_ C v u ^ I Last Call to Test S ^ A A H X I I U For Filling Jobs as P L AutoLicenseExaminer L I E APE Americans Vol. XI—No. 3 8 Largest Weekly for Tuesday, May 30, Public Employees 1950 Price Five Cents See Page 14 $51 TYPIST AND STENO LLEDBYU.S. JOBS TO By HERBERT M. BEKON The exam for Steno and Typist will be opened by the U. S. Civil Service Commission, to fill jobs in New York and New Jersey, in June, as promised, possifContinued on Page 15) Official A n s w e r s t o Q u e r i e s S. Offers O n 5 5 - Y e a r R e t i r e m e n t Plan U.Illustrator ON OLD 55 YEAR RETIREMENT proximately IV2 times the norPLAN) I mal 60 year contribution rate. Reirular contributions under new Deficiency Contributions: plan: If one became a member beUpon receipt of application to fore July 1, 1943, 1% will be come under Section 86-a, the added to his new 55 year rate, employer and the member will as a token payment toward his be advised as to the new con"deficiency." If he became a iribution rate which will be apmember after July 1, 1943, V2% will be added. Later he will be informed of the full deficiency or rate required to liquidate his deficiency by age 55. He may then either: (1) Pay the deficiency in a lump sum. (2) Pay a deficiency rate in addition to the 55 year rate— or (3) Continue to pay rate first s t a t e Armory eirployees may formity in rules, the "flexible" assigned, which includes 1% or look forward to significant im- working day, the low take-home '2% toward deficiency, the lat(Continued on Page 4) provements from the 1951 Legislater until deficiency is liquidated. ture. This prediction was made by Assemblyman Roman and Senator Scanlon at a meeting of the Metropolitan chapter, Armory employees, Civil Service Employees Association, last Wednesday evening. William F. McDonough, executive representative of the Association, also predicted improvements, telling the group of legislative action which they could look forBy H. J. BERNARD Samuel H. Galston, Director of ward to. Mr. McDonough stated With the intention of producing Examinations, said that the secthat a regular pay increase and promotion plan were in the mak- a larger eligible list than an equal ond 50 questions were a little ing. He gave it as his opinion that weight for all the 100 questions more difficult than the first 50, t h e Governor's personnel relations in the Patrolman (P. D.) written therefore the Commission felt jusorder applies to the Armory work- test would provide, the NYC Civil tified in increasing the weight in ers, even though they are not un- Service Commission assigned a the second group. weight of 1.2 to the second 50 The first estimate was that der the civil service law. questions, while applying the 8,350 had passed the test. It was MacDonald, Alexander Speak standard weight of 1 to the fiist later stated that this figure will Francis A. MacDonald, 2d vice- 50. The Commission desires an form weight of 1 per cent per president of the Associaiton, de- eligible list, so far as practicable, be exceeded, indicating that a uniscribed the early stages of organi- that wouldn't necessitate another question was the tentative figure zation among the Armory employ- Patrolman exam to be open until assigned and the idea of increasees, asked for the elimination of 1953 at the earliest. ing the number of eligibles by giv"free riders," and gave the slogan The eligible list in the current ing more weight to each question of "Unity" as the means for State exam is expected to T)e promul- in the second group was an afteremployees to achieve their aims. gated soon after the first of the thought. He said that by their own strength year. With a maximum legal life The medical test of those who would Armory employees win new of four years, the list would exgains. pire early in 1955. Sidney Alexander, chairman of The combined weights in the t h e Metropolitan Conference, ex- written test held March 25 would plained the relationship of confer- permit anybody who got all the ence to chapter. answers right to attain a percenMaxwell Lehman, LEADER edi- tage of 110, but it was said that The annual service rating retor, reviewed the working condi- there was no such result, and. be- ports of the NYC departments tions of Armory employees, and sides, if anybody gets more than are being received by the Rating stated that such conditions would 100 in any NYC test, under the Bureau of the Civil Service Comnot be tolerated in private indus- Rules that make 100 the maxi- mission. All employees in the try. He mentioned the lack of uni- mum, he is rated at 100. competitive class, excepting the uniformed forces of the Police and Fire Departments, are reported. By June 15 receipt of the reports should be completed, said Margaret Reilly, head of the Rating Bureau. ALBANY, May. 29—The following material on the 55-year retirem e n t plan is official. It has been prepared by the State Retirement System, and is released as an official statement from Comptroller Prank C. Moore. CONTRIBUTIONS OF MEIVIBERS UNDER AGE 55 (AND NOT NOW Advances Predicted For Armory Workers If payments are made under (1) or (2), h e may revert to the 60 year rate at age 55. CONTRIBUTIONS OF MEMBERS UNDER AGE 55 WHO ARE CONTRIBUTING UNDER THE OLD 55 YEAR RETIREMENT PLAN— Regular Contributions under Section 86-a: Upon receipt of application to transfer to Section 86-a, the employer and the member will be advised as to the new contribution rate which will be approximately IV2 times the normal 60 year contribution rate. Deflciency Contributions: Later, the member will be advised of the deficiency or excess which exists in his account. If a deficiency exists, the member will be advised of the rate re(Coniinued on Page i) Jobs in State An examination to fill jobs as Illustrator, GS-4 through GS-7, at $2,875 to $3,825, was announced by the Recorder, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, U. S. Navy, Special Devices Center, Office of Naval Research, Port Washington, N. Y. All of the vacancies are in various Federal Government agencies in NYC, and the counties of Nassau, Suffolk, Rockland and Westchester. All competitors must show from thiee to five years, depending on the grade of the position, of technical art experience in design, lettering, lay out, and illustration. Successful completion of college work in illustrative design or commercial art may be substituted year for year for the required experience, up to a maxium of foiuyears. Application forms may be obtained from first and second class post offices, excepting New York, N. Y., the counties of Nassau, SufI folk, Rockland, and Westchester, i One may apply also to the Direcj tor. Second U. S. Civil Service passed the written is now in prog-1 Region, 641 Washington Street, ress. The competitive p h y s i c a l s | New York 14, N. Y., or the Rewill be held in Van C o r t l a n d t i colder, address above. Applications must be on file Park, beginning possibly on July with the Recorder not later than 10. Thursday, June 8. N Y C Rescaling Increases N u m b e r of Police Eligibles Departments Send in' Service Rating Reports 4 - D a y Holidays Given State Aides; Sets P r e c e d e n t By MAXWELL LEHMAM ALBANY, May 29 — F o r State employees there will toe two fourday holidays this year, because of administrative leave granted for the Mondays preceding Memorial Day and the Fourth of July, and the fact that Saturday and Sunday precede these days off. A memorandum sent last week by President J. Edward Conway, of the State Civil Service Commission, to all departments, set the precedent. It said that, "consistent with the maximum of essential service," all State administrative offices are to be operated at half staff on Monday, May 29 and Monday, July 3. Thus half of the employees would receive the four days off in a row at one time and the other half The Second Regional Ollice of the next time. the U. S. Civil Service CommisThe memorandum contained alsion received about 3,000 application for the Admipistrative Assistant exam. The test will be held on June 3 for filling Jobs in New York and New Jersey. 4 , 0 8 2 A p p l y for 3,000 SerA Jobs as N Y C L a b o r e r Jobs Administrative Aides The number of applicants for NYC jobs as Laborer totalled 4,082. The applications were received for only three days last week by the Civil Service Commission. More than 100 jobs will be filled soon after the list is promulgated. T h e position is in the Labor Class. Applicants who pass ai'e given a tentative standing on the list in the order of their applications. After veteran preference claims are verified, the preference law applied. This puts disabled veterans at the top of the list, non-disabled veterans next and non-veterans last, all in the order of their applications. The jobs pay from $1,860 to $2,330 a- year, or $35 to $46 a week, depending on the department in which they exist. In general, the departments that pay the higher salaries to laborers require a larger humber of working days. To become eligible, a candidate must pass a physical t t and demonstrate tiiat he can read auql write Englisli. so the recommendation that "whenever practicable, similar arrangement may be applied to the institutional employees." Mental Hygiene Statement The Mental Hygiene Department has interpreted this last statement broadly. All institution heads have received an official document reading. "Every employee is to be granted either May 29 or July 3 as a day off. If this arrangement will in your judgment impair the maintenance of essential services of your institution, employees required to work on both days will be allowed one day off in lieu thereof. Please be guided accordingly." Other departments interpreted President Conway's memorandum in the same way. Exam Study Books STUDV BOOK for Administras t u d y books for Social Investitive Assistant Officer. $2.50. Exam Interviewer, to be held by U. S. on Saturday. gator, Employment June 3. Candidates will be rated Assistant Unemployment Insuron the basis of the « d t t o n test 1 ance Claims Examiner, Practical alonfv LEADER Book Store, 97 tt . Dh-ao S t m . N: w Yo»k 7, N. Y. Nurse, Motor Vehicle License Ex1 I See acivt. P. 15. aminer and other popular exams are on sale at The LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y. two blocks north of City Hall, just west of Broadway. S(>e advfr(i';o!no?-itH). 15. ^ Page C I V I t IVo S E R V I C E L E A B E R TiiMay, Mmj 90, f f M STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS An Interne in '32, Dr. Brill Now Heads Craig Colony Diners C h e e r H a n l e y ' s P l e a for E m p l o y e e Gains Sy NAOMI SCOTT "I look forward to the day when every New York State civil service worker will earn as much as h e could in private industry," said Lieut. Governor Joe R. Hanley to more than 300 enthusiastic listeners at the 40th anniversary banquet of The Civil Service Employees Association chapters of Syracuse and Onondaga County. The event was held at the Onandaga Hotel, Syracuse. In the past eight years great progress has been made in sal- TYPEWRITERS RENTED and SOLD Latest Models — Royals. Underwoods, Remingtons, L. C. Smiths, etc. Standard and Portables Brand New Rented for CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS or HOME PRACTICE NJ'feried r i i j i m i i t s AH I.OW an weekly Best of Service and Dependability J. E. Albright & Co. •33 IROADWAY, N. Y. C. Near 13th St. Telephon* Alfoiiqain 4-4t2t LOWEST COST I'KRSONAl. 6 Only C H E C K I N G A C C O U N T S PER CHECK Q No charge No minimum for or call Booklet, for l)epl. WILLIAM ST., cor I.. Fulton ooL7>eK Always fresh SQOO " If^haf makis a court sttnotr*ph*T ti'orth $6,000 a year? Th« buie rMUHi i> F A S T E R S H O R T H A N D . Fatttr shorthand apcns many doort ta IUCCMI. And th« s«cr«t of shorthand tpotd U ropoatod practico with tho rifht kind of dictation. With S T E N O S P E E O DICTATION RECORDS you can havo America'* molt (ffoctive practice dktation riaht la your own homo. Whether your poal be in Civil Sorvleo. Butinoti. Convention or Court Reportini. S T E N O S P E E O can help you tot there. S T E N O S P E E O DICTATION RECORDS are now availablo at ipood* of M . M . IM. II*. IM. 130. 140. and ISO wpm. Only $1.25 each postpaid. CompMo set. 80 t* ISO wpm. $•. Freo iiteraturo on roqueot. SuKcu Won't Wail—Mail Your Oriir Tnlay STEHOSFEEt, INC., 1 4 1 MMABWAY, N . Y . S l.liADEIt I ' l i b l i s l u ' i i e v i T y Tueiiiluy by m i l . S|;KVI«K I . K A D K K , inc. 1)7 OiiiliH- St., N r w Y o r k 7 . N . Y . 'IVIt'iiliuiK': H K e k i i i t i i i :i-<l<IIO Entorad as socond-clau matter Octob « r 2, I 9 3 f , a t t h * p o s t o t t i c o at N o w Y o r k , N . Y.. u n d o r t h o A c t of M a r c h 3, I 8 7 f . M o m b o r i of Audit l u r o a u of C i r c u l a t i o n s . IVr % fur fi $900 !)leals At All 9 o r A r o G o o d Food Stores CHOPS • Always Tasty Genuine Panama Sailor Straws Wasserman Did It Again! Free N o t a r y Service Notary service is available free of charge at the office of the Civil Service Leader, 97 Duane Street, New York City (directly across the street from the Civil Service Commission). V ^ 8iibk<rlptiui) P r K e f J l i n l i t i i l u u l t'lii****** Went her St. $6,000 SKUVICK Hot Z'RpiOK • N K W V O K K 7, N . V . MeiiibPi- FiHit'i'iil D i ' i i o s i t I i i s u r a i i o e C o r p . civil. For TREAT CRISPS rliarise HELLENIC BANK TRUST CO. r i i o i U ' K K «-0!MM» 3 e n , O n ondaga Sanatorium; James Furlong, State Armory. Prior to the dinner, Fred I. Hungerford of the New York State Employees Retirement System spoke at a meeting at t h e College of Forestry. He discussed the new age-55 retirement plan. deposits Ideal rile 139 aries, hours and working condi- cessfully since April, 1948, at the tions, he declared, and will con- College of Forestry and its merit jtiniie until employees have all the has been recognized by colleges 1 rights they deserve and their f u - and universities outside of the tures fully protected. Diners State. cheered the statement of this goal. Among the guests were chapter "Of course," he added, "you presidents Joseph A. Settinerl, must remember this. I'm only the Onandaga; Fred J. Krumman, Lieutenant Governor. I can't do State School; Harold F . W e b b , O n anything personally to accomplish ondaga Sanatorium; Mauro Scithese things except to talk to the ancalepre, State Armory; Helen Governor or the Budget Director. Musto, State School, Ithaca; and But that much I can and will do." Melba Binn, Rochester. Mr. Hanley emphasized that the Association officers present inState of New York employs more cluded Piancis A. MacDonald, people than any institution with- 2nd vice president, J. Allyn in its borders. Stearns, 3rd vice president; David "The merit system has proven M. Schneider, 5th vice president; itself a remarkable success," he Charlotte M. Clapper, secretary; and Harry G. Fox, treasurer. said. Mayor Thomas J. Corcoran of Also present were Isabella O'- surance Fund; Juliet Pendergast, Syracuse congratulated the As- Hagan, representative of the De- Board of Education; Catherine sociation on its anniversary and partment of State on the Board O'Connell, New York State Eminformed employees of his city's of Directors; Kenneth A. Valen- p 1 o y m e n t Service; Catherine government that their jobs are tine, representative of the Public Thornton, City Clerk's office; Eva secure, Service Commission on the board; Agronin, Workmen's Compensa"As long as 5'ou are filling a Edith Fruchtendler, secretary of Mon Board; George Snyder, Syra- ' job here," he said, "you won't be jthe Metropolitan Conference and :use State School; Kathryn Pur- i removed for political reasons by the Public Service Chapter, NYC any Mayor or any other official." Rajrmond Castle of Syracuse, and Mrs. Castle; and Charles Hall, T r i b u t e f r o m Dr. T o l m a n representative of the Department Toastmaster Prank J. Costello, I of Public Works. former Mayor of Syracuse, said I Conference Chairmen in attendthat the turnout of employees j ence were Raymond Munroe, from Onandaga County was the Western Conference; Sidney Allargest in the history of the coun- exander, Metropolitan Conferty. ence; and Mr. MacDonald, SouthJohn P. Powers of NYC. 1st ern Conference. vice president of the Association, Other guests were State Senapaid tribute to Lieut. Governor Hanley and to the employees of tor John H. Hughes and Assemthe County on behalf of Dr. Frank blymen Lawrence Rulison, DonL. Tolman, Association president. ald M. Mead and Searles G. Jesse D, McParland, co-chair- Schultz. Charles R. Culyer, Association man of the Association's membership committee also gi'eeted the field representative, and Clyde guests and was introduced from Morris, treasurer of the Metropolitan Conference, were present. the floor. Co-chairmen of the banquet Award P r e s e n t e d to Carroll were Doris I^eFever, Syracuse Henry A. Cohen, chairman of chapter. State Division, and Vernthe Slate Merit Award Board, de- on Tapper, Onondaga chapter, scribed the work of the Board County Division. The chapters of and presented $400 and a certifi- both divisions joined to stage the cate of Meritorious Service to A. event as a unity demonstration, i J. Carroll, an employee in the Members of the social commit- i College of Forestry -at Syracuse, tee included Ann Munro, Mediafor developing a detailed func- tion Board; Alyce Corey, Syracuse | tional accounting system for the Public Works; Ethel Chapman, constituent colleges and .«ichools State Public Works: Edith Schroeof the State University of New- der, Syracuse Public Library; York. The system devised by Mi*. James McEney, Syracuse State Carroll has been operating suc- School; Mollie Doyle, State In- M.D. four years later. In addition to his work at Pilgrim State Hospital he has served Southside Hospital, Bay Shore, as consultant in neurology and psychiatry, and is a member of the Department of Mental Hygiene committee on professional care. Dr. Brill has written on shock therapy and prefrontal lobotomy, a surgical procedui'e used in selected cases of mental illness. He is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and of the National Board in Medicine and Surgery, a m e m ber of the American Psychiatric Association, and past president of the Long Island Psychiatric Association. balance I 5 » ' a IIHHIIII s e r v i c e I KI:E ALBANY, May 29 — T h e appointment of Dr. Henry Brill as director of Craig Colony for Epileptics at Sonyea was announced ; by Dr. Newton Bigelow, Commissioner of Mental Hygiene. The appointment, to become effective Jime 1, fills a vacancy caused by the retirement of the former director. Assistant director of Pilgrim State Hospital at West Brentwood, L. I., since 1943, Dr. Brill entered that institution as a medical intern in 1932. He was gratuated from Yale in 1928 with the degree of B. A. A member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society and holder of several scholarships, he entered medical college at Yale in 1928, receiving the degree of • DURING T H E WINTER AND SPRING WASSERMAN T H E HATTER WAS ABLE T O SELL FAMOUS BRAND H A T S AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES, BECAUSE HE MADE A S H R E W D PURCHASE. NOW HE REPEATS T H E PERFORMANCE W I T H AN UNUSUAL PURCHASE OF FAMOUS MAKE STRAWS AND HE W A N T S TO PASS T H E SAVINGS ON TO YOU. COME IN EARLY FOR THESE TRULY GENUINE VALUES A B E WASSERMAIV CANAL Euliancti: 46 BOWEKY and 16 ELIZABETH SF. ARCADB Opp. new'ttiilranc® to Manhattan Bridge WOrth 4-0215 Open UntU S Every Evening Open to 3 p.m. Saturdays Kcmember: "Grhiger is s very reason' gbh man" TELEVISIOM REFRIGERATORS RADIOS IRONERS WASHIRO MACHINES RANOES AIR CONDITIONERS HARDWARE TERMS T O SUIT YOUR BUDGET. PRICE TO SUIT YOUR POCKET established 191^ Open 8:30 to 7:00 Monday through Saturday - GRom»rcy 50012-J0013—1733 29 First Ave Cor, E, 2nd St, r" > Tii«<i4fAr, M«t .30, 1 9 5 0 C I V I L E R V I C E Paj?e Thre?. L E A D F R STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS Lockporf Teachers Seek Better Pay T h e Public Employee LOCKPORT, May 29—Civil service employees of the Lockport public school system have requested a wage adjustment from the Board of Education similar to the $480 cost-of-living bonus paid to Niagara County employees during the past two years, it was announced at a recent meeting of Niagara chapter of The Civil Service Employees Association. Field representative Charles R. Culyer of the Association explained to the 50 chapter members present the legislation favorable to public employees passed at the lavSt session of the Legislature. He said the Association was successful in obtaining the signature of Governor Dewey to the 55-year retirement law. Treasurer William A. McNair of Members of the Reception Bowling team are presented with the Lockport presided in the absence trophy of the Inter-Hospital League by Dr. Duncan Whitehead. From of President Henry Nevins. Alice left, standing, Edward Douglas, Patrick Farrell, Dr. Whitehead, Dennis Gammon, chairman of the social McGadey, P firry Gc!7ic!che, (accepting the trophy), John McCoy. committee, announced that a picKneeling, Bill Terrence and Henry Riley. It is <a league of State nic will be held in June at Krull Employees. Park. r State Employees Top-Notch In Tests for H i g h Positions ALBANY, May 29—Lists of successful candidates for the State's top personnel jobs have been issued by the State Civil Service Commission. Open-competitive examinations were held September 17. Heading the list of 15 eligibles for Director of Personnel, State departments, $6,700, are three veterans: John H. Blendell of Albany, Associate Personnel Administrator in the Division of Placement and Unemployment Insurance; Joseph Watkins of NYC, and William N. Livingston of Hoosick Falls, both Associate Personnel Technicians in the Municipal Service Division of the State Department of Civil Service. The highest grade in the examination for Director of Personnel Albany Girl •WinsTopSpot In Genius Test ALBANY, May 29—Joan Thomson of Albany won the highest mark in two civil service examinations for junior administrative posts in the State government, the State Civil Service Commission announced. The examination's were for Management Assistant »nd Junior Management Assistant. Miss Thomson is a public administration intern in the State Department of Health. She Is a graduate of Mount Holyoke College and took her graduate work at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. Mills Finishes Second Borden H. Mills of Voorheesville, a junior personnel technician in the Department of Civil Service and a former intern, took second place in the examin^ition for Management Assistant. The starting salary is $3,451. Mr. Mills is a graduate of Union College and is studying for his master's degree in public administration in the graduate program conducted in Albany by Syracuse and New York Universities. He was appointed to his " present post after placing second in the administration examination in the annual "College Series" in 1948. Disabled Vet Heads List Marcus Ribak of Albany, a disabled veteran, heads the Management Assistant list of 24 successful candidates with the sixth highest mark. He is employed in the Department of Taxation and Pinance. Sixty-two candidates passed the H examination for Junior Managenient Assistant, qualifying them ^ K for jobs paying $2,760 to start. Interns who obtained places on ^ ^ both lists, in addition to Miss ^ f c Thomson, are Edwin C. Fostei, ^ ^ ^ D u a n e K. Ochellreo, and Frederick was made by William Brody of Flushing, Personnel Director, NYC Department of Health, who had a score of 91.167. Milton Musicus, of Albany, Assistant Director of Business Management and Personnel, State Education Department, was second with 90.333; William E. Tinney, of Delmar, Associate Personnel Administrator, State Conservation Department, third with 88.167. The only candidates who passed the exam for Director of Mental Hygiene Personnel, $6,700 were William B. Kilian of Schenectady, 79.833, and Granvill Hills, of Hudson, 78.167. Mr. Kilian is Principal Personnel Technician and Mr. Hills Associate Personnel Technician in the Division of Classification and Compensation, State Civil Service Department. Daniel J. Shea, present head of personnel for the Mental Hygiene Department, failed the test, as did William Callahan, assistant personnel director. The lists: DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL State Departments Non-Disabled Veterans 1. Blendell. J., Albany 82833 2. Watkins, J., NYC 82167 3. Levingston, Hoosick F l . . 8 1 3 3 3 Non Veterans 4. Brody, W., Flushing 91167 5. Musicus, M., Albany 90333 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Tinney, W., Delmar 88167 McGuire, M., Albany . . . 8 7 3 3 3 Segrest, W., Bronx 87167 McCann, F., Delmar 86167 Weinstock, I., Albany ..84833 Becker, T., Albany 83333 Gold, D., Menands 82500 Kilian, W.. Schtdy 80833 Hills, G., Hudson 79667 Gold. I., Albany ....79500 D I R E C T O R O F MENTAL HYGIENE PERSONNEL D e p a r t m e n t of M e n t a l Hygiene Non-Veterans 1. Kilian, W., Schtdy 79833 2. Hills, G., Hudson 78167 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. ASSOCIATE P E R S O N N E L ADMINISTRATOR State Departments Disabled Veteran Santen, V., Albany 83262 Non-Disabled Veterans Dermody, J., St. Albany.85400 Woodru^T, R., Albany ..84566 Quinn, R., Castleton . . . 8 4 2 7 6 Kirmayer, S., Albany . . . 8 3 6 6 6 Houlihan, T., Cohoes . . . 