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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

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Brooklyn, New York
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7
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BROOKLYN EAGLE, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1942 7 Vacationers Having a Wonderful Time LOAFING- -The Misses Virginia and Beverly Ochs (left) of 91-12 173d Jamaica, are enjoying Summer breezes at the Monterey. Beach Club. Roy Pinney photo PAULA LARKIN of 58 Atlas Malverne Park, on breakwater at Monterey Beach Club, Atlantic Beach. Miss Pierce Plans Her Wedding Miss Lloyd Pierce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

William Lloyd Pierce of Flushing, formerly of Brooklyn, will be married to Ensign Malcolm Kimmonth Smith son of Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm Kimmonth Smith of Morristown, on Friday. The ceremony will take place at St. George's Episcopal Church in Flushing.

A reception will be held at the Oakland Golf Club for the families and close friends. Miss Pierce has chosen Miss Joan Hathaway Webster of North Wilmington, as her maid of honor, and her bridesmaids will be Miss Polly Ann Pancoast of Miami Beach, Miss Julianne Wightman and Miss Deborah Cassidy of Flushing, Miss Jessie Maxwell Black Baltimore, and Miss Marilyn and Miss Leonore O'Boyle of Greenwich, Conn, Ensign Smith will have his father, Dr. Smith, for his best man, and his ushers will be Paul Applegate and Arnold Ladd of Morristown, Carroll Dunham 4th of Manhattan, and Richard Potter of Baltimore and Andre Reichel of Hackensack, N. and William Lloyd Pierce Jr. Jones-Gilkes The St.

Mark's M. E. Church, Rockville Centre, was the scene of the wedding of Miss J. Adele Gilkes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Allan T. Gilkes of Hoke Oceanside, and Valdo R. Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irving M.

Jones of Alfred, N. Y. The Rev. Karl Moore, pastor of the church, officiated. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, was attended by Mrs.

Alfred Gilkes, her sisterin-law. Allan T. Gilkes the bride's brother, served Mr. Jones as best man. A reception at the Gilkes home followed.

Miss Gilkes received her education at Oceanside High School and at Packard School, Manhattan, while Mr. Jones was graduated from Alfred High School and from Alfred University. Mr. Jones is a soloist at the Episcopal Church of the Ascension, Rockville Centre. He is a first-class petty officer, U.

S. Coast Guard. Thompson-Young' Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A.

Thompson of Lake Mohawk and Caldwell, N. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Evelyn Norton Thompson, to Gerald Woodrow Young, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Young of Brooklyn and Lake Mohawk.

The engagement was announced at a party at the Thompson home on Saturday evening. Miss Thompson 1s a junior at Randolph-Macon Woman's College. She is a member of Gamma Phi Beta, Mr. Young is a graduate of Poly Prep Country Day School and Rensselaer Polytechnio Institute. Beauty and You By Patricia Lindsay Lashes and Brows Require Grooming, Too, If Brittle, Give Them Cream Treatments A constant reader writes are dry, of sparse growth and about this beauty problem.

Brow stick and lash true eye beauty. Unless the brows and lashes are healthy, medium length, or long, and manageable, one cannot expect the maximum of eye attractiveness. Summer sun and other things rob the hair about the eye of much of its vitality. It therefore needs lubricating with a special cream or oil, or odorless castor oil, and daily brushing. It is good to anoint both the brow hair and lash hair with an oil at night before going to bed, and to brush the hair each morning with little brow brush against the growth and with the growth -thus stimulating it.

Some women and girls (and men too) find that they have what looks like dandruff in their eyebrows. This can be eradicated by frequent oilings and scrubbings with soap and water. And if the condition is chronic it is good to use a regular scalp tonic for the correction of dandruff, on the brows. Be careful though not to let it get into the eyes. Before and After Make- Up If one's lashes and brows are very dry and brittle it is better to avoid all make-up for at least three weeks or a month.

Their is a rich lash cream which is a fine lubricator, which is tinted dark brown and this will serve as a tint if it is brushed on carefully. Thus one can keep the lashes and brows lubricated both during the daytime and night to hurry up the reconditioning period. About Growth So much about grooming, now a word about growth. The hair about the eye, as is the case of the hair on the scalp, depends upon a healthy body for luxuriant growth. If one is quite deficient in certain vitamins, or if one takes too little exercise, the hair grows less rapidly than normal.

