— CUmH S-e/tAHOA. LiEAPER America's Vol. X V — No. 50 Largest Weekly for Public Tuesday, AuRust 24, 1954 Employees See Page 3 P r k e Ten CenU State Set Exam Record For 6 Months Some of the 200 members and guests who attended the seventh annual picnic of Willowbrook State School chapter. Civil Service Employees Association. Included in the group are: State Senator John Macdonald; Assemblyman Lucio F. Russo; Frank Pavis, of the board of visitors: John F. Powers, CSEA president; Charles R. Culyer, CSEA field representative, and Thomas Conkling, chapter president. Assemblyman Amann and Borough President Baker were guests, also. A L B A N Y , Aug. 23 — The State Department of Civil Service held 1,266 exams for positions in State and local governments in the first six months of 1954, Oscar M T a y lor, President of the State' Civil Service Commission, reported. This is a higher figure than that for any other six-month,' period m t l ^ history of the department. Mr. Taylor said. Last year, record* were broken by holding 1,203 e x aminations. All work was completed on 1,203 exam.s, as compared with 1 152 during an equivalent period last year. T h e number of applicants f o r exams during the half-year dropped from 35,358 In 1953 tm 33,336 in 1954. About 30 per cent of the e x a m i held were for State positions. T h « rest were for counties, cities and other local units of government. 6,050 Permanent Appointments T h e department processed 6,050 permanent appointments to positions in the competitive class of the State service, except for 274 appointments in localities whose civil service is directly under State administration. Processing of veteran claims f o r extra credits in exams dropped from 7.658 in the first half of 1953 to 6.927 in 1954. Seventy-three employees of Napanoch Institution were hon- of Correction. Sergeant William Johnson was honored for ored for service of 20 years or more in the State Department longest service, 40 years. ACTIVITIES OF KMPI.OYEES THKOITOHOIJT X E W YORK STATE Willard Sfate Hospital T H E W I L L A R D State Hospital •oftball team recently played host to the Rochester State Hospital team, and the home group suffered its second defeat of the 1954 season, Howard Smith, assistant recreational supervisor, who plays right field for Willard, flew to Rome Immediately after the game, to Join the Winnek Post Drum Corps In musical competition the same evening. Mr. Smith is second soprano bugler with the Geneva corps, Charles " R e d " Collins of the North Wing and his wife, Mary, of Elliott Hall, were enjoying a vacation at their private beach at Lodi Point. T h e North Wing has Harry W . Eno, Frank Moses and Wilber Cool as new employees. William Lattimer was recently married to Mary Combs of Clifton Springs. Mi'. Lattimer is a charge nurse in the North Wing, and his bride is a nurse at Clifton Springs Hospital. T h e couple are residing in Clifton Springs. Dorothy Filxipek of the Pines was vacationing with her daughter from California. Her son-in-law Is an Air Force pilot stationed in England. Melburn White of the Pines kitchen attended the V P W convention in Philadelphia. Elizabeth Trickier, an employee of the Edgemere, and her husband, Gordon, recently received a new income tax exemption, a boy. Congratulations. Walter Bennett and Eugene Hayes of the Maples wereon vacation. Ann Beardsly of the Maples kitchen recently submitted her resignation. Wishes for a speedy recovery from her recent operation are extended to Mildred Mitchner of tlie Inflnnary. Wilber Emmons of Sunnycroft recently returned f r o m a vacation In Boston, Mass. Paul Bogardus Is a new employee in the Siuiny•J-oft. JtuM DiPi'oaio and J o « a lUX- feron, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Hefferon, hospital employees, are new stenographers in Elliott Hall. Welcome to Dr. Sandor Benedict and Dr. George Glenn, who recently joined the Willard staff. Sincere sympathy to Margaret Christensen on the death of her husband, Arthur, on July 29. Mr. Christensen transferred to W i l lard in 1948 from Binghamton State Hospital where he had been employed for many years. He was a staff attendant in the Maples Building. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tanner are vacationing in Kansas. Zola Brown has returned from a twoweek vacation. Samuel Peltz, business officer, and Mrs. Peltz are vacationing in Ontario and Quebec. Dr. Donald Mcintosh, assistant director, has retired. He and his family will reside in southern Ontario, Canada. T h e chapter extends best wishes. man at Willard for 18 years, will reside in Ireland. Ethel Nivison, a student nurse, and Charles Williams, hospital employee, were married recently. Florence Domedion, head of the occupational therapy department, attended the quarterly meeting of the Western New York Occupational Therapy Association on August 10. Newark State School B E R T H A Hack, stenographer. Is vacationing at her home in Palmyra. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Coomber are visiting friends and relatives in Michigan. Helen Banckert, staff attendant at A Building, will be vacationing for two weeks at her cottage on Seneca Lake. Eva Burditt is in Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Hladick and Mary Satta have returned f r o m a trip to Arizona and Mexico. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Manley are vacationing at H i m rod, N. Y . T h e following employees have Mona Hagin, R.N., Is on sick resigned: Mary A. Updyke, Betty leave. Ijowe, Marjory Blew, Stanford Lt. Col. and Mrs. Hugh Hoeftler Jones, Lillian McMinn, Maria of St. Louis, Mo. and M a j . and Mianowski, Dr. Antoni Mianowski Mrs. Thomas Boreman of Georgia, and Betty J. Charlsen. former employees of the school, New employees: Gerald Mess- were recent visitors. Orville Baylord, who has been mer, G. J. Pentecost, Edward M c Guire, Thomas Blank, Lovella ill at the Vaux Memorial HosSheldon, Donald McGuire, Jeanne pital, is now convalescing at his Corcoran, Margaret Wheeland, home in Palmyra. Martha Collins, Israel Puro, Jean Past chapter secretary. Mrs. O. Harrison, Helen White, Andrew Alice Walsh, is on a month's trip Siposa Jr., Flora J. Kope, Herbert to Mexico. Tillinghost and May B. Grover. Mrs. Van De Velde was the reThey are invited to join the CSEA. cipient of a lovely cake on her Chapter membership is at an recent birthday. Won't the boys all-time high, more than 600 share this wonderful recipe? ( I t members, and the chapter hopes was a hemlock board covered with to reach 650. Dues must be paid frosting and all the trimmings.) as soon-as possible to protect inOn vacation from the boys' side surance. See your supervisor or during July: Arthur Fisher, K e n any member of the membership neth Hart, Gordon Mumm, Francommittee. cis Condet, Raymond Bell, EmerMrs. Leona Bell, retiring super- ald Youngs, Richard Keller, Alfred vising nuise, waa honored at a Crescihene, Anthony Crescihene, picnic supper at Cayuga Lake William Foley, Sidney Lush, John Credeford, Harry State Park by co-workers of the Cell, Ralph Pines Building. A watch was pre- Douglas Sr., Alex Pezzirusso, Vinsented by Mrs. Elizabeth J. W i l - cent Soleman, Delos Gand, Alvin Young, William Roeland and A n kens. supervising nurse. thony Nittala. Jolui McDoaald. retired police- More Vacationers Mark Mayou, B.H.I., on a trip to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin are enjoying their new cottage on Canandaigua Lake. Dr. Edward Stevenson returned from his vacation. Dr. Guttman convalescing at his home after a reCent Illness. Recently Mrs. Cutting visited her father in Hamilton, Canada. He has been very ill. Dr. Murray Benjamin on vacation. T h e following employees from the food service have just returned f r o m vacation. Mr. and Mrs. William Henry, who visited "Santa Claus" at the North Pole, White Face Mountain; Marilyn Robinson, Hilda Rukerson and Marlech Buisch. On vacation were: Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Burnham, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Klahn, Lurlla Ikewood, Irene Nephew and husband; P a t rick Donahue, fishing in Canada; Christine Borgus, visiting, at her home in Rochester; Leah Muddle, who spent the weekend of July 25 in Schenectady with relatives. Helen Whalen visited her niece in Olean for 10 days. While there she was taken ill. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Leo Baker on the birth of a new son. New Employees Friends of Ella Lawrence are happy that she is convalescing at her home on Maple Avenue. Jalia Carpenter has resumed her duties after a three-week illness. Pauline McClellan is visiting at the De Nagal cottage on the St. Lawrence. New employees in foot} service are:. Carlo McKeon and John Buisch. Verna Minman has resigned as dining room attendant. Clam Bake, September 4, 1 P.M. at Lyons Rod & Gun Club. Employees and their guests are welcome. Tickets $4 each. Please send news items to Mrs. Bessie Darrow, who will be Newark reporter for the coming year. She Is most anxious to continue (Continued on Pace l i State Adds 11 Titles, Drops Five A L B A N Y , Aug. 23 — T h e minimum salary has been increased temporarily in one statewide and one county title, J. Earl Kelly, director of classification and compensation, State Civil Service D e partment, announced. T h e titles: senior electronics laboratory engi-i neer, Rockland County, $6,621 gross pay. effective July 16. and senior research scientist (physiology). statewide, $5,414 gross, e f fective July 9. Eleven Titles Added Eleven titles have been added te the State title structure (new salary range and effective date i n dicated' : Associate claims engineer, $•.090 to $9,800; August 1. Cancer research scientist (chemotherapy), $5,090 to $6,320; Julr 16. Cancer re.search scientist diology), $5,090 to $6,320; 16. (raJuly Head cook and housekeeper, $3,540 to $4,490; July 16. Inspector of motor vehicle » censing operations, $3,540 to $4.490; July 1. Research scientist (blood protein), $5,090 to $6,320; July 1. Radio-physicist, $4,130 to 200; July 16. Senior cancer research scientist (chemotherapy), $6,940 to $8,470; July 16. Senior electronics laboratory e » gineer, $6,590 to $8,070 July 16. Senior inspector of motor v e hicle licensing operations, $4,139 to $5,200; July 1. Senior research scientist (bloo4 protein), $6,940 to $8,470; July L Five Titles Out Five titles have been eliminated by the Division of Classiflcatlon and Compensation, all effective July 1: Assistant grade separation engineer, $6,590 to $8,070; July 16. Associate cancer breast surgeon, $8,350 to $10,138. Mu.seumi technician, $3,091 l a $3,891. Senior ptame pathologist, $4,964 to $6,088. Supervising toll collector, $3,0M to $3,891. R E A D E R S have tbefar sajr tm the Comment columu of Vk* LEADER. State Eiigibles By H. J. BERNARD ^ Serious Consequences of Inadequafe Pay StJB-STANDARD SALARIES are notorious in the N Y C government, and the effects are serious. Recently Police Commissioner Francis W. H. Adams dramatized the effect of low police pay, and numerical inefficiency of force, on conations of crime and juvenilfe delinquency. The public has never had an opportunity to vote, in recent years, its conviction about police pay, but there is no doubt what that vote would be. Police and the firemen always get the support of the people at the polls. Public officials who deny the uniformed forces the pay they deserve, however great the difficulty of providing adequate pay, are therefore running counter to public opinion, a dangerous course, both civically and politically. Le.ss publicized is the fact the Board of Hospitals recommends that new hospital projects be deferred, partly because of the difficulty of staffing even present hospitals at the inadequate salaries offered, though mostly because of lack of proved need. When police protection is less than N Y C deserves, and crime and delinquency flourish as a result; when hospitals to care for the needy 111 can not be fully staffed at the sub-standard pay offered, it Is obvious that other, though less vital, obligations to the public can not be, and are not being met, and that therefore the reclassification project goes farther than 80,000 employees basically involved, and half as many others secondarily. Including uniformed forces. The whole 8,000,000 population has a tremendous stake in it. THE U. S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT will issue regulations governing the new income tax law, and until that is done, there must l»e considerable doubt as to the meaning of some of the provisions. As to others, however, the meaning may be accepted as clear already, and can only be confirmed by the regulations. Fortunately, most Ot the provisions in which public employees and pensioners are particularly Interested are not in the dubious category. Because public employees' pay often lags considerably behind that of workers in private industry, the benefits gain significance for government workers, even when those benefits apply generally. For inBlance, being able to claim an exemption for a dependent son or daughter who is a student, regardless of the amount of money earned by the child in part-time or summer work, puts an end to the ridiculous necessity of the progeny stopping work when income nears $600. If it exceeds $600 it must be reported by the student, but the exemption to the parent is not lost, under the new law. The income tax exemption of $1,200 applies to retirement allowances of all pensioners under a public employee system, regardless of age, though as to others not until they attain age 65. The obvious reason is the lower minimum retirement ages of public employee systems and, in the case of some police, fire and similar systems, retirement on the basis of service length, regardless of age. I t would have been most unfair to impose the age 65 rule, for instance, on N Y C policemen and firemen, who, if appointed at 21, may retire after 20 years' service, hence at 41; also to those others under public employee systems that permit retirement at age 55. Under public employee systems, also, there are ordinary and line-of-duty retirement provisions, independent of age, whereas Social Security provides no such benefits. Widows living on pittance pensions, as for instance widows of policemen and firemen receiving $600 a year from NYC, will not have to pay a tax on that income, though previously, even if they had no additional income, they were taxed, though if the pension were a cent a year less, they would not have been taxed. The pension exemptions are intended to end the discrimination against those receiving other than Social Security benefits, for Social Security benefits have been 100 percent tax-exempt, as have Railroad Retirement Systm benefits. Though the added exemptions are not 100 per cent, they are intended nearly to equal in amount 100 per cent of normally lesser Social Security and Railroad Retirement benefits. T H E E X E M P T I O N of sick benefits will probably have to await elucidation by regulation. In general, benefits from a sickness, accident, health, hospitalization, medical or similar insurance plan are, and have been, exempt from U. S. income tax. The new law offers some liberalization, under which no tax will have to be paid, up to income of $100 a week, on employer-paid sick benefits, not counting the first seven calendar days, unless the employee is hospitalized for at least one day. Whether salary continued during absence for illness or accident comes under this heading, is yet to be clarified. Up to now it has not been exempt; the benefit had to come from some form of in.surance, and tliat is the way it is likely to stay. ^ AUTOMOBILES STATE Open-Competitive FOR FARM MANAOKR I . F l o o d . Charlps. C o i d o r k i o . . . B3760 2 . Onrrincr, M a y n a r d , A l t o n a . . . . n'JBOO 3 . W i l k e s , Jampp. Batli 01500 4 . T h u r f l t o n , Charles, B r e n t w o o d 8H260 5. Slranir. Robc.t, Iroquois .. 88000 0. Harriiran, F r a n c i s , Cad.vville ..87260 7. B i u w e y , O r . m t . C o b l e s k i l l . . . . 87000 8. Mow;-y. R a l p h . O x f o r d . . . . . . . 8 7 0 0 0 0. C h a p m a n . HaroUl. C o x s a c k i e ..80500 10. B u r k e , I.^'o. R o m e 80260 11. G i l c h r i s t , K e n n e t h . Comstot k ..80000 12. Scannell, T h o m a s , P e e k s k i l l ..86500 13. H i i l l e . W i l l i n m , W e s t l o w n ....86000 14. P e r r y . Virstil. B i n r h a m t o n . . . 84760 15. P r e d n i o r e . M o y t l , W a r w i c k R4000 10. R l a n b r o , Gf-orire, A u b u r n ....8.3350 17. n . l r k , John, S t r y k e r s v i l l e ....8.3260 1 « . V o l k . Kenneth, Collins 8.3000 I f l . B r e s e t l . C a r l t o n . Oirdensburs . . SBOOO 20. F r o s t . C o r n e l i u s . O v o c a 82760 3 1 . T a y l o r . A l b e r t , Ctrl I s l l p 82600 32. A l l e n , E i l w a r d , M i i l d l e t o w n ...82000 2.3. S t a r k , H a r o l d . G a n s e v o o r t . ..81260 24. B a k e r . D o r s o n . A t t i e a 80000 25. r a d w a l l a d e r . D., B e a c o n 70750 20. P r a r y . Irt-in, Oirdenstnirr ....700O0 27. Stoller, G . A l b . m y 70':60 RKNT KXAMINP.R (ACrOINTINO) 1. O l i c k , H v m a t i . B r o n x 10.3.500 2 . Oohen. H a r r y . B r o n x 08000 .3 F r a n k . I.oiiis. B.iyside 00600 4 Hubert, Benjamin, Jamaica ..P.'>6n0 6. R o s e n , S a m . Bkl.vn 84600 0 M e y e r . I^onis. piuehinir 04600 7 . Berechid. R . i l n h . B r o n x .... 04000 8. E p s t e i n , S e y m o u r . W h i t e s t o n e . . 0.3.500 n. H o e h b e r r . C h n i l e s , M t V e r n o n 0.3600 10. B r o t m a n . E u y e n e , A s t o r i a ...,0.3500 11. R o s e n b e r g . J o r d a n . B r o n x . . . . O'IBOO 12. D i m o n t e , Joseph. T-t C i t y ... 92600 1.3. F a z z i n o , Rooe. NYO 02500 14. Messina. Pr.^nk. K R o e k a w a y ..02000 15. Schneider. K . i ' m a n . NYC 0200<) 1<). Serber, S e y m o u r . Bkl.vn 02000 17. S h a p i r o . I r v i n g , B r o n x 01500 18. B o s s m a n . Samuel. Bklyn ....91600 10. C a r t e r . W i l f r e d . N Y C . 01600 2 0 . A n d u z e . Carl. E E l m n r a t ....91000 31. Oriss. Z i t a . N Y C 91000 22. K u b i n . Isido^. B k l y n 90600 2.3. S i l v e r s t r l . J o h n . V,i11ey S t r . 90600 24-. l l a s i . R o b e r t . Bklyn 90000 26. W.altzer, G w j r i r e . B r o n x 00000 20. G o l d b e r r e r . Jules. Bklyn ....90000 27. SIlTer, D a v i d . M t V e r n o n . . . 00000 28. M u r p h y , James. K T C 99000 29. H o r o w i i t , Daniel, B k l y n 89600 •30. S t u a r t . Robert. Bklyn 89000 31. S a l m i n i . A d r l a i i a . R a v e n * ....88500 .33. R i c h m a n , J u l i u s . N Y C 88600 .3.3. C a n t o r . Abraham. Bklyn . ..88500 .34. C a r r o l l , T h o m a s . N Y C 88500 .36. R o s e n . M a r e a r e t . NYC RSOOO .30. B u r k e , R o n a l d , A s t o r i a .88000 .37. Quinn, Robrrt. Bklyn 88000 38. S o l o m o n . M i r i a m , A l b a n y ....87600 30. R o t h c h f o r d . D a n i e l , N Y C S7.')00 10. B n i t t o . Ro-l.vn, Bronx 87500 41. G e n n a r i , Fiirio, Bkl.vn 87600 42. B . i s t l o t t a , V i n c e n t , B r o n x . . . . 87000 4.3. D"Bcl1is. F r . l n k , B r o n x 87000 44. Rosenblatt, Melvin, N Y C ....87000 46. D o n o v a n . M a r i e , T o n a w a n d a . . SH600 4fi. T a r t e r . Harold, Bklyn 80600 47. B r a v e r m a n . R o s e , B r o n x 80000 48. H a b e r , Glenn. S c h u d a c k Lnrtg- . 8 6 0 0 0 49. I . u b i n , Barnet, N Y C 80000 50. B.auniler, Dolores. B u f f a l o .80000 51. A r m o . Samuel. Bronx . 80000 52. K l e i n , J a c o b . B r o n x 86.500 6,3. D i s l e l m a n , Jacob. Bronx . . . . 86000 64. S d t i e r . M o r r i s . R e r o P a r k ....86000 65. U n t e r b e r c . Arthur. NYC 85000 50. A v a n t . R o b e r t . N Y C 84000 57. Brande, Harry, Bklyn 8.3000 68. P u o h s . Douirlas. Flushlnir ....8.3OO0 69. T a t u m , James.. E E l m h u r s t ..82600 00. S i l v e r m a n , Jack. B r o n x 82600 fit. S c h w a r t z . G n t t a . B k l y n 82500 B2 H a r r i s , Jer.ime. B r o n x 82600 fi,3. Caruso, M i c h a e l , B k l y n 82000 6 4 . R u b i n , Willi.am, B k l y n 81600 05. M o s k o w i t / , S h e r w i n , B r o n x ..81500 BO. Y o i i n i f s , E d m u n d . C i r e l e v l l e ..81600 67. Cohen, A b r a h a m . B k l y n 81500 08. A l e s i , J o h n . B k l y n 81000 00. Dcscta, V i n c c n t , Green L a w n . . 80,500 70. l y n e r , G e r a l d . Bkl.vn 80.500 71. M e h r . Edward. Bklyn 80500 7 ! . Healy. Daniel, N Y C 80000 73. R i n z l e r . Jack, J a i k s n H«rt ....80000 CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ONLY 1954 GHEVROLErS BEL-AIR 4 - D O O R SEDAN Signal Lights - Undercoat - Simonize $187500 210 SERIES—$1,775.00 150 SERIES—$1,675.00 $1,875.00 DANE MOTORS INC WHOLESALE DISTROSRTORS TO GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES O N L Y 4042 AUSTIN BLVD. ISLAND PARK. L O N G ISLAND. N. Y. Phone LOng B«ach 6-8104-5 OPEN • A. M. TO 10 P . M . THE BEST D E f t l FOR r O U O N STORAGE SPECIALS I9S4 •49 '56 '48 '47 '41S M n e , 4-dr., R « H $e7B M r r c . . Conv.. R & H W W . . . . « 7 B <md., Cnnv., R & H , W W BOO Old.. 4 dr., K « H . H y d . e cyl. l e s B u i r k 4-dr., R A H J.-W Bronx Pk'way Garage 2852 Webster Ave. FO 4-8280 NOW! We Mean, NOW! Check Us For Best Deal! '54 FORDS $1798 i r S DOWNTOWN! FOR THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN '54 PONTIACS No Fixed Down Pay't! Se M « « . » • Pay. 1-Hour D f l W e r * y o « r old C » r la w o r t h MORK HERE Cwnie In Mid Ftiid O o t W h y I fcUwU McKENZIE FORD Antborl/nl Ford D«»l<«r DELVD. N. V. C. TERMS AS L O W AS $442.,$13.50,';^ ; I 3445 White Plains Rd. OL 2-5600 TOP PRICES FOB TRADES , Downtown Pontiac Corp. | I Authorized Factory Dealer . , 39-2nd Ave. (2nd St.) N. Y. ' DE.AI. O F on the VOUB LIFE '54 OLDS CIVIL SERVICE LEADER America's Leading Newsmagaline for Public Employees CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Inc. 97 Duane St., New York 7. N. ¥. Telephone: BEekman 3-6010 Entered as second-class matter October 2, 1939. at the post off?ce at New York, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Members of Audit Bureau of Circulations. Subscription Price $3.00 Per Year. Individual copies. 10c. T h e r . l u n o n r f a r of the T«»r Buy Your Year Ahead Oldsfflobile Now Substantial Reductions Under !JOO Miles Old Reliable Olds Your "0J(1»" lleal/r for i doMule. First Ave., Cor. 91 St. Open eVM. to 10 I ' . M . BA C-OflOO SPECIAL 1 OR Summer Closeout of 1951 P.-VCKARDS F R O M $1075 Up Tliese Cars Carry New Car Guarantees. Chrysler-Plymouth We Offer An Exceptionally Attractive Deal to Civil Serveie Workers PACKARD Henry Caplan, Inc. Direct DON'T BUY A GAR f Factory Dealer. 1491 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn MA g-4H0n Eatabliahpd Over 35 Yeai MERCURY- MUST SELL 100 NOW! Special to Civil Swvleo Workert. $190 Ovor Factory Invoice. See Manager. 348 Fiatbush Ave. Ext. HABER-MERCURY •pp. B'klya I'uruiiiuuiit. UL 5-2300 Under <00 3-14gU OPE.M EVF.8. TUX It | ammammmmmm m INWOOD'S S S BONAFIOE 8 • s : FORD ! • • H f ABOVE 4-DOOR SEDAN Radio and Heater - Siqnal Lights - Undercoat - Simonix* CSKT T H E Ralph Tambasco eqitipped ^s 1954 FORDS 8 CYLS. CUSTOMLIME (Continued on Page IS) F O I I M E K L V a dependent, to constitute an exemption, had to be related to the taxpayer, or, in the case of a joint return by husband and wife, to one of the taxpayers, in either case to a specified degree of consanguinity; now no relationship is necessary. If the taxpayer B R O A D W A Y A T 61st ST. contributed more than half the cost of the dependent's upkeep, the CO. 5-3900 new exemption requirement is satisfied. The medical expense deduction is raised, by excluding only 3 per cent, instead of 5 per cent, of income, to determine the amount left as deductible. Working widows, and other mothers with child-care expenses, UNTIL YOU SEE ME | will be able to deduct baby-sitting and other expenses, up to $600 a year. g TE 8-2700 i Of import ant e to employees who are required by their employers to live or eat where they work, is Uie new. provision declaring the cost of sucii food and lodging, called maintenance, not be a part of compensation, hence not taxable. This gain was won by the Civil Service 'QUANTITIES of QUALITY' Employees A.s.sociution and represents the rectification of an indefenl a l M t « MimIW Dard C A M sible burden, particularly on New York Stale employees who work in Al.l. » t • I'KIl'K SHOP and SAVE at ln.siitut)uas. From January 1, 1954, the eltective date of the entire P A C K A R D amended tax law, no tax on maintenance will have to be paid. A suit Hroitdway at (Hat St. CO 6 3 U M (Cualinued on Page 15) ^ FINANCE PLAN We Deliver A • • t-PASSENGER SEDAN n i t h full factory eiiiilpnient and N E W t'.AR GU.'iR.'VNTEK f o r S $350 H DOWN M and J • • " $12.75 S prr nn-k inrludlnK rollliiion all Insurance chitr);r«t ||| mm/ ^^ We Guarantee fo Deliver What We Advertise We Can Handle Your Deal On tiie Teleplione! Call LO 9-1200 FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Open Evei. to 10 P.M. Authorlied Dealer I 216th St., lust off BROADWAY LOOKING INSIDE, informative, authoritative comment eoiumn. »ppear!i weekly in The LEADEU. Be »ure to read i t At TIVITIKS OF KMPl.OYKKS Ii^ STATK (Continued from Page 1) the news and needs a lot of cooperation to do so. T h e Newark State School chapter, CSEA, will hold a clambake on Saturday, September 4 at the Lyons Rod and Gun Club, one mile south ol Lyons. Pete Ro.ss Is general chairman, assisted by Cliff Boekhout, Prie Tack, Harry Ross, T e d Lane, chapter officers and members In all departments who are selling tickets. Tickets are $4 each. Serving starts at 1 P.M., with plenty of raw clams, clam chowder, giblets, salt potatoes, cheese and crackers, beer and pop. T h e afternoon program will include games, prizes and good food a-plenty. At 5 P.M. the bake will be served, including steamed clams, clam broth, half a broiler, sweet and white potatoes, corn, relishes, rolls and coffee. As this is the chapter's first clambake, the committee and officers are working hard to make It a succe.ss. and earnestly hope for a good attendance from the membership. employees and guests. This Is not a money-raising affair. only a chance for a social get-together. Sing Sing Nunis, Ellis H. Olmstead, John J. Patten, William A. Ritchie, Americo Roia, Lawrence Schatzel, Sanford Seller, Leroy W . Sherwood, Lucius W . Smith, Walter Smith. Harry Springfield, Thomas Stanton. John Sullivan, Owen Tierney, Herbert Tompkins, Jacob Topolski, Rufus Tunnell, Fred Wallace, Frank J. Wal.'