N.Y. STATE TROOPER TEST OPEN NOW

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Americans Largest Weekly for Public
Vol. 7 — N o . 4 3
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Emnlnyee«
New Annual, Sick Leave
Rules for II. S. Employees
See Page 7
Price Five Cents
Tuesday, July 9, 1946
N.Y. STATE TROOPER
TEST OPEN NOW
Veterans Get Full Priority—
200 Immediate
Vacancies
See Page 8
Di Faico State Employees
OPA'ers Still
Get Pay Checks Bills OK'd On S-Day Week
Pending Legislation Benefits Veterans.
Retired Employees, Army Medics and
Therapists, Hatch Act Victims
ing of a loan fund to tide exBy BERNARD K. JOHNPQLL
OPA staffers over between the
Special to The LEADER
WASHINGTON, July 9—OPA ending of their jobs and the findemployees haven't been axed by ing of a new one.
the end of the Office of Price
Hatch Act
Administration. They still remain
WASHINGTON, July 9 —The
on the payroll under an Executive future of the Hatch Act will be
Order. If OPA is finally killed by decided within the next few
July 20, then they cease work on months, it was learned by The
that date. Otherwise they con- LEADER today, as action on moditinue under the Congressional de- fying amendments appears cerficiency appropriation. Enforce- tain as soon as the summer vacament people continue on the regu- tion ends. A Supreme Court delar payroll as they aren't out by cision on its constitutionality may
be forthcoming.
law yet.
Meanwhile, the United Public
The bill to modify the act has
Workers have announced the rais- been before the Senate Judiciary
Committee for eight months now,
and a high ranking member of
the conunittee told The LEADER
that the proposal would be sent
to the floor "soon." The most important amendment, suggested by
the Civil Service Commission,
would modify punishment for violations. The present law states
simply that anyone who violates
the law is due to be fired There
is no discretion allowed the Commission Under the amended law
the Civil Service Commission
would decide what form the punishment would take.
Senator Hatch (Dem., New
Key Answers Will
Mexico), author of the original
bill, is known to favor the amendAppear in Next
ment but has asked that its language be altered. This is now
Week's LEADER
being done and the bill is almost
completed.
The 19,250 men who have filed
Hundreds to be Rehired
applications for the Fireman examinations should have received
Several hundred persons have
postcards advising them at which lost their jobs due to the Hatch
school to appear for the written Act and it is expected that at
examination next Saturday. Any least 50 per cent of these will be
who have not received the cards rehired as soon as the amendshould phone Joseph Zweig at the ment is passed. Civil Service
Municipal Civil Service Commis- Commission is keeping a list of
sion. COrtlandt 7-8880.
those whose rehiring it will recMen who participate in the test ommend.
will be allowed tb take the examThe Supreme Court has thus
ination papers away with them. far held the act to be constituIn next Tuesday's LEADER (June tional, but several of the Civil
16 issue) key answers to the test Service -Unions here have been
questions will be given, allowing making a study of the law and
the candidates an opportunity to claim to have found a loophole
check their answers.
which is In violation of the FourThe present starting salary for teenth Amendment. They claim
the Firemen jobs is $2,500 a year.
(Continued on Page 7)
19,250
Called for
Fire Exam
FIRE LIEUTENANT
In Council
Finance Committee
Approves Change in
Fire Pension Board
The DiFalco bills (26, 27 and
28) in the NYC Council to replace
representative? of the old-line
Fire Officers associations with men
selected from the present representation of officers In the
Uniformed Fire Officers Association were favorably reported to
the Council by the Finance Committee. This action was taken
after a public hearing last week
at which members of the UFOA
and of the old liquidating groups
appeared.
It is expected that the Council
will vote upon the bills at a meeting in the near future. The next
Council session has been called for
Thursday. July 11. (See Editorial
on Page 6 of this issue.)
30,000 Compete
In State Tests;
Many Jobs Due
Special to The L E A D E a
ALBANY, June 9—Some 30,000
candidates took the New York
State Civil service examination
on June 29 for positions as account clerks, statistical clerks and
file clerks. A sharp drop was
noted this year in the number of
contestants for such positions as
compared with the year 1941 when
100,000 candidates competed.
The results of the examinations,
conducted in Albany and other
key cities of the State, will not be
officially announced for several
months. The decrease in the
number of contestants this year
was a surprise to State officials
and various reasons were given,
some officials believing that private industry offers higher salaries for the same positions, and
(Continued on Page 4)
More State News
p p . 2, 3, 4 , 5, 6, 8, 1 6 .
Association of State Civil Service Employees
Wins Campaign for Summer Week-ends
Special to T a e L E A S E R
ALBANY, July 9—The State
Association has been Informed
that the Administration has accepted the suggestion of the Association for a five-day week during July and August.
It is understood that essential
services must be maintained by a
skeleton force on Saturday mornings, that the total working hours
per week will not be reduced
and that the work load of the
State agencies will be currently
maintained.
Departmental Schedules
The various State departments
were asked to submit to the Civil
Service Commission their plans
for the five-day week based on the
above provisions and as a result
most of the State department offices will be enjoying Saturdays
off for the summer season beginning July 6th and any who do
not begin this schediUe on July
6th will doubtless begin it the
following week.
The Association is heartened by
this response to its continued requests to Governor Dewey and to
Judge Conway, President of the
State Civil Service Commission
for the shorter work week. The
establishment of a permanent
five-day week for State employees
has been and will continue to be
urged by the Association.
Early this year the Association
requested the shorter work week
for at least the summer months.
As recent as June 27th, President
Tolman sent the following telegram to J. Edward Conway, President of the State Civil Service
Commission:
"With the approach of July 1st,
I again urge immediate consideration of the Association's request
of April 8th for establishment of
the five-day week at least during
the summer , months without any
decrease in the total number of
hours now worked per week and
with a Saturday skeleton force
wherever essential."
Patrolman
List Due
In August
Candidates Should
Notify Commission of
Change in Address
The Patrolman eligible list of
the 3,000 successful candidates in
the recent NYC examination will
Jje issued during the last two
weeks in August according to
estimates at the Municipal Civil
Service Commission.
When the list is published,
names will immediately be certiUFOA to Meet
fied to the Police Department
On July 11
"subject to future investigation."
The NYC Uniformed Fire Then the men in line for appointOfficers Association, Local 854, ment will be investigated by the
American Federation of Labor, Civil Service Commission and the
will meet at its new gathering- Police Department. Any fraudplace, the Hotel Martinique, ulent Items on the appointee's
33rd Street and Broadway, application blank may subject
Manhattan on Thursday, July him to dismissal and disbar him
from future municipal employ11, at 8 p.m.
To protect their interests,
Refreshments will be served, ment.
should promptly notify
and all members are urged to candidates
Commission of any change in
attend, as up-to-the-minute the
as unanswered comreports on vital matters will be address,
munications may cause delay, or
made.
even loss of appointment.
FILING OPEN-^STUDY MATERIAL
Page 9
Page Two
STATE NEWS
CIVIL S E R V I C E
Pensioners Tell Why
income Should be Freed
By Congress from
In behalf of the retired Government employees, Federal, State, or
aoy political subdivision thereof,
and the present four million Government employees throughout the
United States, the Pensioners Protective Association of America,
Inc.. of 70 Pine Street, NYC, called
to the attention of Congress the
need to have retirement benefitspensions-annuities exempt from
taxation.
Retired Government employees
suffer hardships because of high
local taxation, the high cost of
living, and the U. S. income tax
on their pension benefits since
1939, said the Association.
"The vast majority of retired
Government employees, because of
their advanced age in life, major
and minor physical disabilities received in the performance of their
duties and from natural causes,
are unable to supplement their
pension benefits by obtaining employment in other fields of endeavor, besides their life expectancy is rather short," the Association continued. "Their pension
benefits have not been increased
as salaries and wages went up in
business and industry.
Solitary Victims
"The Government employees
and the retired pension recipients
look to you, the members of Congress, for legislative aid and relief
from the high U. S. income taxes
on their pensions, especially since
all other types of social legislation
benefits, such as Secial Secvurity,
Old Age Insurance, Unemployment
Insurance, Workmen's Compensation Benefits, Railroad Retirement
Benefits, Health-Life-Accident Insurance Benefits, War Veterans'
and Widows' Pensions, are totally
tax exempt.
"There are now pending before
Congress several bills to exempt
pensions of ."rovernment employees in their old age from Federal
income taxes. The President of
the U. S. Civil Service Commission,
in a letter of January 31, 1945, to
the Chairman of the Committee
on Civil Service of the House of
Representatives, very ably expressed'the reasons why Government employees' pensions should
be exempt from taxation.
"The passage of such legislation will completely eliminate
from our tax structure a class
that was never intended to be included and which was not taxed
prior to 1939, and thus much
such discrimination against retired Government emplojrees will
be abolished.
Benefits in Old Age
The passage of this type of social legislation will contribute to
the building up of our Social Security system and Congress will
not be acting prejudicially to those
who long before there was any
social security had provided themselves for their old age by joining
and becoming members to an established retirement system. The
taxation of retired Government
employees' pensions - retirement
annuities in our opinion cannot be
justified on any ground at all;
cannot be justified on the basis
of the revenue which it yields or
it cannot be justified on the basis
of economic effects upKJn the community.
Being that 57,000,000 workers
under Social Security will receive
in their old age benefits totally
exempt and upwards of 680,000
NEWS ABOUT STATE EMPLOYEES
Great Meadow P r i s o n
At the regular meeting of the
Great Meadow Chapter held
Thursday evening, June 13, 1946,
the following officers for the coming year were elected:
Pi-esident, Frank B. Egan; VicePresident, Harry A. Wrye; Recording Secretary, Daniel E. Damon, Jr.; Financial Secretary,
Benedict Kirkpatrick; Treasurer,
Kenneth M. Bowlen; Sgt-at-Aims,
John Mack; Delegate, Frank B.
Egan; Alternate, Harry A. Wrye;
Adjustment Committee, Frank B.
Egan, Herry A. Wrye and Keimeth
M. Bowden.
With very few exceptions the
same officers were elected for the
fourth term by unanimous vote.
After receiving the many
complimentary
remarks of the
officers who did
such a splendid
job in carrying
on the business
for Great Meadow, President
Egan addressed
the group and
t h a n k e d all
"«">•
present, and those unable to attend for their excellent cooperation in handling the many problems that confronted them during
the year.
A new construction company in
North Granville, known to the
public as the B & M Construction
is headed by Engineer Jim (Hungered) Middleton, who is a graduate of the Granville School of
Technology. In view of the talent
which Mr. Middleton possseses the
silent partner of this organidation,
Marvin Balland, feels that he, too,
will have to take" a course in the
above mentioned school, in order
to cope with the situation.
Great Meadow is congratulatfaig Harry Hodges. Mr. Hodges
has been at Great Meadow for
twelve years and is to take up
new duties at Auburn. It is our
honest belief that Auburn is getting the better of the deal. Harry
was well liked by all he cam£ in
contact with, thus leaving no room
for challenging his character and
ability as an officer—as he sure
was all man," is the opinion of
his fellow workers at Great
Meadow.
In this business of Prison work
it is a known f«ct that the giwxxl
generally takes orders from his
superior, however, Mr. Hodges accomplished the feat of the year
before transferring. He had one
of the sergeants working on his
boat this spring, putting it in
shape. When Harry was asked
about the deal his answer was:
"Sergeant B. F. N. was a good
worker around boats and never
protested on any order I gave
him."
Mr. Hodges was tendered a farewell party by his friends at the
Busy Bee Tavern and was presented with a substantial purse.
Officers elected for the year
1946-47 are President Leon Armer,
Vice-President James McCarthy,
Treasurer Walter LaBarge, Secretary Wm. B. Meehan, The Clinton
Prison Chapter is taking an active
interest in a community project
known as the Dannetnora Veterans' Memorial Park. It will
consist of a recreation park and
bathing beach at Chazy Lake
available to the public. Local organizations one of which is the
Clinton Prison Chapter raised
funds to purchase the property
to make this project a reality.
Upon completion it will be one of
the finest recreation spots in the
North Country. Metro-GoldwynMayer's representative, Mr. O.
Dull, planed in from Hollywood to
visit our good Chaplain Rev. A.
Hyland. Mr. Dull is familiarizing
himself with the location around
which M-G-M's forthcoming picture is being written. One of
Clinton's retired officers, Harry
McCorry, is enjoying himself by
managing the local baseball team.
(Continued on Page 16 J
The New Constitution
\
f
The full official text of the "Proposed Amendments
to the Constitution," which was endorsed by the delegates
and executive board members of the Association of State
Civil Service Employees is concluded in this issue. The
first portion of the proposals was published on this page
last Tuesday.
This change in the organic by-laws of the Association, which admits local employees to membership, must
be voted on again, probably at the annual meeting next
October.
ARTICLE U
Meetinirg
Angelo J. Donate, President of
the Palisades interstate Parli
Cliapter of tlie Association, wiio
reports a new membersiiip liigli
for liis Cliapter of 151 members,
almost 100 per cent of eligible
employees.
railroad workers and all future
railroad workers will receive in
their old age pensions exempt
from income taxes, why shouldn't
the 355,000 present pensions recipients and the 4,000,000 Government-Civil Service workers of the
Federal or State Governments, or
any political subdivision thereof,
have their retirement paymentspensions likewise totally exempt?"
The plea was signed by John P.
O'Brien, Chairman; Abbie G.
Sheehan, Secretary, and Albert
J. E. McLaughlin, Vice-President.
40 Employees
Aid Council
On Personnel
Special to T h e L E A D E R
ALBANY. July 9—Working in
close co-operation with the State
Personnel Council is a group of 40
officially-delegated departmental
and
divisional
representatives
whose major task it is to represent the emplo:?fces and the
officials of the respective departments in Council matters and to
assist the Council in establishing
and maintaining greater uniformity in State personnel administration.
Psychiatric Institute
Departments and divisions are
Mr. Sidney Alexander, R. T., represented by the following:
p r e s i d ^ t of the New York State Eugrene F . Gorse
AgrricuHure and
Civil Service X-ray Technicians
Markets
A u d i t A Control
Society and Vice-President of the W m . I>. P f e i f f e r
R. Domian . . . . Banking
Psychiatric Institute Chapter, has Gerald
Charles H. Foster
Budfret
returned from St. Louis, where 0 . L.. C a m p b e l l
Civil Servic®
Commerce
he attended the 18th Annual Con- A n n e F . L o w r y
William
T
i
n
n
e
y
vention of the American Society E d w a r d J . D o n o v a n . . . CC oo rnrseecrtvi aotni o n
of X-ray Technicians.
Lloyd L . Cheney
Education
. Executive
Mr. Alexander presented a pa- LE od rmeut tnad McGoldrick
Schreiner
Health
per, during the scientific session, P a u l Kelly
Housing'
on special studies carried out by F l o r e n c e P . G r i m m . . . . I n s u r a n c e F u n d
Typermasa
I n s u r a n c e Dept.
himself at the Psychiatric Insti- Carl
A. M . G o l d b e r g
Labor Relations
tute.
Board
Law
Mr. Alexander is also weU known J o h n Hartgrian
r e d e H c k Bullen
Bd. of Mediation
among the X-ray technicians in FDaniel
J. Shea
M e n t a l Hygiene
New York City, where he is presi- S a m Viner
Parole
DPUI
dent of the X-ray Technological H a r r y S m i t h
M u r r a y G. T a n n e r . . . . P u b l i c Service
Association.
H e n r y A. Cohen
Public Works
Clinton P r i s o n Chapter
Tuesday, July 9, 1946
LEADER
Helen E s r a y Chaae . . . . Social W e l f a r e
Helena G r i m m
S t a n d a r d s and
Apiwals
F r a n k Dorpfeld
Standards and
Purchase
Alfred E. Schwcnker
Llciuor A u t h o r i t y
R u t h Miner
S t a t e Dept.
HertM-rt F . O'Malley . . . W o i ' k m e n ' s Conip.
D o r o t h y O'Brien . . .
. Conmiis. A g a i n s t
D o r o t h y Bell Ra<>koff
. Discrimination
Jame* Batterson
J u d i c i a l Council
Ledhard Saxe
C o u r t of Appeals
John Ludden
C o u r t of Claims
Catherine Crowe
S u p r e m e Court,
F r a n k McNally
2nd D e p t .
Supreme Court.
George T . Campbell . . I s t D e p t .
Supreme Court
Herbert Walt
4 t h D<'Pt.
.Stat« R e p o r t e r
L e l a u d F . Cost
S u p r e m e Court,
J o h n F . Roc h e
Dept.
H. P a l m e r H a r c o u r t
Veteran*' A f f a i r *
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Publlthsd •vtry fuaiday by
CIVIL SERVICE PUBLICATIONS, Nk.
07 Uuuiiu 8t.. New Yurfc 7, N. Y.
Ent«r«d • * i«cond-cl«u m«H«r Octob«r 2, 1939, at th« pott oHica at
Maw York. N. Y., under Hia Act of
March 3. i m .
Mambar of Audit
Buraau of Circulations.
Subicrlption Prica U Par Yaar
IndlvldtMl Coplai
5c
Section 1. Annual Meeting. The
annual meeting of the Association
shall be held on the first Tuesday
of each October. Officers of the
Association and members of the
State executive committee shall
be elected by ballot. Ballots, with
the names of all duly nominated
candidates printed thereon, shall,
at least ten days prior to the date
of the annual meeting, be distributed in the official magazine
or otherwise made available to
memtoers at all oflBces or locations
designated by the board of directors. The ballot, or the envelope
in which the ballot is enclosed,
shall be marked "Ballot" and such
envelope or ballot shall also bear
the signature of the members and
the name of the department or
unit of government In which he
Is employed. The ballot shall contain instructions as to how a
secret ballot may be cast. To be
counted, properly prepared ballots
must be received at the headquarters of the Association, either
by mail or in person, before six
o'clock P.M. on the day of the
annual meeting. The board of
directors shall appoint a board of
canvassers, of at least three members of ttie Association, to determine the validity of nominating
petitions and to count the ballots.
The member receiving the greatest number of votes for the office
shall be declared elected. Any
member whose name is printed on
the ballot may be present during
the counting of the ballots. In
the case of a tie vote, a new ballot shall be taken under rules
established by the board of directors.
Section 2. Board of Directors.
Meetings of the board of directors
shall be held upon call of the
president. Upon the written request of five or more members of
the board of directors, the president shall call a special meeting
of the board.
Section 3. Directors Committee.
Meetings of the directors committee shall be held upon call of the
president. Upon the written request of one-third of the members
of the directors committee, the
president shall call a special meeting of the committee.
Section 4. State Executive Committee. Meetings of the State
executive committee shall be held
upon call of the president. Upon
the written request of five or more
members of the State executive
committee, the president shall
call a special meeting of the committee.
Section 5. County
Executive
Committee.
Meetings of the
county executive committee shall
be held upon call of the president.
Upon the written request of five
or more members of the county
executive committee, the president
shall call a special meeting of the
committee.
Section 6. Special Meetings.
Special meetings of the Associa-
A friendly
neighbor to
CIVIL SERVICE
PERSONNEL
tion shall be .held upon call of
the president. Upon the writt«i
request of a majority ol the members of the board of directors, the
president shall call a special
meeting of the Association.
Section 7. Notice. Notice oi
special meetings of the Association, the board of directors, the
directors committee, the State
executive committee or the coimty.
executive committee shall be given
by publication in the official
magazine or by mailing to eacli
delegate or committee member a/b
least three days before the date
of such meeting.
Section 8. Proxies. A member
of the board of directors, the
directors committee, the State executive committee, the county,
executive committee, or a delegate
to any meeting of the Associatiori
who is unable to attend a meeting
is empowered to appoint, by
written designation filed with the
secretary of the Association, a
member of his chapter or department to act in his place, provided!
however, that no officer of the
Association shall be represented
by proxy.
Section 9. Order of Business.
The order of business at all meetings shall be as follows:
1. Reading of Minutes.
2. Reports of Officers.
3. Reports of Committees.
4. Unfinished Business.
5. New Business.
Section 10. Parliamentary Procedure. Parliamentary procedure
shall be In accordance with
Roberts' Rules of Order, Revised.
ARTICLE ra
Dues
Section 1. Fiscal Year. The fiscal year of the Association shall
commence on the first day of
October and end on the thir:;ieth
day of September.
Section 2. Amount. The dues of
the Association shall be payable
in advance on the first day of
October each year.
The dues of members of the
State division shall be three dollars per annum, of which one
dollar shall be refunded to chapters as hereinafter provided.
The dues of members of the
county division shall be six dollars per annum, of which two
dollars shall be refunded to chapters as hereinafter provided.
Section 3. Refunds to chapters.
Each duly organized chapter of
fifty or more members in the
State division shall receive from
the treasurer an annual payment
of one dollar, and each duly organized chapter of five hundred
{Continued on Page 16)
PERSONAL . VOCATIONAL
ANB
CAREER GUIDANCE
Individual attention to your problems
b y a qualified psycholosrist.
Huniiui R e l a t i o n s G n l d a n e e CcntM
.41bf* Bids., 1 Albee Sq., B k l y n . , N.Y.
TR 6-174X
Just • step from dty,
state and federal deparunenub
Drop in and use our many
friendly services.
Civil servic« pay checks cashed
without diarge—^war bonds
kept free for our depositors.
Many other important fiicllities.
Open an account today.
51
Chambers St.
Open MQndciy$ and Fridayt unfil 6
MIDTOWN
OFfICi
S East 42mI Strut
t
M«Mb«r P«d«ral O«poill
IwweiiH Cwiweflee
f. kk,
TiM^Mlay, July 9 ,
CIVIL
l<lt6
The State
Employee
SK.H^^ICK
STATE NKWS
LKADKR
Page Three
Per ^ m State Workers
Cain Salary Protection
therefore, taken steps to pay the services or occupational group.i
Sppcial to The 1.F:.\DKR
ALBANY, July 9—The settle- Chapman $2,000 per annum from described in such section the
date of his appointment, minimum .salary of which is equal
President, The Association of
ment of a law .suit brought by the
April 2, 1945, and the proceeding to or lower than the rate of comState Civil Service Employees
John T. DeGraff, Counsel of the has been discontinued by stipula- pensation
then received by stich
A.ssociation of State Civil Service tion.
employee, shall, upon such a p Employees has established the
The pertinent section of the law pointment, promotion, or transfer,
be paid the same salary tha^ he
principle that all employees, re- reads:
"Appointments, promotions, and was receiving in his former i>osigardless of whether they were
T HAVE READ carefully the statement attributed to Dr. Bigelow,
transfers of employees occupying tion immediately prior to the date
• nThttlrman of the Permanent Salary Board in reference to the salary paid on a per annum or per diem non-allocated positions. An em- of such appointment, promotion,
study which is to determine the future salaries of New York State basis before they came under ployee who for a period o£ one or transfer, not to exceed the
Feld-Hamilton receive the salary year has been continuously oc- maximum salary cf his new posiPublic Employees.
Dr. Bigelow makes a number of important points.
protection of Section 41 of the cupying a position not allocated tion and, for the purpose of comto one of the services or occupa- puting future Increments, he shall
Salary data is being collected for similar positions in private Civil Service Law.
tional groups described in section be credited with the number of
industry and in the Civil Service of the various jurisdictions. State,
On April 1, 1945, .section 41 of 40
of this chapter and who is ap- years of service in such new
local and Federal.
the Civil S e r v i c e Law was pointed,
promoted, or transferred position which corresponds with
This data is to be used to correct the various inequities which amended to provide that when an
have developed in the State service since the Feld-Hamilton Law employee has been occupying a to a position allocated to one of such rate of compensation."
N-^as adopted.
non-Feld Hamilton position for
Each class of positions in the State service and each promotion at lea.st one year he shall, upon
series will be examined to determine relationships and equities within appointment to a Feld-Hamilton
the salary structure.
position, be paid the same rate of
The higher positions will apparently receive particular attention compensation he was receiving In
in the effort to determine whether the more difficult and complex his former position, not exceedjobs are receiving commensurately higher salaries.
ing the maximum of the FeldThe ninth annual meeting of!
Economic changes since 1937 as far as these appear permanent Hamilton position. The complete
the Public Service Motor Vehicle I
will be reflected in the salaries determined.
text of this law apears below.
Chapter of the AssoRKVISKD SALARY SCHEDULKS
Appointments in institutioxis Inspectors'
ciation of State Civil Service EmDr. Biglow adds that the Board expects to recommend to the have been made in accordance ployees
was held recently in New
legislature basic Changes in the Feld-Hamilton Law. Revised salary with this law ever since it was York City.
schedules Will, he says, be recommended for this is the first oppor- adopted, but the Budget Director
The meeting of the entire staff
tunity the board has had to recommend to the Legislature changes refused to permit this law to be
in the basic salary structure.
applied in the case of appoint- of the Motor Carrier Bureau of
It will be remembered that the Governor promised the employees ments to positions that were not the Public Service Commission
was held in State Office Building,
two things: (1) that the War Emergency Bonus would be incorpo- in the institutional service.
rated into the permanent salaries, (2> that a thorough general study
In this case, the petitioner, 80 Centre St. Mr. J. F. Fitzgerald,
salary levels as effected by increased cost of living, general wage Othmer H. Chapman, was em- Supervisor of the Bureau, conlevels and other factors and trends would be made.
ployed in the Public Works De- ducted a discussion of the post
Writing the bonus into tlie basic salary scales can be done in a partment as a Welder—a position war rules and regulations covernumber of ways. Possibly the best way is to increase the Feld- which is paid at a per diem rate ing all motor vehicles under the
Hamilton schedules by pi-oper percentages and to smooth out the and which is not under the Feld- jurisdiction of the Commission.
On Friday night the annual
results. This is something quite different from a basic revision of Hamilton Law. He received a little
over $2,000 per annum in this Chapter banquet was held in the
the salary scales. Dr. Bigelow is not on record in this matter.
W I L L I A M B. FILKINS
position but when he was ap- Pent House of the Picadilly Hotel.
SALARY SCALES ARE A STAM)RRl)
It should be evident that salary scales are like the inches on a pointed a.s a Canal Structure Guests included William F. Mc- Utica re-elected President for
i ^ r u l e r or the weights on a scale. They do not determine salaries; they Operator, a position which is Douough, Executive Representa- sixth term. Joseph J. Lettis of
under the Feld-Hamilton Law and tive; John F. Powers, Vice-Presi- New York City re-elected First
merely provide a standard of uniformity and fairness.
$l,500-$2,000 per annum, dent, and Kenneth Valentine, all Vice-President for second term.
The Association of State Civil Service Employees does not wish to paying
was paid the minimum of from the State A.ssociation, Mr. William H. Salisbury of Syracuse
be unduly critical or suspicious at tliis time. It desires to help in he
and the Budget Director McDonough was the principal elected Second
Vice-President.
working out the best salary plan possible. However, there seems to $1,500
refused to permit his appointment speaker. A floor show followed.
Clarence J. Atkins of Rome rebe in the background some remains of the last late not-lamented at
He thereupon instituted
Saturday luncheon at Picadilly elected Secretary-Treasm-er. for
proposal generally called the Burtdn plan, which the Association this$2,000.
proceeding to compel the Hotel was followed by business sixth term. Past President Henry
understood was defunct beyond resurrection.
of $2,000 as required hy meeting of the Chapter. Reports Honegger of Gloversville installed
^
It is, therefore, p<nhaps proper and desirable to indicate our payment
foregoing section. After a .showed that Chapter has highest new officers.
^ fundamental opposition to any abandonment of the essentials of the the
of conferences between percentage of membership ever
A social session followed the
Feld-Hamilton law—the best salary law on the statute books any- number
the Attorney General, the Depart- attained by any Chapter and business meeting.
where in these United States.
ment of Public Works and the every member was present and
President Filkins was presented
The A.ssociation welcomes the salary study. It wonders a bit at Budget, it was agreed that the
agi'eed that it was a privilege a set of travelling cases. Secrethe preference or emphasis given to the large salaries rather than to petitioner's contention was cor- all
to
belong
to
Chapter
and
State
tary-Treasurer Atkinson and John
all salaries large and small. It would welcome more information rect and the State decided not to Association.
Frawley of Albany al.«K) received
about "inequitie«" which the Association has striven to get corrected contest the issue. They have,
Officer.s—William B. Filkins of gifts.
for many years. It would like to know that all plays will be above
the board and that all parties will have full opportunity to contribute
to the final result.
I)AIN(;ER IN INFl.ATION
^^
The task of the salary board is made much more diffcult by
the present threat of inflation. As tlie Association has repeatedly
pointed out, the real value or purchasing power of the salaries paid
is the nub of the matter. Any amount of money salary fixed this
year may be reduced by one-half or more if prices continue without
controls.
In my opinion it would be a .statesmanlike thing for the Governor
and the Salary Board to work out a salary plan that includes consideration of real wages or buying power, and which would make
» unnece.ssary the constant struggle for salary reallocation and new
salary legislation.
A cost-of-living adjustment bill is e.s.sential. Why not include it
In the revision of the salary law?
By Frank
Tolmati
State Salary Study
FILKINS HONORED
AT MOTOR VEHICLE MEETING
_
/^youNBEV^
VERSONAL
Public Service Tomorrow
HENRY A. WALLACE estimates annual postwar public expenditures at 35 billion dollars, of which 10 billion will be State government expenditures. Using the familiar 10 por cent of the total for
New York State, the 2 State and local government expenditures will
approximate one billion dollars. The Association members and others
(Executive, Legislators. Judges, etc.) would then be operating a
billion-dollar industry. This is truly big business. It is a "trust" in
the best .sense of the word, or, "organized public service."
