Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 28, 1916, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    14
HARRISBURG REAL ESTATE BOARD
You Can Obtain Information These Properties From Any Member
OFHCEIIS
I! '! Herman P. Miller, President.
]' 1! John K. Glpplc, Vice-President.
* m rjj j • J! C. Vernon Rettew, Secretary.
Money I IcICCCi 111 <> Edward Mocslein, Treasurer.
j| j| MEMBERS
Harrisburg Real Estate li a £s.' Wfc * 1003 Nor,h ™" 1
!' M. R .Allcnian, 145 North Front
kO . ft < 1 street, Steelton.
Sure to VIFOW !j Baokenstoss Brothers, 15 North
11 ! > Second street.
! | !| rf. M. Bird, Union Trust Bfdg.
11 '[ W. P. Buslinell, 1000 North Third
'! T" > r m ~ . '! street.
Uoil t fail to read our new edition of j; Robert A. Carl, 14 North Market
FACTS AND FIGURES .and become ac- # Einstein & Spooner, Spooner Bldg.
j> . , . . . !' M. A. Fought, 272 North street.
; quainted with the many splendid opportuni- !; J. E. oippie, mi Market street.
!>.... . . !' W. S. Harris, 1851 Whitehall street.
ties which our lists of properties offer to William E. JONES, 204 south Thir
the in\ estor real estate purchased and pUr- ( > Augustus i.utz, 309 N. second st.
. , ... I 1 John S. Maloney, 1619 Green street.
chased now will pay you BIG. |j A. S. Miller & Son, 18th and State
| c 1 streets.
| 1 1 Miller Brothers & Co., Locust and
]! Court streets.
! _ J! E. Moeslein, 424 State street.
MILLER BROTHERS & COMPANY ji •££—■•-
; ! 1 C. Vernon Rettew, 307 Market St.
Member Harrlnburg Ileal Instate Bonrd !' ' ' Rohrer it: Son. Bergner Bldg.
I <1 George - 11. Slireiner, 14th and
J | Forster s'reets.
S Locust and Court Streets !l ■*< C. Thompson, 2039 North
] 1 Second street.
J < | P. Vanderloo, 307 Market street.
ii Burton Van Dyke, 900 North Six-
E Jj teenth street.
A. C. Young, 3 4 N. Second street.
I Real Estate For Sale
B 22 X. IMb Street, near Market— ! 1829-1820V&-1R31 N. 3d St. 11)12 Sunquclianna Street 3- •
S 214-story brick house. 9 rooms three 2V&-story brick houses; story brick house: 8 rooms and *
and bath; hot and cold water; sewered; papered; fine location; bath; front porch- Improve
f side entrance; rear drive alley; I set back frOm building line; inents. Price S2OOO.
g paved street; front porch. See porches can be added. ,
J HIP about price. 201 Hamilton Street —3-story ~" 3 Delaware Avenue —3-story |
___ ... „ brick house; 8 rooms and bath'; brick house; 8 rooms and bath; U!
Z3o 'laelny street steam heat; side entrance: splen- front porch; improvements, Price
brick house; 9 rooms and bath; dld condition; good location.
outkitchen: electricity; gas; ce- 1 i r |,. P *4.100
mented cellar with hot and cold '
water; front porch; balcony; side 1231 nerry Street 3-story i R,n s '*tb Street 3-story
and front bay windows; gas | brick and frame; all improve- brick house; 9 rooms and bath; h
range; size of lot 21x98 feet; cor- ] nients; front porch; 7 rooms and cit >' steam heat; Improvements;
ner property. l'rlce *1S00; now | bath. Price $2300. Rented now ' interior finish hardwood; stone
rented at (30. !at Sl7. trimmings; desirable property; fl
I * centrally located. Price sjidUOO. _
115 Verbeke Street 3-storv u ■•• Second Street —3-story | ,
blick house; 8 rooms and bath; house, 9 rooms and bath, 1432 Walnut Street 1 nrv n
hot and cold water; furnace; gas; !]" VJ nS Vi e ' s ? 3 heat- ; ] lr j c i t all( j frame house- 9 rooms kl
ed' ltr Prlce'°B42o *'*" tuBtruct * se'ssfom* mfdiat9 P ° S " | and bath; stTam°Tit? 'from 1
ed. Price 4200. ' ' | porch; corner property; lot 15x90 I
Mwench Street 3-story feet. Price 93r>70.
