O ' D w y e r F r... N e w Base W a g e ...

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O ' D w y e r F r e e z e s N Y C Cost-of-Living Bonsus;
N e w Base W a g e G o e s I n t o Effect July 1
Recreational Instructors
Are Sought by S tate
L i E A P E B L
Americans Largest Weekly
Vol. XI—No. 3 0
for Public
Tuesday, April 4, 1 9 5 0
See Page 9
Employees
Price Five Cents
HUNDREDS OF NYC JOBS
FOR LABORERS, CLEANERS
S t a t e Proposes t o Transfer
W h o W i l l Be N e w C r o u p of E x e m p t Jobs
Candidates
For Governor? T o C o m p e t i t i o n ; H e a r i n g D u e
D O I ¥ ' T R K P K A T TIII5!»
V
^
By MAXWELL LEHHAM
T H I S COLUMN h a s twice polled
t h e political newswriters of t h e
B t a t e , a n d h a s on both occasions
f o u n d , in t h e i r collective opinion,
a matui'e observation of t h e t r e n d s
a n d prospects in political events.
O n August 16, 1949, t h e newsm e n predicted, in a series of queries dealing with t h e t h e n - f o r t h coming S t a t e S e n a t o r i a l race, t h a t
;(1) H e r b e r t H. L e h m a n would be
t h e Democratic candidate;
(2)
J o h n Foster Dulles would be t h e
Republican candidate;
(3) t h e
D e m o c r a t s would win. T h e news(Continued
on Page B)
Finkelstein s
First Budget
RequestOK'd
W i t h a n enlarged budget p e r m i t t i n g a n increase in staff f r o m
Its p r e s e n t 66 to 113 employees,
t h e City P l a n n i n g Commission
p r e p a r e d t h i s week to accelerate
its progress t o w a r d a m a s t e r p l a n
f o r t h e City of New York. T h e
(Continued on Page 16)
ALBANY, April 3 — T h e S t a t e
Civil Sei-vice Commission p l a n s
to place 25 S t a t e jobs, now in t h e
e x e m p t or n o n - c o m p e t i t i v e c a t e gories, i n t o t h e competitive class.
P. D . L i e u t . A s s n .
Plans C a l a F e t e
A gala climax to t h e golden
jubilee year of t h e L i e u t e n a n t s
Benevolent Association of
the
NYC Police Force will be t h e
spectacular
entertainment
and
dance, to be held M o n d a y evening,
October 9. a t t h e St. George Hotel, in Brooklyn.
P r e s i d e n t Joseph J. R e g a n J r .
h a s selected Vice-President W a l t e r
Clarke, of t h e 13th Precinct, as
c h a i r m a n of 'the golden jubilee
year book, a n d
Vice-President
P e t e r H. Nesdale as c h a i r m a n of
t h e ticket committee.
C h a i r m e n of o t h e r necessary
committees will be a n n o u n c e d at
t h e April meeting of t h e Association.
I n addition, t h e Comiriission proposes t o kill 24 jobs, alter t h e
titles in a variety of others. T h e
action was a n n o u n c e d on t o p of
t h e 44 job j u r i s d i c t i o n - t r a n s f e r s
a n d eliminations a n n o u n c e d several weeks ago.
T w e n t y - t w o S t a t e agencies a r e
C o n d i t i o n s in N Y C H o s p i t a l
D e s c r i b e d as ' W o r s t ' of A l l
Comm. Kogel
Pleads for
Improvements
By H. J. BERNARD
T h e D e p a r t m e n t of Hospitals
was described by Al W u r f , business
a g e n t of t h e F e d e r a t i o n of S t a t e ,
County a n d Municipal Employees,
AFL, as t h e worst d e p a r t m e n t in
t h e NYC government, on t h e score
of low pay a n d practical absence
of promotional opportunities.
H e m e n t i o n e d t h e pay of X - r a y
Police a n d Fire D e p t s . B e n e f i t
M o s t From Bonus F r e e z e
NYC employees hailed t h e a c tion of Mayor William O'Dwyer in
f r e e z i n g t h e r e m a i n i n g $350 of t h e
salary bonus i n t o base pay. P r o m
t e c h n i c i a n s in t h e d e p a r t m e n t ,
whose salaries r a n g e f r o m $2,350
to $3,010, a n d said t h a t t h e employees of t h e S t a t e doing t h e
s a m e type of work get approxim a t e l y $600 a year more, while
a person in t h e F e d e r a l employ
doing t h e s a m e work gets approxim a t e l y $1,300 more a year, with
b e t t e r o p p o i t u n i t i e s for advancement.
" I n t h e D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h
t h e X - r a y t e c h n i c i a n receives $240
A Lof of Cash
a year more t h a n t h e X - r a y T e c h nician in t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Hospitals," he. added, " t h o u g h t h e y
are both drastically u n d e r p a i d . "
Other Pay Scales Low
O t h e r p a y scales f a r too low are
those of t h e Hospital Helpers at
$140 in regular buildings, $155 a
m o n t h in contagious wards, a n d
at $160 in Psychiatric wards, all
(Continued on Page 12)
Sen. Lehman MetheElected
VotedAgainst ToAssociation
Cut in Leave Top Board
W A S H I N G T O N , April 3 — S e n a t o r H e r b e r t H. L e h m a n i n f o r m s
T h e LEADER t h a t h e
voted
against t h e proposal of S e n a t o r
P a u l Douglas to reduce t h e l e n g t h
of leave f o r F e d e r a l employees.
S e n a t o r L e h m a n arrived on t h e
floor n e a r t h e end of t h e tally a n d
h a d voted for a rider on t h i s s u b ject without being a w a r e of t h e
p a r l i a m e n t a r y s i t u a t i o n . T h e rider
to a deficiency bill would have
limited t h e a n n u a l leave of F e d eral employees to 20 days. As soon
as h e was appri.sed of t h e s i t u a tion, S e n a t o r L e h m a n immediately
requested permission to c h a n g e his
vote, a n d this was g r a n t e d u n a n i mously.
Mr. L e h m a n h a s a pro-employee
record of long s t a n d i n g .
finding t h e money w i t h which to
d e f r a y t h e cost. T h e t o t a l is expected to be between $5,000,000
a n d $6,000,000, but by no m e a n s
all of it will be a c h a r g e against
t h e 1950-51 budget now in t h e
semi-final stages of adoption.
LEADER Complimented
R a l p h L. Van Name, Secretary
of t h e NYC Employees R e t i r e m e n t
System, said: " T h e LEADER is to
be complimented for t h e successful
nology, or a satisfactory equiva(Continued on Page 16)
lent c o m b i n a t i o n of education a n d
experience. No closing date.
Duties consist of technical work
of a routine n a t u r e in t h e medical laboratory. Involving t h e r e sponsibility l o r careful a n d a c c u r ALBANY, April 3—Withholdate p e r f o r m a n c e of a wide variety ings f r o m t h e wages of S t a t e
of r o u t i n e technical procedures,
such as chemical, physical a n d employees for Federal income
microscopic
urinalyses,
b l o o d t a x purposes r e a c h e d a record
counts, hemoglobin d e t e r m i n a t i o n , total of $21,474,641.49 in 1949.
s t u d y Dooks for S u r f a c e Line
blood sugars, etc.
T h e figure was revealoH by t h e O p e r a t o r , P a t r o l m a n S t e n o g r a p h Addiess Geoi ee E. H u b b a r d , S u - S t a t e Comptroller.
er, Motor Vehicle E x a m i n e r a n d
perintendent,
Veterans'
Camp,
o t h e r p o p u l a r e x a m s a r e on sale
M o u n t McGregor, New York.
July 1 on nobody will receive a
bonus; all t h e pay received will be
base pay. Budget Director T h o m a s
J . P a t t e r s o n was praised, too, for
Medical Technician Jobs
O p e n at M o u n t McGregor
T h e r e are openings for a Medical Te<^hnicians at t h e Division of
V e t e r a n s ' Affairs Veterans' C a m p ,
M o u n t McGregor, which c a r r y a
s t a r t i n g s a l a i y of $2,246 per a n n u m , with a m a x i m u m of $3,036.
Tiiere is a provisional vacancy subject to a f u t u r e Civil Service comw t i t i v e e x a m i n a t i o n . A c h a r g e of
$45 per m o n t h Is deducted for t h e
cost of room a n d board.
M i n i m u m qualifications include
g r a d u a t i o n f r o m a s t a n d a r d senior
h i g h school a n d completion of a n
•iitproved course i n medical tech-
involved in t h e new move, a drastic a t e m p t to " s h a k e o u t " jobs
which t h e Commission considers
unnecessary, a n d to place as m a n y
positions as possible w i t h i n t h e
competitive ^class.
T h e public will get a n oppor(Continued
on Page 7)
H u n d r e d s of jobs f o r laborers
a n d cleaners will be offered" by
NYC. Two filing periods f o r receipt
of applications, one f o r e a c h title,
will be opened in May, probably
a week a p a r t , t h e Municipal Civil
Service Commission expected. No
experience or education Is required.
To avoid h a v i n g c a n d i d a t e s wait
in line all night, for jobs a r e filled
in t h e order of application, t h e
doors will open a t noon a n d close
at 5 p.m. I t is expected t h a t applications will be received for t h r e e
consecutive days each d u r i n g t h e
weeks of May 8 a n d 15.
T h e jobs exist in practically all
NYC d e p a r t m e n t s , for m e n only.
T h e e x a m s to fill t h e m always
a t t r a c t a large n u m b e r of c a n d i dates. W h e n t h e doors were o p e n (Continued on Page 11)
ALBANY, April 3 — Charles D.
Methe, of M a r c y S t a t e Hospital,
h a s been elected to t h e B o a r d of
Directors of t h e Civil Service E m ployees Association as r e p r e s e n t a tive of t h e S t a t e M e n t a l Hygiene
D e p a r t m e n t . Mr, M e t h e won over
Robert
L. Soper to
fill
the
seat as representative in place of
J o h n M. Harris, who died last
month.
T h e election, by secret ballot,
was tallied by a special c o m m i t t e e
of t h e Association. I n addition t o
t h e m a j o r candidates, s c a t t e r e d
votes were cast for a n u m b e r of
o t h e r M e n t a l Hygiene employees.
Mr. M e t h e is also president of
t h e M e n t a l Hygiene Employees Association. He will be seated at t h e
May meeting of t h e Association's
Board.
Exam Study Books
a t T h e LEADER Bookstore, 97
D u a n e S t r e e t , New York 7, N. Y.
two blocks n o r t h of City Hall,
just west of Broadway. See a d v e r t i s e m e n t t p. 15.
Pafi^e T w o
C I V I L
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
T»
STATE A N D C O U N T Y N E W S
Hanley to Address
State Employees
Syracuse A r e a
SYRACUSE, April 3—The combined c h a p t e r s of t h e Syracuse
a r e a will hold a f o r t i e t h a n n i v e r sary dinner dance in Syracuse on
S a t u r d a y . May 20. Doris LePever
is c o - c h a i r m a n with Vernon T a p per of t h e O n o n d a g a
County
Chapter. W i t h a m e m b e r s h i p of
3,000 t h i s should be a n o u t s t a n d ing a f f a i r in t h e c o m m u n i t y . Lieut e n a n t Governor J o e R. Hanley
will be t h e principal speaker.
Guests of h o n o r will include
M a y o r T h o m a s J . Corcoran, S t a t e
S e n a t o r J o h n H. H u g h e s , a n d
Assemblymen Lawrence Rulison,
Donald H. Mead, a n d Searles
Schultz.
Edward Killeen, president of t h e
Syracu.se c h a p t e r , is
publicity
c h a i r m a n , a s s i ^ e d by E t o l a M u c k el, Mrs. Helen H a n l e y , R a y m o n d
G . Castle, Mrs. E t h e l C h a p m a n ,
Mrtlie Doyle, Anne M u n r o , I r e n e
Dobrowsky, R a y Fields. Mrs. Eva
Agronin. I d a Meltzer, Charles A.
Quick, Mabel R. S m i t h . Mrs, J e a n n e t t e Hodge, C a t h e r i n e O'Connell,
Cy S u r d a m a n d Eddth Peigel.
J o s e p h Settineri, president of
t h e O n o n d a g a c h a p t e r , is c h a i r m a n of t h e ticket committee, a s -
r
Chapter
sisted by E d i t h Schroeder, M r s .
Juliet Pendergast, Thomas J a c k son, K a t h e r l n e T h o r t o n , M a r y
Tice, Eleanor Rosbach, Eloise G a y lord, B e a m o n Tremble,
Harry
H u n t e r , K a t h e r i n e Apps, M a r y
D u d a a n d R o b e r t Sawyer.
Fred K r u m m a n , president of t h e
Syracuse S t a t e School c h a p t e r is
c h a i r m a n of e n t e r t a i n m e n t c o m mittee, assisted by J a m e s M c E n ney, Helen
Heriiman,
George
Snyder, K a t h r y n E a g a n , Ii-ma
Toomey, H a r r y Williams, A n n a
Boland, Gladys Holmqui.st, Mrs.
G e r t r u d e G r a n t , Fl-ed T h o m a s .
D o r o t h y Jewell a n d E d n a Lube.
H a r o l d Webb, p r e s i d e n t of t h e
O n o n d a g a S a n a t o r i u m c h a p t e r is
c h a i r m a n o f t h e reception committee. a n d will be assisted by
Elizabeth M a h a r . I v a n Studley,
K a t h r y n Purcell, Lillian McQuire,
Marie
Rcddy,
Mabel
Bresee,
Dorothy Adiams a n d Peter Streiff.
M a u r o Sciancalepre, vice-presid e n t of t h e S t a t e Armory c h a p t e r ,
h a s c h a r g e of table a r r a n g e m e n t s
with t h e aid of J a m e s F i u i o n g ,
George Clark, Etola Muckey a n d
Juliet P e n d e r g a s t , M e r t o n I n g r a h a m , D u m o n t Baker a n d J a m e s
Rifle.
Activities
CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION
J
Cattaraugus County
t u r n e d out, with t h e following
p r e s e n t : Virginia B. K e n r e i c h ,
Max Lord, M a r y S w a n t o n , G r a c e
T H E REGULAR m o n t h l y m e e t - G a m b i n o , W i n n i f r e d Hyslop a n d
ing of C a t t a r a u g u s c h a p t e r . Coun- Eleanor McConville.
ty Division of t h e Civil Service
a i g r e t t a Bantrell, Melba B i n n
Employees Association, was held a nM
Charles Rudolf r e p r e s e n t e d
a t t h e Moose Hall a t t e n d e d by 50 i t h ed Rehabilitation,
a n d Lucille
members.
Pennock, Agriculture. I r e n e M a r President Joseph T. G e n g o pre-1 tin a n d Lillian Wilson f r o m D P U I
sided.
completed t h r e e tables of C a n a s t a .
Guest speakers were Noel F . McT h e n e x t p a r t y is scheduled f o r
Donald. president of t h e S o u t h - W e d n e s d a y . April 19. S a m e time,
western c h a p t e r , a n d A r t h u r B r o d - same place. M a r g r e t t a B a n t r e l l ,
beck, 1st vice-president of E r i e | Consuela T u r n e r a n d Irene M a r t i n
chapter.
comprise t h e committee in charge.
Mr. McDonald reported on t h e
Association's legislative p r o g r a m
a n d explained t h e benefits of the
age-55 r e t i r e m e n t bill.
Mr. Brodbeck called a t t e n t i o n to
A M E E T I N G of t h e C e n t r a l
t h e m e m b e r s h i p success of Erie B a r g e C a n a l Unit, CSEA, was held
c h a p t e r a n d to its activities for t h e a t Clyde, N. Y., on M o n d a y ,
benefit of its members, to t h e con- M a r c h 20.
t i n u a n c e of t h e $500 cost-of-living
Among those p r e s e n t were Pi-ed
bonus, application for t h e u n e m - Lindsey. E d w i n
Hudowaliski,
ployment i n s u r a n c e benefits, a p - J a m e s Hawkes, Lawrence Hollister
p e a r a n c e s before t h e Civil Service a n d J a m e s Frederick of Albany;
Commission on behalf of m e m b e r s J a c k Wilcox, Section S u p e r i n t e n d a n d m a n y other problems of t h e ent of Lyons; R a y Q u a n d t . Seccounty a n d subdivision employees. tion S u p e r i n t e n d e n t of Syracuse.
An invitation was extended to t h e Guests f r o m t h e C h a m p l a i n Unit
m e m b e r s to visit Erie c h a p t e r at were Vivian W a r n e r a n d R. C.
t h e i r meetings a n d learn more of Bailey; E a s t Central, M. B. Atw h a t t h e County EHvision c h a p t e r s chinson, Philip W i c k h a r t ; Harold
c a n gain for their membership.
Bonnet a n d Chester S t o n e ; West
Central,
Howard
Lay.
Henry
Michaels, Alvin Grove, J o e Wiebald, R i c h a r d Cooper. Charles
ON SATURDAY, May 13. t h e H a r r i e r a n d J o h n C l a r k ; Philip
A n n u a l Spring D i n n e r Dance of Westcott of Seneca Falls.
t h e Rochester c h a p t e r . CSEA, will
A steak dinner was served at
be held a t t h e Hotel Rochester. Mineral Springs Hotel to 98 m e m H u g h Lee. general c h a i r m a n , h a s bers a n d guests.
selected Melba B i n n as co-chairOfficers of t h e C e n t r a l U n i t are
m a n . His c o m m i t t e e is comprised Charles T e r p s t r a of Lyons, presiof J o s e p h W a t e r s , Milk M a r k e t i n g d e n t ; Howard Post of Clyde, viceArea; Bill D a n s k i n , Division of president, a n d F r a n c i s K a r p p of
V e t e r a n Affairs; R u t h Lazarus, Lyons, secretary a n d t r e a s u r e r .
W o r k m e n ' s C o m p e n s a t i o n ; Gleim
Hugglns. S t a t e I n s u r a n c e F u n d ;
J o h n Walsh. T a x Dept., a n d Billy
Wilson, Employment.
Capital District
Jos. J. O'Brien, District A d m i n T H E CONSERVATION D e p a r t i s t r a t o r of W o r k m e n ' s C o m p e n s a tion, will be t o a s t m a s t e r . T h e new m e n t Capital District c h a p t e r held
officers of t h e c h a p t e r will be pre- its M a r c h meeting in t h e audit o r i u m at t h e Association's Elk
sented.
St. P a t r i c k s n i g h t saw t h e b i r t h S t r e e t h e a d q u a r t e r s t h e evening of
of a card club in the Lounge of the 21st.
" T h e new h e a d q u a r t e r s building
t h e E m p l o y m e n t Service in R o c h ester. Social W e l f a r e Staff really is a swell place to hold a n event,"
says F r e d Everett, c h a i r m a n of t h e
c h a p t e r ' s publicity committee. A
turkey dinner was p u t on by t h e
" o r Maestro," Bill Winters. AsCIVIL SERVICE LEADER
sistaQt S u p e r i n t e n d e n t of Law EnPubllnlird f v f r y Tuetiiiuy by
forcement.
C I V I i . I S K i t V K K l . K . A D K K , liie.
» 7 Diiuiiv St., Nt'w Y o r k 7. N. V.
T h e business meeting was short,
Telvphour: BKrkniaii 3-ttOIO
William Tinney, Personnel Officer,
tint«rad at sacond-clau mattai Octoanswered questions on t h e new
ber 2, 1939. at Hm poit olfic*
55-year r e t i r e m e n t law.
N«>» York, N. Y.. undar th* Act ot
March i. 1879. M«mb«i ot Audit
G u e s t speaker was Dr. David
luraatt
Circulation*.
Schneider, C h a i r m a n . Capital Dis8«bMriptioa Price «C Par Ymr
trict c h a p t e r , who explained t h e
iHdivldual Copir*
0*
workings of the C a p i t a l District
ConX«rence,
Central Barge Canal Unit
Rochester
Conservation Dept.
State Dept.
Supervisors
G e t Training
TIME TABLE FOR APPEALS
ACTION
TIME
Disciplinary Action
20 days
OR
Examination Marks
20 days to look at papers
PLUS
20 d a ^ fo tile app««l ail«r
seeing papers
5 days
On unsalisfacfory performance reports, immediate request for "State*
ment of Facts"
PLUS
2 weeks aiter receipt of
"Statement of F a d s "
4 months
Service Ratings
C—"-ation
BO days after notice of action
is received from the
Classiiication and Compensation Board
60 days after notice of original allocation
Salary
Other Grieyances
No time limit
APPEAL TO
Civil Service Commission
Courts ,
Civil Service Commission
ALBANY, April
Widespread
benefits in terms of more efficient
operation and improved emirioyeo
relatioM were forecast by President J. Edward Conway of t h e
State Civil Service Cwnission
as arrangements were completed
with R u t h M. Miner, Executive
Deputy Secretary of State, to e x tend training to toi) level supervisors in the Department of State.
Training in the fundamentals
of .supervision, already under way
i n three other departments and
scheduled to start next week i n
another, began on March 30 for
State Department employees i n
thefr Albany offices. Discussion
meetings will continue weekly for
10 weeks.
T h e Subjects
The discussion topics are: responsibilities of t h e supervisor?
conference or discussion methods
and procedure; meUiods of instruction; job analysis and performance standards; riements of
administration; elements o£ organization; leadership; managing
the worker; coordination and c o operation, and h u m a n relations.
Verncm F. Morrison, Training
Supervisor in the Civil Service
Department will lead the discussions.
Department Appeal
Committee
Civil Service Commission
Classiiicaion a n d
Compensation Appeals Board
Classification a n d
Compensation Appeals Board
Immediate "Supervisor; Next Supervisor; through administrative channels or to Personnel
Officer;
Deparlmenia) Personnel R e l a t i o n s
Boards*
State PersoniMl Relations Board
* These Boards have not yet been established but are authorized by
the Executive Order
The chart gives the time within which S t a t e employees must ' a c t
if tfccy wont t o appeal varleas •ctioas vt boards and cotmnistloas.
Dermody Heads Q. and A. on
A g e - 5 5 Bill
Civil Service
Inspection
Unit
ALBANY, April 3 — T h e a p p o i n t m e n t of J a m e s A. D e r m c d y
of S t . Albans as Associate P e r s o n nel Teciinician t o h e a d t h e S t a t e
Civil Service D e p a i t m e n t M u n i c i pal Inspection Unit in Albany, a n d
J a m e s M. C u n n e e n of Brooklyn to
replace Mr. Dermody a s District
Supervisor in c h a r g e of t h e dep a r t m e n t ' s office in NYC, was a n n o u n c e d by J . E d w a r d Conway,
P r e s i d e n t of t h e Civil Service
Commission. B o t h a p p o i n t m e n t s
are a l r e a d y effective.
Mr. Dermody will be responsible
f o r reviewing t h e operation of t h e
m e r i t system in counties a n d
municipalities a n d inspections t o
d e t e r m i n e w h e t h e r local civil service officials are c o n f o r m i n g w i t h
t h e Civil Service Law a n d Rules.
Mr. Dermody joined t h e Civil
Service D e p a i t m e n t staff in 1941.
Previously h e h a d been EHrector
of I n f o r m a t i o n a n d R e c r u i t m e n t
for t h e NYC Service CommissioA.
F i o m 1942 to 1945 he served w i t h
t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s Army.
D u r i n g 1946 a n d 1947 h e was
Personnel A d m i n i s t r a t o r in t h e
S t a t e Division of Housing. H e ret u r n e d t o t h e Civil Service Dep a r t m e n t i n 1947. A g r a d u a t e of
Uie College of t h e City of New
York, h e studied also at t h e G r a d u a t e School f o r T r a i n i n g in Public
Service a t New York University.
H e is a m e m b e r of t h e Civil Sei'vice Assembly, t h e American Society f o r Public A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,
a n d t h e Reserve Officers' Association.
Mr. C u n n e e n e n t e r e d - t h e public
service following his g r a d u a t i o n
f r o m St. J o h n ' s University in 1940.
T/i£ following
questions
and
answers on Age-55 Bill are coiicluded jrom last week.
Q. May a m e m b e r who h a s al- .
ready r e a c h e d age 55 elect t h e proposed option?
A. Yes. A m e m b e r who is age 54,
or over a t t h e t i m e of his last be- |
coming a m e m b e r is considered I
t h e same as if his age were .54. He !
gets t h e increased benefits for j
m e m b e r service from' t h e d a t e of
his last e n t r a n c e u p to age 55. f
T h i s m e a n s , f o r example, h e will j
receive a pension p a r t of 1/120 i n - j
s t e a d of 1/140 f o r every year off
m e m b e r service u p t o age 55 w i t h out a n y additional cost. He is also
p e r m i t t e d t o m a k e u p his a n n u i t y
deficiency f o r t h e years before age
55 if h e so desires.
Q. How soon m a y a m e m b e r retire a f t e r electing t h e new option?
A. If t h e m e m b e r h a s a t t a i n e d
age 55, he is eligible for i m m e d i a t e
retirement.
Clearance
usually
t a k e s f r d m 30 to 60 days.
COST
LOWEST
PERSONAL CHECKING
ACCOUNTS
6
O n l y ISo a m o n t h service c h a r g e
W r i t e or call f o r
F R E E Booklet, D e p t . L.
Be Smart
GET YOUR
139 WILUAM ST., cor F«Kon St.
r h o i i « R E 2-OUOO
SHORTHAND SUCCESS
T h « se<r«l of i h o r l h a n d s p e a d
p r a c l ' x * witli t h e r i g h t k i n d of
^hilip Grinfi;er ft Sons
INCORPORAIEO
|2f FUST AVE. tRr. 2d St.l. NYC
«R. S-0612 . 0 0 1 3 - 1 7 3 3
Est^bTDhMt I9lt
(IMfe PAYMENTS A«IAN6H>
RECORDS
Wn'l* fat
Intoimation Today
STENOWEED, INC. 141 BROADWAY, N.Y. 4
. . . Look
Smart
EASTEK HAT
i \ f O W
Any $10. $15 or $20 Hat
NATIONAIXV FAMOUS
MAKK
ABE
WASSERMAN
sell
these
cause
washers
DICTATION
is r e p c o K d
diclotion.
provide clear, t i m e d , practical dictation for
h o r n * p i o c l i c a a t t h e e x a c t speeds y o u n e e d
fer y « u ( pcrsonol Maximum ptegress.
on ail broads
Television
Ifefrii^eraitors
IMsli W a s i i e r s
Washing Maehines
GMH
Ilaiif^es
DIteoMHt oa
N K W Y O K K 1 , N". I f .
Member Fe<teral Deposit Insurain'c Corp.
at this Low Price
AtrroMA&ic
»
HELLENIC BANK
TRUST CO.
25% to 40% Discount
Speciat
N o c h a r g e f o r deposits
N o minimum b«lance
STENOSPEED
Q. Will this bill benefit those
who have already r e t i r e d ?
A. No. T h e Civil Service E m ployees Association is s u p p o r t i n g a
c o n s t i t u t i o n a l a m e n d m e n t which
would do this.
Can
THOU
PER CHECK
Q
^
he
, unusual
ABE
hats
be-
made
Bargain
Buy.
WASSER
MX^R
(CANAL
Entrance: 4 6 BOWERY and 16 ELIZABETH ST
ARCADE)
Opp. new e n t r a n c e to M a n h a t t a n Bridge
w o r t h 4-0215
O p e n Until 6 Every Evening
O p e n to 3 P.M. Saturday
^ ' l ^ ^ o c]!:;. "sT
— —
T u n e in WLIB Tiies. A Thiirs. nt 4 : 3 0
Tmmtmiixin^
im
liavnr
TREAT CRISPS
POXm>
G^OL-DC^C ^ItpvfK
Alway*
frM*
•
At AH
CHIPS
F««d SHf*
•
4lw«ys r««fy
CIVILSERVICE
Tucftday, April 4, 19S0
Pnffe Three
LEADER
STATE A N D C O U N T Y N E W S
T h e Public
Employee
By Dr. Frank L.
Tolman
President The Civil Service Employees
Association Inc. and Member of Employees Merit Award Board
SELLING CIVIL SERVICE
THE MUNICIPAL Service L>ivision of the State Civil
Service Department has issued and distributed to local
civil service commissions a practical guide or manual on
public relations and selling Civil Service to the communities throughout the State.
It is an important new concept that it is part of the
job of civil service oificials to tell all the people that
civil service is really important to them in their every
day life.
In its own fashion the Association has tried to emphasize the fact that the merit system is designed to
provide public servants chosen for ability, as tested
The commiHee in charge of the recent dance held by the Brooklyn S t a t e Hospital chapter of The Civil through fair, open competition, and thus assures the
Service Employees Association. From left, front row, Miss C. Sullivan. Mrs. G. Boenwell, Mrs. Darling, Miss
maximum of essential public service at the least cost.
K. ColHns, Mildred Drogue and Therese Euler. Second row, Dr. J. Lawton, Thomas Conkling, Williom Farrell,
J. Edward Conway, president of the Commission, in
President Arnold Moses, George Stevens and Lucille Pembleton. At rear, ilohn Drogue.
his foreword to "Selling Civil Service" quotes a short
popular definition of good public relations as "doing a
good job and getting credit for it." Doing a good job is,
1 believe, an ideal attained more often in public service
than in any other business, but there is much less credit
given the thousands of outstanding public employees for
jobs well done than is their rightful due.
I agree witl> the manual that the best potential salesman for the merit system is the merit man himself, the
public employee.
Another point worth m e n t i o n i n g
BUFFALO, April 3—The E d Perhaps because one section of the public service
ALBANY,
April
3—Two
sectionw a r d J . Meyer Memorial Hospi- t h a t employees are talking about
is
so
vocal, the non-elective, permanent public servants
al
meetings
on
m
e
m
b
e
r
s
h
i
p
in
t
h
e
t a l U n i t of Erie C h a p t e r , Alois is t h e diflferential in working h o u r s
MoJlitocr,
President
has
a d - of employees in d i f f e r e n t d e p a r t - Civil Service Employees Associa- keep their big mouths too often shut and silent. We public
tion were s p e a r h e a d e d last week employees have a duty to ourselves and our fellow emdressed a m e m o r a n d u m to Dr. ments. Some d e p a r t m e n t s a t t h e
by J . Allyn S t e a r n s , 3d vice-presiO'Connor, S u p e r i n t e n d e n t of Mey- Meyer Memorial Hospital work d e n t of T h e Civil Service E m p l o y - ployees of the civil service to spread the gospel of good
371/2
h
o
u
r
s
a
week,
some
40
h
o
u
r
s
e r Memorial Hospital a n d to t h e a week a n d others 44 hours. E s - ees Association. Held on consecu- public administration through th« merit system.
B o a r d of Supervisors calling a t - t a b l i s h m e n t of u n i f o r m work-week tive evenings, t h e y were a r r a n g e d
The body of this manual is devoted to simple, standt e n t i o n to working conditions a n d would eliminate t h i s degree of by Everett H. Q u i n n , vice c h a i r requesting a 40-hour work-week u n f a i r n e s s between u n i t s of op- m a n of t h e S o u t h e r n Regional ard practices and procedures for good public relations in
the public service, drawn chiefly from private business.
f o r t h e employees in t h e hospital. eration in t h e hospital.
Conference, a n d also vice-chairR e c e n t surveys indicated
that
M a n y of t h e employees a r e ex- m a n of t h e S t a t e - w i d e m e m b e r - The last section deals with relationships between the civil
m a n y d e p a r t m e n t s could o p e r a t e posed daily to t h e h a z a r d s of t u - ship committee for his area. T h e service commissions and the employees. In a very real
efficiently on a 40-hour S-day berculosis a n d o t h e r contagious results of t h e two meetings, it was sense this can be taken as a statement of policy for the
week, with little additional help diseases.
predicted by Mr. Q u i n n , would be entire state. I quote briefly:
In some d e p a r t m e n t s a n d no a d - 1 i t is believed t h a t consideration
Erie County Hospital Unit SouthernArea
Asks Improved Conditions, Membership
Uniform W o r k W e e k , Raise Croups M e e t
ditional help in others. Also' to t h e i r request with a d e q u a t e
s h o w n in t h e surveys was t h a t salary a d j u s t m e n t s at this time
d u r i n g t h e three-week vacation will go f a r to correot t h e condiperiod, 11 holidays a n d times of tion of loss of personnel, t i m e
illness, every-day routines were ppent to t r a i n new people a n d will
c o n t i n u e d satisfactorily.
