9 l i E A P E I t Your Big Christmas

advertisement
_ ClAnll
S^/IAHAO.
l i E A P E I t
America's
Vol. XIV — No. 12
Largest Weekly
for Fuhlic
Tuesday, December 2, 1952
Employees
Your Big Christmas
Cift Cn*
Is Ready
9
Price Ten CenU
co^?
McFarland Lists
CSEA Committee
Posts for 1952-53
ALBANY, Dec. l — J e s s e B. M c Thomas
Conkling,
Brooklf®
F a r l a n d , p r e s i d e n t of t h e Civil S t a t e Hospital. Brooklyn.
Service Association, h a s a n n o u n c e d
B e n j a m i n L. Roberts, City H O ^
a p p o i n t m e n t s to 22 r e g u l a r a n d I t h a c a .
special c o m m i t t e e s of t h e o r g a n i MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEI
zation. T h e a s s i g n m e n t s w e for
S t a t e Division
t h e year 1952-53.
Charles D. Methe, c o - c h a l r m a ^
T h e full roster follows:
M a r c y S t a t e Hospital, Marcy.
AUDITING COMMITTEE
Charles J . Hall, Public Woifci
George S y r e t t , C h a i r m a n , Labor Dept., S t a t e Office Bldg., Albany.
Department, Menands.
Alex G r e e n b e r g , S t a t e Insurano®
R o b e r t McGulre, Dept. of Audit F u n d , New York City.
«fe Control, Albany.
F r a n c i s A. M a c D o n a l d , S t a t e
Harold
Gook, Public Works School.
Dept., Albany.
H a r r y Joyce. Attica S t a t e Priso«(
B e r n a r d Campbell, E d u c a t i o n Attica.
Dept., Albany.
E m m e t t J. D u r r , R a y B r o c k
G e r a l d P. Maloy, W o r k m e n ' s S t a t e Hospital, R a y Brook.
Compensation B o a r d , M e n a n d s .
Vito J . F e r r o , G o w a n d a 3 t « t o
C h a r l e s O'Connell, M e n t a l H y - Hospital, H e l m u t h .
giene Dept., Albany.
S a m u e l E m m e t t , T a x Dept., I ^ m
York City.
EDUCATION C O M M I T T E E
The State Merit Award Board in oetion. Dr. Frank L. Tolman, (seated, center), Boord chairman, receives
S u s a n n e Long, T a x Dept., S t a t e
Mrs. Mildred O. Meskil, C h a i r Information from Board Secretary Jamet S. Quigtey, concerning an employee's sngqettion. Boord member*
Office Bldg., Albany.
m a n , Commerce Dept., Albany.
Tliomas E. Mulligan, Jr. ( l e f t ) omd Edward D. Igoe attentively follow ttie discnssioa*
Emll B o l l m a n , R o c k l a n d S t a t e
H e n r y M c F a r l a n d , Civil Service Hospital, O r a n g e b u r g .
Dept., Municipal Division, Albany.
County Division
l>OIV>T R E P E A T T M I S
John J. Cox, Public Works Dept.,
Vernon A. T a p p e r , Co-chalrnMH^
Albany.
Syracuse.
Raymond
Castle,
Commerce
I v a n S. Flood, W h i t e Plalna.
Dept., Syracuse.
P h i l i p L. W h i t e , O g d e n s b u r t .
Mrs. Melba R . B i n n , Div. VocaMrs. L u l a Williams, B l n g h « » >
tional R e h a b i l i t a t i o n , Rochester. ton.
Lottie Edwards, E d u c a t i o n Dept.,
George Plschle, B u f f a l o 15.
Albany.
PENSION-INSURANCE
Virginia Leathern, a v U Service
COMMITTEE
BINGHAMTON, Dec. 1—Glow-Night, the Association® regloMi Dept., T r a i n i n g Division, Albany.
ing praise was showered u p o n attorney:
M a r y O'Connor, Div. S t a n d a r d s
Charles C. D u b u a r , n i i i l r n i — .
E r n e s t L. Conlon by his m a n y
"The real tribute to Ernie Con- At P u r c h a s e , Albany.
I n s u r a n c e Dept., Albany.
friends, a t & testimonial d i n n e r lon will come with the expansion
Solomon B e n d e t , New York C i t j .
Sylvia P a r k e r , Correction Dept.,
Davis L. Shultes,
Insuranat
given in his h o n o r a t t h e Arling- of this group, for you will find . ^ b a n y .
ton Hotel in B i n g h a m t o n on S a t - your success is but a reflection of
John Predmore, State Teachers Dept.. Albany.
u r d a y . November 22. N u m b e r e d his own, and his inspiration will College, Brockport.
J o h n Mullaney, Auburn.
a m o n g his a d m i r e r s were civic be felt in deeds, not words.
Charles D. Methe, M a r c y State
E d w a r d D. M e a c h a m , Commerce
leaders of t h e Triple Cities, as well
Hospital, Marcy.
Other speakers included John Dept., Albany,
as h i g h r a n k i n g officers of t h e Civil
Philip L. W h i t e , Ogdensburg.
Elizabeth McSweeney, M a n h a t Mrs. A n n LeVine, B r o a d a c r w
t a n S t a t e Hospital, New York City.
T h e G O P j o b - h u n t e r s h a v e d e s - Service Employees Association, of
S
a
n a t o r i u m , Utica.
cended upon Gen. Eisenhower with which h e was recently 4th' viceSPECIAL CONSULTANTS
G
r a c e Hlllery, State I n s u r a o t e
r a p a c i t y to be expected a f t e r a president.
Dr. Albert B. Corey, E d u c a t i o n
F u n d , Buffalo.
twenty-year hunger. But what are
T h e occasion of t h e d i n n e r was
Dept., Albany.
t h e jobs open? T h e great m a s s of Mr. Conlon's r e c e n t r e t i r e m e n t
Dr. F r a n k l i n B. Airiof, H e a l t h
PUBLIC RELATIONS
F e d e r a l jobs are u n d e r civil s e r - f r o m S t a t e service. He relinquished
Dept., Albany.
COMMITTEE
vice. J u s t t h e jsame, t h e r e will be his post as executive officer of t h e
D o n a l d D a v e n p o r t , Commerce
Foster Potter. Chairman, Depia
t h o u s a n d s upon
t h o u s a n d s of Broom County A. B. C. B o a r d to
Dept., Albany.
Agriculture & M a r k e t s , Albany.
openings available for t h e f a i t h f u l . become a field r e p r e s e n t a t i v e f o r
Dr. Charles T. Klein, a v U S e r v Thomas
Stowell,
Commere®
T h e editors of T h e LEADER'S t h e Association.
ice Dept., Albany.
Dept., Albany.
" D o n ' t R e p e a t T h i s " column a r e
Acting as m a s t e r of ceremonies,
Dr. David M. Schneider, Social
Philip F l o r m a n , Commerce Dep4.
able to reveal exclusively t h e list C. Albion K e n w o r t h y , president of
W e l f a r e Dept., Albany,
Albany.
of p a t r o n a g e jobs open.
B i n g h a m t o n c h a p t e r of t h e AssoDr. E d w a r d S. Mooney, E d u c a J . A r t h u r M a n n , Div, S t a n d a r t e
Not only will t h e r e be t h e t o p ciation, detailed t h e m a n y i m p o r tion Dept., Albany.
3c P u r c h a s e , Albany.
d e p a r t m e n t jobs to fill, t h e a t t o r - t a n t services p e r f o r m e d by Mr.
Dr. Price C h e n a u l t , Correction
N o r m a n G a l m a n , T a x Depli«
neys, a n d m a n y postmasterships, Conlon in behalf of civil service
Dept., Albany.
Albany.
b u t even in t h e lower r u n g s , it m a y employees t h r o u g h o u t t h e years.
GRIEVANCE C O M M I T T E E
R E S O L U T I O N S COMMITTEI
be expected t h a t m a n y of those A typical expression of c o m m e n d a P r e s i d e n t s of C h a p t e r s i n C a p i E d w a r d L. R y a n , Chalrm•il^
(Continued
on page 2)
tion was t h a t given by William E.
t a l District a r e a as of October 1, Dept. of Law, Albany.
1952, to serve t o S e p t e m b e r 30,
R o b e r t L e o n a r d , Dept. oi AudM
& Control, Albany.
1953.
H a r r y M. Dillon, Auburn Priaoi^
LEGISLATIVE C O M M I T T E E
J o h n P . Powers,
C h a i r m a n , Auburn.
J o h n F . Powers, F r e e p o r t .
Freeport.
E m m e t t J . Diu-r, R a y Brocll
R a y m o n d L. Munroe, T a x Dept.,
S t a t e Hospital, R a y Brook.
Rochester.
J o s e p h M c M a h o n , S t a t e IndWH
ERMiST L CONLON
J. Allyn Stearns, Wlalte Plains,
R o b e r t L, Soper, W a s s a i c S t a t e t r i a l School, I n d u s t r y .
P a u l W. Swartwood, C o t m B
A complete catalogue of staple ployees to do t h e i r C h r i s t m a s P. Powers, New York City, 1st School, Wassaic.
Items available for C h r i s t m a s giv- shopping by mail a t a s u b s t a n t i a l vice-president of t h e Association;
J o s e p h P . Felly, T a x Dept., Al- University, I t h a c a .
J o s e p h J . Byrne, PubUc WobIh
ing is published t h i s week in t h e saving." Mr. (Sold said. " I n g e n - J . Allyn S t e a r n s , W h i t e Plains, b a n y .
Charles H. Davis, New H a m p t o n . Dept., New York City.
Civil Service LEADER by t h e E m - eral, we h a v e k e p t our m a r k - u p a t 3rd vice-president; J a m e s Felly,
R o b e r t Baylor, K i n g s t o n .
Louis G a r r i s o n , H u d s o n River
ployees Cut R a t e Buying P l a n Ltd. about one-half t h e n o r m a l retail Albany, 4 t h vice-president; H a r r y
R e m i n g t o n Ellis, Rochester.
Fox,
Albany,
t
r
e
a
s
u
r
e
r
;
C
h
a
r
l
o
t
t
e
S
t
a
t
e
Hospital,
Poughkeepsle.
store
level,
a
n
d
in
some
cases,
we
T h e catalogue, which a p p e a r s as
E d m u n d J . Bozek, S t a t e I n s u r Clapper,
Albany,
secretary;
M
a
y
o
r
F
r
a
n
k
E.
Wallace,
369th
AAA
h
a
v
e
been
able
to
m
a
k
e
excellent
a n 8 - p a g e a d v e r t i s e m e n t in t h i s
ance F u n d , New York City,
C. B u r d e t t e P a r k h u r s t of E n d i - G r o u p , New York City.
week's LEADER, lists more t h a n p u r c h a s e s for t h e Buying P l a n . "
Clifford A s m u t h , S t a t e N a v i l
Mr. Gold stressed t h a t t h e p r e - cott; Dr. H u g h S. Gregory, direcCharles L a m b , Sing Sing Priaon,
200 items including toys, electrical
Militia Armory, Rochester.
m i u m set of p e r f u m e was "some- tor of t h e B i n g h a m t o n S t a t e Hosappliances,
jewelry,
novelties, t h i n g e x t r a " as a sort of C h r i s t m a s pital; t h e Reverend Felix Zaffiro, Osslning.
David L. Frost, Babylon.
Helen Musto, Cornell University,
greeting cards, c a m p i n g a n d s p o r t - dividend, to t h e P l a n ' s customers. pastor of t h e High S t r e e t M e t h - I t h a c a .
Arnold Moses, Brooklyn State
ing equipment, a n d clothing. A " W e were able to buy out a s u b - odist C h u r c h ; Clyde Eggleston of
James
Evana,
Conservation Hospital, Brooklyn.
J o s e p h Crotty, S t a t e StorehoMM^
special p r e m i u m offer is m a d e by s t a n t i a l q u a n t i t y of these fine sets," t h e Broome C o u n t y Supervisors; Dept., Albany.
t h e Buying P l a n t o all p u r c h a s e r s Mr. Gold said, " a n d we t h o u g h t it Mrs. Lula Williams, president of
P i a n c l s A. M a c D o n a l d , S t a t e H a m b u r g .
George H. Plschle, B u f f a l o 16.
of $10.00 or more in m e r c h a n d i s e . would m a k e a n excellent C h r i s t m a s t h e Broome C h a p t e r of t h e Asso- School, Warwick.
P a u l Hayes, Middletown S t a t e
T h i s is a set of S a i n t a n d S i n n e r s gift for all our customers, for ciation; E a r l Daniels, commisChester Hoyt, W a t e r t o w n .
P e r f u m e , containing two o n e - o u n c e themselves, or for anyone they sioner of t h e Broome C o u n t y A.
P a u l Robinson, H e a l t h Dept., Hospital, Middletown.
Isabelle M. O ' H a g a n , Dept. i f
bottles.
attractively
packaged, want to please with it."
B. C. Board.
Albany.
State, Albany.
which was originally sold a t $9.00
Additional Copies Available
At t h e conclusion of t h e a f f a i r ,
J o h n P. Q u i n n , Buffalo.
per package. Tlie p e r f u m e , c r e a t e d
Additional copies of t h e c a t a - Mr. Conlon was presented with a
K e n n e t h S t a h l , S t a t e R e t i r e - C O M M I T T E E ON R E V I S I O N 0 »
by Adrian, t h e f a m o u s designer of logue, which a p p e a r s in t h i s week's brief case a n d electric razor. T h e m e n t System, Albany.
C O N S T I T U T I O N AND B Y - L A W i
gowns, was a high priced luxury LEADER,, will be m a d e available dinner was a t t e n d e d by one
H a r r y S p o d a k , Div. of iSlmployJ a m e s V. K a v a n a u g h , Chalrraan<
product last C h r i s t m a s , a n d sold to those who request it. Mi-. Gold h u n d r e d persons. It was jointly m e n t , Albany.
L. I. I n t e r - S t a t e P a r k Commlssloa,
w a n t s any civil service employee sponsored by the B i n g h a m t o n a n d
widely.
Albert C. Killlan. S t a t e Veter- Babylon.
to have additional copies for his Broome c h a p t e r s of t h e Associa- a n s Affairs, N o r t h T o n a w a n d a .
I'rlces Are Low
Anatole Dolen, Dept. of Law. AlT h e Buying P l a n m a n a g e m e n t f r i e n d s who wish to have t h e m .
tion,
D e n t o n R. VanderPoel. T h o m a s bany.
h a s a t t e m p t e d to keep its prices
T h e Buying P l a n plans to c o n I n d i a n School, Iroquois.
P a u l M c C a n n , Correction D e p i «
well below n o r m a l retail levels, a c - tinue its low price policy into o t h e r
C i l A P T E R T O CLLEBUATE
K e n n e t h A, Valentine, PubMc Albany.
cording to Daniel Gold, its m a n - fields a n d will continue to m a k e
T h e Metropolitan Public Service Service Commission, New York
Arnold Wise. T a x Dept., A l b a a f ,
special offers f r o m week to week C h a p t e r , CSEA, a n n o u n c e d p l a n s City.
ager.
D o n a l d Edick, County Weifaaa
" W e are trying to provide a n o p - t h r o u g h t h e pages of t h e Civil for a C h r i s t m a s p a r t y to be held a t
William
Greenau0r,
FuWlc Dept.. Pulaski.
port unity f o r . Civil Sorvl«t
Service LEADER, he said.
t h e Comm. oOices a t 233 B'way. W o r k s Dept., Babylon.
(Continued an poif*
Memo to Ike:
Full List of
U.S. Jobs Open
To Patronage
Ernest L. Conlon Lauded by
Civic and Employee Leaders
A t Dinner in Binghamton
Xmas Catalogue Provides
Big Variety of Cift Items,
Toys, At Lowest Prices
Civil.
Page Two
S K R V I C E
L e A D e II
.iniMflnj, DeeMiibor % I M S
i)
They Say
DON'T REPEAT THIS
(Continued from page
now holding Jobs protected by civil
service will be eased out t o make
room for the faithful.
Then there are the "excepted
jobs." those which are open to
patronage, exempted f r o m the
competitive service for one reason
or another. These positions are
divided into
two
categories,
Schedule A and Schedule B. Appoint! lents in schedule A are made
without examination.
Appointments In schedule B are made by
such non-competitive examinatioif
as the Civil Service Commission
may prescribe.
The Complete List
All these positions will be available to General Eisenhower. The
complete list Is revealed below,
for the first time publicly. The
first part of the listing is entitled
"Entire Executive Civil Service."
This means t h a t wherever jobs
occur, in any department, they
are filled without examination.
Then follows a specific listing of
specific patronage jobs, department by department.
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWnV
rresident-«leei — " I h a v t
witii dvil service all my life. T b e m
confidentiml assistants
the Sec- Is BO finer body of people
retary of State.
devoted to Uw welfare*of
(3) One chaujffeur for t h e Sec- country."
•
• *
*
retary of State.
Office 9 i t h e Special Assistant,
ROBERT MOSES, NTC Os»*
Research and Intelligence.
>lr«etion Ce-wrdinator — "This l i
(1) Not to exceed 50 highly con- a trying time for public olBcial&i
fidential professional and techni- I t is a period of complaint a n 4
eriticism. T h e public is being Ie4
cal positions.
Foreign Service Bnildiags Office t o think t h a t public service to «
(1) Chief and Assistant Chief. dreary business, t h a t , there a r e
International Boundary Commis- very few, if any, .honest publie
servants, or if they are honesi
sion, United States and Mexico
they are mere feeders at the publie
(1) Oage readers employed p a r t - trough."
time or intermittently a t isolated
•
•
•
localities when, in t h e opinion of
MAURICE
H.
MATZKIN,
Isl
the Commission,
appointment
Commissioner, NYC Dei»through competitive examination Deputy
p a r t m e n t of Hospitals: "Labor re«
is impracticable.
lations are h u m a n relations, a n d
International Boundary Commis- personnel are persons. We m a y
sion, United States, Alaska a n d buy an employee's time but we
Canada
must earn his loyalty. Human r e (1) Temporary field employees lations consist of giving our e m such as instrument men, foremen, ployees a sense of usefulness a n d
recorders, packers, cooks, and axe- Importance. Our employees are
men, for not to exceed 180 work- entitled to a sense of security, t h e
ing days a year.
opportunity to advance, and digniMutual Defense Program
fied t r e a t m e n t as h u m a n beings,"*
(1) One private secretary to the
Director and Beputy Director of
the Mutual Defense Program.
CSEA Annual Dinner
International Claims Commission.
(1) One private secretary to To Be Held In
each of the three Commissioners.
Rochester
TREASURY D E P A B t M E N T
ALBANY, Dec. 1 — The annual
Office of t h e Secretary
(1) Two private secretaries or dinner of t h e Civil Service E m confidential assistants to the Sec- ployees Association, traditionally
retary of the Treasury, and one held in Albany, will be held in
to each Assistant Secretary of t h e Rochester next year. The Association Board of Directors moved t o
Treasury.
(2) Five assistants to the Secre- make the change a t the invitation
of Raymond L. Munroe, 2nd vicetary of the Treasury.
(3) Two chauffeurs for the Sec- president. Mr. Munroe stated t h a t
Rochester City officials had added
retary of the Treasury.
their names to the invitations.
(Continued on mge 6)
thorized under this paragraph.
(1) Any position directly concerned with the protection of the
life and safety of the President
and the members of ta)s family.
(m) Positions withoV. compensation provided such appointments meet the requirements of
applicable laws relating, to compensation.
(n) Professional, scientific, and
technical experts for temporu-y,
part-time or intermittent e m ployment for consultation purposes.
<o) Unskilled laborers a t any
city, locality or establishment
where the Labor Regulations were
not in effect on July 1, 1941. The'
H. Eliof Kaplon ( a b « v e ) , has been
Commission, with the concurrence
• p p o i n t e d by President Trvmoa t o
of the department or agency conbeod fli« study of U, S. r«tireiii«Mt
cerned, may include within the
progroms.
competitive civil service unskilled
laborer positions a t any such city,
ROLLISTER MAKES PLEA F b R
locality, or establishment.
NON-TEACHING EMPLOYEES
(p) Any local physician, surLaurence J. Hollister, field repgeon, or dentist employed under
resentativc"! CSEA, met the Board
contract or on a part-time or fee
of Education of the Sauquolt Valbasis, when, in the opinion of the
ley Central School to urge t h a t
Commission, appointment through
non-teaching employees be incompetitive examination is imcluded' among those eligible for
practicable.
ENTIRE
EXECUTIVE
membership In the New York State
(q) Positions of a scientific, proEmployees Retirement System. P.
fessional or analytical nature when
CIVIL
SERVICE
Wright Johnson is supervising
filled by bona fide members of t h e
(a) Positions of Chaplain and faculty of an accredited college or
principal at t h e school.
Chaplain's Assistant.
university who have special quali(b) Cooks, except at fixed loca- fications for the positions to which
tions, such as, haspitals, quaran- appointed. Employments under
tine stations, and penal institu- this provision shall not ejjceed 130
tions.
working days a year.
(c) Positions to which appoint(r) Positions of a scientific, proments are made by the President fessional,
analytical n a t u r e
without confirmation by the Sen- when filled or
by bona fide graduate
ate.
students at accredited colleges or
(d) Attorneys.
universities provided t h a t the work
(e) Law clerk-trainee positions. performed for the agency is t o be
Appointments under this p a r a - used by the student as a basis for
graph shall be confined to grad- completing certain academic reuates of recognized law schools quirements toward a graduate deor persons having equivaleiat ex- gree. Employments under this properience and shall be for periods vision may be continued only so
not to exceed nine months pend- long as the foregoing conditions
ing admission to the bar. No per- are met, and the total period of
son shall be given more t h a n one such employment shall not exceed
appointment under this paragraph. one year in any individual case:
(f) Chinese, Japanese, and Hin- Provided, T h a t such employment
du interpreters.
may, with the approval of the
(g) Any position in which the Commission, be extended for not
appointee will receive compensa- to exceed an additional year.
tion aggregating not more t h a n
(s) Temporary, part-time or in$900 per anniim, the duties of
positions of student
which are part-time or intermit- termittent
when the appointees are
tent, but such appointments shall assistant
to assist scientific, professional, or
not be for job employment. I n techni
employees. Persons emWashington, D. C., such appoint- ployed yunder
provision shall
ments shall be subject to the prior be bona fide this
students a t high
approval of the Commission.
schools or accredited colleges or
(h) Any position in a foreign universities purstiing courses recountry, or beyond the continental
limits of the United States, when lated to the field in which' e m in the opinion of the Commission, ployed. No person shall be employappointment through competitive ed under this provision (1) in a
examination is impracticable, ex- position of a routine clerical type;
cept as provided in paragraphs or (2) in excess of 130 working
(i) and (j) of this section, and days in any consecutive period of
except: All positions in Hawaii; one year; or (3) at a total comNEW 1 6 5 0 - I V A r T
positions in the Immigration and pensation exceeding $1050 during
Naturalization Service, Depart- such-period of one year.
(t) Subject to prior approval by
ment of Justice, in Canada and
Mexico; positions in the Bureau the Commission positions in Fedof Customs, Treasury Department, eral mental institutions
In foreign countries, in Puerto filled by persons who have been
patients of such Institutions and
Rico
and in the Virgin Islands.
AUTOMATIC
HEAJEB
discharged, and are certified
(i) Positions on the Isthmus of been
t h e medical head thereof as
Panama,
except:
Accountant, by
sufficiently to be reguKING-SIZE AND
architect, architectural designer, recovered
employed but i t - i s believed
bookkeeper, calculating machine larly
and in the interest of
INERMOSTATCONTROILEO
operator, chemist, clerk (paying desirable
persons and the institution
• Plug it in—set tbermosUt
more t h a n $150 in United States tl\e
to teini>eratare you want—
currency per month), dietitian, t h a t they be employed at t h e Inand that's
you gatl Can't
draftsman, employee counselor, stitution.
•v«rhMit.
medical technician, personnel aide,
STATE DEPARTMENT
• Usoa 1650 or 1320 watta, u
personnel assistant, pharmacist,
General
yott chooae.
physician,
playground director,
(1) All positions under internaIxMn£-life, electric
statistician, stenographer, store- tional
commissions, congresses,
type heating clement.
keeper, surgeon, trained nurse, conferences, and boards, except
• Quiet i^uction motor, mo
typist, and harbor personnel of the International Joint CommisXT or radio int(»'farence.
the Quartermaster Corps, Depart- sion; the International Boundary
• Safeguard Switch cute ct»ment of the Army, air traffic con- Commission, United States and
rmxt if upset; safe wit^ chitdren.
troller and air traffic communica- Mexico; and the International
• BMutiful broi
tor, Civil Aeronautics
Adminis- Boundary
Commission, United
ivory plastic trim.
tration, and Veterans Administra- State, Alaska, and Canada.
tion Representative for the P a n a (2) One private secretary or
ma Canal Zone with duty station confidential assistant to the U n BUY. WISE
at Balboa, Canal Zone.
der Secretary of State, the Coun115 West 45th Street (j) Positions in Alaska, when, in selor, the Assistant Secretaries of
t h e opinion of the Commission, State, t h e Legal Advisers, and
N i W YOKK CITY
appointment through competitive other officials of t h e DeparUnent
PLoxo 7 . 2 f 7 4
ffvtryMtef ro« M*«d far Tftc Ho»« examination is impracticable. Per- holding the r a n k of Assistant Secsons formerly appointed under this retary of State.
paragraph may be reinstated to
Office of the Secretary
positions In Alaska with the apr
(1) Five special assistants k>
proval of the Commission.
the Secretary of State.
(k) Temporary, part-time, or
C2) Two private secretaries or
Intermittent employment of mechanics, skilled laborers, and
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
tradesmen on construction or repair work in places where there is America's Leading NewsmacDECEMBER 2, 1952
asine for Publie Employees
no local board of examiners of the
Civil Service Commission for the LKADER ENTERPRISES. INC.
employing establishment, when in »7 Duanc S t . New York 7, N. Y.
the opinion of the Commission, apTelephone: BEekman 3-<tlf
pointment through competitive Entmsd as seeond-class matter
j
examination is impracticable. Ap- Octeber 2. 1939, a t the pest efpointments under this provision ace at New Yerk, N. Y., under
shall not extend beyond one year, the Act of Match S, 1879.
and the employment thereunder Members of Audit Bureau ef
shall not exceed 180 working days Circulations.
DECEMBER 2, 1952
within any one period of twelve
SulKicription Priee $3.M Per
months. Seasonal employments of
a recurring nature are not au- Year. Individual ee»ka, yitL,
Arvin
LIBRARY COUPON
RAYEX
COUPON
THIS XMAS BUY A HAT FOR
SOMEONE DEAR IN THE FAMILY
BUY THE BEST FOR LESS
o
50
Ga»ranteed
1 0 0 % For FcM
« ATS
HOUSE
Sold Throughouf
tha Country af $10
Kvenr
iiae
of
HATS
aT»llabl«
ABE WASSERMAN
Entrance ^
Open
CANAL ARCADE: 46 BOWERY
UbUI S Bvery Breiuns Tak* Srd Ave. u
rememier
pgr your
OPEN SATURDAYS f
^
convenienci
A.M. TO 3 P.M.
"L."
to
Cauai St.
PHONE
w o r t h 4-021S
EASY WAYS
to buy your
wardrobe at
'Boxd'i
America's Lorgest Clothitf;
Regular Charge Accouili
3-Month Charge Accoutf
6*Mooth Charge AccoUii
ClVIt
IhiieSey, 0e««MlMF 1 , 1 9 ( l t
^
SERVICE
LEADER
Paf9» TlirM
^
H. Eliof Kaplan Named
By Truman to Head Biggest
Retirement Study in U. S.
T h e biggest retirement job in
the United States has gone to H.
Eliot Kaplan, farmer State Deputy
Comptroller in charge of the Retirement System. Mr. Kaplan has
been appointed by President T r u m a n as chairman of a Federal
committee to re-study all United
States government retirement systems. Full title of the group is the
Congressional Commission on Retirement Policy for Federal Personnel. With Mr. Kaplan on the
committee are the Secretary of
Defense, Secretary of the Treasury,
Chairman of the Federal Reserve
Bank, Director of the Budget, and
Chairman of the United States
Civil Service Commission.
What Will Be Done
The Commission is to embrace
within its study:
1. Types and amounts of retirement allowances and pensions;
2. Necessity for such benefits for
those serving long years and in
hazardous occupations;
3. Relationship of retirement
allowances and pensions to workmen's compensation, social security benefits, etc.;
4. The current financial status
of the Federal retirement systems
and methods and policy of financing them;
5. Report is to be made to the
Congress on or before Decemf>er
31, 1953.
The Commission was set up by
t h e 82nd Congress. Alttiough appointed by the President, the new
group is a Congressional body.
Mr. Kaplan will continue on under
President Eisenhower.
To Meet With T r u m a n
T h e former New York State
Deputy Comptroller will go to
Washington on December 9 to
meet with President T r u m a n , and
set u p the lines upon which the
work of the new commission will
be based.
In Many Activities
As Deputy State Comptroller,
Mr. Kaplan reorganized the operations of the State Retirement System, bringing new efficiency into
the organization. He had been,
prior to t h a t time, executive secretary of the National Civil Service
League and the Civil Service Reform Association. As an attorney,
he has fought in some of the most
important merit system cases to
come before American courts.
The new position will be on a
per diem basis. This means t h a t
Mr. Kaplan will be able to retain
a variety of tasks he is now performing, also on a per diem basis,
for the New York State Comptroller and for the Public Service
Commission.
Task Enormous
The enormity of the task is indicated by the f a c t t h a t the following retirement systems will be
surveyed: civil service retirement
system, social security, military retirement systems, the various retirement systems of District of
Columbia employees
(including
teachers, policemen and firemen),
the Federal Reserve Retirement
System, the retirement plan of
foreign service officers of the State
Department, and t h a t of the T e n nessee Valley Authority.
First exclusive announcement of
Mr. Kaplan's appointment came
in The LEADER S Don't Repeat
This column.
A photografMi taken a t Gowanda Stat* Hospital. Left t o right, s e a t e d : Ernest S. Paleic, business ofiieert
G r a c e Hillery, presideiit of the Western New York Conference: Vito J. Ferro, Gowanda chapter (CSEAI
president: Dr. Richard V. Foster, director of the Hospital. Back row: Priscilla Harvey, retiring c h a p t e r
s e c r e t a r y : Herbert L Meyer, treasnrer; Robert E. Colbum,
vice-president;
isobelle Diitton,
secretary!
Chariec Barfchardt, d e l e g a t e ; Horold C. Sondwick, o f t e m a t e : and Hossie S. Moore. The event w « f ftie eighth
annual meeting of the chapter.
V
C S E A Committees
Named by McFarland
(Continued from page 1}
Claude Rowell, State Hospital,
Irene Kohl, State Industrial Rochester.
Maureen McSorley, Rockland
School, Industry.
State Hospital, Orangeburg.
SALARY COMMITTEE
Frances Wilson, Brooklyn State
Davis L. Shultes, Chairman, I n - Hospital, Brooklyn.
surance Dept., Albany.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Dr. Chester B. Pond, Vice-ChairCOMMITTEE
man, Tax Dept., Albany.
Jesse B. McFarland, Social WelJ. Allyn Stearns, White Plains. fare Dept., Albany.
Dr. Theodore Wenzl, Education
John F. Powers, Freeport.
Dept., Albany.
Raymond L. Munroe, Tax
Max S. Weinstein, State Retire- Dept.. Rochester.
ment System, Albany.
J. Allyn Stearns, White Plains.
Mildred M. Lauder, Div. of EmJoseph F. Feily, Tax Dept., Alployment. Albany.
bany.
Thomas
Conkling.
Brooklyn
Robert L. Soper, Wassaic State
State Hospital. Brooklyn.
Scliool, Wassaic.
Mrs, Margaret J. Willi, Div. of
Harry G. Pox, Civil Service
Employment, Albany.
Dept., Albany.
Stephen C. Davis, Mediation
Charlotte M. Clapper, Health
Board. Labor Dept., Albany.
Dept., Albany.
Dr. Theodore Wenzl, Education
SPECIAL CONSULTANTS
Dept., Albany.
Dr. Charles M. Armstrong, EduDr. William Siegal, Health Dept.
cation Dept., Albany.
Albany.
•Philip A. Cowen, Education
Noel F. McDonald, Red House
Dept., Albany.
Francis C. Maher, Law Dept.
Fred J. Decker, Teachers Retire- Albany.
ment System, Albany.
Lawrence W. Kerwin, Civil ServArthur W. Moon, Public Works ice Dept., Albany.
Dept., Albany.
Arnold W. Wise, Tax Dept., Albany.
SOCIAL COMMITTEE
Mrs. Lula Williams, Binghamton
Mrs. Helen Todd, Chairman,
Vernon A. Tapper, Syracuse.