—O7 !N. 4<h Street 2-story ! brick house; 8 rooms and bath
brick house; 8 rooms and bath; j front porch; Improvements. Prlee o A >
hot and cold water; furnace: sras I _ - 05 HI-IRKM Street .3-story W
and fixtures; laundrv; i 2122 A Monro si ' r ° oms }n (1 city ■
Price e s3Bool° e ' i " bath; lEf SF nlnt I
M. A. FOUGHT, 272 North Street I
™ Member Heal IXnfc Board *
FOR RENT ; For Sale or Exchange
The Holland Apartments <
25 S. FRONT STREET < mm ."one!"'®" 1,1 tlie ' auto busl -
From Nov. 1, 1916 i Hee nie for a Bnap prlce -
Apartments of nine and ten spacious rooms each. One apartment * 4 f> VAlT*.rr,
SKSSuS"""" < .OUNG
VAINDERLOO, Owner
J I "° W ' ora ' nl In Ike Young lllilu
.o ,Inrr,l >'"-K Ileal IXnte Hoard 4 34 \OItTII SISCOND STKKIiT
1 V Secoml Street, or your own broker 7 „-
Bell Phone 971-J i „ ,
A . . , . . . . Member llbg. Iteol Estate Hoard
Homes of Quality and Convenience
cont are locatec^^j
ut street m the ] 900 block. They are well constructed and carefully planned with
every advantage and with all improvements completed.
These beautiful houses are indeed differ ent from the average.
In quality, construction, workmanship, comfort and price they are unsurpassed
An early visit will be well word, your while, that you may sec and thus know of an unusual opportunity
J. E. GIPPLE
Market St. Ree]E.,, Bell phone 4259
Member of Harrlsburjr llral KstnU- Hoard.
SfcWRDAY EVENING, HAKRISHURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 28, 1916.
re %
Announcement
' i
W. F. Bushnell
has purchased the business of the firm of Rettew &
Bushnell, Real Estate and Insurance Agency, and
will maintain the office in the established location.
1000 N. Third Street
Real Estate and Insurance
Member or Harrisburg Real list ate Board
/ \
FOR SALF FOR SALE
New frame house with 6 rooms
1923 N. 2d St., 3-sory brick. and bath, porch, side entrance.
~ ' ... lot 20 by 100 ft. to 20-ft. alley.
(14 Capital St., 3-storj brick. Location. 2123 Swatara street. A
854 S. Cameron St, 3-story' real bargain at #IBOO
frame. j. E. GIPPI.K
518 S. 14th St., 3-story brick. L 1251 Mrket Street
2028-30 Briggs St., 2-story
brick.
IRO<JHESS 17 O 1
10 lots, Redwood and Ash Sts., X 1 Or oSle
w1118e "
! 12 acres, 1% miles east of Lin- '
glestown along State Highway, -All improvements; up-to-date'
good buildings and water. houses Pronositlon favornhlr. trJ
1 acre, east of Colonial Club. nouses, i ropositlon favorable to^
good house and stable, chicken anyone seeking a good home, i
ot trult - Call at once on
H. M. BIRD M. R. ALLEMAN j
UNION TRUST BUILDING ' W 145 N. Wont St. j
Member of Harrisburg Real STEELTON, PA.
Board Member Hbg. Itcnl Estate Board.)
FOR SALE "
BUNGALOW
Located on Linglestown car line, between Penbrook and Progress
frame, fi rooms, bath, furnace, electric light, porches, 3-cent fare limit!
Lot 53 by 140 ft. Immediate possession. Special price before Nov. l!
J. E. GIPPLE
1251 MARKET ST.
TODAY'S REALTY TRANSFERS
To-day's realty transfers included the
following in city and county:
Lewis Turns to Mary L. Graupner,
Susquehanna township; Grace K. Speece
jto Frank P. Benlzer, 618 Geary street;
'Samuel Couffer's executors and trustees,
ito Leonard Acrl, Rteelton; Ira F. Rtew
jart to Charles E. Handshaw, 1535 North
• Third street: C. I* Brinser to Charles
|llandshaw, 1600 North Third street;
Kate E. Krelger to Herbert A. Reed,
lf>l3 Berryhill; Dan B. Marks to C. L.
Brown, Jr., Lower Paxton; Carrnle
C. Meek to William S. Harris, 1713 Mar
ket street; Fred C. Ylngst to Kate
E. Yingst, Twenty-Third near Knox al
ley, all for $1 each.
