the times that the U.S. federal census was taken? It turns out that a lot can happen in ten years.
The following table shows where I have found Joseph Handler in city directories in the early 1920s.
| City | Year | Name | Occupation | Address |
| Akron | 1922 | Joseph Handler [Lena] | jitney driver | h 406 Raasch ave |
| Akron | 1924 | Joseph Handler [Lena] | jitney driver | h 406 Raasch ave |
| Akron | 1925 | Joseph Handler [Lena] | [no occupation] | h 406 Raasch ave |
Joseph Handler doesn't appear in Akron City directories before 1922, though he was living there by 1917 when his daughter Belle was born. (Prior to that, he was living in Cleveland.) His 1918 World War I Draft Card reports that he was living at 646 Bell Street and working as a bartender for his cousin, Herman. He lived in Akron until at least the fall of 1922, when youngest son, Harry, was born.
But in 1925, Jos Handler appeared as a jitney driver in Miami, Florida.