Nearly every business is planning foi- expansion and full employment. Government is brought into the piciture at many points,
as housing, education, taxes, public works, highways, etc.
CONTINUOUS STUDY RECOMMENDED
There are, however, very few studies of post-war government
and public administration themselves. Such studies, plans and forecasts are needed if Government is to meet its post-war problems and
offer adequate service to the people at minimum cost.
The research work of the State is placed chiefly in the Departments of Commerce and Educatioin. Neither of these departments
is empowered or able to study the complex of government structures
—State and local—in New York State. The Department of Audit
^ ^^ and Control touches local government at many points, but its influence iis limited chiefly to financial aspects of local government.
We suggest an interdepartmental planning committee to study
continuously the problems of public adminiistration in relation to
the common welfare. Such a committee should be empowered to
hold hearings and investigations, make recommendations, draft laws
and report frequently to the people of the State.
EXPANSION MUST BE EXPECTED
\
We have seen at Washington the dire results of failure to plan
the needed machinery for war-time and post-war conditions and
needs. A multitude of temporary agencies liave been created with
little thought being given to over-lapping functions, lack of cooperation between agencies, or what to do with dead or dying or
reorganiised agencies. While no such job of unscrambling war
agencies confronts the State, there is real need for a new study of
the functions of the State government and of all its agencies, in
the new era.
The "Story of State Government," published by the Association
some years ago, is an amazing report of the tremendous expansion
of the essential services demanded of the State by its citizens.
It is only reasonable to believe that this expansion will increase in
the post-war world at a greatly accelerated tempo. Take any State
department—Agriculture, Education, Health. Public Works, for
example and try to forecast its future functions and duties. Probably
any bureau la any of their departments will be as large and influential as is the entire department today.
There is no time for delay if the Stale is to solve its problems
of full employment, housing, adequate universal Education, u living
Wiige, security, adequate public health, etc.
LO^N
its BASY to borpow from
fhe
/mm!
Your Job is Your "Collateral"
W e will gladly lend you money for many purposes
if you have a steady job. You can borrow as little as
$ 6 0 , as much as $ 3 , 5 0 0 — a n d af low cost. You have
from 12 to 24 months to repay—depending on the size
and purpose of your loan. It is not necessary that you
be an Irving depositor.
}
Your application will be handled by friendly, understanding people. Apply today at the nearest Irving office
or simply mail in the time-saving coupon below.
NEED t o - , , ,
^^Lom
IRVING
Offices located at: One Wall Street—Wooiwortt* BIdg.—21st Street at Fiftfi Avenue—Empire State
Building—42nd Street at Park Avenue—46th Street at Park Ave.—48th Street at Rockefeller P l a z a
I^age Four
STATE NEWS
CIVit
SEltlaCE
LEAblft
Association MembSll0iip
Croup Insurance Plan
Chapter Representative
Airs Views- on Association
bership. T h a t is the way the
By H. J. Bernard
chance to observe the true con- and again it makes no difference
By C. A. CARLISLE, JR.
A refreshing point of view on democratic system works and it
dition of the applicant.
j whether the present illness or ac- the activities of the Association is the best system.
Ter Bush & Powell, Inc.
For instance, if you are blind in | cident has any bearing on the of State Civil Service Employees,
The Friendly Spirit
Once a year we try to explain one eye, or if you have lost a leg, in correct answer.
and the part members .should play
to the thousands of State em- or if you have had tuberculosis,
Let us as.sume you fill out an in the Association is expressed by
"It is not necessary to look for
ployees who are Interested all of arthritis, rheumatism or any other application which is perfectly Carol S. Schloss, newly elected
unanimity. Many a fine project
the facts regarding the handling similar condition and t h a t fact is clear. T h a t is, it appears from Chapter representative.
is lost when the proponents don't
of your Accident and Sickness I n - not shown in the application a the application t h a t everything is
An appeal to the ambitions, in- fight for their objective because
surance and the coverages offered policy might be issued when it OK, so we issue a policy. Then
thereunder.
you have an accident and break telligence, social instincts and of the certain opposition. People
should be declined.
convictions of the can be friendly even if they disSome persons have told us they a leg. While investigating your democratic
The Application
is the best way to agree. T h a t makes for the best
In obtaining insurance of al- signed an application in blank for claim we find that 20 years ago, membership
an organization on a sound kind of relationship. T h a t ' s what
most any kind the first act is for the salesman and let him fill in the you had tuberculosis, but you did put
lasting footing.
exists in the State Association.
the applicant to fill out an appli- answers to the questions. Then not divulge t h a t fact in your ap- and
That is the opinion of Miss There should be more of t h a t
cation answering a number of later when errors were found these plication. This is a plain breach
important questions, all of which persons claimed they did not see of warranty although there is not Carol S. Schloss, newly-appointed feeling."
She will attend Representative
have a bearing on the issuance of the answers to the questions. So any connection between the t u - Representative of the NYC Chapa policy as requested by the ap- several years ago we adopted a berculosis and the accident. Still ter of the Association of State meetings regularly, she said and
plicant. I n the case of the Group plan to help State employees who had we known you had tubercu- Civil Service Employees. She start putting notices on the bulPlan of Accident and Sickness I n - did not fill in their own appli- losis 20 years ago we could not points out to the State Associa- letin board at the Division of Law •
have issued a policy as any one tion as a good example of how Enforcement, State Department
surance offered to all State em- cation. •
and endurance were p a - of Education, where she works.
ployees under 59 years of age and
If a policy is issued on the who ever had tuberculosis is u n - strength
i n good health with no chronic strength of the answers to the insurable. So when you have the tiently built up through these She will solicit opinions from emdisease or serious disfigurement.
questions in an application, then accident we discover this and set processes, and believes t h a t with ployees and report back to the
aside the policy due to the breach still greater application of the representative meetings.
You as a State employee on any a letter is mailed in an envelope of
warranty and return all pre- same principles, t h a t strength will
regular State payroll have the under first class postage to each miums
Stresses Social Activities
have collected and do reach
limits heretofore
only
privilege of completing an appli- assured asking him to look at the not pay we
the claim.
dreamed of—but It requires work.
cation. After all questions are copy of his application on the
"There
be social activities
"Those who undertake delega- to keep must
On the other h a n d if you had
answered then you sign the appli- back of policy and if the answers
the members' interest
ted
duties
are
under
an
obligacation, probably through
the are incorrect to advise us at once. failed to state in the application
alert/' she said.
efforts of a representative of Ter We have done this to protect th5 t h a t 20 years ago you had an tion to put much of their time in
She recalled the beneficial efthe
undertakine;."
she
observed.
Bush & Powell, Inc., 423 State State employee from thinking he appendicitis operation and you
fect of dinners, dances and theAs
for
herself,
.she's
prepared
Street, Schenectady, New York, has insurance, where actually had an accident. We would coratre parties when, as a member
such as Alan Delancy, Kendrick, this is not the case. Because an rect the application by endorse- to do just that.
of the New York Society, comWhiting, Carstens, Wood, all of error in the application, if it is ment and pay the claim, and this
posed of NYC residents who
Personality Girl
whom are circulating at the material to the issuance of the misstatement or omission had no
worked in Albany, she had the
present time among various groups policy, automatically sets aside bearing on the issuance of the
An attractive girl, w^th a bouy- time of her life. The Idea of
t h a t policy, no matter how long policy.
of State employees.
ant personality. Miss Schloss al- people knowing one another betI hope this disertation has ready has started to study the ter strikes her as the happiest
The application is mailed to the the policy has been enforce. This
is
called
a
breach
of
warranty.
proved
the
necessity
for
full
and
Home Office of the Commercial
various projects of the Association one for the success of any orCasualty Insurance Co., 10 Park And it makes no difference complete answers to all questions as (she freelv admits) she never ganization, and the accent on the
Place, Newark, New Jersey. There whether the incorrect answer was on any application for anything, did before. Ordinarily, members social certainly turns the trick,
insurance, jobs ,etc.
it is checked by the Underwriters given intentionally or not.
think and read about those m a t - she believes.
and if approved a policy is issued
Any correspondence concerning ters that interest them personFortunately in the State group
Dues? They should be whatbased on your answers to those plan insurance, we have very few this article may be directed to ally, in which they have a f i n a n - ever they are worth to the memquestions. So now you can see, if breaches of warranty. But occa- C. A, Carlisle, Civil Service De- cial or related stake. But all mem- bers, in actual financial returns,
an error is made in answering the sionally one pops up. The incor- partment, Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., bers should acquire the broad- other gains, and in social conquestions on the application then rect answer is usually discovered 423 State Street, Schenectady, range hahit. she believes, so that tacts and activities. Add up all
the Underwriter does not have a in the investigation of a claim New York.
any one of them can discuss even the advantages. If you give more,
those projects not directly re- you get more. T h a t ' s her view,
lated to themseleves, and can vote and, with an augmented program
on all proposals more intelligent- such as the NYC Chapter inly. Miss Schloss has a lot of In- tends to begin in the fall, Miss
telligence herself.
Schloss expects to be in the swim.
"A group Is successful to the
Service Commission has not pre{Continued irom Page 1)
degree t h a t its members and its
Special lo The LKADKR
WAR VETS WAGE
others t h a t veterans preference, pared its own list of correct a n leadership are aggressive," she
swers,
so
there
would
be
no
possiALBANY,
July
9—Formal
ap- said. "The Representatives have
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
which provides that veterans go bility of applicants getting hold
pointment of two new District
•rms
The New York War
automatically to the head of the of the correct answers before Engineers and five new Assistant to gather much detailed information, and constitute themselves in Civil Service are --' ing
eligible lists, if they secure a pass- they took the tests.
District Engineers was announced the local point for the d<stribu- awards of several buildir" 1
'n
An official of the Civil Service by Charles H. Sells, State Super- tlon of facts o the members in Florida and a Vi^'^ory t"
ing grade, has discouraged non• to
Commission
explained,
however,
intendent
of
Public
Works.
veterans from competing for State
-atmembers for recruit'r>rr
their unit.
that each contestant filled out a
Lacy Ketchum, who has been
must be done with e.st number of new m - r ^ ' ^ - s outjobs.
postcard with his name and ad- serving as provisional District the"Everything
full authority of the mem- side the metropol^'tan a r r i .
Five examinations were sched- dress after completing the tests, Engineer at the Utica District
and
within
a
month
each
will
reOffice, was confirmed in his presuled for June 29, including stena key to the correct answers, ent post. George L. Nickerson, asographers and typists, but the ceive
mimeographed on the postcard. sistant district engineer at the
clerks examinations were the In this way, each contestant will Poughkeepsie District Office, will
only tests given on that date, all be in a position to estmate his succeed Peter J. Lamb as District
Engineer in charge of the Albany
paying $1,200 to $1,700 annually. own grade or rating.
It was also noted t h a t a period district office. Mr. Lamb, who has
Those who pass the clerks exaxns
acting District Engineer in
will be notified of the date of the of ten days will be allowed for been
persons objecting to the answers Albany, will resume his permaexamination for typists and sten- considered correct by the Com- n e n t post as Assistant District
ographers, probably in September mission. Those objecting may ap- Engineer.
or October. A thirty per cent cost peal to the Commission by writing
Samuel Ehrinrich, Elmer Youngof living bonus is added to the in their objections. These will be m a n n and J o h n Ettinger, who
secrutinized
and
if
inaccuracies
minimum salaries for the posi- are discovered in the Civil Service have been serving provisionally as
THE NEW ARCO COMPf FTFAssistant District Engineers at
tions, with smaller bonuses granted "key", they will be corrected.
Hornell, Buffalo and Babylon ofas the salary increases.
To date no figures are available fices, respectively, were confirmed
HOMESTUDY COURSE FOR
on the number of veterans taking to their present posts. Edward
Answers Next Month
the examinations, although veter- Stickney, assistant district engiContestant were permitted to ans were required to state wheth- neer at Albany has been t r a n s take their question booklets home er they would claim preference ferred to a similar post at Utica
with them after the examinations, when they filed their applications and Albert Erskine, Associate
handing in only the answer sheet, for the exams. The Commission Civil Engineer at the Buffalo ofwhich will be electrically corrected said t h a t these answers have not Ice, was named Assistant District
Engineer at Poughkeepsie.
and marked. The State Civil been tabulated.
30,000
Take NYS Test
Sells Appoints
Five Engineers
-NOW
WHAT EVERY STATE EMPLOYEE SHOULD KNOW
9 u i i Covers Veterans Rights and Privileges
b'^Ll
By THEODORE BECKER
3. Veterans of World War I are f r o m competing in an examinaentitled
to plt-eference in appoint- tion although his actual age exCIVIL Service employees, espe- ment over
veterans of World War ceeds the announced maximum
cially those who are veterans, are II.
age by three years.
expected to and should know
• Ti-ue
• False
Q True
Q False
about the special civil service
4. It is a crime to refuse to
10. Veterans who are entitled to
rights and privileges accorded to
a veteran the preference in takke G.I. Bill of Rights courses
war veterans under New York allow
granted by the Civil must be granted leaves of absence
State laws. Employees who retain appointment
Service Law.
from their State jobs to take such
only a vague recollection of these
courses.
• True
• P'alse
matters may have their memories
• True
• False
5. A veteran of World War II
refreshed by a short quiz on the
subject. Below are 12 questions cannot be removed from a tem11.
Persons
who
served
with the
porary position except after a
set forth in the traditional True- hearing
U. S. Red Cross overseas in World
on
charges
of
incompetFalse style. Indicate, by check- ency or misconduct.
War II are entitled to preference
mark in the appropriate Ijox
in appointment and promotion.
• True
Q False
• Ti-ue
False
whether the statements following
6. World War I veterans who
are true or false. You can check
subordinate exempt posi12. If an eligible list contains
your answers against the answer occupy
tions of a technical n a t u i e can be the name of one veteran and 20
key printed below.
removed without charges.
non-veterans, and only one ap1. The preference in promotion
Q Ti'ue
Q False
pointment is to be made, the vetgranted to disabled veterans of
7.'Veterans of World War n . eran's n a m e is the only one t h a t
World War I expires on December threatened with lay-off, are en- can be considered for appoint31, 1950.
titled to be ti-ansferred to vacan- ment.
• True
• False
• True
Q False
cies in similar positions.
• True
• False
2. A person entering military
A n s w ^ Key
8. The Civil Service Law proseiTice for the first time today
1, False; 2, True; 3. False; 4,
cannot obtain preference in ap- vides t h a t in lay-offs from exempt
pointment although he becomes positions non-veterans must be Tiue; 5, False; 6, False; 7, True;
8, False; 9, Tiue; 10, T i u e ; 11,
suspended before veterans.
disabled in .such service.
• True
p False
• Ti'ue
• False
False; 12, True.
READY-
Post Office
Clerk-Carrier
•••
^ 1 . 5 0
A systematic Iioiiiestudy course uilli 2 9 0 0 p r e v i o u s
exuiiiiiiutioii type ((uestioiis uiid answers.
Iiiclutles
Sorting, FolIo>^iug Instructions and (*eneral Test.
EXAMINATIONS BEGIN JULY 29
INo. C.O.D'il
[Add lOv on Mail Ordentj
THE LEADER BOOKSTORE
97 DUANE STREET
NEW YORK CITY
CIVIL
Tuesday, July 9, 1946
SKRVICK
LF.ADER
Progress Report
For State Jobs
What Job Vet Can Claim
On Return from Service
OPEN-COMPETITIVE
STATE NEWS
Page Five
Western Conference
Hears Officials
A t Attica Meeting
Associate tale Publicity Editor.
If you left a civil service job to ditlon t h a t you engage in work
engage in military duty, either by essential to the prosecution of Commerce Department: 21 cand r a f t or voluntary enlistment, the war, you are entitled to -he^ didates, held February 2. 1946.
then you have been on military i same privileges as had you con- Rating of the vritten examinaleave of absence, and your job tinued t o perform military duty, i tion is completed. Clerical work
SiKviiil to Tho LKADIOH
and spoke of the efficiency of
h a s been filled. If at all, by the In addition to furnishing a copy i is completed. Interviews to be
ATTICA, July 9—Over two hun- State government. "During the
appointment of a temporary sub- of your discharge, you must furn- held.
dred
and
fifty
members
of
the
Principal Economist. Depart- Western N. Y. Regional Confer- last four years much considerastitute, who must be discharged ish a certificate of the War Mantion has been given to the finanto make way for you to make power Commission, or of the ment of Commerce: 15 candidates, ence of Chapters of the Associa- cial remuneration of State emapplication
for
reinstatement United States EmploVment Serv- held February 2, 1946. Rating of tion of State Civil Service Em- ployees. Public workers should be
1 ^ 1 thin the proper period of time. ice, or of the proper authorities the written examination is com- ployees, attended a regular meet- paid enough to live comfortably
The time within which you in the Armed Forces of the pleted. Clerical work is com- ing on J u n e 29 as the guests of and happily and when they retire
must make application for rein- United States, or of any other pleted. Interviews scheduled for the Attica Prison Chapter at the they should be given sufficient to
Chapter Club House, Attica.
statement is ninety days from the authorized federal agency. The week of July 1.
continue to live comfortably. I
Publicity Production Manairer,
termination of your military duty certificate shall state the period
Robert L. Hopkins, Chairman •am proud of the employees of New
Commerce Department: 14 candior during your terminal leave. If you were engaged in such work.
of the Conference Group, presided York State. I realize that many
The date of the tei-mination of dates, held February 2, 1946. R a t - at the business meeting in the of them have difficult and d a n you fail to make such application,
ing
of
the
written
examination
is
your
military
duty
Is
the
date
of
you may still be reinstated within
afternoon. An election of Confer- gerous work. The average citizen
one year a f t e r the termination of your certificate of honorable dis- completed. Clerical work Is com- ence officers resulted in the re- doesn't realize the job they are
pleted.
Interviews
to
be
held.
charge.
In
case
you
suffeied
a
..^your military duty, but then only
of Mr. Hopkins and all doing particularly in the State inSenior Ilousingr Accountant, Di- election
In the discretion of your appoint- temporary disability which arose
previous officers.
stitutions," said Mr. Hanley.
vision
of
Housing,
Executive
Deout
of
and
in
the
course
of
your
ing oflRcer and not as a matter of
The guests at the evening
Senator Erwin praised the Asp
a
r
t
m
e
n
t
:
18
candidates,
held
military
duty,
then
the
date
of
right. Of course, if you fail to
dinner Included l i e u t e n a n t Gov- sociation and said: "Your motto
February
2,
1946.
Rating
of
the
the
termination
of
such
temporary
make application for reinstateernor Joe Hanley, State Senator 'We Serve' is one of the finest
ment within the ninety-day per- disability is the date of the ter- written examination Is completed. Austin W. Erwin, State Assembly- mottoes any group can have. We
mination
of
your
military
duty.
Rating
of
training
and
experience
iod then your appointing officer
m a n Harold C. Ostertag, Mary shall all be known by the way we
I t should be noted t h a t although is completed. Clerical work to be Goode Krone, Chairman of the serve."
can appoint someone else to fill
done.
your
military
leave
of
absence
your job.
State Personnel Council, Dr. WalAssemblyman Ostertag stated:
Title Examiner, Department of ter Martin, Warden of Attica
^
T h e right of reinstatement is continues until you actually are Law:
"I a m proud bo be a servant of
107
candidates,
held
Februreinstated
and
covers
time
in
Prison, J o h n Holt-Harris, Coim
your position on a permanent
2, 1946. Rating of the written sel to the State Association, a n d the people of the State of New
granted to you under the pro- traveling back to your job, never- ary
York. I do not believe there is
examination
is
cwnpleted.
Rating
theless,
your
application
for
reLaurence J. Holllster, Field Rep- any better government on earth
visions of Section 246 of the New
of
training
and
experience
is
cominstatement
must
be
made
within
resentative of the State AssociaYork State Military Law, known
Clerical work to be done. tion. Lawrence Law, President of t h a n we have here in our own
a s the Page-Osterag Law, which ninety days a f t e r you are honor- pleted.
State. We of the Legislature must
Assistant
District
Supervising
ably
discharged
or
while
you
are
the Attica Prison Chapter, was depend upon the people taking an
was enacted in 1941 to protect on terminal leave.
Public
Health
Nurse,
Health
DeToastmaster at the dinner, and interest In our work and aiding us
the rights of public employees enIf you are on terminal leave, p a r t m e n t : 15 candidates, held welcomed the guests a n d mem- to carry out our responsibilities.
gaged in military duty and of
April
27,
1946.
Rating
of
the
you
may
be
reinstated
a
n
d
embers.
^ j > e r s o n s on eligible lists who enGovernment is largely what the
ployed during this period by fur- written examination is completed.
^ t a g e in military duty.
Lieutenant GovernQr
Hanley people permit or w a n t their legisRating
of
training
and
experience
nlshing
a
certified
or
photostatic
"Military duty is defined by this
complimented
State
employees lators to make it."
in progress.
law to cover t h e following serv copy of your order granting such is Assistant
Food
Chemist,
Departleave.
I
t
will
be
necessary
at
the
ices:
of Agriculture and Markets:
1.Military service in the mili- expiration of your terminal leave 10 candidates,
held April 27, 1946.
tary, naval, aviation, or marine to furnish a certified or photo- Rating
of the written examination
service of the United States, f r o m static copy of your discharge and Is completed.
Clerical work in
release from military duty, to
July 1 1940 on.
progress. Training and experience
2. Sei-vice with the American your department head, who in to be rated.
will forward same to the
Red Cross while with the armed turn
Assistant Laboratory Worker,
forces of the United States on Personnel Office.
Special to T h e L E A D E R
It should be noted t h a t military Department of Health. Division of
New York, Cornell University;
foreign service, f r o m April 7, 1943
service which is temporary, inter- Laboratories and Research: 40
ALBANY, N. Y., July 9—Schol-, Miss Alice M. Reber of 2846 B u f to July 1, 1947.
candidates,
held
April
27,
946.
3. Service as an officer or mem- mittent, or gratuitous, with any Rating of the written examination arships for study a t schools of falo Road, Rochester, University
or auxiliary force, is not
of Rochester; Miss Viola B. Pa via
ber of the crew of a United States reserve
is completed. Training and ex- social work have been awarded of Rochester, Nazareth College;
Maritime Service on active duty considered "military duty."
perience
to
be
rated..
If you left a position in the
by the State Department of Men- Miss Vita Tomaselli of Rochester,
or in training for or awaiting
Associate Education Institution tal Hygiene to eight college grad- Nazareth College.
^ a s s i g n m e n t to such service f r o m exempt class to engage in military Engineer,
Department of Educaduty, your military leave of abApril 28. 1941 on.
continues until your return, tiijn, Albany: 13 candidates, held uates of New York State, Di*.
4. Service in work essential to sence
in the meantime, a per- April 27, 1946. Rating of the Frederick MacCurdy, Commist h e prosecution of the war en- unless,
manent
successor has been ap- written examination has not been sioner, announced. "These young
gaged in by a public employee pointed to
your pjace. The started.
women, a f t e r three months of
who has been discharged or re- appointmenttake
sucBoiler Inspector. Department of graduate study, will be the first
lieved from military duty on con- cessor (other of t ha apermanent
n a substitute
15 candidates, held April
dition t h a t he engage in such appointee) terminates the mili- Labor:
27, 1946. Rating of the written Student Social Work Aides chosen
work.
tary leave of an exempt employee examination has not been started. by the Department as a part of
Before you are reinstated, you and his rights of reinstatement.
Chief, Bureau of Curriculum an over-all program extending the
will be required to furniish a
Development.
Department
of social service work of the departk certificate or photostatic copy of
(Continued Next
Week)
Education: 11 candidates, held
^ lyour discharge so that proper nomiinrnry
April 27. 1946. Rating of the ment beyond anything previously
tation of your military service
written examination is completed. contemplated in t h a t field," said HATS .IMSPIBBD WITH. quaUty MKS
c a n be made on the records kept
b e a u t y . $1 6 0 t o $ 6 . 0 0 Over 1 . 0 0 0 h a t s
Interviews to be held.
-Dr. MacCurdy.
INSURANCE PLAN
by your department, the Persont o select
trom.
THE
MIIXINEBT
Head Account Clerk, State
The student social work aide
M A R T . Cor. B r o a d w a y and Maiden L a n a
nel Office and t h e Department of
The Lost Angeles County Audi- Teachers College a t Albany: 74 program is the direct result of
( O p p o s i t e P o s t O f f i c e ) . A l b a n y . 12«
Civil Service.
Main 3t_ GlorerBville. N. T.
candidates, held April 27. 1946.
If you were discharged or re- tor is now permitted to make pay- Rating of the written examina- a critical shortage of suitable personnel for an increased number
lieved from military duty on con- roll deductions for G. I. Insur- tion is in progress.
Hair Removed
of social service positions in the
ance.
TLY
BY
ELECTROLYSIS.
Health Investigator (Venereal State mental institutions. It Is GP Eu aRrMa nAt eNeEd Nno
re-srowth. No after-marke.
Disease), Department of Health: implemented by a special approM o d e r a t e fee. C o n s u l t a t i o n t r e e . E r n e s t
104 candidates, held April 27. 1946. priation included in the State H. S w a n s o n ( K r e e G r a d u a t e ) . Electrolog-ist
You are
invited
Rating of the written examination <budget on the reco'mmendation of 1 2 3 S t a t e St. Open eves. ALbany 3- 4 9 8 8 .
t o Join with t h e Sisters of Kepurutioii
1*11 rji^a l o r y
Soeioly
is in progress.
Governor Thomas E. Dewey.
of tlip CoiiKreeatioii of Mury In niukWatches
A MASS LEAGUE
iiiK 11 Moiitlily Noveiia in H o n o r of tiie
Junior Architectural Draftsman,
The eight young women grad- F R A N K J . M f N E E L Y , W a t c h m a k e r , 20
Miruciiioiitj I n f u n t Jesiis of I'lUKin*. A
FOK T H K I.IVIN(i ANI» T H K UK.\D
Department
of
Public
Works:
37
Eagrle
St.,
A
l
b
a
n
y
, N . Y . ( D e W i t t Clinton
uates are Miss Marie Marsh of
N o v c n u will b e hold in t h e Convent
OBJECT—To give you an easy meant TO
candidates, held April 27. 1946. Volois. Elmira College; Miss Helen H o t e l ) . — 3 3 y e a r s ' experience; 3 y e a r s
i'ha|>el f r o m t h e tlrst in t o n i n t h of
provide spiritually for your dear departed.
m a k e r f o r U . S. Marine Corps;
every niontli.
Rating of the written examina- Elizabeth Doherty of 20 Pearl St., hc oo audr t e wo uast c hand
BENEFITS—Eleven High Masses celebrated
p r o m p t eervice a t all times.
Send y o u r I n t e n t i o n s , w h i c h will be
daily for intentions of living and for.
tion has not been started.
Hornell, Elmira College; Miss P h o n e AI.bany 4 - 0 0 0 1 .
placed a t t h e S h r i n e of t h e I n t a n t
souls of departed mennbers.
Junior
Pharmacist,
Department
Jciiuti diiriiiif t h e Novcua, t o :
Sarah Ann Dougherty of 1111
(This obligation assumed in perpetuity by
Personal Representative
of Mental Hygiene, Gowanda Earl St.. Schenectady, Mount St.
the Redemptorist Fathers)
Kev. M o t h e r Mary Jotiephu
J . H E N D E R S O N , P e r s o n a l RepOBLIGATIONS - Yearly Membersh!p
Convent of t h e Sisters of K e p a r n t i o n
State Hospital: 20 candidates, Vincent College; Miss HaiTiet Cr eHs eAnRt aLtEi vSe —
pt
duat,
50c;
Perpetual
Membership,
$10
of t h e ConKregration of Mary
held April 27. 1946. Rating of the Elizabeth Rendall of Aurora, Wells a n d reliable T ht rea n Cs aacptiitoonl s ;d i srtar ti ce ts; $p1r o mper
Literature Sent on Request
1 4 8 VVetit 1 4 t h St.. New York 11, N.V.
written
examination
is
in
progress.
AnliIresH ('outniuiiieHtiong T o
College; Miss Phyllis OConnor of h o u r . H So. S w a n St.. A L b a n y 6 - 5 8 9 0 .
Fraj rs fur the Novena icill be
Junior Tax Examiner, DepartREDEMPTORIST FATHERS
sent upon request
3 8 0 K A 8 T ir>Oth 8T., N E W VOitK 5 5
ment of Taxation and Finance:
717 candidates, held April 27,
1946. Rating of P a r t I is com® ReasonobI* rates
pleted. Rating scale for Part I I is
* Convenient payments
in preparation.
Parole Officer, Executive De* Prompt service
Training for the Professional Catholic Theatre
partment: 357 candidates, held
16»7 BROADWAY (at 53d)
C.B.S. Theatre Bldg., N.Y.C.
April 27, 1946. Rating of the
* Experienced personnel
wi-itten examination is in progress.
» i P K C l A I . S L T M M K K C 4I1TR.SK
Principal Printing Clerk, De* Mail or phone service
JULY 8 to AUGUST 16 •
p a r t m e n t of Labor, Workmen's
SitoiiDored by
UnOw Uire.i tion of
*
No co-maker pkin
Compensation Board, New York
THK C.ATHOUC DRAMATIC MOVKMKNT
Office: 33 candidates, held April
DAY AND EVENING COURSES
If you need from $60 to $3,500
27. 1946. Rating of the written
Al-L n t O I - ' K S S I O N A I . S T A F F
examination is completed. T r a i n for a sound purpose
C^IIKMR A — D A I L Y , M(>N. to F K I .
fOtKSKS FOR—
ing and experience to be rated.
CUI RSK B — M « N . . WKD.. F K I .