^h, Leo T. Walsh, Alfred Werben, Robert S. Westlake and Thomas W . Wilson. Warden Denno noted that some of the men receiving awards have actually completed more time than indicated by the pins, which are awarded on a five-year basis. T h e pins and certificates in recognition of long years of service were instituted by former Commissioner of Correction Edward J. Donovan before his return to the Parole Board as a Commissioner. Woodbourne T H E G R O U N D S of the W o o d bourne Correctional Institution was the scene of a grand 19th annual clambake held Augast 11 with 350 members, personnel and friends present. The committee did a splendid job. Hugh Denman was general chairman, assisted by Bertram Smith, James Blatchly Kenneth Green, Earl Fox, Frank Fairbrother. Raymond Johnson Roland Doty and Donald Buchanan. On the clambake line were Senator Arthur Wicks, Assembly man Hyman Mintz, County Judge Lawrence Cooke, Sheriff Louis Ratner, District Attorney Ben Newberg and many local digni taries. Superintendent Fred Brum mel held a reception for the dis tinguished visitors prior to the clambake. Senator Wicks and Assembly man Mintz received the thanks of the guards for their splendid efforts in assisting the guards In an upgrading of salary grade. Western Conference Aids Salary Appeals R O C H E S T E R . Aug. 23 — The executive council of Western Conference, Civil Service Employees Association, held a dinner meeting at the Moose Club, Batavia. President Claude Rowell met with the chairmen of standing committees to plan for the coming year. Chairman Clifford Asmuth presented a budget for the year. Chapter presidents brought to the meeting examples of inequities in the salaiy reclassification, which were discussed at length. President Rowell said the Conference will assist with appeals and indicated that if a chapter desires a Conference officer to attend one of its meetings, he him.self would make the necessary arrangements. All correspondence should be addressed to Claude Rowell, Rochester State Hospital, 1600 South Avenue, Rochester 20, N. Y. Mr. Rowell attended a board of directors meeting of the Association In Albany on August 19, and heard ^ o r e about plans for salary appeals. He announced a tentative schedule of Conference meetings for the year: September 18, general meeting at Newark State School; December 4, executive council meeting at Batavia; January 15, general meeting at Roch- Act Fast on Appeals, MHEA Advises Employees S Y R A C U S E , Aug. 23 — " M a n y employees in the Mental Hygiene Department are very poorly rated on the new State pay scales," said Frederick J. Krumman, president, Mental Hygiene Employees Association. "Appeals will be taken, and it is important no time be lost. Every one deserving a better salary allocation should not hesitate to protest." He listed, for the benefit of members of his association, their representatives: John E. Graveline, W a r d Service, St. Lawrence State Hospital, Ogdensburg. Charles J. Ecker, Cottage Employees, Syracuse State School, Syracuse. Arthur Cole, Professional Services and Offices, Marcy State Hospital, Marcy. Robert L. Soper, Educational and Allied Services (including Occupational Therapy workers), Wassaic State School, Wassaic. Mrs. Sarah Collins. Food Service. Letchworth Village, Thiells, Rebella Eufemio, Administration, Stores and Allied Services Rockland State Hospital, Orangeburg. Charles D. Methe, Safety Divi- sion and Transportation, Marcy State Hospital, Marcy. Herbert Nelson, Maintenance and Powerhouse, Wassaic State School, Wassaic. Walter Jenner, Farm and G a r den, Syracuse State School, Syracuse. James Shanks. Laundry, Psychiatric Institute, 722 West 168th Street, N Y C . Mr. Krumman advises employees dissatisfied with their allocation to communicate with their representative, who will aid them on appeals. Asks Employees to Act Fast "Kindly give this matter your early attention," he advises. " T h i s association will do everything possible to have each and every employee in Department of M e n tal Hygiene institutions properly allocated." He added that protest is being made .3 the Department of Mental Hygiene and to the Department of Civil Service in regard to the salary grade for clerks, 'account clerks, telephone operators medical technicians, occupational therapy instructors, pharmacy aides, dietitian aides, assistant bakers, laundry employees, safety employees, and others. ester; March 19, executive council meeting at Batavia: April 16. general meeting at Gratwick Hospital, Buffalo; M a y 21, executive council meeting at Batavia; June 25, general meeting (annual election). place to be announced. Host chapters for the general meetings will send announcements to the chapters regarding time, place and agenda, and advance notices will appear in T h e LEADER. Chapter presidents and members are asked to note dates on their calendars so they will not miss any of these meetings. Melba R. Binn is chairman of the publicity committee. CSEA to Aid Mental Hygiene Salary Appeals A L B A N Y , Aug. 23 — John E. Graveline, representative of the Mental Hygiene Department on the board of directors. Civil Service Employees Association, urged that employees of Mental Hygiene institutions in the different titles forward copies of any appeals relative to salary reallocation to Association headquarters, 8 Elk Street, Albany, N. Y . T h e Association is desirous of assisting appellants to the maximum extent in organizing the factual material relative to each appeal, so that the widely separated individuals in the various titles are covered by pertinent facts when the appeals come before the Division of Classification and Compensation for analysis and decision. T h e Association will review appeals from individuals in each title, coordinate the facts, and present the complete material to J. Earl Kelly, director of Classification and Compensation. P I N S and certificates honoring long years of service were presented to 127 Sing Sing Prison employees by Warden Walter L. Denno, on behalf of the Commissioner of Correction. Mr. Denno was assisted by Principal Keeper tiouis J. Kelley. William B. Leonard, Acting Commissioner of Correction. had planned to be present but was detained by pressure of business. John J. Shanahan, principal stationary engineer, was honored lor 42 years' service. Others re celving awards for at least 35 years' service were: William T Alger, sergeant: Thomas Bos well guard; James Connaughton, senior mechanical stores clerk; Thomas T H E E M P L O Y E E S of Mount J. Horigan. guard: Edward K e n - Morris chapter enjoyed one of nedy. guard; William McElroy Frank Nicastro's well known steak guard: Frederick Vetter, captain roasts at John Barrett's farm on and Robert Woodworth, guard. August 5. T h e eleven employees receiving Fourth floor staff and their pins and certificates for at least families enjoyed a picnic at Perry 30 years' service were: Victor J, Park. Brown. Ernest Crocker, Albert S John Barrett, president, and Hall. Roy D. Hayden and John Irene Lavery, delegate, attended and delicious pastries donated by Hornett. guard.'^; Mr. Kelley. prin- an interim meeting of the Western each houseparent. cipal keeper: Prank Libby. indus- Conference at Batavia on A u I n charge of the all-day event trial superintendent; John V gust 7. were chief supervisor A1 Luther. Mack, plumber and steamfltter; Jim Rowland, Dick Mitteer, Bruce Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Payton, guard: John Tobin. John Passamonte on the birth of Coger and Byron Simpson. Evelya senior stationary engineer, and a boy August 14. Carr, Peggy Clouse and Ira CumChristian, Thomas J. Hanlon, assistant, and the $55 raise for Nelson True, guard. Best wishes to Carl Macirella on Richard Hayden, Cornelius B. launderer, while higher bracket mings, of the recreation department, directed the games and Awards for at least 25 years of his recent marriage to Dolores Irwin, Francis Low, Leonard M. jobs received $898 increases. contests. service went to: Robert E. Armi- Tripi. Quick. Harry Smith, Ralph Smith Chapter president Paul Hayes tage, guard: Lewis J. Clark, serGuests, welcomed by Mrs. P o w Mary Miceli has been confined and Frank Schonher. will appoint a committee to assist geant; William Clarke, Ralph in the Robert Parker Hospital at ers, supervisor, included: Hester Twenty-seven employees with members who plan to appeal. Connor, John Connors, Alvah Sayre, Pa. B. Crutcher, director of psychia25 to 30 years' service: Robert Coon and Leo Curtis, guards: tric social work; Dr. Ext and Annual Picnic Howard Andress motored to Brown, Dorothy T. Backman, James Dawson, education super- Pennsylvania last week; Madeline Joseph D. family; Bearldeen Burke, head of Black well, Alonzo About 600 members attended visor; Warden Denno; Charles J. Eichinger motored to Harrisburg Brackman, Charles E. Clearwater, the occupational therapy departthe chapter's seventh annual picDoyle, assistant principal keeper; where she met her Marine son and Bert C. Doughty. Frank Dierfelter, ment. and Mrs. Maude Christennic. T h e affair got under way at Joseph Doyle, guard; Rudolph drove sen. They exhibited patients' him to Quantico, Va.; Arthur Eck, John J. Flannery, Polts, sergeant: Walter Gartland Maida Young has been vacation- Frank Purman, Ernest Heusser, 1 P.M.. went into full swing when handcrafts, and provided an opthe main serving began at 6 P.M. and Robert Goewey. guards, and ing in Ottawa, Canada; A1 Z a m - Dorothy portunity to become acquainted L. Heusser, Joseph H. Delos Hugenin, senior identi- bito spent his vacation visiting his Hornbeck, Eli V. Krom, Oscar Dancing was enjoyed to the tune with, and secure, O. T. material. of an employees' orchestra. fication officer. Scholarship Awarded son in East Hampton, L. I.; Phil Newkirk, Raymond Rosakranse, Affiliating student nurses perCongratulations to Mrs. Hannah Also, Idwal Jones, guard: Phillip Lopez is in Ogdensburg; James Bert P. Rohan, Erhardt Rosen- formed songs and dances. Vuolo of the business office, winKraemer, account clerk; Chaun- Lathan has been vacationing on berger, Edwin T . Smith, Ernest Guests included: Assemblyman Service cey Long, guard; George M c - his farm. Sarr, Irving G. Smith, Ross T u r - and Mrs. Wilson C. Van Duzer, ner of a State W a r Scholarship for Veterans. The Cracken. junior physician; James Oliver Longhine drives a new ner, Nial Van Wagener, George H. Mayor Louis V. Mills, Elizabeth McGrane. William McDonald sind Pontiac convertible. Weeks. Harry E. Wright. Lloyd V. Hoyt, Dr. and Mrs. Walter A. competitive exam took place la June. T h e scholarship entitles Mrs. Joseph McQueeney, guards; Harry Louis Continenza is back on Wilklow and George E. Winsman. Schmitz, Dr. and Mrs. Sol Kliener, Vuolo to fees and tuition at any P. O'Brien, sergeant; Philip duty in the diet department after Thirty-four honored for 20 to Dr and Mrs. Benjamin Schantz, O'Connell, lieutenant; Edward recuperating from surgery. 25 years' service: Dr. A. G. Augus John D. O'Brien, 4th vice presi- college, univeislty or trade school in the State, which is approved by Parthemore, guard; Martin P o m Welcome to Shirley Montema- tine. Vespine P. Battaglia, Clyde dent, CSEA; Charles E. Lamb, the Board of Regents. eranz, senior account clerk; Car- rano, new assistant dietitian. C. Bowes. Raymond W. Beams, R, president. Southern Conference; Congratulations to James K l l n g roll H. Rudes, guard; Bruna TauMrs. Eleanor Rose has resigned Kenneth Bradford, Rabbi Herbert Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl, State Edu- man on his graduation from Rider terhan and Roy Taylor, sergeants, from the nursing staff. I. Bloom, R a y Crossman, Joseph cation Department; John E. College, Trenton, N. J. He is the and Paul E. Wilson, guard. Dr. Chester J. Fortuna has ap-4 Carberry, Warren Davis, Charles Graveline, Mental Hygiene repreT h e seventy-seven employees re- plied for a commission in the med- H. Eck, Clark O. Purman, Dillon sentative, and M r t . Graveline; son of Charles Klingman, telephone operator at the hospital. ceiving pins and certificates for ical corps of the Air Force for Pluckiger, Jasper W . Hall, George Roland Schoonmaker, Orange Mr. and Mrs. John Voula are P. Halbig, Lester Hyatt, James County Public at least 20 years' service were: active duty. Works chapter; vacationing in the south. Charles Alberda, William F. A m Rumor has it that Jane Bryant Irish, Edmund S. Katzenberger, Nellie Davis and Peggy Killackey, Get well cards are in order for A Hudson River State Hospital, and brose, Leonard C. Anton, Irving is charging toll for the use of her Vernon L. Krom, Vincent Alice Pascoe, who is confined In Knoll, Leon G. LaCasse. Robert Henry Marier, Rockland Arras, Alexander Barton Joseph driveway. State the infirmary, and to Nina Devine, C. Michel, Roy W . Miller, John Hospital. M. Bonner, Edmund Brockelbank, Best wishes to Mike Piraino and who is convalescing at Middletowa H. Osborne Frank A, Bryant, Patrick J. Marilyn Pruner on their engage McClay, Clarence Family Care Event Sanatorium. Burke. Charles Carpenter, Henry ment. T h e wedding will take place Vida L. Peirson, Arthur D. Roberts Best wishes to Mabel Halstead, Howard W. Rowan, Scott Sahler K. Clancy, James J. Clifford, in October. T h e annual Family Care picnic who is resigning due to ill health. Zygmond Surdakowski, Milton P. Tliomas J. Concannon, Warren Back from vacations are: Sam Townsend, Rodney P. Terwilliger for Delaware County boarding-out Welcome back to Anne Larkin, Cook, Gerald F. Curtin, Michael Coniglio, Ann Russell, Betty W a l patients was held at Beerston the D'Ambrosio, Samuel DeDio, Morris lace, William Gilmartin, Betty Prank Van Steenburg, Alden Van last week in July. T h e day-long who has returned after a month's vacation in California. She Is a A. Diamond, William Donnelly, Weir, Rosetta Rossborough, Gene- Vliet and William E. Wendland, event was sponsored by the social stenographer In social service. Prank J. Doyle, Harry Effenber- vieve Lathan, and Thomas Batservice department, together with Mr. and Mrs. Richard K i n g ger. Otto E. Egger, Charles R. tagll. the recreational therapy staff, who Frazer, Hobart A. Gilmore and provided entertainment and have returned from a trip to B u f Joseph A. Gondek. games for the patients. T h e picnic falo and other points north. Al.so, Robert Grevert, Charles E. EMPLOYEES of Middletown also afforded an opportunity for S E V E N T Y - T H R E E employees of State Hospital held a special meet houseparents and staff to renew Griffin, Matthew J. Haggerty, 01ton R. Haring. Nellis W. Harter, Napanoch Institution were hon- ing to protest inequities in the old friendships. T H E A N N U A L class reunion of T h e weather was excellent for Gerard H. Higgins, William Hine, ored for service to the State" De- new State salary plan. The gen Robert H. Hotaling, Joseph W . partment of Correction. Service eral opinion was that the new games and dancing in the morn- the Class of 1933, Craig Colony Huestis, Carl B. Hunt, Jeremiah award cards and emblems were plan presents an even greater need ing, field events in the afternoon. School of Nursing was held August by Superintendent for appeals than heretofore. Embroidery, crocheting, hooked 7, at the home of Mrs. Ruth M a c H. Jerome, John J. Joyce, Dennis presented D. Kelleher, Fred J. Keyton, M a r - Thomas J. Hanlon, assisted by Groups who plan to appeal in rugs, vegetables, and even three Comb of Rochester, with Mrs. tla B. Kuchesky, Henry D. Lash- Lloyd V. Wilklow, assistant super- elude: attendant, launderer, meat hoodln chickens were displayed Clarice Chamberlain as stssciate war, Gaskell Lawrence, John Les- intendent. cutter, assistant meat cutter at the arts and crafts exhibit. En- hostess. Others attending were: ton, Clifford 0. Long, Daniel J. Sergeant William C. Johnson barber, beautician, supervising tries were Judged by a group of Sam Cipolla, Wilson Insley, Jean L u b j , Edward H. Luck, Joseph topped the list of those honored. tailor, supervising seamstress houseparents, and prize ribbons A. Curry, Mildred L. Egan, U l l i a a T . Bryant, Esther E. Austin. H a t awarded. McCarthy, John J. McOoey, H a r - He has 40 years' service with the assistant cook, roofer and tin vey A. Martel, Lawrence Matte- department. smith, telephone operator. The 203 patients, houseparents, tie Johnson and Evelyn Osboma. Smorgasbord at the Lions' aon and John W . Montgomery. Attention was given to the guests, staff and employees enEleven employees have served Also, Harry Morone, Glenn E. from 30 to 35 years: Chester salary cuts in some lower bracket joyed potato salad, baked beans, Den was enjoyed by the group Uoscii. Martin Nestor. WllUam Bradford, Garry Browo, Kelly titles, such H meat cutter and sauorkraut, frankfurters, coffee later in the day. Mt. Morris Napanoch Middletown State Hospital Craig Colony State Clerk Lists Issued; Total of 5,899 Make Grade The State Civil Service Department has issued four clerk eligible lists, with a total of 5,899 names, as a result of the clerical exam series, held March 27. Number of eligibles on each roster: Clerk, 2,913. File clerk. 2,127. Account clerk, 500. Statistics clerk 359. Although there are a total of 5,899 names on the four rosters, actually fewer persons pa.ssed the tests. Applicants were eligible to complete in more than one title, and many were successful in getting on more than one ll.st. Several candidates are notable for Having achieved high scores in several of the exams. The new salary scale f o r the clerical jobs is $2,320 to start, and $3,040 after five years' service. An additional pay boost, after six years' continuous and satisfactory service, brings salary to $3,184. N Y C Folk Top Clerk List Harry P. Ryan of Brooklyn heads the 2,913-name clerk list, with 102.250, including veteran credit. Other 100 percenters: Louis H. Sneider of Brooklyn, 101.700; Arthur W . Beckert, N Y C , 101.150; and Melvin F Brown, Bronx, also Vacation and Holidays Liberalized for Employees Of City of Amsterdam A M S T E R D A M , Aug. 23 — Employees of the City of Amsterdam •will receive two weeks' vacation with pay, after one year's service; three weeks after three years' service; eleven paid holidays each year; and twelve days' sick leave a year, cumulative to 90 days. The City of Amsterdam Common Council voted approval of the plan, re- troactive to July 1. Concerted efforts of Montgomery chapter. Civil Service Employees Association, v/ere instrumental in achieving the new vacation and sick leave plan. Employees of Montgomery County were granted the liberalized plan two years ago, also through efforts of the CSEA chapter. Buffalo Cops Mental Hygiene SoftbaH Crown Many Regular Teachers Start Above Minimum In a game that would be difficult to reproduce, even by a Hollywood script writer, Buffalo State Hospital defeated Willard by a score of 5 to 4 to cop the championship of the Mental Hygiene Softball League for 1954. Buffalo was ahead ail through the game, but tense moments developed in the bottom of the ninth. Buffalo was leading 5 to 2. Willard scored twice and had a runner on first with no outs. Fritzie Ehlers struck out Long, a plnchhitter, then walked Corcoran, the Willard pitcher. Ehlers struck out the next batter, and the third and final out was recorded on Heeler's fly ball to right field, Final standings are: Team W. L. Buffalo -8 1 Willard 6 3 Rochester 4 5 Sonyea . . . 0 9 While the majority of teachers in N Y C schools who start in tlie fall as regular appointees will get $3,450 a year, many will get more. Those with a master's degree and 30 semester hours of pos tgraduate courses will begin at $200 a year more; others, with teaching experience in private schools, or other public schools, will get credit for a year's service for each two years, while substitutes will carry over any increased pay into their regular assignments to either $4,438 or $4,638 maximum, depending on the master's degree. 101.150. T o p woman on the roster is Dorothy M. Case of the Bronx, No. 8, 99.450 There were 8,915 applicants in the general clerical test, of whom 4,535 failed, 1,127 were absent from the exam, 35 disqualified, and 305 disapproved. File Clerk Honor Boll Mr. Sneider. No. 2 on the general clerical list, heads the 2,127 name file clerk roster, with 101.850, followed by Mr. Beckert, wlio is third on the clerk list, Irwin H y man of the Bronx, and Frank C. Wadas of Buffalo, all with scores of 100 or better. First woman eligible is Rose A. Matthews of Flushing, No. 9, 98.250. Of 4,214 applicants for file clerk jobs, 1,462 failed, 460 were absent, 26 disqualified and 139 disapproved Account Clerk Roster There were 1,343 candidates for account clerk. Five hundred pa.ssed, 623 failed, 162 were absent, three disqualified, and 55 disapproved. Mr. Wadas, who is one of the "top four" for file clerk jobs, heads the account clerk list, with 99.650. Runners-up: Joan D. Stocker of Mechanicsville, 99.550; Mr. Becker, 99.150; and Joseph Weissman of Brooklyn ,99.100 Statistics Specialty John B. English of N Y C is top man in the statistics clerk title, with 101.300. Top female honors went to Mi.ss Stocker, No. 2, 99.000. Number 3 is Mr. Beckert; 4, Robert F Jones of GIo'ersviile; 5, Robert G. Johnson of Bethpage; 6, Joseph Weissman, Brooklyn, all scoring 98.000. The statistics clerk exam' had 965 applicants, of whom 450 failed, 122 were absent, five disqualified, and 29 disapproved. The complete clerical lists will be published serially in The LEADER, beginning with next week's Issue. POLICE JOBS OPEN IN ORANGE COUNTY Jobs as police patrolmen in Orange County towns and villages \vill be filled from an exam which closes for receipt of applications Wednesday, August 25. Apply to the Orange County Civil Service Commission, County Building, Goshen, N. Y . The exam is No. 103. Candidates must be residents of Orange County, and, in some cases residents of the town or village. Pay varies, from $2,520 to $3,600 a year, with other pay on an hourly basis. Age limits are 21 to 50, except for veterans. High school graduation or equivalent education, is required. Business or industrial experience, or military duty, may be substituted on a year for year basis. Minimum height, 5 feet 7 inches; minimum weight, 135 pounds. G I V E N NO N U M E R I C A L B A T I N G IN INTERVIEW, FAILED CANDIDATE APPEALS A L B A N Y , Aug. 23 — Declaring that she was not given a full competitive examination as required by law, as the interview was subjective, Eleanore Stone has appealed to the State Commissioner of Education from the ruling of the N Y C Board of Education's board of examiners that disqualified her. She passed the written test and met other requirements. In the interview, she says, candidates who passed were given numerical scores, the regular incident of competitive examination; those not passed were simply marked For Security for Your Future unsatisfactory, and given no nuBUY That Home Now. merical rating. She says the Education Law requires a numerical rating, to provide all the candidates with a.s nearly similar a test as possible, and protests the failure to give her one. She sought a license as chairman of department in health education. Get U. S. COMPLETES GUIDE O N JOB F O B H A N D I C A P P E D W A S H I N G T O N , Aug. 23 — The U. S. Civil Service Commission has completed a guide for government agencies in employing handcapped persons in shipbuilding positions. The guide is the third part of a revision. Part I covered aircraft positions, and Part I I , ordnance and ordnance store positions. H A L F OF U. S. EMPLOYEES HAVE V E T E R A N P R E F E R A N C E W A S H I N G T O N , Aug. 23 — The number of Federal employees who have veteran preference has reached 50 per cent, the highest proportion to date, the U. S. Civil Service Commission reported. For an analysis of oivU wrvice problems In the forefront of the news, read H, J. Bernard's weekly column, "Looklns Inside«" See i^Me Z. F A U L T Y VEHICLES, N O T DRIVEBS, U N I O N SAYS Eugene Calamari, president of ment's safety campaign. The department, which recentSanitatlonmen's Local 111-A, AFL, has urged that faulty N Y C Sani- ly instituted a driver education tation Department Vehicles which, program for its employees, should. Instead, concentrate on Its defeche said, "in many ca-ses have tive equipment, the union presibeen awaiting condemnation for dent said. Sanitation drivers have months" be put In proper shape, already passed stringent State as the first step in the depart- motor vehicle tests, he added. • offers you—the government employee—an opportunity to own the finest automobile insurance protection at low preferred-risk rates. If you are not yet a member of our family of satisfied policy owners, we invite you to join over a quarter million government employees who now entrust their automobile insurance protection to Government Employees Insurance Company. MAIL THIS COUPON FOR RATES O N YOUR CAR N O O B L I G A T I O N — N O A G E N T WILL CALL (A Capital Slock Company . . . 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S T A T I O N Open 9 A.M. t« C P.M. — 9 A.M, to 6 P,M, Thuradaya 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Saturdays Where Yen A l w a y s G e t A G o d iMy J U. S. to Fill Clerk, Teacher, Steno, Nursing, Librarian And Other Jobs Overseas A wide range of civilian clerical, technical, skilled and unskilled labor, and administrative positions with U. S. governmental agencies in m a n y locations throughout tlie world ure being filled directly by personnel officers of the various departments. Some of the civilian jobs are in the classified civil service; most are in the " e x c e p t e d " Schedules A and B. Excepted jobs are filled without reference to or approval of the U. S. Civil Service Commission. m • L r ^ ^ M o s t overseas jobs are on a contract basis, for one, one and a h a l f , or t w o years. In addition to salary, competitively set on an a n nual, monthly, weekly or hourly basis, employment In many areas also includes a post differential or c o s t - o f - l i v i n g allowance, or both. G o v e r n m e n t quarters may be f u r nished f r e e of charge, or additional money provided f o r quarters, or quarters and subsistence available at nominal rates, depending on the location of the jobs. Federal agencies hiring civilians f o r overseas duty include: the D e partments 01 Agriculture, Air Force, A r m y , Commerce, Interior, N a v y and State. W h e r e specific addre.sses are not given, write to the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C. for tiie name of the appropriate agency where application should be made. Air Force Civilian Jobs Clerical, administrative, recreational, technical and engineering jobs are being filled by the A i r Force for duty around the world. T h e r e are no requirements f o r e m ployment in unskilled trades or construction work. Persons in N Y C , lower New Y o r k State and N e w Jersey should apply to the civilian personnel office at Mitchel Air Force Base, Hempstead, N . Y . Residents of upper New Y o r k State should apply to the civilian personnel office, Grifllss Air Force Base, R o m e , N. Y . If vacancies do not exist in a particular occupation at the time application is made, the application is kept on file f o r future vacancies. Overseas agricultural jobs in v a rious specialties are being filled by the Office of Personnel, D e p a r t m e n t of Agriculture, Washington 25, D. C. A r m y Jobs T h e Department of the A r m y is filling vacancies in Alaska, Austria, Prance, Germany, Japan, K o r e a . Okinawa. P a n a m a and Turkey. Employment is f o r one and a half or two years, depending on job location. For clerical, administrative, profe.ssional and recreational jobs, apply to tlie Department of the A r m y , Office of Civilian Personnel, Overseas A f f a i r s Division, Old Post Office Building, Washington 25, D. C. F o r engineering jobs, apply to the Chief of Engineers, Civilian Personnel Branch; for quartermaster jobs, to Quartermaster General, Civilian Personnel D i v i sion; f o r signal jobs, to Chief Signal Office, Civilian Per.sonnel Branch; f o r transportation jobs, to Chief of Transportation, Civilian Personnel Branch: for ordnance jobs, to Chief of Ordnance, Civilian Personnel Branch, all located at W a s h i n g t o n 25, D. C. T l i e Bureau of Indian Affairs, D e p a r t m e n t of the Interior, employs general clerical and administrative personnel, mechanics, cooks, nurses, doctors, teachers, social workers and others. Apply to the Area Director, Bureau of I n d i a n AfTairs, Juneau, Alaska. Navy ^ and clerk-stenographer, typist, accounting clerk, code clerk, general clerk. $3,150 a year; diplomatic courier $3,531, and nurse. $4,323. Allowances are granted in addition to basic salary. Apply to the Employment Division, Department of State. Washington 25, D. C. T h e U. S. I n f o r m a t i o n Agency Is recruiting librarians. English teachers, and administrators, at pay ranging f r o m $3,500 to $6,000 a year, plus allowances of $1,000 to $6,000, depending on marital status and living costs. Jobs are located in the various American Republics, Turky. Iran. Burma and Thailand. Apply to the I n formation Center Service, U. S. I n f o r m a t i o n Agency, Washington 25, D. C. Teachers Needed T h e Panama Canal Company and the Canal Zone G o v e r n m e n t employs persons in a wide variety of professional and subprofessional positions and in the mechanical trades. Base salaries in teaching Jobs Clerical and administrative personnel, engineers and skilled workers are being employed by the Department of the N a v y for service in Hawaii, Guam, Alaska, P a n a m a Canal Zone, Puerto Rico, the Philippine Republic, French Morocco. Europe, Japan and other f o r e i g n areas. Applicants are hired by the particular unit in command of tlie area where employment is desired. Applicants for clerk, stenographer. administrative, technical and trades jot)s.with the Military Sea Transportation Service should w r i t e the Commander, M S T S , P a cific Area. Sun Francisco P o r t of Kmbarkation. Fort Mason, Calif. Jobs in Other Departments H i e Deparlnient of State, be•Idas filling jobs as foreign service officer and staff officer, has vacancies f o r : secretary STATE TESTS NOW OPEN STATE Open-Competitive isfactory equivalent. E x a m dat«^ Saturday, October 23. (Friday, September 24). T o apply by mall for any of the following State tests, mail request to the Examination Division, 39 Columbia Street, Albany, N . Y., and give number and title of e x amination; also enclose a large self-addressed envelope bearing 6 axcept with filled-out application cents postage. D o not enclose fees Required fees should be mailed to the State Department of Civil Service. State Office Building. A l bany, N . Y., with the filled-out forms. Applications may be obtained in per.son or by representative at the following locations: I n f o r m a t i o n Desks Examinations. Division. 39 Columbia Street, or Lobby of State Office Building; N Y C . State Department of Civil Service, R o o m 2301 at 270 B r o a d way, corner Chambers Street; B u f f a l o , State Department of Civil Service, State Office Building, R o o m 212; Local offices of New Y o r k State Employment Service. Last day to apply given at end of each notice. 