QAAASL Study Material For Patrolman Test ^ ^ / t A t U J i , L i E A P E l t rnmmmmmmmimi^^mmm^mmmmmm^mmmm^mmK^mmmimmmmmt^mtmm^mmmmmmm Americas Vol. 8—No. 2 6 I Largest Weekly for Public Tuesday, March 11, 1947 See Page 9 Employees Price Five O n t s OFFICIAL SAMPLES OF SANITATION MAN WRITTEN EXAM 'Anti-Strike' Bill Seen as Severely Curbing Peaceful Activities of Public Employees •y MAXWELL LEHMAN The Condon-Wadlin anti-strike bill now before the State Legislature must be defeated. 1. It cannot achieve its objective. 2. That objective is not a good one. 3. The bill contains "hidden objectives" which are fraught with tremendous danger. 4. Not only does the bill restrict the public emp l o y e e ; it places every government unit, from the State to the smallest hamlet, into a legal straitjacket. 5. It has not been proved that any compelling reason exists necessitating so drastic a measure. 6. The bill makes of public employees a group of second-class citizens, with less rights and liberties than other sections of the population. 7. Discontent with conditions of employment cannot be dealt with by denying the right to strike; it can only be dealt with by providing better means for peaceful elimination of the sources of discontent. 8. While the bill professes to outlaw the strike, it could be used to render impotent even the peaceful efforts of civil employees and their organizations to obtain improved w a g e s or conditions of work. A Fundamental Right The right to strike must be regarded as a fundamental right in a democracy. All who work should have (Continued on Page 6> Tax Exemption Of Pensions IMalces First Headway S|H'. iiil to The LKADKH W A S H I N G T O N , M a r c h 10—Recognition of the principle of lightening t h e t a x burden of t h e elderly, m a n y of wlioin are trying to live on m e a g r e pensions, is gaining h e a d w a y in Congress for t h e first time, a f t e r years of effort. However, public employees are greatly interested in obtaining passage of a bill allowing exemptions up to $1,440 on their pension income. T h e K n u t s o n t a x reduction bill, H.R. 1, includes a $500 exemptioii for all persons at least 65 years old. Opposition to tiie higher m a x i m u m h a s developed f r o m technical advisers to the House Ways a n d M e a n s Committee, of which R e p resentative Harold K n u t s o n is C h a i r m a n . T h e a r g u m e n t presented is t h a t $500 exceeds the average of the actual exemptions t h a t obtain under t h e $1,440 m a x i m u m oi t h e m e m b e r s of t h e Railroad R e t i r e m e n t System a n d the $1,020 noaximum u n d e r Social Security. E m ployee organizations point to t h e fallacy of using t h e average, since it does not o p e r a t e on t h e railroad a n d Social Security r e t i r e m e n t s ' catiti to p r e v e a l e x e m p t l u m up to $1,440 uud $1,020. Office Jobs To Open A t U. S. Board A Federal examination for probational (permanent) appointm e n t to t h e positions of Field Assistant a n d Claims Assistant, CAF-4. a n d CAF-5. $2,394-$2,644, was a n n o u n c e d by t h e U. S. Civil Service E x a m i n e r s f o r t h e Social Security Administration. T h e v a cancies to be filled a r e in t h e field oflices of t h e B u r e a u of Old-Age a n d Survivors I n s u r a n c e , Social Security A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , i n large a n d medium-sized cities i n New York, New Jersey, Delaware a n d Pennsylvania. Competitors will be required to t a k e a w r i t t e n test. Applicants f o r b o t h positions m u s t h a v e h a d two years' experience f o r g r a d e CAF-4, a n d t h r e e years' experience for CAF-5, in government, business, education, industry, or the armed forces, p e r f o r m i n g work which h a s involved t h e exercise of skills related to these jobs a n d which h a s involved extensive experience. Applicants m a y substitute, a t t h e r a t e of one year of academic study f o r n i n e m o n t h s of experience, completion of a full f o u r - y e a r course of study in a college, university or t e a c h e r t r a i n i n g institution of recognized s t a n d i n g , with at least 24 semester h o u r s in one or in a n y combination of t h e following: socialogy, economics, raw, political science, psychology, education, h i s tory, public a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , social welfare, a n d related social sciences. I n s u b s t i t u t i n g less t h a n a full course of study for a p a r t of t h e experience, a p p l i c a n t s m u s t show for each year of education completed, a n average of a t least 6 semester h o u r s in one or in a combination of t h e fields listed above. Apply to U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 W a s h i n g t o n St., M a n h a t t a n , or t h e Executive Secretary, Board o. U. S. Civil Service Examiners. Social Security Administration. Room 2300, 11 West 42nd S t i e e t . New York 18, N. Y. Closing d a t e is Monday, M a r c h 24, More State News, pp. 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 12. 13. Filing Now Open For $54 NYC Job Samples of the written examination. for Sanitation Man, Class B, based on the last test, given in 1940, and the current policy of the NYC Civil Service Commission, are presented by The L E A D E R this week. The period for receipt of applications opened yesterday (Monday) at City Collector offices (addresses on p. 8) and will remain open until and including Thursday, March 27. T h e r e were 100 questions given i n t h e l a s t e x a m i n a t i o n , of which 26 were directly p e r t a i n i n g to t h e duties of S a n i t a t i o n M a n . T h e r e were f o u r questions designed to test t h e knowledge of City Grovernment. F o u r m o r e questions covered t h e reaction of c e r t a i n m a t e r i a l s w h e n exposed to w e a t h er conditions. T e n questions c o n - cerned themselves with oil a n d its use in m o t o r vehicles. T h e use a n d care of basic tools were covered by 10 questions. Eleven questions tested t h e applic a n t s ' knowledge of first aid. Seven questions were on snow r e moval, a n d five on t r u c k s a n d flushers. Five questions were on (Continued on Page 81 Minimum Heiglit Reduced to 5' 4 In 2 NYC Tests n T h e height r e q u i r e m e n t f o r S a n i t a t i o n M a n , Class B. h a s been reduced to 5 feet, 4 inches, by t h e NYC Civil Service Commission following its reduction of t h e h e i g h t m i n i m u m for S u r f a c e Line O p e r a t o r , B o a r d of T r a n s p o r t a t i o n , f r o m 5 f e e t 6 inches also to 5 feet, 4 inches. S a n i t a t i o n M a n f p r m e r l y h a d a 5-foot, 5 - i n c h minimum. T h e other e x a m i n a t i o n s in which both t h e h e i g h t m i n i m u m m a y be reduced, possibly to t h e same 5 feet, 4 inches, a n d t h e t h r e e - y e a r experience r e q u i r e m e n t lowered, are for M a i n t a i n e r ' s Helper, Classes A. B. C a n d D, Board of T r a n s p o r t a t i o n . Last Wednesday t h e M a i n t a i n e r ' s Helper applications were s u p posed to open, as t h e Commission h a d so a n n o u n c e d , but t h a t was called off by the Commission pending a restudy of niinimum r e quirements. T h e p a r t i c u l a r question t h e r e was not so m u c h m i n i m u m h e i g h t as t h e t h r e e years' m i n i m u m experience requirement. On behalf of veterans, m a n y of w h o m were said not to have a n o p p o r t u n i t y to gain t h e required experience, t h e T r a n s p o r t Workers Union p r o tested, as it h a d done successfully with the m i n i m u m h e i g h t in tlio Suxiace U u e Operutoi' teiit. Page TH-O CIVIL SXAfEl fVEWS SERVICE State Employee Drive Is Improving Chances Of a 10 Per Cent Bonus Spooial to Thn LEADEK ALBANY, March 10—The 10 per cent bonus bill received strong backing as State employees urged legislators to pass it, citing the rising cost of living and the inadcquatcy of State salaries to cope with the continuing rise in cost. State employees, by leltei-s, telephone calls, personal solicitation and telegrams continued their strong demand foi- tlieii* No. 1 objective. They got friends and relatives to join the letter drive. T h e bill was d r a f t e d b r t h e Civil Service Employees Association and was i n t r o d u c e d in t h e S e n a t e by Seymour H a l p e r n , of Queens (S.I. 2299) a n d in t h e Assembly by Wilson C. Van Duzer, of O r a n g e (A.I. 2295). T h e bill is in t h e S e n a t e F i n a n c e Committee, Room 332, Capitol. Albany 1, N. Y.. a n d in t h e Assembly Ways a n d M e a n s Committee, Room 342. T h e H a l p e r n - V a n Duzer bill would raise pay for t h e fi.scal year b e n n i n g April 1, 1947. T h e m e a s u r e was Introduced a t t h e req u e s t , of t h e Association to assist S t a t e employees to ' m e e t the greatly increased living costs. " S t a t e employees f a c e serious economical h a r d s h i p s in t h e f u t u r e unless this m e a s u r e is a p proved," says t h e A.ssociation. Should Request Supoort "Every S t a t e employee should request his or h e r representative in t h e Legislature to support t h e bill. E a c h employee m u s t have his f a m i l y , friends, relatives, neighbors, m e r c h a n t s , a n d local fraternal, social, professional, t r a d e a n d religious organizations advise t h e Governor a n d their legislative representatives to a p prove t h e measure. " T h e cost of living h a s increased m o r e t h a n 50 p e r cent since p r e war days, while t h e war e m e r gency pay g r a n t e d S t a t e workers r a n g e d f r o m 14 per cent to 30 per cent. Thus, t h e r e a l wages of S t a t e workers h a v e been reduced a b o u t 18 per c e n t during t h e p a s t year, a n d up to 34 per cent since pre-war. " T h e results of this reduction a r e t h o u s a n d s of vacancies in S t a t e service for more lucrative employment elsewhere. . . . S t a t e workers t a k i n g e x t r a outside e m ployment to supplement i n a d e q u a t e incomes a n d exhausting t h e i r a c c u m u l a t e d savings. . . . T h o u s a n d s of S t a t e jobs filled by untested temporary appointments , . . a n d m u c h m o r e evidence. "Governor Dewey indicated concern a s to t h e economic welf a r e of S t a t e employees in t h e event living costs continue to i n crease. They h a v e increased since t h e Governor s message. T h e r e is every indication prices will go much higher. "The Wholesale Commodity Price I n d e x advances steadily a n d is f a r above t h e level of retail prices. T h i s is a sure sign of higher retail costs a h e a d . "Recently Increased freight r a t e s call for h i g h e r prices. " I t is a p p a r e n t t h a t Congress will approve higher rents, which h a v e been stagle u p to now. T h i s item represents a good p a r t of t h e average wage e a r n e r ' s budget. " M e a t prices a r sky-rocketing. "Food prices are again on t h e rise. Workers in a Fix " I t is n o t possible for S t a t e workers to meet p r e s e n t prices, let alone h i g h e r prices, without a t least a m o d e r a t e a d j u s t m e n t . " D a t a on t h e committees considering t h e bill follow: Senate Finance Committee, Room 332, S t a t e Capitol, Albany, N. Y.: A r t h u r Wicks. C h a i r m a n ; J o h n D. B e n n e t t , Seymour H a l p e r n , J a m e s J, Crawford, S a m u e l L. Greenberg, Elmer F. Q u i n n , F r a n cis J . M a h o n e y , Alexander A. Falk, Isidore Dollinger, William F. Condonfl Pliny W. Williamsan, T h o m a s C. Desmond, Frederic H. Bontecou, Gilbert T. Seelye, B e n j a m i n F . Feinberg, Fred A. Young, Isaac B. Mitchell, W a l t e r W. Stokes, Floyd E. Anderson, C h a u n cey B. H a m m o n d , H e n r y W. G r i f fith, Austin W. Erwin, Allen J . Oliver, William Bewley, W a l t e r J. Mahoney, Charles O. Burney, Tuesday, IVfnrrli 11, 1947 LEADER Jr., a n d George H. Pierce. Assembly W a y s a n d Means Committee, Room 342, S t a t e Capitol, Albany 1, N. Y. D. Mallory Stephens, C h a i r m a n ; William H. MacKenzie, Julius J. G a n s , Elmer J. Kellam, F r a n k A. Gugino, Philip V. Backzkowski, William L. Doige, B e r n a r d Au.stin, B e n j a m i n H. Demo., F r a n k J . Becker, J a c o b E. Hollinger, Searles G . Schultz, J o h n S. T h o m p s o n , William E. Clancy, Fred W. P r e l ler, William M. S t u a r t , Elisha T. B a r r e t t , J a m e s G. Lyons, H n e r y Neddo, a n d T h o m a s Hill, J r . , NYC C h a p t e r on t h e B e a m T h e NYC ChajJter of t h e Association, u n d e r t h e energetic leadership of Michael L. Porta, President, moved f a s t in g e t t m g letters off to legislators. " T h e bonus bill, a n d also t h e 55-year R e t i r e m e n t bill, h a v e a f a i r c h a n c e of being passed by t h e Legislature a n d of being signed by t h e Governor, if each m e m b e r of t h e Association will write to his legislators a n d to t h e Governor." Mr. P o r t a wrote t h e m e m b e r s of t h e largest C h a p t e r . "As P r e s i d e n t of t h e C h a p t e r , I c a n n o t stress too forcibly u o p n you t h e i m p o r t a n c e of doing your p a r t immediately to bring to t h e a t t e n t i o n of your s e n a t o r a n d a s semblyman, a n d to t h e Governor, t h e u r g e n t needs of all S t a t e e m ployees a t t h i s time." A s a m p l e f o r m of letter was enclosed f i r guidance. A list of n a m e s of legislators in NYC was also provided. S t a m p e d envelopes were f u r n i s h e d by r e p r e s e n t a t i v e UF>on r e q u e s t . " T h e concerted s t r e n g t h great C h a p t e r should do t o w a r d s accomplishing t h e tive we all hope to a t t a i n , " President Porto. " T h i s is you opportunity. new. Do n o t p u t it off!" Lists of State Eligibles rorriM'l ioMiil liisl riK'tor, Vor„ Iii«inirt«r l.ill<l(.\ |M- OiHTiitor Th* KMaiiiiix-r, Tii%H<ii»ii hihI \ rtcrno* Fiiiaiicr nc-|tt. r Frank M r'a.\ nt, Hklyn P'^Ontl I>iM<l>l«-<l Vrfrrinis M.-ir.ild Collin". Klniira S.'KMIO 1 Norman Ui-•hanl^' Itkljii . . . . ^,•)^ilM» l>rin<i|>iil Hlo rierk. I»<|»). rorrfitIon, \ Cliiirlfn nalkin. Hkl.vn s^lt(0 Miiiii Onlri;{ 1,1011 .1 Kltcniian. Hklyn .s.-iUKi \ o i i - \ I'll nina 4 I-rstcr llociiiir. NVC Mlli'M 1 Rnth Wasar. Ifo.v ncSHO u NHthHiiicl WHiiicoH, Hkl.vii . . . . .sli;iii ^ Mariraret, l{oee,.. Alb: ny lU.^lt.". \ rtrriiiiH ;t Catherine Ki>Mlei>i. Troy . . . . II n Aiilinr .AnriiiicHii. Hkl.vn . . . . .''"nT.'i 1 .\(rnef« H. Maloney. T oy «r)Hll-. 7 Viiifcnt C'iiinpHiriia.NYC .><(iN(iri ".> (Jenevii-ve nniiMhii.-. Mbany . Sr.SV.l 8 Ncwfonif' 1) -i'lncn. Hklyii . . . . Kt;iiMl (j Helen Feret, Anwierdani ,s;j()t!;j !) No:iU Liptoii, NYC MKitir, SCHIT Witter Siipt.. Wehtlfrlil ]<» Lpoii Knunf-r. N!i«5>;in XtHlHl Non-\ cteiiiii II Willhiin Miiiivc.", Hniiix . . . . . .>.'lHt5 Joseph Tfow.-on, West field . . . 848ti3 l:^ Leo D l'())itZ( r, ^ YC S J Itt } (use Supervisor. I'lil-lie Welfare, Josi>i)h O Lifin, Hkl.vn S-.'0!»i) Kockliii-il County l a Aaron Brenner, Saralos-ii . . . . KOO10 \ ftera n<t Non-VetpraiiH 1 Rbt Hemminover. Garnervill i n Vini'fnt C Tyninnn, WoodpiOo . . O.'Jilo't Non-Veteruns 17 Jos P Dowliiig-, Bklju 81 .-)•;» C Beatrice WanI Nyack .... IH t'arl.vM!i(r<'r, J>klyn !tl TOO .•( Elsie Malley. Haver-ti-aw . . J» Anita Huff. Albany !M)Jli() 1 t;s 4 Helen Kcmicy. Stony Pt. . . . •.'(> ChuH H Barfickl. Bklyn NK.Kio Si.->81 5 Helen McFarlane. Nyack . . ;il Hckn L Kirby, QuccnsVil . . . . .st!54'i Chief Clerk. I'urkwiiy Maliitenmiee, Elizabeth Vo»rfl, Roclicstor . , . .»<.">!•)»."> We-iteliester County KuK'ene Ko^«'iiz\veig, Albany . . H."i4Kr> A ••lenin Alice M .Siidniann, Hklyu . . . . S4K70 1 .Mien V Johiisoji. Yonkers . . . . ATiti-'.S Kulh 11 Rice, Nassan H-lT^il >;on->etenin Jack Spcrlinir, Hnfialo s;i!MM) KTdlH) ^7 David Rubin, NYC . .s:!!t70 .^..Xnuiist C Kocli, Hawthorne .'Vnne M .\(lanir<, .Mbany P R O M O T I O N •J.'l Harry Nclz, Roclifslir H-.'S.s", .'?0 Rcgina Hfipclit)f rtr. Bklyii . . . ,M'.'!<((0 .Senior Mail Supply < ieiT;, Mental liyuicne John F. Rafferty. Albany . . . . S.--:!-t a i Nathaniel Mavwe-ll, Bklyn . . . . .s-i.5(ir> Sanfonl S Seader. Bronx . Hdst;,) .Xsst. Hupt., OperatUMi .Mt^e. ruMie Work* Senior <iHii)p, I iittioloKUt, ('onH*-r\h<ion Uisalileil \eleran Julius Haberniau. Itliaea . .M ()()() 1 Oscar Hasl)roiick. Troy . !)Oi:i!> \ eterans Asst. Plinntiiiii;, Kneineer, I'lihlir orks rtoHS'j 3 Albert Erskinc, Hyde Park \ eterans SewHffe riant Oiwrator, Cirade !(, 1 Geanru-e l.obilill, IMallHlmrtr Wentehester County 1/cnry Ryan. NYC Non-Veterans Noii-Vi'leriins Edw. Conlon. Tarrytown . . . .StS" .T .lohn Stni'hiiiiillii'. Fi-eei)ort Water Works Supt.. Grade 4'John L.iboipisiere. Grcpn l^'l. str/.5(i Wesehester County fi Floyd Harn. s, Scotia ... .s I -) Noil-Veterans (i (iabricl .'^nssnian, Hklyn . . SI ,S.-ilt Kiirle l'etters<ni, Teekskill 7 William Browii, Bklyn . . . Jr. I'onipensntioii KeviewinR Examiner, H Kdw. Hamiiiton. RonsBt-laer 7S4(I0 Ijihnr Dept. 0 lloiny Tiiabeu, Bklyii . . . itio-jr. Disabled A'eteran 1 Albert Ranton. Bklyn . . 8807fl Fire Driver, VilluKe of Keiiniore, Krie Co. Veterans Veteruns 83;iSfl 1 Hilary SchnUz. Kenmore . . . . !• I •!(»() C Heiny Tarsliis. Fox Hills 3 John W Leach Syra<n-<e . . 81430 3 Frank Kisele. Kenmore .S'.'l(i') -Nou-Veteniiis Noii-Vetermis 4 Hose Grossm.'ni, Hi'onx . . na30fl .T Walter M<K'rcadie.Kenmore SJIlOO 5 Carinl Intn u-wieros, Bronx 8H318 Alfred Schultz, Kenmore Si>;!(»() »1 Albert Ha.vd- ii, NYC" . . . . 87870 IndiiKtriul InNp., re|»(. Corr. 7 lOdw P Vopyt. Woodside 87515 Noii-VeteraiiH « Sai-ah Weill. Bronx .... 87110 Paul T.aper, Aubuni .S1J!M> 9 Nanc.v Ijpscliitz, Hklyn . . 8fifm:j A Qninonpfi, Bronx 10 Sue PeinHtein. Jackson lit 8Ui)44 8H»11 Institutional KilueHtinn Siipervlhtir, (ien- 11 Fred Fein. Bklyn 12 Arthur II Rush, Hkl.vn . . 8«:J3« eral Dept.. iMental HjKiriie 13 Alice E Harper, NYC . , , 81»44 Veterans 14 Rose Tarduojrno. Bklyn . . 8454.1 1 Jerry Lyneh. Warwick !t,-)000 84055 a Samuel Moreaio, Bklyn 7ti(>(»0 15 Sinon Swirsky, NYC 10 Hennan Enier, NYC 8.1317,T Non-Vetenms 83U89 < . 5 Ethel Walter. Thiels HI 000 17 Hira Ru.ssell, Bullalo 83854 4 Prank Priolo, Warwick JMMiOO 18 Isadore Koniak, kBklyu 5 F Parri»rrand, Thiels MWKIO rrinoipal Kxnniiner, Methftds a»d I'ro6 JJOIS E Praser, Thiels S7oti0 cedures, l.abor Dept., DI'l'I 7 Pauline Zietrlcr, Hudsoii KriOdO Non-VeteriiiiK 8 Ross Dietrieh,Warwick SUOttO 1 Erwin Menielsdorf, .Albany . . . . 93450 0 Maud Minofrue, Wassaic 8;J0()0 3 Clement Berwitz. Flushing . . , 87(!5a 10 Hynian Peiteh, Catskill ROOOO 3 Ralph C Craig:. Albany 83633 OPEN-COMPETITIVE l-Xiitf 2 NEW CHAPTERS APPROVED SpeciaJ to The LEADER t h e Constitution a n d By-laws was of our ALBANY, M a r c h 10.—The B o a r d held on J a n u a r y 15. m u c h of Dh-ectors of T h e Civil Service objec- Employees A.ssociation, Inc. a p a d d e d proved two new C h a p t e r s of t h e Association a t its m e e t i n g on F e b W r i t e r u a r y 4, T h e two new groups are t h e New York S t a t e Bridge A u t h ority C h a p t e r which is composed of employees of t h e Catskill, M i d Hudson and B e a r Mountain Bridges, a n d t h e Conservation Department C a p i t a l District C h a p t e r , composed of employees located in t h e vicinity of Albany. R E A S O N A B L E RATES Malcolm Evans, Sr., acted as Temporary Chairman of the Bridge Authority C h a p t e r . Aloysius from ^60 H. C u r a n was elected Acting R e cording Secretary. T h e c o m m i t t e e to )3,500 f o r d r a f t i n g t h e Constitution a n d By-laws consists of J a m e s F . M c N O RED T A P E Guire, C h a i r m a n ; M. G a r d n e r a n d L. D u n n e . T h e m e e t i n g t o o r g a n ize t h e C h a p t e r was held on December 11 last a t Poughkeepsie a n d a n o t h e r meeting to approve PERSONAL ALBANY TAX CHAPTER HOLDS NOTABLE PARTY LOANS Prompt Service Dinner At the Tax Chapter party (left to right) Mary A. Kelley. Ruth Rice, Rebecca Lansing, Anita Ruff, Anne Adams, Philip Fisher and Irene Wolcott. SiMH'ial to Tlic LE.'MlKll ALBANY. M a r c h 10—The T a x D e p a r t m e n t C h a p t e r of T h e Civil Service Employees Association held a p a r t y at t h e K n i g h t s of Columbus Hall. I t was t h e first social a f i a i r sponsored by the Chapter, which is composed of Association m e m b e r s in t h e Albany offices of t h e S t a t e T a x D e p a r t m e n t , exclusive of t h e B u r e a u of M o t o r Vehicles. More t h a n 500 m e m b e r s a n d their f r i e n d s a t t e n d e d a n d t h e S t a t e Office Building a n d o t h e r buildings in which t h e T a x D e p a r t m e n t is housed were still a s t i r with c o m m e n t s lauding t h e success of t h e party. T h e a f f a i r was c a b a r e t style, with continuous e n t e r t a i n m e n t all evening under t h e direction of CIVIL SERVICE F r a n k McCullough of t h e I n c o m e T a x B u r e a u . Lew Staley, of t h e Local Assessment Bureau, a n d his orchestra, played for the show a n d dancing. Gerald R y a n , of t h e Miscellaneous T a x Bureau, was M a s t e r of Ceremonies a n d also was C h a i r m a n of t h e C o m m i t t e e whic h a r r a n g e d t h e details of the p a r t y . Assisting Mr. R y a n on t h e party committee were Anne Schelde, R i t a Lemieux, Vincent Campbell, Marge Tallmadge, Wil- Markvart A dinner will be given to F r a n k M a r k v a r t , .retired D e p u t y Commissioner of Motor Veheicles, a t t h e Hotel Commodore, NYC on T h u r s d a y . M a r c h 20 a t 7:30 P.M. T h e C h a i r m a n of t h e D i n n e r Comm i t t e e is J o h n Nelson, Director of at $10, m a y be obtained by telet h e T r u c k Weight Unit. Tickets p h o n i n g Commissioner Charles W. T e r r y , or A1 Silverman, a t C O r t l a n d 7-9800, Extension 611 or 666. * \ OIJH WAI i II I I REPAIRED tr,.':?- WHOLESALE No Cd-makers Required Convenient Payment Plan WHY NOT ? Call, Write or Phone PERSONAL LOAN DEPT MEIroce 5-6900 t Savings Up to"i/j"oV Retail Stor« Pricei t X ONK DAV Xtl 0.\K W KKK MKKVICK T APTITUDE TESTS TEST FREE LECTURE Sponsored by APTITUDE TESTING LABORATORIES of REESEN CO., 130 W. 42nd St., N. Y. C. 18 Thursday, M a r c h 13, 1947 8:30. P. M. at Barbizon Hotel, Lexington Ave. & 63rd St., N. Y. C. Phone Wl 7-3281 or writs Reesen Co. for FREE INVITMTIONS TO THIS LECTURE . .. ft All Watches Scientifically Tested and Regulated on Western Electric Wafchmaster DEMONSTRATIONS PREPARING FOR A LIFE CAREER LEAUKR Publiihtd (vary luetddy by LKAUKK KNlKKritlSKH, lui-. t>7 Diiuiir 8t.. Nfw Vurk > N V. 'IVIt'itliuiif: KKckiiiiiii 3-OUlO Entarad ai tacond-claii mdttar Octobar 2, 1939, at tha Poit oHica at New York. N. V., undar tha Act ol March 3, 1879. Mambar of Audit Buraau of Circulation. HubM-ripduii I'rici- (f^i Prr liidlviUuul rui>lt*ii . .. lie liam McDonnell, Louis Vella a n d Lewis Staley. The Tax Department Chapter is very active a n d h a s enjoyed t h e s u p p o r t of m a n y new m e m b e r s since its organization several m o n t h s ago. C h a p t e r m e m b e r ship is a p p r o a c h i n g t h e 1000 m a r k , which will be t h e iwrgest in t h e history of t h e d e p a r t m e n t . P h o t o g r a p h s of t h e a f f a i r were t a k e n by T h o m a s F. F l y n n , of t h e Local Assesments Bureau. to V ... f:* t X • t CLEANING BALANCE STAFF MAINSPRING STEM & CROWNS....1.50 to ^ •J. ^ .j, ij. If >uur wute!i Hhuiilil require more tiiuii one item tiie tomliinutlon will be Dtl.OO leNH Wo are as close to you as your Tost Olliee. Send your watt li by Insur d I'urcel I'o.-t, save receipt. Ksliniate Bint you lilt bamu Uiiy. Vuur walch eovi-red by iniiuranee until returned to yuu. Jicturu pot-ta^a paid by Ud. •{i * BRONX COUNTY One Year Mrilteii (inaruiitee VKAKS KXI'KltlKVCK 3.50 3.50 2.b0 2.00 lliiiverisal W u l c h Ser>i«'e 51 K. TKK.MtINT .WK., BRONX AH I N I N f CONVENIENT OFFICES JVIAIN OFFICE: THIRD AVENUE al I46tt> St THIRU AVENUE E. TREMONT AVE al Biucknai Blvd. ol I37lh Strtel 733rd STREET THIRD AVENUE ul Whilt Plaint Kd nt Botl^n Koa>t FORDHAM ROAD E TREMONT AVE ul Joiom* Avanu* ut Roi*on Rood n HUGH ORANI CIRClt OCDEN AVENUE al Porlichtilai Oiya/ii/td I88S Mi iikii Ftiutl liH^I iiuruci eHMiitlM CIVIL Tuestlay, March 11, 1947 ViESTCHESTER FOR CHARTER SERVICE STATE NEWS LEADER CROUP APPLIES IN ASSOCIATION Page Three The State Employee By Dr, Frank L, Tolman President, T h e Civil Service E m ployees Association, Inc., and Member of t h e Employees' Merit Award Board. The Governor's Anti-Strike Proposal A Floyd Adams Studio At the Westehestcr Competltiv® EmpIoy*e« AsseeiatieH taWe. aHendinq the annual dinner of The Civil Service Employees Association, were Faustlne Spencer, of the Albany office of the State Atsociatlon; IMInna Goldberg. President Flood, of the Westchester group: Edna Smith, J. Allyn Stearns. ex-Presldent of the county association and now Chairman of Its Board of Directors, and Gertrude Hayes. The Westchester Association has applied for a charter of membership in The Civil Service Employees Association. strike call h a s been introduced in t h e legislature. T h e Governor. according t o t h e press, proposes to m a k e strikes against t h e S t a t e a n d local g o v e r n m e n t impossible. My personal opinion about strikes a g a i n s t t h e G o v e r n m e n t is well known. I believe t h e public i n t e r e s t is above any private interest. I believe strikes are not t h e proper or best m e a n s to obtain justice for t h e worker. T h e position of T h e Civil Service Employees Association is equally clear. I t h a s renounced strikes. I t h a s a clearcut no-strike pledge. I t i n t e n d s to live u p to t h a t pledge. WHAT EVERY STATE EMPLOYEE SHOULD KNOW THEODORE BECKER' Court Upholds Reduction of W a r Veterans' Salary special privilges accorded THE to war v e t e r a n s by t h e provisions of t h e Civil Service Law h a v e o f t e n been cited in this colu m n . Among these is t h e p r o t e c t i o n accorded a veteran a g a n i s t s u m m a r y removal even if h e was appointed without competitive e x a m i n a t i o n . So, a s u b o r d i n a t e n o n - c o m p e t i t v e class or exempt class employee (other t h a n a cashier, deputy or private secret a r y ) c a n n o t be removed, if h e is war veteran, except a f t e r a h e a r i n g on charges of i n c o m p e n t e c y or misconduct. Nor c a n h i s salary ge so f a r reduced as t o bring it below a proper living wage, i n a s m u c h as such a reduct i o n , i effect, constitues a r e moval. While S t a t e employees occupyI n d positions for which salary schedules a r e provided in t h e Civiy Service Law c a n n o t have their s a l a r i e s reduced without t h e s a m e r e d u c t i n o talcing place for all o t h e r s in t h e same title, t h e a p p o i n t i n g officers' powers to fix salaries still obtains in cases of positions not covered by t h e socalled P e l d - H a m i l t o n career law. H e n c e , a recent court case c o n c e r n i n g t h e reduction in salary Of a v e t e r a n occupyiny a n o n competitive class position in t h e K i n g s C o u n t y District Attornes'y office is of some m o m e n t to S t a t e employees. F a c t s Ii» t h e Case I t a p p e a r s t h a t the petitioner, a war veteran, h a d been appoined a s Investigator by the f o r m e r K i n g s County District Attorney in September, 1945, four m o n t h s before t h e expiration of his t e r m . T h e salary was $4,000. O n J a n u a r y 1st t h e newly-elected District Attorney reduced t h e salary to $3,300, t h e s a m e salary being r e ceived by all other investigatore except t h e chief investigator. T h e petitioner took the case to court, c h a r g i n g t h a t t h e r e d u c t i n o nis salary was t a n t a m o u n t to a r e moval, which required a h e a r i n g on chrges, a n d t h a t t h e salary should be restored to $4,000. T h e v e t e r a n also asked for t h e difference in py between $3,300 a n d $4,000 for t h e perod t h a t his sala r y was cut. T h e S u p r e m e Court of iKngs County, which h e a r d t h e case, noted t h a t in two previous cases t h e courts h a d held t h a t a fine of t h e n days' pay was not a r e moval, whereas a reduction in salary f r o m $150 a m o n t h to $20 a m o n t h was a removal. Cost of Living Considered Applying these s t a n d a r d s to petitioner's case, t h e court said: 'The contention t h a t the petitioner's salary was reduced below a proper living wage is lacking in merit, a l t h o u g h I apprecia t e t h e fact t h a t t h e rise in t h e cost of living h a s m a d e it i n creasingly difficult for those emrisen proportionately to m a i n t a i n t h e i r s t a n d a r d of living. T h e petitioner was appointed by a n o f ployees whose salaries have not ficial whose t e r m of office was to expire in f o u r m o n t h s a n d whose likelihood of election to t h a t position for t h e following t e r m was, to say the least, doubtful. W i t h i n COXSACKIE PLANS EVENTS FOR A FULL YEAR AHEAD SlRtial to Th.' I.K.VDKH chestra. George G a t e s is going to do his own individual i n t e r p r e t a tions; a n d Don S t r a u s s a n d J a c k H u g h e s have been scheduled to do solos. A special featui-e will be t h e Dimmick All Girl Trio, f e a t u r i n g Irish lullabys. T h e following events have been tentatively scheduled by t h e E n t e r t a i n m e n t C o m m i t t e e for t h e f o r t h c o m i n g y e a r : Spring Dance, April 21; Chowder P a r t y , J u n e 7; Hot Dog P a r t y , July 12; A n n u a l Clam Bake, September 6; Fall Festival Dance, October 1. T h e Membership C o m m i t t e e reports t h a t 80 per cent of t h e e m ployees now belong to t h e Association, a n d they a n t i c i p a t e t h a t their next report will show 100 per cent membership. C o n g r a t u l a t i o n s are in order to Mr. a n d Mrs. Cliff Casscles upon t h e a r r i v a l of a baby boy, David Clifton. two m o n t h s of his employment t h e petitioner learned a s a result of t h e election t h a t t h e r e would be a new district a t t o r n e y . U n d e r those c i r c u m s t a n c e s t h e petitioner should h a v e known t h a t the h a n g e i n his superiors would be likely t o result in some c h a n g e in t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n of t h e office. Moreover, t h e period of time d u r ing w h i c h t h e petitioner received $4,000 was of such s h o r t d u r a t i o n t h a t i n m y opinion t h e c h a n g e salary could not h a v e required any great a d j u s t m e n t in his s t a n d a r d of living." Accordingly, t h e petitioner's request was denied. ( G e r a r d v. McDonald.) Certain Salary Cuts Criminal Apropose of t h e subject u n d e r consideration is t h e provision in Section 21(7) of t h e Civil Service Lw which declares t h a t "a ref u s a l to allow the preferences p r o vided for in this section to a n y v e t e r a n or disabled veteran, or a reduction of his compensation intended to bring; about his resignation shall be deemed a misdem e a n o r , a n d ai-y such veteran or any such veteran or disabled v e t e r a n shall have a right of action t h e r e f o r in any court of c o m p e t e n t jurisdiction for d a m ages a n d for righting t h e wrong." Accordingly it, is a crime for a n a p p o i n t i n g officer to reduce a veteran's salary for t h e purpose of getting him to quit his job, presumably to obtain another which pays a salary a d e q u a t e for the veteran's established s t a n d a r d of living. Progress of Assn. Bills T h e following are among the bills of T h e Civil Service E m ployees Association which have "moved" recently: F o r t y - h o u r week (A.I. 1081, S.L 972), passed Assembly. Feld - H a m i l t o n amendments, bonus permanentr.