RETURNS FROM HOSPITAL
After undergoing treatment for three
weeks at the Harrisburg hospital fol
lowing an operation. William A. Adams,
well known in realty circles, has re
turned to his home, 441 Hummel street
while the realty expert is improving
it is scarcely likely that lie will he able
to return to his desk for several days.
PERMITS FOR TWO GARAGES
Two small building permits were is
. sued to-day for the following:
Frank E. Stouffer, a Jtwo-story brick
garage, rear of 1835 Berryhill street,
1600; Abrarn Schlffman, single story
brick garage, rear of 1210 North Sixth
street, S7OO.
LYSLAND TORPEIJOEI)
London, Oct. 28. The Norwegian
steamer Lysland has been torpedoed
and sunk, says a Ritzau News Agency
dispatch from Stavanger, Norway,
which adds that the crew was taken
on board a submarine to a point near
the Norwegian coast where they were
placed aboard another Norwegian ves
sel.
DISCUSS FAMILY TROUBLES
Lancaster, Pa., Oct. 28. "Fam
ily troubles and tha- courts," was the
general subject udider consideration
this morning by the Pennsylvania
Conference on Social Welfare.
V
New Houses For Sale
1717-19 Forster St. —Brick
houses, 9 rooms and bath; hard
wood floors, steam heat; built
in an up-to-date style; all con
veniences. If thinking of buy
ing, these homes are to be con
sidered open for inspection all
the time.
John F. Barnhart
Builder
BELL PHONE 3572-W
are but five of these twenty beautiful Derry Streeet Homes remaining unoccupied.
They are of the better built type, being erected by Contractor Hippie and are modern in
every detail. Situated on a main thoroughfare in one of the finest residential sections of the city
they are particularly desirable. The very low price at which these homes are being sold has
made them especially appealing to the man of moderate means. As a home investment they are all
than can be desired.
HAROLD A. HIPPLE
Contractor and Builder. Harrisburg National Bank Building
CITY IN MIDST OF
\ BUILDING BOOM
[Continued From First Page]
ly attractive and the increasing cost of
materials has udded further to the
burden of the builders.
At that Harrisburg is in the midst
of a mighty enthusiastic building
boom Just now. September was a
record month and the increase in op
erations as compured to the same
month of 1915, placed Harrisburg
in the unique class of second on the
list of 111 of the larger cities of the
United States. October will run high
too, although the approaching winter
months has served to slacken things
a bit.
Half Are (Parages
To date some thirty-seven permits
have been issued and oddly enough
about fifty per cent are for automo
bile garages. Of the thirty-seven
structures for which permission was '
given to build this month, just eigh
teen have been given out for garages.
The biggest operation perhaps, is
the new Pennsy freight station in '
South Second street and the adjacent
warehouse. The walls are steadily
rising 011 these jobs and before the
cold weather calls a halt on activities,
it is believed that the structures will
be under roof.
Activity is also apparent in church
construction. Chisuk Enimuna, the
new Jewish synagogue at Sixth and
Forster streets has progressed as far
as the first floor; across the street,
the new Messiah Lutheran church
walls are above the first floor.
The New Churches
The brownstone front is being built
into the new St. Lawrence German
Catholic church in State street and
its adjoining parsonage. Augsburg
Lutheran church at Camp and Sixth
streets is pretty nearly ready for oc
cupancy and City Building Inspector
J. H. Grove says it should be finish
ed within the next couple of months.
Remodeling of Covenant Presbyterian
church in Peffer street, near Fifth, is
almost finished.
Business and manufacturing struc
tures are moving rapidly toward
completion too. The new Dauphin I
Cigar company plant at Cameron and
State streets Is practically finished
and the great Star Laundry building
at Sixth and Herr streets has pro
gressed beyond the third floor. De
lays in shipments of materials was
seriously felt on that job.
Business Building
Davis and Hargest have finished
the foundations of the big garage in
Muench- street near Third, while at
Geiger and Fourth streets, Jennings
and Son, shirtwaist manufacturers,
have pushed their new building to a
short distance beyond the first floor.
Meyer Gross is hustling work on his
new slaughterhouse at Currant and j
Sayford streets and operations inci
dent to the extension of Swift and
Company's plant at Seventh and North
streets, are well under way.
Nathan Frieburg has nearly finish
ed the remodeling of the four-story
building at Cherry and Second streets,
which he purposes using for a ware
house and the Pennsylvania Milk Pro
ducts Company is. hurrying work on
its new plant in the west end. The
construction of an addition to the
plant in Geiger street has been ob
jected to by residents in the vicinitv,
but this isn't interfering with the
contractor's evident desire to put on
all possible speed.
