—Ci/oilZ. $^AA>ieju Mary Krone May Head State Civil Service Commission

advertisement
, MI
—Ci/oilZ. $^AA>ieju
jKon
>,KVaT''
<- *U
1
'Every Member Gets a Member'
Americana Largest
Vol. XX, No. 12
Weekly
for
Public
Tucuday, Novemlier 25, 1958
Employee*
Price 10 O n U
Mary Krone May Head State Falk Refuses To Sanction
Civil Service Commission
Freezing of Politically
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 — M a r y
Goode Krone, Republican
minority member of the State Civil
Service Commission, ranks as the
leading choice for designation as
Commission President after Jan. 1,
It was learned by T h e Leader.
Miss Krone, who has been a
member of the commission since
the Dewey administration
and
once served as chairman of the
State Personnel Council, is expected to succeed Democrat A l e x ander A. Faik as president of the
commission.
Backing for the appointment
by
Governor-elect
Nelson
A.
Rockefeller has been Indicated
f r o m Westchester
County, her
home county, and from influential
Republicans who worked with her
during the Dewey days in A l bany.
Falk Can Stay
bers are appointed to six-year
terms at a salary of $15,200 a
year. T h e President receive $20,000 a year plus expenses.
T h e r e is ample precedent for the
President of the Commission to
serve with two members of the
opposite party on the Commission.
W h e n t first-named President, M r .
Falk was the only Democrat on
the Commi.ssiou. T h e other m e m bers were Miss K r o n e and Oscar
M. Taylor, a Republican appointee
of former Governor Dewey.
Miss Krone's term on the commission ends Feb. 1, when she
will be up for reappointment.
Appointed Aides in Jobs
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 — Attempts
to freeze some 50 Harriman A d ministration pationage job-holders in the protection of civil service status have come up against
stern opposition f r o m Alexander
A. Falk, president of the S U t e Civil Service Commission.
M r . Falk revealed that he opposed freezing party appointees
into a cla.ssiflcation that would
permit them to retain their jobs
He
said
that
he had
not
changed his mind and had so advised
Democratic
department
heads seeking his support in retaining their positions. Most of the
department heads then dropped
the idpa, he said.
Hoch, Hillboe Expected
To Retain State Posts
Several Appointees Stay
M r . Falk, who was named president by Governor Harriman, will
resign as chief administative o f fices of the department Jan. 1, but
m a y continue to serve as a member of the commission until his
term expires Feb. 1, 1961.
(Hi>ecii>l lo T h e I.MUlrr)
T h e other Democratic appointee
on the commission, William H.
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 — A number
Morgan of Cortland, is serving a of top state o f f i c i a l are expected
term through Feb. 1, 1963. M e m - to retain their cabinet-level posts
in the incoming Rockefeller administration although they served
the outgoing Harriman regime.
Capitol observers expect G o v enor-elect Nelson A. Rockefeller
to seek no change in the health
and welfare agencies.
Dr. Herman E. Hilleboe, who
Rochester State Hospital Chapserved as health
commissioner
ter of the Civil Service Employees
under Governor Dewey and conAssn. held its membership dinner
tinued under Governo Hariman,
recently at Donald's Restaurant,
can be expected to keep his post.
Rochester. T w e n t y - e i g h t commitIt is considered i^obable that
tee members attended. Chapter
membership is now 802 and the M r . Rockefeller also will ask Dr.
goal for the coming year :s 1,000. Paul H, Hoch to stay on as mental
Jack Kurtzman, held representa- health commissioner, although Dr.
tive, was principal speaker £.nd Hoch was brought into his post
by Governor Harriman and reurged everyone on the committee
to do his part in helping to reach placed an appointee o^ former
the chapter goal of 1,000, and the Govenor Dewey. Dr. Hoch has enState Association goia of 100,000. joyed friendly relationships with
the Republican-controlled LegisPatrick J. McCormack, senior
lature and has given the departbusiness officer, spoke on memberment new emphasis on research.
ship and the salary picture for
Brig. Gen Ronald C. Brock,
the coming year, George Wachob,
chief of staff to Governor HarriInsurance representative for T e r
man and head of the State DiviBush & Powell, spoke on the adsion of Military and Naval A f vantages of sickness and accident
fairs, will continue until July at
Insurance for State employees.
least when he reaches retirement
M r . Wachob will be canvassing
age, under federal statute.
hospital personnel for the next
several weeks.
Education, Social W e l f a r e
Rochester State
Membership Goal
Set At 1,000
James Surridge, retiring maintenance supervisor, was feted as
the guest of the evening and was
presented with a check f r o m the
Chapter. Jim is a past Chapter o f ficer and had been active on many
Committees.
Iris Jackson, recording secretary, was dinner chairman and
Bill Posslter, Chapter President,
was toastmaster.
Unable to be present
were
C. F. Terrence, M. D., Director.
Ruth L. Lewis, chief supervising
nurse. Veto Fero, President of the
Wersterrt Conference, CSEA, and
Lao L » i u p h r o n ,
membwsliip
ohairman. letters of regret were
after the administration comes to
an end on IDec. 31.
Four years ago, when the departing administration of
Gov.
Thomas E. Dewey granted this
protection to ~>ome of its m e m bers, M r . Falk, then the only
Democrat on the three member
commission,
called
the
move
"regrettable and unfortunate" and
against the best interests of the
civil service.
N o changes will be forthcoming
in Education and Social W e l f a r e
since these departments heads are
chosen by boards rather than by
the Governor. James E. Allen Jr.
is education commissioner and
Ranymond W . Houston is social
welfare commissioner.
/
and will leave office with Gover- Pre.sident of the Commission.
T h e "boss" is the President, who
nor Harriman os he serves at the
pleasure of the Governor. T h e handles personnel matters. T h e
othe two commissioners remain biggest patronage haul after Jan.
1 for Republicans will be some
until their terms expire.
58 tax attorney jobs, one for each
New Tax Set Up
of the counties except the five
Commissioner Ira J. Palestin, counties of New Y o r k City.
Although he has reached retireNew Y o r k City, serves until Dec.
31. 1P60 and Commissioner Fred- ment age, Benamin F. Feinberg is
erick R. Clark, Rochester, serves expected to continue as chairman
until Dec. 31, 1962. T h e next T a x of the powerful flve-member State
Commission will have a unique Public Service Commission until
political makeup. M r . Palestin is Feb. 1. A Republican, Mr. Feina Liberal P a r t y member. Mr. berg continued as chairman durClark is a Democrat and Gover- ing the Harriman administration
nor-elect Rockefeller can be ex- under authoity of his term appected to name a Republican as pointment as chairman.
Veterans Rights To Jobs
May Block Patronage In
Some State Departments
(.Hiiecial to T h e
Leader)
ernor's secretary; Richard Amper,
press secretary, and Francis J.
Jameison, special assistant.
Mrs. Edgar Martin, of the Assembly research staff, joined Mr.
Hurd at formal state budget hearings, which opened last week, as
W i t h the return of Governor- a special Rockefeller observer.
Estimates on the number of
elect Nelson A. Rockefeller f r o m
his Venezuelan vacation retreat appointive or exempt jobs, which
the process of building a new or- may change hands, a f t e r Jan. 1,
ganization to take over the policy- range f r o m 500 to 1,000. T o t a l
level positions in Stale govern- salaries for these jobs are estimated at between $3 and $5 milment has begun in earnest.
First appointee of the pew re- lion. T h e bulk of atate positions,
gime was P . Norman Hurd, a however, fall into the competitive
member of the State Board of civil service category and are not
Regents and Cornell University subject to change.
A L B A N Y , Nov. 17 — T h e selection of top officials and the dispensing of patronage jobs by the
newly-elected Rockefeller Administratioii Is taking on top priorty here.
One state agency, which will
have nominal Democratic
control a f t e r Jan. 1, will fall into professor of agricultural econoG O P patronage hands. T h i s is mics. M r . Hurd served as budget
the State Department of T a x - director in the Dewey administation and Finance.
ration and will assume his old
The department is headed by a post January 1.
three-member commission. PresiOthers named to tha budding
dent Geoige M . Bragalinl is the Rockefeller team are Dr. William
AdmloUtratlve head of the agency Ronan. who will serve as the gov-
The
incoming
Administration
may find itself faced with numerous legal roadblocks when it attempts to take some of the patronage jobs now held by Democrats:
Ironically, Republicans in the
(Continued on Page 16)
Any proposal to reclassify j o b j
now exempt f r o m civil service requirements so that their holders
could retain them after Dec. 31
would need t h e ' support of two
commission members.
Mr. Falk has made it clear that
he would vote asainst any such
proposal. T h e
sole
Republican
member, M a r y Goode Krone, is in
line for the chairmanship under
the incoming Rockefeller A d m i n istration. She is not expected to
support the cause of Democratic
job holders now. T h e third commi.ssioner is W i l l i a m H. Morgan,
a Democrat.
Governor Harriman has gone to
some pains to try to dissociate
himself f r o m any attempts to
force the new Administration to
keep his appointees on. He said
he had not requested Mr. Falk
to approve such moves, ^nd M r ,
Falk echoed this disclaimer.
It was reported, however, that
calls have been made to the Civil
Service Commission by members
of the Governor's staff on behalf
of job holders in various departments. urging that they be granted Civil Service protection in their
present patronage positions.
Praises Harriman
T h e commission chairman said
he had discussed the possibility
of such action " w t h some department heads" and that " i t is greatly to the credit of the Governor
and his Administration that there
have been so few requests of this
kind."
T h r e e days before he left office
in 1954, Mr. Dewey approved a
freeze for twenty-eight appointees of his Administration.
In expressing his continued o p position to the policy, Mr. Falk
did not officially shut the door otx
further attempts to protect D e mocratic appointees, but he l e f t
it scarcely ajar.
" I have received formal applications f r o m department heads
involving less than a dozen position,s he said. " I n response to
these applications I have naturally stated my attitude.
"But
any commissioner
who
wishes to pursue his request for
competitive-class status for any
employee may be sure that it will
be put on the commission calendar and that the matter will be
put to a vote In the usual m a n ner."
T h e Harriman statement. Issued
after news of Mr. Falk's position
had become known, pictured the
Governor as instructing depart(Continued on Page 161
Pass your copy of The Leader
On to « Non-Member
CIVIL
Page Tw«
Senior Stores Clerk
Exam Now Open
New Y o r k State Is, accepting applications in an open-competitive
examination
for
senior
stores
clerk, $3,480 to $4,360 a year. A p plications will be accepted until
Friday, December 19. T h e written
test will be held January 17.