Conservation Dept., Albany.
Virginia Leathern, Co-Chairman,
' DIRECTORS BUDGET
Training Div., Civil Service Dept.,
COMMITTEE
Albany.
Francis C. Maher, Chairman,
Margaret M. Fenk, Utica State Law Dept., Albany.
Hospital. Utica.
Charles D. Methe, Marcy State
Helen Forte, Civil Service Dept., Hospital, Marcy.
Albany.
W. F. Kuehn, Dept. Agriculture
Helen B. Musto, Cornell Uni- JSc Markets. Albany.
versity, Ithaca.
Ivan S. Flood. White Plains.
Doris LeFever. Workmen's ComVernon A. Tapper, Syracuse.
pensation Board, Syracuse.
SPECIAL CHARTER
Edith
Fruchthendler,
Public
COMMITTEE
Service Commission, New York
Vernon A. Tapper, Chairman,
City.
Lea Lemieux, Truck Mileage. Syracuse.
Grace Hiflery, State Insurance
T vx Dept., Albany.
Buffalo.
Mrs. Rita Hughes, Tax Dept., Fund,
Thomas Conkling, Brooklyn State
Albany.
Hospital, Brooklyn.
Ivan S. Flood. White Plains.
Edward Gilchrist. Dept. of State,
Matthew W. Fitzgerald, Motor Albany.
Vfhicle Bureau, Albany.
Ivan S. Flood, White Plains.
George W. Hayes, Tax Dept.,
Philip L. White. Ogdensburg.
Henry Shemin, New York City.
Michael Dollard, Division of the 8PE("I.\L ATTENDANCE RULES
- COMMITTEE
Budijet. Albany.
Dr. Wayne W. Soper, Chairman.
Charles P. O'ConneM, Mental
Education Dept., Albany.
Hyiiieue Dept., Albany.
Dr. William Siegal, Health Dept.,
Paul D. McCann, Correction
Albany.
Dept . Albany.
Fred J. Walters, Middletown
Jolui J. Joyce. Dept. Audit St
State Hospital. Middletown.
Contiol. Albany.
W i l l i a m Counally, State TratnM;u '4are( Maiioney, PubUc Harviny Stliool, iiudson.
Ice Dopt,, Albany,
State Civil Service Acts on
Workmen'sCompensation,
Other Employee Requests
ALBANY, Dec, 1. — The State ticularly from the Department of hiring of specialists for limited
Civil Service Commission has de- Law, The matter is now scheduled periods where the need is shown,
the Commission approved paying
cided the Education Department for the December calendar.
Dr. Bernard Joslin, temporarily in
Court Job Plan
and the State University of New
A long investigation into t h e the Education Department, $521
York are separate promotion units. classification and compensation a month while working as a r e At its last meeting the Com- setup of the Queens County sur- search consultant in elementary
mission adopted a change in pro- rogate court, requested by Surro- education.
motion units allowing for the di- gate Anthony P. Savarese and carAttendance Rules
vision. Up to this time the two ried out under direct supervision
The Commission took no actio*
agencies had been considered £is of Commissioner Falk, has result- on a proposal to establish a sinpart of the same promotion unit ed in Civil Service Commission gle set of attendance rules for all
for all titles.
approval of the classification plan. employees, regardless of whether
Time Lost
The plan is considered unique working in a department or an
The Commission also determined in New York courts and has been institution. The matter was put
t h a t where an employee is out of hailed by Falk as "a firm step for- over to the December calendar.
work and the time lost is paid by ward" in establishing career fields
Exempt Jobs
Workmen's
Compensation,
his in this area of public service.
The position of secretary to th«
time lost shall be re-credited to
Land Board in the Department of
Training Tour
him.
Because it feels the grievance State was approved for t h e exInstead of receiving the Work- machinery is not widely enough empt class.
men's Compensation he shall draw known or understood, the DepartNew Lists
his regular salary and not lose ment of Civil Service has engaged
Although new lists were estabthe days of absence. The Commis- a training consultant whose job lished in November, the Civil Servsion action came in answer to a will be to tour state institutions ice Commission has extended e a r letter from the Civil Service Em- explaining the program. J. Theo- lier lists for proofreader, several
ployes Association and applies to dore Bailie has been hired until departments and senior beveraga
workers in institutions and de- next March 31.
control investigator. State Liquor
partments.
Also under V i n - 9 the Commis- Authority, until June 16 and OcAttorney Study
sion gave the Public Service De tober 13, 1953, respectively.
A study of the position of a t - partment approval to hire Joseph
Eight names were certified lat«
torney is about to be made by L. Weiner and Oscar Lasdon as in November on the proofreadwr
Civil Service in all departments corporate finance experts in
list and 52 were on the senior
where the title appears. The CSC utility case. They will receive $150 beverage control investigator list.
took action planning the study as and $100 per day, respectively, for Now these persons must wait u n til the old lists are exhausted berequests for exempt attorney po- a maximum of 25 days.
sitions continued to come in, parUnder Rule V n - 9 , which allows fore the new ones can be used.
Joseph Cranney, Dept. of Audit
& Control. Albany.
Henry E. Lewis, Labor Dept.,
Albany.
Raymond Marohn, West Coxsackie.
Michael L. Porta. Workmen's
Compensation Board, New York
City.
Alfred Castellano, Motor Vehicle
Bureau, Albany.
SPECIAL BUILDING MAINTENANCE COMMITTEE
Harry G. Fox, Chairman, Civil
Service Dept., Albany.
Jules Tauss, Div. Standards &
Purchase, Albany.
George W. Churchill, Superintendent, Albany.
SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON
PREPARATION OF JOHN M.
HARRIS MEMORIAL CIVIL
SERVICE PLAQUE
Francis A. MacDonald, Chairman, State School, Warwick.
Dr. Theodore Wenzl, Education
Dept., Albany.
Helen B. Musto, Cornell University, Ithaca.
Grace Hillery, State Insurance
Fund, Buffalo.
Thomas
Conkling,
Brooklyn
State Hospital. Brooklyn.
Francis C. Maher, Dept. of Law,
Albany.
SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON REVISION OF THE CIVIL SERVICE
LAW
Theodore Becker,
Chairman,
Civil Service Dept.. Albany.
William Connally, State Training School, Hudson.
Harry Spodak. Division of Employment, Albany,
Mary O'Connor, Div. of Standards «& Purchase, Albany.
Mrs. Mildred O. Meskil. Commerce Dept., Albany.
Ivan S. Flood, White Plains.
SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON SUBSISTENCE AND MILEAGE
RATES
Roy McKay, Chairman, Dept.
Agriculture & Markets, Albany.
Arthur W. Moon, Public Dept.,
Albany.
M. G. Osborne, Education Dept.,
Albany.
SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON
SERVICE RATINGS
Dr. David M. Schneider, Chairman. Social Welfare Dept.. Ibany.
Helen Banker, State Retirement
System. Albany.
Margaret Mahoney, Public Service Dept.. Albany.
Warren W. Coxe, Education
Dept., Albany.
George W. Hayes, Tax Dept^
Albany.
Samuel Viner, Division of Pftrole, Albany.
John J. Cox. Public Works Dept^
Albany.
SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON
HEART PILOT PROGRAM
John J. Cox, Chairman, PubU«
Works Dept., Albany.
Clifford C. Shoro, Altamont.
Wm. H. Heath, Board of S t a n d ards «& Appeals, Albany.
SPECIAL D.P.U.I. COMMITTEE
Miss Celeste Rosenkranz, Chairman, DPUI, Buffalo.
Miss Catherine O'Conneil, DPUI,
Syracuse.
Henry Shemin, DPUI, New York
City.
Walter Underwood, Albany.
Joseph Redling, DPUI, Albany,
Alethea Kloepfel, DPUI, Buffalo.
George Roht, New York City.
Mrs. Lucille Wilson, Rochester
CIVIC
Pafe Fo«r
SERVICE
LEADER
Thoughts Following
Conference Meeting
By 9. ALLYN STEARNS,
3rd Vice President,
The Civil Service Employees
Association.
T h e meeting ol the Metropolit a n Conference a t M a n h a t t a n
Btate Hospital on Saturday a f ternoon, November 15th, presented a good view of Civil Service Emiployees Association units in action. A good deal of r u n - o f - t h e mine business was carried on,
some talks delivered and a few important matter discussed. Some
tallKs were on the legislative processes, and chairman Tom Conkling of Brooklyn State Hospital
spoke of general Interest in what
t h e Association's coming legislative program will cover.
Reduced Legislative Program
Desirable
While preparing a t this time for
t h e next session of the Legislature,
it would be helpful to the Association's objectives if we could all
work in our local meetings t o wards limiting the number of bills
on our program. For some time
our counsel, who is charged with
the prime responsibility for trying
to get our bills enacted into law,
h a s been urging t h a t we sponsor
» program of only 10 to 20 bills
each year instead of the 78, for
instance, which we backed at t h e
last legislative session. These bills
would consist of those having most
importance to the greatest n u m ber of members and whose introduction is propitious. The suggestion has the full approval of
t h e directors and the committees
which are close to the situation.
The obvious purpose of t h e proposed reduction in number is to
eliminate the wasteful expenditure
of our pressure Involved In trying
t o push « great number of bills.
Including many with practically
n o chance of passage. While the
last legislative session was a successful one for our program, we
etill supported 44 bills which were
n o t passed by either the Senate
or the Assembly. Many of these
were repeated losers year after
year. We have had good indications of the results of concentrated pressure, in the successful e f f o r t we made to pass the revised
Veteran Preference Amendment in
1949 and to defeat the Mahoney
bill for a single civil service administrator at the last session.
The logic of a reduced program
21
rr
RCA
is evident, but to make it effective
it must be initiated a t t h e chapter and conference level. Abstinence should be practised in the
number of legislative requests
forwarded to the Association. P r o posed requests should be weighed
in the light of their soundness and
their relative importance to other
items of the Association's proramf. Forbearance should be pracIsed regarding proposed legislation a f t e r it h a s been siJbmitted
to the Association, by conforming
with good grace to suggestions by
those closest to the problem.
A point to be remembered is
t h a t bills which have been introduced many times previously and
turned down, have little chance of
passage if no significant change
of conditions h a s occurred. Left off
the program for a couple of years
and then
re-introduced, they
should stand a better chance of
favorable consideration, no m a t t e r
how worthy their passage a t this
time might be.
I n many instances where public
employees feel "there should be a
law," the direct approach may be
through administrative
action,
either statewide or departmentally, or through local authorities.
A review of the past will show t h a t
some of t h e most important achievements have been won without
benefit of legislation. I n some
cases, where administrative procedures are involved, the introduction of legislation only tends to
relieve pressure on responsible ofiBcials without having much chance
of becoming law, as legislatures
have shown as little inclination t o
interfere in such matters as t h e
courts have.
Government — Lead Or Follow?
Debate on t h e Association's
stand on "heat leave" for State
employees scratched a f u n d a m e n tal principle. Pointing out t h a t
large private employers allow such
leave, AI Corum, of the New York
City chapter, stated t h a t government should show the way to business and industry in such m a t t e r s
instead of lagging behind. This
seemingly simple statement constitutes one of the basic points we
have been trying to establish with
public management for a long
time. Unfortunately, with a signal
lack of success all too often.
Highest Quality
I t concerns the proposition t h a t
f
WORLD'S FINEST
TELEVISION SET
Superpowered
31 TUBES
Lie. "630" Chasis
MFR. Lie. UNDER RCA PAT.
$
12" CONCERT SPEAKER
IN BEAUTIFUL HAND-RUBBED
CONSOLE CABINET
TRANS-MANHAHAN
FREE
75 CHURCH ST. cor. VESEY
NEW YORK CITY
WOrth 2-4790
N«ar All Subways, Bates, Hudsoa T«bes
And All Civlt C«iitr«s
OPEN 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. INCL SAT.
OPEN THURS. IVE. UNTIL t P.M.
FOR SPECIAL ALLOWANCE
BRING THIS AD
299
Price Includes Federal T a x
34 Month, to P w
INSTALLATION
Window or
Roof
PARTS WARRANTY
laeludlng
I
Adaptable
Plotorc
T«b«
To Color
with governmental services playing a large part in everyone's life
under our bountiful economy, we
should insure t h e highest quality
for those services by making employment in t h e m attractive to t h e
highest type employees. Further,
t h a t with the business of government spanning the entire country
and reaching every level of society as no private business can,
it is proper a n d desirable for government to apply to its own e m ployees amassed information on
higher standards of living and
better conditions jof work. This
would point the Way for laggards
in private business and industry.
This thinking does not propose to
set up any special public-employee
class of citizen but to project into
public employment the most progressive type of personnel practises as a standard for all employment. This proposition is the direct opposite of the thinking
which has held sway in too many
quarters for too long — in effect,
t h a t the public employee is some
kind Of poor relation, holding his
position by sufferance, able to be
paid sub-standard wages, and fair
game to divest of many of the
rights of other citizens without
compensation in lieu thereoft Correction of this concept continues
to be one of our m a j o r problems.
Hoi lister,
Kerker, Get
Around a Lot
ALBANY, Dec. 1 — Philip K e r ker, public relations directoi' of
the Civil Service Employees Association, and Larry Hollister, field
representative, have been b a r n storming around the State. Here's
a letter f r o m Phil, describing the
activities:
At Dannemora
1. On Tuesday, November 11, we
attended and spoke a t t h e annual
dinner-dance
meeting of
the
Dannemora State Hospital chapter, held at the Elks Club, Plattsburgh, N. Y. Hollister reported on
the projected 10 percent increase
in State salaries; I, upon public
relations.
Assemblyman - elect
James Fitzpatrick, who also spoke,
mentioned salary increase with no
commitment or prognostication.
Dr. Charles Harold, assistant director of the Institution, spoke
too. Albert Pester of the chapter
acted as toastmaster.
Clinton County
2. Wednesday, November 12 •—
Hollister and I visited Supervisors
Aaron Scheirer and Jack Lacey of
the Clinton County Board in behalf of an increase in salaries for
Clinton County employees. Also
succeeded in getting a notice on
local radio station WIRY, reporting our visit and conversation.
Hollister is to appear before
Board of Supervisors a t next
scheduled meeting, November 28.
Supervisors sympathetic, but state
problem one of county t a x limit.
Franklin County
3. Hollister and I spoke before
Pianklin County chapter dinner
meeting, American Legion Post.
4. I spoke on Thursday, November 13, before Rotary Club, Hotel
Flanagan, on "The Changing Role
of the Civil Servant."
Philip Kerker.
WANT A GOVERNMENT JOB?
MEN — WOMEN
iViei^ay, Deeeitiber 2, 1 9 5 2
(
Right to Withdraw
Resignation
Poses New Legal Problem
The question whetlier an employee of the State or one of its
communities may withdraw his
resignation before he is separated
f r o m the payroll, not now covered
by statute, court decision or departmental rule, was raised but
not directly answered In the case
of a former employee of the NYC
Department of Welfare. He sued
in the New York County Supreme
Court for an order compelling t h e
acceptance of his withdrawal of
his resignation, but Supreme Court
Justice Benjamin J. Rabin dismissed the petition last week. T h e
Justice intimated t h a t the rule
under the Public Officers Law
might even apply, whereby a
resignation is effective when submitted, although the petitioner in
this case had attempted to set an
effective date.
Effective Date Disputed
The papers in the case, M a n haim vs. McCarthy, showed t h a t
the employee submitted his resignation on September 21, 1951 and
designated October 19, 1951, as
the last day of work, and December 7, 1951 as the effective date
of the resignation. The later date
was to take care of accumulated
vacation leave
and
overtime
credits. T h a t raised the question
what would be the legally effective date of the resignation — t h e
last day of work or the last day
for which h e ' i s paid.
The Court thought it unreasonable to consider t h a t the e m ployee was not separated from hi«
employment until his credits h a d
been used up, because then t h e
department head hardly would be
able to assign anybody to hia
Job, which might be important to
fill, until the period covered by t h e
credits elapsed. The Court held
t h a t during the period when n o
duties are performed the e m ployee Is, In effect, not working
for the department, even though
paid. The employee's continuation
on the pajo-oll records was a m a t ter of mere bookkeeping, the Court
believed.
The Court held t h a t Commissioner Henry J. McCarthy h a d
acted within his rights, especially
as t h e employee was under charges
a t the time, the penalty could
have been dismissal, and the e m ployee h a d not notified t h e dep a r t m e n t until October 24 t h a t
he wanted to withdraw t h e resignation. The October 24 date was
five days a f t e r the last day of
work, although six weeks before
t h e expiration of the period for
which he was paid. Thus t h e
Court determined t h a t t h e e f fective date of the resignation was
the last day of work, and hinted
It might even be the day t h e
resignation was submitted.
PATROLMAN
MENTAL
PHYSICAL
MENTAL PREPARATION given by four of fhe most experienced instructors in the field — E. B. SCHWARTZ. H. t O'NEILL, E. J . M A N N I N G .
G . J . GERMAIN. Ask any police ofRcer, of*«ny rank, of the ability vf
those men.
PHYSICAL PREPARATION in the b w t equipped gymnasium ki the
city — running track, swimming pool, massage room, steam room, ^tc.
Individual instruction only during class periods.
GYM open from 8 A.M. t a 10 P.M., Monday thru Friday, • A.M.
6 P.M. on Saturday. Closed Sunday.
«
m
*
*
*
Y
instalments.
CLERK — GRADE 2 (N. Y. C. Agencies)
COLLEGE OFFICE ASST.
Thwrsday elat*
4tl5 P. M.
CLERK PROMOTION — GRADE 5
M^iidoy or TliTsdoy cla«s cf 6;00 P. M.
COURT ATTENDANT CSfate and CoHntyf
Fridoy d o s t <rt 6;15 P.M.
•••••(••nail
The School With an OUTSTANDING Experienced
Civil Service
HUGH E. O'NEILL
GEORGE J. GERMAIN
Attend
Teaching Sfaff
EUGENE B. SCHWARTZ
EDWARD J. MANNING
one 6f our class s e s s f e n s a s o u r
"s"c H W A
RT Z
guest
SO H O "o l"
88f BROADWAY ( a t 19lh St.)
ALqenquin 4-1236
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
Academle a n i Commercial—OoUefe
BORO HALL
AOADEATS—Flstbueb
OK lor Gl'a. MA 2-2447.
Preparatory
Bxt. Cor. r o l t o o S t .
Bklm
Berentc
Building A Plaot Uanagemeiit. Stattoaary * O u t e d l a o Bnglnecre U e c a e c
SatlneM
approved.
-wk
Preparatieaa.
S«liooI>
1JI3IB'S BUSINESS XRAININO S C H O O L — G r e n - P i t m a n . Typlnv. Bookkeeping. Oomp<
tometr^. Clerical. Day-Eve Individual loBtructioo 8 7 0 Otb St. (oor. Oth Ave.K
Bkiro 1ft south 8-4236
BKUTFLEY * BROWNB SECRETABIAL SCHOOL, 1 Lafayette A v e . oor.
Brooklyn 17- tiSivlnE 8 - 2 8 4 1 Day and sven^. Veteran* BUfible.
rutbntb.
UONROK SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. Secretarial, Accounting. Veterans Accepted. Civil
Service p r e p a r a t i o n . E a s t 1 7 7 l h St. and Boston Ho ad (RKO Chester m i e a t r o
Bid?.) Bronx, KI 2 - 6 6 0 0 .
BLECTKOLXSIS
KEBB
INSTITUTB OV BLECTROLXSIS
P r o f l u b l e tnll or part-time
permanent hair removal for conn and v o m e n Ihree Book
18
M.
a U D 8-4498.
L B. I f .
oareer W
41et St..
^
MACHINES
FOR IBM TAB. SORTING, WIRING. KEY PUNCHING. VERIFYING, ETC.
Go to the Combiuation B u u o e s e Scliool. 1 3 9 W. 1261b St. U N 4 - 3 1 7 0 .
tAMQUAGB SCHOOLS
Stort High os $73.00 a week. Experience usually not needed
OHRISTOPHB SCHOOL O * LAMOUAQB8, ( U p t o w n 8<diooi). Learn Lanvuacea. Oan>
vensatlonal f r e n c b . Spanish. Q e m a n , Italian, etc. Hative Teacher A p o r .
(or Vets. Approved by State O e p a i t m e n t of BdncaUon. Daily 8 A. M. t o •
P . M. 8 0 0 West 186tb St. NYO W A 8 - 2 7 8 0
-
MotiM Pfetarc Operating
Be Ready When Next Exdm7r>atIons Are HeW
in New York, New Jersey and Vicinity
RearmaiiieNt Program
lias
created
Tiiousaiids of Additional
Openingt.
mCA
T B A O B BCBOOL—IMO Bedford A m
(Oatee) Bklyn. UA
S-11^
I
FRANKLIN INSTITUTE
(not Gov't Controlled)
Dept. T-56. 130 W. 42 St.. N. Y. 36
Veferoiis Get Special Preference
Full Particulars and 92-Page
look on Civil Service FREE
Now you have the best opportunity in many y e a n
to get a big-pay U. 8. Civil Service Job with f e n erous vacations, aiolc leaves, retirement pensiona
a n d other benefits. FiU out and mail coupon today! Or call at office—open daily 9:00 to 6:00
Learn how you can prepare at home to got
jrneof the many excellent pobs open NOW!
ACT TODAY
BBOOKI^
SMd n«, ofcMlutcly PRfE. (11 list «f avail
obia pesitioMt (21 froa copy •# 32-pag« baok
-"How fo « t t « tf. S. •ovonimoat Job"; (3)
npla t o i l ^oslioasi (41 Toll
kpw H qualify
U. S. ttovoriMOBf Joik
Stroot
Apt.
tf«l«.
NEW XORK OOLLBOB OW H V m O (Cbartered 1 8 7 8 ) a B branobea. Prlvat* or c I m S
UutmoUone. 1 1 « Baet 8fttb Straet. B i ^ e n t 7 • 7 f t l . « . T. 88. M. T. O a t a l ^ r ^
BefriKcratlon
— Oil
Bamer
NBW Y O U TBOHNIOAL IMSViTUTB—«ft8 Blztta Ave. ( a t I t t b 8 ( . ) B . T . a Oey «
Eve. claeees Donieatlo * commercial InataUaUoo m d eirvleiuc Oor 4 l B d y e a n
Beaoeet oatatocue. U OHelaea 8 - 0 8 8 0
Badie ~
TelevUion
B A D I O - T B U V I S I O M IKSTITOTB. « 8 0 Le«in«ton Av«l U S I b S t . ) . B
• v e n i n c . 8m«U v e e U r v v n a w U . Voider 8 0 . PI. 8 - 6 0 0 8 .
T
O. Dv
•eentorial
BBAKK I M J f A l ^ l l
1I.TA B ^ t t t l a l Aflf^unting OraftiDC Ion
D w - m m WMte «or OatW m S484a
i
TuetSay, December X 1951
Activities
G I T I S
S K K T I C K
Page Flyf
L B A D S K
of Civil Service Employees in N.Y. State
chapter,
Jaekels, erf the occupational t h e r - Farrell, Fannie Popp, R u t h M. bership drive. Mrs. Rose Marroie, the Sullivan County
apy department, were appointed to Barker, Delia Keenan, Marguerite membership committee chairman, CSEA, tOid James Plgott, CSE;A
assist Martin W. Neary, super- Hooke, Doris -S. Sleeaer, Betty K. was requested to call a meeting of field representative, appeared bevisor ot the department, in draw- Penner, Virginia Sherman, Wilson the entire committee, and notices fore a Joint meeting of the Town
THE REGULAR monthly meet- ing up an appeal for t h e upward Powell, Philip Greggs, Dorothy will be sent to each committee and Village Boards of Liberty t«
discuss the question of extendinc
kkf of the Rockland State Hospl- allocation of occupational therapy Brown, Homer Leroux, Gloria M. member shortly.
Revision of the constitution a n d the State Retirement System im
Daviti, Elizabeth Song, Vilma A.
M chapter. CSEA, was held on Items.
of the chapter was dis- town and village employees. A
Ifovember 12 in the Association
T h e following employee® have Breda, Mary S. Lyons, Mary D. by-laws
cussed.
A
committee to consider lengthy discussion of t h e vario\u
Dalton,
Mice
J.
Chandler,
Theresa
vooms, Home 29.
renewed their membership or beRose Johnson, chairman (rf the come new members during the Fuchs, Jessie Steindecker, Jessie the propositions was appointed: features and detsUls of the RetireE. Bull, Delia Garvey, Pauline Mc- Samuel Borelly, chairman. City of m e n t System was held, following
rtdc and welfare committee, r e - past two weeks:
Allister. Anna Metzker, Fern L. Utica; Leo Aiello, Water Depart- which town and village ofBciali
ported t h a t 35 "get well" cards
Leona E. Valentine, Annie Benent. City of Utica; Winnifred promised to give the matter due
h a d been sent to employees since son, Rosle B. Waugh, Mattie J. Crook, Grace Kllroy.
Phalan, City of Rome, and Horace consideration and Inform t h e
f b e last meeting. All other com- Malone,
Theresa DiPrancesca,
chapter of its decision in the near
Westcott, Auto Bureau.
mittees reported progress.
District No. 8.
Margaret C. Malley, Helen KleinAmong those present a t the future. Mayor Stewart F a r r a n d
Marion Howell,
Rebella E u - man, Louise Burk, Gloria Migllmeeting were: Vernon Tapper, presided at the meeting.
iemio and Miss Johnson were ap- anti, Eliza Lowe, Emelda Jacobs,
Public Works
Onondaga chapter and co-chairMr. Ross and Mr. Plgott alse
pointed to formulate plans for giv- Bertha H. Routhier, Ivan D. CunA BUSINESS meeting of Dis- m a n of the Association's member- attended a meeting of the Board
hig some special attention to e m - ningham,
Sylvia
Cunningham, trict 8, Department of Public ship committee for the Coimty of
Education, Village of Montiployees who will be confined to Irene Gowett, Dr. Donald M.
t h e infirmary during the Christ- Carmichael, Evelyn Mone, Sonia Works daapter, CSEA, was held division; Charles Methe, Marcy cello, to discuss entry into t h e
recently
a
t
the
Italian
Center,
State Hospital chapter and co- State Retirement System.
m a s holidays.
Eltonhead. Kathleen
Merrigan,
Grace Ottenheimer a n d Fred Theodore Vandenheuvel, Lillian B. Poughkeepsie, with newly-elected chairman of the Association's
president James Plerson, chairing membership committee for the
Kirkland, Dina Soble, Dorothy E. the meeting.
State division; CSEA field repre- Newark State School
Lois Latham, Hazel K. Otto,
Delegates I n a Mabie and Betty sentative Lawrence Hollister; Mrs.
NEWARK STATE School chapHIGN SCHOOL DIPLOMA Petty,
Emily S. Burch, Paye Giuffrida, Pllnn submitted reports on t h e Rose Sarmie and Manuel G r a s - ter,
CSEA,Veports t h a t Dr. Isaac
EQUIVALENCY
J o a n Fox, Agnes Gooler, George October CSEA meeting in Albany. iano. County Clerks; Lee Spinning N. Wolfson,
director. Dr. Murray
Fully Recognized by Federal, Harper, Anna Fay Crosby, Eva R
President Plerson named the and Leo Aiello, Water Supply, Bergman, assistant director, a n d
Renella,
Betty
King,
Addle
ChisUtica;
Virginia
Moskal
and
following
committees
for
the
year:
S t a t e & City Civil Service holm, Jennie Woods, Catherine
eight department heads attended
Auditing: Daniel Gonia, Val Samuel Borelly, City of Utica; a meeting at Utica State HospiCommissions, Most
P r i v a t e W. Irvine, Isabelle M. Joyce, Maria
McCourt and Bill Heidel; 'Griev- Winnifred Phalan, City oi Rome tal on November 17, to hear a talk
Employers, Colleges & Tech- Fiorrelli, Louise Exton, Lillian ance: Fred Liguori, F r a n k Riley Hospital, Horace Westcott, past by Dr. Maxwell Jones, well-known
Ward, Helen B. Gregory, Lloyd A, and Ann Riley; Social: J o h n president of the chapter, and British authority on total rehabi• i c a l Schools.
Gregory.
Manning, Bill Hurlihe and J o a n Fred Koenig, president.
litation of the psychiatric patient.
B m tho lack ot a Ht?h School Diploma
• t o o d bi your way f«»r » protnoUoi^ or
Adolph C. Miller, Nettie Wright, Dionysius; Membership:
Ethel
•ppolntmeut^
Anna DuQuite, Joseph Culletto, Thomas ,Tom Rlngwood, Fred
Sullivan County
dteata o n held by the State Bducatioa Monne Benson, Louis Franklin, Lovelace, But<^ Miller and
all
"Janie" belongs in y o w honM.
Dept. a t regiilar intervals. N o w i s t h e Wilbert Exton, Fred W. Meyer, County assistant engineers; PubKENNETH ROSS, president of See details on Page 7.
l e aet. Get that H.3. Diploma now.
Dawn
Brenno,
Sebastian
Neulicity:
I
n
a
Mabie,
Betty
Flinn
and
M a n h a t t a a Coaching Courae Ifl practical,
brand, J o h n Splno, Helen R. Gus Noble; Welfare: Zora Way,
• r o r e n and builds needed confidence.
Quinn. Lillian Sykes, Helen Mc- Aage Hansen and Ethel Thomas.
A 15 WEEK COURSE
Clarty, Margaret White, Thelma
Prepare for an Attractive Civil Service Career
Plans are being made for a busCLASSES MEET WEEKLY
E. Duhrendahl, I n a May Lang- iness meeting in early J a n u a r y
Through DELEHANTY SPECIALIZED TRAINING
schur, Edward M. Rutherford. and a buffet supper-dance in the
TUITION $47.50
J o h n a . Hanly. Andrew Postel, near future.
•
COURSES A m O V I D PCk KORIAN VITEtANf
— ALSO —
Irving Ward. J o h n Holland. Eliza• a O O L A R DAY & E V E N I N O CLASSES beth
A. Navary. J o n a t h a n K.
A CLOM S»»»loe Of Aey C o t — U O t eii»«t
<tr TYPING. STKNOGRAPHY,
STENO- Croft. Luther J. Harmon. Joseph
Mt. Morris
tTPH
REPORl'ING.
COMPTOMETRY,
Application
Opmi D««. Sfk «O D M . Zlmd
DR. ARMSTRONG is receiving
ACCOUNTING.
BOOKKEEPING
A N D Winning .Peter B. Lespinasse. Fred
B U S I N E S S ADMINISTRATION.
BRUSH- Borg. Russell Poquette, Everett A. congratulations on his new posiiWrlH»a
exmm
H • • MeW khirtk 141
PP
COURSES.
BUDGET
P A Y M E N T S Watson. J o h n
G. Scott, Lillian tion as director of Mt. Morris
M A I L A B L E IN ALL COURSES.
Lahey, Edwin G. Smith, Margaret State Hospital. The employees
—
N. r . CITY FOLICI DITT.
Heehs, Eugene H. Grandison, wish him every success.
Frances Elizabeth Williams, Geo.
Dr. Learn has been appointed
STARTING
IMCAEASEt
f O C
March, M. D., Gertrude D. Kean,
director of t h e hospital.
m 3 YRS. T O ^ ' i l ' O d
SALARY
BUSINESS INSTITUTE Dr. Fritz Breuer, Anna Kent, assistant
The regular meeting of t h e Mt.
l4Mf W. 4 S St., Cor. B'dwar BR • • 4 1 8 1 Nancy Lyons, Patricia M. Quinn, Morris chapter, CSEA, was held
SpMioliMd TreiiiiiHi for BeMi WriHoe amd Physical i x e n c . of
tfV T e a r s at the Crossroads of the World Gustav Heehs. Mary L. Ellis, Elea- on Tuesday, November 18, with 75
I k e Sekeol Tkof Hat Traload Ov«r 90% of N. Y. CIty'i PoHm O i l i e r
nor B. Wright, James B. Dowdell, members in attendance. Mrs.
L R A R N IBM T.VBULATINO
Charles E. Laykin, Thomas H. Lavery gave her report on t h e a n DAY
EVE. CLASSES !• MANHATTAN and JAMAICA
Preitero Xor High Paying: Jobs in
Gallagher, Fritz Greenfieldt, H u - nual meeting in Albany. The
Federal. State, City Civil Service
bert Golden, Lillian Kinney, R president urged all employees to
Rapid Courae, Placement Service. Free
Appllcafl<m9 WW open Dae. Sfk for
Ti<». Free Manuals. Certificate Granted
S. Bell.
join civil service.
Interviews Kveninerb 6 - 1 0 P.M.