0215. SENIOR ARCHITECT. $6,590 to $8,070. Open to any qualified citizen of the U. S. T h e r e are 33 vacancies in Albany, 150 more expected. Requirements: (1) a professional architect's license; A N D (2> 2 years of experience in work similar to that of Assistant Architect in State service performing important architectural work on building plans and department f o r 16 years, except for signs. Fee $5. Exam date. Saturthe period of federalization. day. October 23. (Friday, SeptemMore T h a n 6,000 Workers ber 24). Mr. Brockv/ay will be responsi0216. S E N I O R HARDWARE ble for a division with more than 6,000 employees who has paid out S P E C I F I C A T I O N S W R I T E R , $6,$247,864,696 in unemployme;;it 590 to $8,070. T h e r e is one v a benefits in the past 12 months, cancy in the Dept. of Public W o r k s Albany. Requirements: (1) placed approximately 762,000 at graduation or an workers in jobs, and holds the high school key to an Unemployment Insur- equivalency diploma: (2) 3 years ance Trust Fund of $1,300,000,000. of professional experience in the I n 1948. he was appointed assist- preparation of hardware specifiant executive director of the DE. cations which must have involved I n 1950. he was appointed direc- developing, writing and reviewhardware tor of the field operations bureau ing specifications for and fixtures used in building conof the Division. struction and maintenance; and (3) either ( a ) a bachelor's degree in architecture or engineering plus one more year of above experience and one year of experience assisting in work related to hardware design, manufacture or installation. or ( b ) a master's degree in architectui'e or engineering plus one year of one of above types of lope Inserts registered with only experience, or ( c ) 5 years of e x about half. perience assisting in work related One remedy suggested by an to hardware design, manufacture employee was to put an extra $10 or installation and one more year bill in each pay envelope and see of the above described experience if attention value improved. in the preparation of hardware specifications, or ( d ) a satisfactory equivalent. Fee $5. Exam date, Saturday, October 23. ( F r i day. September 24). jobs range f r o m $477 to $574 a month, and $3,968 to $4,743 a year, plus allowances. Nurses, medical officers, hospital residents interns, medical technicians, powerhouse operators and wiremen are also among the jobs where vacancies exist. Apply to the Personnel D i rector. P a n a l P a n a m a Canal C o m pany. Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. T e a c h i n g jobs are being filled In Alaska, Cuba, Guam. Hawaii, Canal Zone, Philippine Republic. Puerto Rico. Virgin Islands, A m e r ican Samoa, Trust T e r r i t o r y of the Pacific Islands, and U. S. military occupied zones. W r i t e to the Division of International Education Relations, U. S. Office of Education, Washington 25, D. C. Government Booklet A general survey of civilian jobs outside continental United States may be obtained f r o m the Superintendent of Documents. U. S. G o v e r n m e n t Printing Office, Washington 25. D. C. T h e booklet, "Federal Jobs Outside the Continental United States." costs ' 15 cents. B R O C K W A Y APPOINTED HEAD OF STATE'S D. E. Industrial Commissioner Edward Corsi appointed Richard C. Brockway as executive director of the Division of Employment of the State Labor Department. Mr. Brockway, 46. a native of Rochester, succeeds Milton O. L o y sen. who recently re.signed to become vice president in charge of internal operations f o r the Hospital Service Plan of New Jersey. T h e new executive director, who will exercise administrative control over the State Employment Service and the State's unemployment insurance system, has been with the State Labor D e - Half Don't Heed What's Not Pay in Envelope T h e civilian personnel office of the U. S. arzny depot at Tooele, Utah, made a study of how well word gets around to their employees. T h e office sought the answers to two questions: D o employees hear the information they are supposed to? And if they hear it, do they understand it? T h e ways of communicating most commonly used at the depot, says the Civil Service Assembly, are inserts in pay envelopes, meetings with staff members, and the employee newspaper. T h e office decided that using two or three of those channels was more effective in getting ideas across than relyCurrent Civil Service listings f o r ing on just one. U. S. jobs outside of New Y o r k I n f o r m a t i o n passed out through State were issued by the U. S. staff meetings reached the upper Civil Service Commission; levels well, but that there was a Medical officer jobs with Federal sharp drop in both coverage and agencies in Washington, D. C., and comprehension among other e m - throughout the U. S., $5,940 to ployees. I n f o r m a t i o n in pay enve- $7,040 a year. Apply to the U. S. Oivil Service Commission W a s h ington 25, D. C. P a t e n t adviser jobs, mostly with the Department of the N a v y in NYC PROMOTION LISTS the Washington, D. C. area, $3.Senior probation officer. City 410 to $5,940. Apply to the Board Magistrates; 18. of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Signal maintainer, T r a n s i t A u - Department of the N a v y , M a i n thority; 66. N a v y Building. Washington, D. C. Stenographer, grade 3, W e l f a r e . Substitute general mechanic, at 3; Municipal Court. 1. Structure maintainer, group B, Alexandria and Arlington, Va., post offices, $1.61 Vi an hour. A p Transit Authority; 78. ply to the U. S. Civil Service SPECIAL M I L I T A R Y LIST Bridge tender. Public W o r k s ; Commission. Washington, D. C., by August 24. 3,433 (from attendant, male, Fireman, $3,900 a year. District grade 1, list April 1949>. Columbia Fire Department, Junior electrical engineer. of Traffic. W a t e r Supply, Gas and Washington, D. C. Apply to the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Electricity, Hospitals. Higher E d ucation. Public Works, Transit Washington, D. C. Maintenance inspector. Fort Authority; 84. Laborer. Marine and Aviation, M y e r and at other A r m y installaarea, Public Works. W a t e r Supply Gas tions in the Washington $1.97 an hour. Apply to the Board and Electricity; 501. Maintainer's helper A , Transit of U. S. Civil Service Examiners. Military District of Washington, Authority; 57. Maintainer's helper C, Transit R o o m lB-869. T h e Pentagon, W a shington 25. D. C. Authority; 62. Medical officer. Health Bureau, Surface line operator, Transit Canal Zone Government. P a n a m a Authority; 5,733. Canal Zone, $7,425 to $10,450 a LABOR CLASS Laborer, Public Works, 964; year. Apply by air mail to the W a t e r Supply. Gas and Electri- Board of U. S. Civil Service E x city. 987; M a r i n e and Aviation, aminers, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. 1,000. Federal Jobs Outside State InWideRange Certifications 0217. A S S I S T A N T H Y D R A U L I C ENGINEER. $5,360 to $6,640. T h e r e are two vacancies in the Dept. of Public Service at N Y C . Requirements: (1) high school graduation or equivalency diplom a ; (2) one year of satisfactory engineering experience in the field of hydraulic engineering or in the supervision or operation of a public water supply system; and (3' either ( a ) a bachelor's degree in civil engineering plus one more year of above experience and one year of experience assisting in such work, or ( b ) a master's degree in civil engineeeing with specialization in hydraulics plus one more year of above experience or one year of e x p e r ience assisting in such work, or ( c ) 5 years of experience assisting in work described above and one more year of the engineering experience as described, or (d) a satisfactory equivalent. Fee $5. E x a m date. Saturday, October 23. (Friday, September 24). 0218. S E N I O R ENGINEERING A I D E , $3,540 to $4,490. T h e r e are 72 vacancies in the Dept. of P u b lic Works at Albany and in the District Offices. Sixty-six more are expected. Requirements: ( 1 ) high school graduation or equivalency diploma; and ( 2 ) either ( a ) 4 years of experience assisting in engineering work by p e r f o r m i n g simple teclinica! tasks and manual work in office, field or laboratory, or ( b ) a bachelor's degree in e n gineering. or (c) equivalent. Fee $3.00. Exam date, Saturday, October 23. ( F r i d a y . September 24). 0226. S U P E R V I S O R O F SOC I A L W O R K ( M E D I C A L ) , $5,090 to $6,320. T h e r e are three v a c a n cies, one each at Syracuse. B u f f a l o and Albany. Requirements: (1) completion of two years of graduate study in a recognized school of social work; (2) two years of satisfactory medical social work experience, within the last 10 years, in a recognized institution or agency o f f e r i n g casework services, of which one year must have been under the supervision of a medical social work supervisor and one year must have been in a supervisory, consultative or administrative capacity; and ( 3 ) either ( a ) one more year of sat- . 0219. J U N I O R E N G I N E E R I N G A I D E , $2,720 tc $3,520. T h e r e are 209 vacancies in the Dept. of Public Works at Albany and in the District Offices; more expected. Requirements: (1) high school graduation or equivalency diploma; and ( 2 ) either ( a ) one year of experience as a helper on engineering projects, or ( c ) a sat- (Continued o n P a g e 8 ) Visual Training OP CANDIDATES For Police, Housing Officer, Transit Patrolmen FOR THE EYESIGHT TESTS OF CIVIL SERVICE REQUIREMENTS DR. JOHN T. FLYNN Optomefrist • Orthoptist 300 West 23rd St., N. Y . C . Br ApilK Only W A . 9-.'S019 MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE EXAMINER Thof Who Filed Applications Are InvHed To Be Our Guests at a Class SessfMi of Oar Course ot Proparatioa MANHATTAN: Tues. or Thurs. at 1:15, 5:30 or 7:30 P.M. or iH J A M A I C A : Wed. or Fri. at 7:30 P.M. Classes Now Formiag tor Auto Mechanic - Insp. Construction Gr. 4 Surface Line Operator - Painter • Carpenter Electrician's Helper - Asst. Supt. Construction Gr. 4 Inquiro f o r Particular* BUSINESS COURSES: Stoaograpliy - Typowritlnf • Secretarial VOCATIONAL TRAINING JlirX^'^A-t^-MrcJarc. ARE OPPORTUNITIES ESCAPING YOUf Kjep liifurrned about cominr ezaaia bjrflUur» OONiriDENriAL QUESTIOMNAIUK wtCli un gtviiK your qualiflcatioui. Wo will notify you by mail without cli^i,'u ot ariiA'oacliinr popular exam* for which you may elitiblr. juestioiiiiairo foruis Dialled FKKE o r may b« obtoiued a i our o f f l c M . 744 DELEHANTY ^^^mm^ MANHATTAN: IIS EAST 15th STREET — ML 3-«fM JAMAICA: 90-14 SUTPHIN BOULKVAItO — JA. »-UM umce Uuuni: U O N . U nu., • A M t* • r M | B A T . t All to I Ht Page Six C # —CUn£' I V I L n K K V I i; K L E A II S^/IAHAA. L e a d e r POLICE D U T Y QUESTIONS IN PATROLMAN TEST Editor. The L E A D E R : Antprti'a'H iMrgenl Weekly for Public Kmployees If a candidate proves in a writMeinl>rr Audit R i i r e n i i of CirnilHtions ten test he has a good knowledge of fundamental police rules and Puhlished every Tuenilay hy the main laws he will be asked to CIVIL SERVICE LEADER. INC. enforce, I am sure such a type of 97 Dapiic Street, New York 7, N. Y. BEvhmoii 3-i010 test will produce patrolman eliJerry FinkelMein, Connulting Piihli»her glbles better equipped for police work. I t is better than bare intelMnxwell l^limnn. Editor H. J. Bernard, Executive Editor N. H. Mnger, Buninet* Manager ligence testing because combining test of intelligence and special 10c Per Copy. Suhscriplion Prire $1.37 ^^ to members of the Civil knowledge. T h e fact they will get departmental training after apService Employees Assoeintion. $3.00 lo non-members. pointment will serve to qualify T U E S D A Y , A U G U S T 24, 1954 thern further for the job. Also, candidates who equipped themselves to answer questions on police duties are likely to be the ones who have the right answers for the other questions bound to be included in a patrolman test. Congress Votes Raise^ But Invites a Veto I am a N Y C policeman who patrolman on rated high on the (P.D.) test. I came out high on pay. the sergeant promotion test, too. For both of these tests I attended T h e P o s t O f T i c e a n d H i v i l S e r v i c e C o m m i t t e e s o f b o t h school and know I was well reH o u s e s a p p e a r e d c o n v i n c e d b o t h t h e p o s t a l a n d t h e c l a s s i - warded, as do my fellows who took the same precautions I did. fied ( w h i t e c o l l a r ) e m p l o y e e s are entitled to a raise, and The promotion test would deal a m a j o r i t y o f t h e S e n a t e v o t e d f o r a T) p e r c e n t b i l l , t h o u g h largely with police duties, but the other aspects were important, too, under the rules a two-thirds vote, not attained, w a s necand also covered by schooling. essary. I insist that police duties constitute a proper subject for part of T h e House v o t e a 7 per cent bill. the patrolman written test. My own experience, and that of thouBoth measures concerned postal pay. sands of others, confirm it. MoreT h e S e n a t e r e s c i n d e d i t s a c t i o n a l m o s t i m m e d i a t e l y , over, N Y C has included police duty questions in patrolman exams e v i d e n t l y t o s a t i s f y t h e W h i t e H o u s e , w h i c h h a d b e e n in the past and there is every insisting no raise must be g r a n t e d unless f u n d s to finance reason it should continue to do so in the future. it w e r e v o t e d . T h e s a m e insistence r e n d e r e d t h e H o u s e PATROLMAN bill i n e f f e c t i v e . SIXTH STATE INCREMENTS A s C o n g r e s s r u s h e d t o w a r d a d j o u r n m e n t , l e g i s l a t i v e CALLED INCONSISTENT Editor, T h e L E A D E R ; leaders w e r e c o n f e r r i n g with the President on policy Something should be done to r e g a r d i n g a r a i s e . A s a r e s u l t , t h e e m p l o y e e s w e r e l e f t in help the State staff nurse who is a s o r r y p r e d i c a m e n t , u n a b l e t o g e t t h e a f f i r m a t i v e l e g i s l a - due to receive the extra salary step. An attendant, raised from t i o n e v e n l e a d e r s in C o n g r e s s h a d p r o m i s e d t h e m , a n d grade G - 2 to R-4, will receive u n a b l e t o o v e r c o m e t h e p o w e r f u l i n f l u e n c e o f t h e W h i t e $353.20 as an extra increment; a practical nurse, from G-3 to R-5, H o u s e . I t w a s a h a r r o w i n g e x p e r i e n c e f o r t h e e m p l o y e e s , $385.80; a head nurse, from 9 to a n d n o d o u b t f o r C o n g r e s s a s w e l l , a n d f o r C o n g r e s s a 10, $412; an instructor, 11 to 12, $545.84; a supervisor, from 12 to shameful showing. 13, $623.76. A staff nurse raised from G-7 T h e r e c o u l d b e n o q u a r r e l w ith t h e W h i t e H o u s e i n to R-8. will receive $320.16 in the s i s t e n c e t h a t a b i l l g r a n t i n g a r a i s e d e m a n d s a n o t h e r o n e extra step. Is this justice? A. R. D. to p r o v i d e the funds. It w a s the duty of Congress to vote Bronx, N. Y . the funds. T h e case f o r a raise w a s strong and clear-cut. lONCRESS There has m a d e a butt of Federal employees was nothing the employees could do, save to u r g e PROBATION EMPLOYEES' l e g i s l a t o r s to v o t e t h e m o n e y . T h e r e s p o n s i b i l i t y f o r p r o - VIEW ON TREULICH BILL Editor, The L E A D E R : v i d i n g the f u n d s rests w i t h the e m p l o y e r . T h e e m p l o y e e T h e Civil Service Reform Assoh a s d o n e h i s p a r t w h e n h e h a s p r o v e d t h e n e e d a n d j u s t i c e ciation continues to insist in urging the enactment of the Treulich of a raise. bill which would waive requireT h e r e w a s m u c h d i s p o s i t i o n in t h e W h i t e H o u s e a n d ments of the Lyons Residence Law for probation officers and saipert h e l e g i s l a t i v e c h a m b e r s t o a v o i d g r a n t i n g a n y r a i s e , w h a t - visors in the Magistrates and Doe v e r p r e t e n s e s t o t h e c o n t r a r y m a y h a v e b e e n u s e d t o mestic Relations Courts. At the public hearing the legislation was m e e t w h a t a r e c o n s i d e r e d p o l i t i c a l r e i i u i r e m e n t s in a n opposed by the Probation and P a role Officers Association. election year. The bill is not necessary at this T h e b i l l t h e S e n a t e v o t e d w a s c o u p l e d w i t h a n o t h e r time because the mode of recruitr a i s i n g p o s t a l r a t e s . N o b o d y h a d a n y c o n f i d e n c e a ' p o s t a l ment as adopted by the City Civil Service Commission is not realisr a t e i n c r e a s e b i l l c o u l d b e p a s s e d , so t h e S e n a t e ' s a c t i o n tic, besides being unfair to the w a s a n e m p t y g e s t u r e , e x c e p t o n l y t o b r i n g t h e w h o l e s u b - employees and applicants. T h e purport of the bill is conj e c t b e f o r e a S e n a t e - H o u s e c o n f e r e n c e c o m m i t t e e . B u t trary to general civil service praca d j o u r n m e n t b y m o n t h ' s e n d w a s t h e g o a l . C o n g r e s s w a s tice and a career system. T h e bill would waive the requirement not m u c h m o r e i n t e r e s t e d in t h a t , t h a n in g r a n t i n g t h e r a i s e . only for probation officers but for W h i l e t h e o n e p o l i t i c a l p a r t y b l a m e d t h e o t h e r f o r f a i l u r e the .senior and supervisory grades which can now only be attained o r d e l a y in v o t i n g a r a i s e , WMiite H o u s e e m i s s a r i e s w e r e by promotion examination. If the Department of Personnel Baying t h e P r e s i d e n t w o u l d v e t o a n y p o s t a l r a i s e b i l l t h a t or the Commission considers the did not p r o v i d e the f u n d s f o r t h e raise. matter from a realistic and funcT h e c i r c u m s t a n c e s w e r e s o a r r a n g e d it b e c a m e e a s i e r tional point of view, and corrects the recruiting policy accordingly, a n d s i m p l e r n o t t o v o t e a r a i s e t h a n t o v o t e o n e . F o r t h e recruitment of N Y C residents will e m p l o y e e s , t h e s i t u a t i o n h a d g r o w n d a r k a n d d e s p e r a t e , prove adequate. James R. Watson of the Civil a l m o s t h o p e l e s s . T h e i r l e a d e r s s t r o v e t o i n d u c e C o n g r e s s Service R e f o r m Association states to m e e t i t s r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s . D a y s p a s s e d . N o t h i n g h a p - that the opposition is "purely political or selfish, coming mainly p e n e d . C o n g r e s s w a s m o r e c o n c e r n e d w i t h o t h e r m a t t e r s . from City employees who want to T h o u g h Congress had been considering the raise f o r restrict competition for court positions and sponsors of provisional m o n t h s , a n d its c o m m i t t e e s h a d h e l d e x t e n s i v e h e a r i n g s , employees who are fearful of lost h e b i l l s f o r a r a i s e g o t c a u g h t in t h e j a m o f t h e c l o s i n g ing their jobs." The P P O A is not a political group and has never d a y s o f t h e s e s s i o n . I t w a s n o t t o b e m e r e l y a r e c e s s , b u t attempted to use political influa n a d j o u r n m e n t . N e x t t i m e C o n g r e s s m e t , it w o u l d b e a ence. If it is selfish to endeavor to safeguard the rights of employn e w Congress, b a r r i n g a special session. ees who continue to give their all F i n a l l y , t h e S e n a t e v o t e d a 5 p e r c e n t r a i s e , a n d r e - to the public, then the word has lost its meaning. j e c t e d an a m e n d m e n t that w o u l d raise p o s t a g e rate*. T h e For some unknown rea.son the H o u s e t h e n v o t e d t h e b i l l a s its l a s t a c t i o n p r i o r t o a d j o u r n - framers of the bill have not included the Court of Special Sesm e n t . T h e r a i s e w o u l d p r o v i d e a $ 2 0 0 m i n i m u m a n d a sions. This court maintains a pro$ 4 0 0 m a x i m u m f o r p o s t a l e m p l o y e e s ; a n d $ 1 7 0 a n d $ 4 4 0 bation service with functions and aims of tho.se in the Domestic l i m i t s f o r cla.ssified e m p l o y e e s . The majority l e a d e r s Relations and Magistrates Courts. o f b o t h H o u s e s s a y P r e s i d e n t E i s e n h o w e r h a s n o t c h a n g e d Here again is evidence of danger In taking action which would conh i s o p p o s i t i o n t o a n y r a i s e f o r w h i c h f u n d s a r e n o t v o t e d . tradict civil service practices and F a i h i r e t o p r o v i d e t h e m o n e y , in o n e w a y o r a n o t h e r , l o o k s create a cleavage in the overall City service. like an invitation to a v e t o . Recruitment for the probation K K Tiiffliliiy, NEWS August 24, 1954 cXette^ FTiLL-SCALE reorganization of the N Y C Personnel Department Is planned, with major functions assigned to some new ranking a p pointee.s. Personnel Director Joseph Schechter Is discussing with the Budget Director's office the amount of money needed. One job will be that of Mr. Schechter s right-hand man, to free him of much administrative detail, and give him more time for policy matters. A new set-up in the Reclassification Bureau is reported under consideration also. M A Y O R W A G N E R ' S willingness to have N Y C bear at lea.'st part of the expense of police uniforms has prompted other groups of uniformed employees to seek the same benefit. It's an old project with all of them. Howard P. Barry, president, sounded the request on behalf of the Uniformed Firemen's A.s.sociation. T H E B I L L to make permanent the temporary increases in pensions to those former U. S. employees receiving pittance retirement allowances is before President Eisenhower. He will sign it. Also before him is the bill to extend unemployment in.surance to 4,000,000 e m ployees. whereby nearly all U. S. employees would be included. An administration measure, its enactment also is certain. N E A R L Y 3.000 men have pas.sed the N Y C patrolman <P.D.) physical test, and it appears that the eligible list will contain nearly 4,000 names. The more, the merrier, is the City Civil Service Commission's comment. T h e present list will be exhausted, as to usefiilne.ss, by the appointment of about 300 patrolmen September 1. T h e budget certificate allows for" 500, the list contains .somewhat more than 500 names, but not more than 300 will clear investigation and be willing, ready and able to accept. Police Commissioner Francis W . H. Adams wants a 7,000 increase in the number of patrolmen, and at higher pay. If the money can be raised for even 2,000 more men, the number of remaining eligibles on the new list would be too small for comfort, SQ a new exam is to be rushed. T H E M A I N T A I N E R ' S H E L P E R , group E, written test for N Y C Tran.sit Authority jobs will be held on Saturday, October 2. T h e r e are 468 candidates, 300 vacancies. Job offers to all on T A eligible lists is the rule, has been for years. . . . On August 24 the N Y C Police Academy graduated 250 recruits. If any large-scale patrolman hiring is to be made, armories would be hired in which to train the appointees, the same as was done in 1946, when 2,000 patrolmen were appointed in four days, so don't think it can't be done. . . . Medicals in the open-competitive gardener test will be given by N Y C on September 7 to the 111 eligibles. . . . T h e attempt of some candidates to have the Supreme Court, New York County, change the key answers lo questions 8 and 17 in the police sergeant promotion test failed. Supreme Court Justice S. Samuel DiFalco, in deciding the case, Kobiernicki v. Brennan, said: "Under the circumstances disclosed herein, the action of the (Civil Service) commi.ssion was not arbitrary, capricious or unrea.sonable." A N I N S T R U C T O R ' S training course, now in progre.ss at the New York, N. Y . post office of which Robert H. Schaffer is Acting Postmaster, ends on August 27. I t is part of the National Motor Vehicle Accident Prevention Program of the Post Office Department. T h e program is under the Bureau of Personnel of the department. Through the courtesy of Mayor Robert F. Wagner and the N Y C Traffic Department, 32nd Street between 10th and 11th Avenues, is closed off as a training area for the week. The trainees come f r o m Long Island and Westchester County post offices. P l ' B L I C E M P L O Y E E S who want to do .some prospecting in the hope of adding to their income can get hints from a booklet entitled "Prospecting with a Counter", published by the Atomic Energy Commi.ssion. T h e booklet obtainable from the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Ollice. Washington, D. C, at 30 cents, deals with radiation detection, including the hunt for uranium. service of the County courts is confined to residents of the CoTinty. Because of reasonable pay scales and incentives, adequate staff is maintained. These services to a great extent draw their recruits from the Domestic Relations, Magistrates and Special Sessions Courts. L L O Y D V. T H O M S O N , DO E M P L O Y E E S of the N Y C President, Probation Transit Authority have to be N Y C and Parole Officers residents? If they do not, are their Association, N Y C . promotion pro.spects adver.sely a f fected if they live outside the City? L. C. C A N C E L L A T I O N OF Answer — They do not have to AUTO INSURANCE be N Y C residents, but, with some Editor, The L E A D E R : exceptions, must be lesidcnts of If a candidate's auto insurance the State. T h e exceptions apply to has been cancelled by the insur- former employees of the privately ance company he may be dis- owned B M T and I R T who live in qualified from the State's exam New Jersey, and some others who for motor vehicle license exami- live there who were hired subsener. Is this fair? quent to unification. T h e old If one is a habitual driver-acci- Board of Transportation, for a dent individual, the stock and while, complied with the Lyons mutual companies will probably Residence Law, though not bound throw him into a pool for auto to do .so, but the T A does not. P r o coverage at a rate at least 25 per motion rights of T A employees cent above published rate sched- resident in the State, or in Nev? ules. But many companies will Jer.sey as just described, are not cancel a risk even if he is not re- adversely affected by non-resimotely responsible for an accident, dence in N Y C , a.s happened to a State superJ visor who.se car was struck by a V Question, Please truck tire which had become detached from a passing truck on Route 20 near Duanesburgh, or another man whose risk was cancelled becau.se his car, parked in a hotel lot at Malone, was struck by an unidentified vehicle. F L. Albany, N. Y . llOMEMAKER SOUGHT AS N E W T I T L E The N Y C Department of W e l fare has requested City Civil Service Commission approval of a change of title, from mother'! aide to homeinaker. NYC Exams That Open Soon T h e followinf SY C H r exams wUl open for receipt of application on Wednesday, September S, and will remain open until dates Indicated. Starting September 8, application may be made to the N Y C Department of Personnel, in person or by representative, at 9G Dnane Street, Manhattan. Where speciflcally stated, application may be made by mail to the Department of Personnel, 299 Broadway, New Yorli 7, N. Y. Enclose a six-cent sel^-addressed envelope at least nine inches wide. Candidates must be U. S. citisens and residents of New York State, unless otherwise indicated. Three years' residence in N Y C is re<|uired for appointment to most City jobs. 7196. D I E T I T I A N (2nd amended notice, 2nd filing period), $2,890; open to all qualified c l t i «ens. Application m a y be made by mall. Requirements: bachelor's degree In home economics, with m a j o r studies in food, nutrition or Institutional management. F e e $2. XOpen until further notice.) 7034. DENTAL HYGIENIST (4th amended notice, 12th filing p e r i o d ) , $2,825; seven vacancies. Requirements: S t a t e license dental hygienist. Fee $2. ( O p e n tintil further notice.) 7197. J U N I O R C I V I L ENGIN E E R (10th filing p e r i o d ) , $4,080; 375 vacancies. Requirements: bachelor's degree in engineering, by M a r c h 1, 1955, or equivalent. Fee $3. ( O p e n until f u r t h e r noUce.) 7341. M E D I C A L SOCIAL W O R K E R , G R A D E 1 (2nd filing p e r i o d ) , $3,425; 125 vacancies. Open to all qualified citizens. A p plication m a y be made by mail. Requirements: bachelor's degree and two years' f u l l - t i m e case work experience in social case work agency; graduate study in school of social work m a y be credited. P e e $3. (Open until further notice.) 7035. O C C U P A T I O N A L T H E R A P I S T (4th amended notice, 4th filing p e r i o d ) , $3,425; 31 vacancies In Departments of Hospitals and Health. Open to all quahfied c i t izens. Application m a y be made by mail. Requirements: graduation f r o m school of occupational t h e r apy, or therapist registered with approved O.T. association. Fee $3. ( O p e n until further notice.) cept for veterans. until further notice.) 7038. P R O B A T I O N OFFICER, GRADE 1. r>omestic Relations Court (4th amended notice, 2nd filing p e r i o d ) , $3,745; 65 v a c a n cies. Requirements: same as No. 7007 above. F e e $3. (Open until further notice.) 7219. P U B L I C H E A L T H N U R S E (4th amended notice, 6th filing period), $3,080; 185 vacancies In Department of Health. Open to all qualified citizens. Application may be made by mail. Requirements: nursing school graduation, including courses in medical, surgical, ob.stetrlcal and pediatric training; State license as registered niu'se, or application f o r such license, r e quired f o r appointment; m a x i m u m age, 30, except f o r veterans. Fee $2. ( O p e n until f u r t h e r notice.) 6986. PLUMBER'S HELPER, $17.85 a day. M i n i m u m Requirements: ( a ) T h r e e years' paid practical experience of a natiu-e to q u a l i f y for the duties of the position: or ( b ) not less than one year of acceptable experience of a n a ture to q u a l i f y f o r the d'Jties of the position, plus sufficient educational training of a nature r e lating to the duties of the position In an approved vocational or trade school to complete the threeyear minimum requirement. Six months' practical experience will be credited for each year of educational training. A g e limit, 50 years; does not apply to veterans. (Thursday, September 23). 