Or it one is ailing, the hair reacts to the sick condition of the body. To have luxuriant hair one must keep up to par in health and nature tells us through falling hair, and sparse hair, that all is not well. Calcium. phosphorus and B1, in the food we eat are vital to hair beauty. Ask your physician how you can add these to your diet.

"ACNE DIET" is a booklet containing menus and skin care directions to aid in the cure of skin blemishes. If you desire it send ten cents in coin and a three-cent stamp to cover cost of mailing and handling to Miss Lindsay, care of the Brooklyn Eagle, 24 Johnson Brooklyn, N. Y. LEGAL NOTICES File No. 4488-1942 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW WE YORK, by the Grace of God Free and Independent, NICOLA MARTINIANO and CARMELA MARTINIANC.

Send greeting. WHEREAS, ANGELINA MARTINIANO SALA, who resides at 315 East 68th Street, New York City, N. has presented a petition praying for a decree that a certain instrument in writing bearing date the 22d day of February, 1941, relating to real and personal property, duly proved as the last Will and Testament of DOMINICK MARTINIANO, lately residing at No. 83 Summit Street, in the Borough of Brooklyn, City of New York. NOW.

THEREFORE, you and each of you are hereby cited to show cause before our Surrogate's Court of the County of Kings. to be held in Room 25-A at the Hall of Records the County of Kings on the 20th day of August, 1942. at 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon, why such decree should not be made. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we have caused the Seal of our said Surrogate's Court to be hereunto affixed. (Seal) WITNESS.

HON. FRANCIS D. McGAREY. Surrogate of our said County, at the Borough of Brooklyn, in the said County the 6th day of July, 1942. PERCY T.

STAPLETON. Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. 13-4t FORECLOSURE SUPREME COURT. KINGS COUNTY -KINGS COUNTY TRUST COMPANY and as Trustees. WILLIAM WALSH.

deceased. and ROBERT B. ROY, et as Executors. GEORGE C. ROY, deceosed.

plaintiffs. against WILLIAM SCHAUMBERG, et defendants. the above entitled action on July 6th, Pursuant to de judgment entered in 1942, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, by PHILIP A. SHERIDAN, auctioneer, at the Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange. 189 Montague Brooklyn, N.

on August 3, 1942, at 12 o'clock noon, premises situate at the northeast corner of Avenue and Coney Island Avenue. being 80.73 feet in width on Avenue and 72.19 feet width in the rear, by 100.36 feet in depth on Coney Island Avenue and 100 feet in depth on the east. and known as Nos. 1101-7 Avenue U. Brooklyn, N.

Y. Dated, July 6, 1942. JOHN L. FLETCHER. Referee.

WRENN SCHMID, Plaintiff's Attorneys, 26 Court Brooklyn. N. j13-6t SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, COUNTY OF KINGS- THE NATIONAL CITY BANK OF NEW YORK, as Trustee for LILIAN TOUSEY under an agreement dated April 26, 1929. Account No. 2, plaintiff, against MARIO ARCARIO, et defendants.

Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale in the above entitled action dated the 24th day of June. 1942. and entered in the office of the Clerk of the County of Kings on June 25th. 1942. the undersigned, the Referee in said judgment named.

will sell at public auction on the 29th day of July, 1942, at 12 o'clock noon, at the Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange, 189 Montague Street. Brooklyn, New York. by MONROE J. EHRMANN. auctioneer, the premises in said judgment directed to be sold, being a plot of ground with buildings and improvements thereon, situate in the Borough of Brooklyn, County of Kings, City and State of New York.

on the southeasterly side of Melrose Street, distant 225 feet northeast of Evergreen Avenue, being a parcel 25 feet in width in front and rear and 100 feet in depth on both sides. the rear line being parallel with and the side lines right angles to Melrose Street. Reference being made to the judgment for more complete description of said premises. Dated, Brooklyn, New York. July 6th.

1942. LOUIS COHEN. Referee. WINGATE CULLEN. Attorneys for Plaintiff, Office and P.

O. Address, 142 Plerrepont Street, Brooklyn. New York. 16-6t SUPREME COURT. KINGS COUNTY MANFACTURERS TRUST COMPANY.

as Trustee, v. STANBOR INC. defts. N. BISCO.