(A.I. 1080; S.I. 971), passed Assenibly. Unemployment i n s u r a n c e for S t a t e employees (A.I. 203), B a r r e t t , passed by Assembly. T h i r d O n this occasion, " C a p " Cronk reading in Senate. e x t e n d e d a n invitation to his Forest R a n g e r s to be included f r i e n d s to help h i m celebrate his under F e l d - H a m i l t o n (A. L 625), Lawrence; passed both houses. own b i r t h d a y on May 19. Board a n d Authorities, optional T h e regular m o n t h l y meetings of inclusion under Peld-Hamilton t h i s C h a p t e r will continue to be (S.I. 208), B u r n e y ; passed Senate. held on t h e first Wednesday of Veterans' resignation effect s o f t e a c h m o n t h at t h e Riverside C o t ened; six m o n t h s i n c r e m e n t credit, tage, Coxsackie, at 8:30 p.m. T h e too (S.I. 309 , M a n n i n g ; r e p o r t e d n e x t meeting will be held on April out of S e n a t e committee. D i n n e r will be served a t 5:30 T h i r t y days' pay f o r active milip.m., a n d will be followed by t h e John ("Count") Longthon is t a r y duty (S.I. 206), Anderson; m e e t i n g a t 8:30. confined to his home in Coxsackie reported out of S e n a t e committee. Plans have been rompleted for COXSACKIE. M a r c h 10. — A large number of fellow-employees a n d friends dropped in to say hello, a n d offer their felicitations t o C a p t a i n C o c h r a n at a gett o g e t h e r a n d s p a g h e t t i dinnei' held In his h o n o r on his b i r t h d a y . F r o m t h e e n t h u s i a s m with which t h e C a p t a i n accepted his b i r t h d a y p r e s e n t , it was felt t h a t h e was t o u c h e d by t h e spirit of the occasion. the annual St. Patrick's Day event, to be held at Riverside Cottage. tk>xsackie. on March 17. A corned t>eef and cabbage supper will be served at 8:30 p.m.. which will be follow d by dancing to the strains with an infected knee. Dick Prendergast was accepting any and all offers of assistance on "moving up" day. Ed Flegel la becoming a little anxious about the moving In date Hi <'Poi)" Wagn^r'tt t o h i s n « w h o i Q e 1q Or- 91in9«rlftna». Merit Award Board extended to April 1, 1943 (A.I. 316) Van Duzer; passed Assembly and sent to Senate. Extension of right to appeal to local employees (S.I. 591); Erwin; reported out of Senate committee. BILL to Impose penalties on public employees who answer a Legislation ISever Stops Strikes Strikes, however, c a n never be stopped by legislation. W h e n conditions become intolerable, workers will quit their jobs. T h e y will tell t h e i r f r i e n d s about real conditions a n d will advise t h a t o t h e r s do not t a k e t h e v a c a n t jobs. T h e y will point out t h a t t h e r e are two p a r t i e s to every dispute a n d t h a t the duty of ensuring high efficiency a n d f a i r working conditions rests equally on m a n a g e m e n t a n d on labor. T h e real problem is not to outlaw strikes but to provide better m a c h i n e r y f o r collective peace t h r o u g h conference a n d conciliation. Strikes a r e a "last r e s o r t " of embittered men a n d women. B e t t e r m a c h i n e r y a n d legal processes to establish peace are w h a t we need. If such m a c h i n e r y is established a n d used, strikes will soon be obsolete a n d outmoded. I n t h e S t a t e G o v e r n m e n t strikes are impossible as long as t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n a n d t h e organized employees can meet a n d really confer. T h e Governor himself paid t r i b u t e to t h e c o n f e r ence m e t h o d w h e n h e s t a t e d a t t h e recent a n n u a l dinner of t h e Association: " D e t e r m i n e d but sincere persons got into a room a n d c a m e up with a solid a g r e e m e n t t h a t was fair, a n d a g r e a t impx'ovem e n t over w h a t was first proposed." Dewey and Moore /i.s Examples Governor Dewey deserves m u c h credit for employing the c o n f e r e n c e m e t h o d with t h e S t a t e employees. A few of his d e p a r t m e n t heads, chief among t h e m , Comptroller F r a n k Moore, are equally c o n f e r e n c e - m i n d e d . B u t m u c h r e m a i n s to be done to m a k e t h e conference m e t h o d work to m a k e it t h e rule r a t h e r t h a n t h e exception; to provide f u l l i n f o r m a t i o n about proposed a d m i n i s t r a t i v e a n d civil service changes before they are p r o m u l g a t e d or e n a c t e d ; to provide i m p a r t i a l a n d competent advice to both parties, to create opportunities for a p p e a l a n d for review as m a y be required to r e a c h a final a&i'eement. T h e Association believes t h a t a d e q u a t e i n s t r u m e n t s for peace must be established before t h e strike is outlawed. Advance Requirements For Jobs in Vet Division Sin'C'ial to The LKAIiKK ALBANY, M a r c h 10.—The period for the receipt of applications for t h e positions of Senior S t a t e Vete r a n Counsellor, $4,560 to $5,700, a n d S t a t e Veteran Counsellor, $3,681 to $4,560, will open on or a b o u t Friday, M a r c h 14. T h e written e x a m i n a t i o n will be held on S a t u r d a y , May 10. These e x a m i n a t i o n s are n o t r e stricted to veterans, but S t a t e vete r a n p r e f e r e n c e applies—disabled veterans who pass go on top of t h e list, non-disabled veteran eligibles c o n s t i t u t e t h e n e x t group, a n d n o n - v e t e r a n s come last. T h e r e a r e 170 jobs to be filled p e r m a n e n t l y , 165 of t h e m as S t a t e Veteran Councilor. T h e Senior Counselor m u s t h a v e five years of satisfactory experience plus a bachelor's degree, or seven years of experience plus a high school diploma. T h e S t a t e Veteran Counselor m u s t have t h r e e years of satisfactory experience, plus a bachelor's degree, or h a v e seven years' experience plus high school g r a d u a t i o n . EXAMPLES O F E X P E R I E N C E T h e following are official examples of experience considered as qualifying: (1) Experience in veteran c o u n seling in g o v e r n m e n t a l agencies or v e t e r a n organizations. (2) Experience in personnel work including placement, job analysis, or resolution of personnel problems relating to a p p o i n t ments, promotions, reinstatements, lay-offs, pay, etc., where COUNTY PROMOTION TESTS 3398. Assistant Cashier, Department of Social Welfare, Erie County. Usual salary range. $2,200 to $2,500. Application fee $2. At present, one vacancy exists. (Closes Friday. March 28.) 3397, Clerk, Grade 7, Surrogate's Court, Kings County. Usual salary range over $3,240. Application fee $3. (Closes Friday, March 28.) the world included regular contacts with the public, employers, a n d employees, for the pui-pose of explaining policy, d e t e r m i n i n g proper action, or resolving special problems. (3) Experience as a vocational guidance or placement official in a high school or college. (4) T e a c h i n g experience in vocational guidance, business a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , occupational a n a l ysis, social work, psychology, or other directly related fields. (5) Experience as a social worker in a private or public social agency a d h e r i n g to acceptable social work s t a n d a r d s . (6) Experience in t h e a r m e d forces in personal affairs, classification, a n d assignment, or p e r sonnel evaluation work. (7) Experience as a n industrial relations specialist whose duties included personal c o n t a c t s with t h e public or employers a n d e m ployees. (8) Experience in promotional or public relations or equivalent work which involved t h e developm e n t a n d p r e s e n t a t i o n of comprehensive programs, such a s i n surance, or various phases of c o m m u n i t y development. T h e following are examples of experience which would not be considered qualifying: (1) Interviev. ing, such as is done by a claims or application t a k e r , i n f o r m a t i o n clerk, or receptionist. (2) P r o m o t i o n a l work, such as is done by a sales clerk or route salesman. (3) Personnel or o t h e r a d j u s t m e n t work involving t h e processing of correspondence, bills, p a y rolls, reports, a n d o t h e r r o u t i n e m a t e r i a l , but not involving field investigations, public contacts, or t h e analysis a n d resolution of ocmplex problems. MINIMUM STATE PAY The bill the Legislature will adopt provides $1,600 minimum pay. compared with present total $1,560. and with $1,500 (not $1.200) recommended by the Salary 0oard. CIVIL SERVICE LEADER STATE NEWS Page Four Tuesday, March 11, 1947 No'Strike Bill Opposed By Association as Hasty And as Curing No Abuses Spncial to The LEADER ALBANY. March 10—Opposed to strikes by public employees on principle, and with a no-strike pledge In its own constitution. The Civil Service Employees Association is against the bill proposed by Governor Dewey to bar strikes by employees of the State and its civil divisons. The need for compensatory protection of the right to strike is abrogated, the necessity for full discussion, without haste and the futility of a nostrike bill to correct abuses were stressed by Dr. F r a n k L. Tolman, President of the Association. He said, In reference to the amended Condon-Wadlin bill, which contains the strike prohibition, when asked by The LEADER for a statement: , "The Association is unalterably opposed to strikes against the government. It is also opposed to Dr. Shapp to Speak Dr. Charles M. Shapp, member of Labor Arbitration Panel, Principal of Pershing Junior High School, and former psychiatric case worker in the U. S. Army, will be guest speaker of the Hugo Wohlhagen Post No. 1258, AmeriIcan Legion, U. S. Department of Labor, at their next regular meeting at Post Headquarters, 180 Seventh Avenue South, at 8:30 p.m., tonight (Tuesday). Dr. Shapp will discuss " A G.I. faces the Atomic Age." All Legionnaires and other veterans are invited to attend. Special to The LEADKR Most Precioui! Blood Church KKANClSiAN KATHKRS 11.3 BAXTER STREET Oiif Door Off Oaiial Street) New York 13, N. Y. PeriM-tiiiil Novcmin in Honor of llie Mirac-iiloiiN Mwlul — Kvery Monday St. Anthony — Kviry Tui't«day Nooiiduy MuhH I'^.IO ALBANY, March 10—A bill Introduced in the Legislature provides that any State employee with five years or more of service on a war-duration, temporary or provisional basis be "blanketed" into his job with permanent civil service status, without any examination. The measure says t h a t any such employee who was absent in the the no-strike bill in its present form now being pressed for passage. .. over $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 A Tribute to Thrift... p I iHE President and Trustees of the Emigrant IndustnaJ Savings Bank announce that deposits in this Institution others insist upon maintaining their independent power to fix salaries and wages. "The Niagara Frontier Authrity, for example, has been a t tempting to come under the FeldHamilton law for the past three years, but has been told t h a t nothing con be done unless enabling legislation is passed. "This is a permissive bill, which would permit any pubic authority, at its electin, to have the wages of its employees fixed in accordance with the Feld-Hamilton law. We believe t h a t it is a step in the right direction and t h a t a number of public authorities will avail themselves of this privilege if this bill is adopted. "I have been told t h a t there are certain technical objections to the bill in relation to authorities whose appropriations are not included in the budget. If any sound or technical objections are presented to you I would like to have the opportunity to sit down with you or one of your assistants to discuss them, because I feel that any objections that may arise can esily be taken care of by minor amendments to the bill." have now reached more than $500,000,000. Representing the savings of 283,000 depositors, this vast sum stands as a tribute to the thrift of the people of this community. O n opening date, September 30th, 1850, deposits totalled |3,009., the combined savings of 20 people. Throughout its long history, this bank has never failed to declare a dividend on schedule. In 233 consecutiv? interest payments, it has paid its depositors the impressive amount of $371,362,703 This significant milestone emphasi/es of our depositors and the community. PRESIDENT EVERYTHING FOR THE AMATEUR & PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER 1 (Only Photo Shop in N. Y. P Open fil Midnight 7 days Wfc.) k / f f / e Cottage sfiKs i 124 W. 50th St., N. Y. CI 7-2094 EMIGRANT I N D Church Announcements FOR CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES IVOOINDAY \i MASS 12.15 Every Day During Lent ST. MICHAEL'S CHURCH 414 WEST 34th STKEET, N. Y. C. NVur Ninth Avfiiiif the responsibiJuy we always feel to merit the continuing confidence and trusi SALE IVooiiclay Kvery Day During 12:15 U S TRJ S A V I N G S 51 Qiambers Street Lent ST. BONIFACE CHURCH Hrt'ond Av«. cor. 4->tb Kt., N. ¥. Mondayii at 12:20 due to Miraculuuti Medal UevotiuiiB ut I2slO 'Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corpot«tioo M iNTKU—5U I::AKNKSr-MINUKIl TKOI'I K for «|)ri-ul Tuetiduy iilKht Ulblo coin'M. t'l-ct.—Chribtiaii, iioii-iliMioniiualioiial. Ureal I'vnts litfht of Bible. Nothing like It S.o or call Or Kowlcr, Uooni :<tl« Katfle BiiilUintf, 3<t6 Wa»>liintfton St. Jt;rookl>ii. MAiij u OUai. I military forces may count t h e time In uniform as part of the Ave years. If enacted, the bill would give thousands of temporary emplo3rees permanent Jobs. Dr. P r a n k L. Tolman, President of T h e Civil Service Employees Association, laughed heartily when asked about the chances of passage of the proposal. Objects to All Hasty Laws "The Association is opposed to hasty legislation on any subject. It believes in the full legislative process where proposals are discussed in hearings and where the will of the whole people is heard. No bill is good unless and until It is perfected in the heat of pubic discussion and debate. "The Association believes that if the right to strike is taken from the pubic employee it is essential to provide new devices adequate to promote peaceful adjustment of grievances in public employment. Arbitration, conciliation and collective negotiation are as essential in public business as in private employment. "The Associaton has a no-strike pledge. It has never called a strike or counntenanced a strike. It proposes to live up to that pledge in the future. We are against strikes but we are equally for the building up of instruments designed to assure fair play and peace in public employment. A no-strike bill will do nothing to correct the neglect and abuses t h a t lead to strikes. "Time should be afforded for the real consideration ot the problems of employment under the civil service law. The Legislature should continue in session long enough to work out a constructive rather t h a n a negative solution of a very difficult problem." Co-operation Offered O n Authorities Bill ALBANY, March 10—Any objections t h a t may be raised to a permission bill to allow authorities' salaries to be imder the FeldHamilton law, can be ironed out, J o h n T. DeGraff wrote to Charles D. Breitel, Governor Dewey's Counsel. M. DeGraff, Counsel to The Civil Service Employees Association, said: "We recommend the approval of the above bill (S. I. 208) which was drafted by the Association and introduced at our request, "The Feld-Hamilton Law, under which salaries of State employees generally are fixed, is not applicable to the 30 or more independent public authorities or agencies. Employees of these agencies are State employees and in most cases they are appointed from civil service lists. Because their salaries are established independently, they differ widely among themselves and fail to conform to the general State policy with respect to wages. Some Authorities Eager "The Association has long maintained t h a t the Feld-Hamilton law should be extended to these independent State agencies in order to bring about imifromity and equality with respect to these employees. Some Authorities would like to come under the Feld-Hamilton low. while Bill Gives Dr. Tolman a Lau^h AL BANK 5 East 42nd Street CIVIL Tii«fi<]a7, March I I , 1947 SERVICE Page Five IVYC NEWS LEADER OFFICERS OF THE UFOA MEET Mlt® s at Civil SERVICE TEST f Perfect I By HERMAN J. BERNARD T h e bill Introduced in the Council by S. S a m u e l DlFalco, to ext e n d seniority r i g h t s for v e t e r a n s w h o were on NYC eligible lists w h e n they entered t h e a r m e d forces. Is n o t only receiving t h e s t r o n g backing of t h e U n i f o r m e d F i r e m e n ' s Association a n d t h e P a t r o l m e n ' s Benevolent Association, but is being considered by various other employee groups for indorsement. T h e bill would affect about 800 F i r e m e n , f a r fewer P a t r o l m e n , a n d relatively few employees in o t h e r d e p a r t m e n t s , but a n effort is being m a d e to obtain united backing f o r t h e bill on a n " e m ployee u n i t y " basis. T h i s move is being u n d e r t a k e n , even t h o u g h p a s t experience h a s been t h a t difficulty a t t e n d s obtaining active s u p p o r t of bills f r o m groups who will not benefit f r o m t h e m very numerously. This time, it is expected, t h e imity idea will c a t c h on. Revision Mad«> i T h e bill was passed by t h e Council a n d sent to t h e B o a r d of E s t i m a t e , which r e t u r n e d it f o r reasons t h a t have never been o f ficially m a d e public, a l t h o u g h it is understood t h a t cost was a principal consideration. I n line with this, t h e benefits are now limited, in a revised f o r m of t h e bill, to veterans of World W a r II. since t h e cost a r g u m e n t was considerably directed, t h o u g h not by any employee organization, a g a i n s t t h e cumulative effect created by World W a r I veterans, m a n y of whom h a v e already r e tired, so t h a t as to t h e m even t h e question of constitutionality a l ose. T h e a r g u m e n t being m a d e in f a v o r of t h e present bill is p r i n cipally t h a t seniority benefits now accorded to veterans are not consistent. It is recognized t h a t t h e Legislature a n d t h e city both desired the v e t e r a n s to be able t o c o u n t t i m e spent in t h e a r m e d forces, so t h a t they could enter promotion examinations. and h a v e their original e n t r a n c e d a t e b a c k d a t e d to t h e time t h a t t h e n e x t lowest eligible was a p p o i n t ed, i.e., got t h e job they would h a v e got if they h a d not been in t h e a r m e d forces. However, t h e a r g u m e n t is t h a t , being entitled to credit for seniority f o r e x a m i n a t i o n purposes a n d protection against layoffs, they should be g r a n t e d credit also for salary i n c r e m e n t purposes, or for pay a d v a n c e m e n t within a g r a d e as obtains in t h e F i r e a n d Police D e p a r t m e n t s . A m a n a p pointed as a p r o b a t i o n a r y F i r e m a n c a n a t t a i n m a x i m u m pay in t h e F i r e m a n category in t h r e e years; in the Police D e p a r t m e n t t h e m a x i m u m pay for P a t r o l m a n is a t t a i n a b l e in five years. Credit for salary purposes is t h e r e f o r e of p a r a m o u n t i m p o r t a n c e to the m e n concerned, as they would obtain t h e h i g h - p a y rates now. Thei'e is no a t t e m p t in this bill to m a k e t h e city pay for t h e vete r a n ' s a n n u i t y contributions d u r ing t h e period h e was in the a r m e d forces; t h e r e is a special provision s t a t i n g t h a t t h e veteran would h a v e to m a k e t h a t contribution himself, altliough if t h e Legislat u r e passes a n d t h e Governor signs a law under which t h e city would t a k e over t h e obligation, as already propo.sed, a n d credit p a y m e n t s m a d e by t h e veteran for t h a t period to his allowance, a s additional a n n u i t y when h e retires, t h a t benefit would accrue, also. Statement by Crane The Firemen and Patrolmen have a J o i n t Committee t o prom o t e t h e success of t h e DlFalco bill. T h e C o m m i t t e e consists of J o h n P. Crane, UFA P r e s i d e n t ; William Reid, UFA vice-president, G e r a r d Purcell, UFA T i e a s u r e r ; J o h n Haggerty, T h o m a s C u m - Fire Leaves Granted Because of Snow Duty Division C o m m a n d e r s have been ordered to g r a n t leaves of absence to all m e m b e r s of t h e D e p a r t m e n t who lost time due to t h e recall signal which was t r a n s m i t t e d on F e b r u a r y 28, last, in connection with the snow storm. Members shall be g r a n t e d one tour for each e i g h t - h o u r period or f r a c tion thereof, lost, regardless of w h e t h e r t h e m e m b e r was working under t h e T h r e e Platoon, Modified T h r e e Platoon or Elimination. mings, Geoige Hodgson and J a m e s H. Scott. Messrs. H a g gerty a n d C u m m i n g s a r e PBA delegates a n a Me.ssrs. Hodgson a n d Scott PBA members. T h e following s t a t e m e n t s were m a d e by t h e Presidents of t h e UFA a n d t h e PBA: Mr. C r a n e : " T h e DlFalco bill provides for credit to veterans to t h e same extent as they would have obtained if they h a d not been in the a r m e d forces, a n d t h e r e f o r e represents simple jus'tlce aid fair dealing. T h e S t a t e law gives veterans seniority b e n e fits in connection with promotion e x a m i n a t i o n m i n i m u m - time - in grade requirements, a n d in connection with layoffs. T h i s bill extends those benefits by including time spent in t h e a r m e d forces as time In city service for all p u r poses." Statement by Donovan R a y m o n d A. Donovan, President of the PBA: " T h e bill is of benefit only to men who were on eligible lists when they were in t h e a r m e d forces a n d who were appointed. T h e y are entitled to all t h e benefits t h a t they would h a v e obtained h a d they not gone into t h a t service, on t h e sound theory of equality of benefits. Any o t h e r i n t e r p r e t a t i o n m a k e s services in t h e a r m e d forces p u n i tive. Also, t h e bill provides benefits f o r m e n who passed t h e written test before entering, or while in, t h e a r m e d forces, a n d were miable to show up, because of military service, for t h e physical, but who later passed special p h y sical test. T h e y would get t h e seniority benefit, as t h e y should, f r o m t h e time they would h a v e been appointed actually, h a d they passe d t h e physical te.st w h e n it was genarally held. T h e s a m e principle of fairness applies here, too. T h e bill piovides full seniority in reference to promotions, layoffs a n d i n c r e m e n t s . " T h e UFA a n d t h e PBA welcome t h e s u p p o r t of all employee or ganizatlons in civil service, because t h e principle applies to all city d e p a r t m e n t s a n d agencies, a n d because they believe in t h e effectiveness of united action a n d in s h a r i n g t h e cerdlt with those who s h a r e t h e work. r Gamblers Court Wiil Co On The Air I For Civil Service Officers of th* Uniformed Fire Officers Association are (standing) Captain Richard A. aenahan; Lieutenant John P. Mullen: Captain Frederick J. Muesle; Lieutenant Henry J. Fehling; Lieutenant John F. Dalton; (seated) Deputy Chief Henry A. WiHekind, President; Chief of Staff and Operations Frank Murphy: Battalion Chief Joseph D. Rooney; Acting Battalion Chief Winford L. Beebe. ' United Employee Backing Sought For DiFako Bill As LEADER Feature Of Hi! Jinx Continuing iii its eflort to bring t h e people of New York a t h o r ough cross-section of t h e f u n tions of their government, the " H i ! J i n x " radio p r o g r a m . In conj u n c t i o n with T h e LEADER, will bring t h e r a d i o listeners into G a m b l e r s Court next T h u r s d a y m o r n i n g at 8:30 when a direct broadcast will be m a d e f r o m t h e courtroom. J i n x Falkenburg, noted model a n d actress, a n d her h u s b a n d , Tex McCrary. formerly Chief Editorial W r i t e r for the Dally Mirror a u d Executive Editor of American r Special Service for Sanitation M a n Test ^ C a n d i d a t e s in t h e NYC test for S a n i t a t i o n M a n , Class B, for which filing is now open, c a n get t h e i r problems solved at T h e LEADER ottice, 97 D u a n e Street, New York 7, N. Y. Write queries t o S a n i t a t i o n Editor a n d enclose s t a m p e d , addressed envelope; or telephone B E e k m a n 3-6010, 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., or come In personally. V J Mercuiy, will sit in court with M a g i s t r a t e Eugene Canudo. Upon completion of t h e h e a r i n g s they will retire to t h e judge's c h a m b e r s a n d discuss f o r the listeners t h e action t h a t took place. T h e newly-organized gambler's court is said to be t h e most i n t e r esting of all t h e M a g i s t r a t e s Courts. Every T h u r s d a y m o r n i n g over WNBC " H i ' Jinx" and The LEADER bring interesting persons in t h e City, S t a t e a n d Federal service to the WNBC microphone Suggestions f r o m our readers are welcome. Address t h e m to Herbert M. Friedland, care of T h e LEADER, 97 Duane S t r e e t , New York 7, N. Y. Preparation Success Hard-To-Get Info Made Easy-For-You-To-Study 25. SANITATION MAN. Class B MI ..lO Test will be annoUDi'Pd ^oon and jrivon on Ma.v :(. Start .voiir Ktiid.v now for th(> written and Dhyslcal tests. Previous exanm Cd and a careful ?o|pction of study niat'-rial are incUlilcd iu this book. 1. 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JUNIOR PROFESSIONAL ASSISTANT IKI.50 On the beam preoaiation for a difficult "general" test given periodi cally. Successful caiididatcs are assigned to a wide vai-iety of tfchnical. professional jobs. Cctvers vocabulaiy. spatial relations, compu tations, graphs, tte. MAINTAINER-S HELPER (Groups A, B, C, D) 15. iK I . 