+ All Categories
Home > Documents > NEWSHIP INQUIRY CIVILIZATION SHIPPING NEWS IN BRONX' … · 2017. 12. 18. · NEWSHIPINQUIRY LOOMS...

NEWSHIP INQUIRY CIVILIZATION SHIPPING NEWS IN BRONX' … · 2017. 12. 18. · NEWSHIPINQUIRY LOOMS...

Date post: 21-Mar-2021
Category:
Upload: others
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
1
NEW SHIP INQUIRY LOOMS IN SENATE Board It» Called Upon to Submit Figures ou Its Financial Situation. PLEA MALE TO HARDING Westerners Ask Enforcement of Jones Act.Poindexter Charges Plot. Special Despatch to The N«w York Herald. New York Herald Bureau, I Washington, D. C.. Oct. SO. I Passage by the Senate or a resolution offered by Senator Poindexter (Wash.) calling on the Shipping Board for a statement of claims against the board. the number of claims and debts that have been acknowledged by the board, were taken as evldenco to-day that the shipping question is due for another airing. A delegation of middle Western men called on the President to-day and urged the carrying out of the provisions of the Jones act. In the debate on the Poindexter resolution Senator Underwood (Ala.) charged that "sinister Influences have been at work In America for more than a hundred years to keep American ships from the *cas." Commenting on the Poindexter resolution Joseph Powell, head of the corporation. said he was almost ready to present to Congress the figures asked for In the resolution. Criticisms of the board for not carrying out the wishes of Congress were made by Senators Poindexter and Borah. The latter Introduced an amendment to the Poindexter resolution calling on the hoard for information as to salaries paid, hut withdrew it with the statement that he would offer a separate resolution later. The delegation of middle tyestc-rners who-called on the President was headed by Malcolm Stewart of Cincinnati, chairman of the Middle West Merchant Marine Committee, who acted as spokesman. Their call came as the result of a meeting of the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce on October 7, 'when strong r< solutions were adopted favoring the development of trade routes along tho lines laid down In the Jones shipping act, the carrying out of sections 28 and 34 of that act relative to discriminating tariffs and through bills of lading, and tho de« velopment of a greater number of American ports. The sentiments expressed In these resolutions, which subsequent to the Cincinnati meeting were adopted by Chambers of Commcrse in twenty-nine niner mia-w estern cities, were ropeatod to President Harding to-day by Mr. .Stewart, and also by Senator liansdell i.La.), president of the National Merchant Murine Association. TEST CASE TO DECIDE WOODEN SHIP CLAIMS Commission Makes Selection for Hearing November 1. Special Despatch to Tine New York Herald. New York tlrruld Bureau, ) WuiUiinston. I>. Oct. 20. I fudge Waiter Meals, chairman of the Shipping Board's claims commission, announced to-day that what amounts practically to a test case for all the wooden ship building claims will be heard by the commission on November 1. This case involves the claims of the Tampa Hock Company and was selected because It appears to contain practically nil tho mooted points involved in the various wooden ship claims. The decision reached on it probably will set a precedent. Claimants are to lie given plenty of time. Judge Meals said, for filing briefs after the hearing. NEGROlPASTOR TALK HALTED; MAKES DENIAL Explains Remarks Which Upset Burial Service. The Rev. John Henry Parker, a negro, J 53 Washington street. Flushing, whose sermon at the funeral of Thomas Bass, ngrd servant of Mr. und Mrs. Norman Nplson, at the Kbenozer Baptist Church. Flushing, caused Mr. and Mrs. Nelson to take the rest of the services into their own hands, yesterday denied that he had said Mass could not be saved. The Rev. Mr. Parker, who is a gardener by occupation principally and clergyman only in the absence of tho regular pastor, said he was repeating the text of his sermon v.*hen Mrs. Nelson arose and stopped the service. "Mrs. Nelson must havo misunderstood what I said," he declared. "I was repeating; the text. 'If so be that being . v>« .-iii.iii iiui uk iiiumi naReu, over and over to make It* moaning: clear. I said nothing of what ahe understood me to nay, and was making no reflections on the dead man." NEGROBRANDELT'WHITE' CHARGES GARVEY LIBEL Publisher Has Editor and Promotor Arrested. Cyril V. Brigs*, publisher of the Oru oder, negro periodical, caused the arrest yesterday of Marcus Oarvey, editor of the A"earn World and promoter, on a charge of criminal libel. The suit was sustained by Magistrate Kcnaud In "Washington Heights Court. Brlgg* alleged that Oarvey had defamed his character In the columns of the yrgro World by asserting that he actually Is a white man posing as a negro to gain the good will of the negro subscribers of the Crwsoder. Applications for a counter charge of criminal libel, made by Oarvey for alleged criticism by Br*ggs. was refused by the Magistrate. Hearing on Brlgg'g suit will take place on October 31. Oarvey is a well known figure among negroes. Two years ago he was elected "provisional president of the African nation." WANAMAKER AT.LUNCH TO SUNDAY SCHOOLS Say a America Tries to Instil Respect for Sabbath. John AVannmnkop presided yesterday nt a luncheon at the Aldlne Club Riven for tho executive committee of the World's Sunday School Aasoclatlon and told the foreign guests to Inform their peoples that "America Is trying to train her youth by Instilling a proper respect for the Sabbath day." The special guests of honor were itlshop Urakl of Toklo. head of the >»fernod!st Church In Japnn: the Kev. Dr. 11. fcor.ai of Toklo, president of the ..'atlonal Sunday School Association ol t&pan; Baron Van Boetxelaer Van Dubbeldam of Holland, a commissioner tc .lava of the foreign missionary societies of Holland, and Newton Jones of London, missionary of the London Sunday School Union. All present except Haron Van Dubbeldam will attend the executive meeting at the Union Leaguo Club October 27. V CIVILIZATION I FROMN. Y.,SAY Standards of Decency Have .'Content to Be Govei Irishmen Manipulat »» . Dr. William Norman Guthrie. rector of the Church of St. Mark's-in-the-Bou- werle told students at St. Stepnen*s Col- lege, Annandale, N. Y., In a lecture last night that "civilisation has to all prac- tlcal purposes disappeared from the city of New York." Klaboratlng the theme, ho said that It takes a genius or one who has had moral prejudices thorough. ly inculcated in youth to retain niorui standards while living here. "The Island of Manhattan," he said, "Is an impossible place. Even the standards of decency have disappeared. Politically, the city is decadent because nil sense of social responsibility has disappeared from most of the people, who are content to be governed by a tiny group of Irishmen manipulating Hebrew votes." | The reason for New York's decadence in Dr. Guthrie's view is that the city Is too big, violating the Greek ideal of a city Just large enough so that praclFORMAL PEACE SOON WILL BE EFFECTED! It Awaits Only Exchange of Ratification Papers in Berlin. Washington", Oct. 20..Formal restoration of peace between the United States ana uerminy swmui mu «:*- change In Berlin of the ratification papers and will occur some days from now. The official evldenco that the treaty has beon made, signed by President Harding and for deposit in German archives, la In course of preparation and will be forwarded us soon as completed. Kcestabllshment of diplomatic 'relations and the working out of a supplemental commercial treaty will follow the exchange of ratifications. It was Indicated to-day that the treaty approved by the Senate contained about all commercial provisions, it had occurred to American authorities as desirable to provide for. reservation of American rights under the treaty of Versailles being viewed as accomplishing this result. There are certain reciprocal agreements as to German Interests In the United States, however, which the German Government Is anxious to have written Into a commercial pact, and It Is expected this will be taken up through regular diplomatic channels and at Ger'jnan initiative when the peace treaty ratifications have been exchanged and diplomatic machinery set. No Indication was available to-day as to when It might be decided to withdraw American forces on the Rhine, or to reduce the strength of the command. There are now 13,000 men In Major-Gen. Allen's command and while every suggestion that American roops might be recalled hns met with opposition up to this time from the Kronen and English, and from Germany herself, It may be found possible later to reduce the force. It Is regarded as Improbable that the American force will be withdrawn as a unit. S3 SOCIETIES PREPARE FOR ARMISTICE DAY Feature Will Be Maes Meeting at the Garden. Kepresentatives of fifty-three patriotic societies will meet to-day at the headquarters of the Armistice Day coremonies committee of the American Legion, 4 Fast Forty-third street, to draw up a programme for the celebration of Armistice Day, November 11. The principal feature of the day will be a mass meeting at Madison Square Oarden, where President Harding's speech at the Arlington Cemetery, WashI lngton, over the body of the unknown American soldier w ill be transmitted by telephone and amplifiers. The speech will be transmitted to New York, Chl' cago and San Franclaco. FOUR WOMENlciLLED IN MOTOR ACCIDENT Machine Struck by Maine Central Train. Bai.dwin, Me., Oct. 20..An autonio-1 bile shopping trip to Portland ended today in the death of four women and severe injuries to a fifth when their machine was struck by a passenger train on the Maine central nauroau iruoKs at Mattocks station. Rain which fogged the windshield was believed to have been responsible for the accident. Tito dead are Mrs. Frank D. True. Mrs. Irma Hybert, Mrs. Bernard Small nnd Mrs. Albert Howard, all of East Hiram. Mr». Herbert Foss was Injured. HAYNESWILL SEARCH FOR KENTUCKY STILLS Dry Commissioner Leaves Today for Middle West. Washington, Oct. 20..Prohibition Commissioner Haynes plans to leave tomorrow for a survey of the liquor situation In Kentucky. It was said to-day at prohibition headquarters. Mr. Haynes, It was said, plans to co to Cincinnati and thence to Louslvllle, wlie.ro he will direct a survey of Illicit distilleries in Kentucky. His visit. It was explained, was In line with the pol| icy of effecting cleanups In various States. RUM CASE AGAINST ARBUCKLE DELAYED Actor Is in San Francisco to Face Charge. San Francisco, Oct. 20..The hearf in* of the charge of having violated the Volstead Prohibition Act pending here against Roscoe C. ("Fatty") Arbueklo was continued to-day for one week by a United States Commissioner. Arbucklc arrived from i-ios Angeles. It was announced he would remain here until after his trial In the Htate courts1 «m ft marge or mnnsinutrnter in connection with the (loath of Miss VCr- irlnla Happe. two pkrisii lis* aim* kirk. Marine Citt, Mich., Oct. 20..Tw«. member* of the crew of the steamer Wllllnm H. Wolf, lout their liver when tho vessel burned opposite here this' morning. and Captain J. P. Hanson of! lJetrolt, who escaped by Jumping from the deck of hla ship Into a small boat. suffered fractures to both lege. THE N1 IAS VANISHED S DR.GUTHRIE s Disappeared, He Declares ned by Tiny Group of ;ing Hebrew