.\DI LT«
School Transportation Supert'Ol'KSK ( • — T l KHDAY, T I I I KSDAY
Y O r N G FKUPLB
Call, write or phone
visor, Department of Education:
I'llILDKKN
13 candidates, held April 27, 1946.
Sitlisfui'tory w o r k leads to meiulM'rsiiip in the l^roft-buioniil Catholic T h e a t i e and
PERSONAL LOAN DEPT.
I)iodu< tion8 in New York and priiiLiiml eities of Hie eo\intiy, under E q u i t y rule*.
Rating of the written examinaMEIrose 5-6900
FHONK (^)Ll'MHUH 6-H59.'V
tion Is in progress.
Write, Phone or Call in Person for Enrollment
Senior Housing: Control Architect, Executive Department. Division of Housing: 8 candidates,
held April 27, 1946. Rating of the
BRONX COUNTY
written examination has not been
started.
Senior Inspector of Penal In
stitutions. Department of CorrecFOR CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
(Continued on Page 16)
NINI CONVINIENT OFFICiS
Student Social Work
Scholarships Awarded
Albany
Shopping
Guide
THE CATHOLIC THEATRE SCHOOL
Church Announcements
MAIN OFFICE THIRD AVENUE at UBth $i.
ioly Innocents
128 WEST 37fk STREET
NEW YORK CITY
DAILY MASSES-7. 7)S0, 1. 1:30,
SUNDAY MASSE5-2:20. 4. 7. 8.
DAILY SERVICES-11:60. |':I5 3,
SUNDAY SERVICES (P.
-5:34
CONFESSIONS - At . i l tim.,.
k. Francis of Assist
><«t<M«l ShrliM • ( M. Anthony)
\
m WEST 31 It STRE61
^ N i w XQ&K mt
DAILY
Lv
^
MASSES-C,
4:K 7.
MASSES-*^ 4.
4, 4:30.
OOli'f'EsWHVligi^
^
1, I2:IS. I 2 : «
», 10. iT 12 I M |
^HS^-.-K. 7:30
and 7:30
Only: 3 P M.)
1:30.
10.
lii«
iLm.mJmJmM^
ST.
.lOSKPll'^i
VII.I.A
F A R A Y RKrtT, t ' A T N K I M . , N. Y.
Vu<utiou U E S O H T f o r men mid w o n u n .
Open all yoar. B e a u t i f u l l y located; ovei-luokinif Hudtion. Siieciou* viuundii. N u r s e
a t t e n d a n t l o r cunvalesceuttf; tray bervieo;
elevator.
I'rlvate or
eonvenient
baths.
Kxoelient f o o d . S n o r U include tenuis, pinif
t>(>nir, oroQuet, uhulHeboard and b a s k e t b a l l .
IXlitrhtlul m o t o r trips. Ten n i i n u l e s drive
to golf course. M o d e r a t a r a l e s . B o o k l e t .
Tel
Frttnuibt'uu hiMt«r». Ht)»et'v«ktioai(
tiNr
Out., Muv. ouly.
I THIRD AVENUE f
' 1 ol I37lh Straol
THIRD AVENUE
ot Botton Road
€ TREMONT AVE.
ol leiton Road
OOOEN AVENUE
E. TREMONT AVE.
at ijiuckiitr Blvd.
:.M:ird STREET
at While PUIniAv.
FOROHAM ROAD
at Jtromt Av»nua
11 HUGH 0RAN1
CIRCLE
at Univtirtllv Av«.
at Porkctt«it*(
^MMln* Orgonutd 1868
NMIW
NfMit IMMMM (WH'lttH
CIVIL
SIX
A THOLGHT
FOR THE
WEEK
H E devil d o e s n o t t e m p t p e o p l e w h o m h e f i n d s s u i t a b l y
SERVICE
Merit Man
employed.—Jeremy Taijlor.
TjT^AOIEiVL
America's
Dismissals
Main Topic of
Litigation
By H. Eliot
Kaplan
C.ounifel, ISalittnal (Avil Service Leatfue
Largest
Weekly
for Public
Employees
Member of Audit Bureau ot Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
CIVIL SERVICE PUILICATIONS. Inc.
»7 Duane Street, New York 7. N. Y.
COrtlandt 7-5665
Jerry Pinkelstein, Publisher
H. J. Bernard, Executive Editor Maxwell Lehman, Editor (on leave)
Bernard K. Johnpoll, Directoj* LEADER Washington
Bureau
1203 Trenton Place. S. E.; Tel.: Atlantic 1624
(
The LEADER is the only civil service publicalioji with Teletype leased wire to
Washinqton
N. H. Mager, Busi7iess Manager T U E S D A Y , J U L Y 9, 1 9 4 6
State Should Help to Pay
For Age 55 Retirement
July %
LEADER
Frederick J. Ludwig
DISMISSAL is the outstanding point of litigation In civil servic*
cases. The dismissed employee wants to be reinstated, or wants tajijfll
be retired on a pension, or seeks some related remedy. How much
likelihood he has of succeeding can be gleaned from a glance a t
decided cases.
More and more the courts tend toward the general rule t h a t in
their review of dismissals by heads of departments or by the personnel
agency, where the latter is given statutory authority to review
disciplinary action against employees, the court will not substitute its
judgment or wisdom for t h a t of the removing authority; and t h a t
thfe court will not direct the reinstatement of a dismissed employee,-^
unless the charges on which dismissal is sought to be made appear
on their face to be specious and trivial, or where the determination
of the administrative official is arbitrary and whimsical, or where i
there has not been substantial compliance with the statutory pro- f^
cedure required for making dismissals.
Frederick J. Ludwig is a NYC
TYPl(14L CASE CITKl)
policeman who wears a Phi Beta
Kappa key, the first such policeTypical of this general point of view is the determination of
man t<y earn it, and, so far as the New York Court of Appeals in Miller v. Kling, 291 N. Y. 65?
where the court held t h a t if there was any e\;idence reasonably
N E of t h e p r a c t i c a l g o a l s o f S t a t e e m p l o y e e s is a n could be learned, still the only supporting any one of the substantial charges made against t h e
one. He received his Bachelor of employee the dismissal would be confirmed. The court stated the
Arts degi-ee, magna cum laude, rule substantially thus: T h e head of hte department has the
a g e 5 5 r e t i r e m e n t p l a n w i t h t h e S t a t e a n e q u a l c o n - f r o m the College of t h e ' C i t y of responsibility
of managing his office efficiently. He has t h e power
t r i b u t o r . U n d e r t h e r e t i r e m e n t l a w a s it n o w s t a n d s f u l l New York in 1939, and the Master to remove his subordinates subject only to the procedure required
the statute. When the department head's determination comes
e x t r a c o s t of t h e d i f f e r e n c e b e t w e e n t h e h i g h e r r e t i r e - of Science degree, summa cum by
to b€ reviewed in the courts the courts "have no right to review t h c ^tj^
m e n t a g e a n d t h e a g e 5 5 p l a n is b o r n e e n t i r e l y b y t h e laude, f r o m the same institution facts generally as to weight of evidence, beyond seeing to it t h a f i ^ f
is 'substantial evidence.'' Similar rulings were applied by t h e ;
e m p l o y e e . In N Y C t h e 5 5 - y e a r p l a n h a s l o n g b e e n i n three years later. Then he took there
\
up law and was graduated No. 1 Colorado and Washington courts.
e f f e c t , w i t h t h e c i t y c o n t r i b u t i n g h a l f of t h e t o t a l c o s t . in his class of 68 at Columbia
Where a statute grants a right to a civil service employee to t
T h e r e is n o r e a s o n w h y t h e S t a t e , w h i c h i s f a r b e t t e r off Law School. He was a James "appeal" to the civil service board from a department head's deter- !
mination dismissing the employee from his position, the employee has i
financially,
c a n ' t d o a s m u c h , a n d t h e p o l i t i c a l d i v i s i o n s Kent Scholar for each of his a right to a trial de novo before the appeal board, r a t h e r t h a n <
o f t h e S t a t e t h a t w o u l d b e a f f e c t e d b y s u c h a l a w could three years at Coliunbia, and merely a review of the testimony presented at the hearing before s
winner in 1945 of the Robert the department had. A statute providing for removal of an e m - ^ ^
finance
t h e e x t r a cost.
Noxon Toppan prize in Constitu- ployee after investigation entitles the employee to a hearing a f t e i ' " ^
T h e a g e 5 5 p l a n is of p a r t i c u l a r i m p o r t a n c e b e c a u s e tional Law. He was admitted to reasonable notice notwithstanding t h a t the statute does not expres.sly
it is g e n e r a l l e g i s l a t i o n a n d a f f e c t s t h e p r i n c i p a l s h o r t - the New York bar a month after provide for such notice or opportunity to be heard, a decision which ^
is contrary to the general rule.
,
c o m i n g in our e c o n o m y , t h a t r e t i r e m e n t d o e s n o t c o m e receiving his LL.B. degree.
Delegation to a referee or deputy appointed by him to hear the i
e a i l y e n o u g h , o r a t a h i g h e n o u g h i n c o m e , to p e r m i t t h e
Since Mr. Ludwig became a pa- charges preferred against an employee sought to be dismissed and
r e a l a n d f u l l e n j o y m e n t of r e t i r e m e n t .
trolman as far back (considering requiring him to report his findings to t h e department head is not
his age of 29) as '40, he attained an unlawful delegation of authority where the final determination
Time for Enactment
his M.S. and LL.B. degrees and is made by the department head based on the evidence and report J
A c a s e w a s c i t e d r e c e n t l y of a N Y C e m p l o y e e w h o admission to the bar while work- submitted by the referee or deputy (Minnesota case"*.
r e t i r e d a t m o r e t h a n f u l l p a y , a f t e r 4 3 y e a r s of m e m b e r ing as a policeman from 12 mid.SKPARATK NATURE OF CHARGFAS
to 8 a. m. So besides being
s e r v i c e . F u l l - p a y r e t i r e m e n t is still on t h e f a r h o r i z o n night
bright, he had to be inordinately
Somehow
the
impression has grown t h a t a public employee
f o r a n y S t a t e e m p l o y e e s , b u t e a r l i e r r e t i r e m e n t , or a industrious to get along on two
j^reater r e t i r e m e n t a l l o w a n c e , is a s t e p in t h e r i g h t d i r e c - or three hours sleep a day for indicted for a felony or charged with a misdemeanor, and subsequently acquitted, must necessarily be continued in his pubic position, i
t i o n . If t h e h i g h e r a l l o w a n c e is i m p e r a t i v e , e x t r a y e a r s over three years. How did he like and t h a t charges based on the offense for which the indictment or ^
t h a t ? Not so. good. 'He'd say,
of S t a t e s e r v i c e c a n b e p u t in. U n f o r t u n a t e l y , b o t h a d - not so well).
arrest was made must be dismissed after the court acquittal. An ^
in the NYC Board of Transportation had been charged
v a n t a g e s — s o o n e r and m o r e — c a n not be obtained now,
"If I had to go through it again, employee
b u t it is t i m e t h a t t h e S t a t e d i d p r e s e n t t h e a d d i t i o n a l I wouldn't do it," he admitted. by the Board with insubordination and misconduct in connection .
with an altercation he had with one of his superiors. He was c h a r g e A ^
c h o i c e to its l o y a l w o r k e r s . T h e r e is n o r e a s o n w h y a 'T wouldn't recommend it to my with assaulting his superior. The employee sought to have t h e
worst
enemy."
bill t o t h a t e f f e c t s h o u l d n o t p a s s t h e n e x t s e s s i o n o f t h e
'Of com'se, t h a t worst enemy hearing of t h e charges deferred until after action by the court.
Legislature.
E m p l o y e e o r g a n i z a t i o n s s h o u l d h i t h a r d phrase is merely rhetorical. He The Board declined to do so, proceeded with the hearing, and
t o w a r d t h a t g o a l . B i l l s t o t h a t e f f e c t h a v e b e e n p u t in h a s hosts of friends, for he's t h a t dismissed him. Thereafter h e was acquitted after court trial on
charges growing out of t h e altercation. The employee demanded
y e a r a f t e r y e a r , s o n o b o d y c a n p l e a d s u r p r i s e or n o v e l t y . way by nature; no enemies. More t h a t he be reinstated clainling t h a t the acquittal by the jury a f t e r
h a n six feet tall, he's broadS t a t e L e g i s l a t o r s a n d o f f i c i a l s c a n n o t c a l l f o r m o r e t i m e tshouldered,
ready with a smile trial was conclusive on the Board of Transportation and t h a t the «
f o r s t u d y . T h e n e x t t h i n g on t h e a g e n d a s h o u l d b e f a v o r - and a handshake, and good-look- prior dismissal by the Board was unlawful. The court'held t h a t the
ing. (Girls, the field is still wide determination of the criminal charge wa.s in no way controlling ancJ^-'-i
able action.
t h a t the Board did not exceed its authority when it refused to po.'^t- '
open).
pone the departmental hearing until after the disposition of the
Patrolman Ludwig takes his criminal
charge.
scholastic honors in his stride;
makes no special point of them;
RETIREMENT A1<TER DISMISSAI.
rates the honors he received at
law school far ahead of his elecWhere an employee has been dismissed from the service, and
tion to Phi Bet^ K a p p a ; and is where his right to retirement depends upon his still being in the
interested in advancement as a service when he applied for retirement, his dismissal precludes his
policeman. He- is on the sergeant's retirement, even though h e may have a review of his dismissal
list.
His dismissal was held to be final and his retirement on the assumpN O T H E R m e e t i n g of t h e N Y C C o u n c i l h a s c o m e a n d
He's not without experience. Six tion that withdrawal of his appeal for review was in effect a "settleg o n e , w i t h o u t a n y a c t i o n o n t h e D i F a l c o b i l l s ( 2 6 , years as a patrolman, including a m e n t " or "compromise," was unlawful (Mas.sachusetts case). T h e
2 7 a n d 2 8 ) t o r e o r g a n i z e t h e B o a r d o f T r u s t e e s of t h e siege of pounding a beat, and now court held t h a t the purpose of the review was solely to secure reinliason officer between the Po- statement, and occurs only after t h e removal has been made, holding
F i r e D e p a r t m e n t P e n s i o n F u n d a n d r e l a t e d f u n d s . N o w as
lice Department and the N. Y. t h a t "the removal is complete and effective when sufficient reasons
t h e J u l y 1 d e a d l i n e h a s p a s s e d a n d t h e C h i e f O f f i c e r s County District Attorney's office, are duly furnished." Inasmuch as he was not reinstated, but was
A s s o c i a t i o n h a s b e e n t e r m i n a t e d b y c o u r t o r d e r , y e t t h e sum t h a t up. He is now assigned actually out of the service, his retirement on pension was unlawfully
l a w c a l l i n g f o r c o n t i n u e d r e p r e s e n t a t i o n o n t h e B o a r d to the Appeal's Bureau in the allowed.
Criminal Courts Building.
No
Where aft employee has been lawfully .discharged, a city ordistill r e m a i n s u n c h a n g e d .
O t h e r o l d - l i n e o r g a n i z a t i o n s more working from mdinight to
nance which sought to reinstate him was held invalid on the ground
w i n d u p l a t e r . T h e u r g e n c y o f t h e C o u n c i l ' s a c t i n g o n 8 a. m., attending school, doing t h a t his reemployment was not in accord with the civil service prot h e b i l l s is n o w d o u b l y a c u t e . T h i s s h o u l d b e d o n e a n d homework and facing t h a t awful vi.sions governing appointments after competitive examination.s
residue of two or three hours for (Pennsylvania case). Similarly, a civil service commission has no
the measui-es enacted speedily.
sleep, without nary a moment for inherent power af^er ordering the dismi.ssal of a subordinate from
recreation.
the service to review its determination and set aside its prior order.
Mr. Ludwig was boru in The Such power must be expressly conferred by statute.
Bronx, attended Cathedral Boys'
High, began to work when his
father died many years ago*
Not only is Patrolman Cirawig
proud to be in the Police Department, but the Police Department
is proud to have him in it. He
Editor, The LEADER,
During that time, I earned A
typifies mental alertnes.s of a remarkable order, yet he does bring
In January, 1942, I became certain number of days leavp (
income tax monicker of
the home to the public, by his record,
time which I couldn't get whiK?^
i'ity Circus
Louis-Conn fight promoter when the fact t h a t to be a policeman, over patriotic, gave up a business the war was on.
,
I
was
in
to
go
to
work
for
the
Upon the termination of the
Mayor O Dwyer has on his desk it appears on the screen in the you have to do the mental course
war, the reduction of force s t a r t xeconnmendations from his Com- fight release with siiickers—Mi- in par or better. The examina- government.
njittee on Recreation and Ath- chael L. Jacobs. Takes a moment tions are tough, the Police AcadI wanted to do my bit, as an ex- ed. I was advised by my C.O. at
letics for a full-sized program to recognize the society synonym emy cour.se that follows appoint- ex-service man so 1 joined with the Naval Clothing Depot to e f ment is rigorous, and the first the Naval Clothing Depot, 29th fect a transfer through the perlor city employees. Soon as he for Mike Jacobs.
assignment to actual police duty
sonnel officer to the Treasury
gets back from California, look
will require brains as much as Street and 3rd Avenue. Brooklyn, Department, but now, when I
lor action, and please give City
•iround the Town
brawn and fieetness of foot. So N Y. as a Clothing Inspector. I want my leave, I am being kicked,Treasurer Spencer Young some
credit.
Police officers report that t r a f - Patrloman Ludmig symbolizes the sacrificed home and the balance around between the two agencies. W
of the family by consenting to befic congestion in M a n h a t t a n is brainy policeman.
I'm sure private Industry would
come a field man, (not seeing not do that and can't see why the
Ladies
Municipal
Bowling getting worse. But water-cboler
League is in for a big expansion, conversations in public offices still
my family at times for a year government should and in adi*nd there won't be any delay. often hinge around the "When decision of the U. S. Court of or more. I was with t h a t agency dition to that I can't understand
Employees are being importuned will I ever get my new car" com- Appeals in Washington, D. C.
till Aug,. 1945 earning just about why I'm being used as a footbefore they leave on vacation, so plaint.
The Court decided that pension enough to keep the wolf away ball between the.se two agencies,
that ihey will be all set when they
the Naval Clothing Depot and
checks of a retired Capitol cop
rt.'turn.
Retired employees who aren't could be attached because he from the door, while others of the Treasury Department. Promy
age
<51)
were
ca^hing-in
in
happy with their wives won't dropped back a bit in his alicurement Divi&ioa.
private industry.
NYC movie audient'fs gnn^t the find much con:iolation in a recent mony payments.
F. N. E.
O
Council Should Act
On Pension Board Now
A
Comment, Please
CIVIL S E R V I C E
Tucsaay* July 9, 1946
Full Official Text of
New U. S. Leave Rules
LEADER
U. S. NEWS
Page Sev«n
USES Aide in Movies
StiU Likes U. S. Job
By LUCILLE ELFENBEIN
Sppcial »o Thr LEADEK
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., July 9.—
In Hollywood everyone is in the
act! At least that's the way the
situation looks to Danny Pried,
Civil Service appointee at the
Hollywood branch office of the
United States Employment Service.
1. "Permanent employees shall
Danny, a war veteran who
be credited with leave at the rate if they return to a n agency other
holds a clerical rating, has reof 1 day per bi-weekly pay period; t h a n the one they left.
cently learned a great deal about
or, the total credit for any calen5. Under this section, employHollywood, for he h a d the oppordar year may be given at the ees who are erroneously or u n j u s t tunity recently of appearing in
beginning of the calendar year in upon appeal after being o u t of the
David O. Selznick's $5,000,000
which it accrues. The minimum ly dismissed, and who are restored
technicolor production, "Duel in
credit for leave shall be 4 hours, Government service, will be rethe Sun "
Rnd additional credits shall be in credited with the sick leave which
"It was a lot of f u n working in
multiples thereof." This change was to their credit when they
a movie," Danny admitted, 'but
was made in order to have leave were dismissed.
here at the Hollywood Unemploycredited, as f a r as possible, on a
ment office one actually gets to
pay-period basis, instead of a
Annual Leave
see all of the has-beens of the
calendar-month basis as before,
industry, so t h a t working along
Accrual of Annual Leave
since the majority of Government
with the government surely seems stead of working with 'hademployees are now paid every two
beens' I was in the company of
like a steadier deal.
leave shall be credited
weeks. The new system of credit-- to Annual
"Working in the Hollywood of such people as Jennifer Jones,
employees
as
follows:
Sick
Leave
ing leave h a s no effect on the
flee of the U. S. Employment Gregory Peck, Joseph Cotten,
Permanent employees shall
a m o u n t of leave earned, which is be (a)
Accrual ot Sick Leave
Service." Danny said, "is probably Lionel Barrymore, Herbert Marcredited
with
leave
a
t
the
r
a
t
e
26 days a year.
the most interesting job there is. shall and others who are on top
of
1
day
per
bi-weekly
pay
period;
(a)
Permanent
employees
shall
2. "Permanent employees shall or, t h e total credit for any calenas ane sees some of the famoas today at Selznick's. It was a little
be
credited
with
sick
leave
a
t
the
be credited with sick leave a t the dar year may be given at t h e
people of a few years back stand- sad to return to the Employment
rate
of
1^4
days
per
month,
which
r a t e of IVa days per month, which beginning of the calendar year in
ing in line for their twenty bucks. Service in Hollywood where we
may
be
credited
at
the
beginning
m a y be credited at the beginning which it accrues. T h e minimum
deal daily with the people who •
It's amaziing.
of the calendar month, or at the credit for leave shall be 4 hours, of the calendar month, or a t the
lost out in the movies."
begliming
of
the
first
pay
period
Back
at
Desk
beginning of the first pay period and additional credits shall be in
Danny, who was born in B u f following the first day of the
Xollowing t h e first day of the multiples thereof.
"Appearing in 'Duel in the falo, N. Y., 23 years ago, is
calendar
month.
The
minimum
calendar month. The minimum
and resides with his
(b) Temporary employees shall credit for sick leave shall be one Sun' in the role of a cowboy cer- unmarried
credit for sick leave shall be one
tainly was refreshing," Danny mother in an apartment at 1343
hour, and additional credits shall be credited with leave of 2V2 days hour, and additional credits shall admitted, "for in t h a t picture in- North Catalina Street, Hollywood.
be in multiples thereof.
be in multiples thereof." Sick for each month of service.
(c) Because of t h e difference in
(b) Temporary employees shall
leave was previously credited at
t h e beginning of the calendar crediting leave to temporary a n d be credited with VA days of sick
month, or in l - h o u r credits permanent employees the follow- leave for each month of service.
(c) Sick leave accrued during
throughout the calendar month. ing method shall be followed in
As before. 15 days of sick leave crediting leave when a temporary any month of service shall be
will be earned in each year of appointment is converted to a available at any time during that
permanent appointment prior to or any subsequent month.
continuous service.
end of the service m o n t h :
Unused sick leave shall be
3. The new section adds the the
Service as a permanent employee cumulative and available for
proviso t h a t "an employee who is shall
be counted as temporary
(Continued from Page 1)
of a family member as well as
t o be placed on furlough in con- service for the purpose of com- future use: Provided, tha^t the
annuity. Now the retired emtemplation of separation by re- pleting the month of service. balance to t h e credit of t h e em- t h a t due process of law is not ployee
choose between the
duction of force shall be granted Leave shall thereafter be credited ployee at the end of any month allowed since the action Civil two andmust
can only get one or the
shall not exceed 90 days.
immediately prior to furlough, as a permanent employee.
Service takes is mandatory.
other.
upon his request, any annual
Grant of Sick Leave
The third, already passed by
Several cases on this count are
Accumulated annual leave may
•leave to which he is entitled." The
pending in the Supreme Court the Senate and due for signature
proviso was added in order to be carried forward for use in sucSick
leave
shall
be
granted
to
by President Truman by Wednesdirect t h a t employees who are ceeding years until it totals not employees when they are incap- and a decision on one of these day, would allow physio-theraexceeding 60 days: Provided, t h a t acitated for the performance of
placed on 90-day furlough leading during
will
make
the
final
pasition
of
pists aicd dieticians, who joined
the period of the present their duties by sickness, injury, or
to reduction in force be allowed emergency
the law known.
the rmy medical corps, to receive
days additional
to take the annual leave to their leave may be30 accumulated:
pregnancy
and
confinement,
or
for
Employees were glad to note accumulated annual leave. The
Procredit before being furloughed. vided further, t h a t when accummedical, dental or optical exam- that the House of Rpresentatives bill was proposed by Senator LisPreviously some employees who ulated leave equals or exceeds 60 ination or treatment, or when a this week acted on three bills ter Hill (Dem., Alabama).
were furloughed in a reduction in days, further increase in accum- member of t h e immediate family which are of importance to Civil
force were made to wait until ulated leave shall be limited to 15 of the employee is afflicted with Service employees.
actual separation to be paid for days in any succeeding year.
a contagious disease and requires
The first, introduced by House
their annual leave.
the care and attendance of the Majority
Leader
MacCormack
R I V K R H E A D , L. I.
4. Under this section, waremployee,
or
when,
through
ex(Dem., Mass.), would grant seniGrant of Annual Leave
82 Park Rd. (Reeves
service appointees who are vetposure to contagious disease, the ority to those veterans who were
Park), f u r n i s h e d
erans may, if they return to the
Aimual leave shall be granted presence of the employee at his on civil service eligible registers
Sunmier
Bungalow,
log siding; 3 rooms,
Government service within 120 to a n employee at such times as post of duty would jeopardize the and who would have been given
sion attic, corner plot
days of their release from t h e the heads of the departments and health of others. The minimum appodntments h a d they not been
kitchenette,
expanarmed forces", be credited with any agencies may prescribe: Provided, charge for sick leave shall be 1 called into the military service.
t{0xl04, shade trees,
2 blocks L. I. Sound.
sick leave which was to their t h a t an employee who is to be
(Continued on Page 16)
The second, introduced by Civil Beach rights. Immediate occupancy, $2750.
credit when they entered the placed on furlough in contemplaS e r v i c e Committee Chairman By appointment. EGBERT at Whitestone.
armed forces. They will be re- tion of separation by reduction of
Randolph
(Dem., West
Va.), FLushing 3-7707.
LEGAL NOTICE
credited with such sick leave even force shall be granted immediateamends the Civil Service Retire- AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
ment Act to allow a retired person
At a Special Term, Part 11. of the City to receive compensation for death JAMAICA ESTATES NORTH—$9,900
The new annual and sick leave regulations of the
Federal Government streamline the process of crediting
employees with their earned tim«-ofT and provide safeguards for employees who may lose credit for earned time
when dropped from the rolls in a "reduction-in-force."
In explaining the five major revisions of the rules, the
Civil Service Commission listed five important changes:
ly prior to furlough, upon his request, any annual leave to which
h e is entitled. Permanent employees during their first year of
service shall not be granted leave
in excess of t h e amount accrued
t o their credit. Temporary employees shall not be granted leave
until immediately prior to the
end of the month in which it is
earned. The minimum charge for
annual leave shall be one hour,
and additional leave shall be
charged in multiples of one hour.
When an employee is absent
from duty and in attendance in
court as a witness in behalf of
the United States or the Government of the District of Columbia,
or for jury duty in any State court
or court of the United States, the
absence from duty shall n o t be
charged against annual leave but
should be recorded as "court
leave."
Employees Benefit
By New Legislation
Driving Instruction
LEAKN TO DRIVE
Auto School
Expert instruction. Cars f o r Hire lor
Road Test. Identification Photos and
P h o t s t a t s our specialty. License and
plates secured.
531 W. 207th STRIET, NEW YORK
WA 8-8192
LO 7-9556
L E A R N T O DRIVE
the R E L I A B L E WAY
Cars to Hire for Road Test
2067 B'way, NYC. EN 2-0414
3-^tiO Morris Ave., Bronx. FO 7-8662
Mt. Vernon 8-1333 N. Rochelle 6-5158
Peekskill 4022
Yonkers 3-6804
White ris. 8864
P'glikecpsle 2418M
10 Courteous Experienced Ex-OI
Instructors
RELIABLE DRIVING SCHOOL
—EHdicott 2-2564i—
•7
LecirntoDrive
Safety Controlled Cars
Auto Driving School
1912 Broadway - N. Y. C.
(bet. eard and 64th Streeta)
Cars for State Examinations.
M & M A I J T O SC H O O L
Courteous. Patient, Experienced
Instructors
Latest Model curs used—Dual control
Hpecial rate for veteruus
Mtwin Onice, 41-41 Kiss«na Blvd.,
FlusliiiiK. riushiuK 0-8162
N.V. Ufllce 1S8 K. 5 1 8t. Bft. Lex.
uiid 3rd Ave., PL 8-0032
L E A R N to DRIVE
TRAFFIC
You gain c o n f i d e n c e quickly /ith our
courteous
expert instructors.
WE
u s e l94/> SAFETY C O N T R O L C A R S .
MODEL AUTO SCHOOLS
145 W . 14 St. ( 6 . 7 A v t i )
C H 2-0063
229 E. 14 St. (2-3 Aves.)
G R 7-8219
302 A m s t e r d a m Ave. 74 St. EN 2-6922
LEARN TO
DRIVE
In dual control cars
Quickly and Safely
Phone NEvins 8-1690
ALL STAR
AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL
720 Nostrand Avenue
(nr. P a r k Place.). Brooklyn
Lie. by New York State
LEARN TO DRIVE
UTICA A U T O SCHOOL
The Safe and Quick Way '
A satisfied customer is our best
ad. Special consideration given
to veterans a n d civil service
employees. Cars for road test.