I improve morale.
State Workers Come Up
W i t h M a n y Good Ideas
ALBANY, April 3—The New
York
State
Employees'
Meiit
Award Board a n n o u n c e d t h e following n i n e g r a n t s :
$100
LAWRENCE E P S T E I N , P r i n c i ple File Clerk. NYC office of t h e
B u r e a u of Motor Vehicles, who
invented a simplified procedure for
suspension of motor vehicle licenses. T h e plan already is in ope r a t i o n a n d is expected to save
$1,800 a year. Mr. Epstein t h u s
became a fourth-time award winner.
$50
S E R G E A N T H A R R Y ADAMS,
Of Medina, a m e m b e r of t h e S t a t e
Police, for suggesting improvem e n t in t h e records used by t h e
B u r e a u of Motor Vehicles, to f a cilitate locating motor
vehicle
owners a n d operators, including
traffic law violators a n d h i t - a n d run drivers.
$35
ROSE KLEIN. Typist, NYC office, State Insurance Fund, for a
time-saving i m p r o v e m e n t in t h e
f o r m a t of claims folders.
MAURICE M. KAPLAN, T a x
Collector, NYC office. D e p a r t m e n t
of T a x a t i o n a n d F i n a n c e f o r a
simplified f o r m of t a x assessment
notice.
$25
ISABEL M. RIEDEL, Principal
Account Clerk, Brooklyn office,
B u r e a u of Motor Vehicles, for suggesting elimination of serial n u m ber f r o m envelopes enclosing a u t o mobile license plates, since t h e
license a n d t h e serial n u m b e r s are
not t h e same.
J O H N H. O'BRIEN, Albany, f o r
a n Idea for improving t h e processing of applications In t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Agriculture a n d Markets.
G E O R G E B U R S T E I N , DPUI,
NYC, for a time-saving correspondence procedure
in
reviewing
c l a i m a n t ' s earnings.
MOLLIE TAUB, Brooklyn o f fice, Motor Vehicle B u r e a u , for a n
improved m e t h o d of
handling
dealer renewal applications.
SYLVIA GOLD, DPUI, NYC, for
a more effective m e a n s of notifying employers of c l a i m a n t s ' eligibility f o r benefits.
Certified Shorthand Test Set for May 20
T h e semi-annual examination
of shorthand and stenotype reporters for the certified shorthand
reporter certificate, will be held
on Saturday, May 20, in NYC.
Application must be flled with the
State Education Department, Albany, N. Y.. by Apill 20.
Applicant must be over 21; a
citizen of the United States: resident of the State of New Y c r k ;
have successfully completed four
f t a n ' work in a high school rec-
ognized by the Board of Regents,
or the equivalent; h^ive had technical training in verbatim reporting of matters involving law, medicine and science, and ptoduce
proof showing five yetfrs' experience in stenographic work.
Candidates will be examined In
reporting of oourt proceedings at
speeds not exceeding 200 words
per minute, and In matters involving elementary law and legal
procedure. The passing mark is
95 per cent.
a large u p w a r d s p u r t in m e m b e r ship. F r a n c i s A. MacDonald, 2d
vice-president of t h e Association,
a n d L a u r e n c e Hollister, field r e p resentative, p a r t i c i p a t e d in t h e
meeting, which took place in t h e
Nelson House, Poughkeepsie, on
M a r c h 28.
Among those a t t h i s m e e t i n g
were:
Wassaic: Robert L. Soper a n d
H e r b e r t Nelson.
Hudson River S t a t e Hospital:
G u y de Cordova, M a e M c C a r t h y ,
M a r y Hemp.
Sing Sing P r i s o n : Charles L a m b ,
Charles Scully.
Westfield S t a t e H o s p i t a l : F o r d
J . Hall.
H a r l e m Valley: A n n a Bizette.
Green H a v e n : William M e e h a n ,
J a m e s McSkemim.
At t h e O r a n g e I n n , Goshen,
M a r c h 29, a meeting was held i n cluding t h e following persons:
Westfield: Sheldon H u n t .
New H a m p t o n : Carl E k l u n d a n d
J o h n Sweeney.
W a r w i c k : F r a n c i s A. M a c D o n Forest P r o t e c t i o n : A. W a l s h a n d
aid a n d J o h n Wolik.
P e t e Sarnecky.
R e h a b i l i t a t i o n , H a v e r s t r a w : Imogene M a r g i o t t a .
Letch worth Village: Hi Phillips
a n d R a y Roby.
Middletown: S a m Decker a n d
L e n a Stout.
R o c k l a n d : M a u r e e n McSorley.
Hudson River A r m o r y :
Bob
Minmesley.
Open Lines of
Communication
"In selling (civil service employees) on civil service
—you gain satisfied, eflficient employees, and they in turn
become enthusiastic salesmen for civil service in their
contacts wth the public.
"Good morale is, in pait, the result of such visible
factors as good pay, good working conditions, and liberal
vacation benefits. But there are other intangible factors.
It involves the employee's feeling of accomplishment, of
•getting a worth-while job done, with his efforts acknowledged by the supervisor.
"Open lines of communication lend to the important
feeling of belonging. Many supervisors have maintained
lines of communication such as bulletin boards and house
publications, in order that employees may be informed of
the organization's activities and objectives. These channels serve also to air employee grievances and to receive
employee suggestions.
"A valuable interchange of ideas may result. The
New York Merit Award System has proved the time and
labor saving value of some of these employee suggestions.
Good morale includes willingness and eagerness of the
employee to perform the job to his utmost ability; more
efficiently and less waste in the production of quality
work; loyalty to and interest in the organization; successful selling and T . R.' which comes from a close knit
organization of loyal, enthusiastic employees."
A close knit organization of pulplic employees in an
organization of their own and devoted to the common
welfare of the employees and the people of the State,
is, I think, an essential part of the evolving vision of a
good job of government for the people of New York.
WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE IN THE LEADER? As part
of its program of improving covera ge of civil service news, explaining
the meaning of matters affecting public employees, and "going to bat''
for decent pay, working conditions and an improved merit system. The
LEADER wants your opinions. What kind of information would you
like to see given more space? What kind of features would be most valuable to you personally? What problems would you like to have discussed? Help us make your paper a better paper by telling us the kind
of information you'd like to have u s print. Address Editor, Civil Service
LEADER, 97 Duane Street, New York City. . . . And thanks!
CIVIL
Page Four
SERVICE
LEADER
Tiieflday, April 4 ,
1950
STATE A N D C O U N T Y N E W S
Green Haven
Becomes Unit
O f Assn.
POUGHQUAG, April 3 — On
Thursday evening, March 23,
the Green Haven Prison Chaptei
received its official charter as a
member chapter of The Civil
Service Employees Association.
The ceremonies took place in the
Town Hall at Poughquag at a
dinner attended by over two h u n dred persons. Francis A. MacDonald, second vice-president of
the Association and Chairman of
the Southern Conference, presented the charter to Mr. William
B. Meehan, newly elected president of the new chapter. He also
installed Mr. Meehan and the
other officers of the group — William
Robin,
vice-presidient;
Charles Fisher, secretary; Paul
Wild, treasurer; Leonard McGlynn. delegate.
Warden at Table
At the speakers table were
Warden and Mrs. Edward M. Fay
and Principal Keeper Robert M.
Murphy and Mrs. Murphy; also
Harry Fritz, Department of Correction Representative on the
CSEA Board of Directors; J. E.
LaValle, Assistant Principal Keeper of Wallkill Prison, Chaplains
Mathers and Wermuth of Green
Haven. The dinner was attended
by delegations from Hudson River
State Hospital, Harlem Valley
State Hospital, Sing Sing Prison,
Westfleld State Farms, Wallkill
and Coxsackie Institutions, Middletown State, Hospital and Wassaic State School.
Mr. Meehan was presented with
a gavel by the Middletown Chapter.
The committee of Green Haven
Prison employees, under the direction of
Chairman
Meskimen,
served a roast beef dinner. Entertainment followed.
Social Worker's Suit
For Job Is Argued
ALJBANY, April 3—Decision by
Supreme Court Justice Murray is
awaited in the case of Rose
Koenig seeking permanent appointment from the eligible list
for Social Worker, Department of
Mental Hygiene. She says t h a t
provisionals are occupying such
positions.
The case was recently argued.
Miss Koenig contended that the
list is statewide and t h a t she is
willing to accept appointment at
any institution.
Quinn Vice-Chairman
Of Southern Conference
Everett H. Quinn, of Westfield
State Farms, has been appointed
vice-chairman of the Southern
Regiojial Conference. The announcement was made by Francis
A. MacDonald, the Conference
head.
.r
ActivLties
of Assn.
Chapters
J'
Sing Sing
arranged the party. Charles R.
Culyer, field representative of the
Association, spoke on the opportunity given CSEA to work with
the special committee to be appointed by Governor Dewey to rewrite the present Civil Service
Law of the State. Suggested improvements in the law discussed
were the non-competitive service
and the use of seniority in promotion and layofTs where permanent
appointments were not made.
During the evening prizes were
awarded to Esther Wood of P a t chcgue, Marie Beers of Wyandanch, Franlf Johnson and A1
Dorm of Babylon.
AN ESCORT of 90 uniformed
officers atended the funeral of
Principal
Keeper
Thomas
J.
Keeley and marched in a body to
St. Mary's Church at Saugerties
on March 17. Sergeant Werben
had charge of the details and was
congratulated on its fine appearance. We want to thank the officers from Auburn, Green Haven,
Coxsackie and Woodbourne who
also attended. Deputy Commissioner McGuiness represented the
Department of Correction.
Among the old timers at the
rites were Morris Sheehan, ExE>rincipal Keeper, John Sheehy,
Joe O'Byrne and ex-Sergeant
Molitor.
Warren Cook expected to be
back on April 1.
Cliff Long's son was Injured in
a fall in CaMfornia.
George Lusignan h a d a little
hard luck. Keep pulling, Georgie.
Chauncey Long and Frank K r a tochvil are new members of t h a t
lower Spring Street Club (Ossining Hospital).
The Mrs. Brocklebank, McCauley, Leonard, Lamb, Smith, Decker, Matteson and their husbands
plus a few stags, namely R. T u n nell, Scully, and Westpfai Sr., attended the charter presentations
at Green Haven Prison Chapter
on March 23.
We were sorry to hear of the
sudden death of Rabbi Jacob Katz,
Chaplain at Sing Sing Pi'ison for
the past 32 years, and a Chapter
member for many years. Rabbi
Katz h a d the longest tenure of any
prison Chaplain in New York State
Prisons.
Assistant P. K. Charles Doyle
has been Acting Principal Keeper
since the death of Mr. Keeley.
Kitchen Keeper, John J. Ford,
is back on the vlttle range after
his recent illness.
Charles Scully and Lamb a t tended a dinner at the Nelson
House, Poughkeepsie, called by
the membership committee of the
Association. J. Allyn Stearns, assisted by Lawrence J. Hollister,
carried the chairmanship bui-den.
Francis McDonald, 2d vice-president, also was present and gave
pointers.
That's some buzz-wagon Ed Lyman was seen wheeling around
recently.
Mrs. Evaiis, Matron; Sergeants
Nolan and Algers, and Joe Casey
have been missing from their usual haunts due to illness.
Athletic Instructor Gerald Curtin has been ill.
The old Pump House on Spring
Street does not seem the same
since Louie Nelson has been away
so long.
Sullivan County
THE REGULAR monthly meeting of Sullivan chapter. County
Division of the Civil Service Employees Association, was held at
The Paddock, with 40. members
present. The meeting was conducted by Kenneth Ross, president. Committee
reports
were
read.
Questions on operation of the
Highway Department were discussed. Charles R. Culyer, field
representative of the Association,
spoke on the legislative program
and outlined what could be done
with local government groups to
provide coveiage of the New York
State Employees Retirement Law.
Mr. Ross commented on the membership of the chapter and welcomed into membership 14 new
members.
representatives of insurance offices in New York City. John L.
Files, DPUI In.surance Representative of New York City chapter,
presided. Problems of staffing,
temporary appointments and local
office procedures were discussed.
Charles R. Culyer and James Pigott of the Association's field staff,
attended the meeting.
Parole, Albany
O N A P R I L 10, a t 5.30 p . m . , t h e
Albany chapter, Division of Pa- i
role, CSEA, will hold a meeting '
in the Association headquarters |
auditorium. 8 Elk Street, Albany, j
William Flanigan's nominating !
committee will present a slate of
candidates with three nominees
for each office.
President John T.
Slattery
urged all chapter members to |
participate in . the election of i
chapter officers.
Ithaca
THE ITHAL;A Chapter, CSEA,
held 5 meeting at the Nurses'
Home of the H. M. Biggs Memorial Hospital. Miss Millicent
Stevens reported on the annual
Association dinner. The 55-yeav
retirement bill was described.
Plans were made for the next
meeting to be held at the Nurses'
Home on Monday, April 24. A refreshment committee, cons-isting
of Mildred Patterson, Helen Neustatter and Catherine Porter, was
appointed. The Central New York
Conference plans for the next
meeting at Oneonta on April 15th
THE LEGISLATIVE committee were read to the members.
of the Steuben County chapter has
been instructed to contact the
Board of Supervisors about salTHE BOWLING LEAGUE ended
aries . . . Mrs. Mildred Groves, of
Bath, who works in the County a successful season with Reception
Clerk's office, has been elected sec- Building copping the trophy. The
retary, to succeed Phyllis Mielsen, Midnight Raiders, last year's
of Wheeler, recently resigned . , . champs, placed second. MaintenThe recent meeting was held at ance, third. Individual high avthe home of the County Treasurer, erage for the season was held by
Elisha Paddock, and refreshments George Stevens, with a 178.
were served by a committee of
A benefit performance for the
Mrs. Georgia Hide, Mrs. Edna patients' dance was given by
Mann and Blanche Kniffin.
Johnny Gallo and his band.
Additions in Sick Bay: Mrs.
Maud Alberts, Mrs. Kirk, John
McCoy, Mrs. Morales.
A MEETING of employee repreChapter President Arnold Moses
sentatives in the Division of has appointed George Stevens as
Placement and Unemployment In- co-chairman with Thomas Conksurance was held at 342 Madison ling to promote recreational and
Avenue, NYC, and attended by social activities.
Steuben County
Brooklyn State
DPUI, NYC
H o w fo Increase
Your Income
Via
BUSINESS BY MAIL
•
Dist. 10, Public Works
40-Hr. W e e k
W o n ' t Bring
4 8 - H r . Pay
ALBANY, April 3—An appeal
by 735 Mental Hygiene workers
who asked t h a t their present pay
for a 48-hour week — including
eight hours at overtime—be made
their base pay for a 40-hour
week has been denied by t h e
Classification and Compensation
Division of the State Department
of Civil Service.
In an opinion by J. Earl Kelly,
d i r e c tor, the petitions
filed
through the State Hospital E m ployees' Union, TJPW, were general in character and would open
the door for salary raises for more
t h a n 36,000 positions in state service.
,
'Usurpation'
" T h e granting of tnis usurpation," Mr. Kelly wrote, "would
amount to a virtual repeal . . .
of the lower salary grades specified in Section 30 of the Civil
Service Law. Such a course would
be a usurpation of the legislative
function."
According to Mr. Kelly's analysis, 118 classes of work were r e p resented in the petitions—some
exclusively in the mental hospitals, some common to all S t a t e
departments and institutions.
Declaring t h a t "we are here
concerned with but one petition
of a general nature and not 118
separate appeals, Mr. Kelly c a u tioned :
•No B a r '
"The denial of this petition
must not be construed as a finding t h a t each of the 118 classes
is presently assigned to an a p - , ^
propriate salary grade, nor as a
bar to any class of employees to
\
the filing of a petition for salary
change based upon their specific
duties and responsibilities and
upon a comparison of their salary grade with the salaries paid
to other state employees or with
the salaries paid for similar employment in business or industry,
or in other governmental jurisdiictions."
Had cash to buy
my new trousseau
because I made
iT^ savings ^rottf
I i/m
N o w s l a r t a m o d e r n m a i l o r t l e r lt(i!>iness o f y o u r o w n !
4'itiiiplete new niaiiuul explains eveiytliinK: lunv to Htiiii, what to
s e l l , mail prumolion nu'tlnnlH, how t4> (..Vhteniatiy-e anti Rrow biu.
Hundreds of people lii'e making money b.v the knowledKe .von'll get
from this manual! S w d (Milj
for "HOW TO INCKKASK YOl K
INCOMK BY MAII.."
A SPECIAL St. Patrick's Day
meeting was held in the State
Office Building on March 17 a t tended by over 50 members and
guests. President Paul Hammond
presided and William Greenauer
SI'KCIALTV U(M)KS. Um. i ; U l ,
4.^0 Seventh Ave., N. Y, C. 1
GET ON "UNCLE SAM'S" PAYROLL!
START A S H I G H AS $3,450.00 FIRST YEAR
Be Ready When Next N e w Yo rk, Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens
Long IsBand, New Jersey, and Vicinity Examinations A r e Held
Prepare Immediately in Your O w n Home
THOUSANDS OF PERMANENT APPOINT
M E N T S N O W BEING M A D E
/
Veterans Get Special Preference
refiuiarjy a t
•
' FRANKLIN INSTITUTE
DEPT. E-S6. 130 W. 42 SST.. New York I I . N.Y.
Rush to me entii'ely tree ot c h a r g e
and without o b l i g a t i o n : ( 1 ) a full descriptioiT of U. S. Government jobs. ( 2 )
f r e e copy of illustrated 4 0 - p a g e book, " H o w
to Get a U. S. G o v e r n m e n t Job." ( 3 ) list of U. S.
/
Government jobs. ( 4 ) tell m e h o w to q u a l i f y for
one of these lobs.
LIST OF M A N Y POSITIONS IN 40 PAGE
BOOK O N CIVIL SERVICE — FREE!
DON'T LOSE T H I S O P P O R T U N I T Y !
Call or mail coupon to ua at once. Although
not Government sponsored this can be the
first step in your getting a big paid de|)endable
U. S. Government job.
O f f i i e open tlailv iiwludiiifs Saturday uulil 5
P.M. Thui-feday uiilil
P. M.
Were saving
j K i n H C i S ^
5 1 C h a m b e r s Street
Jwit E«ut of Broadwoy
5 East 4 2 n d Street
Jw*t eff FiMi Av«im«
Mame
Street
f
^
City
iJ$e This Coupon Uejore
riiiVNo""""""""""'"""
You Mislay It—Write
or Pri/U
Fluiiil^
1
.
%
P«r
onnum
Current Dividend
MMibtr N<i«r«l OtpgtillniuraiK*
CIVIL
Tuesday, April 4, 1950
SERVICE
Pngff Five
LEADER
STATE A N D C O U N T Y N E W S
Scourge of the Spoilsmen
H. Eliot K a p l a n ' s Belligerent D i p l o m a c y P r a i s e d
By State Senator D e s m o n d
s t a t e S e n a t o r T h o m a s C. Desm o n d , of Newburgh. himself a
l e a r n e d m a n in m a n y respects,
Including a s t r o n o m y , sees in H.
Eliot K a p l a n one of t h e f i r s t - m a g n i t u d e s t a r s in civil service. He
p e n n e d a n article at>out Mr. K a p l a n , published in T h ? Survey,
which told of brilliant battles
a g a i n s t t h e spoils system.
Mr. K a p l a n , t h e S e n a t o r r e called, got into civil service quite
by accident. He w a n t e d to a n s wer a n a d v e r t i s e m e n t by a firm
in t h e ITYC financial district for
a n office boy, pot lost a n d f o u n d
himself s t a n d i n g outside t h e o f fice of t h e Civil Service R e f o r m
I.eague. J ' h a t organization h a d
been suffering d e p r e d a t i o a s by
office boys. Eliot walked in, got
a job a n d n o t h i n g disappeared
thereafter.
T h e Small P a y Envelope
T h a t was t h e s t a r t of t h e prese n t D e p u t y S t a t e Compitroller in
c h a r g e of t h e New York S t a t e
Employees R e t i r e m e n t
System,
w i t h 150,000 m e m b e r s a n d $400,000,000 assets.
PILOT
TELEVISION
with F.M. Radio
"Always a year ahead*'
1 9 5 0 Models
NOK on Demonstration
GULKO
Products Co.
1165 BROADWAY, N. Y.
(cor. 27th St.)
MU. 6-8771 . 8772. N. Y. C.
>
Chapter
Activities
Suf.olk Chapter
Eligibles
Attention!
CANDIDAflS
ONLY V2
of the Official Test is oyer!
M
T h e severe physical examination ahead a f f o r d s an
opportunity f o r candidates to
Safeguard a HIGH Mental Mark
or Make Up for a Relatively LOW One!
T h e Physiojil Test carries the same weight as the Mental
in determining your place o n the final Eligible List.
Train Under Exjiert Instructors in
Our Specially Equipped Gymnasiiuii
•
FREQUENT TRIAL EXAMINATIONS
GIVEN UNDER OFFICIAL T E S T CONDITIONS
•
Outdoor Running Track
Approved f o r Veterans Under G. 1 . Bill
^ DELEHANTY
1 1 5 EAST I 5 t h ST., N. Y. 3
"Over 90% of
Force of More
Health Department
James
E. C h r i s t i a n Memorial
Chapter
WILLIAM E. BYRON, president
of t h e c h a p t e r , a n n o u n c e d t h a t
p l a n s a r e being completed f o r t h e
annual meeting and dinner dance
on Monday. April 11th a t Circle
Inn, Lathams.
Donald P. T r e a n o r is c h a i r m a n
of t h e social committee, assisted
by S t a n l e y B a i k e r , Dorothy Brew,
Dr. A r t h u r Bushel, H a r o l d Hall,
Daniel K l e p a k , Clark LeBoeuf,
Florence Manley, Neil Moylan,
Signe Norris, Peggy Powers, J a n e
Wheeler, A n n e Williams, H o w a r d
Wiltsey a n d Mildred Winters. Mrs.
A. E. Weisheimer is c h a i r m a n of
t h e publicity committee.
At t h e meeting, a n n o u n c e m e n t
will be m a d e of t h e new c h a p t e r
officers.
Rochester
ALICE F O R D is receiving cong r a t u l a t i o n s on h e r recent p r o motion to h e a d of t h e new Disability I n s u r a n c e Division, D e p a r t m e n t of Labor. Also recently
p r o m o t e d were Rose S a v a r i n o a n d
Gladys M a e C h a p m a n .
Piew Book Out for
DAY and EVENING HOURS
To Suit Your Convenience
institute
P h o n e GR; 3 ^ 9 0 0
the Entire Present New York City Police
than 18,000 Htwe Been Delehanty
Students"
FOR SUCCESS IN C I V I L SERVICE
Applications
Eliot e a r n e d b a n k i n g a n d law two t h i n g s t h a t d o n ' t fit t o g e t h e r
degrees a n d finally b e c a m e ex- —political p a t r o n a g e a n d r e d u c ecutive s e c r e t a r y a n d counsel of tion in t h e cost of g o v e r n m e n t . "
t h e League a n d its m e t r o p o l i t a n
New York a d j u n c t , t h e Civil S e r vice R e f o r m Association.
S e n a t o r Desmond r e c o u n t s how
Eliot battled NYC Mayor J o h n P.
Hylan, when t h a t official w a n t e d
to sign a bill to m a k e some one
eligible for police c a p i t a n w i t h out t a k i n g a promotion exam.
Eliot was a t h i n but vocative
youngster t h e n . T h e a t t a c k d i d n ' t
Civil Service Emirioyees Assn.
succeed, but t h e f a c t became
known t h a t t h e Kid K a p l a n of
those days was a fighter who
f e a r e d nobody.
SUFFOLK CHAPTER met at
Non-Swimming Lifeguards
P a t c h o g u e High School w i t h P r e s T h e young investigator con- ident George G u i n t a in t h e c h a i r .
nected a large n u m b e r of d r o w n - T h e principal speaker was H.
ings a t Coney Island w i t h t h e Eliot K a p l a n . D e p u t y Comptroller
inactivity of t h e lifeguards. H e of t h e New York S t a t e Employees
forced a n e x a m to be held f o r R e t i r e m e n t System. Also on t h e
filling
t h e positions. Half
t h e p r o g r a m were Harold Hertzstein,
lifeguards d i d n ' t even compete. regional counsel of t h e AssociaT h e y couldn't swim. L i f e g u a r d tion, a n d Charles R . Culyer, field
jobs in NYC h a v e been filled by representative.
Mr. K a p l a n gave t h e history of
e x a m s ever since.
He's battled even t h e U. S. t h e New York S t a t e Employees
S e n a t e a n d won, as in killing t h e R e t i r e m e n t System a n d t h e imMcKellar bill to require S e n a t e p r o v e m e n t s in t h e law, e n d i n g
approval of all U. S. jobs paying with t h e age-55 r e t i r e m e n t plan.
Mr. K a p l a n said t h a t besides
$4,500 or more.
He likes to quote Alfred E. r e t i r e m e n t , t h e r e a r e m a n y o t h e r
S m i t h , who told h i m : " T h e r e a r e benefits which come to t h e public
employee who is a m e m b e r of t h e
Retirement
Systfera, ones
for
which no p r e m i u m or s a l a r y d e duction is m a d e . T h e difference
between t h e New York S t a t e E m ployees R e t i r e m e n t F u n d a n d t h e
Old Age a n d S i u r i v o r s I n s u r a n c e
provided by t h e Federal Social
PERSONNEL TECHNICtAN
Security Act were pointed out.
(Prom.), (Municipal Service),
Mr. Hertzstein described o t h e r
D e p a r t m e n t of Civil Scrvice
p a r t s of t h e Association's legislaD i s a b l e Veteran
tive p r o g r a m a n d Mr. Culyer r e 1. Veeder, W., Albany
83770 p o r t e d on m e m b e r s h i p activities.
Non-Disabled V e t e r a n s
Among t h e guests were Philip
2 Bailey, W., A l t a m o n t . . . . 8 2 8 2 5 A. H a t t e m e r , Supervisor of t h e
3. Blake, R., Albany
80449 Town of B r o o k h a v e n ; J . M. K i r k 4. Comiskey, R., T r o y
78657 up, Jr., Commissioner of Public
Non-Veteran
W e l f a r e . Suffolk County; Michael
5. WilUams, R.. Albany . . . . 8 2 5 0 9 J. ^ f u i p h y , president of t h e C e n t r a l Islip S t a t e Hospital C h a p t e r ;
P a u l H a m m o n d , president of Ddstrict 10 S t a t e Public Works c h a p ter, a n d L. A. Walker, p a s t presid e n t of Suffolk c h a p t e r .
T h e Suffolk c h a p t e r is a b o u t to
start a membership campaign to
complete discussion of t h e salary
interest all county employees. A
s t r u c t u r e of t h e county employees
is planned.
PAtROLMAN
DELEHANTY TRAINING
Public Health
Nurse
PreviuuM Ouetttiuiu> and AiuwerM
N8 icivfn in Official exiiniinatiuiitt and oilier valuable preparation.
PUICK $ 2 . 5 0 POSTPAID
LEADER BOOKSTORE
9 7 UUANF ST., N. Y. C.
Open April
11 — IS. Y. C.
Examination
ELECTRICAL INSPECTOR - Gr. 3
S a l a r y $66.50 Per W e e k t o S t a r t
REQUIREMENT.S: 5 years satisfactory experience as skilled
electrical worker, deftifcner, inspector or druftsnien of electrical
installations, or a satisfactory equivalent.
Attend
Opening;
Class As Our
Guest
Tuesday, A p r i l N t h a t 8:15 P.M.
Neu) York
State Examination
Scheduled
for
July
M O T O R VEHICLE
LICENSE EXAMINER
S a l a r y $58. a W e e k t o S t a r t
15th!
AUTOMATIC INCREASES TO $70 A WEEK
Men n p to 45 Years Eligible
• M m i m u m Height 5' 6"
• V i s i o n 2 0 / 4 0 (Glasses Permitted)
Classes Meeting WED. and FRI.
Attend a Session as O u r Guest at 1:.30, 6 or 8 P.M.
AVAILABLE TO VETERANS
New York City
examination
Ordered!
INSPECTOR of PLUMBING - Gr. 3
NO MAXIMUM AGE LIMIT
H It Expected TV a t 5 Years Trade Experience Will Qualify
CLASSES T H U R S D A Y S at 7 : 3 0 P. M.
Attend m Class Session as Our
SOCIAL
INVESTIGATOR
$52
Starting
SALARY
Guest
A WEEK
($2,710 a Year)
Excellent Promotional Opportunities
Numerous Vacancies for Niimcroaa varancirg for college grailuates or
pertMins
with 2 years of college and 3 years exMen and Women
perienee fn social case work. June, 1050, colof All Ages
lege cr»d«ates will be eligible.
Visit a Q a s s Without Obligation on TUESDAY at 6 ; 3 0 P.M.
INSPECTOR of H O U S I N G
Classes TUES. & THURS. at 7 : 3 0 P. M.
Candidates for this examination are invited to visit a class
SURFACE LINE
OPERATOR
INSPECTOR of
CONSTRUCTION
Classes in Preparation for Written Examinmtlon MUN, * THI KS. at 1:15, 6 or 8 P.M.
SPECIAL GYM CLASSES
FOR PHYSICAL TEST
Classes Meet
TUES. and THURS., at 7 : 3 0 P.M.
PATROLMAN • Nassau & Suffolk Counlies
Classes Mon. & Wed. at 6 or 8 P.M.
In Municipal BIdg., 172 Washington St., Mineola
Attend a Class as O u r Guest
Approved f o r Veterans — Moderate Rates — Installments
Classes Forming For
• STEAMFITTER
• STEAMFITTER'S HELPER
• STEAMIFITTER • STEAMFITTER'S HELPER • STENOG. . Gr. 2
Preparation f o r FIREMAN. N. Y. City Fire Dept.
Preparatory Courses for New York City License Examinations
» MASTER ELECTRICIAN
• STATIONARY ENGINEER
• MASTER PLUMBER
Also Shop Training for Plumbers la Joiiit Wiping & Lead Work
INSURANCE
COURSE
Approved
for
Qualifying for H. Y.
State
Broker's License Exams
Accredited
by
State Insurance 0*|i#.
Veterans
Inquire f o r Information o n Any Civil Service Position
Most Courses Available to Veterans Under C. 1. Bill
FREE MEDICAL EXAMINATION WHERE REQUIRED
You Arm Invited
to Attend
Any at the Above Classes as a Cuest
VOCATTONAL COURSES
TELEVISION
Courses In Technician Training
Include
RADIO SERVICE ft REPAIR. P-M aad TELEVISION.
ELECTROMAGNETIC TELEVISION SERVICING
4LSO PREPARATION FOR F. C. C. LICENSE EXAMS
DRAFTING Architectural & Mechanlcal-Stractural
AUTOMOTIVE
MECHANICS
—
Detailing
DELEHANTY
"35 Years of Cmrem Assistence
to Over 400,000
Executive OfficAi:
Jamaica Division:
II5E. 15 ST., N. Y.3
GRamarcy 3-6900
Studenu"
90-14 Sutphin Blvd.
^"^^SKMS^
JAmaica 6-82U0
o r V t C S HOUKS-Mun. to Vri.i Ot.HO a.m. to »:itO p.iu. Set.i tfUMI a . n
to 8 p.m
CIVIL
Page Six
SERVICE
Tntmdmf^ April 4, 1950
LEADER
STATE A N D C O U N TY N E W S
Criminal Hospital Aides
Continue Campaign to G e t
Pay and Title of Guards
EYE
GLASSES
» Neor Vision
• Far Vision
Bifocals
Complete
Selection
O f High
Quality
Eye
Glasses
Painstaking
Eye
Examinations
POWELL
OPTICIANS
Criminal Hospital A t t e n d a n t s
.at Dannamora and Matteawan
h a v e for a long time been t r y i n g
to get t h e S t a t e Classification a n d
Compensation B o a r d to c h a n g e
t h e title t o Criminal Hospital
G u a r d , with t h e s a m e pay as
Prison G u a r d .