Vote.' cally every one was acquainted, and that moral safeguard* are removed, no that a man may live here with the feeling that nobody knows him or cares what he doe*. Applying the same principle to other cities, Dr. Guthrie declared that "the white man's clvllizution Is in danger of collapsing in America." adding: "The city crushes out their human Instincts and makes its people parts of an aggregate which constitutes a real danger to the survival of America." "Religiously," he said, "the old parochial idea has disappeared from the city. There are no parishes, no family churches. The religious worker nowadays must appeal to special groups through skilfully designed publicity* or else reach no one at all. The unnatural life of the average New Yorker whose living conditions cramp and thwart his normal human feelings and activities has produced a race of people incompetent to see those simple cosmte realities iifvolved In the sun. the moon, the stars, the fields and the goods." HIS SON CONVICTS SLAYER OF THREE Schutte, Who Shot Ball Family in Connecticut, Jokes as He Leaves Court. Middlktown, Conn., Oct. 20..Kmll Bchutto, storekeeper of the village of Bhallerville, was found guilty of murder In the first degTeo by a Jury In the Middlesex County Superior Court today. All six counts against him charging the killing of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ball and their son Jacob by gun and fire were upheld. Schutte showed no emotion .'when he! heard the foreman of the Jury tell Judge Maltbic of the verdict. Judge Multbte deferred sentence until Tuesday. Another indictment against Schutte charges him with the murder of Dennis I.educ, his farmhand, last April. The principal evidence against Schutte was given by his son, Julius, who testified that on the night of December 10. 1015. he wont with hia father to a bungalow near the shack In which the Ball family lived and at 2 A. M. both went Into a cornfield. He said his father saturated two bags of shavings with oil and placed them against the door of the shack. He swore that his father set these bags on fire and as the Balls came out, first the father, then tho wife and then the son, his father shot them, and then dragged the bodies into the burning shack. Julius swore that he and his father returned home, his father warning him to keep quiet. The State offered bones, bi)sksbot and a fnushroomed bullet found m a coffin in which were placed the three bodies fouitf In uhanl.- Schutte Joked with his custodians as he left the court room. DR. FARRAND INSTALLED AT CORNELL UNIVERSITY, George F. Baker Donor of $1 £00,000 Laboratory Fund. Special Despatch to The New York Hkbai p. Ithaca, Oct. 20..Or. Livingston Farrand was to-day invested with the office of president of Cornell University. Coincident with this came the disclosure that the donor of the $ 1,600,000 for the election of a new labora- tory of chemistry was Goorsra Fisher Baker, New York banker, who laid today the corner stone of the laboratory. Mr. Baker, who had become interested In Cornell through his friendship with the late George C. Boldt, had previously given $350,000 to the university for a group of domltories. The gathering included some fifty presidents of Institutions of higher learning, among them President Lowell of Harvard, Angcll of Yale. Hibben of Princeton, Burton of Michigan, Wilbur of Leland Stanford and Day of Syracuse. The State was represented by Gov. Nathan L. Miller. Delegates were also present front the universities of Paris. Toulouse, Touralne, Glasgow, Seville, Edinburgh, McGill, Toronto, Leeds, University College of Wales, Liverpool. Birmingham, Queens College and Dalhouslc. NOBLETT NOT GUILTY, BUT COURT DEMURS: Justice Strong Expresses Surprise at Jury Verdict. After five hours' deliberation a jury before Justice Strong In the Brooklyn Ruprcme Court Criminal Term, returned last night a verdict of not guilty, freeing Kdward Arden Noblett. 55, of 131 Riverside Drive from a charge of swindling Arthur A, Victor, disabled soldier, of 22 Kchenck avenue, Brooklyn, out of 33,000. Noblett was Alleged to have in- duced the ex-servloc man to Invest that sum in a Burf avenue, Coney Island, "Jazz hall" concession In return for a half Interest in the lease. According to the prosecution the lease was not in Noblett'se name at all. Though respecting the verdict of the jury and formally discharging the de- fendant, Justice Strong told the Jurors: "I do not ace how you arrived at your verdict; I cannot are It. It seems to the court that not only was the defend- ant guilty, but It Is a grave question whether his counsel was not in It too." John O. Dyer, who represented Noblett. protested against the comment. He said h" had hold "positions of honor and trust" during fifteen years of practice and had lived up to "every rule of the most ethical practice of the law." DIVORCE WITNESSES KEPT VIGIL AT CHURCH Testimony Given Against Mrt. Albert R. Thoen*. Harry Thoens, secretary of M. & L, Hess, Inc., real estate agents, and Rov L. Little, another real estate man. tcld yesterday before Supreme Court Justice McAvoy of nightly vigils they kept on the steps of a church In watching lncl- dents across the way at 12B West AjMth street. In a two room ground floor «l>artment at that address, they testl- fled, they often saw Mrs. Katherine M. Thoens, wife of Albert It. Thorns, also In the real estate business, and brother of the witness, enter, accompanied by a man afterward Identified as I»r. E. A. Campbell of 129 Kn*t Ninety-second street. The testimony was given In a divorce action begun by Albert R. Thoens. The Thoenses had been living apart for more tliHn a year, it was brought cut. on the trial. Mrs. Thoens has started a separation action, but determination of It hns been halted pending the outcome of the divorce suit. 5W YORK HERALD, i SHIPPING NEWS" (CONTINUED PROJJ PRECEDING PAG 13 ) L & W B C C Noe 1 (for Lynn), 4 (for ;»!emi and Wllkeebarre; Neponaet, Sandwich, towing barge Jtmei Barton, Now Vork; W H Vorkea, Sandwich, towing barged C'oaiiale and Hauto, New Vork. Sallail Kith, atr Walter V Noyau. Newport Nawc'tug I'allaa, with a lighter; 20th, stm I'aivln Auattn, New York. Kcranaw. .Nor- folk; Nor walk. Now York; Prlnro Gayrge lllri, Yarmouth..Wind 3W. 15 n.tlre, thick! fog: smooth .-tea. BALTIMORE. Md. Oct 2<V-Arrlved. at-a Orrus, Norfolk; Valarla (Rrt, New York; Callleto (Dutch), Hamburg via Philadelphia; Artie (Nnr>, Tamplco; Kalfuku Maru <Jap>.l Harry: Unilen iftv), Hernoaand via Ornek-1 Joldavlk arid Philadelphia; Norfolk. Boston. cleared 20th, str Penaeo tltal). Gibraltar (for,?ordcr»>. Sailed 20th, atri> Thai Iron (Greok). V'or: Maria. Viatula (Dan), Port I«oboa; Missouri (Hr), London and Antwerp via Norfolk and Philadelphia; Memphis City, London nnd Glasgow via New Orlearu; tlowden (Nor), Norfolk and Newport New a; Veauvlo (ltal>, Gibraltar: Evelyn, Hampton {toads: Lewie K Thurlow. do; Everett. Boatou (latter ut daylight 10th;. HATH. Me, Oct 10. Arrived at Parkerj Plata, barge Northern No 3. for Augusta. BEVERLY. Mars, Oct 50 (not 10th). Sailed, str N'lwisn. rtewalla Point. HK.MTFOP.T. NO. Oct 20-Arrtvcd. U S lighthouse str Orchid, Norfolk; sehr Junlp«-i. 0/j. CHARLESTON, SC. Oct 19- Sailed, achr* Albert H Willis, Huston; G J Cheny. NewYork. Arrived 20th, atrs Mohawk, New^ York for >l< Kr^lIJVllit VtCIIL nui I B11U3, a . topsxl Havana. CAP*: HENRY. V«. Oct 20-PasseJ in. «tr Munsomo. Galveeton for Baltimore. Passed out l!)th, tug Bristol, towing barges Falmouth. Newport News for Boston, arid Barnstable, for Kail RArer. i'aased out 20th, 0 AM. etrs Tuscaloosa City. Baltimore for Yokohama and Kooe; noon. Coolleda. do for Norfolk..Wind X, 20 miles; raining GALVESTON. Tex. Oct .0.Arrived, str Swiftstar, I'ort Lnbos. Arrived 20th, etrs Schroon. Charleston; Joalah Mary', Tamplco; Gladyebe, do; Baton Rouge, do. Sailed 20th. strs Vlncenzo Florio fftali. Italy, Marne, Orange; Thurland Castio (Br), Antwerp; J E O'Neill. New York. Sailed 20th. strs Monte Santo (ital). Ital- Ian porte. "Monte Vano." Havre. GULFPOP.T, Miss. Oct 12.Arrived, atr Eastern Sun. Mobile. Sailed 10th, str Hagno (Dutch), Buenos Aires. HONOLULU. Oct 10.Arrived, str H.twk- eye State, Manila, Ac. for Han Krancb.cn. JACKSONVILLE, Ela. Oct Id.Arrived, srhrs Nancy Hanks. New York; Blakely. do: 17th. Anna 11 Heldrltter, do; Maid of Scotland (Br). do. Sailed 20th, str Comanche. New Y'orlt. MANILA. Oct 10.Sailed, strs Silver Mate. Seattle; Tippecanoe, Man Kranclsco. MUKILTEO. Wnsh. Oct 20-Salled. schr Alice Cooke. Honolulu. MAYAGUBZ, PR. Oct Ift-Salied. str Maracalbo (from Curacao, Ac), New York. v MOBILE. Ala. Oct 20.Arrived, etrs Mattola, Galveston; Vlttorla (Br), Liverpool; echr Nellie, Cartagena. Sailed 20th. strs Winifred. Port Arthur; Copen (Hond). Tela: achre Vanlear Biack, San Juan; Scheme. Preston. NEW ORLEANS, t.a. Oct 20-Arrlved. Atra Amsteldyk i Dutchi. Vera Crux; Burgondlcr (Br), Antwerp; Coahu'la (Mcx). Progreso; Garibaldi, Havana: Jamaica (Nlc), Port Barrios; Lake Fisher, Vera Uruz; Nocca lula. London; Rajah. Progreso; RosenfioM (Br). Buenos Aires and Rio Janeiro; Stavangaren (Nor). Frontera: Tomlahua. San Francisco; Truntollte, Tamplco: Yoro (il)nd), Ibn. Sailed 10th. atrs Gelaha (Nor). Glasgow, | 20th. Hachsenwald (Oer), Savannah. Sailed from Port Ead* 2hth, strs Hrahe- holm Swedish porta: Chattanooga City, Shnnarhai; Coraus, New York; Hereula, P.ora.i del Toro. Mendocino (Son, Tamplco; Qulmlstan (Hondl, Tela; Tegucigalpa (Hond), t'elba; Yuri Maru (Jap), Yokohama. NEWPORT NEWS. Va, Oct 20--\r-lv-»l, strs Orcana (Br), Valparaiso; Slrlo (Ital). Norfolk Cleared 19th, str Anglesoa (Hr), Ipawlrh. Sailed 20th, atra Berwlndvale (Br), Norfolk; Tyrula (Br), Tamplco. NORFOLK. Va, Oct 10.Arrived, atra S-ho1-nrle, Philadelphia for Hamburg and Bremen: Brazlller (Br), New Orleans tand sailed 20th for Antwerpl. Arrived 20th, strs Wlllsolo, Philadelphia for Baltimore and Pacific, ports: Westmeath (Br>, I.ondon: Gloucester, New Engl tnd; Banka (Dutch), New York; Paul Palx (Hr), Port Arthur: Coelleda, Baltimore; Tymmlc (Br), Manatea: Monmouth. Avonmouth. Spiled 10th, strs Grecian, Boston; Yone Mam (Jap), Hull; Dorington Court (Br>, Havre; Nyland (Br), Bremen: Bolivian (Br), Liverpool; Easterly (Br). Brrmen; West- hnven, wrst coast via Philadelphia. Sailed 20th. strs Mcxlrano (Nor), Gothcn- burg: Ecuador, nest coast via Havana; Settler (Br), United Kingdom; Fteeman, New Bedford; Brazlller (llr). Antwerp. Sailed 19th, str Indian, Providence; schrs James E Hewson, Camden, Me (not as i>e- fore); Ella Pierce Thurlow, New England; Percy K Pyne II, do: Maurloe R Thurlow. do; tug Ontario. Boston, towing barges Sid nev, Cn«Visla and Smyrna. PORTLAND, O. Oct IP.Sailed, stra KIs.rldlan, Liverpool; Romulus (Nor), Chile. PORT ARTHUR, Tex, Oct 20.Arrived, *!r» Corbis (Br). Liverpool; Delphinula (Dr), Halifax ^Gulfcoast, Philadelphia: Malmangvr (Nor), Rotterdam. Arrived 20th. rtr* Texaco 147, Amssvitle; Liberty Mlnquas. Tampico; J R Gordon. New York. Sailed 20th, strs Cardonla, Galveston; Blbbco. Buenos Aires: Reaper, Tampion. Sailed 20th, strs Vaarll (Nor), Norfolk, Aladdin. Hoston: War Sirdar (Br). Devonport: l.lberty P.ell, New Orleans; Dlitrtct of Columbia. Sand Key. PEN8AOOLA. Fla. Oct 20.Arrived, sir West <*hetao. New Orleans; schr Jean Mackav I Br). St John, Antigua. Sailed 20th, achr Martha (Fr), Flee'wood, RORT TAMPA. Fla, Oct 20-Sallcd, sirs Trinidad.an, Tamplco; EL Russell, Port Arthur. PHILADELPHIA. Pa. Oct 