In the Central Section
In the/ central section of the city
the new C. R. Boas building in North
Second street is probably the biggest
single job. Foundations are prac
tically completed for that $25,000
operation. Work was begun to-day
incidentally on the new garage that/
Elizabeth Shearer planned for Cam
eron and Mulberry. It will cost
$6,000.
George Meyers and T. W. Dill have
combined forces in the construction I
of the concrete retaining wall just I
south of the Mulberry street bridge!
for the extensive building improve- i
ments contemplated there.
New Bungalows
While many contractors are at work
on business structures, dwelling
houses are not lacking for attention.
John F. Barnhart has work pretty
well under way on the two bungalows I
he planned for 1721-23 Forster street,!
and John B. Prowcll has begun work
on a handsome bungalow at Twentieth '
and Kensington streets. Two dwell-I
ings of a similar type of construc
tion are being built in the rear of 670 !
Schuylkill street and David F. Bander
has the ground work for his bunga
lows at 1812-14 Chestnut street well
under way.
V
North Fifth Street Homes >
Located at 23U-IS-15-17 S. Fifth St.
KASY TKHMS
FRED C. MILLER
BUtI.DEn 1
213 Walnut street. IlarrlnburK, Pa.
Prospect Hill Cemetery ,
M \ ItK f T Iftt •.■MTU TIFF"T I
This cemetery Is toon to be en
largt-il mid nmuuited under plan** ;
prepared by Wurreii It. Manning.
Lota will be old with '.be per
petual cure provision
Prospect Hill Cemetery Co. ;
Herman P. Miller. Prel.lei
UICtKT A Nil COH It T THICIfTI
UKI.L I'HU.NK ISM
REAL ESTATE
GOOD HOTEL IS
BIG CITY ASSET
America's Leading Hostelry
Proprietor Tells How Har
risburg Will Benefit
What a good hotel means to a city,
how a hostelry that satisfies the travel
ing public really benefits the citizens
and why a municipality which boasts
of such an improvement Just cannot
bo pushed from tho nation's map of
progress, are interestingly set forth by
George C. Boldt, of the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel Company, of New York, in a let
ter to "Realty," New York's greatest
real estate magazine.
Mr. Boldt is one of the world's lead
ing hotel men and expresses his views
on the hotel problem In a concise way
that Is made doubly forcible because It
has behind It the weight of knowledge
gained by years of experience.
The letter is of particular interest to
Harrisburg citizens Just now in view cf
the proposed erection of the capital
city's own million dollar hostelry. Here
is Mr. Boldt's letter:
"I could write you columns and
columns of what a good hotel means
I to a town were It not for the fact that
I have consistently refrained from
writing for publication. I simply want
to say that jhe benefits a town derives
from possessing a good hotel is incal
culable. These may not always appear
to the careful observer, and the benefits
its inhabitants receive may seem some
| what obscure; nevertheless they are
there. For. let It be known to the trav
eling public that a town possess a
good hotel and it will not be passed
by. Every time a stranger stops, it
only for an hour or two, he leaves a
certain amount of money which adds
to the prosperity of its citizens. Let this
stranger leave the town with a good
impression and a kindly feeling, and
you have an advertisement which
money cannot buy.
>
The Behney Homes
in the fast-growing section of
Harrisburg
331 TO 311 EMERALD ST.
Two-story houses, six rooms,
bath and pantry; mission finish
downstairs, mahogany and white
upstairs, gas range, and water
heater, steam, electric light and
gas. Allowances made for pa
pering and electric light fixtures.
Asbestos shingle roof. Concrete
cellar.
Uncqualctl at the price
S3BOO to S4OOO
Sample Houses Open For
Inspection
Consult J. C. Behney
Plione 488-J 80i N. Second St,
| " — *
j 109 S. Second St.
Three hundred and fifty feet
from Market Square.
i'^FOR^I
SALE j
A fine residence in a line 3
neighborhood, for a fine family,
No. 2131 N. Second St. No rea- m
sonable offer will be rejected by m
S'. FRIEDMAN, Ileal Estate and i
Insurance, Kunkcl Bldg., or 217 ■
OUR SPECIALTY
Write for Our Special
Market Letter on
HARROUN MOTORS
It fives the quotations on over
] 100 different motor stock* and
1 affiliated companies besides a
i' great deal of other valuable in
formation. We are the largest
dealers in motor stocks in the
country.
i LOQMIS & RIESS, Brokers, *
Dept. 1. No. 30 llroad Street,
New York, N. T.