A f t ^ holding h e a r i n g s
last
year, J . Earl Kelly, C h a i r m a n of
t h e Board, a n n o u n c e d t e n t a t i v e
specifications, without t h e c h a n g e
in title a n d u p g r a d i n g of pay.
Albert A. Foster, delegate of t h e
D a n n e m o r a S t a t e Hospital c h a p t e r of T h e Civil Service E m ployees Association, wrote Mr.
Kelly t h a t when h e held h e a r i n g s
on t h e request t h e r e seemed to
be a g r e e m e n t on w h a t t h e specifications should be, but, with t h e
sole exception of h i g h school
g r a d u a t i o n , n o t one of t h o s e
p>oints was included in t h e t e n t a tive specifications.
Custodial Duties
Mr. Foster asserted t h a t t h e
duties of t h e A t t e n d a n t s a r e custodial, including supervision of
i n m a t e s on t h e i r cells, giving
them baths and other attention.
" W e p r i m a r i t y supervise i n m a t e s in t h e i r cells, in t h e hails,
dormotories, a t meals, at work
In t h e y a r d s " Mr. Foster wrote.
" W e m a i n t a i n discipline, p r e v e n t
escapes, help to locate escaped
prisoners, g u a r d against i n j u r y to
person or property, t a k e periodic
count of i n m a t e s , e x a m i n e i n coming baggage, etc. We p e r f o r m
t h e s a m e duties as t h e g u a r d s
who brinig t h e s e u n f o r t u n a t e i n m a t e s to us. We do n o t ask f o r
t h e - t i t l e of Prison G u a r d . All we
ask is t h e s a m e salary f o r t a k i n g
c a r e of t h e s a m e prisoner who
h a s a d d e d a m e n t a l deficiency.
Is this type of prisoner a n y less
dangerous?"
ALBANY, April 3—A
five-day
institute
for clinic
personnel,
conducted by t h e New York S t a t e
D e p a r t m e n t of M e n t a l Hygiene
was held last week a t t h e O n a n daga Hotel, Syracuse. Dr. H. B.
Lang, Assistant Commissioner of
t h e d e p a r t m e n t presided a t tlie
first session.
E m i n e n t Authorities
A unique d e p a r t u r e i n e d u c a tion for c o m m u n i t y service, t h e
institute brought together emine n t authorltdes.Dr. Milton R o s e n b a u m , associate professor of psyc h i a t r y a t t h e University of Cincinnati School of Medicine discussed t h e role of t h e cdinlc i n
t h e c o m m u n i t y . Dr. Morris K r u g m a n , Assistant S u p e r i n t e n d e n t of
Schools, NYC, talked on t h e
broader aspects of guidance. A n n e t t e G a i r e t t , associate director
of S m i t h College School f o r Social Work pointed u p t h e role of
t h e social worker.
Objectives of thds
institute,
said Dr. Frederick MacCxirdy a r e
to evaluate p r e s e n t m e t h o d s of
clinic organization a n d t r e a t m e n t
a n d t o s t u d y t h e kinds of comm u n i t y organization a n d comm u n i t y relationships which e n -
St. Raymond's
Holy Week Services
Between 78rd * 74tli St*.
7^235
OPEN
THURSDAY
VNTIL 8:30 P. Af.
Church
Corner Ea»t Tremoiit wnd
Castle Hill Avee.
Bronx, N. Y.
fat tor: Rt. Rev. Mtgr.
THAMEUS W. TIERNEY, V.F.
2109 Broadway
SUsquehanno
List Issued
WEDNESDAY
ConfiMHioiiB will bti heuril in the ftlternoon at 4 oVloek aiul evening: at 7:30
o'clock
HOLY THURSDAY
Coniinunion will U* ilistributed every
half hour from 0.16 to 0 a.m.
Suk'iun Hi|j:h Miisu at W o'clock
GOOD FRIDAY
9 a.ui.—Muhu u I the l>i'oiiHiiotlUe(l
Noun to 3 p.iii.—^TUKKK IIOtKS
• AGONY HKKVU'K
I'leachor: RKV. JAMKS F. McLEAN,
CS.l'.
8 p.m.—Stations of tho Ciobb
i-i
HOLY SATURDAY
. . Cfi-inionii'8 bcBin at « a.m.
Suli'mii Mumb will Ix't-'iii about tl a.m.
EASTER SUNDAY
Soliinn lliish MUSH at 11 o'llock
.4 Utippy F.mter to All!
by
W o r k m e n ' s Compensation Board,
a n d Board of S t a n d a r d s a n d
Appeals)
Non-Disabled Veteran
1. Crowley, R., Bronxvle . . . 92532
Non-Veteran
2. Feiner, B., Bronx
90780
ASSOC. M I L K SANITARIAN
( E Q U I P M E N T ) , (Prom.),
D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h , Excl. of
I n s t i t u t i o n s a n d Laboratories &
Research)
Non-Veterans
1. Weber, C., Nassau
91930
2. Alexander, W., Canisteo . . 87853
3. S w a n n e r , R., S a r a t o g a ..85231
4. Colvin, C., B l n g h a m t o n ..83731
SR. S T E N O G R A P H E R
(MEDICAL), Roswell P a r k
Memorial I n s t i t u t e , D e p a r t m e n t of
Health
Non-Veteran
1. Landers, M., B u f f a l o
80080
State
SR. M I L K SANITARIAN
^
(Prom.), D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h
(Excl. Insts., Labs & R e s e a r c h )
Non-Disabled Veteran
1. Brooks, P.. N. H a m p t o n .83245
Non-Veterans
2. H e f f e r n a n , F., F a b l u s . . . 8 3 7 0 7
3. Beckler, P., Pkeepsle
81593
NOTICE
rX)CKER ROOMS. ETC.
STATE ARMORY
NEW YORK CITY
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Separate sealed proposals covering Con.
struction. Heating. Sanitary and Eleetrio
Work for Locker Rooms, Store Rooms.
Class Rooms and Toilet Facilities for
Heailciuarters, 42nd Division. State Armory,
Park Ave. and 34th St., New York City,
in accordance with SpeciJieations Non,
15023, 16624, 16025, and 1.5020 and accompanying drawings, will be ivceived by
Henry A. Cohen, Din-.-lor, Bureau of Contracts and Accounts, Department of Public
Works, The Governor Alfred E. Smith
State OfTloe Building. Albany, N. Y., on
br>half of the Executive Department, Division of Military and NaviU Affairs, until
2:00 o'clock P. M. Eastern Standard Time,'
on Wednesday, April 12, ]!»60. when they
will be publicly opened and read.
Each proopsal must be nia<le \ipon the .
form and submitted in the envelope provided thenfor and shall he accompanied
by a certified check made pajable to the
State of New York, Commissioner of TaxFOR THE MAN
.ition and Finance, of 5'o of the amount
of the bid as a g\iaranty that the bidder
ON HIS FEET
will enter into the <ontract if it be awarded to him. The specification number must
ALL DAT
be written on the front of the envelope.
The hhink spaces in the proposal must be
$3.n
filled in. and no change shall be made in
the phraseology of the proposal. Proopsals
that earry any omissions, erasures, alter(Arch
Supporting)
ntions or additions may be rejected as infoinial. Suceessful bidders will be required
to give a l)ond conditioned for the faithful
i)er[ormiince of the contract and a si'parate bond for the payment of laborers and
materialmen, each bond in the sum of
BKUUnUTNS BEST KNOWN SHOE HOUSE i
lOO'ii of the amount of the contract. CorI02-K>4 MYRTLE
CorBRIDCCSTj
»or;i(ions submitting proposals shall be
authorized to do business in the State of
•9m mrrner J>v TIU 9:90 PJM.New York. Drawings and specifieation»
ma.v l)e examined free of charge at the
iluiisuMj nil e I'.IM
following offices:
Slate Arrhi'ect. 270 Broadway, New York
City
L^KR.AI, NOTICE
(al(> Arebitect, The Governor Alfre<l E.
Smith State Office Bifilding, Albany, N.Y.
• File No. 2767—1040
Di«tii.t Engineer, 353 Broadway, .Mbany,
The People of the State of New York, By
N. Y
the (ri-aoe of God Free and Iiu^pendent, Dislri.-t Engineer, 109 No. Genes«>e S t To: Com Ex.-haiijre Bank Tiust Company
T'ti. a, N. Y.
M trustee iimler the will of James D. Hopp, Distri.-t Engineer, 301 E. Water St., Syra.
decea-sed: Elisabeth Hojrg: Gilbert (nametl
eii«e. N. Y.
in will as Elisabeth May HOKK): Marion DIstriet Engineer. Barge Canal Terminal,
R. HOKK'; Kathleen ForlH-s Graham; Helen
Rorhcster, N. Y.
R. Forbes Uiird; Elisabeth Hotfg; Marion District Engineer, 65 Coiwt St., Buffalo,
Hoifir Sniith; Ann Hojfsr Snyder; Murray
N. Y
Forbes: Robert Hotrgr Forbes; Kenneth Distri.-t Engineer, 30 West M.iin St., HOP.
Stuart Hocg; Kenneth S. Hofriir, Jr.; Rol)ert
nell, N. Y.
HoK>r; John Symons Hogrtr; John Morrison Distriet Engineer, 444 Van Duzee S t ForlK-s: Ann Hoift; Forbes; Helen Graham;
Wiitertown, N.Y.
Katherine Graham; Rosannc Gr.aham; Ken- Di-tri.
t Engineer. Pleasant Valley Road,
neth S. HoKpr 3rd; Susan Claik Hotrif;
Poiiglikeepsie, N. Y.
Robert Dana Hotrtr; James D. Hogrg:! Henry
D. Snyder, Jr.; Donald K. Snyder; Aim Distric t Engineer, 71 Fr<'deriek St., Binsrhan-ton. N. Y.
Elizabeth Hoetr; Sai'a Louise Hopg:; Stanley Robert Smith; Norman Shaw Smith; Di-Uiiet Engineer, BabjJun, T^ng Island,
able t h e clinic to give its best and Judith Ann Smith, beinfi: the p<Msons
Armory. Park Ave. and 34th St..
intert>sted as ercditors, lesratees, •^levisees, St.nic
service.
New York City
distriljute-.'s, or otherwise, in
O t h e r o u t s t a n d i n g professional ^nefleiaries,
D: awings and speeilieations may be obthe estate of Katharine Hoefr Smith, depersonnel a p p e a r i n g on t h e week's eeased, who at the time of her death was taiiml by calling at the olli:'(> of the State
The Governor Alfied E. Smith
p r o g r a m included Dr. Leo P. O ' - a i-esident of No. .52 Grami rcy Park North Ar.bite.f.
the Borough of Manhattan, County, City Slate Office Buikling. Albany. N. Y.. and
Donnell, Director of H a r l e m Val- in
nirf1<iiig deposit for eaeh set as follows:
and State of New York, Send Greeting:
Con.-trii. tion, $10.00r Hi nting. $5.00; Saniley S t a t e HospUal; Leon Lucas,
Upou the petition of Karl Maeomber ar.v. ¥.>.00: and Electric. .^^S.OO; or by
president of t h e A m e r i c a n Asso- Smith, who resides a^t No. 63 Gramercy mailing
such deposit to the Bureau of
ciation of Psychiatric
S o c i a l Paik, North, Borough of Mnnhnttan, City Contracts and Accounts. Department of
New York, and Brooklyn Trust Com\ihlie Works. The Goveinor Alfi-ed E.
W o r k ; Mrs. Cornelia H. Allen, of
pany, a New York bankinir eorporation,
State Office Building, Albany. N. Y.
professor of social case work. having its plaee of business at No 177 Smith
Ch' ks chall be made payable to the DeUniversity of Buffalo School of Montague Street, in the Borough of Brook- partment of Public Woiks. Proposal blanks
County of Kings, City and State of and envelopes will be furnished without
S o d a l Service; Dr. J u l e s Colemam, lyn,
New York,
eliiirge.
professor of psycliiatry at t h e
You and eaeh of you are hereby eited DATICD: 3 / 2 2 / 5 0
University of Colorado School of to show eause before the Surrogate's Court .MKM:hf
Medicine; Dr. H e n r i e t t a Klein, of New York County, held at the Hall of
in the County of New York, on
associate psychiatrist, College of Records
the 5th day of May, 1!»50, at half-past ten rTTATfON.—The People of the Slate of
Physicians a n d Surgeons, Colum- p'elock in the forenoon of that day, why V. w York. By the Gr.iee of God. Free and
IIDC lit. To A'lTOBNEY GENERAL
bia University; Dr. A b r a h a m F a - the a<jcount of prociv dings of Karl Maeom- TIICI,.|..
Smith anil Brooklyn Trust Company as o r TIIK STATE OF NEW YORK: ANNA
bian, director, t h e G u i d a n c e Cen- ber
i
n
w
i
t
A N K A : ALFRED HAWRANKA" To
executors of the will of said Katherine
t r e of t h e Brooklyn Juvenile P r o - Hogg Smith, de.-cased, should not be judi- KHNA HAWRANKA, alleged niece of
AN'N.V
>fOUITZ. deceased, whose Posttective Association; Dr. Samuel ••ially Sftlled and why the eourt should not Otli. • .lUdiess
is unknown and i-amiot. after
whether thf> payments n^eeived
Goldberg, director of t h e child determine
liliti'
lit
inquiry,
be .iseertaiiied by the peand to be reoevit-d by petitioners from
guidance clinic, Brooklyn College; Corn Ex. hange Bank Trust Company as titionep herein if living: and if dead, to
h»>
...xec^utors,
administrators,
ilistributees
a n d Dr. N a t h a n W. A c k e r m a n , trustee under the will of James D. Ho_ anil .assigns of ERNA HAWRANKA,
deexcess income from the trust
director. Council Child Develop- representing
cease
il,
whose
names
and
Post-Ollice
adcreated in and by the will of siiid James
m e n t Center, NYC.
D. Hogg of a $12,000. aiuniity for the dresses are unknown and cannot, after dillbenefit of his wife, Irma A. Hogg, consti- gent inquiry, be ascertained by the petitute im.ome or prin.-ipal of the tmst of the tioner herein: BERTHA MTTNDE; and to
SANITARY E N G I N E E R S
residuary estate created in and by the will "John Doe" the name "John lioe" beins:
of said Katharine Hijgg Siiiith, deceased, nctiii;uis. the alleged husband of Anna
WANTED BY STATE
should be apportioned or pro-rated be- Moritz. deceased, if living, or if dead, lo
T h e r e are openings for S a n i t a r y or
tween income and principal of said trust the excc^utors, administrators and next ©f
Engineers i n two categories in t h e and, il BO, in what proportion, and why kin of said "John Doe" deceased, who«o
names and Post Offie;' addresscB are unS t a t e D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h , a n d petitioners should not be jiermittcd to re- known
and cannot after diligent inquiry be
tain, for the purpose of liiiuidation, the
applications will be accepted by unliquidated
interests of the decedent in asc-eitained by the petitioner herein, and
t h e S t a t e Civil Service Commis- certain other estates set forth in Schedule the next of kin of Anna Moritz. de<'eased.
nnmcs and Post Odiee addresses are
sion until F r i d a y . April 21. I n t h e H of said petitioners' account, and why whose
the de. ri-e to b»? made herein jiulieially set- liiiUnown and cannot after diligent inquiry
title of Assistant S a n i t a r y E n g i - tling
be
ascertained
by the petitioner herein,
the account of petitioners should not
neer, t h e e n t r a n c e salary
is accordingly provitle, and why such other being Hie persons Interested as creditors,
next
of
kin
or
in the "oetate of
$4,242, a n d t n e r e are five a n n u a l and further relief as to the court may ANNA MORITZ,otherwise
deeeasi D. who at the
just and proper should not be grunted
salary Increases u p to t h e maxi- seem
lime
of
her
death
was
a
resident of 07
to petitioners.
We-t 73rd Street. New York City, Send
m u m of $5,232. Application fee Is
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we have nuiCKTTNG:
caused the ^-al of the Surrogate'
T'pon the petition of The Public AdCoint of the said County of New
Senior S a n i t a r y Engineer jobs
York to be heif\Mito alUxed iiiiniNtralor of the (^)nnly of New York,
pay $5,232, a n d t h e r e a r e five a n WRRXESS, H O N O R A B L E
William having his office at Hall of R. c ords. Room
.
Borough of Manhattan. City and
n u a l salary increases u p to t h e [Seal.] T. Collins, a Surrogate of our •MOK
of New York, as administrators of
said ..iiunty, at the County of f'ouiily
m a x i m u m of $6,407. Application
the
goods,
chattels and ei(>dits of said
New York, the 28lh day of .IC.EIISECL:
fee is $5.
March in the year of our Lord
Yn\t
and
each
of you are 'herel>y eited lo
one thousand nine hundniil and
Oiow eause before the Surrogate's Court of
fifty.
N'(
w
York
County,
held at the Hall of
PHU>1P A. DONAHUE,
Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. ReeonlH. in the Cotuilv of New York, on
the ."ith day of May, 11»50. at half-iiast t<n
STETTENHEIM. DAISY L. In pu.<>uance r)'. lock in the forenoon of that day, why
the account of proceedings of The Public
of an order of Hou. George b'rankenthalei
H E E D E D
a Sun-ogate ol the County of New York Adniinislrator of the County of New York,
as
administrator of the goods, eliattels and
notice is hereby viven to all peraons hav
Every Wednesday Night
InK clalme asruinBt Daias L Stettenheini eiMiits of said deceased, should not be
jll-li'-'
illy settled.
late of the County of New York. deceaee<i
6 to 8 P.M.
IN TESTIMONY WHERKOF. we have
to present same with vouchers thereof t}
eauseil the seal of the Surrogate's
the subscriber, at the oHlce of Fhillipt'
Court of the said County of New
Mahoney & Spohr. bla attorneys, at 100
York to In- hereunto affixed.
Broadway. Dorough of Manhattan. City
WITNESS. HO.NOKABl.E WillliUU
County and State of New York, on or be
I
Si
ill
.
1
T. Collins, a Surrogate of our
the 'ind day of May 1060.
THE M O U H T
S I H A I fore
said county, at the County of
Dated. October 21. 1040
New
York, the- 20tl» day of
FUEDEUIC H. STE'ITENUEIM.
HOSPITAL
March in the year of uiu- Lord
.\dminlBtrutor c.t.a
one
thousand
nine hiuidred and
PHiLLll'S. MAHONEY & SPOllll.
Entrance 1468 MadUon Ave. NYC
(ifty.
Attorneys for Administrator c.t.a.
(iii'iir lOlht)
PHll.ll' A DDNAIU.'E.
,100 Uiouai^ui'
Clei-k oX the Surrotfute'k) Cuiu't.
New York. H. ¥,
M e n t a l Hygiene Personnel
Hear Lectures on Service
INC.
N*w York City
Or Call
Eligible
COURT ATTENDANT (AUDITI N G ABILITY) GRADE C,
(Prom.), New York County
Court of G e n e r a l Sessions
Non-Disabled Veteran
1. Groner, H., NYC
85812
Non-Veterans
2. G a r r , M., NYC
90479
3. Rowe, T., Laurelton ..-3^.86922
SENIOR B U S I N E ^
CONSULTANT (Prom.),
D e p a r t m e n t of Commerce
Disabled Veteran
1. Abrams, H., Albany
83030
Non-Disabled Veterans
2. S t e a d m a n , G., Albany . . . 8 4 9 3 6
3. Sachs, G., Rensselaer
82413
Non-Veterans
4. S a n d e r , W., S t a t e n Isl . . .88410
5. Seel. G., Albany
88099
6. W e s t e r m a n n , E., Syracuse 83627
SUPERVISING D I E T I T I A N
(Prom.), All I n s t i t u t i o n s
D e p a r t m e n t of M e n t a l Hygiene
M I D D L E T O W N STATE H O M E O
HOSPITAL, M I D D L E T O W N
Non-Veteran
1. Dellmore, H., Middletown. 83235
SENIOR I N D U S T R I A L H Y G I E N E
E N G I N E E R (Prom.),
D e p a r t m e n t of Labor (Exclusive of
t h e S t a t e I n s u r a n c e F u n d , Division of P l a c e m e n t a n d Unemploym e n t I n s u r a n c e , Labor Relations
Board, Worlunen's Compensation
Board, a n d Board of S t a n d a r d s
a n d Appeals)
Non-Disabled Veteran
1. Crowley, R., Bronxvle . . . 9 1 0 0 3
Non-Veterans
2. Ballfl, J., NYC
89338
3. Felner, B., B r o n x
88800
4. P e r l n a , A., S t a t e n Isl
82818
SENIOR CLERK (PURCHASE)
(Prom.), D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h
(Exclusive of t h e I n s t i t u t i o n s a n d
t h e Division of Laboratories a n d
Research)
Non-Disabled Veteran
1, Carley, P.. Alljany . . . ! . . .81601
INDUSTRIAL H Y G I E N E
E N G I N E E R (Prom.),
D e p a r t m e n t of Labor (Exclusive of
t h e S t a t e I n s u r a n c e F u n d . Division
of P l a c e m e n t a n d U n e m p l o y m e n t
I n s u r a n c e , Labor Relations Board,
BLOOD DONORS
$7.00 Paid lo Donor
POLICE SHOES
I
MIAgfS
CIVIL
Tue^mj, April 4, 19S0
SERVICE
LEADER
STATE A N D C O U N T Y N E W S
M o r e S t a t e Jobs A r e t o Be C o m p e t i t i v e
•
(Continued
from Page H
%unity to give its views oai t h e
n e w policy. O n M o n d a y , April 17,
a t 2.00 p.m., a h e a r i n g will be
h e l d on t h e first Qoor of t h e S t a t e
Office Building, Albany, in c o n n e c t i o n w i t h t h e Commiasioa's
over-all study.
Politics Denied
C h a r g e s t h a t political influences
h a v e d o m i n a t e d t h e Ck)mmission's
a c t i o n h a v e been vigorously denied
b o t h by t h e R e p u b l i c a n c h a i r m a n
of t h e Commission, J . E d w a r d
Conway, a n d its D e m o c r a t i c m e m b e r , Alexander Falk. T h e y a r g u e
t h a t t h e removal of positions
f r o m the exempt a n d non-competitive classes i n t o t h e c o m p t e i tive field is s o m e t h i n g w h i c h m e r i t
s y s t e m advocates always seek.
T h e y m a i n t a i n t h e y are ncrt c o n cerned with t h e employee c u r r e n t l y holding t h e position, but
t h a t inevitably h e m u s t be m a d e
competitive w i t h t h e job. T h e
legal question h a s been raised. Is
it possible t o m a k e t h e position
competitive w i t h o u t m a k i n g t h e
i n c u m b e n t employee competitive
also?
T h e group of positions to be
' p a r t i c u l a r l y t a k e n u p a t t h e April
' 17 meeting include t h e following:
T h e following list gives t h e title
of t h e e x e m p t job. t h e n a m e of
t h e incumbent, the appointment
d a t e , t h e d a t e of t h e beginning of
previous S t a t e service, if any, t h e
s a l a r y a n d t h e r e c o m m e n d a t i o n , in
t h a t order.
Exempt
A G R I C U L T U R E AND M A R K E T S
Chief Supervisor of K o s h e r Law
< E n f o r c e m e n t . S. Z. B a u m , 1-1-38,
5-16-34, $6146. T r a n s f e r t o n o n competitive as Chief K o s h e r Pood
I n s p e c t o r , 0 2 0 . $4242-5-252.
Supervisor of K o s h e r Law E n f o r e e m e n t , I. Koenigsberg. 1-7-38,
$5823. T r a n s f e r t o non-competitive
a s Sr. K o s h e r Pood Inspector G16,
$3715-4440.
Attorney, C. C. Curlette, 12-1643, $5232. T r a r ^ f e r t o c o m ^ t i t i v e
fts Attorney, G20, $4242-5232.
Attorney, W m . S h e e h a n , 11-1LKGAL
,
f
(
^
7-1-40, 11-1-23, G20, $4620. T r a n s - to exceed $100 per mo.), none.
S r . W e l f a r e Accounts C o n s u l t f e r t o competitive as H e a d M a i n - Eliminate.
a n t . none. Eliminate.
t e n a n c e Supervisor, G20.
LABOR
W e l f a r e Accounts C o n s u l t a n t ,
A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Assistant ( E d u I n f o r m a t i o n Officer, none. Elim- none. Eliminate.
c a t i o n ) , C o n s t a n c e P o t t e r , 7-1-42, i n a t e .
Supervisor of Racial Problems,
G20, $4620. T r a n s f e r to c o m p e t i Labor Liaison Ofificer, none. S a m u e l Allen. 10-5-37, G22. $4987tive a n d c h a n g e title t o Adminis- Eliminate.
.50.
t r a t i v e Assistant.
Labor Liaison Officer, none.
TAX
F o r e m a n of P r i n t i n g P l a n t , T h e - Eliminate.
Varitype O p e r a t o r , A n n a Koons,
odore Held, 7-1-32, 1-1-22. C h a n g e
DPUI
7-16-49, 8-11-48, G4. $1800.
title t o P r i n t i n g S h o p F o r e m a n
Confidential
Assistant,
none.
Varitype O p e r a t o r , Gladys M a r a n d c o n t i n u e non-competitive:
Eliminate.
tin, 2-15-50, 3-16-44, G4, $2200.
STATE M A R I T I M E COLLEGE
Sr. Public R e l a t i o n s Asst. ( E m Varitype O p e r a t o r . Lillian H u d Secretary of M a r i n e Academy. ployees). none. Eliminate.
son. 12-16-47, G4, $1920.
J. J . O'Connor, 9-1-47, G22, $4080.
Sr. Public R e l a t i o n s Asst. ( U n CORRECTION — Institutions
Eliminate—position to be abolished ions), none. E l i m i n a t e .
Atendants (Woodbourne): Wal4-1-50.
STATE INSURANCE FUND
ter H a n o f e e , 11-23-39, G2; H e n r y
Sr. S t e n o g r a p h e r , Investigation Bogan, 10-20-41, B2; Floyd Hill,
M a r i n e Academy Easiness OfiBeer, H i r a m G a n d e l m a n , 3-11-46, Unit, M a r y D r u m , 8-16-41, G6, 4-1-49. 11-23-43, G2: one v a c a n t .
8 - i a - 2 8 , G28, $5671.82. C h a n g e $2640. T r a n s f e r to competitive T r a n s f e r all to competitive class.
title to M a r i t i m e College Business class.
A t t e n d a n t s (NapanoCh): J a c o Officer.
LAW
bus Eltinge, 7-1-41, 5-10-37, G2,
M a r i n e Academy Assistant BusiAdmin. Supervisor of Title Ab- $2200: A r t h u r Eck, 7-1-41, 4-1-26,
ness Officer, J a c o b Sklaire, 9-12- s t r a c t s , Julius K a a g a n , .4-1-45, 8- G2, $2268. T r a n s f e r both to c o m 47, 9-25-40, G25, $4620. C h a n g e 28-44, G30, $6800. T r a n s f e r to petitive class.
title to M a r i t i m e College Assistant competitive class.
A t t e n d a n t (T. B. Service) (ClinBusiness Officer.
SOCIAL WELFARE
t o n ) , D a n Fitzgerald, 11-1-19, G4.
PAROLE
J u n i o r Typist (Blind). E d y t h e $1800. T r a n s f e r to competitive
W a r r a n t a n d T r a n s f e r Officers: Williams, 4-1-45, 9-1-39, G2, $2200. class.
J o h n K a r l . 11-23-45. G i l , $3000; C h a n g e title to Blind Typist.
Medical I n t e r n e , none. EiimiGeorge H a h n , 6-19-47, G i l , $2880; Leave non-competitive.
ate.
J o s e p h Denecke, 10-16-47, G i l ,
$2760; Andrew McDevitt, 2-15-44,
G i l , $3240; F r a n c i s Mullane, 8 25-45, G i l , $3120; J o h n Healy,
6-19-47, G i l , $3000; W a l t e r B u r k h a r t , 9-16-45, G i l , $3120; P a t r i c k
Rogers, U-23-45, G i l , $3000; A n drew Klein, 6-17-47, 1-1-46, G i l ,
$3000.
STANDARDS A P U R C H A S E
Supervisor of P r i n t i n g
Cont r a c t s , J . A r t h u r M a n n , 11-24-43,
ALBANY, M a r c h 27—Bolow is m e n t s , 39.
G32, $7375. T r a n s f e r to competi- t h e n u m b e r of applications r e Assistant Architect, S t a t e Detive class.
ceived for S t a t e CJivil Service e x - p a r t m e n t s . 42.
HEALTH
a m s to be Held on April 15. T h e
Senior Architect, S t a t e D e p a r t F i r e m a n (at $75 per mo.), none. listing was compiled by H a r r y G. m e n t s , 36.
Eliminate.
Fox. T h e deadline for filing was
J u n i o r Hydraulic E n g i n e e r (DeiVo/i -Com petitive
Food a n d Dairy S a n i t a r i a n in M a r c h 10.
s i g n ) . I>epartment of Public
Also, non-competitive jobs are T r a i n i n g , none. Eliminate.
ADMINISTRATIVE. B U S I N E S S Works. 12.
'Technical Assistants (20) (not
listed, with r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s . T h e
Assistant Hydraulic E n g i n e e r ,
AND CLERICAL SECTION
list follows:
Public Service Commission, 11.
S t a t e Promotion
T A X A T I O N & FINANCE
Assi.sitant H y d r a u l i c Engineer
Principal Clerk, D e p a r t m e n t of
S a f e t y Responsibility I n f o r m a Conservation, Allegany S t a t e P a r k (Design*, D e p a r t m e n t of Public
tion Assistant, none. Eliminate.
Woi-ks, 9.
Comm., 2.
AUDIT & C O N T R O L
HEALTH. EDUCATION AND
Senior Clerk (Billing), S t a t e I n Field Investigator, J o s e p h C o n WELFARE SECTION
s u r a n c e F u n d , New York Office,
don, 5-8-41, G14, $3650. T r a n s f e r
S t a t e Promotion
33.
^^ ^lompetitive u n d e r title of AsBacteriologist, D e p a r t m e n t of
Senior Clerk (Collection). S t a t e
s i s t a n t S t a t e Accounts Auditor,
I n s u r a n c e F u n d . New York O f - H e a l t h , Tut>erculosis Hospitals, 3.
G14,
Chief. B u r e a u of I n d u s t r i a l Arts
fice, 24.
Field Investigator, A r t h u r Fries,
Senior Clerk
( C o m p e n s a t i o n ) . E d u c a t i o n , Division of I n d u s t r i a l
5-8-41, G14, $3650. T r a n s f e r to
a n d technical E d u c a t i o n . D e i m r t following
concludes the S t a t e I n s u r a n c e F u n d , 159.
The
competitive u n d e r title of Assist- article on insurance
begun last
Senior Clerk ( P u r c h a s e ) , S t a t e m e n t of E d u c a t i o n , 1.
a n t S t a t e Accounts Auditor, G14. week.
Chief, B u r e a u of T r a d e a n d
I n s u r a n c e F u n d , New York O f Hall. 5-8-41, G14, $3650. T r a n s f e r
Technical Education, Division of
S t a t e Cooperated
fice. 3.
Field Investigator, R i c h a r d T .
I n view of t h e f a c t t h a t 25.000
Senior Clerk ( S a f e t y ) , S t a t e I n d u s t r i a l a n d Technical E d u c a to competitive u n d e r ttile of As- employees applied f o r t h e g r o u p I n s u r a n c e F u n d , New York O f - tion, D e p a r t m e n t of E d u c a t i o n . 1.
s i s t a n t S t a t e Accounts Auditor, insurance, t h e S t a t e Comptroll«" fice. 15.
Director of I n d u s t r i a l E d u c a t i o n ,
G14.
a n d o t h e r S t a t e officials cooperSenior Clerk
( U n d e r w r i t i n g ) , Division of I n d u s t r i a l a n d T e c h CIVIL SERVICE
a t e d by m a k i n g paymenit f o r p r e - S t a t e I n s u r a n c e F u n d . E n t i r e De- nical Education, E d u c a t i o n D e Civil Service I n f o r m a t i o n Secre- m i u m s due u n d e r t h e irfan by p a y - p a r t m e n t , 87.
p a r t m e n t , 0.
t a r y . Christine H a n n o n , 4-1.-44, roll deductions. T h i s n u m b e r r e p S t a t e Open-Competitive
Senior S t e n o g r a p h e r (Medical),
1-20-39, GIO, $3120. T r a n s f e r to resented 60% of all S t a t e e m - S t a t e I n s u r a n c e F u n d , New York
Chief, B u r e a u of Occupational
competitive as P r i n c i p a l Clerk. ployees a t t h e time. Payroll de- Office, 12.