20-Anrtved. strs Korsfjord (Nor), Media Luna; Osalneke. Sundsvaal, Ac. via Baltimore; Kentucklnn, New York; West Haven, do; Hayonna (motor), do; Persian, Jacksonville and SavanAr rived 20th. str City of Agra (Br). New York. Cleared 20th. strs Grelfryda (Br). Havre vl.r Bordeaux; Runa (Nor), Port Antutdo; Wm Uoyce Thompson. New Orleans; (Irof Khuen Hederx-ary (ltn.lt. Gibraltar (ror orders) ; Springfield. Seattle. Sailed 20th, battleship Illinois, New Tork; strs Atlantic Sun, Port Lobos; levant Arrow, Beaumont; Panuco, Vera Cruz; Betikelsdyk (Dutch), Rotterdam via Ilaltlmore; Herbert L Pratt, Port I-oboe; Gustavsholm (Hw). Baltimore. Passed down Marcus Hook 20th, i);K) AM. tugs Valley Forge, towing barges Wleonlsco, for Charlestown. Tamanend for Providence, and Richardson, for Newburyport; Carlisle, towing barges Yardley, for Cambridge, Tuckahoe, for Boston, and Tohtckon, for East Cambridge. Passed up Reedy Island 20th, 2:20 I'M, tug Latin American, towing barge Dallas. Passed out Delaware Breakwater JOth. .1:30 PM. strs J C Donnell, Philadelphia for Port Loboa; R PM. Lyngenfjord (Nor), do for Bergen (for orders) 20th, 5:20 AM. Atlantic Sun, do for Port lobos. In port 19th, tug Georges Creek, for Boston. towing barges Noe 5, 17 and 21 (ready). .Wind NW. 30 miles; raining; moderate r-». PORTLAND, Me, Oct 20-Arrtwd, str Matoa. Norfolk. Sailed 20th, str Jonancy, Norfolk. In port 19th (to leave when weather permits), tug Tamaqua. from Philadelphia, with barges Tulpehocken. for Augusta, and Pennington, for Pearsport. PORTSMOUTH, NH. Oct 19-Arrlved (for a harbor*, tug Bess. Parkers Flat*, towing ha>ge Virginia Palmer. Portlanil for Norfolk via Boston, where shs picks up barge John Forsyth, and at New London for barge Edith. SAN FRANCISCO. Cat. Oct 19-Arrlvtd. itr Hllversum (Dutch). Hamburg. Ac. Sailed lft'h, strs Hamer. Shanghai. Willpolo. Norfolk; nark L Harmltc (Fr), <Ju«enstown. Sailed 19th, strs Cardiganshire (Br), attle; Wlllpolo. New York. SAVANNAH. Ga, Oct 20.Arrived, strs CreSALE8 AT AUCTION. _ SALE TODAY 3 P.M. Also Tomorrow, same nour. |[ at in# uiuicnoa or If FIFTH AVERUE 2SthSt. AUCTION ROOMSinc To Be Sold at Inreetricted Public Auction FINE ORIENTAL Rugs and Carpets both antique and modern in a large variety ot sizes-.Removed by us from "the U. S. Customs Stores. Tl»e property of Mr. Jacob Kormansky of . Nizni Novgorod, Russia.* Ordered Hold by MICHAEL JOSEPHSOHN to liquidate an unxatlafUid lien. On *levr until hour of aale. Wallace H. Day, Auctioneer FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, tan, Jacksonville (and (ailed for Ba.timore): Merrimack, Philadelphia (and sailed (or Jacksonville). Hailed 2rtth. etr» City of St lA>nia, New Vork; City of Columbus. Boston; tug W B Keene. do. TACOMA, Wash. Oct 2ft-Salled. str Klao Maru (Japl. Portland. TAMPA, F'ia. Oct 20-Sailed, str Tiuii'Io, New Orleans. VINEYARD HAVEN. Mas*. Oct 2ftArrlved, tugs William C Blckel. towing ;wo barges. Norfolk for lloston; Gettysburg, tnwIng three, Philadelphia for East; schr B K Tower (Br), Apple Hlvcr, NH, for Ne v Vork. Passed 10th, f:45 PM, tug Chaa P Cirecrough, Boston for Norfolk, toalng barge Irane. Passed 20th. atrs Munalbro. Bylayl and Cambria, bound E..Wind. AM, SHE, frtoh; rain; ob«nivat!on. ;l mllea; I'M. WBW, strong; clearing: hnromete', 20.42. AMERICAN PORTS. I By Mail.] BANGOR, Me. Oct 18.In port, aehr Kathorlne May, waiting charter. GAI.VKSTON, T«x. Oct t«.Arrived, str Freeporr Sulphur No 6. Krseport. ORANGE, Tex, Oct 10- Arrived, str Went Erral, Galveston (to tie up) PROVIDENCE, Hi. Oct IS.Sailed, str Paul H Harwood, Tatnplco. SABINE, Tex. Oct Id.Arrived, str Ai:tonlna Hie"), New Orleans. STEUBEN. Me. Oct ld-Salled, achr Nellie Grant, New York. ( f. \ 1^ Naval Orders Sprcwl Urspat'-h to Tub New Y'oik Hb*ai,p. N>« York llcnilO Bureau. Washington. D. Oct. ?«. ( Thfufl naval order* have born nmd* public: I.tout. Marvin Kox. to U. S. 8. Kennlson. Lieut. lugoli N. KUarid. to It. .S. s. Young; Lieut .lohu R. Sullivan. to IT. S. P. Nicholson; Lieut. l-'rederick 8. t.'onncr, to V S. P. Badger; Lieut. Hoy K. Prnlth <S. C.I, to TMvlalon 8ev"nt"en: I,(rut. Wm. J. Morcock, to r. H. 8 Hands; Lieut. Harold L. Mitchell, to home. BATH BEACH SECTION TO HAVE NEW APARTMENT The newly organised C. and I* Construction Company, Mrs, Llllle Lande president, v.-JU erect at tlie southeast corner of Cropsey avenue and Twentyiiinth street, Brooklyn, a five story apartment house, 112x183. The proposed building Is to coat about $300,000. In the new company, which Is represented by H. I.ubolkin, attorney, are N. Cohen and C. Dlstelfeld. J. I>. Itanck sold bungalows as follows: For Realty f»ales Company, at 414 Avenue J, 40x100, to Wllhemtna Wilkenlrg; at 4717 Bay' Parkway, 52x 100. to Rose Coppage; at 1044 Ocean Parkway, 40x130, to Joseph O. Tlieiss, and for Joseph O. Thelas a house at 1031 East Thirteenth street to J. l>. Ranok, and for Annie W. Jewett two family scml-detached house at 1255 East Seventh street to Daniel V. MeAulKTe. Spear & Co. leased 12,000 square feet in Bush Terminal Building, No. 10, to Andrew/ Jergens Co.. perfumers. Bulkley & Horton Company sold cooperative apartment In 1289 Dean street for Mr. St. Cyr to Leroy V. Edwards. J. Lacov sold for Bonart Mayerowitz to Ester I^ane 1122 Avenue J, a store and apartment property. A. B. Horwltz sold the southwest, corner of Rtverdale and" Blake avenues. 40x100, In East New York, for Alexander Poprhn to Louisa Shahrll. A Mlsffkln sold| for Solphil Realty Corporation to Harry Silverman a two family dwelling at 1170 East Fourteenth street. Frank A. Seavcr & Co. have placed building loans on four houses on north side of Fighty-fourth street. 100 feet east of Tenth avenue; also on two stores on east side of Fourth avenue, 40 feet north of Bay Ridge avenue. RESIDENTIAL LEASES. Pease & Elllmaii leased for Mrs. B. B. Bates to Mrs. E. V. T'arr the foiir story 25 foot dwelltnx at 311 West 101st street. between West End avenue and Riverside Drive. The same brokers leased apart ments as follows: In 755 Park avenue to Mrs. A. H. Morris, in 082 Ccxlngton avenue to J. Ci. Purdle, In 145 East Forty-ninth street to Miss Edna Noland, in 140 West Fifty-eigrhtli street to A. T. Burr, in .157 West Fifty-seventh street, to Mrs. William Breustadt, In 162 West Flftv-elghth street to J. Wilson and Li. Rogers. In 120 East Eighty-second street to Daniel Gregory Mason, in 70 East Eighty-seventh street to Ralph Royal), in 124 West Seventy-second street for the Park Avenue Operating Company to W. J. Gallear, In 39 West Seventy-sixth street to Oscar E. Velt and In 133 West Seventy-ninth street to Robert Cushman. Li. J. Phillips & Co. leased the following apartments: In 20 West Fifty-seventh street to Jennctta Methvcn, in 63 West Seventieth street to Mae Held and Winifred Purkwood. In 208 West Seventy-second street to Mrs. Frances M. De Leon, in 273 West End avenue to Mlaj M. F. Quinn, In 226 West Seventyfifth street to Mrs. (>. Do Conlnek. In 50 West Eighty-sixth street to Fred M. Santley. M. Morgenthnu, Jr., Co. leased an apartment In 133 and 135 West Eleventh street to Frederick A. Dewey, associated with the new Marshall Field in his banking firm. Everett M. Selxas Company rented the following furnished apartments: In 40 East Eighty-third street, to Frank D. Webster. In 590 West End avenue to J. L. Rubenstein and In 372 West 120th street and 50 Mornlnpslde avenue. at'GBN8-RICHMO\D MARKETS. The Rickert-Brown Realty company sold to Katherine Maseel a two story elKlu room dwelling and a two oar Karaite on Seventh avenne, between Jamaica and Grand avenues, in Norwood Gardens. C. H. Pratt, associated with the Navy Knitting Mills, and formerly a resident of RidKefield, X. .T., purchased an apartment at 131 Twenty-third street, Jackson Heights. Rdgemer* Crest. Inc., Maximilian Mnrgentkau. president, sold eleven lots In the north side of McKinley avenue, west of Cedar avenue, Kdgemerc, to Bernard Gottehrer, house builder. INSTRUCTION. COLLEGES. &C. LEARN LANGUAGES I THE BERLITZ WAY By ths famous Beriltx Method of language instruction you can quickly lesrn to «i>eak, rend ar.tl write any modern language {English In- eluded). Private or class Instruction from experienced nsttve teachers. Day or Evening Classes Individual hessons. Reasonable tuition. A*!< fcr catalog. nFRIITT jL# schooTT^JF M 4 LANGUAGES CSX l»r» 3Sfi HWANtMEl .10 Want nth Slrfft. Plinn* I'rnnMliiinlii I l*H. Brooklyn. tl* iliinfutoil St. Fhun* Main ID40. The Semple School for Girls 241-245 Central Park Wert NKW YORK CIT*. Boarding and day puplla. College preparatory Port (lraduate, Flr.iahlng Couraar Language*. Art Mualc anil Dramatic Art. rhu rchool hat a country eatato for out loor racrcatloi. Urn. T. mnnis-'.T »?: - :mcm: principal. WEIGESTER ^ R Rti.'llo nf Vocal Mum \ i n \fxrtlklf Carncyl Hall. N. v. I KAIINlINlj Write for Hook let 11. At Mndarnt* llnte*. Mil.I .Kit SCHOOL. Ulinitai At*., al till St. fail and Winter Claiaaa Mow Forming. j 1921. BUILDERS IN BRONX' PLAN APARTMENTS Demand for Vacant Property Shows Construction Wave Is Still v ljrorous. , For improvement with apartment'1 houses two plots in The Bronx have Just been purchased by the Benensor Realty Company. The deals involved i| the plot, 121x130, on the east side of; University avenue. 331 feet north of '183d street, and the plot, 126x100, at1 the southwest corner of the Grand Con- 1: course and Elliot place. The latter was ', bought from a client of the J. Romalne Brown Company. A five story apartment house, costing $200,000, is to be erected at the south- »as: corner of Burnslde and Creston avenues by the newly organised Crest Burns Corporation, which proves to be tiie new owner ot the plot. 114x100. re- ported sold recently by the Sparta Realty Company. Thc new company is composed of T. Jaltc, M. Fasa and A. Brodsky. It is represented by Gettinger <5t Weinman, attorneys. Plans have been filed for a five story apartment hous*, 75xS8.1i. on "io west aide of Walton avenue, 177 feet north of Burnslde avenue, for Henry JuoUson G. F. Pelham, architect, estimates the cost at $100.0CO. J. Clarence Davlty resold to RJckphy Operating Company the vacant plot. !i3.f>xl00, on the west side of Wales avenue, 356 feet south of 119th street This is one of the plots sold by .Mr. Davif-s at auction last Tuesday. Henry M. Bloch sold the plot. Sox 120.7x Irregular, on the northwest skle , of Interval# avenue, 20.*.1 feet northeast of 167th street, to Mary Katz, who owns Jhe adjoining two story dwelling to thelj north. For the erection of a taxpayer the newly formed Friedman Holding Cor- poration, with. Fanny Deutarh, Jacob Maran and Louis J. Gold as directors, has bought the plot, 88.1 x"2x Irregular,! on the east side of Prospect avenue, 107.3 feet south of 166th street arrd extending through to Stebblns avenue. George H. Shaffer, Jr., was the seller. George Meyer sold 083 Home strcst to an Investor. Harry Cahn sold through George H Janss a plot. .71x100, on the east aide of Spofford avenue, 30 feet aouth of Coster j street., to Richard J. Harde. bul'der. Frank E. Kohl sold to Edward AroI helter the vacant plot, 50.2x117.2, on the west side of Morris avenue, 230.10 feet north of 196th street. Herman Krepper bought the five story building, 85.9x25.6x irregular, on the northerly side of East 136th street, be- j tween Third and Lincoln avenues. Thomas T. Uren purchased from the Rouns estate fifty lots on Lyre avenue. Klngsbridge road and South Fifth ave- nue. Harry W. Dav's of the Red Roof Realty Company negotiated the sale. The newly formed Massachusetts Holding Company (I). Molloy, J. O'Neill and T. II. Ray) bought from Kmil Kaufman, Inc.. the three story buildln". 