This position exists in the Long
Island State Park Commission,
Department of Con.servation; in
the institutions of the Correction,
Mental Hygiene, and Social W e l fare Departments; in the Department of health and its hospitals;
in the State University units; and
at Mt. McGregor in the Division
of Veterans' Affairs. A t present,
two vacancies exist, in the State
University College, Long Island,
and in the State Univei-sity A g r i cultural and Technical Institute,
Fai-mingdale. In addition, vacancies are expected at the units of
the State University in Endicott,
Syracuse, Ithaca, Brockport, B u f falo, Cortland, Predonia, Geneseo,
New
Paltz,
Oneonta,
Oswego,
Plattsburg and Potsdam.
State to Open
24 More Tests
C I V I L KKHVICK L E A U E K
America'! I.«a>linc Newhiuacailn*
tor Pubtlo Euiplnyct^
I.BAIII'^R ••UHMCA'I'HINH, INC.
•7 Dliniir 8t., Nrw Vurk 7, N, X.
Telepliuiie: Bl':ckiiian 3-tiOlO
Entered a« aecond-clata mntler October
S, 1U39. al the poM o f f i c e at Nrw
York. N y. uiiaer the A . t of Mar^h
3. ]87n niemoer ol Auuit Bureau of
Clmilatlona.
8ubieri|illan Price l-I.OO I'ri VcM
liiilivldual copllil. Ittc
RCAn Tlie I.eailer e v e r ; wc«k
fur Job Oiipurtuultlra
LEADKM
T u c d d a j , Nerem1i«r 2 5 , 1 9 S S
Charity Drives Amonq
US Employees Studied
WASHINGTON,
new
White
House
Nov. 24 —
A
committee
Is
conducting controlled tests in 280
Federal installations in 100 cities
to discover how charity drives directed at U.S. employees are a f fected if restricted to a confidential, envelopetype
of
solicitation.
Four types of solicitation are being
u.sed, but only one
type
in
any given Installation.
T h e President's Committee on
Fund Raising Within the Federal
SeiTlce plans to supplement this
test with questionnaires. Its f i n d ings will be m^de public early
next year. T h e United Community
Funds and Councils of America
has claimed that envelope-type
T h e application fee, $3, must solicitation reduces receipts and
accompany fllled-in applications, increases administrative overhead.
A promotion examination for
this title in the State University
will be held at the same time. T h e tools, clothing, and other m e r promotion list will be exhausted chandise.
soon after it is established.
Duties Described
Candidates in the open-competitive test must have had two
Appointees perform difficult and
years' satisfactory full-time e x - responsible
work
in
handling,
perience in the work of a ware- storing, and issuing of supplies;
house
ore storeroom
handling supervise subordinate storehousue
food supplies oi- other varied mer- employees; and do related work
chandise, such as household sup- as required. Examples (illustratplies,
chemicals.
maintenance ive o n l y ) : supervising and worksupplies, mechanical supplies and ing with storehouse employees in
tools, and hospital equipment and unloading, unpacking, checking,
medical supplies of all types. Can- inspecting,
storing,
weighing,
didates must be physically able to measuring counting, and issuing
perform the duties of the posi- food, household supplies, and/or
tion at the time of appointment. other materials; working with the
A physicila-medical examination Accounting Office in taking physmay be required.
ical inventories; recording sup-
T h e State Issued an advance list
of 24 open-competitive examinations it will open Monday, December 8. T h e list is subject to
change.
Six of the titles, designated by
an a.sterisk ( * ) , are open to any
qualified citizen of the United
States. For the other jobs, one
year's State residence Is required.
For the production engineer job
residence in the Eighth Judicial
District is also required. T h e district is made up of Allegany, CatT h e written test will have a
taraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, G e n esee, Niagara, Orleans and W y o - weight of 100 and will include
ming Counties.
questions on supervision and inCandidates may apply from D e - terpersonal relations; and storecember 8 to January 30. DO not room procedures, practices, and
attempt to apply before December equipment, as they relate to food.
8. T h e written tests will be held
on Saturday, Febinary 28. T h e
tests:
•Social work scholarships and
Internships, .salaries vary.
•Superintendent of t r a i n i n g
school, $11,920 to $14,050.
•Director of cottage program,
$5,840 to $7,130.
Assistant architectural estimator, $6,140 to $7,490.
Junior architectural estimator,
$5,020 to $6,150.
Principal craftsman (Mechanical), $5,020 to $6,150.
Division equipment maintenance
supervisor, $5,840 to $7,130.
A.s.sistant
hydraulic
engineer,
$6,140 to $7,490.
Assistant mechanical estimator,
$6,140 to $7,490,
Senior park engineer, $7,500 to
$9,090.
Local as.sessment examiner, $5,280 to $6,460.
Senior local assessment examiner. $5,280 to $6,460.
Senior local assessment examiner, $6,450 to $7,860.
Assistant lands and claims adjuster $6,140 to $7,490,
Game protector, $3,480 to $4,360.
Property sales examiner, $3,870
to $4,810.
Production e n g i n e e r ,
Eiie
County, $7,000 to $9,000.
•Professional career tests, $4,400 and $4,770.
•Public administiation intern,
appointments at up to $4,770.
Safety
field
representative
( f i r e ) , $5,280 to $6,460,
Safety
field
representative,
$5,280 to $6,460.
Safety
field
representative
(police), o5,280 to $6,460.
Cliief, Bureau of Fire Safety,
$9,220 to $11,050.
Chief, Bureau of General S a f e ty, $9,220 to $11,050.
Safety
consultant, $6,140
to
$7,490.
SCilTICB
plies received and preparing m e r chandise
requisitions;
training
new storehouse employees.
Apply to the State Department
of Civil Service, Room 2301, 170
Broadway, New Y o r k 7, N . Y .
Give Your Family the GHf
They'll Remember
a Ufeflme
...
13 DAYS
of Sun and Fun in the
WEST INDIES
sail March 6 from New Yoric City
abroad the glamorous Arosa Star
from $195.00 per person
To encourage you to buy NOW!
LOWER
PRICES
"'^irloonv
You'll visit tbeso Caribbean ports:
* Port Au Prince
* San Juan
• St. Thomas
* Bermuda
C H R I S T M A S IN M A R C H . . . and all the exciting days
of planning in between—that's what you'll be giving
your family with this fun filled 13-day cruise specifically
designed for civil service employees, their families and
friends. Can't you imagine the happy surprise on Christmas morning! You'll all love the excitement of sailing
aboard the Arosa Star. You'll love the novelty of a
stateroom as your hotel throughout the entire cruise,
the delicious meals, swKnming in the ship's pool, and
choosing social activities supervised by a full recreation staff—including dancing to two orchestras.
You'll never forget the charm of the Caribbean cities,
the pleasure of basking in the sun on tropical beaches,
the thrills of shopping for imports from all over the
world. It' a Christmas present and vacation cruise your
family will remember the rest of their lives. Send in
the coupon today for your free brochure giving full
details.
C Damask R o s a *
D. Lasting Spring*
A. Young L o v « »
Flow«r Lana*
E. SHvar Rosa*
r . Stanton Hall*
T h e makers of very fine HEIBLOOM STERUNG have
reduced place setting prices without any change in
quality!
You can buy this famous solid silver now at prices far
below your expectations. Cume in and let us help you
S A V E on the pattern of your dreams.
SlintuQ Hall piicct iliylitly hi«li«i
'Tiade miiki ol Oncidt Ltd,
tP'"' >0% Fcdeiil Tt>
INTERSTATE WATCH CO.
71 NASSAU
New York 38. N. Y.
STREET
Specialized Tours, inc.
286 Fiftii Ave.
New York. N. Y. — Longacre 4-3939
Sir:
I am interested in your excitintr, low-cost cruise
to the We.st Indies. Please send, without obligation,
a descriptive brochure and application f o r m .
Name
t •m
Address
BE 3-1450
1 City
..State
CSL
TuMiIay, ISovftmber
1958
C I V I L
•y A. J. C O C C A R O
After Th« Count
The election Is over and the count has been taken. Two weeks
later one state senator and three state assemblymen visited one of
our large mental hospitals in Kings Park, Long Island.
The "team" of legislators, Senator Ellsha (June) Barrett, Asgemblyman James Grover and Prescott Huntington, are all residents
of Suffolk County. The visit If made several weeks earlier would
have been interpreted as a poltical pitch on the part of tHe legislators.
However, coming after the election and some six weeks before the
1959 leRislative session opens In Albany, it could only mean that
the group Is interested In the mental hospital problems.
S E R V
I C E
Pige Threi
' L E A D E »
WesternConferenceAgain
Sponsors Tour of Europe;
Will Depart From Buffalo
Once again, the Western Con- dral and continue by motor the beautiful little city with Lake
ference of the Civil Service Em- coach to Paris. Dinner at the ho- Leman at its feet, the perpetual
snows of Mont Blanc over its head
ployees Association is sponsoring tel.
and the Rhone River flowing
France
a low-cost tour of Europe, which
through it: the Palais des Nations,
will leave directly from Buffalo
Paris (Sixth Day). Morning the ILO, the Gothic Cathedral of
and return there by plane.
sightseeing by motor coach; the
Celeste Rosengranz and Melba Opera, the Madeleine, Place de St. Pierre, where Jean Calvin lecBinn, co-chairmen of the tour an- la Concorde, Chambres des De- tured and John Knox preached,
Four Men Meet
nounce that the group will leave puties, Champs Elysees, Arc de the impressive sculptured group
comprising the International MoThe three legislators met for a good part of the day with Charles August 31 and return September Trlomphe, Palais de Chaillot, Eif- nument of the Reformation, and
22.
The
low
price
of
$675
—
or
fel Tower, Napoleon's Tomb; the delightful streets and squares of
Buckinan, M.O., Director of Kings Park State Hospital. The meeting
Included a tour of hospital facilities, exchange of Ideas, and discus- nearly the cost of normal air Latin Quarter, the Pantheon, the ancient houses, fountains and
transportation abroad alone — Sorbonne; Sainte Chappclle, Consion of patients welfare and employee working conditions.
flowei-s. In the evening, a short
A highlight of the meeting Included a discussion on employee will include round trip air trans- ciergerle, Notre Dame Cathedral, .journey along the shores of the
portation.
all
hotels,
most
meals,
the Tuilerles Gardens, the Palais I-ake to the resort ftjwn of Montmorale and factors which govern and Influence this important aspect
sightseeing, guides, porters, tips, Royale; Montmartre, Sacre Coeur
of work and production.
reux for dinner and a restful
land transportation etc.
and the Place du Tertre. Lunch at night at a good Swiss hotel.