Extension a n d I n d u s t r i a l Service,
GIO.
ductions for employee purposes is
J u n i o r I n s u r a n c e Qualifications D e p a r t m e n t of Education, DiviSupervisor of Payroll Analysis, a c o m m o n t h i n g t h r o u g h o u t i n - E x a m i n e r , D e p a r t m e n t of I n s u r - -sion of I n d u s t r i a l a n d Technical
Daniel O'Brien, 8-29-46, G20, d u s t r y today. M a n y S t a t e s a n d ance, 5.
Education, 8.
$4260. T r a n s f e r t o competitive.
public agences i>rovide payroll
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
Senior Office M a c h i n e O p e r a t o r
EDUCATION
deductions f o r employee o r g a n i z a - (Bookkeeping). D e p a r t m e n t
of (Arts a n d C r a f t s ) , D e p a r t m e n t of
tion-sponsored i n s u r a n c e plans.
Shipper, none. Eliminate.
Correction, 18.
T a x a t i o n a n d F i n a n c e , 1.
• M e c h a n i c a l Assistant a n d L a Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
G r e a t Aids
S t a t e Open-Competitive
borer, none. Eliminate.
T h e g r o u p life i n s u r a n c e pdan,
J u n i o r I n s u r a n c e E x a m i n e r , De- (Chjld C a r e ) , Dept. of CorrecP r i n t e r ' s Helper, none. Elimi- a n d t h e aocident a n d sickness i n - p a r t m e n t of InsuraiV.ce, 245.
tion, 0.
nate.
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
s u r a n c e p l a n h a v e proved t o be
J u n i o r I n s u r a n c e Qualifications
Relief Telephone O p e r a t o r , none. g r e a t aids t o t h e promotion of E x a m i n e r , D e p a r t m e n t of I n s u r - (Commercial S u b j e c t s ) , D e p a r t Eliminate.
m e n t of Correction, 8.
welflare a n d m o r a l e of m e m b e r s . ance, 73.
J u n i o r Typist (Blind), Maybelle U n d e r t h e later plan, since its i n Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
Office
M
a
c
h
i
n
e
O
p
e
r
a
t
o
r
(BookDrennon,
3-5-40,
G2,
$2200. ception in 1936, insured m e m b w s keeping), S t a t e D e p a r t m M i t s a n d (Common B r a n c h e s ) , Dept. of
C h a n g e title to Blind T y i ^ a n d who were disabled by accident o r I n s t i t u t i o n s . 59.
Correction, 28.
leave non-competitive.
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
sickness h a v e received in excess
Office Machine O p e r a t o r ( T a b H e a d Public Buildings Bfainte- of $3,000,000 in indesnnities—just u l a t i n g - B e m i n g t o n R a n d ) , S t a t e ( D r a f t i n g ) , D e p a r t m e n t of Corn a n c e Supervisor. B. W. Maloney, when they needed help the most. D e p a r t m e n t s a n d I n s t i t u t i o n s , 20. rection, 7.
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
County Open-Competitive
T a b u l a t i n g M a c h i n e O p e r a t o r , (English a n d Social S t u d i e s ) , D e p a r t m e n t of Correction, 48.
E r i e County, 21.
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
E N G I N E E R I N G , MECHANICAL
( H o m e Economics), D e p a r t m e n t
AND AGRICULTURAL S E C T I O N of Correction, 0.
State Promotion
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
Associate Architect, D e p a r t m e n t ( M a t h e m a t i c s a n d Science), Deof Public Works. 11.
' p a r t m e n t of Correction, 11.
Prinielpal Archite«t, D e p a r t m e n t
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
of Public Works. 10.
(Music), D e p a r t m e n t of CorrecAssistant Architect, D e p a r t m e n t tion, 8.
of Public Works. 6.
Correction I n s t i t u t i o n T e a c h e r
Senior Architect, D e p a r t m e n t (Physical E d u c a t i o n a n d R e c r e a of Public Works, 11.
10.
S t a t e Open-Competitive
MORE
J u n i o r Architect, S t a t e D e p a r t - t i o n ) , EJepartment of Correction,
43. $5078. T r a n s f e r to competitive
as Atttorney, G20, $4242-5232.
AUDIT A C O N T R O L
Director
of R e t i r e m e n t
Accounts, None. E l i m i n a t e .
BANKING
Senior
Attorney
(Banking),
H e m y Cherey, 2-16-45, $6516.
T r a n s f e r to competitive as Sr. A t torney, G25, $5232-6407.
CONSERVATION
Genesee S t a t e P a r k Commission
Executive Secretary, None. Elimintae—reclassified, 4-1-50 to J r .
Administrative Assistant.
CORRECTION
S e c r e t a r y to S u p e r i n t e n d e n t at
Westfleld, none. T r a n s f e r to competive as Senior S t e n o g r a p h e r .
DIV. O F VETERANS' AFFAIRS
Exec. Assistant
t o Director,
none. Eliminate.
EDUCATION
Head
Stenographer,
Ruth
W y n n e , 10-1-40, $4308. T r a n s f e r
to competiitve class, G15, $35834308.
DPUI
U. I. Appeals B o a r d
Administrative Assistant, H y m a n
Hecht, 12-22-47, $4440. T r a n s f e r
to
competitive
(requested
by
B o a i d ) , G20, $4242-5232. Question
of title?
LABOR RELATIONS BOARD
Administrative
Assistant
to
C h a i r m a n , none. Eliminate.
MENTAL H Y G I E N E
Administrative Assistant, none.
Eliminate.
PUBLIC SERVICE
Principal G a s Engineer, none.
Eliminate.
PUBLIC W O R K S
Public Works Consulting Engineer. none. Eliminate.
NOnCK
ROOFING WORK
33rd REGIMENT ARMORT
BROOKT^YN. N. Y.
N O n C B TO BIDDER.<i
Sealed proposals covering Constnielion
l ^ o i k for Rooflnr Renewals and Replaccmoiilu. a.lrd Bepiment Armory, 1322 Bedlord Arc.. Brooklyn, N. Y.. in aocordance
With SiXM-ifloaUon No. 1 5 4 0 4 and »ceompaiiyiiis: drawings, will be received by
Henry A. Cohen, Director, Bureau ot Contracts and Accounts, Department of Public
Works. The Governor Alfred E. Smith
gtate Onice Buildinpr. Albany, N. Y.. on
bchuU of tho Executive Department, DiriSion of Military and Naval Affairs, until
2:()0 o'clock
P.M. Advajiced
Standard
Time, which is 1 : 0 0 o'clock P.M., Eastern
St.iiid:ircl Time, on Wednesday, May 10,
1050, wlicn they will be publicly opened
kMI rt-ad.
Each proposal m u s t be made upon the
form and submitted in the envelope provided therefor and shall be axvompanied by
a coi iiticd check made pay.-tble to the Slate
of New York. Commi^ioner ol Taxation
and Finance, of 5 % of the amount of the
bid as a KTUaranty that the bidder will
enter into the contract if it be awarded to
him. Tlie specification number must be
written on tho front of the envelope. Tite
blank Kpacea in the proposal must be filled
fn, :tiul no chanre shall be made in the
phra.seolofry of the proposal. Proposals that
carry any oniissions. erasures, alterations
«r additions may be rejected as intorniiU.
Successful bidder will be required U» grire
• bond conditioned for the faithful p«r(ormaiice of the contract and s separmte
bond (or the payment ot laborers and m»torialmen. oach bond in the sum ot lOO%
of the amount of the contract. CorporatioiM subniittinr proposals shall be aathorIzed to do business in the State of Mew
Tork. Drawinrs and specificatiotMi m a r be
exitniinetl tree of charre at the following
offlces:
Btate Architect, 9 7 0 Broadway. Mew Tork
City
Btftte Architect. The Governor Alfred K.
Smith State Office Buildinr. Albaojr. M.T.
iNHtrict Engineer. 3 5 3 Broadway, Albany,
N. Y.
IXiriti-ict Eneiueer, 1 0 0 Mo. O e o e M St.,
Utiea, N. Y.
District Enfiiueer. SOI E, 'Water St., SyracuHe, N. Y.
DlKti'ict Enirinoer, Barire Canal Terminal,
Rofhester, M. Y.
District Engineer. 66 Court St.. Buffalo.
N. Y.
Pistriet Knrineer, SO West Main St.. Hornell, N. Y.
DlMti'ict Enrint«r, 4 4 4 Tan Dusee St.,
Watertown, N.Y.
District Engineer. Pleasant Valley Koad
I'ouffhkwpsie, N. Y.
Diflti'ict Engineer, 7 1 Frederick St., Binrhninton, N. Y.
DiHtrlct EnRTtnerr, Babylon, T^onr Island,
N. Y.
9 3 n l lletrimttnt Armory, 1 3 2 2 Bedford Ave..
Brooklyn, N, Y.
DiMwimrs and ipecificatiuiis may be ob
lain* d by callin* at tho ottU-e ot the State
Architci't. Tho Governor Alfn'd E. Smith
i t i i t e UlUce lUiiUlinif, Albany, N, Y.. and
biiiUiuic din^osit ol ^lO.OO lor each set or
by mailiiiv such deposit to the Bureau of
^ n t r a c t s and A<HX>unta, Dttpiu-taieat of
Public Works. The Uoveruor Alfred H.
Smith Slate OUlce BuiUUnir, Albany, M. T.
OhiH'ks shall be niaile payable to the D»^artiuent uf l^iblic Works. Proposal blanks
And Mivelupt^ will be furuishoa wiiliuut
ftianc
ATKD^
S/Xl/M
PA
Tt
Itlflf
A p p l i c a t i o n s for
R e c e n t S t a t e Tests
Assn. Offers
Attractive
Insurance
Miss and
Tb«
iastitiit* for •wploy*** of Hi* Stat* Department of Taiatioa
MMD N M S C * ia Alfcoay wat opoaod by ProsMoat J. Edward Coaway,
of tho St«t« Civil Sorvico Co«ii«iU»ion aad Mrs. Haiol Ford, (toft),
Director of Pertoaael, Depui haoat of Taxatioa aad Haaace. la tho
conter it MUs N. Moo $«wyor. Director of the Aaioricaa InstitHte of
NUat^
By HELEN DUNtI
American Association of Advertising Agencies, 420 Lexington
Avenue, New York. This o r g a n i z a tion ia composed of advertising
agencies. Among o t h e r activities,
t h e A.A.A.A. conducts n a t i o n - w i d e
e x a m i n a t i o n s a n n u a l l y to discover
advertising t a l e n t . W r i t e about
this talerit search.
Mrs.
swer your questions about o p p o r tunities in t h e graphic arts, i n cluding commercial a r t , c a r t o o n ing, book illustraiton, m a g a z i n e
work, comic-book work, posters.
Questions should be detailed, a n d
your own background
* * * described,
Artists
Equity
As.sociation,
G r a n d Central T e r m i n a l Building,
•
«
•
New York. TJiis org;*ni:nMo»i is
American I n s t i t u t e of G r a p h i c availabh? for advice P'MI
"maAi-t^i, lU. East 40th Street. New tion to tlie artitit seeking to break
York. T h i s organization will a n - in.
CIVIL
Page Eight
SERVICE
LEADER
Tmrndt^, April 4, 19M
. r
•L E A P E B .
ELEVEIVTB
AmeriffoFH MMrgvHt Weekly
¥EAR
for Puhlic
Emploffeen
Member, Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER,
INC.
97 Juane $tre«t. New York 7. N. Y.
BEekman 3-4010
Maxwell Lehman, Editor and
Publisher
H. J. Bernard, Executive Editor
Morton Yarmon, General fAanager
H
N. H. Mager, Itusiness Manaf^er
TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1950
Freezing
of
Serves Dual
Bonus
Causes
o sooner was Mayor William O'Dwyer's decision announced to freeze the $350 remainder of the NYC
bonus into permanent pay than the gratitude of employees
began pouring in on him. Bonus-freezing had been one
of the top objectives of all employee organizations. The
LEADER had been campaigning for it steadily.
The Mayor's action was a fine thing not only for the
employees but for the people of the City because of the
improved morale of the employees and even keener performancje of duties. The feeling of insecurity when part
of pay is officially temporary is unshakable. Now the
hazard has been happily and graciously ended. State employees had their cost-of-living wage adjustment covered
into base pay two years ago. It was inevitable that sooner
or later, the City would have to follow.
The effect of the freeze is non-uniform because of the
difference in the pension systems and the basis of pay.
Laborers, mechanics and workmen receiving the pay
rates prevailing in private industry under Section 220 of
the Labor Law are not affected, nor are teachers, since
no bonus applies to the pay of either group.
The earliest full benefit wtll be derived by Policemen
and Firemen. Under their similar pension systems tbe
pension is based on the last pay received. So on July 1
next, and thereafter, when Policemen or Firemen including officers, retire at half pay, they do so at $175 extra
a year at once.
The white-collar workers outside of teachers are members of the NYC Employees Retirement System in which
the pension is based on the best consecutive five years of
salary, not on the last salary received. Between July 1,
1950, and July 1, 1955, new pensioners under that system
benefit at the rate of $35 a year. Only those retiring in
1955 and thereafter would get the full amount, $175.
The disparities are inherent in the differences of the
systems.
The result of the freeze is not perfect, but it should be
possible at some future time to bring the lesser benefits up
to the higher level.
The LEADER is glad that its own long campaign for
a freeze of the City bonus has been successfully won.
N
Deputy Mayor,City Officials,
Labor Chiefs Honor Feinstein
For Contributions to Workers
City officials, labor leaders a n d
union m e m b e r s generally joined
S a t u r d a y n i g h t to honor H e n r y
Feinstein at a testimonial d i n n e r
at t h e Hotel S t a t l e r .
Mr. Feinstein is in c h a r g e of
t r a n s p o r t a t i o n a t t h e office of
Manhattan
Borough
President
R o b e r t F. Wagner, J r . Mr. W a g n e r acted as t o a s t m a s t e r . T h e
f o r m e r Borough President, Hugo
Rogers, now counsel to t h e T r a f fic Commission, was one of t h e
speakers. Deputy Mayor William
Rsid, Betty Hawley Donnelly,
vice-president of t h e S t a t e F e d eral ion of Lalx)r; President J o h n
P. Crane, 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 Maxwell
L e h m a n , editor and publisher of
Th'i LKADKR, were o t h e r speakers.
Works for Employees
Mr. r v i n s t e i n ,
president
of
District Council 37, American
fVilcration of S t a t e , County a n d
Municipal Employees, was hailed
as a h a r d worker for City e m pl(.ve<'s' interests.
Ho h a s been working for their
cause nearly two decades. Aggr.':-;.sive a n d de/terinined, he p u r sues a policy of amicable settlem e n t and h a s conferred o f t e n
with Mayor William O' Dwyer,
Dt'puty Mayor Reid a n d Mr. P a t tcison on a .satisfactory solution
of employee problems. N e v e r t h e less, when t h e interests of t h e
employees require him to be
" t o u g h " , h e gets " t o u g h . "
Suggested Wage Agreement
I t was Mr. Feinstein, speakers
said, who first suggested t h e a n -
DON'T REPEAT THIS
(Continued
irom Page 1 )
men hit it precisely, as subsequent
history showed.
What They Said in Jan. '49
I n a n earlier p o l l — J a n u a r y 25,
1949—this column asked t h e newswriters t h e i r i n f o r m e d opinion of
t h e gubernatorial situation which
was to come u p more t h a n a year
l a t e r . T h e purpose of t h i s opinion
survey was to d e t e r m i n e t h e political t r e n d s a t t h a t t i m e ; a n d
t h e newsmen, f r o m all p a r t s of
t h e S t a t e , h a d a close "collective"
feeling for those t r e n d s . T h e y said
t h a t , a t t h a t time, t h e likeliest
Republican c a n d i d a t e for G o v e r nor would be Governor T h o m a s E.
Dewey, even t h o u g h h e h a d f r e s h ly lost a t i t a n i c P r e s i d e n t i a l c a m paign. H e was followed closely, in
t h e opinion of t h e n e w s p a p e r m e n ,
by U. S. S e n a t o r Irving M. Ives.
O t h e r Republicans t h e n receiving
votes as gubernatorial possibilities
were Assemblyman Oswald
D.
Heck, L i e u t e n a n t Governor Joe R.
Hanley, a n d Dwight D. Eisenhower.
O n t h e D e m o c r a t i c side, NYC
Mayor William O'Dwyer r a n first,
followed by F e d e r a l Security Adm i n i s t r a t o r Oscar R. Ewing. O t h e r
Democratic g u b e r n a t o r i a l possibilities seen a t t h a t time were
Brooklyn Borough President J o h n
Cashmore, Albany's Mayor E r a s t u s
Corning, J a m e s A. Farley, Democratic S t a t e leadei- P a u l E. Fitzp a t r i c k , f o r m e r U. S. S e n a t o r
J a m e s M. Mead a n d S a m Rosenman.
But a Year Has Passed
B u t more t h a n a year h a s intervened. New n a m e s h a v e arisen,
n a m e s like F e r d i n a n d Pecora a n d
F r a n k l i n D. Roosevelt, J r . a n d
Charles Fioessel. Events
have
t h r u s t u p some personalities, b u r ied others. How now, t h i s m u c h
closer to election, does t h e situation look to t h e newsmen? T h i s
column h a s once again asked t h e
Albany legislative correspondents,
t h e n e w s m e n of Room 9 in New
York City's Mall, a n d the political
writers of o t h e r S t a t e newspapers
for their i n f o r m e d opinion. W i t h a
gubernatorial a n d a Senatorial
election coming up, t h e queries
dealt with both. T h i s column, for
each race, h a s asked t h e n e w s p a p e r m e n t h r e e simple questions:
Three Questions
1. As t h i n g s look now, which of
t h e following, in your opinion, is
likely to be t h e Republican c a n d i d a t e for Governor?
2. W h i c h of t h e following, in
your opinion, is most likely to be
t h e Democratic c a n d i d a t e f o r Governor?
3. As you see t h e situation,
which side is likely to win t h e
election i n 1950?
T h e s a m e questions were asked
w i t h respect t o t h e S e n a t o r i a l
race.
Tl»e Names
T h e most p r o m i n e n t n a m e s being m e n t i o n e d for these races were
listed, a n d t h e newsmen were
asked t o m a r k t h e i r first a n d second choices. O n e of t h e surprising
f a c t s is t h i s : as t h e n a m e s of possible c a n d i d a t e s w6re being listed.
It became a p p a r e n t t h a t those "in
t h e r u n n i n g " f o r b o t h posts—Gove r n o r a n d S e n a t o r — w e r e nearly
t h e same, a n d for b o t h parties.
The Republicans
O n t h e R e p u b l i c a n side, t h e s e
n a m e s were listed as prospects
(with t h e n e w s p a p e r m e n asked to
include a n y o t h e r t h e y felt to b e
potential nominees):
F r e d e r i c R . Coudert
T h o m a s E. Dewey
William D o n o v a n
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Geor-ge F r a n k e n t h a l e r
N a t h a n i e l Goldstein
J o e R: H a n l e y
Oswald D. Heck
Walter Mahoney
F r a n k C. Moore
R o b e r t P. P a t e r s o n
D. Mallory S t e p h e n s
A r t h u r H . Wocks
The Democrats
T h e Deniocratic n a m e s on Mi)
r o s t e r Included:
Era.stus C o r n i n g
Oscar Ewing
J a m e s A. F a r l e y
P a u l E. F i t z p a t r i c k
C h a i l e s . E . Froessel
Averill H a r r i m a n
Robert Jackson
Lazaraus Joseph
H e r b e r t H. L e h m a n
J a m e s M. M e a d
William O'Dwyer
F e r d i n a n d Pecora
F r a n k l i n D. Roosevelt J r .
T h e n e w s p a p e r m e n were given
two ballots, one f o r t h e gubernac
torial r a c e a n d one f o r Senalie
I'ace.
T h e . full breakdown of opinion
will a p p e a r in n e x t week's D o n ^
R e p e a t T h i s column.
M c N a m a r a Extols
N Y C as E m p l o y e r
T h e opportunities of s t e n o g r a p h e r s f o r jobs with t h e NYC
g o v e r n m e n t were stressed T h u r s day n i g h t by J o s e p h A M c N a m a r a , P r e s i d e n t of t h e M u n i cipal Civil Service Commission,
over WNYC, t h e municipal b r o a d casting s t a t i o n . Mr. M c N a m a r a
was interviewed by H. J . Beanard,
executive editor of T h e LEADER.
Applications a r e now being received for S t e n o g r a p h e r , G r a d e 2,
a t $2,100 s t a r t i n g p a y — a little
m o r e t h a n $40 a week. Apply a t
t h e Commission's Application bur e a u , 96 D u a n e Street, two blocks
n o r t h of City Hall, j u s t west of
Broadway, opposite T h e LEADER
office. As soon as a sizeable n u m ber of c a n d i d a t e s h a s applied t h e
period f o r receipt of applications
will be closed a n d t h e e x a m held.
P r e s i d e n t M c N a m a r a said t h a t
Phone Jobs Open
T h e r e a r e vacancies for telep h o n e operators in S t a t e d e p a r t ments and institutions with a
salary r a n g e f r o m $1,840 t o $2,530
a year. Only six m o n t h s of experience a r e required. Apply u n til Friday, May 5, at t h e S t a t e
Civil Service Commissions Offices
i n Albany, B u f f a l o or NYC.
t h e r e a r e 600 p r e s e n t v a c a n c i e s
a n d proonotion o p p o r t u n i t i e s fo*
those who are appointed.
T h e r e will be a p r a c t i c a l tei
i n w h i c h t a k i n g d i c t a t i o n a t 9i
words a m i n u t e will be required,
a n d t r a n s c r i p t i o n within a r e a s o n able t i m e limit. T h e i e will be n o
w r i t t e n test.
No Capricious Dismissals
" T h e r e is one good f e a t u r e a b o u t
City e m p l o y m e n t t h a t is n o t
generally recognized," said P r e s i d e n t M c N a m a r a , " a n d t h a t ia
t e n u r e or security. City employee^
m a y n o t be dismissed a t t h e
w h i m of a superior. They m a y b e
dismissed only f o r i n c o m p e t e n c y
or misconduct based on w r i t t e n
charges.
" T h e City of New York will n o t
go out of busines noa- will it move
its offices to a n o t h e r city.
" T h e r e is p e r m a n e n c y i n City
e m p l o y m e n t which does not exist
in all cases of p r i v a t e e m p l o y m e n t .
P r i v a t e employers die or retire,
c o r p o r a t i o n s sometimes fail i n
business or t h e y move t h e i r offices
to o t h e r cities. T h e City of New
York will employ c o m p e t e n t p e r sons regardless of age a n d does
not discard a n employee m e r e l y
because h e r h a i r grows gray. I n
f a c t we p r e f e r to capitalize on experience a n d ability which we d p
t h r o u g h promotion examinations.'*
nual
wage a g r e e m e n t s
which
took
skilled
and
semi-skilled
workers out of t h e squabbles u n der Section 220 of t h e Labor Law,
a n d provided t h e m with g u a r a n teed a n n u a l salarievs a n d paid
vacations. T h a t was w h e n K e n n e t h Dayton was Budget Director, T h e s a m e policy is followed
by t h e City now, only on a m u c h
larger scale.
A n o t h e r l a u d a t i o n of Mr. F e r n stein concerned t h e waivers u n der which City employees receive
t h e cost-of-living bonus w i t h o u t
a n y friction over w h e t h e r they've
been promoted when t h e e x t r a
money lifts their pay above t h a t
of t h e top. He sugge.sted t h e
waiver as a solution.
Credit Union Work
As vice-president of t h e M u n i cipal Credit Union, t h e largest
city employee organization of its
kind, h e h a s counselled m a n y of
his fellow-workers who needed a
loan a n d h a s waged unceasing
war on loan sharkes.
T h r o u g h Mr. B'einsitein's efforts,
speakers recalled, t h e rule t h a t
obtained during t h e La G u a r d i a
At the testimonial dinner given Henry Feinstein, president of District Council 37, American Federation of
a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , prohibiting City
State, County and Municipal Employees, AFL Left to right: Deputy Mayor William Reid. former Manhattan
employees f r o m accepting outside Borough President Hugo Rogers. Mr. Feinstein, Mike Mirande of the Fire Departmnt Civillani, and Man'
jobs a f t e r hours, was abrogated.
hotton Borough Prsldent Robert Wagner Jr., who a c t e d as toastmaster. The silver was presented to
Guests at t h e d i n n e r included:
Mr. Feinstein by the Deputy Mayor Reid.
Chief J\istice J o h n J. B e n n e t t , of
Special Sessions; a n d J a m e s C.
Q u i n n , secretary. C e n t r a l T r a d e s his organization. H e lauded Mr. comes t h r o u g h when h e says h e ballroom of t h e S t a t l e r Hotel.
a n d Labor Council
Feinstein's integrity a n d honesty will." And R o b e r t W a g n e r praised Among t h e m were commissioners,
over t h e years as a union leader. " t h e m a t u r e relationship t h a t de- deputy commissioners, a n d or.her
P r e s e n t a t i o n Made
Hugo Rogers called him " a m a n , velops in a d e p a r t m e n t with t h e high city officials a n d labor leaD e p u t y M a y o r William Reid all t h e way t h r o u g h . " J o h n C r a n e kind of r e p r e s e n t a t i o n which Mr. ders.
m u d e t h e p r e s e n t a t i o n of a g i f t to spoke of Mr. Feinstein as a fel- Feinstein provides."
A dinner and a dance wer®
•Mr. Feinstein, for m e m b e r s of low union leader " w h o always
More t h a n 500 guests filled t h e part of the festivities.
1960
CiriL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Nine
EXAMS FOR PUBLIC JOBS
2033. Senior Public Health Edu2108. Head Laundry Supervisor,
cator, $4,242. Fee, $4.
k«2.898. Fee, $2.
2109. Laundry Supervisor, $2,346.
2034. Public Health Educator,
Pee, $2.
$3,451. Fee, $3.
2110. Automotive Maintenance
2421. Public Health Educator,
»iRspector, $3,451. P e e , $3.
Erie County, $4,500. Fee, $3.
2420. Principal Public Health
Open-Compefitiye
The New York State Civil Service Commission announces the Educator, Erie County, $6,500. Pee,
This hg the 'latest list of open- following new list of open-com- $6.
These exams will be held on
eompetltive exams announced by petitive exams to be held on
the State Civil Service Commls- Saturday, May 27. Apply for all Saturday, April 29.
Blon. Apply for the written tests but the Game Protector title
until Tuesday, May 2; for the un- until Friday, April 21. For Game
Promotion
written until Saturday, June 10, Protector apply through Friday,
1042
Principal
Hearing Stenogwhen all exams will be held.
April 28.
grapher, Albany Office, Depart2082. A s s o c i a t e Pathologiet,
2058. A s s o c i a t e Nutritionist, ment of Agriculture and Markets.
|6,700. Pee, $5.
$5,232.
$3,583 to $4,308. Fee $3.
2083. Senior Patholoerist, $6,660.
1041 Principal Hearing Stenog2059. Senior Nutritionist, $4,242.
Pee, $5.
rapher, Department of Insurance.
2060. Nutritionist, $3,451.
2084. ^Biochemist, $8,461, Pee,
$3,5» to $4,308. Fee $3.
2064. Senior Statistician, $4,638.
$3.
1036 Senior Insurance Audit
2065.
Statistician,
$3,847.
Clerk, New York Office, Depart2085. Junior Biochemist, $2,760.
2069. Senior Office Machine Op- ment of In.surance. $2,484 to $3,Pee, $2.
174. Application fee $2.
2086. Senior Laboratory Worker, erator (Photocopying), $2,346.
1038 Principal Hearing Stenog2070. Office Machine Operator
$2,484. Fee, $2.
rapher, Dlvi.sion of Parole, Execu2087. Laboratory Worker, $1,955. (Photocopying), $1,840.
2066. Principal Hearing Stenog- tive Department. $3,583 to $4,308.
Pee, $1.
Fee $3.
$3,583.
2088. Manaein«r Editor, The New rapher,
1039 District Game Protector,
2067. Senior Hearing StenograYork State Conservationist, $5,650. pher,
Comervation Department. '$3,715
$2,898.
Fee, $5.
2068. Laboratory S e c r e t a r y , to $4,440. Fee $3,
2089. Senior Conservation Publi- $2,484.
1037 Assistant Superintendent,
cations Editor, $4,242. Fee, $4.
2061. Senior Parole Officer (Wo- Law Enforcement, Division of Pish
and Game, Department of Con2090. Publicity Agent, $3,716. men's Reformatory), $4,242.
2062. Parole Officer (Women's servation, $4,242 to $5,232. AppliFee, $3.
cation fee $4,
2091. Senior Dietitian, $2,898. Reformatory), $3,583.
2063. Senior Travel Promotion
1035 Senior Parole Officer, New
Pee, $2.
$4,242.
York District Office, Albany Dis2092. Dietitian, $2,484. Fee, $2. Agent,
2071. Game Protector, $2,346.
trict Office, Central Office, Divi2093. Recreation Instructor, $2,2072. Associate Building Con- sion of Parole. $4,242 to $5,232.
760, unwritten. Fee, $2.
struction Engineer, $6,700.
Fee $4.
2094. Assistant Recreation In2073. Assistant Building Electri1040 Assistant District Game
structor, $2,208, unwritten. Fee, cal Engineer, $3,451.
Protector, Division of Pish and
$2.
2075. Junior Valuation Engineer, Game, Department of Conserva2095. OiBce Machine Operator $3,451; and Contract Valuation tion. $3,036 to $3,726. Fee $3.
Engineer, G-III, $15 per diem.
(Blueprlnter), $1,840. Fee, $1.
The State Civil Service Commis2076. Senior Sanitary Engineer, sion announces that applications
2096. Teleptione Operator, $1,840. $5,232.
Will be accepted for the following
Pee. $1.
2077. Assistant Sanitary Engi- promotion examinations until Wed2101. Compensation Claims In- neer,
$4,242.
nesday, April 19. To be eligible for
Testigator, $2,760. Fee, $2.
2078. Junior Sanitary Engineer, promotional
titles,
candidates
2111. Associate Case Analyst $3,451.
must be employed in the depart($5,232 per annum) and Contract
2079. Assistant Sanitary Engi- ments where the vacancies exist.
Associate Case Analyst ($22.75 per neer
(Design), $4,242.
1058. Senior Hearing Stenogradiem). Pee, $5.
2080. Senior Superintendent of pher, New York Oflfice, Depart2112. Principal Case Analyst Construction, $4,242.
ment of Labor, (including the
($6,700 per annum) and Contract
2081. Assistant Superintendent Board of Standards and Appeals
Principal Case Analyst ($29.13 per of Construction, $3,451.
and the Mediation Board, but exdiem). Pee, $5.
«
*
«
clusive of the State Insui-ance
2097. Senior Social Worker
The
New
York
State
Civil
SerFund,
the Division .of Placement
(Child Welfare), $3,583. Pee. $3.
vice Commission announces the and Unemployment Insurance, the
2098. Senior Social Worker following dates for its open-com- Workmen's Compensation Board
(Public Assistance), $3,583. Pee. $3. petitive examinations in the fields and the Labor Relations Board).
2099. Senior Social Worker of medicine and .social and insti- $2,898 to $3,588. Pee, $2.
(Woikmen's Compensation Board) tutional work: closing date, Fri1052. Assistant Sanitary Engi$3 451. Pee, $3.
day, April 7 for written exams; neer, Department of Health, $4,242
2100. Transfer Agent, $2,622. Saturday, May 13 for unwritten to $5,232. Pee, $4.
Pee, $2.
exam. All exams will be held Sat1045. Payroll Auditor, New York
2102. Senior Planning Delinea- urday, May 13.
and Upstate Offices, The State Intor. !ti5.232. Pee. $5.