200x100. occupying the easterly blvk front of Lincoln avenue, between 132ill and 133d streets. The seller acquired the property last August. Nettie Singer sold to the 1567 Corpo- - i~r,,t- director* Louis Schwartz. Abraham Tabachlnek and Barney Heiss, an apartment house, 75x 100, at 1557 Hoe avenue. The Suchy estate sold to J, Waller through John F. Prendergast a five story apartment, 54x100, at 417 and 419 Hast 147th street. ARCHITECT WILL BUILD FLAT ON WEST S4TH ST. John H. SohciVr, the architect who recently completed the new seven story building at 23tl and 238 West Flft.v-flfth street, and who owns the adjoining properties at 240, has acquired control of the three three story houses at 241 to 245 West Fifty-fourth street, having a frontage of 57.6 feet, by leasing them from Sommer ic Brother for twenty! one years, with renewals and with an option to purchase. The transaction Involves a net rental of 31,000.000. Mr. Scheier announced yesterday that he Intends to Improve the property with a six story office and apartment build: ing, to be ready next spring. Albert H. Stout was the broker In the trans| action. .__.^ ART SALES. 3RD SESSION All the Elegant Articles in To-Dag's Sale AUCTION SALE OF IMPORTANCE To-Day(Fri.)2P.M. Also To-Morrow, Saturday, Same Hour DARLING & CO. LOUIS VAN BRINK. Auctr 242* 5th Ave..27th-28th Sts. Elegant Home Furnishings Works of Art BELONGING TO Prominent N. Y. Banker and Broker From His Large Estate at Montclair. N. 1 ^mNrrwEuet A,moneGallenM ^^MTUREJ Tiffany Studios Upholstered Furniture W. & J. Sloane Baby Grand Piano Kranich & Bach Clock Set* Tiffany 4c Co. Chinese Ruga Altman 4t Co. r SAROOK-KERMANSHAH RUGS. Room Sizes: and 200 PERSIAN RUGS, various sizes, from Public Warehouse. Rare Bronzes. Clock Sets, Cabinets with Curios. Fine Linens, Draperies tuo Library Furniture. Beautiful Dining Room and Bedroom Suites, Tea It wood, t ninese Vases, etc. Know vamors KHTATF.* Smith's Knickerbocker argfik Sales Rooms, Inc., BWwQ 825 BKVK.VTH AV. AT MO HT. VpySl/v/ Ph,"1,'s Olrrla 3014-3*13. W* C. E. SMITH. Auct'r. 19"1 THIS FRIDAY AT t O'CIOCK. ALSO PATt'RDAY, MONDAY A TfKSPAV. t ONTINI ATION KXKI I TOKS' SAI.K. KSTATF. or TIIK LA TO William A. Stone FORMER GOVERNOR OF PENNSYLVANIA BY OnnBR OK KXKCt'TORS. ALSO THIQ ARTISTIC Furniture & Rich Effects REMOVED FROM RIVERSIDE DRIVE OK MRS MARGARET M. HURLBERTj v DEMAND FOR BUSINESS SPACE CONTINUES FIRM Spear & Co. leased floors as follows: In 93 Spring street to FinheIstein Knot., manufacturers of chair seats; In 115 Mercer street to Ileanxo & Jacullc, In 123 Fifth avenue and 2 West. F.lghteenth street to Iilachoff llros., M. & 1- lltss, Inc., represented the lessee. Brett & Goode Company leased oificee in 312 Fifth avenue to the Lahquan Photo with Brown-Wheelock Company; 303 Broadway to Mirhige Bros, of San Jose. Costa Itiea. *ith Horace 8. Kly & Co.; spa<~e In 23o Fifth avenue to Rudolph Schrciber, lite., and Devonshire Mills Company, Inc., with Walter C. WycKOff; space In 237 Lafay- ette street, to W. P. Ltlllcrapp: eleventh floor In Fifth avenue to MohawV Glove Corporation: store and t>a«emeat iti 34-1 West Fifty-second street u A nisi Fischer; offices In 79 Fifth Menus to John Lewis Thompson. L. Tannebaum, Strauss & Co. leased the fireproof parage, on u plot 541x100, at lis Beach street, to the G. U. Express Company, Inc. Mastlrio & Co.. Inc.. rented the following: Store and basement in 45 West Twenty-seventh street to Edgar ljc-hmar., store and basement In 19 West Twenty- fourth street to George C. Kindt & Co.. Inc., and second fldor In 91 Fifth avenue to Haher pros. Folsom Bros., Inc.. leased store in 134 East Thirty-fifth street to F. J. Pas>otti, »tatloner and printer. Itoyul Scott Gulden leased for ten tears to Louis I'armc of Paris the. uor>- und l«asernent in the new building at 48 East Forty-ninth street. The rental ug- uregntes $52,500. William I. Kosenfeld leased loft in 136 West .Seventeenth street to the Western Electric Company. Henry Brady ioased the four story dweKIng at 355 West Twenty-seventh street to Frank Lombardi for Archie McAlonen; also a loft 111 123 and 125 West Thirty-third street to Goldkrantr. Sc Rro Pease & Klllman leased parlor floor In 27 West Fifty-seventh street to the C. K. Wolfert Company, retail shoe dealers. John U. & Oscar L. Foley leased the torner store at the southwest corner of Seventh avenue and Fifty-second stree' to A. Massalian. REALTY MARKET JOTTINGS. Wood, Poison <\ynipanv. Inc.. through jonn i). uevviu, piareu loan uc sisu.vuv on University avenue arid IShth street, and f-oven building ami permanent lonp- of $10,"00 eaeli cn dwellings tn pelham The Title Guarantee and Trust Com pa > has lonned $30o,0"0 on the Southeast corner of Sixth avenue anil Twentieth street, a six story building, lot llj.Tx 167.4; also $230,000 on 43 West Fiftyseventh .street, an eight story business building. 32.3x100.5. I'aniei H. Jackson was th~ seller to, the Benenson Healty Company of the six lot3 at the northwest comer of the Grand RESORTS. Atlantic City. Announcement. Th Seaside On the Ocei ATLANT1 wishes to announce a reduce for the cominc winter, eff WEEKLY RATES II 1 Person.Single Room with 1 Person-Single Room with 2 Persons.Double Room wi 2 Persons.Double Room wi flDarlborougf with its Spacious Exchanges uml attractive ATLANTA FAMOUS SUM June to Octofc Exquieita music a feature. Surf-Bath Rolling Chain, Plan, Theatre*. Movies r OWNERSHIP M JONIAH W II ITU A VerrowM. EQUINOX HOUSE Monohe«»ter-in-theMonnt»*in*, Vermont. OPEN I NTIL OCTOBER ?ITH. i WnrtrhMlfr. jSiuarcUtt I ffiobne > Pt#jON*L Co«fO«r» Of A HOMF k BRIARCLIFF MANOR.NY. k NEW YORK OFFICE 343 MADISON AVB. J New Jrmej. Id =71 IDEAL COUNTRY HOME Hotel Montciair MONTI ( AIR. N. J. MO«T nKI.HJHTrui.l.V MTCATED RKSTDKNTIAI. HOTKI. IN NKW YORK'? H'Rl'RIM. OPEN* THE ENTIRE TEAR. OWNERPHrP MANAGEMENT rWFDKWHK C. HA If CliMrAVT MANOR FARM MorrU Turnpike, summit. N. 4. Plctureeque IS acre nutate, SOtl ft, aleva tlon, 40 mlio n-1»-w, Expre** eeivlre to V ^ ork City within the hour. I.uxorloux home «pt>clntmem» Efficient service. Superior cut e!nc. Knrm apcrlnltlse. Adjoining Canoe ItriKik country- Cluh. 2 mile* from llaltuernl. (lolflnt; , prlvllwi arrantted. Telephone Hummlt ,V>. Michigan, MOUNT CLEMENS MINERAL BATHS World renowned for Khruniati-nt, Ntrroue- nee* and that run-down condition, Opfn ali the year. Twenty RtUoS from Detroit. ML. Clemen* lnterurban meet* N. Y. Central Wolverin# -,w*ry morn Ins at Detroit. Write for Roe-' let. HutiitfM Men'* Aaeoriatlnn. Mf.Clentrne.Mtt.-U t'a natln. SEE CANADA THIS TEAR. A. - CHOWN. Canadian National ftnUtrajw StTO Broadway. N .. lark. » + 19 1 'on course and Mount Ecton avenus. Willltpi iluKo wan the broker and Uoldsmllb & Rosent.hu! u ud an attorney a for Mr. Jackaou. Horace S. Ely & Co. represented George lnnej, Jr.. Ha.- artist and painter. In the Mta of tliu five story buildin-? lit 51 Washington Square South, which to be cc.nv rtcd Into dormitories for thp students of the School of Ctmnwrce of New York I'niversity. l'avii Technian and Hrajanin Stein ore the buyers of 98-106 East 114th street, sold recently. Harry J. Golden, the buyer of th" southwest Comer of WhltVock and Eryant avenues, paid $33,090 for the property. He will erect an Ice plant. Pease £ Elllmun have been appointed managers of the npartment property at 135 Bast Fifty-fourth street. Haggstrotn-<*aiU-n Company has been nppolnteu agents of the business building »t 115 Wdst Sixty-third street. Byrne it Bowman wer, the brokers In the sale of the apartment l^uae at 10031005 Tinton avenue reported yesterday. Vl'BCRBAN TR A NS ACTIONS. ChalUieey B. Urii'fen & Co. sold f<V Mrs. M. J. Cherry a residence with three c:i r i:. ,:i l.ar. :vint. Mailer. N". to H. P. Hevenor. Tito dwelling nt 20S Elbert aver.ac. West Netv Brighton, Staten Is'tind. has « r, pur- ha.-rd Patrick Six through \V. S. K. Hall. Prince & Ripley sold for Barney Gerard his new house on Park Circle, White Plains. X. Y., to L. li Paulin of the New York World. also for Charles Paul ' cf White Plains, X. Y.. his residence on Sterling avenue to Frank E. Hoi Iowa y of Brooklyn. The property consists of a nine room lions'-- on a half acre nloc R. R. Ragette sold for Zibelli Brothers, builders, a two family dwelling, 5Gtc 10U, at ^06 l.angdon avenue. Mount Vcrnon.J.to Morris Colin. ';?-*{ Kfah-< lai n.an;- Rca.lt} Corporation sold two lots in the Ferncliff section of I.Sears X. Y.. for Judson II. Swift to Mrs. Henrietta Robeson of Scarsdslc. Siillwcill Realty Offices of Ma ma notice k rented the furnished residenco of Bertha Strl.-h at .nrliiiiont .Manor to John T. Byrne of this city. Uoorgr* Howe sold for John A. Rosa A' eight acres and a residence and o:thulldlntj on Glnndals road, Oss'ning, to Dr. Dorvithy Smiley, Robert .\i. Farley Organisation rented an apartment in the Phillpse Manor..' ^ Apartment House, Tarrytown, to M*s. R. I.. Met "lure. V 'liioir.as S. Burke sold the store property at northwest corner of Bruce and *. Caryl avenues. Yonkem, for Cordelia Shipmnn to George Mansfield. Hilmer M. Nelson lius purchased from Raynniml M. Oakes the residence and large plot on the cast side of Rhlgrwo-id road, between Cedar lane and Cliircmont road, Maplewood. X. J., and the adjoin- ' Iny plot from Frederick W. Nash, giving the buyer a frontage of 435 feet on Rldgewood road. I.ouis Schleslnger. Inc.. were the brokers. *1 r RESORTS. Atlantic City. :.. I j Unnoa IIUUOU an Front IC CITY i schedule of minimum rates ectrve until February 1st: ELUDING MEALS j Running Water.... $35.00 i Bath $45.00 th Running Water . $60.00 ith Bath $75.00 __F. P. COOK'S SONS. f * I >*Bknbeim, r t Open Air Plaza is particularly during C CITY'S MFR SFASON er, Inclusive linic. Golf (2 Championship f'oureei.) ind rountless other amusement*. ^' '* anagemknt NUNS COMPANY ... I MOTEL. "Jf" O'ATLANTIC CITY JL I On the Hfiwh front PRE WAR RATES Aiterlcm Plan Entirety. Alvayt Ofen ^ ^ Sirijls j Ruaiii'<f[ Vitsr $.44 jt wmk / ^ Ro«»wt i Privits Bath $42 Co 9 '4 " m Doabls > Rnnntns I'«l#r M t*> Raw® ) Prints Bath $72 Co $84 * DnubU Room. Private Path : I < Wan e rnar, $96 par week Ownership Managatnmt PSo®a 14U I | ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. j i Directly on tKe Ocean Front § JAnAmerinmPtanHotelot Distinction | CAPACITY 600 r., _ , i oawaok llrrfter-7.Bc/ir/p'I « ». s.seiwsismsai '»sn J"M12 Jt >TE1. WITH A NEW HOME IDEA. NEW HOLLAND New York \v., ne«r li.ach. Cuisine and Her»ii' unexcelled. Special Fall Amor plan rates, |1"> week or- C. II. WOOD. Jr , Mgr. Zi)c HreaUers Greatly ReduceJ Present Season Rates new <;oi,F ci.rn pruvit.noKf I nmirpu^d for hraltliful Kr«it and K«h rrntion. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Kifry month In lh« yrar. Anbury I'ark. <$M&V&OPOUGAfi ' «/'V^ X5BUKY R4RKN.J. Open All Year Capacity 300 coMT.i-rrK o'NfrrntT'TJo.N TiinouunOVT; ELEVATOR. P HEKVr.s. l'ro|» v II nEBrtH, Jr.. M«r. || Waaliiuatoa. I>. C. GRAFTON HOTEL AMERICAN PLAN $5 per day and upward. HAKUIMjIUN MILLS, Proprietor.
Transcript
Page 1: NEWSHIP INQUIRY CIVILIZATION SHIPPING NEWS IN BRONX' … · 2017. 12. 18. · NEWSHIPINQUIRY LOOMS IN SENATE Board It» Called Upon to Submit Figuresou Its Financial Situation. PLEA

