1
¡foyers Arrived l&snaaai tr»» .ff***«»»S aatii -rtç-i-pît Mo. -Richardsron P. O. ^ayn***. !a<Ji,?8' ***&? '*«l-r, -8 Ï.íá.'f-,_-r-.n, !.. van Slyck, ft. McCon- **. e \\ Pederson. tadle»* ready to ."* '«¿«is B'way , _,, *.Ttf'4 j|l«ii.-Mat«y C»,¡ loulg 8il. if*;»,, mgr. coat«, euitt*. ek.rtB; (MA"«*'»«'',' f r *i£<« ¿repeM««. »n«l art needlework; «^ífWfín.-«.P*«"<*e «*o<^": <*."» Ktrbjr. »**¦ » riaoher 362 4th «*.'. HLf/^vf« Ñ Y- Lichtenberg Cloak PfVi P ¦' I«ch<enb«rg. <Ir«-«<*ee. »«*:.» «ùitx: Martinique. iH.'K v C.--W S. Clark ft Son«; i**5;'rk dry goods; Martinique. LeR H-aUTB Ind..Root P. O. Co.; ?Ä"'.* *Hk» »».! woolen«; Mr«. M. ' !*-udl«' ready t, ^ear: H. P. Hing» neckwear, haudker- ¦ffi&m"¡ráiÍÍl *ft^Kocli; W. 1, «^"T ~-n«» .urnt«hln*.«.; C. H. Hoffner. «SS- wther ioSde So^iery : Î36 6th »v. *Ä«* Ohlo*-TlWmr.«<m H«jd. on Co./. tMorreil. md«c mgr.. Mr«. B. w. ¿(& l./i«' ready to «Wi Jay fc Co.. Ö«rti.BDO "'Ohio . Ixsper-Sajsrtuel« Co. ; ,1, Wer. women*« ready to wear; i W »itb «rt., room S«50 .».«.. -a»». V&BPO. OhUta-La.Sa.1« ft Koch, Mr,. a- «ebrnidt. mltltJaerr; ÍSf f'tn.jv;M vim fte* M°rhvr.raai^« # ** ."¿.».«c-» i-tTV Mteh .A- Roaenthal O^f ïSEtEFia-JS"ready to wear; as*1® v^w«* «.¦ ». »an, job« w«*,'B£î*fc,r« kid «"-y and MWM;..*.*JjrV&yts. 37 W. 26th »t. ïlTROÏ^Ia,-J«tVn,,*r* Bros.; Mis» Bit. ¿/«en'« reetdv to wear, children's .Vln'.^w/.r. b¿ys' clothing; Mar- 4B-all?»V N Y..J. Woolman. velvet ',.-*«' H'arav .^'«ii Okla-'HallIburton Abbott Co. , r Vtawliin». fency goods, Wm. M. r. r. h»v Van »»a W. 36th »t. rviONTOWN. Pa..Silverman 8<-fa«; I. barman «¡reneral merchandise; care SmT« ft Hartblay. 117 W. 3Sd at. «ai'O_SanC'.-r Bro».; Ml«« T. UUman. J.reear 1* E 2«h «t. «äBW"' WASH I «VOTO!* t Kann Sons Co.. T. F. t innln, notion», «¿sir «teod.v 432 4th a v. all ladie»- knit underwear: 404 4th av. Gtttoa Cloak & Suit Store«, J. Fein- 2. x. Felaatein. P. Felnsteln and W. Extern, ladies' ready to wear; 42 W. gARSAW, N. T..E. Cuchen; E. jtHi je*elry; Brésiln. WASHINGTON.Woodward ft Lotbrop; tail. P, Hayden. petticoats ajid skirt«; in C C AUtn, extra slae evening dresses îtleai«; r. K. Muck, linens, white goods ]¿ éomeetic«; J. O. Moque, furniture; I "th »v. RATEKHfRY.P.eid A Hughes; A. 8. -ji. Italia-«' knit underwear: 404 4th av. SSU'H. W v»-.C. A. 8mli»y A Co.: s taHUfy, nction», dry goods and Jewelry; ^HBEWNG. "W. Va..Georg:« E. Stlfcl - jj. c. Curlingame, women's ready to t«4T .».''. an<1 *u,t'3'. R- C. Dancer, 'rtrwo««*'«, care Alfred Fant!, 116 W. 3.4-* ¦ TICKITA. Kan..Conn Hinkel P. G. Co. : r s.Odor, basement ready to wear; Weill iB»-:rr.ann. 116 W. ÜOth «t WTS'TA. Kan..Rorabaugh D. G. Co.: »a« Brasliiar. mena furnishings; car* Jlhajrh-B'-ving Co.. 366 6th av. WKHiTA. Kan..The Cohn Hinckle D. d o.; C. S. Odor, ready to wear; 136 VicHITA. Kan.Rorabaugh P. G. Co.; ¦ Q ¿grri», »II ready to wear, notions. ¦i« íoodí. «.-loveltles; Ray Brashear. Wl f«fnl»h«ng*s: varo Rorabaugh-Ewlns ra lii 5th »v- _ * TOKÍS-BARRE. Pa..N. Springer «fc Mi ¿a|nariJ. Springer, women'« ready to a-tir rallliiaery; Philip Sprinser, Samuel «rimrer rtpreseniing; Grand. WIIJC'Es-BARRK, Pa..C. Casper & !(M' E Caffper. dry goods, notlone, men's vniihlit«; Penna. «glLMINQTON. Del..R. Topkis ft Son; taW TopKia, rtady to wear; care Jay ft c#, V. i'.th st. «j-<X)}«S0CKt.T.Harria ft Mowry; Ml*e C W. 811**. lavtUe»' knit underwear; 404 I'OIaCESTatR.Bernard, Summer & Put- nim- A. VMJder Pjle, ladies' knit under- w»af, 4«« 4th ar. YORK, Pat.i-azaru« A. Petow; Mrs. l.uanj» A. Patftw, mlllioery, fura and fur coat» »<*»«'» ready to wear; Mar liai«, >a rOVXOSTOVrti, Ohio.George L. For- fret C".; >Uss J. Mlleas. boelery, .under- f»»r; ft B. Jones, men's furnishings; H. P. Bttrchfietd, ladles' ready to wear; 4Í4 «h «v. rOfX-JSTOWN, Ohio.George Living- «aifa, eoatj. suits; Herald Square. TOrXGSTOWN, Ohio.G. M. McKelvey C«; B. T. Thompson, hosiery, petticoats. ttaw dreasts. wrappers, apron», corsets, iflatet; boys' and men'« clothing, cot- !ii ft«* goods, blankets, muolin under- **.'. Hafiket», comforts, bedding, white It**»; «are J. M. Biggin», 333 7th av. WPaVOSTOWN, Ohio.StrousB-Hlrshbelg «lilaintttl Levy, women's apparel; J. M. JftiajMld, furniture, floor coverings, cur- ¦afca drapery, upholstery; care Baer & -altaatha', lioO B'way. ¦^Y.TelephoneDevelopment fwt Nine Months Indicate Greatest Progress in »History Howard F. Thurbçr, president of the -.w York Telephone Company, states «felt the accomplishments during the tat nine months of 1922 forecast the pwtest development of the company's sjitem for any one year in its history. "In the nine months' period," he said, *we have connected 261,000 new tele¬ fones, installed 6,570,000 miles of ¡dre, enlarged 118 central office switch- wards anil placed in service eleven new central offices. Our building op¬ érations have been equally extensive, «nee January l we have begun con¬ struction on lour new large buildings and additions to nine others. Before the war the average annual L^nnn at'0*" new T*lant was $15-- "w.wu. This year our construction jrog-ram calls for an expenditure of .¦Wroximately $61,000,000. The neces- JS Mpital has come principally from ¦ »ale of the company's securities." ÎUls at Port Chester Bring . ^an Average of $550 Each «Jan L. Kennelly, Inc., sold at auc- ^Sfty-two building plots at Port 2*r on Saturday. The sale was well gMed, chiefly by residents of West- *wr County. The lots sold were on <Jr Street. *5ust north of Regent £», formerly known as the Good- Jaroperty. Bidding was brisk and «»erage price of $550 was realized '¦»eh plot. ia> . ' **itor Purchases Loft Building in Dey Street «¦*». R. Read & Co. have sold for M. «Wman-Edson Company to an in- ^r, 65-7 Dey Street, a five-story ¡j«««.,,, 38.4x50. In connection with j»a«le M. K. Bowman-Edson Com- will take a long term lease at a * »anual rental. ».Vrrny Orders i «T* ^he TriDUHB's Washington Bureau 2*SatNGTON. Oct. iß..Army orders "««»«.-«ley follow: »^ Quart ei-msnter Corpa ¦Jfs- Lt, M. B., to Washington. *aSL »l.J J ¡o Washimrton. '.W^Ä' ,Co1- H <-'- u> Washington. ^w. «a». B. to Washington. jL Medical Corp« .Sf-Capt. G. B. to Panama. ^M-* Capt. J. M., to Banama, c Coast Artillery l^r ,U,E'« t0 Manila. I --. <-ol. H. J., to Walter Reed Hosp.tal. I LMl«««îUa!iîeoUa r?t'lÄPtaaVC-' lnf* t0 K,;W YOTM. &£?*' A' k" A,r Svc-. to Constan- r«tt.nC¿to8n.°ra- °",CerS* *** C6rlí»' .^?^g*ygg' XOTICE8 ^Aca*A?ï'JkS f°B»E" Ô» Hon. * Jtt N«T v ,N« ?; «'V-regata of th« *«»ri S?r.Z?Tk¿ NOTICE U hereby ** £^ tf&.S5iJ**»vin«. claims against SP*ÍVa\\"i^CBACKBR. late of th. ^m^2eï?iï- *r««*wetí. to present th* SÍ?1» «f C %. transacting buslnew at 259». at N^J »h,tr£*«'« * WhTtehead. their ^?krt amsow. .»WIS F. HRENNBK, BTaoNQ . «_.__ Exécutera. *Mteeî.?1l,T «HEAD. Attor- 7"^***»«« K«hv yortt city. Real Estate News Rental for 1 ribune Bldg Retired Merchant Takes 21 Years' Lease on Well- Known Structure; Will Get Control Next May The Tribune Building, at th« «sorrier of Nassau and Sprue« streets, a pioneer in the intensive development of New York*? was leased yesterday for twenty-one years at an aggregate net rental said to be $5,000,000. Victor Wcichman and associates are the lessees. According to the agreement reached yesterday. Mr. Weichman'* control of the building Starts May 1. 1923. It will be passed over to him by S. Morrill Banner and Herbert E. Mitler, who purchased the structure several months ago from The New York Tribune after it decided to estab¬ lish up town, Mr. Weichman will take the property in the name of the Trib¬ une Building Corporation, which was formed recently for th« purpose. Mr. Weichman was until recently engaged in the mercantile business. Since he entered the realty field he has concluded a number of interesting deals. He has favored business prop¬ erty. Among the structures which he now controls are the Arena building, at 38 West Thirty-second Street, ex¬ tending through the block to Thirty- first Street, the site of the famous Arena of old Tenderloin day*»; the Manhattan building at 8 to 13 West Thirtieth Street, and the Union Square building at 33 Union Square. The Tribune building is twenty stories high and covers 90 feet on Natsau Street, 98 feet on Spruce Street and 86 feet on Frankfort Street. The building surrounds the former "Sun" property, at the southeast corner of Nassau and Frankfort streets. Louis Wetzler and Laurence J. Borchard negotiated the lease. Stoddard & Mark were the attorneys for both lessor and lessees. V. S. Industrial Alcohol Co. Locates in Central Zone Ruland & Benjamin, Inc., with Brown-Wheelock Company, leased the fourteenth iîoor in the New Bowery Savings Bank Building at 110 East Forty-second Street to the United States Industrial Alcohol Company and its subsidiaries for executive and gen¬ eral offices. Cross & Brown Company leased the top floor at 127-29 West Fifty-third Street to Harry A. Roberts and George A. Mackey and the third floor rear at 28 East Sixty-fourth Street to John W. Lee. The Mojtor Guaranty Corporation, whose main offices are in Newark, N. J., have leased through Cross & Brown Company space in the Fisk Building, Broadway and Fifty-seventh Street for a branch. This company also main¬ tains a branch at 30 Church Street. Tankoos, Smith & Co. leased in th- building now being erected at the southwest corner of Broadway and Third Street a store on the Thirj Street frontage to the Udell Station¬ ery and Printing Company for a branch establishment. Armenian Democratic Liberal Party Gets 27th St. Quarters Ruland & Benjamin, Inc., leased three floors at 124 East Twenty-seventh Street to the Armenian Democratic Liberty Party, Inc., the basement and first floor at 126 East Twenty-seventh Street, to the Key System Institute, the parlor floor at 157 East Seventy- second Street to Herbert Kendall, and thé basement store to Joseph Lancina, also a loft at 126 West Thirty-fourth Street to Joseph Scelsi. é . í orillar«! Spencer Estate Lots Bing $605,585 at Auction The three-day auction sale of the Lorillard Spencer estate in the Pel- ham Bay section of the Bronx was completed on Saturday night by Joseph P, Day on the premises. Mr. Day received a total of $605,585 for the 1,200 lots comprising the offer¬ ings. M. J. Kane's purchase of an Eastern Boulevard lot for $3,500 was the top price of the sale. a Knights of Columbus Plan $150,000 Clubhouse New Amsterdam Council, Knights of Columbus, will build a club¬ house, costing $150,000, at 107-108 West Seventieth Street from plans being completed by Victor C. Farras, architect. It will be a four-story structure, 40x100, of brick and lime¬ stone. ¦. ¦ Garage on Park Ave. Corner Bought For Private Use Wm. A.: White & Sons sold for Pvingland F. Kilpatrick the northeast corner of Park Avenue and Ninety- seventh Street, a new two-story garage, 32x2Sr--vith chanffeur's apartment. The purchaser will use the property as a private garage. $50,000 Rental for Store Thoens & Flaunlacher, Inc., leased the store and basement at 7 and 9 West Thirtieth Street to the Hercules Knit¬ ting Company, Inc., at an aggregate rentaj of $50,000, and leased the third floor at 14 East Thirty-fourth Street to Raymond Cusato, manufacturer of hand embroidered articles. Brady & Bowman leased offices in*the Borden Building, Forty-fifthvStrect nnd Madison Avenue, to George F. Willis and Linton Itigg. Douglas L. Elliman & Co., Inc., leased a store at 1185 Lexington Avenue to Philip Siniscalchi for a barber shop. -i.¦¦'¦" ¦' ¦"" Apartment Near Pelham Station Held at $50,000 Sold Fish & Marvin sold for a New York client a property at Pelham known as the Smith Apartments, with store, on large plot pear the Pelham station, held at $50,000, to S. E. Shanks for investment. ¦¦- Sale of Morristown Residence Eugene V. Welsh sold for Mrs. Ben¬ jamin Van Cleve her house at 13 De Hart Street, Morristown, N. J,, to W, E. Van Liew, who expects to occupy the premises. ArAKTMEVTS TO -.M.FURNISHED Manhattan BEAUTIKUI. newly furnished rooms; ex¬ clusive private residence. 60 West 16th st. SUITES of I. 2 »na 3 room« with bath, with complete hotel service, trjthln fifty minute« of Pennsylvania Station, at 1129 a month »nd Up. THE NASSAU HOTEU I/ONO BBACH, U.Z. Opea AU Tear. ¦CN'FCRNISHKP APAs%VXmVST» TO UCT Bronx 3-* BOOMS, new bulldlns; ideal ^eatl"".; reasonable rent*: »B KA£-B AV.. BBONX. 1 block east of Jerome av.. south of «un HUI Road: 6th and 9th Av. "I* «i«."»® and Lexington subway to Mosholu Park¬ way. Builder« Sel! Apartment Recently Erected in Bronx House Disposed Of Occupies Large Site at Morris Ave- nue and 196th Street Barry Brothers, builders, sold the, newly completed flve-and-ii-half-story tax-exempt apartment, on plot 70x100,1 at the southwest corner of Morris Avenue and 196th Street to an investor,! a client of Morris Sax. The structure contains accommodations for seven families on a floor, the suites being of three, four and six rooms. The prop-1 erty was held at f 175,000. Etta Blank sold to Samuel Goldman the five-story apartment at 1444 Cro- tona Park East, 40x09.11*, also to M. Goldfarb a similar apartment at 1448. Wolf Rosenberg sold to Tillie George the four-story flat at 168$ Waibing- ton Avenue, 26x90. The Clinton Avenue Realty Com- pany sold to Samuel Brecher the four- story apartment at 1807 Clinton Ave¬ nue, 00x27. Aaron S. Laidhold sold to the Mur-. berk Realty Corporation the building; at 1599 Bathgate Avenue, 60x120. M. M. Reynolds sold for Henry W. Ressick the two-family house 1920 Benedict Avenue, on plot 100x100, at the southeast corner of Virginia ana Watson avenues, to George Bail. Scott Brothers sold for Thomas Dwyer to Herbert Feidler the two-story dwelling 2772 Marion Avenue, 20x100. Anna C. Swarris sold to Elfredo de Cambio the two-story dwelling at 309 East 144th Street, 23x100. Adolph Buchignani sold to Charles E. Ramey the two-story dwelling at 899 Morris Avenue, 25x105. The Hudson P. Rose Company sold to Mary Egan the dwelling at 455 East 146th Street, 12.6x99.11. Caroline B. Beach sold to William Strick the two-story «dwelling at 2667 Marion Avenue, 15x169.2. Sarah Welner sold to Israel Ayer-] bach the house at 314 East 164th, Street, 22.6x90.3. -.¦.a- [New Building in Bronx Containing Twenty Stores Sold Herman Berson has purchased the newly completed building, on nlot 200x 86, on the east side of Hunt's Point Avenue, 100 feet north of Seneca Ave-1 nue, containing twenty stores, held at $150,000. Arthur L. Shaw was the broker. Josephine Reinhardt sold to the Evardus, Inc., the property on the west ßide of Brook Avenue, 73 feet north of 163d Street, 125xll3.4x irregular. Jane Kellakey sold to the Bainbridge Construction Company the plot on the east side of Webster Avenue, 150 feet north of Mosholu Parkway, 77.9x98.6. J. Junemanu sold to the Junemann Corporation the property at 1084 to 1088 Bryant Avenue, 84x100. ¦ » . Corporation Sells English Type of Home in New Rochelle Fish & Mslrvin sold for the Tomphyn Realty Corporation an English brick and stucco residence with a half acre at Paine Heights, New Rochelle, to Earl Constantine, of Seattle apd this city. The same brokers sold for the Sheldon-Florence Company a Colonial residence on Webster Avenue, New Rochelle, to F. E. Basier, of this city. Prince. & Ripley leased for Messmore Kendall his property at Broadway and Livingston Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, to Howard C. Matlaek. Mr. Kendall re¬ cently purchased the property through the same brokers. Estate Sells East 54th Street House Owned for 63 Years Brown, Wheelock-Harris, Vought & Co. sold for Mary M. Sugden and Jo- sephine McCay Poles 61 East Fifty- fourth Street, a four-story dwelling, 22x100, held at $75,000. The new owner is Edward Oliver Bel_er, who will re¬ model it. The property had been in the selling family since 1859. .