You can be sure that these Suffolk politicians, aheady well
The
co-chairmen
announced a typical Parisian restaurant. A f schooled to the problems of the hospital workers, left the institution
Montreux (Tenth Day). The
that
due
to
insufficient
time,
many ternoon free. In the evening dinwith additional infoiination about our needs and with a revived Inmorning
free for individual purpersons were unable to book res- ner at tlie Restaurant Aux Quatre
terest in promoting legislation on oui- behalf.
Marches, followed by a perform- suits. Lunch at the hotel. In the
ervations
on
the
tour
of
last
sumArrangements for the meeting were made by Edgar Douglas,
ance of the Folies-Bergere and afternoon an excursion to Chillon.
Chairnwn of the Employee Management Committee of the Kings mer and incomplete registration
a look at the night life of Mont- one of the best preserved mediecaused
the
tour
to
be
cancelled.
Park Chapter of the Civil Service Employees Association.
val castles in Europe. Dinner at a
Current timing, however, will now martre.
typical Swiss restaurant.
allow sufTicient time for bookings
Paris (Seventh Day). An all-day
(Eleventh Day). A day's excurto insure the success of the torn- motor excursion to Versailles via
•sion by motor coach up into the
late next summer.
the Champs Elysees, the Arc de Alpine valleys of the Bernese
The tour is hmited strictly to Triomphe, and the Bois de BoulOberland. The scene widens as
Association members of the West- ogne. A visit to Supreme Headwe climb from Montreux till it
ern Conference and members of quarters of the Allied Powers in
takes in all of Lake Leman and
their
immediate
families.
No Europe (SHAPE), a briefing by
the surrounding mountains. Then
others need apply. Only 87 per- senior officers, followed by lunch we leave the panorama behind
sons can be accomodated.
in the Offlcei-s' Mess. Then a tour and traverse an intimate landMembers in the Buffalo area of the palace and gardens of .scape of picturesque villages, slopare reque.sted to write for inform- Versailles ,built by Louis X I V and ing pastures and grazing herds.
ation. applications and brochures the most sumptuous of all royal Chateaud'Oex. Saanen, Ostaad,
As part of a program to stream- of the property results in undue to Miss Rosenkranz at 55 Sweeney houses. Back to Paris for dinner and Sweisimmen are the delightline the work of the Real Prop- hardship to the former land own- St., Buffalo. Those in the Rochest- at the hotel.
ful mountain towns we pass
Paris (Eighth Day) Morning: through until we come to Cpiez
erly Bureau of the New York ers because of a delay in payment er area are requested to write to
State Department of Law, Attorn- by the state," the Attorney Gen- MIS. Binn at 115 Manor Parkway, the magnificent Louvre art galler- on the Lake of Thun and an exRochester 20. N.Y.
ies. Limch on your own .Afternoon cellent lunch. Then on around the
ey General Louis J. Lefkowitz an- eral said.
free to shop and window-shop I.ake to the town of Thun with a
"
I
t
is
my
Intention
to
do
everynounced the appointment of seven
Tour Description
along the Rue de Rivoll, the Ave- fine view of the Jungfrau, and on
thing possible to bring about the
Here is what will be seen and
civil service associate attorneys In
nue de I'Opera, the Rue de la to Berne, the beautiful old capital
prompt payment of these claims," done on the tour:
the Department of Law to serve
Paix, and the rue St. Honore. of Switzerland, where we shall
he said.
London
(Second
Day)
Land
at
fts section chiefs of the Bureau.
Dinner at a good typical Quartier spend the rest of the afternoon.
London Airport. To the hotel for
They are:
restaurant.
By rail, the short way, back to
luncheon,
followed
by
a
briefing
Alfo.-.so Bivona, Jr., Altamont,
Montreux for dinner at t he hotel.
session conducted by those in
Switzerland
and Percy Lieberman, Vito Tltone,
charge of the European arrangeMontreux, (Twelfth Day) The
Nocholas J. Barry, Arthur Mebel,
(Ninth Day) The nine o'clock morning free to shop and laze.
ments .The rest of the day free
Louis W. Rosen, and Samuel Ruge
The Association of State Civil to get your own first impressions express from the Gare de Lyon, a Shortly after one o'clock we board
ftll of Albany.
morning crossing France via Di- the epress for Milan. Lunch In the
Service
Attorneys held a dinner of England and the English.
Mr. Lefkowitz' said that these
jon, Macon and Bourg, through dining car. The afternoon watchLondon
(Third
Day).
Morning
meeting
at
Miller's
Restaurant,
attorneys who are now assigned to
the great wine-growing province ing the passing Alpine scene as
motor
coach
tour
of
the
West
the Real Property Bureau will New York City. About 60 persons
End:
Piccadilly;
Trafalgar of Burgundy, to the Swiss border. the train chmbs up to the specattended.
gupervise sections in the Bureau
Luncheon in the dining car, ar- tacular tunnel through the SimMrs. Bannlgan
presented a Square; Thames Embankment;
as a part of a planned reorganizriving at Geneva In the early af- plon Pass .and the gentler ItaliNelson's
Column;
Westminster
ation which has been Instituted by scroll to Joseph Osier, the outternoon. Time for a drive aroi^nd
(Continued on Page 14)
Abbey;
Parliament;
Buckingham
him to streamline the procedure , going president. Jacob B. Ward
Palace
and
changing
of
the
of passing on claims in order to
welcomed as the incoming
guard; Regents Park; Hyde Park;
expedite
payment
to
persons president. On the dais were Miss
Pall Mall; etc. On your own for
•whose lands are appropriated for Ellis Prenke and Mr. David R.
lunch. Afternoon motor coach
Cohen
of
the
executive
commitpublic improvemsnt. The appointtour of the oldest section known
ments do not provide for extra tee: Mr. Robert A. Keyes, first as "the City": Tower of London,
vice president; Mr. Samuel Bachcompensation for the attorneys.
with the Crown Jewels; St. Pauls
The Attorney General said i h a t lar, treasurer; and Mr. Osier and Cathedral; Guild Hall; Mansion
the appointments of the section Mr. Ward.
House; Bank of England; London
As membership is being subchiefs will provide a closer superDocks; Cheshire Cheese; Brilish
vision of the work of lawyers in stantially increased the associa- Museum; Covent Garden, etc.
tion
had
opened
an
office
at
270
the Real Property Bureau, under
Dinner at a West End restaurant.
the direction of Assistant Attor- Broadway, Room 2704.
Evening at the theatre, seeing a
Herztein and Galpin Speak
ney General Edward R. Amend,
London "hit".
Henry Galpin, salary research
and are also in furtherance of
London (Fourth Day). Morning
Studies made by Attorney General analyst for the Civil Service Emfree for attendance at a service
ployees
Association,
spoke
of
Lefkowitz aimed at expediting
in one of London's famous places
classification problems
pertainpayment of claims.
of worship: Westminster Abbey,
Late last year Mr. Lefkowitz ing particularly to attorney, and SI.
Margaret's or St.
Paul's
called a conference of representa- offered'the assistance of the CSEA (Church of England), Westmintives of the Departmnt of Public in any of their classification and ster Cathedral (Roman Catholic),
Works to consider how the pay- compensation problems.
Great (Orthodox) Synagogue, etc.
Harold L. Herzstein, regional On your own for lunch. In the afment of claims to persons whose
properties are taken by the state attorney for the CSEA, spoke of ternoon by motor coach to Eton,
Xor public improvements may be the necessity for Improving the founded in 1440, Windsor Castle
stature of attorney In the civil built by William the Conqueror
expedited.
"Everything possible should be service. He suggested that the more than a hundred years eardone to prevent undue delays in pending salary problems be dis- lier ,and Hampton Court Palace
General which dates from Henry VIII.
the payment of claims for prop- cussed with Attorney
erty taken by the state," Mr. Lef- Louis J. Lefkowitz, since he Is
London (Fifth Day) Morning
head of- the Law Department and
kowitz said.
free to shop and see things on At the annual dinner of the Broome County chapter, CSEA,
"Because of the great state-wide is interested in the welfare of your own. In the afternoon by new officers for the cominci year were installed. They are
development of
highways and lawyers and of the entire State motor coach to Lympne on the Harry Eaton, president; Willard Lamphere, 1st vice presi<
otlier public works In the State of civil service. The suggestion was English Channel, with a stop en- dent: Edward W. Haskell, 2nd vice president; Mildred PierNew York, there has been a large apptx>ved by acclamation and a route at Canterbury to see the pont, secretary: and Freda Graf, treasurer. Seated in the
Increase In the number of claims, committee was appointed by Pres- Cathedral. Cross the Channel by front row, center, Is leniamin Roberts, C S E A field repre>
l a some oases, the appropriation ident Ward.
air to Beauvais. Visit the Cathe-
Lefkowitz Reorganizing Real
Property Bureau As Part Of
His Streamlining Operation
Discuss Attorney
Jobs at Dinner
BROOME COUNTY INSTALLS
tentative.
CIVIL
Page Four
SEKTICI
IDEA WINS $500,
CITY'S TOP AWARD
U.S. Lists Local Jobs
Its In a Hurry to Fill
The U.S. has listed Its most, ur- Rome Air Force Depot. Griffis All
gent needs for filling jobs In the Force Ba.se, N.Y.
Meteorol. Equipment Repairer,
New York-New Jersey area. Apply
to the Executive Director, Board $2.28 an hour, Rome Air Force
ol U.S. Civil Service Examiners at Depot, Griffis Air Force Base. N.
the addresses given, unless other- Y .
Ground radio installer, $2.32 an
wi.se stated. Examinations are
open continuously. Salary cited is hour, Rome Air Force Depot, G r l f fl.ss Air Force Base, N.Y.
Btarting pay,
Armament sub-systems repair' Alphabetic card punch operator,
$3,255 and $3,495, Second Civil er, $2.32 an hour, Rome Air Force
Service Region, Federal Building, Depot, Griffiss Air Force Base, N.
641 Washington Street. New York Y .
Wire communications mainten14. N Y.
Stenographer and typist, $3,255, ance man, $2.24 an hour, Rome
$3,495, and $3,755, Second U. S. Air Force Depot, Griffiss Air Force
Civil
Service Region,
Federal Base, N.Y.
Wire communications maintenBuilding, 641 Washington Street,
New York 14, N.Y.; Mitchel Air anceman. $2.32 an hour, Rome Air
Force Base, N.Y.; U.S. Naval Sup- Force Depot. Griffiss Air Force
ply Depot, Bayonne, N.J.; Head- Ba.se, N.Y.