Pitf's 29 Broadway Y. PURSUANT to judgment entered June 22, 1912, I will sell at public auc- that her lashes and eyebrows short. She wonders what to do coloring are not enough to furnish a Marion Ingersoll Bride Mother's Garden Scene of Ceremony In the garden of her mother's Summer estate at Duck Island, Northport, Miss Marion Vail Ingersoll yesterday became the bride of the Rev. Joseph Azor Howell. The bride is the daughter of Mrs.

Raymond Vail Ingersoll of Brooklyn and Northport a and the late Mr. Ingersoll who was Borough President of Brooklyn. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Corey Howell of Manhattan and Bethel, Conn.

The Rev. Burns A. Chalmers, religious director at Smith College who. spent last year with the Friends Service Committee in France, officiated at the double ring ceremony at 4:30 o'clock; a reception followed. Miss Ingersoll was given in marriage by her father's brother, Andrew J.

Ingersoll, and had her sister, Mrs. Lyle Eggleston Craine, as matron of honor; Miss Dorothy Fosdick and Miss Barbara Briggs as maids of honor and a group of her Smith College friends as other attendants. The bride wore her mother's wedding gown of white satin and rosepoint lace, her mother's wedding veil of tulle and carried white leather-bound New Testament. Mrs. Craine wore 1 a white organdy frock with blue trimming and the maids of honor were in white organdy with yellow.

The other attendants wore pastel shades and carried large hats filled with garden flowers. Alfred Howell was best man for his brother and the ushers were classmates of the bridegroom at Princeton University and the Yale Divinity School and also the brothers of the couple. The bride attended the Woodward School, Packer Collegiate Institute and the Brownmoor School in Santa Fe and was graduated from Smith College in June. The bridegroom attended Brooklyn Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School and Phillips Exeter Academy and was graduated from Princeton University in the class of 1937 where he was a member of the Quadrangle Club. He taught for two years at the Taft School and was graduated from the Yale Divinity School where he prepared for the ministry in the Congregational Christian churches.

He was ordained last Sunday. The couple will go on a wedding trip and early in August will leave for the West where they intend to make their future home, working in the rural communities. Girard-Glazier Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Barbara Stuart Glazier of Concord West Hartford, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Stuart Glazier, to Corporal Arman Eugene Girard, Son of Mr.

and Mrs. Armand T. Girard of Brooklyn, on July 11. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Andrew J.

Kelly in St. Joseph's Cathedral, Hartford, Conn. The bride was given in marriage by her cousin, Pierrepont Schreiber of Short Hills, N. and was attended by Miss Jane G. Alton of Hartford as maid of honor and sole attendant.

Vincent Girard of Manchester served as best man for his brother and the ushers were Boucher Smyth and Lewelen Mitchell Stearns. A reception for the immediate family was held at the home of the bride's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. 1 Richard Bulkeley, in Hartford. Mrs.

Girard will continue to reside at Concord St. in West Hartford, while Corporal Girard will return to Camp Shelby, after their wedding trip. The bride attended the Oxford School, St. Margaret's in Waterbury and Oldfields in Glencoe, Md. She is a member of the Cotillion Club and has been associated with the Frontier Nursing Service in Hyden, Ky.

Corporal Girard is a graduate of St. John's Preparatory School and the New York School of Interior Decoration. Prior to entering the army he was connected with the interior decorating department of G. Fox Co. BUY U.

S. WAR BONDS AND SAVING STAMPS CHATTING--Miss Barbara Platou of Brooklyn is with Miss Joan Somerville of Westmount, Quebec, on the lawn in front of the Sports Clubhouse of the Seigniory Club, where they are spending the Summer. Women Volunteers Nassau AWVS Sets Up 10 Canning Kitchens; Aims to Preserve 25,000 Quarts This Summer By ALICE COGAN Twenty- thousand fruits and a community pantry hamlet is the goal set by the has set up canning kitchens throughout the county. Ten canning kitchens with a capacity for turning out more than 2,000 quarts per season are in full operation and more will be organized as the season progresses. Kitchens are located in central spots.

Fruits and vegetables have been donated to the AWVS from the large estates and farms in Nassau County. Mrs. E. Gerry Chadwick and Miss Elsie Schefer are co-chairman of the preserving project, appointed by Mrs. Archibald Roosevelt, AWVS Nassau County chairman.

Under their direction canning has grown at a great rate. Three days a week are given to preserving in tins and three for glass jars. The tinned produce will be. reserved for men in the armed services and the hospitals in emergencies. Canning in tins was made possible through the co-operation of the American Can Company, which volunteered both instructors and equipment.