7 3 2 6 0 Riley, W., Hoosick Fl . . .79672 Non-Veterans McCann, F., Delmar ..89238 Weinstock, I., Albany . . .87976 O'Connell, W.. Valy Strm 82840 Chase. H.. Albany 81758 Dvorak, F.. L I City 80420 Delehanty, M.. Watervlt.78610 Seel, G., Albany 78530 Feinberg and Lockwood Address Chapter Meeting ALBANY, May 29—A pledge of protection of the rights of State employees during the current reorganization of the Public Service Commission was voiced by the Chairman, Benjamin P. Feinberg, a guest speaker at the third annual dinner of the Public Service Commission chapter of The Civil Service Employes Association at the Aurania Club, Albany. "The reorganization/' said Chairman Feinberg, "is intended to increase the efficiency of the Department and to provide space thoroughly needed. Seeks M u t u a l Bt>neril "I wanted to know the real story. I intend to make a detailed study of our personnel problems now and in the future, and I ask the continued cooperation of all employees for our mutual benefit." John E. Holt-Harris Jr., associate counsel of the Association, another guest speaker, urged fullest response to the new 55-year retirement plan. He asked for patience and faith in the execution of the program, which he hailed as "the greatest revolution and the most significant step for State employees Since the Feld-Hamilton Law." He said there are no gimmicks in the plan and that every ^civil servant should be able to afford it. "The thing to do now," he added, "is to elect the plan and wait patiently for its great function." Paul E. Lockwood, former societury to the Governor aud new Ify Dr, Frank L. Tolnian President T h e C.ivil Scrvirc Kmp'oyres Asworiation Inc. and Meniher of Kniployees Merit Awar»I Hoard GO SLOW? STOP! LOOK! & LISTEN! THE CHIEF DANGER to efficient governmeHt is prolonged and continued delay in reaching decisions and taking action. The mills of God grind slowly but the mills of government sometimes grind with a procrastination beyond perception or belief. Many government slowdowns are inherited. Every administrator worthy of his job desires to make a record for efficiency. He is apt to find his every action impeded by red tape and routines of every kind which, unless he has unusual drive, enmeshes him in their web. His associates probably tell him what he needs is more new forms, more machine processes, more detailed methods, more complex procedures and more elaborate office techniques of every kind. He thus becomes a devotee of methods rather than of results and the slowdowns tend to bcconie vested and inevitable. Happy Hiiiiliii^ Groiiiul No wonder government is the happy huntiiig ground for the efficiency expert and the manufacturer of mechanical machines and robots. In government these experts are not limited to practical ideas that will streamline and simplify processes and bring prompt results. They can play with the entire complex processes and elaborate control mechanisms and make everything even more elaborate. 1 am not ignorant of the many things that are done to attain prompt efficiency. The standard pi--actice is first to start an investigation of a visit of government. The normal work of that unit is thereby badly retarded or disrupted. A reorganization is set up. The new organization is bolstered by a set of new gadgets and fresh procedures, which may rapidly develop the same strains and frictions and grunts and groans as the old organization enjoyed. One can well look with wonder and admiration at the thousands of forms, tables, records, rules and regulations which some of the large departments require for the transaction of their business. Seldom has human ingenuity gone so far to standardize, to regulate and to record relatively simple ways of doing the obvious things. Ovet-Elahitration Of course there is a reason for the over-elaboration of detail in the public business of the State and its subdivisions. The administration and all the departments are more or less under constant suspicion, and they must have a complete record and a reason for everything they or any one of their employees does, ready for instant use in case of inquiry. The result is that the most essential things get done in a over-documented way. Other things, tend to be delayed until it becomes crystal clear that a similar routine, similarly documented and foolproof can be applied in the new field, and that the results will justify the cost. The Answer member of the Public Service Conmiission, the third speaker, reIn my opinion the answer to this problem is not a viewed his earlier connection with Hoover investigation but in establishing better understandthe department and his pleasure at being again associated with it. ing and appreciation of government services by the people Toastmaster was Horatio O. of the State. If we can arrive at a point where the common Baker, chapter president. Chair- assumption is that a public employee is an honest, patriotic man of arrangements was Mrs. citizen, anxious to do a good job, that very atmosphere of Marguerite Vinett, assisted by confidence and trust would malce possible a new kind and Molly Buckley, Walter Taylor, Mary Bulman, and James Maynes. quality of service by the public employee for all the citizens Almost 100 attended. of the State. The time and efficiency lost in the attempt to The results of the election of be always above and beyond any suspicion, could be devoted oflicers and delegates were an- to making New York State and local government better. nounced : President, Mr. Baker; vicepresident, Margaret A. Mahoney; secretary, Marjorie G. Madigan; assistant secretary, Dorothea B. Olmsted, and treasurer. Edward J. Brady. The executive council consists of Morris Goldfard, Wilford L. Denno arrived at The Sragow brothers have James T. Maynes, Leslie G. Uphoft', Dorothy Hoag and Charles Sing Sing Prison from Auburn to scored again. Sol Sragow. a distake up his new duties as Principal abled veteran, is first on the State Kunz. Keeper, filling the vacancy caused promotion list for Assistant SpeGuests fruiu NYC by the sudden death of Thomas cial Deputy Clerk, Supreme Court. First Department, with a score of The results covering the Divi- J. Keeley. Mr. Denno had been Principal 90332. Horace Sragow, topping his sion of Research and Valuation were not ready. Also to be heard Keeper on a temporary basis at brother with a rating of 91212, is from will be the representative Auburn Prison. He now lives at Number 41 on the same list because he is a non-veteran. Both covering the Technical Inspectors. Pierson Gardens, Ossining. Dancing and a general good First appointed to the Depart- brothers reside in NYC. time followed the dinne: meeting. ment of Correction in 1926 at AuSol and Horace have been starAmong those present from NYC burn Prison as a stenographer, Mr. ring on State exam lists since tiiey were Kenneth A. Valentine, repre- Denno was named Chief Clerk at took their first test in 1937, an sentative of the Public Service Attica Prison in 1931. Ten years open-competitive one for Court Commission on the Association's later he became Assistant Princi- Attendant. They next scored liiglx board of directors; Philip Wexler, pal Keeper at Attica Prisoiv on a promotion exam for Assistant president of the Metropolitan From 1942 to 1945. he served Clerk, their present title. Public S.rv'ue L'IMIJ / ii.iicl nUitii i with the U. S. Na\y. Ai" ci h's disBoth are law school graciuutes, Piuchihendler, secic .ay of that | charge from tlje Navy lie returned " ''/'rr. ii-on\ N .'\v York University chapter. , . . . J tQ l i b ' a n d SQl.t';om SI, Jolm's. Denno Begins Duties As P. K. at Sing Sing Brotliers Star Again On Eligible List Page Four CI V I L S E R V I C E L E AD E R TiieRday, May 30» 1950 STATE AND COUNTY NEWS : / > What Employees Should Know BELATED MEDICAL RULES ALLOWED BY COURT By THEODORE BECKER ONE OF THE primary functions of "an examination announcement is to acquaint candidates with the requirements which must be met. In such notices will be found the educational and experience requirements as well as age, residence and character qualifications. If a weighted oral examination ^s to be held, the factors to be tested are set forth. In addition, for positions involving physical effort there are usually set forth the medical conditions such as height, weight, and sight standards. In some instances specified physical defects, such as hernia and obesity, are disqualifying. It is not always possible or practicable to anticipate every physical defect that might cause disqualification in the opinion of the Civil Service Commission. Would its failure to specify in detail in the announcement just what medical standard will have to be met bar it from imposing such medical standard after the wi'itten or other examination? The Supreme Court in Albany County considered this question in the case of two candidates disqualified medically for State Parole Officer. Sight Standard ot Announced The announcement in this case stated that a physical examination would be required and that applicants "must be physically strong and active, and free from any defect or deformity that would have a tendency to incapacitate them" and that the law provides "that parole officers must be physically, mentally, and morally fitted for parole work." Candidates who passed the written examination and who satisfied the training and experience requirements were notified to appear for the physical examination. This notice told them for the first time that they would be required to meet a sight standard of 20/40 in each eye without glasses. The two candidates had been rejected by the Commission because their sight was only 20/100 without glasses. They urged, in court. (1) that the Commission was prevented from fixing the sight standards at 20/40 because the announcement did not so state; (2) that such sight standard had never before been set for Parole Officer; and (3) that the Commission's action was unreasonable and contrary to law. Commission Upheld The Court cited Section 14 (4) of the Civil Service Law, which provides that the commission "may lefuse *** after examination to certify an eligible *** who is physically so disabled as to be rendered unfit for his performance of the duties of the position to which he seeks appointment" and Rule X (6) which provides that "Whenever physical qualifications are of prime importance in the proper discharge of duties in any position, applicants must pass a physical examination and be certified as qualified in such respect, either before admission to examination, or before certification for appointment, as the commission may determine." It pointed out that among the duties of a Parole Officer is the responsibility for returning parole violators to prison. When so engaged, they are peace officers, required to carry firearms. The Court also noted that 92% of te candidates who took the medical examination were able to meet the sight standard. Three Points Decided On the basis of the law and these facts, the Court upheld the Commission. The Court reached the following conclusions: 1. The Commission was not barred from setting sight standards not previously announced. The Constitution and the Civil Service Law require the best fitted to be selected to fill civil service positions. 2. Because of the physical demands in making arrests, the need for glasses by a Parole Officer could be "not only a serious handicap in the performance of his duties but also an unnecessary exposure of the public to danger." 3. The standards were not arbitrarily or capriciously set, being similar to or lower than those set for comparable jobs. The fact that such standards were not previously prescribed for Parole Officer is not in itself evidence of caprice. Neither was the nature the requirements nor the time of their promulgation aimed at ddsqualifying the two petitioners. The Court dismissed the petition. (Eisig and Seabrook v. Conway, June 24, 1949) Wingdale Playground Achieved by Stock Thanks to Harold Stock, Chief of Police and Safety Commissioner of the Harlem Valley State Hospital, the children of Wingdale have a playground equipped with all the recreational facilities their hearts might desire. Noticing that the kids in the community did not have such f a cilities, Mr. Stock, aided by Assistant Chief William Murray and Patrolman Charles Quinlan organized a drive, and with the money they collected, the three policemen bought more than enough softballs. bats, horseshoe sets, and baseball uniforms to go around. Metropo!itan Conference Nominates The nominating committee of the Metropolitan New York Conference met on Thursday, May 4, and unanimously voted to renominate the present board of officers for another one-year term. The officers are Sidney Alexander, Psychiatric Institute, chairman; George Siems, Long Island State Park Commission, vice-chairman; Clyde Morris, Long Island State Park Commission, treasurer; Edith Fruchthendler, Public Service Commission, secretary. Members of the nominating committee are Michael L. Porta, chairman; Mrs. Helen C. Peterson, Paul Hammond, and Biagio Romeo. Armory Goals (Oontinued from page 1) pay, the fact that the ipen are on a per diem salary, and that they receive fewer benefits than civil service employees. Stanton in Sympathy The meeting was held in Kingsbi-idge Armory, the Bronx. General Stanton addressed the assemblage, stating that the Adjutant General's Office was in sympathy with the aims of the employees. Officers Elected Election of officers took place at the meeting, with William Maher winning the -presidency over the incumbent Jack M. De Lisi by 2 votes. Other officers elected were: Ernest H. Johnson, vice-president; Prank E. Wallace, executive secretary, Arthur F. Cornell, recording secretary: Charles J. Smith, sergeant-at-arms. Duchar Is M. C. James Duchar acted as temporary chairman during the counting of ballots. In the course of his talk, he gave high praise to The LEADER for the work it had done in behalf of Armory employees. He lauded Mr. McDonough and Mr. MacDonald as "friends of the Armory men." Benjamin Alulis, of the Poughkeepsie Armory, a guest, stated that his chapter had 100% membership. He also suggested that the group give consideration to an Armory man as representative of the Executive Department on the Association Board of Directors. A resolution was passed to amend a legislative measure providing l>enefits for the Armory employees. And a question-andanswer session on the 55-year retirement plan was conducted by Mr. McDonough. The meeting was rounded out with presentation of 25-year awards to Robert Pate, Walter Rube, Ccharles Schwartz, Frank E. Wallace, and Valentine Schonweis. General Stanton was the installing officer, and also presented t h e awards. Pension Q u e s t i o n s A n s w e r e d (Continued from page i) quired to liquidate the deficiency by age 55. He may then either: (1) Pay the deficiency in a lump sum— or (2) Pay a deficiency rate in addition to the 55 year rate— or (3) Continue to pay the rate first assigned. If payments a i e made under (1) or (2), he may revert to the 60 year contribution rate at age 55. Excess Contributions: If he has made contributions, in excess of those required under the new plan, such excess contributions may be withdrawn or allowed to remain on deposit for the purpose of purchasing additional annuity when the member retires. CONTRIBUTIONS OF MEMBERS OVER AGE 55 (WHO DID NOT CONTRIBUTE ON THE OLD 55 YEAR RETIREMENT PLAN) Regular Contributions under 8eetion 86-a: ,, ^^ ^ Upon receipt of application to come under Section 86-a, the employer and the member will be advised as to the new cont trlbution rate which will be ap- proximately 11/2 times the normal 60 year contribution rate. Deficiency Contributions: Later, the member will be informed of the deficiency which exists in his accoxmt. He may then either: (1) Pay the deficiency in a lump sum— or (2) Continue to contribute at the rate previously assigned until the defiiency is liquidated or until the member retires. After the deficiency is liquidated, contributions may be at the normal 60 year retirement rate. CONTRIBUTIONS OF MEMBERS Welfare Conference AtK)Ut 1,000 Federal, State and local'public welfare administrators participated in a three-day conference of the American Public Welfare Association beginning Thursday, May 18 at the Hotel Astor. NYC. Canada, the District of Columbia, and IX states—Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Mary> land, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Penosyjv^iiiia. Rhodp JsJ^ifl » o 4 Vermont—were represented. OVER AGE 55 WHO WERE CONTRIBUTING ON THE OLD 55 YEAR RETIREMENT PLAN AT THE TIME THEY ATTAINED AGE 55. Regular Contributions under Section 86-a: Upon receipt of application to transfer to Section 86-a, the employer and the member will be advised that future contributions should be at the normal 60 year retirement contribution rate. Deficiency Contributions^ Later, the member will be advised of the deficiency or excess which exists in his account. If a deficiency exists, the memiaer will not be required to pay it but may do so if he so desires. Excess Contributions: If the member has excess contributions, they may be withdrawn or allowed to remain on deposit for the purpose of purchasing additional annuity when the member retires. Payment of Deficiency in full not required to receive full pension benefits: Whether the deficiency is fully paid or not, a member who elects to come under the new 55 yefMT {^UQ Ut, OS thereafter. Chapter Activities CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEE^ ASSOCIATION Manhattan State Hospital > I dismissed from the C.I.O. o n charges of Communist domlna* tion. Jimmy Parrell of Kit 1 is keeping Andy Canfield company i n the Mabon Sick Bay. Let's keep hoping for their speedy recovery. Mary Cameron, popular telephone operator, is coming along nicely after a recent operation. Florence Reddan is on sick leave, m a n y of her friends and co-workers in Kitchen 3 will be glad to share her swell Irish smile. So come on Flossie, get well, huh? Three cheers to Mary Flanagan^ senior clerk in the Main Office,! for completion of 52 years of continuous State service. That's a record hard to beat, and still be in good health and spirits. All members are reminded by John Wallace to continue their efforts in securing new members. The chapter has over 400 members, and "free riders" are a heavy load to carry. A SPECIAL meeting of the Manhattan State Hospital chapter will be held on June 14 at 4:50 P.M. in the fire house lecture hall. Wards Island. Several guest speakers have been invited: H. Eliot Kaplan, Deputy Comptroller, of the State Retirement System; Sidney Alexander, Chairman of the Metropolitan Conference; Sol Bendet, President-elect, New York City chapter; Maxwell Lehman, Publisher of The LEADER; Arnold Moses, President of Brooklyn State Hospital chapter; Baigio Romeo, President of Psychiatric chapter; Larry Hollister, Field Representative of the Association. Deputy Comptroller Kaplan has been asked to answer questions concerning the new 55-year pension plan. June 23 is a date to remember, the 4th Annual Spring Dance will be held in the amusement hall. Wards Island. Starts at 8 P.M. Music by Chris Puleo and his Columbian Orchestra. Refreshments AN INSTRUCTIONAL meeting, will be served. Admission is $1.00, sponsored by Oneonta chapter, and all proceeds go toward the j was held on May 22 in the cafeemployees burned out of the F e - j teria of State Teachers College male Home. Support this humane i for all State employees in the project. vicinity of Oneonta. State Director of Classification Prom the large attendance, it J. Earl Kelly's good news to skilled is obvious that employees are vimechanics recently was royally tally interested in their r ^ i r e hailed by all concerned, and it is ment problems. hoped that the Maintenance Men, Issac J. Himgerford of the decision will be made in the very State Employees Retirement Sysnear fufare. In the meantime tem, was the speaker. The opporMaintenance Men should busy tunity to ask h i m questions and themselves in preparing separate get definite information was appeals for salary allocations. , greatly appreciated. From the Chapter President John Wal-! comments heard later, it aplace has submitted a letter to As-: peared that nearly everyone pressociation President Fiank L. Ttol-1 ent v;ill take advantage of t h e man lu-ging the presentation of new 55-year retirement law. an appeal to Governor Thomas A lunch was enjoyed after t h e E. Dewey, requesting an official meeting. order be sent to all departmental Oneonta Chapter officers are heads, outlawing of the UPW in now working on plans for a pic-State Civil Service. The UPW was nic. Tentative plans call for it to be held on September 10. O t h er chapter members and friends will be welcome if they will make reservations. ( Oneonia Eye Glasses at Near Wtiolesale Prices Cutting down the cost of bringing a product from the maker to the user by eliminating the number of hands through which the article passes on its way to the consumer is a technique used successfully in many businesses. Today, the ':actic has been applied to yet another field. 1 People have a tendency to ciassi- j fy the purchase and fitting of i glasses in much the same category j as the selection of medical and i dental services. Service has been j regarded by some as a major por- ; tion of the cost of glasses. 1 One of the pioneers in bringing down optical prices by operating in conjunction with a wholesale optical firm is the Powell Opticians, Broadway between 73rd and 74th Streets. NYC. Operated by a wholesaler, Pow^ ell Opticians have managed to get their prices to low levels. In fact, a comparison of their charges with a wholesale catalog discloses that there is very little difference. A complete pair of glasses, including an examination of the eyes, is available for $4.75 at the Powell Opticians to civil service employees. The firm which has been in business 22 years, is one of the first in the city to be operated by a wholesale house. Visit Our riaiee Square Showroom (icu.Hotliiifr'g Gym 1450 W. r^St., NVl RIchiu'dBurbi'lKiyn lua Briwdway St»teii Ulund 6U lb. Mt 91.US 100 lb. set ExtraWelyhtiil-.:"lb. ISO lb. 8«t 918.U8 F.O.B. PlMit 200 lb. wt 9»3.9tt DAN LURIE BARBELL CO. l^owrooni A GyiuiuMUuia 1701-L IMtklii AvMiue Dept. 1£3U Broohis n N. Y. UV 4-»31S-t>31tt An Arco study book f o r Employment Interviewer Is on sale at The LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duane Street. New York t, N. Y.. two north of City Hall and Juiit west ot Broadway, 6ougk the coat IVe been longlnqibr * by wishing Ies5 and saving more Were saving refldarjyat SMwiK^ SI Chainb«r» SiffMl JMI iad «f Brso^way 5 East 42nd Str««l JuiloffnMiAvww* ^ Current Divideiid INTemST PROM annum D A Y OP O E r O S I f lAtmbM' r«d«rgl DvpoilllMtvrsiK* Cgr^«MM> Tfimifay, M « t 30, 19S0 C I V I L S F> R V I C E Page Five L E A D E R STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS Clofd All Day Tuesday, May 30*k • Memorial DELEHANTY Training for Civil Activities of Assn. Chapters PATROLMAN CANDIDATES Your Severe Physical Test Is Only a Few Weeks A w a y ! THE CrVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION Binghamton AS EXPECTED, the Binghamton party was an all-out success. 267 members and guests attended t h e dinner dance of the Binghamton chapter the evening of May 13th, in the evidently well-built Elk's Roof Garden (it remains visibly standing after the party). This highly diverting affair was in observance of the Association's 40th anniversary. The party was a sellout, exceeding expectations of t h e promoters. Jean Marie Kroboth and her committee rate congratulations for putting it over. During the dinner there was lively community singing ably led by Earl Cretser, Music Director of Binghamton State Ho.spital. After dinner Larry La Viola's orchestra played for round and square dancing until midnight. "The Johnsonians" gave a program of songs and a floor show featuring Hawaiian dances rendered by Hawaiian born "Lani," otherwise Mrs. Francis Burke. A table model television set was awarded to K. Lindeman, Sr. of Hornell, N. Y. There was a large attendance of Association notables present, including John F. Powers, 1st vicepresident of the Association: Charlotte M. Clapper, secretary: Jesse B. McFarland, Chairman of the Membership Committee: Isabelle O'Hagan. representative of the State Department, and Mr. and Mrs. Laurence J. Hoirster. Gerald Reilly, president of Binghamton chapter, was master of ceremonies. Among those present were Assemblyman Richard H. Knauf of Binghamton. Helen B. Musto, president. Ithaca chapter: Paul Swartwood of Ithaca, chairman of the Conference resolutions committee, and Mrs. Swartwood: Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dickens of Ithaca: Mr. and Mrs. Earl Butts of Oneonta and A. L. Merriam of Elmira, president of Tioga County chapter, and a party of six: C. W. F. Stott of Binghamton, chairman of the Central New York Conference and Mrs. Stott, and Mr. and Mrs. Freeman E. Drew. Mrs. Drew Is secretary of the Central Conference and of Binghamton chapter. All were pleased to welcome "Ernie" Conlon, 4th vice-president of the Association, past president of the chapter, and a worker, booster and good club member from 'way back. Ernie is back in the groove after a recent illness. Genesee County A MEETING of the Genesee chapter was held in Eagles Hall, Batavia. J. Allyn Stearns, 3d vicepresident of The Civil Service Employees Associa^^ion, explained the new 55-year retirement plan. Mr. Stearns, co-chairman of the Association's membership committee, outlined the Association's accomplishments and impressed upon the members the need for ex'^anding their membership in order to better working conditions more rapidjy. Harry Hubbard, vice-president of the chapter, presided, because of the illness of President William P. Black. Also present were Past 60 Jobs to Be Filled Ttiougtiout State as Principal Account Clerk H P More than 60 vacancies are expected in various State Departm^nts for principal account clerks. Salaries start at $3,451 and increase in five annual increments to $4,176. Applications for a promotion exam, open to clerical employees in 0 - 6 or higher in State departmen.s, were accepted until Monday, May 29. If the eligibles from each department are not sufllcient to All all the vacancies in the department, appointments will be made from an open-competitive list. No Interdepartmental list will be established. Duties generally performed by principal account clerks include the execution of highly ditticult and responsible clerical work requiring a knowledge of accounting principles and practices in connection with the 'Mxnce and checking of financial records of questions were not appropriate for their grade, it was said. As a result of this committee's intercession a promotion examination will be held for the Payroll Auditor title. Instead of compelling State Fund personnel to compete in the general accounting examination. A personnel problem submitted by a typist was resolved to her satisfaction. The board voted to present an THE EXECUTIVE BOARD of annual trophy to the winning this chapiter at its last meeting team in the State Fund Bowling reported an enthusiastic response League. to the suggested boat ride to Bear Mountain in June. Grace Arcaro was appointed chairman of the boat ride committee. RONALD HURLEY of the State The board voted to hold a dance Retirement system addressed a in October. T h e installation of meeting at Ossining, attended officers elected in the annual elec- by over 130 employees. Many emtion will take place then. Bella ployees at last found out through Weinberg was designated to re- his talk what the retirement sysport on hotel quotations. tem actually has to offer. President Bozek reported that Try and cheer Charlie Alberda a letter had been sent to Dr. Tolman conveying the substance of (Sheriff) up a little. He's feeling the board's resolution requesting mighty low. His wife Is in serious that the State organization make condition at Ossining Hospital. Condolences to Don. Dickson on every eiTort to effect a different method of computing and report- the loss of his aunt. » ing individual service record ratHerman Schroeder has* thrown ings. away his lantern and was seen A1 Greenberg was appointed sporting sun glasses in the lower chairman of the membership com- yard recently. mittee. A letter of thanks was adCongratylations to William dressed to the retiring chairman, Baines, recently pi'omoted and Lou DeVivo. transferred from Attica as AssistEfforts will be made to get a ant to Mr. Libby, Industrial Supt. speaker from the Retii-ement SysLarry Hollister, association field tem to address employees of the representative, stopped in to see State Fund on the new 55-year the night trick, and spoke about retirement plan. membership. The grievance committee reCongratulations to Don Volker ported that a protest had been and his wife on the addition of a filed in behalf of the Clerks in Underwriting who had recently son to the family. It was just fifteen years ago competed in a promotion examination for Senior Clerk. A number that a bill designed to place uniformed employees of State prisons on an eight hour day was vetoed by the Governor, who declared "that the State's financial condition would not permit the additional expense." Sounds familiar, eh! The boys are glad to see Major Doyle back on the job, after his recent illness. The boys in the refrigeration department are breathlessly awaitALBANY, May 29—Mrs. Helen ing the return of their popular Esray Cha.se of Albany has the athletic director, Dan Luby. highest score on two open-comDon Juan Frank Doyle hsis been petitive examinations in the field of personnel administration, the laid low by illness, and is recuperState Civil Service Commission ating at Ossining Hospital. Dan McDonald, formerly of announced. Mrs. Chase is Associate Personnel Analyst on the staff Wallkill, seeing sunlight once again. of the Personnel Council. The Newburgh meeting of CorHighest scores on the examination for Senior Personnel Admin- rection chapters was a success. All istrator were: Mrs. Chase. 