Evening Star Newspaper, August 10, 1929, Page 15

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{ PLANS EIGHT-STORY REAL Clifton Manor Copporation Asks Permit for Structure at Estimated Cost of $176,500. o.(Continued From Thirteenth Page) _ story brick addition, New York avenue and North Capitol street (lots 44, 45 and 46, square 619); to cost $20,000. Herbert B. Plaster, owner; George L. ‘Williams, architect and builder; to erect one 2-st: brick addition, 3102 P street (lot “B,” square 1256), to cost $15,000. Prank DuBose « Phillips. owner, de- signer and builder; to erect two 2-story frame dwellings, 5311 and 5315 Ne- braska avenue (Jot 11, square 2027), to cost. $15.000. J. E. Fox, owner and builder: L. E. Allison, designer: to erect one 2-story brick and tile dwelling, 1619 Jonquil | street (lot 8, square 2745-F), to cost | $16,000. Minnie B. Smoot, owner and builder; | J. L. Turner, designer; to_erect one 2-story brick apartment, 1027 Howard avenue southeast (lots 896 and 894, square 5861), to cost $14,000. % Christ Church, owner; W. G. Peter, architect; R. W. Bolling, builder; to erect one 2-story brick addition, Thirty- fourth and O streets (lots 50 and, 825, psquare 1243), to cost $12,000. G. W. Chase, owner, designer and ‘builder; to erect two 1-story brick and tile dwellings, 7205 and 7309 Seventh | street (lots 29 and 30, square 3176), to | cost, $12,000. L. E. Breuninger & Son. owners and builders; H. L. Breuninger., architect; | 1o erect one 2-story brick dwelling. 1321 Jonquil street (lot 4, square 2773), to_cost $11,000. Pries, Beall & Sharp Co., Inc., own- ers: George G. Stonebraker, builder: to erect one 1-story brick warehouse, ‘Thirtieth street and Canal road (Rock Creek) and K street (lot 800, square 1171), to cost $10,000. New Gasoline Station. | Gult Refining Co., owners, designers | B, and bullders; to erect one 1-story brick | nost §7,000. and concrete gas station, 2401 M street and 1200 Twenty-fourth street (lots 828 and 829, square 24), to cost $8,000. P. N. Butt, owner; Allan B. Fay, designer; Morrison Bros., builders; erect one 2-story brick and tile dwell- ing, 4302 Fessenden street (lot 11, square_E-1654), to cost $7,000. H. ‘Thornton, owner: Doran S. ers; to erect one 2-story frame dwelling, 524 Van Buren street (lots 21, 23. square 3195), to cost $5,000. 1. Goldberg, owner: S. M. Smith. sarchitect; Joe Light. builder: to make alterations, 3351 M street (lot 810, aquare 1205), to cost $5.000. J. P. Hovey, owner: Sears. Roebuck & Co.. designers and builders: to erect one 2-story frame dwelling, 4908 Po- 2211 Lawrence St. N.E. OPEN SUNDAY FULLY DETACHED $6,450 Hardwood floors throughout, water heat and five nice, rooms. ~ Entire property newly di orated and painted and in first-class condition. If you are now a rent paver it would be well to come out and see this home Sunday. HOOKER & JACOB Nat. Press Blds. Metropolitan 2663 hot- architect; David & Platt, bufld- | ESTATE. tomac avenue (lot 3, square 1302), to cost $8,000. Meatyard Construction Cp., owners, designers and builders; to erect one 2- story brick dwelling, 4005 Pessenden ,:;r:&tl (lot 36, square 1756); to cost | Henry Spencer, owner; Randolph | Dodd, builder; to erect one 1-story frame dwelling, 4246 Lane place north-| east (lots 7 and 8, square 5099);"to cost | “g::ml View Realty Co.. owners lnd‘h Private oDerafions' Have Highest Month Total of builders;: George T. Santmyers, archi- Year, Except March. BUILDING IN JULY tect; to erect one 1-story brick and tile idwelling, 5019 Ames place northeast | (lots 30, 31 and part 32, square 5191); | to cost $5,600, Mary T. Pflaster, owner: J. F. De Muth & Son, builders; to make repairs, 1900 K street (lot 824, square 86); to cost $7,000. Alfred J. Hazzelwood, owner; M. C. designer; Morrison Bros . to erect one 2-story bri dwelling, 6107 Utah avenue (lot 127, square 2335); to cost $7,000. ’DJuéluul Gnrl?n‘t]:gel. o:mer: kuumn‘c. | Davis, Inc., builders: to make repairs, 11222 7 street (lot 818, square 290); to | bullding inspector. cost $5,000. Permits were issued for eight apart- Protestant Episcopal Cathedral, Wash- | ment buildings having an estimated cost. | ington, D. C.. owners and builders; Mrs. | of $1,269,000, while there were permits G. C. P. Bratenahl, designer; to erect | for a total of 121 dwellings having a |one 1-story frame servants’ lodging, | cost estimated to total $1,044,095. Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues | _The July volume brought the total for Private building operations in the District, for which permits were issued during July, have a total construction cost_estimated at $5,127,815, which is the hii‘helt monthly.total for this year with the exception of that for March, which was but slightly greater, it is re- vealed in the monthly statement issued this week by Col. John W. Oehmann, COST $a,127815 ON REALTY ROW News Briefs and Observa- tions Concerning the Local Business, Tilden Gardens. ‘The fifth unit of the $3,000,000 co- operative -department development of M. & R. B. Warren on Connecticut avenue) between Tilden and Sedgwick streets, has been completed. This is a double unit in the shape of two crosses joined together, containing many new departures in apartment house construction. Called the Tilden Gardens Club Building, this six-story structure is fea- tured by & number of exclusive club and hotel features on the first floor. There is a trophy room, a spaclous and lavishly furnished room with pegged oak floor, designed as a lounge. It has |a huge fireplace. Another feature is a dining room with a seating capacity of 100. There are also two private dining {rooma seating about 30 at a time; a | large kitchen from which there will be | room service to all apartments in Til- (parcel 41-21, .square 1926); to cost!‘the vear thus far to $24.165,610. Per- den Gardens, and a large baliroom. | $6.000. | mits were classified as follows: | which, when not In use for dances, Prank J. Rawson, owner: J. E. Sohl.{ e Brick. |may be used as an indoor practice | architect; Morrlsog ‘B;os.. dbl::{de;s: l'ln' P e value | place for golfers. | e g i@ 21 a— 11030 | S Ui Ry nfiéép:’ lc!“twtlrk?ggnn owner, designer | 3 1 o LeLn. 80 f{,"";’ix'm'h.s"’fi?é“fie:"::fi" t;gdb:’c-t:: ‘ and builder; to erect one 2-story brick | P 1 1 ,000 | Twenty of the apartments have three | r f e - | Mort 5. : ers: va cect o 31istory Teame awel: |Eammop i 1 T e i ing, 5509 Nevada avenue (lot 22, square | Repairs s e Wi | 5 g ‘;:n“id;‘ "':"m'-‘:" e 1995); to cost $5,000. - - president o G. 'W. Chase, owner, designer and |, .. . i | Kennedy-Chamberlin ‘Development Co.. builder: to erect one 1-story brick dwell- Garages 1 § ing, 7213 Seventh street (lot 31, square | 3176) ; to_cost $6.000. | asases Salfz Bros. owners and builders; | Sitres®" Claughton West, architect: to ereet Church brick addition, 1341 F street (lot 44, Repairs . square 253); to cost $2,000. Theodore 'N. Gill. jr., owner: W. K. Reeve, builder: to make alterations, 3022 P street (lots 828 and 829, square 1257); to_cost $3.000. National Women's Party, owners: J.! H. Collier, builder: to make repairs, 144 Ga B street northeast (lot 878, square 725); SN | to_cost. $3.500. | Loffler Provision Co.. owners; ichol, builder; to make alt Benning. D. C. (lot —, square 5044) llings .. e it Repairs .. D. E./Moors . | Boilers ations, | Bollers 6806 47th Street, Chevy Chase, Md. NEW, ALL-BRICK DETACHED COLONIAL HOME Corner Lot, Nearly ¥4 Acre Paved Streets and Sidewalks OMPLETE in every detail. including garage, bronze screens throughont. inlaid linolenm on kitchen floor. open fireplace in living room, landscaped lot. 11,950 Drive out Wisconsin Avenue to Leland Street (just north of Bradley Lane), turn east on Leland Street to 46th Street, then north 2 blocks. M. & R. B. WARREN Wisconsin 2875 ‘again the fact that the M | e THE. EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D C., SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1929. his wife and daughter, Mrs. Henning Nelms, * & & ¥ Hagner Resting Out West. Randall H. Hagner is enjoying the great out of doors at Estes Park. He started on his vacation last week and will be in the West until September, * ok ok ok U. 8. Grant Title Holder. ‘The District government has greatly expanded its real estate activities with the acquisition of two properties in the site for the mew municipal center in the section between' Pennsylvania, Loui- siana and Indiana avenues, Third and Sixth streets. Here is a section, once of great importance but now largely de- cadent, that abounds in historical ref- erences, Ben T. Webster of Boss & Phelps this week ruminated on one bit of history there while chatting with the writer. District officials, making a study of properties to be