F
r
a
n
k
Metzger,
Thomas
R
a
f
t
e
r
,
Dr. Arnold Riley h a s resigned
or Call J U 2 - 5 0 1 1
Margaret Leitner, Elizabeth I. his position as principal thoracic
•USINESS MACHINE INST.
SUPREME COURT — U t , 2ad a>d 10«k Jadicial Districfs
Sullivan, John M. Vahey, Anna surgeon and plans to go into priHOTEL WOODWARD
eENERAl SESSIONS ft COUNTY COURTS witkia Now Yoi% CHy
Myers, R u t h P. Jones, Gertrude vate practice, at Holly, N. Y.,
SStb St. A Bway. N.Y.O.
Rosldeats ef N. Y. City aad Natsaa aad Suffolk Coaaflos oliglMa
around J a n u a r y 1. Good luck. Dr.
Entrance Salary up to $5,065 a Year
Riley.
, ,
The employees of the hospital
Official WriHoa Examinafioa Ho« Booa SckediHod for Fob. 141%
extend their sympathy to Dr.
Preparatory ClatMt Poataro a Completo R«viow of All Exaia TophM
Armstrong in the recent death of
Bo 0 « r Guest oa MON. or THURS. a t 5:45 or 7:45 P.M.
his mother.
Rockland
Stote HospHal
PATROLMAN
$3,725 I
MANHATTAN
COURT ATTENDANT
Proparo for Opoa Competitivo aad Promotional Exam for
Oneida County
A MEETING of the Board of
Directors of Oneida County chapter, CSEA, was held on November
19 at the County Court House.
The meeting was called to formulate plans to stimulate interest in
the CSEA a n d to discuss a memLEGAL
NOTICR
CITATION—P.t368 1963
€HMSTMAS
MORNING!
You will be able to do that if yov were o member of
Emigrant'* 1952 Christmas Club.
Plan on buying those exfro gift* for them next Chriitmcik
Join EMIGRANT'S 1953 CHRISTA^AS CLUd today*,
H ^ r ^ ' f f i o w If worlrtt
you DEPOStr WUKim
$
¥0¥ MCifVf BefOUt eNAMrAM^
29,00
90.00
100.00
10.00**
290.00
900.00
»t»•
One of Anwlca'i Greof $avhg$ kntHyfhm
EMIGRANT
Industrial
SAVINGS BANK
# 1 Chambort Stro«t
;/vif coit of Broodw(«r
dfm Mqh. and M H 4 fM
VMivmimhhSSJ^^
9 l a f t 41nd S f r « « # ,
/vii Off nm Amm
0pm Mwk H 7 f.M. ond M H • M l
The People of Uie State of New York
By the Grace of Ootl Free and Independent,
To Mendel Varshavsky. Minna Varahaveky.
Moisei Varshavfiky, S i m o a Varshavsky, L « t
Varshavaliy. Rachll Varshavsky. it Uvinjr
and if dead to their heirs at law, next of
kin and diatributees w h o s e namea and
places of residence are u n k n o w n and if
they died subsequent to the decedent herein, to their executors, administrators,
(ratecs, devisees, assigrnoes and successor*
in interest w h o s e names and plaoea of
residence ar* u n k n o w n and to idl other
heirs at law, next of k i n and distributees
of GRIQORY B E N J A M I N VARSHAVSKY.
the decedent herein, w h o s e names and
place* of residence are u n k n o w n and cannot, after diliKeot inquiry, b e ascertained,
the next of kin aad h e i w at l a w of ORIQORY BBNIAMIN
VARSHAVSKY.
deceased, and t o Attorney General of N e w
York State, and the P u b l i c Administrator
o l New York County, send erreetin*:
Whereas, Samuel Dmitrovsky, w h o resides at »S6 Weet 7 6 t h Street, Manhattan, N e w Yorts City, and Mark Manerich
w h o reside* »t Jone* Siding Road, R.V.D.
2, Freehold. N e w Jersey, ha* lately aftplied t e the Surrotrate's Court oi oor
County ot Ne>w Yoiic t o h a r e ft certain
instrument in writinc bearinr date A u r u s t
31, 1&40, relating to both real and personal property, duly proved a* the la*!
will and testament of Grifonr Beniamin
Varshavsky, deceased, w h o w h o wa* at
the time o< hi* death a resident of 3 4
Weoi 6 5 t h Street, Manhattan, the County
ef New York.
llicu-efore, yom and each ot you
are
cited t« s h o w cause before the Surroirate'a
Court of our County of New York, at t h e
Hall of Record* in the County oi N e w
York, on the Sth dfty ot January, one
thousand nine hundred aud
fifty-three,
at half-pa«t ten o'clock in the forenoon
of that day. w h y the said w i n and te«Uuieot sliooM not be admitted to probate
a* a will of reel and personal property.
testimony whereof, w e h a v e caused
t h e seal o< the Surrograte'a Court of the
said CouBiy e< New York to be hereunto
affixed.
Witneoi, Honorable
Oeorge
Fraukeathaler, Surroyatre p i oar said County a i
New York, ftt MOd oountr, th* » ! * ( dar • (
N o v e m b t r to t h « ye«r of o w Lord o m
thousand atoe h o n d i ^ a n d
fifty-two.
^
PmUF A. DONAHUB.
JR. ACCOUNTANT — N. Y. C* Depts«
Tkic examinatioa is tentatively scheduled for Marok 21st
CLASS MEETS TUESDAY AT 6:15 P.M.
SANITATION MAN CANDSDATES!
Only 6 . 4 1 a or 3-l% of those w h o competed in the kiat c-^ainination for
Sanitation Man passed. Moet ef the 9 , 7 3 2 w h o did not p.iss failed in the
Written Teat although it w a s only a Qualifying one.
Most of thoee who applied for this examination have been away froea
scho<ri f o r years, h a v e had no experience in this type of examination and
jonseauontly require some specialized preparation.
'inie Phyelcal Test is one t h a t f e w can pasa without spocialiaed trainiiw.
PRIE classes for writtoa oxaai if enrolled for Physical Court*.
DAY and EVE. CiASSES fa MANHATTAN and JA<xlAiCA
PHYSICAL CLASSES FOR FIREI^AN '
A HiOH PHYSICAL RATMI« WILL RAISE YOUR PiMAi. A V E R A e i
Traia Under Expert Instructors ia Oar Gym, tko Largest aad Boat
Eqaipped Civil Service Gyai ia tko U. S.
DAY ft EYE. CLASSES—-MODERATE FEE-INSTALMENTS-
ApplkafloMM WHI Bo Reopened Dmcembmr 44 fo 19fk
COLLEGE OFFICE ASSISTANT
CLASS MEETS TUfSOAYS AND PRIOAYS AT 6:1C f M .
^
Classes Also Meetiag Now ia M a n k a t t A for:
e SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR — $3,260 a Year f e S t a r t
e CLERK - G r a d e 2 — Salary Range S2.110 f o $2,720
Day ft: Eve. Classos la
e STENOGRAPHY
e TYPEWRITING
e SECRETARIAL DUTIES
9 « a l i f y for Next N. Y. S t a f «
INSURANCE BROKER'S
LICENSE EXAM.
App'vd. by S f a f o fasaraace Dept.
Earoll Now! Classes Start Doc. i
Attractive Positioas Pleatlfol
la Mankattaa a a d J a m a i e e
Attead ia Maakattaa or Jaaiaiea
Praetlcaf
TralniMg f o r Better
Paying Poiltlom
ot
TV TECHNICIANS • DRAFTSMEN - AUTO MECHANICS
740 DELEHANTY
**ISearly 40 Fears of Serviem in Advancing th»
Careen of Motm Than 450,000 Student^
ExsouMve OfflcMt
Jsmsioa Dlviiloai
ll«E. ISST.,N.Y.I
90-14 Sutpkifi B M
GRamsroy S-6900
JFWOB BOUB8! Hon
to m , : 9 aJi
JAmaiM 6-92M
to 9 .BO p.M
Sat
to t p
m
C I T I C
Page 9 h
MjIEAJDIE'SL
P K K T I C E
LVADSIt
DON'T REPEAT THIS
(Continued from page »
are of a quasi-military nature and
IrWolve the security of secret or
confidential matter, when in the
opinion of the Commission, appointment through
competrtive
examination is Impracticable.
(2) Caretakers of abandoned
military reservations or of abandoned or unoccupied
military
posts when the positions are filled
by retired non-commissioned oflBcers or enlisted men.
(3) During the emergency declared by the President to exist
on May 27, 1941, all positions in
the Department of the Army on
the Isthmus of P a n a m a .
(4) Unskilled laborers and munitions handlers engaged in h a n dling Ordnance materiel, including ammunition, where temporary
or intermittent employment is
necessary.
(6) Messenger boys employed on
the Alaska Communications System.
(6) Internes (medical and denBure^n of internal Revenue
tal) in Army hospitals.
(7) Student occupational t h e r a p o J ^ ^ ^ J J i ^ e T o T T n 'he w i
pist positions in Army general hosservice imder the appropriation pitals. Appointments to these posifor d e t ^ t i n g and bringing to trial tions will not extend beyond the
and punishment persons violating training period applicable to each
the internal revenue laws. Ap- Individual C£ise, which is a minipointments under this subpara- m u m of three months training
graph shall be limited to persons and a maximum of twelve months
whose services aie required be- training, depending upon the Incause of Individual knowledge of dividual's previous clinical- t r a i n violations of the law, and such ing.
appointments shall be continued
Office of the Secretary
only so long as the personal know(1) Two private secretaries or
ledge possessed by the appointee confidential
assistants to each of
of such violation makes his ser- the following:
The Secretary of
vices necessary. This exemption the
Army and the Cliief of Staff,
from competition is for special United
States Army. One private
and unusual cases only and report
or confidential assistant
shall be made to the Commission secretary
each Assistant Secretary of the
by letter as soon as the appoint- to
Army.
ment is made.
(2) One chauffeur for the SecreBureau of Customs
tary of the Army.
(1> Positions in foreign coun(3) Five Board Members of the
tries designated as "interpreter- Armed Services
Renegotiation
translator" and
"special em- Board.
ployees,'* when filled by appointTransportation Corps
ment of persons, who are not citi(1) Longshoremen and stevezens of the United States; and dores employed at ports of empositions in foreign countries of barkation in the United States;
messenger and janitor.
and all povsitions on vessels opCoast Guard
erated by the
Transportation
(1) Lamplighters.
Corps.
Comptroller of the Currency
Office of the President, Mississippi
(1) Receivers of insolvent n a River Commission
tional banks and other financial
(1) Student assistant positions
institutions appointed
by the concerned with scientific engineerCurrency with salaries payable ing investigations when filled by
fron* the funds of Insolvent insti- the appointment of students in
tutions, and the employees of such attendance at colleges and univerreceivers.
sities of recognized
standing:
United States Savings Bonds
Provided, T h a t substantial conDivision
tributions to the Investigations are
<1) Radio Director, Director of made by such colleges or univerLabor Organizations, Information sities in money, services, advice,
and Editorial Specialist (Labor or materials or in the use of buildRepresentative), Information and ings, laboratories, equipment, f a Editorial Specialist (Head, Rail- cilities, or otherwise. Such employroad Unit), Information and Edi- ment may be continued under this
torial Specialist (Director of Ne- authority only so long as the appointee is a bona fide student in
gro Groups).
a particular college or university
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE and receives academic credit toOflSce of the Secretary of Defense ward a degree for the work he is
(1) Two private secretaries or performing: And provided, T h a t
confidential assistants to the Sec- appointments to such positions
retary of Defense.
will not exceed fifteen in number
(2) Two chauffeurs for the Sec- at any particular time, and will be
retary ol Defense.
for a period not to exceed nine
(3) Five Special Advisers to the months.
Office of the Under Secretary
<1) One prly&te secretary or
assistant to the UnA m m r i e n ^ B Imrfgrnmi. W m e M ^ f o r t h ^ h U e E m p l m f f e e s confidential
der Secretary of the Treasury.
Member Avrfll BurtMia ot Qrculaliom
(3) One assistant to the Under
M l i s h e d erery Tneflday hy
Secretary of the Treasury.
Bnrean of Narcotios
LEADEt
E N T E R P R I S E S .
INC.
(1) Special employees in the
t7>DMii» SiTMt. N*w V«rfc 7, N. Y.
•Eekmai 1 ^ 1 0
field service. Appointments under
Ittry Fink«lM4Bin. Publi$kmr
this subparagraph shall be limited
Maxwell Lehimm. Editor mnd to-PmhiUher
to persons whose services are reR. J. Bernard, Exmcuiiwm Editor
Morton Yammn. Cmmrml Mamagmr
quired
because
of
individual
N. B. Mager. BiuinmM* Managmr
knowledge of violations of the
Fer 0»P7. 8ab«crii>tlon Price IJ.Ot Per Annum.
law, and such appointments shall
be continued only so long as the
personal knowledge possessed by
T U E S D A Y , DECEMBER 2, 1952
the appointee of such violation
makes his services necessary, "nils
exemption from competition is for
special and unusual cases only and
report shall be made to the Commission by letter as soon as the
appointment Is made.
(2) Thirty positions of Narcotic
Agent for undercover work.
Good Appointments—
Hagerty, Rogers, KapBan
en. Eisenhoweufi appointment of James C. H
Haaggeerrttyy—
—
n o , . him m
. . Jim—will be
h . applauded hby
v
everybody kknows
all newspapermen.
Aa press secretary to the President, Jim bringrs t o the
job a knowledge of the working newspaperman's problem. W e of The UaADER know. Over the years that w e
worked with him in his capacity as secretc.ry to Governor
Dewey, w e learned to respect his ability, his willingness
to go oat of the w a y in helping a reporter, in giving the
n e w s straight. Jim is a solid, reliable guy, a newspaperman's newspaperman. W e wish him well in his tough
n e w job. , . . Two other appointm'ents that will sit well
with N e w Yorkers who've had occasion to work with
them are those of W. P. (Bill) Rogers, named deputy
attorney general of t h e United States; and H. Eliot
Kaplan, appointed by President Truman to head up the
most thoroughgoing study of retirement systems ever
undertaken in the United States.
G
$1200 a Year Isn't
Enougti for a Pensioner
T
h e pension aid granted by the State, and by some local communities under the State formula, to those
with low retirement allowances, is obviously too small
On« erf the responsibilities of the Legislature that will m e e t
in January is to liberalize supplementary pensions.
The State waited until the final days of the last Legislature before it advanced a bill to comply w i t h th« will
expressed by the voters w h o four months previously had
enacted a constitutional amendment. Small as the appropriation turned out to be, it was considerably larger than
originally intended by some budget-minded State officials.
The NYC Administration waited eight months longer,
thus ahowing even le«s enthusiasm, although the benefit^ ^dSStSS- 31,
adSfare made retroactive to July 1 last. NYC got its law tional positions of Special Adviser
to the Secretary of Defense.
through the Council just before Election Day, as if it
(4) Ten positions of Manager or
were more interested in tiie low-paid pensioners vote than Secretary of Committees, Special
Programs Division. Appointments
as people in a plight.
under this subparagraph shall not
Summed up, the formula' means that | 1 0 0 a month exceed two years.
(8) Twenty-five positions at
is wiough to live on, since nobody's pension m a y be raised Scientific Warfare Advisers in the
Systems
Evaluation
so that it e x c e l s $1,200 a year total. Siuch a distorted Weapon*
Group.
estimate needs serious legislative attention.
(7) One private eecretary or
N E W YOHJK CITY employees will have four-day
holidays (m Christmas and N e w Years, just m they had
for Thanksgiving. All of these fall on Thursdaym, and
Mayor Impellitteri has announced that employees will
have the succeeding Fridays off, except w h e r e they are
engaged in essential work on those days.
W e hope N e w York State and othar local nnits of
government do likewise.
A DRIVERS' clinic for Dallas, Texas, city e m p l o y e e s
who operate city-owned cars and trucks has reduced the
city's accident rate for city vehicles by 18 percent. A good
idea. Should be tried by communitiee in N e w York State.
FIREMAN ELIGIBLES MEET W I T H CHIEF L O F H J S
The eaectttive board of the
i r r c n r e m a a Stlglbiw AMociatton mni Mt tlM> W«rdein*mi'i
Hall, i m h SUreet MM! trd Avanu«.
• c Monday. December 1. t:30 p.m.
Sdward Morse, {resident of the
B e t v l t h Chief of DepartMtf ffX a
promise that the Fire Department
wUl do all it can to build up the
foree.
Those on the list of fireman
•ttglbles who wish to join the
iussov iation may communicate with
Mr. Morse at 375 61st Street
Brooklyn. Bis phone numbar Is
Byaoioth 3-4903.
ToMday, Dceember 2, 19SS
confVlential assistant to the Under Secretary of Defense.
(•) One cpecial assistant to the
XTnder Secretary of Defense.
(9) Not to exceed six positions
at management engineer la the
Ofllce of the Assistant Secretary
(Comptroller). Employment imder
this pityvision shall not excqed
one year In any individual caae:
Provided. That such employment
may, with the prior approval of
the Ckinmiission, be extended for
not to exceed an additional yetir.
(10) One private secretary or
confidential assistant
to each
Assistant Secretary of Defense.
Kesxsajreh and Development Board
(1) Thirteen Executive Directors, eleven Deputy Directors,
eight Scientific Warfare Advlsert.
two Chiefs erf Branches, one Head
of Section.
(2) One staJff m«sl«tant (confidential assistant to the Chairman).
Munitions Board
(I) One position of Vice caialrnwn or Deputy Chairman.
(1) One Industrial Engineer.
(8) Fbur Industrial Speciallsta.
DEPARTMENT OF THE ABMT
Ckeneral
M i JtaiiUoDi the d u O t t
hostesses, chapel organist and t h e
choirmaster, librarian when filled
by an officer of the Regular Army
retired from active service, a n d
military secretary to the Superintendent when filled by a Military
Academy graduate retired as a
regular commissioned officer lor
disability.
Spccial Services Division
(1) During the emergency declared by the President to exist
on May 27, 1941, positions In t h e
Army Motion Picture Service a n d
positions of hostess and librarian^
assigned to Army posts.
National War College, Washington, D. C.
(1) Civilian Directors of Studies
employed for not to fexceed six
months in
any
twelve-month
period.
Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission
(1) One position of clerkstenographer-translator or civilian
aide requiring a knowledge of
English, Portuguese, and Spanisli,^
Command and Genera! Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
(1) Position of psycho-educational advisor, individual appointment not to exceed one year d u r ation.
Army Lan^ag^e School, Presidio
Of Mont(n-ey, Calif.
(1) Language instructors when
the type of instruction requires a
period of actual foreign residence
to qualify t h e m for the instruction.
(2) Typists of foreign language
material whose duties require t h e m
to make corrections in g r a m m a r
and spelling of the material typed,
DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY
General
(1) Positions the duties of which
are of a quasi-naval character and
Involve the security of secret or
confidential matter, when, in t h e
opinion of the Commission, a p pointment through
competitive
examination is Impracticable.
(2) Technical or professional
consultants or advisors, at e n trance rate of P-5 or its eqviivalent and above, employed for nofe
to exceed 6 months a year.
(3) Caretakers or guards e m ployed at closed or decommissioned facilities of the Navy D e p a r t ment. Appointments under this
subparagraph shall not extend beyond 6 months, except with t h a
prior approval of the Commission.
(4) Alien scientists employed
under the program for utilization
of alien scientists approved under
pertinent State, War, and Navy
Coordinating Committee Directives.
(5) Student trainees in naval
shipyards, whose salaries shall not
aggregate more t h a n $500 a year.
Only bona fide students engaged
in the study of navaT architecture
shall be eligible for appointment
under this subparagraph. Employment under this subparagraph
shall not exceed 90 working days
a year.
Office of the Secretary
(1) Two private secretaries or
confidential assistants to the Secretary of the Navy, one to each
Assistant Secretary of the Navy
Engineer Department
and one to t h e Under Secretary of
(1), Land appraisers employed the Navy.
on a temporary or indefinite basis
(2) One chauffeur for the Secfor specific projects where knowl- retary of the Navy.
edge of local values or conditions
(3) Five Board Members of t h e
or other specialized qualifications Armed
Services Renegotiation
not possessed by appraisers regu- Board.
larly employed by the Department
United States Naval Academy
are required for successful results.
(1) Professors, instructors, a n d
U. S. Military Academy, West teachers In the United States
Naval Academy, the United States
Point, New York
(1) Civilian professors, instruc- Naval Postgraduate School, and
tors, registrar, teachers (except the Naval War College.
teachers at the Children's School),
(Continued on page 23)
r
Comment
EXPERIENCE DEMANDS
CALLED NOT LIBERAL ENOUGH
Editor, The LEADER:
Tlie C^vil Service Commissiona,
all Jurisdictions, seem to take the
easiest course in defining experience requirements. Ttie effect
•eems to be to overvalue work for
large corporations, or at least
mdnimize work for small concerns.
There is the constant reqtiirement for "progressively reeponsible experience," though in small
organizations it may be impossible to "progre«£" In tfa« manner
that the Commissions demand.
All those grades that the Commissions i m i ^ n e must exist everywhere simply don't exist in small
business. Everybody must have
heard of the *'one-girl ofBoe." Well
there are one-man oillces, too.
While wperience is tac^rtant,
t ttUnk tlMU llae attoawft lo
its value on the magnitude of th«
employer's operation is misplaced.
The idea that the best obtainable
recruitment results from hiring
thoae who became supervisors first
of a few persons, then of a dozen
or so. then of scores, and finally
of hundreds, loses sight of the employee of a small office. Often one
person does his own work, and
there is no supervisor. So when
a Commission requires supervisoi-y
experience, may it not be making
it too difficult for Uiose who work
for small concerns to compete?
I recognise ttiat the Cominis*
sions are doing what they think
will beftt serve recruitment, but
r m sure that what now has now
become the formula for expresstag experience requirements eonvetimes Biay worii more harm ttuuf
k
S . M. i
GITIE
D«e«mli« X
9EVTICK
LEADBK
Fi
Sbs Civil S«rvie« L«acl«r km made o special arroBgemoiit with a mamifacturer to bring you tfiii sontatloiMri oilor —^
Never a Value Like
Jusf In Time For Chrhfma$
It!
Giving
This $9.98 Doll is Yours for $3.98 (plus .two coupons) because the
Civil Service Leader wants to mdke new friends.
JAIVIE
93
a perfect playmate for your favorite Bttle girl
A 2 4 inch doll
with arms and legs perfectly molded of
flesh-like lostex rubber and plastic
break-resistant body.
With magic Soran hair you can comb,
shampoo and set (curlers come without
extra charge)
Advertised ia New
Yorli City newspapers as a $9.98 Value,
and would be cheap
at that price.
You can comb and set
"Janie's" hair.
Yours ttf give now or for
Christmas for only $3.98
plus 27e mailing oiid handling charges.
—<ind—
T w o "Janie" eonpont
from tiie Civil Service
Leader or your wrapper
label, if you CH*e m vah*
scriber.
She cries "Mommy" wh«
you lift her up.
An adorable little girl doll as big at a real baby, fafl
enough to eat off your chair. She closes her eyes when
she sleeps and cries mommy when you spanic bor.
You will want to cuddle this little blue-eyed blondo
yourself, with her rosy cheeks, bow mouth ond real
eyelashes. Her lifelike arms and legs ore moveoble, m
she can sit.
She's all decked out, too, in Sunday finery, wHb on oK
tractive lace trimmed plaid dress and bonnet, ponflot
to match, and pretty socks and shoes.
HOW TO GET YOUR *-JANIE" DOLU Just cRfi Hm
which appears with Miis advertisement, and which will appear oe P o ^ 1
of future issues of the ^ivil Service Leader, as long os doHs aro ovallablob
If you are a subscriber, you may substitute th« label oe yo«r wrapper for
the coupons. Send the coupons (or your label) together wiMi $4.2S ($3.98
plus 27c for mailing and handling eharges) te the ChrN S«rvle« LackIm^
97 Duane street. New York 7, N. Y.
Of course, fvll refund—If you with yo« may r«t«ni "Jaaie"' If yoe're eet
tirely thrilled when yoa receive her.
'^Janie'' a 2 4 - f n c f i Beauty
f o « may toe "Janle" of Hf IMADBtt oMce.
C o f r y fcf off g a d » a v t h e potfagm
•OKMO
CivN Service Leader
97 Duone Street
New York 7. N. Y.
Please send me
'Janle** doRs. I encloM
($3.9t piM
27c for mailing and Handiing) and two "Janie" dol coupons fri
the Civil Service Leader, for each doll. (Subscribers may substftwfe their wrapper label for tviro coupons.) If sent
New York
CHy add 12c for sales fax.
$1 Reservation Plan
if you prefer we win reserve m ""Janie" D d
for you for Christmas giving. Just sencTSl
with your name and address oed say: Save
"Jonie" for me.
€kargm.
AddrMt
CHy . . .
C I T I C
Page Eight
9 B R T I C K
Tneflllaj'f IVcemBer 1|
L B A H B H
AVOID THE CHRISTMAS RUSH!
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE TERRIFIC DISCOUNT AT DUANE N O W
REVEREWARE
a
nii
^ V ^ M U
FARBERWARE IN STOCK
S T A I N L E I T ^ WARE
FULL LINE
NATIONALLY FAMOUS BRANDS
ELECTRIC TRAINS AND ACCESSORIES
| | |
SAVINGS OF 25% TO 30%
.
v An
STOCK
LIONEL AND AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS
AND ACCESSORIES IN STOCK
INFRA RED BROILERS
& ROTISSERIES
40o/o t o 50o/o ofF
ROT.ISSERIES
Roto-Broil # 4 0 0
Iroilquick Ch«f
Superstar
Mack Angus
Iroilquick
Rotissemat
Hack Angus Broiler
J«y Broiler
Lisf
DUANES
Price
Price
$59.95
$35.75
$54.75 $31.75
59.95 Special
36.95
$20.95
29.95
13.95
SAVINGS 25% f o 30%
Now at Duane Appliances
The only Vacuum CleaneF in the world
fhat brings
BY FAMOUS MAKERS
2 5 % t o 3 5 % off
CLEANING!
Meal Dolls
Flexible Flyer S M t
Louis Marx Toys
Erector Sets
Tinker Toys
Chemistry ,Sets
•eisy Ross
Microscope Se4«
Sewing Machines
Tool Kits
Unique Toys
Halsam Logs
Holgate Toys
Exacto Kits
Union Hardware
Keystone Gas
Skates
Stations
AND MANY, MANY OTHERS
N E W G E N I R A l ELECTRIC CLEANER
with the omazing new swivel-top thot
lets you clean whole average-size living room without once moving cieanerl
You just set this new G-E Cleaner in th«
middle of the floor, and reach every nook
and cranny without moving the cleaner.
Many other great features.
FAMOUS VACUUM CLEANER
NO DUST BAG TO EMPTY
COMPLETE SET TOOLS
•
larger dUpotable bag than any other cleaner
•
Maintain! dirt<getting ability a i cleaner flili
O iKtra quiet I No radio or TV interference
•
Cemplete let off attachment! in portable caddy
S SPEED PHONOGRAPH
List
DUANES
Price
Price
$32.95
$21.95
Webster-Chicago VM-Trimatic
Produ<^ts In Stock
FAMOUS MAKE AUTOMATIC
CLOCK RADIO
List
DUANES
Price
Price
$39.95
$29.75
DUANES
Price
$29.95
$20.95
VACUUM 1
CLEANER
At fhe House of
Good Values
Where You Get
the Best In
Appliances
MMbI A v e 4 l f
flNMiltiifOftAfiiOfctAtftiiyOtllONSTRATION
Aythorti^d
OP NOUSECLEANING
MAGICI
DUANES
Price
$25.95
$16.95
4O0/0 oflF
CIGARETTE and TABLE
LIGHTERS*
!
^
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
MIXER WITH MEAT GRINDER
List
Price
$46.50
DUANES
Price
$30.95
QUIET DELUXE
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
List
DUANES
Price
Price
$98.50*
$68.00*
Plus Fed. Excise Tax
4 0 % t o 5O0/0 off
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
MEN'S & LADIES WATCHES
Benrus, Elgin, Gruen
Longlnes, Witnauer
Wal+ham, Bulova
Le Coultra & Many Others
In Stock
By N O M A
MAJOR APPLIANCES
FOR CHRISTMAS
DUANES LOW. LOW PRICES
W A S H E R S
THOR, MAYTAG. G . E.. BENDIX, ABC<
WHIRLPOOL, BLACKSTONE, NORGB,
WESTINGHOUSE. HOT POINT. BTC^
DRYERS. REFRIGERATORS. I R O N E R ^
STOVES. TV.
TERRIFIC
PRICES ]
COME IN, BROUSE AROUND.
eiFTS TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS.
CHECK WITH DUANE BEFORE ^ f C m
MAKE
YOUR
CHRISTMAS
PUm
CHASES. MAIL AND PHONE
Mi
QUIRIES WILL RECEIVE OUR
DIATE RESPONSE.
APPLIANCES
95 DUANE STREET
Civil $¥«. Ltodor
ihahf
VACUUM CLIANERS
DUANE
Door
Lisf
Price
PARKER,
WATERMAN.
SHAEF«H
PEN & PENCILS. LA CROSS MANIC U R I N G SETS. MILITARY SETS. BABV
JEWELRY. DELTAH PEARLS. ELECTRIC
SHAVERS,
RADIOS,
TOASTERSii
CLOCKS,
CAMERAS.
VACUUM*,
BIKES, TOOLS. STEAM IRONS. CARVU
ING & STEAK SETS. MIXERS. ELECb
TRIC
BLANKETS,
HAIR
DRYERS
HEATERS, ETC.
6 I N E R A L @ ELECTRIC
INFRA-RED BROILER
LARGE SIZE
Special
$8.50
I M
$41.50
ALL FAMOUS MAKES
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
tAMERA OUTFITS IN STOCK
KODAK. REVERE. BELL
& HOWELL. ARGUS
^ v l n g 250/0 t o 3 0 %
Juft W. ol B'w«y
AcroM St. from Civlf Sv«. Comm.
$67.50
CHRISTMAS LIGHTS
ofld DECORATIONS
H H n r i W i A i ^ m i i r
CANFIELD AUTO
PERCOLATOR
List
Price
DUANES
Price
D U A N E S LOW, LOW PRICES
rWELVE (12) PC. STEAK SCI
DUANES
Price
$3.50
List
Price
• New •wiv«l-top far "rMch-Mty" cUaning
DUANES
Price
$55.75
SILVERWARE
Nationally
Advertised Brands
40o/o off
Price
List
$11.95
REGINA
FLOOR POLISHER
*Fed. Tax On Table Lighters
3 3 - 1 / 3 % t o 40o/o off
Elgin-American Compacts
Men's & Ladies Wallets
Jacques Kreisler Men's Jewelry
Blenders
Sleak Carving Sets
Sterling Silver Items
Ladies & Men's Gold Rings
$88.95
HOOVER, G. E. UNIVERS/H!
WESTINGHOUSE. LEWYT
VACUUM CLEANERS
FAMOUS MAKE
HAND VAC.
T O Y S
List
Price
FACTORY AUTHORIZED:
DISTRIBUTORS
305 BROADWAY
OPEN t M i DAILY -
W M
P.M. l A T . -
OPB4 m U A
HOURS DURWG
DECEMBER
Lobby Enfranco
T n e t d a y , I > e e e m b « r 24
1952
C I V I L
r/
'
S E K V I C C
L K A D I M
Page NIiw
n
y
\ *
fi/m
\ V
L
famous Alt
rmt
Qmitt^
YLONS
ExquisKe Savings! Bemitifui, Fsmous Make Full Fashioned NYLONS
m 3 smart fashion shades-Beig*.
Taupe and Tan. Long wearing U
Gauge. 15 Denier quality.
Beautiful Gift Boxed.
3 000
PRS.
P
for
B o y s ' <!t G i r J s ' Qi/f
/ I/*
SKATES
Mhi. Ordar t Prt.,
LIST $3.30
FIGURE Skates
DetigiMKl for I>«Hm
fit & lono wear. ShoM mod* of
rugged Cowhido for oxtro
strength. Uned foneue. FuU
' • i m 1 2 to 4 .
BOYS' HOCKEYS
Black Cowhkte Leather. Lined
tongue for comfort, hard box-tee
protection. Keenly
honjKi tubular skates. SpecialK
1 5 "
BABY
DOLL
FREE!
With Ev«ry Ord«r Totaling $10.00 or n o n i
#15«->e«Mpo«itiMi
hMd. arm and toga.
Soft Cotton atofiod body.
Flow«t«d Organdy
drew 4 SUp^ Flowered
Orgcuidy bonnet wMi
Lcwe tote om bonnet
Ofc BOTTLES o i ,
Saint (Sinner
PERFUMES
&9
PAIR
OF HOLLYWOOD
B«auUful Gift BoMd.