87.121; institutions south of Albany were Winifred O'Connell of Valley represented, except Westfield and Stream. 85.064, and Eugene Har- Green Haven, Sorry to hear about J. Sherikavy of NYC, 84.903. All are nondan's ticker kicking up. He's restveterans. In the examination for Person- ing quietly at Ossining Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. C. Scully, Mr. and nel Administrator highest scores were: Mrs. Chase, 91.625; Mr. Mrs. C. Decker, Mr. and Mrs. C. Harkavy, 88.529; and Charles J. Lamb, Mr. and Mrs. G. Westpfal O'Hara of Albany, 88.249. Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. F. Mattison, attended the Westfield Chapter O'Hara is a disabled veteran. Disabled veterans who head the annual dinner at Kellers. Mt. list of 45 successful candidates for Kisco, and had a swell time, plus Senior Personnel Administrator, an excellent dinner. Tlie commitin order of appointment, are: tee should be congratulated on its Mark J. Jacoby of Flushing; Ver- success. non B. Santen of Albany; Mr. The chapter is negotiating with O'Hara: Victor Rosenbloom of Associated Hospital Service or Brooklyn, and Francis K. Cook of Blue Cross for a Group Contract Ann Arbor, Mich. for Chapter members. President Donald Morse, Treasurer Erwin MacMaster, Fire Department Captain E. Glenn Squires, and Leon Jones who recently retired from the Water Department. Members from Batavia and Genesee County Departments and from various localities in the county attended. State Insurance Fund Sing Sing Mrs. Chase Is No. 1 on Two Eligible Lists A hijih physivril rutins m a k e n TREMENDOUS DIFFERENCE in j o n r position on tiic ELIGIBLE LIST. T h e pliysiral test is of efiiial iniportanre witli the written in determining yonr FINAL AVERAGE. . . . It can mean the d i f f e r e n c e between appointment and f a i l u r e ! • EXPERT INSTRUCTORS • SPECIALLY E9UIPPED GYM • FREQUENT TRIAL EXAMINATIONS GIVEN UNDER OFFICIAL TEST CONDITIONS Day & Eve. Clansea to Suit Your Convnnience Approved For Veterans Under G. I. Bill Applleaflens C/os« Mon., June 5tk — N. Y. State NO EDUCATIONAL OR EXPERIEHCE Rf^UtREMENTS 0|»eii tM Meii Wonieii 17 Ye«r» f»f .4|te and Older S a l a r y $58. a W e e k t o S t a r t N. r. city Examination Ordered i ' r e p a r a t i o n for perlorniunce testi* may be t-umiuenced at once in either dav or eveniiiK »>e!>»ioii.«. THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE 115 EAST ISih ST., N. Y. 3 — I'hone CUanier«x 3-6900 Cl.OSt.ll A l l , DAY TUKSDAY, WAY 30ih—MKMOUIAI. liAV for Permanent Jobs As ATTENDANT . $38 to $47 ApiMtintinenIs Mill also be made f r o m this Hit to poi«itions as • MessenRcr • Gateman • Handyman • EIe^alo^ Operator • W a t c h m a n • Bridj^e Tender • Railroad Caretaker • Process Server Hundreds of Vacancies — Open to Men of All Ages Attend as a Guest a Session of Our Special Preporatory Course CLASSES TUES. and FRI. at 1:15 or 7 : 3 0 IMVl. Approved for Veterans — Moderate Fee for Others N. r. City Promotional Examinations Expected CLERKS - G r a d e 3 and 4 OPENING LECTURE TUES.. JUNE Ath a t 6 or • P.M. Thereafter on TUES. owd FRI. m* tlie swHe hoars. Approved for Vets. ENROLL NOW! New York City ExamlnalloHs Orderod! S T A T I O N A R Y ENGINEER — $14.08 a Day Opom only to those holding N. Y. City Ucenses - Numerous Vacancies CLASS THURSDAYS at P.M. INSPECTOR of PLUMBING - Gr. 3 NO MAXIMUM AGE LIMIT It t« Mpected That 5 Years Trade Exprn^ience Will Qualify CLASS THURSDAYS at 7 : 3 0 P M. — An Invifafion — T h ^ who have filed applications f o r any of the following examinations are invited to attend a c U m lertnre an our jsnesls- SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR - T U E S . I:30 P.M. STEAMFITTER • M O N . , T U E S . . or T H U R S . a t 7 P . M . ELECTRICAL INSPECTOR - T U E S . OT 7:3o P . M . INSPECTOR of ELEVATORS - WED. OT 7:30 P.M. SURFACE LINE OPERATOR SPl:€fAI,GY!VI^ASlllIV^ CI.ASSES For Severe Phrsical Test Ahead PATROLMAN - Nassau & Suffolk Counties • STENOG. . Gr. 2 • Classes In Preparation F I R K M ^ , N- Y. City Fire Dept. for N. Y. City LICENSE EXAMS, for MASTER ELECTRICIAN—Fridays at 7 : 3 0 P. !VI. STATIONARY ENGINEER—Moii. & Vi ed, at 7 : 3 0 P.M. Also Coarse for MASTER PLUMBERS LICENSE Practical Shop I'rainin;; in Joint Wiping and I-ead Work Enrollment Still Open! Quaiifyinq for Next N. Y. State INSURANCE COURSE Broker's License Exam Accredited by State Insurance Dept. Approved for Veterans Inquire for I n f o r m a t i o n on Any Civil Service Position Most Courses Available to Veterane. Under G. I. Bill V O C A T I O N A L COURSES ^ TPl PVI^fOKf Course Covers Every Phase of Tralii~ i n g as TELEVISION TECHNICIAN. A l s o PREPARATION FOR F. C. C. LICENSE EXAMS DRAFTING Architectural A Meebalcal Structural >4(/TOMOrfVE M E C H A N I C S — .\p|>lifutiuii8 lixpeeted in Mid-Juiie Vt e ort'er prepanititHi for hutii the written exaniinatioii and the pecl'urinanre tests. Opeiiiiijs I.t'fture f u r Written Exaniiiiutiun MONDAY, JUNK 12th at 7 : 3 0 P.M. 15th AUTOMATIC INCREASES T O $70 A W E E K Opportunity f o r Men 2 1 to 4 0 — and older if a Veteran • Minimum Height 5' 6 " • Vision 2 0 / 4 0 (Glasses Permitted) M»d«rat« Rates - Installiiienfs - APPROVED FOR VETERANS Attend • Class in Manhottan or Jamaica as Our Gnest MANHATTAN: TUESDAY or THURSDAY a t 1:30, « or 8 P.M. JAMAICA: TUESDAY or THURSDAY a t 7:30 P.M. Kvaiiiiiiations f o r ^Vderal P o s i t i o n s ill >l»'H York Hiid New Jersey as starting Salary $47 a Week Exam. July MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE EXAMINER MON.. WED. & PRI. at 6:30 P.M. STENOGRAPHER or TYPIST Day Scrvie* Detaillag DELEHANTY . ".15 Years of Career Anistanie to Orer 400,000 Extcuh've O f f i c t s : 15 E. I 5 S T . . N . Y . 3 Jamalcd Slndenth' Division: 9 0 - 1 4 Sufphin Blvd. GRamercy 3-6900 Oi''t'U'K UOt KN-Mtiii. lu 1 11.: »»:;iO n.iii. to »»::f« i. iii. JAmaica 6-8200 |c;;o ii.m , m ;i ,,.m,. C i v i l Page Six SERVICE L E A D E R TueMiay, May .10, 1^50 STATE A N D C O U N T Y NEWS State Will Try to Find Geniuses by Giving Competitive Exams Eligibles Hergart Heads Pharmacists Open-Competitive ALBANY, May 29 — The New guests of the Pharmacists AssociYork State Mental Hygiene Phar- ation: Col. Frank J. Smith, Trua-^ macists Association held its 1950 tee of the Albany College of PharJUNIOR MANAGEMENT spring meeting and first seminar macy; Prof. Deichmann, Prof. ASSISTANT (O. C.) in Albany on May 14, 15 and 16. Walter B. Singer and Mr. Grover Non-Disabled Veterans officers Bowles, Chief Pharmacist of t h e 1. Kallmeyer. A., Troy 82750 .The ^ following , „ . , t,.were t, elect^ Memorial Hospital In 2. Schwartz. M., Albany . . . 8 2 7 5 0 Hergart of Binghamton Strong 3. Hokroian, V., Bronx 82240 I H(^pital, chairman; K e n - Rochester and Vice-President of 4. Berman, L., Bklyn 80890 neth J. Roseboom of Creedmoor the American Hospital PharmaState Hospital, vice-chairman; cists Association. By MORTQM Y A R M A N of Business Management and 5. Garrison, R., Sligerlnd .79900 Anthony Santulli of Rome State 78970 ALBANY, May 29 — Pioneer Personnel, State Education De- 6. Bobilin, A., Schtdy School, secretary-treasurer. {.ROAI. KOTICB work in the field of testing for partment; John Daniels, A.ssociate 7. Beckman, N.. Syracuse ..78820 The pharmacists attended a Junior executive positions in pub- Budget Examiner, Division of the 8. Radack, B., Syracuse . . . 7 8 5 5 0 seminar at the Albany College of CITATION. — Tho People of the State o« 9. Kresky, E., . . B k l y n 78550 lic service was begun recently Budget; Philip E. Hagerty, DirecYork, By the Grace o£ God, Free and d 78250 Pharmacy, which was arranged New To Attorney General of thi at the first of a series of meet- tor, Division of Personnel Re- 10. Drucker, A., Bronx and supervised by Dr. Francis J. Independent. State of New York: and to "Mary Doe' ings of university officials and search, and William J. Murray, 11. WillhofT, S., Buffalo . . . . 7 8 1 9 0 O'Brien, dean of the College. the name "Mary Doe" being- flctitioue, the State administrators. Assistant Administrative Director, 12. Mack, F., Syracuse . . ..78100 Nine Senior Pharmacists and alleged widow of Georg-e Kiipranitz, daBaxter, J., Syracuse 78100 eeased, if liviiifr, or if dead, to the execuJ. Edward Conway, President State Department of Civil Ser- 13. 77650 two Junior Pharmacists attended tors, administrator!) and next of kin of of the State Civil Service Com- vice. Mrs. Eugenia McLaughlin, 14. Julis, M., Bronx the business meeting. Twelve Sesaid "Mary Doe", deceased, whose names 77650 mission, reported that a plan Principal Personnel Technician 15. Liff, S., Bklyn nior Pharmacists and two Junior and Post OtTlor: addresses are unknown and for an examination to select pub- in the Civil Service Department's 16. Erickson. J., Flushing . . .77650 Pharmacists attended the Semi- cannot after diligent inquiry be ascertained by the petitioner licrein. and the next of lic administration interns in the Examination Division, is serving 17. Brown, C., Rochester . . . 7 7 5 3 0 nar. kin of Georgre Knpraiiitz, deceased, whoso 77500 State service on a competitive as technical consultant. Mr. Mur- 18. Bower, S., Buffalo namc« and Post Ofllce addresses are unOn Monday evening the group 76750 known and cannot after diligent inquiry bo ray is chairman of the committee, 19. Green, J., Bklyn basis has been developed. attended a dinner a t t h e Univerascertained by the petitioner herein, being 76300 The use of a competitive ex- all the members of which have 20. Cook, A., Ithaca sity Club in Albany as guests of the persons interested as crwlitors, next of 75490 amination as a method of select- been intimately connected with 21. Raine, A., NYC Dr. O'Brien and the Albany School kin or otherwise in tho estate of GEORGE KUPRANITZ, (leceaHed. who at the time of ing government interns marks a policy-making or administration 22. Burstein, G., Arverne . . . 7 5 4 6 0 of Pharmacy. The speakers includ- his death wa? a resident of 1873 Second 75130 radical departure from the usual of the internship program since 23. Crane, P., NYC New York City. Send GREETING: 24. Morrison, J., Buffalo 75130 ed Dr. O'Brien, Dr. Newton J. T. Avenue, Upon the petition of The Public Adprocedure. New York's public ad- its beginning. 25. Ingersoh, R., Syracuse ..75100 Bigelow, Acting Commissioner of ministrator of the County of New York, ministration interns heretofore the Mental Hygiene Department; havinp his otlice at Hall of Records, Room 26. Wolff, T., Bklyn 75010 Dr. Bascom B. Young, Asst. Comhave been given one-year apBoroueh of Manhattan, City and 27. Daly. G., N Y C 74650 missioner; and Mr. Kenneth S. ;U)8, County of New York, as administrator of pointments, after surviving an 28. Deluca, C., NYC 74500 intensive screening process which Griswold, trustee of the A l b a n y j chattels and credits of said Non-Veterans followed recommendation by col^na each of yon are hereby cited 29. Thomson, J., Albany . . . 8 9 8 6 0 College of Pharmacy. Carl Her- • ' lege and university officials. The gert. Senior Pharmacist of the ' to show cause before the surrogate's Couru 30. Kamm, S., Syracuse 88540 Binghamton positions have been in the exState Hospital acted I New York county held at the Haii o i Young men and women Interest- 31. Poster, E.. Albany 82900 ^^ ^^/urj^.., I Records, in the County of New York, oii empt cla.ss. ed in a career in State Civil Serv- 32. Duncombe. H.. Syracuse. 82600 as toastmaster. T,, In addition to t h e ' th^ 33rd day of jnne, ii)5o. at haif-past ice may get the foundation they 33. Ocheltree, D., Albany . . .81040 above guests, the following were ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day. Hard to Test why the account of proceedings of Tho Whether or not it is possible need at the State University of 34. Giles, J., Queens Vlg . . . 8 1 0 1 0 Public Administrator of the County of New York, as administrator of the goods, chatto measure effectively the abilities New York, Institute of Applied 35. Allison, R., Syracuse 80950 tele and credits of said deceased, should and p>ersonality factors which are Arts and Sciences, at Binghamton. 36. Hahne, F., Albany. 79990 not be judicially settled. regarded as important in selecting This State-supported technical In- 37. Carr, C.. Phila., Pa 79150 IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, We have caused the seal of the Surrogate's junior executives in private as stitute offers six two-year curricu- 38. Schmulowitz. J., Bronx .78550 Court of the said County of New well as in public business, is a la with tuition free to residents of 39. Ellenberg, M., Bronx 78400 York to be hereunto affixed. moot question. Application of the New York State. ALBANY, May 29—State CompWITNESS. Honorable William T. 40. Silver, H., Bronx 78370 The training received at State 41. Byrne, K., Bayside [Seal.] Collins <v Surrogate of our said combined practical experience troller Frank C, Moore announced 78250 County, at the County of New and knowledge of educational Tech plus some experience would 42. Dubois, K., Albany 78100 the appointment of John J. SandYork, the 5th day of May in tho authorities and government ad- give the young person excellent 43. Roth, E., Bklyn year of our I.ord one thousand., 78040 ler of Albany as Executive Assistnine hundred and fifty. ministrators to the problem of preparation for entrance into a 44. Wolfe. E., Bronx ant to the Comptroller at $9,378. 77800 PHII.IP A. DONAHUE. actually constructing an examin- wide variety of civil service posi- 45. Rasenberger, R., Syrcuse 77560 Since October, 1944, Mr. SandClerk of tho Surrogate's Court. ation, is believed to be unprece- tions. For example, a graduate of 46. Travis. H.. Bronx 77500 ler has been Director of the New dented. Efforts will be made to the Automotive Technology course 47. Lovegren. R., Utica York State Apprenticeship Coun77500 CITATION. — The Pr'0))le of the State o l test objectively for intangible with a few years experience would 48. Colcord, F.. Syracuse . . . 7 7 1 1 0 cil. He attended Cornell Univer- New York, By the Grace of God. Free and Independent. To EMIL BURGIN, HEDWIO qualities and capacities required be well qualified for Automotive 49. Miller. S., NYC sity and after editing and publish76150 SCHIESS. EI.LA BUROIN, ELIZABETH for success in public administra- Maintenance Inspector, $3,451 to 50. Legg, E., Albany 76120 ing weekly newspapers at Monti- SAUTTER, JAMES BURGIN, the next o l tion, such as leadership, imagin- $4,176. cello and Livingston Manor bekin and heirs at law of KATHERINE T. 51. Reitkopp, M., Rochstr .,76120 Other curricula offered at Bing- 52. Domowitz, J., Peekskill .75850 came Area Director, SKINNER, deceased, send greeting: ation, initiative, social intelligence, Whereas CHARLES S. SKINNER, who hamton are Electrical Technology, 53. Stephenson. D.. Albany .75790 and practical common sense. residee at Hudson View Gardens, West Applications for the internship Chemical Technology, Mechanical 54. Glickel. J.. Staten Isl . . .75760 l«3rd street. Borough of Manhattan, the City of New York, has lately applied to positions will be opened next fall. Technology, Technical Office As- 55. Portz. D.. Orangeburg ..75760 the Surrogate's Court of our County o l The examination will be conducted sistant and Medical Office Assist- 56. Samuels, R.. Bklyn 75700 York to have a certain instrument AT A RECENT meeting of the Newwriting early in the winter, and appoint- ant. Registrations are now being 57. Coburn. R.. Syracuse . . . 7 5 5 8 0 bearing date July 16, 1048 Mid State Armory Employees relating to both real and personal propments will be made from the re- taken for the fall term which be- 58. Grasso, E., Bklyn 75340 erty, duly proved as the last will and sulting list for the internship gins September 10. Information 59 R o ^ " J "Albanv" 75100 Chapter, the following were elect- tesatment of KATHERINE T. SKINNER, may be obtained by writing to the fin 5«RR' T" term beginning July 1. 1951. 74RRnied: President, Bernard Lawrence; deceased, who was at the time of her 60. Barr, J., NYL. . .. . n^orio. Registrar. a resident of Hudson View Gardens, 61. Ferman, R., Bronx 74770 vice-president. Clarence Goode; death Competition will be open to all treasurer, Clarence Phillips; sec- West 183rd Street, Borough of Manhattan, 62. Cohen, P., Bklyn 74620 persons having the minimum City and County of New York, retary., Henry Cols. Therefore, you and each of you ar« miallfications. TTie present system SR. ACCOUNTANT (O. C.) cited to show cause before the Surrogate'e of requiring nomination by the Public Service, and Contract LEGAI, NOTICE Court of our County of New York, at the colleges a.s a prerequisite for A training course for the AsHall of Records, in the County of New Utility Account, Grade IV, CITATION.—The People of the State of York, on the 10th day of June, one thoucon "^.ideration for an internship sistant Claims Examiner test is beDepartment of Public Service New York By the Grace of God Free and sand nine huntlred and fifty, at half past will be discontinued,. ing sponsored by The Civil Service Independent: — To: Congregation Enianu- ten o'clock in the forenoon of that .day. Non-Disabled Veterans Lillian S. Benihcini, Therece K. Marks, why the said will and testament should The members of the committee Employees Association. Lectures 1. Heineck, F., Bellaire 86300 El, Jane Atliuus. Alma L. Hartnian, Aliee not be admitted to probate as a "wJll ol appointed by Mr. Conway to plan are held at the Central Commer- 2. Morris. J., Hion 81050 benny Stehlik, Gertrude Ncustadt, Mabel real and personal property. the examination are Dr. Paul H. cial High School, 241 East 42d 3. Fleschner, J., Bklyn Livingstone, Deulah Livingstone, New In testimony whereof we have caused 79050 Annleby, Dean of the Maxwell Street, NYC. The future dates are 4. Carmer, E., Williamsvl.. 78000 York Times "One Hundro<l Neediest Cases," the seal of the Surrogate's Court o l said Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of County of New York to be hereunto Sriiool for Citizenship and Public June 3, 10 and 17. The hours are 5. Olaksen, J., NYC 76900 New York, Harry Neustadt, Mark I. anixed. A Hairs at Syracuse University; from 2 to 5 P.M. Adams, Rita Adams, George Adams, Ann Witness, Honorable William T. Collins. Non-Veterans Lucille Neustadt, infant under the age of Dr. Willinm J. Ronan, Director Surrogate of our said County o l Lectures will also be held from 6. Lodato, J., Bklyn 82750 14 yeare, Benita Claire Neustadt, infant New York, at said county the 8th of the Graduate Division for 7 to 10 P.M. on June 1, 7. 9, 15, 7. Bitsko, A., NYC 82500 under the age of 14 years, Pauline Adams, day of May in the year ol our Training in Public Service at 16, 21 and 22. Central Hanover Bank and Trust ComLord one thousand nine hundred 8. Akerstrom, A., Albany ..82450 pany, Trustee, William Henry Hosenstein, Nrw York University; Byron T. and fifty. Home study material Is obtain- 9. Dunne, C., Mineola 81600 Trustee, being the parties inteifsted as [Seal.] PHILIP A. DONAHUE, Finplc, Assistant to the State able for $3.50. Write to John L. Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. 81400 legatees, devisees, beneficiaries, distribuC-minissioner of Social Welfare; Files, 81 North Portland Avenue, 10. Park.L., Bklyn tee« or otherwise in the Estate of JOSE11. Kenealy, A., Utica 80300 PHINE A. ROSENSTEIN, deceased, who Milton Mu.«;icus, A.ssistant Director Brooklyn 1, N. Y. HARRY.—CITATION.—THE PEO-/ INTERMEDIATE CLERK (O.C.), at the time of her death was a resident JENKS, OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, By of the City, County and State of New PLE Town of Mount Pleasant, the Grace of God Free and Independent York; TO Edna Kanzer, Rita Severs, Hartford Non-Veterans SEND GREETING:—Upon tho petition Accident & Indemnity Co., Bernard Kap1. Walsh, D., N. Tarrytown .83600 of WILLIAM HENRY UOSENSTEIN and ell. Collector of Internal Revenue, 3rd 2. Rice, M., N, Tarrytown . .80400 CENTRAL HANOVER BANK AND TRUST Hstrict, State Tax Commission, Louis LerCOMPANY, Exeeutors, of !)10 Park Ave- nor, Robert Edelnian, Sehreiber ft Memmo, MOTOR CARRIER nue, New York City, and 70 Broadway, Inc., N. Y. Telephone Co., Dr. Kflrt Lange, New York City, respectively; INVESTIGATOR (O. C.) Lawer & Binder, Charles Cox, Phil Cooper, VOU and each of you are hereby cited, Inc., Fineberg & Rubin, Baroda Purs, C. Public Service Commission to show cause before the Surrogate's R. Jones, Jr. Inc., Regent & Sons, Inc., Disabled Veterans Court of New York County, held at the Dr. Alexander Bonis, Rotholz Bros,, Cherof Records, in the County of Now nak Furs, Inc., Soloff & Wechsler. Inc., ALBANY, May 29—Emma EJois the Department's central office. 1. Meehan, F., Albany . . .88835 Hall York, on the 6th day of July 1 Out), at Sidney Lambert, Inc., F. D. Service. Inc., Shatter has been provisionally ap- The salary range for this position 2. Kremsdorf, E., Bronx .84165 half past ten o'clock in the forenoon of Center Printing Co., Levy-Theisen, Ine^ that day, why the .\ci'ount of Proi'eediiigs General Fur Cleaners. Inc., Celano Bros. pointed as Consultant Public is $6,700 to $8,145. 3. Furman, J., Bronx . . . .81335 of WILLIAM HENRY ROSENSTEIN and Inc., Homer & Co. Inc.. RockeU?..!M) Nurss (Obstetrics), DepartAndrew J. Puller has been pro- 4. Giaimo, A., Elmont . . .78500 CENTRAL HANOVER BANK AND TRUST feller- Center, Zograph Inc., John Capasso, Gabriel ment of Health, Miss Shaffer, visionally p r o m o t e d , t o Regional COM PAN V as Executors of the La.st Will Abel. George Klavens, Richard Parsella 'h Non-Disabled Veterans who has been serving as District Sanitary Engineer and assigned 5. Denenholz, R., NYC . . . .911,65 aiul Testament of JOSEPHINE A. ROSEN- Christy Eberling, Rose Kromm, Buckingdcceafied, shoulil not be juilic ially ham Florist, Weber & Heilbroner, Dr. Sidsuj)f»rvising Public Health Nurse, to the Rochester Regional Office. 6. Ferrazzano, T., Bklyn . . .89000 STEIN, settled; why this Court shouM not ap- ney L. King, N. Y. Times, S. Freirich, Inc., Jamestown District Office, was The salary range Is $5,860 to 7. Yallowitz, P., Bklyn 85500 provi; the abandonment of un. ollei tible Bessie Seabrook, William Sloan and Caasset: and why this Court should mille M. Berg, Administratrix, Estate ol as,=;i^ned by the Bureau of Public $7,120. 8. Translateur, Forest His..84165 principal not apiu'ove the i)aynicnt to the Central Berg. Deceased, being the persons }i \Vlth Nursing to the Bureau of Ralph C. Sweeney, who has 9. McGaffney, G., Bklyn ..84165 Hanover Bank and Trutit Compauy, one Herman interested as creditors, legatees, devisees, ]\U\ternal and Child Health, Divi- been aoting as Regional Sani-i 10. Jackson, F., N, H a r t f d . . .82835 of the E.vecutors, of the sum of benefli'iaries, distributees, or otherwise in to it for custodian fi'es for the the estate of HARliY JENKS,' decea«e(1^| .^ion of Medical Services in the j tary Engineer, White Plains R e - , 11. Damato, V., E. Elmhrst. .82835 owing account of dcii'dent prior to liei' di'uth; who at the time of iiis death was a resi^H Albany central office. The position! gional Office, has been reassigned! 12. ZIno, D., NYC 82665 anil why the i:.\erutoi s should not have dent ol 1.'17 Riversiile Drive, New Y o r k ^ p;iys $4,242 to $5,232. | as Regional Sanitary Engineer, 13. Munafo, A., NYC 82335 siuh other and fin'ther relief .us to this City, Send Greeting: Upon the petition of MAX SCHREIBER, VTiss S. Velma Burbridge has White Plains Region. 14. Weisse, P., Bronx 82335 Court may seem proper and just. IN TESTIMONY WHKRKOK, we have residing at 36 Eustlleld Road, Mount Verbeen provisionally promoted to j Carl J. Bernhardt has been 15. McFaddeft, J., Kingston .82000 lauseii the seal of tin; Surro- non. New York, You and each of you are .81335 Di.