purchased f the new center, brought into l;:{l:l n Methodist Episcopal Church on John Marshall place still is assessed in the name of U. S. Grant, the former Presi- dent, who for a time was chairman of the church board. The church, a dignified brown stone structure of English gothic style, was rected in the period from 1854, to 1869, being completed about the time Grant became the Nation's Chief Ex- executive. In addition to Grant, Presi- dent McKinley and Vice Presidents lhognn and Fairbanks attended services there. The property now has an assessed value of $108,000 for the bullding and $27,600 for the ground, the land assess- ;ne{m rate amounting to $3 per square oot. * koK ok Many Seek New Sites. ‘The rebuilding of large sections of downtown Washington to make it con- form to far-visioned plans for the Na- 116.200 | is at Loon Lake, New York, where he | tional Capital is resulting in cansid- | 1s_svending the month of August with crable real estate activities ide from 206 East 1aylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Really a Charming Home HIS two-story, absolutely modern dweiling, which is just east oi Connecticut Avenue, is a pleasant, comfortable, livable home. There are 6 roome and tiled bath, with built-in garage, and other modern conveniences tioned throughou fashion as to really in such caref Redecorated and recondi- ul and painstaking be a new house in every respect. $11,950 Your ear invited. Sunday until Bradl for Girls), turn east on Taylor Street property. ' Or phone Wisconsin 2875. 1y inspection 1s pm Dri nt . Drive out Conn. iey Lane on Taylor Street (opposite Chi Open 8 Ave. evy Chase School two short blocks to, M. and R. B. Warren A acquisition of private properties for Government purposes, as homes of or- genizations and firms in these sections seek. new_sites. ‘The Southern Railway offices now are located in the magnificent new building erected for the southwest corner, of Fifteenth and K streets, and its old home on Pennsyl- vania avenue west of Thirteenth street has been left to tem ry use by Gov- ernment offices pending removal of the structure to make a site for a new Fed- eral building. Dosgens of business organizations, the Me litan _ Methodist Episcopal Church, the First Presbyterian Church, the Ford Motor Co. and many other institutions in the site of the municipal center shortly will be faced with' the rroblem of having to give up present locations '.hm.* e Rust Goes to France. H. L. Rust, jr, and Calvert Bowie or | of the H. L. Rust Co. sailed last week for Europe, where they will enjoy a month of vacation from work. They will be at Honfleur, France. * ¥ X ¥ Miss Newman at Boardwalk. Miss Ruth L. Newman. member of the firm of Boss & Phelps, is vaca- tioning at Atlantic City. Milton Schwab, member of the same | irm, returned this week from a vaca- | tion spent at Patuxent, Md., fishing, boating and swimming. e Londoners are worried over the de- crease in the number of American visit- ors this yea REAY ESTATE. BUSINESS PROPERTY ON G STREET LEASED | Julius R. Panitz Will Open Stores There—Alterations Will Office Aids Efficiency. 2 d Efficiency of modern American bugi-t jness is in a large measure due to the! {superiority of the modern office bullding | {in the opinion of Ralph D. Kaufman, | vice president of the Lawbeck Corpora- tion of New York and Chicago. He be, |lieves that the tremendous volume :; money being spent in the erection super-office bulldings is amply justified Be Made. | by the resulting increased efficiency and | productivity reflected in modern busi- ness. Business property at 1350-52 G . FOUTES SRR I, street been leased Julius R.| = Panitz, who will open stores there for New Factory Cos B the sale of men's clothing, hate and | TyiCoscatiowa haberdashery, trading under the name | Although industrial building has of “Youdie's,” it is announced by |been at high levels this year, the cost Shannon & Luchs, Inc., which han- | Of & new factory structure is 6 per cent dled the leasing transaction. below the average for the last 10 years, The two premises have been leased | according to a survey of building costs for terms of five years beginning Sep- | throughout the country, made by the tember 1. Extensive alterations are | Austin Co. engineers and builders. to be made prior to the opening of the | = shops. The leases were made on a guaranteed rental basis