¦¦ -"« $7,150 for Maspeth Lots Twenty-two lots in the Maspeth sec-1 tlon of Queens were sold at auction Saturday by the Jere Johnson Jr. Com¬ pany, auctioneer, for a total of $7,160. Lots on Juniper Avenue, between Cald- well Avenue and Dorothy Place, aver¬ aged $490 each, and on Jansen and Harris avenues $160 to $240; three lots: on Maiden Lane brought $530 each. . a- Buys Home at Cold Spring George Howe sold for Harry Mekeel his property at Cold Spring-on-Hud- son, containing ten acres and a resi¬ dence of seven rooms and bath; also barn and garage. The purchaser is Miss Dona Saruya, of this city. » ¦-¦¦ Sale in Pleasant Avenue Enrico Esposito sold <*o Jacob Man- del the two-story house at 410 Pleas¬ ant Avenue, 16.8x98. BEAX BSTATB.ftAt,K OB RENT Brooklyn BEAÏ/nr ASSOCIATES "Builder- of 600 Kasy Housekeeping* Homes" IS- Kemsen SU BrooUlyn ni anliai tan * BROADWAY, NEJAR 1S1ST Apartment and «torea, Low rents.all short-term lease». Rent 560.000. Sold subject to five-year first mortgage. No amorti Kation. Balance easy terms. SLAWSON <_ HOBBS. ,16a West 72- St. Vfaat&beaiar Send for book.et. SUBURBAN WEST- CHESTER, giving vital Information about the various town sof Westchester County. Send postage four cents. Prince & .Ripley, S4. MadUon Ave.. New York City. New Jersey SUBURBAN HOME BARÓAIN.- am will¬ ing to take a loss to «ell immediately, bHng In need of ready ca-h." If you can arrange to make a moderate cosh payment within a few daya you own save several thousand dollar« and «ecure a really fine home !n what beyond question the most desirable, refined, purely residential su¬ burban section within convenient com¬ muting of New Tork City. The house con¬ tains ten beautiful room», two bathrooms and garage. It is almo«t new and of most aura-tire exterior and interior design. The large llvjng room with He big co»y open fireplace is In every sense of the word a living room. Nothing hi_s been omitted to make thi» a real home. Ground« are 100x194 feet, with good shade tree«; high location; superb environment; lake« and wonderfully kept home« and grounds; every comfort ha« been provided. Churches, store«, school« and market», which are »o necessary, are conveniently near. I will sacrifice for $11,000 to obtain some quick cash. Difference between cash paid and tho price can remain on mortgage- The property now ha« « first mortgage of 17,800 on St. Mr. BROOKS, P. O. Box 1107, City Hall Station, New Yortt City. NOW Colonial dwelling and garage at Ptainfteld, N. J., forty minutes from New Tork. On Central Ratlroad. Dandy loca¬ tion. Handy to station and trolley ; 8 rooms. All improvement«; 2 bath«. Hot-water heat; lorg« lot. Price $12,800. Terms. Artcrait Homes Co., 144 No. Ave., Plalnfleld, N. J. Tel. 607. FOR RENT.Seven-room dwelling, im- provemet«; acre plot; clo«e school, trol¬ ley and Erl#; »70, Including fuel; ready now. William Tyndail, Wald wick. Bergen County. N. J. FRB_ Hat of house« for eai» and rant. ¡ Writ» VAN WINKLE CO.. Rutberford.N.J. to Mar ron BnMXËBS rCKPOSB- Desirable Office Space. Ziegler Building, £12 (th Ave.. -(3d St. lOrTB-orriCEg : ï-Tstory fireproof "build- ing; exceptionally light space. 100 6th av. MÖaTOAOK MONEY $4,000,000. Mortgage money to lend. High class metro¬ politan property. Btoddard Moifman. 2S8 Broadway. Tel. .918 Barclay. 1:30 to 11. Active Trading of Large And Small Apartments Riverview on Upper . Broadway and Carlton in East Bist Street Among Sales Slawson & Hobbs sold for the Weit Heights Realty Company the River- view, a seven-story apartment, »OOjcIOO, with seven storrs, at the southwest corner of 149th Street and Broadway, to the Meister Builders, Inc., I. Meis¬ ter president. The property was held at $100,000. Ruland & Benjamin, Inc., sold for the 157 East Eighty-first Street, Inc., represented by Culver «fe Co., to an in¬ vestor, the nine-story apartment known as the Carlton at 157 East Eighty- first Street, 66x100. The H. & E. Realty Company, Her¬ man Berson president and Samuel Wacht jr. secretary, sold to Henry Ordel 82 Wadsworth Avenue, a five- story modern apartment, 42x100, ar¬ ranged for thirty families, held nt $90,000. Arthur L. Shaw was the broker. Hannah Bergfield sold to .F. Finkel- stein the five-story flat nt 400 Man¬ hattan Avenue, 27x94.10. LeRoy Sober sold to J. Clarence Da- vies the three-story tenement at 12o Ea»t 12üth Street, 26x100.11. Filomena Citerelln ««»sold to An¬ toinette Celentano the three-story tene¬ ment at 2418 Second Avenue, 2<Jx60. Bertha Levy sold to Aaron Oberstein the four-story tenement at 1418 Sec¬ ond Avenue, southeast corn%r of Sev¬ enty-fourth Street, 20x60. Valentine Brech sold to a client of Louis W. OsterweiB the five-story ten¬ ement 1598 Avenue A, 25x98. Fred¬ erick W. Kroehlc jr., whs the broker. Morris Welch sold to Bernard Wan» derer the five-story tenement with store at 1748 Avenue A, 25x94. Valentine Brech sold to a client of Louis W. Osterweis a five-story tene¬ ment, 1698. Avenue A, 26x98. Frederick W. Kroehle jr. was the broker. Lewis ,T. Stovall sold to the King <£t Johnson Company the five-story tene¬ ment at 178 West 137th Street, 25x 99.11. , Harry T. Jefferson sold to Josef Pe- trovec the four-storjktenement at 407 East Seventy-first {Street, 19x102.2. Morris Iser sold to Mollic Cherkess the three-story tenement at 48 East Third Street'* 20x50. Carmela Boffa 3old to Valeria Ca- pozzi the seven-story tenement at 717 Mulberry Street, 24.11x100. Old Polyclinic Hospital Taken for Trade Henry Hof leased for the New York Polyclinic Hospital and Medical School, Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst, president, the former hospital build¬ ings at 214-220 East Thirty-fourth Street, 96x100, to Edward Smolka und Alexander Greif for twenty-one years. After extensive alterations the lower portion of the premises will be occu¬ pied by the lessees for their plumbing supplies business and the balance for manufacturing lofts and showrooms. New York Exporter Buys Show Place at Little Silver At Little Silver, N. J., the Gibbons property, one of the show places of the Jersey coast, situated on the Shrewsbury River, was sold at auction by Arthur C. Sheridan for $67,500 cash to Louis R. Buckbee, vice-president of the exporting firm of Cook & Bern- heimer, 105 Hudson Street, this city, The estate consists of a large house, lodge, outbuildings and fifty-three acres fronting on the main read and the Shrewsbury River. « Wyoming Valley Coal Co.7 Buys on Newtown Creek The Wyoming Valley Coal Company, Sanders A. Wertheim, president, pur¬ chased 1181 to 1207 Grand Street, near Newtown Creek, from Charle3 H. Rey¬ nolds & Sons. The property consists of about twenty-eight lots on which the company will erect coal pockets. J. M. Riehle represented the buyers. Operators Get Bronx Stores The Arnold Investing Company, Inc., operators, M. Rosenthal president, have purchased the building containing eleven stores, at the northwest corner of Beck Street and Leggett Avenue, the Bronx. The property was held at |75,000. M. Finkel was the broker. Operator Resells Business Building On Fifth Avenue Takes East Side Tenements in Trade for Structure Bought From Bank; Deals in Greenwich St. Samuel Brener resold to Mayer & Mayer a modern five-story office, store and showroom building at 206 Fifth Avenue, extending to 1126 Broadway, purchased last week from the Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank. The building, which is between Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth streets, is on a site 28...X 11.2x irregular. In part payment Mr. Brener received the four-story tene¬ ments at 228 to 232 East »Seventieth Street, 100x100, near Third Avenue. Byrne Si Bowman were the brokers. Greenwich Village Sales William A. White & Sons sold for Mandelbaum & Lewine, Inc., to an in¬ vesting client, the six-story factory at the northeast corner of Greenwich and West Twelfth streets, 74x74x irregular. Nathan Wilson as president of the Occidental Realty Corporation pur¬ chased from Greenwood Cemetery the five-stoj-y building with stores nt 39 Greenwich Avenue, northwest cornfer of Charles Street, 27.3x81, hold at $50,000. The property will be immediately al¬ tered. H. Lilly was the broker. East Side Lofts Sold Speer & Co. sold for Augustus H. Tennis to an investing client a seven- story loft building at 47 East Nine¬ teenth Street, 25x100. George S. Runk sold for Adam Hap- pel 1790 First Avenue, a live-story loft building, having a frontage of twenty-five feet. The entire building is now rented to one tenant, Stern Brothers, dealers in Indian motorcycles. Geza Eichhorn represented the buyer. a-'- Sell $456,000 Mortgage of Tall Fulton Street Loft Lawrence, Blake & Jewell have sold a first mortgage of $456,000 at 5^i per cent for seven years, at 106-108 Fulton Street, with an extension to 14 Dutch Street, improved with a fifteen- story office building. The property is owned by the Broadway-John Street Corporation. Childs & Humphries has negotiated for Howard A. Raymond a first mort¬ gage of $88,000 at 5«V*s per cent on the property at 31-33 East Tenth Street, an eight-story left. 44.5x94.9. Leases of Apartment Suites Pease «fe Elliman leased apartments at 1075 Park Avenue to H. Frank; .it 71.3 Lexington Avenue to Killen Keough; at 1157 Lexington Avenue to Mrs. A. E. Mayer; at 105 East Fifteenth Street to Joseph Mumma; at 71 West Twelfth Street to Robert Sherwood; at 146 East Forty-ninth Street to Miss Beatrice Heywood; at 171 West Fifty-seventh Street to Isaac Greenberg; at 378 Central Park West, to W. E. Blecher, and to Mrs. E. A. Locke, and at 310 West Seventy-ninth Street to Harold C. Mayer. Worthington Whitehouse, Inc., leased a large duplex aparment at 210 Park Avenue to Mrs. Robert L. Stevens. Fine East Side Homes Rented Pease «fe Elliman have leased for Charles Wanniger to Dr. Harry Seller the three-story dwelling at 114 East Ninety-fifth Street. Worthington Whitehouse, Inc., has rented for the New York Trust Com¬ pany, the dwelling at 57 East Sixty- seventh Street to Cornelius W. Provost. a Fíat in Dyckman Section Sold The Manning-Bernhard Realty and Construction Company sold the five- story modern apartment at 114 and 116 Nagle Avenue, 40x129.6, to Effie F. Peirce. The house contains twenty- four suites and two stores. Estate Sells Yonkers Plot The Robert E. Farley Organization sold for the estate of William B. Rice a plot in the Gray Oaks section of Yonkers, N. Y., to Frank Wekerle, of Yonkers. MONEY TO LOAN. MONEV TO LOAN. S%% MONEY An unlimited amount to loan on desirable improved real estate in Manhattan and Bronx. Low fees, prompt answers, early closings. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. Capital, surplus and profits, $20,000,000 176 Broadway, sNew York TO LET FOR BUSINESS PURPOSES STORE and LOETS Between 5th Ave. and Broadway Immediale or Feb. lit Occupancy 5 E. 17TH ST., to 18TH ST. Sixth loft .fO.OOO 15 EAST 17TH ST. Fifth loft (25x75).$2,800 17 EAST 17TH ST. Store and basement.$4,300 rhli-ahloft (25* .0). 2,000 Fourth loft . 8.000 20 EAST 17TH ST. id loft (2r>xH.ï> Immediate_»2,400 4th loft, immediate . 3,40* 416 BROADWAY Corner Canal 4th-6th Lofts. 20 windows_«2500 Immédiat« possession. No Mfg. I. H. POLLACK 110 \V. 40th St. Bryant 0161 BROOKLYN REAL ESTATE ¦jr»tï-«i-««r\*Ta«-> You buy don't fall to »ee our RRFllKP sew mode», moderate priced ULO. \Jl\L» 2-iaraily dwellings. Fine«* in Brooklyn; pamphlet upon request. John F. Churlo Corpn., 132 Hlghlawn Avenue. tea Beaah subway to Kin»« Highway station- Avenue R end. LONG ISLAND REAL ESTATE ALONG THE BOt'TH »HOKB Deairable rrepertl««. for »alt» <sr rea*. Fnrnibh«d Cottages. JEREMIAH BOBBINS Mat» attest Tard. BaUayV.» «» FARMS FOR SALE Netv «ïeratey NEW JERSEY FARM BARGAINS Free ilíus. cátalos» give details hundreds of bargains throughout state, map shown; many fully equipped, Immediate possession orle«-.«« $1.000 up, easy terms. Call or write. NEW JERSEY FARM AGENCY. 164 68 Nassau St., N. T. C. UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS TO WET Bonny Castle 601 West 191st St. Highland Court 600 West -92d St Elevator Apartment. 4 Rooms, #75; S Room». S85; 6 Booms, $90; 8 Booms. 2 Baths, (12S BEAI. ESTATE BROKERS || Established 1853 i] Horace S. Ely & Co. REAL ÉSTATE Bishop Building, 7*9 WUlltuat Street, EDWIN H.HESS Business Property Management A Weht* Specialized 3trtiet 259 - 5th Av«. Mad. Sq. 8398 Busine» Lj P" ¿ C2 Country Fropertiei I ¦ , *c **¦»«.* Propertiea ~Cctnm»)jg¿¿Í .Property -.ir oml i >j'i;wl t toll .:7V'-» Realty Itwesteents ¥!#fiS_fi&OT: CUSHMAN ft WAKBFIELD, INC.. ti Kast 4-d St. T«l. üutTajr HiU TU«. TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LOST. FOimO AND REWARD LOST-.«und«|r Afternoon, «apphlre bar pin. Reward. t> «IQ, Trlbta-ve/^ Lost Bankbook« LOST--nenl,book No. 747,74$ of the Unten Dlmp (»«v!ngs Baftk is missing. Any per¬ son having a <Sla,m to it Is herebv calle«! î,f°î?. .'" iF^HQi th* .MUt,° within t«?n days or submit xo having said passbook canceled and a new one Issued. LSftX.T,ï,,',,l'**«N,>; CO**«2«« «f the Union Dime Bavins* Bank Ig mltwing. Any s»er- son having u .aim to it is hereby Wiled upon to pretaemt the »same within ten days lai,,« » to ha,vtn«» **W passbook canceled ann a new one tissued. l.«3«T.Bankbook No. »«3,114 of ON Union u .Sav«n*l« Bank is missing. Any jx>r- ï.°JlJT'in* * cllt"T* to ft «¦ hereby called upon to present the k«.i» within t*n days or submit to having said passbook canceled anil n new one Issue!. LOST.Rankbook No. 605,214 'st ttie UtSltTaB hav n/ «8*m V °ttn.k !s ".»»*.*¦¦«. Any person havlns a claim to it is hereby called upon to present the same wtl.in ten «lays or sub¬ mit to having said passbook canceled and a new one issued. L^Ir.rn rl<bfi,k ,^°-63**a'13 oi GrWBWtch Savings Bank, 248 Sixth Ave., N. Y City Payment »topped. Please return to hank. FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET West Stan 18TH' ST. <22 7th Av.)~Fln« rooms; hot water; married, business people ; refer¬ ence. 01 ST ST.. Broadway.On«, two room« day week or month. 2465 Broadway. HELP WANTED FEMALE Miscellaneous UNUSUAL opportunity for woman under 40' good education; attractive personality. In¬ itiative cHsentia! to learn gotxj, secure bual- ness good »alary to titart. Call 11-1. Suite 100«, 565 6th ave. V* OMAN-. 22 to 40 to place aupplementary scnoo! clues; $1,400, with future; may spend winter In South If preferred. Tay¬ lor, 522 5th Ave., room 322. HELP WANTED MALE BOT. 16-15 years of age, in downtown com¬ mercial house. Apply ¡Saldo & Co., 67 Wall St., room 507. DOLLS.Experienced prefers, «poHs<*n*r« gluerB, grinders, dippers and Jolnero. U. S. Doll Co.. 54 Fulton st., Brooklyn THE NEW TORE. NEW HATER a, HARTFORD RAILROAD COMPACT? HEN WANTED Regular positions for com¬ petent men whose work is . satisfactory as: Machinists.*6c to 71c per boor Boilermakers.87c ta 7«k- per hour Blacksmiths.66c to 76c per hour Armature Winders.66c to 76c per hour Car Inspectors at Repairmen.6Z<1 par heat Helpers.first /ear» «5c per hour. The above rates are those agreed upes with Committee of Mechanical Department Association. This Is not a «strike against tne railroad; It is a strike waged against a reduction in rates of pay ordered by the United State* Railroad Labor Board, effective July 1, isaa. Apply. 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., to Superin¬ tendent's office at 122d at. and Willis av». Bronx. N. Y. F. M. CLARK, Superintendant, New York, New Haven «% Hartford R _. Ce. SITUATIONS WANTED FEMALE Chamta-enn&HIa CHAMBERMAID-MATD Young French girl; 2 excellent city references. P., Miss Hofmnyer's Agency, 10 Kaat 43d St., :¡d floor. Tel. 8947 Murray Hill. CHAMBERMAID WAJTRBtSS Young Irish girl; city apartment preferi-ett good references. II., Miss Hofmayer's Ageni:y, 10 Bam 43d St., Jd floor. Tele¬ phone 8947 Murray Hill. CHAMBERMAID, assist waitress; very neat, nice experienced Irish girl; excel¬ lent references; city; $60. Mason's Agency, 47 East 44th st. CHAMBERMAID-SEAMSTRESS Young, neat, willing and reliable; best refer¬ ences. Dang «fc Boecherer Co., 43 W. *3d at. CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS.Young ; thor¬ oughly capable; excellent. Miss Fitz¬ gerald's Bureau, 366 Sth av. Si CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS, young, neat. highly recommended. Mias Hall's Bureau. 