2053. Child Guidance Psychia- surance Fimd, $3,036 to $3,726.
2103. Planning Delineator, $4,242. trist, State Departments, $6,700 to Fee, $3.
Fee. $4.
1051. Senior Superintendent of
$6,145. Fee, $5.
2104. Junior Planning Delinea2054. Psychiatric Museum Cura- Construction, Department of Pubtor. $3,451. Pee. $3.
lic Works, $4,242 to $5,232. Fee. $4.
2105. District Ranger, $3,715. tor, Dep't of Mental Hygiene,
1050. Senior Building Electrical
$2,622
to
$3,312.
Fee.
$2.
Pee. $3.
Engineer, Department of Public
2055.
Senior
Cancer
Radiologist,
2106. Junior Forester, $2,760.
Works, $5,232 to $6,407. Fee, $5.
Dep't of Health, $6,232 to $6,407.
Fee. $2.
1049. Associate Building ConFee,
$5.
2107. Laundry Consultant, $4,638.
struction Engineer, Department of
2428. Director of Nursing, Dep't Public Works. $6,700 to $8,145.
Pee. $4.
of Public Welfare, $4,920 to $6,100. Fee. $5.
Fee, $4.
1047. Associate Payroll Auditor,
2056. Senior Supervisor of Nursl- The State Insurance Fund, $4,242
ing Education, Dep't of Education, to $5,232. Fee, $4.
$4,242 to $5,232. Fee. $4.
3429. Intermediate Social Case
Worker, Dep't of Public Welfare,
The question whether a NYC Westchester County, $2,190 to
employee in a job in the graded start. Unwritten.
service can claim the right to • The final filing date for applit h e rates of pay pievailing in cations for the following openNew wealth at the rate of more
private industry, under Section competitive
health exami- t h a n $875,000 a month is being
220 of the Labor Law. will be nations has public
been extended from placed in t h e h a n d s of the public
argued today (Tuesday) before Friday, March
24 to Monday, by T h e Dime Savings Bank of
the Appellate Division, First De- April
10 by the State Civil Service Brooklyn in dividends paid to department.
Commission:
positors, said C. Johnson, presiSeveral actions involving Board
2031. Director of Public Health dent of the 90-year-old institution.
of Transportation employees conDiuing 1949, the more t h a n 291,solidated after Comptroller Laz- Education, $8,538. Pee. $5.
a i u s Joseph dismi.ssed t h e com2032. Supervising Public Health 000 depositors received $10,281,271.
I n 1950, the dividend total is explaints.
Educator, $5,232. Fee, $5.
pected to approach the $11,000,000
mark if deix>sits continue their
r
substantial rise already recorded
this year.
STATE
Graded Employees'
Pay to Be Argued
Dime Bank of Brooklyn
Continues to Grow
Where to Apply for Jobs
U, S.—Second Regional Office, U. S. Civil Service Commission,
641 Washington Street, New York 14, N. Y. (Manhattan) Tel. WAtkins
4-1000 and at post offices outside of New York, N. Y.
ST.^TE—Room 2301 at 270 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y., Tel.
BArckiy 7-1616, State Office Building, Albany 1, N. Y., and Room
302, State Office Building, Buffalo 7, N. Y. Same applies to exams
for county jobs.
NYC—NYC Civil Service Commission, 96 Duane Street. New York
7, N. Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) . Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880. Opposite Civil Service
LEADER office.
NYC Education (Teaching Jobs Only)—Personnel Director, Board
of Education. 110 Livingston Street. Brooklyn 2, N. Y.; Tel. MAin
4-2800.
How to Get There—Rapid transit lines that may be used for
reaching the U. S.. State and NYC Civil Service Commission offices
In NYC, follow:
State Civil Service Commission, NYC Civil Service Commission—
IND trains A, C, D. AA or CC to Chambers Street: IRT Lexington
Avenue Une to Brooklyn Bridge; BMT Fourth Avenue local or
Brighton local to City Hall.
U. S. Civil Service Commission—IRT Seventh Avenue local to
Christopher Street station.
V.
•
3 Answers Changed
In Custodian Test
Three alternative correct answers were allowed by the NYC
Civil Service Commission in the
final key answers in the Cu.stodian
and Custodian Engineer
test.
Question 28 from B, to A or B;
41 from D, to A, C or D; 47 from
D, to A or B.
PRO GROUP ORGANIZED
The American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Dmployees <AFL) announced t h a t it
has organized professional workers
in the Health, Welfare. Correction. Police, Fire and Welfare departments. Titles include Pharmacist. X-Ray Technician, Biologist',
Dietitian, Junior Physicist and
others. An effort will be made to
obtain pay increases.
1046. Senior Payroll Auditor,
New York and Upstate Office, The
State In.surance Fund, $3,583 to
$4,308. Fee, $3.
1054. Assistant Superintendent
of Tree Nurseries, Department of
Conservation, (exclusive of the Division of Parks and the Saratoga
Springs Authority), $4,242 to
$5,232. Fee. $4.
1053. Senior Sanitary Engineer
(Design), Department of Public
Works, $5,232 to $6,407. Fee, $5.
1055. Senior Hearing Stenographer, Department of Law, $2,898
to $3,588. Fee, $2. Note: The examination will simulate a hearing.
1057. Senior Office Machine Operator (Photocopying), Main Division, Albany Office, Department of
State, $2,346 to $3,036. Fee, $2.
1044. Principal Clerk (Payroll
Audit), New York Office, The
State Insurance Fund, $2,898 to
$3,588. Fee, $2.
1056. Senior Office Machine Operator (Photocopying), New York
Office, Banking Department, $2,346
to $3,036. Pee, $2.
1048. Principal Payroll Auditor,
The State Insurance Fund, $5,232
to $6,407. Pee, $5.
1043. Senior Clerk
(Payroll
Audit), New York Office, The
State Insurance Fund, $2,346 to
$3,036. Pee, $2.
Apply for the following State
promotion exam until Friday,
April 7. The exam will be held
Saturday. April 15.
1065 Associate Budget Examiner,
Division of Budget, Executive Department. $6,700 to $8,145. Fee $5.
-Apply until Friday, April 7, for
the three following promotion exams which wll be held Saturday,
May 13:
1032. Head Dining Room Attendant, Institutions, Department
of Mental Hygiene, $2,070 to
$2,760. Pee, $1.
1033. Head Attendant, State
Schools and Colonies, Department
of Mental Hygiene, $2,760 to
$3,450. Pee, $2.
1034. Supervising Public Health
Dental Hygienist, Bureau of Dental Health, Division of Medical
Service, Department of Health,
$3,174 to $3,864. Pee, $3.
Open-Competitiye
Apply until Friday, April 7, for
the following county open-com*
petitive exams:
2435. Assistant Director of Nurs'
sing, Tompkins County, $3,000 to
$3,600. Fee, $2.
2434.
Account
Clerk-Typist,
Town of Fallsburgh,
Sullivan
County. $2,050. Pee, $2.
2433. Lineman Helper, Village of
Groton, Tompkins County, $1.00
to $1,25 per hour. Pee, $2.
2432. Lineman, Village of Groton, Tompkins County, $1.25 to
$1.50 per hour. Fee, $2.
2431. Senior Account Clerk and
Stenographer, Village of Hastingson-Hudson, Westchester County,
$2,750. Fee, $2.
2430. Toll Collector, P a i k Commission,
Westchester
County,
$1,950 to $2,550. plus an emergency compensation of $720. Pee,
$1.
2427. Courfr Stenographer, Sullivan County, $2,000 to $2,400 plus
an emergency compensation of
36%. Fee, $1.
Apply until Friday, April 21,
for the following
exartiivatioun
which will be held on
Saturdajf,
Mvj) 27. (County residence is required /or
eligibility).
2438. Administrative Supervisor,
County Laboratory, Erie County.
$3,000 to $3,300, $500 cost-ofliving adjustment authorized for
year 1950. Fee $2.00.
2444. Children's Court Clerk and
Stenographer, Sullivan County.
U.sual salary range $1,400 to $1,640,
plus an emergency compensation
of 36 per cent. At present, one vacancy exists. Application Fee $1.
2449 Assistant Instructor
of
Nursing Science a n d Theory, Dep a r t m e n t of Public Welfare, Westchester County. $2,370 to $2,910,
plus an emergency compensation
of $720. Fee $2.
2442
Stenographer,
Essex
County. $151.66 per month. Fee $1.
2451 Senior Library Clerk, (Part
Time), Irvington Public Library,
Westchester County. $1.00 per
hour. Fee $.50.
2443 Typist, North Elba P a r k
District, Essex County. $35.00 per
week. Fee $1.
2452 Water Plant Operator, Village of Hamburg, Erie County.
$2,500 to $2,800. Application fee $2.
2446 Senior Typist, Sullivan
County. $lt520 plus a cost of living a d j a s t m e n t of 36%. Fee $1.
2447 Instructor of Nursing Arts,
Department of Public Welfare,
Westchester County. $3,180 to
$3,900, plus an emergency compensation of $720. Fee $3.
2445 Senior Clerk, Sullivan
County. $1,460 to $1,700 plus a
co.st-of-living adjustment of 36%,
Fee $1.
2441. Typist, Erie County Departments and Institut'ons, Towns
and Villages. $1,000 to $2,300. Fee
$1.
2440 Stenographer, Erie County
Departments
and
Institutions,
Towns and Villages. $2,000 to
$2,300. At present, 30 vacancies
exist. Pee $1.
2439 Laboratory Technician, Erie
County Laboratory, Erie County.
$2,100 to $2,400, pluis $500 cost-ofliving adjustment authorized for
year 1950. Fee $2.
2437, Senior Nutritionist, Dep a r t m e n t of Health, Erie County.
Usual salaiT range $3,500 to
$3,800. plus $500 cost-of-living a d justment authorized for year 1950.
Fee $3.
2436 Nutritionist, Erie County.
U.sual salary range $3,000 to
$3,300, plus $500 cost-of-living a d justment authorized for year 1950.
Fee $2.
2448 Assistant Instructor of
Nursing Arts, Department of P u b lic Welfare, Westchester County.
$2,370 to $2,910, plus an emergency compensation of $720. Fee
$2.
'Thank You' Said
For 14 Promotions
Fourteen Assistant Engineers
(Structm-al) "have been promoted,
following a campaign by T r a n s portation Chapter 2 of the Civil
Service Techniical Guild.
The score to date is 100 per
cent use of all promotion lists in
the technical service of the Board
of Transportation excepting Civil
Engineer. The Guild is trying to
get action on t h a t list.
The chapter thanked Chairman
Sidney H. Bingham, Commissioners P r a n k S\illivan and Joseph
Minetti, Division Engineer Alfred
Brahdy and Chief Engineer J a m e s
H. Griflm for the 14 promotions.
H. Grifhn for helping to obtain
the 14 promotions.
State Is Seeking M a n y
Recreational Instructors
There are many vacancies for
Recreation Instructors and Assistant Recreation Instructors in the
State Department of Mental Hygiene. The qualifications follow:
Candidates for the title of Recreation Instructor must be college
graduates who specialized in physical education or recreation or
have had 1 year's experience in the
field; or be graduates of a 3 year
course in physical education and
have 1 year's expeilence; or have
a satisfactory equivalent of the
foregoing training and experience.
Entrance salary is $2,760 with
five annual salary increases up to
$3,450. Application fee is $2.
Candidates for assistant instructor jobs must be high school graduates and have 1 year's experience
in a recreation program; or be
college graduates with 4 credit
hours in physical education or
recreation; or have a satisfactory
equivalent of the foregoing t r a i n ing and experience. Entrance
salaiy is $2,208 with five annual
salary increases up to the maximum of $2,898. Application fee is
$2.
There will be no wiilten exam.
Applicants will be nilcci on tiie
basis of their training and experience.
Completed
applications,
together with required fees, must
be filed at the Governor Alfred E.
Smith State Office Building, Albany. New York: Room 302. State
Office Building. Buft'ulo. New
York: or R; om ?301. 270 Broadway. New York 7. New York: by
Jime 10.
CIVIL
Page Ten
SERVICE
FEDERAL
LEADER
TneMi«7, April 4» 19S0
NEWS
S u p r e m e C o u r t t o C o n s i d e r Exams for U. S. Jobs
Employee Loyalty Program
W A S H I N G T O N , April 3—While
t h e United S t a t e s S u p r e m e C o u r t
p r e p a r e d to e x a m i n e t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n a l i t y of t h e G o v e r n m e n t ' s
1 o y a Ity p r o g r a m , t h e United
S t a t e s Court of Appeals held t h a t
F e d e r a l employees could be disc h a r g e d for alleged disloyalty. At
t h e s a m e time, t h e r e was a move
in Congress to give protection t o
employees dismissed f o r security
reasons.
GIVE CLOTHING
or
RECTOR 2-3424
SALVAGE D I V I S I O N
Write
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High School Equivalency Diploma
Easy, Inexpensive 90-Day Course
W h e t h e r you w a n t a j o b in t h e business world, vocational field.
Civil Service—or seek a d v a n c e m e n t in your p r e s e n t job—or t o go t o
a vocational or t r a i n i n g school—a High School Equivalency Diploma
is a n absolute " m u s t ! " For, in t h e s e days of keen competition, t h e
h i g h e r - p a y i n g , more a t t r a c t i v e joDs always go to t h e m a n or w o m a n
who Is better educated.
Don't you miss out on t h e job you w a n t because you were n o t
f o r t u n a t e e n o u g h to g r a d u a t e f r o m h i g h school! D o n ' t let someone
else beat you out of a job because you c a n ' t show a h i g h school
d i p l o m a — w h e n a h i g h school equivalency diploma is so easy to get!
Yes. if you have failed to complete h i g h school f o r a n y reason—
or even if you h a v e never set foot in a highschool—you c a n still get
a High School Equivalency Diploma! And you don't have to go to
high sc hool to get it. Nor do you h a v e t o p u t in long h i u r s of s t u d y
or a t t e n d any classes—you p r e p a r e for it r i g h t In your own h o m e ,
in your s p a r e t i m e !
HERE'S HOW TO GET YOUR HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
I n 43 s t a t e s t h e E d u c a t i o n D e p a r t m e n t offers anyone* w h o
passes a series of e x a m i n a t i o n s a h i g h school equivalency diploma.
T h i s diploma is accepted by employers, t r a i n i n g schools, vocational
schools, a n d t h e Civil Service Commission as t h e equivalent of a
r e g u l a r high school diploma!
Yes. regardless of your previous education, you c a n get t h i s h i g h
school equivalency certificate. B u t you m u s t p a s s your s t a t e ' s t e s t s !
BUT—you c a n improve your c h a n c e s of passing your exams—
a n d getting your High School Equivalency Diploma—by enrolling in
t h e Career School High School Equivalency Diploma Course! For
t h i s course offers you complete, p e r f e c t , inexpensive p r e p a r a t i o n f o r
your exams.
THE STATE IN WHICH YOU RESIDE ISSUES YOUR
HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
T h i s does n o t apply t o t h e residents of Iowa, K a n s a s , M a s s a chusetts, New Jersey, R h o d e Island.
MAIL COUPON NOW FOR FULL DETAILS
^
Send t h e no-obligation coupon to us now f o r complete details
on our Equivalency Course! You'll see exactly w h a t you will get, w h a t
t h e lessons consist of. how little s p a r e t i m e you will h a v e t o devote t o
t h e m . R e m e m b e r — t h e request for I n f o r m a t i o n does n o t obligate you
in any way—nor do you risk a n y t h i n g w h e n you enroll. B u t d o n ' t
delay! T h e sooner you enroll in t h i s Equivalency Course—^the sooner
you'll he able to t a k e your e x a m s — a n d get t h e H i g h School E q u i v a lency Diploma you w a n t ! Mail Coupon NOW.
• In some s t a t e s t h e offer is limited t o veterans.
CAREEP CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL
M a r k e t S t r e e t , Newark, N. J.
• k
a
M
M
M
M
M
—
M
M M
M mm mm mm mm mm mm mm wm mm »m mm 0m ^m mm ^
^
M PV
CAREER C O R R E S P O N D E N C E S C H O O L
207 Mi.rket Street, Newark. N. J., Dept.
Please send m e full i n f o r m a t i o n about t h e Career School H i g h
School Equivalency Course. I t is understood t h a t t h i s request does
not obligate me in a n y way whatsoever.
NAME
AGE.
ADDRESS
CITY
APT.
ZONE.
STATE,...
I n a m i t i g a t i n g second ruling,
t h e Appeals Court held t h a t a n
employee dismissed f o r loyaJty
could n o t be b a r r e d f r o m sdl F e d eral service f o r t h r e e years. T h i s ,
said t h e Court, .seemed to be " p u n ishment,
something that
the
loyalty order never h a d in m i n d .
Called It Unconstitutional
T h e Court's ruling c a m e i n t h e
case of D o r o t h y Bailey, who was
suspended in November, 1948,
f r o m a n $8,000-a-year job in t h e
F e d e r a l Security Agency, a n d was
dismissed t h r e e m o n t h s later.
S h e d e m a n d e d h e r job back on
t h e g r o u n d t h a t t h e e n t i r e loyalty p r o g r a m was u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l .
S h e once was president of a local of t h e United Public Workers,
union recetiUy expelled by t h e
C.I.O. on t h e ground t h a i it
showed Communistic tendencies.
I n t h e m a j o r i t y opinion, J u d g e
E. B a r r e t t P r e t t y m a n u p h e l d t h e
motion t h a t " t h e P r e s i d e n t m a y
remove f r o m G o v e r n m e n t service
a n y person of whose loyalty h e
is n o t completely convinced." H e
held t h a t t h e Constitutiwi h a d
placed u p o n t h e P r e s i d e n t a n d
Congress responsibility for t h e
country's welfare in world affairs.
T h e dissent of J u d g e Heairy W .
Edgerton argued: "Without
a
trial by j u r y , without evidence
a n d without even being allowed
to c o n f r o n t h e r accusers or t o
know t h e i r identity, a citizen of
t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s h a s been f o u n d
disloyal t o t h e G o v e r n m e n t of
t h e United S t a t e s . "
Both majority and minority
agreed, t h o u g h , t h a t t h e t h r e e year e m p l o j ' m e n t b a r was out,
s a y i n g : " O u r sense of justice r e bels."
Appeal Rights Sought
Meanwhile a move h a s been
deve4oping in Congress to give
f u r t h e r protection to dismissed
employees. Activity seems c e n tered on a m e n d i n g t h e p r e s e n t
legislation by s e t t i n g u p a r e view b o a r d f o r appeals a n d b y
providing full p a y f o r accused
employees cleared on appeal.
CANDIDATES
HH TRAINED
HK DUON'T
Get fhe oafy boofc tkai givs yoa (IJ 26 pages-of
sample elvll
service exams, all tubfecfs; 12) requiremeais
fat 500 goveramami
lobs. 131 iHformailoo about bow fa get a "patraaage"
(ob—wiffcoaf
taking a test and a complete listing of sack lobs; (4) fall latoraaIon about veteraa preference:
IS) tells yoa bow fa fraasfet
from
one iob to another, and 1,000 additional
facts aboat governmaaf
lobs. "Complete Guide fo Your Civil Service Job" If wriftea
to
you can understand
It, by LEADER editor Mauwell Leftaiaa aaa
general manager Marfan Yarmaa. It's only- SI.
LEADER BOOKSTORE
97 Ouane Street, New Yorii City
Please send me immediately a copy of "Coaiplef* Guldtt t« Year
Civil Service Job" by Maxwell Leiimaa aad Morioa Yonnoa. I
eaelose SI la paymeat plas 10c for postag*.
Name
4ddre»t
perience required. No w r i t t e n t e s t .
Closing d a t e : April 18, 1950.
221. Scientiflc Aid
(Cotton),
$2,450 to $3,100. W r i t t e n test plus
appropriate
experience
and/or
e d u c a t i o n . Closing d a t e : April 18,
1950.
2-20 (50). Industrial Specialist
and Contract Negotiator. J o b s i n
New York S t a t e a n d New J e r s e y .
S t a r t i n g pay, $3,825 to $6,400.
(Last d a y to a p p l y T u e s d a y , April
4).
Previous
Exams
To Help Yea Pats Hi* Test
Steanifittcr
50c
Electricnl Inspector .. .25c
available at
LEADER Bookstore
97 Diiane Street
New Yorii 7. N. Y.
MOTOR VEHICLE
UCENSE EXAMINER
Classes Scheduled for July 15
INSPEGTOR
OF PLUMBING
Master Plumbers Liceuse
CITY PLUMBER
1
Tues. 6:30
Instructor—Mr. Thos. MeCarthy
COLLECTMG AGENT
AOMINISTRATIVE ASS'T
(Promotionl Applications Apr. 11 to 24
I Exams
Orderedl
VISIT — P«ONE — WRITE
H. O. W . S C H O O L
(HMsioii O'Neill Wray)
715 BROADWAY, N. Y. C. 3
Nr. IKT. Aktor PI. or B.M.T. 8 St. SU. Tel. OB. S-86SO
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
«inilnM<T M d OomuMMisl—Collecc Preparatory
MAMA. ACADBlfX—PUtbodi Bzt Oor. rulloB St-Bkiri»- Meamtt AoetudiMt,
HA. »-«44T.
BuaiaeM Scbaaia
4
Sr4Rr
GOTHAM aCHOOt, Of BUSIMKSB. Sec'l, Biu. Adju.. Bkkpinff. Comptom^ry Coura^
Span. & French aborthaud. Days Erea. Co-od. Enrcdl now. 606—6th Are. N.T.
VA 6-0334.
M A M F L A T T A M BIJ81NK8S 1 M 8 T I T V X K , 147 Wert 42iid St.—SecreUrtal and Bsoto*
keeplnc. Typing Comptometer OiMr.. Sbortbaod Stenotype BB 9-4181. Opeo
TRAINING
NOW
BARBELLS $7-98
SEND FOR FREE
CATALOG
WASHII^OTOM BVAINCSTLNST., S106—7U» AT®, toor.
and d v i l •errioe trainlns.
Moderate ooU.
ia8th
8t.» H.T.O.
Secretarial
MO ',2-0080.
UBFFLBY A BBOWNB 8ECBETABIAJL SCHOOL,, 7 Lafayette Are. cor.
BrookJyn X7. NEvuw 8-ii941. Day and evenin*. Veterans EUgible.
n«tbas1i.
FINE QUALITY ADJUSTAIil.E
MONBOB SCHOOL 0 # BUSINESS. SecretarUU Accounting. Stenotype. Approrad to
train veleraoB under O J . Bill. Day and evenlner. Bulletin G. 177tta St.. Boaton
Boad (B K O Chester Theatre Bld».) Bronx. DA 3-7300-1.
SO^b. set $7.08 150-U>. Msi «18.98
lOO-lb. »M y i S . » 8 SOO-lb. Mt
Buiilne«ii and Foreisn Service
LATW AMEBICAM I M S T I T U T B — 1 1 West 4Ziid St. N.f.C. All secretariat and tNU«nsaa sub)ecU in BtwUsh. Spanish. PDrtucase. Special cwnrse in tnternational
administration and toreirn aerrio. L A 4-S8S&.
THE LOWEST PKICE A.NYWHEKE
We Also Reaf
Weights
free:—^four sets of cour»ai and a book
iiO% Pcpoait with order. BiUatice C.OJ>.
Rxtra weighU 18c per lb. F.O.B. plant.
Viait Mir Times 8«m-« tShswraM mt
Otmege Itothuer's
tiOO W. 48 K .
OraftlBg
C I M ^ M B O S T B C H M I C A I . SCHOWL, ISO W . 80th bet. Otb * 701 ATOB.. M . T . A drafts*
mau tratnlnc for earoora to the archUectural and maehanlea] ftr^da. Immedlato
svoUment. Teta cOlcible. D v - e r e s . WA O-OaSS.
nZB-JL Sockawar Pkwr., Dept. D - t l
Kre^ni
N. T.
CC. 7-lSS6-18ee
NATION AI> TECHKriCAI. IN8TITUTB—Mechanical. Archttactoral. )ob
Manhattan. M W. 4 t n d SC-wA L>A 4-aSM. TN arooUya. 00 CStaton M . fBoav
Han). T B 6 - 1 0 1 1 . ID Itev JEIMR. U « Mewark Art.. BBrtao 4 - 2 2 5 0 .
TYPEWRITERS RENTED
Inveatication * Criilaolsay
T i n BOLAN ACAfiUIY. Sawire SCate B U s . . M . T . O ^ t B e an InTorticalw) James B.
BOLAM, FORMER POUCB COMMlSSIOIfBB OF • T. trains men and womem
to pirepare for m tatnre ta inveatication. Detection and Orindnology by Horn*
Study Course. Free iriteoement service assists araduates to obtain lobs Approvad
tor reterans. Send tor Booklet L.
DAN LVRIE lAtfiElL CO.
FOR
EXAMS
No Pick Vp or Delivery
Charge
Also BooKht. Sold Rei>aJr«d w
rMit«d br tbe niantii.
BEACON TYPEWRITER CO.
6 Maiden Lane, off B'wuy, INYC
worth 4-3755
Comolete Guide To Your Civil Service Job
2-20.6 ( 5 f ) . Medical Officer,
$5,400 to $6,400. J o b s a t C a m p Dlx,
with D e p a r t m e n t of Army. G e n eral practice, anesthesia, d e r m a tology, i n t e r n a l
medicine
and
diagnosis,
material and
child
health
(obstetrics,
pediatrics);
psychiatry; surgery (general, o r t h o p e d i c ) . Apply u n t i l f u r t h e r n o tice to B o a r d of Civil Service Examiners, Headquarters, 9th I n f a n t r y Division, P o r t Dix, N. J .
222. C o m m u n i c a t i o n s
Coding,
$2,875 to $4,600; C o m m u n i c a t i o n s
Facilities Specialist. $3,825
to
$6,400; C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Service
Supervisor, $3,450 t o $6,400; Comm u n i c a t i o n s Specialist, $3,100 to
$6,400; C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Specialist
(Radio a n d W i r e ) , $3,825 to
$4,600; Telegrapher, $3,100 a n d
$3,450;
Telegraphic - Typewriter
Operator
(Manual),
Operator
(Semi-Autoffiatic Teletype Equipm e n t ) , Telegraphic - T y p e w r i t e r
Technician. T e l e g r a p h i c - T y p e writer Supervisor, $2,875 to $5,400.
A p p r o p r i a t e experience. F o r C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Specialist a n d Comm u n i c a t i o n s Special (Radio a n d
Wlre(^ positions, p e r t i n e n t s t u d y
m a y be substituted for p a r t of e x -
Elementary Courses for Adults
THE COOPER SCHOOL—316 W. 130th St., N. Y. 30. Spedalizinr in Adult Educ»>
tion. Evening Elementary Classes for Adulta. Aftemoon Coaching Classes f o r
High School Qbildren. Au 3-6470
Motion Picture Operating
BBOOiULrM IfMCA TBADB SCHOOLr—111» Bedford Are. (Oates). BUyn. MA t - 1 1 0 « .
Eves.
LKGAI, NOTICK
Musie
STATE OP NEW YORK. DEPAKTMENT THE PIERBE BOTSTOM ACADEMX OF MUSIC—ID West M t h Straet, M. T. O.
OK 8TATK, as.: I do hereby cerUfjr that
O I'B aUowed fuU subaistence (appr M. T SUta Bd. of Ed. I Details OaU
certificate of di-ssolution of
R1 8-7430.
NATIONAI. REALTY MANAGKMKNT CO..
haa been filed in thie department this day NEW YORK COLLEGE OF MUSIC (Chartered 1878) all branches. Prtrate or oil
and tliat it appears therefrom that such
InstrucUons. 114 East 86th Street BU 8-8377. M. Y. 28. M. T. Catalogue.
oorpuration has complied with SecUon 105
of the Stock Corporation Law, and that it
Plumbing and Oil Burarr
Is diBsolred. Given in duplicate under my BERK TRADE Sl'UOOI,—.384 Atlantic Ave„ Brooltlyn, M *. Plumbing, OU-baroflg;
hand and ofiicial seal of tlie Departnieat of
lead wiping. Bet'inneis and advanced O. I. Approval. Full or part time.
State, at the City of Albany
(Seal)
•Jl»t iluy o( Mivnh, 1050.
Radio TWwi«iaa
Tliotnas J. Curran, Secretary of State. By RADIO-ELEOTRONICIs SCHOOL OF NEW TORK. 68 Broadway, M. X. Approved f w
Ruth M. Miner, Deputy Heoretary of State
V^etarans. Radio, IJelevislon. FJC. Day-evenings. Immediate enrollment
ling Green 8-1120
STATE OF NEW TOUK, OEPARTMEin
OF STATE, M.: I do hereby eerUfy that t BAUIO-TELEVISION INSTITUTE, 4 M Lexington Are. (iOtk St.). M. V. a Dar aa«
oertificate of dissolution of
evening, I'L. 0-5065.
MANAt.AN HOMK8. lue.
has been filed in this department this day
SeereUrial
and that tt appears tharefrom that such
corporation has conipliad with SecUon 106 OBAKBS, 164 NASSAU BTHKBT, M.k.iX SecretaiihL Aocouuttng, Drafting. JownalilB^
of the Stock CorporaUon Law, and that It
Day-Might Write tor oatalog BB S-4640.
is dissolved. Qiven in duplicate under my
hand and ofiicial seal of t t o Departmeot of
RKFRIUKRATION, OIL BURNKBB
St^Oe. at the City of Albany
(SealI
NEW YORK TKCHNICAI. INSTITUTIC—663 Sixth Ave. (at I6th St.) M.Y.C, Ds^y *
DiUed, the 7th day of JSlan<b. lUitt.
Kve. clauties. Doiiietitie & cuniiiibrcial. lii(ita)lation and serviciog. 0 « r SMh y o w .
Thomas i . Curran. Seeretary of State. By
UiMiueiit cutali>K:uo L. Cliulkia t2-U:iU3,
Hutk M, Miuer, Pcput/ Socretarf ol S t a t ^
1
Tuesday, April 4, 1950
CIVIL
MONDELL
STATIONARY ENGR'S LICENSE
Closses Wednesday and Friday at 6 P.M. Classes Wednesday and Friday at 6 P.M.
MATHEMATICS A SCIENCE
DRAFTING A DESIGN
Architectural, M e c h a n i c o l , Electrical,
Structural, Topographical, B l u e p r i n t
Reading, Building Construction, Estimating and Surveying.
LICENSE PREPARATION
Prof. Engineer, Architect, Surveyor, Plumber, Portoble Engineer, Marine Engineer.
Stationary Engineers
MONDELL INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN: 230 West 41st Street, Herald Tribune Building.
CiiBtodlans, Siipts., & Firemen
ST t D %
BuiMing ft Plant Mgmt. INCI.
LICENSE PREPARATION
Wisconsin 7-2086
AMERICAN
FOR
Over 35 Years Preparing
Thousands^of
for Civil
DBUSIMESS
R ASCHOOLS
KE
Service
D I C TAT I O N
Civil Service
(Fast)
TYPEWRITER
EXAMINATION
RENTALS
BOWERS
(6-S P.M. DAII.Y)
ja.3 w. 4 a
PAINE HALL
MAKK<
\LL
Stutlents
KHt. I I8»
-
Preparing you for Mie next
Best of
Service and Dependability
STAl'E EXAM, JUNE 17
Enroll now In Apr. 17 Class
:'all, Phone or H'rit«. Get
J. E. Albriglit & Co.
833 BROADWAY, N. Y. C.
Near 13fh St.
Telephone Algonquin 4-4828
STEHOTYPE
Booklet
K
MACHINK
SHORTHAND
$ 3 , 0 0 0 to $ 6 , 0 0 0 per year
Eiirn while you learn. Individual Instruction rheoi-y to court reporting in 3 0 weeks
$60. S. C. Goldner C.S.R. Official N.Y.S.
Reporter.
Classes Tues, Wed., Thurs. 6 to 8 P.M.
Pi'^tation 8 0 - 2 2 5 wpm. 6 0 c per seesion
5 Ueeknmn St., N.Y.C.
FO 4 - 7 4 4 2
SCHOOL CLERK EXAMS
Exuins, Week of April 24
Sntunlayti 1 to 5 I'.M.