5 0 Tests for these jobs will be held May 10. 17, 24 and June 7. Bat it yo.i really want to be ready, start Btudyinir now with this e.xeel lent AR(!0 Book for the very test you're groiuK to take. Previous exams, test questions ami answers. Kor electrical, plimibingr, main lenance and carpentry workers. Aptitude tests included. PATROLMAN (Police Department) II1.50 You'll take this test on Mar<h 15 for a very fine job with New York> linest. You'll be wise to ^et ARCO's PATROLMAN now. Previous exams, many test questions and answi'rs on police judKments, laws and ordinances vocabulary, etc.. will pive you the knowledge and asburauce you need for success. 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Previous Kxanie, etc. 74. 31. be given July 2«. TITLE EXAMINER 1Study .50 II2.00 Finance De()t. holds a promotion exam April Hook Ivfore you take your chaiicea ou the test. See this STENOGRAPHER-TYPIST ARCO * I .50 These tests are bi-ng given constantly by Federal. State and Oily Aifencicn The AKf'O Book is preparation for all grades. Order by Mumber to fnsiire Accuracy and Sp»edy No C.O.O.'s Dtllvry Add 10 Cents for Pottag< The LEADER Bookstore 97 DllANE STKKI'/I NF.Vt YOKK Page Six CIVIL A THOVGHT FOR THE WEEK HE greatest success is confidence, or perfect understanding between sincere p e o p l e . — E m e r s o n , SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, March 11, 1 9 4 7 WARDS ISLAND GROUP FROLICS jsmmmm 9 AA ^ eun^-SeM^uiB. I4 JSil^DB I t iRepeatThis! 'Eighth Year Americans Largest Weekly for Public Employees Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations Published every T u e s d a y by LEADER ENTERPRISES. Inc. 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. ¥. A t c M * of pageantry filled the stage at the entertainment and dance of the Manhattan State Hospital Chapter of The Civil Service Employees Association. The proceeds will be devoted to the Welfare Fend. Anti-Strike Bitl Is Held Severe Curb (Continued from Page 1) the right to desist from work when, as a last desperate resort, they have no other means to oppose intolerable working conditions or gain a living wage. The right to strike must not be confused with the wisdom or unwisdom of using that right. Many organizations of civil employees have voluntarily renounced the strike weapon. But to remove the right by legislation is another matter: that means depriving the public worker of a liberty enjoyed by all other e m p l o y e e s — a n intolerable infringement upon his dignity as a citizen. Public employees have only rarely resorted to the strike. The Civil Service Reform Association says there were f e w e r than a dozen strikes or threats of the strike in the decade until two years ago. There are no figures since then—but the total number is tiny. It is curious that now—in 1947—precisely at the time w h e n the available instruments to secure improvements have been shown insufficient—that a measure so overwhelmingly restrictive has been introduced in the Legislature. Throughout the country, municipalities sat back and refused to help teachers attain a minimal decent wage, until the provocation w a s too great for human frailty to stand longer. It was only by resort to strike or threat of strike in Buffalo, St. Paul, Providence and other cities that teachers have gained some modicum of improvement in their pay. And, as a corollary, they have brought to the public an understanding of how weakened our educational plant has become, because of our faiUn-e to pay the teachers a decent wage. Conditions the Real 1 Manager TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1947 Improved I V ^ BEekman 3-6010 J e r r y Pinkelsteln, Publisher Maxwell L e h m a n , General H. J. B e r n a r d , Executive Editor mi^lf N. H. Mager, Business Manager Key unless we, in our wisdom, see fit to help you." Yet that is precisely w h a t the Condon-Wadlin bill proposes. And of w h a t efficacy is such a bill in the case w h e r e any large group of employees, strongly organized, strikes and then refuses to go back to the job without concessions? The community might w a n t to grant those concessions, rather than impose penalties. But such is the nature of the Condon-Wadlin bill that not only must the community refuse concessions, however j u s t ; it must invoke machinery to deprive the employee of tenure, deny him any w a g e improvements for three years, place him on probation for five years under such conditions that he may then be fired "at the pleasure of the appointing officer or body." W h a t American can accept such a condition of employment, and yet retain his dignity as a citizen with civil r i g h t s ? . The very harshness of the penalties m a k e s the whole business suspect. So drastic are the penalties that one can see only widespread evasion of the law by the community itself. It can't be emphasized too strongly that the way to get Americans to work is not by fiat, but only by persuading them that they are being treated fairly. If the Legislature wishes to do a constructive job, it should study procedures for maintaining the best possible service; determine w a y s for assuring that fairness and justice shall prevail in considering the grievances or demands of employees. Certainly the Government o w e s its employees at least the same consideration as employees receive in private industry. W h e n public workers are satisfied that they've been treated fairly and honestly, there will be no resort to the strike. The whole history of public employment show§ that. Harshly Restrictive Provision Examine the loose wording in section 6 of the bill, and you'll quickly see the abuses which could develop under it. That section reads, in part: . . . any person . . . who witJiout lawful approval of hU superior, fails to report for duty or otherwise absents himself from his position, or abstains in whole or part from the full, faithful or proper performance of his position shall be deemed on strike. . . This is so utterly restrictive as to d e f y comparison with anything else in American law. A n y absence, however innocent and otherwise lawful, can be made unlawful merely by whim of the department head. He can call a strike an absence which is not a strike. Suppose an employee takes a day off to do organization work, or to see a legislator about a bill. Suppose the department head doesn't like this employee. Under the bill, he has the absolute right to "deem" the employee on strike, to say that the employee has abstained "from the full, faithful performance of his position," and fire him. Any department head w h o is averse even to the present peaceful methods of organizational work can deeply crimp such activity. He can forbid employees to attend conventions of their organizations. He can deny them the time needed to discuss grievances. He could use the bill to kill any employee activity he opposed. He could use it, in the larger sense, as a denial of free speech. Anyone who thinks that no department head or personnel officer would do anything so drastic, doesn't know the calibre of some of the officials now incumbent in various depailinents. Nobody advocates the use of the strike weapon by public employees except in extraordinary circumstances where the ordinary peaceful methods of obtaining redress of grievances collapse. In most government jurisdictions, unfortunately, these methods are still primtive. It is a tribute to the patience of public employees, to their ability to "take it," to remain loyally at their work despite the most intolerable provocations, that so few strikes occur among them. Is it unreasonable to conclude that when they do strike, the grievances are more than human spirit can bear? Everything should be done to eliminate strikes. But this means eliminating conditions which lead to strikes— not eliminating essential liberties which the employees now possess. Machinery for the proper hearing of grievances, for conciliation and arbitration, must be set up, with employees and their organizations granted full right to present and obtain fullest consideration of their grievances. What little machinery exists today is sluggish and inefficient, particularly at the local levels. Precisely because strikes among public employees are so rare, the citizen must ask himself, when one does occur: "What dissatisfactions were present to have led Strike Definition Dangerously Broad this normally peaceful group to so drastic an alternative?" Surely the public attitude should not b e : "Bring out a W h a t is a strike ? A s defined in this bill, it could mean w h i p ! These insolent creatures have had the temerity to protest against low w a g e s and impossible working con- almost anything an employee does to improve his working ditions." Yet it is the second benighted approach which conditions—even a simple conference. Read the words: "As used in this section the word 'strike* shall mean the Condon-Wadlin bill envisions. the failure to report for duty, the wilfull absence from one's position, the stoppage of work, or the abstinence in whole Inhuman Denial of Rif^ht of Redress or in part from the full, faithful and proper performance Every reasonable person understands that public em- of the duties of employment, for the purpose of inducing, ployees are subject to many of the same problems and influencing or coercing a change in the conditions, or comor obligations of emirritations as are private employees. It is just as difficult pensation, or the rights, privileges for a clerk in civil service to get along on an insufficient ployment. , . w a g e as it is for a clerk in a private office. The sentence goes on to say that this section doesn't Nor is it reasonable to assume that personnel officers limit the right of a public employee to express his views, and public officials are immune from the criticisms often provided it doesn't interfere with his work. leveled at private employers—including the desire to W h a t could this m e a n ? make a good showing by cutting budgets. It could mean that employees would hesitate to speak It is undemocratic, indeed inhuman, to say to the to their fellow-employees about their working conditions puUlic .wmpioyett:- VVou kuvij lu? lli^uLoitJU4Jii .Qf i'fUi'yss, (Continued ijH Pave i2J I p i F T E E N thousand Federal e m 1 • ployees are slated as I m m e d i a t e victims of t h e r e d u c t i o n - i n - f o r c e axe. . . . T W U succeeded In g e t t i n g , t h e NYC Civil Service C o m m i s , sion to reduce t h e h e i g h t r e q u i r e m e n t for S u r f a c e Line O p e r a t o r by two inches. . . . W a t c h f o r a revival of t h e c a m p a i g n t o g e t , a S t a t e university f o r New York. . . . T h e NYC Civil Service C o m mission is in t h e m i d s t of t h e heaviest filing since t h e w a r . . , . T h e W a r Dept. h a s okayed a c h a n g e to h a v e all - p u n i s h m e n t duties a t West P o i n t Involve c o n structive work. . . . A lot of city schools a r e u p In a r m s a b o u t t h a t well-known daily s p o r t s colu m n i s t w h o h a s been p a n n i n g t h e i r s t a r a t h l e t e s regularly. . . , It takes twenty-two separate e m ployee organizations to keep S a n i t a t i o n Dept. workers h a p p y . More VA offices are scheduled to close in the near future. . . * The pipe fashioned from the tomahawk with which Sitting Bull scalped General Custer, on view at the National Antiques Show at Madison Square Gar-> dence, once brought the U. S. and Canada almost to blows* . . . The local papers killed that story the other day about six girls escaping from a delinquent children's camp at Welfare Island when they couldn't locate the city department in charge. . . . The HiJinx radio program has to do some high stepping to keep step with LEADER guests. The control tower at LaGuardia Field and Magistrate's Court are next on the schedule. . . . Airline business, in the dumps for a while during that wave of ac« cidents, is up again. T o m Dewey, who originally c a m e t o New York to f u r t h e r a singing career, is still i n good voice. Ask those S t a t e employees who stayed u p singing with t h e Governor one r e c e n t n i g h t till 2 a.m. . . . A n o t h e r s c a n d a l a b o u t college a t h l e t e s who wink at eligibility rules is brewing. . . . AMG u n i t s i n G e r m a n y a r e p a i n fully s h o r t - h a n d e d . . . . A U. S. S e n a t o r , sweating out a r a i l r o a d d i n i n g - c a r line, was a s k e d by a visiting foreign d i p l o m a t with h i m if a table w a s n ' t reserved fo* h i m because of his position. "I'm lucky I could get on t h e train,'* smiled t h e S e n a t o r . "A w o n d e r f u l p l a c e — A m e r i c a ! " was the b r e a t h l e s s response. . . . DoO B l a n c h a r d , W e s t P o i n t grid w o n der, c o u l d n ' t d e f e n d h i s I C - 4 A laurels recently a t t h e G a r d e n b e cause h e was serving a c o n f i n e m e n t "slug" f o r c u t t i n g a class. Uncle Sam is probing phony claims of the wives of disabled vets for Civil Service preference on the grounds their husbands can't perform their peace-time jobs. Like one claimant's husband, who is an outstanding athlete at the college he attends seven hours a day under the GI Bill of Rights. . . . Commissioner Moses and the Art Commission are at it again. This time over the proposed Coast Guardsman statute in Battery Park. . . . Sign-of-thetinies dept: prices in Bowery joints are up from 20 cents a night to 35 cents. . . . Sanitation officials say their department offers quicker opportunities for promotion than any other city agency. . . . Pension loan insurance will soon be a reality. _ _ _ Advice d e p t : Go S o u t h , Y o u n g M a n , Go S o u t h . T h e U. S. Civil Service Commission is h a r d - p r e s sed to find e n o u g h c a n d i d a t e s t o t a k e Civil Service jobs below t h e M a s o n - D i x o n line. . . . Mrs. George M a r s h a l l ' s best-seller " T o g e t h e r " is aiding t h e r e c r u i t m e n t drive of t h e Army. . . . G a m b l e r s a r e d e inserting local sport a r e n a s as {| result of all t h e r e c e n t fuss. . . , H a r d - h e a d e d Miami B e a c h t r a d e s people a r e p r e p a r i n g f o r a l e a n season in '48. . . , S t r e e t c l e a n e r s a r e working a r o u n d t h e clock In a n effort to rid t h e city of snow —before the next storm. . . . T h e Buffalo t e a c h e r strike a n d t h e t h r e a t of a repetition in New Y o r k are bringing discussion on t h e p e r ennial subject, " C a n Civil S e r v ice Workers S t r i k e ? " back i n t o t h e columns ol t h e popular m a g - azliie^ - -—1 T x t e ^ a j , March 11, CIVIL 1947 SERVICE LEADER U. S. Page NEWS Sevi?ii Maiority of U.S. Employees to Be Veterans Says Commission in Job Analysis T h e Second Regional Office of t h e U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 W a s h i n g t o n Stre,/., prophesied t h a t as t h e result of s t a t u t e s , executive orders a n d regu l a t i o n s beneficial to veterans, " t h e m a j o r i t y of t h e F e d e r a l e m ployees will be v e t e r a n s . " I t a d d e d : " T h i s being true, t h e efficiency of t h e F e d e r a l governm e n t d u r i n g t h e troublesome years a h e a d will rest in n o small m e a s u r e upon t h e v e t e r a n s of t h e United States." T h e p e r c e n t a g e of v e t e r a n s in U. S. jobs is increasing, b u t l a y offs are beginning to a f f e c t vetera n s , too, so t h a t t h e t o t a l n u m b e r of veterans in such jobs declined d u r i n g s t a t e d m o n t h s , despite r e t e n t i o n p r e f e r e n c e to veterans, t h e Commission pointed out, explaini n g t h a t t h e extent of layoffs p u t v e t e r a n s in competition with one another. Commission's S t a t e m e n t " O n S e p t e m b e r 30, 1946, 38 per c n t of all t h e m e n a n d w o m e n employed by t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t in civilian position were vete r a n s , " t h e s t a t e m e n t said. " T h e e x a c t n u m b e r was 825,135. Since S e p t e m b e r of 1945, a p p r o x i m a t e l y 400,000 v e t e r a n s h a v e been e m ployed by t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t . T h i s increase in employm e n t of v e t e r a n s in c o n j u n c t i o n w i t h t h e lay-offs which h a v e occ u r r e d d u r i n g t h e p a s t year h a s Increased t h e p e r c e n t a g e of v e t e r a n s employed f r o m 18 to 38. I n o t h e r words, t h e r e was a n increase of 20 per cent in t h e n u m b e r of v e t e r a n s employed by t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t during t h e last year. 1,124,000 people have been e m ployed by t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t since V - J D a y ; 827,000 of these people h a v e been v e t e r a n s ; 60 per c e n t of all persons receiving e m p l o y m e n t since V - J Day h a v e been veterans. " I t should be pointed out, h o w ever, t h a t since J u n e of last year, t h e r e h a s been a decrease in t h e n u m b e r of v e t e r a n s on t h e F e d e r a l payroll. T h e r e was a n e t decrease of 1,600 in Augu.st a n d 9,700 In September. T h i s recent n e t d e crease in t h e n u m b e r of veterans employed in t h e Federal G o v e r n m e n t suggests t h a t t h e p r o g r a m f o r reducing Fedcval personnel in r e d u c t i o n s in f o r / e h a s begun to a f f e c t t h e v e t e r a n s in spite of p r e f e r e n c e which v e t e r a n s receive in connection with lay-offs. "Only 37,900 of t h e employees of t h e Federal G o v e r n m e n t a r e ex-servicewomen, wives of disabled veterans, a n d widows of veterans. Widows of v e t e r a n s and wives of disabled v e t e r a n s comprise 2,700 I.KGAI. NO rH F. Nf>Tlt;K IS HKUF.BY OIV'KN that I.itiuor Lii-'Ciisc. No. HL-1H5 has »)ffu issued to the xiiidi rsigned to s.<U Litiuor. Wine, Cider ami Beer at retail ui a hotel under t h e AUoholie Buveraf?.- Control l.aw at No. KUl 114 East :JHth St.. in the City ami County of New Vork. ftir on premises cou.smiiution. National t'nion CorpDration. 11(5-114 East IlHth St.. New York 1«. N. V. NOTU K IS IIKRKBY GIVKN that Liiiuor Biul Wine License IJ.K7 has Itecii i>:sucil to the umlcrsikfiird to sell liiiuor and wine at vliolcsule, uiuli'r the Al.'ohol Bcvcratfc Control Law, in tin- prcniiscs loc.it.il at y 5 0 Fitih A \ c n u e , New York tUt.v. County Ot New York. SCTIIONLEY TNTKKNATION CtnirOKATION 3 5 0 F i f t h Avenue, New Y'orlr City HOTh'K IS IIF.HKBY lUVKN that Li^iuo:aiul Wine I.icense XA.T.l has b.-cn issued to the uiulersijfiii d to sell liquor ami wine Ht wholesale, under the Alcohol Hcverasre Coiltiol Law, ill the i«i-cn)iscs looatcd ut iWO Filth A\eniie, New Vo>k Cit.\, County of New Vork. TUIIKK FKATIIKU^ li|«TKlHt'TORS. INi. 3,'>0 Fifth Aveune, New Ym-k City Noliei' is hereby si^en that Wholesaler's Winn License \\ W-P-1 has b<-cn issued lo the undcrtiHiieii to sell wine at wluil.sul.! under the A l o h o l i . ' B.'s-era<e (Control Law in the preniisis hjcuteil at I'ark How .City anil County of New York. ITALIAN SWIS?» rOH>NY. INC l a - ' H I'ark Row, Sew Vork, N. V. N O T l f K IS HERKBV U I V F S thai Liquor aiui Wine Li<ense Lf.KiT hs been i«su il to the undcrsitrned to sell li<iuor and wine at wholesale, uiulcr the Alcohol BeveraK'iJ l^oiitrol I,aw, in the premises loeatcil at ;jl);j Washinyton S i r e d , Brooklyn, New York, County of Kintfs. BUODKLVN WINK AMI -il'lKlTS, INT. aiKt W \ S l l l N l l T O N ST. HKl.VS. N. Y NOTK'K IS 1II:1!1:hY filVKN that wholesaler's wine liei-nsc WW '.'I-; has been issued to the uudcr>iviud to sell wines at wholesale uiulcr the Alcoholic lleverauL- Control I.:iw iu the premises localed at !;7 William Street, City and Count} of N-w York. STANDARD COMMODITIES CORPORATION a/ William Street, New York 5, N, Y. BILLS IN CONGRESS SENATE 637. I n t r o d u c e d by S e n a t o r s Langer a n d Chavez. Provides f o r voluntary r e t i r e m e n t a f t e r 20 or more years of service a t age 50, g r a n t s widows' a n d d e p e n d e n t s ' benefits, increases existing a n n u i l ties of 25 per c e n t of $300 which ever is lesser, eliminates t h e t o n tine charge, a d d s 1 per cent t o t h e pension r a t e of deduction, a n d prescribes t h e following two new m e t h o d s of c o m p u t i n g a n n u i t i e s : (a) IVa per cent of t h e average a n n u a l basis salary for a n y five consecutive years, multiplied by t h e n u m b e r of y e a r s of service n o t exceeding 35, or (b) 1 per c e n t of t h e h i g h e s t average a n n u a l basic salary f o r a n y five consecutive yeard. multiplied by t h e n u m b e r of years of service not exceeding 35, or (b) 1 per cent of t h e h i g h est a v e r a g e a n n u a l basic s a l a r y f o r a n y five consecutive years, multiplied by t h e years of service not exceeding 35, plus $25 for a c h y e a r of service not exceeding 35. of t h e n u m b e r of cases in t h i s group. " T w o - t h i r d s of t h e v e t e r a n s now in t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t saw service in World W a r I I . T h e r e a r e 545,800 employees i n thsi group a n d t h e g r o u p constit u t e s 4 per c e n t of t h e 13,585,000 v e t e r a n s of World W a r I I reported by t h e V e t e r a n s A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . " T h e r e a r e 74,80 Odisabled v e t e r a n s in t h e Federal service anif 73 per cent of this group were disabled in World W a r II. Vet P r e f e r e n c e in E x a m s " T h e Veterans P r e f e r e n c e Act g r a n t s non-disabled v e t e r a n s a p r e f e r e n c e of five points, disabled v e t e r a n s 10 p o i n t s ; t h e wives of such disabled v e t e r a n s who a r e u n a b l e to qualify f o r F e d e r a l positions along t h e general lines of t h e i r usual occupations, 10 points, a n d widows of v e t e r a n s 10 points. R e s t o r a t i o n of Veterans " T h e Selective Service and T r a i n i n g Act of 1940 c a r r i e d a section, t h e purpose of which was t o assure r e t u r n i n g v e t e r a n s of t h e i r old j o b or a job of like s e n iority, s t a t u s a n d pay. U n d e r t h e provision.s of t h i s Act, 260,000 vete r a n s h a v e been restored by t h e Federal Government. Generally speaking, t h e r e h a s been no h e s i t a n c y on t h e p a r t of t h e agencies of t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t in a c knowi(;dging t h e spirit as well a s to t h e letter of t h i s law. I n some cases, t h e r e h a v e been u n n e c e s sai'iiy long delays in restoring t h e veteran to his f o r m e r F>osition or one of like seniority, s t a t u s a n d pay. T h e r e h a v e been serious e f f o r t s by the agencies a n d t h e Civil \ Service Commission to avoid d e lays of t h i s t3T>e. "A large n u m b e r of F e d e r a l e m ployees h a v e been laid off since V - J D a y a n d h u n d r e d s of t h o u s a n d s Will be laid off within t h e next few m o n t h s . T h e V e t e r a n c e P r e f e r e n c e Act says t h a t w h e n lay-offs t a k e place, n o v e t e r a n with a n efficiency r a t i n g of Good or b e t t e r shall be laid off u n t i l all n o n - v e t e r a n s in competition with him, regardless of t h e i r efficiency r a t i n g s or l e n g t h of service, h a v e been laid off. I t also says t h a t v e t e r a n s who receive a n efficiency m a r k of less t h a n Good shall not be laid off until all n o n v e t e r a n s in competition with t h e m a n d who h a v e efficiency m a r k s of less t h a n Good h a v e been laid off, regardless of l e n g t h of service. T h i s m e a n s t h a t whe n t h e r e is a lay-off in a section or division of a G o v e r n m e n t Agency, t h e p e r centage of v e t e r a n s in t h a t section or division will ordinarily be sure to increase. R e d u c t i o n s in force, consequently, generally h a v e a t e n d e n c y to increaes t h e p e r - '.Kri.\l NOTICE OKVNOT.DS, CHARLKS, also known as criAS. RKYNOf.DS.—CITATION.—P a s I. l i n ; .—The I'eople of tlie State of New Y'oik. By the Grace of God Free iind Independent. T o EFFIK SHAVER. MOLLIK E. I>riFFJKLD, JAMES W. REYNOLDS, ORA MAY M . L E A N , CHARLES R, GRAHAM. STELLA MAY WHITE. W ALTKU ANDERSON REYNOf.DS, OLIVE MfLDRKD RfNEHART. MINNIE MYRTLE BLRNES.S. ETHEL REYNOLDS DII^LINGHAM, MAKOARET KERR, JENNIE ADELIA BASSETT, the next of kin and heirs at law of CHARLES REYNOLDS, .il.so known as Chas. Reynolds, deceased, .send Krceting-: Whereas RACHKL REYNOLDS, w h o resides at No. '.'tilt West l ^ t h Street, Manhat t.ui Boiouyh, in the City of New York, has lately :ipi>Ued to the Surrogate's Court of our County of New York to have a certain instrument in writinsr. dntrul November 'M. 1!>-U, relatins' to both real .-Hid pers.>ii;il property, duly proved as th° last will aii.l testament ot CHARLES REYNor.DS, al.-o known as Chas. Reynolii.-, dccea-'i'il, who was at the time of his ileuth a resident ot No. iHUi West ritU Street, ^r.nnhatlaii Boroutrh, in the County of New York: Therefore j ou and each of you art citeil to ^how cause before the SurroRate's Court ot (iur County of New York at the Hall of Records, in the County ot New York, on the rJ8th day of March, one tlioiisuiiil nine Imiulred and forty-seven, at half-past ten o'clock iu the forenoon of that il.ny why the said will and testament should not be :tdmittetl to probate as a will ot real and personal property. In tc.'-iiiiion.\ whereof, w e have caused the <e:tl ot the Surrotfate s Cuiut of till- said County of New York to be hereunto alUxetl. Witness. Honorable' William T. Collins. '1. Miiriiiyati! of our said County ot New York, at said county, the l « t l i day of February, iu the ieiir ot our Lord one thoiisaiul nine hundred and forty-seven. GKORGE LOK.«4»'ll, I lei k of the Surrogate's Court. > LEGAL N O T I C E FKANCHLSK HKAKING Motor Omnibna Lines (Xone C). BOARD OF ESTIM.\TK Boroujfhs of Manhattan. Brooklyn and Queens CITY OF NEW YORK Appli(;ations having U-en hereto'ore made by the GREEN BUS LINES, 1NC„ for a franchise to maintain and operate motor omnibuses upon certain routes in Zone C, BorouKha ot Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens; the petitions therefor published, hearings held on Tliuraday, Sep temljer 1», l!t4tt and Deceml>er 5, 1 0 4 6 , due notice of which w a s griveu, and an iniiuiry made by this Board to determine the terms and conilitions to be iinposeil— PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a PUBLIC HEARING will be held at City Hall, Borou«rh of Manhattsui. at l():aO o'clock A. M., on Thursday, March l y . 1 0 4 7 , upon the form of resolution and the proi>osed contract lor the fran<!hi."e, cmljodyintr all the terms and conditions to trovern the ffrant. at which citizens shall be eutitle-l to appear and be heard. PROPOSED CONTRACT Copies of the form of resolution, co"i tainintr the proposeii contract with all the terms aud conditions of the grraiit m'vv l)e obtained at the otti<!e of BTIREAU OF FKANCHISES, 1 3 0 7 Municipal BuiUUns:, Centre and Chambers Sts., Borotieh of Manhattan. SYLVESTER B. SHEIUDAN. Acting Director of Franchises. HILDA G. SCHWARTZ. Secretary. Dated, New York, February 11, 1 0 4 7 . c e n t a g e of v e t e r a n s in t h e F e d e r a l service. Disabled V e t e r a n s "Special provisions h a v e been m a d e by executive order for v e t t r a n s who h a v e i n c u r r e d a service-connected disability of n o t less tJian 10 per cent. V e t e r a n s Who a r e disable d t o t h i s e x t e n t a n d who hold W a r Service I n definite A p p o i n t m e n t s m a y be recommended for permanent status by t h e h e a d of t h e agency i n Which t h e y a r e employed providing t h e i r services a r e s a t i s f a c t o r y . Veterans who h o l d T e m p o r a r y I n definiate positions whose services are satisfactory, who have not less t h a n 10 per cent disability, a n d who m e e t t h e s t a n d a r d s f o r t h e jobs which t h e y occupy, m a y also be r e c o m m e n d e d f o r p e r m a nent status. "Veterans' preference as provided in competition f o r F e d e r a l positions, t h e p r e f e r e n c e g r a n t e d veterans in connection with l a y offs i n t h e F e d e r a l sei-vice, t h e Notice is hereby given that Wholesaler's Litiuor License LL-85 h a s been issued to the undersigned to sell liiiuor at wholesale uiider the Al< oholic Beverage Control Law iu thi; yreuiises located at t»5-H7-tll» East S'iiui Street, City and County of New York,.BELLOWS & CtVMPANY, INC, a.'i-07-0l» East 5r:iul Street, New York, N.Y. STATE OF NEW YORK. D E P A R I M E N T OF STATE, H!?.; I do hen-by certify that a certilicate of dissolution of AMAZON RKSTAUHANT, INC. has Ijeen tlletl lii this department lait clay aiwl that it aiipears then;froui tha*. *uch iM>i poralion has complieil with Seofioc 105 of the Stock Corporation Law. and that it is tlii-solvi.il. Given in duplicate under my hand and olllcial seal o l the IK-t>artmnil of State at the City of Albany. {S<al) this •.'