7120. A S S I S T A N T C I V I L E N GINEER (SANITARY), $5,006. Fee. $5. W r i t t e n test, October 27 (tentative). Minimum Requirements: A baccalaureate degree In engineering issued upon completion of a course of study registered by the Univin-sity of t h e State of IKENE MAUIE r. ;;o.ii, ii)6t ni'iinows, or day care centers for young c h i l dren. T e s t s : Technical, weight 30; training and experience, weight 40; oral, weight 30. T h e factors in the oral test will be manner, speech and judgment. T h e t e c h nical test m a y be written or oral. ( O p e n . u n t i l further notice.) 7000. C O N S U L T A N T PUBLIC H E A L T H N U R S E , $4,876. T h r e e vacancies. Dept. of Health. Fee, $4. W r i t t e n test October 29 ( t e n t a t i v e ) . M i n i m u m Requirements. Candidates must have each of t h « following or a satisfactory equivalent: ( a ' a master's degree In Nursing Education with a m a j o r in M e n t a l Health: ( b ) t w o years of experience in the field of P u b lic H e a l t h Niu-sing; and ( c ) t w o years of responsible supervisory experience in a Health P r o g r a m . Tests: W r i t t e n , weight 40; t r a i n ing and experience, weight 30; oral, weight 30. T h e factors in the oral test will Include manner, speech, judgment and technical competence. (Thursday, S e p t e m ber 23.) County Exams Open Promotton 9451. C L E R K - S T E N O G R A P H E H (Prom), Town Clerk's Office^ T o w n of Tonawanda, Erie County, $3,547.60. (Friday, September 3 ) . 9454. S E N I O R PSYCHIATRIC m i s M -- \m\mi CTTA- U1 Automotic Washer HOI'UIHAN. G E N E V I E V E M A H O N E Y , ROSE COUUTN E Y , T E K E N C E B H A N I G A N and " J A N E " •'CONVBU.E' (tho name " J a n e " bcinr fletitiotiH. the true first name of aaiU person bein? unknown to pptitioner, and the niniB " C o n v i l l e " b i i n e the approximate Bunianie of the person intend to do^iffliate a paU-riial aunt of deeeiieiit) if liTInff ainl if dead to their heirs at law, Bext of kin and difetributeea whoHe namofl and places of n-sideneo are unknown and If they died subseiiuent to the decedent herein, to their executors, a.lminiatratorB. legatees, devisees, assisneee and euecesBora ill interi'Ht v.-hotio names and itlaeea o t reiiidenee are uiilinown and to all other heirs at law, next of kin and distrBiutees of Irene Mario Ilraiiii^an, the deciHlcQt liei^in, wliwie names and pla-ea of reaidence are llnlviiown and cannot after diUKent imiiiiry, be ascertaineil, the next of kin aiul lii'irs at law of Irene M.irie BraniL:aii. di'ceas"d, irend (rrectinir' W H E R E A S T H E C O I ' N T Y T l l l ST COMP A N Y . h a v i n i Us princiitol pUiee of business at No. Main Slreet. White I'buna, 1B the Slain of New York, has liiti-Iy applicd to the Surroirale's Court of our County of Nt w York to have tt certain Instrument in writiiiir biarins il:il« October m i s . relalins to bulh real and pcTMiHial properly, duly prov.-t ay the last will ami I. il.uuMlt of Ifi-ni' .Marie Itrailir.-ui. decea-'d, who waw at the time of her .1.'ilh a rcsidnit i)f West I ^:)rd Street and I'm-'liuryt .Avenue, the County of New Vu-1.. 'i'iii i : i : M m E , y.iu aiul i-.:ch of j o u ore eited to - Smiw 1 .lU^' In u>re tlw- SurroJrati. ^ c.turl -if our County of N> Y.>rk. at tbf H ill .i( Ki • in ih.^ c..uir- of N: w :'.il , oil ill. 'II.! .1 :,v ..t s. 1,1: : :1-.-r, r11. '1 111-, nine l- - . .1 "hI 111,' Ic-.ir. - i It -iL 1, ( 1 icii o ' Ki k I''- fuj. ii.-.in I. .1, 1 ..HI of .1 lo ae 1 not > . . . ll!l I - lul p • M riy. V, CI h .V. • ll of Ih r,.iirt of I . ' t y of .. r -ll . .'.le h. • .-W .lh < • i|;ii«- : ,ir. . IV, tha ' 1 K.-w York, -.t 13lii d.'.-- ->f AeuM-it in 11.;: j -ar -•f our Ixird ono thoiu \>id inii<- liuii-ixd and flft>' (ollr. (1.J1.) I ' H I l . l l ' A, n c A A H I ' B . Clerk uf Uie Siin'uddtc* Cuurt. an Institution, hotel, or residence proximately 100 or more rooms. (Open until further notice.) 7048. M A C H I N I S T S HELPER, $4,515. T w e l v e vacancies. F e e $4. W r i t t e n test, November 20 ( t e n t a tive). Minimum Requirements: T h r e e years' recent practical e x perience of a nature to qualify f o r the duties cf the position; or a combination of recent practical experience and training in an approved vocational or trade school. (Thursday, September 23.) 7129.. S E N I O R CONSULTANT (EARLY CHILDHOOD). $6,470. One vacancy. Dept. of Health. Promotion eliglbles will be offered job first. Fee $5. Date of written test still open. M i n i m u m Requirements: Candidates must have each of the following or a satisfactory equivalent: ( a ) a master's degree with a m a j o r in Early Childhood Education f r o m a university a p proved by the University of the State of New Y o r k ; ( b ) three years of satisfactory full-time paid experience under supervision, teaching in an approved nursery school, kindergarten or in primary grades" ( c ) two years of satisfactory, full-time paid e x perience as director of an approved nursery school or day care center; ( d ) three years of satisfactory f u l l - t i m e paid experience in an approved agency in the administration or siipervlslon of a group of nursery schools, kindergartens, Rost Protection with a The ivopio ot ALHEKT 53; Purcha.se, 50; Hospitals, 44; Comptroller's Office, Bureau of Audit, 35; Parks, 34: L a w . 26; Health 26; Sanitation. 23; Public Works, 19; Housing Authority, 19; Housing and Buildings, 17. T h e r e are six lists with one name, and nine lists with t w o names. Get Lasting the State ot New Y o l k . By the Qrare of Cod Kicn and Ilidipciuiellt TO HUULIO A D . M I N l S T U \ T O I T OK T H K C O U N T V OK N E W Y O U K , K L L E N VklJAOX, KriTY GAY T h e N Y C Civil Service C o m mission last week established 59 clerk, grade 5, promotion lists, with a total of 1,142 eliglbles. M o r e than cne-fourth, 304, are on the W e l f a r e Department roster. Other lists are: Education, 91; Finance, 85; Transit Authority, general administration, 69; Police, pljfeeMin l,i;(i \L N O T U K BR.\NUiAN. Mew Y o r k and three years' satisf a c t o r y practical sanitary e n g i neering experience In the type of work outlined under duties; or a satisfactory equivalent. Tests: W r i t t e n test weight. 50; experience wight, 50. ( T h u r s d a y , S p tember 23). 7097. A S S I S T A N T SUPERVIS O R O F C U S T O D I A N S , $6,460. Fee, $5. W r i t t e n test, October 23 (tentative). Minimum Requirements: H i g h school education or equivalent; plus at least seven years' experience in connection with buildings similar or equivalent to school buildings supervised by custodian engineers either ( a ) In charge of the cleaning, mechanical operation and m a i n t e nance or ( b ) In building construction and alterations in an e x e c u tive or supervisory capacity or ( c ) a.s a graduate civil or mechanical engineer concerned with building operation and maintenance; or a satisfactory equivalent. Appropriate technical education on a collegiate level m a y be substituted f o r experience on a year f o r year basis up to a m a x i m u m of f o u r years. Additional credit will be given f o r a valid N Y C stationary engineer's license with oil burner endorsement, or a U. S. Coast G u a r d marine engineer's license. Tests: ./rltten, weight 50; t r a i n ing and experience, weight 50. T r a i n i n g and experience will be rated a f t e r an oral interview and a f t e r a review of the candidate's statement of experience to determine the extent to which such xperience has (Jemonstrated his fitness to p e r f o r m the duties of the position. (Thursday, S e p t e m ber 23.) 7334. H O U S E K E E P E R , G R A D E 1. $2,510. Second filing period. Fee, $2. M i n i m u m Requirements: One year of experience In • the supervision of a housekeeping unit In ANOTHER AMERICAN HOME CENTER VALUE... 7007. P R O B A T I O N OFFICER, G R A D E 1. City Magistrates and Special Sessions Courts (4th amended notice, 1st filing p e r i o d ) , $3,745; 25 vacancies. Requirements: (1) bachelor's degree; and ( 2 ) either ( a ) graduation f r o m school of social work, or ( b ) t w o years' f u l l - t i m e paid case work e x perience with social case work agency; age limits, 21 to 55, e x - TioN (Open 1,142 ON LISTS FOR CLERK, GRADE 5 wojher tvtr Come model ^^^ riRMsi tanowlSMoPROOfdemonslroflon! I...- tt /•f A 616 THIRD AVE., at 40th St., N.Y.C. SAVINGS ON APPLIANCES, AIR CONDITIO NEKS. TOYS, DRUGS. UU 3-3616 GIFYWARE, NYLONS Exams Now Open For Public Jobs •tool. S E C R E T A R Y OF C O M PHYSIpotential for submi.ssion to the | 0207. S U P E R V I S I N G OF CORRECTION THERAPIST (PUBLIC MISSION Civil Aeronautics Board. In air CAL route cases or cases involving H E A L T H ) , $4,053 to $4,889; three I Prom.), Department of CorrecOpen-Competitive justification of air service to par- vacancies in Bureau of Public tion, $7,300 to $8,890, one vacancy ticular communities or areas; and Health Nursing, Department of at Albany. One year in position (Continiird from Page 5) (2) either ( a ) fi more years of ex- Health. Open to all qualified U. S. which as of March 31, 1954, wa.s jKfactory medical social work experience in the field of aviation citizens. Requirements: State li- allocated to G-25 or higher, or is perience, or ( b ' one more year physiotherapy now allocated to R-22 or higher. as an air passenger representative, cense to practice of social casework experience and years' experience, of Fee $5. (Friday, September 24). traffic manager, or traffic research and two specialization medical or psychiaanalyst for a scheduled airline or which one year must have involv9092. D I S A B I L I T Y B E N E F I T S tric social work in the graduate in a responsible nosition with an ed field activities in public health E X A M I N E R (Prom.), Workmen's ©••iJO. CASE W O R K E R . J U N I O R aviation consulting firm or public agency. Fee $3. (Friday, Septem- Compen.sation study listed above, or ( c ) a satisBoard, $3,360 to factory. Fee $5. Exam to be held SOCIAL CASE W O R K E R , various agency handling aviation matters, ber 3). $4,280; seven vacancies in N Y C . Saturday, November 6. 'Friday, cities and counties. Salaries vary or ( b ) a bachelor's degree with 0208. B I O C H E M I S T , $4,053 to One year in position allocated to in the different jurisdictions, specialization October 8). in transportation $4,889; two vacancies in State G-6 or higher, or now allocated to 0227. SENIOR S O C I A L W O R K - ranging from $2,100 to $3,250. Ap- and 4 years of the above exper- University Medical Center. Syra- R - 7 or higher. Fee $3. (Friday, E R ( M E D I C A L ) $4,350 to $5,460. pointments will be made to fill ience or ( c ) a satisfactory equi- cuse. Requirements: (1) bache- September 24). There are two vacancies in the vacancies in many local Welfare valent. Fee $5. Exam date, Satur- lor's degree with specialization in 9093. P R I N C I P A L ACCOUNTState University Medical Center Depts. I N Y C Welfare Dept. will day, October 23. (Friday, Septem- chemistry, and (2) either ( a ) one A N T (PUBLIC SERVICE). at Brooklyn and one in the Dept. not u.se this eligible li.st). Require- ber 24). year's experience in biochemistry, (Prom.), Department of Public of Social Welfare at Albany. Re- ments: (1) high school graduaor (b) master's degree in organic Service, $8,090 to $9,800; one v a 0220. JUNIOR LAND AND quirements: (1) completion of two tion or an equivalency diploma; C L A I M S ADJUSTER, chemistry, physical chemistry or cancy in Albany. One year a.s $4,350 to years or graduation study at a and (2) either ' a ) college grad- $5,460. There are 11 vacancies in biochemistry, or ( c ) equivalent. a.ssociate accountant or associate recognized .school of .social work; uation, or ( b ) four years of satis- the Dept. of Public Works, 4 each Pee $3. (Friday, September 3). accountant (public .service). Fee <2) one year of satisfactory medi- factory, full-time paid experience at Albany and Buffalo, one each . 0209. S E N I O R M E D I C A L T E C H - $5. (Friday, September 24). cal social work experience within in social wo'k with a puttllc or at Rochester, Hornell and W a t e r - N I C I A N , $3,251 to $4,052 ($3,411 9094. A S S O C I A T E A C C O U N T the last JO years in a recognized private social agency adhering to town. Requirements: Either (1) to $4,212 for T B service'; three (PUBLIC SERVICE). Institution or agency offering case acceptable standards or in .super three years of satisfactory exper- vacancies in Department of Health, A N T work services under the super- vi.sed teaching in an accrediaVd ience in the appraisal, negotiat;in, one each at Newburgh and Mt. iProm.), Department of Public vi.sion of a medical social work school, or ( c ) a satisfactory equi settlement or trial of real proper- Morris and J. N. Adam Memorial Service, $6,590 to $8,070; one v a supervi.sors; C3) either ' a ) one valent. Fee $2. Exam to be held ty claims arising out of the ac- Hospitals ( T B service); one in cancy each in N Y C and Albany. more year of medical social work Saturday. October 23. (Friday quisition of real property for a Department of Mental Hygiene at One year as senior accountant or senior accountant (public serexperience, or (b) one more year September 24). governmental agency or large pub Rome State School; one each at vice). Fee $5. (Friday, Septemof .social case work experience and 0223. E X H I B I T D E S I G N E R lie utility; or (2) one year of such Clinton Prison and Dannemora ber 24). specialization in medical or psy- $3,360 to $4,280. There i.s»one va- experience plus: college gradua State Hospitals, Correction De9095. P R I N C I P A L C I V I L E N G I chiatric .social work in the grad- cancy in the Thruway Authority at tion or two years of law exper partment. Requirements: (1) high uate work lifted above, or <c) a Albany. Requirements: (1) one ience or four years of engineering school graduation or equivalent; N E E R ( D E S I G N ) , (Prom.), Desatisfactory equivalent. Fee $4. year t)f experience in the design or real estate appraisal experience and (2) eitlier ( a ) completion of partment of Public Work.s, $9,950 Exam to be held Wednesday. No- construction and decoration of ex- or 13) college graduation and one course in medical technology and to $11,920; one vacancy in A l vember 6. I Friday, October 8). hibits and displays; and (2) either year of engineering experience, or two years' experience as techni- bany. T w o years as associate civil 0079. P H A R M A C I S T . $4,130 to ( a ) satisfactory completion of two a master's degree in engineering cian in medical laboratory, or ( b ) engineer (design), associate civil proof of having passed four years' experience, of which engineer, a.ssociate civil engineer $5,200. There is one vacancy at years of an art course at an ap or (4) Dannemora State Hospital and proved school with major work in Parts 1 and 2 of the professional two rears must have been under (highway planning' or associate Green Haven Prison. Require- commercial art, or ( b ) high school engineering examinations: or (5) qualified supervision, or ( c ) equi soils engineer; plus State license ments: (1) po.ssession of, or eligi- graduation or equivalency diploma a satisfactory equivalent. Pee $4. valent. Fee $2. (Friday, Septem- as professional engineer. Foe $5. • Friday, September 24). Exam date, Saturday, October 23. ber 3). bility for. a license to practice and two more years of above ex 9096. SENIOR ARCHITECT (c) a satisfactory (Friday, September 24). pharmacy in New York State; i2) perience, or 0210. S E N I O R L A B O R . A T O R Y Public graduation from an approved equivalent. Fee $3. Exam date 0221. P A R K M A I N T E N A N C E A N I M A L C A R E T A K E R , $2,931 to (Prom.), Department of school of pharmacy; and (3) two Saturday, October 23. (Friday S U P E R V I S O R , $50;)0 to S6320. $3,731; one vacancy in State Uni- Works, $6,590 to $8,070; 31 vayears of experience as a licen.sed September 24). One vacancy in the Long Island versity Medical Center, Brooklyn. cancies in Albany. T w o years as assistant arciiitect; State licen.se Dtiarmacist. Fee $4. Candidates 0225. OFFICE M A C H I N E OP- State Park Commission at Baby- Requirements: either (a) two who have rlready filed need not tCKATOR ( C A L C U L A T I N G — K E Y lon. Requirements: Experience in years' full-time paid experience in as professional engineer. Fee $5. file again nor pay another fee but D R I V E ) , $2,320 to $3,040. T w o the fields of building and/or high- handling and care of laboratory • Friday, September 24). should submit notarized state- vacancies in New York City and 3 way construction, of which five animr.ls. or ( b ) equivalent. Fee $2. 9097. A S S O C I A T E L A N D A N D ments bringing their experience in Albany. Requirements: Either years must have involved regular (Friday, September 3). CLAIMS ADJUSTER (Prom). up-to-date. Exam to be held Sat- three months of expei'ience in the supervision over supervisory emDepartment of Public Works, $8,0211. A S S O C I A T E A R C H I T E C T 090 to $9,800; seven vacancies. urday, October 23. i Friday, Sep- operation of a calculating (key ployees, journeymen, maintenance $7,754 to $9,394; one vacancy in tember 24). drive) machine 'Burroughs, Comp- men and helpers. Fee $5. Exam Division of Housing, N Y C , and One year as senior land and claims adjuster. Fee $5. (Friday, Sep0036. PROCESS SERVER. tometer. or similar type) or tlie date, Saturday, October 23, (Fri- one in Department of Public tember 24). G R A D E 2, N. Y. CtWJNTY. Usual successful completion of an ac- day September 24). Works, .ixlbany. Requirements: salary range $2,361 to $3,385; ap- ceptable cour.se in the operation 9098. A S S I S T A N T L A N D A N D 0 2 2 2. A S S I S T A N T SUPER- (1) State license to practice propointments to be at $2,995. At of such machine. Fee $2. This V I S O R OF P A R K OPER.ATIONS, fessional architecture; and ADJUSTER (Prom). (2) C L A I M S present there is one vacancy in the test will be held in Albany and $3920 to $4950. One vacancy at four years' experience performing Department of Public Works, District Attorney's Office, New N Y C only. Exam date, Saturday. Jones Beach State Park. Require- architectural work on building $5,360 to $6,640: three vacancies York County. Requirements: (1) October 23. (Friday, September ments: T w o years of supervisory plans and designs. Fee $5. (Friday, at Albany, one each at Rochester, high school graduation or equival- 24>. Watertown and Babylon. One experience in the operation and September 3). ency diploma: and (2) one year 0224. SENIOR BUSINESS CON- maintenance of public recreational 0212. M O T O R VEHICLE I N - year as junior land and claims of full-time paid experience in the S U L T A N T ( A I R civil engineer, C O M M E R C E ) , facilities and buildings. Fee $3 SPECTOR, $4 206 to $5,039; two adjuster, junior service of legal papers, or in field $6,590 to $8,070. Open to any Exam date, Saturday, October 23. (design), vacancies in Department of Pub junior civil engineer investigation or as a law enforce- qualified citizen of the U. S. There (Friday, September 24 engineer (highway lie Service, Buffalo, and one ex junior civil ment officer. Fee $2. Candidates is one vacancy in the Dept. of pected in NYC. Requirements planning), junior soils engineer or must have teen legal residents of Commerce at Albany. Require(1) high school graduation or junior laboratory engineer. Pee $5. New York County for at least four ments: (1) T w o years of satisfacequivalent; and (2) either ( a ' five (Friday, September 24). months immediately preceding the tory full-time paid experience in Pay rates for following are years' xperience in repair, assem9099. JUNIOR LAND AND date of the examination. Candi- the evaluation of air commerce those given on the oflicial anbling or mechanical inspection of C L A I M S A D J U S T E R (Prom.). Denounoen.ents, which were issued buses or heavy trucks, or ( b ) five partment of Public Works, $4,350 before the new State salary years' experience with responsi- to $5,460; four vacancies each at schedules were issued. bility for supervision of complete Albany and Bufl'alo, one each at f Candidates must be U. S. citi- general maintenance of buses or Rochester, Hornell and W a t e r zens and residents of New York trucks, or ( c ) equivalent. Fee $3. town. One year as .senior draftsStale, unless otherwise indicated. (Friday, September 3). man, senior engineering aide, Apply at offices of the State junior civil engineer, junior civil 0213. P R I N C I P A L OFFICE M A Civil Service Department, 270 engineer (design), junior civil CHINE OPERATOR (REPRONYC; Slate OITicc engineer (higiiway planning), c .V; S - S e c o n d Regional OfBce,. D. S. Civil Service Commission Broadway, D U C T I O N , First, Second and laboratory engineer or 641 Washington Street. New Yo/k 14, N. Y. (Manhattan). Hour- 8-30 Building or 39 Columbia Street, Tenth Judicial Districts, $3,731 junior to 5, Monday through Friday; closed Saturday. Tel. WAtkins 4-1000 •Albany; and State Office Building, to $4,532; vacancies in Tempo- junior soils engineer. Fee $4. Buffalo. (Friday, September 24). Applications also obtainable at post offices except the New York N Y rary State Housing Rent Commispost office. ' • The closing date is given at the sion, NYC. Open only to residents 9100. SENIOR ENGINEER I Prom.). Department of S T A T E — R o o m 2301 at 270 Broadway, New York 7 N Y Tel end of each notice. of N Y C and Nassau and Suffolk AIDE 0203. MEDICAL DEFENSE Counties. BArclas 7-1616; lobby of State Office Building, and 39 Columbia Requirements: three Public Works. $3,540 to $4,490; 72 Street, Albany, N. Y.. Room 212, State Office Building, BufTalo 2 N V H O S P I T A L C O N S U L T A N T , $10,- years' experience in operation of vacancies in main office and in 10 Hours 8 30 to 5. exceptinp Saturdays 9 to 12 Al.so. Room 400 at 155 138 to $11,925; one vacancy in duplicating and related office ma- district offices; 66 more vacancies W e s t Main Street, Rochester, N. Y., Tuesdays, 9 to 5. All of foregoing Health Department, Albany. Open chines, including ofI.set printing expected. One year as junior ento all qualified citizens and non- machines, of which one year must gineering aide, junior draftsman, applies al,so to exams for county Jobs. citizens, and to non-residents. Re- have '-"een in responsible super- junior mechanical draftsman or ; rciiitectural draftsman. N Y C — N Y C Department of Personnel, 96 Duane Street. New York quirements: (1) State license to visory capacity. Fee $3. (Friday, junior Fee $3. (Friday. September 24». 7, N. Y. (Manhattan) two blocks north of City Hall, just west ol practice medicine; (2) one year September 3). Broadway, opposite the LEADER office. Honrs 9 to 4. excepting Sat- of post graduate study in ho.cpital Old pay rates given in follow0214. T R E E P R U N E R F O R E urday, 9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880. Any mail intended for the administration or public health; ing exams: M A N , $2,931 to $3,731; one vaN Y C Department of Personnel, should be addressed to 299 Broadway (3) one year's experience in hos9077. SENIOR M E D I C A L T E C H cancy in Department of Public New York 7, N. Y. pital administration involving adN I C I A N ( T U B E R t : U L O S I S SERWorks, Al'jany. Requirements: two responsibility; and V I C E ) (Prom.), Department of N Y C Education (Teaching Jobs Only)—Perscmnel Director, Boaro ministrative years' experience in tree care and of Education, 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn 2, N. Y. Hours 9 ic (4) either ( a ' six years of medi- removal. Pee $2. (Friday, Sep- Health. $3,411 to $4,212; one vacal experience in public health or cancy each at J. N. Adam M e 3:30; closed Saturdays. Tel. MAin 4-2800. hospita. administration, of which tember 3). morial Hospital and Mt. Morris two years must iiave involved maT B Hospital. One year as mediN Y C Travel Directions STATE jor administrative responsibility, cal technician (tuberculosis serHapid transit lines for reaching the U. 3.. State and N Y C Civi' Promotion or (b) four years' experience, invice). Fee $2. (Friday, SeptemService Commission offices in N Y C follow: cluding two years of administraber 3'. State Civil Service Commission. N Y C Civil Service Commisslon- tive experience, and two years of Canilidates in the foUoHing 9078. S U P E R V I S I N G PHYSII N D trains A, C, D, AA or CO to Chambers Street; I R T Lexington general medical practice. Fee $5. State promotion exams must be CAL T H E R A P I S T (Prom.), State Avenue line io Brooklyn Bridge; B M T Fourth Avenue local oi (Friday, September 3). present, t|ualificd employees of Rehabilitation Hospital, West Brighton local to City Hall. the' department or agency men- Haverstraw, Department of 0205. SENIOR C L I N I C A L P S Y tioned. New pay scales are indi- Health, $4,053 to $4,889; one vaU. S. Civil Service Commission—IRT Seventh Avenue local tc C H I A T R I S T , $6,801 to $8,231; Christoplier Street station. cated. An additional increment, cancy. One year as physical theraone vacancy in Department of after live years' satisfactory ser- pist. Fee $3. (Friday, SeptemMental Hygiene at Psychiatric I n Data on Applications by Mail vice, will also be paid. Last day ber 3), stitute, NYC. Requirements: (1) Both the U. S. and the State issue application bianks and receive to apply given « t end of cach no9079. P R I N C I P A L A C T U A R I A L State license to practice medicine; tice. filled-out forms by mail. In applying by mail for U. S. jobs do not (2) C L E R K (Prom.), N Y C office. State graduation from medical enclose return oostaee. If applying for State jobs, enclose 6-cent school and completion of intern!t089. A S S I S T A N T S l ' P E R I N - In.surance Fund, $3,571 to $4,372; Btamped, self-addre,ssed 9-inch or larger envelope. Both the U.S. and ship; and (3) three years' full- T E N D E N T OF JONES BEACH one vacancy. One year in clerical the State accept applications if postmarked not later than the closing time residency In psychiatric hos- S T A T E P A R K (Prom.), L. 1. State position allocated to G-6 or highdate. Because of curtailed collections, N Y C .residents should actually pitals. Fee $5. (Friday, Septem- Park Commission, $6,590 to $8,- er. F»»e $3. (Friday, September 3). 070; one vacancy expected at 9080. SENIOR O K F K E MAdo their mailing no later than 8:30 P.M. to obtain a postmark of ber 3). Babylon. One year in po.sition al- C H I N E OPERATOR (OFFSET 0206. S U P E R V I S I N G P H Y S I that date. $2,771 to CAL T H E R A P I S T , $4,053 to $4,- located to G-20 or higher. Pee $5. P R I N T I N G ) , (Prom.), ."63,571: for promotion within proN Y C does not issue blanks by mall or receive them by mail except 889; one vacancy In Rvhabilita- 'Friday, September 24). for nationwide tests and for professional, scientific and administrative tion Hospital, West Haverstraw, 9090. S E N I O R T R U C K W E I G H - motion units, within entire deJobs, and then only when the exam notice so states. Open to all qualified U. S. citizens. EB (Prom.', Department of Pub- partments, to other departments. The U. S. charges no application fees. T h e State and the local Requirements: State license to lic Works, $3,020 to $3,880; 20 Competitive cla«s emnloyet^ on or Civil Service Commissions charge fees at rates fixed by law. practice physiotherapy and two vacancies throughoijt State. Three before July 9 1954. Foe $2. ( F r i year.s' experience. Fee $3. > Friday months as truck weigher. Fee $3. day, Sentember 3). (Friday, Septeinbw 2iJ, (Continued on Pate 9) September a>. STATE dates who have already filed for this examination, originally scheduled for May 15, 1954. need not file again but should submit a notarized statement bringing their experience up-to-date and must submit an additional fee of $1. Exam to be held Saturday, October 23. 'Friday, September 24'. ^ Where to Apply for Jobs r State Exams Now Open STATE Promotion (Continued from Page 8) 9081. S U P E R V I S O R O F S O C I A L W O R K ( P S Y C I I I A T R I C ) , (Prom.) Department of Mental Hygiene. $4,664 to $5,601; one vacancy each at Syracuse and Letchworth State Schools. One year as senior social worker (psychiatric) and two years in school of social work, preferably with master's degree. F e e $3. (Friday, September 3). 9082. S E N I O R S O C I A L W O R K ER (PSYCHIATRIC), fProm.), Department of Mental Hygiene, $4,206 to $5,039- one vacancy each at Blnghamton and Utica State Hospitals. One year as social worker (psychiatric) and two years at school of iocial work, p r e f e r ably with master's degree. Fee $3. ( F r i d a y , September 3). 9083. C H I E F L A U N D R Y SUP E R V I S O R ' P r o m . ) , Institutions, Department of Mental Hygiene, $4,053 to $4,889; one vacancy at Central Islip State Hospital. One year as head laundry supervisor or two years a-s laundry supervisor. Fee $3. (Friday, September 3). 9084. SENIOR PHYSICAL T H E R A P Y T E C H N I C I A N (Prom.) Jnstitution.<;, Department of M e n tal Hygiene, $3,411 to $4,212; one vacancy each at Pilgrim State Hospital and Willowbrook State Scliool. One year as physical therapy technician. Fee $2. ( F r i day, September 3). 9085. SENIOR MEDICAL T E C H N I C I A N (Prom.), institutions. Department of Mental H y giene, $3,251 to $4,052; one v a cancy at R o m e State School. One year as medical technician. Fee $2. (Friday, September 3 ) . 9086. H E A D D I N I N G ROOM ATTENDANT (Prom.), Harlem Valley State Hospital, D e p a r t ment of Mental Hygiene, $2,451 to $3,251; two vacancies. Two years as attendant. Fee $2. ( F r i day, September 3). 9087. A S S I S T A N T ELECTRIC E N G I N E E R ( P r o m . ) , Department of Public Service, $4,964 to $6,088; one vacancy in N Y C . One year as junior electric engineer or junior valuation engineer. Fee $4. (Friday, September 3). 