NEW SHIP INQUIRYLOOMS IN SENATE

Board It» Called Upon to SubmitFigures ou Its FinancialSituation.

PLEA MALE TO HARDING

Westerners Ask Enforcementof Jones Act.Poindexter

Charges Plot.

Special Despatch to The N«w York Herald.New York Herald Bureau, I

Washington, D. C.. Oct. SO. IPassage by the Senate or a resolution

offered by Senator Poindexter (Wash.)calling on the Shipping Board for astatement of claims against the board.

the number of claims and debts thathave been acknowledged by the board,were taken as evldenco to-day that theshipping question is due for anotherairing. A delegation of middle Westernmen called on the President to-day andurged the carrying out of the provisionsof the Jones act.

In the debate on the Poindexter resolutionSenator Underwood (Ala.) chargedthat "sinister Influences have been atwork In America for more than a hundredyears to keep American ships fromthe *cas."Commenting on the Poindexter resolutionJoseph Powell, head of the corporation.said he was almost ready to present

to Congress the figures asked for In theresolution.

Criticisms of the board for not carryingout the wishes of Congress weremade by Senators Poindexter and Borah.The latter Introduced an amendment tothe Poindexter resolution calling on thehoard for information as to salaries paid,hut withdrew it with the statement thathe would offer a separate resolutionlater.The delegation of middle tyestc-rners

who-called on the President was headedby Malcolm Stewart of Cincinnati, chairmanof the Middle West Merchant MarineCommittee, who acted as spokesman.Their call came as the result ofa meeting of the Cincinnati Chamber ofCommerce on October 7, 'when strongr< solutions were adopted favoring thedevelopment of trade routes along tholines laid down In the Jones shipping act,the carrying out of sections 28 and 34 ofthat act relative to discriminating tariffsand through bills of lading, and tho de«velopment of a greater number of Americanports.The sentiments expressed In these

resolutions, which subsequent to theCincinnati meeting were adopted byChambers of Commcrse in twenty-nineniner mia-w estern cities, were ropeatodto President Harding to-day by Mr..Stewart, and also by Senator liansdelli.La.), president of the National MerchantMurine Association.

TEST CASE TO DECIDEWOODEN SHIP CLAIMS

Commission Makes Selectionfor Hearing November 1.

Special Despatch to Tine New York Herald.New York tlrruld Bureau, )WuiUiinston. I>. Oct. 20. I

fudge Waiter Meals, chairman of theShipping Board's claims commission, announcedto-day that what amounts practicallyto a test case for all the woodenship building claims will be heard bythe commission on November 1. Thiscase involves the claims of the TampaHock Company and was selected becauseIt appears to contain practicallynil tho mooted points involved in thevarious wooden ship claims.The decision reached on it probably

will set a precedent. Claimants are tolie given plenty of time. Judge Mealssaid, for filing briefs after the hearing.

NEGROlPASTOR TALKHALTED; MAKES DENIAL

Explains Remarks Which UpsetBurial Service.The Rev. John Henry Parker, a negro,

J 53 Washington street. Flushing, whosesermon at the funeral of Thomas Bass,ngrd servant of Mr. und Mrs. NormanNplson, at the Kbenozer Baptist Church.Flushing, caused Mr. and Mrs. Nelsonto take the rest of the services into theirown hands, yesterday denied that he hadsaid Mass could not be saved. The Rev.Mr. Parker, who is a gardener by occupationprincipally and clergyman only inthe absence of tho regular pastor, saidhe was repeating the text of his sermonv.*hen Mrs. Nelson arose and stopped theservice.

"Mrs. Nelson must havo misunderstoodwhat I said," he declared. "I wasrepeating; the text. 'If so be that being. v>« .-iii.iii iiui uk iiiumi naReu,over and over to make It* moaning: clear.I said nothing of what ahe understoodme to nay, and was making no reflectionson the dead man."

NEGROBRANDELT'WHITE'CHARGES GARVEY LIBEL

Publisher Has Editor and PromotorArrested.Cyril V. Brigs*, publisher of the Oru

oder,negro periodical, caused the arrestyesterday of Marcus Oarvey, editorof the A"earn World and promoter, on acharge of criminal libel. The suit wassustained by Magistrate Kcnaud In"Washington Heights Court.Brlgg* alleged that Oarvey had defamedhis character In the columns of

the yrgro World by asserting that heactually Is a white man posing as anegro to gain the good will of the negrosubscribers of the Crwsoder.Applications for a counter charge of

criminal libel, made by Oarvey for allegedcriticism by Br*ggs. was refusedby the Magistrate. Hearing on Brlgg'gsuit will take place on October 31.Oarvey is a well known figure among

negroes. Two years ago he was elected"provisional president of the Africannation."

WANAMAKER AT.LUNCHTO SUNDAY SCHOOLS

Saya America Tries to InstilRespect for Sabbath.

John AVannmnkop presided yesterdaynt a luncheon at the Aldlne Club Rivenfor tho executive committee of theWorld's Sunday School Aasoclatlon andtold the foreign guests to Inform theirpeoples that "America Is trying to trainher youth by Instilling a proper respectfor the Sabbath day."

The special guests of honor wereitlshop Urakl of Toklo. head of the>»fernod!st Church In Japnn: the Kev. Dr.11. fcor.ai of Toklo, president of the..'atlonal Sunday School Association olt&pan; Baron Van Boetxelaer Van Dubbeldamof Holland, a commissioner tc.lava of the foreign missionary societiesof Holland, and Newton Jones of London,missionary of the London SundaySchool Union. All present except HaronVan Dubbeldam will attend the executivemeeting at the Union Leaguo ClubOctober 27.

V

CIVILIZATION IFROMN. Y.,SAYStandards of Decency Have

.'Content to Be GoveiIrishmen Manipulat

»».

Dr. William Norman Guthrie. rectorof the Church of St. Mark's-in-the-Bou-werle told students at St. Stepnen*s Col-lege, Annandale, N. Y., In a lecture last

night that "civilisation has to all prac-tlcal purposes disappeared from the cityof New York." Klaboratlng the theme,ho said that It takes a genius or one

who has had moral prejudices thorough.ly inculcated in youth to retain nioruistandards while living here."The Island of Manhattan," he said,

"Is an impossible place. Even the standardsof decency have disappeared. Politically,the city is decadent becausenil sense of social responsibility has disappearedfrom most of the people, whoare content to be governed by a tinygroup of Irishmen manipulating Hebrewvotes." |The reason for New York's decadence

in Dr. Guthrie's view is that the cityIs too big, violating the Greek ideal ofa city Just large enough so that praclFORMAL

PEACE SOONWILL BE EFFECTED!

It Awaits Only Exchange ofRatification Papers in

Berlin.

Washington", Oct. 20..Formal restorationof peace between the UnitedStates ana uerminy swmui mu «:*-

change In Berlin of the ratificationpapers and will occur some days fromnow. The official evldenco that the treatyhas beon made, signed by President Hardingand for deposit in German archives,la In course of preparation and will beforwarded us soon as completed.

Kcestabllshment of diplomatic 'relationsand the working out of a supplementalcommercial treaty will follow theexchange of ratifications. It was Indicatedto-day that the treaty approvedby the Senate contained about all commercialprovisions, it had occurred toAmerican authorities as desirable to providefor. reservation of American rightsunder the treaty of Versailles beingviewed as accomplishing this result.There are certain reciprocal agreementsas to German Interests In the

United States, however, which the GermanGovernment Is anxious to havewritten Into a commercial pact, and ItIs expected this will be taken up throughregular diplomatic channels and at Ger'jnaninitiative when the peace treatyratifications have been exchanged anddiplomatic machinery set.No Indication was available to-day as

to when It might be decided to withdrawAmerican forces on the Rhine, or to reducethe strength of the command. Thereare now 13,000 men In Major-Gen. Allen'scommand and while every suggestionthat American roops might be recalledhns met with opposition up to thistime from the Kronen and English, andfrom Germany herself, It may be foundpossible later to reduce the force.

It Is regarded as Improbable that theAmerican force will be withdrawn as a

unit.

S3 SOCIETIES PREPAREFOR ARMISTICE DAY

Feature Will Be Maes Meetingat the Garden.Kepresentatives of fifty-three patriotic

societies will meet to-day at the headquartersof the Armistice Day coremoniescommittee of the AmericanLegion, 4 Fast Forty-third street, todraw up a programme for the celebrationof Armistice Day, November 11.The principal feature of the day will

be a mass meeting at Madison SquareOarden, where President Harding'sspeech at the Arlington Cemetery, WashIlngton, over the body of the unknownAmerican soldier w ill be transmitted bytelephone and amplifiers. The speechwill be transmitted to New York, Chl'cago and San Franclaco.

FOUR WOMENlciLLEDIN MOTOR ACCIDENT

Machine Struck by MaineCentral Train.

Bai.dwin, Me., Oct. 20..An autonio-1bile shopping trip to Portland ended todayin the death of four women andsevere injuries to a fifth when theirmachine was struck by a passenger trainon the Maine central nauroau iruoKs atMattocks station. Rain which foggedthe windshield was believed to havebeen responsible for the accident.

Tito dead are Mrs. Frank D. True.Mrs. Irma Hybert, Mrs. Bernard Smallnnd Mrs. Albert Howard, all of EastHiram. Mr». Herbert Foss was Injured.

HAYNESWILL SEARCHFOR KENTUCKY STILLS

Dry Commissioner Leaves Todayfor Middle West.Washington, Oct. 20..Prohibition

Commissioner Haynes plans to leave tomorrowfor a survey of the liquor situationIn Kentucky. It was said to-day atprohibition headquarters.

Mr. Haynes, It was said, plans to coto Cincinnati and thence to Louslvllle,wlie.ro he will direct a survey of Illicitdistilleries in Kentucky. His visit. Itwas explained, was In line with the pol|icy of effecting cleanups In variousStates.

RUM CASE AGAINSTARBUCKLE DELAYED

Actor Is in San Francisco toFace Charge.

San Francisco, Oct. 20..The hearfin* of the charge of having violated theVolstead Prohibition Act pending hereagainst Roscoe C. ("Fatty") Arbueklowas continued to-day for one week bya United States Commissioner.

Arbucklc arrived from i-ios Angeles.It was announced he would remain hereuntil after his trial In the Htate courts1«m ft marge or mnnsinutrnter in connectionwith the (loath of Miss VCr-irlnla Happe.two pkrisii lis* aim* kirk.Marine Citt, Mich., Oct. 20..Tw«.

member* of the crew of the steamerWllllnm H. Wolf, lout their liver whentho vessel burned opposite here this'morning. and Captain J. P. Hanson of!lJetrolt, who escaped by Jumping fromthe deck of hla ship Into a small boat.suffered fractures to both lege.

THE N1

IAS VANISHEDS DR.GUTHRIE

s Disappeared, He Declaresned by Tiny Group of;ing Hebrew Vote.'cally every one was acquainted, and thatmoral safeguard* are removed, no thata man may live here with the feelingthat nobody knows him or cares whathe doe*. Applying the same principleto other cities, Dr. Guthrie declared that"the white man's clvllizution Is in dangerof collapsing in America." adding:"The city crushes out their human Instinctsand makes its people parts ofan aggregate which constitutes a realdanger to the survival of America."

"Religiously," he said, "the old parochialidea has disappeared from the city.There are no parishes, no familychurches. The religious worker nowadaysmust appeal to special groupsthrough skilfully designed publicity* orelse reach no one at all. The unnaturallife of the average New Yorker whoseliving conditions cramp and thwart hisnormal human feelings and activitieshas produced a race of people incompetentto see those simple cosmte realitiesiifvolved In the sun. the moon, thestars, the fields and the goods."

HIS SON CONVICTSSLAYER OF THREE

Schutte, Who Shot Ball Familyin Connecticut, Jokes as

He Leaves Court.

Middlktown, Conn., Oct. 20..KmllBchutto, storekeeper of the village ofBhallerville, was found guilty of murderIn the first degTeo by a Jury In theMiddlesex County Superior Court today.All six counts against him chargingthe killing of Mr. and Mrs. JosephBall and their son Jacob by gun and firewere upheld.

Schutte showed no emotion .'when he!heard the foreman of the Jury tell JudgeMaltbic of the verdict. Judge Multbtedeferred sentence until Tuesday. Anotherindictment against Schutte chargeshim with the murder of Dennis I.educ,his farmhand, last April.The principal evidence against Schutte

was given by his son, Julius, who testifiedthat on the night of December 10.1015. he wont with hia father to a

bungalow near the shack In which theBall family lived and at 2 A. M. bothwent Into a cornfield. He said hisfather saturated two bags of shavingswith oil and placed them against thedoor of the shack. He swore that hisfather set these bags on fire and as theBalls came out, first the father, then thowife and then the son, his father shotthem, and then dragged the bodies intothe burning shack. Julius swore thathe and his father returned home, hisfather warning him to keep quiet.The State offered bones, bi)sksbot and

a fnushroomed bullet found m a coffin inwhich were placed the three bodies fouitf

In uhanl.-

Schutte Joked with his custodians ashe left the court room.

DR. FARRAND INSTALLEDAT CORNELL UNIVERSITY,

George F. Baker Donor of$1£00,000 Laboratory Fund.Special Despatch to The New York Hkbai p.

Ithaca, Oct. 20..Or. Livingston Farrandwas to-day invested with theoffice of president of Cornell University.Coincident with this came thedisclosure that the donor of the $ 1,600,000for the election of a new labora-tory of chemistry was Goorsra FisherBaker, New York banker, who laid todaythe corner stone of the laboratory.