Construction maintenance inQuarters, Fort Monmouth, N.J.;
and U.S. Military Academy, West spector. $2.32 an hour, Rome Air
Force Depot. Griffi.ss Air Force
Point, N.Y.
Stenographer, Rochester Ord- Base, N.Y.
Teletype maint«nanceman, $2.24
nance District. Roche.ster 4. N.Y.;
Rome Air Force Depot, Griffiss Air an hour. Rome Air Force Depot,
Griffi.ss Air Force Ba.se, N.Y.
Force Base. N.Y.
Accountant and auditor, $4,040,
Nursing a.ssistant, $3,255, VA
Hospital, Lyons, N. J.; VA Ho.spl- Armed Forces Audit Agencies, 290
tal, Northport, L.I., N.Y.; VA Hos- Broadway, New York 7, N.Y.; 2nd
U.S. Civil Service Region, Federal
pital, Castle Point N.Y.
Card punch operator, $3,255 and Building, 641 Washington Stieet,
13,495, Mitchel Air Force Base. N. New York 14, N.Y.
Airways operations speciali.st,
Y.
Tab machine operator, $3,255 $4,040 and $5,470, Civil Aeronautand $3,495, Mitchell Air Force ics Administrations, Jamaica. L.I..
N.Y.
Base, N.Y.
Architect, $4,040 and $12,770, N.
Tab machine supervisor, $3,755
and $4,040, Mitchel Air Force Y. District. Corps of Engineers,
New York 3. N.Y.
Base, N.Y.
Budget officer, $5,985 and $7,030,
Tabulation planner. $4,040 and
$4,980. Mitchell Air Force Base, Rome Air Force Depot, Griffiss
Air Force Ba.se. N.Y.
N.Y.
Electronic scientist. $4,980, New
Training officer (military sciences), $7,030 and $8,330, U.S. Naval York Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn,
Training Device Center, L.I., N.Y. N.Y.: U.S. Naval Air Station,
Nursing assi.stant (psychiatric), Lakehurst, N.J.; U.S. Naval Train$3,255, VA Hospital, Montrose. N. ing Device Center, L.I., N.Y.; Naval Air Turbine Test Station,
Y.
Tailor, $2.06 an hour, U.S. Mili- Trenton, N.J.; Watervliet Arsenal,
tary Academy, West Point. N.Y. Watervliet, N.Y.; Picatinny ArseRadio repairer, $2.24 an hour. nal, Dover, N. J.; Headquarters,
Tuci«lfly, NoTcmlicr 25, 19511
LEADER
T h e Suggestion Award Board
has approved c a s h awards totaling $1,140 (or 30 suggestions submitted t o t h e New York City Ebployees' Suggestion Program.
Sidney Goldberg, an assistant
bacteriologist in the Department
of Health receives $500., the top
award for an employee suggestion.
Mr. Goldberg, designed a special
apparatus which permits a modification of the laboratory procedure for performing Staphylococcus
Bacteriophage Typing. The modified procedure permits a technician
to type 100 cultures per day as
compared to 25 cultures under the
previous
laboratory
procedure.
This is most important because
the demand for the typing of cultures has increased tremendously
owing to the problem of hospitalinduced staphylococcal infections.
Joseph F. Smith, a supervising
clerk in the Department of Purchase. receives $250.
Captain Michael J. Bennette of
the Fire Department receives $50
for modifying a shaft on the turntable brake on a ladder truck.
Other award winners:
$25—Jerome
F.
Raab
and
Thomas Killelea.
$20—Lester Bimberg Seth M.
Rubin, John S. Nijakow.ski.
$15—Franklin H. Senior, Hyman
A. Hammer. Henry J. Thompson,
Jr.. Anthony T. Cohn
$10—Henrietta Gelberg. Elizabeth B Griffin. Stanley Craigwell, Thomas J. Killelea. Lucille
Lane, Fred Hale, Bella Seiden-
Fort Monmouth, Tt. J.j Rome Atr
Force Depot. Griffiss Air Force
Base, N.Y.
Electronic technician, $4,490 and
$5,985, Civil Aeronautics Administration, Jamaica, L.I., N.Y.
Engineer, $4,040 and $12,770, u r gently needed in almost all locations.
Metallurgist, $4,040 and $4,980,
New York Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn, N.Y.; U.S. Naval Air Station,
Lakehurst, N.J.; Watervliet Arsenal. Watervliet, N.Y.
Metallurgist. $5,985 and $12,770, Watervliet Arsenal. Watervliet, N.Y.
Military personnel clerk, $3,755
and $4,040, Headquarters, Port
Jay, Governors Island, New York
4, N.Y.
Nurse, $4,040 and $4,980, urgently needed in a number of locations.
Organization and methods examiner, $5,980 and $7,030, Rome
Air Force Depot, Griffi.ss Air Force
Ba.se, N.Y.
Physicist, $4,040 and $4,980. New
York Naval Shipyard. Brooklyn,
N. Y.: U.S. Naval Training Device
Center, L.I., N.Y.; Watervliet ArArsenal, Dover, N. J.; Headquartsenal, Watervliet, N.Y.; Picatinny
ers. Fort Monmouth, N.J.; Rome
Air Force Depot. Griffi.ss Air Force
Base, N.Y.
Research p.sychologist (experimental and physiological). $5,985,
Training Device Center, L.I., N.Y.
baum, Harry Mar.shak, Samuel
Greenwald. Frank Allepra, Erward
Dros, William lA. Ijeask, Carl M.
Dil^Iedio, Margaret
V/einberger.
Evelyn Rosenthal, Morris D. Stiefel, Dominick J. Brunetti, Francis
J. Van Manen.
Certificates
of
Merit
were
awarded to Margery Smolen.i, Herbert J .Madlgan, Anthony Biondi.
Legislative Manual Has New Edition
ALBANY, Nov. 24 — SUte officials and employees can oUlaln
copies of the new 1958 Legislative
Manual at Department of State
offices, 164 State St., Albany.
The Manual, the official state
directory, came off the press late
last week and now is available in
limited quantities for distribution.
A charge of $2.50 is made for
the Manual, which centair^ 1,234
pages.
IS CONVENIENT FOR
BUSINESS OR PLEASURE
'*•
Close to the
glamoroua
ilieatre-andnightlife, ahopa
and landmark
^
Express
subway at
our door takes
you to any |Mrt
of the city within
a few minutas.
That's convenienc*!
A handy New York '
subway map is yours
F R E E , tor the writing.
IMMEDIATE CONrWMED
RESERVATIONS
In N«w Yorh: CIrcIa 7-39M
In Albany: 62-1232
In Roehastw: LOeusI 2-«4flO
Sinal» fram $«.S0
Doublet from $10.00
(C. L. O'Connor, Manager I
V7/Z7th Ave ofS^iKSl M.-w "fo^k
^ wonfhli/ check
thatmeans
so much
Introdaetory
SPECIAL!
•
to introduce the NEWEST PATTERN
Every month a d a t e e m p l o y e e in A l b a n y w h o ii recovering from o hip injury looks forvyard to o special
e n v e l o p e . You see, inside this e n v e l o p e is a disability
check for $ 1 0 0 which this w o m a n u s e s to help meet
her regular living e x p e n s e s ! To date, s h e h a s received
3 0 checks or $ 3 , 0 0 0 .
You l o o con protect a g a i n s t loss of i n c o m e d u e to
accident or illness b y enrolling in t h e C.S.E.A. Plan
of Accident a n d Sickness.
C O M M U N I T Y
THt mtsT
mvaHAJt
Bo/ore anothtr day gooi by, gel i* fovch with one of these e » »
perienced imurantu couniuUon m our Gvil Service Dmpartmrnnt.
PIERCED ROUND
SERVER
95
H.OO ^
Regular
1
NO FED.
TAX
So handy for serving tomatoes, eggs, waffles, fritters.
A wonderful gift!
|
I
;
John M. Dexlin
Harrison S. Henry
Koi.trl N. Boyd
Vi illiani IM^onboj
Anita E. Hill
Tlioinus Caiily
Tlioiiins Karley
*!luirlc8 MrCrft-tly
( ; i l e « Van Vorat
t^-orge Vfarhob
Ccorge Wclliiier
\\ iiliaiii Scanlan
Millard S<liafl«r
President
Vice President
(General Service Klanaget
Association Sales Manager
Administrative .\8si8la»t
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
Field Supervisor
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New Y o r k
342 Madison Avenue, New Y o r k , New Y o r k
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York
342 Madison .\venue. New York, New York
110 Trinity Place Syracuse, New Y'ork
2U Briarwood Koud, Londuiiville, Ni w Y o r k
118 Clinton St., Scheuectiidy, New York
3S62 Chapin, Niagara Falls, New York
10 Diniitri Place, Larchinont, New Y'ork
342 Madison Avenue, New Y o r k , New Y o r k
12 Duncan Drive, Latham, New York
(
I
C.OMMLN1TY
SERVICES
S i A K r Ai' $24.95
*rrad«-morki of
EASY
O/xiila M.
TERMS
EL-ZEE JEWELRY & GIFTWARE CO.
20 WEST 20TH STREET
N « w York
W A 4-7277
T K R
BUjfiH&PfllinEUi/^^
c^nd'M/m/nee
t^AIN OFFICE
• 48 CLINTON ST.. SCHENECTADY I. N.Y.
FRANKLIN 4-7751
ALBANY B-2032
m
WALBRID6E BLDCr.
BUFFALO 2. N. Y.
MADISON
aisa
342 MADISON AVE.
NEW YORK 17, N. Y.
MURRAY HILL 2-7BW
Timdajr, November 2S, 19S8
C I V I L
APPEALS COURT WEIGHS RIGHT
OF COMMISSIONER TO DROP
PROBATIONARY PATROLMAN
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 — A (ieclslon
Is expected during the week of
December 22 in a case that seeks
to have declared Illegal the 30-year
practice of the New York City
Police Department of exercising
unlimited authority to drop a probationary patrolman prior to the
expiration of the probationary
period.
T h e case Is that of Peter G o ing. dropped on the ground that
he had high blood pressure. Mr.
Going asserts that the rules of
the City Civil Service Commission
provide that before the services
of a police probationer can be
terminated for medical reasons,
the Police Commissioner
must
have the concurrence of the C o m mission's physicians. In M r . G o ing's ca.se the termination was
ba.sed on a report by a police surgeon only, after Mr. Going had
undergone a physical test a short
time
before
the
probationary
period, in this ca.se six months.
Is about to end.
Other Cases Affected
T h e main question affects seven
other similar Police Department
cases until the Court of Appeals,
which now is weighing Mr. G o ing's ca.se, has .spoken. I t Is e x pected that, if Mr. Going wins,
there d be other cases, too.
