524
RECORD AND GUIDE
October 21, 1922
To Help Sell and Rent
BUSINESS PROPERTY
To assist owners, brokers and agents in selling and renting
Business Properties of every description. The New York
Herald now publishes a Business Property Guide. This Guide
is the only feature of its kind published by a New York news¬
paper, and together with the publicity given it, marks a degree of
cooperation with Business Property advertisers unequalled in the
New York field.
If there is a market anywhere for your property it should be
rented or sold if listed in The Herald's
Business Property Guide
THE guide contains a list of business properties to let and
for sale, including office space, desk room, show rooms, lofts,
stores, factory property, studios, basements, garages and build¬
ings. Properties are grouped under their proper headings and
classified according to location, and frequently their rental, for
the convenient reference of buyers and renters. The guide is
published every Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday in the Real
Estate Pages.
THE NEW YORK HERALD
280 Broadway Telephone 10,000 Worth
CO-OPERATION OF RELIABLE BROKERS INVITCO
OFFERED
Lofts. 90iS0. W, 25th. for Feb. 1st. $7,500 (B)
6 acr. Estate. $300,000. Los Angeles (S-EI
8 sty. Apt. Ha.. Newark. N. J,. 152i92, $360,000
(S-EI
Factory. 40.000 8. 1.. Portland. Me,. $75,000 (S)
25.000 acre. Potash Prospects. Texas. $15 (S)
Factory. 27.000 s. f.. W. 30's. Plot T4ll00. $125,000
(S)
20.000 acrs. Coal & Iron Mining, Ala,. $400,000 (S)
WANTED
Large Equity in Long Leased Property (B)
Money for Mortgages in Atlantic CUy <M)
Plot 10.000-15.000 s. f.. Manhattan ApU Ha. (B)
Explanation. B—Buy: E—Exchange; M—Mortgage:
B—Rent; S—Sell.
AMERtCAN BUREAU OF REAL ESTATE
All About Beal Bstate Everything—Everywhere
MODERN "AfflSBKE" SYSTEM-
18-20 W. 34th St. (Astor-Court Bldg.), New York
Telephone 0396-0397 Pennsylvania
ALL ITEMS TREATED STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
(See Previous Weekly Ads.)
Buys Riversicle Drive Corner
F. V. Calder & Co. resold for the Colworth
Kealty Corporation to Anthony Campagna the
north corner of Riverside dr and 145th st, a
vaeant plot measuring 103 feet on the Drive
and 58.8 feet on the street. It adjoins the 6-
sty elevator apartment house at GSI Riverside
(Ir, which he built in 1919. the first house of
its kind to be erected after the armistice.
The land measures 103 feet on tbe Drive and
.'iS S feet on the street. Mr. Campagna bought
it principally to preserve the light aud air of
the adjoining structure. He will probably
erect an apartment house on the site at a
total cost of $350,000.
HEIL & STERN
Member of Real Estate Board, N, Y.
Real Estate
Business Property Specialists
1165-1167 BROADWAY (n. w. cor. 27lh St.)
Telephone: Watkins 42S0
Builders Assemble Site
J. Axelrod & Son bought from Milo M.
Belding the vacant plot, 37 6x102.2, on the
north side of West 71st st, 187.G feet west of
Central Park West; also, from E. E. Mathews,
19 West 71st st, adjoining the foregoing, and
from the estate of Mary Oakley 21 West 71st
st, each a 4-sty and basement brick dwelling,
and each on a lot 25x102.2,
On the combined plot the new owners will
erprr a l-'i-sty elevator apartment house. The
builders have t^rcctod in this section the Cam-
briclce Hotel, at ((• West fiSth st, and now have
in Ihc course of (onstruction the Hotel Glad-
:<ione.
DANIEL H. JACKSON
REAL ESTATE OPERATOR
OFFERINGS INVITED
Straoss Bide, 565 Sth Ave., Saite 1210
Pbone: Murray Hill 47(S
BROOKS & MOMAND
Member of Real Estate Board
Real Estate Mortgages
lit BROADWAY
Phone* I20S '^â– ctor
Dyckman Tract Corners Sold
The Brensam Realty Co.. Samuel Brener,
president, so'd to a client of Byrne & Bowman,
the o sty brick apartment house with stores
at the northwest corner of Sherman av and
•J-7th St. on plot 100x100. In part payment
Mr. Brener took the 7-sty and basement ele¬
vator :ipartment house 516 and 518 West 151st
st, on a Iilot 50x99.11, between Broadway and
.\iusterdani av.
.Tamis .T. Martin & Co, sold for Jules Breu¬
chaud to the Brensam Ri',ilty Co., S;imu£l
Brener. president, the northwest corner of
ITSih st and Broadway, a 6-sty elevator apart¬
ment house, known as Seafield Arms, with
stnres, ]03xl45x irregular. The property was
held at .??.."0,000,
Investor Buys Carlton Apartments
Ruland & Benjamin, Inc., has sold for 1.57
East ,Slst Street, Inc., represented bv Culver
>^- Co , to an invistor. I."i.'il59 Bast Slst St. a
9 sty anil basement elevator anartment house.