908^. A S S O C I A T E A R C H I T E C T ( P r o m . ) , Department of Public Works, $7,754 to $9,394; one v a cancy expected in main office. T w o years as senior architect; State license as professional architect, Pee $5. ' F r i d a y , September 3). 9075. S U P E R V I S I N G P S Y C H I A T R I S T ( P r o m ) , institutions. . D e partments of Mental Hygiene and Correction, $8,350 to $10,138; 50 vacancies in Mental Hygiene; three at Dannemora and four at M a t t e a w a n , Department of Correction. T h r e e months a.s senior p.sychlatrist. Fee $5. (Friday, September 3). 9076. D I R E C T O R O F M E D I C A L D E F E N S E I P r o m . ) , Department of Health (exclusive of Divi.sion of Laboratories and Research and the institutions), over $10,000; one vacancy in Albany. One year in professional medical position allocated to G-40 or higher. Fee $5. (Friday, September 3). COUNTY AND VILLAGE Open-Competitive Candidates must be residents of the locality mentioned, unless otherwise staled. Apply to ofliees of the Stale Civil Service Department, ui N Y C , Albany and Buffalo, unless another address is indicated. Last day to apply given at end of each notice. 70. S E N I O R S T E N O G R A P H E R , ( O n t a r i o C o u n t y ) , $2,650 to $3,050. Apply to Ontario County Civil Service Commission, Court Hou.se, Canandaigua, N. Y . (Wednesday, September 8'. 71. S E N I O R C L E R K , $2,600 to $3,000. Apply to Ontario County Civil Service Commi.ssion, Court House. Canandaigua, N. Y . i W e d nesday, September 8). 0346. S E N I O R C L I N I C A L P S Y C H O L O G I S T , Erie County, $6.050. (Friday, September 24>. ()5I7. S U I ' E R I N ' r E N D E N T OF P U B L I C W O R K S . Village of Albion. Orleans County. $4,600. i F r i day, September 24). 0550. W A T E R W O R K S S U P E R I N T E N D E N T , G r a d e I I I . T o w n of Bedford, Westchester Covmty, $3.900. (Friday September 24). 0560. W A T E R S U P E R I N T E N D K N T , Village of Medina, Orleans County, $4,000. ' F r i d a y , September 24). 100. R E S O U R C E ASSISTANT Department oX Public Welfare, State Exams That Open Aug. 30 STATE Open-Competitive T h e L E A D E R publishes advanre information in six state-wide open-competitive and three local exams which will be open for receipt of applications starting M o n day. August 30. Do not attempt to apply before that date. Starting August 30, applications may be obtained f r o m oflices of the Slate Civil Service Department, in N Y C , Albany and Buffalo. New starting salaries, and pay a f t e r five years, are given. An additional pay increase is given, a f t e r six years' satisfactory service. 022S. A S S O C I A T E B I O S T A T I C I A N , $6,590 to $8,070; one v a - U. S. Jobs Open T h e following U. S. exams are now open for receipt of applications. Apply to the U. S. Civil Service Commission, 6 4 1 W a s h ington Street, New York 14, N. Y., unless otherwise indicated. Last day to apply is given at the end of each notice. 414 ( B ) . M E D I C A L O F F I C E R , $7,425 to $10,450. Jobs with P a n a ma Canal Company, Canal Zone G o v e r n m e n t Organization, in the Canal Zone. Medical school g r a d uation internship, license required, plus experience f o r higher p a y ing jobs; maximum age, 45; vet;erans eligible to age 62. Apply to Board of U. S. Civil Service E x aminers, Balboa Heights. Canal Zone. ( N o closing d a t e ) . 2-137. L I B R A R I A N , $3,410 and $4,205 a year; jobs in New Y o r k and New Jersey. Requirements: either i a ) college graduation with 30 semester hours in hbrary science, or ( b ) one year s training in library school and either three years' college or three years' library experience, or ( c ) four years' experience, or ( d ) equivalent combination; additional year's e x perience required for $4,205 jobs. Students who will meet educational requirements within four month of application, are eligible to apply. Apply to Second U. S. Civil Service Region. 641 Washington Street. New Y o r k 14, N. Y . ( N o closing d a t e ) . 2-71-3 (53). H O S P I T A L ATTENDANT (MENTAL), $2,750. Jobs at V A Hospital. Northport. N. Y . N o experience requirements; age limits, 18 to 62 do not apply to persons entitled to veteran preference. Restricted by law to such persons aa long as they are available. Apply to Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners. V A Hospital. Northport, L. L , N . Y . ( N o closing date.) 2-196 (53). T . \ B U L A T I N G M A CHINE OPERATOR; CARD P U N C H O P E R A T O R . $2,750 and $2,950. Jobs in N Y C . Requirements: three to six months' e x perience. Apply to U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street, New York 14, N. Y. ( N o closing d a t e ) . feet, to 6 feet 5 inches: minimum weight, 140 pounds; 20/20 vision each eye, without glasses; good hearing. -Apply to U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C. ( N o closing d a t e ) . cancy at Roswell P a r k Memorial Institute, Buffalo. Open nationwide. Requirements: (1) bachelor's degree and 30 graduate hours in statistics or blostatlstics; (2) three years' experience, including two years In blostatlstics; and (3) either ( a ) two more years' .statistical experience, or i b ) completion of requirements for Ph.D. in stati-stics or biostatlstics, or ( e ) equivalent. Fee $5. ( F r i d a y . October 8). 0229. A Q U A T I C BIOLOGIST ( M A R I N E ) , $4,130 to $5,200;- one. vacancy in Department of Conservation, Freeport. Open nationwide. Requirements: ( 1 ) two years of college itudy, including appropriate courses; and (2) either ( a ) bachelor's degree plus two years' experience, or ( b ) bachelor's degree plus either master's degree or 36 graduate hours in fish conservation or related field, or ( c ) six years' experience in fish conservation; or ( d ) equivalent. Fee $4. (Friday, October 8). 2-173. S T E N O G R A P H E R , $2,750 to $3,175, and T Y P I S T , $2,500 to $2,950. Jobs in Camden, N. J. R e quirements: written exam. Apply to U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street, New 0230. M A R K E T I N G FACILIYork 14, N. Y . ( N o closing d a t e ) . T I E S S P E C I A L I S T , $4,350 to $5,2-17-7 (52). S H E E T M E T A L 460; one vacancy in Department W O R K E R , $2,974. Jobs at V e t - of Agriculture and Markets, A l (1) high erans Administration Hospital, bany. Requirements: Northport, N. Y . A g e limits, 18 school graduation or equivalent; to 52, waived f o r veterans. M e n (2) two years' experience in cenpreferred. Requirements: 18 tralized marketing of f a r m prodmonths' experience as sheetmetal ucts: ' 3 ) eitiier ( a ) bachelor's deworker's helper, as.sisting a sheet- gree f r o m college of agriculture metal worker of journeyman with specialization in economics grade, or as sheetmetal worker's or education, or ( b ) two years in apprentice. Apply to B o a i ^ of agricultural division of agriculU. S. Civil Service Examiners, V A tural and technical institution plus Hospital, Northport, N. Y . ( N o two years' experience, or ( c ) equivalent. Fee $4. (Friday, October closing d a t e ) . 8). 0231. RADIO TECHNICIAN, 2-71-3 (53). H O S P I T A L AT'JENDANT (MENTAL), $2,750. $3,920 to $4,950; one vacancy in Jobs at Veterans Administrative Department of Conservation. L. I. Hospital, Northport. N. Y . Jobs State P a r k Commission. Requirerestricted by law to persons en- ments: (1) second class or higher titled to veteran preference; radio telephone operator's license others will be considered only in f r o m F C C and State driver's liabsence of preference eligibles. cense; ( 2 ) three years' experience Males preferred. A g e limits, 18 to in installation, maintenance P,nd 62, waived f o r veterans. N o e x - repair of standard land and mobile perience requirements; ability to radio transmitters and receivers of read and write English necessary. F M and A M types; and <3? either Apply to Board of U. S. Civil ( a ) high school graduation or Service Examiners, V A Hospital, equivalent, or ( b ) four more year's Northport, N . Y . (No closing experience, or ( c ) equivalent. Fee $3. ( F r i d a y , October 8). date). 2-174. S T E N O G R A P H E R , $2,500 to $2,950. Jobs in Newark and Jersey City, N. J. Requirements: written exam. Apply to U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street, New Y o r k 14. N. Y . ( N o closing d a t e ) . Candidates must be residents of the locality mentioned, unless otherwise indicated. Apply to o f fices of the State Civil Service D r partment, unless another address is given. Last day to apply at end of each notice. Do not a t t e m p t to apply before August 30. $558. D I R E C T O R O F M E N T A L H Y G I E N E C L I N I C , Department f.f Health. Tompkins County. $12,500. Open nationwide. ( F r i d a y . O c t o ber 22). 0559. A S S O C I A T E PLANNER ( R E S E A R C H ) . Westchester County, $4,655 to $6,095. Open n a t i o n wide. ( F r i d a y , October 22). MIGHT YOU FAIL YOUR VISION TEST? ThoUHaiuls H a v e Be -n J'aHSed VCSITAL T R . \ I . N ] N G Dr. Parker Jotter BALL L O O K I N G I N S I D E , informative, authoritative comment coluinii, appearsi weekly in T l i c L E A D E R . Kc sure l « read it. the NEW PARKER "51" POINT ctMia^uu^ ELECTROPOLISHED POINT! • W r i t e s 5 times longer than ordinary ball points — 393,000 words without a refill! Smoothest-writing pen you ever held in your hand I Simple two-finger filling. Choice of colors. • Y o u r choicc of 4 point sizes! 0551. S E N I O R C L E R K - T Y P I S T . Erie County, $2,710 to $3,510. ( F r i d a y . September 3). Candidates must be present, qualified employees of the department mentioned. La.st day to apply given at end of each notice. 9459. S U P E R I N T E N D E N T OF PUBLIC WORKS ( P r o m . ) , Department of Public Works, V i l lage of Pleasantville. Westchester County. $5,700. ( F r i d a y September 24). by BERENHOLTZ OPTOMETHIST Vlmial Trainina: Siieoialii^t 4n « t - » t :mtli St., .New V o i k <i(> CnirhrriiiK I tMim B.v A f i i * 1 iluiyrau) 0538. S U P E R I N T E N D E N T , Essex County H o m e and I n f i r m a r y , $2,160 to $2,610, plus maintenance. (Friday, September 3). $539. O C C U P A T I O N A L T H E R A P Y A I D E , Summit Park S a n a torium, Rockland County, $3,100 to $3,500. (Friday, September 3'. 0541. A S S I S T A N T D I R E C T O R OF N U R S I N G ( T B D I V I S I O N ) , 101. E N G I N E E R I N G A I D E , O r - Westchester County. $4,655 to $6,ange County, $10.50 to $12 a day. 095. (Friday, September 3 ) . Apply to Orange County Civil 0542. VILLAGE ENGINEER, Service Commission, County Village of Dobbs Ferry, W e s t Building, Goshen, "I. Y . ( W e d n e s - chester County, $7,500. (Friday, day, August 25). • September 3). COUNTY A N D VILLAGE Promotion HARRY ANCHOR RADIO CORP. 401. B. BANK EXAMINER (trainee assi.stant), $3,795, and BANK EXAMINER (assistant), $4,205. Jobs with Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation throughout country. M e n only. Requirements: f o r trainee, two years' banking experience at "clerical level or above, or as bank e x a m i ner; college training may be substituted for part of all the experience requirement. Apply to Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners in district office of F.D.I.C. where employment is desired; District 2. R o o m 1900, 14 W a l l Street. New Y o r k 5, N. Y . ( N o closing d a t e ) . 391. V E T E R I N A R I A N , $4,205 to $5,060, Orange County, $3,200 to $3,500. Apply to Orange County Civil Service Commission, County Building, Goshen, N. Y . (Tuesday, August 31). 0543. P S Y C H O L O G I S T (MENTAL HYGIENE). Westciiester County, $4,075 to $5,135. Open to all qualified State residents. ( F r i day, September 3 ) . 0537. S U P E R V I S I N G PUBLIC HEALTH PHYSIOTHERAPIST. Department of Health. Erie County. $4,050 to $5,170. ' F r i d a y , September 3). COUNTY A N D VILLAGE Open-Competitive TRY IT TODAY 2-70-2 (54). H O S P I T A L ATTENDANT (MENTAL), $2,750. Jobs at V A Hospital, Lyons, N. J. Jobs restricted by law to persons entitled to veterans preference; others will be considered only in absence of preference ellgibles. Males only. Age limits. 18 to 62, waived for veterans. N o experience necessary. Apply to Board of U. 8. Civil Service Examiners, V A 389. D I E T I T I A N . $3,410 and $4,Hospital, Lyons. N. J. ( N o closing 205. — Jobs are with the Veterans date). Administration. 37. F I R E M A N ( l o c a l ) . Di.strict of HEAD NURSE, Columhia Fire Department, $3,- P S Y C H I A T R I C 900 a year. Requirements: 21 to $4,205. For duty at St. Elizabeths 35 years old; 5 feet 8 inches, bare Hospital, Washington, D. C. 102. J U N I O R E N G I N E E R . O r ange County, $3,600 to $4,100. Apply to Orange County Civil Service Commission, County Building, Goshen, N. Y . (Wednesday, August 25). 8626 (reissued). ASSISTANT P E R S O N N E L O F F I C E R . Department of .Per.sonnel. Westchester County. $5 915 to $7,675. (Friday, September 3). 0232. J U N I O R MECHAMCAU D R A F T S M A N , $2,720 to $3,520; two vacancies in Department of Public Works. Albany. R e q u i r e ment.-ii (1) high school g r a d u a tion or equivalent; and i2> either ( a ) one year of d r a f t i n g room e x perience, or ( b ) one year in college engineering < course, or ( c ) high school courses in mechanical design, construction and drawing, or <d) equivalent. P e e $2. ' F r i day. October 8). 6233. I N S T I T U T I O N F I R E M A N , $2,720 to $3,520; one vacancy each at Letchworth Village and Central Islip State Hospital, two each at P i l g r i m and K i n g s Park State H o s pitals. N o educational or experience requirements. Candidates must have satisfactory hearing and vision and generally good phy.sical condition, pr.ssess a State driver's license. Fee $2. (Friday, October 8). 0234. E X E C U T I V E O F F I C E R F . A B C B O A R D , Herkimer County, $3,540 to $4,490; one vacancy. Open only to residents of H e i k i mer County, Fee $3. 'Friday, October 8). B / i ^ CHOOSE YOURS Radlot • Camarat Silverware TODAY 'XotuccC^ AT • Ttlevisioii - T y p e w r i t « r i . RefrigeratoFt V W I . - Rangef tlectrical • ! Jewelry Appliances ANCHOR RADIO CORP. (Cor. l o H e r y Mace. N. Y.i ONE GREENWICH ST. Lobby Entrance • One B'way Udf. TEL. WHitehall 3-4280 OrPOSITE CUSTOM HOUSE •v. NYC to Fill Painter Jobs A medical e x a m will be given. N o candidate w h o Is Blind in one eye, who has less than 20/30 v i sion, ela.sses allowed, who has « hernia, who is deaf in either ear, who has defective color vision, or any other disabling defect, will be qualified. A comprehensive physical exam will test candidates' strength and agility. Painters do inside and outside painting of a general nature, hicluding all coats; work on and f r o m ladders and scaffolds as jobs may require; erect ladders; rig lities and scaffolds; prepare, fill and prime surfaces for painting; mix paint components and m a t c h colors; and take proper care of all materials, tools and equipment. T h e N Y C Civil Service C o m m i s sion has approved the requirements f o r painter Jobs, $2,S9 an hour with the Housing Authority, and house painter, $19 81 a day with the Department of M a r i n e and Aviation. Approval of the Budget D i r e c tor is required before application dates are set. Do not attempt to apply until the filing period Is official. W a t c h T h e L E A D E R for such dates. Candidates mu.st have five years' experience, or at lea.st two and one-half years' experience plus helper experience or training to equal five years. Six months' experience will be credited tor each 12 months of helper work or training. T h e maximum period f o r which credit will be given for provisional work is nine months. T r a i n i n g or experience acquired on military duty or In a veterans' training or rehabilitation program will be credited. M a x i m u m age is 50. except f o r veterans. W h a t the Duties Are Candidates will take a written test, weight 30 per cent, and a performance test, weight 70 per cent. U. S. Exams Open T h e following: jobs in the medical and nursing fields are now open f o r receipt of applications by the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Wa.shington 25, D. C. Mention the exam number. 377. C O R R E C T I V E THERAP I S T . $3,410 to $5,060. Jobs are with the Veterans Administration. 217. M E D I C A L O F F I C E R , $5,940 and $7,040. (Special salaries for Panama Canal Service, $7,425 i^llOPPEItS Womflfi's Spefialty Stores Household l\ecessitie.t K E M R E F R I C E R A T I O M Seventh Ave So ANNE GARY < DESIGNER-CRAFTSMAN OF HANDWROUGHT JEWELRY < Z ^ Made to order traver* rods, and installed To Greei T h e Wind. Sun aud BK V. UKOUGK IN HIS A l K - C O N D I T I O N K D OlM« u i K h t s ' t a 8. T h u r s . 'til 5l)l » A v e U e cor. 48 St.I L'phoUlering liiiiir Buttiinie liewebltrd SOl'AS Costoni Matle BpeeiHl _ Silpioiern at l.(n\est Uute) fur Uox re-niude SpriiiKi ib ReupliulHtery lie. livuiK rm. A H . & - Nti'ril., (liilllH « O K R .• 9l.»n op l-illuHS 1 0 % Discount Av.. to Kiilunoiid I'ivil »icr. anil JIM Wurkecs LE »i-TON 4 Tijiris movHiff. J ft bcuolu's. U irum Iliaa. local ttriM^h, niotnitains. snecialty tt) Civil 7U000. Iti. « Muiifa. _ Iturliauays, lii-asonulile. T l l.one 1-S800 C A U B T L E 4 S880 Iiistrui'litnis l l l l ' ; \\OOI>l,.\NUiS: lluilt on the side of a mountain, BPaiklini; pool, modern new buiUliilira for dining, lounging. Rooms witli Drivate halhs and vei'aiidas. $50 up. T i m \VOOI>l,.\M)S, 1-hoenii'ia, N . * . t.-- BU : Ji.d He . 1.1- )i' 't O U l i l l N Iti-iMii.-k lluUio ti 21" LL>64 llaby Siltcrs I.KT r i ! F 1 A l N TS DO I T It.VllV . • . i n i M i S I I D l ' f l . S t i tslOltVICR M : \ H S 0 K N ll.VliV I'AtiK TVl'INti l'rr-.oiKilly conU'ii-teil Si.s.'-hloeoit:^ or what do vou lU.dV SpaiUiili. Fii-ncb and At' a 3-15: i (8;:l<l - a m . eveH., weekend^. OulO p.m.) CU .s lll..vi r ; I •• i " i r .1 ; ...J • :: V .•„.;. i|. • ..I ' I. . Ir. il .N- T . f • iH.li.,... SEALED $139.95 CAETOIW N o Extra rhartce f o r Warranty N o K i t r a r h a r g * f o r F.B. T a x Ehrmoa TV Salci & Scrviec .. rii-.i..- ..iH.-.- . A IM, M 1:.,M ••.I„ Broad New Picfura Tubat Inttalled—full yaar warranty 17"?20.95 19" 23.95 20" 24.95 •RONX—MAN.—BKLYN—9UEENS P U L A S K I 13 5° Cigar \ii-nu< laiAiiANi-i:i'.u within SU ti 1 hour rv SI.KVICE 1* i.vineiiT.. atTui'trud IIIU IVu.pect Ava, R m r . By M a i l : DiFore, (J.P.O. Box 634. IJiooUlyn, N. V. !'i.sLu;ri> to Vv'-irUciS I. ibl •. lui '•LOOIii.VCi IIHIINI' IO I.OUM* i u llll .-.lie, II..w- tltl If....:,. INSIDE" ( b e e P;i6e i ) Jacuby, Prieo $12,600 .. .Prieo I^ejal (IS.OOO ..Prico A V E Price S16.600 >16.600. »14.&00 10 Rooms . . . P r i o e ST. J A M E S P L 12 Rooms . . . P r i o o L E X I N G T O N A V E >16.000 12 Rooms Windotct BO. 3-3509 Continental Screen Co. •O OS 70tk A T * . , FORMT HUIa . . . P r i c e Herman Robins, Inc. 962 HalseySt. B'klyn • P A C I F I C ST, • BROOKLYN — A story, Sij • apartments. Cash required $2,-=* 2500. * Many S P E C I A L S DON'T W A I T . • Ask for Leonard Cummins I PR. 4-6611 • I P UiicUoUKal 8t. Urookljraij . OppK Hundsys 11 « * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * GL. 5-4600 PROSPECT P L (liET. NO.STKAND Suinl)tuous 4 brick trfU-o^re. QUEENS Y O R K A V B . ) BLory liuicMtone, Spriukler, 16 N t W S cftr rooms. 4 bulbs. AU Pilrquet. liital. A l l v a c a u t , $3,500 NEW BRICK HOMES (INTEIIKACIAL) uid pari'. b''-!!;. .J.atuaic-.. .-irca. A nio..il h.iiue, jU9l i-iiiiplclca. ir.l.-rliir t.ir ci liirn. n i . . . l . .11. >.-, : : .•« t?!(.ture w m . h v i r . * room arallable to BU. A C ! TO DAY I CUMMINS REALTY^ Open Sun. by Appointment Only K:i.-iiir I | I H O P K I N S O N AVE. J S T . M A R K S — 7 apartments, icl store, possessiorL Price $15,-3 *500. Cash $1,500. X >11,000 BE A PROUD HOME OWNER • Investigate these exceptional i buys. * • INCOME P R O P E R T Y * 5 H A N C O C K ST. % •NEAR HOWARD AVE. — 2 * :): f a m i l y brick, combination sinks, J • steam. Price $17,500. Cash J 500. » • D E C A T U R ST. % • T H R O O P — 8 family, m o d e r n * • brick. Price $35,000. $ >14.600 All Buildings A-1 Condition luko), g-ai iiiii. »11.600 P r i « By D1 Fiore D e m a n d T h e m — Smoke T l i e m Bo.\ 50 - 250 I f not available at your store MILL r .. . 1 liil; . .1. .. I'rico M O N R O E ST 11 Rooms . . . H A N C O C K ST NOT Call MA 4-4970 $14,500 A V i 5 . ^ House L A J f A Y E T l ' K 13 Rooms TAMPA PRINCE Piur . . . . P r i o o Rooms • Rooms D E A N S T IVIAI.E O R F E M A L E — P A R T O R full-time selling for manufacturers rep. If you have some personality, you can earn $75—or more weekly. For appointment call ULster 5 6350, M r . Trager. '^ ' r ' . i i - ST Rooms L E X I N G T O N K O S C I U S K O ST 8 Rooms G R E E N E A V E Part Time If'omen IT- O R Bx. 3 - 1 1 1 0 Aluminum Wlndowa mm Hcreens KewlrMl Venetlaa Blinds • <«ls«sts« Shower Doors Bathtub Rnelosnrea • • • • • I I Move Right In! MCQII IN. 9.6700Mi BELIEVE AT. nr. BumoMo, Ll'dlow 5creei»«, Storm HERE Is The Largest Selection Of Houses For Sole In Brooklyn! TV Ropolri at Law Prieat People Men or VnlversItT * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * P«ynuiit» sminjsd. Na nonar dawal AU Prices Include Voor Dad •ju K. :;o. cii a :iiiou. Y'('/«'i i.woii lit puir* and BABY MART I97» BROOKLYN TV Service—Today! 10" ?12.95 12" 14.95 16" 19.95 SALE!- Ree. NOW " B l l t r l t e " CoaehrtU . . $ i M . S * »»9.76 Full .Sice r r i b 33.8S 19.94 r h r o m e Fold. Carriace 40.90 20.00 Fi>ld. Snmnier CarrUtKe 1-1.05 9.9fi Trimble A l u m . BathlnHe BIK Discount I ' U r Ten A Wheels . . 11.08 9.90 Fnldine Sleep. Stroller 19.98 9.90 Baby CarrinKe Mattress Z.Ott 1.44 " C r o - R l t e " Table Tender 29.98 17.97 Maple Volith Bed 39.98 %4.7» Wet Proof Crib Mattress 19.08 6.»n White - Colored. 1 and 2 room apts., beautlfuJly furnished, k i t c h enettes, bathrooms, select elevators. Nr. 8th Ave. and B r i g h t o n line. Adults. K i s m e t Arms, bet. B e d f o r d and Nostrand Aves.. 57 Herkimer St.. Brooklyn. StXi W . 20'lt St. I.U 0-18»a CUil Av.-.. V ,B. Ii,..u...i.le. |J> . lia'.lll I -Ilni-.l...:! U I-.-. :i-- -SALE! BUY DIRECT AND SAVE MODKL ADMIRAL . - . - i l i : 111 . . . . II .1 llll V .-1.II-. i;. -. pti.,!;' I'nv.iie I'Ti:..! i. Storage « A N AM A K I : K ' S N K W I ' K T S I I O l ' n W A V A T STH ST.. ^U t'l.K. ClU U-1700 Selt'clion of all breeds oi I'uppics. Aiuo Tame Monkeys. C.marH'S. Parakeets. Ti-opi^-al & tiolillltih Oi a full line of accebSoric« . ril.. •) !>.. .iMk r- Tj "M;: I'Vlr-r JJeUe Uoso, L. and Sanitaiiitm li' iiui.-. Sheet and Moving L l U i r r MOVINCi & .MIOS.SE.MiKll S K K V I C E T H E DOOKllS T i i r r i i , M O T o m Yc'i.E STATION WAGON JOHN WAHCiA.MAN CH. 3 0123 Kn^llcih -M>''kL'H L K . M . N 1 11 M K i : v I T N i : ! -lu 11...1'- l),,i..tliy l;:,!,- : . 1 . :. 1 : til!. 1, N.V.i:. i: NKW FACTORT Sales I'ets T V I ' K W U r i ' r . U S KKN r i : u I'or c:ivil Scrvioe K.x;iin ^ We ilo di.)i\i r to the L:\aniiua tiun It-Hinis All riialu'S tcrmd. .\Ud' inif Mii. luni'S. .Mini; InltTiiatlniiai T y p e w r i i . r Co.. lo K. Mjili -it. KK J TUOO N. y (.'. Open 111! ti .")U p.m. .11 & 5152 Hxit PANTS OR SKIRTS auo.uuo - . C A S H CHEMSOL. INC. 74 Dod Ct., Elizabeth, N . J. REAL ESTATE 1637 »&Ul Varatiintji ilitiKrUi To inat<'b yuui lackets. patterns l-awaoD railorms i Wesvuiii Co., 185 Fulton St.. cornel Uroadwas N YXX 41 fliebi upi WOrtb i - i b n n Ill LU.XE. For an analysis of civil service problems In the f o r e f r o n t of the news, read H . J. Bernard's weekly column, *XookinK Inside." See P a s e Z. 10 11! Mr yi=u Decorators. a u d 7-i W e a t CO. alorinv All di'liverii's all BotCbairs recovered PRATT E L E C T R I C TOSCA.NOS NKW INSlUtiJD VAN3 » 7 Ur. Flat Kate to All I'oinia. CV B - J l l O tu Furniture Encore 8 31&0 DE BRAND P.M. 8 All Makes Sold at Discount. Wally's lletr. 744 Columbus A r . (UUI MO !S-t!B70 L O A D S . p;u-t lo:u1e nil o v e r US.\. Caiif. and Florida, Sptflal ralfs Service WorUors. UoUL'libovs. W A UAII.V till ANYTIMK Luw Kales 3-2760 PAINT CLOSEOUT Oreni, Lt. * i k . . oatsUo f t . M / i s l . U n y . ontslOo f«.*0/kai Groy floor A M k f8.0«/Kill. Aluminun «9.S«/(al. B a m R M I <S'S o n l y ) M i n i m u n order 4 oiM r a l . cane or 1 fire ral. can Money b a c k if not satisfactory FURNISHED APTS. W Conditioning W O 6-0745 All Oil 1954 Window Air Conditionen 1 / 3 H.P. List $339.00 N O W J129.50 1/2 H.P. List $279.50 N O W $100.60 1954 MITTHET.I. 3 / 4 H P . with temp, and beat contiol. N o w only $179. ONLT S l i | > Cov- Any Make Serviced & Rep'd. I N S T A L L A T I O N $23.50 UP Storage STEVENSON MOVING Cushlua SPECIAL SALE 1954 Mitchell Air-Conditioners Greatly Reduced. $169.90 mil VI. 0-tiU(>8 Moving 59.85. wide selection Second Ave.. BU MO 8 3-.;43. 1034 (H:.\KA\TKI:I» JumiiiiM 8-BDOO GENUINE SPECIAL SALE! estimates. evenincs Air Crown Bedding & Upholstery 1U~>-U:! Sofas S I rriceH. 3 WEKKM >133.00. Q U A L I T Y C P H O L S X E R I N O rebuilt expertly your borne. $4.1)5. »U reupliolstered MattrCHses F I N K toms Ho (M'der Sea SAf.OW 0. S a t u 9-8 M U 7 U0tt7 survsir. 19iJ8. WOOL BROS. 134 7th A r e . 3.. or. l O t h S t . (;H 3-7468 STYI.INU Free since Mr. ALBERT 345 E. I i 9 St. Bronx, M O 5-4700 ANDREW FISCHER Open 1964 VA AMPUTEES GIVE BLOOD Twenty employees of the Brooklyn Regional Offlce of the Veterans Administration ^ aU veteraa'n themselves — became members of the R e d Cross Oallon Club. Pins, denoting eight or m o r e blood donations, were presented to seventeen by A. B. K e l l y , manager of t h e ' V A office. A m o n g the new club members are amputees Seymour Gitlin. Jack Miller, Patsy Mastrocovl, Nick Sllvesky and Chester Kusterbeck. Others are Assisting Manager Charles MacEllven, George Hunt, Norman Strauss, A b r a h a m M e n delowits, Jacob Rauch, Irving Cohen, Mrs. Florence M c G o w a n , Michael Schnappauf, Sol Pinsky, Paul Nugent, John Norton, and J. Polsy. your or our fabric*. Alao Free t l T S A L E S WA. U-0982 makc>« CONDITIONERS below cost. Established OA anj length, made to at r e a s o n a b l e prices. ers taH.OOl rarinerl]> Culture standard CALL Upholstering • New & Old Slip Covers Draperies S l ' B d A L 8AI.E: 3 • Original and Custom-Uade < ^ S t o r e : 84 Charlei St. W A 4-0826^ s«rn: T w o ( h a i r s a n d s tlRCI-K Will sell oblijation. Upholstering S ' T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T V T T V T * all AIR rcfrlffettps 51 Conditioning 'BLOOM & KRUP Has Rebuilt Refrigerators 178 C H U R C H S T . Bet. Duane and Reade St. Heauly Air A l l m a k e s , a l l siiei> A C . . D . C . . O a g From o n e to t w o yra. g:uai-untee. Expt^rt Service and Repair. We al.'io eel] or rent mnall G. M. C . I t t and $8,800). For duty countrywide and in Panama. 360. M E D I C A L O F F I C E E , $5, 940 to $10,800. Positions are principally in the Indian Service in Western States and in Alaska. 4-40-4 <53). M E D I C A L OFFIC E R . R o t a t i n g Intern, $2,800; psychiatric resident, $3,400 to $4,200; neurologic resident, $3,400 to $4,200. Jobs are In St. Elizabeths Hospital. I'l R M T l ' K E RI'CS A T I ' K K E H l O U ( A N A P F O K D Kilriiilure, nr>|)lianrrs, » i f l s , rluthiiiK, et«. (Ht n>al ^.aviiiKfi) A l u n l o i p u l K i n p l o y e e s Serv i c e . K o n i i i V i H , I S |>ark K o w . C O 7.0.'IUO N E W F A L L DRESSES, 3.95 to 12.95 N E W FALL BLOUSES NEW FALL SKIRTS Specially Priced W o o l or Orion Sweaters On Sale I Pins denoting membership in tlie Gallon Club, whose members have given eight or moro pints of blood to the Red Cross, are presented by Brooklya Regional VA office manager. A- B. Kelly to VA employees. .i-. uil.'hrn. ^.-.'-^i-r Down Piiyiniiit — «3,000 20 Y e a r Bank M u i l g a g c 155 St. & 125 Ave. Nr. Sunrise I l ' w a y A Rockawey Blvd. A G E N T ON P R E M I S E S Hoi ca«h. water LINCOLN P L (NR. I'UOSl'ECT PAILS) Beautiful 3 story and basement urowuHtone. All vacant. Air eoodiUnai..(l. l.aviHh Hollywood kitchen. AU tiarguot. All bra£s uluiuinv. New roof. I'^xtriis inclu<ie vvn.^.aiiii, storm win.!<IWB, ( - . ' u - p < ' t t i u c . d r a p e s . Mt^'-erm vlaM • loo.Ti. 2 Ilourc beauUfuUy furuisiiod. i.;i,-.Iluut buy. Eiacrilloe. HELLER 5-.i7 (•Viit.ra PailiK::j- SU (8000 For an analysis of clrU aervie* problems in the f o r e f r o n t mt U M news, read H. J. Bernard's weekly i column, "LookiiMr InakU,* 8Mf' Fit^e t. Tiirii(lil)r, Aiifnist 24, I'Ki'* fj 1 V I L 9 K K V 1 K K A LI K Page P:ieven K • REAL ESTATE + HOUSES — HOMES — PROPERTIES THE BEST GIFT O F ALL — YOUR OWN L O N G ISLAND ST. ALBANS LONG $12,500 Gl Sacrifice Own Your Own Home THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS Detached Brick and Shingle Bungalow ROCKAWAY $500 GASH Gl 5 room brick bungalow with expansion attic. House 2'2 years old. Plot 55x100, oil heat. Sacrifice Sale, 5 Big Rooms • Oil H e a t L a r g e Expansion A t t i c for 2 More Bedrooms . , . MOLLIS CHAPPELLE GARDENS O N L Y 3 Y E A R S OLD 25 YEAR MTGE. AVAILABLE FOR V E T E R A N S G l is forced to sacrifice this beautiful detached Cape Cod style bungalow at a mere fraction of its value. Only 3 years old and built of e n during brick and shingle, this home has 5 large rooms including an ultra-modern science kitchen — a Hollywood tile bathroom — a large living room with lots of wall space f o r that modern furniture — hardwood floors throughout — h u g e white-walled basement that you can do wonders with — many extras included at no additional cost. See it T o day at . . . SEE T H I S B A R G A I N TODAY 147-05 Hillside Ave., Jam. JA. 6-4034 7 DAVS A Two-Family brick, semi-attached, 5 rooms down and 3 rooms up, modern bath,s, kitchens and Frigidaires, parquet floors, oil heat, 1-car garage, excellent community, near all facilities. P r i c e : ST. ALBANS All B R I C K , ranch hme of 6 nice rooms, large plot 50x100. Only 4 years old, modern, clean and uptodate, all you would want in a home. 10 R O O M S Built of beautiful stucco, a mansion of 10 rooms with 3 baths, large plot, flni.shed basement, oil, modern and I m m a culate condition. F.H.A. A G.I. M O R T G A G E S ARRANGED e\er7 typ« SPRINGFIELD S9.990 GARDENS G. I. O N L Y $1,300 C A S H Beautiful detached f r a m e dwelling, 8 large modern rooms, e x tra lavatory, oil heat. T e r r i f i c location; can easily be converted into 2 - f a m . borne eall Arthur Watts, Jr. II?