."ilh day of bruary, 10-17. Thonia.' J. Cin ran. Sceivtary of S i a U . By Kdwaitl 1) Harper. Deputy Secr i'ii'v of State. STA'ri'. Ulf rOKK OLl'A It I M KN l JF STATE. I do heieUv certify thai » t-rtificate of ilissoiutiou ol CAfll'OL I'ACKING CorU'. aas Oeeu filed lu itiu depurinicui tun day and thai it (tppeart (herefrom that «iicb •orporutioi) uat uoniulleo with Seolion 1 A if the Stoi te Corpoiaiion f.uw and that I* s di-»olve» Given ui auplictiie undei my land and liffKia! leai ot thr D'M>artmeni >t Slate. ai th« ' itj o) .Albuiiy (Seal) STATK OF NEW YORK. DKPARI'MENT this 17th day of February, I'.U". OF STATE, ss.: I do hereby certify thai ii ceriiii<-.ite of ilis.-oliuion of riiouu* I.Currun SecrctiiJ) oi state 8> 707 FtK.ST AVKNCK REALTY EiU.irU U Uaipcr. Deputy Secretary of COUPt>RATlON State, has l»een fil.d in this lUparinient thib Jay and that it appears therefrom that su( h NOTK'H: IS HFREBY GIVKN that Li.juor i.'orporalioii hx^ complied with Section 105 aiul Will,- l.iceiiM; i . L l 7 4 has b c i i issued of the StiKk Corporation Law, and that it to ihc uiideriiiKued to sell liiiuor and wine is dissolvtxi. Given iu duplicate uuder my at wholesale, under tliu Alcohol Beverane hand uud otUcial seul of tho Departiueiit of Control Law, in the premises located at State, at the City of Albany. (Seal! rtOl West 'Jiuh Street, N<;w York City this ;;«th day of February 1047. County of New York, Tlioman J. Curraii, Se. r iiiry ol .State. KOAIA WINE t!OAlFANy, By Edward i>. Harper, ln-puty Secietaiy tJOi West !JtJtli Street, New Vork City vl' State. LOOKING F O I A WONDERFUL CAMERA? OffK OF WOmUTH FINRMT-NAEK CAM- KRAA. Korrlle B^Hrx. see exactly w h a t yon talse. F 3 . 9 lens, triirjrer wiiuiinB fneohanigm. Speeds t o 1 0 0 0 t h speond. ITses 1 2 0 film. Spec.ial back l o r color. Syiichronized flash e q n i p m e n t — t h e best, aud bulbs. Filt«!rB, sunshade, case. T h i s camera wa» n»e<l by physician t o take detailed tissue shots. TTie whole t h i n e is youra for cash. Phone BEekman 3 - 3 8 1 1 . ask for Mr. Lee. SHOPPING GUIDE Y f Men! Let's 6et Acquainted SALE! Men's Comtiat Boots Rebnilt combat boot. New sole® and heels. Brown only. Ail sizes. Good for farming. hunt-A^ qj^ in«. and other nses— Send St.OO witli order. Satisfaction or money back. FREE NEW CATALOG .There's a pi«asanf surprise awaiting' Ryou when you see our fine coltecfion; /of all-wool S P R I N G SUITS. TOP-S C O A T S . SPORT C O A T S , ' SLACKS. Our vatuas are remarkablal} Men's Army Rebnilt ^ttioes A n a r Shirts. PaRta. etc. 5% DISCOUNT Fanaers' MaH Ordor Hout* CfvH Serrice Employ«« SUITS 2i.50-45.( TOPCOATS 24.75-33.50, nFTH AV. OUTFtTTERS 1«0 n m Av.. N. Y. ROOM f02 Cor. 21 tt St./ To 4(28 B ' w a r (Drv*. CI.) N e w * o r k 12. N . Y. TAILORED 231 WEST 2nk ST. FURS LO S-4073 Pmr Maitsfachrrers' Ovorstoek LASKIM & OTHMK HOUTOM-DYED LAMB COATS I Here Is G o o d Hews OPBN 8AT. UNTH. a:.^® |»89.50 to M a n y more of tiM items y o u ne<^ ure BOW av»ih>bie and at sobstiMitiol savings. la Stock for liiiiii«4iot« Delivery R«ioni Heatinc Fads and »Jeetri«! HIiMiketH at eios^ut prices. . I.iniitrti quantify. Clocks, irons, pressure cookers, toasters, silverware, radios, mixers, juicers, v a c u u m cleaners,, typewriters, broilers, stinlamps, (rrills bathroom scales, carvinfe' sets, electric sh.ivers, and many other ai>pUances and ^Ift items. »139.50 K E G BEER rOK r O « « PAKTV K K COLD Popular Brands, H. ImrreU Sold by the cose. Immediate Ocliverieai RID«E lEER DISTRIIVTORS UiyM. N. Y. RiglitT-aiotb Street SHere Rd 8-8697 Keiiieiiiber to ewiiiart us for all yuur iipedH inrlurtiiiR; furniture, rugs, furs. mnes Shop With Us—Save as YON Spend Municipal Employees Service 4 t PARK KOW — 117 N A 8 8 A U 8T. CO 7 - 3 3 » « NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN that Wiue Lif'enso W W ; i l 4 has been issued to the undersitfiied to sell wine at wholesale, under the Alcohol Bererasre Control I.,aw, in the premises liH-ated at 50 West .57th fitrect. New York City County of New York. ROMA W I N E COMPANY, 5 0 West 5 7 t h Street, New York City Noiico is hereby griveu that Wholesalers's Liquor License LL-,5.'» h a s been issued to the undersiifued to sell liquor at wholesale under ;he Alcoholic Beverage ('ontrol Law in the premises located at 13t) Hrooadway, City and County of New York. NATI(.)NVL D l S T l L f . E R S PRODUCTS CORPORATION I'^O Broadway, New Y'^ork, N.Y. policy of restoration adopted by the Federal Government, and t h e executive orders r e l a t e d to t h e g r a n t i n g of p e r m a n e n t s t a t u s t o disabled v e t e r a n s , all t e n d to i n crease t h e p e r c e n t a g e of v e t e r a n s in t h e F e d e r a l service. T a k e n t o gether, t h e e s s t a t u t e s , executive o r d e r s a n d r e g u l a t i o n s will u n doubtedly m e a n t h a t t h e m a j o r i t y of t h e F e d e r a l employees will be veterans. T h i s being t r u e , t h e efficiency of t h e F e d e r a l G o v e r n m e n t during the troublesoem year.s a h e a d will rest in n o small m e a s u r e upon the v e t e r a n s of t h e United S t a t e s . " HELENS HA AIM ANN ORRNSRS OF DISTINCTION UOSIKKV • C4»STljaiE aKWKLKf ACCK8KORIRS CUSTOM MADK BL0U8C8 220 W. 4«h ST. C H 2-?842 SAVE MONEY SAVE FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT Call Abraham Kaye TR 2-9474 or LU 7-3449 SCHU-WALD SALES ft SERVICE Large Selection of A l l K i n d s of Fresh Sausages, Boiled and Smoked Ham and Fresh Provisions For the past 50 years w e have produced only O N B quality—the BEST HENRY KAST, Inc. 277 Greenwich Street Bet. Murray and Warreu 8(»., >.%. I l l W a t e r Street Slapletuii, 8. I. Brooklyn C u s t o m Matters INC Willoughby Street • R O O K L Y N . N. t . MinimuBa arder it eartooii Liuiit 5 eartMui per aaoatli Check or Mouey Order SUN SALES CO. P.O. Box «7—Went N. New Jersey ^CUSTOMIZED SHOE REiUILDING^ shoeti rebuilt, restyled; platlornih.^ ^tded. removed, toes opened, closed;.^ ^i.ule lonirtir. shorter, wider; ai^usteti tO'^ ^it; dyi'U any color; orthopedic correc-^ ^ion. Over half a century. Mail ordeic-^ ^ everywhere. ^ • Quality Work ut Mttderute Frlees M r Liverpool Shoe Rebaildiag < ^IM W. 34, N. Y, I • 4SI B'wdy, nr. Canal^ •(Opp. Macy's) LAckawanna 4-23292 MiAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS a STKTiMtN « -KNOX e OOKBS • ftlALL<m«. Ete. cfnucH tAMUU8 KKAMIM CLOSEOUTS Hltit-k. — Latest Styles 8 2 0 0 - 1250 MOUTONS $69.50 U|t *2 45 4 * L o w aa H a l f frke ur 8 DOORS FROM AUTOMAT TKL. MA. a-wia lis S. J. HORN a««h mnM* JU» «.!«•• Page Riglit CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Exams for Public Jobs That Offer Good Pay And Also Permanency NYC Open-competitive rt;{44. Sanitation Man, Class B. $2,120 (313 days) plus $720 bonus, total $2,840 a year, $54.42 a week. Pile a t City Collector oflices, not at Civil Service Commission. ^Closes T h u r s d a y . M a r c h 27.) (All the followmq close Thursday, March 20.) 6171. Junior Civil Emfineer, $2,- lar court personnel who are serving in the titles of I n t e r p r e t e r , Court A t t e n d a n t , Probation O f ficer, G r a d e s 1 or 2; Clerk, G r a d e s 3 a n d 4; S t e n o g r a p h e r , G r a d e s 3 and 4; Typist, G r a d e s 3 a n d 4; Messenger, G r a d e s 2 a n d 3, Prison M a t r o n a n d Court Stenogropher, a n d who have served in such title for a period not le.ss t h a n two years, a n d h a v e sei-ved c o n t i n u ously in t h e d e p a r t m e n t for a period of six m o n t h s . E x a m May 27. 160 to $3,120; 12 vacancies, m o r e 5197. Court Clerk, Grade 4 expected. B a c c a l a u r e a t e degree f r o m a n accredited school of en- (Mas^istrates Court), $3,000 a n d Kineering. S a t i s f a c t o r y equivalent over. T h r e e vacancies. Open to experience is also acceptable. all p e r m a n e n t employees of t h e c o u r t who are serving in t h e title Exam May 10. SlflO. Junior Electrical Engineer, of Assistant Court Clerk, G r a d e $2,160 to $3,120. Ten vacancies. 3 a n d 4, C o u r t Clerk, G r a d e 3, A baccalaureate degree f r o m a n a n d have been serving in such accretlited college of engineering title for not le.'^s t h a n two years, or .satisfactory equivalent experi- a n d have been with t h e court for not le.ss t h a n six m o n t h s . E x a m ence. E x a m May 17. 5191. Junior Mechanical Engi- May 13. neer, $2,160 to .$3,120. Ten va5090. Assistant Court Clerk cancies. A b a c c a l a u e r a t e degree (Municipal Court), $3,000. V a c a n f r o m a n accredited college of en- cies occur f r o m tiihe to time. gineering or s a t i s f a c t o r y experi- Open to employees of the M u n i ence equivalent. E x a m May 24. cipal Coiu-t who have served in .'>184. Inspector of Water Con- t h e title of Court S t e n o g r a p h e r , Attendant, sumption, G r a d e 2, $1,801 to $2- I n t e r p r e t e r , C o u r t 400. Ten vacancies, 40 more ex- Clerk or S t e n o g r a p h e r , G r a d e s 3 pected In four years. Two years a n d 4, A t t e n d a n t or Me.ssenger, of plumbing or pujnbing inspec- G r a d e s 2 a n d 3 a n d have served ti(m experience required. E x a m i n these titles for not less t h a n 2 years a n d h a v e served c o n t i n u May 17. 5391. Surffcon-Policc Depart- ously in t h e d e p a r t m e n t for six ment, Medical Oflicer-Fire De- m o n t h s . Exam May 6. M a i n t e n a n c e Man a n d who have served in t h a t title for two years a n d who have been with t h e B o a r d f o r at least six continous m o n t h s . E x a m May 26. 5226. House Painter, $14 per diem. P o u r vacancies. Open to p e r m a n e n t employees of t h e B o a r d of Higher Education sei-ving in t h e title of M a i n t e n a n c e M a n for a period of two years a n d h a v e been with t h e d e p a r t m e n t continuously f o r six m o n t h s . E x a m May 27. 5065. Foreman Ma«hinist, $3,500. O n e vacancy. O p e n to all p e r m a n e n t employees of t h e F i r e D e p a r t m e n t serving In t h e title of Auto Machinist a n d have served in t h a t title f o r n o t less t h a n two years a n d have been with t h e d e p a r t m e n t continuously for six m o n t h s . E x a m May 14. 5306. Captain, Fire Department, $4,650. Vacancies occur f r o m time to time. Open t o all p e r m a n e n t m e m b e r s of t h e F i r e D e p a r t m e n t serving in t h e title of L i e u t e n a n t , a n d who h a v e served in t h a t title for not less t h a n one year a n d have served six m o n t h s c o n t i n u ously in t h e d e p a r t m e n t . E x a m August 7. Tuesday, Mareli 11, 1947 Tuesday, March 11, 1 9 4 7 CIVIL Complete Physical and Medical Rules for Sanitation M a n Test (Govtinned from Page 1) driving and traffic regulations. T h e r e were 10 p u t - t o g e t h e r type queries to test the c a n d i d a t e s ' g r a m m a r . These were finally 15 questions on rules a n d 10 questions about filling out accident reports. I t can readily be seen t h a t t h e exam is largely of a general n a t u r e a n d does not c o n t a i n highly technical material. I t is t h e type of test t h a t c a n be passed by a c a n d i d a t e who applies himself a n d who answers t h e questions slowly a n d carefully. T h e following are carefully picked sample questions t h a t a c tually a p p e a r e d in the last exa m i n a t i o n for S a n i t a t i o n Man. 1. I n general, t h e problem of snow removal in a city like New York Is more difficult t h a n it would be in t h e country. Of t h e following, t h e chief reason f o r t h i s is t h a t (a) snow becomes very dirty i n t h e city (b) it is difficult t o recruit labor for such a job ^c) m o r e snow falls in t h e city, (d) city traffic is heavier, <'e) t h e r e is a g r e a t e r a r e a to be cleared in t h e country. 2. Of t h e following t h e poorest conductor of electricity is (a) copper, (b) a l u m i n u m , (c) iron, Cd) rubber, (e) salt water. 3. A t o u r n i q u e t is usually u.sed Ca) to prevent t h e i n j u r e d p a r t f r o m moving, (b) to stop t h e loss of blood, (c) to clean t h e wound, fd) to kill t h e genns, (e) to carry t h e i n j u r e d person to safety. 4. T h e l a w - m a k i n g body of NYC is (a) t h e Council, (b) t h e Mayor, (c) t h e Board of Aldermen, (d) t h e Borough Pre.sidents, (e) the City P l a n n i n g Commission. 5 W a t e r will freeze <a) at 65 degrees P., (b) only in winter, (c) only below 5 degrees P., <d) at 32 degrees P., <e) only out of doors. 6. T e m p e r a t u r e is measured by (a) t h e r m o s bottle, <b) c h r o n o m eter, (c) pressure gauge, (d) t h e r m o m e t e , (e) speedometer. 7. It is h a r d e r to drag a c a n of ashes t h a n to roll it mainly because of (a) the hajidles, (b) its size, <c) increase.- friction, (d) t h e distance, ^e) the f o r m of t h e can. issess a t least 20/40 vision in time of a p p o i n t m e n t , c a n d l d a t m u s t comply with t h a t section of each eye, separately (eyeglasses t h e Administrative Code which allowed). C a d i d a t e s m a y be reprovides t h a t a n y office or posi- jected f o r a n y disease, i n j u r y or tion, compensation for which Is abnormafity, such a s : h e r n i a ; decolor vision; defects of t h e payable solely in p a r t f r o m t;ne h e fective lect a r t or lungs; defective h e a r i n g f u n d s of t h e City, shall be filllad heai either e a r ; varicose veins, only by a person w h o is a bo fide resident a n d dweller of tH P ? : 'hange of Address: C a n d i d a t e s r e x a m i n a t i o n a n d ellgibles on City for a t least t h r e e y e a r s im m -f nTor mediately preceding a p p o i n t m e n t . the lists m u s t n o t i f y t h e CommisService in t h e a r m e d forces does sion p r o m p t l y of all c h a n g e s of address between t h e t i m e of filing not I n t e r r u p t residence. Proof of good c h a r a c t e r will be the application a n d a p p o i n t m e n t a n absolute prerequisite to a p - to a p e r m a n e n t position f r o m t h e list. Failure t o do so m a y dlspointment. 'alify f r o m a n y p a r t or p a r t s Age Requirements: O p e n to t h e e x a m i n a t i o n which have persons who shall n o t h a v e pass! ot already been held, t h e i r 36th b i r t h d a y on t h e firs d a t e for filing of applications. COMPLETE PHYSICAL T h i s position requires e x t r a o r d i AND MEDICAI. R U L E S n a r y physical effort. However, Local Law 51 of t h e T h e official physical a n d m e d i .year 1945 provides as follows: r e q u i r e m e n t s of t h e NYC Civil Any person w h o h e r e t o f o r e a Trvice Commission f o r S a n i t a t i o n subsequent to July 1, 1940. e: n. Class B, a r e given h e r e w i t h . tered or h e r e a f t e r , in t i m e of w a naval service of t h e United fies a n d are obtainable until States, or the active service of T h u r s d a y , M a r c h 27. T h e q u a l i f y t h e women's a r m y corps, t h e ing written test will be held on women's reserve of t h e n a v a l re- Saturday, May 3. T h e physical serve or a n y similar organization £st will follow. authorized by t h e United Sta to serve with t h e a r m y or na* SANITATION MAN shall be deemed to meet sue icH I Medical Standards m a x i m u m age r e q u i r e m e n t if his 5307. Battalion Chief, Fire Dea c t u a l age, less t h e period of such 1. M i n i m u m Height—5 feet, 4 partment, $5,450. Vacancies f r o m service, would meet such maxiinches (bare f e e t ) . time to time. O p e n to all Fire Dem u m age r e q u i r e m e n t . 2. M i n i m u m Vision — 20 40 vip a r t m e n t personnel serving in t h e Also C h a p t e r 590 of t h e Laws sion; each eye separately; eyetitle of C a p t a i n , a n d who have of 1946, provides as follows: If glasses p e r m i t t e d . served in t h a t title f o r not less m a x i m u m age r e q u i r e m e, n t s aihe t h a n one year a n d have served x . , 3 . Normal color vision. continuously in t h e d e p a r t m e n t established by law, or rule or No decayed teeth, partment, Medical Examiner-De5088. Deputy Clerk of District, action of a civil service commis- ^ 5 ^ o h e r n i a or potential pot( herIKirtment of Sanitation. $5,150 for $3,250. Vacancies occur f r o m t i m e for six m o n t h s . E x a m August 18. sion for e x a m i n a t i o n for, or for nia. 5308. Deputy Chief, Fire DeFire a n d Police D e p a r t m e n t s a n d to time. Open to all p e r m a n e n t a p p o i n t m e n t or promotion to, a n y 6. Normal h e a r i n g in each ear $4,500 in Sanitation. Vacancies employees of t h e Municipal Court partment, $6,450. Vacancies occur position in t h e public service, the separately. occur f r o m time to time. C a n d i - who are presently serving in the f r o m time to time. O p e n to all period of military duty as h e r e 7. No varicose veins. dates m u s t have an M.D. degree title of Assistant Coui-t Clerk for m e m b e r s of the d e p a r t m e n t servinbefore defined of a c a n d i d a t e 8. No hemorrhoids. from an accredited medical col- not less t h a n two years a n d h a v e ing in the title of B a t t a l i o n Cliief or eligible shall n o t be included a e a « .9. Normal h e a r t . lege, two years experience as i n - served continuously with t h e de- a n d who have served in t h a t title in computing t h e age of such c 10. Normal lungs. tern or resident physician, and p a r t m e n t for not less t h a n six for not less tiian one year a n d didate or eligible for t h e purpo^ who h a v e served contniuously f o r 11. No disabilities of a r m , h a n d , five years of varied experience in m o n t h s . E x a m May 6. of such e x a m i n a t i o n oia p p o i n f six m o n t h s . Exam. August 28. finger; leg, foot or toe.. surgery. C a n d i d a t e s must pi-oduce m e n t or promotion. P-74-44. Inspector of Water 12. History of epilepsy rejects. 5370. Lieutenant, Police Departa license to practice medicine. Consumption, Grade 3, $2,401 to ment, $4,150. Vacancies occur Also, C h a p t e r 521 of the laws 13. History of serious m e n t a l Exam May 10. $3,000. Six expected vacancies. of 1946, provides as follows: A illness m u s t r e j e c t ; norvous disor5302. District Health Oflicer. Open to all p e r m a n e n t employees f r o m time to time. O p e n t o all di.sabled veteran t h u s preferred Sders m a y reject, G r a d e 4. $3,000 and over. Pour of the Df>partment of W a t e r S u p - m e m b e r s of t h e Police D e p a r t shall not be disqualified f r o m | 14. No o t h e r disease, i n j u r y or vacancies a t $5,750. C a n d i d a t e s ply. G a s a n d Electricity who a r e m e n t who are serving in the title holding any position in t h e civil a b n o r m a l i t y which, in t h e opinion must po.sse.ss a n M.D. degree f r o m serving in the title of Inspector of S e r g e a n t (P.D.) a n d moreover service on account of age except lof t h e Medical E x a m i n e r , would a n accredited medical college, a of W a t e r Consumption, G r a d e 2, who have been serving in t h a t for positions for which age l i m i - [ i m p a i r h e a l t h or usefulness. C a n m a s t e r ' s degree in Public H e a l t h , a n d who have served in t h a t title title for at least a year. Exam t a t i o n s are specifically authoriaig||p|Rates for t h i s position m u s t pass t h r e e years of experience as a for two years a n d who have served J u n e 28. OFFICIAL KEY ANSWERS or prescribed by law, or by medical b o a r d s — t h a t of t h e Health Ollicer, or a satisfactory continuously in t h e d e p a r t m e n t l.D; 2.B; 3.B; 4.A; 5,D; 6.D; of any physical disabifity, p i ^ - "JVTunicipal Civil Service Commisequivalent of t h e last two require- f o r six m o n t h s . E x a m May 17. 7.C. vided such age or disability doeshsion a n d t h a t of t h e D e p a r t m e n t ments. E x a m May 7. [More study aid iie.vt tveek, and not render such disabled v e t e n i ?of. S a n i t a t i o n , P-55-44. Inspector of Water <)-29-43. Home Economi.st, $2,- Consumption, Grade 4, $3,000. Exweekly until exam.\ Promotion i n c o m p e t e n t to p e r f o r m t h e duties |Compi»titive Phy.sical Examination 500 to $3,000. Six vacancies. C a n - pected vacancies, 120. Open to all of the position appUed for. A \ 'jo% General Average Required 3396. Head Dining Koom AtExam Notice dates nmst have a b a c a l a u r e a t e p e r m a n e n t employees of t h e deT h e complete official notice of veteran t h u s p r e f e r r e d shall n o t | degree in h o m e economics f r o m p a r t m e n t who h a v e served in t h e t e n d a n t , Institutions, D e p a r t m e n t TEST I—AGILITY be disqualified f r o m holding anv an accredited college or university, title of I n s p e c t o r of W a t e r Con- of M e n t a l Hygiene. Usual salary e x a m i n a t i o n for S a n i t a t i o n M a n . position in the civil service m:\ i t a r t , supine position, feet toplus two years' additional satis- svunption, G r a d e 3, a n d who h a v e r a n g e $1,500 to $1,900, plus an Class B. follows, with medical a n d account of age except for positioijjj hor; h a n d s by sides. O n signal, factory experience. Exam M a r c h served in t h a t title for two years emergency compensation. Appli- physical regulations: for which age limitations are si cation fee $1. So f a r as possible, o," rise a n d r u n 5 yards to 25. Notice of ExaiiJTnation a n d who have served continuously certification will be m a d e f r o m t h e cifically authorized or prescribedTg.jo'ot wall a n d scale i t ; R u n 5 No. 5344 with t h e d e p a r t m e n t for six r e s u l t a n t eligible list of males in by law, provided such age d o e s l ^ ^ ^^ ^^ obstacles a n d Promotion SANITATION MAN, CLASS B not r e n d e r such v e t e r a n incompe- dodge t h r o u g h ; R u n 2 y a r d s to a m o n t h s . E x a m May 17. t h e wards f o r male p a t i e n t s only Salary: $2,120 per a n n u m (313 t e n t to p e r f o r m t h e duties of the tunnel a n d proceed t h r o u g h ; R u n T87-44. Dockmaster, $2,400. a n d of females in t h e wards for (AH the following close ThursEight present vacancies. Open f e m a l e p a t i e n t s only. A s e p a r a t e days). I n addition t h e r e is a position appliea for. tiaii, March 20.> 5 y a r d s to 8-foot wall a n d scale At t h e time of investigation t j R u n 5 y a r d s to vault box a n d 5397. Senior Accountant, $3,000. only to m a l e employees of the eligible list will be w r i t t e n for e m - bonus of $720 per a n n u m at presa p p l i c a n t s will be required to sif ' One expected vacancy. Open t o D e p a r t m e n t of M a r i n e a n d Avia- ployees of each institution. Some ent le it a n d sprint 40 yards back Applications and Fees: Appli- mit proof of delate a t e 01 ol bbirtn i r t h aj^vik lii employees of the Triborough tion seizing in t h e title of J u n i o r employees h a v e appealed to h a v e s t a r Ling line. Brige a n d T u n n e l Authority serv- Accountant, T e r m i n a l F o r e m a n , their positions classified as H e a d cations are issued a n d received tran.script record of t h e B u r e ^ ? ^ e p o n d s Per Cent 32 . . . ing in the title of A c c o u n t a n t Laborer D e c k h a n d , G r a d e s 2 a n d Dining R o o m A t e n d a n t . If you f r o m 9 a.m to 3 p.m on weekdays, of Vital Statistics or o t h e r .satis-n . . 100 and who have been in t h a t title 3 of t h e Cleri< al Service, or G r a d e s have such a n ppeal still pending, except S a t u r d a y s , to M a r c h 27, f a c t o r y evidence. Any vvilfull m a - ' ' 3.3 . . 96 tor two years, six m o n t h s of it 2 and 3 of t h e A t t e n d a n t Service, it is suggested t h a t you file appli- 1947 in t h e borough of residence terial m i s s t a t e m e n t wiil be cause j| •J4 . . 92 in the Authoiity continuously. for a t least two years a n d have cation for this e x a m i n a t i o n a n d of t h e a p p l i c a n t a t t h e City Col- for disqualification. 35 . . 89 served continuou.^ly with t h e de- compete in it, so t h a t if your lector's office as follows: Exam April 8. ;J6 . , 86 Duties: To sweep streets; drive, p a r t m e n t for six months. E x a m classification appeal is denied, you M a n h a t t a n — R o o m 100, Munici51K5. Mortuary Caretaker, G r a d e :57 . . 83 load a n d unloai' collection t r u c k s May 28. m a y still have a n o p p o r t u n i t y to pal Building, C e n t r e a n d C h a m b e r s 1, $1,200 to $1,800. Eleven v a c a n 38 . . 80 h a n d l e heavy e q u i p m e n t ; gra 5089. Clerk of District, $3,500. obtain t h e title t h r o u g h p r o m o - Sts. (st,reet level, n o r t h side). i'ies. Open to all m a l e employees 39 . . 78 Brooklyn—Mimicipal Building, a n d level off landfills; assist of the D e p a r t m e n t of Hospitals Vacancies occur f r o m time to tion, provided you e a r n a passing 40 . . 76 t h e operation of t r a c t o r s a n s»'rving in any title in t h e n o n - to time. Open to p e r m a n e n t e m - m a r k . (Closes Friday, M a r c h 28.) Court a n d Joral.'mon Sts. 41 . . 73 Bronx—Bergen Building, T r e - o t h e r special equipment used in competitive or labor class whose ployees of t h e Municipal Court 42 . . 70 the disposition of r e f u s e ; perform m o n t a n d A r t h u r Aves. equivalent sahiry is $1,800 with who a r e serving in t h e title of 43 . . 67 4 Queens—Borough Hall, 120-55 related work. maintenance. Candidate m u s t Deputy Clerk of District a n d w h o 44 . . 64 Tests: Phy.sical, weight 100. 7 0 | Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens. have served in t h a t title for t h r e e have served in t h e d e p a r t m e n t f o r 4.5 . . 60 per cent required. | years a n d continuously in the two years; six m o n t h s c o n t i n u R i c h m o n d — B o r o u g h Hall, St. Open-competitive . . 56 Prior to t h e physical test, 4UI., 46 D e p a r t m e n t for six months. E x a m ously with t h e court. E x a m May George, S t a t e n Island. 47 . . 52 Bacteriologist, Cayuga Comity 6. May 22. Applications will N O T be issued c a n d i d a t e s will be required to f 48 . . 48 Laboratory, Auburn, N. Y., $2,400. pa.ss a non-competitive qualifs'ii or received t h r o u g h t h e malls. 5115. Inspector of Markets, Filing fee ,$2. O p e n to both resi5195. Assistant Court Clerk, 49 . . 44 written test N\hich will inludc^ , , . . , . No application will be accepted (irade 3 (Domestic Kelations Weights uud Measures, Grade 4, d e n t s a n d non-re.sidents of New questions designed to Lest general^^, ^ I m t l e time .sUll u nfinished: unless it is on t h e regular appUCourt), $2,401 to $3,000. One va- $3,000 a n d over. Two present v a - York S t a t e . C a n d i d a t e s m u s t h a v e .t cancy. O p e n to employees of t h e cancies. Open to p e r m a n e n t e m - h a d either t h r e e years of experi- cation f o r m t'urni.shed by t h e intelligence a n d ability to tunnel. 25; maze. 20; 6-foot court who a r e serving in t h e title ployees of t h e D e p a r t m e n t of M a r - ence in a public h e a l t h or m e d i - Commission t h r o u g h t h e City directions. -.vail, 0. T h e competitive physical tests of Clerk, G r u d e 3 or 4, a n d who kets presently seiTing in t h e title cal diagnostic laboratory a n d col- Collector's office. Applications m u s t be signed by will be designed to test iht<f> T E S T II—STRL-NGTH have served in either title for u of Inspector of Weights a n d Meas- lege g r a d u a t i o n with specialization s t r e n g t h , agility, a n d s t a m i n a ^J;/ period of n o t less t h a n two years ures, G r a d e 3, a n d who h a v e in bacteriology, or a n equivalent a p p l i c a n t s a n d notari'^ed. •ABDOMINALS) Applications .nre issued f r e e but candidates. C a n d i d a t e s will taicefc a n d who have served c o n t i n u o u s - served in t h a t title for n o t less combination of experience a n d ly In t h e D e p a r t m e n t tor six t h a n two years a n d with t h e de- t r a i n i n g sufficient t o indicate abil- a fee of $2 m u s t be paid a t t h e t h e physical tests at their 0 With his feet held down, while p a r t m e n t for ut least six c o n t i n u time of filing t h e application; no risk of i n j u r y , a l t h o u g h t h e Com- in a supine position, c a n d i d a t e months. ity to do t h e work. Duties include fees will be r e f u n d e d . mission will m a k e every effort to ous m o n t h s . E x a m May 17. 5197. Clerk of Court, Grade 4 must as.iume a sitting position, m a k i n g bacteriological e x a m i n a Vacancies: Occur f r o m time to s a f e g u a r d t h e m . Medical exami- carrying up a barbell behind his .'