-.tncit Suptn-vising Public Health | temporarily promoted to Regional 16. Cordo. J., Jamaica ;!ate's Court of the saiil County hereby oitod to show cause before tho tif New Yin-k to be iiereunto Surrogate's Court of New York County, .79500 Niu'.se. Miss Biu'bndge will remain ' Sanitary Engineer, and has been 17. Zannle, J„ Rochstr , nflTxed. WITNESS, HONORAIU.E held at the Hall of Records in the County .79500 in the Oneonta District Office. assigned to the Buffalo Regional 18. Johnston, R., Bronx 1 WILLIAM T. COLLrKS, a Sur- of New York, on the 27lh day of June, .79335 19. Neville. J.. Staten Isl The position has a salary range Office. rogate of our County, at 1U60, at iiaif-past ten o'clock in tho lorethe County of New TorH, thp noon of that day, why tho account o l .79335 of S4.242 to $5,232. Henry J. Smith has been tem- 20. Zlzek, W., Flushing . ;."ind day of May, in the year of proceedings oi MAX SCHREIBER, a« Exec.79165 WiUiam H. Larkin has been per- porarily promoted to Senior S a n - 21. Piken, A., Jamaica . (Uir l.ord ono thausand nine hun utor should not lie judicially settled, ami manently promoted to Associate itary Engineer and assigned to 22. Guderlan. E.. Woodside. .78000 cired an.l llfty. why the Executor should not be authorized to reserve the balance, on hand, ftPPUPHILIP A. DONAHUE, 23. Vannote, K., Eden 77835 Sanitary Engineer and assigned t l ^ Geneva District Office. cable to the payment of general cnditorr Clerk of the Surrogate's Court as Chief, Water Pollution Control Sherwood Davies has been tem- 24. O'Donnell, N.. Syracuse .77835 to meet possible income tax assessmeni) Non-Veterans Section, Bureau of Environmental porarily promoted to Senior SaniSTATE OF NEW YORK, DEPART.MENT whi.'h may be made upon final audit Sanitation hi the Depaitment's tary Engineer and assigned to the 25. Osborne, G.. Rochstr . . . 9 2 6 6 5 OF STATE. Bs.: 1 do liereliy certify that a the decedent's returns. ato of dissolution of In testimony whereof, we have cftuseil 26. Guarrella, L.. Bklyn 90500 ccrtitiilutvrStMl« central oflice. The salary range Hornell District Office. Contraets t'oipurutiun the seal of the Surrogate's C o u r t 90500 has bein illed in this department this day Is $6,700 to $8,145. Richard C. Gorman, who was 27. Carpenter, C.. Vestal of the said County ol New Yorif to be hereunto attixed. WitncMj 85835 and that it appears therefrom that buch Ralph D. Bates has been tem- serving as Senior Sanitary Engi- 28. Plock, C., Maspeth has complied with Section 105 [L. S.l Honorable Wjlliani T. Collins. porarily promoted from the eli- neer, Hornell District, has been 29. Doyle, F., N. Rochelle ..85000 corporation of the Stock Corporation Law, and that it Surrogate of our said county, 83835 is dissolved. Given in duplicate under niy gible list to Associate Sanitary reassigned to the Sewage and 30. Frey, R., Buffalo the County of New York, tli^ 17th day of May. in tho y«ar 82000 hand and ofUcial seal of the Department of Engineer. Mr. Bates has been as- Waste Disposal Section, Bureau 31. Territo. G„ Bklyn ut the City of Albany iSeal) our Lord one thousand Blue hu 79500 State, signed as Chief, Sewage and of Environmental Sanitation in 32. Berlinger, J.. Schtdy died and fifty. Dated, tlie Uth day ut May, llluO. 78835 PHILIP A. DOHAHUU, Waste Disposal Section. Bureau' the Department's cawtraJ office, 33. Brezlner, A., LI City Thomas J. Curran, Secretary of State. By hriii W. Cl«ik oi the buri'vf »!«'• i 3 1 . C l i a p m a n , H . . A l b a n y . . .TTOOO Kutb a. Jdui«r, i x p u t j n e i x a i v s of Environmental Sanitation in i as Senioi- Sanitary finsium'. Institute at Binghamton Offers Free Courses Moore Names Sandler To $9,378 Job Mid-Sfale Armories Claims Examiner Course Promotions Announced By Health Department TmtOmw, Mmf SO, C I V I L 1 9 S 0 S E R Y I C R L R A D E R P«g« S«y«ii STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS Titles a n d D a t e s of Eligible Lists Charles L. Campbell. AdminisALBANY, May 29 — The State Civil Service Department issued trative Director, reminded appointing officers to use the lists in the monthly list of titles of exams making appointments and promofrom which eligible lists were es- tions. tablished, April 14, to May 12, T h e title, date of establishment and number of eligibles follow: 1950. PROMOTION Title Est. Elig. Civil Service Sr. Personnel Ttchnicial (Municipal Service) 4-28 Commerce Sr. Editorial Cleik 4-14 Sr. OfBce Machine Operator (Offset Printing) 4-20 Conservation Principal Clerk, Alleghany State Park Commission 5-10 Edncatien Associate Education Supervisor (Phys. Bduc. & Rec.) 5-4 Associate Education Supervisor (School Health E d u c . ) . . 4 - 2 0 Sr. Editorial Clerk, Albany Office 4-14 Executive—Budget Associate Budget Examiner • 5-11 Executive—Housing Sr. Accountant 5-4 Mental Hygiene Chief Supervising Atendant 4-25 Public Service Assoc. Accountant & Contract Utility Accountant 5-4 Mptor Carrier Investigator 4-20 Sr. Accountant & Contract Utility Accountant 5-4 Public Works Sr. Claims Engineer 5-8 Social Welfare Principal File Clerk 4-20 Standards and Purcliase Sr. Purchasing Agent 4-28 State Supervising License Inspector. New York Office 4-20 State Insurance Fund Jr. Compensation Claims Auditor 5-4 Taxation and Finance 4 Sr. Office Mach. Oper. (Addressograph). Albany Offiie.. .4-20 Sr. Office Machine Oper. (Printing), Albany Office 4-20 1 In ter departmental Jr. Examiner of Methods & Procedures 5-8 14 OPEN -COMPETITIVE Asst. Accountant, Pub. Serv., & Contract Utility Acct 5-4 9 Assoc. Personnel Administrator, State Departments 4-17 14 Clothing Clerk, State Hospitals & Institutions 4-20 72 Director of Personnel, State Departments 4-17 15 Motor Carrier Investigator, Public Service Commission. .4-28 34 Pharmacist, State Departments 5-4 15 Photographic Technician, State Dept. & Insts 5-8 12 Accounting Asst., Professional & Technical Asst 4-25 452 Jr. Management Assistant, Prof. & Technical Assistant. .4-25 62 Management Assistant, Professional & Technical A s s t . . . .4-25 24 Professional & Technical Assistant, Engineering 4-28 316 Professional & Technical Assistant, Bacteriology 4-28 37 Professional & Technical Assistant. Chemistry 4-28 58 Professional & Technical Assistant, Journalism 4-28 26 LKO.M. NOTICK/ TICKETS I'LEASK CO.MPANY.—O^ie following: ia tho sub.staiioo of CcTtiflcate of Limited Partnernhii) siibsoribod and acknowlpilirtHl by all D.irtiurs, llli'il in the N e w York County CUTU'S ofllee on May 17, 1 9 5 0 . Tlie name and location of the principal placp of business of the partnership Ifl TICKETS I'l^EASE COMPANY, 246 West 4 4 t h street. Now York, N. Y.. and its bUHineB.i is producing- the pl.iy "TICKETS PLEASE." The g^oneral partner is Arthur Klein, residing: at Belmont-Pla^sa Hotel. Lexington Ave. Sc 4J>th St., iTew York City. Liniitwl I'aitners. their cash contributions, bciiplits, shares and residences (all of which arc New York City unU'ss otherwise noted) are as f o l l o w s : BETTY I. SCHAfK, ;:NO Ocean Parkwaj-, Brooklyn, $50(1, .005: UOBEKT COLWELL. 5th Avenue, yiOOO, .01; BOBEUT DOWI.INCi. L'5 Broad Street, $^500, .0^5; HAURV M. BEUN.STEIN. tioew's s t a t e Theater llldr., Broaiiway and 4 5 t h Street. $ 1 5 0 0 , .015: IX)UIS LOTITO, Martin B»<ck Theater. 15th Street, $1;J500, .i;i5: JULIA KAIIKMAN. 502 Park Ave., $ 5 0 0 . .005; SYLVIA JACOBS, 1» Ueetor St.. $ 1 0 0 0 , .01: IDA E. SHAKIN, i;i42 4 0 St.. Brooklyn, $500, .005: TRUDY HAZAN, 2 0 0 Wadsworth Ave., $1000, .01; DAVID H. KNOTT, 4;») Madison Ave., $1500, .015: B. LELAND MIJLLEK, 2 7 0 Broadway. $1000, .01; LAWHENCE LIPSON, 2 0 0 Eifth Ave.. $500. .005; DAVID M. TITEI-MAN, J150 F i f t h Ave., $500, .005: LUTHER WOOD. 4n7 F i f t h Ave., SIOOO. .01; MORRIS L. ROTHCHILD, 10 Marvel Road. New Haven, Conn., $750, .0075: ANTHONY BRADY FARRELL, Mark Hellingrer Tlieater, Broadway and SlBt Street. $1(5500, .105; ALICE BESSER. 6 1 2 Onderdonk Ave., Ridirewood, $ 5 0 0 . .005; MIRIAM J. STEWART, ;j;j5 Quincy Street, Itrooklyn, $500, .005; BENJAMIN WEITZNER, I'icadilly Hotel, 4 6 t h Street, $760, .0075; WILLIAM DEUTSCH, 3 0 0 We^t 4 5 St., $1000, .01; ARTHUR LEMMON, B e e k h a r d f s Ticket Oftlee, 1(!33 Broadway. $500, .005; IX>RETTA McKEEVER, 0 0 Sherman Plai'e, Jersey City. New Jersey $500. .005: JOSEPH WALTZER, 8 7 8 0 — 1 1 0 t h Street. Richmond Hill. $ 5 0 0 . .005; MARGAREa^ WEAVER, Hamilton Hotel, Norristown. Pa.. $ 5 0 0 . .005; MARGAREa'E SCHLEGEL, 141 SouUi New St.. Naaareth, Pa., $ 1 0 0 0 . .01; MARY CRAIO P H I L U P S . 1 9 West Washin^tou Ave., Washing-ton, New Jersey. $500, .006; IDA ABRAHAMS, 20tK) Brighton 12 Street. Brooklyn, $ 1 0 0 0 , 0 1 ; CATHERINE H. PEDEN, 3 1 Eliot Place. Freeport, N. Y.. SIOOO. .01; ALICE BOERNER. 4 3 7 East I6tt Street. $ 1 0 0 0 . .01: CONSTANCE B. BOLES. 1 3 0 West 18th Street. $ 1 0 0 0 , .01; JOSEPHINE HINTZ. 113-23 803rd Street. St. Albans, $ 5 0 0 . .005: LILLIAN REDDEN, Indian Neoklane, Peeonic, N . T.. $ 1 0 0 0 . .01; EVELYN JEAN CRAIO, 1 9 Weet Washinrton St,. Washingrton, New Jenjey, $ 5 0 0 . .005; JOSEPH H A U I T M A N , Lincoln Hotel, 8th Ave. and 4 6 t h St.. $500, .005; P A U L I N E HOFFMAN, c / o Arthur Klein. 2 4 0 Wt«t 4 4 t h St., $600, .006. The pai-tnershlp term oonunence« on fllingr of certitlcate, etmtinuingr until all partnership rights in play are terniinattxl. LiniitMl Pai-tneru' contributions returnable in cash only nftor play opens in New Tork City and after payment or provision f o r all liabilities plus eai^h i-eservo of $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 . Additional partners admissible, but share of proUts payable only out of foueral partners' share. Substituted limited artnurs prohibited. No priority to any mltetl pttJtncr as to contributions or compi'disation. Partnership tcrminat«'8 on death, insanity or retirement of the tfi n,9ial partuur. Nu udditiouul cuntributiuiis f^uiftkl. S I.K<JAL NOTICE At a Special Term of the City Court of the City o l New York, held in and for the County of New York. at 52 Chambei-s Street, Borouprh of Manhattan, City of New York, this May 18, 1{»50. PRESENT: Hon. Edward J. McCullen. Justice. In the Matter of the Application of EVE HENRY, mother of JACOB BEN COHEN, also known aa JACK B. COHEN, an infant over fourteen >fars of age, f o r leave to the infant to assume the name of JACK B. HENRY. Upon readinsr and filing: the petition of EVE HENRY", verified the 18th day of April, 1050, and the consent of JACOB BEN COHEN, also known as JACK B. COHEN, the infant herein, verified the 18th day of April, 1950, praying- for leave to the infant to as.sumo tlie name of JACK B. HENRY, in the place and stead of his present name; and it appearing that the said infant has been regrietered pursuant to the Selective Servii^ Act and has filetl his Declaration of Intention of becoming- a citizen of the United States, and the Court being satistied thereby that the averments contained in said petition and consent are true and that there is no reasionable objection to the change of name proposed, NOW. on motion of BENJAMIN J. AXELROD. attorney for the petitioner, it is ORDERED, that the said infant, JACOB BEN COHEN, also kno\wi as JACK B. COHEN, be, and ho hereby is authorized to assume the name of JACK B. HENRY, in place and 8tea<i of his present name, on the 27th day of June 1050. upon complying with the provisions of this order, namely, that the petitioner cause this order and the papers upon which it is granted to be filed in the office of the Clerk of this Court in New York County, within ten days from the date hereof, and that within ten days from the date of the entry of the said order, petitioner cause a copy thereof to be published in the Civil Service I.«ader. a newspaper published in the County of New York, and within forty days after the making of this order, proof of such publication by afBdavit, be filed and recorded in the office o t the Clerk of this Court in New York County, and it is further ORDERED, that within twenty days from the entry of this order, i>etltloner cause a copy of this order together with the papers upon which the said order ia based, be served on the Selective Service Local Board Number 14. New York, New York, and within ten days after said serrice proof of such service by affidavit be filed In the office ot the Clerk of this Court in New York County, and it is further ORDERED, that a copy of this order and the papers upon which it is baeed be served upon the District Director of the ImmigraUon and Naturalisation Service, addressed t o No. 7 0 Columbus Avenue. Now York. New T o r k , within twenty days from the date of this oi'dcj, and that proof of sueh service be tiled with the Clerk of this Court, within ten days atter nuch servii-e. and it is further ORDERED, that after such requirements are complityl with, the said infant, JACOB BEN COHEN, also known as JACK 11. COHEN, shall on and after the 27th day of June 1050, be known a^) and by the name of JACK B. HENRY, which he is hereby authorised to assume, and by no olhtiir uiuiie. ENTKK. i:. J, .McCuUuu, J.C.U. Title Est. Professional & Technical Assistant, Education 5-1 Professional & Technical Assistant, Library S c i e n c e . . . .5-1 Professional & Technical Assistant, Economics 5-1 Professional & Technical Assistant, Statistics 5-1 Professional & Technical Assistant, Psychology 5-1 Professional & Technical As.sktant, Law 5-1 Professional & Technical Assistant, General 5-1 Sr. Accountant, Public Service, & Contract Utility Acct.. .5-3 Sr. Editorial Clerk, State Departments 5-4 Sr. Education Supervisor (Phys. Bduc. & Rec.), Educ 5-11 Assoc, Accountant, Pub. Serv., & Contract Utility Acct.. .5-4 Sr. Claims Engineer, Public Works 5-8 Disease Control Veterinarian, Agriculture & Markets 4-20 Jr. Pharmacist, State Departments 5-4 Sr. Education Supervisor (Child Development), E d u c . . . 4 - 2 0 Sr. Education Supervisor (Rural Educ.), Education 5-4 Clinical Photographer, State Depts. «fe Institutions 4-20 Office Machine Operator (Printing), State Departments. .5-4 Director of Mental Hygiene Personnel, Mental Hygiene. .4-17 AiIT. I for Elig. 61 26 9 67 23 27 212 11 38 8 6 6 6 5 4 4 4 4 2 Motor Equipment Operator Exam Open Rockland County will hold a n open-competitive examination for Motor Equipment Operator, with salaries varying from $1 to $1.70 an hour, according to the location. Vacancies exist in Orangetown, Clarkstown, Stony Point, Haverstraw, and in the Rockland County service. Apply until Friday, June 2, to the State Department of Civil Service, State Office Building. Albany 1, N. Y., or the NYC or B u f falo branch office. A chauffeur's license will be required of permanent appointees. The practical performance exam will be given during the week of June 19. Mr. AdT. Kllllf • I have examined "THE MANAS FOOT OSCILLATOR" and find that it does an efficient job and is simple to operate. Plug into outlet and relax whUe the OSCILLATOR gently massages and helps restore the circulation which gives relief to tired, aching feet. Free demonstration 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Only $21.95 postpaid, or C.O.D. plus charges. Pull purchase price will be refunded if not tiioroughly satisfied. Send check or money ordei- to OSCILLATION EQUIPMENT CO. Dept. C — 1 3 2 West 72nd St., New York 23, N. Y. —John STAINED RUGS AND CARPETS brightened and renewed with CALIFORNIA CLEANER I was amazed to see a shabby, dog stained rug, sprinkled with this scientifically prepared granular powder, brushed in, and an hour later vacuumed to an unbelievable brilliancy. California Cleaner will not harm the finest rug, because it contains no acid, and is positively non - inflammable. It is a remarkable spot cleaner, for it n e v e r leaves a ring. A 1 lb. 14 oz.; can is only $1.25 postpaid. I suggest that you send a check or money order today to G. J. DeBARCENA. Dept. C., 101 West 58th St., New York 19, N. Y. —John PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SWIMMING POOL OWNERS, you can now fill your pool once and keep the same water sparkling and clear the entire season. I was surprised to learn that this small stainless steel "SMX" type of filter purifies 50 QPM of water. I t is far superior to the old fashioned sand filter, and c a n be depended upon to give greater clarity and more complete removal of organisms. The cost of operation and maintenance is small, because the filter unit was designed to minimize any possible damage due to careless operation by an unskilled attendant. I suggest that you write or phone for details immediately to MICRO METALLIC CORP., 203 Bradford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Applegate 7-8493—John. EARN whUe you LEARN at MANHATTAN BUSINESS INSTITUTE. They train you quickly in shorthand, typing, comptometry, stenotype, bookkeeping or secretarial and place you in a part time position. The Institute is staffed with competent instructors. Visit them. They will advise you. MANHATTAN BUSINESS INSTITUTE. 147 W 41nd St • (cor B'way) NYC. Bi'yant 0^4181.—John At BONDED, New York's oldest and largest automobile dealer, you may have a 1950 car without cash, take 3 years to pay and at bank rates only,—even if you're only a wage-earner. You get immediate delivery, without red tape and best of all an UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE, backed by Bonded reliable reputation earned thru over 29 years of selling and buying cars. If your credit has been declined elsewhere, come to Bonded; they guarantee delivery. Choose from a vast selection at 2 big buildings: In New York: 1696 Broadway (53 S t . ) : in Jamaica: 139-07 Hillside Ave., just off Queens Blvd. Open evenings till 10. Closed Sunday. Liberal Trade allowances or cash for your oW car. Come in. Get their proposition. —John PERSIAN COATS Will be COMPLETELY RE STYLED into the latest 1951 fashion for ONLY $85.00 by N. KEENER who for 24 years has enjoyed the reputation of reliability second to none in Brooklyn. MR. KERNER assured me that not only is the workmanship guaranteed, but that additional skins, if required, will be supplied at cost. Hollander, who does the brilliantizing, really makes the coat look like new. If you really want a job well done, I suggest you go to N. KERNER, 592 Sutter Ave. (Cor. Georgia), Brooklyn. All subways to East N. Y. Open evenings till 9:30. Friday and Sunday 5 P.M. or call Dickens 6-3011. DAY'S L O W COST I OWN A PAIR OF "NITE-VUE" amber glasses. What a pleasure it is to drive at night without t h a t dan gerous, accident-causing GLARE! I also find that they cut television glare, and sharpen c o n trast. For outdoor activities, well, just forget about sun headaches. It is amazing, because they don't dim or darken vision, in fact all objects become clearer and stand out in sharp contrast. T h e price is only $2.95 and when you send yom- check or money order, mention if you wish the "Clip on" style for your present glasses. THE MAILORD COMPANY, Dept. ICS —204 East 81st St., New York 28, N. Y. Each pair of glasses will be sent postpaid and fully guaranteed.—John PLAYLAND, RYE. Amusements, boardwalk, kiddyland, boating, bathing, restaurants, picnic groves, fire works. Rd. trip wkdays: Child 58c. Adults 87c. Sat.-Sun. $1.15. N. ROCHELLE (25c), HUDSON PK. (32c), GLEN ISLAND (35c), LARCHMONT (35c), MAMARONECK (58c), RYE (to PORTCHESTER LINE (69c). Busses Pick Up at Fordham Sc Valentine (1 block from Ind. Sub.): Fordham Rd. & Wash. Av., & on So. Blvd.; on Boston Rd. @ Pelham Pkway., Allerton Av., Gun Hill Rd., Eastchester Rd., Dyre Av. <fc City line. CONNECTIONS to Pelham Manor, Mt. Vernon, Bronxville, Harrison. Port Chester, Greenwich and Stamford. FORDHAM TRANSIT CO., INC. POixJham 7-3323-7. I have made this trip many times and always spent a vei-y pleasant day. I suggest you try it.— HORMONE TURTLE OIL. H u n dreds of clinical tests have proven beyond a doubt tha4; homiones which are effectively absorbed by application will help revitalize skin and recaptme youthful glow. T h e use of UP - TO - DATE'S ESTRON - HORMONE CREAM WITH TURTLE OIL which contains Lanolin and no water, and is equivalent to high priced n a tionally advertised creams of this type, has actually helped correct eyelines, crepey throat, sagging muscles and double chin. For younger skin and adolescent conditions. there is PINK ESTROGENIC HORMONE CREAM, which I also recommend as a day cream. A 3 oz. jar, 6 weeks supply, is only 89c plus tax. Mail orders will be filled direct from laboratory, C.O.D., or you c a n send check or money order to Dept. C., UP-TO-DATE COSMETIC CO., ELECTROLYSIS is the ONLY 9 East 48th St., N. Y. 17 (PI. 3MEANS of REMOVING HAIR 2929) .—Alice PERMANENTLY, because it kills the follicle. Investigation of the method and technique used by TYTELL TYPEWRITER CO.. h a s Lucille Murphy, R. N. convinced me of her reliability. Her skill in long been a favorite with Civil removing unwanted hair will Service Employees and TYTELL please you. Many prominent phy- gives them a spectacular discount sicians, knowing of her experience on all makes and models of brand in hospitals, and in the military new, price fixed, portable t y p e service, recommend her highly. writers. For example, the RemingThe method Is safe and results ton Noiseless Portable, new 1950 guaranteed. I suggest you take model, lists for $112.50 plus $7.17 advantage of Miss Murphy's offer excise tax. TYTELL allows a 40% of free consultation and demon- discount. You pay only $71.80 net. stration. Visit LUCILLE MURPHY Other make portables are sold at 200 West 57th St. Suite 805 with similar discount. TYTELL or telunhone Juflson 6-0959 for an TYPEWRITER CO., 123 Pulton St. N. Y. (aud floor)» appointment.—Alice i; I • • . { • . , CIVIL Page Eight •LEADER. Amvri€'a*H KhEVKJ%TtM M.argvHl Wtwkly Sov YKAtt Public SERVICE Finger-Printing To Be Resumed In U.S. Exams EmpUmvvH The Second Regional Office of the U. S. Civil Service Commission reports that it hasn't had an Published every Tuesday by impersonation case in a long time. CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, INC. 97 Duane Street. New York 7. N. Y. BEekmon 3-6010 However, it has just ordered the r e s u m p t Ion of finger-printing, Maxwell I.ehniHti, lulitor and I'lihlisher H. J. Kernarcl, Executive Editor Morion Yarmon, General Manager which ^was stopped during the war. In the next large exam to N. H. MaKer, Itiisiness Manager be held in the Second Region, TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1950 for filling jobs in New York and New Jersey, finger-printing will be resumed, although the cost is high. The Regional Office figiues that it takes four employees 11 minutes to fingerprint 40 candidates. The flngerprints will be taken at the exam and will be sent to the appointing officers, who will check with prints made of the person who shows up as the eliT week's end, it was reported from Albany, without gible certified for possible apofficial confirmation, that another "wild pitch" down- pointment. Menilier, Audit B u r e a u of (limilalions A Creeping Wage-Cut? A grading was being prepared by the State Classification and Compensation Division. Latest victims of downward salary adjustment are to be the physical therapists, if the reports are correct . . . and we hope they aren't. The work of the therapists In New York State institutions has won nation-wide renown. At West Haverstraw, for example, where the largest group of physical therapists work, some excellent results are being achieved in the alleviation of the terrible effects of polio. It is unseemly that the employees doing this work should feel the sudden chill of cut salaries. No one had appealed in behalf of this group. No public hearings have been held at which they could be told what was in the wind, and given an opportunity to speak their piece. And, on the surface at least, there seems no adequate reason why this group has been singled out for the axe. Can it be that a new creeping wage-cut is descending upon State employees in the form of downgradings one-ata-time ? NYC Employees Prove Thrifty ^ ^ H E remarkable gi-owth in size, service and influence A of the Municipal Credit Union is a tribute to the thrift and reliability of NYC employees. The raport for the year 1949 shows that there are 34,433 members and that capital is $8,744,759.91. When the organization started, on December 31, 1916, it had 19 members and $570 capital. The enormous rise in 33 years attests also to the soundness of the management. For more than two-score years William Reid, the present Deputy Mayor, has been president of the Municipal Credit Union. Loans are made to members only. Out of more than $87,000,000 in loans during the 33 years, the losses have been only $21,000. Protection From Loan Sharks One of the outstanding services rendered by the MCU is tlie protection of employees from loan sharks. The interest rate charged by the credit union is 6 per cent simple interest, but only on the unpaid balance. Over a year's period, on the basis of monthly payments, the interest is about 3 per cent. Loans are made on the basis of an individual's record of responsibility. If a mortgage loan is issued, it could equal the full assessed valuation of the employee's improved property. The credit union has never lost one cent on any loan made to help an employee build or buy a house or permanently improve his home. A former city employee, Frank R. Rubel, is counsel and general manager of the credit union. His motto is to recommend help wherever it is needed and deserved. Some Lose Under Suit They Won ALBANY, May 29 — The Court of Appeals aflirnaed the claims of Nicholas Barbarita that he should be a member of the old Relief and Pension Fund of the NYC Department of Sanitation, and not a member of the NYC Employees Retirement System, which he's been for many years. Similar suits have been brought, affecting 1,200 men. They joined the NYC Employees System when they were told by the trustees of the old system that they weren't eligible for that. But the courts find they were eligible. The suits were begun when the benefits would have been greater by the transfer, as far back as five years ago. Meanwhile the NYC Employees System has been liber- alized, many men would gain greater benefit by staying in it. Also some have already retired under it, at disability haJf pay after 10 years, or have died after ten years' service and their f a m ilies received a full year's pay, or after shorter service, a half year's pay. Depending on how the court order reads, some of the men who sued to reccive the former higher benefits. will be forced to take those benefits, now less than those in the System from which they wanted then to be transferred. whatever they might prefer now. Making the new adjustments would involve a tremendous operation by the NYC Employees System. Tueflda:^, May 30, 1950 LEADER Miss and Mrs, By NAOMI SCOTT WHAT IS the outlook for you in your profession over the coming years? A survey made by the U. S. Department of Labor of prospects