Mr. Baker, who had become interestedIn Cornell through his friendship withthe late George C. Boldt, had previouslygiven $350,000 to the university for a

group of domltories.The gathering included some fifty

presidents of Institutions of higherlearning, among them President Lowellof Harvard, Angcll of Yale. Hibben ofPrinceton, Burton of Michigan, Wilburof Leland Stanford and Day of Syracuse.The State was represented by Gov.Nathan L. Miller. Delegates were alsopresent front the universities of Paris.Toulouse, Touralne, Glasgow, Seville,Edinburgh, McGill, Toronto, Leeds, UniversityCollege of Wales, Liverpool. Birmingham,Queens College and Dalhouslc.NOBLETT NOT GUILTY,

BUT COURT DEMURS:

Justice Strong Expresses Surpriseat Jury Verdict.After five hours' deliberation a jury

before Justice Strong In the BrooklynRuprcme Court Criminal Term, returnedlast night a verdict of not guilty, freeingKdward Arden Noblett. 55, of 131 RiversideDrive from a charge of swindlingArthur A, Victor, disabled soldier, of22 Kchenck avenue, Brooklyn, out of

33,000. Noblett was Alleged to have in-duced the ex-servloc man to Invest thatsum in a Burf avenue, Coney Island,"Jazz hall" concession In return for ahalf Interest in the lease. According tothe prosecution the lease was not inNoblett'se name at all.Though respecting the verdict of the

jury and formally discharging the de-fendant, Justice Strong told the Jurors:"I do not ace how you arrived at yourverdict; I cannot are It. It seems tothe court that not only was the defend-ant guilty, but It Is a grave questionwhether his counsel was not in It too."John O. Dyer, who represented Noblett.protested against the comment. He saidh" had hold "positions of honor andtrust" during fifteen years of practiceand had lived up to "every rule of themost ethical practice of the law."

DIVORCE WITNESSESKEPT VIGIL AT CHURCH

Testimony Given Against Mrt.Albert R. Thoen*.

Harry Thoens, secretary of M. & L,Hess, Inc., real estate agents, and RovL. Little, another real estate man. tcldyesterday before Supreme Court JusticeMcAvoy of nightly vigils they kept onthe steps of a church In watching lncl-dents across the way at 12B West AjMthstreet. In a two room ground floor«l>artment at that address, they testl-fled, they often saw Mrs. Katherine M.Thoens, wife of Albert It. Thorns, alsoIn the real estate business, and brotherof the witness, enter, accompanied by aman afterward Identified as I»r. E. A.Campbell of 129 Kn*t Ninety-secondstreet. The testimony was given In adivorce action begun by Albert R.Thoens.

The Thoenses had been living apart formore tliHn a year, it was brought cut. onthe trial. Mrs. Thoens has started a

separation action, but determination ofIt hns been halted pending the outcomeof the divorce suit.

5W YORK HERALD, i

SHIPPING NEWS"(CONTINUED PROJJ PRECEDING PAG 13 )

L & W B C C Noe 1 (for Lynn), 4 (for;»!emi and Wllkeebarre; Neponaet, Sandwich,towing barge Jtmei Barton, NowVork; W H Vorkea, Sandwich, towing bargedC'oaiiale and Hauto, New Vork.Sallail Kith, atr Walter V Noyau. Newport

Nawc'tug I'allaa, with a lighter; 20th, stmI'aivln Auattn, New York. Kcranaw. .Nor-folk; Nor walk. Now York; Prlnro Gayrgelllri, Yarmouth..Wind 3W. 15 n.tlre, thick!fog: smooth .-tea.BALTIMORE. Md. Oct 2<V-Arrlved. at-a

Orrus, Norfolk; Valarla (Rrt, New York;Callleto (Dutch), Hamburg via Philadelphia;Artie (Nnr>, Tamplco; Kalfuku Maru <Jap>.lHarry: Unilen iftv), Hernoaand via Ornek-1Joldavlk arid Philadelphia; Norfolk. Boston.cleared 20th, str Penaeo tltal). Gibraltar

(for,?ordcr»>.Sailed 20th, atri> ThaiIron (Greok). V'or:

Maria. Viatula (Dan), Port I«oboa; Missouri(Hr), London and Antwerp via Norfolk andPhiladelphia; Memphis City, London nndGlasgow via New Orlearu; tlowden (Nor),Norfolk and Newport New a; Veauvlo (ltal>,Gibraltar: Evelyn, Hampton {toads: LewieK Thurlow. do; Everett. Boatou (latter utdaylight 10th;.HATH. Me, Oct 10.Arrived at Parkerj

Plata, barge Northern No 3. for Augusta.BEVERLY. Mars, Oct 50 (not 10th).

Sailed, str N'lwisn. rtewalla Point.HK.MTFOP.T. NO. Oct 20-Arrtvcd. U S

lighthouse str Orchid, Norfolk; sehr Junlp«-i.0/j.CHARLESTON, SC. Oct 19- Sailed, achr*

Albert H Willis, Huston; G J Cheny. NewYork.Arrived 20th, atrs Mohawk, New^ York for

>l< Kr^lIJVllit VtCIIL nui I B11U3, a .

topsxl Havana.CAP*: HENRY. V«. Oct 20-PasseJ in. «tr

Munsomo. Galveeton for Baltimore.Passed out l!)th, tug Bristol, towing barges

Falmouth. Newport News for Boston, aridBarnstable, for Kail RArer.i'aased out 20th, 0 AM. etrs Tuscaloosa

City. Baltimore for Yokohama and Kooe;noon. Coolleda. do for Norfolk..Wind X,20 miles; rainingGALVESTON. Tex. Oct .0.Arrived, str

Swiftstar, I'ort Lnbos.Arrived 20th, etrs Schroon. Charleston;

Joalah Mary', Tamplco; Gladyebe, do; BatonRouge, do.Sailed 20th. strs Vlncenzo Florio fftali.

Italy, Marne, Orange; Thurland Castio (Br),Antwerp; J E O'Neill. New York.Sailed 20th. strs Monte Santo (ital). Ital-

Ian porte. "Monte Vano." Havre.GULFPOP.T, Miss. Oct 12.Arrived, atr

Eastern Sun. Mobile.Sailed 10th, str Hagno (Dutch), Buenos

Aires.HONOLULU. Oct 10.Arrived, str H.twk-

eye State, Manila, Ac. for Han Krancb.cn.JACKSONVILLE, Ela. Oct Id.Arrived,

srhrs Nancy Hanks. New York; Blakely. do:17th. Anna 11 Heldrltter, do; Maid of Scotland(Br). do.Sailed 20th, str Comanche. New Y'orlt.MANILA. Oct 10.Sailed, strs Silver Mate.

Seattle; Tippecanoe, Man Kranclsco.MUKILTEO. Wnsh. Oct 20-Salled. schr

Alice Cooke. Honolulu.MAYAGUBZ, PR. Oct Ift-Salied. str Maracalbo(from Curacao, Ac), New York. v

MOBILE. Ala. Oct 20.Arrived, etrs Mattola,Galveston; Vlttorla (Br), Liverpool;echr Nellie, Cartagena.Sailed 20th. strs Winifred. Port Arthur;

Copen (Hond). Tela: achre Vanlear Biack,San Juan; Scheme. Preston.NEW ORLEANS, t.a. Oct 20-Arrlved. Atra

Amsteldyk i Dutchi. Vera Crux; Burgondlcr(Br), Antwerp; Coahu'la (Mcx). Progreso;Garibaldi, Havana: Jamaica (Nlc), PortBarrios; Lake Fisher, Vera Uruz; Noccalula. London; Rajah. Progreso; RosenfioM(Br). Buenos Aires and Rio Janeiro; Stavangaren(Nor). Frontera: Tomlahua. San Francisco;Truntollte, Tamplco: Yoro (il)nd),C« Ibn.Sailed 10th. atrs Gelaha (Nor). Glasgow, |

20th. Hachsenwald (Oer), Savannah.Sailed from Port Ead* 2hth, strs Hrahe-

holm Swedish porta: ChattanoogaCity, Shnnarhai; Coraus, New York; Hereula,P.ora.i del Toro. Mendocino (Son, Tamplco;Qulmlstan (Hondl, Tela; Tegucigalpa(Hond), t'elba; Yuri Maru (Jap), Yokohama.NEWPORT NEWS. Va, Oct 20--\r-lv-»l,

strs Orcana (Br), Valparaiso; Slrlo (Ital).NorfolkCleared 19th, str Anglesoa (Hr), Ipawlrh.Sailed 20th, atra Berwlndvale (Br), Norfolk;Tyrula (Br), Tamplco.NORFOLK. Va, Oct 10.Arrived, atra S-ho1-nrle,Philadelphia for Hamburg and

Bremen: Brazlller (Br), New Orleans tandsailed 20th for Antwerpl.Arrived 20th, strs Wlllsolo, Philadelphia

for Baltimore and Pacific, ports: Westmeath(Br>, I.ondon: Gloucester, New Engl tnd;Banka (Dutch), New York; Paul Palx (Hr),Port Arthur: Coelleda, Baltimore; Tymmlc(Br), Manatea: Monmouth. Avonmouth.Spiled 10th, strs Grecian, Boston; YoneMam (Jap), Hull; Dorington Court (Br>,Havre; Nyland (Br), Bremen: Bolivian (Br),Liverpool; Easterly (Br). Brrmen; West-hnven, wrst coast via Philadelphia.Sailed 20th. strs Mcxlrano (Nor), Gothcn-

burg: Ecuador, nest coast via Havana; Settler(Br), United Kingdom; Fteeman, NewBedford; Brazlller (llr). Antwerp.Sailed 19th, str Indian, Providence; schrs

James E Hewson, Camden, Me (not as i>e-fore); Ella Pierce Thurlow, New England;Percy K Pyne II, do: Maurloe R Thurlow.do; tug Ontario. Boston, towing barges Sidnev, Cn«Visla and Smyrna.PORTLAND, O. Oct IP.Sailed, stra KIs.rldlan,Liverpool; Romulus (Nor), Chile.PORT ARTHUR, Tex, Oct 20.Arrived, *!r»

Corbis (Br). Liverpool; Delphinula (Dr),Halifax ^Gulfcoast, Philadelphia: Malmangvr(Nor), Rotterdam.Arrived 20th. rtr* Texaco 147, Amssvitle;

Liberty Mlnquas. Tampico; J R Gordon. NewYork.Sailed 20th, strs Cardonla, Galveston;

Blbbco. Buenos Aires: Reaper, Tampion.Sailed 20th, strs Vaarll (Nor), Norfolk,

Aladdin. Hoston: War Sirdar (Br). Devonport:l.lberty P.ell, New Orleans; Dlitrtct ofColumbia. Sand Key.PEN8AOOLA. Fla. Oct 20.Arrived, sir

West <*hetao. New Orleans; schr Jean MackavI Br). St John, Antigua.Sailed 20th, achr Martha (Fr), Flee'wood,RORT TAMPA. Fla, Oct 20-Sallcd, sirs

Trinidad.an, Tamplco; E L Russell, PortArthur.PHILADELPHIA. Pa. Oct 20-Anrtved. strs

Korsfjord (Nor), Media Luna; Osalneke.Sundsvaal, Ac. via Baltimore; Kentucklnn,New York; West Haven, do; Hayonna (motor),do; Persian, Jacksonville and SavanAr

rived 20th. str City of Agra (Br). NewYork.Cleared 20th. strs Grelfryda (Br). Havre

vl.r Bordeaux; Runa (Nor), Port Antutdo;Wm Uoyce Thompson. New Orleans; (IrofKhuen Hederx-ary (ltn.lt. Gibraltar (ror orders); Springfield. Seattle.Sailed 20th, battleship Illinois, New Tork;

strs Atlantic Sun, Port Lobos; levant Arrow,Beaumont; Panuco, Vera Cruz; Betikelsdyk(Dutch), Rotterdam via Ilaltlmore;Herbert L Pratt, Port I-oboe; Gustavsholm(Hw). Baltimore.Passed down Marcus Hook 20th, i);K) AM.

tugs Valley Forge, towing barges Wleonlsco,for Charlestown. Tamanend for Providence,and Richardson, for Newburyport; Carlisle,towing barges Yardley, for Cambridge,Tuckahoe, for Boston, and Tohtckon, forEast Cambridge.Passed up Reedy Island 20th, 2:20 I'M, tug

Latin American, towing barge Dallas.Passed out Delaware Breakwater JOth.

.1:30 PM. strs J C Donnell, Philadelphia forPort Loboa; R PM. Lyngenfjord (Nor), dofor Bergen (for orders) 20th, 5:20 AM. AtlanticSun, do for Port lobos.In port 19th, tug Georges Creek, for Boston.towing barges Noe 5, 17 and 21 (ready).

.Wind NW. 30 miles; raining; moderate r-».