M r . Going was appointed In
1955 after having passed the medical test.s of both the Commission
and the Police Department. He
says he never had high blood
Paint your
kitcheh or
bathroom
SUPER
WHITE!
STAYS
WHITE
AS NEW!
• N e v « turns y e l l o w , . . from
aje, fumes or steam!
• Extra hiding p o w e r . . . goes oa
easily without brush marks!
• Flawless finish, high or low
g l o s s . . . like "baked" enamel!
• Thoroughly s c r u b k a b l e . , .
to keep it spotlessly white!
MURPHY
ENAMEL
Super-White
267
PEARL
PAINT CO.
105 Chambers St.
N. Y. City
W O 2-2470
FOR HOME OWNERS
SEE PAGE 11
SKRVICK
Pag« F I T *
LEAi)EII
Apply Now for Second
U. S. Service Entrance Test
pressure, and doesn't have It now,
and offers affidavits of physicians, and the fact he was acT h e first in the new series of Ing date for this t«.st Is Wednes- ments may be obtained f r o m t h «
cepted as a Red Cross blood donor,
Federal Service Entrance E x a m - day, December 24. Other test dates Director, Second U.S. Civil S e r v to prove it.
ice Region, Federal Building, 641
Mr. Going,
through
Samuel inations held November 15 drew and the deadline f o r applying for
Resnicoff, his attorney, says that 2,265 candidates, the local region- each are: January 29 f o r F e b - Washington Street, New Y o r k 14.
he became a permanent employee al office of the U.S. Civil Service ruary 16; February 26 for March N . Y .
because he was not served with Commission announced last week. 14; March 26 for April 11; and
notice of dismissal untU the day
Of these, 852 took the manage- Apr'l 23 for M a y 9.
after his probationary period was
T h e tests seek to attract presup. A permanent employee can ment intern test.
New Y o r k State announces two
not be dismissed except on charges
Applications are now being re- ent or prospective college gradu- open-competitive examinations to
that he must be given an oppor- ceived f o r the second test, to be ates or persons with three years
In New Y o r k C i t y : director of
tunity to refute. Mr. Going got
held Saturday, January 10. Clos- experience In administrative, pro- fill top-level director vacancies
no hearing.
fessional. investigative, technical
T h e former patrolman won the
community development bureau.
or other responsible work to carright to a trial of the issues o f
Division of Housing; $10,990 t o
fact, and Justice Sidney Pine upeers in public service.
$12,160; and director of research.
held him, in the New Y o r k County
Starting salaries are $4,040, $4.Commission Against DiscriminaSupreme Court, -saying that the
Incentive awards totaling $3,400 980, or $5,985, depending on qualtion, $9,220 to $11,050.
petitioner had indeed become permanent, because the day-late ser- for superior work, special act or ifications. Appointees will be asRequirements for the housln*
vice was illegal, and adding that service, or suggestions were made signed for training in a wide job are a bachelor's degree with
the Police Commissioner does not to 37 employees of the New Y o r k range of career fields.
specialization In urban or regionhave the right to decide, alone, Region of the Internal Revenue
Applications
and
announce- al planning, landscape architecthat a probationer is medically Service,
Regional
Commlsloner
unfit.
ture, or architecture, and progresT h e Appellate Division, First C. I. Fox announced.
sively responsible professional e x Award recipients Included John A R C O P U B L I S H E S B O O K
Department, reversed the decision,
perience in the physical plannlnf
and said that the Commi.ssioner G. Burke, Frank S.
Chiarello, O N FIRE H Y D R A U L I C S
aspects of city, metropolitan or
had substantially complied with Henry C. Cohart, M a r y Davoren,
A CO nprehensive book applying regional planning.
the law regarding sei-ving o f disEllen Fuchs, Harry
Gotwlsner,
the principles and knowledge of
mi.ssal notice and that medical
For the Commission Against
unfitne.ss is a ground for holding Frieda Greif, Sadie O. Hamerman, modern science to the solution of Discrimination position, minimum
Eunice
Hong,
Hai'Old
Levinson,
probationary service unsatisfacpractical problems in fire-flghting requirements Includa a year in
tory. Mr. Going showed a record Lucette T . Marchand, Margaret
of satisfactory service, and even M. Musgrave, Victor A. Shammas, has just been published by Arco. direction of m a j o r research proT h e 276-page book. Fire Hydraul- grams In such fields as human
had some commendations for alert
Mildred E. Sharper, Miriam A.
action in making arrests.
ics, was written by former Chief behavior,
Intergroup
relations,
Togsted,
Thomas
J.
Travaglini,
As.sistant Corporation Counsel
Gustave Bonadio of the New Y o r k community organization and l a Anthony Currerrl argued the case Lillian D. Walsh, Roberta Webb,
City Fire Department to use as a bor economics. A n additional refor the City government.
Pauline Weiss. James W . Wright,
text for his couise In Are hydraul- quirement calls for a bachelor's
Richard E. Joyce, Howard M c ics and fire administration
at degree and three more years e x 90 TO G E T T A JOBS
Elrath, John J. Boyle, Michael D.
•Queens
College.
perience.
AS R A I L R O A D P O R T E R
Cahill, Fred Dubitsky, James J.
Applications
and
announceT h e book contains 250 questions
Ninety pennanent railroad port- Gallagher. Paul Goldman, Galdys
er appointments will be made by M. Heller, Aaron Lane, Florence regarding the entire field of fire ments may be obtained f r o m tha
the New Y o r k City Transit Auth- V. Luizzl, Marie A. Marinello, hydraulics and mathematics, and New Y o r k State Department of
ority. T h e Department of Person- Kathleen O'Donnell, Elaine Pas- provides complete solutions and Civil Service, 270 Broadway, R o o m
nel certified 293 names, down to kowitz, Anthony P. Polito, Esther explanations for every question. 2301, New Y o r k 7, N . Y . Closing
I date is Friday, December 19.
1,900 on the 1955 list. Jobs pay C. Solomon and Susan S. Stieple- T h e price Is $4.00
man in the metropolitan area.
$1.85 an hour.
2 Director Jobs Open
$3,400 in Awards Go
To I.R.S. Employees
State Jobs OfFered In Education, Health,
Business, Social Work and Sciences
New Y o r k State open-competl•8141. Assistant in school lunch
tive examinations to be held D e - administration, $6,450-$7.B60.
cember 13 are listed below. Appli•8143. Assistant in physical edcations will be accepted until F r i - ucation and recreation, $6,450day. November 14. Ask for spe- $7,860.
cific announcements by number Mental Health and Public Health
and title at State Department of
•8142. Assistant director of psyCivil Service offices at 270 Broad- cholgical services, $8.310-$10,030.
way, Room 2301, New Y o r k City;
8150. Camp sanitary aide, $140
the lobby of the State Office nurse, $6,450-$7.860.
Building or T h e State Campus in
•8148. Senior industrial hygiene
Albany; R o o m 212, State Office physician, $8,750-$10,520.
Building In BuTTalo, or local offices
8149. Food service
manager,
of the New Y o r k State Employ- $5,020-$6,150.
ment Service. Those marked with tutions, $5,020-$6,150.
an asterisk are open to any quali•8146. Associate
bacteriologist
fied citizen of the U.S. T h e lower
(mycology). $7,500-$9,090.
figure listed is the starting salary.
8147. Regional public health
Secondary Education & Guidance
•8144. As.sociate clinical psy8121. Associate in foreign langu- chologist. $7.130-$8,660.
ages education. $7,890-$9,540.
8145. Inspector of welfare Insti8122. Associate in mathematics every 2 weeks.
education. $7.890-$9,540.
Business and Social Work
8123. Associate In science edu8900. Unemployment insurance
cation, $7.890-$9.540.
claims clerk, $3.300-$4,150.
8124. Associate in
secondary
8606. Senior social case worker
curriculum, $7,890-$9.540.
( C W ) , Westchester County. $4,8125. Assistant In citizenship 530-$5.810.
education, $8,450-$7,860,
8607. SerUor social case worker
8126. Assistant in
education ( P A ) , Westchester County, $4,guidance, $6,450-17,860.
530-$5,810.
Education of Handicapped
•8608. Social case worker, W e s t •8127. As.sociate In education of chester County, $4,150-$5,310.
handicapped, $7.890-$9,540.
*8128. Associate In education of
the crippled. $7,890-$9,540.
MIGHT YOU FAIL
•8129. Associate In education of
YOUR VISION TEST!
the vision and hearing handiTRY VISUAL TRAINING
capped. $7.890-$9,540,
*8130. Associate In education of
Dr. Harry Berenholtz
mentally retarded, $7,890-$9,540.
OPTOMETRIST
•8131. Associate in education of
speech handicapped, $7,890-$9,540.
4J W. 35 St,
CH 4.6449
Education Consultants
N.Y.C.
By A p p » .
8132. Associate in industrial education, $7,890-$9,540.
8133. Associate in professional
education, $7,890-$9,540.
8134. Associate In school busiOF CANDIDATES FOR
ness management, $7,890-$9,540.
8135. Associate in teacher certification, $7.890-$9,540.
PATROLMAN
8136.
Assistant
examinations
editor, $4.300-$5.310.
BRIDGE & TUNNEL POLICE
*8137. Chief, Buieau of StatisIP IN DOUIT ABOUT PASSING
tical Services, $9,700-$ 11,590.
SIGHT TEST OF CIVIL SERVICE
•8138. As.sociate in education
CONSULT
t>esearch, $7,890-$9,540.
•8139. A.s.sistant in adult education, $6,450-$7.860
Optometrist • Orthoplit
•8140. Assistant in Americaniza300 West 23rd St.. N. Y. C .
tion and adult elementary educaBy A p p t . O i l y — WA 9-5VIV
tion, $6,450-$7,860.
Visual Training
FIREMAN
DR. JOHN T. F L Y N N
C L O S E D THURSDAY. NOV. 27—THANKSGIVING
MAINTENANCE
DAY
M AN
for our updiiIhI iir»|wri«l(>rr courin roTrrlni all ph»iir«i i»f the « j » m . It •iioaia
( r i w t l r Imurave Jtour diani-* of piMnInK wHh • hlsh ratlnK.
C l a s s . * In M a n h a t t p i i —
MON. & THURS. a t 7 P.M^
JOURNEYMAN
PLUMBERS
E«c»ption»l opportuniti«» to Improv* your «t«tu».
3 POPULAR EXAMS ABOUT TO t E HELD
MASTER
PLUMBER'S
LICENSE
9 u « l i f i » « a man to a n g a g a in b u i i n a u for himsalf.