in popular fields shows the following picture: NURSING The need continues for professional nurses, although more nurses than ever are working in the field. More than 400,000 active registered nurses are expected to be needed by the end of 1950 and 500,000 by 1960. The heavy demand is caused by several factors: the Hospital Survey and Construction Act of 1946, giving financial aid to communities to build hospitals; an Increase in the number of hospitals and patients; the populai*ity of hospitalization insurance plans; the growth of the population; and the increase in the numWhere Responsibility Lies ber of aged in the country, with The responsibility for seeing 17 million over 65 years of age that there is no impersonation estimated for 1975. will devolve on the personnel o f Educational preparation beyond ficer of the department or agency making the appointment, as he the minimum required for a liwill make his own prints of the cense in nursing, such as a nursing applicant, and also the compari- degree at one of the 200 schools son, but there will also be a spot offering collegiate programs in check by the Commission, which nursing, may lead to well-paid has just obtained more investi- teaching or administrative posts in gators. Two e m p l o y e d at the Re- the field. Median monthly pay for gional Office were transferred beginner R. N.'s is about $175, with from other titles to investigators, salaries Increasing with greater reand the others obtained by trans- sponsibiilty. For additional information on a fer from other agencies. The request" for more investi- nursing career write: The Amerigators was made by James E. can Nurses' Association. The NaRossell, director of the Second tional League of Nursing EducaRegional Office, so that a still tion, or Committee on Careers in more thorough investigation of Nursing, all located at 1790 Broadcandidates could be made. He way, NYC, or the Women's B u would like to be able to send an reau, U. S. Department of Labor, investigator to every employer Washington 25, D. C. NEWSPAPER REPORTING reference that a candidate gives. June graduates are going to face Discrimination Charged stiff competition this year, and The Federal Government used even experienced people may find to require that the candidate's the going a bit tough in the next photograph be affixed to his ex- year or two on daily newspapers. am admission card. That method, In contrast to the increase in plus other precautions, safeguard- numbers of recent journalism ed against impersonations, the graduates, openings on daily paCommission found, but it had to pers have been declining. This is be abandoned when some • ap- due to a variety of reasons. There pointing officers, after a glance is a gi-adual tendency, particularly at a photograph, suddenly found in larger cities, for dailies to conthey could get along without the solidate. In NYC, for example, additional employee. The color there were nine large metropolitan of the eligible's skin had a lot dailies in 1949. This year there to do with it, the Commission are eight. In addition, experienced reportfound. Also, the angry protests are showing less tendency to against the discrimination, made ers leave their jobs for other employby outraged groups, were numer- ments. Furthermore, an ever-inous. Since the discontinuance of creasing proportion of space in the photo practice there has newspapers is being devoted to adbeen a minimum of complaints vertising. about discrimination. However, expansion in employ- • ft:i.KMIi:i%T«>» OF COMMENT » P U 1 .JOII.S Editor, The LEADER: An examination of your columns on J. Earl Kelly's decision that each Claims Examiner title should be reduced one grade, shows that his recommendation is based on two judgments: (1), The Boai-d's admission that the work (Claims Examiner vis-a-vis Employment Interviewer) is equal in difficulty and responsibility, (2), that wage data from other S4;ates lead him to feel that Claims Examiners are overpaid. To come to conclusion number one, the Board must concede that its original study of the job and their pegged classification was badly done and their gradation was wrong, or that recent studies have shown that both jobs are now virtually the same. The latter is contrary to fact. The essential element in the Interviewer job, the selection of workers for jobs, has remained unchanged in 20 years. The added requirement of knowledge of the U. 1. law is not a working element of the job but an influence upon the interviewer that selection is made under the provisions for allowances or prohitions against allowances. The Claims Examiner's work is not the same as five years ago. It is broader and wider with the extensions of the U. I. law and the -growing deposit of decisions which examiners must know to protect all parties reached by an issue under examination. Examination ten years ago was a simple declaratory process. Today it is an improving tool for the ascertainmenit of truth and is largely cross-examination. The Claims Examiner is a trier of f a c t ! in the first chain of an administrative judicial process. The Claims Examiner is more a junior U. I. Referee than an employment interviewer. The Employment Interviewer has conducted his selection within the U. I. law. Work Differs The use of wage data from other States to Set wages in New York is like saying a certain car can be bought in Detroit for $1,350, it costs $1,625 in NYC therefore it is overpriced in New York City. New York State must meet the wage scale required in New York by determining the importance of certain work to a whole process and then establishing that the money return shall be more or less influenced by the cost of living in New York State with at least 70 per cent of the weight of the wage scale being determined by the index in NYC. Other States pay examiners less because (1) local cost of living is lower and <2) the content of the job differs. In New York examiners make decisions, called initial determinations; elsewhere examiners are manual transcribers of claimants' stories with a central reviewing unit concluding the case. In the latter States examiners are interviewers and should be paid the same as interviewers. Senior Examiners are downgraded because the Classification and Compensation Board does not understand the value of supervision of management, although it sometimes seems equipped to distinguish between various kinds and grades of technical a.ssignments. Work gets done because ment is expected with the labor press, religious press, house organs, foreign language papers, trade association papers and country p a pers. In addition, fields related t o newspaper work, such as radio, public relations, advertising and book-publishing are still able to absorb many people with journalism training or experience. CHEMISTRY Employment opportunities are expected to be good for both m e n and women with graduate training in chemistry, both in the near future and in the long run. However, recent grads with only a B.S. will run into stiff competition in t h e next few years at least. There is a shortage of chemists for basic and background research. Particularly in industrial laboratories, where chemists represent nearly 40 per cent of the total number of scientists and research engineers employed, opportunities are plentiful for those with advanced degrees or specialized experience. Expenditures IH^ the Federal government for chemical research are tremendous and ai'e expected to remain this way, which means many jobs. BUSINESS The largest single career field open to college graduates is in t h e management and operation of business firms. The long-range employment outlook is good, because of the growth of business employment, heavy replacement needs expected over the coming years, and increasing use of business administration graduates to fill these jobs. There will also be a continuation of the trend toward greater specialization and increased complexity in business, which has led to wider use of such specialized e m ployees as accountants, personnel workers, market research analysts and sales executives. The main source of new job opportunities for graduates of business schools will be in the replacement of executives now employed as they die or retire. A large proportion of the executives in the higher-ranking administrative and technical jobs in industry are i n the upper-age brackets. This means that a higher percentage than usual must be replaced in the near future. Many companies are seriously concerned about this problem. Will graduates of university business courses be hired for e x ecutive positions before those without degrees, other qualifications being equal? According to the Labor Department survey, the answer seems to be. Yes, the trend is in that direction. • someone sees that it gets done and in that iies the reason for the success of the State's business. The Board must recognize it in the salary scale in the same way that this most important feature is rewarded in private enterprise. The Senior Examiner is the foreman of eight to 15 Claims E x aminers whose work is superior to that oi interviewers; he must be pegged at a higher return t h a n those who supeivise fewer people with less responsibility. There can be no parity between these jobs because there is no close correspondence in the work content of these titles. JAMES L. S L A V m WI.MIOW-WAMIEItS' l»AV Editor, The LEADER: We are three window washers employed at Brooklyn State Hospital. It's abouc time something was done about our salaries. We are beginning to believe that the Classification and Compensation Board has forgotten our claims. It has been a year since our claims have been in, and we are getting led up. In addition, how about looking into the dangers of our job? T h e Budget Director's Ollice says it's not dangerous hanging out of a sixteen-story window. PHILIP A. MASTRIDGE, Vice President, Civil Service Employees Association, Brooklyn State Hospital Chapter. JAMES R. WORTHY JEKMIAH MOORE r T M e d b r , May SO, C I T I L 1 9 5 0 S E R V I C E T. E A D E Pnsjc R Nine STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS ELIGIBLE LISTS Open-Corn petitive ^ ASST. ACCOUNTANT, PUBLIC Service (O. C.) and CONTRACT UTILITY ACCOUNTANT, GRADE III Department of Public Service Non-Disabled Veterans 1. Olaksen, J., NYC 82000 2. Fleschner, J., Bklyn 78400 3. Donnelly, D., Buffalo ....75400 Non-Veterans 4. Bitsko, A., NYC 78900 r 5. Seskln, P.. Bklyn 82300 6. Sllbersteln, W., Bklyn ...81400 7. Kenealy, A., Utica 80200 8. Handler, M., NYC 78300 9. Prince, W., LI City 78000 SEWAGE PLANT OPERATION (O. C.) Town of Cheektowaga, Erie County Non-Veterans 1. Nagorskl, J., Buffalo . . . . 7 8 2 0 0 2. Freeman, A., Buffalo . . . . 7 7 2 0 0 3. Gajewskl, S., Sloan 76600 4. Hyzy, J., Buffalo 75400 Complete Guide To Your Civil Service Job Oft Me oaly book thai givt yoa 111 26 p « g « s o # t a m p l * civil service exams, all fiib|eet<; (21 requlremeafn far 500 goverameaf lab$: ill Mermaflaa akaut kaw to get o "patreaage" fob—wlfft«a# taking a test and a eemplete listing of sack fobs: 141 tall laferm«> lea akeat veteran preference; I SI tells yea kew to traasfet from one fob to another, and 1,000 additional facts obeaf goverameat loks, "Complete Guide to Year Civil Service Job" h writtea so yea caa anderstand It, by LEADER editor Maxwell Lekman «•« general manager Morton Yarmon. It's oaly Sf. LEADER BOOKSTORE 97 Duane Street. New Yerii City Please tend me immediately a copy of "Completo Goido to Yomr Civil Service Job" by Maxwell Lehman and Mortoa Y C N U I O O . I enclose SI in payment, pins 10c for postage. n Nome I .!> 11 t I I - Address —• A. J. Corroll (left), a State College of Forestry employee, receives a Merit Award check of $400 from Lieutenant Governor Joe R. Hanley ot the joint dinner of chapters in Onondaga County of the Civil Service Employees Association. Doris LeFever, co-chairman of the dinner committee, locks on. Arco's Study Book What to Do at an Exam Explained for Motor Vehicle License Examiner Social Investigator Employment Interviewer f The course being given in preparation for the State Employment Interviewer exam by a group in the DPUI, under the auspices of The Civil Service Employees Association, inchides a discussion of how to proceed at the examination Itself. The classes ajre held at 87 Madison Avenue, NYC. H. J. Bernard, executive editor of The LEADER, addressed the group last week. The advice to candidates follows: "A candidate should first read all the questions on the whole pa- *2.00 I rl Samnle Tests, Questions and Answers Practical and Public Health Nurse _ 2.50 State Trooper , 2.00 Steno-Typist (Practical) 1.50 Telephone Operator 2.00 Able Seaman and Deckhand .25 per before attempting to answer even one, but mentally note which questions seem difficult. These should be classed m e n t a l l y ^ the trouble questions. Answering them should be reserved until the last. "Having carefully read thiough the questions once, and not merely glanced at themi, the candidate now should read them again, one at a time, answering first each one to which he feels he knows the answer. The trouble questions are skipped over this time. "After having answered the socalled easy questions, read with renewed care each question to which you feel you do not know the answer, and try to figure out the answer. Sometimes the difficulty is in properly understanding the puzzling question, rather LEARN TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION I)AV & NIGHT CAR l-'OR STATK KXAMINATION Veterans Lessons iiiuier (J.l. Bill Apiirovwl by N Y. State Hoard «>f Kdiicutioii Times Square '^rJ?.'.f^fy"' Het. 66th & 67tli St., N.Y. TR. 7-a<M9 We will pay i)t>«>ta{;c diiriiig month of May. pt. Available LEARN TO DRIVE at LEADER BOOKSTORE 97 DUANE ST. N. Y. 7. N. Y. EYE GLASSES The Comptroller of t h e State of N e w York will sell at his office at 270 Broadway, N e w York 7, N e w York June 6, 1950» at 11:30 o'clock A. M. (Eastern Daylight Saving Time) State of New York $ 5 8 , 3 1 0 , 0 0 0 Housing Bonds and $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 Grade Crossing Elimination Bonds Dated June 15, 1950, and maturing as follows: H O U S I N G BONDS—$1,190,000 annually June 15, 1952 to 2000 inclusive. Redeemable by the State on notice, on June 15,1990, or on any interest payment date thereafter. G R A D E CROSSING E L I M I N A T I O N BONDS—$600,000 annually June 15, 1951 to 1970 inclusive. Redeemable by the State on notice, on June 15, 1967, or on any interest payment date thereafter. Principal and semi-annual interest June 15 and December 15 payable in lawful money of the United States of America, at the Bank of the Manhattan Company, N e w York City. Descriptive circular will be mailed upon application to FRANK C. MOORE, State Comptroller, Albany 1, N. Y. Dated: May 24, 1950 • • Near V i s i o n Far V i s i o n • C o m p l e t e Selection O f H i g h Quality Eye Glasses C In The Finest Auto Driving School In The BRONX DA 8 - 3 1 1 0 ^ v^f" POWELL OPTICIAHS INC. 2109 B r o a d w a y Between 73rd & 74th Sts. New York City Or Call SUstiut'huaiiu OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 F. M. $ 1 2 , 9 9 0 up Egbert At Whitestene. Pushing 7-7707 Opeu Sundays C D A T T E N T I O N CIVIL SERVICE M O T O R I S T SAVE $9.85 or more E C mcc Hook ^ I. RANCH HOMES Spielman Auto School 100 ExaminaHons L. ABLE COURTKOUS INSTRUCTORS DUAL CONTROLLKD C \ R 8 1051 Westchester i v . At Southern Blvd. Bronx, N. Y. Bifocals Parnsfaking t h a n lack of knowledge of the a n swer. '•It may appear t h a t an unusually long time is left in which to answer the trouble questions. Remember diflficult questions take a disproportionately long time to answer. "With the difficult questions weigh any proposed answer, recheck with the question and, when fully satisfied t h a t you have a r rived at the answer, or the closest approach to the answer of whicii you are capable, register t h a t answer. Proceed slowly and carefully with each of the remaining troublesome questions and write the answers in only after you have come to the best solution of which you are capable. "As questions not answered are counted as wrong answers, a n swers should be given to all questions. The candidate has nothing to lose. "After all the questions have been answered, if there is any time left the candidate should devote it to checking and rechecking all his answers. This should include rereading the trouble questions. If any answer is to be changed, the candidate should write in the new answer and indicate t h a t the tentative one has been deleted. Hook " D R I IV^InNi Gto IDrive S FUN" General Auto Driving Seh. Inc. •104 Jay Stre^-t, Oi>p. l/ww'ii Met •^6A llaiiHun I>I. -^44 FlatbiiHh Av. Kxt. MAin 4-4695 on your auto iimuranic. Imnudiate .vnd ooiiiidete protection. S( rv iny niotoribta Binoe lO.'M. WM. BECKER CO. 87 MuUleii I.aiie Xew \ o r k ' Day IMioiie HO IMIKR MKlit rlione I N a-1 r.«i X. Y . SAVE up to $500 ^ TRUCKS on NEW and USED 1/2 to I ton. All body styles Generous trade-ins. Painless Payments J. J- Inc 37 YEARS OF FAIR DEALlNCi 1095 Atlantic Ave., B'klyn UrUN KVKNINUH UNi'lI. 8 A M ) MAin 2-0600 ALL UAlf S.Vi'l'KUAV rmgf! € I T I L T«n 9 K f t T I C I L K A D R X Latest Eligible Lists Issued b y S t a t e Promotion t. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 49. llodlisaeireki. S., AlbMiy 7t470 S. Clabeaux, R., Buffalo . . . . 8 2 8 1 5 13. Sanderson, W., Renslaer. 9020S 79500 13. Christian, A., Albany . . .89705 44. Lawson. C., Renslaer . . .78461 4. Druar, I., Buffalo 5. Trumann, D., Buffalo . . . .79125 14. Nixon, v., Kew Gdns . . .85830 Nvn-Vetcrans TAX EXAMINER (Prom.), 84840 45. Authier, J., Albany-....90234 f. Kapuscinski, J., Buffalo . .77940 15. Wilder, E.. NYC DeiH. of Taxfttion mn4 Flii«ncc 7. Clark, M., Elma 75750 16. McFerran, G., Albany • . . 83865 4$. Zuckerman, I.. Coeymns.89094 Tax Examiner Corp. Tax A 47. HesUn^ O., Cohoes 87027 t. Vonlangen, H., Buffalo . . .75500 17. Roberts, E., Setauket ...82395 Disabled Veteran* 18. KeUy, G., Watervliet 82155 Non-Veteran 48. Abeam. W., Albany 86728 1. Ck^en. J.. Fliushing . . . . 8 6 0 4 5 75000 19. O'Connor, C.. Bklyn . . . . 8 1 6 1 0 49. Walther, E., Albany . . . .85249 9. Kramer,. D., Buffalo 2. Nelson. M., Rego Pk. -..82543 LIBRARY CLERK (O. C.) 20. Bennett, J.. Hudson . . . . 80995 50. Bodrate, A.. Albany . . . . 8 4 5 8 5 3. Guzik, O., Rensselaer ..81448 Special District off Larehmoni, 21. Tobey, M.. Albany 80880 51. Fitzgerald, E.. Delmar . .84298 Non-DisaMed Veterans Public Library, Westchester 22. Flores, B., Albany 80840 52. Kalina. D., Bklyn 84080 4. Dugan, A.. Mechnicvle. .88083 Coanty 23. Chin, H., NYC 80725 53. Gold, A.. Albany 84052 5. Schwartz, J., Woodside. .86689 Non-Veteran 24. Garcia. M., Bkiyn 80470 54. Neely, A.. Albany 83545 6. Zara, S.. Bklyn 86589 80215 55. Moon, R.. Coxsackie ...83207 1. Harrell, A., Mt. Vernon.. .83600 25. Cohn, H.. Bronx 7. Pine, J., Bklyn 85853 80070 5f. Danforth, R . Syracuse .82602 WATER TREATMENT PLANT 26. La very, W., Bronx 8. Siskind, S.. Bronx 84526 27. Doyle, A., Freepwt 79965 OPERATOR, GRADE n , 57. Field, R., Syracuse 82569 9. Weber, M.. Bklyn 84096 58. Staff, A.. Albany 82195 Westchester Joint Water Works, 28. Eisenman, P., ..Bronx ..79020 10. Kern, S.. Fltishing 82308 Special District, Westchester 29. Fitzgerald. J., Albany . . .78715 59. Rubin, H., NYC 81970 11. Mulcahy, E.. Ttt>y 80696 County 30. Gurley, M., Bklyn 77740 60. Murphy. K.. Troy 80647 12. Simon. N., Albany 77754 Non-Veterans 31. Shufelt, D., Schtdy 77685 Tax Examiner Misc. Tux C Non-Veterans 1. Peterson, J., Larchmont . .79376 32. Simon, S.. Bklyn 77655 Disabled Ycterans 13. Schmahl, B., Albany ...86840 76965 1. Nelson, M., Rego Fk. . . 84328 2. Comblo, F., Mamaroneck.78104 33. Noonan, J., Albany 14. Zuckerman, I.. Coejnnns.86769 X Guzik, Q., R^issselaer .80426 SR. LABORATORY TECHNICIAN 34. Holtzman, B., Bronx . . . .76735 15. Kalina, D.. Bklyn 85964 (BACTERIOLOGY) (O. C.) 35. Rosenfelt, L., Bronx '76175 3. Whitney, K , Hamburg. .79961 16. Moon, R., Coxsackie ...79799 State Depts. and Institntions 36. Mahler, R.. Bklyn 75740 4. Delbrocco, D., Schtdy ..78341 Tax Examiner Income Tax B Non-Veterans 37. Adler, S., Bklyn 75590 Non-Disabled Yetefam 85125 5. Schwarts, J.. Woodside .90259 1. Steinglass, M., Bronx . . . .80100 38. Antczak, E., Rochstr Disabled Veterans 75600 SR. EDUCATION SUPERVISOR 6. Siskind. Bronx 81721 2. Singer. H., NYC 1. Guzik. G., Rensselaer ..83612 (RURAL EDUCATION) (O. C.) SR. RESEARCH ANALYST 7. Cahill, J., Buffalo 79106 2. Cohen, J., Flushing . . . . 8 2 2 3 2 Bureau of Rural Administrative (CRIMINOLOGY (O. C.) Non-Yeterans 3. Delbrocco, D.. Schtdy ..81494 Service, Education Department State Departments 8. Hawron. U , Cohoes 86838 4. Noonan, R.. Ballston ...81494 Non-Disabled Veteran Non-Disablod Veteran 9. Zuckeraum, L. Coesmms.86769 5. Perry, T., Troy 79070 78632 1. Benedict. D., Rensselaer .87900 10. Authier, J., Albany 86187 1. Rieger, R., Yonkers Non-Disabled Veterans Non-Veteran Non-Veterans 11. Kalina, D., Bklyn 84179 6. Leffler, B., Bklyn 89196 80804 2. Baine, H., Albany 88400 12. Kirsch, J., Rensselaer ..82671 2. Dundon, J., Buffalo 7. Connolly, J„ Schtdy ...89022 81960 13. Field, R., Syracuse 82143 ASSOCIATE PUBLIC HEALTH 3. Lattimer, E., Delmar DENTIST (O. C.) 4. Fisk, H., Middleport 80620 14. Fitzgerald, E., Delcuar ..81703 PRINCIPAL CANCER 15. Danforth, R.. Syracuse. .81585 SR. EDITORIAL CLERK (O. C.) State Departments UROLOGIST (O. C.) 16. Moon. R., Coxsackie 80564 Disabled Veteran Department of Health SPECIAL DEPUTY CLERK* Non-Disabled Veteran 1. Ramos, M., Bronx 76960 (Prom.), Supreme Cosrt, FIrsi 1. Staubitz, W., Kenmore . . .77139 Non-Disabled Veterans Dept. Non-Veteran 2. Goodman. W., Bronx ...82095 STATE PROM. ELIGIBLE8 Disabled Veterans 3. McNamara, T., NYC . , . .79880 2. Fuchsman, J., Jackson Ht.79875 1. Shea, W.. Bronx 92633 4. Wallace, J.. Bklyn 79220 OFFICE MACHINE OPERATOR (PRINTING) (O. C.) 2. Hoyler, H.. Bronx 87448 5. Schwartz, M., Albany ...79180 State Departments 3. Nlcholls, J., Bronx 86373 6. Gewirtz, A,, Bklyn 78705 AN •specially p r e p a r e d selection of valuable study aids Non-Disabled Veterans Non-Disabled Veterans 7. Corinaldi, D.. NYC 77365 78750 4. Keenan, J., NYC 92511 8. Gerry. J., Bklyn 77005 1. Upton. E., Albany 5. Germain, P., Brtmx 91196 9. Doyle, D., Mt McGregor.76165 2. Deitsch, G., Buffalo 78750 PRICE $3.50 6. Hussey, R., Bronx 89876 Non-Veterans Non-Veterans 7. Coyle, J., Great Kls . . . .89020 10. Sehl, J., Albany 82500 84595 3. Goldberg, M., NYC 8. McKee, A., NYC 88036 11. Gilbert, S., Bronx 90540 4. Foley, B., Mechnicvle . . .76880 O r d e r DirecHy F f m Tkm 9. Nugent, W., Bronx 86495 10. Kesten, J., NYC 85898 Non-Veterans 11. Sheridan, J., NYC 94079 C i v i l S e r v i c e Employees Associoiion 12. Victory, El, Corona 93820 13. Weinblatt, L, Bronx 93356 8 ELK STREET A L B A N Y . N. Y. 14. Baker, A., Bronx 92822 15. Yurdin, H., Bronx 92729 16. Koch, E., Bronx 92138 AvteUea 17. Kavanagh, W., NYC ...91574 18. Hannigan, R., St. Albans 91300 ROCKAWAY AIRPORT. Flight instruction—G. I. Bill or private stucJents. Clean 19. Peny, W., Bronx 91004 modem planes for rent. Beach Channel Dr. & Beach 52 St. Bell Harbor 6-0470. 20. McGowan, F., Mineola . .90531 21. Goldberg, S., Bronx . . . . 9 0 3 9 5 Academic and Conunerei*!—College Preparatorjr 22. Rosenblum, S., NYC . . . .90249 BORO HALL ACADKMY—Flatbush Ext. Cor. Pulton St., Bklyn. Resents Accredited. 23. O'Connor, T., NYC . . •. .90233 MA. »-;j447. 24. Roos, G., Tuckahoe 90152 25. Fischer. S., Bronx 89309 BuHincM Schools 26. Ivans, E., NC 89084 MANHATTAN BUSINI'^SS IN8TITUTK. 147 Woot 42nd St.—Secretarial and Book27. Nolan, T., Bronx 88922 keeping:. Typing: Comptometer Oper., Shorthand Stenotype. BR 0-4181, Open eves. Whether you want a job in the business world, vocational field. 28. McEneney, M., NYC . . . ,88840 Civil Service—or seek advancement in your present job—or to go to 29. Yonet, W., Bklyn 88651 MONROK S<lIOOL OF BUSINESS, Secretarial, Acconntingr, Machines. Approved to train veterans under G.I. Bill. Day and evening-. Bulletin C. 177th St. Boston a vocational or training school—a High School Equivalency Diploma 30. Maickel, P., Floral Pk. ..87220 Road (R K O Chester Theatre Bldg.) Bronx. DA 3-7300-1. is an absolute "must!" For. in these days ot keen competiticm, the 31. Mullane, C., NYC 86911 higher-paying, more attractive jobs always go to the man or woman GUIDANCE SUPERVISOR BusincM and Foreign Scrviee who is better educated. (Prom.), Dept. of Correction LATIN AMKKICAN INSTITUTE—11 West 42nd St.. N.Y.C. All secretarial and bustSTATE PROM. ELIGIBLES Don't you miss out on the job you want because you were not noss subjects in En^'lish. Spanish, Portug^uesc. Special course in international Non-Disabled Veteran administration and foreigm service. LA 4-2835. fortunate enough to graduate from high school! Don't let somewie else beat you out of a job because you can't show a high school 1. Drojarski, G., Catskill ...85075 DraftUig ASSISTANT EXAMINER OF diploma— when a high school equivalency diploma is so easy to get! Yes, if you have failed to complete high school for any reason— METHODS AND PROCEDURES COLUMIllIS TECHNK'.VL SCHOOL, ISO W. 20th bet. 6th & 7th Aves., N.Y.C., drafts(Prom.), (Interdepartmental man traii)in? for careers in the architectural and mechanical fields. Immediate or even if you have never set foot in a high school—you can still get enrollnienl. Vets eliffiblo. Day-eves. WA 0-0625. STATE PROM. ELIGIBLES a High School Equivalency Diploma! And you don't have to go to Disabled Veterans high school to get it. Nor do you have to put in long hours of s t u ^ NATIONAL TECHNICAL INSTITUTE—Mechanical Architectural, job estimatiner in 85787 Manhattan. 55 W, 42nd Street. LA 4-2020. In Brooklyn, 00 Clinton St. (Boro or attend any classes—you prepare for it right in your own h ^ e , 1. Taeler, P., Albany Hall) TH 5-1011. In New Jersey. 116 Newark Ave., BErgen 4-2250. 2. Ribak, M., Albany 83005 in your spare time 3. Solodow, W., Albany ...81069 DetMtion, InvestiKstion St Crimlnologry Non-Disabled Veterans HERE'S HOW TO GET YOUR HIGH SCHOOL 4. Owens, C., Albany 86001 THE BOL.AN ACADEMY, Empire State Bldg., N . Y . C — ( B o an Investigator) James S. EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA ' 5. Duffy, R., Albany BOLAN. FORMER POLICE COMMISSIONER OF N. T offers an opportunity 85887 to men .