E R O N
Stenotype Speed Reporting, Rm. 718
S C H O O L
8.13 llroiulwuy, N. V. (nr. 14 St.)
BUSINESS
Dilvid J. Kappel, M.A.
I.e4<tiirer at Broiikljii CollcKe
Kiir Kookaway 7-448U
Olh SU(VC«BIUI Year
yO% Pa6B»>d Last Written Tt-et
I T R *1N I M a
JHUSECRETARIAL
Stenogrophy
NOWl YOU CAN GET A
HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY
ah
City
.Zona
Stat*
Veterans
M o d e r a t e Ralet -
Instolmentt
— 1
I
I
Register Now For
Plumbing Inspector
•
Facilities availahle every iveekday f r o m 8 a.m. to 1 0 : 3 0 p.m.
Tliree Cyme, Track, Bar-hells, Scaling Walls, D u m m i e s Pool,
and General Conditioning Equipment.
BROOKLYN CENTRAL Y M C A
5 5 HANSON PLACE,
SHpcrbly
BROOKLYN,
17
PHONE: ST. 3-7000
SCHOOL CLERK
STENOGRAPHER, Gr. 2
Thousands of applicants expected — only the best prepared
will get the jobs. We offer special intensive coaching classes
which meet twice weekly. Starting March 29th, 6 P . M. "Enroll
at once.
REGISTER TODAY. OfEN 9 A.M. . 9 P.M.
ARISTA
I civil
INSTITUTE
Service
Branch I
2 1 0 W. 5 0 i h St., NYC — Cor. B V a y . — JU 6 - 1 3 5 0
Equipped
CLASSROOMS for
COACHING COURSES
Civil Service exams, cultural and
discuBsion Krouixt. Kxrellent facilities for fraternal, business and
labor urKanizations.
Send for lliiHtrate<l Booklet "L"
ADELPHI HALL
Arco's Study Book
. 74 Fifth Ave. a t 14t1i St.
WAtkiHS 4.0355
Most desirable section on lower
Fiflli Ave. Accessible to all subways, Hudson Tubes and Buses.
Civil Service Exam PreparotioH
Eastman
E. C. GAINES, A. »., Prat.
SECRETARIAl&ACCOUNTINGcurm
Also SPANISH STENOGRAPHY
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Approved for Vttcroni
Reilstered by th« Regtnti. Day t Evening.
Established 1893
Bulletin On Request
(44th 8t.)
I Hriid me nmiplvte drIalU on your honie Mudy IJ
I lliKh 8chuul KtiuUalency Diploma Courue. Thl« I
I rtxiuvni du«« aot obllKat« nu) lu any way.
I Addroe*
Arista Institute
aio W. 50 St.—N.Y.C.—wt Bw»y.
iludson 6-13ff0
441 UxinqtoB Av«.. N.Y. MU. 2.3527
Send coupon for compUtw dotaiU . .
I Name
A p p r o v e d for
Ray. ky N. Y. Hot* Oopt. of Idutollen
RIANHATTAN: IIS E. » S T . - O R 3-«900
JAMAICA: M - M SutpMii B M L - JA 6-B2M
• IN A FfW MONTHS
• WITHOUT SOING TO HICN SCHOOL
• STUDY IN YOUR S^ARE TIME —
IN YOUR OWN HOME
Earn Up To $25 A Week
Typewriting
D E L E H A N T Y SCHOOLS
. DIPLOMA
Career Corrtivondtnca School, Oo»t. OM
! 207 Marliet 8trt«t. Newark. N. J.
•
T i m « - » o v i n g p r o g r o m t lo c o n f o r m to
individual ploni. Boginners-Advonced
- B r o i h - o p . D A Y - EVE. - PART T I M E
Special Classes Under Expert Instructioiv
We p r e p a r e you to pass School Clerk exams to be held April
10. You qualify f o r $3,300 a year jobs. Training is under supervision of N. Y. C. High School official. Saturday Morning
Sessions. REGISTRATION NOW OPEN.
While learning, students are placed
in office jobs. Train half day in
business school, half day in office.
TYPING, STEON, COMPT STENOTYPE. SECRETARIAL,
BOOKKEEPING
O f f e r s Real Estate
Brokers' License Course
For late model machines.
ESTABLISHED 1 8 8 4
D A Y - N I G H T — A F T E R BUSINESS
Secretarial, Gregrr. Pitman, Bookkeepinr.
Typing, Aecountinir, Business Machines,
Drafting:, Journalism. Laiigniafre Stenos.
SPANISH: Conversation, Export Doruments.
Correspondence,
Translation.
NEW YORK, 1 5 4 Nassau St.
OPP. CITY HALL, BEeknian 3 - 4 « 4 0
Brx. Pordham Rd.-Gr. Cone. FO. 7 - 3 5 0 0
Wash. Hirts. 18"lst-St. Nich. WA. 3 - 2 0 0 0
B'klyn, Flatbueh at Church, BU. 2 - 3 7 0 3
B'klyn, Broadway at Gates, GL. 5 - 8 1 4 7
J.inn., Sutphln Blvd.-Jam., JA. 6 - 3 8 3 5
F l u s h V Cham.of Coni.Bldif., PL. 3 - 3 6 3 5
Staten Island, St. George, GI. 7 - 1 5 1 5
STUDENTS
State IJoiHised
1008 Fifth Av.. N.Y.C. BU 8-2294
Order Now
PATROLMAN
MA S-S714
VETS
Personalized and Group Instruction given days, eves and Sats.
NOW!
TR>liNING
sE%icE Physical Exams
TFXH
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START
Claflgrooni A Shop—Part £ Full Time
Immediate Enroll.—Appd. for Vets
BRONX: 2555 Webster Ave. CY. S-4224 • JAMAICA: 163-18 Jamaica Ave. AX. 7-2429
MOST COURSES
Jiu Jifsu School of India
siEsmznmnim
REFRIGERATION ENGR'S LICENSE
Classes Tuesday and Thursday at 6 P.M. Classes Wednesday and Friday at 6 P.M.
Civil Service Arithmetic, Algrebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, Calculus, Physics,
Prep for Engineering Colleges.
Laboratory anil theoretical Instruct Ion under guidance of experts, corerlng nl) terlinloal phases of Hadlo, Froqiiency Mndiilatlon, Television. Leads to onpnrtniiUles
in Bniadraslinff, Industry or Own Kn^lness.
MORNING, AFTERNOON or EVENING
SESSIONS. Approved for Vetfjrans.
ENROLL NOW FOR NEW CLASSES
VISIT. WRITE or PHONE
t h e P a r k D e p a r t m e n t pool on West
57th Street.
RADiO-TELEYISiON INSTITUTE
T h e c a n d i d a t e s will fill out t h e
Plonters in TaUvitien Training Mnc* 1938
480 Lexington Ave., N. Y. 17 (46th St.)
simple application blanks. Notaries
Llcenitd by N. Y. Slal*
will be present. Pilled-out f o r m s
I ' l ^ i n 0-500ft
will be signed a n d h a n d e d in on
t h e spot. All t h a t would be r e quired a f t e r t h a t , t o get on t h e
job list, would be to prove citizens h i p a n d ability to r e a d a n d write.
VARMANNIE THE HEW SYSTEM
T h e r e a d i n g sample is usually
"Super Jiu Jitsu" N.Y. Worl.l Tclcjri-ani
•'The
Master Systcnj"
Police
Dept.
s o m e t h i n g familiar, like a p a r a Special Low Rate f o r Limited Tin)e
COUNTY DERRY LASS
g r a p h or so f r o m t h e U. S. Consti- Only,
Call or Come In.
TO MAKE NYC DEBUT
t u t i o n , a n d if one can write his
1551 Broadway (46th St.) Rm. 107
J u d g e O w a n W. B o h a n is c h a i r - n a m e h e c a n write. T h e literacy
CI. «-53l!»
m a n of t h e general c o m m i t t e e a n d t e s t is t h e only one.
S e a n P. K e a t i n g , m e m b e r of t h e
B o a r d of S t a n d a r d s a n d Appeals,
is c h a i r m a n of t h e e n t e r t a i n m e n t
Af£IV
YO/tK
SCHOOt
of
c o m m i t t e e w h e n Helen Legge, 22year-old c o n t r a l t o colleen f r o m
Castledawson, C o u n t y Derry, IreAmericu^t Oldest School of Dental
Technolomr
l a n d , m a k e s h e r American concert
E S T A B L I S H E D 1»20—LONG B E F O R E G. L B I L L
ApproTcd for V e t e r a n s * Immediate Enrollmeirt
debut P i i d a y n i g h t . May 5, a t t h e
a n n u a l Carmelite e n t e r t a i n m e n t
Complete Training in Dental Mechanics
in M a n h a t t a n Center, 311 West
1.ICEN8KU BY N E W KUHH and NEW JBR»EX STATB8
Call, write phone for FREE CATALOG 'C"
34th St.
NEW YORK SCHOOL OF MECHANICAL DENTISTRY
125 Wtst 31st Street, New Yorii I, N. Y.
138 Woshliiqtoii Street, Newarli 2. New Jersey
M O T O R V E H I C L E INSPECTOR
D A M A G E EVALUATOR
S O C I A L INVESTIGATOR
ADMINISTRATION ASSISTANT
F O R E M A N OF LABORERS
INSP. OF PIPES A N D C A S T I N G S
ELEVATOR INSPECTOR
SUBWAY PROM EXAMS
ELECTRICIAN'S LICENSE
ELECTRICAL INSPECTOR
TELEVISION
(Continued
from Page 1)
ed, in t h e past, at 9 a.m., c a n d i d a t e s would s t a n d in line all night.
Now t h e applications are received
in mild w e a t h e r , so t h a t d u r i n g
a n y waiting period c a n d i d a t e s
won't freeze, as h a p p e n e d in p a s t
winter filing periods.
Applications will be issued at
C I T Y . STATE & FEDERAL EXAMS
MARINE ENGINEER
NEWS
Laborer and Cleaner
Tests to O p e n in M a y
. . •
On exomfnationt h«ld In 1949 for Civil Engineer, Prom., Assistant Civil Engineer,
Civil Engineering DroHsman, Jr. Electricoi Engineer, Jr. Mechanical Engineer,
Inspector of Steel Construction; mony M O N D E L L Students attained FIRST and
SECOND places with ratings of over 9 0 % and hove been appointed by the City
with salaries of $4000 and $5000 yearly.
9 5 % of M O N D E L L Students obtained their licenses for Professional Engineer,
Master Electrician, Stationary Engineer, Refrigerating Machine Operator and
Portable Engineer.
H O U S I N G INSPECTOR
INSPECTOR OF C O N S T R U C T I O N
ASST. C I V I L ENGR. (STRUCTURAL)
V A L U A T I O N ENGINEER
BLDG. C O N S T R U C T I O N SUPT.
ELECTRICAL ENGRG. D R A F T S M A N
ASST. ELECTRICAL ENGINEER
P L U M B I N G INSPECTOR
Page Eleven
LEADER
N E W Y O R K CITY
GRADUATES PASS HIGH
ON EXAMINATIONSI
HERE IS OUR RECORD
SERVICE
TYPEWRITING-BOOKKEEPING
Bpcciul 4 MootliB Oouritr
for
Motor Vehicle License Examiner
$ ^ . 5 0
Sample Tests, Questions and Answers
PatroliiKin — $2.50
Jr. Accountant — $2.50
Suface Line O p r . — $2.00
Census Enumerator — $2.00
Day or Eve.
add 15c for postage
Calculating or Comptometry
BERK TRADE SCHOOL
;tMI Aduntif Ave.
Ilklyn, N. V.
|ll>^ter fi-atiOa
liiteimive Coumr
BOKO HALL ACADEMY
4a7 riA'nuiSH
avkniik
KXT.
Cor. Fultou bt. H'litra M A i o a-!i447
Available
97 DUANE ST.
af LEADER BOOKSTOKE
N. Y. 7. M. Y.
Twelve
C I V I L
S
E
R
V
I
C
E
L
E
A
D
E
TiMwdiij,
R
April
4,
1 9 5 0
N E W Y O R K CITY NEWS
'
•
Hospil-al Workers Forced
N e a r l y H a l f of 2 1 , 8 9 3
To Take Extra Jobs in O r d e r
E x p e c t e d t o Pass Police T e s t To M a k e a Living W a g e
T w o unique points about t h e
P a t r o l m a n (P.D.) written test
held recently by NYC were t h a t
85 per cent of t h e c a n d i d a t e s
^ o w e d up, a n d t h e average age
was t h e lowest t h a t a n y of t h e
Civil Service Commissioners could
recall.
I t is usual f o r about 20 per
c e n t or more t o fail to show u p
a t a n open-competitive writtentest.
Commission P r e s i d e n t J o s e p h
A. M c N a m a r a t h o u g h t t h a t t h e
younger element was m o r e n u m erotis t h i s Ume because t h e older
m e n ambitious to become Policem e n h a d t a k e n e i t h e r or b o t h of
t h e t w o previous exams, been a p pointed or failed a n d gave u p
hope, or now exceeded t h e a e e
29 limit. Also, some sizeable p e r centage, h e felt, losA confidence
a f t e r t r y i n g to m a s t e r study m a terial. As if t u r n e d out, however,
t h e y should h a v e t a k e n ttie test,
as it w a s n ' t difficult.
Half will P a s s
Of t h e 21,803 who took t h e
w r i t t e n test, n e a r l v half are e x pected to pass, j u d g i n g by p r e vious s t a n d a r d s a n d considering
t h e f a c t t h a t t h e latest test was
easier t h a n t h e two previous exams. T h o s e who d i d n ' t show u p
n u m b e r e d 3,938.
" M a n y of t h e c a n d i d a t e s were
in t h e i r very early twenties," r e m a r ked Commissioner
Esther
Bromley. I've never seen a b e t t e r looking, m o r e Intelligent g r o u p of
young men. T h e only t r o u b l e was
t h a t t h e y m u s t h a v e been n e r vous, because t h e y l e f t a n i n credibly large n u m b e r of clgurette
stubs a r o u n d . "
T h e w r i t t e n t e s t f o r Paitrolman
oontained
"intelligence"
type
questions based on police c i r c u m stances, plus questions on law
a n d actual police work. S o m e
knowledge of g o v e r n m e n t was
necessary t o a n s w e r o t h e r questions.
Candidates May Protest
These pointers on guessing a r e
valuaWe in all multiple choice
type written tests.
T h e c a n d i d a t e s h a v e until W e d nesday, AprH 15 t o protest t h e
t e n t a t i v e key answers to t h e M u nicipal Civil Service Commission,
299 Broadway, New York, 7, N.Y.
T h e t e n t a t i v e answers were published in last week's LEADER a n d
t h e final ones will be published
as soon as a n n o u n c e d . If you feel
t h a t one of your answers is b e t ter t h a n t h e "official" answer,
C OUMTY
G m station. Comer main h i g h w a y
rooms, liuero i»lot. Priced to selj at $ 1 4 , 7 5 0 .
CM! Mr. Holmes. Ideal l o r retirement.
EGBERT
WHITESTOIIE
RjMlihi9 3-77Q7
iO
WATM
NECESSAIV
POGO
B(MiSld«i Lambtwool -ExMll«at Ur wwkiai
FiiM Sizs-Expaniieo
—polUhIng—eleaniM
Wriitlat
Wind*, f u r i i l t a r * .
WM4iabl*—
(iMTt. Mc. Wwr Hlw
iMQ Lxlifif
e^wtriricd LtmbiwMl glov* and cImh.
Price Only A C T
$100
*
TODAY
WE PAY POSTAGE
WORTH MUCH MORE
Pays for itself aflcr fli-st use. Priced
low (or volume sales. Money gladly relUDdcd aficr S days.
POES Producis, 42 W. IStb Sf.J.Y.II.H.T.
BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE!
Insure your car Now
92. You deposit a passenger in
a block in which t h e only u n o c c u pied p a r k i n g space is in f r o n t of
a private driveway. T h e passenger
orders you t o a w a i t h i s r e t u r n .
You should (A) p a r k t h e « a r i n a
n e a r b y block a n d r e t u r n on foot
to await t h e passenger; (B) p a r k
in f r o n t of t h e driveway, but keep
t h e engine idling; (C> p a r k in
f r o n t of t h e driveway if t h e r e Is
n o sign prohibiting p a r k i n g ; (D)
send word in to t h e passenger t h a t
you are p a r k e d in t h e next block,
a n d await h i m t h e r e ; (E) p a r k in
f r o n t of t h e driveway w i t h t h e
ignition on. but t a k e a n o t h e r spot
as soon as it is v a c a n t .
Si'i viiiB Civil Serviro motorists
(iiiire 1US4
Tiiiu- I'u.viiu-nts (ilu<ll.v ArmiiBed
w i i x i A A i BE(:KI:K CO.
87
Miiidrn Lane. New York 7, N. t ,
Out IMioiie: Uowliue lireen 9-44»i»
NiBlit IMiont't r n . 3 - 1 4 7 0
Drivinu
Instruction
LEARN TO DRIVE
VETERAHS '"-'S^";!?'
General ^Uto D r l v i n q S c h o o l
4 « 4 Jay
St.
25A Hanson
8 4 Court Si.
F U t b u s h Ave. E r t
244
B'klyn, N.Y.
PI.
MA 4-4695
LEARN TO DRIVE
INSTKtCTlON UA% « NIOUJ
OAB I'OH STATK KXAMINATWIS
Veterans Lessons under
Bill
Approved Oj N »
Uoam of edurallOD
Times Square
Bel.
6f)tli
St. & 6 7 l l i
PR 1-li«41)
Si..
NA.
(Continued
from Page 1)
of whom work 48 h o u r s a week, h e
said. H e also included t h e P r a c t i cal Nurses, a t $1,740, or about
$400 less t h a n t h e S t a t e pays.
A P h a r m a c i s t In t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Hospitals, h e pointed out,
m u s t h a v e a college degree a n d a
S t a t e license to get a job s t a r t i n g
a t $2,470. with $3,606 as his final
limit. T h e P h a r m a c i s t f o r t h e
S t a t e gets $1,100 a year more,
while one in t h e F e d e r a l employ
gets $2,300 dollars a year more,
were o t h e r comparisons h e m a d e .
sect e x t e r m i n a t i o n ,
window-repairing, plumbing, p e r f o r m e d o u t
of title in all 27 hospitals. M r .
Wurf argued. H e said t h a t M e s sengers do clerical work: A t t e n d a n t s h a n d l e two w a r d s a t n i g h t ,
with 80 or m o r e p a t i e n t s ; Cooks
get only $1,980 t o s t a r t , t h o u g h
private employers p a y a r o u n d $80
a week f o r s u c h work: a n d P r a c t i cal Nurses are overburdened w i t h
work because of t h e t r e m e n d o u s
shortage.
Hold Outside J o b s
"All t h e P h a r m a c i s t s employed
by t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Hospitals
h a v e outside jobs," h e said. " T h e y
m u s t have, because t h e y c a n ' t live
a n d s u p p o r t t h e i r families on w h a t
t h e City pays t h e m . "
H e f o u n d out t h a t t h e d e p a r t m e n t Inserts a d v e r t i s e m e n t s f o r
p h a r m a c i s t s in t h e S u n d a y Times,
giving a box n u m b e r , in a desperate, a n o n y m o u s effort to obtain
r e c r u i t m e n t f o r t h e low-paying
P h a r m a c i s t job.
Commissioner M a r c u s D. Kogel
h a s requested Budget Director
Thomas J. Patterson for an "upw a r d a d j u s t m e n t of t h e shockingly
low salaries of t h e professional,
scientific a n d technical personnel
—medical a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , p a t h o l o gists,
reongenologists,
psychiatrists, psychologists, dietitians, social woi-kers, chemists, bacteriologists, physicists a n d m a n y categories of t e c h n i c i a n s who are t h e
backbone of our hospitals."
T h e medical boards of each of
t h e hospitals a n d t h e advisory
council of t h e d e p a r t m e n t s u p f a c t is t h a t (A) skill i n driving r e - ported his s t a n d .
quires m a n y y e a r s of experience;
Kogel Warns of Problems
(B) y o u t h f u l drivers a r e s o m e w h a t
"
T
h e bottlenecks in t h e X - r a y
reckless; (C) older drivers h a v e a
quicker r e a c t i o n t i m e t h a n y o u n g - a n d laboratory services m u s t be
er ones; (D) t h e r e are m o r e driv- b r o k e n , " Dr. Kogel warned. "Until
ers u n d e r t w e n t y y e a r s of age t h i s is d o n e we c a n m a k e little
t h a n in a n y o t h e r age g r o u p ; (E) progress in providing p r o m p t diagolder drivers t a k e t h e trouble t o nostic service in t h e o u t p a t i e n t dep a r t m e n t s a n d in eliminating costl e a m t h e m e c h a n i c s of a car.
ly delays in t h e wards. Bottlenecks
95. E x p e r i m e n t s h a v e s h o w n a r e chiefly created by too few
t h a t t h e glare of oncoming h e a d - technical
workers,
insufllcient
lights usually leaves a driver p a r - clerical forces to get out reports,
tially blinded f o r a n appreciable a n d lack of m o d e r n scientific tools
period of t i m e a f t e r t h e o t h e r c a r a n d m e c h a n i c a l aids.
h a s passed. T h e r e f o r e , t h e best
Diet Service Needed
t h i n g f o r a driver to do to reduce
t h e probability of accident a t
" T h e d e p a r t m e n t needs a s t r o n g
n i g h t is (A) never to use b r i g h t dietary service. O u r dietitians, who
h e a d l i g h t s ; (B) to speed up w h e n are college-trained
professional
passing so a s t o reduce t h e people, are miserably paid, a n d
a m o u n t of glare; (C) t o t u r n on t h e low salary scale goes s t r a i g h t
d a s h b o a r d lights when passing t o down t h e line, which m a k e s it very
reduce t h e c o n t r a s t between t h e difficult to
maintain
suitable
darkness and the
a p p r o a c h i n g s t a n d a r d s in vital t h e r a p e u t i c s e r h e a d l i g h t s ; (D) t o slow down; (E) vice a n d one t h a t ' p r o v i d e s about
to t u r n his own h e a d l i g h t s on 100,000 m e a l s to p a t i e n t s a n d emb r i g h t a n d t h u s reduce t h e glare. ployees daily."
While
Commissioner
Kogel
96. I t was f o i m d i n a series of
inspections of motor c a r s t h a t stressed t h e low p a y of one gent h r e e out of f o u r c a r s on t h e eral group, a n d M r . Wiu-f t h a t of
h i g h w a y were defective in a t least a n o t h e r , b o t h were e m p h a t i c in
o n e piece of s a f e t y equipment. If deploring t h e miserably low p a y of
t h i s is generally t r u e of c a r s . It Is t h e titles t h e y discussed.
probable t h a t (A) compulsory I n Out-of-Title W o r k
spection would reduce t h e total
Hospital a t t e n d a n t s a n d h o s p i n u m b e r of accidents; (B) most
accidents are caused by defective t a l workers are called on to p e r equipment; (C) good drivers a r e f o r m various out-of-title duties,
o f t e n u n a w a r e of serious d e f e c t s even in semi-skilled a n d skilled
in t h e i r safety equipment; (D) trades, In which t h e r a t e of pay
most m a n u f a c t u r e r s provide f a u l t y in private Industry is f a r higher,
s a f e t y e q u i p m e n t ; (E) most s t a t e s •niere should be some recognition
now h a v e compulsory inspection of t h e e x t r a value of s u c h o t h e r
work as m a s o n r y , c a r p e n t r y , i n laws.
" T h e r e are p a r t - t i m e employees
in all of t h e lowest-paying titles,"
h e a d d e d . " M a n y of t h e employees
are o n p a r t i a l relief a n d c a n ' t
m a k e b o t h ends meet. T h e y work
swing s h i f t s — r o u n d t h e clock, as
t h e saying is—and 48' h o u r s a
week, so t h a t t h e i r lives a r e disorganized. Couples with c h i l d r e n
work in t h e hospitals, s o m e t i m e s
in t h e s a m e hospital, a n d h a v e
outside jobs besides, all in a n e f f o r t to survive. W h a t becomes of
their children?"
His u n i o n advocates t h a t all t h e
jobs should be competitive, a n d
t h a t t h e r e should be a h i g h e r p a y
scale a n d larger g r a d e spread t o
end abominable salaries. Promotion o p p o r t u n i t i e s a r e necessary,
too, h e added, t h e s a m e as f o r
o t h e r employees, as t h e employees
are not only greatly u n d e r p a i d b u t
a r e t r a p p e d in dead-end jobs, b e sides.
T h e a t t e n d a n t , helper, n u r s i n g
a n d o t h e r lowest-paid jobs a r e i n
t h e n o n - c o m p e t i t i v e class.
T h e u n i o n is greatly i n t e r e s t e d
in t h e case of t h e l a u n d r y workers
in t h e Hospitals D e p a r t m e n t , r e c e n t l y a r g u e d before t h e Court of
Appeals. T h e employees seek t h e
r a t e s of wages prevailing in p r i v a t e i n d u s t r y . T h e y invoke Section
220 of t h e Labor Law. T h e City
opposed
t h e petition
on
the
g r o u n d t h a t Section 220 requiies
t h a t t h e employees shall work o n
construction, r e p a i r or m a i n t e n a n c e of public works, as in t h e
c o n s t r u c t i o n of a building, n o t
merely work in t h e building. W h i l e
only l a u n d r y workers a r e involved
directly, t h e ramifications of a d e cision favorable t o t h e employees
would extend to o t h e r titles in t h e
d e p a r t m e n t a n d t o workers in o t h er City d e p a r t m e n t s .
Study Material
for
Bus Driver Exam.
This continues the study
material for the Bus Driver exam, to
be held Saturday,
April 22. The
following
questions,
92-105,
are
designed to test your
knowledge
of NYC and New York State
traffic regulations
and accident
prevention in general.
Gar C l e a n i n f
a N Polishine LaMbiwtol MiM
write t h e Commission a n d s t a t e
why.
"The c a n d i d a t e s who survive t h e
w r i t t e n teat, t h e pass marie of
which was 70 per aent, will be
g i v « i a qualifying medjboal t e s t —
no percentage ratings—and those
who pass t h e medioals, to be held
probably In May, will be called
t o t h e competitive physicals, t o
be held in t h e s u m m e r in V a n
Cortlandt Park.
Must E a r n a t Least 70
I n t h e two competitive tests—
t h e w r i t t e n a n d t h e physical t h e
score will be t h e a v e r a g e of t h e
two, but to pass, one m u s t a t t a i n
a t least 70 per c e n t i n eeuch.
As t h e new list won't be p r o m ulgated u n t i l t h e p r e s e n t o n e Is
e x h a u s t e d , t h e new roster w o n ' t
be out imtil a f t e r J a n u a r y 1,
1951, by which t i m e t h e new v e t e r a n p r e f e r e n c e law will be in e f fect. Non-disabled v e t e r a n s will
get 5 points a d d e d t o t h e i r score,
while v e t e r a n s disabled 10 per
c e n t or m o r e will get twice as
m a n y a d d e d points. However, t h e
v e t e r a n s need n o t use t h e i r e x t r a
points a t t h i s time. T h e y m a y
p r e f e r to wait until a promotion
test is held.
Absolute
veteran
preference
will be a t a n end by J a n u a r y 1,
1951.
93. W i t h r e g a r d to d r i n k i n g of
liquor by automobile drivers, it
h a s been f o u n d t h a t (A) consumption of j u s t e n o u g h liq^ior t o produce a slight exhilaration improves driving skill; (B) consumption of slight a m o u n t s of liquor
during or a f t e r meals h a s n o a p preciable effect on driving ability;
(C) a skillful driver is not likely
to be a f f e c t e d ! (D) c o n s u m p t i o n
of small a m o u n t s of liquor a p p r e ciably slows u p t h e driver's reaction time; (E) it is possible to r e move t h e d a n g e r by being exceedingly cautious.
94. Accident records show t h a t
KEY ANSWERS
drivers u n d e r t w e n t y years of age 92. A; 93, D ; 94, B ; 95, D ; 96, A.
h a v e more accidents per t h o u s a n d
drivers t h a n a n y o t h e r age group.
T h e most probable reason for t h i s
For the best deal in town
I 950
'.to
'.-(H
'10
'4«
• t7
'17
• IH
$ S IH>WN 1>KIVK8 IT AWAV
IIUUMON !!-<Ir., kikmI nit'vli. . . $i>n
HI ICK S<-<luii, 0 - w h e f l
CUUN. S«al., rilih, coixl inecti.. f »1)5
CHKV. CI. rp«, r&h, like nvw « 1 0 5
C A « . r . K . HiW A - l c u n d l t l o n . . . .
r i . V M . CI. Cpe, r&li, low nil. 9m>5
FOKU !J-<lr. low ml., r & h . . . f 1W5
MANY OTHKK UOOU Bl'YH
DKWITT AUTO SALES
l o a s KMteni lUrkwuy, B'lyii
l>l 9i-9539
StatMMOB
Aaibastador
o a all
l i n « « d i a f e Delivery
models
Driving
School
In The IROMX
.Ittl.K t O l U T K O l > I N S r U H T t U t t i
111 AL (;ONTKOI,l.l';i> CAKS
Splelman Aufo School
1051 Wostchester Av.
At SouHiem Blvd.
UA 8 - U l l A
0|n>ii Hiiiiduyii
I Can't BeFooledr
Protsbt Your Invistmint
Let me cMmlne (he e^r you wtnl
U bay. A» mn EXPEKT MKCUANIO
I CM UDAttANTUC iolUr tM
doIlM value on the purchMC of WDjr
u»rd car.
ROCCO'S AUTO SERVICE
SUUIUAN AVS.
tV I-MA4
POCKET WATCH
ALARM CLOCK
An invaluable aid for
Teachers, Librarians,
Firemen, Policemen,
Transportation
Workers, Lab. Technicians, Hospital Sc
Post Oflioe KmployDes, etc.
7 RiJBY J E W E L S
S e c o n d indicator.
Luminous Hands and
Numerals. Chromed
Caee. Pleasant, audible
alarm
ring:.
Easy to set.
1 n DAY R E T U R N
I'RIVILECIE
Mall orders promptly
cloae check or money
IMPEXTRA
O VTR
ServU®
**
GuHrnnlt««
and carefully filled. Kik.
order or we ship C.O.D«
SOI Firth Avenue
(at 4 S St. Dept
New York 17, N . Y .
F f t » r M > f f i n f f » f f f f f f y f f f f f f > i > » t f f u f f i i | M f f f i f f f i > f i f f » f f i i
H0MES^I995!
FOR
ALL
YEAR
—
VACATION,
or
RETIREMENT
/SAVE 3 0 % TO 5 0 % O N
COSTS
3 YEARS TO PAY
MINIMUM DOWN P A Y M E N T
DESALES
MOTOAS
1375 B i u h w l e k Ave. (eoc. DM»tur St.)
Brooklya
3-7100
Opca M M . t h i n S«t. 'tUl 9
S
BL
LEARN TO DRIVE
IN T/ie Finest Auto
P a r t - T i m e Employees
-1950
—
WAS.*®"'
""
NEW FREE 1950 HOUSE PLAN BOOK
WITH PHOTOGRAPHS & FLOOR PLANS
Wr!t« or phone our New York City showrooms for Free House Plan Book.
Address: 516 Sth Ave. (43rd St.) N. Y. C. or come in . . ; see exact
scale models of many practical designs. Visit our furo Long Island Homo
Exhibits. See actual homes. Main exhibit on Jericho Turnpike (Route
25) just east of CommacL Branch Exhibit on Sunrise Highway, just east
of Albany Ave., Amityville. Plan now for early spring occupancy.
N . Y. O f n C E P H O N E M U .
6 Pm«. ScxIfUl
Dowu piiyuiout and monthly
plau to suit your budicet.
paymcait
WALKER MOTORS. IMC.
Authorised Ford Dealer
216tli S t . ^ ' w o y ft Toafh Av«.