1421 ST. JOHNS PLACf
Nr. Utlca AVOM Bklyn., P B 4-2028
856 UTICA AVENUI
Nr. Cluircb Ave.. B k l i a ^ PU 2-1440
Court of the City of New York, held
1G7TH ST. Si 7«TH AVE.
in and f o r the County of New York at
(i lovely rooms, all off the foyer, plus
the Courthouse therpof, at No. 62 Chainbreakfast nook; raised dining room;
bera St., Borougrh of Manhattan, City of
WANT 48 HOURS
extra lavatory I s t fioor; science witchNew York, on the 28th day of June,
en; Hollywood bath with powder room;
l!)-i6.
Connecticut
State
Employees
beautifully landscaped and decorated 1
Present—Hon. JOHN A, BYRNES,
are waging a campaign to initiate This home challenges comparison.
Chief Justice.
In the Matter of the Application of
NORMAN REALTY
HUGO DEUTSCH, also known as HARRY a 48-hour week for institutional
120-34 Queens Blvd.
Virginia 9-OaOO
HUGO DEUTSCH, for leave to changre his employees.
name to HARRY HUGO DEUTSCH.
On reading and fllingr the petition of
LEGAL NOTICE
HUGO DEUTSCH, also known as HARRY
HUGO DEUTSCH duly verified t h e 27th
Dutchest County
day of June, 1940, praying for leave to SLAYBAOK, JESSIE T.
assume the naiue of HARRY HUGO
IN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER of
YOUR
RETIREMENT H O M E
DEUTSCH in place and instead of his Honorable WILLIAM T. COLLINS, a Surpresent naine HUGO DEUTSCH, and the rogate of the County of New York,
ONE ACRE. O-ROOM BUNGALOW,
consent of MARGARET DEUTSCH sworn
NOTICE is hereby given to all persons
STATE KOAD, ALL IMPROVEMENTS,
to June 37th, 1946, and the Court being having claims against JESSIE T. SLAY(IBEPLACE, GARAGE; LOW TAXES.
duly satisfied t h a t the averments con- BACK,- late of the County of New York,
tained in said petition are in all respects deceased, to present the same with vouch$6,000 . . TERMS
t r ^ , and that there is no reasonable ob- ers thereof to the subscriber, at her place
Rr B. E R H A R T
jeclion to the chanpe of name proposed, of transacting business at the office of
Vassar Bank Bide., PonKhkeepsle, N. I .
NOW, on motion of Stanley S. Katzen- Douglas, Armitage & Holloway, her attorN. y . Uffire (Monday u u l y ) :
neys at No. 30 Rockefeller Plaza, In the
stein, attorney for the petitioner, it is
10 East 43rd St.
MU 3-7088
ORDERED, t h a t HUGO DEUTSCH, also Borough of M a n h a t U n . In the City of
known as HARRY HUGO DEUTSCH of New York, State of New York, on or
No. 1 Sickles Street, Borough of Man- before the 10th day of December, 1946.
hattan, City of New York be and he
Dated, New York, the 2«th day of
hereby is authorized to assume the name
JUST OPENED
G
MILTENBERGER.
of HARRY HUGO DEUTSCH on the 7th M a y ,
Executrix.
day of August, 1940, upon condition
UOTKL MIDWAY
however that he sliall comply with the
Douglas, Armitage & Holloway. Attorfurther provisions of this order, and it neys for Executrix. Office and P. O. Ad12 Story flreproof. All Ught outside
is further
rooma. Cross ventilation. Brand new
dress. 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Borough of
ORDERED, that this order and the Manhattan. New York City.
furniture. Carpeted wall to wall. Runafore-mentioned petition be iiied within
ning water. Adjoining baths
ten (10) days from the date hereof in 41'ATE OF NEW YORK. DEPARTMENl
Reduced Daily Ratea:
the office of the Clerk of t h i s Court, OF STATE, sa.: 1 do hereby certify t h a t
a
Rooms available every day.
Borough of Manhattan, and t h a t a copy STATE o r NEW YORK. DEPARTMENT
Telephone In every room
of this order shall within ten (10) days certificate of disaolutlon of
from the entry thei-eof, be published in
lOOih St. (S.B. Cor. Bro«dvruy)
PURVEYORS. INC.
tlie Civil SMvice Leiuler, « newspaper ba« been filed in thl» fiepartment thia day
MO 2-0400
published in the City and County of New and that It appears therefrom that auch
York, and tliat proof of publication theie- corporation baa complied with Section 105
of be filed with tlio Clerk ol this Court,
the Stock Corporation Law. and that H
County of New York, within forty days ol
dlsaolved. Given In dupUcate under my
from the date hereof, and that a copy ut ta
hand
and official teal of the Department
2 5 0 Huoiiim A v a i l a b l e
tliis order shall, within twenty days from
(Seal)
the date of entry hereof be served by of State, at the City of Albany
D a y o r IVimht
this
17th
day
ol
June.
104«.
Registered Mail u|)on the Clerk ul tae
SINGLE OB COUPLES
Thomas J . Curran. Secretary ol State. By
District Court of the United States for
the Eewstern District of Pennsylvania, Edward D Harper. Deputy Secretary of
RATES S2.00 DAY
and that a copy of tlUM order be served State.
313 West 127th Street
upon the United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York and upon STATS OF NEW YORK. DEPARTMEN'I
(N.E. Corner St. Nicholas Ave.
Local Board No. 68 ol the County of O* STATE. •«.: I do hereby certify t h a t •
Stb Ave. Subway at Door)
New York of the United Statea Selective •ertificate of disaolutlon ol
Service, and t h a t proof of aucU servitjea
0. * A. UNITED, INC.
271-75 West 127th Street
be filed with the Clerk of this Court ttaa t>aan tUed In tbla department tbla day
(Near Stb Ave. and All Transportation
within teu days tlieieafter, and it is fur- and t h a t it appear* therefrom t h a t aucb
FaciliUesI
tlier
corporation baa compiled with Section 10ft
Olulitg Kouni Specialty
Soutbrrn Vried Chicken and Waffiea
ORDERED t h a t alter said re«iuii-ements ol the Stock Corporation Law. and that It
are complied witti, petitioner shall be ia dissolved. Given la dupUcate under my
The Harriet
Hotels
known, on and uficr (he 7 t h day of band and official seal of the Department of
(Seal)
August. 1941!, by Iht name of HARRY State, at the City ot Albany
UNiv«r«ity 4-9053 .4.8248
HUGO DEUl'SCH and t>y no other niune. this 14th day of June, ll»4tt.
Uwucd ami Operated by Colored
T h o u i u J. Curran, Secretary ol State By
Kuter,
E. T KIKIDKH, Prop.
J . A. B.,
Edward D. Harpei-. Deputy Secretary of
U.J.C.C.
State.
Png^e F i ^ l i t
CIVIL S E R V I C E
CIVIL
LEADER
SERVICE
LEADER
Pnge Nine
LAST CHANCE TO FILE FOR SCIENTIFIC JOBS WITH U. S. AGENCIES
Only t w o (lays are left to file t'oi- the present series
of I'. S. scientific pei-manent, c a r e e r jobs. A p p l i c a t i o n .satisfactory performance of the
duties of these positions, he is
l"())-ms for tlie Kii^ineor, C h e m i s t and Physicist positions Invited to apply.
A physical examination will be
m a y be obtained at the S e c o n d Civil Service R e g i o n a l
by a Federal medical officer
office at 641 Washinj^ton Street, M a n h a t t a n . In a special made
before appointment. Persons who
a n n o u n c e m e n t , c a l l i n g ? for more applicants, Mr. J a m e s E. are offered appointment must pay
intendent and may only be obRossell, roRional civil service director said t h a t t h e beSt their own expenses in reporting
for duty. If, upon reporting at
tained in person or by mail from
o p p o r t u n i t i e s exist for Civil, Electrical a n d M e c h a n i c a l place of assignment, they are
Following is the second installment of the previous own, while on an off-tour of duty.
the Division of State Police,
reer
Jobs
With
Applications
May
Be
Filed
Until
July
21
M
11. The following are not subEngineers. All of t h e s e posts offer s t a r t i n g s a l a r i e s in found ineligible because of physicCapitol, Albany, N. Y. Applica- (1937) promotion examination to Lieutenant, Fire Depart- ject to recall
(a) members
al
defects,
they
caimot
be
aptions
must
be
filed
with
the
DiviDivision
of
State
Police.
Age
Limits
21
to
the P-1 g r a d e , $ 2 , 6 4 4 a year.
The first part was published in last week's on regular 24 hour leave, (b) pilots
pointed and no part of their
sion of State Police, Capitol, ment.
of fire boats, (c) members deF o l l o w i n g are further d e t a i l s of t h e e x a m i n a t i o n s :
Bxpen.ses in returning home can
N. Y. Applications filed LEADER. When the complete examination has appeared, tailed to other than fire duty, (d)
Thousands of men who are looking forward to a ittainment of graduation from a Albany,
be paid by the Government.
by
mail
bearing
a
postmark
later
Engineer, $2,644.80; optional
«nior high school or the equivalmembers temporarily detailed to
brandies, aeronautical, chemical, tion of a standard engineering
Some positions to be filled from career on the New York State Troopers now have a ent thereof. (Candidates must than midnight of July 21st, 1946 official key answers will be run and ^ill be followed by imits other than their own, while
may
not
be
accepted.
Applications
civil, electrical, mechanical, metal- curricuUun in a college or uni- the registers established from this chance to compete for an appointment to the force, with ^^^
other
study
material
until
the
written
examination
is
held.
>resent
evidence
of
such
graduaon an off-tour of duty.
^^ ^^
lurgical, mining, naval architec- versity of recognized standing;
examination require higher physiIn the form of a graduation filed In person in the office of the
12. Company Commanders shall
Laws and Ordinances, Rules and
Division
of
State
Police
later
than
ture and others. Apply until July
the
special
preference
to
veterans
granted
by
the
I'eceilt*
cal
ability.
or
a
certified
copy
cause Inspections to be made of
C. Any time-equivalent combiclub,
<b)
contribute
money
to
a
midnight
of
July
22nd,
1946
may
10 at U. S. Civil Service Commis- nation
Rerulations
thereof
or
the
equivalent
thereof
of A (training) and B (examendment to the State Constitution giving them
first
*
Age
political cause, (c) become dele- all magazines used for the storage
.sion, 641 Washington St., New perience)
»t the time of the physical exam- not be accepted. No applications
above.
Weiirht 3: 50 Per Cent Required gates to a political convention, of explosives, located in their comfiled
prior
to
the
date
of
this
York 14, N. Y. OF>enings also in
chance
at
the
jobs,
if
they
pass
the
test.
These
advennatlbn.)
(14)
License
to
operate
pany districts
(a) daily, (b)
Appicants must be prepared to
Applicants must have reached
Wa.shington; apply t/O Commission furnish
The maximum time allowed for (d) do none of the foregoing weekly, (c) at frequent intei-vals,
motor vehicles on the highways of notice will be considered. Applia list of all college courses their eighteenth birthday but turous jobs will appeal to many ex-Wrvicemen.
things.
cations
which
are
incompletely
in Washington for these.
his
State.
(License
must
be
excompleted, showing the semestei- must have not have passed their
There are no educational requirements, but candi- libited at the time of the physical filled out or which indicate that this subject is one and three8. The Rules and Regulations (d) every three days.
Physicist, $2,644.80. Openings hours' credit received for each sixty-second birthday on the clos13. Officers in commatid of
quarters
hours.
You
are
advised
the
applicant
does
not
possess
the
state
that gasoline tanks on apdates
must
meet
the
physical
requirements
listed
in
the
jxamlnation.)
(15)
No
conviction
in N. Y. State and New Jersey. course. An official registrar's ing date for receipt of applicaunits shall in all cases telephone
necessary
qualifications
will
be
paratus
in
quarters
--—
^a)
shall
not
to
take
more
than
one
and
File until July 11 at 5:30 p.m. at transcript of college record is not tion. These age limits do no apply official notice of the examination below and must stand .s^^ijir,. crinie 'wlthta
or rejected. No candidate will be adbe kept filled at all times; gasoline to the Deputy Chief of DepartU. S. Civil Service Commission, required, but may be submitted to peisons entitled to veteran rigid character investigatiion.
elsewhere.
one-half hours.
mitted
to
the
examination
withshall
not be supplied, however, to ment in advance of a written re641 Washington Street, New York to show this information.
Persons not possessing these repreference. Age limits will be
This part of the test consists of apparatus at night except when port, the pui-port of such report,
Applications may be filed now
out
a
notice
Indicating
that
he
is
14, N. Y.
should not file appliSenior Students. — Applications waived for war service indefinite
(a) any
the State Police Division and following: requirements: (1) United quirements
eligible to take the examination. 60 items. Write your answer to absolutely necessary, (b) shall be with reference to
Chemist, $2,644.80; specialties, will be accepted from senior stu- empoyees, who on the closing date with
catlons^
each item on the answer sheet for kept at least three-quarters full Injury at a fire, (b) violations of
there
are
200
present
vacancies
No
copies
of
examinations,
laws
States
citizen
fif
citizenship
is
advanced inorganic, organic, ann- dents in engineering at a college of this examination are serving which will be filled from this exSubjects of Examination
or other publications relating to this part of the test. Do not write at all times, (c) shall always con- laws, rules or orders of the Delytical and physical chemistry, or university of recognized stand- in positions which would be filled amination. In addition, the list claimed by naturalization, original
the work of the Division or to any your answers in this booklet.
tain enough gasoline to enable the partment by a member, (c) the
naturalization
papers
or
certified
also biochemistry. Apply until ing who are otherwise qualified from the eligible register result- of eligibles will be kept for a full
(a) Written examination.
All
questions
in
this
part
are
to
matters
which
may
be
the
subject
aparatus to travel, under ordinary placing of a company out of
copy
thereof,
must
be
presen*
July 10 at U. S. Civil Sei-vice Com- and who expect to complete their ing from the examination: Pro- year and other appointments will
The written examination will
answered on the basis of laws driving conditions, a distance of service, ^d) the inoperative conon the day of the physical ex a n ^ j ^ e r matters of general informa- of the examination will be f u r - be
mission. 641 Washington Street, course not later than September vided, that certification in any
be made from it. July 21 is the
nished to candidates. Any candi- and ordinances, rules and regula- five miles, (d) shall always con- dition of a fire alarm box.
New York 14, N. Y.
s oniBri
1, 1946. The names of senior stu- such case shall be made only for final date on which applications
14. Fire Department summonses
who intentionally makes a tions, which will be in effect on tain gasoline sufficient for the
21
and
40
years
(candidates
must
Construction Examiner, $4,149 dents who attain eligibility in this appointment to a position of the will be received. Men who are ino test the general intelligence of date
January 1, 1938. Questions relat- ordinary needs of the service.
shall be served
( a) by a memfalse
statement
in
any
material
have
reached
their
21st
birthday
and $3,H97 a year, Bronx, Dutch- examination may be certified and same or lower grade than that terested in these positions should
he applicant.
ing to the Code of Ordinances
ber of the company designated by
fact
or
who
practices
or
attempts
9.
Members
.shall
use
discretion
Mid
must
not
have
passed
their
ess, Kings, Nassau, New York, provisional appointment may be held on the closing date.
(b) Oral interview to deteimine to practice deception or fraud in shall be considered as referring to
the Company Commander, (b) by
read the notice below with ex- 40th birthday on the date of the nental
Orange, Putnam, Queens, Rich- made at any time their names are
alertness, soundness of his application will not be con- the corresponding provisions of in the operating of controlling a police officer, (c) by any memtreme
care
as
its
lists
the
complete
nozzles.
Opening
the
valve
too
written
examination.
A
birth
mond, Rockland, Suffolk, Sullivan, reached for certification during
initiative,
intelligence
Ciizenship
the Administrative Code, which quickly
ber of the uniformed force, (d)
details of the examination, elig- certificate or a certified copy nind,
(a) causes a sudden only
Ulster and Westchester Counties. the existence of the eligible regludgment, address and appear- sidered further for eligibility.
codifies, but does not change, the release of presstire,
by a member who has witibility
requirements
and
the
nature
which
may
thereof must be exhibited at the ance.
Applicants must be citizens of
Close.c July 10.
ister, but such eligibles may not
Do not mall citizenship papers, provisions of the Code of Ordin- wrest the line from control, (b) nessed the violation.
of
the
test.
time of the physical examinationM^(c) Physical examination.
enter on duty until they have or owe allegiance to the United
birth certificates, school certificate ances. Questions relating to the
15. In case of an unusual traffic
Data For Engineers
(3) Sound constitution. (4) w J f l ^ r d ) An Investigation of moral or driver's license—bring them City Charter refer to the new causes a sudden release of pres- congestion,
furnished proof of successful com- States.
State of New York
or any condition which
sure, which may cause the hose to
less than 5 feet 10 inches in character.
pletion of their college courses.
Chaxi.er.
Executive
Department
with
you
when
you
are
notified
Veteran Preference
In addition to qualifying in the
burst, (c) causes a sudden in- may obstruct or interfere with the
height
measured
in
bare
feet.
(5)
Candidates
are
required
to
atto
appear
for
physical
examinaPart-time or Unpaid Experience.
Sample I. The head of the Fire crease of pressure, which may normal response or movement of
written test, applicants must .show
DIVISION OF STATE POUCE Free from all physical defects. (6) tain at least 75 per cent in each
tion.
Preference benefits in examinaDepartment is the
(a) Com- cause the hose to burst, (d) causes apparatus, In the fire zone in
pd\icalion or experience as shown Credit will be given for all valuPhysically
strong,
active
and
well
An
open
competitive
examinaannounced
subdivision
of
the
able
experience
of
the
type
retion and appointment are given tion of candidates for Trooper, proportioned. (7) Weight in pro- j
All persons appointed to the missioner, (b) President, (c) Sec- a sudden increase of pressure, front of quarters, the Company
in A, B, or C below:
written
examination.
Any
candiquired,
regardless
of
whether
it
tmder certain conditions to ex- Executive Department, Division of portion to general build. (8) No date who fails or who is disquali- State Police must become mem- retary, (d) Chairman.
A. Successful completion of a
which may wrest the line from Commander is required by the
Sample n. The following are control.
Rules and Regulations to
(a)
-standard professional engineering was gained In a part-time or full- service men and women, to State Police, will be held at Al- dl.sease of mouth or tongue. No fied in any or more parts of the bers of the State Employees' Retime
occupation.
This
experience
officers of the Fire Department
widows (who have not remarried) bany, New York, at the West- dental caries, unless correcte
tirement System.
direct one oa- more men to atcurriculum leading to a bachelor's
10.
The
following
are
not
ordimination
will
not
be
further
will
be
credited
on
the
basis
of
(a) Major, (b) C:?aptain, (c) narily required to perform house- tempt to clear up the congestion
of deceased ex-sei-vice men who
degree in a college or university
All persons appointed to State
missing Incisor teeth. Reject
ihsidered for eligibility. Canditime actually spent in appropri- served In the United States armed chester County Center Building, no
of recognized standing;
watch duty
(a) members per- or remedy the condition, <b) reWhite Plains, New York and at more than three teeth are missing, ates may be required to present Police must be willing to accept Lieutenant, (d) Sergeant.
ate
activities.
Applicants
wishing
forces on active duty during any such other places as may be desig- unless they could be replaced. (9) hemselves at Albany, or at some assignment to any State Police
1. Assignments of Lieutenants forming building inspection duty, port immediately to Fire HeadB. Four years of successful and
to
receive
credit
for
all
pertinent
war or in any campaign or expe- nated, on August 7, 1946. Entrance Satisfactory hearing. (10) Color ther designated point on days location in the State of New York. to platoons shall be made by . . . . (b) pilots of fire Iroats, (c) mem- quarters, (c) notify the Battalion
progressive experience in technical
(a) the Chief of Department, (b)
Chief of the district, (d) notify
engineeiing. This experience must full-time, part-time or unpaid ex- dition (for which a campaign salary $1,1700 per annum, plus perception and satisfactory eye- ubsequent to the date of the
Approximately 200 immediate Deputy Chiefs of Department, (c) bers detailed to other than fire the Police Department.
perience
must
Indicate
clearly
the
badge was authorized), and to lodging, food or an allowance in sight without glasses. (11) Good ritten examination for a conshow a mastery of the fundamenduty, (d) members temporarily
appointments
will
be
made.
The
nature
of
their
duties
In
each
Battalion Chiefs, (d) Captains.
wives of such disabled ex-service lieu thereof and all service cloth- moral character and habits. (12) inuance of prescribed tests.
tal physical and mathematical
detailed to units other than their
(Continued next week)
eligible list established by this
2. Officers in command at fires
sciences underlying professional position, the responsibilities in- men as are disqualified for ap- ing and equipment:
Mental alertness and soundness of
Application
must
be
submitted
examination
will
expire
one
(1)
volved,
and
the
number
of
hours
shall
turn
over
all
valuables
repointment because of service-conengineering, and a good underAH applioants m«st posse«s the' mind. (13) Minimum education, on blanks provided by the Super- year after its announcement.
ceived to
(a) A member of
standing (both theoretical and a week spent in each employment. nected disability. The veteran on
the Police Department only, (b)
whose service a preference claim
practical) of the engineering sciPhysical Requirementg
the Property Clerk of the Police
ences and techniques, and their
Applicants must be physically is based must have been honorDepartment only, (c) the officer
applications to the branch of en- capable of perfoiming the duties ably separated from active miliin command of the Fire Patrol
gineering for which the competi- of the position and be free of such tary service. In competitive exThis examination is open only Broadway, not later than 14 days
only, (d) the officer in command to employees of t^he Fire Dept. (exclusive of Simdays and holitor is applying. The experience defects or diseases as may con- aminations for original appointOf the Fire Patrol or to a member Salary: • $3,900 per annum at days) following the date of his
must show that the applicant stitute employment hazards to men, 10 points are added to the
of the Police Department.
pos.seses an understanding of this themselves or endanger fellow earned rating of the veteran prefpresent. This is an ungraded appointment to such eligible title,
field of engineering equivalent to employees or others. If a person erence applicant who establishes
3. Members of the department position. Applications: Issued and bringing with him the required
that which would have been ac- has a physical handicap which claim to preference as a disabled
shall permit persons not members received 9 a m. July 9 to 4 p.m. fee, his military discharge record,
quired through successful comple- he believes will not pi*event his veteran, as a wife of a disabled
ake the special comparable exam- ment to the Military Leave Regu- of the department to make a July 24. Fee: $3. Fees are not and such evidence of his appointtranscript of a department record refunded to persons who are ab- ment to the eligible title as he
tion also.
lations:
veteran, or as a widow of a ve1. The Board of Examiners has
(a) only on written request sent from examinations; refunds may posse.ss. However, such caneran. Five points are added to the October 10 Deadline for Veterans to Apply
"I. RESOLVED, That the miUadopted an interpretation of the tary service regulations adopted and with the approval of the are made only to those candi- didates are cautioned that, reearned ratings of the veteran
Military Leave Regulations under by the Board of Education read officer who is responsible for the dates not permitted to take ex- gardless of the 14-day provision,
preference applicant who estab- For Special License Tests
which a person who completed 160 as follows:
custody of such record, (b) only aminations by the Commission they should make every effort to
lishes claim to preference based
Attention is called to the fol-jldays of service as a substitute
Under the Military Leave Reguon wartime military service or on
"6a-1. A candidate before the as directed by, or with the written because they lack the necessary file as soon as pos.sible, so that
they may be summoned for the
creditable service in a campaign lations of the Board of Education, lowing recent interpretations and jteacher and one year as a teacher- Beard of Examiners for any consent of, the Chief of Depart- acquirements.
regular test, since there may be
announcements of Mill- in-training ih the New York City license, who in World War n has ment, (c) only under due process
I or expedition.
certain persons who have recently special
[year period Immediately preced- had one year of military service of law or as directed by, or with
I Applicants who claim veteran been on military duty are entitled tavy Leave Regulations:
Vacancies: 124 at present: considerable unavoidable delay
before another subsequent test
preference should be prepared to
I. The Board of Examiners l^asi i^blic school system in the five- as defined in Military Law 246, the written consent of, the Chief others occur from time to time.
his entrance into military shall be granted an extension of of Department, (d) only on writfurnish documentary proof of to file applications for examina- recently received rulings from the
Date of Test: The written test can be scheduled.
Duties: To enforce all orders
The following sample questions precipitate. The action in the salt honorable separation from the tions comparable in scope and Law Committee of the Board of service may file application for an time to January 31 or August 31 ten request and with the approval will be held on Nov. 29 and Nov.
examination comparable in scope next following the time limit fixed of a Battalion Chief or officer of 30; eligibility will be detennined and instructions of the Captain
show types of questions that will is (A) Bi -1- -I- -!-, (B> Pb -I- -I-, armed forces but should not sub- diflftculty to examinations which Education as follows:
higher rank.
commanding the Fire Company to
by the Nov. 30, 1946, date.
be used in the written lest for iC) Hg -1- -i-. (E) Sb .l--l--j-. mit it unless requested to do so. they were precluded from taking
(a) A person who is entitled to and difficulty to any examination in By-law 238 to meet the experi4. The responsibility for the
4. Chloroplatinic acid is ijsed in Failure to submit such evidence while on military duty or which apply for a comparable examina- held during his absence on mili- ence requirement for such license,
Elitribility Requirements: Open which assigned; be responsible for
Chemist. The physicist and other
duty (or within six months not including, however, an experi- manner of steering and mooring to all permanent employees of the the discipline and operation of the
scientific tests are very similar in the quantitative determination of when requested may result in loss they declared themselves unpre- tion under the Military Leave tary
thereafter) provided he met the ence requirement that is alteris placed upon the
Fire Dept. who on the first date company in the absence of the
nature. They show also how the (A) Na. tB* K, (C) I j . <D) Ba. of opportunity for appointment. pared to take, if these examina- Regulations and who missed two experience requirement and lacked native to a specific course require- fireboats
(a) officer in command, (b) pilot, of the written test: (1) are serv- Captain; report on fires, accidents
[Salary and work week described
or
more
examinations
for
any
questions are to be answered by (E) Sr.
no more than 18 semester hours of ment of observation and practice (c) officer in command and the ing in the title of Fireman, first and tmusual occurrences wlille in
5. The electromotive force de- in Physicist announcement below, tions were held within six months specific license while on mili
those who take tiie test and the veloped
teaching. With respect to teach- Pilot, (d) Pilot and the Marine grade; Engineer of Steamer, Pi- command; perform all other duties
after termination of sei"vice.
by
a
cell
is
independent
of
apply
also
to
Engineer.!
leave
(or
during
six
months
fol^;,^®'
S® ing
approximate difficulty of the test. fA) the chemical reaction taking
experience, this time extension Engineer.
The Board of Examiners pro- lowing) may take only one comlot, Marine Engineer (Uniformed), prescribed for this position in the
eligibility
date
set
for
the
Read the directions below, then place within the cell, 'B) the tem5. When two companies are Chief Marine Engineer (Uni- Official Action Guide and the
lexaminatlon in question. Such may Jje accorded only if the
poses, so far as possible, to hold parable examination for
look over these questions carefully peratui^ at which tho electromo- Sanitation Forenian
these examinations
during the specific license for which he Is | ^Ppli'^ation miist_^be filed w^hin candidate at the time of the housed in one quarters, or in fowned); (2) have served con- Rules and Regulations of the deadoption of this regulation (April
and try to answer them. Then tive force is being measured, ( O
quarters with but a divid- tinuously in the department foi- partment.
school year 1946 to 1947.
eligible. However, the applicant six months of termination of mili- 10, 1946), either (a) is the holder separate
check your answers with those the concentration of the reacting Other NYC Tests
ing wall between them, and when the six-month period preceding
Tests: Record and seniority,
Persons who believe they may may decide for which one of thej tary service, except that if the of
an appropriate license issued the officer in command of either that date, and (3) are otherwise weight 50, 80 per cent required;
given in the Answers to Sample sub.stances, <D) I lie srea of the
be entitled to apply for such "com- missed examinations he desires to applicant has been told that he by the
Board
of
Examiners,
or
(b)
oompany,
excluding
acting
officers,
written,
weight 50, 70 per cent reQuestions below.
examinations
should take a comparable examination. I was
electrodes exposed to the solution,
Ten promotion examinations parable"
, ^ not^ entitled
, , .to, offer his
. year
,
offers teaching experience in a Is the only officer on duty, he shall eligible.
quired. Method of computing
Each sample quebtion has a iE> tlie amount of polarization and one open-competitive test promptly obtain a copy of the
Retroactive
Seniority:
Any
emT1,. ^ If „
1..