-uid women for a professional career in modern Investigation, Detecl a 43 states the Education Department offers anyone* who 6. Whitcomb, H., Valatie ..84843 tion and Criminology by Home Study Course. Free placement service' assists gradnatea to obtain jobs Approved for veterans. Send for Booklet L. psisses a series of examinations a high school equivalency diploma. 7. Soudakoff, J., Bronx ...82502 8. Oshin, S.. NYC 81849 This diploma is accepted by employers, training schools, vocationaJ Elemeatsry Course for Adults schools, and the Civil Service Commission as the equivalent of a 9. Vermilyea, N., Selkirk . 80869 10. Mills, R., Schtdy 80098 regular high school diploma! COOPER SCHOOL—316 W. 130th St., N. Y. 30. Specializing in Adult Education. Evening Elementary Classes lor Adult«. AU 3-6470. Yes, regardless of your previous education, you can get this high 11. McCuUough, D., Cohoes.90098 school equivalency ceitificate. But you must pass your state's tests! 12. Mills, B., Voorhesvle . . .79064 Motion Picture Operating 13. Schneider, R., Delmar ..79052 BUT—you can improve your chances of passing your exams— Non-Veterans BKOOKLYN YMCA TKADB S(!HOOL—1119 Bedford Ave. (Gates) Bklyn. MA 2-1100. and getting your High School Equivalency Diploma Course! For 87722 Eves. this course offers you complete, perfect, inexpensive preparation for 14. Sohaeffer, M., NYC 14. Java, A., Albany 84581 your exams. Musie 16. Dyckman, W., Quofi Vlg 83133 THE STATE IN WHICH YOU RESIDE ISSUES YOUR 17. Beck, C., Wingdale 82444 THK PIERRE ROYSTON ACADEMY OF MUSIC—19 West 00th Street, N. T. C. O. I.'s allowed full subsistence (appr. N. Y. State Bd. of Ed.) Details. CaU HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA 18. CoUar, E., Elmira 81697 RI 0-7430. Tills does not apply to the residoats of Iowa. Kansas. Massa- 19. Gabriel, J., Hicksville ..81665 chusetts. New Jersey, Rhode Island. 20. Irwin. T., Albany 81247 NSW YORK COLLEGE OK MUSIC (Chartered 1878) all branches. Private or claw instructions. 114 East 85th Street. BU 8-0377. M. Y. 28. N. Y. Catalogue. MAIL COUPON NQW FOB FULL DETAILS 21. Tappen, H., Albany 80750 Send the no-obligation coupon to us now for comi^ete details 22. Lazarus, R., Rochester . .80742 Plumbing and Oil Burner 80446 on our Equivalency Course! Youll see exactly what you will get, what 23. Yomtov, E., Bklyn Plumbing, Oil Burning. Befrig.. Welding. Electrical. Painting, Carpentry. Booflng * 24. Noiseux, J., Albany . . . . 7 9 4 0 8 the lessons consist of, how little sparetime you will have to devote to Sheet Metal, Maintenance & Repair Bldgs,, School Vet Appd., Day-Eve. 79282 them. Remember—the request for Information does not obligate you 25. Kaiser, D., Albany Berk Trade School, 3 8 4 AtlanUc Ave., Bklyn., UL 6 - 5 6 0 3 . in anyway—nor do you risk anything when you enroll. But don't Badle TeierWMi delay! The sooner you enroll in this Equivalency course—the sooner Open-Competitive RADIO-ELECTRONICS SCHOOL OF NSW YOBK, 68 Broadway. M. T . Approved for you'll be able to take your exams—and get the High School EquivaSR. ENGINEER ASSISTANT Veterans. Radio, Television, FM D.ay-evenings. Immediate enrollment. BOwlency Diploma you want! Mail Coupon NOW. Uug Green 9-1180. (O. C.) Highway Department, • In some States the offer is limited to veterans. Erie County BAIMO-TKLSVISION INWITUTB, « 8 0 Lexiogtoo Ave. <4eth St.), N. T . O. Day and Disabled Veteran evening. PL. 0-5965. CAKEKK CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL 1. Meyer, R., Hamburg 86000 Socretarial Non-DisaMed Veterans 207 Market Street, Newark, N. J. 2. Scholl. J., Tonawanda ...90940 DKAKES, 154 NASSAU STREET, N.Y.C. Secretarial, Accounting, Drafting. Journalism. Siskind. S.. Bronx 87601 Fcrfey. G., Cohoes S7511 Silfen, B.. Bklyn 87157 Papa, J., Albany •86626 Simmons. O., NYC 84894 Lsmch, B.. ELsmere 84893 Delehanty, J., Rensler. .84447 M u n ^ f P.. Troy 84429 Zavisky, N., Watervlt.. .84421 Roberts. F., Albany . . . , 8 4 1 9 8 Simon. N., Albany 83586 Guttler. A.. Renslaer ...83338 Pine. J.. BUyn 82964 Worden, F., Renslaer ..82924 Donow, A.. Bklyn 82156 Morris. EL. Renslaer . . . . 8 1 9 2 5 Mountain. P.. Watervlt. .81841 Rury, P.. Albany 81797 Piontek, T.. Renslaer ...81794 Bacqua, J.. Albany 81491 SliTka, W.. Bklyn 81191 Steiner. L. Middle Vlg. .81191 Brodzik. F.. Utica 81188 (TKeefe. L., Albany 81188 COstello, J.. Latham 81162 Burke, W.. Troy 81096 Daly. R.. Albany 80982 Uebman, L.. Bklyn 80790 Oedrzejewski, Buffalo -.80282 Brusif. L., Saratoga . . . . 8 0 1 8 1 Kirk, R., Rochester . . . . 7 9 9 1 1 Weber, M.. Bklyn 79422 Diederichs. W.. Albany .79370 Minehan. G.. Troy 79367 Cammarota, A.. Schtdy.79064 Study Course For STATE CLAIMS EXAMINER TEST SCHOOL DIRECTORY High School Equivalency Diploma Easy, Inexpensive 90-Day Course CAREER CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL "207 Market Street, Newark. N. J., Dept. L-52 Please send me full information about the Career School High School Equivalency Course. It is understood that this request does not obligate me in any way whatsoever. NAME ' AGE ADDRESS CITY APT ZONE STATE Day-Night. Write for Catalog. BE 3-4840. RENT A TYPEWRITER for Typing Eiaai* Fre« Delivery and Pfcli Up HKFriJSV * BROWNK SECRETARIAL SCHOOL, 7 Lafayette Ave. c«r Brooklyn 17. NEvins 8-2041. Day and evening. Veterans Eligible. riatbuib, WASHINGTON BUSINI<;SS INST., 2 1 0 5 — 7 t h Ave. (cor, 126th St.) N,Y.C, Secretarial and civil servius training. Moderate cost. MO 2-6086. A. A. TYPEWRITER CO. 101 Wt«t 42 Street Mr Otto Ave. N.y.C. m REFRIGERATION, OIL BURNERS NEW YORK TECHNICAL INSTITUTE—553 Sixth Ave, (at 16th St.) N. Y. 0, Day * Kve. cliUiMs. Duniestic & cummercial. Installation and bervicinr. Our 30tb year. . -Kt-fllicst c a t a l o p ^ L Ctfclsea a-p303. .1 t: :;;55, j. t ' t Tuesday, May C I V I L 19S0 S E R V I C E L E A D E Eleven R STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS -"iraiiB-iaSi 9 4 5 Pass Exams A L B A N Y , M a y 29 — T h e S t a t e Civil Service Commission made p u b l i c t h e n a m e s of 945 c a n d i d a t e s w h o passed the annual college examination for Professional and Technical Assistant. Eleven separate lists were established. Jobs h a v e e n t r a n c e of $2,346 t o $3,000. T h e examination, held last Janu a r y . is t h e S t a t e g o v e r n m e n t ' s bid f o r t h e c r e a m of t h e c o l l e g e c r o p . Although a relatively small n u m b e r of a p p o i n t m e n t s c a n be m a d e e a c h year, a n d t h e e x a m i n a t i o n is m a d e difTicult, t o o b t a i n p e r s o n s of o u t s t a n d i n g ability, t h e c o m p e tition h a s g r o w n f r o m 4,000 c a n d i d a t e s i n 1948 t o 6,500 i n 1950. T h e lists established were for engineering, bacteriology, chemistry, journalism, education, library science, economics, statistics, psychology, law, and "general." Highest Score to Berinstein T h e highest score o n a n y w a s a t t a i n e d b y S. M . B e r i n s t e i n of A l b a n y . H e t o p p e d 1,018 c a n d i dates in the engineering option w i t h 96.1 a n d w a s also h i g h e s t o n t h e g e n e r a l list, for w h i c h 613 c o m p e t e d , w i t h 94.6. P h i l i p A . W o l f , of B r o o k l y n , a n d R . M. O p p e n h e i m e r , of M a n h a t tan, a non-veteran, tied for second both for engineering and the gene r a l lists, w i t h 92.2. E u g e n e E E l z u f o n of B r o o k l y n , h a d the highest score in c h e m i s try. W i t h disabled veterans' pref- e r e n c e h e a l s o s t a n d s first o n t h e list for a p p o i n t m e n t o n t h e e n g i n e e r i n g list a n d third o n t h e g e n eral list. In the other options, those who attained the highest scores are: bacteriology, Jean MacMullen, Yonkers; journalism, Walter Kravitz, Brooklyn; education, Leonard J. Jaisen, B r o n x ; library s c i e n c e , Mary H. Parry, Geneseo; economics, E d w a r d C. H e c h t , N Y C , a n d Richard Hoffman, Forest Hills; statistics, Arthur S. Kraus, N Y C ; psychology, William Gustafson, Brooklyn; law, Harold Feldman, Brooklyn. Those who stand first, second a n d t h i r d in order of a p p o i n t m e n t o n the lists are: Engineering: Mr. Elzufon, Stanley Czyzyk, Brooklyn; Lawrence W . D a i l e y , S c h e n e c t a d y , all disabled veterans. B a c t e r i o l o g y : H o w a r d J. G a r y , Bronx, a disabled veteran; Julian Kramer, NYC, and William F. Oliver, S t a t e n Island, both veterans. Chemistry: Mr. Elzufon, Albert f o r all Examinations Picli-up a n d d e l i v e r y s e r v i c e L a t e s t m a k e s a n d all m o d e l s 1781 Pitkin A v e . Dickens Mckens FREE Class Lecture Plumbing AM) CONVINt K YOrKKI.F! (iaNHt^ Mon. «(:.'(« I'.M. ATTKND A FKKK I.KC'TURK! Welding riHNHra Mon.. TluirH. S:80 P.M. City, state, Federal KXAM1NATION8 AHut, KIpctrirul KnKin<>4>r AHHt. Civil Enicincpr (Strurtur »i> Civil Rniriiie^r (B.W.S.) Jr. <'ivil KnRinrer Civil it Kir<triral Vmktk Draftmnan Jr. Draftsman Motor Vriiirle I.irenHe Kxaminer Klrvntor InNppotor Plumbinir Insp^-tor Steam Fitter Stationary KnKlneer Meoiiaiiicai Maintainer Administrative Assistant Steel InHpector lloiise Manaicement Insiiertor Dork Master Fi re—Promot ion Assistant Chemist Male Attendant ItridKenian Si Kiveter • Siibwny Prom. Kxams \uti> 'Mitrhiiiist REGISTER N O W C a l l JUdson 64922 - 4923 - 4925 or com* to Local I — U n i t e d Public W o r k e r s 210 W . 50 St. N. Y. C. 4fh Floor UL 5-0603 Arista Institute Iway 6-1350 MEDICAL LABORATORY TRAINING QualiAed technicians in d e m a n d ! Day or Evening courses. Write f o r j free booklet "C." Register now! : Veterans Accepted Under GI Bill New Classes J u n e Ist. ST. S I M M O N D S S C H O O L 2 E a s t 5 4 t h St,. N.Y.C. El 5 - 3 6 8 8 MONDELL INSTITUTE PREVIOUS EXAM Q U E S T I O N S 225 Pages of Printed Study Material Electrical TYPING, STENO, COMPT STENOTYPE, SECRETARIAL, BOOKKEEPING License Preparation STENOTYPE SIIOKTHAND I $ 3 , 0 0 0 lo $ 6 , 0 0 0 per year Earn while you learn. Individual Instruction Theory to court reporting: in 30 weeks $(50. S. C. Goldner C.S.R. Official N Y.S. Reporter. I ClasBcs Tues, Wed, Thurs. 6 to 8 P.M. I Dictation 80-235 wpni. 50c per session S t e n o t y p e S p e e d R e p o r t i n g , Rm. 7 1 8 0 neokmun St., N.Y.t'. KO 4-7443 LEARN A TRADE Auto Mei'hanicH DICBCI Machinist-Tool & Die Welilinir Oil Burner IU;fritrt"rat«>n na<lio Air Condiitoniiij Moiion Picture Opcratinir DAY AND EVENING CLASSES Brooklyn Y.M.C.A. T r a d e School 119 BwJford Ave., Brooklyn Ifl, N. Y. MA '^-llOO Tr.abontury E L uidE theoretical V I SInitructloii I O Nun- der guldwM or experti, co?erin( •!! tecbolcal phaiei of Radio, Vrequency Modulallon, TeUvlilon. Lead* to opportuoitlei >0 Broadcaittng, Induttry or 0«n Buitneii. MORNING, AFTERNOON or EVENING SESSIONS. Approved for Vettrans. RADIO-TELEVISION INSTITUTE rUMM* ia TeltvitiM TtaiaiiM Mac* 1«M 4M LMlngtoii Ave., N. T. 17 (4Sth St.) Seamnn 25c Social Worker (Gr. Inspector of Ponltry 2) lOc Live (Gr. 2) 10c Steamfitter 50c Electrical Insjicclor .. .25c Refrigeration Machine Oper avuilnble 25c at LEADER Bookstore Corporation N . Y. 1 6 9 7 D n a n e Street N e w Y o r k 7 . N. Y. 2-7000 SECRETARIAL o f j AmericWt Oldest School of Dental Technn!ogjr ESTABLISHED 1920—LONG BEFORE G. I. BILL Approved for Veternns * Immediate Enrollment C o m p l e t e T r u i n i n g "in D e n t a l Merlianir^ 1,ICBNSKI) BY NEM kUKH and NEW JEK.SKV >1 ATKS Call. writ£ phone foi PllEE CATAI.OG C" N E W YORK S C H O O L O F M E C H A N I C A L DENTISTRY 125 W e s t 31st S t r e e t . N e w Y o r k 1. N. Y. 1 3 8 W a s h i n g t o n S t r e e t . N e w a r k 2. N e w J e r s e y START TRAINING ^ ^ ^ NOW! SERVICE Physical Exams PATROLMAN Special Classes Under Expert Instruction Facilities available every w e e k d a y f r o m 8 a . m . to 10.30 p . m . T h r e e Gyms, Track, Bar-bells, b a l i n g Walls, D u m m i e s , Pool, and General ('onditioning Equipment. BROOKLYN CENTRAL Y M C A RENTED for EXAMS N O W scHool SiEmmTHaima^ TYPEWRITERS PHONE roj9/c Ayiv ESTABLISHED J 884 DAY NIGHT—AFTER BUSINESS Secretarial, Gresri;-, Pitman, Bookkeeping-, Typing, Accounting, Business Machines, Drafting, Journalism, Language Stenog. SPANISH: Conversation, Export Documents, Correspondence, Translation. NEW YOKK, 154 NsHHau 8t. OPP. CITY HALL, BEoknian 3-4840 Bri. Fordham Rd.-Gr. Cone. FO. 7-3500 Wash. Hgts. 181st-St. Nich. WA. 3-2000 B'klyn. Flatbush at Church, BU. 2-2703 B'klyn. Broadway at Gates, GL. 5-8147 Jam., Sutphin Blvd.-Jani., JA. 6-3835 Flush'g. Cham.of Com.Bldg., FL. 3-35;}5 Staten Island, St. eGorge, GI. 7-1515 • Test l)»M'k Hand EXAMS CALL: LExington DBUSINESS R ASCHOOLS KE While learning, Btudeut« are placed in office jobs. Train half day in business school, half day in office. JudsoH Underwood 1 P a r k Ave., by N. y. Stat* Dept. frftfcatlo* MANNATTAN: 115 E. IS ST.-CR 3-«900 JAMAICA: 90-14 Sutphin Blvd.- lA 6 S200 Exams 210 W . 50 S t . - N Y C - a t SERVICE DELEHANTY^HOIUS STUDENTS Earn UpToS25AWk. I'rof. {Kncineer. Architeet, Surveyor, Master Kle<<trieian, Plumber, RiKKer, Stationary. KefriKeratlon, Portable Engineer, Oil Burner. Drafting, Design & Math. Arch'l Mechaniral. Kleetrlral, Struct'l Topoempiiirai, BIdR. Constr. KstinintinR, Survey, Civil Serv., Arith., AlKel>ra, deom., THK., Calrulua, Physics. Join h u n d r e d s who have p r e p a r e d successfully for this examination. 16 two-hour sessions covering •!! phases of the exanninaiion led by welMinown authority in public assistance. Complete Burning 384 Atlantic Ave., Bklyn. CIVIL Practical Exams You P a s s t h e Medical — Ij«te .Model — SreNOGRAPHY-TYPEWRITINO Tim«.saving programs to conform to individuot plans. Beginners—Advoneod - • r u s h - v p . DAY - EVE. - PART TIME Approved for Veterans Moderate Rotes — Inslolmenis Berk Trade School (iasNPs Mon., ThurH. 7:.'J0 P.M. OPENS - Help Able REHT an UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER TRAINING Painting - Carpentry Roonnfr & Sheet Metal Work Maintenaiioe Repair of Buildings Diiy or Eve. Classes School Vet Appd. 1 to 3 Yrs. Course Full or part time Imnieiliate Enrollment Insur. Claims Examiner CLASS - Oil Syracuse; Jacob H. Schuhle, Alb a n y , all v e t e r a n s . E c o n o m i c s : Mr. H e c h t ; E d w a r d J. Cook, K e w G a r d e n s ; Gerald Mordfin, Brooklyn, all disabled veterans. BUSINESS Refrigeration Social Investigator <'liiKse8 Mon., Thiirs. <5:.30 P.M. Employment Interviewer Tuesday, M a y 23. 6:30 P.M. . . . Bklyn, N . Y. 6-7700 6-21 PREPARE FOR City, S t a t e & Federal SHOP ft THEORY Previous To SPECIAL RATES f o r Brownsville Typewriter Exchange Lir.i'.NSE (iuHM'H Tucti., Tiiur8. 6 to 0 P.M. E X CI LENT COURSE! \t(*'llll H SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR P. A b r a h a m s , E l m h u r s t ; Mr. D a i ley, all disabled veterans. Journalism: Arthur B. Winick, Brooklyn, a n d D a v i d P. Gottlieb, New Rochelle, both disabled veterans, a n d Mr. Kravits, a veteran. Education: Leon M. Rosenthal, Bronx, and Martin Parker, Brooklyn, both disabled veteran, and Mr. Jasen, a veteran. Library science: Milton S. Bibby, B u f f a l o ; E d w a r d R. Telfer, Typewriters Rented- Electrical Inspector Master Electrician's 230 W . 41st St. N Y C WI. 7-2086 Itranciies llronx, Jamaica, Wh. Plains VKTS ACCKPTKD FOR SOME t^l^RSKS Over 3fi yrs. preparlnfr thousands for Civil Serv., EnerK, I.irense Kxnnis. For C o l l e g i a n s 55 HANSON PLACE, RROOKLYN P H O N E : ST. 3 - 7 0 0 0 • 17 SPring 7-0283 FREE PICK-UP and DELIVERY MALE ATTENDANT ZENITH T y p e w r i t e r Service 34 E a s t 22nd St., N e w M e n (All Ages) No Edm-ational or Experience Re»|iiirenient8. S a l a r y $ 3 8 l o $ 4 7 p e r w e e k . H u n d r e d s o f J o b s . S p e c i a l (Classes p r e p a r e you to pass E x a m s . Classes start M o n d a v , M a y 2 2 n d at 6 : 3 0 P.M. York $25 TYPEWRITERS Rented ror all REGISTER TODAY Air Conditioned Examlaaftons I4tli ST. AREA NEAR — 9 A.M. T O 9 P.M. Classrooms ARISTA SCHOOLS INSTITUTE Civil Service AIMWELL Typewriter Service 2 1 0 W. 50th ST., NYC I <i ! iJ Branch (at B V a y . ) Judson 6-1350 196 - 2nd Ave., N. Y. C . GR 7-6150 Pick-up a n d Delivery VETERANS S E C R E T A R I A L A C C O U N T I N G M A C H I N E S You Ret tuition and subiilHtence of 918.75 to «(iO a month while attenilhiK eve. session; $7.5 to Sd'^'O ilay seoNlon MONROE S C H O O L OF BUSINESS K. 177 St. & ItO.STON KOAO - HKONX K.K.»>. Cliewter Theatre UMB. DA 3 - 7 3 0 0 - 1 : TYPEWRITERS RENTED S I ALL S AMERICAN 44 Cuuit St., Bklyn. TECH MA a-'^714 g W E DELIVER T O E X A M I N A T I O N R O O M S ! I 1 0 0 T O 5 0 0 T Y P E W R I T E R S AVAILABLE g B International T y p e w r i t e r Co. g 2 4 0 E. 8 6 S t . CalcHlating or Comptometry Iikteukive Cuura« HALL ACADEMY FJ^TBINH A V t ; M b (>r. FuUua B'klyn MAiu N e w York C i t y g • Open • • • • • • • • • • • • Til • • • 6:30 • • ! P.M. • • g • • • • • • • • • • • Unemployment Insurance Claims Examiner Course $3174 - $3864 REGISTRATION at Teachers 13 O N Center: Sessions M O N D A Y , 206 West Conducted M A Y 15th Mon., 29, St., at New Wed., KVr. Study M a t e r i a l on all Phases of t h e S u b j e c t C a n 7-9 York P.M. City Thurs. Be O r d e r e d f o r $5.00 STATE EMPLOYEES UNION LOCAL 2899 210 WEST 50th 5 RE. 4 - 7 9 0 0 FEE: $15, includes all study material S T K X O t ^ l l A P I I Y TYPEWRITING-DOOKKEEPING tjptwlHl 4 Month), Cour«« • Day or Eve. BORO S For CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS Sfafionary Engineers ('u^toillaiis, SuplN., & Firemen S X L' I) Y Building & P l a n t M g m t . Incl. LICENSE PREPARATIOK I liihhrooiii & Slioii—I'lirt & Full Time Iiiimnliate Knrull.—.Appd. for VetM I MAKES STREET. N. Y. C. I C I V I L Twelve S E R V I C E L E A D E R TiirodaT, Mar 30, 1950 STATE A N D C O U N T Y NEWS Many. State Exams To Be Opened in Fall 6 6 Public W o r k s M e n o n A n n u a l P a y •y HELEN NOLAN NEIL ALBANY. May 29 — Sixty-six electricians, machinists and carpenters employed by the S t a t e Department of ?»'iolic Works, fm-merly per diem workers, have been granted annual salaries, retroactive to May 1. T h i s is the first result of the 10-year fight by The Civil Service Employees Association on behalf of hundreds of employees of the department for annual salary status, with coticurrent benefits and protection. At present the Personnel Division of the Civil Service Department is processing approximately 30 more questionnaires from per diem employees who also want to be put on a per annum basis. T h e Classification Division of "HOLIDAY HOUSES the Civil Service department Is also processing the titles of such per diem employees as are aslcing for an annual salary status. T h e State is following the formula established by former Budget Dir- ector John E. Burton whereby only thase employees who have been in one title for an entire year could acquire annual salary status. T h e first annual salaries al- Capital Croup Renominates ALBANY. May 29—Dr. David M. Schneider, head of the Research and Statistics Division of the Department of Social Welfare, has been renominated to succeed himself for another term as chairman of the Capital District Conference of The Civil Service Employees Association Inc. All o<;her incumbent officers were named for re-election by the nominating committee, of lowed go only to those employees who come within the Burton formula. The annual salary for a 40hour week raises an overtime question. The State allows time off in payment of overtime, while there is a movement especially among electricians who m a i n tain trafBc light signals on the Long Island parkways, for cash payment for overtime. '^'".h E. K e n n e t h Stahl was chairman. They are John Cox, vice-chairman, Matthew W. Fitzgerald, secretary, and Margaret A. Mahoney, treasurer. T h e annual meeting and elecFOR y0i;K VACATION tion of officers will take place in Modern rooms, some private baths, well June at the Crokked Lake Hotel, kno'.Tn for excellent meals, ridingr, sports. entertainment. Rates $30Mrs. Helen Todd, president of $40 wk. Includes ercrythinBT. the Conservation Department Free Booklet. Schniollitisrer, chapter, is in charge of arrangeFreehold 3, N. T. Phone 7734. ments. ALBANY, May 29 — T h e S t a t « Civil Service Department will resume the opening of new e x a m s on a large scale in the fall, said Thomsis L. Bransford, Director of Examinations. It is expected that the first s e ries will be opened in August for closing in September. Meanwhile the department is processing exams already held and hs« a heavy schedule of June written tests. 10 GlorioQH Dajrs & Mghts Only f%3.a0 per person I Tour ineliiden • <;«la KreninR at m Mieht Club • VeaHlan Boat Craiite • HiKhtfieeinK (RO ml Auto Trip • Private Bfsrh, Pool • Alr-Coiidltioned Cocktail Lounge Write now for Reservations tTl^'iM^I Millpr Pla<p (near Port Jefferson) Ncirth Sli<»rc. Iileal Adult Vacation iJ|>ot, Bf'aiiliful Gro^itids. Private Bcafh. iVidfiv Plunnp(i Proirram. ExcellMit ''ood. Friendly. T'nusual. $26.00->3;r00 Weekly. DeferipUve Ijoaflet. New York League of Giris ClHbs^ Ino, •n J13 lOitM r.«tli St., » w York 28, N. Y. Trirpluiiie: TKmplpton 8 - 7 ^ 7 ——^ mi ^ fUfwftuti. t,flN r«(i mt tkt iJi* mkh tf LODGE I (f/trr* m i f«i«<( ' viM M M l ceM ramiiif m^tr mai modtrm InforinHl Adult Kesort in the AdiroiKlncks Umit^f^l W—14-niUe Lake—PoHpn-Fre<TeniiiK • i-'i.-liiiiir • Golf • Motor Boatlnp Folk ?M|uare r)an<v»(i • Concert Trio Daiic^ Bmnd N. y . Off.: -J.-.O W. 57th St. Circle 0-0380 • Oi»Pu llii ii Sepl.—I.ouis A. Roth, Dir. • FLORIDA • vartf owfce GO T-SMT KwtmUgM. mMirnn-rm. Mmm SM • MU0SOKf ^ ^ ^ Y ou tlie oreaM UM. 7 t t h * 73th fH*.. m » m i IKH.1. I. .. irs, teui\i8. daiicinfe', shuffllK>ard. handbnll, soft ball a • I I-avriUcs. Home cooking. fre«h fruit? and vepetablcs in season. Catholic and r . ^ . -iaiit churches nearby. Open May 13th. Write for booklet Mr. M. Simpsoti. All lAitd * Water Sport* ••rtebark Kldinc • TeleviMM I.OW RATKfJ Harry ft Clara Gald Tel. Hurleyvllle S15 N.Y.C. Beach TK »-N4R. L O C H SHELDRAKE 5. N. Y." VILLA VIGGIANO UIGlll.AND, N. y . uear PouKfakeeiMue Delicioui Italian Foarf carefully prepared. Kates; Include room and 3 wiiolrsonie meals per 4mr. WKKKI.V, Adults $35. (hlldren (under 10) 91I.4W to 91U.ee. DAII.V 90. tlilldieu 9S. Daneing, Knterialninent. «ar. All Sports. N. Y. phone WA. 4-»K-:i or Highland $herri| frontendc i C o N i H * t * l r Air-C«»4itieiiMl t £ O U C E D SUMMER RATES iVaturliig: America's tnobl bcautifiH c;tbai«a cKib..s.uimniiiig jiool. .and private bcacli .superb ruisine and s e r v i c e . . g a l a r n t e r t a i n i n e n t nightly. W r i t e now fur attractive rates and c o l o r b o o k l e t . B. BURKE. Man. Dir. N. V. o r n c c t MU 4-1807 BERKELEY SHORE $|.50 t>«!>r fM-iHM T w * iu • K«MM • AU Kwtfuik with Privnte Itelk, Hhittvcr mill Tt'lrphune • I'ritMlf Urtt4'li • (IttM- to Thni(r««, HIiuiMt, KptUuraaU • Ft*r FarklHK Collins Ave. a t Lincola Rd. MIAMI iCACH, FLA. ftlACN II BEACH APARTMENTS HOTEL At Ihr ('rtiHkr«»d« of Miawt KeM-il MIAMI I AT'NOm ROOM'lUTft fwM ketd Mfvie* end IvRvry pllt$ the ipaeiovsnett and •ceiiMBir 9f |f9ur own home Spaditl Kate* Hihool leactiei'M 0ther civil •«>r*lce Maplayeea Writ* ar wire fWIMUMINC MXH ItlVATf MACH CAIANA) VILLAS FACING m e OC£AN.6780 COLLINS AV£ • • • • sonable. Write. E V A ' S Y. Swim,.is opposite house. Airy rooms, iioinc t ookcd food. Ger.-Atner. Uitclien. modern, ainMSfincnts. all ohinclio i'.ca- F A R M G E H L E ' S G L E N » W York. Exccll fooil, all mod. inipts., air rooms. All amiise.. All ihim4ies. Write lor booklet. N . Y. Cairo rooms, amuse., all chiirehc?. F A L L S G R A N D H O U S E VIE\^' "^oni'tl Top, N. Y. G<'rm.-Am. cookiiiF. bakinj:. n ..<1. impt. Spec. Junc-Scpt.-Oft. Chur< hef-. Cairo H ! t'ousf'. Cairo. N. Y. All sports orch. dantinp nif.- tlv. Concicte pool. Ilaliaii-Amcr cuisine. Cliurclies. Tele Cairo 1»- 08;i5. Bklt. Write G R A N D Enoell home cooked G<t Amer. tooil aii v up wkl.v. Write Mr. 4 Mrs. A. (Milo. VIEV^' V I L I A Write Mrs. J. Pai>enhusen. HIGGINS GREEN fO"^'^ G^Tman-Am. io<.<l. All mod., sports, 5 min. to villaKo, churches. up. LAKE HOUSE C"tskiii K-D-J: 2 min to h.u-. all iicii amuse. up. ch.i. churchcs. $13 up to 13 yrs Write. Phone Catskill 930 W-;i. H I G H L A N D F 4 R M Giwnville, N. Y. E.KCCH food, licsh fann i x w l . any rooms, all churches. Al aiiUise. nr. by. $'I5 ui> Write Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Meyer. N YO. box 01 KNCCIICIU m.me cookintr i'livatc sw.ninisr pool. MO<1<TII. Cluirilies. Daneine niffhtly Cocktail louiite. Write. T H E M A P L E S O N T H E L \ K E water all rms. Television, home cuokiiig. f'vt. tx'aii. t>oat . li I) iin-;udcd in rate. Sprint and Fall rates 3f: wkly, Jut.v-Ausust Si3r>.00 Churches. Uiili VV Holm, Salisbury Mills. Oranse Co.. N. i'. Tel. Washiiictoiiville 3007 M A P L E W O O D F A R M ille. Cr. Co.. N. Y. All amuse. Coii< rcte pool. e.xcell iuime cooking All mo<l. impts. all churchcs. Write for Booklet F. Jack Welter, Prop. N E W C O L O N I 4 L Mauus. up. premises, "••x^" • o k . AH spts.. bathmj: on 3 min. to churches, reos. rate.« Write li Mc- O S B O R N ^ THE BOARDWALK END J - SO. CAROLINA AVE. Lo n d s fHOTEL AiUnUc Ti. NOW C^Ctf p. OPEN SPMM Lffw K i u t • May-lNN ST. E D G E M E R L JOE'S MT. V I E W F A R M Specially Recommeiided F*r W«*k End Headquarters 10% DISCOUNT To Civil Service Eaiployees OVERLOOKING THE OCEAN - OCEAN DRIVE AT lOth ST. O C I A N AT « S T H NCW YOPIC. KXCCII. food. All ouldoor uniiisc. Ali inodrrii. Ali t hurclies. Keasonablc. Write Patrick Brennan, > roi>. C O L O N I A L M A N O R Crecnvillc. Greene Co.. New York. Concrete Plua—alMMiuteIr (r«e( Kxcitiii? b*at cruU« thrw the tropical waters ol Miami ft Miami Bpach. Tisitiiiff Semi«« nolo Viilac«, AHi«r»tor Fara, UUIO AIndiM IIW4 CoaHt & Tropical Gardein. W>«-« MW f*r rMVTTMilcW S6.7S average a da.T includes room meals and all your favorite aporta. Hoffles, bicycles, boats, caiioee. Finnish steam batlu. Suu deck. bar. dancinc. If you plan a vacation or honeymoon, let us know soon. Bus to churchea. SCANDINAVIAN MANAGEMENT B i x S. Rosendale, Ulster County. N. T. Ask for bouiilet. Phone Boseiidale 3141. TNf OkMtf : Paul WalfMn. Sal •«>M.«M C A R E L A ' S WILLIAMS LAKE HOTEL ON , Gr«^nvine. Greene Co., N. Y. All nio<i. Swimmiiiff pool, exe^ll h , ^ . Fresh farm prod., orchestra, Junc-Sept. $;:6.00: Juiy-Au?. $;tO 00 All amuse. All chaix?he». Writ« for booklet, Mart'arft Gieason Carelap, Mgr. ^ u r / ' • ST CO BRENNAN'S • T.«ii«irr riirBuli*4 r*OBi wltk butti ftnd show(>r • I*rirMt« bMck aWTio* • C«ir«« a i i ^ • AuhH* free iNM-Uar •»•»> FOR S nOOPJJi L.vxi;»¥ u o m i Y. RESORTS MABVKIiOrS DATA * 7 NKIHTS ia OCKAN FRONT •Mi wiMllMrfi OMm: n Ann M. ••"''CED fATBS FOR JUNE FOR THt: SUMMER 18 OR Sylvan Ink* i HopcwtH jMction, N. Y. ^ »»Mlit ttali.