>044. A.ssistant BacteroloKist, tions of various kinds of speci(Domestic Relations I'ourt), $3,n a t i o n is •:-equlred prior to the t i m e in t h e D e p a r t m e n t of S a n i 000 a n d over. T h i e e vacancies. $2,161 to $2,700. Twelve present mens, such as water, milk, food, neck. physical test a n d the Commission Applicants m u s t be regular e m - vacanies. Open to p e r m a n e n t e m - typhoid, rabies ,etc.. overseeing t a t i o n . Pound.s Per Cent ;est i I will exclude f i o m t h e physical test Promotion Opportunities: Employees of the court and must ployees of t h e D e p a r t m e n t of t h e innoculation of laboratory . . 100 70 have served in the title of Assist- H e a l t h who h a v e served in the a n i m a l s a n d conduct of s t a n d a r d ployees in t h e title of S a n i t a t i o n a n y c a n d i d a t e who is f o u n d n i e ^ . . 95 6 ") a n t Court Clerk for a period not title of J u n i o r Bacteriologist for inununization tests a n d experi- M a n , Class B, a r e eligible f o r pro- cally unfit. . . 90 61) Medical a n d physical requi Foreman, less t h a n two years, a n d have a period not le.ss t h a n two years ments, W r i t e to Cayuga County motion t o Assistant . . 85 55 m e n t s as posted on t h e Commis. servied continuously with the de- and contnuously in t h e D e p a r t - Civil Service Commission, Auburn salary $2,50 per a n n u m . . . 80 50 Itequirements: No f o r m a l edu- sion's Bulletin tloard m u s t be met p a r t m e n t for a period of two ment tor six m o n t h s Exam May Savings B a n k Building, Auburn, . . 75 45 Medical and Physical Require19. V<'a)s. Exam May 20. N. Y. W r i t t e n exam date, April cational requirements. . . 70 40 At t h e d a t e of filing applica- ments: C a n d i d a t e s m u s t be not 5224. Carpenter, $14.70 a day. 19 (Closes Monday. M a r c h 31.) 5099. Assistant Court Clerk. . . 60 35 tions, c a n d i d a t e s m u s t be citizens less t h a n 5 feet 4 inches in height <;rade 3 Kieneral Sessions Court), Six vai'uncies. Open to all p e r m a . . 50 30 ['i'jeo tyuinhj promotion tests, of the United S t a l e s a n d residents (bare feet) a n d must approximat $2,401 to $3,000. Vacancies occur n e n t employees of the Board of 0 No weight of the S t a t e of New York. At t h e n o r m a l weight for h e i g h t ; must from time to time. Open to regu- lligh r Education in the title of IXHH' 3.) STATE COUNTY m » TEST III—STRENGTH DUMBBELLS A c a n d i d a t e by .sheer m u s c u l a r effort, one a r m a t a time, m u s t raise dumbbells f r o m a stop position a t shoulder to full a r m vertical extension. B o t h H a n d s Combined Pounds Per Cent 160 100 150 94 140 88 130 82 120 76 110 68 100 60 90 52 80 42 No weight lifted by either or both h a n d s . 0 Medical Regulations 1. T h e results of t h e medical e x a m i n e r s ' findings will be expressed In one of t h e following ways: (a) P a s s e a ; (b) Conditionally r e j e c t e d ; (c) Rejected. 2. T h o s e who are " P a s s e d " or "Conditionally Rejected" must compete in t h e physical e x a m i n a tion. Any c a n d i d a t e , h a v i n g be^n passed or conditionally r e j e c t e d , who does not enter, or h a v i n g e n tered does not prosecute t h e p h y s ical e x a m i n a t i o n t o its econclusion on t h e s a m e day, shall be entirely eliminated a n d carried a n d counted on t h e records a s "Failed or W i t h d r a w n in Competitive Physical." 3. By t h e t e r m "Conditionally R e j e c t e d " is m e a n t t h a t t h e c a n didate h a s presented some s u b s t a n d a r d defect which is o r d i n a r ily a n d usually curable a n d is deemed to be so by t h e Medical E x a m i n e r s of the Commission, or t h a t t h e c a n d i d a t e h a s disclosed on first examiiaation some medical history upon which a decision c a n n o t be m a d e without f u r t h e r e x a m i n a t i o n or evidence. Comm o n cause f o r Conditional R e j e c tion a r e t h e s e : (a) Defective T e e t h ; (b) Varicose Veins; (c) H e m o r r h o i d s ; (d) Slight H e r n i a ; (e) History of M e n t a l Illne.ss. C a n d i d a t e s with Conditional R e jections who a t t a i n a place in t h e eligible list M U S T R E Q U E S T a n d pass medical r e - e x a m i n a t i o n s af ter publication of t h e list. 4. Those who are " R e j e c t e d " by t h e medical e x a m i n e r s will be n o tified to a p p e a r for one l e e x a m i n a t i o n some time before t h e last day for medical a n d physical exa m i n a t i o n s , to be l a t e r a n n o u n c e d by t h e Commission. Controlled by t h e provisions of this p a r a g r a p h are c a n d i d a t e s who disclose such defects as t h e following: (a) Defective Vision; (b) Defective Color Vision; (c) H e a r t Ailments; (d) Defective H e a r i n g ; (e) Short Height. If on r e e x a m i n a t i o n they a r e " P a s s e d " or "Conditionally R e j e c t e d , " R e g u l a t i o n No. 2 above shall apply. If t h e y fail to a p p e a r or are r e j e c t e d a g a i n on r e e x a m i n a t i o n , t h e y are entirely eliminated, 5. E x a m i n a t i o n s or r e e x a m i n a tions beyond those provided for c a n n o t be allowed. Physical Regulations 1. Tlie physical e x a m i n a t i o n is competitive a n d t h e r e f o r e udner no c i r c u m s t a n c e s are r e e x a m i n a tions ever g r a n t e d regardless of accidents, injuries, sickness, or other mi.sfortune. 2. No resting is allowed between tests n o r between trials in a test. 3. C a n d i d a t e s h a v i n g entered into physical e x a m i n a t i o n m u s t continue to conclusion at s a m e session of e x a m i n a t i o n . F a i l u r e to do so, regardless of acident, i n jury, sickness, or a n y m i s f o r t u n e , m u s t result in complete w i t h drawal a n d elimination f r o m t h e competition. 4. C a n d i d a t e s a i e c h a r g e d with the simple responsibility of c a r r y ing their own cards. Any c a n d i d a t e f o u n d with the c a r d of a n o t h e r competitor is subject t o disqualification. 5. Agihty. Any c a n d i d a t e who r u n s out of course or who uses t h e iron s u p i w r t i n g rods of t h e wall to aid his <iimb, wil liout ret racking a n d c o n t i n u i n g properly within t h e time limit shall receive credit only for t h e completion of t h e obstacles previously a n d properly completed. Two trials. 6. Abdominals. T h r e e trials. If no weight h a s been lifted, a f o u r t h trial shall be allowed with the 30pound barbeU only. 7. Dumbells. T h r e e trials. If no weight h a s been lifted a f o u r t h trial shall be allowed with t h e 40- SERVICE LEADER r a g e niine U.S. Clerk Jobs In May; First Croup Is Tested, Windup Exam on Saturday T h e first of t h e two e x a m i n a tions f o r U. S. Clerk, each to t a k e c a r e of about half t h e 50,000 c a n didates, was held on S a t u r d a y a t 42 points In New York a n d New Jersey. T h e r e m a i n i n g group will be x e a m i n e d a t t h e s a m e points S a t u r d a y , M a r c h 15. (Of t h e 50,000 candidates, 30,000 a r e f r o m t h e m e t r o p o l i t a n district. T h e jobs pay $1,756 to $2,394 a year. J a m e s E. Rossell, Civil Service Regional Director in NYC, said t h a t t h e Commission's r e g u l a r f a cilities in t h e P o s t Offices a t 21 cities were n o t sufficient t o h a n dle all t h e competitors a n d a r r a n g e m e n t s were m a d e for use of local schools. I n NYC in a d d i t i o n to t h e r e g u l a r e x a m i n a t i o n rooms in t h e F e d e r a l Building a t 641 W a s h i n g t o n S t r e e t , use is m a d e of E v a n d e r Childs a n d T h e o d o r e Roosevelt High Schools In t h e Bronx, E a s t e r n District High School in Brooklyn, J a m a i c a High School a n d Long I s l a n d City H i g h School. I t is expected t h a t t h e registers of ellgibles resulting f r o m this exa m i n a t i o n will be set u p speedily a n d first a p p o i n t m e n t s will be m a d e In May. D E R last week, m o r e of M a r c h 4. Study Aid 9. W h i c h of t h e following would be most useful In p r e p a r i n g a f r e e h a n d d r a w i n g on a stencil (a) v a r i t y p e r <b) m i m e o g r a p h (c) mlmioscope (d) isotope. 10. T h e only cla.ss of mail which Is f o r w a r d e d f r o m one city to a n o t h e r without p a y m e n t of a d ditional postage is <a) first (b) second (c) third (d) f o u r t h . 11. W h e n a l e t t e r is a t t a c h e d to a p a r c e l - p o s t package, t h e r a t e f o r t h e letter is (a) first class (b) second class <c) t h i r d class (d) f o u r t h class. 12. I n an.swering t h e telephone it is usually considered p r e f e r a b l e to say (a) Hello (b) Yes (c) Tills is Mr. B l a n k (d) How a r e you? 13. Of t h e following, t h e m a i n r e a s o n f o r keeping a c a r e f u l record of incoming m a l l Is t h a t (a) some people are less Industrious t h a n o t h e r s (b) t h i s record will help speed u p outgoing mall (c) t h i s record will c o n s t i t u t e legal evidence (d) t h i s record will help in answering inquiries, 14. Of t h e following, the one which is n o t a reason for avoiding clerical error is t h a t ' a ) t i m e is lost (b) m o n e y is wasted ^c) m a n y clerks a r e very intelligent (d) serious consequences m a y result. 1. An invoice is usually a (a) check (b) bond (c) bill (d) inventory. 2. Of t h e following, t h e one which is not a credit I n s t r i u n e n t is (a) a bill of e x c h a n g e (b) a collateral n o t e (d) a n Inventory. 3. An excise i.'i a type of (a) e m b a r g o (b) Inventory (c) deficit (d) tax. 4. T h e t e r m used in i n s u r a n c e to m e a n c o m p e n s a t i o n for loss is (a) salvage (b) r e i m b u r s e m e n t (c) i n d e m n i t y (d) recovery. 5. A w r i t t e n a u t h o r i t y f r o m one p e r s o n empowering a n o t h e r person to act for h i m is called (a) a n a f fidavit (b) a power of a t t o r n e y (c) a t r u s t (d) a l e t t e r of credit. 6. Sun.strand is a f o r m of (a) filing c a b i n e t (b) a d d i n g m a c h i n e (c) s a f e (d) typewriter. 7. Of t h e following, t h e chief a d v a n t a g e of t h e use of a d i c t a t i n g m a c h i n e is t h a t (a) t h e s t e n o g r a p h e r m u s t be able to t a k e r a p i d dictation (b) t h e person d i c t a (c) t h e d i c t a t o r m a y be d i c t a t i n g letter while t h e s t e n o g r a p h e r Is busy a t some o t h e r ta.sk (d) t h e t i n g t e n d s to m a k e fewer errors usual ofiice noise is lessened. 8. T h e m a c h i n e utilizing most completely t h e stencil process of LEADER Had News First duplicating Is t h e (a) m l n e o g r a p h I. c T h e e x a m i n a t i o n d a t e s were (b) h e c t o g r a p h ' c ) d i c t a p h o n e <d> 6. b published exclusively in Tlie LEA- mimeoscope. II. a 2. d 3. d 4. c 5, b 7. c 8. a 9. r 10. a IZ. c 13. d 14. d. Patrolman Aid Study KEY ANSWERS Following is the final instalment roof when t h e shot was fired; (C) of the last NYC Patrolman exam, a n act m a y cause n o h a r m a n d yet be puni.shable because of i n as study aid for tfiis Saturday's t e n t ; (D) t h e criminal probably Patrolman written te.st: c a u g h t sight of t h e policeman i m mediately before h e fired t h e s h o t ; 69. " S a f e - c r a c k e r s need n o t (E) it was n o t t h e I n t e n t of t h e leave their calling cards behind. criminal to shoot t h e policeman. T h e i r technique or w o r k m a n s h i p 72. "If a legal a r r e s t by a n ofis usually a s certain a m e t h o d of ficer, or one aiding him, is forcidentification as fingerprints." T h e ibly resisted, h e m a y overcome one of t h e following which Is t h e such force by t h e use of greater most a c c u r a t e s t a t e m e n t , solely on force to complete t h e arrest, t h e basis of t h e above except. w h e t h e r t h e a r r e s t be for a felony, Is t h a t : (A) fingerprints a r e o f t e n a misdemeanor, or even in a civil left on tools used for cracking suit." On t h e basis of t h e above safes; (B) few s a f e - c r a c k e r s leave s t a t e m e n t , t h e one of t h e followpositive clues; (C) t h e o p e r a t i n g ing which follows most validly Is m e c h a n i s m s of safes are generally t h a t : (A) legal a r r e s t s a r e geneidentical; (D) fingerprints a r e rally effected by phy.slcal force; rarely a m e t h o d of positive i d e n - (B) t h e use of physical force In tification of s a f e - c r a c k e r s ; (E) m a k i n g a n a r r e s t is n o t always justified; (C) some m i s d e m e a n o r s m e t h o d s employed by s a f e - c r a c k - includes crimes a n d civil suits; ers a r e o f t e n Identifying. (D) few a r r e s t s a r e m a d e for felonies or m i s d e m e a n o r s ; (E) t h e 70. "Every p a t r o l m a n Is neces- use of physical force Is n o t legal, sarily a p r a c t i c a l psychologist, even if necessary in m a k i n g a n f o r h e shortly becomes a n expert a r r e s t . in t h e essential c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s of 73. " W h e n a person drinks h u m a n behavior. T h e p a t r o l m a n ' s beat Is t h e proving ground for t h e voluntarily, a n d becomes Intoxipsychological laboratory." Of t h e cated, a n d while in such condition following, t h e most valid i n f e r - does a n act which would be a crime if h e were sober, h e is neverence t h a t c a n be d r a w n solely on thele.ss responsible, t h e settled t h e basis of t h e above p a r a g r a p h rule being t h a t voluntary d r u n k e n is t h a t : (A) t h e psychological ness is no excuse." Of t h e followlaboratory is essentially a proving ing, t h e most valid i n f e r e n c e t h a t ground for t h e p a t r o l m a n ; (B). c a n be d r a w n on t h e basis of t h e t h e p r a c t i c a l psychologist operates above p a r a g r a p h Is t h a t : (A) In a l a b o r a t o r y ; (C) h u m a n be- voluntary d r u n k e n n e s s as a n exhavior is a c h a r a c t e r i s t i c rarely cuse for crime Is a n accepted studied in t h e psychological labor- rule; (B) some acts which a r e a t o r y ; (D) psychology Is essential- not crimes when a person is sober ly t h e study of h u m a n behavior; a r e crimes w h e n t h e person Is i n (E) familiarity with psychological toxicated; (C) it is t h e c r i m i n a l laboratory techniques is a n essen- n a t u r e of a n act which f r e q u e n t l y tial prerequisite for t h e p a t r o l - leads to intoxication; <D) some acts p e r f o r m e d while a person Is m a n on t h e beat. 71. "A m a n shot at a hole In Intoxicated are crimes; »E) t h e t h e roof w h e r e h e supposed a criminal n a t u r e of a n act Is d e t e r policeman was watching. T h i s mined essentially on t h e basis of was held to be a crlmiitiul a t t e m p t w h e t h e r t h e person p e r f o r m i n g to kill, t h o u g h , when t h e s h o t was t h e act is sober or intoxicated. fired, t h e policeman h a d t h e good 74. " T o .speak of t h e veteran is f o r t u n e to be a t a n o t h e r point on misleading. Tliere a r e all types t h e roof." O n t h e basis of t h e of veterans, j u s t as t h e r e are all above p a r a g r a p h , t h e most valid types of civilians. Most v e t e r a n s Inference t h a t c a n be m a d e is will r e t u r n to n o r m a l civilian p u r t h a t : (A) a m i s t a k e n Idea c o n - suits. A few m a y engage In a s t i t u t e s a harmless i n t e n t ; (B) career of crime." Of t h e followt h e policeman was watching the ing, the most valid Inference on c r i m i n a l t h r o u g h a hole in t h e t h e basis of t h e above s t a t e m e n t is t l i a t : <A) most civilians will a t some time or a n o t h e r c o m m i t a crime; ^B) v e t e r a n s do not differ greatly f r o m civilians; <C) t h e r e a d j u s t m e n t problem of mo.st veterans will be severe; (D) it is not t r u e t h a t a n y civilian will deliberately choose to commit a criminal a c t ; (E) relatively few veterans a r e able to r e t u r n to their n o r m a l civilian pursuits. 75. " T h e patrolman's fight a g a i n s t crime includes not only t h e .spectacular task of a p p r e h e n d i n g criminals, but also t h e less widely publicized, but t r e m endously i m p o r t a n t , task of p r e venting crime." T h i s s t a t e m e n t m e a n s most nearly t h a t : <A) p r e vention of crime Is s p e c t a c u l a r ; (B) criminals are a p p r e h e n d e d by p r e v e n t i n g crime; tC) crime p r e vention Is a n I m p o r t a n t police f u n c t i o n ; <D) t h e a p p r e h e n s i o n of criminals .should be less widely publicized; (E) it is t h e spectacu l a r Clime which Is i m p o r t a n t . pound dumbbell only. 0 per cent shall be given for a trial to c a n dlate (1) who employs a t h r o w - u p or s n a p - u p lilt, or (2) who falls to stop at shoulder in lift, or <3) who employs t h e quick d r o p - a w a y lift. 8. General. T h e regulations a p plying to these e x a m i n a t i o n s are not limited by the above e n u m e r a tion. Any usual or rea.son 'blc rule a t t a i n 100 on the o t h e r tests. He hus t h e r e f o r e failed a n d is elimin a t e d f r o m t h e competition a t t h i s point. Any candidate, who h a v i n g completed Test I (Agility) a n d T e s t 11 (Abdominals), who h a s not acc u m u l a t e d a score of at lea^it 108 points, is foi t h e s a m e reason failed and eliminated f r o m t h e compotition at this point or decision to i n s u r e f a i r competition Is deemed to bo p a r t of these regulations. U. T h e dumbbells assigned for use in t h e D\unbbells Te.st weigh 40. 50. 60, 70 a n d 80 pounds. 10. Any c a n d i d a t e who, having completed Test I (Agility) h a s not achieved a score of a t least 20 points, c a n n o t pass the physical e x a m i n a t i o n even it he were to Below Is a p a r a g r a p h based on t h e M a n u a l of P r o c e d u r e of t h e Police D e p a r t m e n t . Read the p a r a g r a p h carefully a n d then answer questions 76-80 solely on t h e basis of I n f o r m a t i o n a p p e a r ing in t h e p a r a g r a p h . " M e m b e r s of t h e Force shall m a k e k n o w n t h e a r r e s t of any person by t a k i n g stich person to t h e s t a t i o n house of t h e precinct in which t h e a r r e s t is m a d e , f o r s e a r c h a n d record, except t h a t on bridges, a prisoner to be a r r a i g n e d In court f o r t h w i t h , shall be t a k e n directly to t h e precinct s t a t i o n house, within court jurisdiction, n e a r e s t to place of a r r e s t for search. Members of t h e w a r r a n t .squad m a y , w h e n t h e court t h a t Issued tile w a r r a n t is In session, t a k e the prisoner directly to court; In which case t h e a r r e s t ing ofllcer shall, immediately a f t e r t h e a r r a i g n m e n t of t h e prisoner in court, t r a n s m i t to t h e desk o f ficer of t h e precinct In which t h e a r r e s t was made, t h e p a r t i c u l a r s r e g a r d i n g .such a r r e s t foi- e n t r y in t h e Arrest Record." 76. According to t h e above p a r a g r a p h , w h e n a person is arrested on u bridge a n d is to be a r r a i g n e d I Continued on Page 11) Page CIVIL Ten PATROLMAN AND GUARD JOBS OPENED BY U. S. TO YETS ONLY SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, March 11, FIREMEN SCHOOL DIRECTORY Complete Training Electrician, Plumber, Carpenter and Painter Exams Announced, Also—N« Restriction as to These T h e U. S. Civil Service C o m mission a n n o u n c e d e x a m i n a t i o n s t h e positions of Electrician, P l u m ber, C a r p e n t e r a n d P a i n t e r a t salaries of $2,469, $2,694 a n d $2,895, a n d f o r G u a r d a n d P a t r o l m a n a t salaries r a n g i n g f r o m $2,020 to $2,469 a year. All of t h e positions a r e located in W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., a n d vicinity, a n d a p p o i n t m e n t leads to p e r m a n e n c y . Veterans and non-veterans may apply. Applicants for Electrician, Plumber, Carpenter, and Painter positions m u s t h a v e completed a f o u r - y e a r a p p r e n t i c e s h i p , or m u s t h a v e h a d 4 years of p r a c t i c a l exp e r i e n c e in t h e t r a d e for w h i c h t h e y apply. I n addition, applic a n t s f o r t h e $2,694 positions m u s t show one year, a n d f o r t h e $2,895 positions, two y e a r s of j o u r n e y m a n experience in t h e t r a d e f o r which application is m a d e . F o r t h e $2,895 positions, one y e a r of t h e required experience m u s t h a v e been in t h e supervision of small groups of t r a d e s m e n . No w r i t t e n test is required f o r t h i s e x a m i n a t i o n : a p p l i c a n t s will be r a t e d on t h e i r experience as s h o w n i n t h e i r applications a n d upon con-oborative evidence secured by t h e Commission. T h e m a x i m u m CIVIL SERVICE age limit, sixty-two years. Is waived for persons entitled to vete r a n preference. T h e e x a m i n a t i o n for G u a r d a n d P a t r o l m a n is open to v e t e r a n s only. Persons a p p o i n t e d to these positions will g u a r d a n d p a t r o l g o v e r n m e n t buildings a n d grounds. T h e m a j o r i t y of a p p o i n t m e n t s will be m a d e t o t h e position of G u a r d a t t h e $2,020 salary level. Only a few a p p o i n t m e n t s will be m a d e t o G u a r d a n d P a t r o l m a n positions a t h i g h e r salaries. T h e r e are n o experience r e q u i r e m e n t s b u t a p p l i c a n t s m u s t t a k e a w r i t t e n test consisting of two s u b j e c t s — ( 1 ) a G e n e r a l Test, (2) a Directory Test. S a m p l e questions f o r e a c h s u b j e c t will be d i s t r i b u t e d w i t h the examination announcement. T h e m i n i m u m age limit is 18 y e a r s : t h e r e is n o m a x i m i m i age limit. Application f o r m s m a y be obt a i n e d a t t h e Commission's o f fice. 641 W a s h i n g t o n Street, New York 7, N. Y., or f r o m most first a n d second-class post offices, o u t side of NYC, a n d f r o m t h e U. S. Civil Service Commission, W a s h i n g t o n 25, D. C. Applications m u s t be sent to W a s h i n g t o n oflBce of t h e Commission not later t h a n Tuesday, M a r c h 18. CANDIDATES: many advantages of Civil Service enoployment We urge all candidates to matter on the subjects read carefully of all examination. INSTRUCTION DELEHANTY BY EXPERIENCED SPECIALIZED GRAMMAR AND USAGE. CTVTCS, ARITHMETIC, AND OTHER SUBJEtrrS YMCA Schools tS W. 43, mr. B'way EN 2-«117 55 Haiisea Pt.. rklyn ST 3-7000 ATLANTIC MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY Veterans Eligible Uoder G.t. lill Any enlisted m a n who h a s 18 m o n t h s (or a n officer who h a s 6 m o n t h s ) of sea d u t y in t h e deck or engineering b r a n c h on a vessel of t h e U. S. Navy, A r m y , Coast G u a r d or M e r c h a n t M a r i n e is eligible f o r a n Officer's license in t h e M e r c h a n t M a rine. No educational requirem e n t s needed. Classes s t a r t ing daily. Request Catl. 35. New York Preparatory (Evmning tent. Cara canta. B<?8rmner. advanced, and relreaher cour8e«. Cotr for road test. BKTTKK AUTO SCHOOL. 888 Firat Ave. (64tb-55tb), 601 Lexington Ave. (&S-63). FLaza 0-5977. •eaa^ CBB raoOKLVM SCHOOL. BBAUTI CULTURE, BnroU to learn a paying profetaion. Brelyn Layton. Director. 461 Noatrand Ave.. Brooklyn. S^forbBg 3-9701. P M O U K BBAL'TT SCHOOL, IKC. ( U c . R. f . State!. 2 3 5 W. 126 St. ( o v « Lorw'a Tictoria Theatrel. Complete inat. in aii branches beauty culture. Moder* equipmeot aind method Day-Eve claaaea AC 2-1692. lualncsa Schoola 67th fmt—220 •ANKCKA'. ICU 2-0886. Kaai 4Snd Vt.. Haw York CMty. NKW XOKK A€;VJ>KM1f OF BUMINEi^S, 447 Lenox Ave'., N.Y.C. Prepare for CivU Scrvice KxaniiuutiuiiH. Real ICstate Brotieragu. Business SciTctarlal. Da,y-£vea. Robert W. Justice, f i r e c t o i . ED 4-5060. aaaiaan aad raraiga Scrvlea LAUM AinCRMIAM U N B T l T t r r * — 1 1 W M St. AU aacrctarial and ouaineaa aab]ecta Badiah. ijaniah. P a r f w i a a a Special oouritaa to latarnaitoaa) adminiatrat and taraUpa aarvloa LA 4 - a M 6 Court R«|»orting BEPFT.KT A BROWNK SCHOOL—Daitime course in hii^h-gpeed Machine ShorU hami. 7 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn. H.V. NEviiib » ' . ' f i l . Cuitoral aod rrefessiunaJ behool r a s WOLTISB SCHOOL af Spceeh aad Oraaia—Eat. ovei yeara in Camegta Hall. CWtured apeech. a atrons. modulated voice, cbarm ot manner, peraonality. tborourh training in acting for stage, acreen and radio, etc. Circle 7-4253 Dance Stmno Bi;SIM<:88 OIRL8. DANCK CLAJ^I-^^. Simple ballet. Modern stnirei-s, special cour.'je. TR. 01 7-B«04. DOROTHir DAVIS STI UIO—All types of BaUri>oni uiur Tap Dancing. Vvt Lebsona by appointment. 30U W. 33rd. St.. N.Y.G. LO. 5-^357. MABTHA GRAHAM OANCK SCHOOL—00 F i f l b Ave.. New fork a t y . OH 6 9100. Saturday claaaea tor boya and grirla. Beginning and advanced aectiona Duilr adult late afternoon and evening dassea. INDIVIDUAL LKSSONS—A few easy lessona and you will dance. Landers' Dane* School. Brooklyn. DE 9-7856. PBIVATK DANCE LKS«ON8 f l . Social clasa. Tueeday, Friday $1. 147 Moutague Brooklyn. MAin 5-1338. SCHOOL OF DANCt: ARTS—(Approved G.I. Bill of Rit^lUs) Ballet. Special. Char, acter and Tap. Special Chilrwj'a Classes. Carneg-ie Hall. Studio CL 5-8835. Oraftiug BROOKLYN TECHNICIANS INSTll'liTK, 427 Flatbush Aveuue Ext.. cor. Fulton St.. Brooklyn. Architectural-Mech. MAIn 3-2447. COU7MBIA TKCONICAL SCHOOL. 106 W. 63rd St. (Broadway) dralUman trauung for careera to the architectural and mechanical fic.^ds. Immediate enrollment Veto eligil>le. Day-evea. CI 6-7349 (Lie. M. Y. State Dept. Educatioo). NATIONAL TRCHNICAL INSTITUTE—Mechanical. Architectural, job estimating in Manhattan. 55 W. 43nd Street. LA 4-X!839. in Brookl>-n. UO Clinton St.. Boro Hall). TK 5-1911. In New Jersey. 116 Newark Ave.. BKrgen 4-3ri60. Detective Inst. Schttol) DKTKl'l'IVK CNSTITLTE—Instiuction for those who wish to learn the fundampntala EDUCATORS. of detective work 507 5tU Ave. MU 2-3458. Fingerprinting FAD KOI riNGKR PRINT SCHOOL, 2 9 0 Brcadway eputpped School tlic. by State of N. Y.I Flying Svhoula FLVINQ Si'UOOL—Learn the sale way on water Piper Cub Sea Pianos, luetnted instructora. for appointment ISL.AND AIKWAYS foot ot CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS (.'UURTIVH »IMJ roao DRIVE 7t Park Aw., NT 16, Nr. 3 8 St. OAi O-OMl TRAINIHG tor LBARM TO DRITE—Private inetruction. DaiU ControUed cara. Car* to hire toi road t e ^ 1846-47 cara for hire—with or without cbauBeur. Olympia Driving SohooL 876* Broadway, between 106th and 107th Streeta N. T. a KO 3-8000 LKAKN TO DRIV1<:—Private lessons any time. Spocial courac for civil acrvice appli- CHAXTS • equipnwut p»|>4>vialljr sismcd for nieu und woinrii drxirous of IWHttluic the ph>-Ni«-al te^it. S T A T i : > DE- ISLAND GYMNASIl M. F A I L M. KLNVON (nr. Chambera St.» NYC. Moderufy Pboue BE 3-3170 loi information. New classes Just starting new Phone City island 8-i'.;0U ot write East Kordham St„ City Ulano. N.*. Languugeb BLCCINI'S—The otisinal dipioniata' school ol lausuusts. Est. 1009. 6'ineii Italian taugrht at school or pupil's residence. Other languages by experts. Pbone 9-3394 or write Miss Buccini. 5"4 W. L33d S t . N.V.C for appointment DE 1894 Clove Road, S.I., N.Y. TKUiPHON'K GIBRAI.TAK 7-5767 RKVt'KLTA STIDIOS—Spanish Instruction. Eveniiiga at 7. Private, Special Tuea. Eves Soc'ial tfroup exoiiansre. Spanish-Enslisli conversation. ing foUowa 7-iO P.M. 133 E. tilst St. KU 4-OSUl. Rl cla.sa. Danc- A. KARBAZ—Speak Fieoch in 3 months. Native Parisian, Sorboiiiie. A. Kabbnas. 63 Washington Sauute South. Phone: GKamercy 5-4870. N. Y. Massage LB.\RN Mi\8SAGl<;—Veterans (under G.I. Bill) I A ditfuiBed profession for man leading to lifetime security. Eiuoll now. CONNECTUM T S(;iI()()Jj OF MASSAGE, 96 Union St.. Norwich Conn. Tel. 1713. Call or write booisiet. You Learn by SEEING, HEARING and DOING! CONVINCE LSARM TO DRIVK—Mctropoliton Auto Scliool. Bat 1916. Cart Lie. State of Mew York. 165 Second Ave.. N.T.C. 0 & 7-8961. Civil Service institute Dept. of Dwigkt 0*0 Laaoa Ava. AOdulMW S - l « 3 « . PARIuai AUTO SCHtMIL. Learn Driving fhron^b lYaffic. Dual cont^tM eara for road teaU. Open eTenings t684A Broadway (63d St.) CI 6-1767 available ALL SUIJECT MATTER T H O R O U ^ L Y EXPLAINED VERBAL AND ftLACKDOARD ILLUSTRATIONS TYPICAL QUESTIONS ANALYZED AND ANSWERED REASONING USED TO NND CORRECT ANSWERS PERIOOIC TRIAL EXAMINATIONS COMPLETE HOME STUDY MATERIAL . . . REFRESHER C O U R S E S INI1YIM« K ! B 4 N > L — l u t m c t o r a . Expert inatnictor. Call or WrIU tor AppoMm»st for MEDICAL EXAM Md MENTAL TEST Hov^ever. GIVES YOU THESE EXTRA BENEFITS! • • • • • • Aato Orlvlag A A l — A i r r o SCaOOL,—operated t v Qeorge Gordon. World Wai a S83 Soulb Broadway. Yoaketa. 