.L®' teacher-in-traminf service
school accredited by State author(a) respond only to an alarm ployee actually appointed to the record and .seniority: Beginning
Military Leave Regulations at the
number of suggested answers let- that lias occurred.
to which both companies are as- title of Fireman who believes that with the date of appointment as
tT. h
said application may be ities.
tered A, B. C. D. and E. Decide
6. Benzenesulfonyl chloride may were ordined by the Municipal office of the Board of Examiners, Im
"H. RESOLVED. That the en- signed; or if one company has he meets the eligibility require- Fireman, 80 per cent. For each
which one is the best answer to be used to separate piinipry and Civil Service Commission last 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, Sfic Hm.lv . i n L h S ^ w
at any time prior to October
actment of the foregoing resolu- responded to a previous alarm, he ments set forth above by virtue three months of service in any
the question. Then, on the Sam- secondary amines as in Hin.sberg's week. However, only one test on and study with particular care files timely application for a com- j ja 1946
in. l i i e Board of Education tion shall inure to the beoefit of shall respond with the remaining of retroactive seniority as pro- of the eligible titles during the
ple Answer Sheet, find the answer method bwause <A' primary the list. Promotion to Assistant paragraphs 6, 6a, and 6a-l. If
space nninbered
numbered to correspona amines treated with benezenesul- Foreman, Sanitation Department, such persons find they are entitled 4s entitled, he shall be allowed to ^as adopted the following amend- any candidate who was discharired company, ib) when an alarm is vided in Chapter 589 of the Laws five years n'^xt preceding the first
to apply for a "comparable" examfrom the armed forces since received to which only one of the of 1946 or by virtue of having day of the written te.st add onewith the number of the question Fonyl I'hloride yield products which is of any considerable Interest.
ination, they .should without delay
September 1, 1945, and who, be- two companies is assigned, res- been otherwise appointed retro- half per cent or two per cent a
between are soluble In alkali. (B> secondary
Tht) other test-s are:
and blacken the space oeiween
present themselves for official adcause of failure, to meet an ex- pond with such company, (c) actively must, if he desires to year, making at the end of five
the pair of lines lettered the same aniines treated with henzenesul- Promotion—
perience requirement, was denied respond in all cases with his own compete in this examination, file years a maximum of 90 per cent;
as llip best suggosted answer.
fonyl chloride yield unstable prodMechanical Engineer. Bureau of vice as to their examination rights
and obligations at the office of
an examination aimounced since company, (d) respond in his dis- his application therefor in the for each additional three months
1. Whrn
alcohol
containing ^cts whicli liberate Nli, (Ct pri- the Budget:
add one-fourth per cent or one
such date or, was thereby pre- cretion with either company.
As.slstant Iiaudscape Architect. the chairman of the committee in
boric acid is burned, the flame is niary amines do not react with
following manner:
cent a year, making at the end
charge of the license in which
The examination for the posi- vented fi'om entering such examThere are now 60 permanent
6. Members of the uniformed
colored <A) red. <B> yellow
: i)yiiy;e,-ie.suifonyl chloride; <D' sec- Department of Public Work.s;
(a) If actually appointed to the per
PhotostHi Operator, Grade 3 they are interested, bearing with vacancies for Dental Hygienists tion will include both written and ination, and that the Superintend- force are forbidden by the Rules title of Fireman after Dec. 1, of 10 years' service a nmximtmi
Kreen, 'D) purple, 'E» blue.
i uidary aioines do not reuot with
ent of Schools be authorized to and Regulations to
(a) incur 1943, but prior to July 9. the of 95 per cent; for each day's fine,
2. The main components of or- : ijpTijjfiisulfonyl chloride,
sec- (City Reuister, Borough President them such essential data as mili- In New York City Civil Service. performance tests.
tary di.scharge papers and college The position pays $1,320 base pay,
Candidates must possess a cur- direct the Board of Examiners to liabilities which they are unable opening date, such employee must .25 per cent deduction; for each
dinary brass are <A) topper
j cndary aminos form insoluble hy- of Queens»;
$1,680 bonus rate per annum rent New York State Dental Hy- include such candidates in the or unwilling to discharge, (b) re- file his application during the reprimand, .125 per cent deducPhotostat Operator, Grade 4 transcripts.
niekol 'Bt copper and tin. 'C) diochlorides with benzenesulfonyl
Fines and reprimands pre(Borough President of Richmond J:
Peivsons desiring a ruling by mail There are also four yearly incre- jgienist's license and must have special examinations of compar- fuse to pay debts for necessities regular filing period in the usual tion.
eopper and lead. «D) copper and idiioride.
vious to July I. 1940. will not be
.'proof thereof at the time of the able scope and difficulty held within thirty days from date in- manner.
Blueprint er. Grade 4, Borough must include college ti-anscripts ments of $120 per year.
7 A circular pi.-lon with a diambismuth, 'E» copper :ind /inc.
considered.
A dental hygienlit work.s under 1 performance test. The perform- under the military service regula- curred, (c) borrow money from a
and must give full details as to
3 A while .-alt dissolves in eter of 20 cm. moves 15 cm. President of Ri<'hmond;
(b) If actually appointed to the
Applications by mail will be acCarpenter, Board of Higher the dates of their entrance into supervision. The general duties Sance test will be held after li- tions of the Board of Education." superior or lend money to a sub- title of Fireman on or after July
water to give a colorless .solution. again.-^t a pressure of 7 atniosand the termination of their mili- embrace cleaning and polishing (censes have been issued as the
The Board of Examiners will ordinate in rank, (d) .sell or assign 9, the opening date, btU on or cepted if mailed and po.stmarked
On addition ol HCl a white pre- sphores. The amount of work per- Education;
Electrlcii>n, Board of Higher tary service, whether they are teeth of adults and school chil- i result of the June, 1946, New receive applications until October their salaries without the written before Nov. 30, 1946, such em- up to and including 12 midnight
cipitate forin.'^ whivh dis.solves to formed in moving the pl.^ton. In
regularly appointed teachers in dren, instruction in oral hygiene, j| York State license examinations, 10, 1946 from any persons en- approval of the Fire Commis- ployee must file his application on the last day for the receipt of
a mall extent when the solution liter-atmospheres, is most nearly Education;
132, <0) 498, Hou.se-painter, Board of Higher the New York City public school educational programs, assisting a
^
^^
„ titled to file application for a sioner.
IS heated to boiling. Wlien an ex- • A) 2 1, 'B> 33.
in person during the regular bu.si- applications ^nd received by the
system, or if not, the extent and dentist in a clinic, hygienic carer^^^®®"®
^
® comparable examination under
Education,
7. Members of the uniformed ne.ss hours at the Service Rating Commission not later than 4 p.m.
ce.ss of NH4CH is added the pre- (E) 927.
the duration of their substitute of equipment and reports of ac- p u n e , 1946, license will be eligible the terms of the second of the force are permitted to ~ — (a) BuiTa-.J. Room 606 of the Munici- of the day prior to the date of the
ci|)itaie turns black. With H2S
Answer: l.C: 2.E; 3.C; 4,B; 5.D; Open-competitive—
sennc«» etc.
resolutions quoted above.
Assistant Landvscaoe
become members of a poiltical pa\ Civil Service Commission, 299 first test.
tivities.
}to file for the examination.
tlie orit.:iiu»l solution Kive,s a black g a . 7 B.
State
Exam
Fire Lieut. Test Questions
Open To Aid 7,000 Candidates
NYC Board of Educatioit^pens to Veterans
Examinations Held Durim The War
Questions on U.S.
Science Tesfs
60 DENTAL HYGJiHISTSPOSITtONS OFFElED BY NYC
Fire Lieut. Announcement
Pag^e
CIVIL SERVICE
T e n
LEADER
'Kill Promotion List;'
Plea of Dismissed
Hospital Chauffeur
DEpHAXTV
Special Preparatory
Cla sses for Candidates
for
POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER
Examination
Soon!
Enroll
ISow While
CLASSES 3 TIMES WEEKLY
CONFIDENCE
There
Is Still
Time
to
AT CGNYENIENT
IS AN IMPORTANT
Prepare
HOURS
FACTOR IN SUCCESS
Examination '^jitters*' are a common cause of failure . . . but Delehanty graduates are seldom
afflicted with them! They have CONFIDENCE in themselves and their training. Delchanty
students are carefully coached in examination procedure. Trial Examinations given at frequent intervals simulate the conditions prevailing at the Official Examination. Thus our
graduates not only possess a thorough knowledge of all examination subjects but also the
poise and self-confidence to apply it intelligently. NO WONDER THEY SUCCEED!
— NEW YORK CITY —
NEW YORK STATE
PHYSICAL CLASSES for
ASSISTANT
UNEMPLOYMENT
INSURANCE
FIREMAN
CLAIMS
EXAMINER
Remember that a poor mark in the rigid physical
examination may mean complete failure! Enroll now
and get as much well-directed physical preparation
as possible. Only eight men out of nearly 4,000 competitors in the recent Police Physicals received 100%
- S E V E N OF THOSE MEN WERE DELEHANTY
TRAINED!
Class** TUESDAYS and
THURSDAYS at 7:30 P.M.
JR. INSURANCE
EXAMINER
(Stat* iHsuraiice Dept.l
ClasMs THURSDAYS at 7:30 P.M.
PATROLMAN
The next examination should be held early in 1947
or shortly thereafter. It is highly advisable to start
both Mental and Physical preparation as early as
possible. Get a head start by enrolling NOW!
U. S. GOVT.
STENOGRAPHER
TYPIST. CLERK
Telephone Operator
FREE MEDICAL EXAMINATION
and ethars
Candidates for any examination having medical requirements will be examined FREE by our physicians to
determine their fitness. Doctors are in attendance on
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 10 A.M. to
1 P.M. and every eve., except Saturday, from 5 to 8 P.M.
INSPECTOR OF
CARPENTRY
& MASONRY
Supreme Court Justice Morris
Eder, of the New York County
Supreme Court, last week reserved decision on the application of Joseph DeGenero, for a n
order reinstating him to his position of Auto-Enginemen (chauffeur), and for an order annulling
and setting aside a list, promulgated as a result of a promotional
examination.
Appointed in '43
Mr. DeGenero was appointed an
Auto-Engineman on June 1st,
1943, in the Department of Hospitals. On J a n u a r y 17th, 1946,
Mr. DeGenero claims he was summarily dismissed. In November,
1945, the Municipal Civil Service
Commission advertised a promo-
Lieutenants Hear
Waliander.Enright
Both Commissioner Arthiir W.
Wallander and former Comniissioner Richard E. Enright addressed the last meeting of the
Lieutenants Benevolent Association, which attracted over 100
Police lieutenants to the Governor Clinton Hotel.
T h e p r e s e n t Commissioner
praised the efforts of the Police
ofBcers in meeting t h e emergencies caused by the war-time m a n power shortage and indicated
t h a t more promotions to lieutena n t would be made with the
planned expansion of the department.
The officers were regaled with
tales of the old days in the Dep a r t m e n t by the former Commissioner who served back in 1918
and retraced the early difficulties
faced by the Lieutenants who
organized the organization.
Lieutenant Daniel Oliva, first
vice-president, presided over the
meeting which brought activities
to a close for the summer.
Special Practical Ceiirs«s for StMegraphcrs and Typists at Oar
S«er*tarlal Schools
STATIONARY
ENGINEER'S
LICENSE
PROMOTION EXAM.
N.Y. City Dept. of Sanitatloii
ASST. FOREMAN
Classes MON. & WED.
ot 8 P.M.
JANITOR
Custodian-Engineer
JOINT WIPING
for Master
Plumber's License
Classos Start in August
SERVICE & REPAIR
P.M. & TELEVISION
^ay jind Evening Cfosses
D R A F T I N G
Architectural & Mechanical
VETERANS!
FREE — FREE — FREE!
Prepare for a high test score
with the aid of a good civil sery• i«e question and answer booic.
•
Send NOW for your FREE
• CATALOG listing more than a
• hundred helpful book* for all
•
of Federal. State, and City
Civil Service exaniinations.
Classes THURSDAYS
10:30 A.M. & 7 P.M.
NOBLIftNOBU. Publishers. Inc.
72 Fifth Avcnii* (Dept. CS-2)
N«w York 11. N. Y.
Also Preparation for
All Promotion Exams
in Police and Fire Depfs.
CONFIDEBITIAI.
INVESTIGATIONS
HIGH SCHOOL
SECRETARIAL
TRAINING
90-14 SUTPHIN tLVD.,
JAMAICA
SUMMER TERM
JULY 3 to AUGUST 22
Moraing - Afternoon - Evening
Approved by Board of Regents
120 West 42nd St.. N.Y.C.
90-14 Sutphin Blvd.. Jamaica
Alto Spoelal StenograpfcJc &
Busfnets Machho Courses
DAY & EVENING
Moderate Rates — CO-EO
Most Delehunty Court>es are available to veterans qualified under the
G.I. Bill. However, we advise against the use of such beneiits for
short, inexpensive courses.
Visit,
Write
or
Fetroeiuo'a
Inveatig»tion
*
*
*
•
•
•
•
•
Bureau
"The Global Police Name"
Mrite 101 Renisen St., Bklyn.
N. T.
or CaU Maiu 4-3380, Main
Glasses
by
A. J. DRISCOLL
DISPENSING OPTICIAN
01>XICAL RKFAIK8
LKN8B8 OUFUCATKD
TRiuiiKle 0-3»3U
89 Coart St.
Bruoklru, N. X.
Special to The L E A D E R
WASHINGTON, July 9—Thousands of additional jobs will be
provided in the 49 new mental
hospitals for veterans, including
one already planned for New York
State ,at Peekskill, to be constructed by the Veterans' Administration as part of a huge program announced by General Omar
Bradley, which, he estimated,
would meet the needs up to 1948.
The program calls for 183 new,
permanent hospitals to be erected
in 39 States: 105 of them for general medical and surgical cases,
29 for tuberculosis cases, and t h e
remainder for neuropsychiatric
cases.
These hospitals are to have, all
told, a capacity of 151,500 beds.
There are now 83,339 beds in t h e
existing 98 veterans' hospitals,
and General Bradley ventured t o
say that probably a total of 300,000 beds will be needed by 1975.
The cost of the present program .
was put at approximately $448,000,000. Three of the new hospitals are under construction.
Funds are on h a n d for 47 more
hospitals, and appropriations for
30 more are pending in Congress.
The total number of hospitalized
veterans at the present time is
80,756, of whom 30,331 are veerans of World War II. ' T h e new
hospitals will be of the skyscraper
type construction, wherever possible, General Bradley said, a n d
will be built, wherever possible, in
proximity to medical schools,
"where doctors and other professional people can be brought into
part-time association with the V.
A.'s program for giving veterans
a medical service second to none."
He also announced t h a t 22 o u t standing specialists have been
appointed to a nueropsychiatrio
advisory committee to help solve
problems in their field.
If interested in a future job
with Veterans
Administration,
write to Personnel Office, Veterans Administration, Washington
25, D. C. Veterans will receive
preference in hiring.
CANDIDATES FOR
Phone
HANTY
Executive omces:
V. A. Expansion
Means Many
More Jobs
POWERS REAPPOINTED
J a m e s J. Powers of Wellsville
has been reappointed to the Allegany County Civil Service Commission.
Joseph
RADIO
tional examination for Auto-Engineman. DeGenero filed on application, but, according to his
petition, the application was rejected.
Mr. Samuel Resnicoff, representing DeGenero, in addition t o
seeking reinstatement, maintains
that the determination of t h e
Commission which rejected DeQenero's application, and excluded him from participating^ in the
examination, was arbitrary, erroneous, and wholly discriminatory. Mr. Resnicoff, in his brief,
set forth the fact, t h a t there was
no grade lower than Auto-Engineman, and hence it was error t o
give a promotional instead of a n
open-competitive examination.
Pending the argiunent of the
application, efforts were made t o
reinstate DeGenero.
DeGenero.
however, insisted upon being reappointed to the Seaview Hospital
in Staten Island.
In opposition, the Corpcxration
Counsel contended t h a t t h e records of the Municipal Civil Service Commission failed to disclose
the purported application of Mr.
DeGenero, and that it was within
the Commission's discretion to order a promotional instead of a n
open-competitive examination.
A decision on the application
is expected within the next ten
days.
Geii«rcil Classfts MON.. WED. &
PRI., at 1:15, 6:15 & 8:30 P.M.
Classes TUESDAYS and
PRIDAYS at 7:30 P.M.
Classes TUESDAYS and
THUR DAYS at S P.M.
Tueiday, July % 1946
NYC NEWS
UNIFORMS
BOUGHT — SOLD
PoUee, rirciuea, Coaduotora, Bte.
JOE LEITNEU'S
CLOTHES SHOP
43 BAYAKD ST., NIW YORK CITY
CO t-874«
115 EAST 15TH STREET
Telephone STiiyvesaiit 9-6900
•
Closed all day THURSDAY, JULV 4th
Obtain High Mark in
Sorting Section
SliuplinMl MvUiod of Ktudy
Five Haniiile Sorting TrittK
50c
Atlas Photo Co.
305 BROADWAY, N. Y. 7, N. Y.
Dept. M
IVew F l r e m a D
NEW YORK O T Y
Oirice Hours Monday tiu-ougb Frida)', 9:SO A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Closed Saturdays.
Post Office Clerk Carrier
Manual!
Maaufacturtns * Oe&Uu« te
Braud wew, comyIc(«ly det«Ue4
LstMt tnforauitloii om Vet preferwM*
Ltttest M«NUe»l Ke«|iiir«aieota
I U 6 I N I D*iylAYO A SON
Mow ealy ff.OO by nail or call
PROGRESS MTEtPRISIS
rOUOH AND MILITABX
KOVIPMKNT
87tt
147tb St., Bronx, N l
Bxperti since 1919
MO 9-ZllM
8»t 8th Av*. (u«Mr 4 3 r i St.) M.X.O.
TiirBilay, July
CIVIL S E R V I C E
1916
NYC NEWS
LEADER
Library Aids
WHAT NYC EMPLOYEES SHOULD KNOW
Rights of Vets to Leave of Absence for Schooling Under G.I. Bill
Page Elevi»n
Fire Students
A wide .selectioin of study m a t erial for the coming promotion
test to Lieutenant h a s been prepared by the Municipal Reference
Library.
This bibliogiaphy may be convsulted at all the branches of the
New York Public Library. The
publications in this selected list
may be borrowed from the Municipal Reference Library, Room
2230 Municipal Building, Manh a t t a n . by any Fireman interested
to study for this promotional examination.
Firemen preparing for this examination are urged to take advantage of the Library's facilities
between the hours of 9 to 5 weekdays and 9 to 1 on Saturdays.
The reference assistants are always ready to render such help
and guidance as is necessary to
enable all those candidates who
visit the Municipal Reference
Library to better prepare t h e m selves for promotion to lieutenant.
Evening High Sohciol
S IJ T T O X
A veteran to be entitled to edu- the applicant, usually within six during his absence, he may comcation or training under this act weeks of the date on which h e pete, provided he meets the eligmust have served in the active makes application therefor. Usual- ibility requirements. This right,
CITY HALL NEWS AIRED
military or naval service on or ly only one certificate of eligibility however, is limited to a right to
Brief .summarie.s of city hall
a f t e r September 16, 1940, and is issued to an applicant, covering take a regularly .scheduled examnew."? from Phoenix, Ariz., are
prior to the termination of the all courses he is entitled to take, ination. Such a person is not
broadcast each evening over local
present war, and shall have served although it may in some cases be entitled to a special examination,
.station KOY, the International
ninety days or more or, if his subsequently amended to cover if he is unable to appear for the
City Managers' A.s.«;ociation reactive service is less t h a n ninety additional training. Such cases, regular examination.
ports. The executive-secretary t o
If a person on such a leave of
days, shall have been discharged however, are the exception.
the city manager acts as newsor released from active service by
Although a veteran need not absence is on an eligible list and
caster of municipal projects and
reason of an actual service-con- begin his course immediately a f t e r is reached for certification, his
special events, and conducts radio
nected injury or disability. His he receives a cei'tificate of eligib- name will be certified. T h e apInterviews of local officials on rerelease from such service must ility but may delay for the full pointing officer, however, i.s not
cent happenings in their departhave been under conditions other statutory period of four years, obliged to appoint him but may
ments.
t h a n dishonorable. Hence, in some once he commences the course he pass over his name for lack of
cases holders of blue discharges is generally expected to pursue availability. In such case h e will
are eligible for education or such education or training to not be charged with a certification,
training under this act. Such completion without interruption, so as to bring into operation the
Co-Rd'n'i. R e w n t i , ALL Vollefieii.
BUSINESS INSTITUTE
cases are decided individually on except for the usual school holi- rule prohibiting certification of a 58th
PoJnt. Annapolis, AeceleratPd Proi?TaiM
Uay-Kre.
a-Day Week
their merits.
day a n d vacation periods. The name to the same appointing W.
Graduates artmHteO to leaHinc colIeKeo
Dictation-Typing M ^b
A veteran who meets these re- subsistence allowance continues officer more than three times.
In order to be reinstated to his
quirements will be entitled to during such school recesses, unless
1 Subject fl-.-iO Wfpk
Speed, Brnsh Dp, Drills, Short Cat*
from one to four years of educa- the Individual accepts full time position, such employee is required to make request therefor (Evening Dept. of Dwitiht School)
tion, depending on his length of employment during t h a t time.
{"'tn^non. Beginners. Advanced
At the completion of the couise to his department head within 60 nz Park AT., N * 16, Nr. 3 8 St. CAI B-6M1
service in the armed forces. The
117 WEST 4?d ST.
tJ). 5-9335
age qualifications contained in the or courses of study, no evidentiary days of the date of completion of
.statute as originally enacted have certificate or letter is issued by the his studies. (This information also
been eliminated. Length of serv- Veterans' Administration. I n the applies to State employees.)
SUMMIR
MEDICAL LABORATORY
ice is the only determining factor. usual case, however, the individual
HIGH SCHOOL
The veteran makes application will be awarded a diploma or certiSA VMS
TIMMt
TRAINING
for educational benefits under this ficate by the educational instituT*rm Op«n« Jvly 3
Qualified
teciiniciana
in
demand
1
<*|
M
H
(ntU.
Ultf
iMnm*.
tion,
certifying
his
successful
act by applying in person at one
OIL BURNER
u-ti. i>Mt
Day or Evening courses. Write for
completion of the course. I n cases
of the following agencies:
CODRSE
Chorf*r*d by Stelm loord of lt*a*ntt (46th Ytorf
free booklet "C." Register now J
C.I. AfMOVtD FOI VtTS
Cenivlt 0«on Tollt
Installation — Servioingr
• a) Regional Veterans' Admini- where this is not the practice, the
Controls
individual should be able to obE R O N PREPARATORY S C H O O L
ST. SIMIMONDS SCHOOL
strator, 252 7th Ave., NYC.
«
S
3
I'wy
mi
1
4
St.
.
W
.
Y. C. AL 4.4M2
N.
y
.
C.
Installation
l
i
c
e
n
s
e
tain a transcript of his record or
2 East 54fli St.. N.Y.C. El 5-3Att
»b) N. Y. Veteran.s' Service certificate
UAY CLASS STARTS AUG. 6
of attendance from the
KVE.
CLASS
STARTS
SEPT.
6
Center, 500 Park Ave., NYC.
school.
Also AvHilable Unler G.I. Bill
(c) Brooklyn Veterans' Sei*vice
YMCA TRABE & TECHNICAL SCHOOL
Promotion Rig^hts
Rog-ister
iit YMCA Sfhools, KB W
st.
Center, 105 Court St., Brooklyn,
The leave of absence granted
W 6G. SU 7-4400
N. Y.
to pursue studies is in no sense a School Bldfr.,
He must file with that agency: military leave of absence. Section
(a) Rehabilitation Form 1950, 246-c is a separate and distinct
an application form, and
section and not a part of Section
J
1
'b) His original discharge cer- 246 of the Military Law. Hence,
REPORTING
tificate or a large photostatic the rights of an employee on such
LISTING O F CAREER TRAINING S C H O O L
copy.
leave re. seniority, promotion,
Academic and Commercial—College Preparatoff
STENOTYPISTS
When he appears at the office service ratings, salary increments,
BORO HALL ACADEMY—Platbusb Ext. Cor. Fulton St.. BUljn ReKcnte Accre<]ite^.
mentioned above, he will be ad- etc., are in no respect governed by Gregg, P i t m a n ; also dictation
MA. 2
for Federal and State exams.
vised regarding courses of study the provisions of the latter section
Auto Orivint
he may pursue and the educa- but are governed by the laws and
AAl—AUTO 8CHOOI.—operated by George Goiilon, World Wur 11. Expert inetruotor.
B O W E R S
203
South
Broadway,
Voniieis.
tional institutions offering such rules applicable to leaves of ab233 WEST 42nd ST.
BR 9-9092
cx)urses. He is entitled, however, sence generally.
A. L. B. OBIVINO SCHOOL—Expert Instructore. 620 Lenox Are.. ADdubon 8-1433.
to pursue any course of instrucConsequently, his seniority acLYNN'S AUTO SCHOOI.—I.earn to Drive. Expert li.strm tions. Pholos and photostate
tion he may choose, provided the crues during his absence and, if a
a specialty I 531 West 5:07lb St., New York 34, N. Y. WAdtwortb 8-810a.
.«;chool or institution will accept promotion examination is held
him for such course, and may
ALPINE AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL. Expert driving ln(?tr)io(ion. Dual controlled cara.
Cars for hire tor road test. 671t} F i l t h Ave., Brooklyn. BEac.hview 8-31S4.
select any approved educational or
training institution, whether or
ABBY AUTO SCHOOL—816 Amsferdam Ave. (100 St.) Day Eve. Care rented for
Rodto
Technielan-Commuiiieatieii
tests. AC 2-9403.
not it is located in the State in
SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL
And Radio Service Ce«r*«t
PARKER AUTO SCHOOL. Dual control carp. Care for road tcKts. Open evenin«B.
which he resides.
PRE-EMINENT FOR RESULTSl
Day and Evening Classes
1684A Broadway (53d St.) i;l tj l7r>7. 796 Lexington («-M.)KH 4-9638.
July 3 to Aucutt 2 2 — Co-Ed
If eligible for training, he will
Bettuty
A m e r i c a n R a d i o Institute
receive a certificate of eligibility,
101 W. 63d St., New l o r k 23. N. V.
THE BROOKLYN SCHOOL. BEAUTY CULTURE. Enioll lo learn a p a j i n e profession.
which will set forth the exact
Approved ander G.I. Bill of Rishta
Evelyn
Laytou,
Director,
451.
Nostrand
Ave., Brooklyn, S'r> rlintf ;i-9701.
period of full time training to
which he is entiitled and which
Approved by Board of Regents, Board ot
ftnglness ^bool*
Education and Leadlnf
he uses as evidence of his eligibilMKROHANTS A BANKKRS', Coed. a7tta Year—220 Eaat 42nd St., New York 0*19.
427 FIATBUSH AWE.EXT..eor.FULTOM ST.
ity in contacting the institution he
tdU 2-0986.
Diagonally opp. FoxTheatro. Brooklyn I, N. Y.
MAIn 2-2447. Request Catalog-Enroll Nowl
.selects. This certificate is sent to
BuBinea* and Foreign Servie*
New York Preparatory
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
R-A-D-l-0
BORO H A L i
ACADEMY
ApprevtiJ
undtr
ih»
G. I. lill of
STENOGRAPHY
Kighlt
TYPEWRITING • I00KKEEPIN6
COULD YOU USE
10 POINTS?
"Y" TRAINING
WILL
10 to 30
TO
FUSiL
ADD
poims
YOUR
4VERA(;K
ENROLL NOW!
PHYSICAL TRAINING FOR
SEPTEMBER TESTS
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
START
^OfF!
Truiuing
Favilities
and
Instruction
Until
Yitu Are
Called
Use
PATROLMEN
ENROLL
MENTAL TESTS
MEDICAL
EXAMINATION
SMALL
CLASSES
SCIENTIFICALLY
PLANNED
COURSES
^
EXPERT INSTRUCTION
^
FREQUENT
^
FREQUENT
^
PERSONAL
* 1-Yr.
CAICULATMG OR COMPTOMETRY
Condition Yourself
At the "Y" for
lMtaMiv«2 MMithsCflWM
BORONALLACADEIMY
427 FUTBUSH AVENUE EXTENSION
•«.MlMSt.rW|ra.
CIVIL SERVICE
MNa 2-2447
PHYSICAL EXAMS
For FIREMAN
and POLICEMAN
EXCELLENT
FACILITIES
Three Gyms, Running Track,
Weights, Pool and general conditioning equipment.
Apply Membership Deparimenf
Y. M. C. A.
Dental Assistinq Course. B Wks.
Men and Wompn urgently needed Jii
hospitals, luboratoi'ies and
dootors'
otti<!P8. Qualify for these fine positions
NOW I Get Book R,
; .STATE I.ICKNSRU
IMMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
CIai>seB for Qimlifled (jl's
MANHATTAN
60
East 42d St.
MU
.SCHOOL
( 0 p p . Gr. Central)
DRAFTING
RMMO-TELEVISION-UEGTRONICS
Prattical and The«r*tlMl Court* leads to opportunitUs In Industry, Broadcaiting or own
Butintti. Day and Eve. Settlons. Enroll now
tor new claue*. auallHod Votorano EliiikU.
RADIO-TELEVISION
INSTITUTE
4M UoKiniton Avo., N. Y. 17 (4«th St.)
PLaia 3-4!i8S
LUenjed by N. Y. Stat*
Mecbanical.
aeronautical,
eleotncai.
arcbitectnral. tool and die deairn, macbine deaigni. I t qualified under GI
Bill, tblB t r i i n i n t ta available under
Government auipicea.
D a y - Evening
Sessions
New Y o r k Drafting lustilute
lOfi W. 4 e t h (cor. Vnay)
f H E B TRIAL TO TEST
Wl 7-066«
APTITUDE
TESTS
REVIEWS
COACHING
Membership
Track - PtM>l - 4>ymiiaKiu
Fully l'^(|iiipp(Ml
* Clean Wholesome
Atmosphere
Civil Service institute
\ m : \ scHooi.s o i
M:W YOKK
5 W. 63 St.. nr. Bwoy.
55 Hanton PI.. Bklyn.
180 W. 135 St.. N. Y.
SU 7-4400
ST 3-7000
ED 4-9000
CIVIJL
S E R V I C E
C O A C m X G
CUSTODIAN ENGINEER
Masonry & Carpentry Insp.
ti.ASSKH: MONDAV H I'.M.