* AM Sports — Inlwtwwnent;: CcMea^M. Ttmii Cemrt$. Cmting, SmimHmUMI, Bmt^mll, friv fhU^. i SmiiU UmtM, CM. OaiKiiv. «lc. Inttt*^ trift «rr«fMt. OrficMw* mMtmmt .•Mb. »»tlmf Umi. Bala tyf-fjf-ftf SEASOnf OPENS JVIVE 16th aariiiiig Dirtct from Hotel Cefeo Shop • Firopreef • o m t teem e Elevator Spaciew> iewnge Wfh0 0f Meee JOHN R . K E R S [ Y , M g r . « A . C . 4 - 5 1 4 3 Special Summer Rates $20 t o $25 por week - por coupit APARTMENTS and COHAGES ANDREW APrs ( a t tlie eceae) 324 WILSOM SIHECT H O L L Y W O O D CBy the S e a ) FLORIDA H O U S E VVindham. N. Y. Where your comfort A pleasure is our olilipalioii. modern impts. SM'imminir pool, cocktail lounre. Amuse., all churches. Write or phone Windham .'M>t-30j. O'SHEA HOIISF. Durham, N. Y. Catholic church adjoinine proiH-ily sports Write Ida M. OShea Ail P I ^ I T C ^ R O V F ' I f l ^ l l I S K rooms, fthowers. all out door amuse. Uerman-.Amcr. a miiii.. y^^jj inipiovcm< nis. laiyi airy cookinc. Garden fr<«h vepetaliies. fruit in season. All churches. Hca*. rate.-. Write (or (Moklet Mr. and Mrs. Geurc Wenz. IVIcpUoue Cairo D-fUll). KAYI^Il' F A R M Ourhaui. N. y IC!M-<'Ucnt Ger.-Auier. Garden fresh vef;)^ tablog All modern^ All churches. Showers-baths. S3o Write Mra. C. C. ScUueider. Tel. Gret^ni ille 5-4355. S H A M R O C K Kcllerher. H O U S E ^ast Du.ham, N. Y Swim on prcnus^. All m<-d. Write Palr.i U ( hurdles, own orchestra, home cuokins Wr SPOKTSMF.N'S PAKK Huacndale. New York. Modern throughout. Concrete O J^j BPorts. exeell. food, orchestra. Uanciu* ulrUtly. cocktail louuce. $7 duily, $tU wkly. Write Bklt L. Tel. 3551, SULLIVAN'S ^^M^M W • rm.1.1 Sullivau. Morton Mouse. Grtenirille. Greeu Co.. New York Ideal, all mod. cxcell. f(M»d. all sports, airy rooms. I.ow rates Write Mrs. John J. S U N N Y HIl.T F A R M S Greeiirtlle, Green C o . N. Y. Concrete pool, all sports. Auc. 9S9. Churchea. Wnte. • avraaziL. W A I T F U S Cairo. N. r. Tel. U-!21i>U Mod. Shower-baths. Home cooktt raa.. a churchcs, all amuse. Write Tom Gilmour mrr. WEIJKIN'S GLFNCIJFF Jetleibon Heights, Catskill 151. Kxcellent home TV CLiLrvFti C7 U'L.iZii^v.L.mrr (,«,i,„try »l>ie. Mod Showers, hot and cold water ia rooms. TelerUiuo. all spurts, swlmmiuc> Churches uearby $31) up. Uklt. L. T H E WiNDMERF CiUr. K. Y. Home cooked food ol exoell. quality, air.r ^ a i ^ a ^ r o o m s , all IIUHI. impts. all a m u * . all churches. up wkly. Write Mrs. W. D. Bnuiiard. Y I ' O O D ROCiK cU^rcliQit. Write. kilckea. '*'' ' ^ ' ("dcr new niaiiavi-iiU nt. llaliuu-.\Mier. New bwiai. pool. DiuiciiiK uijfhily, all modern. All Tiies<faT, M a y 30, C I V I L 1950 S E R V I C E STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS > SHOPPING GUIDE > mmm SENIOR MEDICAL BACTERIOLOGIST, Department of Health, Division of Laboratories and Research Non-Veterans 1. Ooldie. H.. Bethsda, Md..84332 2. Buckley, J., NYC 79332 Bureau of Dental Health, Division of Medical Services, Department of Health Disabled Veteran 1. Carlin, A., NYC 78800 Non-Disabled Veterans 2. Bushel, A., Albany 85000 3. Gutman, R., Bronx 80100 PHARMACIST (O. C.) State Departments Non-Disabled Veterans 1. Devito, A., Bklyn 84400 2 Moosnick, B., NYC 81600 3. Roberts. H., Mt. Morris. .81200 4. Armao, J., NYC 81000 5. Baratta, M., Jamaica . . .80600 6. Constantine, C., Mt. Mrs.80200 7. Paciello, M., Dannemora.79200 8. Gutcho, C., Bklyn 78200 Non-Veterans 9. Sorkin, A., Bklyn 84000 10. Krause, G., Wantagh . . . 8 2 6 0 0 NAME BRANDS Liebowitz, J., U City ..82600 Stopen, T., Kenmore 82000 Herb, C., Bklyn 79200 Sineno, B., NYC 78800 CroweU, E., Interlaken.. .78600 ASSOCIATE ACCOUNTANT (O. C.), Public Service, and Contract UtIUty ACCOUNTANT GRADE V, Dept. Public Service Non-Disabled Veterans Swan, M., N Rochelle 86628 Heineck, P., Bellaire 79780 Non-Veterans O'Sullivan. J., Yonkers ..84160 Jackson, M., Bklyn 80416 Bltsko, A., NYC 76992 Lodato, J.» Bklyn 76960 JR. PHARMACIST, State Departments Nen-DlsaUed Veteran Marra, R., Batavia 79100 Non-Veterans Delglacco, C., Albany 87900 Alperin, C., Staten Isl . . . 8 0 2 0 0 Cohen, L., Rye 79400 Barrow, S., NYC 76000 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. THRIFH PURCHASE DO YOV HAVE RUG PROBLEMS ^ 25 C O E N T I E S Soctional Sofas • Handrods of Odd Pia«os DiMtt* Sots 7 Ffoors of Flao Foroifaro (S««th Ferry) Nw Y. Ci«y 4 PYSER FURNITURE CO. Phena l O 9-0M4 457 Fourth Ave., N.Y.C., between 30lh & 31st Sts. 0 « r oalT t<«re 31 MVmy Hill 8-3862 Bvdget Plan aTaitable tubes 16" CONSOLE Largest K«y*cl AGO 12" Speakers. Black tub*. voitaq*, doubiflr, RMA Guarantee. Easy Tfmc Payments In Bronx! LU66AGE • TRUNKS • BAGS • CAMP TRUNKS For Voor Vacofion & Week-end Trips TV MFG. CO. S41 Intcrrile Art. D.Aytun 1»23 Cremwell At*. Ft. J«7 W.-Jerome 3-3!>a7 llronv, N. a Better Selections 20Vo REDUCTION SALE! Buy TOU PAT NO TAX - 0URIR9 M o y STERLIISG'S BUY N O W ! TELEVISION Brcry D v TUl •:S0 P J L ibur80a> i'lli e t'Jl HANDSOME REWARD In Mail O r d e r . S t a r t on d shoe string a n d earn substantial income » t o n c e . For i d e a s and infornaation in Items, costs, ads, shipping, etc.. g e t H O W T O START YOUR O W N MAIL ORDER BUSINESS. $2.00. Stratvon Publisher. 113 W . 57th St., N. Y. 19. D e p t . L R e f u n d privilege. Phone o r d e r s J U d s o n 6-3657. II you aren't Jnrt s u r e what color or hind of HUG or BROADLOOM is best for jour rooniB. let us help you. Our r e p r e 8 entatlve will call upon request to eetiniate jour requirements. No obligration I EVERY LEADIKS BRAND 0 » KUGS, CARPETS AMD BROADLOOM. SpeclaUstB ia expert wall to waU 1Belallatiou I _ SPECIAL. DISCOUNT TO CIVIL SBKVICE WORKRRS SANFORD HALL ADMIRAL - FADA - PHILCO FREED E I S M A N WESTINGHOUSE GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEKING in Stock Tel. Murray Hill 4-4318 0»«B 9-6 — 8*t. a-2 Open 9 A.M. te 10 P.M. Save Money ir M. FILMS Leader The UEADER conducts a direct questioii-ajid-answer service for its annual subscribers. Besides the benefits of full coverage of civil service news, notices of examinations and news of examination progress, subscribers obtain a valuable help toward a government job, through the service, or, if already public employees, aid in their civil service problems. The LEADER would like to continue its past practice of rendering this direct service to all. but becaxise of its increased news coverage, and new features, its staff must limit the letter and telephone information service to annual subscribers. Subscribe for The LEADER. Use coupon below, if you prefer: DEVELOPED IV/ Mmlel Television Sets, WaahiuK Marliines, KefriKeratoni, Itadios, Vacuum Clcanera and Appliances VEEDS (For Value) Sa KAST 2«ith St., N.Y.O. MU 6 - 4 4 4 3 - 4 4 4 4 of: GIFT SHOP Do You H a v e FLAT FEET? YOUl Men who ar« t r o u b U d wiiit {alUn arches will find c s m p l e f e c o m f o r t in those TREE MARK oxfords, m a d e with « high a r c h supp o r t a n d a special heel f o r a d d e d s u p p o r t . Special Coartosy fo Civil Service Emjifoyoos F B £ B Parking It Texaco Station IttO Bawcry nr. Spring 8t. D I S C O U N T S ! ! ! I ID Leading 1950 ^AO/q SPECIAL DISCOUNT for CivH Service Employees Tftoso TREE MARK SHOES were made for RAPID FOTO SERVICE Dept. la—G.P.O. Box 413, N . ¥ . 1, N.Y. U r 370 E. F O R D H A I F R O A D . Near Marioa Ave. 31 Yrs. a t tfio Same Addrost Tol: TR 5-9328 Wa Dofivor Anywhere 6 OR 8 EXIOSURE BOIJ^ AND 3 FEINTS EACH NEGATIVE 09w Extra Prints 3o Each Jumbo Size—8-Exposure, 30c 12-Exp., 4iac; 115-Exp., «Oc Extra Pi'ints 4c Each Roeiu a i S FIRST lo-i Lexlnston Ave. (»t 3*Jd4I St.) N.Y.C. Fumitnre Exchance DIUVERY 214 M y r t l e Ave. — B'klyn I , N. Y. Murray Hill 3-7779 ' DAVID TULIS SP. 7-2522 "«« MARTIN'S Fnrniture Interior Decorator, bar- i in» at'cess to Faictory' Showrooms, can save jqu up to 4 0 r i on your purchase of furniture. For fnll information without. obligration. Visit or Phone' Kron Frames the on MONET! A bonaUde offer to save yaa Mf money on name brand Items • Television & R o d i o • Waskers • Silverwore • Refrigerotors • Lomps • Mirrors • G i f t s o f A l l Kinds Wo Carry tka ItforcbMdisa te Oar 3-Sfery BiiUdia§ Wftcrc f o a Can Soo ft. 9M*CIIS & B'ltlyR. Rcflidaats Call Our Ofkar Sfar* HE 3.1931 15% Oft on 'Framing: Till June 16—Only Subscribe for [ STERLING JEWELERS 71 Wea 46 St., N.X.C. Circle e-«ail GRAND OPENIPfG SALE 25 to 50% O F F ALL C O L O R PRINTS 4 5 WEST 8th STREET SAVE CORP. 20 E, 33rd Street, near 5th Ave. An Arco study book for State Trooper is on sale at The LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y., two blocks north of City Hall and just west of Broadway. To order this book by mail, see advertisement on pare 15. Open fo 9 P. M. 6 DELANCY ST.. NEW YORK Black Kid $ I 9 . 5 » Brown Kid or C a l f $19.95. Sizes 5 - 1 4 . W i d t h s A t o EEE. TREE MARK SHOES » To All Civil Service Employees € 4 You Can Now Buy Your Paints I a t Painter's Prices I« (aiMn MMUIlMitl.n> w i t h civil service what's job UNPAINTE D FURNITURE news happening to you and your civil service where! (»r EVIiRk DESCRIPTION SPKCIAI. DISrOUNTH INTERBORO LUMBER COMPANY 98-01 Jamaica Ave., VVoodtaaven, L. I. fust uir WiMMlliaven lllvdVlrelaia 0-4801 opportunities StJUS€'KIPTIO.\ men and women f V r every- SAVINGS UP TO 5 0 % l>ar KaUio*, TelevUitMi, KelrlKeraturH, WuHhers—All iStanitard Makes Easy Terms SOUNDVIEW RADIO It TV CORP. M Hagh « r o a t Circla. Bronx, N.Y. 1455 Unionport R4.. Broox. N.Y. TA. 3-7272 CIVIL SERVICE LEADEU, 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y. Please enter my subscription for one yeai". Your Name Address Idenfffreatfon) Living Room Suites SLIP Sawe Up T t 5 0 % M S H O E S with Emp/oyees I Bring Many Stylos Bod Room Saitos to Chooso Frooi ParhMl, Madera, Cmt«m. J b t m I I c * OMe* CoHTenient Payments Arranged At BEST KNOWN SHOE HOUSE I lOa-KM MYRTLE AVE. Cor. BWIOCt S t | IMOOHurNS with new OiscoNwf f o r Civil Servict F U R N I T U R E Always Supporting} with SptcM • Refrigerators • Woihcrt • Cameras • TV • Faat • Radias • Wa*ek«s • Aii^Caiiditio«*rs • A p ^ a a c v s • Pens • GifH • Hoaaawarcs • Typcwrifars Tlira* Fall R a a r s o« Display FOR THE MAN ON HIS FEET ALL DAT S3.ff W FURNITURE # SAVE Up To 50% 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. POLICE SHOES r PERIOD MODERN State Open-Competitive Eligible Lists Issued (Arch Pai^e T h i r f r r n L E A D E R 4 G.E. Rofrigorotors • Bondix Woskors • RCA Tolovision • Ma«U Cbof Raa«ot Roor Samples at tremendous ... I enclose check Q Send bill to me; at my office • my department Q my club PAINT A N D WALLPAPER C O . i 2701MAJESTIC Avenue U (Cor. 27 St.l Broohlyrt. M. Y. 3.24M SH 3-0Q44 fl SH Ben). Moon A C«. "DMC«'' UupeaS Paiute, A. C. Horn PaliitH, IMttslturgli Palate, Federal M M I M Paiota — ALL, AT P.AiNTKK'8 PUiCKS 4 SPECIAL DISCOUNTS OM WALL PAPER At^D SANITA5 • A« Arco study book for Assist ant Unumployment losurance Claims Exaiuii^r is oa sale at The LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duane Street, New York 7. N. Y.. two blocks north of City Hall and just west of Broadway. To order this buoic hy mail, see advertise ment on pajfe 15. sovings Special For This Weekl TABLE M O D E L TELEVISION )ig I2'/2 inch Reg. Price Screen $229.95 N O W $159.95 Cauiiot oieutioa nifyra. uame. SAYINGS UP TO 40% aa FAMOUS BRAND TELEVISION Up f o 36 months ta poy LAKIN'S APPLIANCE STORES &0 y e a n • ( itervice 73B Monhottan Ave. Oroonpoint, B'klyn. lad. Sub. GO train, NUMIMU Ave. 8ta. EV. f-12Q1 Open evee till 9 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, Mmj 30, 1950 STATE A N D COUNTY NEWS Auto License Report on Health Insurance Approved by NYC Chapter ExaminerTest Closes June 5 A report submitted to the NYC serious illness of themselves or nlty contracts under which a , a n d Health departments, and /.fionfor nf ThP PivU Rprvirp F m - members of their families will put member selects any doctor he de- some others, now receive medical cnapier oi xne ^.ivii o c i v i c c ^ i u ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ come." sires. There is a limitation in this care; also others would refrain I pioyees Association oy i i e r m a n jj^ ^ meeting at Albany at instance, however, on the amount because they need every cent M. Pogul, a member of the chap- which were Dr. Frank L. Tolman, indemnified. When a panel is es- | they earn just to pay living e x iter's executive committee, recom- president of the Association: John tabllshed the indemnity contract penses. He figured that perhaps Applications may be filed until i mended that the Association make I P. Powers, 1st vice president; Dr. is superseded. 32,500 State employees would Monday. June 5, for the popular I prepaid medical and hospitallza- Charles A. Brind, Charles H. Pos- j The HIP offers the medical join, at an annual cost to the Motor Vehicle License Examiner jtion insurance, with the employ- fcer, Dr. William Siegal, John J. plan, but only in conjunction with State of $1,635,000, with a good test. Pay starts at $3,036 and er sharing the cost, one of its Kelly of the Association's legal the Blue Cross hospitalization part of the cost offset by increased rises to $3,726 in five annual in- primary obiectlves. While no par- staff, and other State employees coverage, Mr. Pogul added. efficiency and reduced absenteecrements. ! ticulai" plan was favored in the or their representatives. Michael, "The employer pays half the Ism. Candidates must have lived in i report, the operation of the White, general manager, and Dr. cost," he said. "The employee's, The report was approved by New York State for at least one Health Insurance Plan, in which George Bachr, chairman of the share of the cost is defrayed by, the chapter and a copy was oryear immediately preceding July nearly 100,000 NYC employees are board of directors, both of the payroll deductions. For eligibility, dered sent to the Association HIP, also were present. The two of any group of employees con- headquarters at Albany, 18, 1950, and must be between 18 members, was stressed. Mr. Pogul described the HIP as men from the HIP described its stituting a department or diviand 40 years old. They must have sion, 75 per cent must assent. a New York S'ate driver's license a non-profit organization which operation. Also, after cessation of State serfor the past two years and one insures medical and surgical costs Districts Outside of NYC vice, the contract continues, an of the following: four years of without limit, at a reasonable The medical services ai'e ren- important consideration because high school, four years of busi- price, and "thus removes the l.'idO h a i r s rpniovwl p o n i i a n e n l l y ness experience, or a satisfactory | dread of employees in the medium dered by general practitioners we may then enter the period of (in one h o u r ) equivalent. They must be not less and low-paid brackets that some and specialists who practice as a our greatest need for medical serFace • Arms • Rody • Legs group and constitute a panel of vice.' than 5 feet 6 inches in height and Sepiiratc M e n ' s D e p t . 25 or more, Mr. Pogul, who, atmust weigh not less than 135 W r i t e f o r f r e e Folilcr Estimates Cost to State tended the Albany meeting, expounds stripped. CLARA REISNER INSTITUTE plained. Not al! State employees would Dutie.'? of the "ob include conof COSMETOLOGY Since no panels exist outside join, he surmised, especially as ducting road test«J, vision, knowlno.--. F i f U i A v e . , N . Y V . \ . «5-l«!I8 ; NYC, the HIP would offer indem- workers in the Mental Hygiene edge of the trafllc law and safety regulation and English tests of applicants for chauffeurs' and operators' licenso.^:: investigating applicants for licenses by drivers' schools, private service bureaus and dealers; investigating complaints; cxaminintT applications for licenses; and a variety of related ta.sks. Apply in person at the Motor Travel Furs Itestyled Vehicle Bureau. 80 Centre Street, K v o r y l i « i l v ' s I.OW COST T R A V K L TO P U E U T O RTCO. F U K S R e s i y l e d , r e p a i r e d ' relined. C e r t i n e d Manhattan, where forms may Iliiv SiBlttsoeiug and h o t r l a f c o m n i o d a t i o n s . s t o r a s e . C o a t s on h a n d and to o r d e r . also be filed, or by mail from the W A L D K M A R m T H O U N J R . , 2 5 0 W. 5 7 J;^' f""'® ^or the e u m n i c r . State Department of Civil Service, St.. K . Y . P L a z a 7 8 4 0 U . ^ "P ""'l d c l i v r r . fr'ully i n s u r e d . SiiviiiK<t on nil nut ionally-advert Wed items. P h o n e for a p p t . LA 4-08.S3. L. K a t z P u r s . State Office Building, Albany, N. \ isit uiir HIIOW r o o m s I n c 1 2 4 W. 3 1 S t . N . Y C Y. If applying by mail, enclose C A L L S E n-OlOO f o r b o o k i n g by sc.t or air BENCO SALES CO. t r a v e l . H o n e y m o o n s , t o u r s and c r u i s e s ar6-cent, self-addressed large enSMALL GROUPS Fur Storage . 105 X.VSSAIT STKKKT r a n g e d . Free s e r v i c e I m m i g r a t i o n . Calling velope. >««w Vork t'ify IHRhy »-l<ilO R e l a t i v e s a b r o a d J. P c r i l l o & S o n s . T r a v e l F U R S S T O R E D , R e p a i r e d a n d r e m o d e l e d . PERSONAL C O A C H I N G G l a z e d . W e guarantee all our work. An Arco study book for Motor S e r v i c e . 4 5 1 5 T h i r d A v e . B ; o n x N . Y. F r i e n d l y s c r v i c e and f r e e e s t i m a t e . Pick u p MODERN GYMS Vehicle License Examiner is on TELEVISION & APPLIANCES a n d d e l i v e r . P . M. Charles. 1 8 5 R a l p h A v e . sale at The LEADER Bookstore, EXPERT I N S T R U C T I O N B k l y n . , N . Y. GL ;.'-OC;M. I'eiis, Typewrltern, Jewelry and I.tiKsage. " P l a n e oi Ve.sscl travel w i t h K e s s c l " TremeiidouH di<*eoiint8 to Civil Service I'erComplete Travel Service 97 Duane Street, New York 7, L A D I E S ! Your f u r coat stored cold and NiHiiiel. S m i t h t o w n T r a v e l B u r e a u O v e r 5 0 Years Experience N. Y., two blocks north of City d r y in o u r m o d e r n p l a n t at r e a s o n a b l e S m i t h t o w n B r a n c h , L. L. S m t w 1 3 1 0 A. 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The bulk of the appropriations met increased costs of operation due to higiier costs of living and an increase in hospital populations, declared David N. Fields, president of tlie Association. CivH S e r v i c e Exam P r e f K i r a t i o i i Eastman E. C. GAINES, A. h., Prei. SECRET A R i A L & A C C O U N T I N G c u r , . . Also SPANISH STENOGRAPHV CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH INTERNATIONAL TRADE Approved for Veteran* ReiisteredbytheRecents, OayliEvenin|. Established 1853 Bulletin On Request 441 LexingtoH Ave., N.Y. MU.2-3527 {Mill 5 Convi'jiient Centers •KOOKLYIN M O N E Y ! On t e l e v i s i o n , r e f r i g e r a t o r s , w a s h i n g m a c h i n e s and e l e c t r i c a p p h a n c e s . Y o u w i l l a p p r e c i a t e o u r s e r v i c e . C o m e in or c a l l u s . D i s c o u n t t o readers. A. G r o s s i n . m . f)04 E . 1 7 0 St., B r o n x . N . Y . CY CICNTRAI. Y Household iSecexsities PROSPKCT PARK Y FOR YOIK HOME MAKING SIHU'IMNG NEEDS 357 — 9t»i St. F u r n i t i i r e . a p p l i a n c e s , srifts. e t c . ( a t real s a v i n g s ) M u n i c i p a l E m p l o y e e s S e i v i c e . 41 P a r k R o w . CO. 7 - 5 ; » t 0 . 1 4 7 N a s s a u St.. NYC. 570 Jainaira Ave. BRONX BRONX UNION Y 470 E. 161st .St. MAMIA'riAN ^ KST SIDE Y 15 W. 63rd St. CALL FOR MEDICAL EXAM Old Gold & Jeicelery W auted H I G H E S T CASH P A I D f o r Old J e w e l r y . Gold T e e t h . W a t c h e s . D i a m o n d s . F R E E inf o r m a t i o n . R o s e Smelting: Co., 2 9 - C L E a s t Madison. Chicaso. T U T £ YMC:A .SCHOOLS 15 W. 6:<ra St. EN. 2-8117 .St.) NEW STUDIO Photonraphy Miss and i>uri't.>i(ale'd C\>uri. CITATIOS T H E P E O P l . E OF T H E S T A T E OF N E W Y O R K , B Y T H E G R A C E OF GOD F R E E AND INDEPENDENT: TO: IZAAK V A N LIER, M A R I A N N E V A N DAM V A N LIER. H E I M A N V A N DAM, ISI1X)KE B R A M V A N D A M a n d A f . 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Esq., w h o residea at 3 3 0 E a s t 7l)tU Street, in t h e B o r o u g h of M a n h a t t a n , City of N e w Y o r k , Y o u and e a c h of y o u a r e h e r e b y c i t e d to show couse b<'fore t h e Surrogate's C o u r t of N e w York C o u n t y , held in t h e H a l l of Records, in t h e C o u n t y of N e w Y o r k o n t h e ;:3MI d a y of J u n e , 11»50 at 1 0 : 3 0 o ' c l o c k in t h e f o r e n o o n of that d a y , w h y t h e S u r r o g a t e s h o i i h l n o t inciulre i n t o t h e f a c t s and c i r c u i n n t a n c e s a n d judicially determine: ( 1 ) t h a t said I ' / A A K V A N L I E R . is dciul; U N W A N T E D HAIR REMOVED PERMAN E N T L Y f r o m f a c e , legs, b o d y . E y e b r o w s , h a i r l i n e shaiM.'d; ciuick p a i n l e s s method. H I L D A C A M P B E L L , 75(i 7 A v e . (50). N . Y . C . PJ. 7-7t)r:5. Health Servives GKUKGE WKBSTEK ^33 Kust 87th Street. New Vork 'J8. N. Telepiione; AT 9-33'^(i U n i v e r s i t y Opticiaiife. 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N.Y C. 1 8 EXIT LOXEMNESS S o m e w h e r e there is s o m e o n e y o u w o u l d l i k e t o k n o w . S o m e w h e r e t h e r e is s o m e o n e w h o w o u l d like t o k n o w y o u £n an exclusive and discreet raannei "Social Introduction Service" has brought together m a n y d i s c r i m i n a t i n g m e n and wom e n With *reat s o l i e i t u d c and p r u d e n c e y o u can e n j o y a richer h a p p i e r l i f e . Write f o r b o o k l e t SC or p h o U t EN ;2-S033 MAY R I C H A R D S O N 1 1 1 W. 7 S a St.. N . y . C . Oly 1 0 - 7 : S u n . l S - 6 < A.tl PKOtU UJH M l Sli(:t'K8S I.N M\KING MAKKIAGES Confidential Interview without obtisation C l R C l I.AU ON R E Q U E S T Helen Brooks lOO W. 4'Id St., NYC W1 7-'J430 LIKE TO CORRESl'OND} Make new f r i e n d s t h i s aiiu\»le i n t e r e s t i n g w a y t h r o u g h m e m b e i a h i p in t h e " F o u n t a i n of Friends h i p CI j b " Only f e e is ."S5.00 (or list Send f o r f - e e g u i d e "F o l F". 8 1 0 St. J o h n s Plaotf. B k l y n . . N . Y. CJ) that BAREND Et.EASAU VAN I . I E R is t h e o n l y p e r s o n e n t i t l e d u n d e r t h e l a w s of t h e K i n g d o m of t h e N e t h e r l a n d s t o t h e itoHsession o i t h e perwonal IT'S L . \ T E R T H A N YOU T H I N K . . p r o p e r t y of saiil IZAAK V A N L I E R in E n j o y y o u r s e l l w i t h t h e 4 0 p l u s S o c i a l C l u b ( n o n - p r o l i t ) . N e w meinbi rs i n v i t e d . the N e t h e r l u i i d s ; ( 3 ) that a iluly a u t h e n t i c a t e d cowy ot P h o n e or w r i t e M i s s Kay Mui|>hy tor parJA 3-l)50:i, 8810—lO'.' St.. t h e Last Will and T e s t a m e n t of th s a i d I t i i u l a r s , IZAAK T A N L I E R d a t e d J a n u a r y 7 11I38 I J a m a i c a L, 1, be rei'onled h e r e i n ; H) t h a t . \ n ( i l l a i y l,< ltir.-. of A d m i n i s - A C Q U l U E S I N C E R E F R I E N D S . Our uni.tue organization enubU-s y o u t o corri>»poiid t r a t i o n w i t h t h e Will Anne-<ed s h a l l is-iu o l i < \ R - l w i t l i o t h e r i n t e l l i g e n t , discriniinatiiig iteot o y o u r iictiiloiici as t h e tle-igii 1>I.-. M i n i m u m d u e s . W r i t e : E N D EI.EASAR VAN LIER. Natiiinal CiirresponiU nei Ciiili IN WITNESS WHEUEOi-', w. lia\r I'.O.B. 'iTi, Shenorocfc, N. V. c a u i e i l the s e a l o l t h e Surroiialc'a Court of t h e sHtil t'ouijty of Nes\ Voili to be SERVICE h e r e u i i l o i i l l U e d . W i t i u ^ - . lU.m.ruble Wil- R I T I I KAY FRIKNDSIItl NVC. T h e liani T. Collliii-. ;i Sui-iiij:i|i ol nUi ..aiil , •7!il)ll Ui-iiailw;i.\-, Co HTtU St Couiit.v ol .Ni-w \ tlr l.'illi ilu.\ i>l I b. li.' ( las- ( li nt; li . luiii,-*!, , , . . uu.Ma.\. IITil'. I'liil V. h i ' i a l u n ; . C l t l U o l ii'l.- .i liil srr\ii-r. Hon - lU y i l> .Wivi l>i lllc burroialc * Cuuil, Mrs. OPTIClA:>-OirrOMETRIST Eyes examined. G l a s s e s w h i l e y o u w a i t . P r e s c r i p t i o n s tilled. Q u i c k r e p a i r s F a c t o r y o n p r e m i s e s . Will i a m Bergen. 0 4 0 0 C h u r c h A v e . ( N r . R. S t . ) B r o o k l y n N . Y . DI ;i-031'J. Social I'lTATlOS ROOMS I P E R M A N E N T W A V E . . . 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F r e e p i c k - u p a n d d e l i v e r y by ojir bonded messengers. Patronize y o u r neighb o r h o o d f u r r i e r . 0 5 - 0 7 M y r t l e A v e . . Glendale, Queens, L. I H E 3 - 5 7 1 7 . COLD F U R S T O R A G E . A l s o r e m o d e l i n g , repairing, r e l i n i n g , c l e a n i n g . P i c k u p w r vice. S. J . B r a n s , 3 5 L a f a y e t t e Ave., B r o o k l y n , or c a l l S T 3-U5?;5. Sewer (Aeauiiig S E W E K S OR D R A I N S R A Z O R - K L E E N E D . No digging—If no results, no charge. Electric Roto Rootei Sewer Service Phone JA 6 - 0 4 4 4 : NA 8 - 0 5 8 8 : TA 2-0l:;3. Tailoring S K I R T S & P A N T S TO M A I C H SUIT. JACKET L A W S O N T A I L O R I N G 4 W E A V I N G CO.. 1 0 5 F u l t o n St.. corner B w a y . N. Y. C. 1 Flight Up. WO. 2 - f : 5 1 7 - 8 Typewriters TYPEWRITER SPECIALS $15.00. All M a k e s R e n t e d , R e p a i r e d . N e w I'oi-t.ible. E a s y T e r m s . R o s e n b a i i n i ' e , 158:.' B r o a d w a y , B r o o k l y n , N . Y. Kencoii Typewriter Co. Civil Ser\-tce A r e a . T y p e w r i t e r s B o u g h t — Sold—Repaired—Rented f o r t e s t s or by m o n t h . 6 M a i d e n L a n e Near Br(iadw.-jy, N.Y.C. WO 5i-386':. T Y P E W R I T E R S RENTED For Civil Service Exuiiis Me do Deliver tu tlie Kxainiiiatiiiii Kuoitis ALL Makes — Easy Terms ADDING MACHINES MIMEOGRAPHS INTKKNATIONAI, T^PKWKITEK 240 E. 8 6 l l i SI. KK N.Y.C. CO. Open Ull 0 : 3 0 p . m . R e n t a l s f o r c i v i l s e r v i c e e x a m s , or by m o n t h S p c c i a l on all rebuilt t y p e w r i t e r s . Remington Noiseless Tyin-writcrs foi «ale $ 3 5 . Open u n t i l 0 P.M. ex<ept S a t u r d a y s . Aberdeen, 1 7 8 3rd A v e . , N V C . Gr 5 - 5 4 8 1 . A d d i n g m a c h i n e s rented and sold. T y p e w r i t e r s f o r all c i v i l s e r v i c e e x a m s n e a r s c h o o l s . 1 4 t h St. area. P i c k n|) ami delivery s e r v i c e . A i m well T y p e w r i t e r S e r v i c e , IDO ;jnd A v e . , N.Y.C. G R 7 - 0 1 5 0 . TYPEWRITERS RENTED. Delivered to R o o m tor Civil S e r v i c e E x a m s . D A ;i-8:MV!. llpholsiery Auto Uepaira — Brooklyn CUSTOM MADE SE.VI COVEI'.S. Auto T o p s . U p h o l s t ( r y reiialrs. C a r p e t s . Choien o l f a b i i c s . E x p e r t w o r k . D i s c o u n t to readers L Burkhart, 1055 Bedford Ave., Bklyn. N Y Watch Repair YOL'R W.VTCH c o m p l e t e l y overhaul.