17 W. 44th st. CHAMBERMATD-MAID. English ; excellent. Miss Hall's Bureau, 17 W. 44th. Vander- bl>«. 8340. CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS, neat, young ; well recommended; $70. Wettler'a Agency. 20 West 43d. Cooks «. .-,.. COOK.Young Irish woman, very neat ex¬ cellent cook; tactful with other help. A., Miss Hofmayer's Agency, 10 East 43d St.. 8d floor. Tel 8947 Murray Hill. COOK-WAITRESS-CHAMBERMAID To- f:ether; capable girls; city apartment, nthrop Bureau, 47 West <2d. Room 626., Longacre 8743. COOK, 'Irish, excellent disposition; expert cook, excellent manager; highly recom¬ mended. Miss Hall's Bureau. 17 W. 44th st. Vanderbllt 8340._ COOK-CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS . «Two nice young girls: beat long references; $146. Wettler'a Agency, 20 West 43d. Long- acre 8896. COOK.Young Finn, highly recommended; very superior wojrnan; city family. E.. Hofmayer's Agency, 10 East 43d St., »-** floor. _ COOK.Ypung, Scotch Protestant: city; high¬ ly recommended; good manager. Winthrop Bm-eau, 47 West 42d, Room 62S. Longacre 8743. _j_ COOKS. Norwegian. Irish, Scotch ; city «r country all hlgh'y recommended. Miss Hall's Bu-**au. 17 W. 44th st. Vanderb.lt .340._|_ COOK, capable, young; $80; anywhere: three years last place. Mlis Shea'» Agenc-y. « E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774._ COOK.Young, capable Irish girl; four years' references. Winthrop Bureau, 47 West 42d, Room 626. Longacre «743. COOKS, waitresses, housuworsers. Tlnks Andresen, Scandinavian Agency. 2!»4 Broadway, «3d. Schuyler 7992._ COOKS, chambermaids, waitresses, laun- alresses; Finnish girls. Agency, 6. East 125th st. Harlem 6616. COOK.German; first class in all branches ; excellent reference». Lang «fc Boecherer Co., 43 W. 33d ct. COOK.Young; good manager; imusual references. Miss Fitzgerald's Bureau, 366 6th av.__,_ COOK-.Excellent. Finnish; $85. Wettler's Agency, 20 West 43d. Longacre 8896. COOK.Good, German; good referent*««; $70. Wettler'a Agency, 20 West 43d. Day Workers DAY'S WORKER.First class laundrew- cl*aner: neat, competent, responsible woman; highly recommended; $4.1*. Mr«. Mason's Agency, 47 East 44th «t. DAY WORKER, laundress or eleamsr; goof». «juick worker. K. Miss Hofmayer's Agency. 10 East 43d St.. 3d floor. Telephone l»47 Murray HI». ________ General Hoaseworker«, Etc. HOUSEWORKER.Very neat, nice, eettled woman: thoroughly experienced; exceU lent references; apartment; $66. Mr«. Mason's Agency, 47 Bant 44th at. _ HOUSEKEEPER, working ¡for bachelor, gentlemen; neat, refined, exceptionally competent; most hlMly recommended; !.". Maison'» Agency, *_ast 44th at. .. SITUATIONS WANTED FEMALE Genera! Ilouarworliers, Et«. HOmeWORKBR <»?>clUh Prot*st*nO. Very nest, thoroughly expertoneed; ana, two a part men) e_c«11etit reference*; $68. Mason's Agency, 47 Bast 44th at. HOUSEWORKER.Scotch Protestant; «r»ry neat, refined, e-xcepnonalljr competent; highly recommended; rüy, $66. Mason's Agency, 47 K»»t 44(1) «t. liülWSWORK-8, (good cook. waitress; $79; apartment jnefsrred ; long r*fer- uncM. Mies Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41_*. Murray Ulli «774. HOUBEWORKER. UnRlish. capable, re- lU-ie; city only; very highly recom- mended. Mia« Hall« Bureau, 17 Well 44th «t. Vanderbllt 8340. HOUSEWORK ER.Young Irish girl; high- eat reterence*; city apartment. Wln- throp Bureau, 47 West 42-d. Longscre 874». Room 6Î6, HOUSEWORKERS. Finnish girls; aloo late¬ ly landf.il. Agency, 58 Bast 12ilh »t. Harlem 6 ¦'. 1S. HOUSEWORKER.Young good rook ; ex¬ ceptional référence». Miss Fltxgerald's Bureau, 366 $th av. OovernpHsei", Bte. NURSERY GOVERNESS, French, excellent. Miss Halt's Bureau, 17 W. 44th. Vander- blU ID40. NURSERY GOVERNESS-Voun» French girl, does not «peak English : can be seen by appointment only. G . Ml»» Hof- mayer's Agency, 3 8 Eaxt 43d St., 3d floor. I>& undresses LAUNDRESS CHAMBERMAID, young, neat, very competent highly recommend¬ ed; Westchester Cotinty preferred; ft». Mrs. Mason's Agency, 47 Baut 44th St. LAUNDRESS-CHAMBERMAID, neat, com¬ petent, conscientious; small family, city; excellent references; $66. Mr«. Maaon's Agency. 47 Baa* 44th St. LAUNDRESS.First class; capable worker: best references. Lang & Boecherer Co. 43 W. 23d st. LAUNDRESS.Excellent, young; Weetchester preferred; $T6. WetUer's Agency, 20 West 4»«, SECOND LAUNDRESS.Very neat, thor- tmghly experienced; most highly reeotn- mende«!; «rlty family; $65. Mrs. Mason's Agency, 47 EaBt 44th st. Name-, Etc. ASSISTANT NURSE or USEFUL MAID. Two young Canadians: good, willing girls. Me., Mta« Hofmayer's Agency, 10 East 4?.d st., 3d floor. Telephon« 8947 Murray Hill. INFANT'S NURSE. Scotch; very capable, experience's, conscientious, reliable: highly recommended. Miss Hall's Bureau, 17 W. 44th «t. Vanderbllt 8340. INFANT'S NURSE.Experienced, compe- tenet and willing to care for older chil¬ dren; excellent references. Lang Si Boech¬ erer Co., 43 W. 33d st. INFANT'S NURSE--Middle-aged, excellent references; $70-$75. Wettlers Agency, 20 We«t 48d. NURSE <Scotch Protestant).Neat, compe¬ tent, most oonnctenilous; walking child; city; splendid references; $75. Mason's Agency. 47 East 44th at. NURSE, for infant or growing children; capable young American: $70. Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774. NURSE-CHAMBERMAID Young: thor¬ oughly capable excellent references. Miss Fitïgerald's Bureau. 366 6th av. NURSE.Young; Protestant; thoroughly capable; exceptional. Miss Fitzgerald's Bureau. Î66 5th- av. NURSE.Young*. 2 children; country pre¬ ferred. Miss Fitzgerald's Bureau, 366 6th av. SECOND NURSE, young, lately arrived (Scotch Protestant) ; neat, healthy, nice disposition; city; $60. Mason's Agency, 47 East 44th St. Waitresses WAITRESS CHAMBERMAID Young Swede; city apartment: very desirable servant. C, Miss Hofmayer's Agency. 3 0 East 43d St., 3d floor. Tel. 894 7 Murray Hill. WAITRESS CHAMBERMAID, capable, young; well recommended; apartment preferred; $60. Miss Sheu's Agency, 6 E. 43st. Murray H Ml 6774. WAITRESS, Scotch; capable, good appear¬ ing; $6G; anywhere; long references. ATlss Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774. WAITRESS.Young; thoroughly capable; exceptional references. Miss Fitzgerald's Bureau, 366 6th av. Office TOUNG LADY, 21. as office assistant, knowledge of typing, tiling, clerical and switchboard ; excellent references. Address D 994. Tribune. MiB-ellan-ous FRIENDS, cook. $70; waitress-chamber¬ maid. $60; capable, young; weli recom¬ mended. Miss Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774. BUTCHENMAID-USEFUL. newly arrived, young Irish; $40; city only. Miss Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774. KITCHENMAID-CHAMBERMAID . Young, Irish; well recommended; $60. Wettler's Agency, 20 West 43d. I LADIES' MAID (Swiss Proteatant).Neat, nice appearing, thoroughly experienced: excellent reference; city; $65. Mason's Agency. 47 East 44th St. LADY'S MAID.Excellent seamstress; will¬ ing and obliging; highly recommended. Lang & Boecherer Co.. 43 W 33d St. MAID-ATTENDANT. capable. conscien¬ tious (Scotch Protestant); exceptionally well recommended; moat desirable; city, country. Mason's Agency, 47 East 44*h st. USEFUL MAID, good natured $60. Wett- ler's Agency, i'O West 43d. Longacre 8896. SITUATIONS tVANTEP MALE Domestic BUTLERS, cooks, valets, housemen, house- workers who cook; several very efficient Filipinos; highly recommended. Mason's Agency. 47 East 44th st. LUTLER. English; capable, good «appear¬ ing; $90; best personal references; any¬ where. Shea's Agency, 6 G. 41«t. Murray Hill 6774. BUTLERS, second men. housemen and couples; excellent references. Lang & Boecherer Co., «3 W. 3»d st. BUTLER-VALET, best long references; Ger¬ man; $100. Wettler's Agency, 20 West 43d. CHAUFFEUR.Very neat, nice appearing young Filipino; careful, skillful driver; highly recommended. Mrs. Mason's Agency. 47 East 44th St. COOK-BUTLER-VALET for bachelor; young, neat, capable, conscientious Fili¬ pino: exceptionally well recommended. Mason's Agency, 47 E*st 44th et. COOK-BUTLER. HOUSEWORKER. middle- asced;» well recommended; $80. Wettler's Agency. 20 Wept 43d. COUPLE.Belgians; excellent butler and cook: good references. O.. Miss Hof¬ mayer's Agency, 10 East 43d st.. 3d floor. Telephone 8947 Murray Hill. COUPLE. Scotch: useful butler, excclient, cook ; entire work ; highly recommended. Mi«;» Hall's Bureau, 17 W. 44th st. Vander- bilt $34«._ rOUPLK, colored: butler, useful, excellent cook; $130; entl»* work; anywhere. Shea's Agency, 8 E. 41st. Murray Hilt 6774. COUPLE.French, Swiss; excellent cook, butler-valet; beet long references; $1«0. Wettler's Agency, SO West 43d. Longacre SS»«. COUPLE, Belgians; butler, cook, entire .work; $1*0; fine references. Mi»» Shea's Agrency, . K. 4Int. Murray Hill «774. COUPLE.Good cook-«feamberi_*id-*nraUre«s,, gardener (drives For-.) ; hav* child 7 years ; $10«. Wettler's Agency, West 4Sd. COUPLE.Colored; good cook, useful butler- chauffeur; $136 up. Wettler*« Agency, $0 West 43d. 1/ongacre 889«. COUPLES, Finnish; cook*, butlers, chauf¬ feurs, etc Agency, 68 East - 116th »t. Harlem 6616. COUPLE.Cook, useful Datier: Finnish; $160. Wattier*» Agency, 20 West 43d. COUPLE.English, excellent cook, butter: city : $179. Wettler's Agency, -6 West iSa, COUPLE.Swiss; plain coofs, useful busier; $130, Wettler's Agency, M West *.d!yr SITUATIONS WANTED MAIE Dome-tic COUPLE.Uwedlah ; chambermaid-lAtinnr»*?», butler-valet; $160. Wettler's Agency, t* West 43d. FILIPINO coo«s. I'-.itlers. housemen: experi¬ enced; $7(1 up. Wettier » Agency. 20 West 43d. HOUSEMAN-CHAUFFEUR, yo.ing. -- pendable; $90. Wettier» Agency. 20 Went 43d. ;;;_ JAPANESE i»oks, butlers. how**»-worl<-rs. chauffeurs; references. Agency. 106 Weit 46th et. Bryant 7737. Miscellaneous STENOGRAPHER (231, f«t rears" expedi¬ ence ; knowledge bookkeeping ; desires posi¬ tion. Address B 327. Tribune. "employment agencies Domestic Helo ALEXANDER'S AGENCY. 244 "t-»est mth <.th ave). Mornl-S-Jdo 134$. Reliable domestic help. MRS. KEMP'S AGENCY.Hlgh-gr»_« colors« maid«; reference*. ÎS83 7th ave. Audtt- bon 2*6«._ __^,î___^r!___Ll ^SststtíTuaf. 787 Lexington ave., near 61st. Male-Female. 2415 Broadway, cor. 89th. Excellent Help. _FOR SALE _ A WOUNDED, ex-service soldier, serving a lit* «"numen for a crime be did not com mit, is wlthovt funds and is making solid beaded hand begs hi an endeavor to ob¬ tain funds for pardon. Work first class. ¡Satisfaction or money back; $2"i each: made tn order on $10 deposit. Address L. 326, Ttl-une. BÜSi-íESS CAROS Diamonds, Jewc-lry, Etc, DIAMONDS bought and sold for cash. Advlco free. Bennett, 172 B'way. 2d floor- Furniture WE PAY highest prices for furniture. pianos, antiques, bric-a-brac, books, »rt, Kliigsley. University pi. gtuyvesant 2377. M USlCAL INSTRUCTION Great Opportunity for Advanced Singers who desire artistic training Mr. George Hamlin will conduct a Special Course in Singing INSTITUTE OF MUSICAL ART 120 ClareraoRt Ave.» New York City. For full Information app'y to Frank Damrosch, Director INSTRUCTION Language Instruction Learn Spanish, French, Ger¬ man. Italian, English, etc., the Berlitz Way. The Berlitz Con¬ versational Method makes study a pleasure and results a cer¬ tainty. Best native teachers. Private or class instruction Day and Evening. Low schedule of rates. Ask for particulars. Classes forming every tSMlCi French, Spanish, GWrosn, Italia*]. Elementary. Inter¬ mediate and Advanced. Trial Lesson Free. SCHOOL. OK" LANGUAGES EST lorft SSO BRANCHES SOW.-4th St. Tel. Pennsylvania 1188 Brooklyn.218 Uvtqgiten St. Tel, M »In 194» BERKELEY-IRVING . SCHOOL FOR BOYS "From Primary to Callóse." 43d Yeer Tel. Schmier 4836. Small classes. Thorough Instruction by experienced teachers. Boys prepared for nil colleges, technical schools, or for business Swlmmlnir pool; gymnasium building; roof p ayground.all on prem¬ ises. Afternoon outing Classes. L. D. Ray, P_.D.,H_m., 313 W. 83d, N.Y. THE BROWN SCHOOL OF TUTORING t41 Vf. 75th St. Tel Colomb-as MM. Founded 1906. Individual instruction, ward and average pupils all save time. Fall term opens Oct. 2d. "A School with an Atmosphère of Work.'* . .«-..-. Established 50 Year« BALLARD secretarial course nAiiAAi Rr.olst« New fer Ftl! CI»»«. SrHllfll «1° I-**»- .*«*.. at «3d »t. .JK.S. _Vf \JJ-i Centrul Branch Y.W.C_%. PRATT Stcrtisri.l training, in-ivliu-l streetion. Register r.«v». Staooti under sixteen cot aiimirte-. SUMMONS supreme court of the state of new York, plaintiff designates new tork coi'xty as place of TRIAL. The Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, n* Trustee under a certain Deed of Trust made by Virginia Furdy Bacon, dat-ad January 18, lftlfi. Plaintiff, against Annie Ma»:- Wallace: France« L. Wallace tndlvid_ally and a* administratrix of the e«"t»te of Allen Wallace, deceased and The Farmers' Loan and Trust Company Executor of th« La.t Will and Teslanvnt of Virginia Purdy Bacon, deceased. De¬ fendants. .SUMMONS. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS AND EACH OF THEM: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action, and to verve a copy of your answer, or, if th« " complaint is not served with this summon». to servo a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff's attorneys within twenty days after the service of this summons, ex¬ clusive of the day of service. In case of your failure to appear, or answer, judg¬ ment -.ill be taken against you by default for the relief demanded In the complaint. Dated. New York. June 19th. 19Î2. GELLER. KOLSTON & BLANC. At¬ torneys for Plaintiff. Office and Post Office Address: 22 Exchange Place. New York. N. Y. TO the defendants, Annie Marie Wallace and Frances L. Wallace, Individually nnd ns lidmintstrstrlx of the estate of Allen Wallace, deceased The Bnnexed summon« in served upe> vou by publication, pursuant to an order of 'the Honorable James O'Mailey. a Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, dated the 6th day of October, 1982. and filed with the complaint in the office of the Clerk of the County of New York, at the County Court Hous«. In the Borough of Manhattan, City, County and State of New York. Date«). New York. October .tb. 19.2. GELLER. ROLKTON & BLANC. At¬ torneys for Plaintiff, Office and P«>t Office Address : 22 Exchange Place, New York. N. Y. STORAGE tSOTÏCES~ TO: THE ESTATE OF FANNK CURTIS'. Hoadley. Joseph H. Hoadley, Mrs Grace H. Wade. .T. J Powers. Werner & 11c- Olvney, Leopold W. Harburger, Mmm Morris, Surrogates' Court of New York County. Yo'4 and each of you are hxreby notified that the time for the payment of our Hen upon the property hereinafter detwrlbed having expired, after due nottee thereof had been «riven you, we will cause suvh property, to wit: Chiffoniers, beds, chairs, rockers, dressing tables, dresser*, dining- room furniture, parlor and library furni¬ ture, bedroom -iirnltwre. contests of dresser drawers, trunks, boxee, barrels and suit¬ cases, silverware, wearing apparel, pic¬ ture*, painting*, rugs, carrets. bedding, linens, draperies, china, glaisware, bric-a- brac, perennal effects, pi« nos. vlctrolae, phonograph«, musical instruments, sewing machines, iceboxes, cutlery, lumps. Jewelry, papers, stationery, stored in I_»e Brothers. Inc., Warehouse by you or In your name or In which you have an Interest, to b* sold; at public r.uctlon according u> the statut« in such case made and provided, at Merle's Rooms, Inc., ISS Saat 1.5th Street, New- York City, on Monday, November 13th, 192S. at lv:S0 A. M., and ¡r cite sale thereof is »ot completed on j::tid Cute the same wilt be continued at the same place on each and every Tuesday, "Wedne-day and Friday thereafter. -.Ringing at 10.-30 A. M.. and continuing u^ill the »n;> tj com¬ pleted. UK_T BROTHERS, INC.