4. U JStb IT. Co-Ed'nl. Becento, AIJL CtUagM. W. Paint. ABM»diB, A c e c l e n t a i P t o c r a a UrarfuatM a t e U t w l t * leading ooliesw while such reading it helpful IT C A N N O T REPLACE CLASS. ROOM Academic and Cemcrcial—College Preparatary BMRO HALL ACADEMI—FlatbUib Bzt Cor. (TUUOD 8t.. Bklyn Regenti Accre«Hte<». MA. 2-2447. CHARLIK8 O S r v i M e SCHOOL. Coarteone PaUent ln«>tniction, DaaL, controOeo cara. Day and evening leesons. HQS Aveniia J. near Coney Island Avenae. Brocklya. JSa 7-7366. Evening High School HELPS SCHOOL Day and Evening Classes are tion. Competition is keen . . . and of a very high calibre. printed • EXPERT INSTRUCTION OYMS, RTINNINO TRACK, WEIGHT ROOM. POOL. TEST EQtTIPMENT fUlwUBg Gre«B 9 - 7 e M I S Nortk 13th St., rUfaMielphja Pa. OAPTAm A. SCHVI^TZ, OirMtov worthy of your lEST EFFORTS in preparing for any examina- CERTAINLY. READING LISTING O F CAREER T R A I N I N G SMALL CXASSES COMFORTAHLK ROOMS PERSONAL ATTENTION 44 Whitehall St.. N. Y. 4. N. Y. Think It Over! Tk* • • • m 7 Mtri'uani .Murine i%Tl.ANTlC MEKCHAM MAKINt /tCAOEMl:, i i Wliucball oi 3 State St.. fl Y. Bowlins Green 9-708b Prepaiation foi Duck and Eiiffinetrmi; UfTi'.eif^ liceut-i* ocean. coastwi<3e and Uarboi. albo atoam anu Oloeel Veteran^ eligible ander Ol Bill Send for catalog PosUiotit avuUatile. Motion Plctnre Operwtinc BROOKLYN TMCA l'R<%l>E SlUOOL—1119 Bedtord Ave (Gate*) Bkl>u.. UA 2 1100. Evea YOURSELF! MHM 'C W e invite all candidates, including those who have been of any course without obligation A N D SEE THE DIFFERENCEl NKW YOKii COLLEGK, OP M t S l C tCharieieu l87Si ail branches. Oav .uid ivenina instruction 114 East 85th Street BU 8-0.1T/ N V 38. N V SINGliR.S—Isl sesaion frw;. Popular and classiial siiiuers trained lor stage radio. coiK-ert?. Talent Scout concerts. Stanley. HA 3-0470. MENTAL & PHYSICAL CLASSES RADIO PLANST on prominent prograina acceptintf pupils, adults. vUiUiren. ST 8-3713. PubtK SprakiHg WALTER O. ROBINMI.N. Litt M.—Eat. 30 yrs ui Cariietfie Hall. N ». C- Clrclt 74363. Private and d a f s lessens Selt-contidence. public speaking. pUrform deportment etteetive cultured apeeoh vtrojB oleasina voice, etc preparing solely through reading, to attend a class session S T E N O « R A P H T IYPEWIITIN6 • JOOKKUPtNfi SpmM 4 Maattu Caana • Bay arlva. CAiCWATIMG 0 1 COMPIOiNninr MMMiMtMMthaCairM For All P o p u l a r ( a l y . State & Federal E x a m s CONVENIENT DAY & EVE. MODERATE Most Cournea RATES . . . Available • SESSIONS INSTALLMENTS Under (i.l. BORO HALL ACADEMY Bill DEpHAJVTY Itadlu Tclevisioa HAD10-TI;A.a:Vl.M«».S INi^'l'ITiTt.. 480 Lexingtot] Ave evening PL 3-4385 UI(.\KK'c» AvuiUtltl- Iiiiafr (;. I. Kill SCHOOL 1334 B v,oy. N. r. 23 • CI 7-3444 lat Kt'it .MtiSUOE M l. Boston 1 1 5 E A S T 1 5 t h ST., N. Y . 3 • STuyve^aiit OP iUSINESS 9-6900 ^horttiaad tor LefUinerM ot liorte«& Speed DictaUun. I^pewrilinc. BookItcepiug OiUf and eveaius clatistia (co-ed) OFFICE HOURS: Mo«d«y «• Friday, 9:30 A.M. *m f:30 P.M. Safyrday, 9:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. B9 SCHOOL i SOS Flftli Av«. (42d St.) N. Y. VA «l-Mi(4 STKKFI V^iMi 111 U l . l \t:l VI. M I S I N K S S .<<4U«M>i.. 01 KCIHMH., S|>uiu;-li O u t > l »iulii .'{.'J W , st uiiiiUk. Oruttiiig loupoaluiu. Coinl.U t.? c.imii,-, .-i;.! <•01,...^.^. .\|,i„ ou .I l<> li ui,, tviiiii,:. \ V i iic I'di- liiilli tin C . ItTlli S t ami T l u u t i o 4-.'iiil Si. iii>jruiiliy. fc Acoouiwint Sefretunai Ml iHii, !iil;il<it. raiis Udilcr ti.t. iiill i ) ; i . \ ' KoaU (11 H. O t h i - l t r I l l / A GOTHAM NAS.«>4t Ol.v N'lUliI ^ I'll' (M: wkiti-; ijia-i. ;.M |Af^^OL Training Oav Mnd ^ U o - E s e . Civil Servicit M T C L A i & X.RAY TECHNICIANS MEDICAL STENOGRAPHY MEDICAL ASSISTANTS Wi* 2ZHJ Kni.'l.>li Over 30 Yeura of Suvfe»»/ul (40tb St. I Fullon St KelriseratiMi N. t . VECUMIAL I N S r i T l T K . lOt" 6tb Ave. i t f l ) Day. Kve claaaea now (uimuig Veteran* invited aev rata rial COUBINATION UlMNKi^S SCHOOL—Pieparation loi ail Civil Service EsaminauouaIndividual uiatrucuona: Shorthand. Typciwriting. OoniptuniMei. Mimeovrapbine' FiUiig. (ilerks AM-ountuig Stenographic. St'cretanul 130 We»i l a s i b Suect New Yoib 7. N r UNi 4-3170 427 F I A T N S H AVCNUE EXTENSION •k. fMtm IMPi. VMf. Write mr Men« fmr D^tmlh Radio BROOAI.YN TK< MNUIANh INSTITUTE. 437 Flatbush Avenue Ext., coj Brooklyn. Dui-Evening. MAtn 3-2447. ilUU'.) SI T.\ p u i f . i'l.n i im ni D V 3 Si..M i;il ;3tH) l. foiirsi o llcKiUivw pini;. Scrvicu, Lli of 3 »t-l»-»3 i-lMmri .">-Ititiii, W i IIEFH EV » niiOWNE ISEt KKI ARIAl. S4 ilUOL. 7 Lafayette Ave. c w . JUooklyu 17. KEvina 8-3941. Day and evening. MANUAITAN OtSlNEHS i N S T l l t t ' R 147 Weal 43na Si.-~<Jecreiari»i kaeiuag. Typing. UoiuDiometer Over.. Shorthand Steuotyue BU 9 4181 WASHINGTON BIIHJNK8S INST.. 8105—7th Ave. (cor civil aervice traluiu< Moderate coat. MO 2-008U nioiiths ikx-uintula.' 7-41U1. Flalbukh «uu dookOpen av»«. l«5th St.i. Secictana) and Watchmaking SVANUARU «|iATCM.>l.%KMU> INbTlTUTK—1991 UtoitdWMy (UttiU St.). Lifetime pu>ing trade. Vetaana invited. I'K : 86U0 Tue«a«y, March 11, CIVIL 1947 Resolution Adopted For M o r e Security To Yets in U. S. Jobs A resolution f a v o r i n g p e r m a n e n t Btatus f o r w a r v e t e r a n s In U. S. civilian employ, w h o h a v e served f o r one y e a r or m o r e , a n d h a v e An efflency r a t i n g of good or b e t t e r , proposed by A r t h u r A. G r a n t , n e w C o m m a n d e r of Rodger W. Y o u n g Post, 1349, A m e r i c a n Legion, was adopted by t h e B r o n x County h e a d q u a r t e r s . I t isto go t o National H e a d q u a r t e r s for cons i d e r a t i o n . Carl Erceg is B r o n x County Commander. T h e object of C o m m a n d e r G r a n t Js to have Congress pass such a bill. T h e V e t e r a n P r e f e r e n c e Law now provides t h a t w h e n layoffs t a k e place n o v e t e r a n with a n e f ficiency r a t i n g of good or b e t t e r s h a l l lose his job until all n o n v e t e r a n s in competition with h i m , regardless of t h e n o n - v e t e r a n s ' efflciency r a t i n g or l e n g t h of service, h a v e been let out. V e t e r a n s w i t h a r a t i n g of less t h a n good a r e also r e t a i n e d a s a g a i n s t n o n v e t e r a n s of n o b e t t e r efBciency rating. DONOVAN RETIRES Assistant Chief of D e p a r t m e n t T i m o t h y D o n o v a n (2) of H e a d q u a r t e r s Staff retired f r o m t h e P i r e I>epartment a s of S a t u r d a y o n a n a n u a l pension of $4,300, h a v i n g served w i t h t h e D e p a r t m e n t for 31 years. Patrolman SKKVICK was m a d e ; (E) t h e desk officer of t h e precinct In w h i c h t h e c o u r t is situated. (End of w r i t t e n test.) delivery of a prisoner to t h e 66,E; 67,C; 68,0; 69.E; 70,D; w a r d e n of t h e prison a t t a c h e d to 71.C; 72,B; 73,D; 74.B; 75,C; t h e c o u r t ; (E) requiring a prisoner 76.E; 77,0; 78.B; 79,E; 80,D. to plead to criminal charges m a d e a g a i n s t him. 80. W h e r e a prisoner is t a k e n RADIO-TELEVISION by a m e m b e r of t h e w a r r a n t squad Practical and Theoretical Technicians directly to t h e c o u r t which issued Course leads to opportunities in t h e w a r r a n t , t h e a r r e s t i n g officer Industry, Broadcasting or own Busim u s t t r a n s m i t t h e details of t h e ness. Day and Eve. Sessions. Quail* a r r e s t t o : (A) t h e c a p t a i n of t h e lied Veterans Eligible. INROLL NOW FOR NEW CLASSES p r e c i n c t in which t h e a r r e s t was Pioneers in Ts/evition Training Since 1938 m a d e ; (B) a j u d g e of t h e c o u r t which issued t h e w a r r a n t ; (C) R A D I O -TELEVISION t h e desk officer of t h e precinct t o INSTITUTE which t h e a r r e s t i n g officer is a t t a c h e d ; (D) t h e desk officer of 480 Lexington Ave.,N.Y.17 (46tli St.) t h e precinct in which t h e a r r e s t PLqzo 3-4585 LIcensedbyN.Y. State VETERANS If you are qualified under the G.I. Bill of Righta the following training is available under government au»pice8t RADIO—Servicing and AUTO—Electrical Repair and Engine Enroll DMfal A8slBtln« Cears*. • Wks. Men and women nrcently needed In hospltAlB, laboratories and doetore' offices. Qualify for these fine positions NOW. State licensed. Visit School. Get book R. GI.'s accepted nnder P. L. No. 3 4 0 and P. L. No. 16. SCHOOI. 60 East 4Sd St. (0pp. Or. Central) Tune-Up CL National Vocational Training School 72 E. Second St. Mineola, L. I. Phone Garden City 4 3 1 3 NEW CLASSES FORMING NOW COURSE COVERS: Structural Design, B^ams, Columns, Girders. Trusses. Retaining Walls. Dams. Reinforced Concrete. Hydraulics. Welding Design. Inspection of Materials. Surveying, HIghwsT, Sewer. Airport, Pier, Dock Design, Water Supply, Engineering Mathematics, Questions past exams. ' NOItLK & NOIILR, PublitUicrs, Inc. Dept. CS». Fifth Ave. N. X. 11. N.T. nil SCHOOL OF TKADK GARMENT rONSTKK TION « DKKSNMAKING • PATTERN DESIGN « DREKS DESIGN • DRAPING Coaching for Ursf Assistant Home Economic, Junior High School, and Performance Tests 230 West 41 St Street, New York Gty. C L A S P S DIRECTOR ^ M A Actual Previous Tests and B Medical DAY AND EVENING CLASSES NOW FORMING Complete Mental and Physical Preparation Available Under G.I. Bill Call for Appointment LA. S-0S8S RADIO NOW! Register Now! by Phone, Mail or in Person SERVICE S C H O O L GR 7-7901 Physical Answer* Requirements Aptitude ' I I : $1.00 National Institute for Home Study 475 8th Ave.. New Vork 17. N.V. Enclosed find $3 .Oi) for a SANITATION MAN BOOK—Postpaid | | | I Name Section. Adiesa Body-Build ing Exercise Program City . START NOW—Mall Coupon Today 1 NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HOME STUDY Also available at LEADER BOOK STOKE GETAN UNCLE SAM JOB! $1,7J6 T O $3,021 F I R S T Technician & Radio Service Courses FM and TELEVISION t and Mechanical l § » E R V I € E I N S T I T I J T E YMC A 15 WEST 63d STREET, near Broadway EN 2-8117 55 HANSON PLACE, BROOKLYN ST 3-7000 S U T T O IV Beginners, Advanced and Registration CLASS i—COMPLETE C O U R S I N C I V I L taKuon. REGISTER $4.'; SANITATION MAN BOOK S A N I T A T I O N 275 CLINTON AVE.. t'KLYN MAIr 2-64S7 117 WEST 4Sd ST. CLA.S.S SIZE LIMITED FEE, Ov«r 30 t4cr» S/Mc/ollMliAn Pr*p9ratU>n «/ CivU S*rvtc» Cnginttring E*am$ MATTIE M. RIVES, M.A. BUSINESS INSTITUTE Dsy-Kve. a-D»7 Week I Subject $1.S0 Week week D i c t a t i o n - T y p i n g M cneb Speed. Brusb Dp, Drilla, Short Cnta Twenty-flve hour sessions coverlnR Design of Steel and Reinforced Concrete Structures; Hydraulk-s; Water Supply, Sfworagre; Water and Sewage Treatment; Susveyingr, Railroad Curves and F^rthwork; Dams, Tunnels, HlKhways; Materials of Construction and Constnietlon Methwis; PAST EXAMINATION PROUI.KMS. Instructors include: CHARL.r.S RANDALL, P.E. Author of "Structiital Steel and Reinforced Concrete." Dept. of Public Woiks NK'HOI.AS FAHKAS, Consultinic Engineer N. Y. District UP W-CIO 1 3 A S T O R P L A C E , N. Y. 3 , N. Y. . Wisconsin 7-2086 Fee, fS.*) FIRST SECTION ( X O S E D SECOND SECTION N O W FORMING CAREER STATIONARY CNGINEFR REFRIGERATION ENGINEER PORTABLE ENGINEER OIL BURNER MONDEii. I n s t i t u t e • Ten Weeks. Ass'I Civil Engineer Inquiries LICENSE flXAMS COACH COURSES HOME ECONOMIC TECHNIQUE 11 rOMlIVG SOOA! STUDY GUIDE FOR SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR RESERVE YOUR COPY NOW ENGINEER, CIVIL I CIVIL ENGINEERING DRAFTSMAN ENGINEER, ELECTRICAL I JR. DRAFTSMAN (STATE) ENGINEER, MECHANICAL I SR. ENGINEERING AID (STATE) A'TUCH;! A TY/^C t'vll Service Arithmetic, Algebra, Geom., Trig., Calculus, Physics, Coach Engineering Subjfctf PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER REGISTERED ARCJHITECT LAND SURVEYOR MASTER ELECTRICIAN CLASSES BEGIN MARCH Intensive preparation for forthcoming exam by Lincoln Orens, formerly o f ' rity College Faculty, ineludinK Theory of D. and C., Fnmdamentai F^quntlon, Journalizing of Business Transactions, Interest and Discount, Partnership Entries, Fire Losses, Elementary Theory of Corporation Aeconntlng, Etc. Classes on Mondays beginning Mar. 31 at 6 P.M. Courses-given by Licensed Professional Engineers With years of Experience in City Departments Classes Limited—Reasonable Fee~Approvcd for .Veterans JR. JR. JR. M Approved by Veterans Administraion Write KKOISTAK, J08 So.rolninbus St. Alexandria, Virginia No previous experience of any kind necesnary. Complete course in the Fuiidaiiientul Tb»><»ry of Court Keporting. OpcninKs everywhere for <|ualiHe<i HteiiotyplNtH from $'i,IOO to $«,5<)0 per anniiin. Knowledge of typing or shorthand not neeessury. Mr. Samuel Goldner, well-known instructor, guarantees to serious students a spe«'d of 1.50 words per minute, includiuK court reporting, l^a per class. ClaKses held once we<'kly for ;iO weeks, (iuaranleed use«l machines available to students at $.'10 to $45 each. Stenotype machines will not be sold to students wlio do not show aptitude. AT OUR NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN SCHOOLS CaU For Schedule at New York Office CIVIL SERVICE QUESTION A ANSWER BOOK DIVISION Proithetlc Technician 1. Doiitai Tpfliiiiclun (JIO \vkn.) 2. t'oHnietIr \|M»I. Tech. (.15 wks.) This int)>K:ralr>(l conffic commpmled as onn of the linpst in tho oouiiti'y DrcparuH yon to assunin a position in one of thf? !JvJ profilhefic cliniCH bein(r pipcted by Vptprans Administration. Appllcutions for Imnipdiiitp enrollment now ii«'«.>cptp<l. Home refiidents uvalliible. Co-eduoationul. ^teiuitype ASS'T CIVIL ENGINEER Write for your free catalog llBtlng: newly 100 Civil S e r v ice Question and Answer books ot all publishers. Ton will find these books helpful. CIVILIANS St'HOOI, OF VIRGINIA PROHTHETICS AM) RKHEAUCH LAROKATORIRH OlferH nn pxrr|itloiinl course of tralnInic thnt iiualidro >oii as Jr. Aecountaiit Now Call or Write for Booklet bieven PROSTHETICS • ATTBNTIONl . , . G.l.'s and Two 3-Hour Sessions Per Week. Repairing rX-RAY&MED.UB.-i Ar« yoH preparing to tak* CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS? fage Study (Continued from Page 9) In court immediately, h e shall be t a k e n t o : (A) t h e s t a t i o n house of t h e precinct in which t h e c o m plaining witness resides; (B) t h e n e a r e s t court house h a v i n g j u r i s diction over t h e offense f o r which t h e p e r s o n is a r r e s t e d ; (C) t h e s t a t i o n house of t h e precinct in which t h e person a r r e s t e d resides; (D) t h e s t a t i o n h o u s e of t h e p r e cinct t o which t h e m e m b e r of t h e Force is a t t a c h e d ; (E) t h e s t a t i o n h o u s e n e a r e s t to t h e place of a r rest provided it is within t h e court jurisdiction. 77. As used i n t h e above selection, " j u r i s d i c t i o n " m e a n s : (A) session; (B) building; (C) legal a u t h o r i t y ; (D) t i m e ; (E) knowledge. 78. As used in t h e above selection, " f o r t h w i t h " m e a n s : (A) w i t h o u t counsel; (B) i m m e d i a t e l y ; (C) located close a t h a n d ; (D) i n v o l u n t a r i l y ; (E) i n session. 79. " A r r a i g n m e n t , " a s used i n t h e above p a r a g r a p h , m e a n s : (A) requiring a prisoner to post bail; (B) t h e t a k i n g of fingerprints of a p r i s o n e r ; (C) t h e compulsory a p p e a r a n c e of a prisoner before t h e district a t t o r n e y ; (D) t h e MANHATTAN LEAOEK ( S E N D C O U P O N FOR O U R LIST O F Register 10 A. M. to 9 P. H. American Radio Institute YEAR POSITIONS) PREPARE FOR E X A M I N A T I O N S I N N E W Y O R K . BROOKLYN A N D VICINITY 101 Weat UUrd St.. New York i2S, N. Approved Under QI Bill of RigbtB START NOW EROn^; PREPARES for all COLLEGES VVLLBUrCd G.I.VETS MAY ENROLL NOW , OAY.EVE.,"co'.»d. CKpert Fwulty. 46th Yr. Full Particulars and 32-Page Book On Civil Service - F R E E Cbaritrta by State Board of Rtgeou. 8av« Tim* — Consult D«an Tolk I R O N PREPARATORY SCHOlOL B'way at 14 «t., N. Y. C. Al,. 4.4M2>— MEDICAL LABORATORY TRAINING J^iialified IVVUUILiaHB lechniciant io demand I lU U CI Day or Eveoiug courses. Write " """ Ite for free booklet ^C." Hegister now! ST. SIMMOMDS SCHOOL 2 East S4tli St.. N.Y.C. El 5-3688 Veterans and W a r Service Workers G e t Special Preference VriUZE YOVR SPARE MOMEISTS TO YOUH BEST ADJ 4m ACE 7 FRANKLIN INSTITUTE DEPT. 11-56, ROCHESTER 4, NEW YORK Rush to me, entirely free of charge, ( 1 ) A ^uil description of U. S. Government Johsj ( 2 ) Free copy of illustrated 32-page book, How to Get a U. S. Goverimient Job"; with (3); List of U. S. Government Jobs; ( 4 ) Tell me how prepare for one of these j«b«. Mail coupon to ii8 at once. This can result X NAME in yon f;cHinf? a hij- paid, dependable / ADDRESS L'. GovernmeMt jol*. , _ fmum VETFRAN? Mtu, u ' ^ e '^u mUUty U, Page CIVIL TwHve (Continued from Page 6> — f o r f e a r a s u p e r i o r m i g h t c o n s t r u e it a s i n t e r f e r i n g w i t h his w o r k . Tt c o u l d m e a n a s u p e r i o r m i g h t r e f u s e t i m e t o a n y e m p l o y e e t o e n g a g e in w h a t a r e n o w l e g i t i m a t e a c t i v i t i e s — l i k e s p e a k i n g to legislators, presenting petitions, appearing before b u d g e t bodies. It c o u l d m e a n t h a t e m p l o y e e s w h o n o w d o r o u t i n e work on grievance committees might be forced to halt that work. It c o u l d m e a n t h a t e m p l o y e e s w o u l d b e a f r a i d t o e n g a g e in a n y o f t h e i r n o r m a l o r g a n i z a t i o n a l activities u n l e s s t h e y h a d first p r o c u r e d a n O K f r o m t h e i r s u p e r i o r . T h e s u p e r i o r w o u l d b e in a p o s i t t o n t o c o n t r o l t h o s e activities. It c o u l d m e a n t h a t a d e p a r t m e n t h e a d w h o w i s h e s t o " k i l l " a n e m p l o y e e o r g a n i z a t i o n m i g h t d o it b y r e f u s i n g h i s w o r k e r s t i m e to attend m e e t i n g s or conventions, under p e n a l t y of dismissal f o r b e i n g "on strike." Is t h a t w h a t t h e l e g i s l a t o r s w a n t ? Inducement to Oppression T h e C o n d o n - W a d l i n bill is a n i n d u c e m e n t to o f f i c i a l s to be more oppressive or indifferent t h a n t h e y w o u l d d e e m p r o p e r t o d a y , k n o w i n g t h a t e m p l o y e e s h a v e no recourse. To the extent that these officers b e c o m e more oppressive, t h e y will e n c o u r a g e greater rebellion against their authority. Inevitably, the result must be more, rather t h a n less, strikes. D o t h e c i t i z e n s of N e w Y o r k S t a t e desii-e to p l a c e s o d a n g e r o u s a g r a n t of p o w e r in t h e h a n d s of officials? M o r e o v e r , t h e p r o v i s i o n is v i c i o u s in t h a t it u n d e r m i n e s t h e p r e s e n t discretion of t h e d e p a r t m e n t h e a d . T o d a y , if a n e m p l o y e e i s a b s e n t w i t h o u t a u t h o r i t y f o r a d a y o r s o , h e m i g h t b e fined a d a y ' s p a y o r s u f f e r s o m e other minor p u n i s h m e n t . U n d e r t h e C o n d o n - W a d l i n bill, t h e d e p a r t m e n t h e a d m i g h t b e c o m p e l l e d t o fire h i m . W h a t kind of a public s e r v i c e c a n w e e x p e c t u n d e r s u c h conditions? N o w w e c a n s e e t h a t t h e C o n d o n - W a d l i n b i l l is in e s s e n c e m o r e t h a n a s t r i k e - b r e a k i n g m e a s u r e ; it is r a t h e r a m e a s u r e f o r b r e a k i n g t h e will and t h e m e a n s of protest a v a i l a b l e t o p u b l i c e m p l o y e e s . N o t o n l y d o e s it p r o h i b i t p u b l i c e m p l o y e e s f r o m s t r i k i n g ; it d r a w s f r o m t h e m t h e p o w e r f u l w e a p o n s o f d e f e n s e t h e y n o w h a v e ; it e s t a b l i s h e s o v e r t h e m a n u n b o u n d e d l e g i s l a t i v e t y r a n n y ; it r e d u c e s their organizations, under certain conditions, to the status of d e b a t i n g societies, s u b j e c t o n l y to t h e w h i m or g o o d w i l l o f s u p e r i o r s ; it d e p r i v e s t h e m o f a s o l i d , e f f e c t i v e v o i c e in t h e c o n s i d e r a t i o n o f a f f a i r s in w h i c h t h e y h a v e a n i n t e r e s t ; it p r o v i d e s t o t h e c y n i c a l o r t o t h e u n j u s t d e p a r t m e n t h e a d a w h i p w i t h w h i c h t o c o w or d i s m i s s t h e e m p l o y e e s h e d o e s n ' t l i k e . T h e b i l l is p r e g n a n t w i t h t h e s e e d s o f t h e v e r y r e b e l l i o n it p r o f e s s e s t o r e m o v e . It m u s t b e d e f e a t e d . ABOUT 1800 TO COMPETE IN FIRE DEPT. PROMOTIONS T h e NYC Civil Service Commission is receiving applications f o r promotion to I>eputy Chief, B a t talion Chief a n d C a p t a i n . Fire D e p a r t m e n t at its Application Section, 96 D u a n e Street. D e p u t y Chief pays $6,450 per a n n u m ; B a t t a l i o n Chief $5,450 a n d C a p t a i n $4,650 per a n n u m . I t is estim a t e d t h a t 300 will file f o r Deputy Chief, 500 f o r B a t t a l i o n Chief a n d about 1,000 for C a p t a i n . T h e filing period continues u n t i l M a r c h 20. T h e tests will be held in August. No applications are issued or r e ceived by mail. Firearms • ^elicc A Military Equip. • Pelie* Raiiiceafs. Sanifatiei & Postal Weriitrs JOHN JOVINO CO. a Centre Market Place (Opp. Police Hdqtri.) N. Y. Criminal P r o c e d u r e 1947 edition . . $2.50 CadellU Police Digest 778 p«9et . . $5.00 I K.XTUAK B O O K I O. 261 IROADWAY, NEW YORK WAlker 6-4881 CAna] 6-9766 Opi>usite City Hull THE FACTORY STORE POLICE UNIFORMS •OUGHT — SOLD Le«ther Crufstnieii. Cuittoiii Mfidp Leather l!:«|uipniviit Holsters of All Descriptions Police and Shooters* Equipment roUcf, Firemen, Conduetora, Bte. € LOTHES SHOP 43 lAYARD ST., NEW YORK CITY CO 7-8740 ToeMbif, Marek 11, LEADER BILL Bills in Legislature THE ANThSTRIKE An SERVICE Revolvers, Pistols, Ritles & SUotg^un; Kxpert (iiin Kepalriog All Types of Amniunitiuii Senate I n t r o d u c t o r y N u m b e r s Given. A—Assembly C o m p a n i o n Bill. 1945, Condon. (A.2189, Wilson.) R e t i r e m e n t of policemen a n d s h e r iffs a f t e r 25 years' service. T o Pensions Com. 1965, Anderson. (A.2326, K n a u f . ) R e t i r e m e n t of firemen a f t e r 20 years' service; fixes benefits. T o Pensions Com. 2150, M a n n i n g . (A 2255, Noon a n . ) P e r m i t s m u n i c i p a l employees. including police a n d fire district, to join S t a t e r e t i r e m e n t system. To Pensions Com. 2151, M a n n i n g . (A.2256, Noon a n . ) P e r m i t s municipal employees, including police a n d fire district, to join S t a t e system. T o Pensions Com. 2451, Wicks (A.2655, Lawrence.) P e r m i t s S t a t e police to elect t o c o n t r i b u t e on r e t i r e m e n t basis a f ter 20 years' service. T o Pensions Com. 2480, Wicks. (.2686, Stephens.) Provides for r e t i r e m e n t of S t a t e police a f t e r 20 years' service. T o Pensions Com. 2485, Hults. (A. 2687, Stephens.) Relates to r e t i r e m e n t of persons appointed to office by Governor. To Pensions Com. 2288, Griffith. (A. 2406, Dadlin.) R e l a t e s to r e t i r e m e n t of employees of N a p a n o c h institution. T o Pensions Com. 2298, H a l p e r n . C r e a t e s commission to study working conditions as affecting r e t i r e m e n t age. Bill of Civil Sei'vice Employees Assn. T o F i n a n c e Com. 2240, Pine. Provides for r e t i r e m e n t of S t a t e employees a f t e r 25 years' service or a t age 60 years. To Pensions Com. 1917, H a l p e r n . (A 1292, Crews.) Allows NYC employee r e t i r e m e n t credit as U. S. M a r s h a l by m a k i n g p a y m e n t to f u n d . T o Pensions Com. 1918, H a l p e r n . Allows beneficiary to designate f u n e r a l expenses of r e t i r e m e n t system m e m b e r , NYC. 2015, H a l p e r n . (A.2218, Clancy.) R e l a t e s to prior service credit for m e m b e r s , including legislators, of NYC system. 2079, H a l p e r n . (Same as S . 1918.) 2127, Scanlon. (A.2049.) A m e n d s Pass your poike examinations with flyinq colors! STUDY WITH THIS EXTRAORDINARY NEW BOOK HOW TO BECOME A POLICEMAN A stuay «W to help pass eiaminatlons by John C. Chlotis, Angerprint expert, und Joseph C. ^ U , A.B., LLB., member of N. »« l,KtiAL NOTICE STATK OF NKW YORK. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. 8S.; 1 do hereby certify that a cortilieati! of dissolution of uet'Ol'icatp of dissnlutloo of EASTERN TRAILOMOBILE SALES CO., AL.L1KT) MANAC.RMKNT CO.. INC. INC. ha* u«en tiled in this dep*rtmeat ttua day has been Qled in this department this day •nd that it appears tberefroin that uich und that it appears therefrom that audi •or^oratloi* ha* oompltw] wilb tactioa 10ft corporation has complied with Section •f the Stock Corporatioo Law, and that II ot the Stock Corporation Law, luid that1 0it5 la dissolved GlTen ID duplicate onder MY dissolved. Given in duplicate under my hand and ofllcial seal ot the Departm^at of ia hand and ofQeial seal of the Dopartniont of State, at the City of Albany (Seall State, at the City ot Albany. (Seal) this 13(ti (lay of February. 11)47. this '^01 h day of January, 1047. I'houias J Curraa. Secretary ot Slate By Thomas J. Ciirran, Secretary of State. By Edward D. Harper, Deputy S e c r e t v y ot Edw;trd D. Harper. Deputy Secretary of Stute Stute. STATB Ot ilB!>r rOR&. OBPAHTMEMl o r STATB. u : 1 do hereby certlfr that • 8TATK OF NEW YOKK. DEPAUTMKNT iXATB or MEW ?OBK. OEPAKTMCNl OK 8 f A T K , «u.: 1 do h e n b y certify that a o r STATfi. aa.: 1 do haiahy oartlfy that a oertilicnir of disuolutioii of •ertificatc of difwolutlon of a67 KA8T 7(1TH bT. COBl'. liEONAHD'S BEAUTY SALON, INC. h<i4 biH:u tlluU in tins dcpurtiiu-nt (his day aaa oeeo ttted in this department thii day and Itiut it apt>ears tlu-rcfroiii that such and that it M>peara tberefroin that such corixi'utiiiii lius cutiiulled witti Soctioii 105 eorporatioD has compiled with Sactloo lOA ol itu' Siucl( Cdi'iuiratioii l.:tw, uiid tliut it ot the Stock Corporation Law, and that II iM t|iH»<ilv<M. Oivi'ii in dupliciito iiniliT niy 1* dissolved. GlTeo in duplicate under my hiinj whI olticlal soul ol llin UcKui tnient ot hand and official seal ot the Department of Slt\tc at ihn City oi Alt^any. (Heal) StaU. at the Oity ot Albany. (Seal) lUi» ;iril il.ty ol lMl.rniit>. l i m . this SOtli iluy ot February, 1H17. Tiioiniii* J. Cu. : an. t'li it'lary ol .suie. Hy Thomas J. Cuniut. Secretary ot State By Ivlw.itvi D. Hau>i:r, I»iiiu(y b t i i v l a i y ol Edward D. Uaiyei', Deputy Sccretai'jr of Bill Would End ^ Slate Toxation of Pension Benefits Special to The LEADER ALBANY, M a r c h 10—A biU t o remove a n y d o u b t t h a t benefits under the State Retirement System are exempt from State a n d local t a x a t i o n of all kinds is b e i n s p u s h e d by T h e Civil Service E m ployees Association. Its sponsor T h e benefits a r e subject to F e d eral t a x a t i o n , b u t t h e r e a r e billa In Congress to r e m e d y this, p a r ticularly income t a x a t i o n . T h e Association bill c o n c e r n s principally d e a t h benefits t o b e n e ficiaries. Section 70 of t h e S t a t a Civil Service Law h a s provided, even before t h e R e t i r e m e n t L a w was enacted, t h a t t h e pension benefits a r e e x e m p t f r o m all k i n d s of S t a t e t a x a t i o n , b u t S u r r o g a t e Court decisions upheld in 1942. t a x a t i o n of t h e benefits, because a n " e s t a t e t a x " n o t exempted by Section 70, which speclficlally e x e m p t s a " t r a n s f e r or i n h e r i t a n c e t a x . " A n o t h e r case held t h a t S e c tion 70 was repealed by i m p l i cation by Section 249-kk of t h e S t a t e T a x Law , - BEFORE YOU SELL — S T O P IN O R CALL County Aufo Distr. HIGHEST PRICES SHore R o a d 5-9321 «501 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn . . . DRIVE IT YOURSELF . . . ALL LATE MODEL CARS . . . HOUR. DAY OR WEEK E s p l a n a d e DEwey 9-9503 5-8398 ^wwrr^ ^DRIVING SCHOOLS 1 Brooklyn LEARN TO DRIVE to I ^ a r n Modern D r i v e Tn»ffl<' ManruverinB Muirkly TiiiiRlit " A L L S T A R AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL T i 9 Nofttrand Ave. Nr. I'urk IM., Bkl.vii. NEvinfi 8-lfi!