WKI). AM) FKI. 7 I'.M.
n.ASHEK: TI KH. & THLK.S. 8 I'.M.
Stationary Engrs. License
P.O. CLERK-CARRIER
CI.ASSES: WEI). AM> FKI. 8 P.M.
lluki>(« dully, Mom., .Aflernoon, Eve.
I'.S. EiiKln»H'r (Cl»ll. M e i h a n u a l . E l f t l r i . i t l ) , I'lijhiilMt, Jr. EnRlue^-r (Civil, Me«li.
aiiii-ul, EltH'li'h'iil), iiihiit!<-. Water Conbiinip., Crane EiiKineiiian-eleclric, Euieinuiil-aburem, Eleclrical Insp., Stutiuniir} Env.-fleelri<', I'urk Foriuiun, Subway ExaniN.
MATHEMATICS
DRAFTING
Con»(rui'lioii Examiner, Civil Servit'ci
Arrbitei'tiiral, Me«hanloal, Electfieal.
.ArUlinii-lle, AlKebra, (•cuni., Triir..
Veterans acirpted under <i.l. Bill.
(altuluM, I'.ilikit'H, Cuufli lltKb St'buiil,
< (illfKeH, KIIK. SubJtM lM.
Kklc. Jb Eng. Ciini>truc't., EbthnatlnK.
Piuti'bbiunal Eiieiiifer, Arcliitei-t, Surve>or, Eleeii'iiiitn, I'luniber, Slallonury EitKlneer, Boiler Inbpt-clur, Kefrlkerutiun, Oil Burner, Portuble EnKiiievr
LICENSE EXAMS
iNSTiTUTii:
Over
Cultural and ProfeeciouaJ School
THE WOLTER SCHOOL of Spceoh and Drama—Est. over 26 years in Carnegie Hall.
Cultured speech, a strong, modulated voice, ehavm of manner, personality, thorougli
training In acting for stage, screen and radio, etc. Circle 7-4'..'52.
Dance Studio
BOAS SCHOOI.,—323 W. 2JBt St., NYU. Modern Dancn for ProfesHioiials, Am,\teora
and Children. Reg. Daily 11-5 P.M. Call for interview. CH. ;{ ' 5 5 1 .
BROOKLYN C E N T R A L
55 Hanson PL, B'klyn 17, N.Y.
Phone STerling 3-7000
Toil May Join For 3 Mcnfhs
Civil Servlee
WORK FOR "UNCI.E SAM." Commence
month. Prepare NOW for next
examinations. Vets- get preference. Full particulars—sample coaching F R E E .
Write today. Frauklin Institute. Dept. S15. Rochester, N. Y.
-X-RAY & MED. LAB.-,
NOW!
FOR CLASS
STARTING SEPTEMBER 2
^
^
^
^
SiMeM 4 MMittM COHTM • Day Mr Era.
LATIN AMERICAN INSTITUTE—11 W 4 3 St. All l e c r e t a n a l »nd b u e i n e n aubjeoU
la KBgiieb, Spauich, Portugueee. Special ooursei ua international adminiatratioB
and foreign eM-ric*
LA 4-aSM.
•,>.'iU Webt t l h t St., Munhuitun, W Imonkin 7-%'UMU
.ifiirb biiei-iull/.inK in ( ivil Service and EnuUieerini; Kvaiuinaliunii
Detoetlve Inst.
DETECTIVE INSTITUTE—Infstruotion for those viiho w i s l u t o learn tlie deteotlve pro»
fession. 607 6th Ave. MO 2-3-168.
^
Drafting
NATIONAL TECHNICAL INSTITUTE, 55 West 43nd St.; LA 4-2920—Meehaniual,
Architectural. Joli Estimatingr. Day, evenings, Moderaie iatf». Veterans qualified
invited.
Blementary C«nr«ee tor Adalte
THB COOPER SCHOOL—316 W. 139tb St.. N.Y.C. •peciaiizing in adult education,
Matbematice, Spaniah. Frencb-Latin Qraromar. Afternoons, evening* AU. 3 - 6 4 7 0 .
Merrbant Marine
ATLANTIC MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY, 44 Whitehall or 3 Slate St., N. T .
Bowling: Ureen 9-7086. Preparation for Deck and Enpiiifrrrin? Otlicers' licenses—
ocean, coastwise and harbor, also steam and Diesel. Vcicrans eligible under
GI Bill. Send for catalog. I'ositions available.
Millinery
LEARN BY EARNING—training, personal gDidance for career, pi-ofessional, or home,
day-evening claBseB. Enroll now. De Gora's Meihod. 297 Sumner Ave. (near
Gates, Brooklyn). GLenniore 6-8740.
LOUISE ROBINS MlLi.lNERY ACADEMY (Est. 19:<4)—2388 Seventh Ave., NYO.
AD 3-7727. Complete educaiiou iu milliueiy profession. Day Eevening. Correspondence courses.
Motion Picture Operating
BROOKLYN YMCA TRADE SCHOOL—1119 Bedford Ave, (Gates). Bklyn... MA S-1100.
Evea.
Music
NEW YORK COLLEGE OK MUSIC (Chartered J 8 7 8 ) . All bran.hei.. Day and evening
instruction. 114 Eabt 86 St. EUtterflcld 8-9377. N. Y. 28, N. Y.
Public Speukiiig
WALTER O. ROBINSON, U t t . D — E s t . 30 yre in Carnegie Hall, N. Y. C. Circle 74262. Private and class lessens. Self-coufidcnce, public spi aking, platform
deportuiont. effective, cultured speech, etronif. pleasing voh.'e. etc.
Radio TelcvlKlon
KAI)I0-TE1.EVISH)N IN.STITUTE, ISO U-xinglon Ave. (4(i1li si.
evening.
N. Y C. Day and
PL. 3 - 1 3 8 5 .
Kel'rigeratiun
N. V. TECHNICAL INSTITUTE, 108 6tb Ave. <16). Day. Eve. classes uow foriuiug.
Veterans invited.
9«4-retarl»i
ADEi.PHI .SCHOOL OF BUHINI-XS.
Tiitoiink'.
u;i!) Kiiius
Brooklyn.
DKwey (t-HKItlt.
COMBINATION BUSINESS SCHOOL, 39 W 126 Si. UN 4-3170 Seo'l Adult. Bdu.
Grammar. Higb School. Mu»'ic. Fingcrpriiiting Oflk'e Nach.
DRAKE'S, 1S4 NASSAU STREET. Secretarial. Accounting. Drafting. JournaliMn.
Day-Night. Write for catalog. BE 3-4840
MONROE SECRETARI.IL SCHOOL, complete coiuuicr^ial courses. Approved to triMa
veterant under G.I. Bill. Day and evening. Write for bulletin C. I 7 7 t b 8 t ,
Boston Road (U.K.O. Chester Theatre BIdg.) DA 3 - ' 3 0 0 1.
BEPELEY * BROWNE SECRETARIAL SCHOOL, 7 Lalaytlte Ave. cor. rialbatln.
Brooklyo 1 7
NEvioi 8 - S i 9 4 1
Day aud evening
MANH.VITAN BUSINESS I N S T I l t T E 147 Wesi 42nd St.—Sfcretariai ana Boohkeeping, Typiug, Coniptonioter Uper., Shorthand Stcnotype. hit 9 4181. Opeu evea.
tVKSTCHESTER COMMERCIAL SCHO«)L. 629 Main St.. New Kouhelle. N Y
Accountmg. Stenographic. Secretarial Day & Eve StMsion* Enroll now Send fot booklet.
Uatrlininkiiig
STANDARD WATCHMAKERS I N S I I T I ' T K - - 2 0 6 1 Broadvtay (7;:ild), TU 7-8534.
i<ilL'Uuie puling imdu. Veteians invited.
K ' W ^ ^ -.T ••
Page
Twelve
NYC
CIVIL
NEWS
SERVICE
LEiADER
T u e s d a y , July 9 ,
mammii
RESORTS
^estmca&c/H
AWAITS YOU AT
Soudanf Farm
•WtT'tlH:'- IHI
and
i l l l HH' IH 'HI
1946-
mmmm
TRAVEL
37-154
Port JervU, N.T.
Modern. Own f a r m . Good meals.
$25
up. Booklet.
Mrs.
Geo.
SoiKlant.
OI.LYWOOD C O U N T R Y
€I.UB
Idyllic Surroundings
•
Seasonal Sports •
Super Social Actiriftes
Super Cuisine •
Dietary Laws •
Excelleiit Accommodations
VII.LA VON CAMPR, Eaat Shore, Lake
Hopatootiif, N. J . Qood Table. AmoHenients nrarby. Water Sports. P . O. Mt.
Arlington. N. J . Box 153. Booklet.
. . .
EVERY HOLLYWOOD DAY A HOLIDAY
Our Entertainers, FREDA DOVA-LEON LISHNER •
LIVINGSTON
Y.
Sfrickland's Mountaki Inn
Mt. PMoao, Pean*.
L*e*tH hi MM h c s r t a t TH« POMMS.
Op«B all yewr.
(Every eoMon h a s Its own beaaty)
The Inn is modem t b r o u r h o n t , excellent food, Bteam-taeated room*, all indoor and outdoor sports.
A paradise l o r racationists. bonermooners. and acrvlcemen and women.
* . A. STWCKIANB, Owner, M f t .
Tel. Mt. Poe«n9 .^Ml
HALF MOON
HOTEL
O N THE I 0 4 I I D W A L K
CONET ISI.AND, N. T .
,
% ^^
RATES
KLE\H S
Plan)
A Few Reservofleiis Avaltuble
f o r 4 t k 9 f JhIy W e e k e n d
For information write P a u l K. Fuhoii,
Suite 10«», l e s Broadway, New l o r k
City, or PHONR CO. 7-3015.
FREE lOATING^GOLF
M
Deluxe Acoominodutions—
Tile Showers
All Si>ort8—Homelike Cuisine
DIRTARY LAWS
^
^
Entertainment
thru Sept.
Open till Oct. 5th
p
M
Delicious Hot Meals, rooms, running
water; all sports included; bicycles
free. Churchea opposite. Weekly rates.
Double $34. Reserrations open l o r
Sept. Write Booklet C. WilUam J .
Stokes, P r o p .
Modern.
Runninsr water. Private lake.
Free boatinff, bathinir, tennis, lishing.
(;iiuroltos nearby. Rates $;!8 up weekly,
t . GAWENUS.
pocono mis.
LUFF
E. Strendsbnrg, Pa., R. F. D. 1
Phone fB934JZ
All Sport*. Modem. Concrete Swimming Pool. Private Lake. Reo-eation
Pavilion. Square dancing. Fresh f a i m
products. Right place l o r a boneymoon.
All Churchea. Booklet. Rates t 3 0 to
$42 weekly. 3. A. Frederick.
ISLAND LAKE
On
Pike
County's
largest
hot ell
iPanoramie views.
Bathing b e a c h ,
boating,
tennis,
golf. New cocktail lounge. Dancing.
Entertainment. Superb cooking. Excellent rooms. Reasonable rates. Open
June 'iS. For illustrated booklet write
M. D. Conry, Mgr.
B
Frederick's North View
House and Lake *
ARRANGEMENTS
ALL R E S O R T S
R.R. Statioa: Pawting, N. Y.
Tel.: Hopewell Junction 27«l
Onl^ 65 MUes from
NYC
Every Sport Facility
Oelf Free en rrewtses
Many New I m p r o T e n e n t s ^
This T e a r a t Hilltop
Directors:
Paul Wdfson ft Sol Rotliauser
N. Y. Office: 277 Iroadway
Tel,; OOrtland* 7-395S
HAVANA
•
MEXICO
B Y R A I L and
AIR
T r a v e l Dei»artment
NATIONAL B R O N X BANK
of New York
150th St., at Mc^ese Ave. ME ti-7t9Bm
White riaine Ave. a t Pelhans P'kway
CN 3-61«S
Trips To*The Mountains
Brooklyn
KINCS HIGHWAY MOUNTAIH LIRE
DAILY
TRIPS T O AHD
FROM THE
MOUNTAINS
DOOR TO DOOR SERVICE
I R O O K L T M PHONC'-DEWEr
9-9503 a n d ESPLANADE
5-I39C
MOUNTAIN PHONE--ELLENVILLE 417-«1t
C & F MOUNTAIH UNE
High
Above the
Delaware
E H
Phone
90I-R.25
Silver Lake F a r m
Narrowsburg, N . Y.
(European
DOUILE ROOMS WITH iATH
$9.00 and $10.00 P«r Day
HlLl-SIDE
P A R K SVU-L. E
HENRYVILLE, PA.
35th
Season
ti^
Will OpMi July I , 1946
A modern 14-»tory fireproof buildinff.
Reserve now lor t b a t summer T a c a t i o n .
"osaassissszssssy .s^ ''
Stokes Mountain Laurel
FOR ALL
^TRAVEIr-
. . .
L!vinqi«M Manor »«2
MANOR, N.
^^M^
HOUSE—
Lake, S t a r r u c c a ,
Pa.
Elevation 2,000 f t .
HOUSE
FKKK IIOTKL RESERVATION SERVICE
ACK .^>0T r.th Ave. (at 4't St.) VA. «-'i550
Main Office—2026 UNION STREET. BROOKLYN. N. Y.
PRESIDENT
4-2644
Modem. Sports. Churches. Hot and
cold running water in rooms. Excellent
food. Rates $34 up. Booklet. Charles
Buhling, Prop.
— Delaware View Inn—
Barryvilie, Sutlivan Co., N. Y.
Ideal summer resort 18,000 I t . high,
overlooking the Delaware Water.
All outdoor sports, swimming pool,
?aod German cooking.
For booklet and reservations, write or
call E . POELL, Prop. Barryvilie S574.
Mn.FORD. PA.
N. I . Off.—VA. 6-1981
C A R S TO AND F R O M THE
MOUNTAINS
D O O R - T O - D O O R SERVICE . . . f . C . C .
INSURED
ROSENBLATT'S
Friendly Mountain Line
DAILY
"RIDE THE BEST"
TO 6 PROM THE
MIS.
N. r . Pftoii»—AP 7-9225
Mewiifoiii—4IURLEYVILLE 128
SOL'S PARKWAY LIHE
DAILY
TRIPS
TO
AND
FROM
THE
MOUNTAINS
P H O N E DICKENS 2-9083
HTinnTIC IITV
FKEE IIOTKL RFiSEKVATION SERVICE
ACE ryOt &»h Ave. (at f J S(.) VA. «i--iff50
ALPINE
. . L O D G E . .
MOUNT
POCONO,
PENN.
(The .Alpines of the Poeonos)
A Charming
REYER R E S O R T Phone 9091R6
N A R R O W S B U R G . N. Y.
All improvements. Private lalse. Swimming, boating: and iishine free. Excellent
home cookinp. Own farm producta. NODsei.taiian. Kate $30-$a5 per week.
HERMAN REYER, Prop.
Enjoy a Vacation on lOO-Arre Farm
T H E RIVERVIEW
I>r Week
Accord, N. Y.
f.js.oo
Enjoy
Summer
Yoiir
Resort
to
Vacation
Modern Bedioonis. A Beautiful Golf
Course Adjoins Alpine Lodge. We Welcome Overnight Guests. Alpine lU^at a u r a n t Also Adjoins Alpine Lodge,
Whore An Ideal Honeymoon Awaits
You. We Cater to Weddings, Banquets,
Social Parties, and Conventions.
Phone Direct For Reservations
Mount P w o n o 4844 or Write for
Booklet C
r
ORICINAL
SWISS
CHALETS
On GREENWOOD LAKE. N. Y.
Only 10 niilos from N. Y. City
Separate bungalows. Lakeside rnis,
Boutlng. Bathing, Fishing, Et*-.
l!t;t))..5U with MeiiU, Phone
• uses r R O M T I M E S SQ. T E R M I N A L
RUN
DIRECT
TO
SWISS
COTTAGES
Spend your summer vaction with us.
Light airy rooms, delicious homelike meals.
Beautiful location, dietary laws observed.
Rates $40 weekly. BROOKIIAYK, R.F.U.
No. '4. UvingHton Manor, N. Y. Phone
Liberty 71»-FiiJ; city SIvoli ;J-3876.
1 MCALLISTER HOUSE
l a a BEACH !»;}d ST., ROCK AW AY BEACH
Ocean front. Clean, modern rooms; reasonable rates. Liirht housekeeping priviINVITATION
TO
R E L A X leges. Week, month or season.
BKLLK HARBOR 6-1342
Kiijuy the serenity of Plum Point, Gorg»
ou8 coiintrysiite, roaring llreplaves, delicious food—and f u n .
Only 65 miles from
Fur a Memorable Vacation—Visit
Muke^Keswvations
S M B S S ^ M I I
ICarly
'—•• cxs
P A R A D I S E
F A R M
75 miles f r o n j New York City situatetl
in the Sehwanguak Mountains, a range
of the Catskili. Bungalows with buth,
hot and cold running water. Bar and
•
aTTMActivcaATcs §
rmti—mw
Cocktair Lounge — Kxeellent Southern
y Hew Windsof.N.Y. f N e w h u r a h 4 3 / 0
Cooked meals in Modern Dining Uuoni.
KM'RKATION F.^CIMTIK.S—Horsebai-k
and Bieyele Uiding, Boating, Tennis,
Swiniing. I'ing I'ong, Basketl^all, Volley
Ball, Fishing in private lake. Archery,
Shullleboard,
BotliniiUon,
Horseshoe,
indoor games.
Dancing
in
New
Open
Air
Dunce
PaviKYSERIKE, N.Y.
lion. &1AKK KKtaKRVATlONS NOW!
pLum point
M
For H A P P Y
VACATIONS
A plu>>rroun<l of SflO acres of f a r m
and lorefct. All sports. Hicycles. Danelug, Artesian well drinking water. No
fhildieu under 4, Tel. High Fulis !.'Oai
New Windsor, N. T.
Newburgh 4477
Delightful—All Sports—Boating and
Swimming in Private Lake.
Different—the coIoi\jal atmosphere.
Delicious—our unexcelled cuisine.
Diverting—recordings lor listening
and dancing.
Adults. Only 6 3 miles from N.T.C.
PARADISE
FARM
Cudd«rbackvlll«. N«w York
Phone: Port Jervis .H&-ll»4
StsUy Wa'kcr, Prop
Colored Cileutele
DELUXE
CARS
•
DOOR
TO DOOR
SERVICE
BKLYN OFFICE, 117 AMBOY ST.
SHAPIRO'S MOUHTAIN LIHE
DAILY
•'RIPS
TO
AND
FROM
THE
MOUNTAINS
LATE MODEL CADILLAC AND LINCOLN CARS
C A R S TO
HIRE
FOR ALL
OCCASIONS
r419 20 AVE.. BKLYN. BEnsonhurst 6-1737. MT. PHONE Liborty 1462
PARKWAY COACH LIHE, Ine.T H E
A L P I N E
Box 195, R 3, Kingston, N. Y.
ON DEWin LAKE
PHONE 3M9
7 PASSENGER
CARS
TO ALL MOUNTAIN
RESORTS
DOOR TO DOOR SERVICE
OFFICES 1124 E. N.Y. AY.. PR 3-0100 307 THROOP AV.. PR 3-9532
MT. PHONE LIBERTY 1786 MONTICELLO 1356 EV 4-7485
ROUTE 32
Ideal vacation spot. Excellent
Churches nearby. Trailways at
Hotel. 843 W. 43nd St.
food.
Dixie
& S MOUHTAIH LIHE
DAILY
A Delightful Vacation
SWISS COTTAGES
OAKWOOD
Weekly Rates $35 Each
INCLUDING MEALS
Swiniinintf on preniisea, sports, dietary
laws; booklet CI.. City Tel. PR. 3 G433.
For A Grand and Glorious Voeatfon
7 PASSENGER
MT. PHONE FALLSBURG 177
TRIPS T O
AND
FROM
THE
MOUNTAINS
DOOR TO DOOR SERVICE I.C.C. CARRIERS
LATE
Lakewood
House
HIGHLAND LAKE, Sullivan Ce., N. X.
Noted f o r good food. All sports. Near
Catholic Church.
MODEL
LINCOLNS
& CADILLAC
CARS
CARS FOR HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
73I9A
2 0 t k AVE..
BKLYN.
N.Y.
BE-21160.
BE 6 - 9 4 2 8
Bronx
^ALTOH MOUHTAIH SERVICE
Cedar Rest
D A I L Y TRIPS T O
Burda
Ave.—Tel.
A quiet, restful place for vacationing In
the peiseefnl hills of beautiful Koekland
County, with lt« high, healUi-giving ellate. Sports, swimming. Only one h o w
traveling. «.<tO up. Booklet.
AND
FROM
THE
MOUNTAINS
I.C.C. CARRIER. DOOR TO DOOR SERVICE
J E R O M E 7-2670 — J E R O M E 6-8693 - 6-9405 - 6-9409
New
MombMi
York
O f l l c * — 5 1 EAST
OBleo—SOUTH
170th ST.. BRONX.
FALLSBURG.
N.
N.
Y.—FALLSBURG
Y.
138-243
DeLUXE SEOAH SERVICE, Inc.
YULA]*
UOTEI.
DOOR
C A R TRIPS T O ALL POINTS IN
MOUNTAINS
TO DOOR SERVICE . . . l-PASSENGER
LIMOUSINES
Ou Washington Lake, Yulan, N. Y. Tel.
Barryvilie '^14%. Modern improvemeata.
Boating, Bathing, Fishing, Oolf near by.
Neap churches. Rate $28 up weekly, Also
Bungalows week or month. AitTHUH
SAMYN.
Bronx—2438 G R A N D C O N C O U R S E
FOrdham 7-4864
Brooklyn—6492 BAY P A R K W A Y
BEnsonhurst 6 - 9 6 0 7
Mountala Pkoiio—LIBERTY 1919
Enr«U Now for
OPEN AlK GOLV Si HOOL
iu the Heart of the City
FUN
•
HEALTH
•
KELAXATMN
A Trial I ^ s o n WiU Convinee Von
Mail a I'usteard for an Appointment
and Further Inforiuatiuu
Stort Your Vacatioa tigkt . . . A Now Fioot of Cars to Take Yo«i to
amd from Your Favorito Rosert. . . . Door-to-Door SorvUt
Carlisle's S C H O O L O F
l i s West 7tiili
GOLF
go,
IRV M O U H T A I H
Now
York
& Brooklyn
UHE
iroM
A L 4-6648
JE 8-0268 - 0 2 6 9
MeiiBt«la Plia»~#AU.$iUft« 214. a i d LlilRTY S4«
'ip-
lay, July
ing up. W h a t t h e vehicles have of toil into minutes of light work.
meant in improved public health One Is a tire-strlpplng machine,
is beyond calculation.
devised by Mr, Ottoson and Joseph
Since then, a steady stream of S. Plumeau, which takes off huge
ideas for inventions h a s poured in truck tires "as easily as a piece
the city hall. Under a plan work- of cheese." It proved a boon to
ed out by Mayor LaGuardia, Geo. the armed services during the war
follow with profit, for a least two H. Mitchell, a full-time legal ex- and is now being manufactured
reasons: it results in constant Im- pert, acts as patent counsel for for civilians.
Once it took two men seven
provement of equipment to which New York's civic Inventors. The
commercial inventors have not City secures patents at no co>it to hours to strip bristles by hand
paid too much attention, and it the inventor, gains use of the in- from one mechanical street sweepadds incentive to rather low-paid vention free, and t h e inventor er. This is now accomplished in
employment—there's always the receives royalties on all his prod- 20 minutes by a mechanical gadget. Mr. Plumeau and F. C. C.
chance of coming up with an Idea ucts purchased by outside users.
To date, over 550 ideas and in- Miller teamed up on that one, and
that's worth a small fortune.
New York's "Department of ventions have proved worthy of a Long Island manufacturer is
Civic Inventions" started when being patented, and this year the producing it commercially.
When New York City was faced
two city employees, L. G. Kurtz Inflow h a s reached a new high.
and the late Carl C. Ottoson, For example, another health-pro- with the heavy expense of buildbrought t o cityhall some sketches tection measure is the pasteuriza- ing a two-leaf drawbridge across
tion test equipment originated by Brooklyn's Gowanus Canal, Clinof a strange vehicle.
"What is it?" asked Mayor La- Harry Scharer, Department of ton D. Hanover, a public works
Health employee. I t is a n enzyme engineer, invented a single—leafguardia.
"A sanitary garbage truck," said test of extreme sensiitivity. If bridge t h a t proved just as safe
Other civic inventions in daily
Mr. Kurtz.
"The garbage is milk has been pasteurized at even
dumped into a hopper at the one degree less t h a n t h e 143 de- use are a carbon monoxide a n a rear, and an escalator carries it grees, or for five minutes less t h a n lyzer, a life saver in tunnel and
into the body, which is closed a t the necessary h a l f - h o u r , or if as mine work; a lighting system for
all times, even when it is being little as one pint of raw milk is the new Brooklyn-Battery tunnel;
added to 125 gallons of pasteurloaded.
The mayor was impressed. ized milk, the Scharer test de"You'd better go up to the cor- tects it.
poration counsel," he said, "and
Labor Saving Ideas
see what he can do about getting
Back-breaking, time consviming
a patent."
Today, cities all across America manual labor is one of the bugand Canada are buying those bears of any city's mechanical
trucks as fast a s they can be pro- departments. New York's mvmiduced, and Mr. Kurtz and the cipal geniuses have thought up
heirs of his co-inventor are clean- two devices for shortening hours
NYCs Invention Mart
Employee Talent
New York's "civic Inventors"
make private fortunes, and the
' city obtains a valuable service,
whenever its Department of Civic
Inventions secures a worthwhile
patent for an enterprlslne; municipal employee.
By LEONARD ALLEN
(Courtesy Magazine
Digest)
The corner cop who fingers his
billy lovingly insn't dreaming of
new skulls tx> crack. He's probably inventing a night-stick with
built-in two-way radio, tear-gas
gun. whistle, and handcuffs.
The street-sweeper leaning on
his broom isn't visioning a world
without horses,
gum-wrappers,
a n discarded tabloids. An Ashcan
Edison, he may be figuring out a
gadget to attract refuse from a
distance, deodorize it, and incinerate it, all in any easy operation.
T h a t is, if they happen to work
for New York City. For today all
its thousands of municipal employees are potential inventors.
They are encouraged and helped
in patenting new and better bits
of civic equipment, from skew
bascule bridges to playground
slides.
New York has developed this
Idea, which other cities might
FOLLOW THE LEADER FOR BARGAIN
a super-efficient snow plow; ft
hydraulic sweeper; a method preventing Clogging of sewage-disposal equipment; and a device for
repairing playground slides.
Ex-Mayor An Inventor
Mayor LaGuardia is listed as
co-inventor with three police officials of a bomb-disposal carrier.
Early in the war, a time bomb
discovered in a British-owned
building, killed two detectives who
attempted to remove it.
Foreseeing the possibility that
bombs might become a m a j o r
public hazard, the mayor and the
policemen put their heads together to create a "bomb-basket."
It looks like an oversized-hamper made of woven elevator cables,
mounted on a trailer for transportation to an outlaying area for
detonation. Should the bomb explode en route, the fragments are
kept in bounds by the strong,
flexible cable.
But that's one invention New
York City hopes it will never have
to use.
BUYS
iAAAAAAAAAAlt
Have Tour Old Piano made Spinet
type. Pianos tuned
repaired, refinished.
Pianos bougrht wid
S U I T S
BUSINESS. SPORTS.
liAINCOATS, TOPCOATS
OVEECOATS
Priced originally from
$46.00 to $100.00
r a O Line of Women'i Bnd
Cfaildren'B Clothet
Complete Selection ol Men**
Work Clothes
A«k 7or C«t»l*f Ce
BORO CLOTHING EXCHANGE
3f Myrfic Av«.
Breokyhi. N. V.
GRAND'S PIANO SERVICE
Foreen uniformii. medals and
antiQue flrearms, caps, imi^nias.
Ben. (irand
!J0« Flatbush Ave.
RrgUtered Tuner
Bklyn., N. T .
Member N.A.P.T.
MA 2-7024
86« I.KXINOTON AVE., N.V.C.
OTHEK
M
rAMOCS BRAND0
Specializing in Live
First Class Poultry
UP
2 DOORS FROM AUTOMAT
TEL.. MA. fi-e075
At fh« Best Prices
Kosher «nd Non-Kosher
Freshly Killed While You Wait
GOLDSMITH
Selling fine furniture since 1915
Markets LecoUd At
ESplanade 7-9564
(••t. Avenue L and Avenue M)
BEnsonhurst 6-1080
(Corner «3rd St.)
both in BroolUyD
1 0 % DIKCOUNT
To .All Civil Service Kniployees
At Either (Store
U a MYllTLE AVENUE—TR. 5-1334
150 MVRTLE AVENUE—MA. 4-liMiO
CASH OR OKEDIT
LIQUORS
At L a e t l A liquor store with a really
COMPLETE stocls. C o m a c s . fine wines
(French. California, K . T . State), rare
liqueurs, champagmes, prepared cocktails. specialties and other hard-to-find
items.
Free, Fast, Courteous Daytime
Delivery Service
BUDD'S LIQUORS, Inc.
30 Church St., N.Y.C. Call CO 7-0080
Children's Bicycles
Buy Direct
From Manufacturer
7325 NEW UTRECHT AVE., B'KLVN
BKachview 2-3*^36
Change to Automatic Oil Heat
and Hot Water Supply
n u i M I H L UKLUGLKY Ul* COAL IN A FEW HOURS.
ENJOY PLENTIFUL AUTOMATIC H O T WATER
No Delay—No Discomfort . . . Do It Now!