PORTLAND, Me, Oct 20-Arrtwd, str Matoa.Norfolk.Sailed 20th, str Jonancy, Norfolk.In port 19th (to leave when weather permits),tug Tamaqua. from Philadelphia,

with barges Tulpehocken. for Augusta, andPennington, for Pearsport.PORTSMOUTH, NH. Oct 19-Arrlved (for

a harbor*, tug Bess. Parkers Flat*, towingha>ge Virginia Palmer. Portlanil for Norfolkvia Boston, where shs picks up bargeJohn Forsyth, and at New London for bargeEdith.SAN FRANCISCO. Cat. Oct 19-Arrlvtd.

itr Hllversum (Dutch). Hamburg. Ac.Sailed lft'h, strs Hamer. Shanghai. Willpolo.Norfolk; nark L Harmltc (Fr), <Ju«enstown.Sailed 19th, strs Cardiganshire (Br),

attle; Wlllpolo. New York.SAVANNAH. Ga, Oct 20.Arrived, strs CreSALE8

AT AUCTION._

SALE TODAY 3 P.M.Also Tomorrow, same nour.|[at in# uiuicnoa or If

FIFTH AVERUE2SthSt.AUCTION ROOMSinc

To Be Sold atInreetricted Public Auction

FINE ORIENTALRugs and Carpets

both antique and modern in a largevariety ot sizes-.Removed by usfrom "the U. S. Customs Stores.

Tl»e property of

Mr. Jacob Kormansky of. Nizni Novgorod, Russia.*

Ordered Hold byMICHAEL JOSEPHSOHN

to liquidate an unxatlafUid lien.On *levr until hour of aale.

Wallace H. Day, Auctioneer

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21,tan, Jacksonville (and (ailed for Ba.timore):Merrimack, Philadelphia (and sailed (orJacksonville).Hailed 2rtth. etr» City of St lA>nia, New

Vork; City of Columbus. Boston; tug W BKeene. do.TACOMA, Wash. Oct 2ft-Salled. str Klao

Maru (Japl. Portland.TAMPA, F'ia. Oct 20-Sailed, str Tiuii'Io,

New Orleans.VINEYARD HAVEN. Mas*. Oct 2ftArrlved,tugs William C Blckel. towing ;wo

barges. Norfolk for lloston; Gettysburg, tnwIngthree, Philadelphia for East; schr B KTower (Br), Apple Hlvcr, NH, for Ne v Vork.Passed 10th, f:45 PM, tug Chaa P Cirecrough,Boston for Norfolk, toalng barge

Irane.Passed 20th. atrs Munalbro. Bylayl and

Cambria, bound E..Wind. AM, SHE, frtoh;rain; ob«nivat!on. ;l mllea; I'M. WBW,strong; clearing: hnromete', 20.42.

AMERICAN PORTS.I By Mail.]

BANGOR, Me. Oct 18.In port, aehr KathorlneMay, waiting charter.GAI.VKSTON, T«x. Oct t«.Arrived, str

Freeporr Sulphur No 6. Krseport.ORANGE, Tex, Oct 10- Arrived, str Went

Erral, Galveston (to tie up)PROVIDENCE, Hi. Oct IS.Sailed, str Paul

H Harwood, Tatnplco.SABINE, Tex. Oct Id.Arrived, str Ai:tonlnaHie"), New Orleans.STEUBEN. Me. Oct ld-Salled, achr Nellie

Grant, New York. (

f. \

1^ Naval OrdersSprcwl Urspat'-h to Tub New Y'oik Hb*ai,p.

N>« York llcnilO Bureau.Washington. D. Oct. ?«. (

Thfufl naval order* have born nmd* public:I.tout. Marvin Kox. to U. S. 8. Kennlson.Lieut. lugoli N. KUarid. to It. .S. s. Young;Lieut .lohu R. Sullivan. to IT. S. P. Nicholson;Lieut. l-'rederick 8. t.'onncr, to V S. P.Badger; Lieut. Hoy K. Prnlth <S. C.I, toTMvlalon 8ev"nt"en: I,(rut. Wm. J. Morcock,to r. H. 8 Hands; Lieut. Harold L. Mitchell,to home.

BATH BEACH SECTION TOHAVE NEW APARTMENTThe newly organised C. and I* ConstructionCompany, Mrs, Llllle Lande

president, v.-JU erect at tlie southeastcorner of Cropsey avenue and Twentyiiinthstreet, Brooklyn, a five storyapartment house, 112x183. The proposedbuilding Is to coat about $300,000.In the new company, which Is representedby H. I.ubolkin, attorney, are N.Cohen and C. Dlstelfeld.

J. I>. Itanck sold bungalows as follows:For Realty f»ales Company, at414 Avenue J, 40x100, to WllhemtnaWilkenlrg; at 4717 Bay' Parkway, 52x100. to Rose Coppage; at 1044 OceanParkway, 40x130, to Joseph O. Tlieiss,and for Joseph O. Thelas a house at1031 East Thirteenth street to J. l>.Ranok, and for Annie W. Jewett twofamily scml-detached house at 1255 EastSeventh street to Daniel V. MeAulKTe.

Spear & Co. leased 12,000 square feetin Bush Terminal Building, No. 10, toAndrew/ Jergens Co.. perfumers.

Bulkley & Horton Company sold cooperativeapartment In 1289 Dean streetfor Mr. St. Cyr to Leroy V. Edwards.

J. Lacov sold for Bonart Mayerowitzto Ester I^ane 1122 Avenue J, a storeand apartment property.

A. B. Horwltz sold the southwest, cornerof Rtverdale and" Blake avenues.40x100, In East New York, for AlexanderPoprhn to Louisa Shahrll.A Mlsffkln sold| for Solphil Realty

Corporation to Harry Silverman a twofamily dwelling at 1170 East Fourteenthstreet.Frank A. Seavcr & Co. have placed

building loans on four houses on northside of Fighty-fourth street. 100 feeteast of Tenth avenue; also on twostores on east side of Fourth avenue,40 feet north of Bay Ridge avenue.

RESIDENTIAL LEASES.Pease & Elllmaii leased for Mrs. B. B.

Bates to Mrs. E. V. T'arr the foiir story25 foot dwelltnx at 311 West 101st street.between West End avenue and RiversideDrive. The same brokers leased apart

mentsas follows: In 755 Park avenueto Mrs. A. H. Morris, in 082 Ccxlngtonavenue to J. Ci. Purdle, In 145 EastForty-ninth street to Miss Edna Noland,in 140 West Fifty-eigrhtli street to A.T. Burr, in .157 West Fifty-seventhstreet, to Mrs. William Breustadt, In162 West Flftv-elghth street to J. Wilsonand Li. Rogers. In 120 East Eighty-secondstreet to Daniel Gregory Mason, in70 East Eighty-seventh street to RalphRoyal), in 124 West Seventy-secondstreet for the Park Avenue OperatingCompany to W. J. Gallear, In 39 WestSeventy-sixth street to Oscar E. Velt andIn 133 West Seventy-ninth street to RobertCushman.

Li. J. Phillips & Co. leased the followingapartments: In 20 West Fifty-seventhstreet to Jennctta Methvcn, in 63West Seventieth street to Mae Held andWinifred Purkwood. In 208 West Seventy-secondstreet to Mrs. Frances M.De Leon, in 273 West End avenue to

Mlaj M. F. Quinn, In 226 West Seventyfifthstreet to Mrs. (>. Do Conlnek. In50 West Eighty-sixth street to FredM. Santley.

M. Morgenthnu, Jr., Co. leased an

apartment In 133 and 135 West Eleventhstreet to Frederick A. Dewey, associatedwith the new Marshall Field in his bankingfirm.

Everett M. Selxas Company rented thefollowing furnished apartments: In 40East Eighty-third street, to Frank D.Webster. In 590 West End avenue toJ. L. Rubenstein and In 372 West 120thstreet and 50 Mornlnpslde avenue.

at'GBN8-RICHMO\D MARKETS.The Rickert-Brown Realty company

sold to Katherine Maseel a two storyelKlu room dwelling and a two oar

Karaite on Seventh avenne, between Jamaicaand Grand avenues, in NorwoodGardens.

C. H. Pratt, associated with the NavyKnitting Mills, and formerly a residentof RidKefield, X. .T., purchased an apartmentat 131 Twenty-third street, JacksonHeights.

Rdgemer* Crest. Inc., Maximilian Mnrgentkau.president, sold eleven lots Inthe north side of McKinley avenue, westof Cedar avenue, Kdgemerc, to BernardGottehrer, house builder.

INSTRUCTION. COLLEGES. &C.

LEARN LANGUAGES ITHE BERLITZ WAYBy ths famous Beriltx Method of

language instruction you can quicklylesrn to «i>eak, rend ar.tl writeany modern language {English In-eluded). Private or class Instructionfrom experienced nsttve teachers.Day or Evening Classes Individualhessons. Reasonable tuition. A*!<fcr catalog.

nFRIITTjL# schooTT^JF M 4LANGUAGESCSX l»r» 3Sfi HWANtMEl

.10 Want nth Slrfft.Plinn* I'rnnMliiinlii I l*H.

Brooklyn. tl* iliinfutoil St.Fhun* Main ID40.

The Semple School forGirls

241-245 Central Park WertNKW YORK CIT*.

Boarding and day puplla. College preparatoryPort (lraduate, Flr.iahlng CouraarLanguage*. Art Mualc anil Dramatic Art.rhu rchool hat a country eatato for outloor racrcatloi.Urn. T. mnnis-'.T »?: - :mcm: principal.

WEIGESTER ^ R

Rti.'llo nf Vocal Mum \ i n \fxrtlklfCarncyl Hall. N. v. I KAIINlINljWrite for Hook let 11. At Mndarnt* llnte*.

Mil.I .Kit SCHOOL.Ulinitai At*., al till St.

fail and Winter Claiaaa Mow Forming.

j 1921.

BUILDERS IN BRONX'PLAN APARTMENTS

Demand for Vacant PropertyShows Construction Wave

Is Still v ljrorous.,

For improvement with apartment'1houses two plots in The Bronx haveJust been purchased by the BenensorRealty Company. The deals involved i|

the plot, 121x130, on the east side of;University avenue. 331 feet north of

'183d street, and the plot, 126x100, at1the southwest corner of the Grand Con- 1:course and Elliot place. The latter was ',bought from a client of the J. RomalneBrown Company.A five story apartment house, costing

$200,000, is to be erected at the south-»as: corner of Burnslde and Crestonavenues by the newly organised CrestBurns Corporation, which proves to betiie new owner ot the plot. 114x100. re-

ported sold recently by the SpartaRealty Company. Thc new company iscomposed of T. Jaltc, M. Fasa and A.

Brodsky. It is represented by Gettinger<5t Weinman, attorneys.

Plans have been filed for a five storyapartment hous*, 75xS8.1i. on "io west

aide of Walton avenue, 177 feet northof Burnslde avenue, for Henry JuoUsonG. F. Pelham, architect, estimates thecost at $100.0CO.

J. Clarence Davlty resold to RJckphyOperating Company the vacant plot.!i3.f>xl00, on the west side of Walesavenue, 356 feet south of 119th streetThis is one of the plots sold by .Mr.Davif-s at auction last Tuesday.Henry M. Bloch sold the plot. Sox

120.7x Irregular, on the northwest skle ,

of Interval# avenue, 20.*.1 feet northeastof 167th street, to Mary Katz, who ownsJhe adjoining two story dwelling to theljnorth.For the erection of a taxpayer the

newly formed Friedman Holding Cor-poration, with. Fanny Deutarh, JacobMaran and Louis J. Gold as directors,has bought the plot, 88.1 x"2x Irregular,!on the east side of Prospect avenue,107.3 feet south of 166th street arrd extendingthrough to Stebblns avenue.

George H. Shaffer, Jr., was the seller.George Meyer sold 083 Home strcst

to an Investor.Harry Cahn sold through George H

Janss a plot. .71x100, on the east aide ofSpofford avenue, 30 feet aouth of Coster jstreet., to Richard J. Harde. bul'der.Frank E. Kohl sold to Edward AroIhelter the vacant plot, 50.2x117.2, on the

west side of Morris avenue, 230.10 feetnorth of 196th street.Herman Krepper bought the five story

building, 85.9x25.6x irregular, on thenortherly side of East 136th street, be- jtween Third and Lincoln avenues.Thomas T. Uren purchased from the

Rouns estate fifty lots on Lyre avenue.

Klngsbridge road and South Fifth ave-

nue. Harry W. Dav's of the Red RoofRealty Company negotiated the sale.The newly formed Massachusetts

Holding Company (I). Molloy, J. O'Neilland T. II. Ray) bought from KmilKaufman, Inc.. the three story buildln".200x100. occupying the easterly blvkfront of Lincoln avenue, between 132illand 133d streets. The seller acquiredthe property last August.

Nettie Singer sold to the 1567 Corpo-- i~r,,t- director* Louis

Schwartz. Abraham Tabachlnek andBarney Heiss, an apartment house, 75x100, at 1557 Hoe avenue.The Suchy estate sold to J, Waller

through John F. Prendergast a fivestory apartment, 54x100, at 417 and 419Hast 147th street.

ARCHITECT WILL BUILDFLAT ON WEST S4TH ST.

John H. SohciVr, the architect whorecently completed the new seven storybuilding at 23tl and 238 West Flft.v-flfthstreet, and who owns the adjoiningproperties at 240, has acquired controlof the three three story houses at 241to 245 West Fifty-fourth street, havinga frontage of 57.6 feet, by leasing themfrom Sommer ic Brother for twenty!one years, with renewals and with an

option to purchase. The transactionInvolves a net rental of 31,000.000. Mr.Scheier announced yesterday that heIntends to Improve the property witha six story office and apartment build:ing, to be ready next spring. AlbertH. Stout was the broker In the trans|action..__.^

ART SALES.