-6a l> A M ST. ALBANS n s Place, 8t. to 7 P M Son. 11 0 ST. ALBANS PM $14,990 7 rooms, brick bungalow, plus finished basement, oil heat, garage, enclosed patio, IV'2 baths and many, many extras. BAISLEY PARK $8,990 Lovely 5 room detached house, side hall entrance. Combination windows, steam heat and garage. G. I. $490 D O W N ST. ALBANS $10,500 $13,000 Several Desirable Unfurnished Apartments for Kent. % large st'lvetloii of other choice b o m e « 111 all price runges Many Other Excellent Values In 1 and 2 Families OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK U o r t c n i i r i anil Tcrnii A r r a i i i e d TOWN REALTY DIPPEL 115-43 Sutphin Blvd. ( C o m e r 115th D r i v e ) OLympic 9-8561 MOVE RIGHT ST. ALBANS BAISLEY PARK 5 Room Bungalow 40 X 100 Plot IN One family, 8-roms,. steam heat, modern bath and kitchen, finished ba,<;ement with lavatory. large plot, garage, near all facilities. $11,500 HOLLIS-CHAPPELLE GARDENS T w o family home, two 4-room apartments, modern baths and kitchens. G o o d income, excellent transportation. Price $9,900 T i r u i f i O f Cuiii-RA MANY GOOD J i i i i i a i v a St. A l b u n i i , So. 0«ui>e Park C A L L J A 6-0250 The Goodwill Realty Co. WM. RICH Lt*. Broker Ue,-U Gbtute ION I.'I N r w Vlirk HIvil.. Juiiiuira. N . V . 2 bcdiooiufl, livine room (line l t e miU k i t c h e u , o n l y 7 yeiii-a old $12,500 (terms) JAMAICA 2 family, brick attuchfd. 6 rooms and bath, flrbt floor, € r o o m s and bath, «fcoud floor, paying $86,00 monthly, oil. steam heat. Convenient to traue. |H)r(aticn. A b k i i i g $ 1 1 , 6 0 0 w i t b Uirnib. J. W. STEWART Hugo R. Heyilurn Realty Co. JA. 6-0787 AX.7-6359 30x100. No. No Cosh for G l $12,200 $13,200 6 ' i room.s, plus attic, fully detached and shingled, 40x 100. oversized garage. No. 359. No Cosh for G l $14,700 FULLY DETACHED 8 ROOMS 5 0 x 100 No. 3 i 8 5 BEDROOMS NO C A S H FOR G l Ilrliipstead I V a n h o e 3-8515 GAR/GE ESSEX "10" 88-32 138th S T R E E T , J A M A I C A 100 feet North of Jamaica Ave. on Van W l i i t e Blvd. — Call f o r detail driving directions. Open everyday. NEW HOMES ST. ALBANS 3 Bedrooms - 2 Story These are brand new homes with every luxury and every m o d e r n improvements. T h e latest in construction and m a terials, with stall showers and laundry room—everything. $13,060 L o w Down Payments f o r Vets and N o n - V e t s ST. ALBANS 6V2 rooms, brick, garage, oil heat, modern kitchen, colored tile bath with stall shower, real fireplace, extra large living room. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ A X . ir- LEE ROY SMITH 116-04 Merrick Blvd. Jamaica .L.I. JAinaica 6-4592 LAurelton 7-6855 7-790C Ik. - N O W READY!! BRAND NEW HOMES See the new all modern brick, 1 fannily, 6 room homes, full basements, ceramic tiled both, ultra modern kitchen, formica top cabinets, casement windows, automatic heat, extra lavatory on main floor, Venetian blinds, laundry in basement, four burner gos range, landscaped plot with parking area. Price $13,060 $12,200 {.^OTelr T^ons lf»land H o r a w » t to Muit ill tli«> moMt itef.irHble »«i-tlonb NKW MSTINGS DAILY Of One and T w o Fi^mily Hoiises Veterans—Down P a y m e n t $1,960 M o r t g a g e (at 4'/s>% for 25 years) M o n t h l y P a y m e n t of Principal and Interest $61.15 Located at East Side of 171st Street, between Foch Boulevard » n d 116th Avenue, St. Albans, New York. Office: HERMAN CAMPBELL 33-21 Junction Boulevard. Jacltson Heights 72. New Y o r k H A v e m e y e r 6-1151 — l l l c l i o r y 6-3672 M o d e r a t e down payment f o r non-veterans MERRICK PK. $12,750 3 fomily Dt'taohnd. 10 rooms, a n d '^-3'b. O U b e a t . S o i u l l caNh. 1-4 room aitl Other ieaturefi HOLLIS G . I. Re«»al^>. 1 f a m i l y fi'i r o o m f i t u c c o . m o d e r n t i l e d b a t h . wuo<i b u r n i n g tirep l a c e . 2 c a r p a r a g e . L o t 4 0 x 1 Od. i^>adti o f o t h e r Irni'iireu. S m a l l c a t h al)Ove (i. 1. m o r t g a g e . ST. ALBANS $12,600 1 l a t n i l y s o l i d brii-U. roomn. 1 H o l l y w o o d colored tiled b a t h w i l h sluU shower. tiavaKt and other lealures. G . 1. » 1 , 5 0 U d o w n . JAMAICA $10,900 2 family, 1 1 taie<l. A tfood S m a l l ca»?h. rooms. Solid brick at uioiiey-mukni? property, MANY BUY NOW St., Sondicrn Ht«te r kwny to . Kxit L e f t to Slid TnilHc L i g h t AlbaiM 8.0IOS 6 rooms and porch, steam heat. Excellent location. M a n y extras. G. I. $500 D O W N 18G-U Merrick Blvd. Springfield Gardens. L. L Laurelton 7-2500-2501 Grove parage, 6','2 rooms, fully detached, oil steam heat, located in the heart of Queen.s Village. No. 384. No Cosh for Gl $12,500 OI. G. I. $1,000 C A S H N E E D E D Buys this lovely fully detached 6 room home P L U S screened rear porch; modern throughout, gar. etc. Must sell owner leaving town M $10,500 steam, 394 No Cosh for G l ROOSEVELT-FREEPORT VIC. WM. URQUHART, JR. S i x - R o o m brick, l - c a r garage, oil heat, completely finished knotty pine basement with lavatory, kitchen and bar, plot 40 X 100. P r i c e : $8,900 Fully detached and shingled. 5 room.s, modern kitchen, A - 1 condition. No. 393. A r e y o n lookinR tor eiiburbun living p l e a s u r e s nnd u r b a n c o n v e n i e n c e s , p a v e d w i n d i n g «trects. oiodcrn sthools. N. Y. D<'pt. S t o r e b i a n c h e s , r e c r e a t i o n a l facilities to name a f e w . W e h a v e availa b l e in o n e o f t h e moot progrcpBive ccnimunitifs on Long Inland, many m o d e r n 4. 6. a n d C r o o m bungalows, r a n g i n g f r o m 3^11.500' a n d u p . ADDISLEIGH PARK IA>NG ISLAND N O C A S H FOR Gl HEMPSTEAD BRICK BUNGALOWS $12,999 Per «KKK «th A v r . Siibwny " K " Train T o Mulpliln Blvd. ijtulimi North K i l t VALUE!! A r e a l c o u n t r y f u r i n c a n be m a d e o f this aero and Vi. vulh a 4'.^-room modern b n n u a l o w . c i r c u ' l a r d r i v e , para+re, screenH, ntonns. m.nny f-x'traf. c o n v e n i e n t t o traiisportul ion. 3^11.'50 f o r ( l u i f k nalo. O n e oJ t h e l a r g o P l s o l r c t i o n f of new a n d re'^ale C a p e C o d S p l i t L e v e l and R a n c h h o m e s a n y w h e r e on L o n g Island Chappelle Gardens 'The Real Estate Super Market!!!' Ol'KN $11,500 $13,999 HOLIDAY LONG ISLAND ISLAND GET RICH QUICK HOME 0TIIKR8 TO CHOOSE FKOM MALCOLM BROKERAGE 106-57 New York Blvd. Jamaica 5. N. RE. 9-0645 — JA. 3-2716 Kitchens & Bathrooms MODERNIZED for only pennleR a day NO DOWN PAYMENTS KHA T e r m s 6 Y r a . t o Hay FREE Huge Selection ol IJiiDainlid C a b i n e t s ESTIMATES Call A X t e l 7-8585, or visit our showrooms. Atlantic-Craft Products I47-:IU Art'bvf A v r . , J u m a l r a 30, N. X. ( I b l o c k Irom L l l U l Station, j u s t oft SutpViin lUv.l., J a m a i c a Ave.) Open O a i l y t o 5 3 0 P M., M o n . , P r I . t o S P.M. Sat. to 1 P M KKEE PAHKINO L O O K I N G I N S I D E , news and views by II. J. Bernard, appears S P O T N E W S of civil service weekly in T h e L E A D E R . Dun't happenings, with for«<-ast!i of mihii it. future events. See f a g e 6. OUTSTANDING VALUES ST. A L B A N S : T w o family, 3 ' i rooms up and 4 ' 2 room.s down, 2'/z baths, 1-car garage, 50.x 100 plot. Near all C I ^ ACA facilities. Price I ^ i W ^ ^ V JAMAICA SPECIAL Near school, bus and day nursery, 8 rooms and sunporch, oil heat, 2 modern baths. Needs some repairs. 5 0 0 Brick bungalow, 5 years old, living room, 2 bedrooms, dinette and Ititchen. Finished expan.sion attic, large full 2 base., Ige. plot, 1-car garage. Low down payment. OTHER 1 AND 2 FAMILY HOUSES FROM $7,500 UP ' — LOW DOWN PAYMcNTS — MORTGAGES ARRANGED ALLEN & EDWARDS U l - i a Liberty Ave.. Jamaica. N. V. OLvmola 8-2014—8-201S BROOKLYN MANSION Corner mansion, 20 rooms, 7 bathrooms, push button elevator, brick and stone, oil, parquet. A n excellent house, well located. ACT NOW — CALL P R 4-6611 MONROE ST. ALL VACANT 2 story and basement, brick, steam (oii>, parquet floors. $1,500 C A S H Sydney S Mochette 1465 F U L T O N S T . P K 8-3789 Chance Of A L i f e t i m e H e r e Ih a e l e u l I I t y o u a r e l o u U i i i e l o r U holiit-, owiK-l' li.Ubt 0 Uirt'c l'unin« in S t . AlbHiiH, uHi^lern b a t h aiKl k i t c-tieii. i l t ' l i f v i ' it 01 n o t t l i e (irii-e its t o o l o w t o m n i t t ' o n C o i i i o auti yee i t . Y o J w i l l b HUipjiseO. Many others to chooNe f r o m to satisfy your taste. OL 7-1635 — SCOTT FURNISHED HOME Furnished ranch home to rent by the week. For further information call R E g e n t 7-6060 or Selden 2 3576 (week ends). For an anal.vsis of civil service problems in the f o r e f r o n t of the news, read II. J. Bernard's weekly column, " L o o k i n g Inside." See P a g e 2. LMAI, K<ITICB IK:HADR. C A R O I . I N E CITATION P. 2154, ! » • . » The Poorto ol the S t » t e at N e w York. By ehc Grncc of Qod Free »nd Inilepcnili-iit. T o thn lieiro at law. ncKl of kin and dlHtriliutcrs of CAROLINE ScnADF:, di'ccicod. if liviiiir. and if a n ; of them 1)0 dpail. lo their rfupccUve helr> at law, no.xt of Uin. distributees, lejrnteei!. encelltorfl. adininiplralorn, Mnisneea and •uccea=ors In iiileresl whose n.itnc« are unknown and c;iniiot lie aFoertained after due diliuenee, and In- The Attorney General of the State ol New York, The Public Administrator of the County of New York, St. Paul s l.utlieran Church. Wartbure Farm Sclinol, Society of Inner Mission and Rcseiie Work, Inner Mieslon Society of the I.atheran Church. Salvation Army. American Red Cro"B, L.Klies Aid of St. Paul s Lutheriin Clinrch. Waener Collrie, Marie Kine. Henry Geiert. also known as Henry Oailher. senil i r c c t i n e : W H K R K A S Ambrose V . McCall. who reaides at (!•; no"eliwood Terrace. Yonkers 6. N e w York, h.is lately applied to the Surroeate's Court of our County of New York, to have a certain instrument in writinK bearing dale June HI. 1040. and two eodi eita thereto, h",trine date, respectively. October I, i n i O and September 27. Ifl4!». relatinff lo both real and personal property, duly prove.l as the I.ast Will and Testament ot Caroline Scha<lc deceased, who was at Hie time of her death a resident of .T:* West l.S'Jnil Street, the County of N e w York. T H i : i t i ; i ' O R K . you and ea<'h of you. are cited lo show cali«e before the Snrroirate's t^ourl of our Cimnty ot New York, at the H.ill ot Records, in the County of New Y o r k , on the •,;ilh day ot September. 1(151. ot hair iKisl ten o'clock in the forenoon o t thai day wliv thn said Will and Testament ,tnil the two codicils thereto, should not l>c ailmitled. to probate as a W i l l of n-al and per.sonni property. I N T K S T I M O . S Y W H E R E O F , wo have caitsed the seal ot the Surroeate's Court of the said County ot New York to be herc-unio nnixe.l WITNES<5. HONORABT.K Wflliani T . Ccdiins. Surroirate of our said C..nrily of N - w York, the 0th day of Yue-u^l. ill tlie year of our Lord, one thousa-i.l nine luindrcd and fifty four. (Seall m i l . I P A. n O N A H I I l ! . Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. CITATION IHI' PEOPLE OP THE S T A T K Ol' N i ; W Y O R K . By the Grace of God I'n.e an.I Ii,dependent T O : Waller L. Cahill. Jcarn.e Diirand. Alice QrumnieauT, Ih.rolliy K n c n . Jiiditii Cahill Kneen. an inlanl. Mary M.-Manaman. John Karl McMananiari. an irtant M i « i e 1 i'alrick MeMananirin, an infant Josephine Manson. TImr Wan-^iin, an infant. Monica Manson an infanl. Nalii.Tiiel L. GoWtitcin. Attorey General of the Slate ot New YorK beiner the P;r-OMs interested as creditors legatees, devisees. beneficiaries. distributee-i. or oihe'w.sp in the estate of John H. Caliill. dece.ised. w h o at the time of bis dealli was u resident of the County of N e w York. N w Vnrk. S E N D G R E E T I N G t'l.on tlic i»-tilion of B.inkers Trust Company. Iiavin-,' ils principnl ofnce at Iti Wall Street. Ni-w York. New Y o r k . Yi.il anil ca<-li of you are hereby cited to sliow e.-iu-i." before the SurroKate's Court of N, w Y( rk Cininty. held at the H.ill ot Reeonls in the County of New Y o i k , on Hie nlli day of O.'toher, 11154. at ha1f-|.as| ten o'. lo.-k in the forenoon of that da.v. why ilir- .account of proeeedinz. of n-iiilicrs T.-lisI Company as Trustee sholii.l not be .iii.lii-ially fettled. I N T i ; S T l M O N V W H K K E O F . we have caiisrti llie seal of the SiirroB-ate's Court of the said r „ n n l y ot New York to be hereunin alhxed. Wll'NESS. HONORABLE Willinm T. Collins a Slirrosate of our said county, at the County of N, w York, tiie 10th day of AiiifiHt in tile .year of our Lord one thousan.l nine huniired and f i f t y - f o u r . (Seal I PHILlt^ A. D O N A H U E . Clerk ot the Surroerale's Court At a Snc-ial Term. Part H . of the City Court of llic City of New York, held in an,I f.ir the Couniy of New York, at Ihe Conrlhoiisc. 5'; Ch.imbers Street llorouffli ot MaelKittan. City and State of New York, on llie I S l h day of Alleust, 11)51. Pr. sciil : HON. JOHN A. BYllNES Chi.-t Jiisli<-c. In Ihe Matter ot the A p pli.-alion ot GlUSEl'l'l-: M A S T R O D O M K N ICO alia GUlSi.Pl'K MOS't'RADOMEN ICO for tea-,-., lo cWSnge is name to JO.-<l:i'H MAStTtO, I'pnn r.-adiii-r and tiline the petition of OlI'SI-M'l'E M ASTROIXJMENICO also known as (i III.SW'PE M O S T R A D O M E N I C O duly verine.i Ihe ICth day ot AUfflist, lli.'il prayin; f o r leave of the petitioner to 3<.-,iime tlu> name ot JOSEPH M A S T R O in pl.nv and siend ot his present name: and it appearinir that the said petitioner Piirsinnt lo llie provisions of the Selective Serviec Act lias subniitte.1 lo refrisIr.ition as lli;-rein pi-ovided: and the Court h e i n j salislicd ihereby that the averments coma in sai.l petition are true and that Ihrre is no reasonatde objection to the chaiitri- ot name proposed, NOW on motion of I V A N F R A N K K A R DflS :,llorii.'y for the p- titioner, it is t l l l D K I t E n that G I U S E P P E MASTROIKl.'UKNICO also known as GIUSEPPE MOSTIt.UlO.MKNlCO w h o was born on Sci«enilier i ; , lil-JS at Brooklyn. New Y o r k , birlh reconi number .37858. be and he her,-by is authorizi-d to assume the name of JOSEPH M A S T R O on and after the ' i r i h d:iy ot Septemher. Ii)54 upon (•on.iiii.in. iiow-ver. that he sh.all comply Willi Ilir furlli"r provisions of this ord,T. an.l It is further 01UJi:i!l-;n that this order and the «f,,r,'menlion,'d pctilion be fil.-d within ten l,iy» from tile date hereof in Ihe 0Hi.-.- ot II,e Clerk of this Court and that a copy ot this oider shall -within ten davs from llie entry thereof be publishcil oiiee in the Civil Service Leader, a newspaper publi-iiied in llie City ot Sew York, Couniy ot N.-w York and tliat within forty days after llie maUii.ff of this order, proof of au.-l, Pliblieation then-of sh.all Im lilcl wilh llie Cli-rk o ( the City Court of ttie Cily ot N,'W YoiU in tlie County of New an,I it is tiirlher o m i l - : i l F l i that a copy of this order • I I I tin- paiii'j-s upon whi.h it is based kh dl I,.- served upon 111,- Local Board of Hie I',,11,-,I S.ales Selective Serviin at whicli the pelitioiier eubuiitted to li-gistr.ilion wiihiii iwenly days after its enti-y an.l Ihat proof ol slleli service shall IM<11.-d Willi til,' Cl,-rk of this Court within ten .lays after such service and it is lui-lli'r O K D K i t K l ) thai followins lb,- full compli;ui,-e with 111- lernis ot this onler and uii and a f l e r Sei.lcmbcr '^Tlh, 1054, the p,.iai.iii"r sli.ill lH> known by the name ot JIMKI-H M A S T K O and by no oilier name. E N T E R . J A C. J. t,. B. c. Requirements in NYC Tests Approved; Filing Dates to Be Set T h e City Civil Service Commission has approved the requirements in the following opencompetitive exams. Approval ot the Budget Director for holding the exams is needed, before filing dates are set. 7267. T E L E P H O N E O P E R A T O R G R A D E 1. (For Rotating and Night Shifts). T h e eligible list will be certified for appointments to rotating and night shifts only. Employees must work Saturdays and Sundays as the needs of the LRGXL NOTICE At 1 Special Term Part 1 of the Supreme Court of the Slate of New Y o r k held in the County of B r o n l . at the Broiiic County Bulldiiifr in the City ot New York. Borouffh of the B r o n i . on the 16th day of Auifusl. 1054. P R E S E N T : HON. JACOB M A R K O W I T Z . Jilhtiee. In the matter of the Application of ODESSA C E N T E R OP T H E B R O N X . INC.. for an Order Directing the Transfer of the assets of the 8.lid ODESSA CENT E R OP T H E B R O N X , INC., T o T H E B R O O K L Y N H E B R E W HOME A N D HOSP I T A L FOR T H E AGED. Upon the annexed petition of Samuel WeiMcr. Millon A. Teplia. Hyman T i p l i t i .-.nd d i a r i e s H. Koplefl. duly acknowledged the : i l s l day of May. 1U54. L E T all persons having any interest, show cause Ix-fore this Court at a Special Term. Part I thereof, to be held at the Bronic County Building. 851 Grand Concourse, Borough of Bronx. Cily of New York on the 1st day ot October, 11)54. at 10:00 o'clock iu the forenoon, or as soon t l i e r e i f t e r as counsd can be heard. W H V an order sould not be made directing the transfer ol the assets of ODESSA C I ; N T E R OF T H E B R O N X . INC. to T H E B R O O K L Y N H E B R E W HOME A N D HOSP I T A L FOR T H E ACJED: and Slll-'FICIENT C A U S E A P P E A R I N G . L E T service of a copy o£ this order and the petition upon which It is granted, upon the Altorney Gcnoial of the State of New Vork. iwi-niy days prior to the said 1st day ot October. 1954, be deemed suffl(ient. and lot notice to the members, crciiilors. and contributors to the funds of the Slid ODESSA CENTER OF THE BRON.K. INC. be given by publication of a copy of this onler once each week for four suc-essivo weeks in the New York I.aw Joura.-«l and the Civil Service Leader. IK-ing two ocwspa[*-r3 ot general circulation puldished in the County of Bronx. lK> deemed sumcienl. E N T B li . J.M. Juslice of the Supreme Court of tha Stale of New Y o r k . S U P R E M E COURT OF 7?HE S T A T E OF N E W YORK. C O U N T Y OF N E W Y O R K GKOllGE E. W A R R E N , as Trustee under a certain Agreement of Trust dated the 'Mth day o l September. 1039. between Edward Tuck, as Grantor, and George E. Warren, as Trustee, and T H E CHASE N A T I O N A L B A N K OF T H E C I T Y OF N E W Y O R K , as Co-Trustee artiointed under Article Seventh ot the aforesaid Asrcement ot Trust, Plaintiffs, against HELEN JULIA BERRY. VINA M. JONllS, H A R R Y V. L A W R E N C E . MIRIAM LAWRENCE. GERMAINE BURIS, MARIE DENIS. MARIE FELON. OABRIELLE CAMILLE FLAMMARION. FR.:\NC0I3E GUILLEMIN. LUCIENNE G U I L L l - M I N . E U G E N I E K R A N S . LOUIS A. L E J E U N E . ROSE M A R C H A K , A L I C E FOURR.\T talso known as Alice M a y ) , H E L E N P . ROOKER. JOHN T U C K . DOROTHY W H I T N E Y . DOROTHY MORGAN HOOKER. A N N E H O O K E R B O A R D M A N . CAMPBELL STEWARD, aa Executor of the I.ast Will and Testament ot Martha Beecknian French, deceased. C A T H A R I N E HOOKER B A R C L A Y . T H O M A S HOOKER. JULIA TUCK F I R T H . JULIA FRENCH W I I . I . I A M S . AMOS T U C K F R E N C H , JR.. Individually and as Trustee of the trust for Pauline French MacUas under the Will ot Amos Tuck French, deceased. TRUST E E S OF D A R T M O U T H COLLEGE. JOHN t ' O S T K R MECK. as Vice President and Ti-canirer of Dartmouth College, " J E A N DOE", "ELS A DOE", "LOUIS DOE', 'JOHN DOE", "MARIE DOE "ANNE'lTE DOE", "VIRGINIA DOE tlio last seven names being fictitious and Iiilended to describe aud designate the licirs at taw, next ot kin. distributees, grantees, assigneee. executors, administra tors and successors in interest of Jean Bourguignon, Elaa Macchetta d'Allegrl, Louis Ganicr. J. Brooke Fairbairn. Marie Fossal. Annette G Noblet. Virginia F. Higgins. deceased, whose true names are unknown to the plaintiffs. Defendants. Plaiutifls designate N e w Y o r k County u the place of trial. T h e plaintiff, George E. Warren resides in N e w Y o r k County The plaintiff. The Chase National Bank of the Cily of New Yorit has its princlpaJ otiice of the Clerk of the County ot N e * Couniy SUMMONS. TO T H E A B O V E N A M E D D E F E N D A N T S YOU A R E H E R E B Y S U M M O N E D to answer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served wilh this summons, lo serve a notice ot appearance, on the plaintiffs' attorneys within twenty days a l l c r the service of this sumnio escluaive of the day of service. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judg nient will be taken against you by default for the relief deniauded In the complaint. Italed: New York. N. Y., August ' i n i , 1061 Mil.HANK. TWEED. HOPE & I I A D L E T 15 Broad Street. New York. N. Y . Attorneys f o r Plaintiffs. TO T H E D E F E N D A N T S A B O V K N A M E D : The furegom.- siimnious is served upon you by pii*»licaliou pui-»uant lo an order of tlie llonorabk Maitiu M. Frank, a Justice lof the Supreme Court ot the Slate uf New Vork. dateil the 5lh day ot August, l l ) 5 t and til.-d with the comiflaint in the olh.-e of the Clerk ot the County o l New York at the County Court House, City. County and Stale ot New Y o r k . Dau-d: New Y o r k . N. Y., August 10. 11151 Mtl.UANK, TWEED, HOPE « HADLBY 16 Broad Street, New Y o r k . N . T . Attorueya f o r Flalutitto. service require, Eligibles who decline appointment to the Department of Hospitals because of assignment to a hospital or Institution will be removed from the list. Appointments are presently made at $2,510. There are about 35 vacancies In the Department of Hospitals and several In other City departments. Pee, $2. Minimum Requirements: A t least four months of full-time experience as a telephone operator rfith a telephone company or with a private or public organization on a P B X cord switchboard (plugboard) having at least five trunks and twenty extensions, or a satisfactory equivalent. Experience on a monitor board is not acceptable. Duties: Under supervision to: operate a telephone switchboard; keep records of telephone calls; take messages; give information; perform related work. Tests: Experience, weight 100, Qualifyiog Performance Test. All candidates will be required to pass a q u a l i f y ing performance test which will be designed to test the candidate's ability to operate a P B X cord switchboard. Candidate's manner and speech will also be among the factors considered in the performance test. No second opportunity will be given to candidates who fall or who do not appear for this qualifying performance test. Candidates' experience papers may LEGAL NOTICK LIGHTENSTEIN. FERDINAND. P30531954 CITATION _ _ T H E PEOPLE OF T H E S T A T E OF N E W Y O R K . B Y T H E G R A C E OF GOD P I l E E A N D I N D E P E k ' D ENT, TO: FERDINAND LICHTENSTEIN id H E R T A L I C H T E N S T E I N . nee ERMANN. persons w h o have disappeared ider circumstancet affording reasonable ground to believe that they are dead: Send Greeting: Upon the petition ot Julius Liehtenstein. residing at 155 Audubon Avenue. Borough of Manhattan. City. County and State of New Y o r k . Y o u and each of you are hereby cited to show cause before the Surrogate's Couj-t ot New Y o r k County, held at the Hall of Records, in the County o t N e w York, on the 14th day ot September. 1054. at half-paat ten o'clock In the forenoon ot the day. why the Surrogate should not inquire into the facts and circumstance* and make a decree determining that the said Ferdinand Liehtenstein and his w i f e Herta Liehtenstein. nee Ermann. late dt Schwalbach/Sa,ar. in the Saor Territory, are dead, and why Julius Liehtenstein should not be appointed ancillary adminlstrater with the will annexed on the estate ot F E R D I N A N D L I C H T E N S T E I N . deceased, late of Schwalbach/Saar, Saar Territory. In Testimony Whereof, w e have e a u s ^ the seal of the Surrogate's Court of said County of New York to be hereunto sITixed. Witness Honorable William T . Collins, a Surrogate o t our said County, at the County o t N e w Y o r k , the Bth day of August, In the year of our Lord, on« thousand nine hnadred and f i f t y - f o u r . ( L . S.) P H I L I P A. DONAHUK. Clerk of the Surrogate's Court C R U T T E N D E N * CO. Notice ot sub stance ot certificate of limited partnership formed under laws ot Illinois and doing business there and elsewhere, nied July 13. 19B4 in New York County Clerk'! ofBce. N a m e : C R U T T E N D E N A CO. Bus iness: general securities business. Princl I>al place o t business: 200 South LaSallt Street. Chicago 4. HI. Principal offlee and place of business in New Y o r k State: 37 Wall Street. New Y o r k City. General part ners and residence addresses: Walter W Cruttenden. 887 Bob O'Link Road. High land Park, ni., Robert A. Podesta, 9310 3 Hamilton Aye. Chicago. HI.. Donald B. Stephens. 1000 Meadows Rd Geneva. III.. Glenn E. Miller. 33 Williamsburg Lane. Evanston. 111.. Walter W. Cruttenden. Jr., 1161 Walnut L » n Northbrook. 111. Limited partners and residence addres.se«; Donald R. BonniweH, 3172 Sheridan Rd.. Chicago. HI.. Fay T. Cruttendon, 887 Bob O'Link Rd,. Highland Park. III. T e r m of partnership is to De cember 31, 1054 and from year to year thereafter subject to dissolution on 30 dayi notice at end of any year by certain ren eral partners. Each limited partner con trihuted $60,000 in cash. Securities, cash and other property which may be held by partnership f o r Individual account o l any partner, limited or general, beeomea part oership property and ia treated as capital contributed by euch partner subject to certain i*-ovislons applicable solely to determine rights at partners among them selvea. Contribution of any partner ia re turnable upon his death, withdrawal or Incompetency, except it may be retained by a continuing or succcasor partnership at the risk of the business tor 120 daya thereafter. Property in the individual account of any partner la similarly return able in the event of his death, and la returnable without such right ot retention upon his ceasing lo be a partner tor any reason other than death. Fay T . Cnitt, den recoires by reason of her contribution 6 % ot net proflta. interest on her capital at 6 K a year, whether or not earned, and to the extent earned, Interst at the sani, rate on any amount in her Individual account available to the partnership in delerniining its capital commitment base under New York Stock Kxchauge rulea Donald B. Bonuiwell, as well aa each general partner, is entitled to receive In leresi on his capital and on the amount ia hia individual account aimilarly avail able, at rate ot 5 % • year but only to extent earned. Net losses above total ot general partnra' contributions, shall be borne by Donald It BonniweH only to tent of his capital contribution and theo by Fay T . Cruttmden only to the extent at her caiAtat oontributioa. Any partner may withdraw on M days' notice. Henial iiir partners h a r e right to continue the buoiuess otter death. incom|»eieiicy or witdrowai ot MW p v t a e r . be reviewed and rated at the ^Ime of the performance test, A qualif y i n g written test may also be given. Candidates will be required to pass a qualifying medical test. 7277. H O U S I N G FIREnii^N. (First Piling P e r i o d ) : 37 vacancies in the m f C Housing Authority at $2,975 a year. Appointments are exempt f r o m the N Y C residence requirement. Fee, $2. M i n i mum Requirements: (a) Six months of recent full-time experience in related work; or ( b ) not less than three months of recent full-time experience plus not less than six months of successful related education in an accredited school (three months of acceptable practical experience will be credited for six months of related education) ; or not less than one year of successful related education in an accredited school in a course which combines classroom work with practical experience. Open only to persons who shall not have passed their 55th birthday on the first date for the filing of applications. This position requires extraordinary physical e f fort. Age limits do not apply to veterans. Duties: Under supervision, to fire low-pressure boilers with heavy fuel oil; maintain and make minor repairs to boilers, indust rial type oil burners, heating and hot water equipment and all auxiliaries; perform related work. Tests: Oral, weight 100. T h e oral test will be conducted in an oil fired low pressure plant and will consist of practical questions concerned with the duties of the position. A qualifying written test may also be given. 