HEATING
Nose Punching
Is Taboo
For Transitmen
tNC
Willoughby Street
SYSTEMS
BACK AGAIN
BENCO
SAUBS
CO.
with
A SPLENDID ARRAY OF
FINE GIFT MERCHANDISE
Nationally Advertised
Tiemendous Savingrs to Civil Service
Employees
VISIT ODB SHOWROOM AT
41 Maidca Lai«
HA 2-7727
Installed, Serviced and Repaired by Heating Specialistfi
IDEAL OIL BURNER CO., 510 Flatbush Avenue
FUR
BUckminster 4-3000
' L''J
li'P
STORAGE
Coats, scarfs, Jackets
Stock on hand.
Coats made to order.
Kepalrlng, remodeling.
Budget Terms
Arranged.
D & S Furriers
330 W. 146th St., N. V. 30. N. V.
KDgccombe 4-7 »01
BEAT THE RUSH . . HAVE YOUR
Carpets and Rugs
Cleaned NOW!
We can give you better and
quicker service now. Kiiijs iiiatle
to look like new.
Spaelall
Beat Inflation Now!
Buy your clothes at
J
Phone:
AL 4-6443
A
R
W
O
O
D
featuring
,
STANDARD CLOTHES
Inc.
^
915 Broadway. New York 10, N.Y.
9x12 Plain
Domestic Rug
•
•
•
•
•
•
Cl«gii*d
Shampooed
Demothed
lasiired
Prompt Service
Picked Hp aad
delivered
WINI>SOR
MICHAEL J. MURPHY
'
Brooklyn Custom Hatters
IROOKLYN. N. Y.
• STKTSON
• KNOX
• DOBBS
• MALLORV, Et«.
AI
as Half Price
Live Poultry Markets
ROBERT ABELS
Phone RE 4-5116
MAPLETON
6224 17th Ave.
Attention Veterans
We Buy War Souvenirs
BOLD.
)5.00 $10.00 $!5.00
1243 E. 14th St.
EARN E X T R A MONEY!
4
82
6-6700
R E G E N T
CLEANERS
1555 60th STREET. BROOKLYN
Punching a cash customer in
the nose Is cause for dismissal in
the NYC Board of Transportation.
Last week's calendar of the
Board reported the case of exrailroad porter Edwin D. Marshall, dismissed on charges that
he:
"While (Ml duty entered into
altercation with male passenger,
at which time he assaulted said
passenger, striking him in the face
with his clenched first, in violation
of the Rules and Regulations
governing employees engaged in
the Operation of the New York
City Transit System."
Veterans Back
P. A. L. Activity
County Commanders of the
American Legion, Catholic War
Veterans, Jewish War Veterans of
the United States, Veterans of
Foreign Wars of the United
States, Army and Navy Union,
U.S.A.. and Military Order of the
Purple Heart, have pledged the
active participation of the membership of their organizations in
the work being done by the Police
Athletic League for the youth of
this city.
LKGAt
Youngest Police
Sergeant Wins
Honors in Law
Highest scholastic honors were
conferred by Brooklyn Law School
on the youngest member of the
NYC Police Department holding
officer rank, at the annual commencement exercises held at 375
Pearl Street, Brooklyn. Sergeant
Michael J, Murphy, of 6169 77th
Street, Elmhurst, L. L, who is
assigned to the Police Department
Third Division Office in M a n h a t tan, and who has not as yet
reached his thirty-third birthday,
received the degree of Bachelor
of Laws summa cum laude, and,
In addition, was awarded the
Donald W. Matheson Memorial
Prize offered annually to the
graduate who evinces the highest
degree of legal capacity by c h a r acter, scholarship, and a t t a i n ments.
Sergeant Murphy, who was appointed to the Police Department
in 1940 and who was promoted to
the r a n k of Sergeant in 1945, was
one of the student speakers at the
exercises.
Supreme Court Justice Charles
S. Colden delivered the commencement address.
Due to identical top scholastic
averages, summa cum laude honors were shared by Sergeant
Murphy with Ludwig T. Smith, of
2064 Nostrand Avenue, Brooklyn.
Miss Adele Shapiro, 1050 Hancock
Street, received the degree of
Bachelor of Laws magna cum
laude, as of February, 1946.
Student
commencement
addresses were made by Sergeant
Murphy and by Irving J. Trow,
who received the degre eof Bachlor of Laws, cum laude.
Help
Wanted—Male
CIGAR CLERKS
Part T i m e — 1 1 a.m. - 2 p.m.
No Saturdays or Sundays
Meals Furnished
KXCHANGE B U F F E T
CIGAR D E P T .
15 Murray Streot, N. Y. City
Help
Wanted—Female
NOTICK
At a Spatial Term, Part II, of the City
Court of the City oj: New York, County
of New York, held at the Courthouse
thereof, at 52 Chambers Street, in the
Borough of Manhattan, County of New
York, City and State of New York, on
the 37th day of June, 1046.
Present—Hon. JOHN A. BYRNES,
Chief Justice.
In the Matter of the Application of
ANNE LIPSEY for leave to change her
name to ANNE LEE.
Upon reaUinff and liline the petition of
ANNE LIPSEY duly vertifuHl the i S t h
day of June, 1040, and the Court beiny
satisfied that the avenneiitB contained in
saiil petition are true and t h a t there is
no reasonable objection to the chaiiBe of
name proposed,
NOW, on motion of Max Schoengold,
attorney for the petitioner, it is
ORDERED, that ANNE I J P S E Y , be
and she is hereby authorized to assume
the name o£ ANNE LEE on and afteiAugust 0th, 1040, and it is further
ORDERED, that thi* order and the
aforementioned petition be filed within 10
days from the diate hereof in the office
of the Clerk of this Court and that a
copy of this order shall within 10 days
from the entry theieof be published onc«
in the Civil Service Letider, a newspaper
published in the County of New York,
and t h a t within 40 days after the making
of this Older proof of such publication
sltali be filed with the Cleik of this
Court, and it is further
ORDERED, t h a t after the said requirenientB are complied with t h a t the petitioner shall on and after the 0th day of
August, 11)40, be known by the name, of
ANNE i.EE which she is authoriziHl to
assume and by no other name.
Kntur,
J . A. B .
C.J.C.C.
COOKS
B A K E R S
N O EXPER4ENCE
W O M E N INTERESTED
IN C O O K I N G
& BAKING
HOME OR
KKSTAIRANT EXPERIENCE
GOOD
WAGES
VACATIONS
MKAI.S AND IINIFOUMS
PERMANENT
44 HOURS
Qim K ADVANCEMENT
F I N E TRAINING IN GOOD TRADE
SCHR AFFT'S
APPLY MON. TO FRI.. 9 to 6 P. M.
OR SATURDAYS TO NOON
54 WEST 23d (N«ar 6 Ave.)
OR EVENINGS 6 to 8 P. M.
MONDAYS TO FRIDAYS
1311 IROADWAY (38ili St.)
Need Extra Money?
supply you with work to be doue
»t home in your spare tlnio. No experience nee<ltil, Wt! supply everythinir.
Writo for iiitcrvii w. Box 401. Civil
lervlcc L.'ud r, !J7 Duane St., NY(!.
Page Fourtern
JOB NEWS
CIVIL
Prospects for the Future
t h a n number of wartime trainees
seeking to enter or return to this
field. Thus job competition will
Jewelry Workers
be keen next few years, with best
Field likely to be overcrowded chances for men with advanced
training in F.M. and television.
in BPBXt few years, with return of
Hand Compositors and
veterans to industry, and retention of many workers iiired and
Typesetters
trained during war. Steady jobs
In next few years employment
are by no means certain since will rise above wartime and prefavorable outlook depends on high war levels, ao there'll be many
level of business activity. Industi-y openings for apprentices as well
concentrated in New York, New as experienced workers. Thereafter, a long-range downward
Jersey and New England .states. trend in employment is expected.
Radio RcpAirmen
Airplane Mechanics
Field will expand because of expected increase in use of radio
a n d electixjnic equipment, but
number of new jobs and business
opportunities will be much less
(I-
I.ONESOMK? Meet interofftinK men-women throupU correHPonUtnee cliib aU over
t h e country. WiUe foiliiy. P . O. Box B8.
Fordham 58, N, X.
VOUR SOCi.\L Lll<fi
Make new friends and enrich ycnr social
lile through SOCIAL INTRODUCTION
SERVICE. New Vorlt'8 famoua. oxclueive
personal and confldential service, designed
to bring discriminating men and women
together. Organization nationally publicized in leading magazines and newspapers.
Send lor circular. May Richardson, 111
W. 72nd St.. N Y EN 2-3033. 10-7
Daily. 12-6 Sun
Household
Millwrirhts
Outlook fair, since many millwrights will be needed during reconversion, but a f t e r few years
number of jobs may decline .somewhat. Stable, long-term trend of
employment is expected.
Filling: Station Attendants,
Managers, Etc.
Post-war rise in employment
expected to continue, reacl\ing
prewar level in two or three years.
Field may be overci'owded for a
while, a f t e r current labor deficit
is met, because of entry of new
workers and return of former
workers from service and war i n dustries.
9th & lOth St..
university PL. Bet.
Tool and Die Makers
| ^^ould Remain s S
oSunl
LENMOR RADIO SALES SERVICE ( 1 6 1
years experience) all work guaranteed. Placements for retired Workers
FOR ¥OUR HOME MAKING
Elee<.rical appliances and radio sets. 1013 I and Others leaving trade, Most
SHOPPING NEEDS
Furniture, appliances, gifts, etc. ( a t real Boston Rd. (Cor. 165th St,), Bronx. N,Y. I iobs in D e t r o i t a r p n n n r i n r > r f h _
" ^ t T o i i aiea ano noitnsavings). Municipal Employees Service, 41 DA.vton 9-3584—315 w. i45tu St. ( b e t . ' " '
eastern states.
Park Row. CO 7-5300. 147 Nassau Street. 7-8th Ave.). AUdubon 3-3636.
WE PAY HIGH PRICES for used men's
Huits,
overcoats,
sportswear,
luggage.
JACOBS, 873 Columbus Ave. AC 3-8500.
Will call.
ESQUIRE RADIO A ELECTRIC CO. 765
E . 169th St., Bronx, Specialists in custom
made radios and phonographs. Radio repairing. DA 9-;ia30
Men's Clothing — New
I'NCAI.LED for men's clothing. Custom
tailor sacrifices odds and ends in men's
(iric> quality suits and coals, own make.
177 Broadway. NYC., 4th floor.
Puppies
Vacation
HOLIDAY HOI HE, MILLER I'LAt E, L. I.
North Shore, Private beach. Social, recreational activities tor business girls. Home
— iking. Informal. Reasonable rates. Write
descriptive leanct, N, Y. Lca^gue of
A r i s Clubs. i;?8 K. ;ir.th St.. N, y. c.
Setver Cleaning
SEWERS OB DRAINS RAZOR-KLEENED.
No digging—If no results, no charge.
Electric Roto-Rooter Sewer Service. Phone
JA 6-6444: NA 8 0 5 8 8 : TA 2-0123.
Watches
NEW BCLOVA WATCHES! Also chronograplis and watches repaired. One week
service. P.VUL ALLEN CO., Mezzanine,
West 47ih St., N. Y. C. BR 9-3864.
Help
HEALTH SKRVICES
D t R * NURSING HOME. Reg. by N. Y.
Dept of Hospit.ils. Chronics, invalids,
elderly people, diabetics, special diet convalescents. N. V. STATE REG. NURSE in
attendance. Rates reasonable. 130-31 Farmers Blvd.. St. Alt>anB. L. I. Vigilant 40504.
EVERYBODY'S BUY
Hire
Dressmaking
PERCY'S AUTO AND TRUCK SERVICE,
Motors rebuilt, overhauled. Expert fonder
repairing, painting. Brakes and ignition.
Tune up, all models, towing service. Est.
16 years. 1530 Fulton Street, Brooklyn.
PR 3-9855.
B.^NNERS, 1 I.A(;S, B.VDtiKH, Embloms.
lor civic and Kinial organizations, sohools.
Tile Pioneer Muoula. tiwfis, 1»I»0 y!>3 Sixth
Ave.
(iHlwccn ;ttj-3rth Sis.), N. V,
Wlbconsiii 7
Treatment
SPECIAL P R M E )iil.r>;j PUR ( ARTON,
Cigars. Siii;(.iiil priie by tl>n box. Trenu^udouu 8UVJii« ou canditrs, etc. Wilbur's
t ut Rate, 300 W. 1 1 U t Sirc-t, N. Y.
Furniture
Pianos Tuned
WA 8-»0,U).
FURNITURE BOUGHT AND SOLD AND PIANOS EXPERTLY TUNED AND REREPAIRED. Couipliite homed our »pe- P.\IRED, Reasonable rates. S. Maynard,
cialty. HIB1II->,1 cash prices paid. Special 56 Fust 118lh St., Now York 35, N. Y,
pricca to Civil Si-i vli;o employees. l)nn'
i'hone ATwatw 9-5835,
Ropair Shop, 301 Flatbuiib Av. MA 2-7 iU3
D R . A l . B EE P.T
Estimates Cheerfuly Given—l.ow Prlfca
155 3(1 AVE.
GRameny 3-3031
Daily 9 A.M. to Si.'fO P.M.
George C, Apostle,
HAIR REMOVED
'JlickcdaA
By Reliable
ELECTROLYSIS
EXP E RT
RESULTS GUARANTEED
Moderate F E E
At JAFFREX'S, 717 7th Ave. a t 48tli
ASK FOR MISS
GREENSTONE
Manager
453 W. 43d ST.
CI 6-739:t - 4
i'.hapels in 411 Boroughs
ISon-Seclarian
L O 5-9883
FURS R E J U V E N A T E D
I.
A
G. EDEL^TEIN A CO. Oldest established
pawnbrokers in the Bronx. 3639 Third
Ave. at 141st St. MO 9-1055. "Loans
on Clothing and F u r s stored here over
the Summer."
OPTOMETRIST
Cleaning • Electrifying • Repairing
Your old coat will look like new.
Special Consideration given
to
Civil Sf.rvice Employees.
971 SOUTHERN BOULEVARD
(Loew's Spooner Building)
Bronx, N. Y.
DAyton 9-3306
295 SEVENTH AVE.. NEW YORK
Corner 27th St.
WI 7-0058
I Guarantee Permanent Removal.
Safe. Painless, Reasonable.
•f NeRVEt. SKIN AND STOMACH
KUntyt.
HAIR REMOVED
Ernest V.
Gtn«ra( WMMSM.
PILES HEALED
818 LEXINGTON AVE. (Nr. 69d St.)
New York City
REgent 7-G831
Hairline, Eyebrows Shaped
RESUI>TS ASSURED
Men also treated. Privately
Bla44«r.
Law* Bsck, Swslltn Clandi.
CARAMAR
BY ELECTROLYSIS
WHERE TO DINE
STERNBERG
Specializing in E.ve
Examinations
and
Visual Correction.
By modern, scieotlfle, painless
method and no loss of tiute
from work.
ELECTROLYSIS ft SHORT WAVE
Pawnbrokers
Inc,
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Stop Tweezing Those Hairs
HARPER
METHOD
SCALP
TREATMENT.S, Established 1888. Boauty Salon,
189 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y. T R
5-3084.
Clockwork
KEEP IN TIMEI Have your watch checked
at S I N G E R S WATCH REPAIRING, 169
Park Row, New York City. Telephone
w o r t h 3-3371.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING. All work
guaranteed
one year.
Qiiick
service.
Wholesale shop, uow catering to retail
service at wholesale prices.
ICstiinateB
cheerfully given. Economy Watch Service, 19 W. 31th St., N.Y.C. Room 9374
nr. WcCreery), PE 6-4881.
Ciaareltes
Scalp
EST 180»
Associated Fur Process
DOROTHY ROBERTS, DUE.SSMAW1NG.
Original designs, also copying.
Expert
fitting. Perfection assured. By appointment. 433 W. 33 St.. N.Y.O. Lo. 3-5414.
HEATED LIMOUSINES for hire. Chauf- BETSV HEAD (i.VRAGE, 354 Hcr^l St.,
feur. low rates, by the hour, day or trip. near Uiverdale, Brooklyn, Complete service centtr.
Repairs.
I.ubrication, carCaU GILES. D.\ylon 3 3031.
wfishing. Check with us lirst. Dickens
CARS FOR HIKE—Hour, Day or Week 3-9U9«.
with and without chauflcur.
Brown's
'Diavel lUueau. 137 W, 45 St. I.O 5-9750
Ban ners—Ent blem s
KINGS HIGHWAY
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Kings Highway Station
Brighton Line BMT.
DE 9-8478
Dresses
Auto Kepatrs
4At K.S PRIVATE \ l TO RENTAL^ Private
<>a,b servit;e to and Iroiu doiaors, hospitals,
tlwaties, hotels and social funcions. Kunerals and wPdOmt,'«. 'J'U Court St., UUlya.
Phone MAiii 4-3039. 34-hour Beivii.-e.
r
RUTH LESONSKY
DOROTIIE'8 PARADE OF FA.SHION.S,
F i f t h Ave. Style, quality and smartness.
UPTOWN at 370 St. Nicholas Avf^nue
(134th St.). Prices besin at $9.98. Also
a complete lint? f>t cosume jewelry. RI
!t 91531.
'K
OPTiCiAH n OPTOMETRIST
By Electrolysis E.tperf.
New
rapid
system approved by
medical sfience. R<»sults
guaranteed.
Consultation
free.
Special
consideration to Civil Service employees,
D.VSHA EI.EtTROLVSIS STUDIO.
Hair
skillfully removed by multiple electrolysis
and new electronic methods. Personal attendant. Satisfaction assured. 33 W. 43ud
St., N.Y. PE 6-3739
BOOKKEEPERS, Stenograptaera, BiUing and
Bookkeeping Machine Operators, All office
assistants.
Desirable positions available
daily. Kahn Employment Agency. Inc
100 W. 43d St.. N.Y.C. WI 7-3900.
952 St. Marks Av*., Bklyn, N. Y.
SLecum 6-0631
UGLY HAIR REMOVED FOREVER
EUctrolytis
BE FREED FOREVER f r o m Ugly unwanted .hair.
Endorsed by physicians.
Results guaranteed. Doris Elena, Expert
Electrologist, 8330 Baxter Ave. (83rdRoosevelt Ave.), Jackson Heitflils, L. I .
NE 9-3009.
Wanted—Agencies
MR. FIXIT
Jobs available for fully qualified
men and for some men with wartraining in instrument
repair
work, to meet war-created backlog of demand for repair work.
WHILE YOC WAIT, we repair your typewriter, $1 up. FISCHER OFFICK, MACHINE CO., 370 Seventh Ave., bpt. (35th
and 36111 Sts.) BR. 9-6388.
MISS and MRS.
T I R K D ?
Docs your ba<'k bother you?
A
SPKNCRR support designed especially
for you—will give you relief by improving posture.
Call ALMA MERRIT, CorwtiPre f w
appointinciit at h?r Corsctoriuin.
Watch Repairmen
Typewriter»
A 4 B TYPEWRITER CO. Typcwriiers,
Mimeos. Add Machines Repaired, Bought,
Sold. 6 3 3 Melrose Ave. nr 149th and Srd
Ave., Bronx. Tel. MO 9-8133.
A BACKGROUND OF SATISFACTION in
personnel service since 1910. Secretaries,
Stenographers. File-Law Clerks, Switchboard Operator. Brody Agency (Henrietta
Roden). 340 Broadway (Opp. City Hall)
BArclay 7-8133.
Drnggistt
SPECIALISTS IN VITAMINS AND PRE•criptions.
Blood and urine speciuiens
analyzed. Notary Public, 15c per Bignature.
Special genuine DDT liquid 6% Solution
80c q u a r t . Jav. Drug Co., 305 Broatiway.
WO a-4736.
eoNtMHatloii FREE,
X-RAY
CxanlnatloR ft
Lab«rafery Ttst S2 AVAILABLE
VAKirO.«iR VKINS TKKATKI»
FEES TO SUIT YOU
D r . B u r t o n Davis
I 415
41 Lexington
I HHoo u r s :
^
Capal«1o
V
Ave. ^"J^'^th fI®*'
Mon.-Wed.-Fri. 9 to t , Tkiirs.
Sat. 0 - 1 . Sun. & Holidays I O - l ; i
(Closed all day Tuesday)
J
140 W. 43d (Hours 1-S p.m.) PE tf-1080
ROYAL RESTAURANT (Cor. 163rd St.,
Third Ave., Bronx), features special Sunday dinner f l . 5 0 . Sauerbraten wilU dumplings $1.25. R. Brier, Prop. MOtt Haven
9-7487-7460.
HEDY'S TEA ROO.M, 2 U East 85 St..
N.Y. Free Tea Cup Reading. Weekday, 13
to 12 Midnight, Sunday 2 to 12 Midnight,
Tea aud Cooki^-i 35u. Ekcollcnt readers.
RU 4-3087.
Pro/essional
Crundmother
EX-HlGH SCHOOL TEACHER will lake
Radio Repairs
EXPERT RADIO SERVU E and r. pair. chlldreu, young people, to appointments,
F1REAKM.S » 0 ( (.111, sold.
Call bi-C\«*eii 3 P.M. and 8 P.M. lor ap- Icoturca, places of interest around city;
ciunsmith on |ii<-mi4e4, aluo i>i«'iol range pointment. Robert H. Avery. Apt. 31), swim, outUt, pack for, eetid oK, accomJohn Jovino Co., 6 i'entr« bt.. M. Y. C 33t» Wc»* I 3 5 i h St., W, Y, iCDaecouibe pany on trips, instruct sewiug, cooking,
Uomswork, Culck, Ctt
\ i-ihit'/.
CAunl 0-9r6i»,
Firearm$
Optical Mechanics
Good outlook for experienced
mechanics, since emplojonent is
expected to rise above war and
prewar levels. Keen competition
expected for beginners' job,s because of large number of war
workers trained in grinding and
polishing precision optical lenses.
ISeceintims
Part Tune
Work
Vmuetian Blinds
OWN BLSINES.S AT HOME. Part-full time.
SIEGEI. INC. (Est. 1886) Venetian
.100 tested ways to niako money in 68 Blinds. Built to order, also old blinds compage book, over 40,000 words. Only 35c. pletely reconditioned. Serving N.Y. City 60
Write Delta Disliibutors, P.O. BOK 13», .vt^ars. S. Siegel, Inc. 3(33 West 126 St.,
N. Y. 33. N. T.
N. Y. UN 4-1410.
KYO.
Keen competition may re.sult If
many service-trained instrument
repairmen seek to enter this field,
as they did after World War L
EFFICIENT FORMS
Minnesota State Civil Service
Department has designed a new
Many j o b s f ca- experienced omnibus personnel
transaction
FOR GDARANTEED RADIO
REPAIR workers
during
reconversion form which can be used for fourService. Call GKam 3-3093. All makes.
Limited quantity of all tubea now avail- period, but fewer jobs in next five teen types of transactions.
able. CITY-WIDE RADIO SERViCB. 50 to ten years. Demand thereafter
AHHORTED PUPPIES
UP.
Cooker
SpaiiielH
Siamese and Persian Kitteus.
Fox Terriers and ColUes. See them at
ELITE MEM AND WOMEN M E E l
M.-vdsion Square Pet Shop. 8 5 7 - 8 t h Ave.,
At Irene's Service BAreau, with the pur- X. Y. f 5 1 s l ) . Open to 8:30,
pose of enhancing sooial lite. Dignified.
Confidential. FO 4-B;m;1. Apointments to
Postage Stamp*
8:30.
CIVIL SERVICE, PROFESSIONAL and DON'T THROW THOSE STAMPS AWAY I
Business Clientele. Personal Social Intro- They may have value. Send 3c for "Stamp
ductions. Investigate uiy Method. Book- Want List" showing prices we pay f o r
let Free. Helen Biooks, 100 West 4;3nd U. S, itampB. Stampazine. 315 W. 43nd
St., WI 7-3430. Room 603.
for
* ,I
GUIDE
OLD BROKEN GUNS WANTED. Will pay
30c lb. and u p depending on condition.
Write giving full particular.s to H. Feit,
TRiangle 5-3;i61, 164-180 Montague S t ,
Brooklyn. N. Y.
I.ONELX? MKKT NKW FRIENDS Ihrough
social coirespomleiice. Members from coast
to coast. AU aires, Continental Service,
f>13 F i f t h Ave.. N. Y. U.
Autos
Tuesdav, July 9, 19 M»
aircraft factories during war will won't be great because of modmean keen competition for jobs. erate size of field (less t h a n 25,000 today). Use of machine weldBookkeepers
ing likely to increase in long run,
but trend toward rapid and autoLimited number of new open- matic machinery will result in
ings because of large numbers in slow rise in employment.
field (over 700,000) and considerable turnover. Keen competition
Diesel Mechanics
for jobs because of large number
Increase-expected
in number of
of trained workers and low training requirements for entrance into Diesel maintenance jobs, but new
field. Trend toward greater use of jobs will be filled mainly by
oflBce machines, thus reducing mechanics experienced in repairing other types of engines. Tlie
number of workers needed.
inexperienced men with technical
school training will find it tough
Linotype Operators
to land jobs.
Jobs available for all journeyBindery Workers
men a n d large number of appientices in next few years, a f t e r
Considerable
in employwhich there will be few oppoi-- m e n t expected rise
during next few
tftnities for newcomers, though years, after which
will be
those in field will have good only a few openingstliere
replacechance to hold jol)s. Most jobs ments. Most jobs in for
large cities
and keenest competitiwi in large in the East and Midwest.
cities.
LAAJkAi
Your
LEADER
About 50,000 new jol>s expected
Automobile Mechanics
in next few years but huge supply
Machine Welders
of service - trained mechanics
Outlook good for men with
(570,000) of them), and about
Good prospects next few' years, highest skills but oversupply of
100,000 mechanics employed in but actual number of new jobs Jess-skilled mechanics is likely
during next few years, due to
large numbers trained in armed
forces and in. war work, and men
returning to former jobs. Employment will rise slowly above prewar
level, to about 450,000 by 1950.
READER'S SERVICE
AFTER HOURS
SERVICE
Leg Ailments
Varicose Veins • Open Leg Seres
Phlebitis - Rkeumatism
Arthritis - Sciema
TREVTED WITHOUT OPERATIONS
No olUce Hours on Sundays or
Holidays,
Monday, Thursday 1 to 8 P.M.
Tuesday, Friday 1 to 6 P.M.
Wednesday 1 to 5 P.M.
Saturday 13 to 4 P.M,
I . . A, I I E U L A ,
320 W. 86tli ST„ NEW YORK CITY
EN. 3-9178
Palmfr'i "SKIN SUCCESS" S<MHr U « >l>etiitl,
I- MMM
conUiAing th* Mm« costly ni*div«tion a» KM
provad Ptimer's SKIN SUCCESS" Ointmtnt.
MP ths rich ciMniing, HHMY MiDU IIHtA
finf«r tip*, wiiliclotn or bi-uih and nliow to i
on 3 minuMt. AmaiinKly quick r M u l t i come t«• otaM
i
skin*, afflifUd w i t h pimpltt. bUeklitadit. ituhintf]
iiiifp
•iiMins, and r«i)i*t txlt'ndly c«uMd that n««4 <
(citnlific hygivns ai'tioit of Palmar'* "SKIN
CESS" Soai>. Far your youth cWar, soft lovaliati^
l^a your ikin t h i i luKUnou* 3 minute f o a m ynUim
m«
tioa-traatmant. At loilutiy eouiiUr* avarywha>«
>•« hIH
m
or from K. T
Brown«
DruM Qwnitanv, 121 WaMl.j
T u ^ y ,
July 9 ,
CIVIL S E R V I C E
I9i6'
FIRE LINES
l y QUINCH
(
"Under tti« Helmet"
During the months of July a n d
August 1946, the Office of Chief
of Department wM be open f r o m
9 A.M. to 4 P.M. a a d on Saturdays
from 9 A.M. to 4 Noon. . . .
Charles A. Wilson, former J u n ior Administrative Assistant, on
his application for reinstatement
as Fireman 1st Grade, failed t o
appear for physical examination
and was dropped f r o m the rolls
of the department effective 12:01
A.M. July 1st, 1946. . . . Why not
make more use of the Holland
Tunnel as a regulau- route for
fire apparatus responding f r o m
M a n h a t t a n to Richmond, especially the north shore of t h e
island? Understand they made
the trip to the St. George Perry
In about 23 minutes, less time
t h a n it now takes via Whitehall
St. Perry route
T h e Lieutena n t Roxbury (Eng. 291) affair was
settled amicably in court following the sage advice of Commissioner Quale
T h a t was quite
a nice article by Michael O'Brien
and Richard Mason in the S u n day News of J u n e 30th last, re:
"Public Menance Seen in Need
for Piremen." Too bad it had t o
be spoiled by an inaccuracy, to
wit t h a t the 40 per cent of the
Department on duty 67 hours per
week are paid for the extra time
worked.. This reporter has never
known any fireman ever to have
been paid overtime, nor are they
a t present being paid for time
worked beyond eight hours per
day. . . . Congratulations to Timothy S. Mahoney of Forest Hills,
who last week started his 43rd
year as Chief of the Bureau of
Pire Alarm Telegraph, Borough
of Queervs. . . . Added Oddities a t
t h e Staten Island Perry Fire: Acting Battalion Chiefs Beebe and
Irwin barefooted in a punt paddling around che'"'--'ng the extent
of fire damage to the underside
of the pier, . . . Word comes from
former Fire Commissioner P a t rick Walsh and family t h a t they
are enjoying their vacation in the
Erin Isle after the transoceanic
plane trip. . . . To date no New
York hotel seems to have followed the advice of a well known
columnist to have their bellboys
show guests the nearest fire escape before showing them the
nearest bar. . . . This reporter
wondered why, after attending
a Brooklyn-Philly game last week
a t Ebbets Field, that some better
system isn't worked out for h a n d ling the crowds attending night
games. Public Assembly 'does a
good job in trying to keep the
aisles free, but no telling the calamity t h a t might follow should
fire or similiar accident occur. . . .