>0 We teach you quickly and safely. Individual appointments. Your instructions are in new cars fully insured and dually controlled. We teach you conventional! fluic* drive, or hydroma tic. Over 20 years in Flatbush. . . LEARN TO DRIVE . . . UTICA AUTO Appointments 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. Gars for road test SCHOOL CHURCH BEDFORD AUTO SCHOOL Onr of tlir oldest in Brooklyn New diiall.v controUi-d i-uru 1421 ST JOHNS PLACE Cor Utica Ave. PR. 4-2028 8 5 6 UTICA AVENUE Nr. Church Ave. PR. 2-1440 BROOKLYN NEW YOKK 2254 CHURCH AVE., IROOKLYN •U 2-2119 IVeiv York LKAICIV 600 questions and answers cover everythiag m pross>ective fwliceman must know. Also a section of general infornaatioa and • chapter on physical exercise* that increase strength and agility. The questions presented are the kind of questions asked in examinations for policemen. The book cover* every subi«o on which you might be questioned. Give yourself » head start by reading this book. $2.50 At your bookstort Dual Control Cars Cars for hire for road tti-at 316 Koebling St., wniiiiinNlnirK, Bklyn. KV 4-7IMU Boulevard AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL Cars for hire for roml test 47-05 Greeiipoliit Ave., Suniiyttide, N.Y. I I Itl isin K-. M « M)Hk LEAKIV T O Civil Service Boolis Dual Control General Test—Sample Questions a n d Answers.$1.00 Aiithmetic, Spelling, Geogr a p h y a n d clerical tests— complete in one edition.$1.00 Clerk-Carrier—Three complete sample e x a m i n a tions with Questions & Answers ...$1.00 Typists & S t e n o g r a p h e r s —sample practice tests.$1.00 Asst. Statistical C l e r k . . . .$1.00 Clerk—U. S. Govt. S a m p l e Questions a n d Answers. Special 1947 Copyrighted Editioon; 58 pages. Size 8»/a x 11 inches. Price, post-paid $2.00 ^^Carii MERIT PUBLICATIONS :ll.H Kvaiis HIdK., M'M) N.V. Ave., N.W. MASlllNtiTUN, U. C. DRIVE Coiiventioi 81 Fluid Diive Hydra-Matic for Insured Cars AmpuK^es^' FIVE CORNERS AUTO SCHOOL 1424 Flatbuth Av«. Brooklyn GEduey L E A R H T O DRIVE Through TruHi . Modern system Day and niifht elasnos Expert liibtruction Cars for road test Kerster Auto School ntt-i K. Sth St., Bklyii, NY (nr. Av I') DEwoy 9-9U5 T O U U I V K Private lessons anytime. Special courses for Civil Service Applicants A U T O DRIVE SCHOOL Community rUNK & WAGNAUS CO EUGENE DE MAYO ft SONS (Est. Since 1 9 1 3 ) 374 K, 147 St., Bronx, NY. MO 9-fJT18 rapid transit law. 2400, Parisi. (A.2545, Crews.) Provides for retirement of m e m bers of NYC sanitation dept. after 25 years' service. 2397, Parisi. (A. 1904, Crews.) Amends constitution. 2412, Q u i n n . (A 2514, Steingut.) Reduces i n t e r e s t r a t e for NYC e m ployees e n t e r i n g r e t i r e m e n t system a f t e r J u n e 30, 1947. 2280, F i n e . (A.2616, Banks.) I n creases pension allowed r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of m e m b e r of NYC police pension f u n d . 2014, H a l p e r n . (A.2363, Archlnal.) Allows credit f o r t i m e in U. S. a r m e d forces towards r e t i r e m e n t ; requires contribution. 2018, H a m m e r . (A. 1103.) 2195, Hults. (A.2433, Noonan. Provides r e t i r e m e n t credit for World W a r n v e t e r a n . If h e r e t u r n s to job In 90 days, 2195, Hults. (A.2433, Noonan.) Allows r e t i r e m e n t credit f o r service in World W a r 11; excepts civil pey period. 2197, Hults. (A.2431, Noonan.) R e l a t e s to r e t i r e m e n t c o n t r i b u t i o n of v e t e r a n in police or fire district. 2264, Corey. (A2524, Wilen.) Allows employee to c o n t r i b u t e to r e t i r e m e n t system while on military leave. 2425, Scanlon. (A. 2372, D r o h a n . ) Provides f o r r e i n s t a t e m e n t of demoted m o t o r vehicle referee. 2113, H a m m e r . (A. 2221, Del Giorno.) Equates salary of correction dept. employee with t h a t of police officer. (Continued on Page 13) lf47 Beginner, Advanced, a n d R e f r e s h e r Courses Cars for Ritad Test lETTER DRIVE AUTO SCHOOL Dl rL tk R O f 9"0«lf FIRST AVE. (54TH-55th) 1601 LEXINGTON (S2d-bi<I) LEARN to DRIVE Y o u gain confidenca quickly with our courteous export insructcrs. Wb USE 1946 SAFETY C O N T R O L CARS MODEL AUTO SCHOOLS 145 W. 14 St. (2-3 Ay«.) C H 2-9553 229 E. 14 St. (4-7 Ay.,.) GR 7.«2I9 302 Amsterdam A». 174 St.) EN 2-4923 . - ^ N d i c o t t 2 - 2 5 6 4 _ L e c u r n t o D r i v e S^Q IN TRAFFIC $|Q Auto Driving School 1912 Broadway • N. Y. C (bet eSrd and 6 i t b Street*) Car* tor State Esamlnatlons. A. C. AUTO DRIVING SCHOOL iiitiivlUiiul IiiKtriu-tluu—MM> & Muuirii Flat Kate Evening ClaKncs (.'ai'tt lor UoHd TcMt 58-03 Woodside Ave. HA 9-3037 l.Di-w'H, WomUiile. N. Y ) st:K "Rt: tuEits' sKHVii t: (DPI). USth St. ft HilUid* Av*. (<U»or away «IU Ave. wtU» UrilHr (Pane It) HtK Jamaica, N. Y. RE|i«iblic 9-91S4 UAHiiAIIS HI IS! r«ge 1 nirteea Tuesday, Mareh 11, 1V47 LEADER Key Answers In Last Sergeant Exam Last week t h e 20 questions f r o m t h e last NYC S e r g e a n t (P.D.) exa m i n a t i o n were published, with a n s w e r s to t h e first four. T h i s •week t h e r e m a i n d e r of t h e a n swers a r e given with t h e answer t o No. 4 repeated, b u t in m o r e detail form. T h e exam was a special milit a r y one. T h e written test for promotion t o S e r g e a n t will be held Satiu-day, April 26. LEADER KEY A N S W E R S 4. If t h e citizen h a s absolute proof t h a t a felony h a s been comm i t t e d . T h e citizen is in jeopady of involving himself in a false a r r e s t charge. 5. (a) Notify t h e s t a t i o n house. <b) C o n t a c t officers in t h e vicini t y a n d extend t h e posts. (c) T h e sergeant will cover t h e post himself or assure t h a t it is covered until a r e p l a c e m e n t a r ries. 6. T h e ink supplied by t h e Dep a r t m e n t will be s a f e r because t h e e n t r y will be p e r m a n e n t . 7. (a) Ascertain t h e a c t u a l need of h o s p i t a ization. (b) Advise t h e i n j u r e d of sick person of t h a t need. (c) Place a call t h r o u g h t h e signal box f o r a n ambulance. (d) P e n d i n g arrival of t h e a m b u l a n c e do w h a t you c a n to m a k e t h e person comfortable. (e) Await t h e arrival of t h e a m b u l a n c e t h e n m a k e report a n d proper entries. 8. Approxmite height and weight of unconscious m a n ; color of eyes; distinguishng m a r k s or scars; how h e was dressed; signs of bruises; if n o n e so, state. 9. G e n e r a l O r d e r s denote t h e various phases of police a d m i n i s t r a t i i o n f o r t h e use a n d g u i d a n c e of t h e force. S u c h would include a m e n d e d sections to m a n u a l s a n d a p p o i n t m e n t of h i g h r a n k i n g o f ficers. Special O r d e r s concern specific a s s i g n m e n t s a n d movem e n t s of individuals. Circulars deal with special m a t t e r s t h a t arise periodically a n d would i n cloude permission to hold social a f f a i r s , etc. 10. T h e lost child should be t a k e n to t h e n e a r e s t s t a t i o n house. T h e p a r e n t s will or should go i m m e d i a t e l y to t h e police in t h e event t h e i r child is missing. U n less t h e child were b r o u g h t to t h e s t a t i o n house t h e r e would be n o record of its h a v i n g been lound. 11. (a) T h e vulnerable or effective p a r t s of t h e body a r e t h u s pointed out a n d (b) f a m i l i a r i t y with t h e object t h e p a t r o l m a n •will be called upon to fire upon. 12. (a) T h e prisoner m i g h t n o t be in condition to walk to t h e s t a t i o n house (b) a question of decency m i g h t be involved a n d <c) t h e prisoner's physical condit i o n m a y m a k e it difficult for him t o walk. 13. (a) T h e fire a l a r m should b e in a position so t h a t if c a n b e used, quickly (b) observation of all persons in t h e a r e a should b e m a d e a n d suspicious persons singled out. (c) A direct short r o u t e should be taken. M 14. A p a t r o l post extends f r o m buillding to buildng Hue. T h e interior of a building shall n o t be considered p a r t of a p a t r o l post unless otherwise specified. 15.1 If a f r a c t u r e is susepected t h e w o m a n should first be advised of h e r condition a n d t h e necessity of being removed to a hospital. S h e should be m a d e comfortable, b u t n o t moved. An a m b u l a n c e should be called. T h e P a t r o l m a n should a w a i t t t h e a r rival of t h e a m b u l a n c e a n d t h e n m a k e his full report. 16. (a) W h e n t h e arriving m e m ber of higher r a n k is physically u n a b l e to assume c o m m a n d , (b) W h e n c h a n g e of c o m m a n d a t t h e time of t h e arrival of t h e m e m ber of h i g h e r r a n k would be d e t rimental. 17. (a) Ascertain f r o m t h e f a c t s w h e t h e r or n o t a crime h a s been c o m m i t t e d (b) Advise t h e civilian of his r i g h t to m a k e t h e a r r e s t (c) a c c o m p a n y t h e accuser a n d t h e accused to t h e s t a t i o n house f o r t h e purpose of protecting t h e accuser. ' 18. (a) Lost person (b) sick or I n j u r e d person (c) i n s a n e person (d) d e a d person (e) foimdling. 19. (a) S t a e m e n t of specific o f f e n s e (b) blames of witnesses (c) list of p r o p e r t y involved (d) f a c t s of t h e case. 20. If t h e prisoner or complaina n t dies prior t o t h e disposal of the case (b) If t h e prisoner is t r e a t e d for a n i n j u r y or illness (c) in t h e event of bail f o r f e i t u r e a n d rearrest. Bills in the Legislature (Continued from Page 12 1914, Halpern. (A.2493, R a b i n . ) R e l a t e s to grievances w i t h o u t dem o t i o n ; permits appeal to cc»nmission. 1976. Erwin. (A.2244, L u p t o n . ) E x t e n d s t i m e f o r allocation of title for position h e r e t o f o r e unclassified. 1977, Erwin. (A 2243, L u p t o n . ) Provides f o r salaries a n d increm e n t s of p e r m a n e n t employees a f ter pi-ovisional service. 1980, Anderson (A.2294. Van Duzer.) Reallocates position of staff nurse in S t a t e classified civil SGrviC6« 2013,' H a l p e r n . (A.2313, Berge.) Relates to local residence eligibility of employees in civil service. 2456, Young. (A. 1892, Van Duzer.) 2037, W. J. Mahoney. (A.2315, Curto.) R e l a t e s to maximum h o u r s of labor of c e r t a i n cities. 2299, H a l p e r n , (A. 2295, V a n Duzer.) Provides f o r additional emergency p a y d u r i n g fiscal year commencing April 1, 1947. 2201, W. J . Mahoney. Relates to salary of inspectors of buildings. New construction a n d repair work. 2205, McCleery. (A. 1511, C l a n cy.) Provides for p e r m a n e n t s t a t u s of employee of NYC t u n n e l a u thority. 2239, Pine. (A.2464, Foy.) P r o vides f o r allowance f o r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n of household goods, for i n t r a - S t a t e move. 2273. Erwin. (A.2562, Lupton.) R e l a t e s to continued e m p l o y m e n t of i n c u m b e n t . 2359, McCleery. (A. 2576. Soviero.) Relates to salary of floating p l a n t employees of public works. 2389. P a k u l a . (A.2572, P a y m e r . ) R e l a t e s to classification of e m ployees p a i d by custodians i n school buildings. Assembly I n t r o d u c t i o n n u m b e r s are given. A—Companion bill in Assembly. 2609, Austin. Gives S t a t e e m ployees r i g h t to join organizations VtTSBE YOUR OWN Restaurant NO KXI'KKIKNCE NKCE8SARV Hours: 11 to 'i ii.ni. liOOD I'AV—PLUS LDNt'H Apply to F U R S Van Volli«Rbiirg ft Fisher, Inc. tor your copy Jupiter Publishing Company 3 2 0 K4ST 49th STREET NEW YORK 17, N. Y. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES KASflLIZVE S T A T I O N S — A MAIV o r W€>MA]*— Every Boro and every Vrioe rangp From $3,000 to $42,000 Unusual Opportunifiep JUST OPENED HOTEL MIDWAY 12 Story fireproof. All lUht outaide rooms. Cross ventilation. Brand new furniture. Carpeted wall to wall. BunDinv water. Adjoijalng baths. Daily Rates: 1 person $2.26 DP 2 persona $3.50 op Opportunity to: permanent doublet ai weekly rates now available) lOOtb St. (S.E. Cor. Broadway) MO 2-6400 Roof garden just opened. Strout's Sprilig Form Catalog JUST OUT! The Big Green Book—time and money-saver—over 3,500 bargains, outstanding values—Coast to Coast—31 States—equipped and unequipped farms, dairies, orcliards, groves, homes, gas stations, stores, hotels, etc, etc. Mailed FREE on reijuest "STROUT REALTY. 365-ZJ 4th Ave. at 20th Street, New York 10. GK 6-1805. Iflki ( KNTK.'VL AVE., Albany N. N.», Al.brtiiy 5-Uaa4 _ _ _ _ _ _ Also m in this prolitable 432 W. 42nd St.. New York, N. Y. EXCELLENT BUY! FOR VETERANS & EVERYBODY! BRONX—-J Family with Finished Basement, Hteam heut, 50x100, also with ICE TRUCK BUHINENS—Truck Bins , & Si-alen. (Business itself worth $6,000) Will Sacritlre all for: $13,000 — Full Prrlc* Mutari 7010 Ft. Hamilton Pkwy.. B'Myn Phone: SHore Ruad 8-3515 WHlTli:.STO.^E, L. I . 145-H<Mh 8th Avenu* Mmlcrn brick bungalow, 4 Ml rooms, colored tile baths, steam —coal—plot 30 X 12'}. $11,500 R U 3-7707 By appointment. EGBERT at Wliitestone. ^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA CO-OP APTS. FOR SALE—tUM B. 74Hi Mtreet Maintei.ancfl $76 month. Rooma $a.500 Maintenauce $46 month. U.\RK1S. Lehigh 4-8763 Announcements PRICE $2160 FOB, D O W N P A Y M E N T $500 El ATDIICII Occupancy I 1 family detached, fl rooms, bath, sun parlor, gas IDVI.E WVLDE IIOBUY SHOf, lue.. _ _ _ _ Maud.i W. Cory (broker), 1117 E. 30 St. Bklyu. NA 8-0463 luoveU to new beathiuarters at IX Central Ave. Complete •tuck uirplaiiea, boats, I H T C B F L R C A I P — w a t e r f r o n t — 3 l<»tB for $600—ailjaeent to White, railroailH. race cara, stouips. toolu. ALbany r • • . r v „ r T Bridge. THERESA BERGER KITCHNER. Licensed Real Estate Broker, FLushing 3-8807. •olance M a y Be Financed Under 01 Bill AND LITeHATUHl CORPORATION 1 0 East 40th Street • New York 16, H. Y. • l E x i n g t o n $1.50 FLOOR ASSISTAHTS R VET DINETTE Send For Responsible Men As EPAIUING KMODEhINQ ELINING B DYKING EFRIGERATED SERVICK CIJ8TOM M.4DE FUK8 fOR APPLKATION MAN HUMDMEDS OF QUESTIONS AMD AMSWCRS AND ACTUAL PREVIOUS iXAMIMATIONS Part Time Work Albany wwrr SANITATION Offers HuUison Terminal Building Dinette •ex 141 Civil Service Leader. 97 Dpane Sf. Qmieh • • Complete • . Home Stndff SILVER KING C A M E O V E N D I N G 44 Cortland Stret, New York A miniature *'R«tlawranl-On>Wheels'* Fwily equipped and reody for ftuilneu • twill of Steel, Stalnleii Steel end Aluminum • Adapted for AII'Yeor.liound operotion • Your own exclusive fronchited territory Work in your spans time at honip. Easy, intcre^tinsr. No Pxpt'Hoiion jtrodwl. Wr unpply cvprythlnjr. Write for intprvicw No oveihe.id. A few machines start you Independent business immediately. EXCHANGE BUFFET RESTAURANT BUY • OWN • OPERATE ADD TO YOUR IHCOME Operate Hot Popcorn Machines Placed On Locations For Yo«i of t h e i r own choosing a n d reOur new. !)47, model, coin-operated 6c or 10c hot popcorn vendors establishei quires h e a d of dept. or agency to ACT QUICKLY you permanently in your ow.i hnsinesa. establish rules whereby r e p r e s e n Full or part time. $1,500 cash investtatives m a y c o n f e r with h i m ; es•IA4 K S E € I J I \ D A ment i-equired for equipment (financed if desired). No routen to buy. Should tablishes personnel board to i n 673 Broadway, N. Y. C. make you up to $80 weekly. quire i n t o controversies. P h o n e O R 4-5830 SILVER LINING COMPAN* 2654, K n a u f , R e l a t e s to t i m e of aO«l Broadway at 7%d 8t. (Rm. 60a) p a y m e n t of wages of street s u r f a c e r a i l r o a d employees. T o Labor Com. CLEANING ESTABLISHM€NT 2657, Lawrence. Provides f o r r e FOR SA1.E view of d e t e r m i n a t i o n of s u p t . r e WE CAN START YOU Doingr grood Busines.s Selling- bccause of illness moving m e m b e r of S t a t e police. in the retail business with a small Looated in heart ot Bifhmond Hill deposit of $25 of nationally advertised 1080, Budget bill. Being a m e n d residential neighborhood shopping: riraincoats of finest quality for ladies ed by t h e C o m m i t t e e on W a y s a n d sinity. and men. Good Trade; flnest loiation M e a n s t o m a k e t h e following ADVANCE RAINCOAT C4>. Double Htore; Very Good Buy. Hellins c h a n g e s : increasing all salaries iNi Fifth Ave., cor. lAth St., CH 3-8«32 At a REA80NABE PRICE! $350, raising m i n i m u m f r o m $1,500 Or call to see Mar. Cohen Call: VI 3-9568 for inforuiutioB to $1,600, reducing m a x i m u m i n first g r a d e f r o m $2,100 to $2,080; VENDORH, all types; roasted salted n a t i restricting Salary Board f r o m infor vending machines; also caudy. We buy-sell used and new vending: machines. discriminate downward salary r e FLOWER S H O P San Filippo & Co.. Nut WholesaJers. 104> vision; requiring, in promotion 14 37th Ave., Corona, L. I. HA 0-8046. FOR S A L E series, h i g h e r grade m i n i m u m IIOllSE TKAII^ERS, a0-2«-28 FT. Special t'ine BuHiness Hection which on J a n . 1, 1947 was above trailers tor veterams. 54 Central Ave., Well Ef)tabli8hed BuHineRH m a x i m u m of n e x t h i g h e r grade, comer McLean, Yonkers. (Take Grand ACT NOW* PRICK: f 4.000 Concourse or Jerome train in Central m u s t be kept so even on reallo('all from I'a noon to O P.M. Ave.) VOnkers 5-50H5. NIBLACK SALKS. cation. SAcramento 2-2940 Mail 25 cents for trailer map. 2356, Stevens. R e l a t e s to bonus BnV AND OPERATE f o r employees on s h i f t beginning New l e or .5c Nut Machine Quantity price $10.37 each Complete a f t e r 12 noon. LARGE CORNER STORE DE LrXK VENDING MACHINE 8AI.ES 2253, Morhouse. R e l a t e s to a b CO., i;jfi-ei Jamaica .Ave., Richmond HiU Suitable A n y Business! sence f r o m active d u t y of m e m b e r L. L, N. Y. Tel. VI 7-97«6 I n Ridgewood Section, B'klyn of S t a t e police force. EVENING AND HATIJRDAY iobs more Very Good Business Area 2374, T. Hill. Includes World profitable than baby sitting:. Write post(Good T r a d e ) card for interview. American S.B.L.I.A., W a r I I v e t e r a n s in r e t i r e m e n t 133 E. 177 St.. N. Y. $1,000 system of police force in N. Y. Selling 3 - Y e a r Lease PHONE: E\fcr9re*R 2-9S08 RADIO A P P L I A N C E S counties. (Store established 7 years) 2411, Berge. R e l a t e s to r e t i r e Good Trade. Good Buy I m e n t of enrollee in U. S. m a r i t i m e TRAILER8, %-ton, carrying capacity 500 Complete Equipment pounds; suitable family use. G. & G. Fine opportunity service, NYC system. Information: H.\venieyer 0-2090 Sales, 1814 Pitkin Ave. Dl 2-9337. 2125, Galloway. (S.1686.) 2705, Wilson. Allows a n n u i t y a n d pension to S t a t e employee $ 13.95 Ea. A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN discontinued f r o m service f r o m PROFITS DAY-NIGHT 1933 t o 1937. NO SELLING 2615, Baczkowski. Increases r e Safe—Sure—Steady—Big Profits. t i r e m e n t allowance a n d reduces Cas^h rolls in day and night every day. No sellins:. Operate locally. Easy, Dignified. ages allowed for r e t i r e m e n t . To Managers In Restaurant Chain BOSS NAER TORMID DINNER-DANCE T h e Naer T o r m i d Society, Inc., of t h e NYC Fire D e p a r t m e n t , will hold its a n n u a l installation d i n n e r - d a n c e a t t h e Hotel St. Cjteorge on Wednesday. M a r c h 26. Official permission h a s been g r a n t e d for t h e holding of t h e aflfair, b u t t h e sale of tickets h a s been limited to m e m b e r s of t h e society. MISS AND MRS. IMMEDIATE (XCUPANCY, 7-room attractive shingled iioma. modern bath, extra lavatory, eiiclowjd porch, plot tJOxJ 12, fruit ROSEOALE trees, garage, convenient everything. Owner, LA 51-1H4. VOU ARK CUUUIALLY INVHEU to viait 4 Family; l'ii<'t): JUS,000. ilc<>'ive» yearly rent oi i;unuio'» Meauty Salon, IlairdreuiierB at 0 $1,700. Cash down, $4,000. U»tl5 84lh St. B kiyu. t'ark Street (opposite Tfltphoije Blilif.t ES. 3 4467. Here you will Jiml btuuly eulture Just a little cliffercut. liuliviUual ;aic iitioa awaits <bul{olk CiiUty) Hdoin Buiii.-:ilow :iu<l I'tuch Funiishod. State TertiODnel. Evt'ninir npDiiiiitineiitH uia> P A p l l l l l f l d l l l I E M n m i n U d WI k k C Clol m o x i o o . l-'nU Pncf SuK-; y:.600, Bi. nr\>.,.Hi A U« UMiUfi. i'uuuui, iUUuu^L a Uiiia. . . rGlonwooU I'l. vail AH. v iitKJJ 691 FRANKLIN AYE. 2-4244 Page CIVIL SERVICE LEADER FouHeen Tuesday, Marrh 11, 1 9 I 7 rVTVTTVl • READER'S SERVICE WHERE TO APPLY FOR PUBLIC JOBS GUIDE Clockwork HEALTH SERVICES AFTER HOURS EXCKLL-KNT CARE, rhronic, $ n O por pionth, 8i mi-|irlvatf- roomc. MAin ;j-fl700. Feet JERRY MALCOLM ORCHESTRA plays for weddings, dinners, dances. LO 7 - 1 0 1 1 . Art Trent ATTKNTIONI HAVR YOU TROUBLE WTTH YOUR FEKT? Do Not NPfrlect Thfiin. WK CAN DEFINITKLY HKLI' VOU. Conii! in and tec us. DOKTO MATIK SHOE CO.. 6 Dclnnory Street. N e w York City. iPptometrist I. »TKKNBKK(S, OI'TOMKTRIST 8P(!oializiii(r in eye Dxaniinati(inf< and tIhuhI coriTctirMi f)7l Southern Blvd. (Lonw's Spooncr Bldff.). DA SPRC1A1.18TM IM VITAMINS AND F R £ •criptiona Blood and arine specimens analyzed. Notary Public, licensed N. Y. Stale. Special genuine DDT liquid 5 % Solution 3ttc quart. Jay Drug Co., 3 0 5 Broa<lway. WO S-473G. r// EVERYBODY'S BLV Beer KEEP IN T I M E ! Have your w a t c h checked «t SINGER'S WATCH REPAIRIKG, 1 6 9 Park Row. New York C l U . Telephone worth 2-327. Distributors ARTISTS WORKSHOP FOR SERIOUS WORKERS. Life class only. Profe-blonal Models. For information call WA 9 - 4 7 0 4 Jack Rossignol. 1 5 5 West ZOth Street. New York. AMERICAN SERVICE. New friends are yours through perponal Introductions. Etihanee your social life. Non-seeretarian. Grace Bowes Original Personal Service f o r Particular People. (Est. 1 0 3 5 ) , 2 3 6 W. 7 0 t h St, (Broadway and West End Ave.) EN 2-4080. INDIVIDl'AI INTRODUCTIONS Arranged personally. Dignified. Confldeutial. Write or phone for appointment. Irene's Service. FO 4 - 5 3 4 3 , 2 0 8 3 Morris Avenue, Bronx. Daily to 8 P.M. Sunday to 1 1 P.M. INVE,ST1GATK MY DISTINCTIVE METHOD—Discriminating clientele. Transcript of Radio Interview mailed free. Confldendential Interview without obligation. HELEN BROOKS. 1 0 0 West 42nd Street. Room 0 0 2 . WI 7 - 2 4 3 0 . F L A T B U S i l HUME SEKVIOlfi—Cold barrel beer. Keg sizes Also bottle beer, soda: coolers rented w i t h Ice. Flatbush Beer Co., 211B Coyle St., Brooklyn. Call DEwey 2 - 5 5 2 0 . Weekly delivery case beer and soda. SOCIAL INTRODUCTIONS—The Art of L i v i n g — d o e s not mean live alone and like it. Ladles and gentlemen w h o are accepted for membership develop long standing friendships. Personal, dignified introductions will enable y o u to enjoy a well rounded social life. National magazines Catttera VKTKKAN'S PR 1 0 K I T * on cameras pro- and newspapers refer to Clara Lane's jectors and photo supplies. Liberty Camera work as a "priceless service." Come in Shoppe, 8 0 Vesey St., N. Y. 7 (nr. Wash- tor a personal Interview or send self-addressed envelope for descriptive literature. ington M a r k e t ) . Open daily-Sunday until 8 p. m. Clara Lane. 3 8 W. 4 7 t h St.. N.Y. 19. BR 9 - 8 0 4 3 . Coal An entire floor in the Hotel Wentworth. ORDKR VOUR (OAI. NOW AT.L SIZKM, QUICK UKUVKRIRH LUNESOMEY Meet interesting men-woWo Also Remove Your Coal men through correspondence c l u b all OTer Highest Prices Paid: Estimates Given the country. Write today P. O. Box 68. OMAHA COAL CO. Pordham K8. N. T. S'J'JS N K P T U N E AVK., B'KI.YN, N. 1 . MAin n-UKSO SEEKING HAPPINEnSH? Meet new friends at Kaye's Friendship Service. 50 Court Florists St.. Room 005, Bklyn.. N.Y. MA. 5 - 0 0 0 4 . Confidential expert service. RUBY'S SWEET SHOPPE U O SaratOBO Ave., Brookl.vii, N. Y, YOUR SOCIAL LIFE DI ;!-»447 Make new friends and enrich your social life through SOCIAL INTRODUCTION Household ISecmssitiea SERVICE, New York's famous, exclusive r v i i VOUR HOME MAKING personal and confidential service. de»igmeJ ^ SHOPPING NEEDS Furniture, appliances, erlfts. etc. (at real to bring discriminating men and women together. Oiganization nationally public• a v i n g s ) . Municipal Employees Service, 4 1 Park Row CO 7 - 5 3 0 0 147 Nassau Street. ized in leading magazines and newepapcra. Send for circular. May Richardson. I l l LOOK AT THIS V A I . l i E — S h i r t s whit? West 72nd St.. N. Y. EN 2 - 2 0 3 4 . 10-7 oxtorUs and broadcloth. Prints sohds, Daily. Sunday 12-0 P.M. •litchtly irreig-ular, $ 2 . 4 5 ut). ordinarily $ 1 . 0 5 . The Tallee Co.. 2 East 2 3 St. WHY BE LONESOME? L i f e long friendN.Y.C., Room 3 1 5 . AL. 4-'7147. Tal' us ships can bo made. Happy romantic relationship can be established through our f a r hard-to-gct items. select clientele. BESSIE'S SERVICE, 1 1 3 MK.N'S <'I.OTniN(i M A M l ACTl REK of- W. 42nd St. L 0 5 - 7 8 0 1 . fer.<( to the pubiie fiurpliiK stofk of bf^ttar Individual introductions grrade overcoats only—Meltony, Cheviots, DISCKIAIINPlcoi'CB—at absolute whole.-<al(.' price. All PERSONALLY SELECTED. sizes. I'l'Kuliirs. Hhorts and loners, $25. ATING CLIENTELE. Investigate my disALSO nicn'p virgin wool Tweedt", Shetland tinctive method. Transcript of Radio Inand Clicviot suits in britrhl spring' Patterns, terview mailed tree. Confidential iuterwell tailored. All sizes at it^'JU.TS. Slyle view w i t h o u t obligation. HELEN BROOKS, Wise Clothes. Ine., 4 8 K. 'ilst Si., N. Y. 1 0 0 West 43nd St.. Room 002. Wl 7 - 2 4 3 0 . Men's (Jothiiig lY anted I I'AY HKiil I'KICES, innii's used suits, coals, si)()itswi'ar, liiKffase, t.vpcwriters. Jaeobs. 87;! Columbiis Ave. AC 2-8500, Will call. Moi'ilig and Slinaae " A l K O S S THE STREET OK ('(UJ-NTKY Kaiiilary. Soiciitilii.' Movins and Storage. A, E. MElSlNCiER 41-0^ Uroatlway L. L Ci;y KAv. 8 - 4 0 2 4 Musical Inslrunieni MI SU AI INSTKl .AlENTh lUK ( . t i l AND tri(lM). Guaraiitred precision repair., done b.v bpocialists at LEVITT & ET.KOIJ. 101 Park Row (one block soulh oi Chatham S(i.). WO 3 - 8 1 2 0 . Phototiraphs IT'S .SM.ARh IMIOTO.s I'OK \VEI>I)l\<iS A K.VltlES! Heantifiil Albums ot l.ustro (Cilossy, I'liis'.l prinlH: .f}5 KIM.MEL, imir. « U h .SI.. Il'ki.vii E,S. !>.II57. ES. « . | 0 7 3 Hailio < KO.SLE\ -ZEM'l'll-ADMlK.M.-TEMI'LE New I'orlables. Auloniatli' Kaclio-l'honograiihs. Tables and Consoles. Small Radios. SCAl.ZO RADIO & AI'1'LIAN(;E CO., 17;:.l Slilh SI . liklyn. BE 0 - 8 1 0 0 . Refrigerators KEl'RUiEKATOKS for immediate delivery. $(10. All sizes. Wo also l>uy refrigerators. Highest prices paid. ACE REFRIGERA TiON & Al'l'LIANCE CO.. 4 6 0 7 Ave. D. Brooklyn. BU 7-3500. CHE.SS AND CHECKERS We buy and sell books and magazines on chess and checkers. Largest stock of new and out-of-print, domestic and foieign chess and checkers literature. Publisher of CHESS NEWS FROM RUSSIA, semimontiily ( $ 2 . 0 0 per y e a r ) , A. Buschke, Dept. CSL-1. 80 East 11th Street. N Y. 3. INVESTKi.VTIONS OF ANY N A T l KEI BEN ABKAMS DETECTI'.'E AtiENCY KXiO Southern Blvd. DA Judo Help E ( m .'^AI.E HTENOTVI'E MA( HINE anil Cux-—Late moilel perfe(rt. $ 4 5 . 0 0 . Call HA 2-7200, E.\t. 72;t;i. Mr. itoiie between 0-11 A.M, Poslaae Stamps and W anted—Agencies #ai BOOKKEEPERS. Stenographers, Billing and Bookkeeping Machine Operators. AJU office assistants. Desirable positions available daily. Kahn Employment Agency, Ijic.. 1 0 0 W 42d St.. N.Y.C Wl 7 - 3 0 0 0 BRODV AGENCY Henrlette Roilen, Owner. High fice pei'sonnel. 2 4 0 Broiulway City Hull) BA 7 - « i 3 3 . MR. FIXIT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. 4 Cubic Feet Refrigerators. Like New. Guaranteed Mereury itctrigenition, 43-52 102nd St FL 0 - 2 5 2 1 . KKKRKiEKATORH, new and used, all sizes. I'asl delivery. Flood, i ; i 4 l Flalbush Ave. cor Foster. lU' 4 - 2 7 0 0 . 0|)en ill 1 0 : 3 0 PM Expert INSTRUCTION BY BOB SCHIAVELLI. 2 2 yrs. experienee Inst.. 5 yrs. in military services. Seeks connection evenings in men's club. Gytii classes, etc. Boulevard g - i a i O . 1 0 0 - 2 1 Continental Ave. Km. 0. Auto type of(Opposite % Kepaira PERCY'S AUTO AND TRUCK SERVICE. Motors rebuilt, overhauled. Expert tender repairing, painting. Brakes and ignition. Tune up, all models, towing service. Est 10 years. 1 6 2 0 Pulton Street. Brooklyn PR 2 - 0 8 6 5 Trucks Coins For Hire DON'T SELl, VOUR .Si'AMI'H until you Gf.ENDALE TRUCKING SVC., INC. — got our buying list. Send 3e for list Limited number of trailers and trucks bhowiiig aetiial prices wi; pay for mint I available NOW for local and long dis and used si amps. STA .M PA'/.INE. 3 1 6 W. tanee hauling, ANYWHERE, day, week, 4 2 a St., N. Y. 18.. Open iilghtb, Sundays. month. Contract; reasonable. VI. 0 - 8 7 5 5 . WHAT HAVE VOU TO OFtEKV Collectionf 'Shot-box" accumulationsl' Anything in stamps J We urgently need them Spot casjh paid. Cosmopolitan Stamp Co.. 1457 Bromlway N. Y If'anted to Ituy VE-r., WITH IVj r(»N TRUCK; any kind of work, day, week, month, contract; reasonable. ESplanadu 2 - 2 0 0 5 after 10 A.M. TIIR<^E-TON TRUCK, transportation body will go anywliere, by day, week, or contract; reasonable. EVergreen 2-8000. ATTENTION VETERANS We buy foreign uu'dals, uniformi. Moving ' Trucking • Storage uuliaue lireurms, daggers, etc. ii.HALL MOVING JOBS—Baggage deliv ROBERT ABEI.S eries. city and piert. Day and night setv8 0 0 Lexington Ave. (nr. 0 5 t h St.) N.Y.O. iee. HALK BROS., 4 2 5 East UOth Street. Phoiie KEgtiit 4 - a i i a PL 0 - 8 6 1 8 . V eterant «MiL.\HGE YOl'K FAVORITE PHOTO— B"*!©" hand colortHl enlargement, framed. Sp«<n»l lor ex-service njen. Send $ 1 . 0 0 With photo, pay $ 1 . 5 0 C.O.D. Total $ 2 . 5 0 Dostpaid. Giiaraiitoed. Vets. Burger Bros. 4 8 7 Jerviutt iiL, Ukiya. 