LBT
PRICE $ 9 . 0 f l l
LIST $ 1 0 0
I
i
4
B O X # 9 0 1 CHURCH SY. STA., NEW YORK 8 , N . Y.
-
;
i
^
iTapre Ten
C I T I D
f l l T I C B
L B A B I B
SHEEPLINED
leatherVestl^P
\
-i-i
# V 2 0 U - Genuine Brown
"Acqualac" water-repellent
Leather outside. Soft, fleecy
Sheepskin lining. Windproof
Zipper front. Two patch
pockets. Terrinc Winter
, Seller; Small, Medium A
TROOPER
# 1 2 4 4 - R « o . $12.95. Royon So«n
Twill. Olive, Novy, GfMwi. KK)%
Raproc. Wool D I M Rayon <|utli
Hf»«d body * s I m v m .
Mtd.,
Value $8.95
LEATHER PALM
B . 9 STYLE
PARKA
ZttOe
100% Wool ^
Gloves/
A l p a c a earflaps with
C A P I
tie tapes. Fully l i n e d .
^ "
»
Olive Poplin. S i z e s
« % to 7%. V a l u e $1.95
Men's Famous
•
^
FLANNEL
ROBES
^
Extremely well made with
full shawl collar, corded rayon braid piping, rayon rope
belt and 2 generous pockets
Warm as toast. Choice o»
assorted Blue, Wine & Brown,
shades. Med. <38-52), Large
(44-46).
^inedf
_.69
Water-repellent Rayoni
ive Satiii Twill. 1009^
proc. Wool filled Rayl
• n Satin quilted lined
w d y & sleeves. Mouton
4lyed-lami) Fur lined A
•rlmm
med ad), tiood. Wind>
>f Zipper-under.tMit.
front. 2 Breast. 2
pocktti. 38 to 48
R
$2.95
LIST
quality 1 0 0 % , ^ !
Wool g l o v e s ,
forced w i t h stron?,
oenuin*
grained
Mather,
fiondsome
T a a
and
t
B r e w s
Ladies' & Men's
• b o d e s . Sm..
Med. « 1 9 * .
Sheeplined Mins
#G824-Water.rep«llent Brown Ae.
qualac finished ^ outsMe? 'fiemi'lne
Shearllni lining and cuffs. RhKl., Lte.
2.99
SWEATSHIRTS
Closely ImH «l hMwy
tuallty yarns. Pl««csd
hisid*. lib.knM neonHue, cuffs A bottom.
Wklte or Silver Crey.
iNiall. MatfHiin A U r | « .
Fleshoul Service
GOLF SHOES
#SH100-Top quality, tamihit Leather uppers.
Double-thick genuine leather soles, oil-treated
ta resist water. Storm Welt plus Goodyear
welt construction. Full quarter lined. Removable metal spikes. Brown. Boxed.
PUID FUNNa SHIRT
Perfect for Work, Sports or
leisure wear! Made of higfi
quality, heavy cotton Flannel,
Assorted colorful plaids. Sanforized. Max. shrinkage |%.
Sm., Med., Lge.
95
ARCTICS
MEN'S S T O R M
RUBBER
first (mallly, pure new Block
all Rubber construction. Vule a n l ' e d • • a m s . Non-skid
•pies. Completely waterproof
throughout. M m s 7 to 12.
M f h quality Black
n M a r . Non-skid
ttottoms. Perfect
protectloii from
Min, slush, snow.
i»rsey knit lined,
tlzes 6 to 12 Incl.
Half sizes.
COMBAT BOOTS
Made ol natural color l e a t h e r
with smooth side In and rough
out Leather iunersoles.
loDgHwecning r u b b e r
outer•cdea A h e e U . 5 " Leather top
ooUai.
7 lo I I tad. jiaM
aUe
l
Uses
99
$9.95
Value
MOLESKIN
RAINCOAlk,
with Pocket Pouch
1D0% Waterproof Virgin
Vinyl Plastic won't crack
or peel. Stain resistant,
in handsome Gun Metal
shade.
» • » - For on outdoor men!
100% Wool lined Ihroughoof.
with coHon llnlns over wool
Mninfl lit tiMvet A upper bpck.
Woter.repellertt O.D. Poplin In
double breoittd style. 2 Big
flop pocket*. Adi. sleeve fobs,
Sm., Med. A lge.
Value
$16.95
SHEEPLINED
BOOTS
_
Reg. $19.95. Warm as toast, can be worn with or without
ahoes. Brown leather water-repellent uppers. Black rubber
lowers. Zipper closures. Sheeplined throughout. Small,
Medium, Urge.
. ^
«
I4e95
4BUCKLE
m
M^^SHEEPLINEO
Water-repellent C o l f e e B r o w n Mole*
skin shell. Sheepskin lined body.
Mouton d y e d - l a m b fur collar. M
to 48.
Mackinaw
Built Nke a Battlashlp! Cemiine
reversed leather uppers, smooth,
side In for comfort. Rival reinforced, stitched A nailed soles,
^eels. Genuine Leather midsoles
leather Innersolas. Slias e
M.
Crey & Ktioki skodea,
Heovy rib-knlt conitruction.
lOV^Io JS. A b u y ! q q
BOWLING
Cenulne leather uppers,
reinforced lined heels.
Standard bowling soles
with rubber heels for
perfect form. Men's.
Black sizes 6 to 12.
ladies' Red. Smoke in
4 to 9. Full sites onlyl
Rrmy Surplus
WOOL LINED
WORK SHOE
Make
VEST
100% All Woolen
Sleeveless, vast-style
sweater with snu| fit.
Itng waist, button.down
•ront. etc. Sm., Med..
VALUE
$3.95
Men's FLANNEL
PAJAMAS
Mad« oi wcnrm. luxurious
Cotton F l a n n e l fobric.
Handaom* ossorted
striped pottenw. Full cut
for oomioit S i m s K B;
C.D.
^
^p
BROADCLOTHS
Fins quality Bioaddoth Pajamos. SanioriMd, Max shrinkage
1%. Color fast & long wearing.
Good looking assorted stripes &
patterns. Sixes A. B. C. D.
29S
LIST
$9.95
AEMPLOYEES
CUT
Address your Orders tOt BOX #901
TMf NRST PA6E Of THIS SECTION FOIt M« MCE PREMIUM OFFER WITH EACH Sl« PWtCHASE
i. mmnm m
€
Chril Service Empleyees
Pagr fderca
^.^BOTTlBSof
ti::;.
•u,
fOO%
GENUINE LEATHER
Woof,teatfierSo/e<t
MOCGJISINS
SLIPPER SOX
All Wool Tops in It«n4«
Uattwr Sol«« a SMt
Vatae
$2.95
W«(H. SmM. M«di«a
« Urge.
Q A
9 9
Valud
$2.9S
Ear Flap
SHEEPSKIN SHOES
^
q J t t ' t t w ? ' bcKk .
Zippw Ifooll
Chote of colorful otsortM ploid*.
SmatC Modium 4
Gabardine. Fisecy' lined
toip andtabsiitffor greater
warmtli. Qrofraia bow.
$1.95 Value
largtk
y/i
71
CORDUROY
SPORTS
Quality
ilavyJai,Brown.Red.Ro|il|
#1
Valu«
$12.9S
GABARDINE
' ^ I G A P
JAC SHIRT
•eg. $14.95. Genuine leather
uppers. Shearling lined. Air>
f o a m Cushion innersole*.
IfaBd M«m lUtcn
L«ath*r. Rubber.
vem-tUA Mthoiwdia
• oU* « h«*U.
Uather laoe. S a .
^
made.
CAP
Converiible
eat^
llapt lined with Brown Alpaca. Un*
breakable Tisor. Soft, fleecy Itoed
crows. Tea ot Navy shades. Head
6H to 7H.
irST
$2.9S
MEN'S DRESS SOX
Sports 'a Work
PARA
Pine. w*ar-reshta«t pin-wol*
corduroy fabric. Hondaoin*.
assorted shades. Just th«
thing lor cold dotyfe ohsodL
Foe school, work. lelsur* or
sports wear. S».. Med> 19*.
3Pn.$L00
CORDUROY
GAP
Colorful Brown « White. Black 4
J ^ t e Plaid <01 Wool fabxte.
Warm, fleecy linlna in top onA
iid>a4. s u o p ' t o * .
Mods sf Mka^Mevr. AUmM
Cordifrn M)ti€, Bpptt iy f r ^ l l 6 5
pocksf^^Mlw ^forU^nSSmd bsft.
WM Ii aiMM .
Mitnf. N«e41>
BLANKET
Smaten^f
100% Virgin Ky!<a. VNedc. fancy Cable knit.
lUb^mit waist & cuif*.
Blue or Tan shade. Me>
dium & Large only.
^ 4 Sm^ C^Ufut
Made hf m iiuii i Ameviowi
Woolea Ce. Handsome
f ^ m m Ctaey, Morooa
& Dfc. Ossaa adiades. W ^
ped seams tor lona wecsr
and te nreveat iarlnq.
SheeplinedCAP
$ 9 ^
Watef>repelleat Brows t s i d u r t w — ,
fully Chamolt leather lined throushOHt
IR C O R P S ' Balloon floth Covered
SLEEPIJIG BAG
Thousands sold foe SHAIt
each . . . Icond New*
Teriifid Fkuae-zeststant
doth ooNs. abuodosHy
fiUed wWi 100% Prteie
Quality Ko(pok. Wrwss.
, double-ftttfi. heorvT-dHly
' rustpessdSppM.JUIached
CanoMj^^jHsd as Cooy
S w f ^ i
ARGTI€
M k v t Wtm, Mozooo
G c m b «» choose
Front
SWEATER
Value $8.95
Sm., Med.. US. Vaiu*
HEAVY
SHAKER
KNIT
Button
12.05
M L WOOLEN
CABLE-KNIT
Vcdue
Top quolilr leather. Ooubl*.
tfaide leolh«f rnktsolet. Noe*
marking rubber t^^eole* ft
heela. Cooplets with row*
hide lacee. ZIPPEB «ldo
closure^
^ ^
ValM
100% NYLON
Value
$4.95
1.49
WmI Plaid
CORDUROYi
PANTS
Convertible Mrflap*
with tie-tapes. Hard
visor. Soli-resistant
asst'd stiades. SUoa
6 % to 7Vt.
[Boots
lOOi; Wool Gloves
stroN^ seiss tm
eiUe dersMMty.
H«s«$M«e Tm *
Naiqr HKw.
iTROOPi
* 13%.
feoa.
Jumbo, extra heovv
S h a k e r Koil ol 1*0%
Wool
Waxm. smail
looJdoa ft IsBB wearing.
SassgHiiiiiM <
111 l^iwdriHflygned
wilk a i K i M d ieath>
1 0 0 %
W o o l
IMI el ttM qoaiitr J M »
Vifglstitorsted W e i C s i w e - ,
leas, wrst stylt vmttm w
Wsi#M • A a
h i i s i H n assoftsi a ^ i k
Snsg Wtint walal. BuUa**
40m
VM^UiL
i
LCHURCH ST*
4
STAe, N E W
YOKK
N.
y.
SIE THE FlltST PAGI OK THIS SICTION FOR BIG FREE PREMIUM OFFER WITH EACH $10 PURCHASE
M ^ x M r
PAIKE
ClftD
TWELV*
SBKTICt
LBADEl
S,
1,
Civil Service Eiiiiitoyees # # #,
CtTtD
lfS2
SKITICB
SAVE on tiiese IMeriy Ciiristmas
Do Ytrni^ S
IMPORTED BRITISH
Sewing Machine
WALKING
Works bY hond 4 con oduoUy eett
)ust like a leal machine. Sturdy netcd
eenstnictioa. Educational and useftil
toy that teoches fvadamentale el s e w
iKf le diUdren.
HIKE BAG UST$I.95
O.D. Canvas. Heavy
. showlder stroo. Snap,
ciMwrei. Add 20% |
M Tox.
Space Man
List
$4.00
Deluxe
P U P
ROULEHE SET
No. 3d - Real ROUL E T T E wheel with
100-% " plastic]
chips, in assorted <
colors. Large layout. In handsome
p r e s e n t a t i o n box.
Replica of regulation casino roulette
wtteel. Sturdy, black plastic bowl with
silver plated spinner. Size
Com|)l«te with ball, large layout A bistruc-
20
T E N T
ktovy. ^q*®?!
canvas.
Rroof«d
oldt 2 p*opl«.
Cempltl*
with
.•p..,
9
m
m
Mechanteally walking
s p a c e m a n , springwound motor that walks
the man & moves his
arms up & down. SW
Tall lo top of Helmet
5
V TC*P
JjXOi
$10.95
UST
$7.95
m a g i c / E-r, T! ; .j
SET FOR
EVERYONE
.T;
UST
MAGIC
SET!
#917-Contains 12 tricks
plus 8 cardboard cut-out
tricks & puzzles. Some of
the contents are: Three
Balls; Red Ashes; Gravity;
Ring on String; Laundry
Ticket; Mystery Tags; etc.
Si2» 12V4" X 8V4" «
#924—A Magic Set
suitable for young & old
elike. No skill required
to perform the 18
fascinating tricks.
Some of them are:
Vis-Escape; Mys*
- tery Cups; Magic
Pins: Horse & Rider. etc. Box nW X
$IJ30
List $1.98
U S T $1.00
MagnusJr. Accordiaa
A i^eetewlw lellef Md <m» ecknowledsed bofgoi*.
de«i«iMd. Yevnflster* ploy reel Iwnei over t t eciav. —>4 • k«H.
e hey*. U reed*. pWk with pyroxolin^foted beUvw*. Oe^d:
bellow* epe« le r . te««d, iMiri^ctioM.
U S T $2.00
MAGIC
IJST$3J8
luomrs
S u p e r
A c c e n U a n
I M i h * e fce«Helll*e ley w w ^ e* « * w H w * wtor. A ewl
MAONUS MMeveMiM. Iis*lll.e>
tm «Wi pleslli mm
»eeUd UMtm*. Upmk H m ead y«l» MAOWW
»v. to UtteM. M reed*. Otm4> dr^K'sMr M e w * eeee »
SPACE
PORT
SET #916.A
Oeotcdna 20 Tricks. S o m e
•I thom ota: C\U & RE-
B
Skyio
Plane
FLIES AS HIGH AS THE CLOUDS
lOH" * Wi".
\
U S T $1.00
LITTLE TEACHER
#926 — Wonderful for small fries. An
edxuxtti<Hial toy containing 18 sepcnrating
t t o o s helping to acquaint them with
•cho(d. Complete with Blackboard, school
d o c k , repoirt cards, alphabet chart, chalk.
List $ 1 ^
MAGNUS
List $3.00
Plys like a Plane, sounds like
a Plane. Takes off at the slightest breeze & reach altitudes a s
high a s 3,000 ft. Wing Spread
18". Body Length 7 Mi". Weight
Vi Ox. Non-tarnish s i l v e r
coated. Appeals to young and
old alike.
ELECTRIC OR^
complete
with Rod
&Reel
COLOR
BOOK
$2.95
YOU
NEED TO A^KE 2 COMPIETE
PAINTINGS!
• On* 12x16 ARTISTS CANVAS
• One 8x12 ARTISTS CANVAS^
with preplanned picture.
•
•
LIST
$1.00
BOOK
PREMIXED OIL COLORS
TWO ARTISTS »RUSH1S
FAINT TRAY
nothing elte »© bvy!
P a g e s a r e 14 Ply Board s p e c i a l l y trsotod
w i t h Capitol's e x c l u s i v e LIFE GLOSS.
Colors g o on smoothly a n d w i p e off
• a s U y . S p e l l i n g b y a s s o c i a t i o n b«<cx>n>es
a w o n d e r f u l g o m e . Big letters, pictures
* w o r d s m a k e tor e a s y u&deistandiae.
1
Bold Pkwtic body. «nrm«.
toge 4 head. Steel mechop
•ism inside of doll can be
wound to make U walk by
MseU. Id" Tall. Moving eyes,
Saran wig; dressed in wash'
cd>le. lace-trimmed dress 4
bonnet. Complete with shoee
4 stockings.
LIST
Ust $25.00
^plonees
tfaMfeoek I. •faap.d la th. foni
tt" mofa < .kaMd Sjl a •»«>•• Contain. MoOm Goo..
£k. o ^ ^ ^ f t u i " l ™ "in'
!»» ooloi llli»
Tidee
Maid Thread Box
FOR MOTHER TOO!
A handy aid to the busy homemaker. Holds 14 spools oif thread
neatly, no more tcmgled thread
Of messy drawers. Qeax plastic
case makes color of each spool
clearly i^isible.
o9
Slso^rmatch??;. ^
docks on back ootm
with aU tl^M* o« ins i d e p a g e s . All
mounted est kewry
board.
$2.00
$12.00
r A « E
Off T H U
UCTKWi
EOft I M
i
f « U
f i e t w e . 4 «harmii»«
mYING
CHURCH ST. STA., NEW YORK z,
r t U M M i
M P H I
IWIH
.
EACH
1
Sit
1
—
PUiCHASE
Kate
Biiyf^^
OHNce
Ltot $1.(KI
Address your Orders to* wm #9oi
SEE THE m S T
^
Cut
Your
LIST
EMPLOYEES CUT
LIST $1.00
2"
LIST
$3.49
or
SPELLING
tenuine Oil Painting
LIST
Clock
G
PAINT-A
PICTURE
This orgcm will thrill childtea 4 aduHs
«iike. OperalM electricaUy oa 110-116 V.
A.C. caneot} pcoducee lich. saetained
twass (rfd-time favoritee, pqpulor and
rriigious music. Sturdily built in tt»e trc*"
dMonal Magnus styling. Finished ia bfi^ht
4 beautiful shades.
8hirdy 4 brightly painted metal struc*
^ tore. Complete with miniature Spacemen
flguree. rockets, tivck 4 radar tunet.
I Iflsaginatiire toy eepedoUy designed for
the yovager set
JotiGtiagy
PRE-PLANNED
Brighl-ookMred T r a v e l B o g
kdns f o u r t o p M o g n u s " j u n i o r "
m u s i o a l l o y s . 1 A c c o r a k m , I Keymonkxi. 1 Horn Honnonica & 1
KannoDica. ComplMs with bMiitfful t r o r e l b o g
DOLL
Paddle
a g l c Pins; Gravity;
o g i c Mirror; Miracle
Coin Trick, ^tc. C o m e s
fe Bo* Size
X
mdw Kiddie Kit
WANDA
WALKING
Ttrick; Ring oa Suing ;
EVERYTHING
Ingenious Plastic
doll which actually
steps out and walks,
iwt a wind-up toy, non.
SMChanical, nothing to
wear o u t . . . will last
lifetime. 6W Tall.
$1.0)
t4". Sesid. )**tfi««tieiH.
Rop«;
WALKING
WINNIE
Senior
Magic
#M0—A M «l Twmly
p)at*d iMOTr wlr« puailM which wfll laacinctt*
diOdxMi of practtoally «dl
mgm. Utbo BOIL Aetaral
mm nw s MH* a 144".
•tor«d
•iiii:
88c IIST
tl^W
PUZZLE
SET
Ust
BASKET
BALL
List $2.25
BIG PLAY BOX
lor D a y s cmd D a y s oi F u n I
Contains Magic Drawing Board that ecm
be used like a slate. Draw with colored
crayons, whisk ofi with cloth. Includes
the following books: 20 Games & Tricks:
Things to Make; Riddles & Quleses; Pen*
cU Ptvslee; Coloring Books. 8 Big sten*
cUs 4 em euts crayons 4 wipe^ff eloth.
r«ll eolor gUt box.
A l l RUBBER
Real Roulette
Page TbIriM
TOYS for Girls & Boys from 6 to 6 0
/
m
LKADEl
OT A JSL J i
«<*«n»a f o r Sole wmler t h e E.C.R.B.P. t e a l
• f A p p r o v o l m u s t m e e t r i g i d s t a n d a r d s o f quoiity«
l o n g - w e a r , h o n e s t valutf a n d m u s t b e o f f e r e d a t a l o w e r
p r i c e t h a n a n y c o m p a r a t i v e m e r c h a n d i s e . T h e ECRBP
Seal a l s o g u a r a n t e e s your m o n e y will b e promptly
r e f u n d e d , if y o u a r e n o r c o m p l e t e l y t a t i s f i e d !
MONEY BACK ( B U d r Q l l t t t Of SATISFAQION
PLAN
CIVIC
Pi^^miftiMi
s n v i c i
'DARIA'
'SUNBURST
17'J*w«l DftLtix*. expan-
Sh«11 lov* th« swMt. Simpl« design of th*
h* iquar*
cut COM. 17>J*w«l Elgin
D»-Lux«.
List tS9.5Q 3 9 . 7 7
Thw**! on wquitlto hiaH
at cadi Mid to oaptur*
bon, plus a lorotr Mpo*•ion bracwiot.
TMi pntir foo* li Mi ^
figtow idw'tt lov* I* law
Qt • « • end
to
towt
at oU H n i
List S55.00 3 2 . 4 4
List $47.S0 3 4 . 7 7
'SWEET BRIAR'
Kot* how th* dainty cos*
Bwirls to romantic snds.
sion bracftlet.
'Martian CALENDAR'
'HEATHER'
ma
'Citation COPLEY*
10 X. Rolled Gold Plotsd
cose. 17 Jewels. Expansion
bracelet. Tells Day< Time i
17 Jewels. 14 K APP. Dial.
Expansion-band. 10 K. Gold
filled case. Plastic case.
list $82.50 5 7 . 8 8
list $92.50
Dote.
ma
17 JEWELS
Water • prolected« Incabloe move*
ment. Anti-magnetic. Luminous dial
& hands. Handsome chrome-ploted
case & breok-resistant crystal. Ad}«
leatherette wrist band. GentUne
Swiss 17 Jewel movement.
List $19.95
1 4 . 7 7
54.88
ml
INGERSOLL
1 JEWEL
Pocket
Watch
Modern s t y l e d .
SwinWaldk
Chrome cos*. Stoinless Steel bade. Silvered dial with Bed
sweep second band.
ShockprooL
S^J,
2 . 2 5
IT J«wels.UX.Ck>ldPlal«d
band.LAm.
^ t i idkd.
s g —XxpoMte
>la»H>
noc
Ust $71 JO 4 8 . 3 4
Assfd luminous dtcds.
Unbc«odcablo cxystcd.
Anti-magnetle lor tons
la accuracy. S b o »
prool Leather strapa.
^
IB Stu».
.
Mr dMAr Ms
tiaeavs
•too fad
fadttott OTw iM lao»
U^MMl
tu $S7JI 39J7 SS
tfct $59J8 39J7 TAX
'CAMPAIGNER'
l<00fc llOW IBmft
ti^
pi* airough th« oom ob^
•zpoBsloa
>—4.
n
g
te
Qncditrt
t]ill47i8 3 4 J 7
SS
'CItatiM DmAH*
'Citation CHRISTOPHCr
SsH-wintUag. shook absod^
ing. Expansion band.
Ridisd Crratal. Gk>ld platsd
cos*. Randsom* cas«l
list $87.50 4 9 . 8 8
'ADRIENNP
'HARLANir
(id m7s 2 7 ^ SS
ml
Him
LKADIM
5 . 4 4
i^ddress your Orders
IT jMrsls.14 K.Oold noted
foe*.
beoid.MtoM
E O o l dffsjiasloa
fi««M dM.
$92J0 5 4 ^
Ka
WImt^C
feqwmsioa
5]«Mri«
M $59JO 3 M 4
wx
K
bond. WRh JMreUed
lenel Pin. P«n* A Mirroc. la B I ^ and Gold Polka Dot
Usi $69.50 4 B M
^ADONIS' 'STAMUUtlK MASTERCASr 'STAMDi
Coabinatioa
Engine-turaod.
Chrome out*e
shell. Baaiaa*
turned ligatos.
Perfeot tor Om
^>0ttSBMBi
• a t U r rinlsK.
U ^
iMta^
UBT t 7 J »
Cluroaie. Butlot
Polished. Bngia*.
turaed. Holds
•laotollos M
Chrome outer
sholl. i M l n e f^^^^rtootMll turned, rlam*
day gttt tlagu* protected Iroai
lor e a g r a v i a t wind. A sport*sum's dreamt
L&t l U m
#9oi c h u r c h st* s t a . , n e w y o r k
SEE THE FIRST PAGE OF THIS SECTIOM FOR BIG FREE PREMIUM OFFEt WITH EACM
HI
Otroae^ Butles
PoUilMd. PUnna
protection. Aa>
other SportasMBi's ienrerite.
. m* «« m
1,
M M
C I T I C
B I M T I C B
L B A D E M
JM otfcw oiMMi t m De««mbf)r t l , I M t m* while merehMdlee iMto. AH yrieee M d e r O. F. t . ••Miiife.
G I T I C
Pmg9 S b r t M
i t l T I G B
%
Twsday,
L B A B i m
M
Efn|}lo()e65{^Mtf(dt£
gayf/^^
•""iiWIRI.l^
I HewRBMINGTOH
TRU
HEAT
IRON
CONTOUR SHAVER
FOMW GC
UdT*. •as7-«04«ekl dtod wHk
Brown numwtris
bm^
SuOOttl I^^OCy plCHttO OOM>
Im* hmSL^vS^i
Width, m - i
tW"'
A B*w bMag»<pric»d <darai
Automatic POPUPTOASTER
FlnUbad ia ChrooM pkrt*. T«»
oUl* Plcnrttc hcmdlM^-baM.
o m l r aMadMd oovd, era tomortle tliMT. Pop-up
lis voH*. AC or DQ.
18»
OMd. Torniah pcoof coal
boB sol* plol*. l i s voHa,
AC only. 1100 watts.
Racine m^ CUPPER
TRAVEL IRON KNIFE SHARPENER
CORY electric
JUICE
Made by GE. Large olumiBum s o l e p l a t e with 19
squore4nch ironing surface.
Okd control . . . lightweiglit
. . . fast heattaig. AC or DC
- O -
MAT
Perfsct for )uidnq cdl dt>
rus fmils. StrainM and
drain cup asaui* sven
flow of juic*. Full eu'
closed Aluminum pitcher.
White, Red and Yellow.
U»
General
Mills
Lightweight, •xtra long
byOSTER
EfBcient, economicaL
Lightweight, sturdUy
built electric hafar cdip*
per. Shock-proof bake*
lite housing. Save
money on h ^ cutsi
Sharpens and cannot harm
OBT kniie; hollow ground,
stainless steel, etc. Cord stores
iB housing. AC only.
FAMOUS EEMCO
^Miniature Alarm
Miniature rise 40-IIow
alarm. Single key winds
both time ft aicaa.Plaaa
dioL IdMd lov your bed.
loeou
TABLE RANGE
QTCHEN CLOCK
Large, eliotterprool
crpicd. Eaiced silvereolov B«»ereda# ea>r*
to-read. Red sweep
•eoond hand. Ecnr to
keep clean. Red.
Qraeo. Blue or Yellow.
Height r'.Wldth7Mt''.
DepA tH"'
Porcelain & Michrome wire elements for e r s e
heat. Low cost operation. Two eosily op«^
ated toggle switdxes. Gives instant heat to botli
elements.
lo clean top surface. IIS TotHw
1650 watt. AC or DC
88
SUN
TABLE MOI»EL
STEAM IRON
Removable cutting wheel for
easy cleonina. Gleaming
chiomium handle. Red, Yellow or White baked enomel
cases with matching knobs,
long, ind. woll bracket.
Modem design ttiioughovt.
Light-asKx-feathev. only 4Vt
lbs. Trouble free operatkm.
Hammered aluminum Unlsh.
polished
plate, confor*
table hondle. A sensattoncd
value!
A Combined Selectiv* Ultio.
Vlol*t cmd Heot Therapy
Lamp. Compact table moM
tans faster than July sunshine.
Genuine high • intensity mer*
cury aic provides thetcqpeutle
beat lays. Streamlined metal
with electro-polished aluminum reflector. S" Wide. MT
Long « 4" H i ^ AC ov DC
110-120 vohs.
88
EMPLOYEES CUT RATE BUYING PLAN m
Mdre$8 your Orders to^ »ox # 9 0 1
H E
THE m $ T
PA#E
OP T I M
SECTION
c h u r c h
P O R E l O FREE P R E M n H f O M R
•Ii
:!, K'V-y
kf' W J'
WlfM
«f. b i a . ,
M C N
lU-H-OtA -J. <k
n e w
m
y o k k
s, n .
y.
f TiiesZUiyt D e e e i H B w 1 ,
W52
G I T I C
S E R T I C E
P i ^
L E A D E R
Serenteca
STATE EXAMS THAT OPEN DEC. 8
nurse, plus four years' experience real property In the State; and
tn imblic health or school nurs- (2) either (a) five more years'
ing, or (b) two 3fears of graduate experience, or (b) two years' exftudy in school of social work, ] E > e r I e n c e as an attorney engaged
two yestrs' experience In :in proceedings Involving title to
medical social ease work, or (o) real property, exclusive of landlord
equivalent combination of (a) and and tenant or negligence cases, or
(b). Fee $3. (Friday, January 9). (c) equivalent. Candidates must be
admitted to the State Bar. Fee
•MO. HEALTH PUBLICATIONS i;5. (Friday, January 9).
EDITOR, $6,088 to $7,421. One
6250.
SENIOR
PHYSICAL
vacancy at Albany in the Department of Health. Requirements! CHEMIST, $4,964 to $6,088. One
(1) bachelor's degree; and (2) vacancy at the Saratoga Springs
LATHAM, Dec. 1—The first Charles J. Hall and Treasurer
three years' experience in pro- Authority in the Department of dinner-dance sponsored jointly by Mary I. Joy of Dept. of Public
Conservation.
Requirements:
(1)
fessional writing Including edithe Civil Service Employees Asso- Works Chapter; and to President
torial experience with one year In bachelor's degree with specializa- ciation chapters of the State De- Estelle J. Rogers, Vice President
tion
In
chemistry;
and
(2)
three
the field of public health or medipartment of Public Works and De- Alfonso Bivona, Jr., Secretary
in physical partment of Law was held Wednes- Erma L, Hemmett and Treasurer
cal science; and (3) either (a) years' experience
STATE
chemistry laboratory work in- day, November 19, at the Circle Irving L. Schonbrun of Etept. of
master's
degree
In
journalism,
Open-Competitive
English, or public health, plus one cluding experience in spectograLaw Chapter; also to the Social
6209. ASSISTANT ADMINIS- more year's experience, or (b) two phic and chemical work involving Inn, Latham. N. Y.
Committee of D.P.W. Chapter,
TRATIVE FINANCE OFFICER, more years' experience, or (c) Independent research in spectroThis unique affair afforded an consisting of Katherine Lawlor,
f^6,088 to $7,421. One vacancy at equivalent combination of (a) and chemical analysis and radiation; opportunity to the personnel of Ward Wells. George Millhouse,
the Albany oflBce In the Depart- (b). Open to all qualified U. 8. and (3) either (a) two more years' two separate departments of the Charles Sholtes, Virginia Wessell,
ment of Education. Requirements: citizens. Fee $5. (Friday, Jan- experience, or (b) master's degree State to get better acquainted with George
Ella Dilge, John
;(1) four years of specialized ac- uary 9).
in physical chemistry of biochem- each other and add considerably Hayden, Witbeck.
Lenore Traver, Floyd
counting or auditing experience;
istry, or (c) equivalent. Fee $4. to their circle of friends. It was a Barnes and
John Cox; and to the
6241.
PUBLIC
RELATIONS (Friday, January 9).
and (2) two years' experience In
departure from the customary a f - Social Committee of the Law Dept.
the supervision of an accounting AIDE, $3,571 to $4,372. One va6251. SANITARY CHEMIST, fairs of single departments. As an Chapter, consisting of
Frank
or auditing staff; and (S) either cancy at Babylon In the Conserinnovation, it proved a huge suc(a) bachelor's degree with 24 vation Department. Requirements: $4,053 to $4,889. One vacancy at cess and an event that may be Nichols, chairman, Frances MacCredit hours In accounting, or (b) (1) high school graduation or Albany In the Division of Labora- emulated by other civil service key. Rosemary Carhart, Esther
bachelor's degree plus one more equivalency diploma; and (2) one tories and Research, Department units. Over 200 attended. A sump- Nast. Ann Jones, Louis W, Rosenj
(1)
All D. Good, Eleanor McGee,
year's experience In (1) or (2), or year of public relations experience of Health. Requirements:
(c) three more years' experience, involving extensive contact with bachelor's degree in chemistry or tuous meal was followed by danc- Martin Barry, Vito Titone, Richard
or (d) equivalent combination of the public; and (3) either (a) sanitary science; and (2) either ing till long past midnight to the Shepp and Paul Colyer.