for On ,,8il. Bldg¡foyers Arrived l&snaaai tr»».ff***«»»S aatii ^ayn***.-rtç-i-pît Mo.-Richardsron P. O. Ï.íá.'f-,_-r-.n,!a

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Page 1: for On ,,8il. Bldg¡foyers Arrived l&snaaai tr»».ff***«»»S aatii ^ayn***.-rtç-i-pît Mo.-Richardsron P. O. Ï.íá.'f-,_-r-.n,!a

¡foyers Arrivedl&snaaai tr»» .ff***«»»S aatii

-rtç-i-pît Mo. -Richardsron P. O.^ayn***. !a<Ji,?8' ***&? *° '*«l-r, -8

Ï.íá.'f-,_-r-.n, !.. van Slyck, ft. McCon-**. e \\ Pederson. tadle»* ready to."* '«¿«is B'way , _,,*.Ttf'4 j|l«ii.-Mat«y C»,¡ loulg 8il.if*;»,, mgr. coat«, euitt*. ek.rtB;(MA"«*'»«'',' f r

*i£<« ¿repeM««. »n«l art needlework;«^ífWfín.-«.P*«"<*e «*o<^": <*."» Ktrbjr.»**¦ » riaoher 362 4th «*.'.HLf/^vf« Ñ Y- Lichtenberg CloakPfVi P ¦' I«ch<enb«rg. <Ir«-«<*ee.»«*:.» «ùitx: Martinique.iH.'K v C.--W S. Clark ft Son«;i**5;'rk dry goods; Martinique.LeR H-aUTB Ind..Root P. O. Co.;?Ä"'.* *Hk» »».! woolen«; Mr«. M.' !*-udl«' ready t, ^ear: H. P.