3RD SESSIONAll the Elegant Articles

in To-Dag's SaleAUCTION SALE

OF IMPORTANCETo-Day(Fri.)2P.M.Also To-Morrow, Saturday, Same HourDARLING & CO.

LOUIS VAN BRINK. Auctr242* 5th Ave..27th-28th Sts.

Elegant Home FurnishingsWorks of Art

BELONGING TO

Prominent N. Y. Bankerand Broker

From His Large Estate at Montclair. N. 1

^mNrrwEuet A,moneGallenM

^^MTUREJ Tiffany StudiosUpholstered Furniture W. & J. SloaneBaby Grand Piano Kranich & BachClock Set* Tiffany 4c Co.Chinese Ruga Altman 4t Co.

r SAROOK-KERMANSHAH RUGS. RoomSizes: and 200 PERSIAN RUGS,

various sizes, from Public Warehouse.Rare Bronzes. Clock Sets, Cabinetswith Curios. Fine Linens, Draperies

tuoLibrary Furniture. Beautiful Dining Roomand Bedroom Suites, Tea Itwood, t nineseVases, etc.

Know vamors KHTATF.*

Smith's Knickerbockerargfik Sales Rooms, Inc.,BWwQ 825 BKVK.VTH AV. AT MO HT.

VpySl/v/ Ph,"1,'s Olrrla 3014-3*13.

W* C. E. SMITH. Auct'r.19"1THIS FRIDAY AT t O'CIOCK.

ALSO PATt'RDAY, MONDAY A TfKSPAV.

t ONTINI ATION KXKI I TOKS' SAI.K.

KSTATF. or TIIK LATO

William A. StoneFORMER GOVERNOR OF PENNSYLVANIA

BY OnnBR OK KXKCt'TORS.ALSO THIQ ARTISTIC

Furniture & Rich EffectsREMOVED FROM RIVERSIDE DRIVE OK

MRS MARGARET M. HURLBERTjv

DEMAND FOR BUSINESSSPACE CONTINUES FIRM

Spear & Co. leased floors as follows:In 93 Spring street to Finhe Istein Knot.,manufacturers of chair seats; In 115Mercer street to Ileanxo & Jacullc, In123 Fifth avenue and 2 West. F.lghteenthstreet to Iilachoff llros., M. & 1- lltss,Inc., represented the lessee.

Brett & Goode Company leased oificeein 312 Fifth avenue to the LahquanPhoto with Brown-WheelockCompany; 303 Broadway to MirhigeBros, of San Jose. Costa Itiea. *ithHorace 8. Kly & Co.; spa<~e In 23o Fifthavenue to Rudolph Schrciber, lite., andDevonshire Mills Company, Inc., withWalter C. WycKOff; space In 237 Lafay-ette street, to W. P. Ltlllcrapp: eleventhfloor In Fifth avenue to MohawV GloveCorporation: store and t>a«emeat iti 34-1West Fifty-second street u A nisiFischer; offices In 79 Fifth Menus toJohn Lewis Thompson.

L. Tannebaum, Strauss & Co. leasedthe fireproof parage, on u plot 541x100, atlis Beach street, to the G. U. ExpressCompany, Inc.

Mastlrio & Co.. Inc.. rented the following:Store and basement in 45 WestTwenty-seventh street to Edgar ljc-hmar.,store and basement In 19 West Twenty-fourth street to George C. Kindt & Co..Inc., and second fldor In 91 Fifth avenueto Haher pros.Folsom Bros., Inc.. leased store in 134

East Thirty-fifth street to F. J. Pas>otti,»tatloner and printer.

Itoyul Scott Gulden leased for tentears to Louis I'armc of Paris the. uor>-und l«asernent in the new building at 48East Forty-ninth street. The rental ug-uregntes $52,500.William I. Kosenfeld leased loft in

136 West .Seventeenth street to theWestern Electric Company.Henry Brady ioased the four story

dweKIng at 355 West Twenty-seventhstreet to Frank Lombardi for ArchieMcAlonen; also a loft 111 123 and 125West Thirty-third street to Goldkrantr.Sc RroPease & Klllman leased parlor floor In

27 West Fifty-seventh street to the C.K. Wolfert Company, retail shoe dealers.John U. & Oscar L. Foley leased the

torner store at the southwest corner ofSeventh avenue and Fifty-second stree'to A. Massalian.

REALTY MARKET JOTTINGS.

Wood, Poison <\ynipanv. Inc.. throughjonn i). uevviu, piareu loan uc sisu.vuvon University avenue arid IShth street,and f-oven building ami permanent lonp-

of$10,"00 eaeli cn dwellings tn pelhamThe Title Guarantee and Trust Com pa >

has lonned $30o,0"0 on the Southeastcorner of Sixth avenue anil Twentiethstreet, a six story building, lot llj.Tx167.4; also $230,000 on 43 West Fiftyseventh.street, an eight story businessbuilding. 32.3x100.5.

I'aniei H. Jackson was th~ seller to,the Benenson Healty Company of the sixlot3 at the northwest comer of the Grand

RESORTS.Atlantic City.

Announcement.Th

SeasideOn the Ocei

ATLANT1wishes to announce a reducefor the cominc winter, eff

WEEKLY RATES II1 Person.Single Room with1 Person-Single Room with2 Persons.Double Room wi2 Persons.Double Room wi

flDarlborougfwith its Spacious Exchanges uml

attractive

ATLANTAFAMOUS SUM

June to OctofcExquieita music a feature. Surf-BathRolling Chain, Plan, Theatre*. Movies r

OWNERSHIP MJONIAH W II ITU A

VerrowM.

EQUINOX HOUSEMonohe«»ter-in-theMonnt»*in*, Vermont.OPEN I NTIL OCTOBER ?ITH.

i

WnrtrhMlfr.

jSiuarcUtt Iffiobne >

Pt#jON*L Co«fO«r» Of A HOMF kBRIARCLIFF MANOR.NY. k

NEW YORK OFFICE 343 MADISON AVB. J

New Jrmej.

Id =71IDEAL COUNTRY HOME

Hotel MontciairMONTI ( AIR. N. J.

MO«T nKI.HJHTrui.l.V MTCATEDRKSTDKNTIAI. HOTKI. IN NKWYORK'? H'Rl'RIM.

OPEN* THE ENTIRE TEAR.OWNERPHrP MANAGEMENT

rWFDKWHK C. HA If CliMrAVT

MANOR FARMMorrU Turnpike, summit. N. 4.

Plctureeque IS acre nutate, SOtl ft, alevatlon, 40 mlio n-1»-w, Expre** eeivlre to V^ ork City within the hour. I.uxorloux home«pt>clntmem» Efficient service. Superior cute!nc. Knrm apcrlnltlse. Adjoining Canoe ItriKikcountry- Cluh. 2 mile* from llaltuernl. (lolflnt; ,

prlvllwi arrantted. Telephone Hummlt ,V>.

Michigan,

MOUNT CLEMENSMINERAL BATHSWorld renowned for Khruniati-nt, Ntrroue-nee* and that run-down condition, Opfn alithe year. Twenty RtUoS from Detroit. ML.Clemen* lnterurban meet* N. Y. CentralWolverin# -,w*ry morn Ins at Detroit. Writefor Roe-' let.HutiitfM Men'* Aaeoriatlnn. Mf.Clentrne.Mtt.-U

t'a natln.

SEE CANADA THIS TEAR.A. - CHOWN. Canadian National ftnUtrajw

StTO Broadway. N .. lark.

» + 19 1'on course and Mount Ecton avenus.

Willltpi iluKo wan the broker and Uoldsmllb& Rosent.hu! uud an attorney afor Mr. Jackaou.Horace S. Ely & Co. represented

George lnnej, Jr.. Ha.- artist and painter.In the Mta of tliu five story buildin-?lit 51 Washington Square South, which

to be cc.nv rtcd Into dormitories forthp students of the School of Ctmnwrceof New York I'niversity.

l'avii Technian and Hrajanin Steinore the buyers of 98-106 East 114thstreet, sold recently.

Harry J. Golden, the buyer of th"southwest Comer of WhltVock andEryant avenues, paid $33,090 for theproperty. He will erect an Ice plant.

Pease £ Elllmun have been appointedmanagers of the npartment property at135 Bast Fifty-fourth street.

Haggstrotn-<*aiU-n Company has beennppolnteu agents of the business building»t 115 Wdst Sixty-third street.

Byrne it Bowman wer, the brokers Inthe sale of the apartment l^uae at 10031005Tinton avenue reported yesterday.

Vl'BCRBAN TR A NS ACTIONS.

ChalUieey B. Urii'fen & Co. sold f<VMrs. M. J. Cherry a residence with threec:i r i:. ,:i l.ar. :vint. Mailer. N".to H. P. Hevenor.

Tito dwelling nt 20S Elbert aver.ac.

West Netv Brighton, Staten Is'tind. has!« « r, pur- ha.-rd Patrick Six through\V. S. K. Hall.

Prince & Ripley sold for Barney Gerardhis new house on Park Circle, WhitePlains. X. Y., to L. li Paulin of theNew York World. also for Charles Paul '

cf White Plains, X. Y.. his residence on

Sterling avenue to Frank E. HoiIowayof Brooklyn. The property consists ofa nine room lions'-- on a half acre nloc

R. R. Ragette sold for Zibelli Brothers,builders, a two family dwelling, 5Gtc10U, at ^06 l.angdon avenue. Mount Vcrnon.J.toMorris Colin. ';?-*{

Kfah-< lai n.an;- Rca.lt} Corporationsold two lots in the Ferncliff section of I.Searsdalo,X. Y.. for Judson II. Swift toMrs. Henrietta Robeson of Scarsdslc.

Siillwcill Realty Offices of Mama noticek rented the furnished residenco ofBertha Strl.-h at .nrliiiiont .Manor to

John T. Byrne of this city.Uoorgr* Howe sold for John A. Rosa A'

eight acres and a residence and o:thulldlntjJon Glnndals road, Oss'ning, toDr. Dorvithy Smiley,Robert .\i. Farley Organisation rented

an apartment in the Phillpse Manor..' ^Apartment House, Tarrytown, to M*s.R. I.. Met "lure. V

'liioir.as S. Burke sold the store propertyat northwest corner of Bruce and *.Caryl avenues. Yonkem, for CordeliaShipmnn to George Mansfield.

Hilmer M. Nelson lius purchased fromRaynniml M. Oakes the residence andlarge plot on the cast side of Rhlgrwo-idroad, between Cedar lane and Cliircmontroad, Maplewood. X. J., and the adjoin- '

Iny plot from Frederick W. Nash, givingthe buyer a frontage of 435 feet on

Rldgewood road. I.ouis Schleslnger.Inc.. were the brokers. *1

r

RESORTS.Atlantic City.

:.. I jUnnoaIIUUOU

an Front

IC CITYi schedule of minimum ratesectrve until February 1st:

ELUDING MEALS jRunning Water.... $35.00

i Bath $45.00th Running Water . $60.00ith Bath $75.00

__F. P. COOK'S SONS. f

* I>*Bknbeim, r tOpen Air Plaza is particularlyduringC CITY'SMFR SFASONer, Inclusivelinic. Golf (2 Championship f'oureei.)ind rountless other amusement*. ^' '*

anagemkntNUNS COMPANY

... IMOTEL. "Jf"

O'ATLANTIC CITY JLI On the Hfiwh front

PRE WAR RATESAiterlcm Plan Entirety. Alvayt Ofen^ ^Sirijls j Ruaiii'<f[ Vitsr $.44 jt wmk /^Ro«»wt i Privits Bath $42 Co 9 '4 " m

Doabls > Rnnntns I'«l#r M t*>Raw® ) Prints Bath $72 Co $84 *

DnubURoom. Private Path : I< Wan e rnar, $96 par week

Ownership Managatnmt PSo®a 14UI

| ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. ji Directlyon tKe OceanFront §JAnAmerinmPtanHotelot Distinction |CAPACITY 600 r., _ , ioawaok llrrfter-7.Bc/ir/p'I

« ». s.seiwsismsai '»sn

J"M12 Jt >TE1. WITH A NEW HOME IDEA.

NEW HOLLANDNew York \v., ne«r li.ach. Cuisine and Her»ii'unexcelled. Special Fall Amor plan rates,|1"> week or- C. II. WOOD. Jr , Mgr.

Zi)c HreaUersGreatly ReduceJ Present Season Rates

new <;oi,F ci.rn pruvit.noKfI nmirpu^d for hraltliful Kr«it and

K«h rrntion.ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.

Kifry month In lh« yrar.

Anbury I'ark.

<$M&V&OPOUGAfi' «/'V^ X5BUKY R4RKN.J.Open All Year Capacity 300coMT.i-rrK o'NfrrntT'TJo.N TiinouunOVT;ELEVATOR.P HEKVr.s. l'ro|» v II nEBrtH, Jr.. M«r. ||

Waaliiuatoa. I>. C.

GRAFTON HOTELAMERICAN PLAN$5 per day and upward.

HAKUIMjIUN MILLS, Proprietor.

Recommended