Special mention should also be
(3) (a), (b) or (c). P«e $5. (Fri- four more years' experience, or (a) one year of laboratory work tune of a five-piece orchestra led
(b) bachelor's degree, or' (c) in sanitary science
Including Iflr Ed Green.
made of Mr. Louis W. Rosen and
day, January 9).
equivalent combination of (a) and chemical and biological examinaPerfect Teamwork
Mr. Harry Ginsberg of the Law
6239. BLINDNESS PREVEN- (b). Fee $3. (Friday, January 9). tion of water, sewage and IndusThe teamwork between the of- Department for their contribution
TION CONSULTANT, $4^64 to
trial waste, or (b) master's degree ficials and committees of both in the preparation of posters and
S243. IDENTIFICATION OF- In sanitary chemistry, or (c)
f5,601. One vacancy In NYC In
the Department of Social Welfare. FICER, $2,771 to $3,571. Vacan- equivalent. Fee $3. (Friday, Jan- chapters was evident in the splen- other literature that proved most
did results. Credit goes to: Presi- attractive as a selling medium. All
Requirements: either (a) State cies: one each at Matteawan, Sing uary 9).
dent Russell E. Taylor, Vice Presi- found there was no let down
license to practice as a registered Sing, and Woodbourne in the De6252. HISTOLOGY TECHNI- dent E. Arden Hamilton. Secretary in the service that followed.
partment of Correction. Requirements: (1) one year's experience CIAN, $2,771 to $3,571, Three vaState Attorney
In photography and fingerprint- cancies in NYC in the Department
ing; and (2) either (a) high school of Mental Hygiene. Requirements:
Probation Time
graduation, or (b) three years of either (a) two years' experience
ALBANY, Dec. 1 ~ The State OflBce or business experience, or in the preparation of tissue speciCivil Service Commission will In- (c) equivalent combination of mens for microscopic examination
itiate a .study to determine wheth- (a) and (b). Fee $2. (Friday, and high school graduation, or
er the probationary period of at- January 9).
(b) course in histology plus one
torneys should be extended to six
year's experience in histologic
6244.
SENIOR
CLERK
(MAINmonths. The study will cover at- TENANCE), $2,771 to $3,571. Sev- work in a laboratory of general
torneys in all State departments eral vacancies In Albany, Utlca histology or neuropathology, or
Tlie program was voted at a Com- Rochester and Watertown In the (c) equivalent. Fee $2. (Friday,
mission meeting recently, anfl district office of the Department January 9).
stemmed from a request of the of Public Works. Requirements:
•145. CYTOLOGIST, $4,053 to
State Division of Emplosrment for (1) one year's experience in keepOne vacancy in Buffalo in
an extension of the probationary ing time records, stock records and $4,889.
the Department of Health. Reperiod to six months.
clerical reports In a construction quirements: (1) bachelor's decompany or engineering office; gree with specialization in biologiLKOAL NOTICE
and (2) either (a) high school cal sciences; and (2) either (a)
BOOPING. MASONRY AND SANITARY graduation,
or (b) two more one year's experience in biologiTHC MAJESTIC
WORK
years' experience, or (c) equiva- cal laboratory work with emphasis
ASSORTMENT
STATE NAVAL, MILITIA ARMORY
lent
combination
of
(a)
and
(b)
NEW ROCHT;U,E, N. Y.
on histology and cytology, or (b)
NOTICK TO BIDI>KR8
Fee $2. (Friday, January 9.)
21 colorful
one year of graduate training in
Sf.ilwl proposals covcritiff Construetion
Christmas Cords
6245. OFFICE MACHINE (MP laboratory work in (a), or (c)
Worlt for Roofin? »nd Masonry Rohabili
with Friendly Sentimeiil*
(TABULATING-IBM) equivalent. Open to all qualified
tiition in aooortlance with Specifioation ERATOR
No. 17504 and aeoonipanyinfr drawiii8:B $2,180 to $2,984. Several vacancies U. 8. citizens. Fee $3. (Friday,
A Special SelecHeK
also spparato spaled proposals covpringr at Albany and NYC in State de- January 9).
Baiiitfiry Work for Rehabilitation of Water
Supplv in acporilanoe with Specifioation partments. Requirements: either
•255. SENIOR PSYCHIATRIST,
48c
Ko. 17047 and aeoompanyingr drawiner
(a) three months' experience in $6,801 to $8,231. Vacancies: about
Strito N.wal Militia Armory. 270 Main St
the operation of IBM sorters, ac- 100 at various institutions in the
Nrw Rochpllo, N. Y., will l>e receivofi by
machines, and other Department of Mental Hygiene;
Hi tiry A. Cohen, Director, Bureau of Con counting
tractq and Acoounts. IH^partmpnt of P u b types of tabulating equipment, or one each at Dannemora and at
lie Works, 14th Floor, The Governor
(b) completion of course In the Matteawan State Hospital in the
E . Smith State Oflloo Building-. Albany operation of the above machines.
Department of Correction. ReN. Y., on behalf of the Executive Depart
nient, Division of Military and Naval Af Fee $1. (Friday, January 9).
quirements: f l ) medical school
lairs, until 2:00 o'clock P.M.. Eastern
6246. TITLE EXAMINER, $6, graduation plus State license to
Standard Time, on Thursday. December Ifi 088 to $7,421. Ten vacancies at practice medicine; and (2) either
when they will be ifnbliely opened
Albany in the Department of Law. (a) one year or nine months'
21 Card Selected Assortment 78c
•lul read.
accelerated Internship plus two
Each proposal must be made npon ttie Requirements: (1) two years' ex
f o r m and submitted in the envelope pro perience in a law or real estate years of psychiatry experience in
Tided therefor and eh.tn be a<>oompanicd office or in a title company In a hospital, or (b) equivalent. Fee
by a c»^rtificd check made payable to the
$5, Open to non-citizens and all
Bt.ito of New York, roniniissioner of Tax- work involving search, examina
ation .and Finance, of 5 % of the amount tlon, proof or closing of titles to U. S. citizens. (Friday, January 9). P r M t n t i n g I t i * Top Flight
The foHowliic Male w a n i s will
• p e n Ml Monday, Deeember t. No
Attempt to apply riioold IM aiade
before then. The U R A D U pubIWies the mfaiimimi reqnireinenta
tm advance m a lerylee to lis
teaders. Pay at start and after
lire annnal Inerements !• fiven.
Vhe last date to apply la at the
pnd of each notice. Where no
written test Is riven, the last date
to apply Is the date on which the
^ i t t e n tests wUl be held for the
ather exams, February 14. (See
Where to Apply. Page 21).
Public Works, Law Dept.
Chapters in Joint Dinner
And Dance Have Fine Time
I
of the bid as a sruar.aiity t h a t the bidder
will enter into the contract if U be award®<1 to him. The specification number must
be written on the front of the envelope.
The hi,ink epaees in the proposal must be
filled in. and no eh.angre shall be made tn
t h e Dhrascolog-y of the proposal. Proposals
th.vt carry any omissions, eraeuree. alterations or additions may be rejected an Informal. Successful bidders will be rcfluired
to arivo a bond conditioned for the f a i t h f u l
performance of the contract and a separate
tonml for the p.iynicnt of laborers and materialmen. each bond in the sum of 100%
• f the amount of the contract. Conjurations aubniittinsr proposals shall be authorUwl to do business in the State of New
T o r k . Drawinge and siieciflcationa may be
•xaniined free of ehar*e at the tollowinr
•fflces:
State Ar<^lt«ct, » r o Broadway, Kew
Tork City.
State Architect, f ^ e d o r . A.
Smith
•tAto Onioo Bldr., Albany, K. Y.
District Ifnirineer. 10© 9. Omeeee 9i.,
Utica, N. Y.
District Bnidneer, M l
Water »t.,
•yracuse, N. Y.
District Bnrineer. Bar«e OmmA Twinlnal,
Bophester. N. Y.
^ Dmtrict Bnrinew, M O n r t St., Boftalo,
District Bnrineer, 80 Went Main »t., Hor
•ell, N. Y.
District Bns-intw, 444 Van Ihiaee t t .
Watcrtown. N. Y.
District Rnrineer. Pleasant Valley Boad,
Fouffhkeepsie, N. Y.
District Knirineer, 71 Frederick M
Bintrhamton. K. Y.
^ District Bnrlnew, Babylon. lK>n» Island.
State Naval MiJitia Arjwory, «70 Main
• t . . New JUM'helle, N. Y.
DrawintB and • p c i f l c a t i o n s may be obtained by calHnr at the office of the State
Architect, Tlio Governor A1fr<'<i E Smith
• t a t o Office Buildinsr, Albany, N. Y. and
•lakini? deposit for each set of $5 00 or
mailinf such deposit to the Bureau of
Vontract« and Accountij. Dcpartnicnt of
Public Works, The Governor Alfred B
t m i t h State OfHee Building. Albany. N. Y
ebedia •hall be laade payable to tbe Deartment pt Pnbtio
Works.
Proposal
t
lank 8 and «*T«)ope« wM be
fithout eharve.
fcATBD: U ^ M ^
f«nU«bed
'College Series' Deadline
Extended to Dec. IS
Sensational Values
For Your Christmas
Greeting Cards
1
Selection of ttie Christmas
Season. The new feature
D * Luxe Christmas assort*
MMit — twenty-one cords
M o t you will agree are
strikingly
beautiful,
and
roally such good solid value
Mirough the entire assort'
Meat. Including one rose
satin puflP. sooie with rich,
velvety iocking. Specially
selected verses add charm
to every eard and make
l U s acsoriiiient and volue.
ALBANY, Dec. 1—Last day for Troy, entered State service in 1948
filing applications for the New as a law assistant. A graduate of
York State Civil Service Commis- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
sion's "college series" of examina- and Albany Law School, he is now
tions for seniors and college grad- an attorney in the Department of
uates has been extended ten days Civil Service.
until December 16, Commission
John Cooper, 601 SaUsburg Park
President J. Edward Conway an- Drive, Syracuse, is another R.P.I,
nounces.
alumnus hired from the 1948 colAbout 600 State jobs wlU be lege examinations. He entered as
filled through the t ^ t s to be held a senior engineering aide and is
on January 10. Mr. Conway said now an assistant valuation engithat the tests provide "an out- neer for the Public Service Comstanding opportunity in public a f - mission.
fairs for young men and women."
Miss Marion Vedder, 1075 Park
12 Fields
Ave., Schenectady, was placed
Starting salaries for successful from the 1949 library science list,
candidates will range from $2,931 after graduating from Syracuse
to $3,731 for different kinds of University. In three years she has
jobs. The following fields are in- risen from junior librarian to sencluded in the "series" examina- ior library supervisor in the Edutions: engineering or architecture, cation Department.
biology, chemistry, library science,
Henry L. Whitcomb, 83 Groeslaw, psychology, mathematics, eco- beck Place. Delmar, was hired
nomics, statistics, accounting and from the 1948 "series" as a junior
employment interviewing. One- examiner of methods and proceyear public administration intern- dures. A graduate of Hartwick
ships, paying $3,541, are also filled College, Oneonta, he is now a
senior examiner (rf methods and
through the examinations.
Since the "college series" w m procedures in the Department of
started in 1946, more than 1,000 Taxation and Finance.
Applications and information
college graduates have been ms^
pointed to entrance-level profes- about the 1953 "college series" of
sional and technical positions. examinations may be obtained
visiting college placement offiSome have been promoted to jobs
paying as high as $6,088 per year. cers or by writing to the State
Department of Civil Service. State
Bxamples
Offiot BuUdlngi Albany, New Yofk.
lf00lM|>.
Tkkt4
Because of the tremeniioMt
popularity and design w «
have selected an assoriment of eighteen of the
most famous CURRIEA ft
IVES prints, each one deslfh
noting an early Americaa
Winter Scene. Folks have
long treasured these prints
as mementos of Americas
tradition, one reason why
they sell so rapidly during
the Christmas season.
SPECML AT
78c
Employees Cut Rate Buying Plan
• o x 901 CHURCH ST. STATION. NEW YORK 8. N. Y.
S e e P o g e 15
for Mailing Coupon
1
CITIB
W a ^ Elglit
on the Hudson
# S p o n i of oil M m
#
proetic* c a g * , driving r m g *
OA p r s m i t M . « . cowrM n « o r l ^
r VrM Instrnetion In Polk kinI B a l l i o f
D»n«liic Krery Wcakcad by Harnr A
Shirley l l o l b e r t
M C A B B R A N D ~ AetivMles
W i a a t w l a rMidence.
NEW WINDSOR 5, N.
NOTICS
CITAT10N~P S19»-19B«
T H E PF.OPLK OF T H l ! STATK O f l f » W
TURK. BY THE GRACH OF GOD P K K
A N D INDEPENDENT.
TO:
ROBERT
BARUCH,
HERTA
BARUCH-MERLANDER
and
ii*RANI!
mALPH BARI7CH. persona w h o h a v * dto•ppearod under circnmstaiicea
allonUnf
Mssonable srround to belie;v« that they
mro dpad; and the PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR OF T H E COUNTY OF NEW
TORK, Send Greeting:
>
Upon the petition of PLETER J. KOOIM A N . w h o residea at No. 8 1 North HIBi i d e Place, Ridsewood, New Jersey.
T o n are hereby cited to show caaM
feeforc thn Surrogate's Court of New Yovk
County, held at the Hall of Records in
t h e County of New York, on the 30 day
« t Docombcr, 1953. at half past ten o'clock
ta the forenoon of that day. why the
SarroKate should not inqairo into the
f a c t s and circumstances and make a do«ree defermininp that the eaid ROBERT
BARUCH died on H a y 31. 1 9 4 6 at Maathausen. Austria, HERTA BARUCH-MBRl i A N D E R , died on November 30, 1 0 4 4 la
Baatcrn
EuroiKe, and FRANZ
RALPH
BARUCH. died on May 1. 1 0 4 8 at Kb«i• 0 . Austria: w h y the Laat Will and Tteat*m e n t of ROBERT BARUCU. Decoaswt
s h o u l d not be recordod; and w h y An•Ulory Letters of AdministraUon
with
t h e will Annexed, on the Goods. Chattel*
and Credits of the said ROBERT BARUCH,
late of the Kingdom o t the Nethertanda,
i h o u l d not be issued to PIETER J. KOOI• A N , petitioner
I N TESTIMONY W H £ R £ O F , w e h w m
aauBcd the seal o t t h e Sorrogate's Coavt
mt the 8ai<l County of N e w York t o oe
fcercunto fixed.
WITNESS.
HONORABLH
OfiORaH
F B A N K E N T H A L E R , a Surrogate of oar
oaid County, at the County of New York,
t h e a o t h day of November, la the yww
0< our Lord, one thousand nine hundra*
a o d flfly-two.
PHILIP A. DONAHUE.
(Sea5)
Clerk of the Surrograte'a C o w t
S U P R E M E COURT, B R O N X C O U N T Y :
M A X SAKOW. p l a i n t i f f , a g a i n s t M A B T
« . C A H I I . L and A N N A J . D O N N E I X T ,
being: sued inilis-iUually a n d a s j o i n t tsBa n t i . Bridget L c a r y , i n d i v i d u a l l y and m
A d n u n i s t r u t r i T of t h e E s t a t e of J o h n R .
Iieary. detoused. Joesie Broweir, E . H . Da
J a m c t f e , J r . , F r a n k Mari(Mi, F r a n k Sa«lor.
" M r s . Franlc Sagrior," said n a m e being
S c t i l i o u s , t r u e n a m e u n k n o w n t o plaintUS,
p e r s o n iuleiulcd bein» t h e w i f e or widow.
If any, of F r a n k Savior, M a r i e Da^ee a a d
a l t of t h e above, if living, and It thecf or
a n y of thcni be dead, t h e n it is intended
t o s u e t h e i r h e i r s - a t - l a w . devisees, 9tmt r i b u t o c s , n e x t - o f - k i n , executorB,
wivea,
w i d o w j , lienors and creditors, and t h s i r
resDCCtive successors in i n t e r e s t , wivaa.
Widows, hoirs-at-law, n e x t - o f - k i n , devisoaa,
d U t r i b u t o f s . creditors, lienors, executora,
adniinistratoi's a n d successors in intereat,
all of w h o m a n d whofte n a m e s and whcraa b o u t s a r e u n k n o w n t o t h e plaintiff a n d
w h o a r e joined and desiffnated h e r e i n aa a
d a w as " U u k n o w n Defendants." defendants.
To the above named defenduntb:
Yo!i a r e iicrcby s u m m o n e d t o a n s w e r t k a
aompluiiit iti t h i s action, and t o s e r r a a
oopy o t y o u r a n s w e r , or if t h e c o m p l a i n t
la n o t served w i t h t h i s s u m m o n s , t o serva
a Noticc of A p p e a r a n c e on t h e plaintUTa
a t t o n t e v \kithin t w e n t y ( 2 0 ) d a y s a l t a r
t h e service o l t h i s s u m m o n s , excluslva mt
t h e d a y of service. I n case of y o u r failu r e t o ai/iK-ar or a n s w e r , judfirmeot wtti
k e t a k e n a g a i n s t y c u by d e f a u l t f o r t k a
relief d e m a n d e d in t h e c o m p l a i n t .
D a t e d : New York, May 19. 1 9 6 3 .
HARRY
HAUSKNECHT
A t t o r n e y f o r PlalntUf
OflSce and P. O. Address, i ; i 5 B r o a d w i » ,
B c w Y o r k . New York.
PlainlifT's address is 3 1 7 1 Boq:nrt Street,
B r o n x , New York and plaintiff desig^iataa
B r o n x County as t h e place of triai.
T o t h e a b o v e named defendaiit^"nie f o r e g o i n g s u m m o n s ia served n p a a
Fou by p u b l i c a t i o n p u r s u a n t to an order
•t Hon. T h o m a s J . Brady, J u s t i c e of t h e
Buprenie C o u r t of t h e S t a t e of N e w T o r k .
d a t e d N o v e m b e r 7, 1962, and Med w t t h
t h e c o m p l a i n t in t h e office of t h e Clerk mt
B r o n x County, a t 1 0 1 s t Street and G r a n d
Concourse, in t h e B o r o u g h of T h e Bronx.
City of New York.
Tliis action is broufirht t o fore<doae
aeverul t r a n s f e r s of t a x liens sold by tho
City of New York t o t h e p l a i n t i f f . T o o
a r e interested in t h e F i r s t , Second. F o u r t h ,
F i f t h . T h i r t e e n t h and F o u r t e e n t h Causee
a t Action of t h o c o m p l a i n t , which iwe f o r
t h e f o r e i l o s u r e of t h e f o l l o w i n g 11ms:
B r o n x Lieu No. 0 3 8 7 3 , in t h e s u m of
S758.()l with interest a t l ' i % per a n n u m
f r o m March 23. 1943. affecting: Sectlea
1 6 , Bio<k
Lot 3 0 ou t h e T a x M a p
af Uroux C o u n t y : Bronx Lien No. 0 3 8 7 7 ,
In t h e s u m of
w i t h interest a t
1 2 % per a n n u m f r o m M a r c h 23, 1 0 4 8 ,
a f f e c t i n g Section 15. Block 4 2 2 1 , Lot 7 on
t h e Tux M a p of B r o n x C o u n t y ; B r o n x
Lien No. TtiUTO. in t h e s u m of $ 2 4 7 . 8 0
w i t h interest a t 1 3 % per a n n u m f r o m
F e b r u a r y 15, 1040, a f f e c t i n g Section 1ft,
Block 4 3 ' n , Lot 6 3 on t h e T a x Map o*
B r o n x C o u n t y ; Bronx U e a No. 6-13D8. t a
t h e s u m of $ 1 , 0 1 0 . 5 0 w i t h intereat a t
1 8 % per aiuium f r o m M a r c h 3,<). 1»4S.
affe<'tiii[i Section 15. Block 4 2 0 8 . Lot OS
o n tl>p T a x M a p of B r o n x C o u n t y ; Bronx
U e n No. o.'ilf?^. in t h e s u m of $ 1 , 3 4 0 . 7 8
w i t h interest ;U 1 3 % per a n n u m f r o m
Koveniljcr li>, li)10, afJocting Section I S ,
B l o c k 4 7 » t . Lot 6 on t h e T»x M a p mt
B r o n x County, and Bronx Lien No. 6 6 0 7 4 ,
t h e s u m of $ 1 , 7 6 2 . 7 8 w i t h inter«rt a t
1 8 % ifcr amiimi f r o m N o v e m b e r 10, 1 » 4 0 .
•ffectijBsr SeeUoii 10. Block 4 7 ^ 4 , L o t I S
m t h e T a x Map of Bvonx County
Pated:
LBA»BB
Dispute Rages Over Riders State Eligibles NYC Per Diem
STATE
In Appropriation Bills
Croups Win
Open-€omp«titffT«
WASHUfOTON. Dm. 1
One and. fudging by early indicatkna^
of ttM 'flrat prooouoccmmls of soon ^11 be doing so on a lamer
»4U«0 Sick
Leave
Representativ* John Taber (R., scale | n a n srver before, unless tbe
"70-ACRI SCENIC PARADISI
LEGAL
I I M T I C B
New York, N o v e m b e r 20. IttSS.
UARRT
BAUSHNKCOT
Attorney for FlalutiB
aad P. 0 . Addraaa. 136 Broadww.
Tatfc. Maw Tark.
Auburn, M. T . ) . sine* hUi dMtgnatkm m chalrmaa-elMt «f tbe
House Appropriations Committee,
WM that riders must be expected
In appn^Mriation Mils as the only
way to protect old-line ciTlI seryic« employees from being fired,
"nlien budgets are reduced. So he
has decided to go along with Representative Ben JensMX ( R , Iowa),
on a stiH tougher celling on Federal personnel. The Jensen riders
of recent years permitted depart^
m m t s and agencies to fill oiily a
percentage of their vacancies.
Hower«r, employee groups don't
ffo along with these ideas. They
say that filling the needs of the
service is the primary objective,
and by following that pattern the
best protection Is given to old-lln*
employees and new-line employees
as well. Also, many groups d o n t
Uke the idea of "government by
rider,** because a President opposed to a rider has to sign ttie bill
or ttie appropriation fails.
Fail To See Benefit ,
It has been called the meat-az
method of legislation. Employees
fail to see how personnel ceilings,
aimed partly at them, benefit
them.
President Truman was opposed
to the rider method ol legislation,
and intimates <rf Presldent-ele«t
Dwight D. Elsenhower say that
he is ever more strongly in o k k h
sitlon. Presidents naturally oppose the method, as it Is a dsfvles
for depriving them of power, or of
circumventing their wtlL But Congress has kept on iH*acticing It,
PKOOrHRAl
1 . B u f w i . Helea W., B t d i i x . . . , 940«e
e o o k . X w l d t n o M^ IH. Plain
S. JenkiM, Ruth O., S. Oleoa Vl 88000
4 . Bdwanto, CTeanor It.. HenaMdanr S I 0 0 0
79009
5. Miner. K . C.. BUlyn B U y n
78000
S. C»Ut>«rt, Sol. Bronx
77000
7. WvimtK B m a J.. Albany
8. ZoHo, Francis M., Rudmrn . . . , 7 6 0 0 0
new President can stop or reduce
its appUcatloiL No President y«t
has made much headway la tlH*
direction.
SKNIOB ORAJrrSMAir
The arguments take some curi1. Wlftklar. Hubert F., S ^ t d r . . 07500
ous twists. For instance, one em- %.
Parfoy, Priacllla. H o n i e B
tMM>eo
ployee spokesman thought that the > a Hoari«an, Edward V., K«iibrook U!2600
Jensen rider required so much red 4 . Hanrahan, Jomea F., Albany . . 9 0 0 0 0
tape that it gave more work to 5. PearMo, WllHam D., 3arraeuae . , 8 7 5 0 0
Patterson, Walter, A m l l r r m e 8SOOO
more employees than would have 79.. Rider.
J.. A l h a a r
86000
been provided had there been no 8. Reed. MGerald
a r s h a l l F.. Babylon . . 86000
soch rider.
S. Barvr. Bererty F.. Hanaibat . . 86000
10. Droita. Harold. Aybaaar
82500
u . RaaHkoalci, John A., Watarford 80000
41 OCT RAISES IN
IS. S p U k , BmU J.. Waterrttat . . . 80000
I S . M e ^ . B. B e r t r a m . Snydar . . . , 7 7 6 0 0
SVPBEME COURT, KINGS
AtweH, Rofrer H.. Bklyn
77500
The Board of Estimate recsokly 14.
15. New<eU, Palmer F., WeatAaU . . 7 7 6 0 0
profvided funds to finance salary I S . F l a M r e , P a a l A.. Watkaa CHn 7 6 0 0 0
increases ordered by Justices of 17. Vonk, J a M t M., Albany . . . . 7 6 0 0 0
c . E w a r y s t , AITMnr . . . . 7R000
the Supr«ne Court. Elings C o u d h I S . M l ^ U JUNIOR
ty. Raises of $100 to $290 a year I. BachmaD, Carl DKAFTSMAN
3., Albany
90400
90 to 41 inciunbents of the Icdlow- s. Gottfried. Norman,
Queens V * 9 3 0 0 0
log tttles: law assistant, d v k . s. naj<ak. K a t t h e w . Bkljra
9!2000
chief court stenographer, eoort 4 . R l d i i e r , enry B., Bohemia . . . . 9 2 0 0 0
s.
Hoaly,
Catherine
J.,
BtrijyloM
.
.
88000
stenographer, law stenographer, s. MleiaUi; Bwaryai, Albany
typewriter operator and conrt In- 7 . H e i t a m a n , John O.. Dalmar . . 88000
88000
twpreter. Three court officer and 8. Blriar, Ronald J.. Albany . . . 88000
5.
86000
Chavsaaa,
Normaa
W.,
HtomM
one court stenographer jobs were
IfeBbmsgr. Eari C., Rotdtealer . 8fl000
ivovided. through elimination of 1«.
11. FkM. Francis. Rocheater . . . 8 4 0 0 0
three vacant positions.
IB. M a a a a a n i i i . Jane H.. Babylon 8 4 0 0 0
I S . PeMhman. Joan M.. Bay Shore 8 4 0 0 0
1 4 . Contt, Anirelo A.. Jtanalca . . . 8 3 0 0 0
NYC FIRE DEFT. LEGION
M. onoara, CaUtota M.. BnfTalo . 7 8 0 0 0
AUXILIARY INSTALLS
15. H e y w , Creto S . . E. Aurora . . . 7H000
The Fire Department American 17. Cook, Robert J.. Bklyn
76200
Legfcm Auxiliary installed the fol- I S . Bldertair. A. H.. Rldrewood . . 7 4 8 0 0
f
.
74800
B
e
y
,
Dertk
J.,
Albany
lowing ofEkiers: Mrs. HelMi Hield,
pcesldMit; Florence Duns omb, 1st P B D T r n f B SHOP . I S S B W A I f * FOBKVIAN
88000
vice president; Jean Turner, ted 1 . MaHu, Swn. OloTeravl*
Gordon- C., Albany . . . . 8 6 2 0 0
vice president; Margaret Jaraao, SS.. BlTwa,
AHen, Walter C.. Troy
86400
secretary: Lucy Coyle, treasurer, 4 . B e i * , Jbaeph B., Bronx
86200
86200
and Louise Tossl. ehamplain. flpe- a . H a m n e , Joaei>fa P., Uttea
flftd guests were the department 5 . I^rea^ Howa*d » . . F i . O v n w t a 8 4 6 0 0
7 . Pleroa, Carleton, Uttea
(dxaplalns of Post »30 and C M S. Calocero, WlIHam. Bronx . . . . 88128800 00
of Detwrtment Petw L o f t w a o i
Bladrlaa, IrfMiis B.. Albany . . 8 1 8 0 0
IB. Btwmrda, Looia, NTO
8040*
Mr*. Loftus.
Per diem employees of NYC. wfaB
lost their sick leave when the Legislature passed a Daw early this
year saying that tbs govsminc
body of a municipaJlty shall h m v
sole authority on sick leave, won
it back when the Board of Estimate recently approved a bill
passed by the Council. The sick
leave limit is 30 days.
Comptroller
Lazarus
Joseph
agreed that per diem employees
should
not
be
discriminated
against, but Insisted that there
must be uniformity of sick leave
regulations, a stop t o abuses that
existed in some departments in
the past. So Budget Director Abraham D. Beame is to recommend
a set of sick leave rules to tho
Board for action at the iheetlng
Thursday. December 4. Meanwhile^
however, sick leave for per diem
employees is in effect, under present arrangements.
Mr. Beame will consult the employee group on the proposed
terms of the new sick leave rules.
QUICK XMAS JOBS
Women are in great demand
for Christmas jobs in stores aU
over New York City. If you can
work from 11 to 4 each day and
one or two evenings a week, there's
a job for you. Pay is good and big
shopping discounts are offered,
•niere's no need to travel from
store to store to get a job either.
You can do your Christmas job
shopping quickly and easily In one
place. Apply at the New York
State Employment Service. 119
Fifth Ave., NYC.
EHJOYTHEFBOST^DRYBBB
v m NEVERIQO FILLING'
facire Rght • a • extra delicious! Switch now to
MIW YORK'S FASTEST-GROWING BEER!
Gat more beer pleasure . . . make your next one
Knickerbocker!
hunotm "extra^
Here's t h e one beer with the three
. . . extra
and less "filling"! Get
York^M fasteat'irowing
light,
irosty-dry,
Knickerbocker
today-
beer/
© 1 9 5 2 , RUPPERT
KNICKERBOCKER BECt
AND RUPPERT ALE,
MGOft RUPPERT, N. Y. C
C 1 T 1 B
DftOBIflSMiP
BROOKLYN
HOUSES — HOMES — PROPERTIES
BE 3 ^ 1 0
ItaM roar wder wiih a«. J>1 u«
Hm A m bnT* « «
^ offer.
LArATVmB ATE.—« •tocT. bwwnient,
AJII-INOTOH PLACB—8 •tory, bMemeot.
WCXINGKTON
itorr A bawMneni.
^ARK PLACB—« •tory. bawsment
PoBMMioHi. Alt tmproT«d proparty.
LONG
Tcrma amu>c«<l. Other rood bny«.
• D T TOOK HOME LTKE P A T I N O »E1*T
$750 & UP
RURJS MURRAY «-t7es
rwlton St B'kira. MA.
ISLAND
RICHMOND
HILL
WTIiLOUGHY AVE.
3 M t y . 15 rooms. AN V«cant
$16,000
ONLY $9,990
ST.
$3,SOD
No Cash G. I.
L A F A Y E T T E AVE.
4 famtiy. All vacant. 4 room ap^.
Terms
MILCAR
«60 G a ^
Ave.
ST.
UL.
REALTY
BesbUtlful «a« famUy consisUac
larc« rooms with raratre on a c o m e r loi
aod near e v e r y l h i n f , schools, storw aMd
hmm. Thifl ia a n n e t . Call to d a r .
Brooklyn, N. Y.
9-0553
5-2336
WALTER
ASSOCIATES. INC.
88-82 188 St.. Jamaica
2 NICE HOMES
JNO Discntmnation
AX. 7-7900
MACON ST.
b K loTeljr reeiuential neishborbood and
in (?*ccMent condition. 2 lamily, brick, 9
rooms, oil bumior, p a r q u e t floom, modern
improvetuentfl. Near P a r k Vacancy.
— Term* Of Course
H/»re is an attractive one family hotae
consiBtinr oi GVa rooms with uteam b e a t .
Here ia a r e a j reasonable buy. This yon
KtiHt see at only $5,.500 with temi!>.
open EVERY day
Including Sat. and Siui.
CHARLES H. YAUGHAN
1 6 » Howard Ave
Brooklyn,
LONG ISLAND
LONG ISLAND
LONG ISLAND
SECURE YOUR FUTURE!
G.I. & F.H.A. INSURED LOANS
HOMES
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION OF THE FOLLOWING HOMES
G A T E S AVE.
3 family. Cash $500
MACON
4 family. Cash
Page Nineteen
L C A O V K
^ B E All E S T A T E ^
il^RE TOU LOOKING
FOR A HOME?
MSI
f l K T I C B
RICHMOND HILL
03U2-7810
H.
Y.
ContiistiUif oi 9. yes 9 largre rooms with %
ATTENTION G. I.
kitchens, oil, h o t water heat, all oakwood,
newly decorated with garage. Kxcloiive
at UkC comer spot, lovely ncig'hborhood. Ideal tor
moiher and d a u g h t e r .
Toor family deserves tbo beBt and
tisrht price. Inves=tig-ate atui —
t'OMI'AKK! — COMTAKKl
CIJOWMIKIOHTH section Lincoln Mace
(Kingston) 2 family, i i rooms, t^. pa»
quot. Cash $1,5U0.
PAKK PLACE (WaMiinfjrton Ave.), 2 Blory
and basement, beautilul limfstoue, 11
rooms, 2 kitchnns, 8 bathe, excoUcnt eoniition. Cash $a,000.