Hing» neckwear, haudker-

¦ffi&m"¡ráiÍÍl *ft^Kocli; W. 1,«^"T ~-n«» .urnt«hln*.«.; C. H. Hoffner.

«SS- wther ioSde So^iery : Î36 6th »v.

*Ä«* Ohlo*-TlWmr.«<m H«jd.on Co./.tMorreil. md«c mgr.. Mr«. B. w.

¿(& l./i«' ready to «Wi Jay fc Co..

Ö«rti.BDO "'Ohio. Ixsper-Sajsrtuel« Co. ;

,1, Wer. women*« ready to wear; iW »itb «rt., room S«50 .».«.. -a»».V&BPO. OhUta-La.Sa.1« ft Koch, Mr,.

a- «ebrnidt. mltltJaerr; ÍSf f'tn.jv;M vimfte* M°rhvr.raai^« #** ."¿.».«c-» i-tTV Mteh .A- Roaenthal

O^fïSEtEFia-JS"ready to wear;

as*1®v^w«* «.¦ ».

»an, job« w«*,'B£î*fc,r« kid «"-y andMWM;..*.*JjrV&yts. 37 W. 26th »t.ïlTROÏ^Ia,-J«tVn,,*r* Bros.; Mis» Bit.¿/«en'« reetdv to wear, children's.Vln'.^w/.r. b¿ys' clothing; Mar-

4B-all?»V N Y..J. Woolman. velvet',.-*«' H'arav.^'«ii Okla-'HallIburton Abbott Co.

, r Vtawliin». fency goods, Wm. M.r. r. h»v Van»»a 5« W. 36th »t.rviONTOWN. Pa..Silverman 8<-fa«; I.barman «¡reneral merchandise; careSmT« ft Hartblay. 117 W. 3Sd at.«ai'O_SanC'.-r Bro».; Ml«« T. UUman.J.reear 1* E 2«h «t.«äBW"' WASH I «VOTO!*t Kann Sons Co.. T. F. t innln, notion»,«¿sir «teod.v 432 4th a v.all ladie»- knit underwear: 404 4th av.Gtttoa Cloak & Suit Store«, J. Fein-2. x. Felaatein. P. Felnsteln and W.Extern, ladies' ready to wear; 42 W.

gARSAW, N. T..E. Cuchen; E.jtHi je*elry; Brésiln.WASHINGTON.Woodward ft Lotbrop;tail. P, Hayden. petticoats ajid skirt«;in C C AUtn, extra slae evening dressesîtleai«; r. K. Muck, linens, white goods]¿ éomeetic«; J. O. Moque, furniture;I "th »v.RATEKHfRY.P.eid A Hughes; A. 8.-ji. Italia-«' knit underwear: 404 4th av.

SSU'H. W v»-.C. A. 8mli»y A Co.:s taHUfy, nction», dry goods and Jewelry;

^HBEWNG. "W. Va..Georg:« E. Stlfcl- jj. c. Curlingame, women's ready tot«4T .».''. an<1 *u,t'3'. R- C. Dancer,'rtrwo««*'«, care Alfred Fant!, 116 W.3.4-*

¦ TICKITA. Kan..Conn Hinkel P. G. Co. :r s.Odor, basement ready to wear; WeilliB»-:rr.ann. 116 W. ÜOth «tWTS'TA. Kan..Rorabaugh D. G. Co.:

»a« Brasliiar. mena furnishings; car*Jlhajrh-B'-ving Co.. 366 6th av.WKHiTA. Kan..The Cohn Hinckle D.

d o.; C. S. Odor, ready to wear; 136

VicHITA. Kan.Rorabaugh P. G. Co.;¦ Q ¿grri», »II ready to wear, notions.¦i« íoodí. «.-loveltles; Ray Brashear.Wl f«fnl»h«ng*s: varo Rorabaugh-Ewlnsra lii 5th »v-

_

*

TOKÍS-BARRE. Pa..N. Springer «fcMi ¿a|nariJ. Springer, women'« ready toa-tir rallliiaery; Philip Sprinser, Samuel«rimrer rtpreseniing; Grand.WIIJC'Es-BARRK, Pa..C. Casper &

!(M' E Caffper. dry goods, notlone, men'svniihlit«; Penna.«glLMINQTON. Del..R. Topkis ft Son;taW TopKia, rtady to wear; care Jay ftc#, vî V. i'.th st.«j-<X)}«S0CKt.T.Harria ft Mowry; Ml*e

C W. 811**. lavtUe»' knit underwear; 404

I'OIaCESTatR.Bernard, Summer & Put-nim- A. VMJder Pjle, ladies' knit under-w»af, 4«« 4th ar.YORK, Pat.i-azaru« A. Petow; Mrs.

l.uanj» A. Patftw, mlllioery, fura and furcoat» »<*»«'» ready to wear; Marliai«,>arOVXOSTOVrti, Ohio.George L. For-

fret C".; >Uss J. Mlleas. boelery, .under-f»»r; ft B. Jones, men's furnishings;H. P. Bttrchfietd, ladles' ready to wear;4Í4 «h «v.rOfX-JSTOWN, Ohio.George Living-

«aifa, eoatj. suits; Herald Square.TOrXGSTOWN, Ohio.G. M. McKelvey

C«; B. T. Thompson, hosiery, petticoats.ttaw dreasts. wrappers, apron», corsets,iflatet; boys' and men'« clothing, cot-!ii ft«* goods, blankets, muolin under-**.'. Hafiket», comforts, bedding, whiteIt**»; «are J. M. Biggin», 333 7th av.WPaVOSTOWN, Ohio.StrousB-Hlrshbelg

«lilaintttl Levy, women's apparel; J. M.JftiajMld, furniture, floor coverings, cur-¦afca drapery, upholstery; care Baer &-altaatha', lioO B'way.

¦^Y.TelephoneDevelopmentfwt Nine Months IndicateGreatest Progress in »HistoryHoward F. Thurbçr, president of the

-.w York Telephone Company, states«felt the accomplishments during thetat nine months of 1922 forecast thepwtest development of the company'ssjitem for any one year in its history."In the nine months' period," he said,*we have connected 261,000 new tele¬fones, installed 6,570,000 miles of¡dre, enlarged 118 central office switch-wards anil placed in service elevennew central offices. Our building op¬érations have been equally extensive,«nee January l we have begun con¬struction on lour new large buildingsand additions to nine others.

Before the war the average annualL^nnn at'0*" new T*lant was $15--"w.wu. This year our constructionjrog-ram calls for an expenditure of.¦Wroximately $61,000,000. The neces-

JS Mpital has come principally from¦ »ale of the company's securities."

ÎUls at Port Chester Bring. ^an Average of $550 Each«Jan L. Kennelly, Inc., sold at auc-

^Sfty-two building plots at Port2*r on Saturday. The sale was wellgMed, chiefly by residents of West-*wr County. The lots sold were on<Jr Street. *5ust north of Regent£», formerly known as the Good-Jaroperty. Bidding was brisk and«»erage price of $550 was realized'¦»eh plot.

ia> .'

**itor Purchases LoftBuilding in Dey Street

«¦*». R. Read & Co. have sold for M.«Wman-Edson Company to an in-^r, 65-7 Dey Street, a five-story¡j«««.,,, 38.4x50. In connection withj»a«le M. K. Bowman-Edson Com-*ï will take a long term lease at a* »anual rental.

».Vrrny Ordersi «T* ^he TriDUHB's Washington Bureau2*SatNGTON. Oct. iß..Army orders"««»«.-«ley follow:

»^ Quartei-msnter Corpa¦Jfs- Lt, M. B., to Washington.*aSL »l.J J ¡o Washimrton.'.W^Ä' ,Co1- H <-'- u> Washington.^w. «a». B. to Washington.jL Medical Corp«.Sf-Capt. G. B. to Panama.^M-* Capt. J. M., to Banama,c Coast Artilleryl^r ,U,E'« t0 Manila.I --. <-ol. H. J., to Walter Reed Hosp.tal.

I LMl«««îUa!iîeoUar?t'lÄPtaaVC-' lnf* t0 K,;W YOTM.&£?*' A' k" A,r Svc-. to Constan-

r«tt.nC¿to8n.°ra- °",CerS* *** C6rlí»'

.^?^g*ygg' XOTICE8^Aca*A?ï'JkS f°B»E" Ô» Hon.* Jtt N«T v ,N« ?; «'V-regata of th«*«»ri S?r.Z?Tk¿ NOTICE U hereby** £^ tf&.S5iJ**»vin«. claims againstSP*ÍVa\\"i^CBACKBR. late of th.^m^2eï?iï- *r««*wetí. to present th*

SÍ?1» «fC %. transacting buslnew at259». at N^J »h,tr£*«'« * WhTtehead. their

^?krt amsow..»WIS F. HRENNBK,BTaoNQ . «_.__ Exécutera.*Mteeî.?1l,T «HEAD. Attor-

7"^***»«« K«hv yortt city.

Real Estate News

Rental for1 ribune Bldg

Retired Merchant Takes 21Years' Lease on Well-Known Structure; WillGet Control Next May

The Tribune Building, at th« «sorrierof Nassau and Sprue« streets, apioneer in the intensive developmentof New York*? was leased yesterday fortwenty-one years at an aggregate netrental said to be $5,000,000. VictorWcichman and associates are thelessees. According to the agreementreached yesterday. Mr. Weichman'*control of the building Starts May 1.1923. It will be passed over to himby S. Morrill Banner and Herbert E.Mitler, who purchased the structureseveral months ago from The NewYork Tribune after it decided to estab¬lish up town, Mr. Weichman will takethe property in the name of the Trib¬une Building Corporation, which wasformed recently for th« purpose.Mr. Weichman was until recentlyengaged in the mercantile business.Since he entered the realty field hehas concluded a number of interestingdeals. He has favored business prop¬erty. Among the structures which henow controls are the Arena building,at 38 West Thirty-second Street, ex¬tending through the block to Thirty-first Street, the site of the famousArena of old Tenderloin day*»; theManhattan building at 8 to 13 WestThirtieth Street, and the Union Squarebuilding at 33 Union Square.The Tribune building is twentystories high and covers 90 feet onNatsau Street, 98 feet on Spruce Streetand 86 feet on Frankfort Street. Thebuilding surrounds the former "Sun"property, at the southeast corner ofNassau and Frankfort streets. LouisWetzler and Laurence J. Borchardnegotiated the lease. Stoddard & Markwere the attorneys for both lessor andlessees.

V. S. Industrial Alcohol Co.Locates in Central Zone

Ruland & Benjamin, Inc., withBrown-Wheelock Company, leased thefourteenth iîoor in the New BowerySavings Bank Building at 110 EastForty-second Street to the UnitedStates Industrial Alcohol Company andits subsidiaries for executive and gen¬eral offices.Cross & Brown Company leased the

top floor at 127-29 West Fifty-thirdStreet to Harry A. Roberts and GeorgeA. Mackey and the third floor rear at28 East Sixty-fourth Street to John W.Lee. The Mojtor Guaranty Corporation,whose main offices are in Newark, N. J.,have leased through Cross & BrownCompany space in the Fisk Building,Broadway and Fifty-seventh Street fora branch. This company also main¬tains a branch at 30 Church Street.Tankoos, Smith & Co. leased in th-building now being erected at thesouthwest corner of Broadway andThird Street a store on the ThirjStreet frontage to the Udell Station¬ery and Printing Company for a branchestablishment.

Armenian Democratic LiberalParty Gets 27th St. QuartersRuland & Benjamin, Inc., leasedthree floors at 124 East Twenty-seventhStreet to the Armenian DemocraticLiberty Party, Inc., the basement andfirst floor at 126 East Twenty-seventhStreet, to the Key System Institute,the parlor floor at 157 East Seventy-second Street to Herbert Kendall, andthé basement store to Joseph Lancina,

also a loft at 126 West Thirty-fourthStreet to Joseph Scelsi.é .

í orillar«! Spencer Estate LotsBing $605,585 at Auction

The three-day auction sale of theLorillard Spencer estate in the Pel-ham Bay section of the Bronx wascompleted on Saturday night byJoseph P, Day on the premises. Mr.Day received a total of $605,585 forthe 1,200 lots comprising the offer¬ings. M. J. Kane's purchase of anEastern Boulevard lot for $3,500 wasthe top price of the sale.

a

Knights of ColumbusPlan $150,000 Clubhouse

New Amsterdam Council, Knightsof Columbus, will build a club¬house, costing $150,000, at 107-108West Seventieth Street from plansbeing completed by Victor C. Farras,architect. It will be a four-storystructure, 40x100, of brick and lime¬stone.

¦. ¦

Garage on Park Ave. CornerBought For Private Use

Wm. A.: White & Sons sold forPvingland F. Kilpatrick the northeastcorner of Park Avenue and Ninety-seventh Street, a new two-story garage,32x2Sr--vith chanffeur's apartment. Thepurchaser will use the property as aprivate garage.

$50,000 Rental for StoreThoens & Flaunlacher, Inc., leasedthe store and basement at 7 and 9 West

Thirtieth Street to the Hercules Knit¬ting Company, Inc., at an aggregaterentaj of $50,000, and leased the thirdfloor at 14 East Thirty-fourth Streetto Raymond Cusato, manufacturer ofhand embroidered articles.Brady & Bowman leased offices in*theBorden Building, Forty-fifthvStrect nndMadison Avenue, to George F. Willisand Linton Itigg.Douglas L. Elliman & Co., Inc., leased

a store at 1185 Lexington Avenue toPhilip Siniscalchi for a barber shop.-i.¦¦'¦" ¦' ¦""

Apartment Near PelhamStation Held at $50,000 SoldFish & Marvin sold for a New York

client a property at Pelham known asthe Smith Apartments, with store, onlarge plot pear the Pelham station,held at $50,000, to S. E. Shanks forinvestment.