William Burkhart, director of the 4H Clubs in Nassau, also lent aid. Foods preserved in jars will be stored in cool, safe places near the canning kitchens and will be FARE, Charboneau, 27, one of the three women now being trained by the Market Street Railway in San Francisco as conductors. Uniform for the new feminine conductors will be navy blue jackets, slacks and overseas caps with the title lettered in gold on them. At present they are wearing non- slacks and jackets, FOR TORRID DAYS- A Summer hairdo with a few wisps of hair to soften forehead and an off-center part right down the back of head. Hair is three inches long, neat and cool.

Created by Mile. Reif at her Thursday beauty clinic. Are You Eating the Soy Bean? It Is Accomplished, Rich Food for Menu Variety By MARGARET PETTIGREW Away back there in 1935 the soy bean was considered as no more than an insignificant item that somehow found its way to the rear of a few food shelves. But today the picture is completely changed. What with the Government urging a wider use of the magic bean and nutritionists stressing the value of this Americangrown plant, the the popular soy bean Jack-of-all-1 has, become food- -trades in the markets and menus of today.

But don't think for a minute that life began for the soy bean in '35. Indeed not. This, the wonder food of the age, boasts a long and useful life. It has been an honored part of the Oriental menu for well over 5,000 years. As a matter of fact, the soy bean is both food and drink, day in and day out, to approximately half of the world's population.

A lonely food in the sense that it has no known near-relative on the face of the earth, this versatile valuable of the market lists makes up for its loneliness by its ability to fit in anywhere, to be all things to all meals. Is Non-Fattening Food Rich in a wide array of food elements the soy bean ranks high on every list of protective foods. The easily digested protein, similar to. that of milk, is a complete vegetable protein, which provides the body with material for growth and repair. Containing practically no available carbonhydrates, it must classed as a non-fattening food, rich in practically all the minerals necessary for human nutritionphosphorus, calcium, iron, magnesium, chlorine and copper.

Yielding an alkiline reaction that possesses 20 times the alkilinity of cows' milk and five times that of citrus fruits, the soy bean provides an adequate supply of vitamins necessary for growth, and large quantities of easily digested fat that rates high in lecithin and cephalin, two important constituents of all the organs of the body. With such a roster of virtues, is it any wonder that the soy bean enjoys great popularity? Baked Soy Bean Croquettes 1 cup tomatoes 2 tablespoons minced onion 4 tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons fat 1 teaspoon salt 3 cups soybean pulp, cooked and ground (use canned soy beans) cups celery diced Add minced onion and salt to tomatoes and bring to a boil. Blend flour and fat and add to the boiling tomato mixture and cook to a thick paste. Cool and add the celery and soy pulp. Shape into croquettes and roll in corn flakes.

Dip in egg and milk mixture and roll again in corn flakes. Bake on a greased baking sheet in a 410 degree oven for 20 minutes. Makes 8 croquettes. ADVERTISEMENT 4 FREEDOMS For Housewives with A SOAPLESS WASHING DISCOVERY FREEDOM from grease on dishes, pans, pots, 1 teaspoonful in dishpan or sink is you need. Leaves no film.

FREEDOM from stubborn fabric stains. such as iodine and blood spots. Removes them completely without injury to most delicate material. FREEDOM from water ring on bath tubs, Saves time and labor FREEDOM clothes. from hard Saves rubbing and scrub-.

of the amount soap or soap chips. The ideal cleanser for Restaurants, Taverns, Hotels, Business and Office Buildings, Hospitals, ete. ASK YOUR GROCER. 10 sizes 10c, or send 15c for a liberal package. Replaces costly soaps.

NU-OX PRODUCTS CO. 29-17 Astoria Long Island City, N. Y. The Menu Fruit Cup with Sherbet Liver and Noodle Loaf Lyonnaise Carrots Kohlrabi with Butter Sauce Snap Bean and Cucumber Salad Spiced Custard Coffee Tea Milk LIVER AND NOODLE LOAF 1 package noodles 1 pound beef liver 1 onion, sliced cup fat 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper 2 teaspoons vinegar 2 cups water 4 tablespoons flour Cut liver into cubes and brown in fat. Place browned liver, onion, water, salt, pepper and vinegar in a saucepan and simmer 20 minutes.