INSPECTOR OF
PLUMBING
Ttaoia who a i w l »in>llratloiM ahould prepare for F H ) .
81 Written
Teal
PLUMBER
7 l t filad a p p l i c a t i o n ! for axam to ba held F a b . 21. 1959
NSARLY J MONTHS IN W H I C H TO PREPARE POR THESE TESTS
C l a s s e i In MaiiliaHaii: MON. WED. & PRI. a t 7 P.M.
NEW YORK CITY LICENSE EXAMS
Writtan
a«am« «oon to qualify m a c h a n i c f
•
MASTER
for l l c a n i a t
an
ELECTRICIAN
C l a s i M in M a n h a t t a n : MON. & WED. a t 7:30 P.M.
• STATIONARY ENGINEER
C l a » « ( in M a n h a t t a n : TUES. & FRI. a t 7:30 P.M.
•
REFRIGERATION MACHINE OPERATOR
C l a s i c s in M a n h a t t a n : THURSDAYS a t 7 P.M.
VOCATIONAL
TRAINING
I n t t r u c t o r i with y a a r t of a x p a r i a n c a train you to b a c o m a
an
AUTOMOBILE MECHANIC — e l a s i c i in L.I. C i t y
DRAFTSMAN — e l a s t a s in M a n h a t t a n & J a m a i c a
TV SERVICE > REPAIR MAN — C l a i i e i In MonhaWan
PATROLMAN
N. Y. CITY POLICE DEPT.
Si.OOi a Y e a r A f t a r 3 Y t a r t of S a r v i e *
(HanMl on I'i-Hour Wet-k
I.eilure Clabm^^ in Maiihallau uri
Jamaica on M.iri. at T •:M P.M. al«o
will be keen. Start preparation early
— liirluiJn llnlfunii Allowaiiiw)
Tue«. al 1:1.%.
and 7;45 P M . , In
» y m cl»i4«i-« in bo(h lo.-aliunn. (.'onipelllKW
and attain a lli«li plai'e ou llie elifilils lint.
W H Y SO M A N Y FAIL IN CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS
Inabilitr to eiercine proper judnmeiit in Ihe analysin o( qucationi and aelecdon
ol correct anawara. dtie t(» lacU of adcuua'.e prcpai'ation.
8I'K< I \I.I/KI> I ' K K l ' . V K A T K I N — T I I K KU.\1» TO 8UCX KNS
Enroll at tli» ailiuul tliat haa propaml a lirice uorcentaKx of men anil women
appniinted in v a n n m ( ily di^pm inn-nta over a lon» period of yearn
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN: 115 EAST 15 STREET - Phone GR } - i 9 0 0
J A M A I C A : 89-25 MERRICK BLVD.. b e t . J a m a i c a & HilUlda A v e t .
ui-KN uuN 'ra r u i 0 a . u . to v r . u . — c i . u u k u o n
uatuku.wh
W
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
- L e a p e i l
ANNUITY TAPPING
F O R CASH IS P R O P O S E D
UmployeeM Editor, The Leader:
Wiiat a public employee needs
particularly, on the day of his reI'uhlithed
every Tiienlay
hy
tirement, is cash. Tiie average
LEADER PUBLICATION. INC.
public employee who retiies has
*7 Dyan* Strict. New York 7. N. Y.
lEekmoii 3-i010 been woriving for 3J or 40 years at
Jerry FinkeUlein, Pnhlinher
a modest salary and doesn't have
Paul Kyer, tdilor
H. J. Bernaril, Executive
Editor
nearly enough cash. H t may not
Jame* Qiiinlivan, ^«i«t«ril
Editor
have even enough mor>ey to carry
N. H. Maiter, llutine»t
Manager
him ever comfortably until the
lOc per copy. Subscription Price $2.00 to members of the Civil
first monthly pension checic argefvic* Employees Association. $4.00 to Don members.
rives. He finds it impossible to buy
•19
even c small home, or taice that
vacation trip of whicli he has been
dreaming, during all those 30 or
T U E S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 25, 1 9 5 8
40 years.
A.s the retirement systems now
operate, the pensioner receives a
pension from the employer, and
an annuity based on his own total
H E R E C O M M E N D A T I O N o f the N e w Y o r k City Salcontributions plus interest. He can
a r y A p p e a l s B o a r d f o r t h e u p g r a d i n g o f e i g h t t i t l e s not tap his annuity reserve. I proin t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f H o s p i t a l s is a l a n d m a r k in t h e his- pose that tlie laws be amended
t o r y o f t h e C a r e e r a n d S a l a r y P l a n . N e v e r b e f o r e d i d a p - to permit him to do so.
Amfrlea^M
iMrgest
Weehly
tor
Public
Member Aadit Bureau of Circulations
Career Plan Sets Record
T
p e a l s a f f e c t i n g so m a n y e m p l o y e e s r e c e i v e t h e e n d o r s e m e n t
o f t h a t B o a r d . A l l t h a t r e m a i n s is t h a t t h e B o a r d o f
mate
concur
with the recommendation,
which
it
Esti-
practi-
cally a l w a y s does.
T h e titles to be u p g r a d e d
include institutional
aide,
hou.sekeeping aide, d i e t a i y aide, and laundry woi'kei', n o w
in t h e
lowest
grade
to
which
the
City
makes
appoint-
ments. A l s o nurses a i d e s are to g o up one g r a d e , f r o m the
second to the third l o w e s t a p p o i n t m e n t
grade.
nurses are to g o f r o m the third to the f o u i l h
pointment
graded,
grade. Senior laundry
too.
The
employees
workers
in
these
Practical
lowest
ap-
are to be
up-
titles
number
a b o u t 2 0 , 0 0 0 , o r m o r e t h a n 18 p e r c e n t o f t h e t o t a l
ber of e m p l o y e e s under the Career and Salary
num-
Plan.
E m p l o y e e s used to think t h a t a p p e a l s f o r
populous
titles w e r e futile.
Can't W i n
P
OLICE COMMISSIONER
New
to s o v e r e i g n t y
York
Stephen P. Kennedy's
over l a b o r relations,
disputed
claim
by
the
City Patrolmen's Benevolent Association,
and
n o w a l s o b y t h e S u p e r i o r O f f i c e r s ' A s s o s c i a t i o n in t h e
p a r t m e n t , .stands l i t t l e l i k e l i h o o d o f u l t i m a t e
T h e groups demand grievance procedures like
that other City employees
have. T h e
De-
survival.
those
Commissioner
says
that the face-to-face opportunity of presenting one's g r i e v a n c e t o s o m e o n e in t h e n e x t h i g h e r r a n k c o n s t i t u t e s a t i m e honored
The
and satisfactory
policy
of
handling
grievances.
o f f i c e r s a n d m e n s a y t h a t t h a t is n o g r i e v a n c e
pro-
c e d u r e a t a l l . T h e y r e g a r d t h e m e t h o d as a m o c k e r y .
The
of
the
Commissioner
times
and
should
institute
voluntarily
formalized
come
abreast
gi'ievance
proce-
dures. H e can l i f t t h e m d i r e c t l y f r o m t h e rules and
regu-
lations of the City g o v e r n m e n t ' s l a b o r relations
program.
The
program,
uniformed
police
are excluded
f r o m that
m a y b e o n l y to a v o i d conflict w i t h the C o m m i s s i o n e r ' s
Rumplion of s o v e r e i g n t y . T h a t one exception, h o w e v e r ,
the
bare
minimum
that
must
be
accorded
the
force, otherwise the complaint that policemen
treated
as less
than
human
beings
remains
asis
How It WoriiS Out
Suppose the pensioner is permitted at retirement time to withdraw ir cash 12 Vi per cent of his
annunity reserve. Suppose that reserve amounts to $7,000. He would
tlien received $875 in cash. His
monthly checic would be reduced
proportionate to the reduction in
the annuity re.serve, but he would
g>t an immediate necessary benefit without any cost to the retirement system.
Under the present arrangement
an employee with, say. $6,000 final
average salary would be entitled,
under stated circumstances, to
one-quartei' pension, or $1,500 a
year and, o/^ the basis of the $7,000 annuity reserve, would get, .say,
$700 a year additional, the sum
constituting a retirement allowance of $2,200. The maximum
primary benefit under Social Security is r-bout $1,400. Adding the
combined income sources, we get
$3,600.
Now taice the other case, in
wiiich the annuity account has
been tapped for 12'i per cent.
T h e $7,000 would be reduced to
$6,125, and the annuity itself to
$612.25. The retirement allowance
now would become $2,112.25, instead of $2,200, and tiie total retirement income $3,512.25 instead
of $3,600, or only $87.75 a year
less.
The figures are only approximate but they convey the idea.
Retirement
systems
always
mention that tliey are actuariliy
sound. Paying a lump sum at retirement in no way would affect
soundne.ss.
uniform
are
being
regretfully
justified.
Questions Answered
On Social Security
I W A S 65 January 17, 1958, and
began receiving a railroad annuity.
A tie-in with Social Security
which in effect says that a railroad annuitant will receive no
less than if tiie same worii had
loeen performed under Social Security. Now when tiie rise in Social Security benefits goes in eflfect
January 1, 1959, will tiie railroad
annuitants also get a rise in their
annuity?
J.V.
As yet. no such provision has
be^'H made. However, we suggest
that you checic with your local
Railroad Retirement Board for information I'egarding any possible
future iegi.slation which might
effect your annuity.
I HAVE life Insurance, and I
know what family protection Is
provided by it in return for the
premium.s I pay. What protection
does the Social Security taicen out
of my checic each month give mc
and my family?
J.G.O.
The Social Security tax you and
your employer pay, and the tax
the self-employed individual pays
provide funds to pay insurance
benefits to insured retired men
and women, payments to totally
disabled woricers and their dependents when the woriiers are
between ages 50 and 65, and survivors Insurance benefits to tiie
families of insured deceased workers. The amount of the payment
an individual or family may receive depends upon the in.sured
person's average monthly earnings rather than on the amount
of the tax an individual has contributed.
Case of Teachers
LOOKING
INSIDE
By H. J .
BERNARD
Extcutivt
Editor
The Infinitely Small and Infinitely Large
Prove Vexations Through the Ages
T H E I N F I N I T E L Y SMALL, the Infinitely large, and continuity
have posed problems that have fascinated and yet plagued mankind
since recorded history began. Even now, twenty-five centuries after
Zeno propounded his famous paradoxes that concerned sucli considerations, the paradoxes have not been completely solved. However,
they have paved the way to many mathematical advances, and hav*
spurred the precision of terminology and decent respect for logio
that now mark mathematics.
Zeno was a Greek philosopher, although born in Eiea (Velia),
Italy. That was five centuries B. C.