¦¦-

Sale of Morristown ResidenceEugene V. Welsh sold for Mrs. Ben¬

jamin Van Cleve her house at 13 DeHart Street, Morristown, N. J,, to W,E. Van Liew, who expects to occupythe premises.ArAKTMEVTS TO -.M.FURNISHED

Manhattan

BEAUTIKUI. newly furnished rooms; ex¬clusive private residence. 60 West 16th st.

SUITES of I. 2 »na 3 room« with bath,with complete hotel service, trjthln fifty

minute« of Pennsylvania Station, at 1129 amonth »nd Up.THE NASSAU HOTEU I/ONO BBACH, U.Z.

Opea AU Tear.

¦CN'FCRNISHKP APAs%VXmVST» TO UCTBronx

3-* BOOMS, new bulldlns; ideal ^eatl"".;reasonable rent*: »B KA£-B AV.. BBONX.1 block east of Jerome av.. south of «unHUI Road: 6th and 9th Av. "I* «i«."»®and Lexington subway to Mosholu Park¬way.

Builder« Sel! ApartmentRecently Erected in BronxHouse Disposed Of OccupiesLarge Site at Morris Ave-

nue and 196th StreetBarry Brothers, builders, sold the,newly completed flve-and-ii-half-storytax-exempt apartment, on plot 70x100,1at the southwest corner of MorrisAvenue and 196th Street to an investor,!a client of Morris Sax. The structurecontains accommodations for sevenfamilies on a floor, the suites being ofthree, four and six rooms. The prop-1erty was held at f175,000.Etta Blank sold to Samuel Goldmanthe five-story apartment at 1444 Cro-tona Park East, 40x09.11*, also to M.Goldfarb a similar apartment at 1448.Wolf Rosenberg sold to Tillie Georgethe four-story flat at 168$ Waibing-ton Avenue, 26x90.The Clinton Avenue Realty Com-

pany sold to Samuel Brecher the four-story apartment at 1807 Clinton Ave¬nue, 00x27.Aaron S. Laidhold sold to the Mur-.berk Realty Corporation the building;at 1599 Bathgate Avenue, 60x120.M. M. Reynolds sold for Henry W.Ressick the two-family house 1920Benedict Avenue, on plot 100x100, at

the southeast corner of Virginia anaWatson avenues, to George Bail.Scott Brothers sold for ThomasDwyer to Herbert Feidler the two-storydwelling 2772 Marion Avenue, 20x100.Anna C. Swarris sold to Elfredo de

Cambio the two-story dwelling at 309East 144th Street, 23x100.Adolph Buchignani sold to CharlesE. Ramey the two-story dwelling at

899 Morris Avenue, 25x105.The Hudson P. Rose Company sold

to Mary Egan the dwelling at 455 East146th Street, 12.6x99.11.Caroline B. Beach sold to William

Strick the two-story «dwelling at 2667Marion Avenue, 15x169.2.Sarah Welner sold to Israel Ayer-]bach the house at 314 East 164th,Street, 22.6x90.3.

-.¦.a-

[New Building in BronxContaining Twenty Stores SoldHerman Berson has purchased the

newly completed building, on nlot 200x86, on the east side of Hunt's PointAvenue, 100 feet north of Seneca Ave-1nue, containing twenty stores, held at$150,000. Arthur L. Shaw was thebroker.Josephine Reinhardt sold to theEvardus, Inc., the property on the west

ßide of Brook Avenue, 73 feet north of163d Street, 125xll3.4x irregular.Jane Kellakey sold to the BainbridgeConstruction Company the plot on theeast side of Webster Avenue, 150 feetnorth of Mosholu Parkway, 77.9x98.6.J. Junemanu sold to the JunemannCorporation the property at 1084 to1088 Bryant Avenue, 84x100.

¦ » .

Corporation Sells English Typeof Home in New RochelleFish & Mslrvin sold for the TomphynRealty Corporation an English brickand stucco residence with a half acre

at Paine Heights, New Rochelle, toEarl Constantine, of Seattle apd thiscity. The same brokers sold for theSheldon-Florence Company a Colonialresidence on Webster Avenue, NewRochelle, to F. E. Basier, of this city.Prince. & Ripley leased for MessmoreKendall his property at Broadway andLivingston Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, toHoward C. Matlaek. Mr. Kendall re¬cently purchased the property throughthe same brokers.

Estate Sells East 54th StreetHouse Owned for 63 YearsBrown, Wheelock-Harris, Vought &

Co. sold for Mary M. Sugden and Jo-sephine McCay Poles 61 East Fifty-fourth Street, a four-story dwelling,22x100, held at $75,000. The new owneris Edward Oliver Bel_er, who will re¬model it. The property had been in theselling family since 1859.

.¦¦ -"«

$7,150 for Maspeth LotsTwenty-two lots in the Maspeth sec-1tlon of Queens were sold at auction

Saturday by the Jere Johnson Jr. Com¬pany, auctioneer, for a total of $7,160.Lots on Juniper Avenue, between Cald-well Avenue and Dorothy Place, aver¬aged $490 each, and on Jansen andHarris avenues $160 to $240; three lots:on Maiden Lane brought $530 each.

. a-

Buys Home at Cold SpringGeorge Howe sold for Harry Mekeelhis property at Cold Spring-on-Hud-son, containing ten acres and a resi¬dence of seven rooms and bath; alsobarn and garage. The purchaser isMiss Dona Saruya, of this city.

» ¦-¦¦

Sale in Pleasant AvenueEnrico Esposito sold <*o Jacob Man-

del the two-story house at 410 Pleas¬ant Avenue, 16.8x98.

BEAX BSTATB.ftAt,K OB RENT

BrooklynBEAÏ/nr ASSOCIATES

"Builder- of 600 Kasy Housekeeping* Homes"IS- Kemsen SU BrooUlyn

ni anliai tan* BROADWAY, NEJAR 1S1ST

Apartment and «torea,Low rents.all short-term lease».

Rent 560.000.Sold subject to five-year first mortgage.

No amorti Kation.Balance easy terms.SLAWSON <_ HOBBS.

,16a West 72- St.

Vfaat&beaiarSend for book.et. SUBURBAN WEST-

CHESTER, giving vital Information aboutthe various town sof Westchester County.Send postage four cents. Prince & .Ripley,S4. MadUon Ave.. New York City.

New JerseySUBURBAN HOME BARÓAIN.- am will¬

ing to take a loss to «ell immediately,bHng In need of ready ca-h." If you canarrange to make a moderate cosh paymentwithin a few daya you own save severalthousand dollar« and «ecure a really finehome !n what 1« beyond question the mostdesirable, refined, purely residential su¬burban section within convenient com¬muting of New Tork City. The house con¬tains ten beautiful room», two bathroomsand garage. It is almo«t new and of mostaura-tire exterior and interior design.The large llvjng room with He big co»yopen fireplace is In every sense of the worda living room. Nothing hi_s been omittedto make thi» a real home. Ground« are100x194 feet, with good shade tree«; highlocation; superb environment; lake« andwonderfully kept home« and grounds; everycomfort ha« been provided. Churches,store«, school« and market», which are »o

necessary, are conveniently near. I willsacrifice for $11,000 to obtain some quickcash. Difference between cash paid andtho price can remain on mortgage- Theproperty now ha« « first mortgage of17,800 on St. Mr. BROOKS, P. O. Box 1107,City Hall Station, New Yortt City.

NOW Colonial dwelling and garage atPtainfteld, N. J., forty minutes from New

Tork. On Central Ratlroad. Dandy loca¬tion. Handy to station and trolley ; 8 rooms.All improvement«; 2 bath«. Hot-water heat;lorg« lot. Price $12,800. Terms. ArtcraitHomes Co., 144 No. Ave., Plalnfleld, N. J.Tel. 607.

FOR RENT.Seven-room dwelling, im-provemet«; acre plot; clo«e school, trol¬

ley and Erl#; »70, Including fuel; readynow. William Tyndail, Wald wick. BergenCounty. N. J.

FRB_ Hat of house« for eai» and rant. ¡Writ» VAN WINKLE CO.. Rutberford.N.J.to Mar ron BnMXËBS rCKPOSB-

Desirable Office Space.Ziegler Building, £12 (th Ave.. -(3d St.

lOrTB-orriCEg : ï-Tstory fireproof "build-ing; exceptionally light space. 100 6th av.

MÖaTOAOK MONEY

$4,000,000.Mortgage money to lend. High class metro¬politan property. Btoddard Moifman. 2S8Broadway. Tel. .918 Barclay. 1:30 to 11.

Active Trading of LargeAnd Small Apartments

Riverview on Upper .Broadwayand Carlton in East BistStreet Among Sales

Slawson & Hobbs sold for the WeitHeights Realty Company the River-view, a seven-story apartment, »OOjcIOO,with seven storrs, at the southwestcorner of 149th Street and Broadway,to the Meister Builders, Inc., I. Meis¬ter president. The property was heldat $100,000.

Ruland & Benjamin, Inc., sold forthe 157 East Eighty-first Street, Inc.,represented by Culver «fe Co., to an in¬vestor, the nine-story apartment knownas the Carlton at 157 East Eighty-first Street, 66x100.The H. & E. Realty Company, Her¬man Berson president and SamuelWacht jr. secretary, sold to HenryOrdel 82 Wadsworth Avenue, a five-story modern apartment, 42x100, ar¬ranged for thirty families, held nt$90,000. Arthur L. Shaw was thebroker.Hannah Bergfield sold to .F. Finkel-stein the five-story flat nt 400 Man¬hattan Avenue, 27x94.10.LeRoy Sober sold to J. Clarence Da-vies the three-story tenement at 12oEa»t 12üth Street, 26x100.11.Filomena Citerelln ««»sold to An¬toinette Celentano the three-story tene¬ment at 2418 Second Avenue, 2<Jx60.Bertha Levy sold to Aaron Obersteinthe four-story tenement at 1418 Sec¬ond Avenue, southeast corn%r of Sev¬enty-fourth Street, 20x60.Valentine Brech sold to a client ofLouis W. OsterweiB the five-story ten¬

ement 1598 Avenue A, 25x98. Fred¬erick W. Kroehlc jr., whs the broker.Morris Welch sold to Bernard Wan»derer the five-story tenement withstore at 1748 Avenue A, 25x94.Valentine Brech sold to a client ofLouis W. Osterweis a five-story tene¬ment, 1698. Avenue A, 26x98. FrederickW. Kroehle jr. was the broker.Lewis ,T. Stovall sold to the King <£tJohnson Company the five-story tene¬ment at 178 West 137th Street, 25x99.11. ,Harry T. Jefferson sold to Josef Pe-trovec the four-storjktenement at 407East Seventy-first {Street, 19x102.2.Morris Iser sold to Mollic Cherkessthe three-story tenement at 48 EastThird Street'* 20x50.Carmela Boffa 3old to Valeria Ca-pozzi the seven-story tenement at 717Mulberry Street, 24.11x100.

Old Polyclinic HospitalTaken for Trade

Henry Hof leased for the New YorkPolyclinic Hospital and MedicalSchool, Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst,president, the former hospital build¬ings at 214-220 East Thirty-fourthStreet, 96x100, to Edward Smolka undAlexander Greif for twenty-one years.After extensive alterations the lowerportion of the premises will be occu¬pied by the lessees for their plumbingsupplies business and the balance formanufacturing lofts and showrooms.

New York Exporter BuysShow Place at Little SilverAt Little Silver, N. J., the Gibbons

property, one of the show places ofthe Jersey coast, situated on theShrewsbury River, was sold at auctionby Arthur C. Sheridan for $67,500 cashto Louis R. Buckbee, vice-president ofthe exporting firm of Cook & Bern-heimer, 105 Hudson Street, this city,The estate consists of a large house,lodge, outbuildings and fifty-three acresfronting on the main read and theShrewsbury River.

«

Wyoming Valley Coal Co.7Buys on Newtown Creek

The Wyoming Valley Coal Company,Sanders A. Wertheim, president, pur¬chased 1181 to 1207 Grand Street, nearNewtown Creek, from Charle3 H. Rey¬nolds & Sons. The property consistsof about twenty-eight lots on whichthe company will erect coal pockets.J. M. Riehle represented the buyers.

Operators Get Bronx StoresThe Arnold Investing Company, Inc.,

operators, M. Rosenthal president, havepurchased the building containingeleven stores, at the northwest cornerof Beck Street and Leggett Avenue,the Bronx. The property was held at|75,000. M. Finkel was the broker.

Operator ResellsBusiness BuildingOn Fifth Avenue

Takes East Side Tenementsin Trade for StructureBought From Bank;Deals in Greenwich St.

Samuel Brener resold to Mayer &Mayer a modern five-story office, storeand showroom building at 206 FifthAvenue, extending to 1126 Broadway,purchased last week from the EmigrantIndustrial Savings Bank. The building,which is between Twenty-fifth andTwenty-sixth streets, is on a site 28...X11.2x irregular. In part payment Mr.Brener received the four-story tene¬ments at 228 to 232 East »SeventiethStreet, 100x100, near Third Avenue.Byrne Si Bowman were the brokers.

Greenwich Village SalesWilliam A. White & Sons sold for

Mandelbaum & Lewine, Inc., to an in¬vesting client, the six-story factory atthe northeast corner of Greenwich andWest Twelfth streets, 74x74x irregular.Nathan Wilson as president of the

Occidental Realty Corporation pur¬chased from Greenwood Cemetery thefive-stoj-y building with stores nt 39Greenwich Avenue, northwest cornfer ofCharles Street, 27.3x81, hold at $50,000.The property will be immediately al¬tered. H. Lilly was the broker.

East Side Lofts SoldSpeer & Co. sold for Augustus H.

Tennis to an investing client a seven-

story loft building at 47 East Nine¬teenth Street, 25x100.George S. Runk sold for Adam Hap-

pel 1790 First Avenue, a live-storyloft building, having a frontage oftwenty-five feet. The entire buildingis now rented to one tenant, SternBrothers, dealers in Indian motorcycles.Geza Eichhorn represented the buyer.

a-'-

Sell $456,000 Mortgageof Tall Fulton Street Loft

Lawrence, Blake & Jewell have solda first mortgage of $456,000 at 5^iper cent for seven years, at 106-108Fulton Street, with an extension to 14Dutch Street, improved with a fifteen-story office building. The property isowned by the Broadway-John StreetCorporation.