Now t h a t the Mayor's Committee
h a s completed the survey on the
rearrangement and of possible
elmination of some fire houses,
I wonder what the final outcome
will be and how soon. . . . The
Comptroller's Office was served
with paE>ers last week on the
Court of Appeals decision concerning those nine Deputy Chiefs
reduced back to Battalion Chiefs;
t h e Corporation Counsel receiving
their copy via mail. . . . Look for
a change in the elmination chart
set-up on or about July 15th. . . .
Something for the books in the
way of long distance fire calls occurred last week when the Queens
Operator received a call for an
airplane fire from Jamaica Airline, Inc. The only catch was t h a t
said company is located in a town
In Massach-usetts and the call was
for a crack up on the landing
SOS
GUARD YOUR PETS
Laboratory Collectors
Are Everywhere
Thouttands of animals are vivise«le«l every year in eoUeges,
Iiu8pituls anil lalMiratories. . . .
Vivisection is cuttinn;, mutilating,
starving, burning, freezing of
living ronnrious animals.
Re«ult: More lioMpituU and
More Diseattes.
VIVISECTION
INVESTIGATION
LEAGUE
11 EAST 44th STREET
NEW YORK 17, N. Y.
'MMuborahip
Su|>|H>rt«l hy voluntary e«iitrlbutioita.
M* iNkid oltkm.
Strip at the local air field. That
would be quite a run for tlie
P..D.N.Y Airport Crash Unit. . . .
I. A. P. F. Conyentlon
The Eighteenth Convention of
the International Association of
Fire Fighters will be held at the
Commodwe Perry Hotel in Toledo, Ohio on September 9th to
13th, 1946 instead at t h e Secor
Hotel. This change in plans was
brought about due to the remodeling and r e h a l ^ i t a t i o n program
now in progress a t the latter
hostelery.
St. George Ferry Fire
One of the largest fires in the
history of the FJ5.N.Y. a n d the
worst to occur on S t a t e n Island
happened on Tuesday afternoon
J u n e 25th, with fire originating
on number one track in the terminal of t h e Staten Island Rapid
Transit and spreading rapidly to
the 41 year old,Municipal Perry
House at St. George, totally destroyed both. The fire was of conflagration proportions and necessitated the transmission of a
Borough Call for Richmond, calling in addition to the fifth alarm
assigment for box 13, St. George,
a f o u r t h alarm assignment t h a t
would normally respond to box
1140 a t Bay Ridge Ave. and Shore
Rd. Bklyn.
T h e alarms transmitted for the
fire period were as follows: J u n e
25th: 2:00 P.M. Box 13 (turned in
by the u n f o r t u n a t e lineman who
was making repairs to t h e cable
a t the time the fire broke out)
E. 154, 155, 51, HL. 78, DC. 8,
BC. 21 At 2:06 : 22-13: E. 153, 156,
152, HL. 77, Chief Mar. Div. Loc.:
E. 161-154, 157-156, 163-152, HL.
79-77. (At this point Richmond
fire alarm central oflice switchboard went out, the fire having
burned through tlie cable on the
under side of t h e pier. Further
alarms h a d to be transmitted via
radio station W H G H t o points
outside of Richmond). At 2:07:
33-13: E. 160, 158, 159, 223. (At
t h e same time Chief Hennessey
ordered the out of service signal
transmitted for the S. I.-Whitehall St. Ferry). At 2:13 M a n h a t t a n Central Office transmitted
222-3-31, followed immediately by
88-33-13. E. 7, 6, 10, 32, 4, 31
(these companies normally relocated in Richmond houses on a
3rd alarm, respond directly to the
fire via Holland Tunnel and Bayonne Bridge) Loc. E. 24-6, 203-31,
256-4, BC. 3-21. At 2:14: 44-13:
E. 29, 27, 9, 55, 13, 15, BC. 1,
GOW. 1 (because of interstate
regulations not permitted t h r u
Holland Tunnel the fuel wagon
h a d to go via 69th St. Ferry), Loc.
E. 19-29, 28-9. At 2:22: 55-13
(Normally M a n h a t t a n companies
t h a t relocate in Richmond on 3rd
ready gone directly to the fire on
alarm resond to the fire on the
5th. but said companies h a d althe 3rd alarm) Loc. E. 12-160, 30
-158, 34- 30, 205-12. At 2:45 a
Borough Call 88-13177-22-1140:
E. 241, 201, 242, 284, 278, 228. At
At 2:51: 88-13-44-1140: E. 247,
243, 282, 220, 239, 240. At 3:01:
88-5-13-57 (Sp. call for the Firefighter). At 3:09: 88-5-13-86: (Sp.
call for the McClellan).
While all this was going on a
fire broke out in Brooklyn in a
two story f r a m e house a t 52
Clarkson Ave., box 1550 at 3:17 P.
M. n i i s blaze spread to the f r a m e
house on either side and at 3:29
a second alarm was sent in for
which the dispatcher h a d to t r a n s mit a third alarm due to the 12
Brooklyn companies in S. I. and
3 locating in M a n h a t t a n .
Because of the two large fires
occurring at the same time, on
orders of Acting Chief of Dept.
Murphy the recall signal 6-6-6-6
was sounded at 3:45 P.M. At 5:26:
444-6-2 (release for Bronx). At
5:28: 4444 - 6 - 5 (release for
Queens). At 5:331 Sp. call for
GOW 3 from Bklyn. At 5:51:
4444-6-4 (release for Bklyn). At
7:42: 88-9-13-22 At 7:58: 88-913-21. At 8:16 Sp. call for Res.
Co. 2. At 9:26 Sp. call for the
Willett, then relocated at the B a t tery). At 9:55: 222-3-71 (39th St.
Perry 008),
At 11:38: Call for
70 men and 7 officers. .
On Wednesday J u n e 26th at
2:00 A.M. call for air compressors. At 3:20 A.M.: 222-3-72 (69th
St. Ferry OOS). At 3:50 A.M.:
88-5-13-86 Pireboat Duane). This
made a total of six firebiats at
work at the same fire. At 12:05
P.M.: 5-5-5-5 National Standard
at half-staff for the hneman
killed in the line of duty). At 2
P.M.: recall rescinded for Manh a t t a n and Richmond. On T h u r s day J u n e 27 a t 1:18 P.M.: 88666-13-1 (recalling Amb. No. 1).
S.I. Ferry Back in Service
Signal 444-3-31. transmitted on
LEADKR
Page Fifteen
July 2nd w«« to notify the Fire
Dept. perscmnel t h a t service on
the Staten Island Ferry from t h e
foot of Whitehall St., M a n h a t t a n
to St. George, Staten Island h a d
been restored. However, the restoration was only for the t r a n s portation of Fire Dept. apparatus
responding from New York to
multiple alarm fires In Richmond,
sufficient repairs having been
made to the slip ordinarily used
by t h e 39th St. Ferry to allow
a boat to dock. Vehicles of a n y
other nature will still be compelled to use the 69th St. Ferry
or go via the Holland Tunnel t h r u
Jersey and back over one of t h e
three bridges to Staten Island.
l y J. RICMAID lUMSTm
Farmingdale Offers
Technical Training
Technical training in the industrial and related fields Is now
available t o residents of Nassau
a n d Suffolk CJounties according to
an announcement f r o m the Long
Island Agricultural and Technical
Institute at Farmingdale.
Courses two years In len^rth f w
high school graduates will be
available a t the opening of t h e
Fall semester In: Building Constructi<m. Highway and Bridge
Construction, Aircraft Manufacrture. Aircraft Maintenance and
Operation, Electrical Equipment
with Industrial Electronics, Industrial
Chemistry, Refrigeration,
Heating and Air Conditioning,
Industrial Instrumentation, Metal
Products Design, Production and
Service,
Food
Administration,
Inspection,
Technical
Dental
Power Laundry a n d Dry Cleaning,
Advertising Art and Design, Radio
and Commiuiications.
A circular describing the courses
may be obtained from the Institute.
JACK lENNY, seen to b* fm im
tiM story of bit lif», "Always
L«av* Them Laiigbiiig."
BETTY FIELD will relieve
Haila Stoddard of the title role
in "Dream Giirl," when she returns to the play on September
2nd. Miss Stoddard substituted
very abley for Miss Field wbile
the latter was on vacation.
T h e Negro musical, "St. Louis
W o m a n " closed a f t e r 113 successful performances a t t h e Martin
Beck Theatre.
W a r n e r Bros, version of the
Irving Berlin stage hit, "This U
The Army" has been released In
China with all profits going t o
t h e China Famine Belief Fund.
"Always Leave T h e m Laughing" Is still in the conference
stage a t Warners, with J a c k
Benny a n d Humphrey Bogart
will co-star in t h e production,
participating. As you p r o b ^ l y
have heard, "Always Leave T h e m
. Laughing" is the movie version of
the life of t h a t talented musician
and comedian. Jack Benny.
The star boarder of the season, "Open City" is now in its
6th m o n t h at the World Theatre and still playing to capacity
audiences.
The R K O Palace has on
schedule three great stars in a
new melodrama entitled "Tbe
Stranger." Edward G. Robinson,
Loretta Young and Orson Welles
are the leading players.
The great British fflm, "Henry
V," starring Laurence Olivier is
still playing to record crowds a t
the City Center. Put this film on
yoAr "can't-afford-to-miss-it" list.
Ejgnl Flynn and B a r b a r a S t a n w y c l ^ r e now before t h e cameras
as the leading players in the new
production
"Ory Wolf,"
and
adaptation of the best-selling
novel by Marjorie Carlton.
Special Session Asked For List Extension
Long Island
IjflJAIVTlJCK HOUSE
0p«n nntU October
Cor reservations write Mrs. L . Frankline March, Fox 761, Quogne. L. I .
Pbone Qnorue 4228.
Owned and operated by colored.
A request for a special session
of t h e State Legislature to extend
eligible lists which expire this year
has been made to Governor
Dewey.
I n a letter to ttie Governor,
Bernard Weiss, a NYC attorney,
pointed out t h a t many lists which
are due to expire this year are
headed by veterans. He cited t h e
difficulty faced by lawyers who
have been in service ai^d must
start f r o m scratch in thlfeir law
practice.
"TTie possibility of civil service
appointment has been a n import a n t morale factor to t h e r e t u r n ing veteran," said Attorney Weiss.
NOW OPEN
Rl C H W I N
HEALTH FARM
J u s t what a vacation should
mean. An atmosphere of rest
and relaxation. Clean rooms
a n d comfortable beds. Good
meals. Fresh vegetables and
chickens.
YOUNG
SIDNEY
A HAL
RICHARDS
WALLIS
production
A P o r o m o u n t Picture
For reservations phone Kingston 3 1 - R l
or Dayton 3-7435 or write RICHWIN
HEAX.TH FARM. Stoneridge P . O. Box
No. R l , 138, N.Y. Operated by colored.
"THE PATCHES"
WILL JAMES'
^^.T
Clinton Corners, N. Y .
An Idea/ Spot to Relax and Jt«st
Private Bathinr. FiBhingr, etc. Wholesome Food. All conveniences. Reservations for day, week, weekends. Reasonable. Write or phone Wm. F . Kinr.
2233 Seventh Ave., N. Y. EDgecombe
4-2666. Operated-owned by colored.
^ ^
In Tecfcakolorl
Starring
With
FRED MacMURRAY
Directed b r IjOVIS KINO
COOL
R
ANN BAXTER
gURL IVES
O
X
Y
AVENUE ft SOtb STREET
BETTE
A HAVEN OF REST * RECRKATIOI^
R. F. D. No. X
GARDINER, N. t .
Phone: New P s l t s 5508
For Particulars Write or Phone
NEW YORK OFFICES—1940 Tih AV.
Phones: VN. 4-077S — 7921
by R. BA8SI.ER
DAVI'S
In WARNER BROS. Hit
"A
STOLEN
LIFE"
With
G L E N N FORD
•
D A N E CLARK
W A L T E RDirected
BRENNAN
•
CHARLIE RUGGLES
by CURTIS BERNHARDT
DANCE
HOLLYWOOD
THf STAIS
E V E R Y SAT. NITE
iROADWAY of SI St STREET
CONTINUOUS
f HK)
P E I \ T H 0 1 I I S E
DKUGHTFUl^LY COOL—OPEN
AIR
13 ASTOR PL., ofr iway. ft 8 St.
Popular Orchestra. Adni. $1.00
UuncliiK Rain or Nhine
Indoor M d Outdoor Ballroon
Eleanor PARKER
•
Paul HENREID
Alexis SMITH
I N WARMER
••
DANCE
FREE
IN PERSON
SPIKE JONES and His City Slickers
Plus
AND HIS ORCHFSTRA
His
AMUSEMENT
PARK,
N
J.
Big
Revue
BROADWAY al 47lh STREET
Zimmerman's Hungaria
AMERICAN HUNftARIAN
PALISADES
HIT
OF HUMAN BONDAGE"
EVERY NIGHT
ART MOONEY
BROS.'
W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM'S
lOS f f w l ««tk St.
BMt or Bwm.
BAL TABARIN
S T R A N D
VA( ATIUNINU ANU RKNUV.VTING.
W I I X iU':OI>lSN JUI.Y
» OrcbMtrma. 3 ll«*u«w NiuJy. Uitiifins.
PI e-0(Hi». U«Lux« VrwMk UiMiwr f l . ' M .
M* cttvcr. Air cooled.
Page Sixteen
CIVIL
SERVirK
LEADER
Official Leave Rules for
Government Employees
Tuesday, July % 1946
PROGRESS REPORT
O N N Y. STATE TESTS
(Continued from Page S>
Department of Public Works: 41
In case of the separation of an tion: 29 candidates, held April 27, candidates, held May 25, 1946.
1946. Rating of the written exam- Rating of the written examinaemployee who is Indebted for un- ination
Is In progress.
tion has not been started.
earned leave, the employee shall
Principal Account Clerk, DeSenior Personnel Technician
refund the amount paid him tor
partment of Audit and Control,
(Civil
Engineering),
Department
the period of such excess, or de- of Civil Service: 17 candidates, Retirement System: 19 candidates,
duction therefor shall be made held
April 27, 1946. Rating of the held May 25, 1946. Rating scale
from any salary due him. This written examination is in pro- In preparation.
Senior Account Clerk, jbepartsection shall not apply in cases of gress.
death, retirement for disability,
Senior State Publicity Agent, ment of Audit and Control, Reor reduction of force, or in case Department of Commerce: 22 tirement System: 42 candidates,
an employee is unable to return candidates, held April 27, 1946. held May 25, 1946. Rating scale
to duty because of disability, evi- Rating of the written examina- in preparation.
Senior Civil Engineer (Field),
dence of which shall be supported tion is In progiess.
State Publicity Agent, Depart- Department of Public Works: 121
by an acceptable medical certifiment of Commerce: 41 candidates, candidates, held May 25, 1946.
cate.
Rating of the written examination
Leave without pay may be held April 27, 1946. Rating of the has not been started.
gianted to an employee for a pe- written examination Is In proTitle Attorney, Department of
riod not exceeding 12 months re- gress.
Tax Examiner, Department of Law, Albany: 16 candidates, held
gardless of whether he has leave
standing to his credit: Provided, Taxation and Finance: 575 can- May 25, 1946. Rating of the
That an employee absent because didates, held April 27, 1946. Rat- written examination has not been
of injuries received in line of duty ing of Part I is completed. Rating started.
Assistant Civil Engineer (Field),
may be carried on leave without scale for Part II Is In preparation.
Estate Tax Examiner, Depart- Department of Public Works: 171
pay for the period for which he
is paid disability compensation by ment of Taxation and Finance: candidates, held June 8. 1946.
the
Employee's
Compensation 45 candidates, held May 27. 1946. Rating of the written examination
Rating of the written examina- has not been started.
Commission.
Assistant Civil Engineer (Field),
When a permanent employee is tion is In progress.
Department of Public Works: 220
appointed, reappointed, or transPROMOTION
candidates, held June 8, 1946.
ferred to another position as a
permanent employee, with no
Principal Clerk, Department of Rating of the written examinabreak in service or a break of Commerce: 7 candidates, held tion has not been started.
Senior Draftsman, Department
less than 90 days, his leave ac- March 30, 1945. Rating of the
count shall be disposed of as fol- written examination is completed. of Public Works: 11 candidates,
lows:
Rating of training and experience held Juxie 8. 1946. Rating of the
(a) If the position is within the is completed. Waiting for service written examination has not been
started.
purview of the leave acts of March record ratings.
.Assistant Civil Engineer (De14, 1936, the leave account shall
Assistant Milk Sanitarian, Debe certified to the emplojang partment of Health: 7 candidates, sign), Department of Public
agency for credit or charge to the held April 27, 1946. Rating of the Works: 42 candidates, held June
employee.
written examination is completed. 15, 1946. Rating of the written
(b) If the position to which h e Ti'aining and experience to be examination has not been started.
Assistant Civil Engineer (Deis appointed, reappointed, or rated.
of
Public
transferred is not within the purAssociate Civil Engineer (Field), sign), Department
view of the leave acts of March Department of Public Works: 51 Works: 13 candidates, held June
14, 1936, the employee shall be candidates, held April 27, 1946. 15, 1946. Rating of the written
furnished with a statement o^ his Rating of the written examina- examination has not been started.
sick leave account and if he is tion has not been'fetarted.
Clerk (Fingerprinting), Departsubsequently appointed, reappointAssociate Insurance Examiner ment of Correction: 9 candidates,
ed, or transferred to a position (Life), Department of Insurance: held June 15, 1946. Rating scale
within the purview of such acts, 9 candidates, held April 27, 1946. is in preparation.
with no break in service or a Rating of the written examinaPrincipal, School of Nursing,
break of less than 90 days, the tion is in progi'ess.
Department of Mental Hygiene,
leave shown bo be due shall be
Senior Engineering Aide, De- Institutions: 8 candidates, held
credited to his account.
partment of Public Works: 69 June 15, 1946. Rating of the
(c) Any person who was ap- candidates, held April 27, 1946, written examination is in propointed, reappointed, or trans- Rating of the wi'itten examina- gress.
ferred prior to January 1, 1945, tion is in progress.
Principal Stenographer, Public
to a position not within the purSenior Examiner of Municipal
Commission, Albany: 12
view of the leave acts of March Affairs, Department of Audit and Service
candidates, held June 15, 1946.
14, 1936, who is or has been ap- Control: 62 candidates, held April The
rating of the written exampointed, reappointed, or trans- 27, 1946. Rating of the written ination
has not been started.
ferred to a position within the examination is in progress.
Senior Clerk, Department of
purview of such acts with no
Junior Civil Engineer (Design),
break in service, or with a break Department of Public Works: 18 Labor, Albany Office: 20 candiof less than 30 days if the reap- candidates, held May 18, 1946. dates, held June 15, 1946. The
pointment occurred between De- Rating schedule completed. Ready rating scale has been prepared.
Written examination to be rated.
cember 31, 1944 and March 1, to rate written examination.
1946, or less than 90 days if the
Senior Parole Officer, Executive
Associate Insurance Examiner
reapiwintment occurred on or (Casualty), Insurance
Depart- Department, Division of Parole:
after March 1, 1946, shall be cred- ment: 10 candidates, held May 25, 13 candidates, held June 15, 1946.
ited with the leave shown to be 1946. Rating of the written exam- The rating of the written examdue.
ination is in progress.
ination has not been started.
Junior Civil Engineer (Field),
When a permanent employee is
Senior Typist (Accounts), Deappointed, reappointed, or trans- Department of Public Works: 273 partment of Public Works, Alferred to a temporary position candidates, held May 25, 1946. bany: 21 candidates, held June
with no break in service, or a Rating of the written examina- 14, 1946. Rating scale has been
break of less than 90 days, his tion has not been started.
prepared. Written examination to
leave account shall be disposed of
Junior Civil Engineer (Field), be rated.
as follows:
(a) If the position is in the
and special meetings of the Asso- same agency he shall be credited
(Continued from Page 2)
or more members in the county ciation shall be paid by the chap- with such leave as may be due
him 01- charged with any unliquidivision shall receive from the ter from such fund.
dated leave which may have been
treasurer an annual payment of
ARTICLE IV
advanced.
spending it at the home of her
(Continued from Page 2)
two dollars, based upon the paid
Expulsion of Members
The Postmaster General Harry has fine material to work mother.
membership in such chapter. The
Section 1.. A member whose and(d)olScers
and employees in or with and we expect t h a t he will
Mr. Jerry Kane and Mrs. Ann
expenses of delegates to regular dues are in arrears for four
the Post Office Department, wind up with a champion team. Hathaway are back at work after
months shall be notified in writing under
those serving in the de- Dr. Harmon LaMar, recently dis- prolonged illnesses.
and, if he fails to remit his dues except
partmental service and in the charged from the armed services.
Ernest Collella is spending a
within' thirty days thereafter, he Mail
Equipment Shops.
Is our new dentist. Most of our few weeks vacation at the home
may be expelled from the AssoEmployees not required to men who were in service have of his wife's parents in Saranac
ciation upon the recommendation be (e)
continuously employed during returned. Housing situation still Lake.
of the Board of Directors.
regular tour of duty, such as (1) critical at Clinton. Rumor has It
Mr. Edward Dougherty, a forSection 2. Any officer or mem- per diem or per hour employees that the folks on the hill intend mei- employee in the Laboratory,
FOR THE FUTURE!
ber may be suspended or expelled engaged in an emergency who may to have it even more crowded. is vacationing with his friends in
by a two-thirds vote of the Board be employed for more than one Some say Tot LaFountaine's vaca- this vicinity.
of Directors for conduct preju- 7- or 8-hour shift within 24 hours tion ended the same time as McYes—everyone dislikes planMr. and Mrs. Arthur Cashman
dical to the best Interests of the during the emergency; (2) part- Corry's refreshments.
are spending their summer vacaning for a burial site, but a
Association after written charges time or intermittent employees;
tion in Ellenburg.
person with foresight knows
Ray B r o o k
have been preferred against him (3) persons engaged under conone can make a more inteland he has been afforded a tract; (4) employees engaged
The newly elected Executive
NYC Chapter
reasonable opportunity to be temporarily for less than a month Council of Ray Brook Chapter
ligent choice when calm and
heard.
on a piece-price basis; (5) em- met on July 2, at which time the
Room 905, Chapter headquarcollected. Most times we
ployees who are paid at hourly following committees were ap- ters, will be closed for the rest
ARTICLE V
are confronted with this unrates
but
who
are
not
engaged
Committees
of the summer. Members wishing
proved:
pleasant task when griefConstitutional Committee—Ken- to contact the Chapter, call K. A.
The standing committees of the on construction work, such as
stricken, and decisions made
mechanics,
skilled
laborers,
and
neth Jones, chairman.
Laura Valentine at 233 Broadway, PubAssociation shall be as follows:
lic Service Commission, or Joseph
at this time, are not always
Legislative Committee, Auditing others engaged in various sex-vices Ward, Margaret Richter.
on
maintenance,
repair,
clean-up
Membership Committee—Cath- J. Byrnei, 80 Centre Street.
Committee, Grievance Committee,
the best. Write, or phone towork,
etc.,
where
employment
is
erine Rice, chairman, Henry
Eva R. Heller, Corresponding
Social
Committee,
Education
day for our Free Booklet F.
Committee, Membership Commit- more or less intermittent and not Swan, Rudy Burger, Dora Pryne, Secretary, is away on a few weeks
on
a
regular
and
continuous
basis;
Mary Starks.
vacation.
tee, Pensions Committee, Salary
THE EVERGREENS CEMETERY
Sick
Committee — Margaret
President Charles R. Culyer has
Committee,. Publicity Committee. (6) consultants employed and paid
on
the
basis
of
"when
actually
(Nun Sfc-turiiiii)
Oriss and Elizabeth Miller, co- been on a vacation for the past
ARTICLE VI
employed";
and
(7)
employees
llUbliwick, CooptT & Ct'iilriil AveM.
chairmen, Tena McGiliis, Henry few weeks at his country home in
Amendments
paid on a fee basis, such as physi- Swan, Prank Witkowski, Sam New Jersey.
itruuklyii 7, New Vork
These By-Laws may be amended cians, surgeons, and other con- Garan.
Charles Offt, the day supervisUl.ciiiiiore a-0»00
by a majority vote at any meet- sultants.
Harley Webb approved chair- ing janitor, has just been released
ing" of the Association.
(f) Allen and native labor em- man of Picnic Committee and from the Brooklyn Eye and Ear,
ployed outside the continental Carl Eden of Publicity Committee. Hospital after a cataract operalimits of the United States: ProBesides the regular business of tion. Best wishes from the ChapPERFECT FOR PICNICS AND PARTIES
vided. that the head or govern- the committee, the delegates gave
James J. Chiararalle the (Mayor
ing body of any governmental their report of the special meeting ter for a speedy recovery,
agency which employs alien and of the Association.
of Parkchester) so dubbed by his
native labor outside the contiCongratulations to Mr. and Mrs. fellow employees of the Depart
nental limits of the United States Robert Walters on the birth of ment of Public Woa-ks, is away
may promulgate regulations gov- their first baby boy.
on a three weeks vacation. Also
g-OLDSK
'Bfipli>2C
^OTUtrO
CHWS
erning the granting of leave to
Mrs. Ernest Stringham has Jack Taylor, one of the operators
AT ALL GOOD
DELICATESSENS
such employees.
at 80 Centre Street.
taken a leave of absence and
of hours based upon the new work
day.
Leave shall accrue to an employee while in a leave-with-pay
status, provided he returns to
duty, or provided that failure to
return to duty Is due to death,
disability (evidence of which
shall be supported by an acceptable medical certificate), retirement for disability, or reduction
of force.
Employees who entered military,
naval or merchant marine service
between January 13 and December 21, 1944, and who are restored
in accordance with statutory provisions after such service may be
credited with leave accrued during the period of terminal leave
granted immediately prior to
entry into active military, naval,
or merchant marine service.
Whenever a permanent employee's absence in a nonpay status
totals the equivalent of the basepay hours in 1 bi-weekly pay
period, the credits for annual
leave shall be reduced 1 day and
for sick leave 5/8 day for each
such period. The total deductions
in sick leave credits on account
of nonpay status in any one
calendar year shall not exceed 15
days: Provided, that when an employee absent because of injury
received in line of duty requests
to be carried on leave-withoutpay, he shall, upon his return to
duty, receive credit for accrued
leave covering the period for
which he was paid disability compensation by the Employees' Compensation Commission.
Leave shall be charged only for
ab.sence upon days which an employee would otherwise work and
receive pay and shall be exclusive
of Sundays which do not occur
within a regular tour of duty,
holidays, and all nonwork days
established by Federal statute or
by Executive or" administrative
order: Provided, That when a
holiday is declared by general administrative order to be a work
day, an employee who absents
himself from work without permission on that day shall be subject to a deduction of 1 day's pay.
Under ordinaiT circumstances
unavoidable or necessary absence
from duty not in excess of 30
minutes, and tardiness, shall be
excused for adequate reasons, or
handled administratively by requiring additional work, or by a
charge against any compensatory
time which the employee may
have to his credit as a result of
overtime previously worked. In
General Provisions the event that this privilege is
Whenever the number of hours abused such absences, and tardiof duty in an employee's work day ness, shall be handled adminisis permanently changed the leave tratively by a charge against anstanding to his credit shall be nual leave, or by disciplinary acconverted to the proper number tion.
(Continued from Page 7)
hour, and additional leave shall
be charged In multiples of 1 hour.
An employee who is absent on
account af sickness shall notify
his supervisor as early as practicable on the first day of such
absence, or as soon thereafter as
possible. Failure to give such
notice may result in the absence
being charged to annual leave or
leave without pay, as the circumstances may justify. Requests for
sick leave for medical, dental, or
optical examination or treatment
shall be submitted for approval
prior to the beginning of the
leave.
All applications for sick leave
for medical, dental, or optical
examination or treatment shall
be supported by a certificate of
the employee that he has received
such examination or treatment
and shall include the name and
address of the physician, dentist,
or other practitioner visited and
the date and hour of visit.
When sickness occurs within a
period of annual leave and lasts
5 or more consecutive work days,
the period of illness may be
charged as sick leave and the
charge against annual leave reduced accordingly.
Application
for such substitution of sick cleave
for annual leave shall be made
within 2 days after return to duty
and shall be supported by a medical certificate, or other evidence
administratively acceptable to the
same extent as provided in these
regulaticiis.
Advance of Sick Leave
In cases of serious disability or
aMments, and when the exigencies
of the situation so require, sick
leave may be advanced to permanent employees not in excess of 30
days: Provided, That no advances
of sick leave shall be made to any
employee unless the absence from
duty on account of illness is for
a period, or periods, of 5 or more
consecutive work days; that every
application for absence leave shall
be swpported by a medical certificate; that the total of such advances shall be charged against
sick leave subsequently credited.
Sick leave may be advanced irrespective of whether the employee
has annual leave to his credit.
Sick leave shall not be advanced
to an employee holding a limited
appointment, or one expiring on
a specified date, in excess of the
total sick leave that would accrue
during the remaining period of
such appointment.
The New Constitution
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TRCAT CRISPS
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