Add flour to fat remaining in fry pan and brown to a golden color. Add to liver and mix in the boiled noodles. Pour into greased baking dish and bake at 350 degrees until moderately brown. Best Buys Victory Food Specials--Broilers, Fryers and Peaches Meat and Poultry Beef cuts, smoked ham, ducks, legs of lamb. Vegetables Cucumbers, 3 to 7 each; peppers, 2 to 6 cents each; snap beans, 0 to 11 a pound; limas, 8 to 12; tomatoes, 10 to 15; cabbage, carrots, beets, onions, scallions, radishes, kohlrabi, Swiss chard, romaine and iceberg lettuce.

Fruit--Peaches, 5 to 9 a pound; cherries, lemons, limes, appricots and plums. More for Your Money By GENEVIEVE SMITH When one of this country's largest electrical manufacturers made a survey to find out what you would like to know about electrical appliances, nine out of ten housewives said they want to know how to take care of what they have to make it last longer. Forthwith that company Issued two sets of consumer booklets dealing with care and use of appliances. One is a set of six little booklets. each dealing with a different electrical appliance.

The other is a meaty booklet that gives ever SO many practical suggestions for the use of appliances in the home, as well as proper operation and care. Both are available at your electrical appliance dealer's also in most department stores. Many fine booklets on all kinds of merchandise are coming out care of rugs and carpets, of aluminum ware, china and other dinnerware, hosiery, men's suits. Sooner or later nearly everything you use will be covered. You'll find the booklets or leaflets on your store counters, or announced in advertisements.

Labels and hang tags also are giving more information now. Such information from a reputable manufacturer or store is absolutely dependable, for it is based on thoroughgoing research. Often a manufacturer retains an outside laboratory to check the work of his own researchists before the booklet is printed. Line the HUDSON ONE DAY OUTINGS THROUGH SERVICE TO ALBANY A.M. Round Farce include Tax San.

Daily and Sat. Federal Only Sunday San. Lv. W. 420 St.

8.30 9.20 10.00 1.45 from W. 125th St. 9.40 10.20 2.05 N. Y. Ar.

Yonkers. Indian Pt. 10.15 11.00 12135 40 10 same $1.45, Bear Mt. 12155 10 Newburgh Poughkeepsie 12140 1130 2100 3100 5130 45 steamer Kingston Pt. 2.25 35 Holidays, Hudson.

3.55 101 3.35 90 Return Round Ar. ALBANY 6.15 001 Rail tickets accepted New York to Albany Manic Restaurant Cafeteria Moonlight Sail on the Hudson. Saturdays only, $1.25 Lu. W. 42 St.

8:15 P.M.: W. 125 St. 8:40 P.M. 4-hour sail. Music Dining Dancing Hudson River Day Line, W.

42nd St. Pier, BR 9-9700 Garden City Personals Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Garden City, July 20-Mr. and Mrs. Abbott L. Dibblee of Pine St.

are vacationing at East Hampton. Major Robert Millard Ives and Mrs. Ives of Washington have been passing several days with Mr. and Mrs. Dermod Ives of Stewart Ave.

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Weldin of Hampton Road and their daughter, Miss Joan Weldin, are on a vacation trip to Lake Ontario. Among other Garden City residents sojourning elsewhere are Mr. and Mrs.

Louis C. Hornung of Magnolia who a are at Middleville, N. Mr. and Mrs. William H.

Cordes of Hampton Road, at Culver Lake, N. Mr. and Mrs. Wallis E. Howe Jr.

and their children of Hilton Ave. are visiting in New Bedford, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Ris of Popuar St.

are at Roxbury, and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Dawson of Stewart Ave. who are guests of Mrs.

George E. Ladd at Wayne, Maine. 7 quarts of canned vegetables and shelf in every town and Nassau County AWVS, which and suitable storage space available for community consumption. A full course of instruction is given all women attending the canning sessions so they will be able to handle their own preserving problems at home. Ten kitchens now in operation are Oyster Bay High School, Mrs.

James Baldwin and Mrs. John Slade, chairmen; Syosset Union Free School, Mrs. E. Gerry Chadwick and Mrs. E.

R. Tinker; Woodbury School, Mrs. Richard Babcock; Jericho School, Mrs. Louis Neilson; Cedarhurst and Lawrence High School, Mrs. Reginald Pratt; Roslyn Presbyterian Church, Mrs.