Childs & Humphries has negotiatedfor Howard A. Raymond a first mort¬gage of $88,000 at 5«V*s per cent on

the property at 31-33 East TenthStreet, an eight-story left. 44.5x94.9.

Leases of Apartment SuitesPease «fe Elliman leased apartments

at 1075 Park Avenue to H. Frank; .it71.3 Lexington Avenue to KillenKeough; at 1157 Lexington Avenueto Mrs. A. E. Mayer; at 105 EastFifteenth Street to Joseph Mumma;at 71 West Twelfth Street to RobertSherwood; at 146 East Forty-ninthStreet to Miss Beatrice Heywood; at171 West Fifty-seventh Street toIsaac Greenberg; at 378 CentralPark West, to W. E. Blecher, and toMrs. E. A. Locke, and at 310 WestSeventy-ninth Street to Harold C.Mayer.Worthington Whitehouse, Inc., leased

a large duplex aparment at 210 ParkAvenue to Mrs. Robert L. Stevens.

Fine East Side Homes RentedPease «fe Elliman have leased for

Charles Wanniger to Dr. Harry Sellerthe three-story dwelling at 114 EastNinety-fifth Street.Worthington Whitehouse, Inc., has

rented for the New York Trust Com¬pany, the dwelling at 57 East Sixty-seventh Street to Cornelius W.Provost.

a

Fíat in Dyckman Section SoldThe Manning-Bernhard Realty and

Construction Company sold the five-story modern apartment at 114 and 116Nagle Avenue, 40x129.6, to Effie F.Peirce. The house contains twenty-four suites and two stores.

Estate Sells Yonkers PlotThe Robert E. Farley Organization

sold for the estate of William B. Ricea plot in the Gray Oaks section ofYonkers, N. Y., to Frank Wekerle, ofYonkers.

MONEY TO LOAN. MONEV TO LOAN.

S%% MONEYAn unlimited amount to loan on

desirable improved real estate inManhattan and Bronx.Low fees, prompt answers, early

closings.Title Guarantee & Trust Co.Capital, surplus and profits, $20,000,000

176 Broadway, sNew York

TO LET FOR BUSINESS PURPOSES

STORE andLOETSBetween 5th Ave. and BroadwayImmediale or Feb. lit Occupancy5 E. 17TH ST., to 18TH ST.Sixth loft .fO.OOO

15 EAST 17TH ST.Fifth loft (25x75).$2,800

17 EAST 17TH ST.Store and basement.$4,300rhli-ahloft (25* .0). 2,000Fourth loft . 8.000

20 EAST 17TH ST.id loft (2r>xH.ï> Immediate_»2,4004th loft, immediate . 3,40*

416 BROADWAYCorner Canal

4th-6th Lofts. 20 windows_«2500Immédiat« possession. No Mfg.

I. H. POLLACK110 \V. 40th St. Bryant 0161

BROOKLYN REAL ESTATE

¦jr»tï-«i-««r\*Ta«-> You buy don't fall to »ee ourRRFllKP sew mode», moderate pricedULO. \Jl\L» 2-iaraily dwellings. Fine«* inBrooklyn; pamphlet upon request. John F.Churlo Corpn., 132 Hlghlawn Avenue. teaBeaah subway to Kin»« Highway station-Avenue R end.

LONG ISLAND REAL ESTATE

ALONG THE BOt'TH »HOKBDeairable rrepertl««. for »alt» <sr rea*.

Fnrnibh«d Cottages.JEREMIAH BOBBINS

Mat» attest Tard. BaUayV.» «»

FARMS FOR SALE

Netv «ïeratey

NEW JERSEY FARM BARGAINSFree ilíus. cátalos» give details hundreds ofbargains throughout state, map shown;many fully equipped, Immediate possessionorle«-.«« $1.000 up, easy terms. Call or write.NEW JERSEY FARM AGENCY. 164 68Nassau St., N. T. C.

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS TO WET

Bonny Castle601 West 191st St.

Highland Court600 West -92d St

Elevator Apartment.4 Rooms, #75; S Room». S85;

6 Booms, $90; 8 Booms. 2 Baths, (12S

BEAI. ESTATE BROKERS

|| Established 1853 i]Horace S. Ely& Co.

REAL ÉSTATEBishop Building, 7*9 WUlltuat Street,

EDWIN H.HESSBusiness Property Management

A Weht* Specialized 3trtiet259 - 5th Av«. Mad. Sq. 8398

Busine» Lj P" ¿ C2 CountryFropertiei I ¦

, *c **¦»«.* Propertiea

~Cctnm»)jg¿¿Í .Property-.ir oml i

>j'i;wl t toll .:7V'-»

Realty Itwesteents ¥!#fiS_fi&OT:CUSHMAN ft WAKBFIELD, INC..

ti Kast 4-d St. T«l. üutTajr HiU TU«.

TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINGLOST. FOimO AND REWARD

LOST-.«und«|r Afternoon, «apphlre bar pin.Reward. t> «IQ, Trlbta-ve/^Lost Bankbook«

LOST--nenl,book No. 747,74$ of the UntenDlmp (»«v!ngs Baftk is missing. Any per¬son having a <Sla,m to it Is herebv calle«!î,f°î?. .'" iF^HQi th* .MUt,° within t«?n daysor submit xo having said passbook canceledand a new one Issued.

LSftX.T,ï,,',,l'**«N,>; CO**«2«« «f the UnionDime Bavins* Bank Ig mltwing. Any s»er-son having u .aim to it is hereby Wiledupon to pretaemt the »same within ten dayslai,,« »to ha,vtn«» **W passbook canceledann a new one tissued.

l.«3«T.Bankbook No. »«3,114 of ON Unionu .Sav«n*l« Bank is missing. Any jx>r-ï.°JlJT'in* * cllt"T* to ft «¦ hereby calledupon to present the k«.i» within t*n daysor submit to having said passbook canceledanil n new one Issue!.

LOST.Rankbook No. 605,214 'st ttie UtSltTaBhav n/ «8*mV °ttn.k !s ".»»*.*¦¦«. Any personhavlns a claim to it is hereby called uponto present the same wtl.in ten «lays or sub¬mit to having said passbook canceled anda new one issued.

L^Ir.rn rl<bfi,k ,^°-63**a'13 oi GrWBWtchSavings Bank, 248 Sixth Ave., N. Y CityPayment »topped. Please return to hank.

FURNISHED ROOMS TO LETWest Stan

18TH' ST. <22 7th Av.)~Fln« rooms; hotwater; married, business people ; refer¬ence.

01 ST ST.. Broadway.On«, two room« dayweek or month. 2465 Broadway.HELP WANTED FEMALE

MiscellaneousUNUSUAL opportunity for woman under 40'good education; attractive personality. In¬itiative cHsentia! to learn gotxj, secure bual-ness good »alary to titart. Call 11-1. Suite100«, 565 6th ave.

V* OMAN-. 22 to 40 to place aupplementaryscnoo! clues; $1,400, with future; mayspend winter In South If preferred. Tay¬lor, 522 5th Ave., room 322.

HELP WANTED MALEBOT. 16-15 years of age, in downtown com¬mercial house. Apply ¡Saldo & Co., 67Wall St., room 507.

DOLLS.Experienced prefers, «poHs<*n*r«gluerB, grinders, dippers and Jolnero.U. S. Doll Co.. 54 Fulton st., Brooklyn

THE NEW TORE. NEW HATER a,HARTFORD RAILROAD COMPACT?

HEN WANTED

Regular positions for com¬petent men whose work is. satisfactory as:

Machinists.*6c to 71c per boorBoilermakers.87c ta 7«k- per hourBlacksmiths.66c to 76c per hourArmature Winders.66c to 76c per hourCar Inspectors at Repairmen.6Z<1 par heatHelpers.first /ear» «5c per hour.

The above rates are those agreed upeswith Committee of Mechanical DepartmentAssociation.

This Is not a «strike against tne railroad;It is a strike waged against a reduction inrates of pay ordered by the United State*Railroad Labor Board, effective July 1, isaa.

Apply. 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., to Superin¬tendent's office at 122d at. and Willis av».Bronx. N. Y.

F. M. CLARK, Superintendant,New York, New Haven «% Hartford R _. Ce.

SITUATIONS WANTED FEMALEChamta-enn&HIa

CHAMBERMAID-MATD Young Frenchgirl; 2 excellent city references. P.,

Miss Hofmnyer's Agency, 10 Kaat 43d St.,:¡d floor. Tel. 8947 Murray Hill.

CHAMBERMAID WAJTRBtSS YoungIrish girl; city apartment preferi-ett

good references. II., Miss Hofmayer'sAgeni:y, 10 Bam 43d St., Jd floor. Tele¬phone 8947 Murray Hill.

CHAMBERMAID, assist waitress; veryneat, nice experienced Irish girl; excel¬

lent references; city; $60. Mason's Agency,47 East 44th st.

CHAMBERMAID-SEAMSTRESS Young,neat, willing and reliable; best refer¬

ences. Dang «fc Boecherer Co., 43 W. *3d at.

CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS.Young ; thor¬oughly capable; excellent. Miss Fitz¬gerald's Bureau, 366 Sth av. Si

CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS, young, neat.highly recommended. Mias Hall's Bureau.

17 W. 44th st.

CHAMBERMATD-MAID. English ; excellent.Miss Hall's Bureau, 17 W. 44th. Vander-

bl>«. 8340.

CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS, neat, young ;well recommended; $70. Wettler'a Agency.

20 West 43d.

Cooks «..-,..

COOK.Young Irish woman, very neat ex¬cellent cook; tactful with other help.

A., Miss Hofmayer's Agency, 10 East 43dSt.. 8d floor. Tel 8947 Murray Hill.

COOK-WAITRESS-CHAMBERMAID To-

f:ether; capable girls; city apartment,nthrop Bureau, 47 West <2d. Room 626.,

Longacre 8743.

COOK, 'Irish, excellent disposition; expertcook, excellent manager; highly recom¬

mended. Miss Hall's Bureau. 17 W. 44th st.Vanderbllt 8340._COOK-CHAMBERMAID-WAITRESS . «Two

nice young girls: beat long references;$146. Wettler'a Agency, 20 West 43d. Long-acre 8896.

COOK.Young Finn, highly recommended;very superior wojrnan; city family. E..

Hofmayer's Agency, 10 East 43d St., »-**floor.

_

COOK.Ypung, Scotch Protestant: city; high¬ly recommended; good manager. Winthrop

Bm-eau, 47 West 42d, Room 62S. Longacre8743. _j_COOKS. Norwegian. Irish, Scotch ; city «rcountry all hlgh'y recommended. Miss

Hall's Bu-**au. 17 W. 44th st. Vanderb.lt.340._|_COOK, capable, young; $80; anywhere:

three years last place. Mlis Shea'»Agenc-y. « E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774._COOK.Young, capable Irish girl; four

years' references. Winthrop Bureau, 47West 42d, Room 626. Longacre «743.

COOKS, waitresses, housuworsers. TlnksAndresen, Scandinavian Agency. 2!»4

Broadway, «3d. Schuyler 7992._COOKS, chambermaids, waitresses, laun-

alresses; Finnish girls. Agency, 6. East125th st. Harlem 6616.

COOK.German; first class in all branches ;excellent reference». Lang «fc Boecherer

Co., 43 W. 33d ct.

COOK.Young; good manager; imusualreferences. Miss Fitzgerald's Bureau, 366

6th av.__,_COOK-.Excellent. Finnish; $85. Wettler's

Agency, 20 West 43d. Longacre 8896.

COOK.Good, German; good referent*««; $70.Wettler'a Agency, 20 West 43d.

Day Workers

DAY'S WORKER.First class laundrew-cl*aner: neat, competent, responsible

woman; highly recommended; $4.1*. Mr«.Mason's Agency, 47 East 44th «t.

DAYWORKER, laundress or eleamsr; goof».«juick worker. K. Miss Hofmayer's Agency.

10 East 43d St.. 3d floor. Telephone l»47Murray HI».

________

General Hoaseworker«, Etc.

HOUSEWORKER.Very neat, nice, eettledwoman: thoroughly experienced; exceU

lent references; apartment; $66. Mr«.Mason's Agency, 47 Bant 44th at.

_

HOUSEKEEPER, working ¡for bachelor,gentlemen; neat, refined, exceptionally

competent; most hlMly recommended; !.".Maison'» Agency, 4Î *_ast 44th at.

..

SITUATIONS WANTED FEMALEGenera! Ilouarworliers, Et«.

HOmeWORKBR <»?>clUh Prot*st*nO.Very nest, thoroughly expertoneed; ana,

two a part men) e_c«11etit reference*; $68.Mason's Agency, 47 Bast 44th at.

HOUSEWORKER.Scotch Protestant; «r»ryneat, refined, e-xcepnonalljr competent;highly recommended; rüy, $66. Mason's

Agency, 47 K»»t 44(1) «t.

liülWSWORK-8, (good cook. waitress;$79; apartment jnefsrred ; long r*fer-

uncM. Mies Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41_*.Murray Ulli «774.

HOUBEWORKER. UnRlish. capable, re-lU-ie; city only; very highly recom-

mended. Mia« Hall« Bureau, 17 Well 44th«t. Vanderbllt 8340.

HOUSEWORKER.Young Irish girl; high-eat reterence*; city apartment. Wln-throp Bureau, 47 West 42-d. Longscre 874».Room 6Î6,

HOUSEWORKERS. Finnish girls; aloo late¬ly landf.il. Agency, 58 Bast 12ilh »t.

Harlem 6 ¦'. 1S.

HOUSEWORKER.Young good rook ; ex¬ceptional référence». Miss Fltxgerald'sBureau, 366 $th av.

OovernpHsei", Bte.NURSERY GOVERNESS, French, excellent.Miss Halt's Bureau, 17 W. 44th. Vander-

blU ID40.

NURSERY GOVERNESS-Voun» Frenchgirl, does not «peak English : can be

seen by appointment only. G . Ml»» Hof-mayer's Agency, 3 8 Eaxt 43d St., 3d floor.