plus a per- | eROPERTY OW centage of the gross sales, it is stated. | NERS | ‘The premises at 1350 G street for- | merly were leased to the University | ATTENTION Shop, Mr. Panitz formerly being con- |nected with that organization. We have a client desirous of purchasing Investment or Busi- ness property. What have you to offer. See Karl E. Jarrell, Thos. E. Jarrell Co. 721 10th t N.W. National 0765 i New Firm Is Incorporated. | Special Dispatch to The Ster. | BALTIMORE, August 10, -— The Maryland Realty Investment Trust has been incorporated under the laws of Maryland with a capitalization of |$1,100.000. The incorporators are Wil- |llam E. Ferguson, William Stanley and ! Bennett Crais i7g Hall Colonial Detached Brick Residence library, 4 splendid bedrooms, venience. ELECTRIC REFRI value. cticut Ave. A Charming Chevy Chase Home At the Crest of a Knoll Amid a Grove of Chevy Chase, Md. ln tlmt bcautffu] wooc]e‘d section ;’ust west of Com!. Ave. —between the two Country Clubs | A HOME to enjoy—ALWAYS. Space is too limited for an adequate description—you must come out | to actually SEE and APPRECIATE this lovely home in its picturesque setting. There are EIGHT com- | fortable rooms—rooms in which you can REALLY LIVE—2 tiled baths, maid's room and bath—a first floor | master bedroom with private bath, lovely screened porch: (GERATION and OIL HEAT. If you are seeking the UNUSUAL—we urge your prompt consideration—NOWHERE Schwab, Valk & Canby Pine and Shade Trees Lot 75x130 Only $19,500 Terms 114 Leland Stret —every possible con- Private driveway to a 2-CAR BRICK GARAGE. can you find a better Ofpen Sunday from 11 to 6 Exclusive Agents Y] TI LDEN GAR DENS is a five. acre tract wooded land occupy. on Commecticut Ave- beyond the Dollar and Calver short twelo drive to the and shopping districts. Construction was be- guw in March, 1921, schedule. S S S S . the Trophy R of high ing am entire square nue, but a few minutes Milliow The fifth building of the group of six is being completed, months akead of . -times for golf driving practice. t Street Bridges, and a inute siness CONNECTICUT AVENUE AT TS P S T § AR The New Club Building at Connecticut Avenue and Tilden Street, in Tilden Gardens THE NEW CLUB BUILDING, pictured above, contains the spacious and lux- uriously furnished Foyer, the office of the Resident Manager and staff, the 24- hour Telephone Switchboard, Newsstand, Cigar Stand and other conveniences; oom, a magnificent Lounge, with pegged oak floor, a huge fireplace, and decorated and furnished in a unique manner; the Dining Room seating over 100 people, and two Private Dining Rooms, seating about 30; the large; perfectly equipped kitchen, which affords typical “Room Service” to apartment homes in all buildings in the development; and the Ball Room, available for private parties and dances, and at other STREET TILDEN VY AT FI KITCHEN o' x14%6" \ 1 12-8$x | i "-8°x |3 TILDEN GARDENS Distinctive Co-Operative Apartment Garden Homes A Development of M. and' R. B. Warren TELEPHONE Iz ! BED ROOM" | BED ROOM CLEVELAND 6084 2Tl Opening October 1st, 1929 FTY delightful co-operative apartment homes are contained in the New CLUB BUILDING, ranging in size from three rooms, kitchen and bath, to six rooms, kitchen and two baths. Twenty apartment homes will have exposure on three sides, and thirty on two sides. features are: Fireplace, Sun Parlor, Frigidaire, Built-in Kitchen Cabinets, - numerous electric outlets, spacious closets, 7%s-inch Oak Floors, etc. DINING ROOM 131°X14-6" LIVING ROOM 13°6x20 BED ROOM 145 18%1 ol 2t xe-nt P LIVING ROOM 19°X186" KITCHEN &8 X6 By - R SSATIIHII ISR SRS BED ROOM DINING ROOM o2 X -6 operative Ownership Plan. Monthly payments, after a very reasonsble first payment, are actually less than the rental paid for far less deSir- sble apartments. And an average of ONE-HALF of operative Home Ownership that makes Y2 Among the T | | KITCHEN LIVING ROOM 137 x19°6" BED ROOM | 16417 18" BED ROOM 124K 1579 BED ROOM 12-6"X 147" LvING ROOM 13-37x19" DINING ROOM 13% 136" Above are miniatare Floor Plans, illustyat- ing the varions styles and sizes of co-opera- tive apartment homes available in the New CLUB BUILDING in Tilden Gardens. Apartment homes in Tilden Gardens are sold under the 100% Co- monthly pay- 2]l means, get the comp! facts S S R A S S ». IS

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