7274. A U T O MECHANIC—Six vacancies in various City departments at $4,900 for 250 working days a year. Other vacancies occur. This is a prevailing rate position. Fee, $4. Minimum Requirements: Five years of recent satisfactory experience on automotive repair work of a nature to qualify for the duties of the position. Six months of acceptable experience will be credited for each twelve months of accredited vocational or trade school training in automotive work. This equivalent acceptable experience shall not exceed two and one-half years. T h e maximum period of time for which credit may be given for experience gained solely as a provisional employee or for duties performed outside the scope of title in an emergency may in no case exceed nine months. Candidates must have a New York State automobile operator's or chauffeur's license at appointment time. Duties: Under supervision, to act as a trouble-shooter in determining mechanical and electrical defects; make minor reLEG.AL NOTICB CITATION The People of the Stale of New Y o r k . By the Grace of God. Free and Independ-jnt. T o Attorney General of the state of New Y o r k ; Ida Lintusalmi. also known as lida Johanna, and K a j o Voorinen as Administrators of the Estate ot David Lintusalmi. also known as David Lundgren, Taavetti Untusalmi and David Lindsren. Deceased: Alma Saari; Hilma Nisula: lida J. Rantanen: Taavetti E l o ; Siri Leino: Erikki J. Lintusalmi: Consul General ot Finland: T h e Society of the New Y o r k Hospital: Rauha Unthus.-Unii to "John D o e " the name "John D o e " being fictitious, the alleged husband of Samia Elida AaSto. deceased, if living, or if dead, to the executors, administrators and next of kin of said "John D o e " dcceaseil. whose names and Post Offlee addresses are v known and cannot after diligent lUQuiry be ascertained by the petitioner herein, and the next ot kin of Saima Elida Aalto. deceased. whose names and Post Offlee addresses are unknown and eaimot a f t e r diligent inquiry he ascertained by the pletltioner herein, being the persons interested aa ereditors. next ot kin or olherwiae in the estate of Saima Elida Aalto. deceased, who at the time ot her death was a resident of 020 F i l t h Avenue. N e w Y o r k . N . Y . Send G R E E T I N G : Upion the petition of The Public Administrator of the County ot New York, having his olBce ot Hall ot Records, Room 300. Borough ot Manhattan. City and County ot New Y o r k , as administrator of the goods. ehattt«s ond credits of said daecased: Y o u and each ot you ore hereby cited to show cause before the Surrogate's Court o l N e w Y o r k County, held ot the Hall o t Records, Boom SOO, in the County o t New Y o r k , on the I s t day ot October, 1054. at half-past ten o'clock in the forenoon ot that day, why the account ot prooeedinga of The Public Administrator of the County ot New Y o r k , as administrator of the roods, chattels and credits ot said deceased, should not be judicially settled. In Testimony Whereof, W e have caused the seal of tho Surrogate'a Court of the said County of New York l o bo hereuuto aflixed. Witness, Honorable WUUaiu T . CoUina. o Surrogate ot our aoid Cotuity, at the County ot Now Y o r k , the 11th day of August ia tho year o l onr L o r d one thousand nine hundred and (ITty four. (8eol) P H I L I P A. DONAHUK, Vtatk o l Uw S«irnicat«'a Court, pairs and adjustments in the field so that a car may be returned to the garage or repair shop under its own power; overhaul gasoline engines, transmission and ignition systems; align wheels and repair steering equipment; reline and adjust brakes; perform related work. Tests: Written, weight 40; performance, weight 60. Medical and Physical Requirements: Candidates may be rejected for any deficiency, abnormality or disease that tends to impair health or usefulness, such as defective vision (beyond 20-40 each eye tested separately — eye glasses allowed); defective color vision; heart or lung diseases; hernia; third degree or disabling varicose veins; hypertension o r , hypotension; overweight (exceeding 10 per cent of normal standard): paralysis; and defective hearing (each ear tested separately). Candidates must be free from physical or personal abnormalities or deformities of speech or appearance. 7275. E L E C T R I C I A N ' S H E L P ER. T w o vacancies in the Department of Sanitation, two in the Department of Hospitals and one in the Office of the President, Borough of Manhattan, at $14 a day. "I^ls is a prevailing rate position. Fee, 50 cents. Minimum R e quirements: ( a ) Three years of recent satisfactory full time paid practical experience of a nature to qualify for the duties of the position; or f b ) not less than one year of acceptable experience of a nature to qualify for the duties (Continupd on Pape 13) NEW PICTUREIN-AMINUTE CAMERA THE Now you can enjoy all the fun of 60-second photography — the excitement ot lifting beautiful finished prints right out of your camera — for much, much less than ever before! $6995* a s little a s $ 7 down Fedorol To« Incl. • PROSPECT • Photographic Corp. 104 Fourth AvenHe, I r o o k l y n 17, N. Y. Vor Cor. Worrell St. T t t 6 4 6 1 » r o r t h e r Information Writo f o r IHustrated Booklet V. inortera f o r A l l Other Pholocri Kqulpmeot Still Time to Apply For NYC School Clerk The exam for school clerk Jobs regular clerk Jobs are: either ( a ) with the NYC Board of Education three years in approved office remains open until Wednesday, clerical work or (b) two years In September 1. Pay Is $3,100 to $4,- school clerical work under aptwo 300 for "regulars;" substitute propriate license; or (c) clerk positions, $14.25 a day, will years In clerical work as civil also be filled. Apply to the Board service clerk or stenographer for of Examiners, 110 Livingston Board of Education: or (d) equivStreet. Brooklyn, in person or by alent. Substitute school clerks may mail. Minimum age is 19; maximum qualify with one-half of the exrequired for regular age for regular clerk, 45, for sub- perience school clerk. stitute, 60. All candidates must be high A bachelor's degree may be •chool graduates. Additional edu- substituted for one-half the excational requirements are: either (a) one year of college with six perience requirement tor both semester hours In education and jobs. Candidates who do not meet BChool records and accounts; or ( b ) 30 semester hours of post-high the post-high school training reschool study, including six hours quirements are eligible to apply. In education and school records They will have until February 15, and accounts. 1958 to complete the one year's Experience requirements for study. HERE IS A LISTING OR ARCO COURSES for PENDING EXAMINATIONS INQUIRE ABOUT OTHER COURSES n• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Administrotiv* Atsistaat Accountant & Auditor _..$2.50 N. Y. C $2.50 ..$2.50 Auto Enginemon „ Army & Navy Practie* Testi -$2.00 Ass't Foreman (Sanitation) $2.50 Attendant .......$2.00 Attorney $2.50 Bookkeeper $2.50 Bridge & Tunnel Officer $2.50 Bus Maintainer $2.50 Captain (P.D.I $3.00 Car Maintainer .... $2.50 Chemijt .....$2.50 Civil Engineer $2.50 Civil Service Handbook $1.00 Clerical Aiiistont (Colleges) $2.50 Clerk. CAP 1-4 $2.50 Clerk, 3-4-5 $2.50 Clerk. Gr. 2 $2.50 Clerk, Grade 5 $2.50 Conductor $2.50 Correction Officer U.S $2.50 Court Attendant $3.00 Deputy U.S. Marshal $2.50 Dietitian $2.50 Electrical Engineer $2.50 Elevator Operator $2.00 Employment Interviewer $2.50 Engineering Tests —-....$2.50 Fireman (F.D.) $2.50 Fire Capt $3.00 Fire Lieutenant $3.00 Foreman $2.50 Gardener Assistant $2.50 H. S. Diploma Tests $3.00 Hospital AHendant .; $2.50 Housing Asst $2.50 Housing Caretakers __$2.00 Housing OtRcer $2.50 How to Pass College Entrance Tests $3.50 How to Study Post Office Schemes $1.00 Home Study Course for Civil Service Jobs $4.95 How to Pass West Point and Annapolis Entrance Exams $3.50 Insurance Ag't-Broker $3.00 Internal Revenne Agent $2.50 Investigator (Loyalty Review) $2.50 Investigator (Civil and Law Enforcement) $3.00 Investigator's Handbook $3.00 Jr. Management Asst. $2.50 Jr. Government Asst. ...$2.50 Jr. Professional Asst. ».$2.50 Janitor Custodian $2.50 Jr. Professional Asst. -..$2.50 Law & Court Stene $2.50 Low Enforcement PoslNons _$3.00 FREE! • • n a a a a • n • • • • • • • • • a • a • n • • • • • n • a • n a • • • • a • a n n • n • • n • • • • • • • • Lieutenant (P.D.) $3.00 Librarian $2.50 Maintenance Man $2.00 Mechanical Engr. $2.50 Maintainor's Helper (A & C ) $2.50 Maintainor's Helper iB) $2.50 Mointainer't Helper (D) $2.50 Maintainor's Helper (E) $2.50 Messenger (Fed.) $2.00 Messenger. Grade 1 $2.50 Motorman $2.50 Motor Vehicle License ,.$2.50 Examiner _$1.00 Notary Public -$2.00 Notary Public -$3.00 Oil Burner Installer -$2.50 Park Ranger -$2.50 Patrolman Patrolman Tests in All States .$4.00 Ploygronnd Director $2.50 Plumber $2,50 Policewoman $2.50 Postal Clerk Carrier —$2.00 Postal Clerii in Charge Foreman „_„__-$3.00 Power Mointainer .$2.50 Practice for Army Tests $2.00 Prison Guard $2.50 Probation Officer $2.50 Public Health Nurse $2.50 Roilread Clerk $2.00 Real Estate Broker $3.00 Refrigeration License —$3.00 Resident Building Supt. $2.50 Sanitationman $2.00 School Clerk $2.50 Sergeant (P.D.) -$2.50 Social Investigator Social Supervisor Social Worker Sr. File Clerk $2.50 Surface Line Dispatcher $2.50 State Clerk (Accounts. File & Supply) I $2.50 State Trooper $2.50 Stationary Engineer & Fireman _..._ .$3.00 Steno Typist (CAP-1-7) $2.00 Stenographer, Gr. 3-4 —$2.50 Steno-Typist (Practleail $1.50 Stock Aeslstant $2.00 Structure Maintainor - 4 2 . 5 0 Substitute Postal Transportation Clerk —$2.00 Surface Une Opr $2.00 Technical & Professional Asst. (State) $2.50 Telephone Opwrater $2.50 Title Examiner $2.50 Trackman $2.50 Train Dispatcher $2.50 Transit Patrolman $2.50 Treasury Enforcement Agent $3.00 U. S. Government Jobs $1.50 With Every N. Y . C . Arco Book— You Will Receive an Invaluable New Arco "Outline Chart of New York C i t y Government." ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON I onclot* m* chock or e o p i c i of m«ii*y 7300. ASSISTANT MECHANICAL ENGINEER (First Filing Period'. About 55 vacancies in various City departments at salaries of $4,711. Fee, $4. Minimum Requirements: A baccalaureate degree in engineering issued upon completion of a course of study registered by the University of the State of New York and three years' satisfactory practical mechanical engineering experience of a nature to qualify for the duties of the position; or a satisfactory equivalent. The maximum period of time for which credit may be given for experience gained solely as a provisional employee or for duties performed outside the scope of title In an emergency may in no case exceed nine months. Duties: Under supervision to perform mechanical engineering work of moderate difficulty and importance in connection with the Installation, Inspection, testing, operation, maintenance, drafting or detailing of mechanical equipment for schools, rapid transit railroads, moveable bridges, public buildings, sewage disposal works, ferries and other municipal works; keep records and make reports; perform related work. Tests: Written, weight 50; experience, weight 50. Candidates will be required to pass a qualifying medical test. 7301. ASSISTANT MECHANICAL ENGINEER (BUILDING CONSTRUCTION). Sixteen vacancies in the N Y C Housing Authority at $4,771. Appointments in this department are exempt from the three-year N Y C residence requirement. Fee, $4. Minimum Requirements: A baccalaureate degree in engineering issued upon completion of a course of study registered by the University of the State of New York and three years' satisfactory practical experience in building construction work of a nature to qualify for the duties of the position; or a satisfactory equivalent. The maximum period of time for which credit may be given for experience gained solely as a provisional employee or for duties performed outside the scope of books c h s c k o d ardor for $ above. r, = = = E = = iMMd • • • • • by M.T Board of BegeaU = Ceachiag CewrM legia Aaytlm* iRdlvldaal Atfenttoa Mmi OBd Woaea Small Claist* = = = = = = $35 - TOTAL C O S T • $35 = 3 Can w send tor folder S YMCA EvMing School M = w . 63td St., New York tS, N.X. BMdIeot* S-8117 = ALL VETERANS Name Ton may attend school Irom A A . M . to 1 P J i . ar 1 to • P J i . and rMwive <uU iubsisteoce with part-time work privileges. riexible program arranged. Addrett A I X BXBCUTIVB 8ECKBTAIIIAI. ACCOUNTLNO « B U S L N I C E S COUKBB8 Dair » B r * . • r i e e riMMuent Serrlea Afaw elBwea tor Non-Veterkna City ... title in an emergency may in no case exceed nine months. Duties: Under supervision to inspect the installation of mechanical equipment in multiple dwelling housing construction including heating and ventilating equipment, electrical work, plumbing and elevators; conduct tests on such mechanical equipment as required under contract specifications; assist in the inspection of repairs, alterations and removal of mechanical equipment; interpret plans and specifications, check layouts and drawings and evaluate costs of mechanical equipment; make investigations and prepare reports; perform related work. Tests: Written, weight 50; experience, weight 50. Candidates will be required to pass a qualifying medical test. 7185. INSPECTOR OF CARPENTRY AND MASONRY, GRADE 3; one vacancy in the Department of Hospitals at $4,016. Additional vacancies occur in NYC. Appointments in the De;)artment of Education are exempt from the three-year residence requirements. Fee, $4. Minimum Requirements: (a) Five years of recent full time practical experience, respectively or collectively, as an architect, engineer, mason or carpenter; or (b) not less than two and one half (2'A) years of recent full time practical experience as indicated in (a) above, plus not less than five (5) years of additional education in an accredited school and/or apprentice training. To be eligible for appointment to the Department of Housing and Buildings, applicants must comply with the requirements of the Charter of the City of New York, viz; possess not less than five (5) years . experience respectively as an architect, engineer, mason or carpenter. Tests: Written, weight 60= experience, weight 40. ^Illllllillllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllli i EQUIVALENCY = i HIGH SCHOOL i = DIPLOMA = ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; 97 Duane St.. New York 7. N. Y . und 1» Duties: Under supervision, to assist an electrician in the installation, repair, replacement and maintenance of electric wiring systems, appliances, apparatus and equipment according to the provisions of the New York City Electrical Code; perform related work. Tests: Written, weight 40; performance, weight 60. In the performance test the candidate will demonstrate his manual skill in the production of a work sample as well as answer pertinent questions relating to the duties of the title. Candidates will be required to pass a qualifying medical test. — S LEADER B O O K S T O R E PI»«M (Continued from Page of the position, plus sufficient educational training of a nature relating to the duties of the position in nn approved vocational or trade school to complete the three year minimum requirement. Six months of practical experience will be credited for each year of approved educational training. The maximum period of time for which credit may be given for experience gained solely as a provisional employee or for duties performed outside the scope of title In an emergency may in no case exceed nine months. i 35c f o r 24 liour t p s c ! « l d e l i v e r y C . O . D . ' i 30c a x t r * U. S. Jobs Open REOUIREMENTS IN NEW EXAMS NYC PLANS TO HOLD Staf*. Ml COLLEGIATE •^iTT'S??. I M I s o * A T * , (at 5 t M . ) P I . B-Wt 406. LIBRARIAN, $4,205 to $7.. 040. Jobs In Washington, D. C. area. Requirements: either (a> college graduation, with 30 hours of library science study; or (b) one year's library training in library school, and either ( I ) three years of college or (2) three years' experience; or (c) four years' experience; or (d) combination. A p ply to U. S. Civil Service Commission. Washington, D. C. <No closing date.) 2-71-7 (52). GARDENER. $2,>52. Jobs at VA Hospital, Northport, N. Y. Requirements: six months' experience as gardener at private estate, or botanical garden, with institution or commercial organization, or in Federal. State or municipal work. Men preferred. Appiy to Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, VA Hospital, Northport, N. Y. (No closing date). City Exam Coming For PAINTERS $2.89 hourly. 250 days a year (;pf>.050) Age limit 60. Helper experience counls (NTENStVE COURSE — COMPLETE PREPARATION NEW COMPLETE CLASS B E G I N N I N G S E I T . 14 at 7 P.M. OQ the last Foreman of P.iintpis exam. 8 of the top 10. ami 17 out of the 25 who tiLiseei), wore our studoiUe. Write or Phono 133 and Ave., N . T . 3 (at 8 S t . ) Plea«e write we. free ahnnt your conree l o r the Painter exuniiiiation. NAME ADDRESS rz...i^8 BOBO EVENING and SATURDAY C O U R T S Cammercial Art • Cbcmieal Electrical • Mechanical • Construction Medical Lab • O o n U I Asslstinc ladastrlal Distribution • Dental l a h Hotel • Retail • P h o t o p a p k y M v o r t i s l n i Production Manageraoot School Clerk Exams 8M. 1 Tnea. A u r . 24 6 9:30 P M 7 L a f v e t t e Ave., Bklyn Se*. 1 Sat. Anr. 28 10-1 66 W 42 St. N Y Rm 2, and floor 7 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N . T . B A T n t J. K A P F K L , B€8, Ba, MA F A r Rockaway 7-4489 8216 Mott Are.. Far Rockaway, M.T. 'Instructor School Record! A Accounts at Brooklyn Collcfre 8th Succeeelul Tear REGISTRATION S e p t . 1 1 , 1 0 A . M . t o 2 P.M. S e p t . 1 3 1 4 - 1 5 . 6 t o 9 P.M. Fall T e r m B e i l n s S e p L 20tli ntOUCST CATAIOO I* • Minlnua F m EvsninO Courisi tsod 10 Csrlificota or D*vrs« NEW YORK CITY COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF APPLIED ARTS & SCIENCES CIVIL SERVICE C O A C H I N G I 3 0 0 P e a r l St., B ' f c l y n 1 , M . Y . » TR 5 - 3 9 5 4 ^ A u t C l T i l . Mech'L. Electr'I Enrineer Sopt Bide Const. Auto Mechanic Custodian Blectrician Helper Staty Enrr-Eleo Machinist Helper Boiler ln<;pector Plumber Helper Marine Enrineer Transit Exams Masonry. Carpty Inen, Steel InBpector Jr Ciril, Elec, Heating:. Ventilating. Plombinr. Bldr. Struc Eiisineer Design. LICENSE AL 4-S029 Eastern School Sadie Brown soys:^"^^"'''"™ OITR 16-WKRK C O . A d l l N O tOIJfSK W I L L P K E l ' A R K VOU FOR TIIK HIGH SCHOOL TptoMr PREPARATION Saturday Morning C'lasiirii Now Funning AI.WO P r o f . Eneineer, Architect. Master Electrician. Plumber, Stationary Enrr. Be f r l r Optr. Oil Burner. Portable Engr. D R A m N G . DESIGN - M A T H E M A T I C S Aire. Mech., Elec.. Arch., Struct., Blueprint B d r , Bldr. Estimat'r, Civil Serr.. AHth.. Algebra, Geom.. T r i g , Cal., Pbys. A P P R O V E D FOR A I X VETS BUSINESS ADMINITRATION Jr. Accounting - Bookkeeping EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL Stenography - Typing - Retil Khiute Insuranee-Publio Speaking-Advert iHing tMesmanKhip - KefreHher Courbes D A Y * E V E N I N G - CO ED MONDELL INSTITUTE AU Vets Accepted - Apply NOW S M W . 4 U t St. lEst. I S I O I W b 7.20MI Bklyn: 600 Pacific St U L 2-2687 Branches Bronx Jb Jamaica Over 40 yrs. Freparlng Thoasands fat a « l l SMTTle* Batrg, U e e u * Katm*. COLLEGIATE I C W W b U U l M BUSINESS institute SOI Madltoa Ave.. N.Y. PL 8-1 >72 (At eSnd St. I Keal estate buys. See P. 11. Real estate buys. See P. 11. SCHOOL DIRECTORY Academic mod •ailding » r i a a t Mwagement, CommeRiai iHationai} * College Preparatory Custodian Knginecrs Ucense BOBO H A I X A C A D B M V , FUtbvah Ext. Cor. Fulton, Bklyn. Regent* * UL 8 2««7. Business I'reiiaratiuM OI ApproTed, l%mii Ht.), N.y.V. Sccrutwiia Behools W A B U I M U T U N BUlUNKSt) IN8T.. £10fr-7th Ave. (ear. and civil aervioe Uaining. Moderate eost. MO 2-eOH6. MONKOK BCUOOt. OF BlltlINIC8B. Secretarial. Accounting. Veterans Acoepted. C t v « Service preparation. East 177tli St. and Boston Hoad ( H K O Chester llieatra BIdg.), Bronx K I 3 6600. 40 to 60 hours. Dorothy Kuoe Schoolk 11 W . 42ud Street. N.Y.C. LEARN IBM KEY P U N C H — L B. M. HACBINKS J O B IBM TAD, SOHTINQ. W l I l l N O , K E Y I ' U N C U I N O , V E K I K Y i N G . i-'lV. do to the Combination B u f i n e u School, 130 W. 126ih St. UN 4 Ul'iU. Bus. Machin* Inst. • IBM KEY PUNCH T^B B'way. 66th w d guaranteed Training. l>ar or Kve. Uutel W o u d w a r « JU Z - S H l . Becietorlal D k A K K H . I M N A t M A U HTKICKT, N.V.C. Seorftariul AccouoUnc, DralUng, Juurnalli Iwy MU«bl. Wrlla tor Catalog. BIC 3 4840. • Social Investigator Study Material PLOSCOWE ASKS TESTS F O R SELECTING JUDGES Judges, at least in the lower courts, should be selected by civil service, f o r m e r N Y C Magistrate Morris Ploscowe proposed, at a conference on law enforcement at New Y o r k University. Mr. Ploscowe, a.s.sociate professor of law at N Y U . criticized political considerations in the pre.sent elective and appointive systems, which, he said, do not always result in good appointments. H e pointed out that in Western Europe judges are chosen by a civil service method, with political influence felt on the p r o m o tion levels only. T h e followinc continues publi- result of an automobile accident, blank on your answer sheet cor- accurately described as a person ealion of study material for the her f a m i l y was eligible for bene- responding to the number of the who — A, constantly attempts to dominate other people; B, hates N V C social investigator written fits; C, James K i n g served with question. mankind; C. suflers f r o m an anColumn I test, to he lield Saturday. Septem- the American occupation forces in xiety neiu'osis; D, loiters- E, feigns 57. Policy for the West ber 25 for 2.033 candidates. K e y G e r m a n y f r o m April, 1945, until illne.ss, or inability to carry out 58. T h e W e a l t h of Nations his honorable discharge in April. fcnswcrs ffiven at end. his duties. 59. Folkways Answor Que.stions 54 through 56 1950. T w o years later he died un64. A phobia may be most ac60. Society: I t s Structure and solely on the basis of the passage der surgery. His survivors were incurately defined as — A. hysteria; eligible for benefits; D. T h o m a s Changes quoted below. 61. T h e House on H e n r y Street B, an hallucination; C, d a y d r e a m Carter, honorably discharged in " T h e families of qualified vet- Manila in March, 1946, a f t e r 16 ing; D, a psychosis; E, an illogiColumn I I erans of W o r l d W a r I I are given months in service, remained as a cal fear. A. Robert M M a c l v e r Social Security protection for a' civilian employee with the United 65. Geriatrics may be described B. A d a m Smith period ol three years following the States A r m y and was killed by most accurately as the — A, pracC. W i l l i a m G r a h a m Sumner veteran's discharge. T h i s protec- guerrilla bands only two months tice of f a i t h - h e a l i n g ; B, branch of D. Lillian W a l d tion is only f o r the survivors of after his discharge. His survivors medicine concerned with children; E. Barbara W a r d qualified veterans. In order for were not eligible for benefits; E, 62. A lien Is — A. a legal claim C, destruction of red blood corpu- England states. Mrs. Sennewould his survivors to l>e qualified for James Johnson, a f t e r two years on property as security for a debt scles; D, branch of medicine con- Is spending a week in O t t a w a . benefits under this amendment, a in the U. S. N a v y was discharged or charge; B. an informal agree- cerned with the aging; E, m a j o r G a r n e t Hicks is in Syracu.se. Mrs. veteran must meet the following in 1946 because of mental illne.ss. ment to pay a stipulated sum of division in the field of penology. L. Bartlett of the matrons' stati, condition.s: 66. Cun-ent research studies in- is vacationing in N Y C . He recovered, but in 1951 he died money; C, an agreement to make I . H e must l:ave been di.scharged of nephritis. His survivors were stipulated payments on a condi- dicate that fluorides are useful in Mrs. Jane Lar.sen reported f o r f r o m the armed forces under con- eligible for benefits. tional sales contract; D, the right preventing — A. rheumatic f e v e r ; duty a f t e r an absence of several ditions other than dishonorable For Questions 57 through 61 to collect all Interest on an in- B. dental cartes; C. epilepsy; D, months. G r a n t Belson is back a f not later than September 3, 1949. Column I lists titles of books and vestment until the obligation in- trauma; 0. hemorrhage. ter a long illness. K E Y ANSWERS I I . H e must have served in the Column I I lists authors. Select curred has been satisfied; E. a 54. E: 55. E; 56, C ; 57. E; 58. armed forces at some time on or the author f o r each book listed in statement that an unsatisfied debt B ; 59. C; 60, A ; 61. D; 62, A ; 63, Column I and write the letter exists. a f t e r September 16, 1940, and be 63. A malingerer may be most E ; 64. E; 65, D ; 66, B. f o r e the official end of the war which precedes the author in the (Consider the ofHcial end of W o r l d T H E N E W salary grades w e r e W a r I I as September 2, 1945.' received at Creedmoor with a m i x I I I . H e must either have had ArTIVITIKS F M I M . O Y E K S TIIKOl^CaiOlTT IVEW Y O R K S T A T E ture of gloom and happiness. T h e at lea.st 90 days of active service or m a j o r i t y still wonders what to e x have been discharged because of Louis Nicastro, Santiago T a p i a , completed by Elmer Hart, chair pect in a monetary way when the *a disability received or aggravated R a y Lewis, George Turtell, A n - man of this committee. All em are asked to retroactive checks come in O c t o while in service. thony Contento, Joseph M u n n , ployees interested ber. A n d no one seems to know I V . He must have died within A n t h o n y Deperino, Randall S t r a k - contact M r . H a r t in Building 18. C O N O R . V r U L A T I O N S to: Mrs. er, Audrey Chieffo, Edward Boyle, T h e next meeting of the chap- what to expect in cash f o r the three years ol the date of his disGeorgette Sacri Groate. Mr. and W i l l i a m O'Connell, Michael Hoey, ter will be held September 15 in sixth increment. Launderers plan charge." 54. T h e one of the following Mrs. Bob Chute and M r . and Mrs. Edward Brielman, James Cahill, Building 32 at 8 P.M. T h e sub- to appeal their reallocation f r o m which is most accurate, on the Alexander Marshall on the birth James O'Sullivan, M a r y Coyne, ects to be discussed include the grade 2 to 3. W o r k e r s at the hosand to Mildred Nina LoSardo, Charles M c W e e n e y , egislative program the Asso- pital feel their raise should at basis of the above passage, is that of daughters, survivors may be eligible for Social G r a d y on her promotion to prac- W a r r e n Newman and N o r m a n ciation. A representative f r o m A l - least equal the jump of ward e m bany will t>e on hand to review ployees, such as the boo.st f r o m Security Veterans' Survivors' tical nurse. Best wishes to Chris- Thompson. grade 2 to 4 f o r attendants. benefits — A, only if the veteran tine Cacace, who resigned recently. Convalescing la.st week were: the appeal procedure. T o m Conkiing, president, has Y o u r reporter spent a couple of had at least 90 days of active W e l c o m e to the following new Mrs. Genevieve Majestic, Anne service; B, only if the veteran is employees: Dolores Sumler. Carl Carroll, Hermina Hensl, W i l l i a m announced the appointment of days in sick bay, and it made h i m not eligible for other veterans' Stout and Josephine Colietti, and Corbett, W a l t e r Bennett, Isabelle Donald Bailey as chairman of the realize the good fortune of having hospital facilities as part of the a.ssistancc: C, if the veteran was welcome back to M r . and Mrs. Donovan', Jack K e e n a n , John sports committee. job. A written bouquet to Mrs. dishonorably discharged after Daniel Cmelko, R.N., f r o m out Shea, M a r y O'Connor, Rose M c Marion Byron, sick bay nurse, and September 2, 1945; D. only if the West. Loughlin, Joseph L a n g and Frank all the sick bay personnel w h o veteran was discharged f r o m the Recently returned f r o m vaca- K e a r n e y . T H E F I R S T meeting of the make things as pleasant as posA r m y before September 16. 1940; tion are: A1 Last, Leonard PembleT h e chapter wishes to express E. if the veteran served in the ton, Joseph Farsetta, Vincent G e b - its sympathy to F r e d Dietrich on newly elected officers and direc- sible f o r the patients. T h o s e c o n armed forces f r o m June, 1941 to bia, Pearl Robinson. Dr. Carmine the loss of his f a t h e r in a boat tors of Monroe chapter was held fined with yours truly in the bay w e r e : T h o m a s Simmons, Ananias April, 1944. Chiarello, Dr. and Mrs. L. Secord accident recently; to Dr. James July 19 at the Citv H a l l Annex. President Bill Hudson presented Johnson. Edward Fleming, James 55. T h e one of the following Palmer, M r . and Mrs. John M c - J. L a w t o n and f a m i l y on the re a program f o r the year which he Hibits, Anna Murray, Agnes M u l statements which is most accurate, Cauley and family, M r and Mrs. cent loss of his brother-in-law. hopes will bring members to chap- cahy, A n n a Tilt, E m m a Z i m m e r on the basis of the above passage, Arnold Moses, Rosie DeFillipps, ter meetings. H e plans to hold a man, M a r y K e l l y and R u t h H a m i l is that a veteran's survivors could Bob Chute, Dr. Robert Mullins, regular monthly directors' meet- ton. Hope to see them up and not be eligible f o r Social Security Mrs. Lillian Dowling, Earle M a r ing, and four regular chapter around soon. Veterans' Survivors' benefits if the shall. Wilbert Anderson, Paul meetings a year, which will consist veteran — A, served only 60 days Buccellato, Bernard Connelly, Luther Baird returned f r o m his in the A r m y ; B, enlisted in the Nelda Alexander, Elizabeth M c T H E S E V E N T H annual pitnic of of a brief business meeting and vacation in Malone, N. Y . Alice armed forces at some time before Guinness and M a r y Accardi. Willowbrook chapter, CSEA, was social event. T h e fall meeting, f o r Cheeseman back f r o m vacation at example, m a y turn out to be a Cape Cod. Marion Byron now v a September 16. 