Asking $12,500
SxciUBive* with
DIPPEL
OL V.86C1
115-43 Sutpbin B h d . . Jamaica
BRING $2,000
X story JMid basement, 26 foet wide, 1®
rooms, 2 kitchene, 2 baths, steam by oil.
MOVE RIGHT IN
All vacant.
St. Albans $12,250
CUMMINS
BIGGEST SACRIFICE
NO MORTGAGE
$3950—ALL CASH
In a b e a u t i f u l aettlng, nice neighborhood,
6 large rooms, in immaculate condition,
semi-detached, 8 large bedroom*, huge liring room, parquet floors, storma. venetians and many extras, goratre, landscaped.
oU b a m e r . Move right in Cash aad terma.
CALL JA 6-0250
The Goodwill ReaHy Co.
W M . RICH
Wrt^e lufl sieai, * fanriUy, 4 kitchens. aO
k a m e r must be ooio at oncc.
CALL OWNER. PL. 7 C086
JUe. Broker, fteal Estate
New York Blvd.. Jamaica, R. X.
SO. OZONE PARK
Houses Wanted
Ib a b e a u t i f u l setting, is this b e a u t i f u l
We nave ouyers waiting for name* and home. One family detached, atucco and
inveBtment proi>ortiee in all boros. List shingle consisting of 6 lovely rooms with
r o a r property with us for a quick sale. porch, flni<3h6d attic ^ d f u l l basement, S
modem tile bathe, steam by oil,
MILCAR REALTY •
driveway.
460 GATES AVE
• T . »-0ftfi8
UL B-23S8
Price $11,000
Terms arranged—Act to-dHy, OaS
BRONX
LJK i.ZitSl
No Mortgagre—-2 Vacant Apts.
FINDLAY AVE.
We«t Bronx — 170th St.
• taniily brick, fully detached, new oU
b u r n e r , new bras« plumbing, sunken tube,
• x t r a staU showers, 2-car garage, parq u e t floora, aew rrigidaire, eoaibination
•inka. tUe kitchen, big backyard.
%
Wock pabUc •chooi. AAA l aeigbborhood.
r r i o e reduced 2 5 % Reasonable ca»h
CALL OW.NEE PL 7-6985
UQUIDATION SACRIFICE
WEST BRONX
ONLY $1975 DOWN
WMt Itlaf St.. U«iv«rsity Ava.
HOLLIS
A HOME TO BE PUOUD O r
Solid brick in a lovely setting, three eo«npleto apts.. with modern baths, m o d e m
kitchens and in i m m u c u l a t e condition with
2 car garage, plot 76x100, oil heat atf
course. Mub ie a m u s t .
Asking $16,800
Harry and see this exclusive hoaas MmwI
i« built to laiit.
MANY OXUKB GOOD BirVS IN
BUOOKLTN AND LOKO IHLAN9
ST. ROSE & WARDEN
CoM Owner PL 7-6985
HUGO R. H E Y D O R N
11 MO Merrick Blvd. — Near IMtk Avenue
JAmaica 6-0787 - JA. 6-0788 - JA. 6-0789
LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
No Mortgage—All Vocant
WEST BRONX
2 Blocks Grand ConcoHrto
I B l o ^ Jerotoe Ave.
CALL FOR APPOINTMENTS TO INSPECT
Morris Avo^ Biirnside
Atlck I t rooaoa, 8 bathrooms, Ug back
panl.
hriM plumbing,
parqaet
floora,
•amb. itaka. oo rant oootrol, all rooma
vata. tradbUwd block. CKcloaiTe aelgh_ hood Pvtae radnced
aeaa<«abla
COLLEGE POINT
$11,900
K
EGBERT AT WHITESTONE
FL. 3-7707
7-«086
U9UIDATION SACRIFICE
No Mortgoge » Big Profit
91.47S Cosk — yocant Apt.
AiMa.. aaar I86U1 St.. 8t Mleholaa Ava.
roiaas vaivala, braas plamblug, aew
b. M m .«aw Prig., mtm oU burner
«M 8880 aMmth. azpcnaea 8176 moatii
a Mduaad 8«%. Act Paat.
GAUL OWNiCK P L . 7-8086
R
E
ST. ALBANS
$11,990
U a r i i j ane family, atuocu, completely d»tached uonsiating of
laxKe rooms with
1 M b a t h , stall ahower, oil hu»t. sereeoa.
atorm window'a Tenetian blinds -with
. . rage. Xanjr « t h a r e x t r a s f o r eaah a»d
»«iBoaable teraa. CALL
LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
NO MORTGAGE
WILLIAMSBRIDGE
VACANT APARTMENT
. Mak. 8 tawHy tmm aU baiuttr. m»m
fateC. f«Uy daUdiad. mm ooaxik. Mar Prta«da«rM. a a v tabla
M a a Mdaoad 4 0 » . Ammob
M 9-5715
Aak
Par
n .
SPECIALISTS IN FINER HOMES
AT LOWER PRICES
THEY'RE SENSATIONAL!
j f i ^ m o z i n g Price
eautifully planned
C h a r m i n g l y designed
j j ^ e t u x e features
[ye Filling—Fabulous
ashionable
E. Elmhurst, Queens
^Jreat
construction
ust a dream
K i t c h e n s of knotty pine
ow down payment—
easy financing
L
READ THIS FIRST
THE BUY OF THE MONTH
ADDISLEIGH PARK-ST. ALBANS: Legal S-famUy stoeoo, 4rooms upstairs, 4-rooms first floor, SO-foot living room, steam
heat (oU), finished basement, plot 60 x 100,
C 1 R RAA
Shmv garace. Price
FOR THE FINEST IN QUEENS
jll^^ost for your money
^ | o w h e r « equalled
Outstanding value —<•
ALLEN & EDWARDS
Liberty Ave.. JaNioiea. N. Y. OLympia 8-2014—8-201S
OWN YOUR OWN HOME!
WHY PAY RENT?
$13,500
$13,590
rotL OTHER 1. 2 and S FAMILY HOMES
la AS SactioNs of QnaeBs and Irooklya PROM $7,500 ft IIP
CALL o a
P a r a d i s e for children
^ ^ uality supreme
8 family, stucco, X four room apta., Baaatttnl l-laa&ily bridA dwelUnff,
bath, racant on cloaixtg, plot 40x100, am kitf^Mtt Mid bath, at«am haat (
ateam kgr oil, modern throughoat with
kardwood floors, landscaped, U Ton 6-rooms, l S x l 8 Mriiig xooaa, aamlpleaae, with S ear gara«e, a real home Saiehed kasewiawt, yiai 40x100, slate
and a real hireatmeat
«
the best!
HOLLIS. L L
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
VISIT
SPENCER.JOHNSON
jj^efined neighborhood
3 Running
exteriors
imes Square
T
25 min. away
fine location Unusually
nr. all conveniences
eterans pay $650 down
REpuMIc 9.8)4f — AX 7 ^ 6 3
Office H o u r s : Mon. to Sat. t ia 8 — Sundays: NOOB »a • F .
Call f o r Appatetnkea«a T o Inspect
*.
EXCEPTIONAL BUYS ON
BETTER TYPE HOMES
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
a . I. SMALL CASH
l-taaatlg, t large rooms, 4 0 x 100, wmt
aC ontt, aaar school and tranaportatton,
w a t y ttaoorated. Seal buy
$12,250
$9,500
OABU a TKKM8
Mo«y other Good Boys !• Springfield Gardens,
St. Albans and Vicinity
TOWN REALTY
APARTMENTS
BaOOKl.YN and MANHATTAN
Corrolls' Renting Servico
m, 9'UAs
sized rooms
eor's best buy
[[ettful living
*12.990
DIRECTIONS: Grand Central Pkway.
to 94th Sf. Exit JLaGuardia Field) or
Flu>hin9 iRT to 103 St. and Bus No.
23 to model homa.
SO. OZONE PARK
MANHATTAN
MvavTtklBg moaem aad oompletiAy done
o»ar. Raaaonable renta, ateam ar. trans
l»artatioa.
Xtroordinary
LOW CASH TERMS ARKANGBD
186-11 MERRICK BLVD.
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
LA 7-2500
2, 2V2, 3. 3Va Rooms
NOW RENTING
^ ^ ^ e love It" • you'll say
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
8 targe modem rootna v i t k aacioaed
pot«h, completely detached, comer, aU
beat, parQuet throughout, naiwly radaeorated inaide and out. with
l a exeeileat eoodition.
AUSTIN
LOOK HERE
FOR BUYS
X
I ntriguing
ABeOOIATKD BUOKKKS
10-16 117th BTKEEX
AttedMd brick. 8 atory, 6 rooms,
tile baths Pull baaeaient. hot water,
QskA aectloo.
TO
|uge landscaped plots
110-34 MERICK BLVD., JAMAICA 13, N. Y.
trieltgr, near lake, good swimming and
flahing. BO bnlldinara. P a l l price 8860.00.
• 8 0 . 0 0 dollara down. $ 1 0 . 0 0 n o o t b . k
Btrena. Phone Seldan 8282.
J ^
i: Monday to Saturday • t a 7 P.M. — Sundays 12 Noon t a 8 P J t .
NE 8-6479
aorroundings, Higli Healthy c.Umata. Urge
duMle traea. ^-ood aoil. Town road, aftec-
FROM
OTHER GOOD BARGAINS IN ALL PRICE RANGES
62J5 Noatrand Ave.
1 family dataehad. 8 rooms. 8 car garace.
HOLTSVILLE, L I
I block Mew Tor* DniveraltT. 1 block
•arome Ave., 1 block achooU. 1 bloc* paafc. 8ian tann. »000 aquare feet, part a8
baantlfal country aatate, amidst majaatic
• ) ( backyard,
INTERRACIAL
COMMUNITY
LONG ISLAND'S BEST INTERRACIAL PROPERTIES
EARLE D. MURRAY
LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
OAUL omvma.
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS: Detached bri<dc veneer, frame and
stnoeo, S-large rooms, expansion atUc, finished basement,
modem tiled bath, scientific kitchen, automatic steam heat,
hardwood floors throughout, eyclone fence encloses property,
2-car brick garage, screens, storm windows, Venetian blinds.
House in excellent condition. Cm/^ for veteran
C 1 1 flAA
»2,800. G. L loan $10,000. Price
^ "• iWV
ST. ALBANS: Z-story and basement, BuUd brick dweUing, i ktfve rooms (S-bedrooms), real wood-burning fireplace in living
room, modem kitchen with tiUde-top gas range, modem tiled
bath, steam heat, oil burner, hardwood floors throughout. Broadloom wall to wall sarpeting on Ist floor, stairway and 2nd flow
hallway, Venetian binds, combination screens and storm windows Subject to mortgage of 10,200. Cash $3,800. C i d IWWI
$S1.S month/y pays aU expenses. Price
^itiVWW
WHY PAY RENT?
$1,000 BUYS
Macnooial Nt. (Cor. liiUpti A r u l t e n )
PR 4.-6«U
B0UTH OZONE PARK: l-family detached frame dwelling. 5
rooms, Miclosed sunporch, tiled bath, parquet floors throughout,
steam heat. House In excellent condition.
. ^ Q COA
Cnrti for veterans ll.OOO, mortgage $8,500. Price .
t r . ALBANS: Detached l-family frame dwelling, 6 rooms,
dinette, expansion attic, modem tiled bath, extra lavatory on
lat floor, modem kitchen with stainless steel combination sink,
hardwood floors throughoiit, steam heat, instantaneous hot
water, 1-car garage, screens, storm windows and Venetian blinds
throughout. Cash for veteran $1,300.
$13 000
-f
19 large roonui, raal 8 fam
Uy kouae with arenr i «
prrovameut,
modem
ot
courae. Plot 8« x 100, ail
kaat aad garage. Something
ta help you defrwf janr ax
petiHee. A rCal buy la a good
aatghborhood, »o dtoorim
iaation.
FaU Prlae fll,a««
and Beat This For V a l m
M l
BC
i-l«ll
HOMES
24th Avenue
&
99th - 101st
Streets
e. ILKIHUItST, 9UEENS. N. Y. C.
Open dsily {Dfluding Sun. until 7 P.M.
P a f « Twenlf
G I T I C
U. S. Advises Candidates
How to Pass Typist Test
James E. Rossell, director, Second Regional Office, U. S. Civil
Service Commission (New York
and New Jersey), issued "a message of friendly advice" this week
fto the 2,062 high school students
who will compete, among others,
in the written and practical test
for typist jobs at $2,750 a year,
$53 a week.
•'Dear Students," he began.
•'We'd like to give you the benefit
of our experience in tests so that
you will greatly improve the possibility of passing the typist test
that you're to take on Thursday,
January 8.
"It's been our experience that
candidates who practice typing two
full hours a day do much better
than those who spend only about
40 minutes or so a day. There is no
way than through practice to gain
speed and skill.
Two Hours a Day Needed
"Candidates should begin their
HATS!
HATSl
FOR MEN
Now We Have
"Hi* biggest and finest shipment
qualify hats we've ever had!
B« Wise!
of
two-hour daily practice at once,
A large number of those who follow that advice will pass the practical typing test. By practicing,
they will make an excellent beginning toward a career in the Federal service in which there are good
promotion opportunities. It must
not be imagined that typists always
remain typists. Many who started
as typists have risen to executive
positions.
"The high school students do
splendidly in the intelligence test,
which is a fine tribute to them and
to the quality of education afforded
by the NYC school system. They
can do equally well in the typing,
if only they'll follow the advice.
In neglecting to practice sufficiently, they may exclude themselves from a job to which they
aspire. Experience shows that they
have not practiced enough in prior
years. They should not repeat this
mistake."
Education Board Helps
Mr. Rossell made arrangements
with Bernard E. Donovan of the
NYC Board of Education, so that
City high schools would be used.
Mr. Rossell spoke glowingly of the
cooperation received from the
Board of Education.
The list of exam centers, and the
high schools from which other stu-
Shop Now!
COME IN TODAY
Entrance - Canal Arcade:
44 »aWERY
Open ontn 6 every evening
Take 3rd Ave. Bus or "L"
Street
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
OpM Saturdays 9 A.M. to 3 P.M.
w o r t h 4-0215
_ _
of 1001 uses!
Sue
PP.
( . ^ n ' t opeo in y o u r p o c k « t 1 I
Ideal l o r Benrctariee, sliippinff r o o m s ,
clipping clerks, sewing- ba-skcta, srilt
w r a p p i n g and m y r i a d o t h e r usea. T h «
Taylor-Made Pocket Knife is made ot
t h e finest e u r g i c a l steel a v a i l a b l e a n d
is h o n e d in oil. L i m i t e d t i m e offer—
10 f o r $4.50—Sent p o s t p a i d .
Money Back Guarantee 1 Dept. 0.8.
BROWN'S
2 0 0 W.
St., N.V. 3 6 ,
JTV » - 3 d M
PILLOW
HOUYWOOO
IF YOUR BACK ACHES?
BACRITE
AUTO SEAT
U
THC FIRST TO HAVE ONE OR M O M
O f THESE LAUGH RIOT
HOLLYWOOD PILLOWS
T h e only scientifically c u s t o m m a d e c a r
s e a t wliioh rpiifvps b.icliaclies and l a t i ffiie—while you drive.
Designed for y o u r hcigrht a n d weig'bt.
Widely Used By Leading Deefors
G O O D WHOLESOME FUN. AlWAVS
GOOD FOR A LAUGH WHEN GUESTS
DROP IN. IT'S LIFE SIZE «. LIFE LIKE.
MADE OF QUALITY FOAM RUBBER 4
A l l NEW MATERIAL.
At a Christmat Gift we will moll it
dir«€t to th« person you w l i h to r«celva It and •ncloi* a cord. Th«yH
really enjoy receiving this bundle of
Iau9h».
ONLY $ 4 . 9 5
TEMPLE LAB., INC.
Send cJieck or Money Order
$2.00 deposit on all C.O.D. order*
584 CONEY ISLAND AVE., B'klyn.
GE 5-1381
CHARLES BALL
P.O.Box 2692 . HOLLYWOOD 28, CAL
POLICE UNIFORMS
Siteoial d i s c o u n t to
Civil Service E m p l o y e e s
Longr Playinff
Classical • i ' o p i i l a r
7 8 ' 3 3 f o r 09c.
4 5 R P M 5 f o r S^l OO
CALL WO 2-3281
'
Or Bring to Store
55 BAYARD ST.
N. Y.
SY'S RECORD SHOP
Opposite City H;U1 P a r k . N . T . 0 .
1>.\KK KOW
^VO 4 - 5 8 M
SHOP AT GULKO'S AND SAVE
ANTI-FREEZE, Reg. 3.75 Gal. — $2.49
ALL WATCHES — 50% DISCOUNT
SILVERWARE — 45% DISCOUNT
l y
Sewiiiif MachincB
Silverware
I'eu & IViicil SeU
flocka
I'honographs
Television SeU
UiMlios
UefngriH-alora
Electric TnUne
HicycW
Kans
WalcUoe
Heatingr P a d s
V a c u u m Cleaners
Sun Lanips
P r e s s u r e Cookers
BUroilers
Toasters
Mixers
Kitehenware
Outboard Motor*
Freezers
Lanipa
Furniture
•
Chrouiiiuu W a r e
Cutlery
C a r p e t Sweepers
Coffee M a k e r s
W a s h i n g Machinee
Heaters
Desk Lanipg
Typcwritcrsi
Raii^os
A i r ConditioucrB
dents will be called to these centers, follows:
Manhattan. Commerce: Washington, Commerce, Textile and
Wadleigh; Washington
Irving:
Washington Irving, Seward Park,
Central Commercial and Julia
Richman.
Bronx. Theodore Roosevelt: Columbus, Evander Childs, Morris.
Roosevelt and Monroe; Walton,
Taft, Clinton and Dodge.
Brooklyn. New Utrecht: Lafayette and New Utrecht; Erasmus
Hall: Lincoln, Erasmus Hall, Midwood and Tilden; Jefferson: Jefferson. Bushwick, Lane, Maxwell
and Williamsburgh; Fort Hamilton: Fort Hamilton and Bay Ridge;
Prospect Heiflits: Prospect Heights
Eastern District, Girls, Madison
and Brooklyn Homemaking.
Queens. Bryant: Bryant, L. L
City, Flushing, Newton and Cleveland; Jamaica: Jamaica, Far
Rockaway, Richmond Hill, Jamaica Vocational, Woodrow Wilson and Bayside.
Staten Island. Curtis: Curtis,
New Dorp, Port Richmond and
Tottenville.
NYC SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR
EXAM REMAINS OPEN
SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR, GR.
1, $3,260; 350 vacancies in the
Department of Welfare. Requirements: high school graduation,
and either (a) bachelor's degree,
or (b) two years of college education plus two years' experience in
social work with a public or private social agency, or in supervised teaching or (c) satisfactory
equivalent of such education and
experience. Students who will receive bachelor's degree before the
end of 1953 may also apply. Fee
$2. (No closing date.)
BRAND N E W
1952
Arvin
CUSTOM MODEL
LECTRIC COOK
Get the biggest, ti||e best, the most
beautiful waflaer-grill—the famous
Arvin Lectric Cook, brand new for
'52. Cooking area equals 3 ten-inch
skillets—tine for fixing a full meal or
• late snack—steaks, chops, bacon
and eggs, pancakes, sandwiches!
Converts in seconds to a fully autoQouatic waffler, making 4 big waffles.
Automatic heat control, signal ligh^
insulated handle and base.
Beautiful clirome finish.'
Listed by Underwriters'
Laboratoriea, Inc.
Air. Fixit
PANTS OR SKIRTS
W» do Uelivei to t b c UsaiuknatloQ K o o b u
ALL Mak«t ~
Ea»y T«rin«
APDINQ MACHINBS
MIMEOGaAPSQi
IMl'lSKNATKmAX r V P K W K I T K S
00.
AM , I.
9t.
»«
and
Fr— Gift Oally
To First 10 Casfomert
Wi/limmrnm
TO CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES
"Established
•
RAOiOS
•
RANGES
CAMERAS
•
JEWELRY
TELEVISION
•
SILVERWARE
TYPEWRITERS
•
REFRI6ERAT0|I
•
•
poliiduiMr
1929"
15 Park Row
•
'•
MUNICIPAL
Employees Servleo
ROOM 4 2 8
Aa
ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES
— Cortlland
Ideal
Christmas
7-53M
Gift
7 Volumes of
Words and Music
ANCHOR RADIO CORP.
ONE GREENWICH ST.
A SovM Voium* Mudcal Treaturo
CoBtohiiiig Ovor 300 Songs
(Cor BoMery Plocs, N Y.I
E a d i b o o k c o n t a i n s t h e songs y o u lov»,
c o m p l e t e w i t h w o r d s , melodic line,
a n d p i a n o a c c o m p a n i m e n t . All w i t k
outstandlng-ly a t t r a c t i v e covers. Thep»
a r e : C o m u n i t y Songs. C o w b o y Songw,
Sonera a n d G a m e s
For
O h ildren,
7 volumes
Sonr* of Sacred
Beauty, Soncrs oC
the
Gay
OO'a,
•ompleto
B o n n W e Lor*,
post
and
Sonra
W
Stephen
F o ster.
poid
Money
back
gruarChristmas
antee. You're s u m
sooiod
to b e eatinfled.
TEL WHitehall 3 - 4 2 8 0
lobby Entronce — One B'way BldQ,
(OPPOSITE CUSTOM MOUSE)
$1.00
r,
i^mmL
©
MAtiiit^eJi
GLAf^OUB
TREASURE CHEST
TARTANSi
^ 240 WEST SSM STREET
I New York City 19, N. Y.
C o l o r f u l Axithentic p l a i d s incl. CORONAT I O N ctopular Clans, li/lizabeth ( r e d predominating)
Princess
Margraret
Rose
(grreen p ' g ) MacLeod (yellow p ' f ) MaeQ u e e a (rod, b l a c k ) B. C a m e r o n (Hunter
grreen. B l k . ) Scarf $ 3 . 9 « (usually $ 6 . 0 0 )
S q u a r e $ 4 . 4 5 . Stole $ 4 . 9 5 ( $ 7 . 0 0 ) . In
f u l l sizes. S o f t Tirgrin wool.
From K N t i L A N D : d e l u x e CHAMOIS 18 x
2 8 — $ 3 . 4 0 ea. 3 f o r $f).00. 0 for $ 1 4 . 7 6 .
G i f t enveloped.
P p d . if r e m i t t a n c e w i t h o r d e r . Money
B a c k if n o t detigrhted.
BABKOK I M P O R T E R S , D-14, Troy, N . T .
N e w A N D B K W 8 KNIFK SHARPKNKR
Scientifically
eharpens
Faster,
Easier,
Sharper. It does no*
strip oft metal. Xl
will not harm t h e
knife. Screw i t om
the bench or wall.
Hold the knife o a
the cone w i t h edg«
o ( t h e k n i f e against
the side ot tbe grinding wheel, and work
the k n i f e ba<^ and f o r t h a f e w strokee
on each side.
The result will a m a s e y o u or your m o n i y
refunded. N o . C.O.D. please.
ANDRKW8 PLATING CO.
4 » 0 a . West St.
S y r a c u s e , M. X .
HOLY LAND COOKIE SPOON
She makes the best
cookies — And why
n o t ? Look at the
Mafric Spoon
she
u s e s . I t ' s a rfrimi11 V e
handcarved
wooden s p g o n f o r
m a k i n g filled cook
ies a n d it comes
f r o m t h e Holy L a n d
w h e r e it h a s been
in u s e f o r Centuries. E l i m i n a t e s t h e t r o u b l e f o r rolling o n t
t h e d o u g h . Comes w i t h a fine recipe.
A fine L A W N , B E A U T I F U L
flowers.
H e a l t h Giving v e g e t a b l e s c a n all be
y o u r s . T u r n y o u r wastes, g r a s s leaves,
g a r b a g e and o f f a l i n t o r i c h ORGANIC
Fertilizer
with
the
GARDENERS
F R I E N D COM P O S T E R . InexiA nsively.
W r i t e f o r h o l i d a y offer t o d a y .
^ O . K. Z I M M E R M A N , M f g r .
Fuirfux, Minn,
.ii'^.On i'OHtiiiiid
Hl'KCIAf-TlKS, D e p t .
P a r k Ridge, N . J .
188
EXCITINGLY DIFFERENT
PERFUMES
Make
Her's
A Merry
mSPIBING AND BEAVTiFtH.
CHRISTMAS GIIT
0
Xmas.
W h i t e Camelia by A N D K E ' A . 1 o«. b o t t l e
r e t a i l s f o r $ 1 6 . 0 0 . Y o u r s f o r only 3 . 9 8 .
In addition to W h i t e Camelia y o u will receive a t no e x t r a cost. 1 b o t t l e of P a s s i o n
by Zolaly, 1 b o t t l e of Sweet W i l l i a m b y
H a r r i e t H u b b a r d Ayer, a n d 1 0 b o t t l e t t e s
of f a t u o u s D u b o i s p e r f u m e a . A $ 2 1 . 6 0
v a l u e f o r only 6 . 9 8 . S a t i s f a c t i o n . Money
b a c k g u a r a n t e e . Order f r o m
NORMEL SUPPLY CO.
1725 Morris Ave.. N. Y. S7, N. Y.
CHECK. CASH OR M.O.
Gold plated bracelet with danj;Ung Cross and Miraculous Mc(1<«i
n heart shape.
^ l . S Q
Including tax.
postage and gift t>ox. In*
qulries on any Religious
items lnvlte#.
Jay Zee Mail Order
Bm 41 D»pt.'|j Planetarium Statlon.N.Y.O.
TROJAN
Handcrafted
ply
w o o d tor, w i t h a
b o x BO cute on it's
back f o r small fry
t o park their favorite small toys.
It iingles
merrily
w h e n pulled. Blue
w i t h Shocking Pink
Mane. 18x8x13.
HORSE
$7.05 Postpaid
FKRN-MAK HPKOIALTUfiS, De|H. IM
Park Rldga, N. 4.
by
MAIL
XMAS BRANDED
GIFT ITEMS
Frwm 0«R Price List*
fir Neutral CofoIosiuM
Over 3 0 0 0 items, P a r k e r s , B u l l o v a , O r e a a .
B e u r u s and o t h e r w a t c h e s . N a t ' l Silve»«
SAVK 7B% OK MORR ON YOUR
w a r e , E l e c t r i c a l Appliances. T.V.
seta.
SHAMPOO BILL.
Radio*. C o n t i n u o u a s u p p l y . G i f t Conaul*.
P e r l u m u d , F r a g r a n t . A p u r e , all vegetable, a n t e t o s u i t every p u r s e a n d p u r p o s * .
SACKS MKRCUANOISK BIAKT
dehydrated, CASTILB shampoo. L a t h e m
I I M B'way., N.
M. Y,
quickly, c l e a n s t h o r o u g h l y , rinaee c o m .
plelely. Only one r i n s e needed. S h i p p e d in
c o m p a c t box, e n o u g h f o r % g a l l o n . 8
m o u t h s s u p p l y o r more, only $ 1 . 6 0 » box.
A $ 9 . 0 0 v a l u e . N o fluer s h a m p o o at a n y
price. Y o u also s a v e t b e tax. N o t a x to
piiy w h e n y o u m i x y o u r own. G u a r a n t e e d
t o s a t i s f y . W. K a n n - S a l e e , 1 7 Williatn, F I N K S V h a n d tailored Uea. Speeiiri.
d a y n u m b e m $ 6 . 9 6 doc,
Ilillsdale, M. J ,
TIES
Houiehelii Necessities
iMl IN
Lorfi* Stock Eioetrieol Applioaoot
au4 Olft Itoms
Jowolry - ioby Itoms
noctf4« TrolM • Famitur*
ACT TODAY POit BEST
SILECTION . Suppliot L I m M
ORDER
GUIDE
lU-finishing' a u d r e p a i r i n c
f u r n i t u r e at your home.
YOUR OPPORTUNITY
TO SAVE UP TO SOX
m
r U B VOLK HOME M A K I N G
SUOl'I'tJNO NfciKUS
9e l o a t c h yout l a c k e u , SUU.UUU p a t t e r n s
F u r n i t u r e , appltancee, r i f t s , e t c (at rea)
I a w b o d X a i l o n u g & Weaving Co., 166 saving*)
MuuicUiat
Employcea
Sorvloa
V u l l o n S t - coruor O r o a d w a j . N . Y . a
<1 Kuoui 1S8. 1 5 P a r k Uow CO 7 - 5 3 8 0
flijrbt u p ) WOrtb 203&17-8.
TYPEWRITERS RENTED
For Civil Servic* Exam»
CLOSE OUT
hi ftm% for yoar gift baytnf
<
PRODUCTS
READER'S SERVICE
1951
^Mail Order Shopping Guidn
FERN-MAR
AND lOOl OTIiKR ITRMS
Terms Arran9ed
GULKO
Tue»d«|i, D e e e m b c r 1,
'n
GRILL THAT'S k GRIDDLE
THAT'S A WAFFLERi
R E C O R D S
WE BUr & SELL
L I A D I K
BILL F(HI EXEMPT JOB
PUBLICITY LOSES, M TO 1
The bill to require publicity on
qualifications of » proposed appointee, before an exempt job Is
filled, was defeated by the NYC
Council, 33 to 1. The lone vot«
in its favor was '«ast by the Introducer, Councilman Stanley M.
Isaacs. Council President Rudolph
Halley, prior to the vote, urged
members to adopt It, sas^ng that
the next Mayoralty campaign
might be fought on the issue of
good government, and this bill was
of the good-government kind.
The bill required that for major
jobs, like commissionerships, a
public hearing be held, while for
lesser ones, publication of qualifications of the proposed appointee 10 days in advance (k any
appointment.
THE "NEW" POCKET KNIFE
ONLY
ABE WASSERMAN
Canal
/
S I R T I C I
4 king-dz* wafflat
GENERAL PRODUCTS
4 big landwUhM
See jU
€it
11 No. Poori (C),
TRUMART CO.
219 W. 14th ST.. N. Y. C.
OR 5-7622
For homes and properiiM, b« aur* WIAI.LETS, LU^GAOB. WATCHES,
TYPEWRITERS. C A M E R A S .
to M* Um beat huf oa 9 f It.
PROJECTORS.
STEFTLINO
MWVUAV. i r &
SH,VML
SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY
OFFER —
$ 1 . 6 0 6pe<!ial for your akin, keeps U
smooth and s o f t w i t h rieh oUs f o r dry
akins, roughneaa, acallinr, drynew er expoaure. Send name of yoar dea««r aad
trial order.
EDMA NITTICK CO.
m, 9k Bern tu
•r
«taiBM«k. A
Albany. N. %
Give Her A Wilder
A l u m i n u m R U G F R A M B and a U G L i n
S t a n d a r d R U O F R A U B ( 4 « " wid*) 91S.T9
Staridui^ RUG-I^ITH ( 4 6 " wid»)
Adjustable RUG FRAMV (4rft" to
$17.76
A4iutlabVi R U G - L I T l (iV to D*"^)
Send check or mouar ordar
WILDB& a U O B O O K I N G B U P P L T
% ilk mnmwsu mL, k m o m m t %
T M i d i y , D e e « l i i b M 2* I 9 B 2
CHriB t I S T i C K
tlXVIK
N Y C Exams A b o u t to Open
Question, Please
requirements. Fee $9. (Monday,
NYC
December 22, except those in miliPromotion
iAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
tary service during any part of the
•671. ARCHITECT
(BfATERregular filing period, who may ap- lALS RESEARCH AND SPECIFIIN THE RECENT olerk-carrler
I AM AN ELIGIBLE on a NYO
ply until January 31).
CATIONS), (Prom.), Housing Au- postal exam, are veterans placed list and was notified by one of the
•589. RESIDENT BUILDINGS thority. $6,1«1 to $«,350. Requij|:e- a t t l i e t o p o f t h e ] l s t . o r d o they departments to appear for an InSUPERINTENDENT, $4,648; four ments: six months as assistant take their position on ttie basis of terview within four days. I was
vacancies in the Housing Author- architect. Fee $S. (Thursday. De- their scores?—^L.C.
too ill to do so, or even writ«<
ity. Requirements: five years' su- c e m b ^ 19).
Answer—^Veteran preference wiH What shall I do? R.D.C.
pervisory experience to the oper•691. ASSISTANT CIVIL EN- apply as follows: To the earned
Answer — You should write tm
ation, maintenance »nd repair of GINEER (SANIT4BT), (Prom.). score, disabled veteran preference the Municipal Civil Service Com«
large tenanted buildings, three Bronx Borough President, $4,141 candidates are entitled to 10 addi- mission, 299 Broadway, New York
years of which must have been in to $5,160.