No literal text of his paradoxes survives, but there is general
agreement on what they contained. There were four of them. All
involved the infinite and continuity, and may be regaaded as the
same paradox applied to four different sets of circumstances.
The
Achilles
Paradox
Tlie most famous one deals with a handicap foot race between
Achiiies and a tortoi.se. It may be taken as the most representative.
Achilles and the tortoise start at the same time, the tortoise
naturally being given a headstart, since Achiiies is twice as fast.
Acliilies successively reduces by half tlie distance between them.
The question is. Will Achilles ever catch up with the tortoise? Zeno
said No, and mathematicians and piiilosophers agreed with his result,
if not always with his reasoning, for centuries and centuries.
Zeno argued that each time Achiiies reduces by half the distance between them, the tortoi.se still will remain ahead, although by
a lesser distance. No matter how small the difference, there will
always be a difference. The argument, in effect, was that any given
quantity can always be halved times without number. For Achilles
to catch up it would be necessary to reduce the distance between
them to zero, which Zeno said couldn't be done, and the tortoi.se
would have to be in a fewer total number of places than Achilles.
I t is by no means certain that Zeno was speaking literally, for
he may have been challenging mathematicians to conform their
methods and thinking to reality.
//e'</
Seen
It
Done
Zeno had seen many handicap chariot races in which the fa.ster
chariots started in the rear, including overnight handicaps, .so knew
that it is possible for a rear starter to go on to win. The fact that
the winner may have gained ground at random speeds and in random
accounts, instead of on .some cyclic basis, is irrelevant.
In Zeno's day no definition of the infinite existed, so no wonder
even the best of the mathematicians were confused in their thinking
regarding the infinite, particularly the infinitely small, which we call
today infinitude. When we speak of " i n i f i t e " these days we mean the
infinitely large.
We know that not only would Achilles overtake the tortoise, but,
given the rates of progress and tlie distance, can compute how long
it would take him to catch up. We apply a branch of mathematics
known as infinite series.
Zeno had been dead five centuries when the elite Aristotle condescended to discuss the paradoxes of the humble Eleatic. Aristotle
agreed with Zeno's result, but not with his reasoning. Both Zeno
and Aristotle missed the point that the cyclic reduction of space
approached zero as a limit. When the spatial distance is zero,
Achilles catches up. Also, both missed the point that if space can
be reduced infinitesimally, so can time.
Another of Zeno's forms of the paradox
fiight. He argued that as the arrow had to
time, and at another place at another time,
finitely large number of places where it had
point and "destination," there is no reality
he said, even in fiight is at rest.
related to an arrow in
be at one place at one
and there were an into be, between starting
to motion. The arrow,
I am a teacher at Cliarlotte
Higli School, Rochester. Most of
the teachers, on retirement, are
requii'ed to pay a large amount to
the retirement system so Uiat they
can benefit from tiie 1/120 proIntellect
at Ray
vision. One of our teachers ha.s to
Zeno's argument that tlie fiying airow is at rest stemmed f r o m
pay $1,275 in sash, and another
(Continued on Page 7)
$1,150. The 121i per cent mentioned above would be vei-y advantageous in such cases.
Our death benefit is one-half
of a year's .salary. The Legislature
pas.sed a bill during the last sesThe Los Angeles County Charter retain its policy-making and Jusion raising this to one year's salStudy
Committee, the chairman dicial functions.
ary. Tiie Governoa- vetoed it. The
2. All promotional examinations
of
which
is H e m y Reining, Jr.,
Slate employees are now a.sking
for a year's salary as death bene- dean, School of Public Administ- to be held on a county-wide rather than departmental basis.
fit. The teachers certrjnly deserve ration, University of
Southern
3. Simultaneous
certification
•A
California, has propo.sed the f o l from open-competitive and proyeai's salary. All or a proportionlowing changes in the County's motional lists.
ate pait increr..sed death benefit
civil service rules:
4. Transfer of responsibility for
should be available to an employee
employee
tiaining to the Chief
1.
T
h
e
Personnel
Director
to
be
who has retired.
B E R N A R D J. T R A C Y appointed by the County Manager, Administrator's office.
9. Greater flexibility in conrather than the Civil Service
Commission, and to be responsible tracting for services rather than
for administering the civil service having all services performed by
"Say You Saw It
program. T h e Commission would clvU service employees.
The Leader"
Public
Administration
Sanitation Widows'
Pension Case Argued
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 — T h e case
®f Mrs. Ella M. Barry versus M u l raln. In which the widow of a
New York
City
sanltationman
•eeks a pen.sion, waa argued In
tha Court of Appeals. T h e City
denied the widow a peaslon on
Kha grounu that she married the
aanltatlonman after he was already retired on a pension. S a m uel Resnlcoff, her attorney, argued
that made no difference, as the
law provides a pension f o r the
widow, granting minimum service
length of 10 years, and states
nothing about when the marriage
has to take place.
Looking Inside
(Continued from Page 6)
the axiom that the whole Is greater than any of Its parts. I n
the Una of
This
Implied
a
line
being
a discontinuity.
If
the Instructor to Socrates was not only broaching the Idea that the
axiom was fallacious but also that definition of " a t rest" needed to
be made precise. T h e conclusion that a flying arrow Is at rest sounds
absurd on the face of It. But what about the great minds, Aristotle
and P a t o Incuded, that
conclusion?
Even
If
accepted
Zeno's
Zeno's premise
conclusion
but rejected
was wrong,
he
was
his
closer
than they, for ha was at least consistent. Put Zeno wa.sn't wrong.
T h e historical development of the theme proved his conclusion right.
K a r l Theodor Welerstrass, German mathematician (1815-97)
supplied a new concept of " a t rest." He said that the nature of the
physical world Is unchanging, and that if a thing itself does not
change It Is at rest, whether In motion or not. Continuity therefore
was not a reality but an abstraction. T h e error made by Zeno and
his successors, even those who disagreed with his result, was in
assuming that continuity must be a reality. Welerstrass was able to
coincide the mathematical result with reahty and logic. Others
amplified his findings. A new branch of mathematics, the Infinitesimal calculus, finally resulted. Zeno realy started something.
l\'o Shortage
of
Infinites
Zeno kept talking about the arrow being here one moment and
there the next, although with ifinltv there Is no next moment. One
moment Is separated f r o m the so-called next moment by an infinite
number of other moments. T h e separation between one moment and
the next would have to be infinitly large. T h e r e would be continuity.
Instead of the discontinuity that separate moments suppose.
W/iere fo Apply
For Public Jobs
The followins directions tell
where to apply for public jobs
and how to reach destinations
In New York City on the transit
system.
N E W Y O R K C I T Y — T h e Department of Personnel, 96 Duane
Street, New York 7, N . Y . ( M a n hattan) two blocks north of City
Hall, just west of Broadway, opposite T h e Leader ofiflce. Hours
9 to 4, closed Saturdays, except
to answer Inquiries 9 to 12. Tel.
COrtlandt 7-8880. Any mall Intended for the N Y C Department
of Personnel, other than applications for examinations, should oe
addressed to the Personnel Department, 299 Broadway,
New
Y o r k 7, N. Y . Mailed applications
for blanks must be received by
the department at least five days
prior to the closing date. Enclose
self-addressed envelope, at least
nine Inches wide, with six cents
in stamps affixed.
Julius W . R. Dedekind, mathematlan, born In Russia, made a
m a j o r contribution to the subject. H e agreed that because a thing
in flight, is not to say that the thing itself is subject to change, adding that the flying arrow now here, now there, being in an infinitely
large number of places. Is in more places than can be counted, and.
Is subjected to change, such as the change In position of the arrow
besides, that there is not just one Infinity but an infinite number
of Infinities.
Lines,
Days and
Years
A whole new branch of mathematicas known as the theory of
aggregates has been built up on the basis of Infilte number of Infinities. Y o u can remove some of the terms of the infinite without
reducing the Infinite. T h e number of points In a line is infinite, hence
Is the same no matter or long or short the line is, and no matter if the
length Is increased or reduced. T o the same e f f e c t the number of
years In all time is as large as the number of days, both being
S T A T E — R o o m 2301 at 270
Broadway, New Y o r k 7, N. Y..
corner
Chambers
Street,
TeL
BArclay 7-1618; State Campus
and lobby of State Of^ce Building, Albany, N. Y., R o o m 212;
State Office Building, Buffalo 2.
N. Y . Hours 8:30 to 5, closed
Saturdays: R o o m 400 at 155 West
Main Street, Rochester, N . Y.,
Wednesdays only, 9 to 5. Also, an
Information ofSce has recently
been opened at 221 Washington
Street, Blnghamton. All of foregoing applies also to exams for
county jobs conducted by the
State Commission. Apply also to
local office-, of the State Employment Service, but only In person
or by representative, not by mail
Mall application should be made
to State Civil Servlca Department
offices only; no stamped, self-addressed envelope to be enclosed
U. S. - S e c o n d Regional Office,
U. S. Civil Service Commission,
641 Washington Street, New York
14, N. Y . ( M a n h a t t a n ) . Hours 8; 30
to 5, Monday through Friday;
cl se ' Saturday. T e l . WAtklns 4 1000. Applications also obtainable
Boards of Examiners of separate
at main post offices, except the
New York, N. Y.. post office
agencies also Issue applications for
jobs in their jurisdiction. Mall applications require no stamps on
envelope for return.
T E A C H I N G JOBS — Apply to
the Board
of
Education,
110
Livingston
Street, Brooklyn
I.
N. Y .
SEE PAGE 11
flight.
separata moments exist, then time Is discontinuous. It's possible that
T h e City also says the widow
was not entitled to benefit because
•ha acted too late. M r . Resnlcoff
t a y i the statute of limitations
does not apply because the City
was under a continuing legal obligation to grant her a pension,
and, besides, she applied promptly
but delay wa^ due to inaction by
the City.
T h e widow is 69, said the l a w yer, and gets more income as a
relief client than the pension
would pay, but prefers the pension. Mr. Resnicoff pointed out
that Andrew W . Mulraln, who, as
Commissioner dened her a pension, Is now retired himself on a
$l2,000-a-year pension.
HOUSE HUNTING?
'his
case tha parts were the succession of separate moments constituting
infilte. Thus the axiom that the whole is always greater than any
of its parts has to be discarded, for with infinities, any part Is as
great as the whole, though never greater. I t should follow that the
infinite also Is indestructible. I t can not be made less by removing all
of its terms for it Is impossible to remove all of its terms.