1940; C. died on Beware, drivers in N Y C ! Edith attended by more than 200 em December 12, 1942, 2 years and 1 Weingarten, supervi.sor of O . T ployees and guests. A m o n g those clambake; the winter meeting a cationing in the Pocono M o u n month after having been honor- has received her driver's license present were: Dr. H. H. Berman Christmas party; the Spring meet- tains. ably dischar.?cd f r o m the Navy^ D, and is going on vacation. director, and Mrs. B e r m a n ; State ing may take the f o r m of an EasBill Finck of Building P is all ter party, and f o r June, of course, enlisted in the M a r i n e Corps Ja-gCurrent vacationers are: Emil Senator John Macdonald, Assem smiles these days. His w i f e p r e uary 10, 1940, was honorably dis- Impresa, chapter president; blymen Lucio F Russo and Edward there will be the annual meeting sented him with a baby boy. Bill charged June 12, 1943, and died T h o m a s Shirtz, Dr. and Mrs, A m a n n , R i c h m o n d Borough Presi- and picnic. T l i e clambake and p a r - was beginning to feel like Eddie January 18, 1946; E. died on July Theodore Goldstein. Dr. and Mrs, dent Edward Baker, Frank Pavis ties will be limited strictly to Mon- Cantor with all the girls in the 17, 1942, 2 years and 2 months Paul Tarantola, A d a K a v a n a u g h member of the Board of Visitors; chapter members; but on the house, arjd now he has someone a f t e r his honorable disciiarge f r o m Joan Smith, M a r g a r e t Boyle, Dr John P. Powers, C S E A president picnic we will invite guests to wear his old pants out. C o n the A r m y . Abraham Glenn, Lucy Egan, Dor- and Charles R . Culyer, field rep- Doesn't this sound as though we gratulations. 56. Of the following, the state- othy McGuire Szarwas, Agnes resentative. are off to a good start for the Nick Curdio, Building W , is still ment which is most acciuate. on Flannery, Clarethe Jones, M a r y Congratulations to M a r g a r e t year? sweating out the stork. H e says the basis of the above passage, is Charlton, Frances Johnson, A1 Bray, winner of the set of match President Hudson called atten the doctor predicts twins. Nick that — A, Joseph M a n n was in- Pascarella, K a t h e r i n e DeGraaff ed luggage, and Florence M c l n e r tion to reports appearing in the never does anything by halves. ducted into the army in June. Elisha Rogers, W i l l i a m Peterman ney, who also won a prize. A n y daily papers to the effect that the Joe Anderson, T h o m a s Neville 1944; was discharged in Octobcr Agnes McGilllc. H a r r y Glasgow one who wishes to order pictures M o n r o e County Board of Super and H a r r y Murray are going of tiiat year because of a heart Donald Stout, Lois Tynes, A n n e taken at the picnic, please contact visors is reviewing the County around with their chins down to condition, and died the next Armstead, Alberta Delk. Jo.sephine M r . McCallion in Building 2. salary set-up. T h i s is a matter of here. A t this writing, Brooklyn is month. H e withheld information Pender, Beatrice Boldin, M r . and Catherine Webb, chairman of interest to City as well as County of his chronic heart trouble prior Mrs. Patrick J. Farreil. the social committee, has an- employees and we are hopeful of two games behind the Giants, and we are sitting smugly back and to induction. His survivors were Also, Catherine Sullivan. Made- nounced that the annual fall dance the results of this survey. saying we told you so. not entitled to benefits; B, Jane line Byrd, K a t h l e e n Harte, Han- will be held the latter part of Committees f o r the coming year L y n d joined the W A V E S in Jan- nah Tinney, Gaynell Barnwell October in the auditorium of the were announced by President Huduary, 1941, was discharged in M a y Naomi Murrey, Charles T y r e e school. son as follows: 1943. after having contracted Darrell Norwood. Henry Riley Plans f o r the establishment of Membership: Jean Lipsett, City tuberculosis while stationed over L a r r y Gamache, Louis Hartung a Blood Donor system f o r the and Eleanor Jones, County. seas. W h e n she died in 1950. as a Michael Kingston, Nicholas Reilly benefit of all employees are being M A R Y M O N T A N A R O of L O 115. Audit: R a y Blake, City, and M a e who resigned July 30 to be m a r O'Connor, County. Social programs: A l m a Muhs ried, was given a farewell p a r t y by telephone operators of the o f City, and Helen Simon, County. Legislative and salary: Stanley fice. T h e wedding took place A u C. W h i t e , City, and R a y G o o d - gust 8. ridge. County. D a v i d M e t z of L O 115 and his Publicity: Adelaide DeVries. bride sailed f o r PYance on July 31. County, and Virginia D a n n a h e T h e y will study in Paris f o r one year under the G I Bill. City. K i r t l e y Lewis, senior f a r m placeGrievance and w e l f a r e : Remington Ellis, City, and W i l b e r t Snider, m e n t representative, died July 31. H e was in the f a r m program f o r County. How many times have you heard many years. T h e L E A D E R publishes study cal signals on a motor vehicle which a motor vehicle of a private this said: " I never see anything in L O 610 extends best wishes to material for the State motor ve- instead of hand signals. individual may follow a f u e en- T h e L E A D E R about M o n r o e chap Edna Lexutt and Augusta Meyer, hicle license examiner written 46. A dealer may interchange gine, going to a fire, is 500 feet. who underwent surgery recently. t e r ? " H o w about letting the pub te»t, to be held Saturday, Sep- registration plates f r o m one motor 55. W h e n driving at night, the licity committee know what you The producers of "Arabian tember 25. T h e exam closed for vehicle to another, f o r demon- riglit hand side of the road should are doing and planning to do? T e l l N i g h t s " at the Jones Beach M a receipt of applications August 20. stration purposes, without the be used as a guide in passing cars us about activities in your partic rine T h e a t e r have extended use of Examine cach of the following payment of a supplemental fee. going in opposite direction. ular department. G i v e up a resume exchange tickets to the end of the statements. If you think a state47. T h e M o t o r Vehicle L a w ap56. N o headlight on a motor of your vacation or your operation. season. Tickets m a y be obtained m e n t is true as a general rule, plies to all sections of New Y o r k vehicle can lawfully be stronger If it was an interesting one. H o w f r o m L O representatives. even thouKh it n>ay have excep- State except those sections of than 21 candle power. about marriages, births, deaths, tions, mark the statement True. counties and cities which have a 57. Street surface cars have the retirements? " N a m e s make N e w s . " I f you think a statement is false police system of their own. right of way over motor vehicles when applied as a general rule, 48. A motor cycle is a motor between cross streets. M O N T G O i M E R Y chapter. C S E A . mark the stutement False. vehicle under the law. 58. Speeding drivers are the will hold its third annual c l a m 41. County treasurers usually 49. A signal should be given cause of the greatest number of A D E L I C I O U S supper was being bake August 28 at Robertshaw'c act as agents of the Commissioner when a motor vehicle is turned deaths in motor vehicle accidents, served at Albion chapter's picnic, Drum, Route 30. Amsterdamof M o t o r Vehicles in their coun- into traffic f r o m a parked posi59. Operators who drive ex- when a sudden cloudburst sent Perth Road. T h e forecast is that ties. tion. tremely slowly are traffic hazards the picnickers hurrying f r o m the this year's event will be even bet42. Members of the same f a m i l y 50. Tires blow out more fre60. A f t e r September I , 1936 lake to the American Legion din- ter than Its highly successful prem a y lawfully use each others' II quently in winter than in summer, every automobile must have two ing rooms in Albion. W i t h the decessors. T h e chicken will be a censes to operate a motor vehicle fine cooperation of the picnic com- la rotisserle. All chapter member* 51. 'The fee for a new chauffeur's rear reflectors. which they jointly own. KEY ANSWERS mittee, the f o o d was transferred are Invited to attend. license is nine dollars. 43. Registration certificates may 41. false: 42, false; 43, false and served with little loss In time 52. A motorcycle properly reg be interchanged among several istered carries two registration 44, false; 45, true: 46. true; 47 or flavor. motor vehicles of one owner. false; 48. false: 49. true; 50. false O n August 6 the teachers left plates. JOHN POTTEB of Tompkina 44. T l i e transfer of ownership of 51, true or false; 62, false: 53 for a four week vacation. Olive 53. T h e registration f e e for % a motor vehicle also Includes motorcycle weighing 300 pounds true: 54, true; 55, true; 56, false MacLaury, supervisor of educa- County Memorial Hospital and transfer of the registration plates. fully equipped, is five dollars. 57. true; 58, true; 59, true: 60 tion. accompanied by her mother, Harry I/eech of the City W a t e r to motoring througb Uu New Departmeat are oo vacation. 45. I t is l a w f u l to use mechani54. The minimum distaace at false. Creedmoor Shate Hospital Brooklyn State Hospital Monroe Willowbrook State School Employment, NYC and Suburbs Driver License Examiner Study Aid for Sept. 25 Test Albion State School Montgomery Tompkins Looking Inside (Ck>ntinued from Page 2) U. S. Jobs for Those With Disability Preference The U. S. Civil Service Commisbrought by the Association In the Federal courts seeks a refund (A sion. in its latest listing of jobs taxes paid on maintenance for prior years. This suit is yet to be de- for tho.se with disability prefercided finally, as an appeal from a decision adverse to the employees ence, with good opportunity of appointment, includes the clerk H being waged. title. Most of the jobs are in Wa.<;hington, D. C. P E N S I O N T A X E X E M P T I O N , even of a limited nature, la welThose entitled to 10-point dis•ome, ia well deserved, and represents a real saving to the tax- ability preference under Federal payer. It Is one of tiie sound methods of Improving the pensioner's law are: A disabled veteran (or a vettot, thoxigh no substitute for adequate pay during his period of serveran who has been awarded the ice. In fact. Inadequate pay can not be satisfactorily offset by any Purple Heart). makeshift, even reduction in annuity contributions. T h e wife of a disabled veteran The reduction of the contributions of N Y C policemen and fire- if the veteran is disqualified for appointment because of servicemen, to 25 per cent of pay, as against former 35. was in recognition connected di.sability. • t the Insufficiency of pay. but made at the expense of pension The widow (who has not re•oundness. The guiding rule of public pension systems must be limi- married) of a deceased ex-service tation of accrued liabilities, otherwise any pension system ceases to man. The mother (who Is widowed, l>e actuarially sound. divorced, or separated, or whose The higher benefits of public employee pension systems, compared hu.sband is permanently and toto other systems, require such actuarial soundness; employer-paid tally disabled) of a veteran who died or was disabled while on acpensions Integrated with Social Security afford much smaller total tive military duty. pension benefits. If the larger benefits are to continue for newcomers, If you qualify a-s above, you may apply under the Veterans the soundness of the system must continue. While It Is tempting to think of 100 per cent employer-paid pensions. It Is well to weigh the likely result of any such pension D ' A M B R O S I A P P O I N T E D policy by government. "Hie pension benefits would be contractual, T O L E G I O N L A W P O S T Fred L. D'Ambrosl of N Y C has hence evidently safe; but salaries are not contractual, and 1,00 per been appointed a.ssistant counsel cent employer-paid pensions would be a real threat to salaries. Also, to the State Liquor Authority, there Is a limit to the goal of the employee who seeks a retirement Chairman John F. O'Connell anallowance large enough to enable him to live on it after retirement, nounced. Mr. DAmbrosl studied at the without handouts or additional Income through gainful employment. Fordham University School of It Is not only a financial or actuarial limit but also a limit on the Adult Education and later attendsafety of one s own standing in the social system of a complex society. ed the Fordham University School Not every last vestige of risk can be run by government, or any other of Law, from which he was grtiduated with an L.L.B. degree In employer, and there Is a certain aspect of totalitarianism in having 1950. He served as research counfovernment or other employer take over one s private responsibilities sel to Senator MacNeil Mitchell completely. Projects that tend to make people the tools of govern- during the legislative session. Mr. D'Ambrosl Is a Navy vetment, Instead of government the tool of the people, must not be eran. His salary is $6,590. •ncouraged. OPPORTUNITIES FOR FEDERAL JOBS Patterson Air Force Base. Dayton, Ohio. 13-1-2 (62). ENGINEER, $3,410 and $4,205. Jobs are in the Bureau of Reclamation in the West and Midwest. 3-39-1 (51). ENGINEER ( nautical, electrical, electronics, and mechanical)—PHYSICIST, $5,060 to $5,940. Jobs are at the Naval Air Development Center. Johnsville. Pa. 356. E N G I N E E R I N G AND S T A T I S T I C A L D R A F T S M A N , $2,750 to $5,940. Jobs are in the Washington, D. C.. area. 4-69-1 (50). FIELD REPRESENT A T I V E (electrical utility management); R U R A L E L E C T R I F I C A T I O N ENGINEER (distribution and transmission, electric power generation, farm electrification), $5,060 to $5,940. Jobs are with the U. S. Department of Agriculture. 287. GEOLOGIST, $5,060 to $8,360. 323. H I G H W A Y ENGINEER — H I G H W A Y BRIDGE ENGINEER. $4,205 to $5,940. 399. M E T E R O L O G I C A L AID $2,950 to $3,410. Jobs are countrywide and in Alaska, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Hawaiian Islands and other Pacific Islands, and in foreign countries. 298. M E T E O R O L O G I S T , $3,410 and $4,205. 357. M I N I N G ENGINEER, $3,410 to $10,800. 4-34-2 (53). O C E A N O G R A P H ER, $3,410 to $10,800. 331. P A T E N T E X A M I N E R , $3,410 to $5,060. Jobs are in the Washington, D. C., area. 289, 347. P H Y S I C A L SCIENCE A I D — ENGINEERING AID. $2,500 to $4,205. Jobs are in the Washington, D. C., area. 3-35-1 (51). PHYSICIST. CHEIvnCAL ENGINEER. M A T H E M A T I C I A N . CHEMIST. $5,060 to $8,360. Jobs are in the Bureau of Mines in Pittsburgh or Bruceton, Pa. 10-8-4 (52). R.'VDAR INSTRUCTOR, $4,205; R A D A R I N S T R U C T O R (trainee), $3,410. Jobs are at the Keesler Air Force Base, Biioxi, Miss. 297. RESEARCH A N D DEVELOPMENT METEOROLOGIST. $5,060 to $7,040. 394. STUDENT A I D T R A I N E E (chcniistry, physics, engineering, metallurgy, meteorology, mathematics), $2,950 and $3,175. Jobs •rua. are in the Washington, D. C., area. 6-42-7 (50). ENGINEER, $5,060 246. TELEPHONE ENGINEER, and $5,940. Jobs are at Wright $5,060 to $7,040. The foUowing C. S. eagineerinf and scientific exams are now open for receipt of applications. Jobs are in Federal agencies tbrough•ut the country, unless otherwise sUted. Apply to the U. S. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street, New York 14, N. Y., antil further notice, unless otherwise indicated. Mention exam •umber. 1-12-3 (53). A E R O N A U T I C A L E N G I N E E R I N G AND S C I E N T I F I C ENGINEER, $4,205 to $7,040. Jobs are in Massachusetts. 386. A E R O N A U T I C A L ENGINEER. N A V A L A R C H I T E C T , M A RINE ENGINEER, WELDING ENGINEER, $3,410 to $10,800. Jobs are in the Washington, D. C., area. 313, 314. A E R O N A U T I C A L RESEARCH I N T E R N . $3,410; AERON A U T I C A L RESEARCH SCIENT I S T , $4,205 to $10,800. 9-67-1 (63). A I R W A Y S O P E R A T I O N SPECIALIST (communications), $3,410 plus cost-of-livlnB differential. Jobs are with the Civil Aeronautics Administration In Alaska and the Pacific Islands area. 4-34-1 (51). ASTRONOMER, $3,410 to $9,600. Jobs are In the Washington, D. C., area. 236. B A C T E R I O L O G I S T — BIOC H E M I S T — S E R O L O G I S T , $4,205 to $8,360. Positions are with the Veterans Administration. 375. C A R T O G R A P H E R , $3,410 to $10,800; C A R T O G R A P H I C AID and C A R T O G R A P H I C D R A F T S MAN, $2,750 to $4,205; C A R T O G R A P H I C T E C H N I C I A N . $4,620 to $5,940. Jobs are in the Washington, D. C., area. 324. P H Y S I C I S T , BIOLOGIST, BIOCHEIVUST (in the field of radioisotopes), 4.205 to $9,600. Positions are with the Veterans Administration. 325. C H E M I S T — P H Y S I C I S T METALLURGIST — MATHEMAT I C I A N — ELECTRONIC SCIENT I S T , $3,410 to $10,800. Jobs are In the Washington, D. C.. area. 1-12-1 (52). C H E M I S T — P H Y S I C I S T , $5,060 to $10,800; METEO R O L O G I S T , $4,205 to $10,800. Jobs are in Cambridge, Mass. 1-7-1 (53). E L E C T R O N I C S C I E N T I S T — ELECTRONIC ENG I N E E R — P H Y S I C I S T , $5,060 to $9,600. Jobs are in Massachu•etts and Connecticut. 383. E N G I N E E R (variouii brunches), $3,410 to $10,800. Most Jobs are in the Washington, D. C., State Eligibles STATE Open-Competitive (Continued from Page 2) 74. 76. 7«. 77. 78. 70. Q r o h . FrBrterii-k, NYC 80000 JlKkaon, Hueh, N Y C 79500 IjTiniCBton. Joel. NYC 79500 l>eut<'man, Jaoob. Bronx ,,..78000 GoodeH, W i l l i a m . R o c b m t « r ..77600 K l M t l w , John, Bklyn 76000 NITRITIONIST 1. A m e w , E l i i o l x - l h . A l b a n y ....76200 t. Rhea. A n n . A l b a n y 7S000 Bl'PEKVI.SOR OF D K N T A L H K A L T H 1. 2. J. 4. 6. EIH CATION Ginrold. Norman, Bklyn . . . . KTMO O u t m a n , KOBO. Jamai'-a 8!>06n Hamilton, P a l m e r . Bklyn ,...85190 Packtor. Jai-k, W h i l c a t o n e ....82650 Brown. Leplie. Boonville ..,.81500 Oold«tein. G e o r g e . S a r a t o g a ..8J410 STATE Promotion f ASHIKK, Department of Taxation wtd Plnanre, Kochenter Office 1. Coyle, Mildred, Rotbeater ....04600 S m i t h . Sophie, R n e h e e t e r 8J050 » . Youne:, M a r v j a n e . R n e h e s t e r . 0.1400 4. B o y c e , I . u l a l i . Rochester 86.100 6. R a l l o , A n n e . Roohewler 70500 RRAI) r n . E CLKRK, ( F r o m . ) , Depnitntent of Taxatltm and Fiiianee 1. Cantellano. A l f r e d . A l b a n y ....97160 5. GaliAn. Hi^ene, A l b a n y 05260 3. E m m e r l i n f . Franeie. W A l b a n y 84450 4. C o n n e l l y . Helen. Naaaall ... 04096 6. B a n n i e t e r . Nanee. NYO . . . . 9!>800 6 . M e l f h u i , T.aurenee, R o s e d a l e ..01090 7 . Cohen, J a c o b . A l b a n y »0110 RoBBi. An!r»la, Rosedale 87670 « . Bnrni". Willinirt. C r o t o n 86;»20 8 E N I 0 R fX)RPOR \ T I O N T A X K X A M I N K R ( P r o m . ) , Department of Taxation and Finanee 1. W n i a n . Divid. Bronx 00200 2. B e r g m a n . R u b i n . B k l y n 08400 3. Zara, Samuel, Bklyn 07700 4. V o i e l , B e n i h a r i l . B k l y n 05150 5. Cohen. J a c k . Flushnig 04700 6. S e h r e i b e r . H a r r y . B r o n x 04400 7 . P i n e , Ja<'nb, Blilyn 02550 8. B e c k e r t , roM.iiil, A l b a n y 00850 9. Q n z i k , G i l b e r t . W e s t b u r y 00700 10. Z o o t a . Iniilore. A l b a n y 1)0250 11. Joseph. SoloniOM. N Y C SilOOO 12. W o l i n a k y , Gcral.l, J a . k s n H g t 87700 I S . Gale. Josep, Aib.lny 86500 14. Kosberir, E l e k i i l . B r o n x 85550 15. C h e r n i i e r . n. rton, Bklyn 85250 16. N a c k e n s o n . J e r o m e . A l b a n y , . . . 8 4 0 5 0 17. iJBtort. H a r o l d . A l b a n y 84650 18. M i i n a f o , N . A l b a n y 83400 ASSOCIATE KI.F.tTllIO KNGINKr.K, ( P r o m . ) , Deptirlnieiit of P u b l i c Servlee. 1. B o l l b a o h . H e n r y , W o o d h a v e n ..1)6750 2. R e y n a , L e o n , l i H y n 00400 3. K e n n y , Charliw. Si-arsdale ....8:i400 CRAtTS PKOIH ( T I O N SUVKRVl.SOR, (Prom.), Department of Social Welfare ( B i e l i i a i T e of tlie W e l f a r e Inatltutlonii). 1. G r e e n w e l l . May NYC 870.10 Borton. Marjorie. N V C 8,3050 (Prom.), C O U N T Y A N D VILLAGE Open-Competitive MICROFll M OPKUATOK, Frle Ctmnly. 1. •Weyaiul. Chr.Hliun. B c B a l o . . . 80.172 Call, Sam. luitfaio 84112 S . Fielilinir, M a r l . ' . K e n m o r e . . . , K,I772 4. Koel8<>h. A r l l u i r . K i ' n m o r e ,...81544 5 . N o l a n , DIIIOI.H. B u f f a l o ......7IIO;tO 6. Seonia. Kloii'lice. Buffalo ....70114 COUNTY A N D VILLAGE Promotion HKMDK M KNUtiK.II-IIEK, ( I ' r t n n . ) , PurtliasiiiK Department, Rrl« t uuiity. 1. W a r o l l o . Una, lliirtiilo 881)27 2 . l , a u n o , Carincu, B u f f a l o b7U13 Preference Act of 1944 and the civil service regulations, for any position in the Federal service to which probational or indefinite appointment has been made in the past three years from a civil service register or for any position for which there is in existence or about to be established a list of eligibles resulting from open competitive examination. Information about location of positions, requirements, forms to be filed, etc.. Is given In the examination announcement. The announcement number is given beside each position. You may consult the announcement of the position In which you are interested (and obtain necessary forms) at many first- and secondcla.ss post offices: or you may obtain copies from civil service regional offices or the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C. If you are Interested in a position in Wa.shington which is not listed here, you may send application Form 57 to the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C., as there are some positions for which 10-polnt preference applicants have the right to apply, but for which there is at present little or no opportunity for appointment. If the position for which you apply Is among tho.se, your application will be accepted: if not. It will be returned and your name placed on file for notification of the next examination in that field. In applying for any position, be .sure to .show the exact title of the position for which you are applying as well as the salary you will accept. If you are Interested in a position outside of Washington, please note that most such positions are filed through examinations held by civil service regional offices. 378. A C C O U N T A N T ( C O M P R E HENSIVE A U D I T S ) , $3,410. 185. C L E R K . $2,750 and $2,950. 387. GEOLOGIST. $3,410 and $4,205. 177. G E O P H Y S I C I S T , $4,205 to $7,040. 40. GUARD. $2,750 and $2,974. 388. H I G H W A Y ENGINEER ( T R A I N E E ) , $3,175 and $3,410. 186. I N F O R M A T I O N AND EDITORIAL C L E R K , $3,410 and $3,795. 189. I N F O R M A T I O N S P E C I A I ^ 1ST. $4,205. Announcement 188; $5,060 to $7,040. 382 J U N I O R A G R I C U L T U R A L ASSISTANT (VARIOUS OPT I O N S ) , $3,410. 381. JUNIOR MANAGEMENT A S S I S T A N T . $3,410 and $4,205. 215. LABORATORY ELECT R O N I C MECHANIC, $2,750 to $5,940. 165. LANDSCAPE A R C H I T E C T . $4,205 to $8,360. 129. L I T H O G R A P H I C T R A N S F E R R E R ( H A N D ) . $1.48 and $2.11 an hour. 308, MEDICAL TECHNICAL. A S S I S T A N T , $3,410. 58. MESSENGER, $2,410. 104. N A U T I C A L SCIENTIST, $4,205 to $7,040. 359. P A R K RANGER, $3,410. 129. P L A T E G R A I N E R , $1.13 and $1.41 an hour. 186 P R O O F R E A D I N G C L E R K , $3,410. 365. P S Y C H O L O G I S T , $4,205 and $5,060. 328. R A D I O ENGINEER, $3,410 and $4,205. 99. SOCIAL W O R K E R , $3,410 and $5,060. 152. S T A T I S T I C A L ASSISTANT. $4,205 to $5,060; S T A T I S T I C A L OFFICER, $5,500 to $8,360. 358. STOREKEEPER, $2,500 to $2,950. 225. SUPPLY SPECIALIST, $3,410 to $7,040. TOBACCO INSPECTOR, $2,950. Announcement 219: $3,410 to $5,060, Announcement 400 ( B ) ; $5,940, Announcement 168. 210. T R A F F I C AND T R A N S P O R T A T I O N SPECIALIST, $3.410 to $7,040. 194. T R A N S L A T O R , $3,175 to $9,600. 376. T R A N S P O R T A T I O N T A R IFF EXAMINER (FREIGHT), $4,205. 384. V E T E R I N A R I A N ( T R A I N E E ) , $3,410. ASBURY PARK 214 4th Ave., Asbury Park Block to Ocean PRospect 5-9635 Comfortable rooms. Home atmo.sphere. Free parking. Cojnplimentary breakfast free. Weekly rate ^ 5 double room. SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR STUDY B O O K »3.00 LEADER BOOKSTORE 97 Duane St.. NYC Who wants to get into civil service? Have you a relative or a friend who would like to work for the State, the Federal government, or some local unit of government? Why not enter a subscription to the Civil Service Leader for him? He will find full Job listings, and learn a lot about civil service. The price is $3 — That brings him 52 Issues of the Civil Bervice Leader, filled with the government job news he wants. You can subscribe on the coupon below: "1 CrVIL SERVICE LEADER 97 Duane Street New York 7. New York j j I enclose $3 (check or money order) for a i year's subscription to the Civil Service ! Leader. Please enter the name listed below: NAME A D D R E S S i :;iTY Z O N E The Association's Accident and Sickness Plan a Better Success Than Ever. The Travelers Extends Addi tional Benefits Riders Another Year. The Civil Service Employees Association. Inc. and Ter Bush & Powell Inc., are pleased to announce that important additional benefits, at no extra cost, continue to be available for another year to Policyholders under the Association's Accident and Sickness Plan. The official announcement from The Travelers Insurance Company is as follovfs: T o Policyholders insured under The Civil Service Employees Association Accident and Sickness Policies issued by The Travelers Insurance Company. Continuance of Additional Benefits Rider W e are pleased to announce that the Additional Benefits Rider N Y R , form A-1504 or A-1505 (see note), attached to your policy is hereby continued in effect during the continuance of insurance under the policy until July 1, 1955 but not thereafter unless continued beyond that date by means of further official announcement by the Company. This official announcement by the Company is the means by which the Additional Benefits Rider is so continued in accordance with its terms. Halsted E. Redfield Secretary, Accident Department NOTE: Additional Benefits Rider N Y R , form A-1504, is attached to policy N Y , form A-1502, issued only to Policyholder who were continuously insured under the Association's Plan of Accident and Sickness insurace from a date prior to July 1, 1953, Additional Benefits Rider N Y R , form A-1505, is attached to policy N Y , form A-1503, issued to other Policyholders insured under the Association's Plan.' When The Travelers became the Insurer on the Association's Accident and Sickness Plan, July 1, 1953, it provided several substantial additional benefits, at no extra cost, on a temporary basis pending accumulation of experience needed to find out the effect of the additional benefits on the Plan, Statistics are being compiled as rapidly as possible and every effort is directed to providing the broadest benefits that can be afforded on a sound basis. Many thousands of dollars are being paid each month by The Travelers and hundreds of Policyholders have written Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., The Travelers and the Association, expressing their thanks for the kind consideration given their claims and for the very prompt payment of benefits. The Plan is administered by Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., under the direction of "Chuck" Carlisle with the able assistance of Larry Hollister. The Plan is underwritten by The Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Connecticut, under personal supervision of an Accident Department Secretary and several underwriters. Claims are supervised by the Company's Home Office Life, Accident and Group Claim Department, assisted by 13 claim managers in the Field. Unusual questions on claims are channeled through The Travelers claim manager at Schenectady who conducts preliminary discussions with "Chuck" Carlisle before the Company renders an official decision. The handling of this Plan is very smooth. Broad underwriting experience and sound practices of The Thavelers have made it possible for many persons to receive protection under this splendid insurance. Claims are paid promptly and correctly. Everyone seems very happy over the new set-up and the extremely broad benefits provided. If you are not now insured drop a line to Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., and get the new facts as you are missing valuable protection not generally available at such low cost. Write to C. A . Carlisle, Jr., Ter B u ^ & Powell, Inc., 148 Clinton Street, Schenectady, New York. RUSH THIS COUPON TODAY GET THE FACTS NOW TER BUSH & POWELL. 148 CLINTON ST. SCHENECTADY, N, Y. INC ^^^^^ TER BUSH & POWELL 148 Clinton Street Schenectady, N. Y. Attention: Lorry Hollister Please Send Me Full Facts Regardinc This Very Broad I.ow Cost Accidcnt and Sickness Insurance at No Oblieation. NAME ... AOUKESS