Requirements: six tional points, non-disabled veter- 7, N. Y., stating when you received
charge of properties having not months as Junior civil engineer ans 5 points. When the premium the call letter, from what departJess than seven maintenance and (including all specialties), civil en- points are added to the earned ment, and concerning what title,
operations employees; or satisfac- gineering draftsman, or assistant score, the veterans take their place and explaining why you didn't
NYC
tory equivalent. Exempt from! NYC civil sngineer (including all spe- on the list on the total point basis comply. A department, in returnOpen-Competitive
residence requirement. Fee $4, cialties except sanitary). Fee $4. only.
ing a certification of eligibles, puts
6614. ASSISTANT HOSPITAL (Thursday, December 19).
(Thursday, December 19).
a notation next to an eligible's
ADMINISTRATOR, $6,620 without
name, in a case such as yours,
6724.
STATIONARY
ENGII
FORMERLY
worked
for
the
6612.
CAPTAIN
(MEN),
(Prom.)
maintenance; live vacancies in the
stating "Failed to respond." The
NEER.
$15.76
a
day;
eighty
vaDepartment
of
Parks
in
NYC
and
Department of Hospitals, RequireDepartment of Correction, $4,250
eligible's name then goes off the
cancies
in
various
City
departtransferred
to
another
City
dements: (a) bachelor's degree, %nd
to $4,700.
Requirements: six
list, hence your name is not on
ments.
Requirements:
U.
S,
cltirtment,
whereupon
my
salary
Kb) either (1) master's degree with
months
as correction
officer
me less by the amount
the the list now. However, the Ck>ma major In hospital administra- aen and resident of NY State; (men). Fee H . (Thiu-sday, Deincrements. I have been employed mission has authority to restwe a
tion, or (2) two years' experience for appointment to most depart- eembw 19).
one year in the second department name to the list, and on a conin an administrative position in a ments, must be NYC resident for
•613.
CAPTAIN
(WOMEN), and shared hi a general wage in- vincing and timely showing may
hospital, or (c) satisfactory equi- three years; stationary engineer's (Prom.),
Department of Correc- crease there to those in my title. be expected to do so.
valent. Pee $5. (Thursday, De- license fr(»n the Department of Uon, $4,250
to $4,700. Require- After four years in the new deHousing and Buildings. Fee $.50.
cember 19).
ments: six months as correction partment I will reach the maxi(Thursday, December 19).
6569. ASSISTANT SUPERIN6574. SUPERINTENDENT OF officer (women). Fee $4. (Thurs- mum salary. But since I have put
PATROLMAN
TENDENT OF CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION (BUILDINGS), day, December 19).
in more than four years' continu(BUILDINGS), GRADE 4, $5,215; GRADE 4, $5,885; 50 vacancies in
MENTAL TRAINING
6698. FOREMAN OF BRICK- ous NYC service, I should be en25 vacancies in the Housing Au- the Housing Authority and De(Prom.), Housing Au- titled to top salary now. L.W.
Small
Classes * led. Coachinf
thority and Department of Educa- partment of Education. Require- LAYERS
Answer — You will have to wait
thority, $25.85 a day; one vacancy.
tion. Requirements: five years' ments: six years' building con- Requirements:
until you have spent four years
Apply New
six
months
as
building construction experience, struction experience, at least three bricklayer. Fee 50 oents. (Thurs- in 3«>ur second job before you'll be
at least two years of which must years of which must have been as day, December 19).
YMCA
SCHOOLS
entitled to the top pay, as you evihave been as assistant superin- superintendent or general superdently were appointed to a pertf
W,
63
St.,
N.
Y. 23 . EM 2-8117
6699. FOREMAN OF CARPEN- manent vacancy in the second detendent or superintendent on intendent on building construcbuilding construction comparable tion comparable in sise to units TERS (Prom.), Housing Author- p e u ^ e n t , after having served as
in size to units constructed by the constructed by the Housing Au- ity, $26.05; two vacancies. Re- a provisional in the other one. The
SANITATION MAN
Housing Authority or Department thority or Department of Educa- quirements: six months as car- policy of making the pay in the
of Education; or satisfactory equi- tion; o^ satisfactory equivalent. penter. Fee M oents. (Thursday. new Job a standard starting rate
FIREMAN • PATROLMAN
valent. Engineering education miay Engineering education may be December 19).
for all, denying emiployees the
PHYSICAL TKAINING
be substituted. Exempt from NYC substituted. Exempt from NYC
Classes K o w I n P r o g r e s e
•700. FOREMAN OF FAINTER continuation of the past-earned
residence requirements. Fee $4, residence requirements. Fee $4. ^ H
increments,
is
unsound,
and
is
the
OUSING
AUTHORITY),
Day Jb E r e . Seseions. Sni.il1 O r o n p s .
.(Thursday, December 1»).
(Thursday, December 19).
Bid. I i w t r u c U o n , T r e e Mwlical
(Prom.), $22.64; five vacancies. subject of discussions between emObet.
Course. M e m b e r s h i p P r i v .
ployee
groups
and
the
Budget
IM6682. GENERAL
SUPERIN•746. SUPERINTENDENT OF Requirements: Six months as
TENDENT OF CONSTRUCTION MAINTENANCE, GRAE 4, $5,935; painter (Housing Authority). Fee reetor's ( ^ c e .
BRONX UNION YMGAy
(BUILDING). GRADE 4, $7,250; <me vacancy In the Depa^ment 50 cents. (Thursday, December
^ v e n vacancies in the Housing of Tra£Bic. Requirements: high 19).
47a I . U l H., N. Y. Si • ME 5.7tM
Authority and Department of Edu- school graduation and five years'
Sadie Brown says:
66et. FOREMAN O P T B A F n C
cation. Requirements: seven years' experience in the direction of and DEVICES (Prom.), Department of
OUR C O A I C H I N * COURSE W I U
building construction experience, scheduling of work for mechanics Traffic, $1,421 to #4,250; three
PREPARE Y O U I C R
THi
at least two years of which must from plans and written orders, vacancies.
Requirements:
six
have been as a general superin- one year of such experience in m(mths as traffic sign malntainer
tendent on work comparable in charge of maintenance operation general mechanic or auto engineRQUIVAUGNCl;
size to projects constructed by the ai«ploying not less that 50 per- man. Fee $1. (TiMUiday, DecemHousing Authority or Department sons, including supervision of of- ber 19).
WEKK OF J A N . 1 7
of Education; or a satisfactory fice and field personnel. College
A P P L I C A T I O N S DEC. 4 10
•808.
METHODS
ANALYST
Which
Will
kelp
y
o
n
gM
a
equivalent. Engineering education education may be substituted. Fee
Hospital Clerk Exom
poiiition and improve f t u
(Prom.), Houaing Authority, $4,m a y be substituted. Exempt from $4. (Thursday, December 19).
•oeial • t a a d i n c .
SaturdajB 1:30-3:30 pm.
021 and over. Requirements: six m a diploma,
w h i c h la laraed Iqr t h e
NYC residence requirements. Fee
M W. 4 3 St., N . T., Rm. 1. 8 M.
•651. TAPPER, $3,070; three months as Junior methods analyst
M.T. S U t e Dept. 0f S d a c a U o n , la tally
(Thursday, December 19).
KAPPRL,
M. A . F/V 7 - 4 4 8 0
r e c o m i i e d by t h e C I t U Serrlce Oom•acancies tat the Department of Fee $4. (Thursday, December 19)
rmSK TYPING * S T E N O . RJSVUIW
miseion, Gttjr, State and Pederal CIOT>
6600. INSPECTOR OF STEEL Water Sun>ly. Oas and ElectricInstructor
B k l y a College
ernmenta, Indaetry and U r admisaion
•742. SENIOR BACTERIOLO
"(CONSTRUCTION), GRADE 3, ity. Requirements: three years' GIST (Prom».), Departments of
to Ootlegrefl.
•TKCIAI. l e WEEKS OODBSB
$4,016; two vacancies in the De- experience or satisfactory equiva- Hospitals and Health. $4,321 and
ia eondacted by ezperta.
p a r t m e n t of Public Works. R e - lent. Fee $2. (Thursday, Decem- over; one vacancy In the DepartAlso
quirements: three years' exper- ber 19).
ment of Hospitals and four In the BTO. A i m . , ACOTG. A AIXDRD B F B i .
• P P L I C . \ T I O N S O P E N — 1 5 « JOBS
ience, at least one of which must
X B O . SECTU, R E A L
EST., ENS.,
COLLEGE OFFICE ASSIST- Department of Health. Require- •ADVO.,
have been on welded structures
SALESMANSHIP, etc. STENO.
ments: six months as bacterioloANT
"A,"
$2,400
to
$3,865.
300
vaEMPLOYMENT
Y P I N G A N D REFKESHEK COURSES.
a n d one in a capacity such as
gist. Fee $4. (Thursday, Decem- T8PBCIAX.
CLASSES P C S
COLLEGE
foreman, superintendent or in- cancies in NYC colleges. Require- ber 19).
WOMEN.
INTERVIEWER
spector; or satisfactory equivalent. ments: high school graduation
Day a ByenloK
•
Oo-Ed •
6708. SUPERVISOR OF CUSII.Y.S. Division of Employmeat
Fee $3. (Thursday. December 19). and, in addition, (a) two years of
New Oiassea Now Pormine
college education; or (b) two TODIANS (Prom.), Department
Teteraoa AcceiMed for All CooreeB
$3,571 t o $4,372
6791. PATROLMAN, POLICE years of general office work ex- of Education, $7,500; four vacanPrepare Now to Poss the Exam
DEPARTMENT, $3,725 to $4,725, perience; or (c) one year of office cies. Requirements: sis months as
Requirements: 20 to 29 yrs. of a^e; work experience in an educational custodian
Course Begias Doc. 9. «:15 P.M.
engineer.
Fee $5
SOI Madltoa Ave. N . Y . 2 2 . N . Y .
no formal educational require- institution oth«r than a college or (Thursday, December 19).
PL. 8 - 1 8 7 2
I«t
S2Bd
St.)
ments; U. S. citizen a n d resident university; or (d) six months' ex- POLICE MEMORIAL SERVICES
APPLICATIONS OPBN
4 0 * JOBS
of N. Y. State; at time of appoint- perience in a college or university;
Members of the Shomrim Soment, three years' residence in or (e) equivalent combination of ciety, NYC Police Department,
SOCIAL
INVESTIGATOR
NYC; good character; 5 feet 8 education and experience. Ability marched in a body to Mount Neboh
N.Y.C. Doi>t. of Wolfore
inches, appropriate weight; 20/20 to type is absolute minimum re- Temple, on Sunday, November $.
STUDY M A N U A L S
S3.2M to $3,740
vision, each eye separately with- quirement. Fee $2. (Thursday, De- and attended memorial services for
Propare Now to Pass tho Exom
out glasses; physical and medical cember 19).
deceased members (rf the departCo«rso Boqins Dec. 3, 4:1 S f M ,
ment. Sergeant George 8. Bon> te
president of the society.
a t t h e School w h e r e W e l l o r e S u p e r v i e o r s
Hospital Clerk, Grade S
s t u d y f o r t h e i r p r o m o t i o o examiuationB
Clerk, Grade 5
Social
Investigator
C i m SERVICE j C O / g H j N G
CIVIL. S B R V I C E D I V I S I O N WA 4 0 8 Z 1
Bienographer-Typist
Beboal •< IiMiasirial Teckmriosy
OMMt.
B
U
c
a
.
O
u
t
o
d
i
a
o
M.
T.
State
C»erk.
Steno,
U. S.—Second Regional Office, U. S. C!ivll Service Commission, IiMp. OoM. HoMtec SUfy Bnrr. Mm.
ieeO-7th AT®., N . T . 1 ( a t 2 7 S t . )
Typist
•41 Washington Street, New York 14, N. Y. (Manhattan). Hours 8:30 Bm. BMir. Bapt.
Salywaor Bkum
Colto^e
Assi&toBt
"A**
Pl«as« w r i t e m e , f r e e , a b o u t y a u r
to 5, Monday through Friday; closed Saturday. Tel. WAtkins 4-1000.
LICENSE PREPARATION
E m p l o y m e n t I n l e r T i e w e r courtie
B
Mviiicipai Gov't. . . . .TS
Applications also obtainable at post offices except the New Yoric, H. Y., StotioMry
Kntrr.. BafrigersMnc Optr.
(A mu«t for all cHy aiiamt)
post office.
Prof.
Kngineer,
Ai«hlt«ct,
Baveyor
Social I n y c a t i e a t o r Course
STATE—Room 2301 at 270 Broadway, New York 7, M. Y., Tel. M a s t e r BI«ctricUui, I l u i n b e r , P o r t a b l e
K a m e (Prints
BArclay 7-1616; lobby of State Office Building, and M Columbia •nrr.. Ml Buracr, Botler la>p«e««r
Duane Publishing Co.
Mathematics, Drafting, DesUni
Street, Albany, N. Y.: Room 302, State Office Building, Buffalo 2, N. Y. Alreraft,
Addreu
lCe<di'l. tUeVL Aich'L Mmc*!.
1S« WEST » 7 t b ST., N. X. 1
Hours 8:30 to 5, excepting Saturdays, 9 to 12. Also, Room 400 at 155 SnrTcqr. Otvil S«irr. Arith. Ale. Ocom. M s .
MaU
Ordera
Pilled
Boro
Ph.
West Main Street, Rochester, N. Y., Thursdays and Fridays, 9 to i. Oald.. n i y a i e a . P i « » • B g i n e c r l i i c OOUCCM.
All of foregoing applies to exams for county Jobs.
MONDELL INSTITUTE
NYC—NYC Civil Service Commission, 96 Duane Street, New York Mjv sso w««t 4im St.. wiM. T-sose
Jamaica Are^ Jamaica AX T-MSS
J. N. Y. (Manhattan) two blocks north of City Hall, Just west of leS-lS
n n e a QWca Da^a A B t m .
TRY THE "Y" PLAN
Broadway, opposite the LEADER office. Hours 9 to 4, excepting Sat- Of«r AH40O oyra.
Praparia* Tbonumdi lor
FIREMAN
OtTU S e r v i o r
Bncrc..
Uoense
tu-day, 9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880.
Mlgli
School
DIploiiia
NYC Education (Teaching Jobs Only)—Personn^ Director, Board
AmOVID AU
1. MLLS
PATROLMAN
(E<)aivalea«y)
M Education, 110 Livingston Street. Brooklyn 2, N. Y. H o w s • to
Approved for Koreas Vets
faaued b r M. T . BoMd e< Becenta
• :20; closed Saturdays. Tel. MAin 4-2800.
SANITATIONMAN
• COACNIN* COMSE
NYC "Travel Directions
Physical Training Clossos
• SMALL CLASSCS
Rapid transit lines for reaching the U. 8., BiaU and m r c OMl
Undor Expert InstriictioB
• BEGIN FREqUENUr
fiervlce Commissi<m offices hi NYC follow:
LEARN
A
TRADE
• LOW COST
State Civil Service Commission, NYC Civil Service Commission
Compfeto Equipmenf
« i o Me(d>aalca
Dieeet
• COEDUCATIONAL
IND trains A. C, D, AA or (X? to Chambws Street; IRT .Lexington A
Kachiaiat-Tbol A Die
Weldisf
Por CfvH Service Test
Call
or
aend
lor
folder
Avenue Mne to Brooklyn Bridge; BMT Fourth Avenue local or Oil Bonier
Befriferatloa
B«dio A IMerlBlon
Air CondiUonliv
Oym and P o o l AvaMuble
Brighton local to C»ty Hall.
YMCA EVENING SCHOOL
Motion Plottwe Opentttng
Brary Day r r o m 8 A.M. to 1 0 : 3 0 AM.
U. S. Civil Service Commission—IRT Seventh Avenue local
16 W. eSrd Bt., New Seek M, M.
OAT AMD l y a i H l l O OLASSaB
Christopher Street station.
BNdieoU % - t n n
IrMlrtyB Y.M.CUL Vira4e Seheel
IROOKLYN CENTRAL
u s e BeMotd Ave., BrooUya M, N. X.
Data on Applications by Mall
MA
Boiee
Both tbe U. 8. and the State issue application Manks and receive
Y M C A
mied-out forms by mail. In a p i ^ n g by mail for U. 8. Jobs do not
STBNOGBAPHY
enclose return postage. If applying for State Jobs, encloae C-OMit
It H o o s o n pi. r k l y a ' 17. N.Y.
stamped, self-addressed S-inch or larger envelope. The State accepts
TVPIWIUTIN«'K>OKNIIPIN»
nutbOKh Ave. L.I.K.K. Ma4i(Mt
postmarks as of the loosing date. H i e U. 8. does not, but requires
P h o n e STerllnK 3 - 1 0 0 0
Spceiai « Montha 0*«rac
As » Bervlee t o appUcants for
Day or Bra.
that the mail be In Ms office by 5 p.aa. of the closing date. Because elvU Bsnrlee I d b c T h e LEADER
cf curtailed collections. NYC residents should actually do their maU BMPfrtleB free notiiry mttIoc aft Ito
•vIcelaMag or C — p l e i e l r y
Ing no later than 8:90 p j n . to obtain a postmark of ttiat date.
iBtenahw O o w a e
office^ M D w u m MRACT, N T C .
been readiiif th«
NYC does not iMtie blanks by mail or receive them by mail except aeross the street from the I f I C
lAABER's interesting new colunui,
l
O
R
O
HALL ACADEMY
for nationwide tests, and then only when the exam notice so itates. CSril Servloe Ooeamlsslon.
C M i 8efvi«e Newaletterr T o u H
11 «Bt xijiTBvaa Axvmm n * .
The U. S. charges no api^icatkm leee. TIm State and MM loofU
i* MAM i t UVBT
H OM. wjum m. rki9« mjM MMS i p | 4
Oivll Service GomuisskHis charge fees at rates fixed by la«.> >
The following NTC exams op«a
on Thursday, December 4, except
the patrolman exam, which opens
on Friday, Deceml>er S. Do not attempt to apply before those dates.
Last day to apply appears at tbe
end of each notice, and Is Thursday, December 19, except patrolman, for which application may
be made «ntil Monday, December
22.
Servicemen in service durinff any
part of the normal fllins period
may apply for patrolman until
February 28, 1953.
HIGH SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
$1.00 EACH
Where to Apply for Jobi
College Clerk Exam
C I T I C
S E R T I C I
L K A D E R
CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
SHOPPING CENTER
WHERE YOU BUY THE BEST FOR LESS
LIONEL TRAINS
TELEVISION
RADIOS
WATCHES
BROILERS
REFRIGERATORS
$
TOYS
VACUUM CLEANERS
TYPEWRITERS
20
TdMShf, DeeemBer t ,
Study A i d for
Hospital Clerk
In N Y C
The following continues t h e
publication of study material for
the NYC clerk, grade 2 (Hospitals
Department) exam, for which 7,048'persons applied. The last day
to apply has passed.
The written test will be held on
Saturday, December 20,
The questions and answer;^ are
the official ones, from the last
clerk, grade 2. test, and are valuable aids in indicating the type
of exam to be expected. From the
eligible list resulting from the
current exam, posts will not be
filled in any other department,
but the written test is not expected fo deal with hospital work in
any way. The jobs are clerical.
Intelligence questions may be expected, also questions regarding
simple types of clerical work and
office practices. I n the department
those filling the jobs are known
as ward clerks. They fill out simple reports, keep records, do some
filing and, if they desire, help to
cheer up patients.
The additional questions for this
1991
Air Force Offers
Inspector Jobs
An exam is open until furthen
notice for filling civilian jobs wiili
the Air Force as procurement i n spector, $3,795 to $5,060 to staii*
There are 15 specialties.
Jobs are open in NYC, on Long
Island, and in Columbia, Dutchess*
Greene, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Ulster and Westchester counties, in the following specialties:
Aircraft instrument (including optics), radio and electronic equiment, tools and gages, packaging^
and material and processing. I n
NYC and New Jersey jobs are
open in aircraft fuel, lubricant
and chemical inspection: in New
Jersey, in aircraft propeller inspection.
Age limits are 18 to 62, but do
not apply to veterans.
Apply to U.S. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street^
New York 14, N. Y., by mail. In
person or by representative, or to
Board of CivH Service Examiners,
Eastern Air Procurement. 780
Broadway, New York 3, N. Y.
LEGAL NOTICE
S U P R E M E COURT. BRONX COUNTY
Max Donncp, plaintift, against Banker*
T r u s t Compiiny ol New York City, aa
Executor and Trustee under t h e Last Will
and Testament of L a u r a E. Mace, doceased,
"Joan'
Gwyer
and "Michael"5. TTie central filing unit of a Owyer, eaid names " J o a n " and "Michael'*
being
fictilious.
t
r
u
e
names
sai®
certain City department keeps in defendants beins? tinknown toof t hthe
e plainits files records used by the vari- tiff. the persons intended being t h e chil<
ous bureaus in connection with dren now living and the issue of L a u r a
their daily work. It is desirable M. Gwycr. A r t h u r Mace Gwyer and
Emily H. Gwycr, whose names and n u m for the clerks in this filing unit ber
are u n k n o w n to t h e plaintiff and t h «
to refile records as soon as possi- said t w o persons arc named to desigmato
as
a
class t h e child or children in b e i n r
ble a f t e r they have been returned
t h e eaid L a u r a M. Gwyer. A r t h u r Mac«
by the different bureaus chiefly of
and Emily H. Gwyer, Mareella L .
because (A) records which are Gwyer
Milliken, Edward B. Barnwell, "Mra. Edneeded can be located most easily ward R Barnwell", eaid n a m e b e i n r fictiif they have been filed (B) such tious. t r u e name u n k n o w n t o plalntift,
person intended being the wife. If any, o*
procedure develops commendable Edwai-d
Barnwell. Doris
Frumkin,
work habits among the employees Dennis P.R.Shiel,
J o h n M. Burke. " M r s .
(C) records which are not 'filed J o h n M. B u r k e . " said n a m e beinpr flctltioua,
immediately are usually filed in- t r u e n a m e u n k n o w n to plaintiff, person
beinsr the wife, if any, of J o h n
correctly (D) the accimiulation of intended
B u r k e and all of the above, if living,
records to be filed gives t h e office M.
and if they or aeiy of them be dead, t h e n
a disorderly appearance.
it is Intended to sue their heirs-at-law,
6. The active and inactive file devisees, distribuleee. next-of-kin. execuwives, widows, lienors and creditorai
material of an office is to be filed tors,
and their respective successors in interest,
in several four-drawer filing ca- wives, widows, heira at-law. next-of-kin,
binets. Of the following, the best devisees, distributees, creditors, lienora,
administrators and euccessoia
method of filing the material is, executors,
interest, all of whom and whose named
in general, to (A) keep inactive in
and w h e r e a b o u t s are u n k n o w n to t h e
material in the upper drawers of plaintlR and w h o are joined and desigrthe file cabinets so t h a t such m a - nated herein as a clasa as " U n k n o w n Deterial may be easily removed for f e n d a n t s . " defendants.
To t h e above named d e f e n d a n t s :
disposal (B) keep active material
You are hereby summoned to answer the
in the upper drawers so t h a t the complaint
in this action, and to serve »
amount of stooping by clerks us- copy of y o u r answer, or if t h e complaint
not served with this summons, t o
ing the files is reduced to a minim u m (C) assign drawers in the serve a Notice of Appearance on th®
l^aintiff'8 attorney within twenty (20>
file cabinets alternately to active days
a f t e r t h e service of t h i s s u m m o n s ,
and to inactive material so t h a t exclusive o l the day of service. In ea»®
file material can be transferred of your f.ailure to appear or answer,
will bo taken against you by doeasily from the active to the in- judgment
a u l t f o r the relief demanded in the comactive files (D) assign file cabinets fplaint.
alternately to active u-id to inDated New York, Aug^uet 21, 1053.
HARRY HAUSKNECIIT.
active material so t h a t crossf o r Plaintiff.
references between the two types Office and P. O. Attorney
Address, 135 Broadway,
of material can be easily made.
New York, New York.
7. Of the following, the best
Tlie plaintiff's address is 370 East 149tU
reason for using " f o r m " letters Street. Bronx New York, and plaintiff
designates
Bronx County as the place of
is t h a t they (A) enable an indivi- trial.
dual to transmit unpleasant or
To the above named dctendants:
The forePToine supplemental s u m m o n s is
disappointing communications in
a gentle and sympathetic manner served upon you by puWication p u r p u a n t
to an order of Hon. Ernest E. L. Ham(B) present the facts in a terse, mer. Jnstiee of tlie Supreme Court of t h a
business-lik^ manner (C) save State of Now Vcrk, cinfed October 10,
the time of both the dictator and 10,53, and filed with the amended complaint in the otTice of the Clerk of Bronx
the typist in answering letters County.
101st Street and Grand Concourse,
dealing with similar matters (D) in t h e Borough
of The Bronx. City at
are flexible and can be easily New York.
This action is brouerht
to foreclos*
changed to meet varying needs
several transfer."? of t a x liens sold by t h «
and complex situations.
City of New York to the plaintiff. You
KEY ANSWERS
are interested in all of the causes of a c
tion of the amended complaint, which ar«
5. A; 6. B or D; 7, C;
f o r the torcclosiire of the following liens,
either by way of ownership or by way of
ca<;cmenta in the l a n d : Bronx Lien N o .
55300. in the sum of $8,360.38 with Interest a t 1 3 % per a n n u m f r o m July S,
1940. affecting Section 10. Block 4 7 0 7 ,
Lot 18 on t h e T a x Map of Bronx C o u n t y ;
Bronx Lien No. 74371, in the sum oC
Civilians are needed at the $ 4 8 0 . 8 3 with interest at 1 3 % per s n n u n i
Signal School at Fort Monmouth f r o m February 4. 1947. affecting Section
10. Block 4707, Lot 30 on the T a x Map
N. J., for teaching in radar, guid- of
County: Bronx Lien No. 5 5 3 1 0 .
ed missile, radio and electronics in Bronx
the sum of $901.33 with interest a t
subjects, at $3,410 to $5,060 a year 1 3 % ijer a n n u m f r o m July 3, 1940, a f Radar instructors must have ex- fecting Section 10. Block 4707. Lot 4 8
UMfTED
on the T a x Map ol Bronx County; Bronx
perience in theory, test, m a i n t e - Lien
No. 5 5 3 1 1 ; in the sum of $ 3 , 1 7 4 . 9 1
TIME ONLY!
nance r.nd repair of ground, fixed with interest at 1 3 % per a n n u m f r o m
and mobile microwave radar.
July 2. 1910, affecting Section 10. Block
4 9 on the T a x Map o l Bronx
Radio electronics
experience 4707. LotBronx
Lien No. 55313. in the s u m
should include repair of ra^io County;
of $001.06 with interest at 1 3 % per ancommunications equipment up to num " f r o m July 8, 1940. affecting Section
500 watts, electronic circuits used 10, Block 4707, Lot 50 on the T a x M a p
Bronx County: Bronx Lien No. 7 3 0 7 4 ,
in amplitude and frequency modu of
t h e sum of $1,340.30 with interest a*
lated equipment, and in very high in
1 3 % per a n n u m f r o m April 17, 1948,
frequency multi-channel radio re affecting Section 10, Btock 4707. Lot M
on the Tax Map of Bronx County; Bronx
lay and associated equipent.
Lien No. 5 5 3 1 4 : in the sum o l $ 9 3 6 . 1 t
Othei- Jobs a t $5,940
with interest at 1 3 % per a n n u m front
Other positions include educa July
8, 1940, aileeting Section 10, Block
tional specialists and training offi 4707. Lot 6S on the T a x Map of Bronx
cers at $5,940. These jobs require County: Bronx Lien No. 55315, In th«
of $793.74, with interest at 1 3 % pev
experience in Signal Corps tech sum
f r o m July 3. liHO, affecting Beonical and tactical subjects. A de annum
tion 10. Block 4707. Lot 00 on the T a «
gree in education, communica Map of Bronx County: Bronx Lion N«.
tions or electrical engineering will 55310, in the s u m of $303.70 with t » .
tore«t at 1 3 % per a n n u m f r o m July St.
be helpful.
1940. affecting Section 10. Block 470T,
Apply to the Board of U. S. Lot 85 on the T a x Map of Bronx County,
Civil Service Examiners. Head- and Bronx Lien No. 55317, In t h e s u m
quarters Signal Corps Center. Fort of $ 9 7 8 . 9 3 with Interest at 1 3 % per ann u m f r o m July 3, 1940, affecting Section
CANAL ST. STATION Monmouth, N. J., until f u r t h e r 10, Block 4707, Lot 09 on the T a x M ^
notice.
o l Bronx County.
Dated: New York. October 31, ma's,
The Signal Corps urges men
9 A.M. t o i P.M. S o t e r d a y t
HARHY HAUSKNECIIT.
about to be released from the mili-
FOR
AT LEAST
YOUR OLD CLEANER!
when you buy fhe NEW 1 9 5 3
I CUfVT
L C n
f
I
VACUUM
CLEANER
^ SwivftUI Rolls Reom-fo-RooMl
Silsntly follows you over bar* floors, rug^
«cross door sills on ball-bearing swivel
rubber wheels! Cleans in big 32-ft.
radius!
^ Carries Aftaehmentt Aiongl
No re-traced steps—always at your
fingertips!
^ A l w a y s Ready for Actienl
Rolls from your closet, plugs m — in
seconds!
^
^ No Dus't Bag t o Empfyl
•
Simply toss out extra-big paper "Speed
Sak" a few times a yearl
^ No Whining Roarl
Just a gentle hum! It's Hie quietest
cleaner of all — by farl
^ Terrific Suction!
Lewyt's motor is over-siaa, gets more
embedded dirt!
^ No. 80 Carpet N o n l e l
With its automatic comb-valve and
floating brush whisks up lint, threads,
even hairs—with less rug wear!
^ No Unhealthy Leaking Dast!
Micro -Dust Filter System traps particle*
even finer than the eyes can see—ac»
tually smaller than 1/25,000 of an inckl
No wonder it's preferred by kospitalsl
^ S w e e p s Bare Floors!
Waxes linoleum; renews drapesf spraiyt
paint; de-moths!
.'SS'^LI?
Signal Corps Has
Teaching Jobs
evwything you ne«d to
,up*,.c
DO IT WITH LEWYTI FREE DEMONSTRATIONS NOWl
SEE IT TODAY AT
CIVIL SERVICE MART
i4 LAFAYETTE STREET. N. Y. C.
BE 3-6S54
Op«« 9 A.M. t e 4 P.M. Dally
9 A.M. t« 4 P.M. Thursdoyt
Where You Alway$ Get A Good Buy;
tary service to apply, although the
jobs are open to all comers.
OfJiro
utiU
1'
O
Atiariipy for i'lniiitifl
Adili'ffi-. 1 3 a HroaUwai^
New Vui'k. Nw* Yuik.
r
7% IfOt
C I V I C
S I K T I C S
DON'T REPEAT THIS
C E A D B A
P«9e T w ^ t j - t l i M
Prison Guards Prepare
Ammunition for 25-Year
Pension Push^lZfh Time
General identified as t h e Fourth Naticnal Fewer Policy Committee
/ yContfnned from paot i )
Astistant Postmaster Oeneral im<l) The General Counsel.United States N « t » 1 B o u m
mediately iMTlor to approval of Re' (1) PoslUons of. orderly whoa organization Plan No. 3 of 1949.
PuertO Rice Reconstruction
•Ued by the appointment of beneAdministration
(2) One chauffeur for the PostALBANY, Dec. 1—Guards in bill by which t h e State's legislaflcUuies of the Home.
(1) One Administrator and one
nwster General.
New York State's prisons are pre- tors voted themselves a h a l f - p a y
Head
Administrative
Officer.
MtUUry Sea TransportatlMi
<S) Four special assistants to
paring ammimition for a renewal retirement plan for 20 years of
Service
the Postmaster General.
Federal Petroleum Board
of their campaign t o achieve a service.
(1) All positions on Tessels o|>(4) One private secretary to the
(1) Three members of the 25-year pension plan.
Another argument advanced is
• r a t e d by t h e Military Sea Tran«- Bxecutive Assistant to the PosV Board.
For the past 12 years legislation the f a c t t h a t other police forces
master General.
portation Service.
h
a
s
been
introduced
granting
them
have plans for either 25-year or
Bonneville Power Admlnisiration
Office ot the Solicitor
PEPABTMENT OF THE AIK .
such a plan at half pay.
20-year retirement. They point
(1) The Administrator.
<1) T h e SoUciter.
FORCE
Each time the measure has died. out t h a t prison guards begin t o
(2) One private secretary or Division of Territories and Island
Office ef the Secretary
Now, in anticipation of the Leg- decline physically around the age
Possessions
<1> Two private secretaries or confidential assistant to the Soliislative opening next month, thfe of 50, and should ba allowed t o .