Sells Ninth Avenue Comer
William A. White & Sons sold for Mandel¬
baum & Lewine, Inc., the northeast corner of
Ninth av and Little West 12th st, a 6-Bty
briek factory building, on a plot 77.4%x75.6k
It is at the beginning of Ninth av.
W. A. Larned Buys Dwellings
Estate of Henry I'hipps sold to William A.
Larned, who for many years waa world ten¬
nis champion, 442-448 East 57th st, adjoin¬
ing the southwest corner of Av A (formerly
Sutton pl), four old 2-sty and basement
brick dwellings, on a plot 71x90, with an
interior annexed vacant plot 72.2x38.3x72.2x
33.-''!4. These parcels are in the new social
center known as the Sutton Square Colony,
where numerous persons of prominence have
established homes during the last 3 years.
Mr. Larned will have tbe houses remodeled
by Cross & Cross, architects, and will occupy
one. Another he will probably lease to a
conirenial neighbor not yet selected.
The new owner of these parcels is presi¬
dent of the Lake Placid Improvement Co.,
which has large holdings on Lake Placid.
He is also a member of the New York Stock
Exchange.
Braender Building Sold
Frederick Brown, operator, purchased the
12-sty Braender Building, 104-112 East 25th
st, 100 feet east of Fourth av and occupying
a plot 100x98.9. The Braonder Building and
Conatruction Co. is the seller. Byrne & Bow¬
man were the brokers. The structure is used
mainly for silk salesrooms. It was held at
$800 000 and is rented for about $116,000.
The structure was built 12 years ago by
Philip Braender and with this sale the
Braender estate has disposed of the last of
its realty holdings. Other properties sold
by Bvrne & Bowman for the Braender estatft
include 20-sty loft building southeast corner
of Fourth av and 24th at, the 16-sty loft
building southwest corner of Broadway and
4th st: and the 12-sty loft building 26-32
West 17th St.
Hotel Joyce in New Hands
J. & E. Realty Corporation sold for Prisa¬
ment Bros, to R, L. Solinsky 31 West 71st st, a-
13-sty and basement U^ik and stone hotel
bui'ding known as Hotel Joyce, on a lot 24.10%
xl02.2. The new owner also acquired the lease
thereof, furniture and good will.
Columbia Oval Auction
There will be an auction sale of 225 lots In
the Gun Hill Road, Bainbridge av and East
snth st section of the East Bronx, known as
Columbia Oval, on Thursday, October 26, at 12
o'clock noon, in the Real Estate Exchange
Salesrooms. No. 14 Vesey st.
Columbia Oval is within a few blocks of the
Mosholu Parkway and Woodlawn stations on
the .Jerome av subway, the 210th st and Web¬
ster av station on the Webster av extension of
thr- Third Av railway, and the Gun HHI rd
(211th st) station on the White Plains av ei-
tonsion of the Lexington av and West Side
(Brnadwav and Seventh av) subway. The Co¬
lumbia Oval lots fronting on Gun Hill rd and
Bainbridce av are in a business zone. The bal¬
ance of the property is rpstricted to Improve¬
ment with dwellings and apartments.
Long Island to Have New Private School
Henry A. Rogers of the Wheatley Hills Real
Estate Corp.. sold for the Valley Land Co. to a
committee nf prominent Long Island residents,
for a private school, a tract of 25 acres at
Greenvale. Lnnp Island, situated on the north
side of Flushing and Nnrth Hemnstead Turn-
I'ike. between Bull's Head and Brookville,
where they will establish a day school for
girls and boys to serve the communities com-
nrised within the district bounded by Long
Ts'and Sound on the north. Cold Spring Har¬
bor on the east. Garden City on the south, and
Mnnhasset on the wost.
The srhool will be operated, under a board
of trustees, hv B, Lord Buckley, the Head¬
master of Buckley School. Now York, arid
Lawrence School at Hewlett, L. T. It is in¬
tended that in point of equipment, facilities
and educational methods, the school shall be
second to none in the country. Classes will
be provided for boys and girls beginnine with
the age of 5 and carrying them through nine
classes tn the age of 14. Plans have been
(lro"-Ti hv .Tnhn 'T. Samnson. school architect,
and have been approved by a committee, of
which .Tulian Peabody ia a member. The
buiidinjrs will provide amply for at least 180
pupils and readi'v lond themselves to enlarge¬
ment. They sbnnld bo ready for occupancy the
fall term of 1923. It is proposed to incorporate
under the Eduoation Law and to vest the per¬
manent onntrnl of the School in a Board of
Trustops. constituted as follows: Bronaon Win-
thron, rhnrios Stoolo. F, N Doub'eday, De-
vorenx Mi'burn. r.renvillo Clark. D. S. Tgle-
bnrt. Childs Frick. .John T. Pratt. Paul D.
Cravath .T Cl. Milburn. E. D. Morgan. Richard
Derby. noT.qnnny K. .lay, Claronce C. Pell and