I>&undressesLAUNDRESS CHAMBERMAID, young,neat, very competent highly recommend¬

ed; Westchester Cotinty preferred; ft».Mrs. Mason's Agency, 47 Baut 44th St.

LAUNDRESS-CHAMBERMAID, neat, com¬petent, conscientious; small family, city;excellent references; $66. Mr«. Maaon's

Agency. 47 Baa* 44th St.

LAUNDRESS.First class; capable worker:best references. Lang & Boecherer Co.

43 W. 23d st.

LAUNDRESS.Excellent, young; Weetchesterpreferred; $T6. WetUer's Agency, 20 West

4»«,

SECOND LAUNDRESS.Very neat, thor-tmghly experienced; most highly reeotn-

mende«!; «rlty family; $65. Mrs. Mason'sAgency, 47 EaBt 44th st.

Name-, Etc.ASSISTANT NURSE or USEFUL MAID.Two young Canadians: good, willing girls.Me., Mta« Hofmayer's Agency, 10 East 4?.d

st., 3d floor. Telephon« 8947 Murray Hill.

INFANT'S NURSE. Scotch; very capable,experience's, conscientious, reliable: highlyrecommended. Miss Hall's Bureau, 17 W.44th «t. Vanderbllt 8340.INFANT'S NURSE.Experienced, compe-tenet and willing to care for older chil¬dren; excellent references. Lang Si Boech¬erer Co., 43 W. 33d st.

INFANT'S NURSE--Middle-aged, excellentreferences; $70-$75. Wettlers Agency, 20We«t 48d.

NURSE <Scotch Protestant).Neat, compe¬tent, most oonnctenilous; walking child;city; splendid references; $75. Mason'sAgency. 47 East 44th at.

NURSE, for infant or growing children;capable young American: $70. Shea's

Agency, 6 E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774.

NURSE-CHAMBERMAID Young: thor¬oughly capable excellent references. MissFitïgerald's Bureau. 366 6th av.

NURSE.Young; Protestant; thoroughlycapable; exceptional. Miss Fitzgerald'sBureau. Î66 5th- av.

NURSE.Young*. 2 children; country pre¬ferred. Miss Fitzgerald's Bureau, 366 6th av.

SECOND NURSE, young, lately arrived(Scotch Protestant) ; neat, healthy, nice

disposition; city; $60. Mason's Agency, 47East 44th St.

WaitressesWAITRESS CHAMBERMAID YoungSwede; city apartment: very desirableservant. C, Miss Hofmayer's Agency. 3 0East 43d St., 3d floor. Tel. 894 7 MurrayHill.

WAITRESS CHAMBERMAID, capable,young; well recommended; apartmentpreferred; $60. Miss Sheu's Agency, 6 E.43st. Murray H Ml 6774.

WAITRESS, Scotch; capable, good appear¬ing; $6G; anywhere; long references.ATlss Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41st. MurrayHill 6774.

WAITRESS.Young; thoroughly capable;exceptional references. Miss Fitzgerald'sBureau, 366 6th av.

OfficeTOUNG LADY, 21. as office assistant,

knowledge of typing, tiling, clerical andswitchboard ; excellent references. AddressD 994. Tribune.

MiB-ellan-ousFRIENDS, cook. $70; waitress-chamber¬maid. $60; capable, young; weli recom¬

mended. Miss Shea's Agency, 6 E. 41st.Murray Hill 6774.

BUTCHENMAID-USEFUL. newly arrived,young Irish; $40; city only. Miss Shea's

Agency, 6 E. 41st. Murray Hill 6774.

KITCHENMAID-CHAMBERMAID . Young,Irish; well recommended; $60. Wettler'sAgency, 20 West 43d. ILADIES' MAID (Swiss Proteatant).Neat,

nice appearing, thoroughly experienced:excellent reference; city; $65. Mason'sAgency. 47 East 44th St.

LADY'S MAID.Excellent seamstress; will¬ing and obliging; highly recommended.Lang & Boecherer Co.. 43 W 33d St.

MAID-ATTENDANT. capable. conscien¬tious (Scotch Protestant); exceptionallywell recommended; moat desirable; city,country. Mason's Agency, 47 East 44*h st.

USEFUL MAID, good natured $60. Wett-ler's Agency, i'O West 43d. Longacre 8896.

SITUATIONS tVANTEP MALEDomestic

BUTLERS, cooks, valets, housemen, house-workers who cook; several very efficient

Filipinos; highly recommended. Mason'sAgency. 47 East 44th st.

LUTLER. English; capable, good «appear¬ing; $90; best personal references; any¬

where. Shea's Agency, 6 G. 41«t. MurrayHill 6774.

BUTLERS, second men. housemen andcouples; excellent references. Lang &

Boecherer Co., «3 W. 3»d st.

BUTLER-VALET, best long references; Ger¬man; $100. Wettler's Agency, 20 West

43d.

CHAUFFEUR.Very neat, nice appearingyoung Filipino; careful, skillful driver;

highly recommended. Mrs. Mason's Agency.47 East 44th St.

COOK-BUTLER-VALET for bachelor;young, neat, capable, conscientious Fili¬

pino: exceptionally well recommended.Mason's Agency, 47 E*st 44th et.

COOK-BUTLER. HOUSEWORKER. middle-asced;» well recommended; $80. Wettler's

Agency. 20 Wept 43d.

COUPLE.Belgians; excellent butler andcook: good references. O.. Miss Hof¬

mayer's Agency, 10 East 43d st.. 3d floor.Telephone 8947 Murray Hill.COUPLE. Scotch: useful butler, excclient,cook ; entire work ; highly recommended.

Mi«;» Hall's Bureau, 17 W. 44th st. Vander-bilt $34«._rOUPLK, colored: butler, useful, excellent

cook; $130; entl»* work; anywhere.Shea's Agency, 8 E. 41st. Murray Hilt6774.

COUPLE.French, Swiss; excellent cook,butler-valet; beet long references; $1«0.Wettler's Agency, SO West 43d. Longacre SS»«.

COUPLE, Belgians; butler, cook, entire.work; $1*0; fine references. Mi»» Shea's

Agrency, . K. 4Int. Murray Hill «774.

COUPLE.Good cook-«feamberi_*id-*nraUre«s,,gardener (drives For-.) ; hav* child 7 years ;$10«. Wettler's Agency, 2« West 4Sd.

COUPLE.Colored; good cook, useful butler-chauffeur; $136 up. Wettler*« Agency, $0

West 43d. 1/ongacre 889«.

COUPLES, Finnish; cook*, butlers, chauf¬feurs, etc Agency, 68 East - 116th »t.

Harlem 6616.

COUPLE.Cook, useful Datier: Finnish;$160. Wattier*» Agency, 20 West 43d.

COUPLE.English, excellent cook, butter:city : $179. Wettler's Agency, -6 West iSa,

COUPLE.Swiss; plain coofs, useful busier;$130, Wettler's Agency, M West *.d!yr

SITUATIONS WANTED MAIEDome-tic

COUPLE.Uwedlah ; chambermaid-lAtinnr»*?»,butler-valet; $160. Wettler's Agency, t*

West 43d.

FILIPINO coo«s. I'-.itlers. housemen: experi¬enced; $7(1 up. Wettier » Agency. 20 West

43d.

HOUSEMAN-CHAUFFEUR, yo.ing. --

pendable; $90. Wettier» Agency. 20 Went43d. ;;;_JAPANESE i»oks, butlers. how**»-worl<-rs.chauffeurs; references. Agency. 106 Weit

46th et. Bryant 7737.

MiscellaneousSTENOGRAPHER (231, f«t rears" expedi¬ence ; knowledge bookkeeping ; desires posi¬

tion. Address B 327. Tribune.

"employment agenciesDomestic Helo

ALEXANDER'S AGENCY. 244 "t-»est mth<.th ave). Mornl-S-Jdo 134$. Reliable

domestic help.MRS. KEMP'S AGENCY.Hlgh-gr»_« colors«maid«; reference*. ÎS83 7th ave. Audtt-

bon 2*6«.___^,î___^r!___Ll ^SststtíTuaf.787 Lexington ave., near 61st. Male-Female.2415 Broadway, cor. 89th. Excellent Help.

_FOR SALE_

A WOUNDED, ex-service soldier, serving alit* «"numen for a crime be did not com

mit, is wlthovt funds and is making solidbeaded hand begs hi an endeavor to ob¬tain funds for pardon. Work first class.¡Satisfaction or money back; $2"i each:made tn order on $10 deposit. Address L.326, Ttl-une.

BÜSi-íESS CAROSDiamonds, Jewc-lry, Etc,

DIAMONDS bought and sold for cash.Advlco free. Bennett, 172 B'way. 2d floor-

FurnitureWE PAY highest prices for furniture.

pianos, antiques, bric-a-brac, books, »rt,Kliigsley. S£ University pi. gtuyvesant 2377.

MUSlCAL INSTRUCTION

Great Opportunityfor

Advanced Singerswho desire artistic training

Mr. George Hamlinwill conduct a Special Course in Singing

INSTITUTEOF MUSICAL ART

120 ClareraoRt Ave.»New York City.

For full Information app'y toFrank Damrosch, Director

INSTRUCTION

Language InstructionLearn Spanish, French, Ger¬

man. Italian, English, etc., theBerlitz Way. The Berlitz Con¬versational Method makes studya pleasure and results a cer¬tainty. Best native teachers.Private or class instruction Dayand Evening. Low schedule ofrates. Ask for particulars.

Classes forming every tSMlCiFrench, Spanish, GWrosn,Italia*]. Elementary. Inter¬mediate and Advanced.

Trial Lesson Free.

SCHOOL. OK"

LANGUAGESEST lorft SSO BRANCHESSOW.-4th St. Tel. Pennsylvania 1188Brooklyn.218 Uvtqgiten St. Tel, M »In 194»

BERKELEY-IRVING. SCHOOL FOR BOYS

"From Primary to Callóse." 43d YeerTel. Schmier 4836.

Small classes. Thorough Instructionby experienced teachers. Boys preparedfor nil colleges, technical schools, or forbusiness Swlmmlnir pool; gymnasiumbuilding; roof p ayground.all on prem¬ises. Afternoon outing Classes.L. D. Ray, P_.D.,H_m., 313 W. 83d, N.Y.

THE BROWN SCHOOLOF TUTORING

t41 Vf. 75th St. Tel Colomb-as MM.Founded 1906. Individual instruction,

ward and average pupils all save time.Fall term opens Oct. 2d."A School with an Atmosphère of Work.'*

. .«-..-. Established 50 Year«BALLARD secretarial coursenAiiAAi Rr.olst« New fer Ftl! CI»»«.SrHllfll «1° I-**»- .*«*.. at «3d »t..JK.S. _Vf \JJ-i Centrul Branch Y.W.C_%.

PRATT Stcrtisri.l training, in-ivliu-lstreetion. Register r.«v». Staootiunder sixteen cot aiimirte-.

SUMMONSsupreme court of the state ofnew York, plaintiff designatesnew tork coi'xty as place ofTRIAL. The Farmers' Loan and TrustCompany, n* Trustee under a certain Deedof Trust made by Virginia Furdy Bacon,dat-ad January 18, lftlfi. Plaintiff, againstAnnie Ma»:- Wallace: France« L. Wallacetndlvid_ally and a* administratrix of thee«"t»te of Allen Wallace, deceased and TheFarmers' Loan and Trust Company a«Executor of th« La.t Will and Teslanvntof Virginia Purdy Bacon, deceased. De¬fendants. .SUMMONS.TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTSAND EACH OF THEM:YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to

answer the complaint in this action, and toverve a copy of your answer, or, if th« "

complaint is not served with this summon».to servo a notice of appearance on thePlaintiff's attorneys within twenty daysafter the service of this summons, ex¬clusive of the day of service. In case ofyour failure to appear, or answer, judg¬ment -.ill be taken against you by defaultfor the relief demanded In the complaint.Dated. New York. June 19th. 19Î2.GELLER. KOLSTON & BLANC. At¬

torneys for Plaintiff. Office and PostOffice Address: 22 Exchange Place.New York. N. Y.TO the defendants, Annie Marie Wallaceand Frances L. Wallace, Individuallynnd ns lidmintstrstrlx of the estate of AllenWallace, deceasedThe Bnnexed summon« in served upe> vouby publication, pursuant to an order of 'theHonorable James O'Mailey. a Justice of theSupreme Court of the State of New York,dated the 6th day of October, 1982. andfiled with the complaint in the office of theClerk of the County of New York, at theCounty Court Hous«. In the Borough ofManhattan, City, County and State of NewYork.

Date«). New York. October .tb. 19.2.GELLER. ROLKTON & BLANC. At¬

torneys for Plaintiff, Office and P«>tOffice Address : 22 Exchange Place,New York. N. Y.

STORAGE tSOTÏCES~TO: THE ESTATE OF FANNK CURTIS'.Hoadley. Joseph H. Hoadley, Mrs GraceH. Wade. .T. J Powers. Werner & 11c-Olvney, Leopold W. Harburger, MmmMorris, Surrogates' Court of New YorkCounty.

Yo'4 and each of you are hxreby notifiedthat the time for the payment of our Henupon the property hereinafter detwrlbedhaving expired, after due nottee thereofhad been «riven you, we will cause suvhproperty, to wit: Chiffoniers, beds, chairs,rockers, dressing tables, dresser*, dining-room furniture, parlor and library furni¬ture, bedroom -iirnltwre. contests of dresserdrawers, trunks, boxee, barrels and suit¬cases, silverware, wearing apparel, pic¬ture*, painting*, rugs, carrets. bedding,linens, draperies, china, glaisware, bric-a-brac, perennal effects, pi« nos. vlctrolae,phonograph«, musical instruments, sewingmachines, iceboxes, cutlery, lumps. Jewelry,papers, stationery, stored in I_»e Brothers.Inc., Warehouse by you or In your name orIn which you have an Interest, to b* sold;at public r.uctlon according u> the statut«in such case made and provided, at Merle'sRooms, Inc., ISS Saat 1.5th Street, New-York City, on Monday, November 13th,192S. at lv:S0 A. M., and ¡r cite sale thereofis »ot completed on j::tid Cute the samewilt be continued at the same place oneach and every Tuesday, "Wedne-day andFriday thereafter. -.Ringing at 10.-30 A.M.. and continuing u^ill the »n;> tj com¬pleted. UK_T BROTHERS, INC.