(1) T h e Director <Jf the Divi- guards once more are preparing retire a t t h a t time.
•onfldential assistants to the Sec- citor.
sion.
retary of the Air Force, one to
their legal program.
DEPARTMENT O F THEHowever it may be received, t h e
(2) One Hawaiian Homes Rept h e Under Secretary ot the Air
W h a t they seek is a return to 25-year pension plan for CorrecINTERIOR
resentative.
f o r c e , and one to each Assistant
a plan which existed in Correction
guards Ls expected to be one
General
(3) The Administrator of St. Institutions up to 1923, by which tion
Secretary of the Air Force.
of the early bills dropped in t h e
(1) Engineers, geologists, eco- Croix, V. I.
(2) One Special or Cenfldential
guards were able to retire on half Legislative hopper next month.
Assistant to t h e Under Secretary nomists, architects a n d appraisers
pay at the end of 25 years of satisProgram Division
•f the Air Force a n d two to each in a consulting or advisory capafactory service. With the creation
CI) The Director.
AJssistant Secretary of the Air city for temporary, part-time or
of the 60-year retirement plan for
Intermitttent .emplojmaent. Em(Continued Next Week)
force.
all State employees, the separate
under this subpara(3) Five Board Members •f the ployments
measure covering gtiards was
graph shall not exceed 120 workWAR VETERANS MEET
'Armed Services
Renegotiation ing
days a yesu- unless prior perThe New York War Veterans in ended.
Board.
mission is (^ven by the Commis- Civil Service held their riegIf Legislators Can—
Office of the Inspector General sion for the extension of an addi- ular meeting Thursday, NovemOne of the arguments the guards
(1) UntU December 31, 1950, in tional 120 days. This time limit ber 13, at 8:30 P.M. in the club are using this year is the 1950
Bfienaaring Year-Round Resort
erder to provide civilian person- does not apply to consultants on room of the Rhelnlander Post, ^' "
nel complementary to military reclamation -work authorized by American Legion, 248 West 14th
Orchestra
Cockfail Loung«
ersonnel, 20 Special Agent posi- the act of February 28, 1929, as Street, NYC. Bills prepared for
Read the Civil Service LEADER Seasonal Sports • Dance Instruction
ons in the Office of Special I n - amended,
the 1953 State Legislature were every week.
•
MOhMtOE, N. Y.
•
vestigations, Office of the Inspec(2) One private secretary or discussed.
Trt: Monrop 4431
N. Y. Off. KO 4-8fl!;«
tor General, Headquarters, and 75 confidential assistant to the head
Special Agent positions in district of each bureau in the Interior
offices of t h e Office of Special I n - Department who is appointed by
•estigations, U. S. Air Force, In the President, and one each to
f r a d e s OS-11 or higher.
the Governors of Alaska, Hawaii,
Air Force Institute of Technology Puerto Rico, and t h e Virgin
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Islands.
Dayton, Ohio
(3) Temporary, Intermittent, or
(1) Civilian deans and pro- seasonal positions in the field
fessors.
service of the Department of the
General
Interior, when filled by the ap(1) During the emergency de- pointment of persons who are
clared by the President to exist on certified as maintaining a permaMay 27, 1941, all positions in the nent and exclusive residence withDepartment of the Air Force on in, or contiguous to, a field activt h e Isthmus of Panama.
ity or district, and as being de(2) Positions the duties of which pent for livelihood primarily upare of a quasi-military nature and on employment available within
Involve the security of secret or the field activity of the Departconfidential matter, when In the ment, subject to the api»roval of
©pinion of the Commission, ap- the Commission.
pointmCTit through competitive
(4) Seaman, deckhand, fireman,
examination is impracticable.
oook, mess attendant, and water
(3) Positions of Special Services tender on vessels of the Departhostess and librarian assigned to ment of the Interior.
Air Force posts.
(5) Temporary or seasonal caretemporarily closed
Lookout Mountain Laboratory, takers at
camps or improved areas to mainLos Angeles, California
tain grounds, buildings or other
<1) All positions.
structures and prevent damage or
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
t h e f t of Government property.
General
appointments shall not ex(1) One private secretary or Such beyond
six m o n t i ^ without
•onfi(^ntlal assistant to each of tend
prior approval of the Comt h e following: Assistsmt to the At- the
torney Oeneral, Solicitor General, mission.
(6) Temporary, intermittent or
Assistant Solicitor Oeneral, and
cach Assistant Attorney General. seasonal field assistants in foresrange management, soils, en(2) Field deputy United States try,
gineering. fishery and wildlife
marshals employed on an hourly management,
UMITED
and with surveying
basis for intermittent service.
temMrarv I
for not to exceed 180 work(3) Positions
of
TIME ONLY!
' ' Ing days a year, whenever in the
deputy marshals In lieu of bailiS
In the United States courts when opinion of the Conunission a p employed on an Intermittent basis. pointment through competitive
No other cleaner has to
examination is impracticable.
Office ot the Attorney General
(7) Temporary emergency forest
(1) Two private secretaries or
many features and costs
confidential assistants to t h e At- and range fire and blister rust
control employees in the field sertorney General.
so little!
(2) One chauffeur for the At- Tice of the Department of the
^ S w i v e l s ! Rollf Roenfi-i«*ReoM!
Interior employed for fire prevenlorney General.
Silently follows yeu ever bare lieors, r u f t ,
(3) Eight positions in the inune- tion or suppression or blister rust
•crott doer tiiU m ball-bearing ewivei
diate office of the Attorney Gen- control for not to exceed 120
eral In addition to those excepted working days a year.
rubber wheelsl Cleans id big 32-ft.
(8) Persons employed to field
under s u l ^ r a g r a p h (1) of this
redius!
positions the work of which is
paragraph.
Carries Attaciiments Ai*sfl
financed Jointly by the Interior
Bureau of Prisons
No re-traced steps—always mt y u r
(1) Director and three assistant Department and cooperating perfiiig«rtipsi
sons or organizations outside the
directors.
^ Always Ready f*r A c t i e i !
(2) The Commissioner of Indus- Federal service.
Rells frem your cUset, plugs ia — h
tries. Federal Prison Industries,
Office ot the Secretary
secendsi
.......
Inc.
(1) Two private secretaries or
^ N * DHst Rog t « E m p t y !
Board of Parole
confidential assistants to t h e Sec(1) Members of ihe Board,
Smply toss out extra-big paper "Speed
retary of the Interior and one ito
f e d e r a l Bureau of InvestigatiMi each Assistant Secretary of the
Sak" a few times a year!
(1) All positions.
Interior.
^ N« W h i a i n g R o a r l
Immigration and Naturalisation
(3) One chauffeur for the SecJ u f t a gentle bum! It's tke quietest
Service
retary of t h e Interior.
d e a n e r of all — by farl
(3) f \ ) u r special assistants to
(1) One private secretary to
^ T e r r i f i c SNcHea!
t h e Secretary.
1
I
'
.
ttie Commissioner.
(4) Six special agents In the
(2) Three Deputy CommisslonLawyt s motor m over-sue, gets aioro
Office of Field Representatives to
•rs.
embedded dirt!
fraudulent entries and
POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT investigate
^
Mm. 80 C a r p « t N o n l o l
other
matters
of
a
criminal
n
a
General
WHh its automatic comb-vaive and
ture.
(1) One private secretary or
floating brush whisks up lint, throods.
(5) Director and Assistant Di•onfldential assistant to the head
ovoii kairs—with less rug wearl
Of each bureau( or office) in the
of the mvision of
^ No Uahooltfcy U o k i s g D««t!
P"^®^® secretiyy or
Post Office Department In WashWashMicro -Oust Filter System traps particles
ington. D. C., who im Annnintivi Confidential assistant to the DiovoM finer tkan tKe eyes can see—ac>
"
I ^ t o r of the Division of Power.
Af L^adhg Doparfmenf
aad
by the President.
(7) Three field representatives
tuady smaller tkaa 1/25,000 of m iockl
(2) Qeiiu! in fourth class post{
Furnifuro
Sforot
and
Your
whose
duties
are
of
a
confidential
No wonder it's preferred by kospitaisl
•ffices.
nature.
N^lgbborkood
D9alerl
(3) Substitute rural carriers.
^ Swoops Rare R e o r s l
(4) Special delivery m«ssenger8|
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Waaes linoleum; renews drapes; sfrays
In second, third, and fourth class |
<1) Positions in the Bureau of
poiat; de-mothsl
l ^ t offices.
Indian Affairs, Washington, D. C.,
(5) Unskilled laborers employed and in the field when filled by the
as Janitors and cleaners in small appointment of Indians who are
|>oetal units in leased quarters at of one-fourth or more Indian
a compensation less t h a n $1,700 blood. per aimum.
(3) All positions in the Neopit
(6) Fourth class postmasters Lumber Mills on the Menominee
the Hawaiian Islands,
Indian Reservation in Wisconsin.
ice ot the Postmaster General
(4) Housekeepers in the Indian
(1) Two private secretaries or Service a t a gross salary not in
WALLETS, LUGGAGE. WATCHES. TYPEWRITERS. CAMERAS,
confidential assistants to the Post- excess of entrance rate of grade
PROJECTORS, STERLING SILVERWARE, JEWELRY. ETC.
master General and one to each CPC-l or its equivalent.
Assistant Postmaster Oeneral exIndian Arts and Crafts Board
•cpt the Assistant Postnxoctcr i
U ) The Executive Director.
mdorest
E
AT LEAST
YOUR OLD CLEANER!
when you buy the NEW 1 9 5 3
LEWYT
VACUUM
CLEANER
It's Quiet! It's Powerful!
NO DUST BAG TO EMPTY!
TRUMART CO
219 W. 14th St, N. Y. C.
OR 5-7622
1
Twenty-four
C i y »
SKRTICt
LEADER
Tuesd«7, December t , 19S1
Activities of Civil Service Employees in N.Y. State
A farewell luncheon was held mittee have a gala program a r executive council in December, u n - Harold Schroll, 517; high t e a m
less something of special.^4mport- single. T e a m No. 2, 749; high t e a m for Dr. M u r r a y on November 26 ranged a n d a huge t u r n o u t is e x THIRTY-FIVE members of t h e ance comes up. T h e next meeting triple, T e a m No. 3, 2108.
in t h e F a i r m o n t Building. G i f t s pected. Qet your tickets early f r o m
St. Lawrence Ccfinty chapter, is scheduled for Thursday, J a n u T e a m No. 2 is composed of J . were presented t o h i m by hospital your council representative. C h a p CSEA, attended t h e general meet- ary 15.
Popora, C. Morley, E. Fragiacomo, employees who wish h i m much ter members may bring guests. . . .
ing held at the St. Lawrence
Dr. T h o m a s O . Davis h a s been
J . O'Brien a n d W. Thomas. T e a m success a n d happiness in his new
Count^jfcJaame on Tuesday evening,
walking with his h e a d in t h e cloudg
No. 3 members a r e C. Thomas, W. position.
N o v e m b e r l B ^ ^ e l t h i a B. Kip,
Middletown State
ever since he m a d e a birdie on t h e
Ahrendt, F. Cheshire, C. Hagepresident, was diTairman. Mrs.
9th hole a t t h e McGregor Links
smeier
a
n
d
S.
Martin.
Sing
Sing
Hospital
Florence C, Wood, deputy county
golf course recently. He says it is
Back a t work a f t e r h e r recent
clerk and delegate, gave her reEMPLOYEES of Sing Sing t h e first time in t h e 30 years h e
LAURA STOUT, president of t h e illness is Cecile Crotty, recreation
orfc of t h e CSEA a n n u a l meeting Middletown S t a t e Hospital c h a p - department.
Prison were encouraged last week h a s been playing golf t h a t h e h a a
eld in Albany In October. Mrs. ter,CSEA. was a guest a t t h e meetto press their own demands for made a birdie. Look out Hogan
K a t h e r l n e Fullerton, public h e a l t h ing of t h e Association's Board d
pay increases a n d a d j u s t m e n t of and Snead! . . .
nurse a n d alternate, also spoke Directors last week.
Utica
working hours by gains received
Max Blume h a s r e t u r n e d f r o m
briefly.
Charles Lamb, president of t h e
LAURENCE J .
HOLLISTER, by employees of a large chain of t h e hospital a f t e r seven weeks of
Mrs. Marion C. Murray, case Correction Conference, a n d Emll CSEA field representative, was food stores in t h e G r e a t e r New confinement, but will recuperate
worker. D e p a r t m e n t of Social Wel- Bollman, president of t h e Rock- guest speaker a t t h e meeting of York area. M a r t i n Mulcahy, Sing for a few weeks before r e t u r n i n g
f a r e a n d co-chairman with J o h n land S t a t e Hospital chapter, were t h e Utica chapter, CSEA, on Nov- Sing chapter's president, urged all to work. Currently on t h e sick list
M. Loucks, probation ofiBcer, r e - guests a t t h e chapter's November ember 20 a t t h e S t a t e University CSEA members t o strive for a 40- are Ed Lasher of t h e X - r a y d e p a r t ported on t h e membership drive meetmg. Mr. L a m b spoke about Institute, Utica. About 40 m e m - hour week a t prevailing wages to m e n t a n d Fenwick Evans of housea n d t h e dinner held recently a t institutional problems whlrti affect bers h e a r d Mr. Hollister describe help meet t h e higher cost of living. keeping, recuperating f r o m a r e t h e Tick Tock in Canton by t h e both Mental Hygiene a n d Correc- t h e salary schedules a n d emergcent operation. "
Personnel news a n d notes:
membership committee.
tion employees. Mr. Bollman dis- ency compensation resolutions of
Congratulation are extended to
Daniel Kellarney h a s gone on
Philip L. W^hite, executive rep- cussed t h e Mental Hygiene Asso- t h e Association, which are being Mr. and Mrs. Adolph K n a p p upon vacation a t Rochester and T u p p e r
resentative. presented t h e c h a p - ciation ^ d its membership drive. discussed with S t a t e ofBcials a n d t h e arrival of their first child, a Laktf. Ann DeLair is also on v a c a t e r with t h e 1952 membership T h e hospital chapter's m e m b e r - which will be presented t o t h e boy, early last week.
tion, destination unknown; also
ftward. I n accepting this award. ship committee reported t h a t dues S t a t e Legislature.
Congratulations a r e extended to Herbert Frey and Eugene Phillips.
Miss K i p stated t h a t t h e goal for are being collected a t a brisk rate.
Bob
Kelly
upon
t
h
e
sudden
d
e
a
t
h
Marian B r i g h t m a n spent t h e
During t h e meeting, Mrs. Ella
1953 was set for 500 members. T h e R u t h Vint h a s been appointed to
Weikert, chapter president, a p - of his wife last week. F u n e r a l Thanksgiving hMiday in New York
membership for 1952 was 320.
t h e membership committee. New pointed Milo W. Eames c h a i r m a n services were held in Saugerties City. . . .
T h e movies, "The Yosemlte members a r e Robert Horton, Dr.
t h e committee to n a m e candi- on Thursday, November 27.
Belated congratulations are in
Valley, California" and t h e '"Heri- Samuel Wallner, Margaret De- of
J o h n T. Connors, F r a n k Leon- ordei; to J i m Maguire on his bedates for t h e J a n u a r y election of
tages of New York City," were Simone a n d Clayton Shaver.
officers. R a l p h D a n f o r t h , member- ard, R u t h Wein, Morton Leon, coming a g r a n d f a t h e r a short t i m e
shown. R e f r e s h m e h t s were served
Paul Hayes, Mental Hygiene ship chairman, reported t h a t 111 Tom Reilly, R. Polito a n d Lew ago. . . .
by t h e Canton group, with Emmo- representative,
attended t h e Board State employees were now chapter B e r m a n won t h e seven turkeys
B a r b a r a Dino recently appeared,
ene Sylvester, chairman, assisted of Directors' meeting
distributed by t h e Sing Sing chap- with great success, in t h e producmembers.
y Mrs. Florence Gallagher, Mrs. last Friday. He reportsint h Albany
the
J u n e Wilt was in charge of a r - ter on Monday, November 24. tion of "Bells-a-Hoppin" in Glens
Dolley Tracey, Cora Barbour and Board voted to sponsor Bluea tCrojss
S a n d y Seiler managed t h e affair. Falls, sponsored by t h e Kiwanis,
rangements a n d refreshments.
Marion Burt, in charge.
insurance on a payroll deduction
Don't forget t h e Christmas party,
Tlie next general meeting will basts, and to hold t h e CSEA a n December 20.
be held J a n u a r y 20.
Madison
County
Manhattan
nual dinner in Rochester.
EIGHTY MEMBERS of t h ?
Scotty Newsome, popular patrolState Hospital
Gratwick
man, returned to duty a f t e r sev- Madison County chapter, CSEA,
Pilgrim State Hospital eral
attended a meeting on November
weeks' vacation.
THE MEMBERSHIP committee
EARL OSBORN, friend and e m THE EMPLOYEES oi r i l g r i m
22
at
Peterboro
Village
Hall.
WilSixty-three fellow employees of
of t h e M a n h a t t a n S t a t e Hospital ployee a t Roswell P a r k Memorial
S t a t e Hospital recently gathered
in the lounge room to say "au Eda Dragone tendered her a liam f . McDonough, executive as- chapter, CSEA, is just starting Institute, was honored a t 4 dinner
sistant
to
President
Jesse
B.
Mcto get into high gear, a n d t h e r e - on Tuesday evening, November 18,
revoir" to Dr. Richard Binzley, shower at t h e Club 211. T h e m a n y
who left his position as associate beautiful gifts were Indeed a F a r l a n d of t h e CSEA, was princi- t u r n s are very encouraging. Among marking h i s retirement a f t e r H
director to accept a promotion as happy welcome to t h e little ex- pal speaker. He outlined Associa^ t h e new members inducted in t h e years of service on t h e nursing
tion efforts to achieve increased past two weeks are E d n a Burgess, staff, Mr. Osljorn entered S t a t e
director of Syracuse Psychopathic pected stranger.
Get-well cards are in order f o r salaries a n d retirement benefits for Julia Sheehan, Estelle Harrell, service in 1906, serving at Willard
Hospital.
Dr. H a r r y J. Worthing, senior E d i t h Skinner, dental assistant. local a n d S t a t e employees t h r o u g h Nora McAleer, Elizabeth Strauss, and Buffalo S t a t e Hospitals. H e
director of Pilgrim State, present- And a welcome to Patricia Kerl, meetings with Governor Dewey Michael Cregan, Kathleen T a a f f e , v/orked a t P r a t t a n d Lambert in
Mae G e t h a Williams, William Bon- Buffalo for seven years as a n i n ed Dr. Binzley with luggage, a gift who h a s joined the Dental D e p a r t - a n d other S t a t e ofBcials.
Supreme Court Justice Howard fleld a n d Anna Flannigan.
dustrial chemist a n d a t Pierce Hosf r o m all t h e employees. Dr. W o r t h - m e n t staff. She is a graduate of
William Kilroy of t h e labora- pital, Buffalo, until 1941, when h e
ing said t h a t in all t h e years Dr. Buffalo S t a t e Institute of Applied Zeller was also among t h e speakers. Earl Stlckels, president of t h e tory is representative on t h e m e m - joined Roswell's staff as a nurse,
Binzley h a d been handling e m - Arts and Sciences.
I n spite of t h e pouring rain last S t a t e Police Association of Troop bership committee a n d will gladly Mr. Osborn h a s been very active in
ployee problems, he h a d never h a d
a complaint of u n f a i r t r e a t m e n t . T h u r s d a y evening, t h e harvest D, spoke on .State police work accept dues f r o m one a n d all. t h e Gratwick c h a p t e r of t h e CSEA,
T h e employees look upon Dr. dance was a big success. Pretty within t h e CSEA. Vernon Tapper Among t h e outstanding workers on having served as treasurer for f o u r
decorations, lighting effects a n d a of Syracuse, CSEA representative, t h e committee are Mary E. S t a u n - successive years.
Binzley as a friend.
Syracuse Psychopathic Hospital good orchestra, t a s t y r e f r e s h m e n t s reported t h a t membership h a s al- ton, William Murphy, Dennis
Tribute was paid Mr. Osborn by
has, without a doubt, won Itself a and a jolly crowd contributed to a ready been increased by 1,000 over O'Shea, Theresa P a r e n t i , Mary Efr. Anthony Hey, principal labolast year's.
ood director. Pilgrim will miss most pleasant evening.
McManus a n d Patrick Qeraghty. ratory technician, Cornelius C a n T h e Association of
AttendA turkey dinner was served a f t e r
imi.
T h e news pf t h e sudden d e a t h dee, Donald Smith, principal engia n t s at Middletown S t a t e Hospital t h e meeting.
of Josephine Duxr was a shock to neer, Ted Stopen, a n d t h e followh e a r d Supervisor Fred J. Walters
h e r m a n y friends a n d co-workers. ing members'of t h e nursing. s t a f f :
laud t h e contribution m a d e by a t Binghamton
Josie was t h e popular supervising Ethel ChEUidler, director of nurses;
Binghamton
t e n d a n t s toward improving Mental
State Hospital
DR. WILLIAM J. MURRAY, su- seamstress. Her presence will be R u t h Blair, educational director;
Hygiene conditions in New York
missed. Sincere sympathy is ex- Mrs. Grace Shongo, Mrs. A n n a
PINS FOR 25 years of service State. He commended t h e Attend- pervising psychiatrist in charge of tended to h e r relative by oflBcers Aungst, Marion Render, Augusta
were awarded recently to 16 e m - ants' organization on its efforts in t h e reception service at B i n g h a m - a n d members of t h e chapter.
Speno a a n d Mrs. Doris Conway.
ployees of Binghamton S t a t e Hos- t h e pending salary appeal, a n d ton S t a t e Hospital, is being t r a n s Fi-iends of Mae Cotter, Higgins Mr. Osborn's friends presented
contrasted t h e daily functions of ferred on J a n u a r y 1 to Auburn
pital at a buffet luncheon.
Building, are urged to send h e r h i m with a m o n e t a r y gift to be
Dr. Hugh S. Gregory, director, today's a t t e n d a n t s with those of a Prison.
Dr. M u r r a y joined t h e Bingham- words of cheer. She is a t Union used to purchase fishing equippresented pins to Mae E. Connors, quarter-century ago.
188th Street, T h e Bronx. ment.
A letter f r o m William P. Mc- ton staff on November 1, 1938. He Hospital,
Wallace Goold, Edward Allen, Mrs.
All wish her a speedy recovery.
Everyone a t Roswell P a r k wishe.^
Mary Edwards. Mrs. Julie F, H a n i - donough, executive assistant to t h e served in t h e Army Medical Corps
The chapter recently received a Mr. and Mrs. Osborn t h e best of
fin, Mrs. J o h a n n a Mertens, R a y - president of the Civil Service E m - as a m a j o r f r o m 1940 to 1945.
He will live a t 42 East Lake card f r o m Edith Keene, retired luck in t h e coming years.
mond Nicholson, Mrs. Mary P r e n - ployees Association, was read s t a t dergast, Joseph Rutherford, Mrs. ing t h a t J. Earl Kelly, S t a t e Direc- Street, Skaneateles, where h e h a s supervisor of t h e Mabon Building,
wishing everyone a h a p p y T h a n k s Minnie Rutherford, Mrs. Alice tor of Classification, was planning purchased a home.
giving holiday. T h e chapter hopes State Insurance Fund
Sheehan, Mrs. Teresa M. Spencer, a conference with t h e Budget DiMiss Keene's holiday was enjoyTHE EXECUTIVE board of t h e
Mrs. Grace A. Spicer, Wesley rector to discuss t h e a t t e n d a n t s '
able and extends its collective best State Insurance F u n d chapter,
Swistovicli, Mrs. Florence Wilday appeal. Mr. McDonough said, too,
regards.
CSEA, will hold its next meeting
t h a t t h e entire salary structure of
a n d J a m e s Q. Vreeland.
Walter Hicks h a s written f r o m a t t h e Hotel Nassau on Thursday,
J a m e s B. Kelly h a d been sched- S t a t e employees might undergo
Rochester State. He wishes to be December 4, at 5:15 p.m. Bill Price,
uled to receive a pin, but h e died revision.
remembered to his friends at chapter president, h a s an agenda
STATE
recently at a Bronx hospital.
T h e meeting was chaired by A1
MSH.
packed with i m p o r t a n t questions
T. Whitaker, president of t h e AtPromotion
Congratulations to Mike Nolan to discuss. As usual, coffee a n d
riiier s t a t i o n a r y K N c a N K K R ,
tendants' group. Other officers are:
Letchworth Village Gordon Hobbs, vice-president; and ( I ' r o i n . ) , liistUutions, I>fi)!»rtiiieiU of of t h e power house upon his pro- sandwiches will be served.
Mental Hygiene.
motion and t r a n s f e r to WillowT h e membership drive is in full
A MEETING of t h e executive F r a n k Smith, secretary-treasurer.
1 . Sipple. M a u r i c e D.. S t a l e n Id. 0 0 0 0 0 brook S t a t e School.
swing again. As in previous years,
council of the Letchworth Village
2. Sivmmis. E d w a r d S., N e w a r k . . 9 1 0 5 0
Non-resident car owners a t prizes will be awarded to members
chapter, CSEA, was held on Wed3. Hyan, P a t r i c k J . , W i z a r d
80450
nesday, November 19, a t which the Psychiatric Institute
4 . Mclncrney, L i a m , Biiighamton 8U400 MSH are anxiously awaiting t h e who brings in t h e most new m e m B.
KoUy.
F
r
a
n
c
i
s
P..
GowuJida
.
.
.88U00
reply of Parks Commissioner Rob- bers. T h e contest ends on Decemfollowing were present: Hiriam
DIXIE D. MASON, president of
S t l ' K K V I S l N t t BBVKKA(iiB CONTROL
Phillips, S a r a h Collins, R u t h Gage, t h e Psychiatric Institute chapter
ert Moses to t h e request of Mental ber 31, so there is still plenty of
INVESTIGATOR,
Lois Fraser, Anthory Dombroski, CSEA, Sal Butero, a n d Nora a n d ( P r o m . ) , Executive Department, Dlvialon Hygiene Commissioner
Newton time for all to pitch in a n d e a r n
J a m e s Barrm, Luella Collons, Bes- J a m e s S h a n k s attended the recent
of Alcoholi« Beverage Control (State Bigelow for free Triborough Bridge their share of t h e prizes.
U
i
q
u
o
r
Authority.)
sie O'Dell, Rebecca Gravelle, Clau- Metropolitan Conference meeting
toll privileges for them. I n t h e
T h e chapter wishes to welcome
1. Hickey, William J.. Rochcstor . . 0 2 1 5 0
dia Voit and Ann DePletro.
a t M a n h a t t a n State Hospital.
3, Redmond, F r a n c i i X.. Uyiibrook 0 1 0 0 0 meantime, all car owners are urged the following employees who h a v e
t h e become members since October 1:
0 1 5 5 0 to support t h e program of
Minutes of the October 21 meetCatlierine a n d Charles Hage- 3. Kisver, Q a r r y . B r o n x
Henry Browne and Elaine Smith,
ing were read and approved.
meier, of the housekeeping a n d 4. P u t » . A r t h u r W., I.ynbrook . . 0 0 4 0 0 chapter by paying their dues.
6 . H a n r a h a n , Joscpfti F . . FluBhinff OO.'JSO
T h e laundry d e p a r t m e n t is t h e Underwriting; Wilhelmena Roach,
Minutes of t h e Southern Confer- laundry departments respectively, «. Devine, T h o m a a J., B r o n x . . . . 8 7 7 0 0
scene of great activity these days. Loretta Thomas, Muriel Proceida
ence meeting of September 6 were celebrated their silver wedding
SKMOB Hi'URAULIO KNGINKER,
also read. The next meeting of the anniversary on November 27. Their (I'rum.), Department of Public Service. New improvements include a new and Howard Adler, Legal; Yetta
1.
Holt,
J
o
s
e
p
h
F
.
.
Bronx
8
0
1
5
0
male employees' dressing room Kolody, Payroll Audit; Shirley
Conference is to be held on S a t - daughters, Florence a n d Mary, a . WclUntttou, Harold, Bronx
86700
and new sanitary installations. B r a n d t a n d Eloise Spraks, Claims;'
urday, J a n u a r y 17, at Italian Cen- held a party in their honor, which
SKMOK VALUATION ENGINKKR,
Minnie Bedersky a n d Charles S l u t ter, Mill Street, Poughkeepsie. T h e was attended by m a n y of t h e ( P r o m . ) , Department of Pubile Servleo. Other changes are scheduled.
1. Griffith. Clarccee. Kenniore
..01050
sky, Collection.
Hudson River State Hospital will couple's co-workers8.
K
r
a
u
e
h
a
a
r
,
W.,
P
e
n
h
Yaa
.
.
.
.
8
7
4
0
0
be host. T h e program for t h e
Some members have overlooked
Back f r o m vacation are Louis а . Zangrlor, H e r b e r t M., Crotou , . . . 8 7 3 5 0
Department
of
State
meeting is as follows: Business Schneider,
t h e necessity of paying their dues
kitchen,
and
W. 4 . Browne. Harold K.. Syracmw . . 8 0 0 0 0
meeting, 3 to 5 P.M.; cocktail hour, Thomas, carpenter shop, who re
THE DEPARTMENT of State for renewal membership. Here's a
б. Durland, Smith N., H e w l e t t . . 8 5 7 0 0
8 S 0 0 0 chapter, CSEA, h a s a new acting gentle reminder to h u n t u p your
6 to 7 P.M.; dinner, 7:30 to 9 P.M.; turned f r o m a n auto trip t o 8. DavU. Henry E.. Albany
7
.
PurceU,
William
S.,
I..
I.
City
8
0
0
0
0
dancing. 10 P.M. to 1 A.M. Tickets Florida with his wife, Ethel. Com
president, Mrs. Bess Fianigan. departmental representative a n d
AS80CIATK BUILDING KLKCTKICAL
a r e $2.50 and may be obtained mencing his vacation is J o h n
Former president Stephen Sche- pay dues.
ENGINKKK,
( P r o m . ) , Department of PubUn Works.
from Miss Gage.
powski recently resigned.
T h e grievance committee h a s
Miller, kitchen.
1. Savitt, Morri». Albany
87360
A Christmas p a r t y is t h e com- been doing excellent work. Ed
Letters will be written to
Howard E. Foote, nursing deSENIOR DUAIfn-HMAN,
ing function of t h e Department, Bozek, committee chairman, a n d
members of the executive council p a r t m e n t , a winner of m a n y pho
(Prom.) Department of Public Workit.
who have not attended regularly. tography prizes, judged the color 1. McConueM, D o r o t h y , Hornell . . 8 6 5 5 0 Monday evening, December 15, at Bill Price deserve praise for t h e i r
Darling'. F r a n k M., Mechanicvl 8 3 7 0 0 the
DeWitt Clinton Hotel. All fine accomplishments. An exIf some representatives feel they slide contest of tlws Color Camera 3.
are no longer able to participate, Clui?,of Westchester on November 8. U u s h k o s k i , J o h n A., WaterforU 7 0 0 0 0 members take notice a n d plan to ample of the type of problem they
C O U N T Y A N D V I L L A G E attend.
t h e Council would like to be In- 24.
have been successfully resolving is
formed so t h a t new appointments
the recent case of a clerk wiio was
Open-Competitive
•Sincere expression of sympathy
may be made.
JUNIOR K X A M I N K k ' AND t'IJ<:RK.
reinstated a f t e r a lapse in S t a t e
to J a n e Ranson, nursing depart
Mount McGregor
It was suggested t h a t letters be ment, on the recent passing of her Couiity t'ierk'N OHice, Wetitciieitt«r County.
employment. He was reinstated a t
1. Delajjey, Ft>rneitu», Mt. Vernon 8 1 0 0 0
written to Senator Desmond and sister.
THE ANNUAL Christmas party t h e entrance salary, but the c h a p Hodo«. Walter L., Yonkerw , . 7 7 6 0 2
Assemblymen Walmsley a n d Vanof t h e Mt. McGregor chapter, ter gained for him an additional
The bowling teams are in their
Duzer to a.sk for their support of a f o u r t h week of kegling. Following
Lovely "Janle", the blue-eyed CSEA, will be held on Saturday. $700 a year. Military service d u r 10 percent salary raise for State are tlie high scores to date: Iiigh blonde doll, is an answer to your December 20 at Milfrank's, on the ing t h e Interval between his e m employees.
individual single game, Charles Clirl»tma8 gilt prubieiu. See Page Glens Falls-Lake George Road. ployment was overlooked when lit
There will be no meeUog of t h e Morley, 205; liigh individual triple. 7.
Walter Tyler a n d hi« social com was rehired.
St. Lawrence
S
g
g
Eligible Lists
Download