U>rmiii« 7 - 1 1 0 0
HOUSING GUILD
7-Mtf
cemtrvcHea OfltaMi
SfllitlitOWIIf I* le
T T T L S.EltVICE
Tuesday, April 4, 1950
PATROLMAN
PHYSICAL
ALL EVENTS
ONLY STANDARD
OBSTACLE COURSE
IN CITY
SMALL GROUPS
PERSONAL C O A C H I N G
MODERN GYMS
EXPERT I N S T R U C T I O N
O v e r 5 0 Years Experience
in Physical Training
MORINING, AFTERNOON
EVENING CLASSES
5 Convenient
Centers
BROOKLYN
CKNTRAI, Y
55 Hanson PI.
PR()SPi:CT PARK
357 — 9ih St.
HIGHLAND PARK
570 Jamaica Ave.
BRONX
BRONX UNION Y
4 7 0 E. 161st St.
MANHATTAN
W E S T SIDE Y
15 W. 63r<l St.
CALL EOR IVfEDICAL EXAM
FREE Simulated PHYSICAL
ALL EVENTS INCLUDING
OUTDOOR COURSE April 29
Call f o r Reservations NOW!
Scholarships
For N Y C
Employees
Civil
Service
Commissioner
E s t h e r Bromley is encoiiraging
NYC employees to a t t e m p t to win
one of t h e f o u r , or possibly five,
scholarships offered to t h e m by
t h e W a s h i n g t o n S q u a r e College
of Arts a n d Sctience, New York
University. T h e last d a y t o a p ply Is S a t u r d a y , April 15. E m ployees should h a v e t h e approval
of t h e i r d e p a r t m e n t heads, w h o
s u b m i t t h e n a m e s a n d addresses
of t h e c a n d i d a t e s to M a r g a r e t
Reilly, chief of t h e Service R a t ing B u r e a u of t h e Commission,
s i x t h floor, 299 Broadway, New
York 7, N. Y .
T h e courses a r e given a t n i g h t
a n d m u s t be completed w i t h i n
six years. T h e y lead to a b a c h elor's degree. E a c h scholarship is
worth $1,984 in t u i t i o n fees.
Y o u n g Men's
Men's Easier Buys !
And
Men'* MDiple Sport Jackct, »]I atylM.
38s to 408. Only $10 to $16 (Value to
$ 3 0 ) . Men's Hate. Famous Makes. $4$6, (Values to $ 1 0 ) . Sport shirtB, dress
shirts, tics b ^ o w wboleMle.
ACME SALES
YWCA SCHOOLS
15 W. 63r(l St.
EN. 2-8117
l,K<iAI> NOTKI-:
SUPPLEMENTAL CITATION.—The People
of the State of New York, By the Grace
of God Free and Indi pcndent, To GEORGE
JAMES IVLEON. Send Oreetinif:
Upon the petition of Rime Greenbiirg^,
•who resides at 504 Ea-st 5lh Street, New
York, N. Y., you and each of you aii'
hereby eite<l to show cause before the Surrograte's Court of New York County, heltl
at the Hall of Records in the County of
New York on the IHth day of May, 1050.
at half-piist ton o'clock in the forenoon
of that day, why letters of administration
on the Goods, Chatties and Credits of Bella
Rosenthal, aleo known as Bella Kristall,
also known as Bella DeLeon. deceased, late
of 20 Clinton Stivet. New York. N. Y..
•hould not issue to petitioner herein and
why no distributive share of the Estate of
Bella Rosenthal, also known as Bella Kristall, also known as Bella r>el.,eon. d«K'eaatHl.
Bliould b« allowe<l to Gi<X)IU}K JAMES
Dt^LBON, for his neirloct and refusal to
provide lor the deceased and for abandon• i r her.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we have
caused the leal of the Surrorate's
Court of the said County of New
Yoik to be henninto afllxwl.
WITNl-^IS, HONORABLE William
•0e*i.1 T. Collins, a Surrogate of our
said county, »t the County of
New York, the 24th day of
M a n h in the year of our liord
one thousand nine hudred a^ud
Mfly.
P H I U P A. 1X)NAHUE,
Ui« 8uiTv«ute'tt Court,
FURNITURE
SpoeM
WneHc
LIviiHI i o o m
Ssitcs
•
SoctioiHil Solos
•
Hundreds
of
Odd Pieces
Sets
7 Floors of Flae Furniture
PYSER FURNITURE CO.
NEED MONEY?
4 5 7 Fourth Ave., N.Y.C., between 3 0 t h & S l s t
0«ir only store
MVrroy Hill 3-3862
Write
CLOVERMAW
385 SHi
MU.
or Ctdl:
MO&IERY SALES
Avo.. N. Y.
9-2289
We Carry m CompUfe Lime of
FretMure Cookers. Radios, Aluminum Ware, Vacuum Cloaners, Electric Irons, Lamps,
Refrigerators,
Washing Machines, Television Sets.
Save Money on Furniture
Furniture.
Sewing
Mocklnes
5
DAVID TULIS
192 Lexinctoa Ave.
<at .1«nd »•.) N.T.C.
near M. T. Furniture Exehaoee
AmaiRC-llflWUMUwiU
ItoRd Skoditff
'tBjoif iwwt
Mrmi*»(
tirtwfslNMOt St h s j ;
ttikti llM «M«.
Q . 8 S C.0.0. iR
RE-^WNVKRTED
BLINDS KK-taped
RK-CORDBD
New
RB-PAINTBD
Blinds—$2.98
A l l i e d A p p l i a n c e Television
S h o w r o o m C l e a r a n c e Salo!
&
up
Free Measurcmeots and DeUTwy
ROMAN
VoMtian Blind Sorviee
1817 BRLMONT AVE., BRONX
n v . »-8«4
TOCNO MEN'S * MEN'S E A 8 T E » BUTS!
Men's sample Sport Jacket, all styles, 38a
to 40b. Only $10 to $16 (Value to $ 3 0 ) .
Men's Hats. Famous Makes, $4-$6. (Values
to $ 1 0 ) . Sport shirts, dress stairta. ties,
below wholesale. ACME 8ALR8 CO., 88
Wasbinirton St. (near. Bector, K. T . ) .
BO. 9-4084.
the
LEADER
THM COMPLETE 9TOC* MlTgT « 0 AT
ONCE
Cleiu'anoc
LiM
Price
1 ADMIRAL 10" Console
(BLOKDE)
»2».t>fl 178.60
3 ADMIRAL 7" table
models
13»»6
69.96
1 DUMONT Club 2 0 " . . . »96.00
44».»5
1 DUMONT Club 1 5 " . . . 795.00
29».»5
1 DUMONT MeaUowbrook
CouBole
625.00
369.60
1 EMERSON 10" « - w a j
CoDBole
495.00 3 6 9 60
1 MOTOROLA 10" tafclfi
. „
model
230.M
119.60
1 MOTOROLA
„
Console
329 96
169.50
1 PILOT PROJECTION
Console, 200 sq. Inch
Picture
706.00 >a«.60
2 RCA 10" 3-way
^ ^^^ ^^
Console-Blonde
726.00
306.00
S RCA 10" with AM «
FM RADIO table mod. 376.00
169.60
2 RCA 10" table m o d e l . . 325.00
149.60
1 SCOTT Projection table
model 200 sci. in. Piot. 696.06
395.00
1 TRIAD 16" Console
496.00
349.50
1 ZENITH 10" Console.. 349.50
179.50
% STROMBERG 12 Mt"
>
Ublemodel AM Jc FM. . 369.60 9«9.60
Allied
t
LEADER eonducts » d i r e c t « a e a 4 i o B - a a d - a i w w e r aer• i e c for its annual subscril>era. B e s i d e s t l i e benefits ot foil
coverage of civil service news, notices of examinatltHis and
news of examination progress, subscribers obtain a valuable
help toward a government job, through t h e service, or, i f a f a v a d y
public employees, aid in their civil service itfoblems.
The LEADEB would like to continue its past practice vt
rendering this direct service to all, but because of Its increased
news coverage, and new features, its staff must limit the letter
and telephone information serviee to annual subscribers.
Subscribe for The LEADER. Use coupon below, K
prefer:
• Television
ALL PERFECT CONDITTON
FULLY GUARANTEED
«
The
t
•
t
•
•
Appliance
• A S RAN«ES and
COMBI»«ATION STOVffS
Up
20 fo 4 0 % OFF
Oa Your Fovorif* Rroad
u p to
3 6 m o n t h s to pay
LAKIN'S
HOME
APPLIANCES
738 MonhaHaR Ave. EV t-4374
GREENPOIKT. BKLYN., N. Y.
Ind. Snb. GO Train. Naawn Av*. St«.
Open Eves, till 0
CSiTi] Serrice Employees
F R E E
•
Standard RMA Guarantee!
<
^
^
Z
^
Choosp from a wide variety o l
luxuriously designed cabinf-ts
EASY TERMS ARRANGED
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
^
<
<
<
These top-notch 31 tube seta
should not be confuted with
the less-efficient 31 tube e e t i l
EDLIE, 154 Greenwich
St.
FLOOR SAMPLES
NAME BRANDS
(iiiarHoteed Perfe«>t
• RANGES
• REFRIGERATORS
• WASHERS • IRONERS
• SINKS • CABINETS
• TELEVISION
2
^
^
AoB
^
EXCEt>TIONAL VALUE
with civil service news
with what's happeuiiig to you and your
job
with new opporttmities
with civil service men and women everywhere!
DMAPERIES
iormtth $25
L i n n l A ilaiid>U(tli«4 Soltoms
We Also < s r r i a Complete Llii» o l
H»nd Prints oa P r b b k Cloth F i l r t .
Antiqae Satins h Linens,
S L I P COVERS
F«r
a V l L SERVICE LEADER,
9 7 D u a n e Street, New York 7, N. Y.
P l e a s e e n t e r m y Mtbeia-ipl&oa f o r o m e
OL
4-M4S
Y
I Always a Better Buy
At
y m .
STERLING'S
Save Up To 5 0 %
Name
TELEVISION
I ancloM e k ^ k
ADMIRAL
Q
S0md bm to mtot ml mtr offiem Q mx department
Q
mtf dmh
Q
FADA
ill S t o c k
STERLING
JEWELERS
71 WMt 40 St.. N.Y.O.
Circle « H i e i t
Opeii ThurMlay 'till tl
1608 C o n e y Island A v
Het. Aw. L & M
NAvorre 8-3500
SAVINGS UP TO 5 0 %
Radios, relevislon, Kefrigeratere.
Washer*—All StHiidard Makes
Kaay Terms
SOUNDVIEW RADIO ft TV CORP.
36 Hugh Grant Circle. Bronx. N.Y.
TA. 3-7272
UPHOLSTCRV
ALL WORK CUSTOM MADE
NOSK VAMBI4 N
Barkc A w .
$2
0«|y
i
•(•or. t'ortlandt St.. NYC.
I>I 0-;}I43-4-8-4
S:AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAf
FIR5T
To
MU. 6-0968
J
<
i
4
<
r
r
^
• Refrigerators
• AutomaKc
Wasliers
Corp.
HOME DEMONSTRATION
Licenstd RCA 630 Typ«
\b" Table Mod«l—$2W.50
16" ConsoU—$259.50
19" Table Model —$279.50
•
SiVBSCHMmON
6-8772
20to 3 0 % DiSCOUMT
OM ALL GIFTS
^
AND HOUSEHOLD
APPLIANCES
eULKOProdHetsGo.
108 E. 28 St.
Yomr
and
, „ V E S I C A S?,
MV
M u r r a y HIH 3 - 7 7 7 9
n a saBBaM
for
Sis.
avaiialile
1,007 other items.
Tlli«E PAYMENTS ARRANGED — Does Not interfere Witli Requlor
UP TO 18 MONTHS TO PAY
Discosnt
1165 BROADWAY. N. Y.
(cor. 27tli St.—Stii Fl.) Room S07
Intorior Deeoratov, baviiiK access to Factory
Shawroocns, can save yoa
up to 40% on your purchase of furniture. For
full Information without
obligatioa. VisH or Phone:
BLVD.
DA 9-061T
Substribe
Doaiiret Plan
Bam it in your spare time. Sell the
finest quality ladies' nylon hosiery at
miH prices.
TURNER RADIO CO.
16" Ckmsole Model, black picture tobe
$226
C E N T E R .
W. SSth St., NYC
LO 4-Z614-*
Open 8-6:30 Daily, Thurs. till 8:30
IdenfHieafloiil
Ssites
H CkooM
From
Call WA. 5-7563 Toiiay
U V i " . 14". 19" TELEViSiOM SETS
Special!
BENDIX TV
I Bring
B«D ROOM
For Furniture Reflnishing In
your home or at our plant
SALE
THIS WEEK ONLY
Crosley Ifl" Consolette, 1950 Model,
Lists $379.96, Now $280.
(limited
quantity.)
tmployoes
Many Styfos
at WA. 5-7563
7S« Flushing Ave.. Bklya, N. T.
EV 8-2068
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
On most makes of nationally advertised T. V. sets, refrigerators, washingmachines, radios.
D/seo«nf for Civil Sorvlee
SANDY'S RERNISHING SERVICE
BROOKLYN HEBREW
Free Loan Association
NO MONEY DOWN
2 4 Months to P a y
PERIOD
MODERN
To Do Year Bedroom, Liviaie Koom,
Dininir Room or Miy odd piece* e*U
Repeating a Sellout!
WKHTHEIM, JULIUS. — CITATION. — P
5;{4, ]»50.—Th<' PRople of the State of
New York, By the Grace of Goil Freo and
Indepomlfnt, To HILDEGARD MAYER. a.s
the next of kin and heirs at law. LOTTE
ROTHSCHILD. LOTTE WERTHEIM, as
leffatees adversely affeoted by a subsequent
Co<licil of JUI.IUS WERTHEIM. deceased,
ecnd R-reetinir:
Whereas. HENRY H. ZOLKI, one of the
executors, who resides at 260 Riverside
Drive. Boroueh of Manhattan, the City of
New York, has lately applied to the Surrograte's Court of our County of New York
l o have certain instruments in writinsr
dated Autrust 10, 1046, July 20. 1949, and
January 23, 1060, relating: to both real and
personal propeity, duly provetl as the last
will and testament of JULIUS WERTHEIM.
deceased, who was at the time of hie death
a resident of 160 Riverside Drive, the
County of New York.
Therefore, you and each of you are cited
to show cause before the Surrograte's Court
of our County of New York, at the Hall
of Records in the County of New York, on
the 25th day of April, one thousand nine
hundre<l and fifty at half-past ten o'clock
in the forenoon of that day, why the said
will and testament should not be admitted
to probate as a will of real and personal
property.
In testimony whereof, we have caused
the seal of the Surrogate's Court
of the said County of New York
to be hereunto alllxed. Witness,
Honorable William T. Collins,
fL. S.] Surrogate of our said County of
New York, at said county, the
15th day of March, in the year
of our Lord one thousand nine
hundred and lifty.
Clerk of the Surroifute's Court.
P U I M P A. DONAHUE
.ni21-Tu
.
I
CO.,
A Complete Job of
MEMNISHIN« ft RESfRAYIM«
U now ovailobic a t
« Niinimani cost
' ^ L O A N ' S "
At no cost to borrower
"Thou Slittlt Take No Usury"
Inquire Mondays thru Fridays
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
1937 SOl'THRRN
BRONX, N. Y.
fSHMIinim^^ltlliil^^
Give Your Furniture
That New Look
New Admiral, Knierson, Olympic, ete.
RefrlKerators, ^Vnshin(; Mach. All Makra
Ch^fmvrcE
J^mgt T h i r t e e n
> SHOPPING GUIDE •
tiS WnshinKton St. nmr. Rertor, N. T.)
DO. 0-4084
Requirements
R e q u i r e m e n t s a r e : h i g h school
diploma, m o r e t h a n 16 points of
college work n o t previously completed, a n d n o n - a t t e n d a n c e a t a n y
college, including NYU, since J u l y
1, 1948.
W r i t t e n tests a r e given a n d
also a competitive oral test. Mrs.
Bromley is a mem^ber of t h e u n iversity's oral panel.
LEADER
I ID
D I S C O U N T S !! I
T ^
On All lA>iMiiiiK 1950
U r
I W
^ ^ ^ .
^ylO/.
Vlf / w
MiHlel IVieviklon 8tt«>
WiudttiiK UaclilneB,
UerriKeratur», Kiidioi.
V'uviHiiu Cleuurrt and
Aupliaiivva
Value)
VEEDS (For
Kooui 816
«5 KASr »Hth ST., N . l . C ,
MU 0 - 4 ' 1 4 3 - 4 4 4 4
S a v e 2 0 ' c tc 5 0 " j on K^jtionr
• l l y Advfrrt>i«d F o m o u i f i w d w c t i
iefrlsveeeww « vM.v.a*
rdevliJau « Radioi
aeuitrhold Appliaurea «
i«welry « Watchea «
The John Stanley
Pr'ues 'I hue
• I'roifctorv
a
Waakera
Uifta • Peat
Fypewters
Howard
Cprp.
('h<illvit»e ('omfKiri^Hi
28 CUKNTIKS 8 U I '
N«w Yark Citjp
-So. Ktrry)
BO «-0<l68
CI V IL
Pa(|e Fourteen
SERVICE
LEaIjER
ly. Aprfl 4 , 19.50
N E W Y O R K CITY NEWS
ELECTROLATION
ISOO bairs remoTed Pfrmanentlf
(in one hour)
Face •
colm of t h e B r o n x Zoo.
Intense Effort Pledged
At t h e meeting t h a t voted affiliation, Mr. T h c m a s , A n t h o n y F e d eroff, n a t i o n a l c h a i r m a n of t h e
organizing committee, a n d Milton
Murcay, n a t i o n a l secretary-treasurer of t h e committee, spoke. Mr.
M u r r a y pledged full CIO s u p p o r t
of "organization on a m a s s basis."
T h e speakers said t h a t t h e organizing e f f o r t would be stepped u p
o n t h e New York drive, but it was o r g a n i z a t i o n of t h e ACEU in t h a t in i n t ^ i t y a n d t h a t a p r i m e oba n n o u n c e d t h a t t h e CIO is f u l - a r e a . Mr. D i a n a is a n employee of jective is t o overcome t h e n u m e r i filling t h e promises of Philip M u r - t h e W e l f a r e D e p a r t m e n t . Morris cal loss resulting f r o m h a v i n g
ray, its presiden);, to back u p t h e lushewitz, s e c r e t a r y - t r e a s u r e r of voted t h e UPWA out of t h e CIO.
e f f o r t with financial s u p p o r t t o t h e NYC CIO Council, is a m e m Operating Through State
ber of t h e m e t r o p o l i t a n advisory
t h e hilt.
committee.
Receives City Delegation
O t h e r b r a n c h e s of t h e organizMr. T h o m a s h a s set u p h e a d CIO Affiliation .
ing c o m m i t t e e a r e o p e r a t i n g on
q u a r t e r s a t t h e CIO Council o f Long I s l a n d a n d u p s t a t e . W o r d
T h e resolution to h a v e t h e or- was received f r o m m e m b e r s of t h e
fices, 101 West 31st S t r e e t , NYC,
a n d h a s been receiving delegatioais ganizing c o m m i t t e e affiliate w i t h G o v e r n m e n t W o r k e r s Union in
f r o m City d e p a r t m e n t s , including t h e C I O was i n t r o d u c e d by S t e - Yonkers t h a t t h e y expected soon
H e a l t h , Hospitals a n d t h e B o a r d p h e n S. Gorey, executive s e c r e t a r y to join t h e c o m m i t t e e a n d t h e
of E d u c a t i o n . Also, efforts a r e of t h e m e t r o p o l i t a n u n i t of t h e CIO.
being redoubled to get f o r m e r committee, a n d seconded by Louis
m e m b e r s of t h e U n i t e d Public Rinsley of M a r i n e a n d Aviation
Workers of America to join t h e D e p a r t m e n t ; H a r r y G r a y of t h e
CIO, f r o m which t h e UPWA was School L u n c h group in t h e B o a r d
ousted on charges of C o m m u n i s m . of E d u c a t i o n , J a m e s T. S m i t h of
for Typing Exams
Mr. T h o m a s is being aided by t h e Housing Authority, Michael
Free Delivery and Picli Up
P a t r i c k J. Brady, president of R a p p a p o r t of W e l f a r e , Louis M a r American Civic Employees Union tini of t h e laborer group in t h e
in t h e Metropolitan District, a n d D e p a r t m e n t of W a t e r Supply, G a s
101 West 42 Street
R a y m o n d E. D i a n a , director of a n d Electricity, a n d J a m e s M a l -
R. J. Thomas, Former
Head
Of Auto Union, in Charge of
New CIO Govt. Organizing
Drive
By NAOMI SCOTT
T h e CIO a n n o u n c e s t h a t its
c a m p a i g n to organize public e m ployees i n t h e M e t r o p o l i t a n New
York a r e a is on a p e r i o d - o f - y e a r s
basis a n d t h a t t h e results will be
accepted as a guide to w h a t c a n
be accomplished t h r o u g h o u t t h e
country.
I t was a surprise t o t h e G o v e r n m e n t a n d Civic EmpToyees Organizing C o m m i t t e e w h e n R . J .
T h o m a s , f o r m e r president of t h e
U n i t e d Automobile Workers, arrived in NYC to h e a d t h e metropoJitan drive. I n f a c t , Mr. T h o m a s
himself was surprised to get t h e
a s s i g n m e n t f r o m Allan H a y w a r d ,
n a t i o n a l director of o r g a n i z a t i o n
f o r t h e committee. Mr. T h o m a s is
a s s i s t a n t n a t i o n a l director.
Strong Financial Support
No s t a t e m e n t was m a d e as to
t h e a m o u n t of m o n e y being s p e n t
RENT A TYPEWRITER
READER'S SERVICE
Armi •
Body •
Ivft
Sjparate Mcn'c Dopt
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of COSMETOLOGY
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VA fl-ie^f-
CHRONIC DISEASES
• f N E R V I S , S K I N a n d STOMACH
KMiitfl, l l t K t r . CtHtUl WttkMIl,
L*m* l*tk, tw*lt«ii tlta^i
f I N t C i l l l N , All Modern Injecttont
PILES HEALED
• f aictftr*, «ti«»lili(, ytinlttt wtHiod
•M • • Itit
liMt IrtM ••rk.
VAKICOSe VEINS TMiATtO
X'fl4Y
^VAtLABLg
iMamhaHoH Fee $3.00
MedJciae
Dr. Burton Davis
41$ Uxinfltofi Av«. rtuNTN ri.
Hours: Men., Wed., Fri., 9 : 3 0 a.m.
to 2 : 0 0 p.m. 4 : 0 0 to 0 : 3 0 p.m
.Sat. 9 : 3 0 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sun. A
Holidays lO-ltZ a.m. Closed Tues
(ind Thursilay.
CALM YOUR NERVES
'
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af tuts aawriai »lMM«ra»li
A, A. TYPEWRITER CO.
.T*
yU
Mlad at. reaM".
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rtmr
nr (Wi Ave. N.Y.C.
(Room 207
BKyant 9-3{H3
IM»« city StotiM. Mw Verii Iti H. V.
GUIDE
mmmmm
LOW COST TRAVEL TO PUERTO RTCO.
Storage
SiirhtaeeinRr and hotel
accommodations.
WALDEMAR BXTHORN JR.. 350 W. 57 Any si7.e» load to and from anywhere. Foreijrn
shipments
of
households and autos.
St., N.Y. PLaza 7-84f)(5.
EKperienced packers. Low rates. Free estimates.
Courteous
service.
Wilson Storage
BttviiiftH on uil iiatioiially-iMlvertiMcd items. SPECIAL throuffh flights at low cost to
Visit our hIiow rooiiiH
Miami, Pla. and Puerto Rico for Easter. Co., 30 W. 06 St., N. Y. EN 2-8360.
RAFAEL FACUNDO, 50 E. 103 St.. NYC.
BENCO SALES CO.
TR 0-2333.
Mr. Fixit
10.-. NA.SHAr STKKKT
New York Cit.v
l)lRl>r 9 - l ( H 0 Tours to Israel. Specialists in Air and
Auto
Repairs
steamship travel. Cruises and vacation ar- Special Attention and discount to civil
ransTcments. Hotels for Easter. WILLIAM service employees on all types of auto work
Collertors'
Items
T U W E L SERVICE, 16 Avenue C repair. Rebuild wre<'ks, upholsterinif, erlass.
liARGK iicalitiful San Marino niiiiialure TAUBE
etc Century Auto Weldimr & Repair Co.
Bliocl l»f)iioiiinf Uinc'oin, plus Cos(a Kica NY 9 OR 7-5540.
Inc., 240 Delancey St. OR 4-0423. Nite
niiniatuic siicct of 4 ooloffui lriaiig:lo
staini>» only l(»c to those reqiiestinB: our Specialists in air and steamhsip travel to EV 7-fl0!i3.
all
part.^
of
the
world.
Tours,
crui.'jes.
vacaworld wide approval. VplIowKtono Stamp
tion,
hotels.
Bermuda
trips
arranfred. Attention I Radiator boiled out and reCo., Box •I'ititi, Bozt'iuaii, Montana.
Honeynioons
receive
special
attention. paire<l.. Gas tanks, heaters, expertly done.
Booklet. Columbia Agency, Inc. 185 3rd Also auto radio repair service and sales.
Dresses
Ave., N. Y. OR 4-315:1.
Discount to city emidoyees. Midtown Auto
Ra<liator Service, 314 10 Ave. N.Y. CH 4TEHRU'lO SALK of sanntlo drcsHCH! Only
11)40.
V.VCATION OR HONKVMt)«N
$!(». Values $-.'!i.!»5 to iB5i».it.'>. Come early
Virffinia
Bcach
7
days
$53.50
foi best sel....|ion. SARI PLAZA U W.
North American Travel Leaprue Inc.
G(Mieral lU^pairs on all make® of cars. Spe5H St. (1 lliKlit UP) N.Y.C. EL. 6-8158.
34it Weet 34 St. Opp. Penn Sta. LA 4-.3453 Mil body and fender work carefully done.
T)iseounts to eivil service employees. City
Household
I^ecessities
IDEAL
WORLD
TRAVEL
SERVICE. Auto Repairs Corp. 310 10 Av. LO 3-3477.
ItM! v o l It HOMK MAKING
Honeymoons, tours, cruises. Airline, steainSIUHM'INU NKKUS
siiii> reserv.ntion^. All over world. Special Attention! Complete auto repair service.
Flii'niturc. apivjianoes. t^illH, etc. (at real attention city employees. Free service 10 Collision 6peeiaUst«. auto body fender,
waviiiii.si Wuiui'ipal KniployecK Scrvive. 41 a.ni.'-U) p.m. i:!71 Rogers Ave. Bklyn N.Y. painlinp matehinK-. Discount eivil service
I'urlt Row CO. 7-.'>;{!t() 147 Nas.sau Street. Oe 4 !»307.
employees. 003 W. 131 St. nr. Bway N.Y.
AD 4-5803.
CALI. SE 3 (MOO for bokintr by sea or air
Photography
travel, llonryrniions, tours and cruises ar- Attention Please—Special discount to civil
BRlfiKS. add prestitre 1o your wedUingr. raiiKTed. Fref» sr-'viee IniniisTration. Calling:
Candid wcddinsr i)liotos. Select
ix-au- Relatives abioad. J. Perillo & Sons. Travel service employees on batteries, tires, tubes.
Batteries chantreti while you wait. A\ito retiful SxKi picluieK from iJti different poses Serviiv, 4515 Third Ave. Bronx N. Y.
paiis and supplies. Jim's Tire & Battery
lor
I'K lures will be taUen at bride's
home, eliuroh and reception. Wcddintf al- CONCOURSE T R W E L BUREAU — Any- Service, 1537 York Ave., N. Y. RE 7-3100.
bum free.
thinK- in travel. Air and steamship leserva- COLLISION REPAIR W^ORK — Painting,
(iKOKGK WKKSTKK
tions. Honeymoons, eruises and tours. All bodyfrlazins-, simonizing, welding:. All types
M;s;t flust «7tli street, New York
N. If. expense trips arranged. Hotels. Free book- of auto repair satisfactorily doiie. When in
lets 34 38 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. need call us. JOHNSTON BODY AUTO
Teleplione: AT y-:J3'i8
FO 7-0110.
WORKS, 31 West 139 St. N. Y. AU 3-0650.
Spei'ial diseoinite on phootpraidiie eQUip.
l.ibc'rai time payments. Best prieea paiil HONEYMOON TRIPS — Virginia Beach. Inwood Gas and Service Station, 4 7 7 8
on .ised e>iuip Spee. 8mm film rentals. Miami,
Canad.i. Bermuda, airline
and Broadway, N.Y.C. General Auto Repairs on
steamship rescrv.itions. Foreitfn and domes- all car« with satisfaetion. Towing. OfTlcial
CITY CAMERA EXCHA^^GE
tic. Tours arranut>d. Hotels. Roffers Travel AAA Station Discount to city employees
II Joliii St.. N.V.
1)1 »>-S»50
Bureau. 3530 Wcl)ster Avenue. FO 4-0700. LO 7-0631.
y/^«
Everybody's
Shoes
Consult us for overseas bookintrs by plane.
ATTKNTIOX I'LEASEl Special discount Domestic arr.'umements for cruises, vaoaon sbiies to polieo and lircmen. All sizes. tions and honcjmoons. Hotel. A-1 service.
Also to all eivil service employees for Arzetm T.-avel Bui-eau. 154 W. 71 St. N.Y.
Eii.Hfer Holidays. M & M SHOE SHOP, TR 3-0174.
!J(>;(4 AmsKrdam Ave., N. Y. WA 3-4^16.
ne^
T t h l
Buy a
DISAPPOINTED?
I AM I>RUIIU OF MY 8U('CKHM
IN MAKING MARRI.\<iiCM
Oonfidential Interview without obligatiou
CIRCULAR ON REQUEST
Boleo Brooks
100 West 4end St.
W1 7-2430
Travel
AIB AND STEAMSHIP TRANSPORTATION all over the world
ERINQEH
TRAVEL BUREAU, lUft Utoouio St.. N Y.
X>{iiQ& of
b-
h o u r U-dayV
n.^^the
Toys
TRAINS Amir. Flyer, at ior'n off list.
H © and scale cheap RAY. ST. »-3087
Ott a
. t t h e Civil S e t v . «
RELIABLE work on brakes, ignition, carburetors. Expert service on all makes of
cars. Jeep towing, Di,scount to city employees. Bayway Service Station & Garage.
331 Neptune Ave. Bklyn N.Y. NI 0-9735"
PLEASE NOTICE. 34 Hour Towing. All
Classes
typee of repairs. Courteous .service. Special
IM» YOU MKK TO DRAW OR PAINT? discount to Leader readers. Benly Service
Stations Inc., 1419 Bruckner Blvd., (eor.
We hav.' life hlt< ti'h groups Tuesday 8-11, Ihonx
River Ave.), TI 3-9893 — 3-9350,
Portrait PaiiitinB Thursday 8-11. Moderate
Television Sets
fee. Well known instructor. Call Iliana
Building
Repair and Carpentry
Standard brands — immediate delivery. Ijnardofl, 133 K. 50 St. MU 8-1944, 1-4
Lowest prices with special diseoiuits to P.M. for api>ointment.
WATRKPHOOFING, brick work, glass
••ivil hervi<e employees. Courteous service.
block, chinmey repairs.
It will pay you to try us. Wolff Radio
O'Brien, FO 5-8339
Hotels
Corp., 7(U»
14(» St. Mel 5-8134.
100 8T & It way (S K ear).
MO S-0400
Cutlery
Sharpened
Wearinfi Apparel - Furs for Sale
HOTEL M I D W A Y
WECK CUTLERY CO.
FASHION KlUKiKS representative, latest
NEW STUDIO ROOMS!
138 Fulton St., N.Y.C.
CO 7-1176
Htyh'H, from S>4.1> 8to $15.1)8, at your home
Sinqles $ 1 2 . 5 0 — D o u b l e s $ 1 5 . 0 0
or call Anna IK'trliomini. 441 E. 12th St.
Al^O
NKSY
KITCHENETTE
ROOMS
I
Furs
Restyled
N.Y.C. SI'. 7-371)7.
FURS Rtwtyled. repaired, relined. Certified
Contests
cold storage. Coats on hand and to order.