7 , M. X, COMPLETE APPAKKL SEKVIC'B. A new and approved method of removing bhic* and rejuveuatiny uusightly olotbiug. perfect reweaviuff of boles and burnt, ri.patr ing. rellning. alterationa and dry cleaning David E. Kiamor, Cuutom Tailoi'. 1!) Mur ruf street. BA. 7-7&M. E X P E R T WATCH REPAIRING. All work guaranteed one year. Quick Bervice. Wholesale shop, o w catering to retail service at wholesale prices. Estimates cheerfully given. Economy Watch Service, 19 W. 3 4 t h St., N.Y.O. Room 9 2 7 (nr. McCreery). P E 0 - 4 8 8 4 . FOR CORRECT TIME, see J. H. Nonl. Complete lino Hamilton, Elgin and Gruen watches. Special attention to civil service employees. J. H. Nord, 3 0 1 F u l t o n St. ( R o o m 1 1 ) , Brooklyn. WATCH REPAIRING — also clocks and jewelry; dependable service, reasonable charges; engraving while y o u wait. SPECIALS: Alarm clock $ 4 . 0 5 — M e n ' s Extension w a t c h band $ 4 . 0 5 — a s k for Mr. A; get 1 0 % discount. DOLLAR WATCH CO., 1 5 0 W. 3 4 t h St.. Store No. 7. Inside Penn Arcade, opposite Macy's. Handbags HANDBAGS REPAIRED, relined, reframc<l. Bags made to order etc. Dorette Handbag Co.. 3 7 East 2 8 t h St. MU 5 - 0 5 8 5 Household ISecessities VETERANS' HOU.SEHOLD SERVKF-S, floors waxed, basements cleaned, chimneys and furnaces vacuumed, windows cleaned. DEwey 2-0578. PLUMBING; HEATING;' Painting; Carpentry; Electrical Appliances; Lamps; Refrigeration: Storm Windows and Screens to order; Sash Chains; Gutters and Leaders; R o o f i n g ; Cementing. Estimates Give». (Rudloff, 1 0 1 8 Ave. M. Bklyn. Phone ES 5 - 0 5 1 7 . F U R N I T U R E & RUGS CLEANED ELECTRICALLY BY MACHINE IN YOUR OWN HOMFE NO PUSS I NO MESS I NO ODOR t Fabric Home Cleaning Co.. 1 8 6 E. 92. Bklyn. P R . 3 - 8 5 4 0 or SL. 6 - 5 2 2 0 Jewelry Repair REASONABLE PRICES—Costume Jewelry refinished, beads restrung. Earrings made from buttons, real workmanship. S T E P H E N GEHO, 07 Warren St„ N.Y.C. WO 2 - 4 6 4 4 Mattresses MATTRESSES box springs, pillows sterilized, made over equal to new; established over 2 0 years. NOSTRAND MATRESS CO. PResident 3 - 1 0 0 4 Radio Repair EXPERT RADIO & APPI-IANCE REP A I R S : Guaranteed Public Address Systems for rent for all occasions. All latest recordings. JA 0 - 2 3 2 2 . Hermann's Radio Service, 141-04 Roekaway Blvd. South Ozone Park. L. I. FOB GUARANTEED RADIO REPAIR Service. Call P R a m 8 - 3 0 9 2 . i(Jl makes. Limited quantity of all tubes now available. CITY-WIDE RADIO SERVICE. 6 0 University PI.. Bet. 9tb & lOtb Sta. "YOUR RADIO DOCTOR"—Radio Need Fixing?'? Guaranteed Repair Service on Home and Atito Radios all Electrical Appliances. 3 0 7 Melrose St., Brooklyn 6. N. Y. Store hours 8 A.M. to 10 P.M. Refrigerators Repaired ANY COLDSl'OT R E P A I R E D ! In 4 8 hours; work guaranteed; complete parts stock; no inspection eliarge. Other makes repaired. JACK ARMSTRONG. MA 4 - 3 0 0 0 . Setcer Cleaning SEWERS OR DRAINS RAZOR-KLEENED. N o digging—If no results, no charge. Electric Roto-Rooter Sewer Service. Phone JA 6 - 6 4 4 4 NA 8 - 0 5 8 8 : TA 2 - 0 1 2 3 The following are the places at which to apply for Federal, State and NYC government jobs, unless otherwise directed: U. S.—641 W a s h i n g t o n Street, New York 14, N. Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) , or a t post offices outside of NYC. S t a t e — R o o m 2301 a t 270 Broadway. New York 7, N. Y., or ab S t a t e Office Building, Albany 1, N. Y. NYC—96 D u a n e Street, New York 7, N. Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) . NYC Education—110 Livingston S t r e e t , Brooklyn 2, N. Y. New Jersey—Civil Service Commission, S t a t e House, T r e n t o n ; 1060 B r o a d S t r e e t , Newark; City Hall, C a m d e n ; personnel officers of S t a t e agencies. Above are the respective places to obtain and receive applications for U. S., N. Y. State, NYC or N. J. positions, unless otherwise stated in the examination notice. V t UP TO 900 ARE EXPECTED TO APPLY FOR POLICE LIEUT. T h e Municipal Civil Service Commission expects between 800 a n d 900 S e r g e a n t s t o apply f o r p r o m o t i o n to L i e u t e n a n t (P.D.). T h e filing period is now open. I t closes on T h u r s d a y , M a r c h 20. Applications received a t 96 D u a n e Street. Applications are not Issued or received by mail. L i e u t e n a n t (P.D.) p a y s $4,150 per a n n u m . T h e d a t e of t h e w r i t t e n t e s t is J u n e 28. T h e j o b Is open to persons holding t h e r a n k of S e r g e a n t on t h e d a t e of t h e w r i t t e n test a n d are otherwise eligible. I n order to b e certified as a Lieutenant a Sergeant must Brooklyn Regional Office Is still a t t h e New York Regional Office a n d It m a y n o t be J u n e before t h e y leave f o r Brooklyn. T h e American Legion Post at t h e VA h a d a n exceptionally large meeting. Assistant M a n a g e r A. J. D a l t o n m a d e a speech on Americanism a n d s t a t u s . KENT A T Y P E W R I T E R — F o r Business School or PREPARATION FOR CIVIL SERVICE Exams. Office or portable. $ 1 2 for 3 months. ALPHA OFFICE SUl'PLY, 2 E. 4 0 St. Store nr. 5th Ave. MU 2 - 4 4 0 8 . 4 4 0 0 , 4 2 5 5 , 4485. Mr. Herbert. MISS and MRS. f DIANE BEAUTY SALON 5 0 EAST 4'iuil ST. Ml'. 2-588'^ 3 "Leaders in style Hair Dressing for 18 Yrs." THE BE.ST For The I-EAST only * i . 0 0 Cold and H<'at Permanent Waves PersonallySupervised Sheridan Beauty Shop 7 0 Greenwich Ave. GR. 5 - 0 0 0 3 All pennanents and hair dyes done by expert operators. (Closed Mondays, Reducing LILLI.VN FERNANDEZ REDUCING SCHOOL. "Wo make loveliness Lovelier." Smart ladies reduce the gyro-lator way. Relax fully dressed. Reduce any part of your body. Look well. Feel well. Frtie trial treatment. 1104 Fulton St.. Bklyn, N. Y. NE 8 - 0 0 0 8 FOR MILADY VIDAL FAMOUS FOR FINE FURS Quality furs since 1022. In the heart of The Fur District. J . T. Vidal Furs, 231 W. 2 0 t h St.. N.Y.C. WHOI.ESALE FURRIER wants to lower inventory, willinf to pass fur coat savings direct to consumer. For appointmeut, LAekawanna 4 - 9 3 5 4 . Mr. Burns. ATTENTION LADIES I We have what you want in F I N E Furs, Fur Coati, Jackets and Scarfa AT YOUR PRICE. FURS $ 3 5 and up. KOVEN'8 'rUKlt^' SHOP 8 6 8 Third Ave. (5J5-63 Sts.) N. T . PLaxa 8 - 0 7 1 « Call Mm. Koveu for Spceial Prioea Appetizingr. dellcloufl. baked in the oven >n our farm up in Bucks Co. in a rich sauce of brown sugar and molasses, its just old fashioned farm baking. We cook old fashioned bean soup with ham, iust real erood farm cooked soup. Six lOVa-et. eons, postpaid, $1.00 MID-HIILL FARM SOUDERTON R. D., PA \ 1• » 50 Varick S t r e e t seems to be h u m m i n g with activity. Staff seems content. Advertisement Dr. Yidal's Treatment CLARIFICATIOIN Since c e r t a i n p h r a s e s of last week's article could be m i s i n t e r preted, Dr. Vidal wishes to s t a t e t h a t h e does n o t t r e a t p a t i e n t s himself, but t h a t h e only i n s t r u c t s qualified doctors on how to apply his m e t h o d . Dr. Vidal's t r e a t m e n t (Symp a t h i c o - T h e r a p y ) is applied at 110 E a s t 16th S t r e e t ( n e a r Union S q u a r e ) . Office h o u r s Monday, Wednesday, a n d F r i d a y 1 P.M. to 7 P.M. Tuesday. T h u r s d a y , a n d S a t u r d a y 11 A.M. to 1 P.M. PENN OPTICAL CO. INC. nNVDlUNTARY NAPS Why be distrcMcd ueedlcs.. |y when you can now get the eflFective aid bf ararlic for relief, without fear ot offending with garlic breath. G O S E W I S C H ' S odorleM GARLIC T A B L E T S , timet proven 'by thousands of ^ users, reaUy are GARLIC M A D E S O C I A B L E , Whiffless, pleasant, •hewable like candy. Use them regularly (il this handy form. 60c & (.10. NIQH BLOOD PRESSURE SYMPTOMS Mh. fxcth/or Lobotaiati, AtlanUe Clfy. N. A At LIGGETT'S, WALGREEN. WHELAN, Eta. DR. WEISS Specialist Suigery of stomach, gall blad.ler female tumors, prostate, hernias tiemorrhoids, varicose veins, tonsils aud deformities corrected. I'enicillin TYPEWRITERS Bought—Sold Exchanged. Rosenbaum's, 1 5 8 2 Broadway. Brooklyn (Near Haleey St S t a t i o n ) . SpeciaU on Reconditioned Machines. FRANCIS TYPEWRITER Jfc RADIO CO As low as 10c a day. buys, rents, repairs, any make typewriter or radio. 4 0 Greenwich Ave. CH 2-7794. 141 W. 10th St. CH 2-1037-8. PENXA DUTCH BAKED BEANS Fiv* V4-lb. cans, peitpald, $1.00 Y A D a y By D a y Typewriters TYPEWRITERS $;t5. Shop overhauling $12.50 Repairs $1.00. Some portable. Adding machines and typewriters bought. H. POf.LACK. I'; 3 — 3 r d Ave. (bet. 10-17 St.) GH. 5 - 5 4 8 1 . h a v e served as S e r g e a n t for o n e year. (Credits are g r a n t e d f o r record a n d seniority, d e p a r t m e n t a l a n d w a r service a w a r d s . V e t e r a n p r e f erence a n d disabled v e t e r a n p r e f erence m a y also be g r a n t e d t o those w h o m a k e t h e list. • X-Ray • Fluorscope 81 E. 125ih SI. 609 W. 135tii St. Park Ave. B'way Ol'TO.^IETKLSTS • OPTICIANS Eyea exatnincd, prescriptions filled 4''0 Seventh Ave., NVC (a3cl St.) Opposite Pennlyvania Station WAtkins 0 - 0 3 4 3 CUSTOM VENETIAN MADE BLINDS REPAINTED A N D REPAIRED Call V4^n«'liain l l l i i i i l ('«». 1710 S H E E P S H E A D B A Y RD., B ' K L Y N 12-1—«-«.30 7 - 8 P.M. Daily Daily Tel. LE 4-'^5r>0 OPTICIAN :: OPTOMETRIST OnO li EST O R . AUB a I . 1809 EP.T E iM Estimates Clieerfuly G i v e n — L o w Price* 150 3d AVE. GRamercy 8 - 3 0 2 1 Dally 9 A.M. to 8 : 3 0 PJtf. Free Estimates OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined • Glasses Fitted LKO]\ llAltlt4»W 1297 WILKINS AVE., BRONX •f NERVES. SKIN AND STOMAOH Kidnty$, Bladder. General Weakneee, Le«e Back, Swellen GItndi. PILES HEALED (A few doors from f r e e m a n .station) Oltlce Hours: Daily, 0 to 8 P.m. Friday, 0 to B p.m. D A u-soun Special Attention to Civ. Serv. PersonntI HAIR REMOVED BY ELECTROLYSIS SPECIALIST! NEW RAUIOMATIO MlCTIIOll Unsightly and Aniioyllng irowth* Destroyed Forever iiariiilesNly Si faluleititlx Shaving Worries Ended Men und Women Treated, frlvuoy Aitttured EKNEtsT V. CAPAI.DO, 1 4 0 W. «aud St. Uoursi 1 0 A.M.-8 f . M . PE. 6-10i)» I;HH0!VIC By modem, sclentiilc, palnleM method und no lose of time from work. ConsttHitlon FREE, X-RAY Examination i Laboratory Tost $2 AVAILABLE VAItirO.«iR VEINS TIIEATKI» FliKS TO KUIT V<»li Dr. Burton Davis "I 415 Lexington Ave. ShVXo®*' Hoursi Mon.-Wed.-Frl. 9 to 7, Tbara. SRt. 0 - 4 . Sun. * Uollilayt 1 0 - l S (Closed all day Tuesday) and A C U T E DlSEASUili Of Women and Men: Hkln. Bladder. Htomach Troubira, I^ame Back. Pain in the Jloluts, KheuumtUin, Piles, KectuI Disorders, tieneral We»kueas. Bronchitis, Women Ailments trcwted. MODEK.\TK EEEH. Penlcllln and otiivr injections, if the are indicated. Individual atteuiion. i'luoroseopie X-Kay, ElevtrotberHpy. l.«bonttory Tests. OR.A.SPIIO, 20S lAST 7ltli STRUT {C«r. Third Avo.l 21 Years' Practice in Europe end Here. . . . Hood Tests for Merrieae License. UOUKH—Mon., Wed,, k'ri. 1 0 A.M. U » P.M.; HUH., 1 1 t « »> XueM,. Thurs., Hat.. l)i P.M. ta 7 P.M. CIVIL S E R V I C E Tuoi^day, March 11, 1947 tip FIRE LINES ^ Jnder the HeBmet Effective July 1, it is expected h a t some 30-odd veteran fire Ighters of all r a n k s will retire as •equested Fire Commissioner Juayle. T h e men are all over 69 hnd h a v e served well over 20 years ' i n the department. . . . ^ ICQ new fire a l a r m boxes have fteen purchased by t h e City for nstallation in t h e new housing Icvelopments. . . . T h e Board of E s t i m a t e voted a Shear's pay to t h e widows of t h r e e 'ormer m e m b e r s of t h e Fire Dept. iilled in t h e discharge of duty. Mrs. Elizabeth Hogan, widow of teatt. Chief William P. Hogan, Rvho was killed in t h e fire a n d uilding collapse New Year's Eve t Broadway a n d 8th St., gets 5,450. Mrs. Betty Moorehead, idow of F r m F r a n k C. Moorelead, killed at t h e W a s h i n g t o n leights T e n e m e n t Collapse on ec. 12, a n d Mrs. Rachel K r a u s s , •/idow of F r m . Daniel M. K r a u s s , jlled when h e fell off t h e p u m p e r )f Engine 15 as it rounded t h e orner of H e n r y a n d Montgomery treets, each get $3,150. T h e Fire S q u a r e Club will hold ts installation of officers on •larch 13. Officers for t h e c u r r e n t /ear include Capt. Edward C. Huber, H. 19; P r e s i d e n t ; William loss, Public Assembly, 1st Viceesident; F r m . G e r n a r d Wolken, 27. 2nd Vice-president; J . C. iddlestorb, E. 16, Recording Sectary; F. P. Inspector William Fling, Jr., F i n a n c i a l S e c r e t a r y ; 3mil Hery, Ret., H. 48, T r e a s u r e r ; Sind E. H. Stevens. H. 48, Hisoilan. . . . t Up in M i d - M a n h a t t a n C o u r t a n a n was given a five-day sus>ended sentence for t u r n i n g in a alse a l a r m on 8th Avenue. M a g istrate I s a a c s evidently believed lis story of w a n t i n g to call t h e ops a f t e r h e h a d been tossed out a bar. . . . yrus A. Curtis was re-elected ident of Brooklyn's 7-7 C l u b . . . Queens a firebug gave t h e a workout in t h e J a m a i c a last week by setting t h r e e (Zes. including ones in a delican store a n d a n automobile., d a t e h e h a s not been c a u g h t . — M a n h a t t a n t h e story was a le d i f f e r e n t when a 52-year-old a n was a r r e s t e d a n d c h a r g e d i^h arson in t h e setting of f o u r s in t e n e m e n t s in t h e vicinity __ 49th St. a n d 10th Ave. Good 'ork on t h e p a r t of Fire M a r l s M a r t i n Scott a n d J o h n ibbons helped solve t h e c a s e . . . At t h e r e c e n t PAL meet, t h e ire Dept. t e a m beat t h e Police iDept. t e a m in t h e mile relay. T h e l^aeshirts were F r m . S a n d y Gold'g, E. 282; Art M u r p h y , E. 250;" 1 Billard, E. 255; Bob Cooper, 132; on t h e first t e a m , a n d anuel Shillings, E. 230; Alonzo overn, E. 234; Joe Lynch, H. 125; ilbur H u t c h a i s , E. 217; on t h e cond t e a m Luck was with the F.D. during e recent snow s t o r m t h a t necest a t e d transmission of t h e f o u r "xes (recall). T h e only fire of any :'eat seriousness occurred at 57 roome St., where some 50 p e r ns were driven out of a t e n e n t . Six firemen were overcome, sluding Capt. William Arniz a n d I. P r a n k McCall. Good work on h e p a r t of all h a n d s , especially 'uembers of H. 18 a n d E. 11. p r e ted any loss of life. Fire was I under c o m m a n d of D. C. J o s e p h Zeipler, l.st Division T h e a n n u a l report of the FDNY for 1946 is being readied. W N Y F .staff will do most of the g r o u n d work for t h e report which will a p p e a r in book f o r m . . . . At t h e last meeting of t h e C e n tral T r a d e s Council, AFL, Act. S a t t . Chief W i n Bcebe was a p pointed to t h e Civil Service C o m mittee... . Dr. William J . Tierney, who h a s been with t h e F.D. f o r 42 years, will be a m o n g those to retire on July 1. His r e t i r e m e n t will t a k e effect when h e r e t u r n s f r o m a two m o n t h s ' vacation. . . According to F r a n k A. S c h a e f e r , secretary of t h e Civil Service Commission, t h e promotion list for L i e u t e n a n t (F.D.) should be ready about May 1 T h a t flash fire up in t h e H. S. of Aviation T r a d s e gave t h e boys a few hectic moments. T h e "all h a n d s " was certainly needed as it h a d t h e m a r k i n g s of a very good second. T h e 900 s t u d e n t s who got a n unexpected if brief vacation were a m o n g t h e m o s t interested spectators— Fire Alarm T e l e g r a p h crews are busy t a k i n g down the air raid sirens a t o p fire houses. Most of these 400 wallers are being sold to volunteer Fire D e p a r t m e n t s i n cluding m a n y in Long Island villages. T h e Airport C r a s h U n i t a t La G u a d i a Field h a s finally moved into its p e r m a n e n t q u a r t e r s . T h e building is a very impressive s t r u c t u r e , m o d e r n even down to a P B i n t e r - c o m m u n i c a t i o a system. T h e only d r a w b a c k f r o m a firem a n ' s angle is to t h e fellow w h o get t h e window-washing detail as it would seem t h e s t r u c t u r e h a s m o r e windows t h a n wall space. Fire Ck»mpanies Relocated I n keeping with Commissioner Quayle's p l a n for s t r e a m l i n i n g a n d m o d e r n i z a t i o n t h e following t r u c k companies were relocated effective M a r c h 1: H. & L. f r o m Nelson Avenue t o 1080 Ogden Ave., B r o n x ( q u a r t e r s of 68 E n g i n e ) . H. & L. 116 f r o m N o r t h e r n Blvd. to 37-70 29th St.. L. L C. ( q u a r t e r s of 261 E n g i n e ) . H. & L. 155 f r o m L e f f e r t s Blvd., R i c h m o n d Hill to 143-15 R o c k a way Blvd., So. Ozone P a r k ( q u a r ters of E n g i n e 302). Also relocated was W a t e r Tower 5, f o r m e r l y i n q u a r t e r s of E n g i n e 261, now located in q u a r t e r s of Engine 260 a t 11-15 37th Ave., L. I. C. LKC.M, NOTICK NOTICE IS HKUKllY (JIVICN that l.iriuoi' and Wiiio I.it.'fincs LL75 has been issucvi to the iiiidci'sisnrd to sell liiiuor and wino at wholesale, under the .M- ohol Beverafre Control Law, in the prenjiscs located at ;i50 F i f t h Avenue, New York City, County County o£ New York. CRESTA BLANCA WINE COMPANY, INC. 3.50 F i f t h Avenue, NcW York City NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I.iquor and Wine Lieense I^L M S h a s been isseuil to the luidei'siirned to sell liquor and wine at wholesale, under the Alcohol Beveragre Control Law, in the iireniises located at ;i50 F i f t h Avenue, New York City, County of New York. SCHENl.EY IMPORT CORPORATION, 3 5 0 F i f t h Aven\u<, N.'W York City NOTICE IS HEREHY (ilVKN that l.iciuor and Wine License L L l l ! ) has been issued to the undcrsitriied to sell liquor and \Khie at whoh'sale, under the Alwihol Beverafre Control Law. in the premises localcd at 3 5 0 F i f t h Avenue, New York City. County of New York. SCUENl.EY DISTILLERS CORPORATION, 3 5 0 F i f t h Avenue, New York City A pipe f a s h i o n e d f r o m the t o m a h a w k with which Chief S i t ting Bull scalped G e n e r a l Custer at t h e Little Big H o r n m a s s a c r e , a clock t h a t saved its owner's son f r o m a G e s t a p o firing squad, a n tique glass t h a t survived a m o n t h in t h e Atlantic Ocean a f t e r its ship h a s been torpedoed by a Nazi s u b m a r i n e , a n d portions of a n a n c i e n t c h u r c h frieze m i r a c u lously restored a f t e r h a v i n g been blown to bit d u r i n g war bombings, are a m o n g $10-12,000.000 worth"" of a n t i q u e s now being displayed •at t h e t h i r d a n n u a l National Antiques Show a t Madison S q u a r e Garden through Sunday, March 16. t h e world's largest display of antiques. A r e c o r d - b r e a k i n g crowd is expected by t h e m a n a g e m e n t of t h e Show, which predicts larger a t t e n d a n c e t h a n t h e e s t i m a t e d 108,000 who j a m m e d t h e G a r d e n for t h e 1946 Show, h e l d in M a r c h , 1946. T h e S h o w is open daily f r o m 11 a.m. t o 11 p.m., a n d f r o m 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. on t h e final day, Simday, M a r c h 16. More Than 140 Exhibitors MODELS — ALL TYPES InvistiBato our method of oi>eniu^ careers for qualified srirls in photo(fi-aphie niodelintr. 1( you aro interested in modeling come, call or write 10 I A I. iBiroii^li MtllAlli: AiitheiUlc from and 11 IP AM iA UL HOTEL 7 ('><I00 lo I I 2r> c e n t s I V,M. National AHtiques Show — A O/vis/on of A u m o n t is R - K ; a n d B r i a n D o n levy is wonderful. ( C r i t e r i o n ) . . . "Blaez of N o o n " with a terrific cast a t t h e Rivoli. I t s t a r s A n n e B a x t e r , William Holden, William Bendix, S o n n y T u f t s , Sterling H a y d e n a n d H o w a r d D a Silva. You c a n ' t go w r o n g . . . . " I t H a p p e n e d I n Brooklyn" will h a p p e n to t h e C a p i t a l on T h u r s d a y bringing S i n a t r a , G r a y s o n , L a w f o r d a n d D u r a n t e to t h e screen. . . . " S u d d e n l y I t ' s Spring" and Captain Lonelyhearts returns home from a wartime career of p a t c h i n g h e a r t s in t h e WAC to find h e r own m a r r i a g e close to t h e rocky shores of destruction. With the material Paulette Goddard and Fred MacMurray confuse and amuse the P a r a m o u n t audiences 20th C e n t u r y ' s a d a p t a t i o n of a Connecticut m u r der case is told in " B o o m e r a n g " a t t h e Roxy| Dana Andrews is s t a r r e d (competing with himself in " T h e Best Years of Our Lives" at t h e A.stor. . . . F o r thrilling a d v e n t u r e it's " P u r s u e d " a t t h e S t r a n d ; stage show supplied by Louis P r i m a a n d company... F o u r good reasons on why not to miss " T h e Sea of G r a s s " (Music Hal) are Spencer T r a c y , K a t h e r ine H e p b u r n , Robert W a l k e r a n d Melvyn Douglas. Need we say m o r e ? . . . O n a point of i n f o r m a t i o n : J o h n Hodiak was t h e origin a l "L'l A b n e r " of t h e air waves. . . . V i c t o r Moore is a bus c o m p a n y executive on t h e side Gus Van, now a Leon & Eddie's, was B r o a d w a y ' s original Melody M a n in the Ziegfeld-Cantor-JolsonJessel days. MINEOLA VZ' RWMTheTX HVFriendly Homrof nanring Kink For Civil Service Groups Mat. Sat., Sun., Hoi. 2 - 5 Eve. (except Mon.) 8 - 1 1 : 1 5 At Fair Groiiuds, Mineola, L. I. fyacai/oH fun t^^Mutni- etititTw^esHc Hu<kow RA mcoAJtr v ^ A o t / t ^ o t i X i ^ 55MIUS FROMNYC«NEW WINDSOR,NY. NEWBUR&H«70 V lo for . V Y A 1 ... l^ulelte Goddard fired MacMurmu SEVENTH AVENUE CN^K JOHNM/ i m Directed by MITCHELL LEISEN UDEB TNYON Produced by CLAUDE BINYON ORCHESTRA JOAN m/ARPS tts Spring CO 5-31 13 STREET /a r . A N Q HIS M I S T V M BUDPy L E S m DON BAKER a» »h« organ , DIXIE Ask fur Mason Teresa W R I G H T NOW IS Till-: TIMK K ) SKNI) I O R YOlJH . priced $250,000.00 . . . iinniediale Bale. SlIMfAY V.M. I<» 7 Leod«r Enterprises. Inc. I I Anywhere! —I'OKKION Inunigrutiuu I'nttluvetl III Per8uii irr^ \mmu ••• • ALAN HALE by United Stales Louis Prima l*ittiire.s ftn Aiul His If'ariiertt t)r('Iiei9tru at 47th STKKF:T T II A IV II KXCIIANtiK I'lublrnu, l'ii»kiiu. U. Ktr. J«;ird SI DEAN JAGGER AHNEU'S B K O A D W A Y 4S45 THIRD AVENUE, 6RONX Neu • And lutrodmiiiK JOHN HODM'V For <h« N«c«stary Papcri, C«ll or Writt •i«>M*|ili iVrill4» Robert M I T C H U M PURSUED" Witi. JUDITH ANDERSON .S\VI<:I<:TIIKAUT . . . From • IN VETERANS l!)17 . ^ ^ Nuliuiinlly KIIIIIUUH l'I.ANTATH>N Kt>(»M |pAillli:N Aiiti<]ue8 olVereti Y o u t h of 19 Exhibits Youngest dealer a t the Show is H e n r y Lickel, 19, of t h e Five Antiques Shop, 347 A m s t e r d a m Avenue. Among others who h a v e booths is J o h n Cecil Holm, coa u t h o r with George Abbott of " T h r e e Men O n a Horse," a u t h o r of o t h e r B r o a d w a y hits, a n d actor, who h a s s p e n t 15 years of t h e a t r i cal " o f f - s e a s o n s " buying a n d selling antiques. T h e m a n a g e m e n t of t h e N a tional Antiques Show r e p o r t e d t h a t t h e y h a v e t a k e n several steps to increase t h e use of a u t h e n t i c a n t i q u e s i n A m e r i c a n life. An e n t h u s i a s t i c response h a s been r e ceived f r o m antiques, f u r n i t u r e , a n d g i f t buyers of America's m a j o r d e p a r t m e n t stores, t o w h o m tickets h a v e been s e n t . Other g r o u p s invited to t h e S h o w include t h e p r o d u c t i o n d e p a r t m e n t s of a d vertising agencies, B r o a d w a y a n d Hollywood producing firms, c u r a tors of p r i v a t e a n d endowed collections, a n d decorators a n d i n d u s t r i a l designers. i\ow Available For PARTIES • BAN(^trKTS • A F F A I K S W A L L J^IAIMMIN l y J. RICHARD BURSTIN first t i m e since t h e o u t b r e k of World W a r I I in 1939, a n d g r e a t e r n u m b e r s of American primitives than ever before, reflecting h e i g h t e n e d interest in American stemming from Pennsylvania Dutch, Shalcer, early m i d - W e s t ern, a n d o t h e r sources. GABRIEL MODELS R E S E A R C H STUDIOS • NATIONAL ANTIQUES SHOW 3 I A I U 11 ^ Macdonald Carey • Arleen Whelan A MITCHELL LEI SEN PRODUCTION An Acre ol" Anti»|iies . . . from a canuM) lo a castle . . . in a j!;lillcrling, c\rilin«; exposition and sale. A ^ Antique Show at Garden Has Historic Exhibits 3 0 \V. 57th St.. N. Y. :i r «l ^ At t h e f i r s t - r u n t h e a t r e s we h a v e : A lavish Technicolor p r o duction built a r o u n d t h e body of Y v o n n e de Carlo a n d t h e music of R i m s k y - K o r s a k o f f , b e a r i n g t h e n a m e of one t h a t composer's best k n o w n works "Song of S c h e n e r a zade." De Carlo is t h e d a n c e r who inspired t h e music; P i e r r e YVONNE DE CARLO, ee-starrlnq with Brian Donievy and Pierre Aumont, at the Criterion, in tiie "Song of Sclieherasade." More t h a n 140 dealers, coming f r o m a s f a r a w a y as California, M i a m i a n d V e r m o n t , a r e exhibiting a t t h e Show, w h i c h h a s 3,000 m o r e square f e e t of exhibit space available t h i s year t h a n last, t a k ing i n t h e entire exhibition a r e a of M a d i s o n S q u a r e G a r d e n . W i t h a wider variety of wares t h a n ever before, a n d with prices of a n t i q u e s a t t h e Show a s m u c h as 25 per cent below store prices a n d w i t h antiques selling in t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s f o r t h e first t i m e below prices in E n g l a n d , it is expected t h a t sales a t t h e coming Show will likewise r e a c h record highs. T h e Show serves also as a s a lute to t h e n a t i o n a l p r o g r a m of t h e American W o m e n ' s V o l u n t a r y Services. Mrs. Colley Williams, director of t h e Golden Drive of the A.W.V.S. f o r antiques, jewelry, a n d a r t objects to stock t h e i r E x c h a n g e S h o p at 14 E a s t 52nd Street, M a n h a t t a n , h e a d s a comm i t t e e which h a s a r r a n g e d a booth a t t h e Show f e a t u r i n g wares f r o m t h e E x c h a n g e Shop. Approximately 50,000 individual a n t i q u e s are exhibited a t t h e Show, r a n g i n g in size f r o m a coin to a coach a n d in value f r o m 25 cents to $250,000. Vying for i n terest a m o n g those coming to browse a n d / o r buy a r e " l i b e r a t e d " antiques f r o m Europe, which are arriving in large q u a n t t i e s for t h e Page Kifteeii NYC NEWS LEADER Kl Station i i Zimmerman's Hun^aria A M f t l C A N HUNGARiAN riinl,'iM Wwt ftttk M^ llMt 9t Bwr. Fumuii* fur Us nuperb fuoil, UUliiiKUltiliiHi for ItH (jy^UY IMIIKU'. Oinner rroni <11.BO, IhUly from 8 8unilii.v from i I'.M. KiiurkliiiK tUtor (tliouH, T u u Ori-lictttru*. Kii iwr<-r ICviv. (fupt foril'ittMir* ' V'l AU CuudlMoiifd. LUuusarrc a - U l J S . t Page SUteen NYC NEWS CIVIL S E R V I C E LE4DER TiiMday, March 11, 1947 the ''REAL" wages of State Employees have been reduced 18% in past year and up to 40% since pre-war in many cases Mr. CITIZEN and T A X P A Y E R : DO YOU WANT the business of the State run economically and efficiently? ... If so, you will wish to have a high quality of Civil Service • •. L O W pay, with resulting low morale and lack of esprit-de-corps is EXPENSIVE in the long run. All employers know that. A N D • . . the RESULT of low pay is evident. . . . Thousands of vacancies in State jobs . . . numerous employees leaving State service for more employment lucrative elsewhere . . . State workers taking extra outside jobs to supplement their inadequate incomes or exhausting their accumulated savings . . • thousands of State jobs filled by untested temporary appointments . . . and M U C H more evidence. The C O S T O F L I V I N G has increased more than 5 0 % since pre-war days. War Emergency Increases to State workers ranged from 1 4 % to 3 0 % . And...WHAT The Wholesale LIES AHEAD? Commodity Price Index advances steadily and is far above the level of retail prices. This is a sure sign of higher retail costs. Increased freight rates call for higher retail prices. Rent Controls may be removed or e a s e d — t h i s represents a substantial item in the average wage-earner's budget. Meat Prices are skyrocketing. Food Prices are again on the rise. IT IS I^OT P O S S I B L E for State workers to meet present prices, let alone higher prices, W I T H O U T AT LEAST A M O D E R A T E A D J U S T M E N T I N S A L A R I E S to meet in part higher living costs. • • • ADVISE GOVERNOR DEWEY, AND YOUR LEGISLATIVE REPRESENTATIVES. THAT YOU SUPPORT THE HALPERN-VANDUZER SALARY BONUS BILL Senate Intro. 2299, Assembly Intro. 2295, which provides a one year emergency 1 0 % salary bonus to help offset reductions in the " R E A L " wages of State employees which have already taken place. WHAT D O E S THE B O N U S COST? The 1 0 % adjustment would take one and one-half cents out of each dollar of the present State surplus . . . O R , in terms of taxes, it would mean thqt . less than one-tenth of one cent would be added to each tax dollar paid by the average New York State Taxpayer. THE CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASOCIATION, INC Albany, New York