Joseph C. Dey Matinecock Fire House in Locust Valley, Mrs. E. Mortimer Ward; Port Washington Senior High School, Mrs. James C.

Horton, and Rockville Centre Clinton Street School, Mrs. F. W. Murphy. The latter kitchen covers a number of towns-Lynbrook, Valley Stream, Malverne, Merrick, among others.

Through experimenting, vast new canning possibilities have been discovered, canning possibilities have been discovered, and foods which ordinarily never would have been considered are found right alongside the old reliables. What amateur ever realized chicken could be canned or that fruits could be put up without sugar? The American Legion and Its Auxiliary are carrying on a campaign for old phonograph records. Funds from the sale of the worn records as scrap will be used to buy new records and players for men in the armed forces. It is estimated there are at least 000,000 old records in American attics and basements, and the Legion means to rout them out. They are worn, scratched and battered, and of no value except as scrap.

The AWVS will help the Legion in its drive for old records here. Or just leave them at the police stations. Clubwomen today form the largest body of book reviewers in the country, Prof. Helen E. Haines, visiting professor library science the University of Southern Caliat fornia, in "What's in a Novel," just published by the Columbia University Press.

Professor Haines is teaching in the Summer session at Columbia. Members of many of the larger clubs increasingly prefer book programs featuring a professional reviewer, Professor Haines said, "because it imposes no direct personal responsibility, requires no individual mental concentration and supplies literary comment and opinion available as current coin of conversation." New under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration ARRID Arrid selling is deodorant largest 1. Does not rot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 2.

No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Prevents odor.

4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 5. Awarded Approval Seal American Institute of Laundering harmless to fabrics. ARRID food Guaranteed DEFECTIVE Housekeeping OR by 39t toilet Buy a goods jar today (also at in any 10e and store selling jars FORECLOSURES tion at the Brooklyn Sales Room Real Estate Exchange, 189 Montague Brooklyn.

N. bv MICH A ET REILLY. auctioneer, on July 30. 1942, at 12 o'clock noon. the mortgaged premises and personal property directed by the judgment to be sold, situated on the northerly side of Arlington distant 25 feet easterly from the northeast corner of Hendrix St.

and Arlington fronting 35 feet on Arlington and the same distance in the rear with a depth of 100 feet on each side, the westerly boundary running part of the distance through a party wall and known as 101-103 Arlington Ave. Dated, July 6, 1942. JOHN J. M. O'SHEA, Referee.

18-6t SUPREME COURT, KINGS COUNTY THE GREEN POINT SAVINGS BANK, plaintiff, against SARAH WARSHAWER. et defendants. Pursuant to a judgment herein entered July 9, 1942, I will sell auction, by ALLEN M. TEPLITZ. auctioneer, at the Brooklyn tate Exchange.

No. 189 Montague Street, Borough of Brooklyn, City of New York, on the 5th day of August, 1942, at 12 o'clock noon, the premises in Kings County directed by said judgment to be sold, situated on the easterly sde of Manhattan Avenue, 75 feet south of Nassau Avenue, having dimensions of 25 feet in width, front and rear, by 75 feet along each side: reference being made to said judgment for a more complete description of the premises herein. Dated. July 13th. 1942.

BEN M. GOTTESFELD. Referee. MALVIN B. MARIASH, Attorney for Plaintiff, 16 Court Street.

New York. 315-6t SUPREME COURT. KINGS -KINGS HIGHWAY SAVINGS BANK. plaintiff, against MORRIS LIPSHITZ, and others, defendants. MARSHALL MARSHALL, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Office and Post Office Address, No.

215 Montague Street, Brooklyn, New York. Pursuant to judgment ef foreclosure and sale entered in the above entitled action and dated the 25th day of June, 1942, I. the undersigned referee therein named, will at public auction by PHILIP COHEN, auctioneer, at the Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange Salesroom, 189 Montague Strew Brooklyn. New York. on July, 23rd.

1912, at 12:00 o'clock noon. that land and the improvements thereon directed by said judgment to he sold and which are situate in the County of Kings, New York. on the southerly side of Avenue distant 68 feet inches west of East 7th Street, being a regular parcel of land 21 feet inches in width. front and rear. by 100 feet in depth on either side.

Together with and subject to driveway easement. Dated, June 30. 1942. RAYMOND J. McGROVER.

Refer 31-6t.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963