Social Doings
23,000 4 and 5 letter word list (alpha) Let us store your furs for the summer,
for D.A.V. contest Iti3, used by many 1949 We pick up and deliver. Fully insured.
winners. Also 0 letter or 7 letter $2 each. Phone for appt. LA 4 B883. L, Katz Furs,
All throe books in one order $5. Write Inc. 124 W. 31 St. N.Y.C
For BEST RESULTS write
Win-R-Wayrt
Box 9 ! 7 Lancing- 4 Michigau.
BKI.PAN Ct>RRK«SP<»NUKNCK CLUB
' b o x 333 anmes S«. Sta., N.Y.C. 18
Sewer
Cleaning
Health
Services
SEUICRS OR DRAINS RAZOR-KLEENED.
Oin'ICIAN-OlTOMKTRIST Eyes exanuned. No digging—If no result®, no charge.
K X I T LOIVELlNESj^
Somewhere there is someone you would OlasiM^ while you wait. Preseriptiona tilled. Electric Roto-Rooter Sewer Service. Phone
like to know. Somewhere there is Home- Quick repairs. Factory on premises, Wil- JA 0-6444; NA 8-0688; TA 2-0123.
one who would like to Snow you. In an liam Bergen, 9109 Church Ave. (Nr. E. 94
(Mcclusive and discreet manner "Social St.) Brooklyn N.Y. D1 3-0318.
Typewriters
Inortduetiou Service" has brouvht
toZENITH TYPEWRITER
irether many disMTiniinaling men and wo- LIBERTY HEALTH STUDIO—M. Sanchiek.
Ph
T.
Dir
Beg.
Pliysiothei'HpiHt
Reducing
men. With gix*at solicitude and prudence
SERVICE
you can enjoy a richer, happier left. Write and corrective postii(<e. Msuisage, sunlamp,
Typewriters tor Exams
steam vapor l>atlis, baking lami>8, eoloiiic
for booklet .SO or phone EN 3-2033
Mo
Charge
for
Piek-Up or Delivery
irrigation. Daily and by appt. 93 Liberty
MAY RICHARDSON
Expert Repair
111 W. 73d St., N.Y.C. l)ly 10 7; Suu. l « - 0 9t. NjY.C. Room 1311 WO 4-5438.
S4 BMt
8t.
New York l « , N.X.
Sport Goitds — Guns —
llr:-..^...
LEGAL
NOTICE
CITATION..—P 514. 1950.—The People
of the State of New York, By the Ora<e of
God Free and Independent, To MARY
CRAWFORD, KATHRYN KENNEDY. EMILY ROSS. ARTHUR ROSS. LILLIAN GIBSON. WALTER
ROSS.
MATILDA
J.
SCOTT, ELIZABETH CRAWFORD, ISABELLA CRAWFORD, also known as ELLA
CRAWFORD, ROSS DAVIDSON. WILLIAM
CRAWFORD
and SAMUEL
RICHARD
CRAWFORD, being the next of kin and
heirs at law of MARION ROSS, deceased,
send greeting:
WHEREAS, MANUFACTURERS TRUST
(X)MPANY, a domestic corporation with
its principal oflice at 05 Broad Street, in
the Borough of Manhattan, the City of
New York, has lately applied to the Surrogate's Court of our County ol New York
to have a certain instrument in writing,
dated the 21st day of December, 1949, relating to both real and personal property,
duly proved as the last will and teetament
of MARION ROSS, deceased, who wa« at
the time of her death a resident of 001
West 116th Street, the County of New
York,
THEREFORE, you and each of you are
cited to show cause before the Surrogate's
Court o< our County of New York, at the
Hall of Records in the County of New
York, on the 3rd day of May, one thousand
nine hundred and fifty, at half-past ten
o'clock in the torenoo:i of that day, why
the said will and testament should not be
admitted to probate as a will of real and
personal property.
Nursing
Home*
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we hare
MON'JXl.VIR Nurrting Home. 78 Midland TYPEWRITER
caused the seal of the Surrogate'*
SPECIALS
$16.00.
AU
Ave., has vaeaneies for convalescent and
Court of the said County of New
Makea Rented Repaired. New Portable*
elderly poople. Nursing caie (night aitd Easy Terms. &o«enbaum's. 1582 Broadway,
York
to l>e hereunto afUsed.
day). Terms ino>l. Supt. France* Harrltion, Brooklm, M. T.
WITNESS. Honorable William T.
Montclair 2-1517.
(Seal.] Collins, Surrogate of our said
County of New York, at said
Watch
Repair
county, tb« 22nd day 9t March
0//i<*
Service
YOUR WAl^liH completely overhauled with
in the year of our Lord one
"UIKL KUIUAY" Ot'FlCK SERVICE
thousand nine hundred and fifty.
1 yr ruuratnee. MAX ARBCTMAN, 580
PHILIP A. DONAHUE,
Conliiieiit^l 149 B
(Suite 5011
6 Ave. Room 2300. PLm» 7 e67&. Cbarvo*
I tow M
Mail—PUouQ—Mosiugcs CO 7
LEGAi. NOTICE
CITATION.—P 773. 1950.—The People of
the State of New York, By the Grace ot
God Free and Independent, To ATTORNEY
GENERAL OP THE STATE OF NEW
YORK: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR
Of
THE COUNTY OF NEW YORK; ANY OB"
THE HEIRS-AT-LAW. NEXT OP KIN,
DISTRIBUTEES OR THEIR LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES of FLORENCE
FISH,,
deceased. WHOSE NAMES AND POST OP-, •
FICE ADDRESSES ARE UNKNOWN: th«
next of kin and heirs at law of FLORENCE FISH, deceased, send greeting:
WHEREAS, The New York Trust Company, whose principal place ol busineaa i«
at No. 100 Broadway. Borough of Manhattan. the City of New York, has lately
applied to the Surrogate's Court of our.
County of New York to have a certain in-'
strument in writing relating to both reiU
and personal property, duly proved as ths
last will and testament of FLORENCE!
FISH, deceased, who was at the time of
her death a resident of No. 1,6 East 58th
Street, Borough of Manhattan! the County
of New York,
THEREFORE, you and eai-h of you ar*
cited to show cause before the Surrogate's
Court of our County of New York, at tho
Hall of Records In the County of New
York, on the &tb day of May, one thousand nine hundred and fifty, at halt-past
ten o'clock In the forenoon of that day.
why the aald will and testament should
not be admitted to probate as a will o i
real and personal property.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we
caused the seal of the Surrogate .
Court of the said County of New
York to be hereunto alllxedU
WITNESS, Honorable William T.
(Seal.] Collins. Surrogate of our said
County of New York, at said
county, the 20th day ot March
in the year ol our Lord oii«
thousand nUte hundred and fifty.
PHILIP A. DONAHUE,
iMurk 9t tbe SurroyateOs Couri.
N E W Y O R K CITY
NEWS
173
Appointments, ' R e p o r t C a r d ' P e r i o d Ends
Promotions in NYC F o r 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 N Y C E m p l o y e e s
Fire Dept. After Protest
Pbrty-five Piremen and
34
U e u t e n a n t s were sworn in by
N Y C P I r e Oommissioner P r a n k J .
Q u a y l e wa F r i d a y following seve r a l hcctic sessions r e g a r d i n g t h e
promotions to Lieutenant.
^
A f t e r a n a g r e e m e n t h a d been
r e a c h e d with t h e City Administ r a t o r t h a t t h e 34 L i e u t e n a n t
positions were t o b e included in
a g r o u p of promotions, n o b u d g e t certificate was o b t a i n a b l e f o r
t h a t purpose a n d firemen f e l t t h a t
.J B u d g e t Director T h o m a s J . P a t t e r ^ s o n was t r y i n g t o avoid c a r r y i n g
L
o u t a promise m a d e by h i g h e r ofli'
cials.
T h e 79 ai>pointments a n d jwom o t i o n s ftrflowed by t w o d a y s t h e
jNTomotion of 94 m e n , also as
p a r t of t h e a g r e e m e n t . O n t h e s e
t h e r e h a d been n o h i t c h . T h e list
tocluded
12 B a t t a l i o n CSiiefs t o
D e p u t y Chief, 34 Capiafais t o B a t talion Chief. 37 U e u t e n a n t s t o
C a p t a i n , a n d 11 P i r e m e n
to
Ueritenant.
%
T h e total f o r t h e week c o m prised 173 a p p o i n t m e n t s a n d p r o motions.
U F O Leads F i g h t f«r L i e u t e n a n t s
T h e U n i f o r m e d P l r e Officers
Association led t h e f i g h t t o h a v e
t h e 34 L i e u t e n a n t jobs included.
It had thought t h a t the promotions were all settled w h e n s u d denly t h e y received word, IndirI
ectly, t h a t 34 L i e u t e n a n t jobs
were h e l d up. T h e olBcers expressed a m a z e m e n t a n d r e s e n t te
m e n t . T h e y protested strongly to
W
M a y o r William O'Dwyer, D e p u t y
M a y o r William Reid a n d M r .
Patterson. The Mayor and the
D e p u t y M a y o r h e a r d t h e i r plea,
which m'as s u p p o r t e d by C o m m i s sioner Quayle. As a result, t h e
h i g h e r officials reversed t h e a c tion of t h e B u d g e t Director.
Staggered Basis Rejected
A c o t m t e r - p r o p o s a l t h a t t h e 34
L i e u t e n a n t promo*.ions b e m a d e ,
b u t on a staggered basis, was r e jected by t h e UPOA, a n d insistence voiced t h a t t h e t o t a l n u m ber of L i e u t e n a n t s be 1,081 b o t h
in t h e c u r r e n t budget, by modification,
a n d also in t h e f o r t h coming budget. W h e n t h e M a y or's executive b u d g e t f o r all dep a r t m e n t s was published on last
T h u r s d a y , i t c o n t a i n e d t h e 1,081
L i e u t e n a n t positions. T h a t confirmed t h e fullness of t h e UTOA
victory.
T h e UPOA explained t h a t in
accepting t h e a g r e e m e n t wriginally it h a d waived its request f o r
t h e full 113 additional L i e u t e n a n t s t h a t a .^udy showed t h e
P i r e I>epai-tment needed.
T h e n a m e s of t h e eligibles on
t h e promotion Msts were published in t h e M a r c h 21 issue of
T h e LEADER,'
T h e U n i f o r m e d F i r e m e n ' s Association h a d h e a r d about t h e
proposed reduction in t h e n u m ber of l i e u t e n a n t s a t a b o u t t h e
s a m e t i m e as did t h e UPOA a n d
immediately
protested
to
the
Mayor, saying t h a t if t h e Lieutenancie.«? weren't restored in t h e
budget, t h e c«se would b e p u t to
t h e people of t h e City. A c o n f e r ence was held by a UFA delegation a n d Commissioner Quayle.
The
Commissioner
supported
t h e i r plea.
Spriog is ExcitHi at... Transportation Board
Gives Holy Days Off
m
tne encnanttna
^ YEAR lOUMO RESOftT
C*At»it U m « Ort^kHlta
Ml S»wt* • li^Uit SUdU HatMt
T M M CWUU f C*lf Dririai JUk^
Yacatioii Now. at EasUrtiaia
n Moaro* 4421. IT T Otf LO «•««<»
SOCIAL e s o u p TOMtaHT «l •
€»•»> 8«B.. Wed. * rri, »-U r.lt.1
BOMBA. TANGO.
PRIVATE LESSONS DAILY i.**
i,
RHOB*: BB 4-9M1. C«a KET»^ t-M r.M.
LMC Pridmy U Mmmftk. Cm^t Miakt
133 E«s< 61>I S I . CPufc
l>SYl-HOANAL.V81S
AND MOKAL, VAI.L'ES
A Sj'piposiiini
AprU 5lh. I 9 6 0
Hniry HIIIINOII llotvl
Brtlnesdaj, 8:15
Mil W. 5~tli Streot
1>R. HAROLD KKI.MAN, Mixlerator
Dr. KAKKN HORNBY
Dr. MDKIKK IVIMKV
Dr. AI.KXANDKR R. MARTIN
Dr. FKKDKKU'K A. WKIKK •
rioketB
ea4!h — HESKRVE NOW!
Send check to AOAAP. Dept. CS.
220 W. 9«th St. NTC 25
AuHpices: Auxiliary Cuuiioil to the A sen.
for tlio Ailvaiu-enient ol Psychoiuiitlysis
^
WILLIAMS LAKE HOTEL
aver aire a day iiM-lu«W8 room.
iiiealH aiiil all your fuvorite eiiorts.
Horsea, bioycle«, boatB, cunoes. Finnish
steam bath«. Sun cfeok, bar. daneinr.
[f you plan a vaoatiun or honrynioou,
tet us know «oon. Due to <lnirehe«.
SCANDINAVIAN MANAGEMENT
Box 3. Bouandale. UUter County, N. Y.
Ask for booklet. Phone U08<>ntlale 3141.
A resolution adopted by t h e
B o a r d of T r a n s p o r t a t i o n p e r m i t s
a n n u a l a d m i n i s t r a t i v e a n d clerical employees, if of t h e C h r i s t i a n
f a i t h , t o be off w i t h pay. Holy
T h u r s d a y a n d Good F r i d a y . E m ployees of t h e J e w i s h f a i t h were
allowed off yesterday ( M o n d a y ) ,
a n d will be off S a t u r d a y . April
8, because of Passover.
T h e s a m e provisions apply t o
General Superintendent, Superint e n d e n t . M a i n t e n a n c e Engineer,
Assistant M a i n t e n a n c e Engineers,
Junior Maintenance
Engineers
and
Maintenance
Engineering
Assistant.
Any empJoyee g r a n t e d t h e r e ligious holy days off who h a s to
work on a n y si.ich d a y will be p e r m i t t e d some o t h w day off with
pay. B u t if t h e holy days fall
within a vacaition period, t h e n
t h e r e is n o addition to t h e n u m ber of days of vacation with pay.
l y MORTON YARMON
T h e service r a t i n g period f o r
100,000 N Y C emirfoyees e n d e d
last F r i d a y . By M a y 1 t h e p e r sonnel b o a r d of eacJi d e p a r t m e n t
m u s t post a list of n a m e s of t h o s e
employees w h o were r e p o r t e d f o r
o t h e r t h a n s t a n d a r d r a t i n g . Em^
ployees whose n a m e s a r e n o t i n cluded on t h e list received t h e
s t a n d a r d r a t i n g . Those listed m a y
inquire of t h e i r personnel r e p r e sentative a s t o t h e reason f o r t h e
r e p o r t . T h i s is also t h e i r wily
m e a n s of a s c e r t a i n i n g w h e t h e r
t h e y were r e p o r t e d above or below average.
T h e r a t i n g s a r e i m p o r t a n t to
employees w h e n t h e y compete in
p r o m o t i o n exams, in which record
a n d seniority t o g e t h e r count as
m u c h a s t h e e x a m score.
M a r g a r e t Reilly, chief of t h e
Service R a t i n g B u r e a u of t h e
Municipal CivU Service Commis-
HIP Reopens
Enrollment
O n April 15
NYC employees a n d d e p e n d e n t s
who h a v e n o t yet enrolled in t h e
H I P - B l u e Cross h e a l t h p r o g r a m
will h a v e a n o p p o r t u n i t y to do so
beginning S a t u r d a y , April 15, E.
Michael W h i t e . H I P ' s
general
manager, annuonced.
T h i s will be fiist general r e opening c a m p a i g n conducted
jointly by t h e H I P a n d Blue Cross
p l a n s in City d e p a r t m e n t s since
t h e first group of m u n i c i p a l e m ployees a n d t h e i r families began
receiving medical a n d hospital
service on April 1, 1947, Mr. W h i t e
said.
Reopenings will be conducted in
practically every City d e p a r t m e n t
f r o m April 15 to April 30. All
eligible employees who
enroll
themselves a n d their d e p e n d e n t s
d i u i n g t h a t period m a y do so
w i t h o u t h a v i n g to u n d e r g o physical e x a m i n a t i o n s .
Blue
Cross
waiting periods will also be waived
in t h e i r behalf. T h e y will be e n titled to complete medical a n d
hospital c a r e beginning J u l y 1,
1950.
All city employees, except provisionals, will be eligible t o enroll
if t h e y h a v e completed t h r e e
m o n t h s of service by July 1. .
T h e City pays about half t h e
base p r e m i u m of both t h e H I P
a n d t h e Blue Cross Hospital P l a n
for all City employee members.
More t h a n 200,000 m u n i c i p a l
workers a n d d e p e n d e n t s a r e now
covered by t h e City's H e a l t h P r o g r a m , t h e largest of its kind in t h e
country.
.*Wiinar: Auspices Auxiliary Coiinfil tu ASAII.
f«»r the Advam-t'iueiH of Fsvehoanalvsis
^'LITTIRAHY F!GLR!:S IN THK LIGHT
OF MODERN PSYCHOANALYSIS"
"WOMEN HITIIOIT 1.0VK" Itrila V»n Bitrk,
"SYMniONV PASTORALK"
LOUIH DrRo«.iH,
"DKATH OF A SAl.KSMAN'
Bruianiin R^rkrr,
"THK TKIAL"
Ab« I'iBHkjr,
"I'AVII.ION OF WOMEN"
J. VuliiiierhauH^n,
M.D.
M.I).
M.I).
M.D.
M.I).
slon, circulated notices t o be p o s t ed by t h e d e p a r t m e n t s w i t h t h e
list of n a m e s . T h e notices gave
t h e rating basis:
Less t h a n t h r e e months—^no
rating.
T h r e e m o n t h s b u t less t h a n n i n e
months—plus
p e r cent.
N!lne m o n t h s t o 12 m o n t h s —
plus 1 per cent.
M a y Appeal
Any person whose n a m e a p p e a r s on t h e list a n d who believes
t h a t h e or s h e is entitled to b e t t e r t h a n a .standard r a t i n g m a y
file a w r i t t e n a p p e a l w i t h i n t h e
WONDERFUL NEW
ARCO COURSES
HERE IS A LISTING OF ARCO
COURSES for PENDING
EXAMINATIONS.
INQUIRE ABOUT OTHER
COURSES
Accowataai & Aadifet . $2.00
AfnerieaH Foreign
Service
$2.50
• Auto Moehiiiist
Mechanic
$2.00
• AHto-Mach. Mechanic $2.00
•
Bookkeeper
$2.50
•
BNS Mointoiner (A « B) $2.00
• Carpenter
$2.00
Census
Clerk-Enumerator
$2.00
• Civil Service Arithmetic
and Vocobalary
$1.50
•
Civil Service Handbook $1.00
• Civil Service Rights
$3.00
• Clerk. CAF
$2.00
• Clerk. CAF.4 to CAF-7. $2.00
• Clerk. Grade 2
$2.00
• Cl*rk. Grade 3
$2.00
•
Clerk.Typist.
Stenographer
$2.00
Comptometer Operator
How to Become on
Expert
SI .25
Dietitian
$2.00
Electrician
$2.50
Electrical Engr
$2.00
Engineering Tests
.... $2.50
File Clerk
$2.00
Fingerprint Technician $2.00
R r e n a n (F.D.)
$2.50
Fire Lieutenant
$2.50
Gardener
Asst. Gardener
$2.00
General Test Guide
$2.00
G-Man
$2.00
Guard Patrolman
$2.00
H. S. Diploma Test
$2.00
Hospital Attendant
$2.00
Insurance Ag't-Broker _ $3.00
•
Internal Revenue Agent $2.00
(~} Junior Accountant
$2.50
Q Janitor Custodian
$2.00
(~] J r . Administrative
Technician
$2.00
|~1 J r . Management Asst. $2.00
Q J r . Protessiondl Asst..... $2.00
Q
n
n
•n
••
••
•
n
•n
••
n
Starting Wednesilay, April 12, 8 ; 30 p.m.
(5) roiisci-ittive Wwlncwiu.vs
At: .4C'AAr llciulquiirtrni
SPECIAL
Write D.pt. I.
SUMMER
MOW AT
$50
FREE!
RATES
M A Y THRU A U G U S T
AFARTMENTS
Touts TO IStAa.
FOftMfRLY 250 Mft WEEK
HOUYWOOI>S LARGEST APARTMENT HOTEL
DNIECTLY OVetLOOKING ATLANTIC OCEAN
H E N R I APTS.
•
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Q)
•
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••
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Jr. Statisticion and
Stotisticol Clerk „ ... $2.S0
Librorion
. . $2.00
Mechanical Engr.
... $2.00
Mechanic-Learner
$2.00
Messenger ... ............. $2.00
Miscellaneons OtRce
Machine Operator
$2.00
Motsr Veh. Lie. Exam ..$2.50
Observer in
Meteorology
$2.00
Office Appliance Optr. . $2.00
Oil Burner Installer
$2.50
Patrol Inspector
$2.00
Patrolman (P.D.J
$2.50
Playground Director
$2.00
Plumber
$2.00
Police Lient.-Captain.- $2.50
Postal Clerk-Carrier and
Railway Mail-Clerk
$2.50
Practice *or Army Tests $2.00
Proctice for Civil Service
Promotion
$2.00
Real Estote Broker
$3.00
Resident BIdg. Supt
$2.00
Scientllie, Engineering
ft Biological Aid
$2.00
School Cl>rk
$2.00
Sergeant fP.D.)
$2.50
Social Investigator ,.....$2.00
Special Agent
$2 00
S t a t e Trooper
$2.00
Stationary Engnr. &
Fireman
$2.50
Steno Typist (CAF 1-7) $2.00
Steno (Gr 3 4)
$2.00
Storekeeper (CAF 1-7) $2 00
Student Nurse
$2.00
Student Aid
$2.00
Surface Line Operator $2.00
Telephone Operator
$2.00
Title Examiner
$2.00
Typist-Steno Practice
$2.50
Vocabulary Spelling
and Grammar
.... $1.50
U. S. Govt. Jobs
.50
ON TNE lEACH
HOLLYWOOP. PLORILA
W i t h Every N . Y . C . Ar«« B o o k —
Y o u W i l l R e c e i v e an I n v a l u a b I *
New A r c o " O u t l i n e C h a r t
of
N e w York C i t y
Government.**
i ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPoiTh
LEADER BOOK STORE
9 7 D u a n e St.. N e w York 7 , N .
COMl>l.k:TB HOMM ON THE OtJEAN WITH A "GAHDKN BEACH" Tl^ KKEP
YOU GLORIOUSLY CONTI:NTE1> UNDER FM)RU)A SUN. EVERY MODERN
CONVENIENCJB EOR OUTDOOR AND INDOOR HAi'l'INESS!
Beach CubaiiiM) at uu extra cost • Private I'atio • 4U0 left of tx'uutiftil uci-uii
Iroiitaife • I-^piuiiaive lawn* uul tropical llpwcriiir plants • HumlrtUff of recliiiiiitr Sulk I'otii, I.UUIIKU Chairs • OIM-II Air Uarbr<'ttt« I'it overloukiiiK octan •
Suluriuni, Privato Suii Dtcks • Lifc^iiiirit and li< iwh Atciuliant.
LainitMi fattlitire for liirKM- ratiieriiiKa in
bi ttruoiii.
bath tlciuxe apai(nii'iit8.
• U o iwo "very •pccial" peiithoute apartiiunts. Early r('«^r%ationk atlvitable.
Worldwide Irsvel by tea wm air. Hotel
at't.i>iuBKidatiuna arraiiKed. AU leatunw
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BKKOLL HOW!
15-day period f o r his or h e r d e p a r t m e n t , directly w i t h t h e C o m mission. with s u p p o r t i n g evidence.
T h e a p p e a l by a n employee
whose n a m e is on t h e list should
n o t be m a d e imtil a f t e r h e or
s h e h a s received t h e r a t i n g c e r tificate f r o m t h e
Commission,
T h i s will c o m e weJl w i t h i n t h e 15d a y period following t h e
first
posting of t h e notice. T h e end of
t h a t period d e t e r m i n e s t h e l a s t
day to appeal. Because t h e lists
go u p on d i f f e r e n t dates, t h e l a s t
d a t e to appeal differs a m o n g d e partments.
PieaM send me
Y.
copiti of books checked above.
I anclose check or money order tor $
Add tSc for postage. Allow 6 days for delivery.
35c for 24 hour special delivery.
No C. O. D.'i
Name
Address
City
Sfafe
Past*' Sixteen
C I V I L
S E R V I C E
I. E
A
D
E
R
Tuesday,
April
4,
1930
N E W Y O R K CITY N E W S
Bonus F r e e z e
Effect A n a l y z e d
(Continued
from Page 1)
c a m p a i g n it waged for t h e freezi n g t h e bonus." All t h e employee
o r g a n i z a t i o n s h a d been as one on
t h e bonus-freeze issue.
T h e freezing h a s wide r a m i f i c a tions. tSee editorial, P a g e 8.1
T h e freeze affects not only t h e
p e n s i o n — w h i c h is t h e p a r t of t h e
r e t i r e m e n t allowance financed by
t h e City—but also t h e a n n u i t y ,
w h i c h is paid for by t h e employees
t h r o u g h deductions f r o m t h e i r pay
checks. T h e boniis was excluded
f r o m all r e t i r e m e n t reckoning, but
since t h e City will include it in t h e
pension c o m p u t a t i o n , t h e employees m u s t increase t h e i r a n n u i t y
a c c o u n t , too, beginning July 1.
T h e s a m e percentage t h a t applied
t o t h e i r f o r m e r base pay applies
t o t h e higher base p a y ; they'll beg i n paying into their a n n u i t y a c c o u n t on t h e basis of $350 more
base pay.
I n his budget message to t h e
B o a r d of E s t i m a t e a n d t h e Council
M a y o r O'Dwyer wrote:
" I a m recommending, effective
J u l y 1, 1950, t h a t t h e r e m a i n i n g
p o r t i o n of t h e t e m p o r a r y c o s t - o f living a d j u s t m e n t be absobed into
basic pay. Although t h e total sala r y of no employee will be i n creased, t h e i r pension r i g h t s will
be greater."
T h e budget did not c o n t a i n a n y
general salary Increases, T h i s was
a d i s a p p o i n t m e n t t o t h e employees, but t h e r e h a d been i n t i m a tions t h a t no general raises would
be approved. B u t t h e y ' r e still i n t e n t on obtaining p a y raises a n d
.some organizations will a t t e m p t to
o b t a i n t h e m t h r o u g h modification
of t h e budget a f t e r J u l y 1.
T h e increased quota of P a t r o l m e n sought by t h e Police D e p a r t m e n t was denied a n d 800 P a t r o l m a n a p p o i n t m e n t s are on t h e
a g e n d a for t h e n e x t fiscal y e a r ;
t h e Fire D e p a r t m e n t quota also
will be t h e same as now, while t h e
new positions, of which 872 are
specified a n d some h u n d r e d s of
others speculative, will go t o dep a r t m e n t s f a c i n g emergencies. T h e
largest n u m b e r of specific new
jobs in a single title is for 429
more Social Investigators, because
of t h e heavy caseloads expected by
the Welfare Department.
The
H e a l t h D e p a r t m e n t is to get 20
more Public H e a l t h Nurses, while
25 Building Inspectors will be a d d ed in t h e D e p a r t m e n t of Housing
a n d Buildings. T h e speculative
new jobs depend on w h e t h e r new
hospitals will be ready in t h e n e x t
in the next fiscal year.
It took a heap of doinq to accomplish the 1950-S1 executive budget for NYC. One City official, who
didn't get nearly oil he wanted, nevertheless described it as a "miracle budget." For a few weeks Mayor
William O'Dwyer went into his budget retreot. Front row. from left, Budget D i r ^ t o r Thomas J. Potterson,
Mayor O'Dwyer. Deputy Mayor Willicm Reid and As sistant Budget Director Aljroham D. Beame. Rear row.
Mildred Pray, secretary to Mr. Patterson; Williom F. Shea, Chief Exominer of ttie Budget Director's office;
Jomes Curran, occountotit, and Loretta Colgal, secretary fro Mr. Beome.
Jerry Finkelstein's First Budget Request Is A p p r o v e d by Mayor
(Continued
from Page 1 U
T h e increase in budget allowing
C h a i r m a n of t h e Commission is these new a p p o i n t m e n t s a m o u n t s
J e r r y Finkelstein, f o r m e r publisiier to $229,933. T h e t o t a l budget for
Of the Civil Service LEADER. t h e Commission is $539,931.
Said Mr. Finkelstein this week:
Since coming into office, Mr. F i n - " T h e principles of t h e m e r i t syskelstein h a s already procured pay t e m will prevail in this d e p a r t raises for 24 m e m b e r s of his engi- m e n t . "
neering and administrative staff.
New York City's newspapers
. Among t h e new positions in the have lauded the work of t h e City
City P l a n n i n g Commission's b u d - P l a n n i n g Commission u n d e r its
g e t for 1950-51 are Assistant City new C h a i r m a n ,
P l a n n e r , A.ssociate City P l a n n e r , j T h e New York Times, in a n ediCity P l a n n i n g Director, Director of • torial dated M a r c h 27, 1950, .stated
R e s e a r c h , Ecoonmist, Senior S t a - ; as follows:
"A c h a n g e of pace a n d a clearer
tistician, R e s e a r c h Assistant. Se- j
n i o r Civil Engineer, Assistant Civil I .sense of direction are readily visEngineer, Civil Engineer, Civil E n - I ible within t h e P l a n n i n g CommisRineering D r a f t s m a n , J u n i o r Ar- : sion. Although we criticized tlie
chitects, Clerks, S t e n o g r a p h e r s , ! a p p o i n t m e n t of Mr. O'Dwyer's
Typists, a n d Research Assistants. ' c a m p a i g n m a n a g e r , Mr. Pinkel-
stein, as C h a i r m a n of t h e C o m mission, we are pleased to a d m i t
t h a t h e seems t h u s f a r to be a c t i n g
with courage a n d vigor. O u r i m pression is t h a t h e is working h a r d
a t t h e job, t h a t t h e r e is a new
mood within t h e Commission a n d
a new confidence outside t h e Commission in w h a t c a n be done with
P l a n n i n g . I t is most i m p o r t a n t
t h a t this e n t h u s i a s m be e n c o u r aged."
T h e New York Herald Tribune,
in a n editorial d a t e d M a r c h 19,
1950, s t a t e d as follows:
"New York City needs a n d deserves t h e best p l a n n i n g it c a n
get h a s been t h e city's s p o n t a n e ous response to t h e leadership
J e r r y Finkelstein h a s given t h e
Ctiy P l a n n i n g Commission. Nearly
YOU HAVE HEARD OF —
Stop the
Music"
BUT...
"Break
the Bank'
'Share
the Wea/f/i'
every responsible civic o r g a n i z a tion h a s endorsed t h e need for a n
e x p a n d e d p r o g r a m in t h i s vital
field."
Mayor 0'E>wyer said t h e City
P l a n n i n g Commission u n d e r Its
new C h a i r m a n . J e r r y Finkelstein,
a n d with a s u p p l e m e n t e d s t a f f ,
"will a p p r o a c h t h e problem of a
completed a n d i n t e g r a t e d M a s t e r *
P l a n with e n t h u s i a s m , o p t i m i s m ^
a n d vision,"
I
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• Light, Floxiblo
Rubber Hose
MASY T^RMSf
LEE APPLIANCE. Inc.
1333 • 6th AVENUE
a t 54tli St., N. Y. C.
LO. 4-6216—JU. 6-0039
TRACHTMAN-SHEFTS
MnnHfuvimvrs
• 14" Noazle
• K-Horsepower
Motor
• Full Year's Oueurantee on every
part
• Automatic Nozzle
Adjustment and
Revolving Brush
• 7-piece Attachment Set
• Broad Beam Headlight
'riiiif I'u.Miii'iils .Virungfd
liiiincdiiiti' th'livery
1272 BEDFORD AVENUI
at Fulton St., B'klyn.
STerling 9-2840
COMK tN AND StlE OIU (O-Mfl.KTK LINK Oi' WKSTlNlMlOtWI.. Tt.l KvTHm^TM
turs
134 WEST 29fh STREET # N E W YORK I. N. Y.
' ' M O N F : PF
Third PNte
Stunning 4-Pieee
Silver-Blue Mink Scarf
y o u CAN BE SUI^E..if i T ' s W f e s t i n t j h o u s e
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