-d w i t h 1 yr. y u a r a i i t e f . M A X A R B E T M A N , 5 S 0 6 Ave., KYC. R o o m ! ' 3 0 0 . P l . a / . a 7 - 0 0 7 5 . Charges as low as $';.50. Summer I'laces Biini^alow.s for rent by s e a s o n . . \ l l iinpi oveiiii-nlH. R e a s o n a b l e . W r i t e S e h u p i laelc Acres. R E D 1, B o x 1 1 4 , K i n g s t o n , N . Y , L a k e George, Hague, N . Y. H o u b c k e e p l n c cottages. All coiivenienccs. Ueiil week, m o n t h or s e a s o n . \ c c o i i i . 0-K $5t) to .$100 tier w k . iiiilude.-. boat ttith oiUboaril m o tor. Half rate tluriiig J u n e . Mrs. J. A . KretcJimer, 7 Brookhiile Ave., Menanda, N . Y. A L b a n y 3 - 3 8 3 5 . PLK.VSE NOTICKI B o w i l e n ' i Instant Ser\iid o e s cxii'i't repairs on all tyiK-i: of B;I.VB R( al E.>tate. Rentals—• cai-f—v\a^lii'i:;. siiiuiMi/iMu. .Moldloil. Mobil- Ilaiiipton gao. Whi'ii ill Iroiilil' i^ill or ililvi- In. Sale^. "l.dtiii 1>. Hii»i n - »iiinoi-tuniiii" ." rii-rii Kip-eiia B h i i . , F l u » h i i r j , L. 1. I^O 8 - I'aiil .l'."jm-, Broker. Main St., Haiiuuou I iiiO » Ul>6. Uatii. i 4 - . t . t < - rm^amf^ M m M , € I T I L I f S t S C f t V I C E Page L E A » K B FtffcM FEDERAL NEWS HERC IT W h i t e House Cautious f O n Sick L e a v e C h a n g e WASHINGTON, May 29 — The White House is not opposed to a revision of the annual leave provisions but wants a thorough study made before any action is taken. That would put off action until the next session of Congress. It Is opposed to the bill introduced by Senator. Paul Douglas, (D.Hl.), t o reduce annual leave for 1,300,000 classified and per diem employees. An Administration report is being prepared, reviewing the leave policies during the past 75 years. In the beginning employees received 30 days' annual leave and •.sick leave combined, changed 16 yeara ago to 26 days' annual leave and 15 days' sick leave. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge (R., Mass.) has a bill to prevent accumulation of sick leaves. The Administration is not opposed to this principle and would require employees to use during the next fiscal year all the annual leave they acquire during that period. The general appropriation bill ^Federal Tests Now Open 4-34-3 (50). Oceano«:rapher, $3,825 to $10,000. Most jobs are in the Hydrographic Office of the Navy Department and in the \ Coast and Geodetic Survey of the Department of Commerce. Appro• f t priate education or experience ^ plus professional experience in oceanography are required. No written test. Apply to Executive Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners for Scientific and Technical Personnel of PRNC, Idg. 37, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington 25, D. C. No closin gdate. 228. Medical Officer in the following options: Rotating Intern, $2,200 first year, $2,400 second year; Psychiatric Resident, $2,400 to $4,150; Surgical Resident, $3,400 to $4,150; General Practice Resident, $2,400 to $4,150.—For duty in St. Elizabeths Hospital, Washington, D. C. Appropriate education is required. Approved internship also required for psythiatric, surgical, and general practice resident, and an additional 3 years as resident-intraining in surgery for surgical resident. No written test. Maximum age limit: 35. Apply to Committee of Expert Examiners, St. Elizabeths Hospital, Washington 25, D. C. Closing date, Tuesday. June 20. r Training Specialist Test carries a rider that says, of an- would be encouraged, the remainnual leave, in effect, "Take it s^s ing time constituting a reesrve you earn it." Two weeks' vacations for trips and the like. Rosseli Discusses Jobs For Stenos and Typists (Continued from page 1) bly in the third week, and will remain open at least one week. T h e jobs are in two grades, G S - 2 at $2,450 to start, and GrS-3 at $2,650. There are six annual increments of $80 each that bring the pay to $2,930 for G S - 2 and $3,130 for GS-3. There will be both a written and a practical test, said James E. Rosseli, Director of the Second Regional OfRce of the Commission. "Those who attain high scores will have an excellent opportunity of appointment," .said Mr. Rosseli. One written exam will be given for both grades and the dictation speed for Stenographer candidates will be 80 words a minute. Mr. Ros.sell warned that the Per' eral criterion is a bit stiffer than it appears, "probably .stiffer than the State's 90, because of syllabic intensity." , Asked what syllabic intensity meant, he said it referred to t h e selection of words with a greater number of syllables. T h » e is a regular turnover that will produce jobs for eiigibles, h e said, although there Is no great number of present v a cancies. When the new register is established, h e explained, the existing one will be killed. On t h e existing registers are niunerous candidates who have circimiscribed their awJOintment possibilities as practically to eliminate he added. Exampicr Include eligible? who will accept a job in only the one department; others who won't take anything lower tlian Grade 4 or Grade 5, and In only a specified location. The Commission feels that such eligibles who so sharply limit their acceptability clutter up the registers. U. S. Clothing Production And Designer Jobs Open Two positions are to be filled by the U. S. Naval Clothing Depot. 29th Street and Third Avenue, Brooklyn 32, N, Y. One is as Production Speciali.st (Clothing M a n ufacturer). $7,600, and the other as Clothing Designer, $6,400. The Production Specialist will be the production manager of the depot's clothing factory and the custom tailoring division of the Naval Uniform Shop. For this position a minimum of six years of administrative experience, which involved important, administrative responsibility in a large and complex federal, state or local government or private organization, is required. The experience must have included over-all direction, planning coordination or control of a varied and significant organization, or in providing diversified staff advice, or as assistant t o the director of such an organization. This experience must have demonstrated the applicant's ability to meet with individuals and groups within and outside of the organization. Three years of specialized experience is required, which may be included among the six. Similar length of experience, but in the designing specialty, is required for the Clothing Designer position. Apply to the U. S. Naval Clothing Depot direct. There is no closing date. SI0CAE54R OOUGUS • PETER5 mcevcocA £xmr sAOVETHATBRUTF PAUL J E A N wim An exam for Txaining Specialist jobs, $3,825 to $7,600. in various States, including New York, is now pen. The options are entomology, sanitary engineering, bactei-iology, veterinary science, chemistry, biology and general (such as public health engineering, public health education and environmental sanitation). Apply until further notice to the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Communicable Disease Center, 605 Volunteer Building, Atlanta 3, Ga. Those desiring consideration for jobs to be filled imA mediately should apply by Friday, •r———' une 9. Blanks may be obtained by mail from the Board. ^ ^ I.. amRfmxm^^^ AVF EMERSON ..HUMPHREY BOGART al^mDOi) In a Lonely Place TJlicltel imt. lUlo 342-352 FLATllUSH AVK. H r u u k h n , N. Y. NEvins 8-4552 O u r fortieth year of service oU'eriiig f i n e f o o d s and liquors to Urooklyii'ii UIOMI diKiTiniiiiutiiig rlieiilele. TIIKKK FKIVATR IIANgiIKi KOOMH AVAII.Alll.K- .ni. GLORIA GRAHAME y I COLUMMA PtCTlNtE fMNKiB UUNE •M. Ca^l fMwr M.r*,'IM \Mi»s r^aHi -Fbge • imwi, ^ fW- Henning ^Itiaf Lawrence, taBBBai N . Y / t Greatest Entertainincnt B u y ! WORLD-FAMOUS SMORGASBORD DINNERS (<1 g g k l V«ri«*iM cf Ci««tc««t D«tica<i«t AH Y*« C«n E«t 1 CIVIL SERVICE SUCCESS! Your test n importunt to y o u — y o u V e spent time and money to I t a k e it. I may m e a n • thrilling new life, new friendo, security f o r t h e re»t of y o w days. Do the best you know liow. It^B definitely worth your while. Study t h e right way! Tl'ould ; o u eroflg the eonntry without a m a p ? An Arco Bo<^ is jiipt as imp o r t a n t f o r your test success! WONDERFUL NEW A R C O COURSES HER£ IS A LISTING OF ARCO COURSES for PENDING EXAMINATIONS INQUIRE ABOUT OTHER COURSES • • • • • • • • Accoantaiit & Amdltor ....$2.00 • AdMMstrotiv* A»rt. ft • OAcer -.$2.50 • AitMN-icM Foreign S«rvic« ~$2.M Aato-Maeli. Mechanic ....$2.00 • looliiiceper $2.50 • §m» Mai«t«iiner (A ft •}..$2.00 • Corpentcr $2.00 • Civil Service Arithmetic ond VocobMlary —$1.50 • • CivH Service HMidbook..$1.00 • Civil Service Rights $3.00 n Cloims Examiner $2.50 • Clerh. CAF 1-4 $2.00 • Clerk, CAF.4 to CAf-7....$2.00 • Clerk. Grade 2 —$2.00 • Clerk. Grade 3 _....$2.00 • Clerk-TypistStenographer $2.00 • Dietitian $2.00 • Electrician $2.50 n Employment Interviewer $2.00 • Engineering Tests $2.50 • File Clerk $2.00 • Fingerprint Technici«n....$2.00 • Fireman (F.D.) ...: $2.50 •• Fire Uenteaant $2.50 Gordener • • • • • • • • • • • • Asst. Gardener $2.00 • • General Test Gnide $2.00 • • G-Mon $2.00 • n Guard Patrolman $2.00 • H. S. Diploma Test $2.00 • • Hospital Attendant $2.00 • • lasarance Ag't-Broker ....$3.00 • Internal Revenne Agent_$2.00 • • Janior Acconntant $2.50 • • Janitor Custodian $2.00 • • J r . Administrative Technician $2.00 • PREVIOUS TESTS • • Medical Social Worker. Gr. 2 10 • • n Electrical Inspector Gr. 3 25 • • Refrigeration Machine • Oper. .25 • • I • Inspector of Ponltry kN Gr. 3 10 n FREE! J r . Management Asst $2.00 J r . Profeasional Asst. $2.00 J r . Statistician and Statistical Clerk $2.50 Uhrarian $2.00 Mechanical Engr. $2.00 Mechanic-Le«mer $2.00 Messenger $2.00 Miscellaneons Office Machine Operator $2.00 Motor Yeh. Lie. Exam $2.50 Observer in Meteorology $2.00 Ofilice Appliance Optr $2.00 Oil Burner Installer $2.50 Patrol Inspector $2.00 Patrolman (P.D.) $2.50 Playground Director $2.00 Plumber $2.00 Police Lieut.-Captain ....$2.50 Postal Clerk-Carrier and Railway Mail-Clerk $2.50 Practice for Army Tests-$2.00 Practice for Civil Service $2.00 Promotion Real Estate iroker $3.00 Resident BIdg. Supt $2.00 Scientific, Engineering ft Biological Aaid $2.00 Sergeant (P.D.) $2.50 Social Investigator $2.00 Special Agent ....$2.00 State Trooper $2.00 Stationary Engnr. & Fireman $2.50 Steamiitter 25 Steno Typist (CAF-l-7)..$2.00 Student Nurse $2.00 Student Aid $2.00 Surface Line 0perator....$2.00 Telephone Operator $2.00 Titie Examiner $2.00 Vocabulary Spelling and Grammar $1.50 W i t h Every N . Y . C . A r c o B o o k — You W i l l Receive an Invaluable N e w 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.** { ORDER DIRECT-HAIL COUPON) PleaM send m« RICO CARI DANCING TO TWO lANDS taowt—7:M. It r.M. NIOHTLT CMstrr c«nt(* MI4 ^uar* DMO«»—It F M. r*KTY rAClLITlBS UP TO l«M IC E L /V N D ^ResTAli^T ft80AOWAVi«f T i m e W o r r y M o n e y Featuring f l a r flf Sttlioii WHOM An Arco study book for StenoTypist is on sale at The LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duaiie Street, New York 7, N. Y.. two blocks north of City Hall ami just nest of Broadway. To order this book by mail, see advertisement on pace 15. Th. QUICK EASY , WAY TO LEADER B O O K STORE ^ 9 7 D u a n e St.. N e w York 7. N . Y . LAVISH B'WAY Revue IS! CI'6-9210 copies of bookt chcclied « b o v * . I a n c l o i e check or money o r d e r for. $ W e Will P«y O r d i n a r y P o i U g e During 35c for 24 hour «p«ci«l delivery C . O . D.'i 30c extra Name . Address City State May F«g« C I V I L . Sixteen 9 E R V i U K L K A D E NEW YORK CITY Change in Rules Studied for Applying New Preference Law vised, promotional as well as open-competitive. In tli«e promotion tests the premium points are half as much—5 for disabled veterans, 21/2 for non-disabled veterans. With more than 200,000 eligibles, the Commission realizes it will have a job to do and is considering an application for additional clerks and others so that the changes in the listings may be made in time. Two Laws Contrasted Under the present preference law, applicable to jobs with the State and its civil divisions, including NYC, veterans who pass a test, if disabled, go to the top of the list as a group, in the order of their scores among themselves; non-disabled veterans come next; non-veterans last. The new law abolishes such absolute preference and substitutes the point system, with only one future application of the preference permitted. The candidate may exercise that one privilege whenever All Lists Affected he desires. Past preference beneAll the eligible lists in existence fits are not counted against cano n January 1 will have to t^e re- didates. I n preparation for the new preference law that takes effect o n January 1 next the NYC Civil Service Commission is exploring t h e changes In its rules and procedures that will have to be made. One of the problems concerns the maximum score, now limited to 100. The new law will permit disabled veterans who pass a test t o claim the right to 10 additional percentage points, non-veterans 5 points, in open-competitive tests, s o ^ h a t any disabled veteran getting 90.1 or more or non-disabled veteran getting 95.1 or more could exceed 100 per cent. In the current Patrolman (P.D.) exam, the Commission weighted t h e two halves of the written test differently, giving a credit of 1 per cent for a correct answer among the first 50 and 1.2 for each correct answea* among the second 50. Hence it was theoretically possible to attain 110 per cent, but any score of 100 or higher is counted as 100. Hilliard Hopeful of $ 3 0 0 Raise for Social Workers Welfare Commissioner Raymond M. Hilliard is optimistic about getting a $300 raise for the social service positions, from Social Investigator up to Case Supervisor. A brief on behalf of still higher Increases was submitted to him by t h e American Federation of State County and Munciipal Employees. I n his argument to Budget Director Thomas J. Patterson the Commissioner embodied the arguments of the brief. Also he had consulted with representatives of other unions. exclusive of the United Public Workers of America. The possibility of an increase also is of importance to candidates in the current Social Investigator exam, applications for which ALBANY, May 29—Peter Rasmussen, a former attendant in the Municipal Court, on Reade Street, NYC, won his suit against NYC over increments. The Court of Appeals ordered the City to pay the difference between what he'd received and what he should have received under the McCarthy increment law. David A. Savage, of 70 Pine Street, NYC, was Mr, Rasmussen's attorney. During the- LaGuardia administration a point arose about increments for competitive employ-;, ees in the ungraded service. T h o s ^ appointed at $1,800 or less were entitled to four increments. But many employees were receiving more than $1,800 plus the what the four increments would add. Mr. Rasmussen received $27700. Under one budget, as the result of a suit, he was paid $3,100, but between budgets the McCarthy law was changed and he was put back at $2,700. Next he sued to compel continuation of payment of the difference, on the ground that though the money had not been appropriated, it was required by law to have been. Mr, Savage contested the authority of either the Board of Estimate or the Council to change the salary between budgets. This is the suit now decided unanimously, but without opinion, Farley Addresses Communion Breakfast Bookbinders Pay Increased to 3,550 T h e Catholic Guild of the Department of Finance and the Comptroller's Office received corporate communion at the Church of St. Ann recently. The communion breakfast was held at the Hotel New Yorker. Speakers included former Postmaster General James A. Farley, t h e Rev. Joseph N. Moody and the Rev. Daniel J. Fant. Dennis P Collins and Ann Carlozzi were co-chairmen of the breakfast. Mr Collins will act as toastniaster. Other committees were headed by John Parry, Thomas E. Judge, Robert W. Brady, John A. Mullaney, Anne Doyle, Daniel Berkery, Elizabeth Thomas, Elizabeth ^Vaish, Margaret Dwyer, Anne M. Whaien, James R. McDonald, Aloysius J. William-^. August Grosbernd, Willlaui .htn-. Margaret M. O'Brien unu Juotpli 'A. Venditto. Commissioner 1950 List of C a n d i d a t e s In P B A Election ^ Pour tickets are in the field in the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association election. Delegates began ballot distribution yesterday. The ballots must be returned not later than midnight of Monday, June 5. Voters are asked to mail them to a post office box number. The term of office is two years. The titles of the tickets and the names of the candidates and their precincts or other assignments follow: Finest Paul P. Brennan (above), new Civil Service Commissioner in NYC, is Acting President. Municipal Court Justice James A. Watson is expect* ed to be appointed to an existing vacancy and to be named President. 3,533-Men Apply for Cleaner Jobs Retirement System To Hire 26 More Mactiine Operators Twenty-six operators of Burroughs machine No. 7200 will be hired for eight months by the NYC Employees Retirement System, of which Ralph L. Van Name is secretary, as of July 1 next. The eligible list will be used until exhausted; the remainder of those hired will be provisionals. The additional operators are needed to catch up with the posting, which fell behind last year because of the huge volume of work necessitated by the liberalized pension plan that 45,000 members accepted. The working hours for the new group will start at 5 P.M. and end when 720 postings have been made, by midnight or earlier. This sohedulc avoids buying new m a chines. Some few permanent employees work the same hours by preference. Starting pay is $1,980 a year. Annual increments are paid. The top of the grade is $2,710. Pro\isionals in these jobs usually take the riext open-competitive exam pass and thus acquire permanent jobs. The Government and Civic Employees Organizing Committee, CIO, announced that it had obtained an agreement with the NYC Administration for a raise in pay for Bookbinders to $3,550, retroactive to January 1 last. Officers of Local 370 conferred with Budget Director Thomas J. Patterson, Chief Examiner William F. Shea and Assistant Corpoiatlon Counsel Howard Fishback, prior to the agreement. The The Naer Tormid Society, Jewofficers were Patrick J. Brady, ish Fraternal Organization of the president; Frank Smith, vice- New York Fire Department, held president, and Philip T a n / . its annual memorial services at the Riverside Synagogue, on Friday, May 19th. These services QUAYLE HI:AI>S DKiVE honored all deceased members of Fire Commissioner Frank J. the Fire Department regardless of Quayle is serving as chairman of faith and were conducted by RevI he Health. Welfare and Public erend Edward Lissman. Chaplain, KaUJloyees S o d ion in Manliaitan Now York Fire Dt'parl nv.'nt. The iJ'i'jitit-at is Fireman j in t ho Greulor New York Fund Sor-ioty .'JuviU PiiiiUps. I l ^ j u cami^aiiiii. Naer Tormid Holds Memorial Services iVIar 3 0 , NEWS Several hundred jobs are expected to be filled from the Cleaner eligible list which the NYC Civil Service Commission will promulgate as soon as possible. The imclosed on recently. The advertised pay is $2,710, but would become mediate vacancies are about 110, $3,010 if the raise goes through. j but there will be additional ones, especially as the list will have a Applications Again in July During the recent application maximum possible life of four period 5,871 sought Social Inves- years. tigator jobs. T h e NYC Civil SerThe exam was open to men only vice Commission wants more ap- for three days last week. All told, plicants, so will receive applica- 3,533 applied. About 300 had tions for the same test from waited in line all night to be Thursday, July 6, to i'''riday, July among the first to apply on the 21. first day, since eligibles' standing An Arco study book for Social on the list will be in the order of Investigator is on sale at The application. LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duane The pay, depending on the deStreet, New York 7. N. Y., two partment. is $1,920 to $2,040. blocks north of City Hall and just Applications were received at west of Broadway. To order this the Park Department pool. West book by mail, see advertisement 59th^ Street. on page 15. Increment Suit Is W o n Tuesday, R (All on this ticket are incumbents, excepting Edward T. Fehling.) President: John E. Carton, 44. 1st vice-president: Mario Biaggi, 24. 2d vice-president: Richard J. Sullivan, 114. Treasurer: John C. Lang, 10. Recording Secretary: John P. Harnig, 1st District Traffic. Financial secretaries: Edward Rogers, 5; Bart J. Egan, Emergency Service Division; Ray Quinn, 108; Walter Gorman, Traffic P.; Edward T. Fehling, 79. Trustees: Manhattan, Martin J. McDonnell, 34; Bronx, Patrick H. Pitzpatrick, 52; Brooklyn, Walter A. Asklund, 67; Queens, Vincent J. Stein. 109; Richmond, Alfred A. Pugazzl. 120. Sergeant-at-arms: Herbert L. Massett, 41. Queens, George Durstoff. 102; Richmond, none. Sergeant-at-arms: none. Carton vs. McCiancy The big battle in the PBA war is lining up between the forces of Carton and the forces of M c Clancy. Last week, a major tilt took place when McClancy, due to bo given a testimonial dinner by a group of Queens County merchants, received a depaitmental order forbidding him to attend. The information was given him 24 hours before the event, at which n various luminaries were to b present. And the McClancy boy; said bluntly that they believed t h e restriction constituted an attempt by the Carton supporters to hurt McClancy's candidacy. They planned, however, to capitalize on this situation. No patrolman, they said, was going to like seeing one of their number "kicked in this unfair manner." It was understood too that the merchants who had arranged the affair were letting the Police Department know Vi of their displeasure, as citizensat the treatment the man the: were honoring was receiving. n 1 %79 Accomplishments Cited Patrolman Carton, now president of the Patrolman's Benevolent Association, and the board of officers, save one, accepted renoijiination on the basis of "79 Accomplishments in I'ij Terms." "Let Carton Complete the Job" Facts is the slogan used by the 16-man "Finest Slate" Patrolman Car-; President: George S. McClancy, ton spoke for the ticket wiiicV 111. has Column 1 on the ballots. 1st vice-president: John P. Vik"Pension cost reduction for meming, 88. bers of Article II of the pension 2nd vice-president, Ray Thorpe, system is now in its final lap," Traffic C. Carton declared. "Mayor William Treasurer, Adam D'Alessandro, O'Dwyer has given his full a y | 45. proval of the PBA pension Recording secretary: Jules Tes- sion campaign. Some 5,000 veter-*^ ler, 46. an, fraternal, labor and busines.s Financial secretareis: John Cik- groups have been urged to suputovich, 14; Matthew Farrell, 80; port the PBA's pension campaign Thomas Hamilton, Troop B; and scores of associations have Ralph Rispoli, 32; Joel Shubert, already endorsed the drive." 61. Commenting on the opposition's Trustees: Manhattan, Paul Pul- statements. Carton said "They lets, Motorcycle 1; Bronx Joseph are composed of half-truths and A. Healy, 41; Brooklyn, Joseph deceptions. We have corrected all Bruton Jr., 90; Queens, none; their distortions but we find it Richmond, none. i. AT • ci. difficult to keep abi-east of each barrage of misstatements - tlu^iv onanko, 88. make so many of them." Cops McClancy's campaign literature^ decried the Carton achievements. President: Raymond A. Dono- Calling his team the "Stick to the van. 68. Facts" ticket, McClancy used 1st vice-president: Brian J. Mc- what had formerly been an effecDermott, 16. tice political slogan in a national 2d vice-president: William E. election: "Had enough?" McDonald, 102. He pointed out that patrolmen Treasurer: Emmett R. O'Brien, pay more for their uniforms t h a n Detective Division. do firemen. And he had personRecording secretary: Christian ally intei-vened with the UniC. Schultz, 60. formed Firemen's Association to Financial secretaries: Charles J. obtain lower-cost uniforms for Olsen Jr., 76; Charles C. Schrimpf, cops and also the right to be inn-78; Francis J. McDeimott, Motor- cluded in the firemen's m e r c h a n t cycle 1 (brother of the candida,te dise-money-saving plan. for 1st vice-president); Michael Answering the Carton force Cronin, 64; Joseph Pabst, 11. boast of 79 achievements during Trustees: Manhattan, Roy Pi- their administration, the Mc[c J liere, 9; Bronx, Andrew Goetsches, Clancy forces denied the reality o f " 46; Brooklyn, Leo P. Casey, 78; these achievements, and issued a Queens, Stephen Byrnes, 100; 6-point over-all program, plus 18 iaichmond, none. goals of which they said, "it Sergeart-at-arms: Edgar D. is our intention to obtain every Moran, 69. one of them for you." Among t h e 18 points McClancy says his side Right will obtain if elected are: full pay President: Vincent L. Butler, on sick leave from first day; i n Midtown Squad. creased vacation allowance; hoj^r1st vice-president: Charles P. for-hour compensation for t Brennan, 102. Unt^l lost; compensation for traveling 2d vice-president: Thomas P. time on details; 25% reduction in Dugan, Traffic O. uniform prices. Treasurer: Charles Zurla, 30. Watching Ballot Boxes Recording secretary: Joseph The McClancy forces are also Veyvoda, 15. ISO 1 Financial secretaries: Fobert watching the boxes where the ba^ Moylan, Traffic N; James Mc- lots come in. "We take nothli? Guinness, 23; Chailes A. Bondy, for gratned," they are saying. Emergency Service Squad, 2; John As the campaign rolls into its ! J. Toolan, 20; Walter Messett, 14. final weeks, an intensification of Trustees: Manhattan, Ben Zu- interest in the department berell, 22; Bronx. John Hughes, comes obvious. The number of Emergency Service Squad, 9; ballots promises to exceed that i n Brooklyn, Walter Casey, 87; any previous election. 1 M Nearly 200 Protest Bus Driver Answers Playground Directors ^ Want 6-Hour Day Back l | A fj-action over one per cent of the 15,023 candidates who took the Surface Line Operator test filed protests with the NYC Civil Service Commission against tentative key answers. The ) •it was a little less than 200. T h e i e are 590 provibioiiaij. Playground directors of tlie Department of Parks decided to start legal action to restore a six-hour working day. They said that Commissioner Robert Moses had increa.scd their hours to 7 in March. 1945, ulthough for 35 years they had worked :iix-houi- duyi». i