T h e Greeks did not Include motion Itself in their mathematical
concepts, preferring to deal with a locus that generated moving
points. W h a t moved were the fancied points. T h i n g s themselves
forever stood still. Maybe Zeno was deriding his fellow-mathematicians
by carrying their theories to an absurd conclusion.
Anyway, the world owes the Impoverished Eleatic a deep debt of
gratitude, even though It may never find out what he really thought.
It's a little too late to start an objective investigation now.
I
Wlio Never Finislied
• HIGH SCHOOL
H
^^
a r t invited f o w r i t e f o r FREE b a s k l e t . Tells h o w
c a n e a r n y o u r A m e r i c a n School Diploma
I
AMERICAN S C H O O L . D e p t . 9 AP-6S
IN W.
tl . N«w Yark i*. N. Y. PIwm Mvoal V-HM
Send me your free 5S-page High Sciiool Booklet.
Nahie
Age,
-A.pt.Address-Zone_State_
Cily
I
|
yeu
A T HOME IN SPARE TIME
I
&
A
QUMMM
SP££D
DRYERS with UEETIME GUARANTEED
'
STAINLESS SIEEL DRUMS
4
and matching Speed Queen Automatic WasHer^l
witir Litetime GuWanteed Stainless Steel T a i ) s |
See the yellow
pages of your phone book, or phone: *
EXeter
2^-6300
SPEED QUEEN ATLANTIC CO., INC., Wholesale Distributors
3 4 - U Norrturw Mvd, long IriwiJ Cty 1, N. Y.
IN ANY WEATHER...
"OHEAVEi x^HAUL I ^
' HANG
when you buy an Automatic CLOTHES DRYER
Saves U n n e c e s s a r y W o r k !
Without
a
Cow
clothes dryer you haul around about 90 pounds of
wet wash a w e e k . . . more than two tons each year!
A dryer saves all that work, and clothes come out
so wrinkle-free you save yourself hours of ironing,
Room 6 4 6 , 4 Irving P l a c e , N o w York 3, N. Y.
Please send me a copy of your free 8-page clothee-dryer
booklet and neighborhood dealer liat
too. See your dealer today.
Send for FREE Dryer Booklet
Thit new booklet
wat written
especially
to help you <n
buying and UHing a dryer. We'd like to tend you a copy
abiolutely
fritl
Juat tnuil the coupon —or pKont l£ 2 - 0 1 0 0
Name
4
A ddress
City
—
— - Z o n «
N.
Y.
Page
Eight
Last Call to Hov. Series of NYC Tests
T h e Novpmber serJes of New factory equivalent Qualifying or"i^rk
Clly
examinations
close al test in February. (Nov. 25).
Tuesday, November 25. The re8448. Department librarian. $4,quirements follow:
000 to $5,080. Pee $3. Minimum
i-equirements include a baccalauOPEN-COMPETITIVE
reate degree l.ssued after com8269. Announcer, $4,000 to $5,- pletion of a four-year course In
080. Pec $3. There are six vacan- an accredited college or univercies at W N Y C , the Municipal sity and satisfactory completion
Broadcasting Company. Minimum of a full year course of study at a
requLrement.s include a baccal- library school approved by New
aureate flegi^ Issued after com- York State Department of Edupletion of a four-year course at cation, or a public librarian proan accredited college or univer- visional certificate issued by the
sity and six months of recent, State of New York, o^ a satisfactsatisfactory, full-time experience ory
equivalent.
Written
test
as an announcer for a regularly March 2. (Nov. 25).
operated radio broadcasting sta8401. Housekeeper. $3,250 to
tion, or graduation fro:!! senior
high school and two years of ex- $4,330 Pe€ $3. Candidates must
perience as described, or a .satis- have been graduated from elementary school and must have
had two years full-time paid exFOR CHRISTMAS PARTIES
perience in institutional or hotel
AT PETIT PARIS
\.ork, one year of which shall
BOOK EARLY . . .
have been as the housekeeper in
T p « . we }iave n f t w (JaleR open, but we charge of the housekeeping activ<'atrt H'-he<ltllp more lli:jn .onr capjifily for
ilie same niBht. So. if j o i i are iilunninif to
liHve your Chiislnias or New Ve:iis dilmer
« t I ' K T I T I'AIU.S—anil we know .ton II
want lo have it there, if iiossihle—pleaKe
cull IIK at oni'e. . . . Whether .von i hoose
a Bhnplt roast beet menu or the tasty
Baa.ine coolli r,v of ialnion, i iver trout.
Ha.iorine ham. noose with triirfles anil
wines of Uanytild, Rant-io and -Ittraneon.
* e ninut maUp preiiat-Htions. We insist
that your c^oiip hanoiiet be a
P K T I T P.AKIS.
bany. f a l l
intill M,i<linin Ave.,
tor leservations.
The Beautifully
YANKEE
R«nMrlarr
N.
Sparkling
SELTZER
WATER!
f
AIC«pnal S OtiHO
Troy
Sundar. Nov. notli.
PoiKhktM'ii^iR Inn.
Diniifr
I
rWI«
Over the river niid through the ^voo(1«
((» th^ ItlAiktiirry Fiinn ne
for
our TlmrikscivinK
Dinner
iiMh the
Vnnkee Trtiveler, Serve«l fHinlt.v •t>le,
I'reseMliiiK
IVinn(>r at
• T H E 3 CLEFS!!
{liniier,
* JIMMY COSTANTINO
••<;i IT.\R"
• MIKE FUDA
"B ASS"
• EDDIE SEWELL
•I'l.WO"
—F(IK VOIR—
"Dlnlnq & Dancing P l e e s u r * "
EVERY FRIDAY
& SAT. NIGHTS!
-NO COVKIt!
—NO MIMMVM!
—I'KKKKfT Sl'OT I'OK—
* XMAS PARTIES!
* OFFICE PARTIES!
ATTKVTION OFFH K WORKERS!
(iKT 01 R riiICK! I.M.L fi-ll(HI«
ST.'S.'l.
r..>I. TrHnKporation and
SYRUPS!
C A N A D A DRY
BEVERAGES
Make the winter ko by fu^t, unm^
(lilns tu look forwttnl to ev<'ry Sun(iH,v. a nire
tour, a ko<hI
dinner
anions rrieniU. What comIiI he flnert
N'oii are home early in the eveninx
In time tor your Sunday e^enln* T V
Nho\>4. Try a Yankee Traveler T o u r ;
tlnil out
for yourNeJf. In f o many
wuy wonderful.
The Toiir-i th:it Invite adventure. There
only one-The V . W K K K T K . i V K L R R .
mm
HOMI 0iuvn«y
Capitol District'
Seltzer Co.
HI GIRLS:
A l l A N Y , N. r .
5-8128
Y o u know as well as I, II
fakes a slim figure to w e a r
the Fall fashions—so come
on over and see w h a t we
have to offer,
•DINNERS NIGHTLY
Eagle)
4-8992
6
Alliany 4-flT«7-fi'i-;t8Al
RESTAURANT-TAVERN
302 DELAWARE AVE.
ALBANY, N. Y.
Now
TRAVELER
TRAVEL CLUB
KemcdeleJ
di:labaii
BARTKE'S LIQUORS
14& S t a t e
( C o r n e r of
Albany, N.Y.
Harry Scarlata
York City residence requiaement.
Minimum requirements include a
baccalaureate degree Lssued upon
completion of a four-year course
(Continued on Page 9)
R.D.I.—Roi
For C h r i s t m a s & New
Years
parties.
Special
aftentlon
fo
Sfafe
Employees.
Br/ng the Whole family
for a Delicious Meal!
Plzxa S e r v e d Every Night.
$7.00 S T A T E
RATE
FOR S Y R A C U S E
TAVERN
Xinnd Si Offire Partiffl. KiihlncAft
moediiK*. i'rlvRte fiicilUirN
1115
83,')7. Housing; community activities coordinator, $4,550 to $5,990. Pee $4. There a i * 11 vacancies In the Housing Authoo-lty,
which are exempt from the New
Al-
In Albany
FORD'S
ities of a hospital, hotel or other
ln.stitution containing at lea.st 100
rooms. Written te.st February 19.
(Nov. 25).
Central
LATHAM
2-9721
BOWL
SHERATOrOeWITT
M O T E L
WE OFFER:
U.S. ROUTE 7. LATHAM, N. Y.
i,l'}«i.AL. NOTICR
Phone: ST
C I T A T I O N — T H E P E O P L E OF T H E
S T A T E OE N E W YOKK BY T H E G H A f E
OE c o n KKKE A N D I N D E P E . N D E N T
T O — R U T H D A M I A T A : S Y L V I A I'ETT I N A T O : BRUNO f - K T r i N A T O : r i . K L I A
PETTINATO:
RENATA
I ' E I T I N ATO;
V I O L E T M . M E Y E R : I.IICILI.E COKNACC l l l A : A M A I . I A (lelle DONNE in K A T T I :
GEOHGE
P.P.
BONNELT..
as T i l l f l f e
v/w
John (Ifllp Donne, (ler'il.: bfinti the
pt-i-sons intpiTHlPd as orcditorn. leKiifrrn.
devisees. bene(i*i»tie8. difilrilnUecB. iillcgetl
.O'filitora or otlierwif^e in the cHliite of
John (lelle Donne, (let-enseil., who »t the
time of ))is tiefllh was h resitlent of N e w
York Connly. SENT) G R E E T I N G :
Have
" ^mtness.
honorable
joSF.PH A. c o x a Snriogate of
our said eoiinty. at the Ooniity
of -New York, the Uul day » '
November 11158.
P H I L I P A. DONAHL-E
Clerk of the Stlirotatt • Court
g U ' r r O N , JOSEPH W I L S O K . also k'lOW"
J . WILSON
mS'lTON.—File
Nu. P
aail4 1»6«.—CITATIO.N.—The People ul
?he State ot New York. By tUe G.ace « '
Free ai„l ' " J f l ' ^ v t , ' , " ' » rm-H1R S i n ^
KirrmN si'san mineu. a k i h i k m i
T N MiLDKLU S. U W V K l l . KAVMCLND
^ r i - r O K , W I L L I A M S i r i T O N . UliOKUE
H * N I ) Y S r i - r o N . ELlZAltKl'H Sll'lTON
G i m - SON JOHN C. .S1 T l ' O N . M A H Y S.
R U Y N K K . «E011GE W. Si m i N . M.AKION
P
SUTTON. K L I Z A I I K T H S. D l l V A I . L .
R l O H A K l ) S. S I " I T O N . K U U E K T Sj r r O N
JJAHUAHET TI-'.MI'LE. Wll.SO.V SI 'ITON,
W I L L I A M O. St • n O N , A L l . l E I ' E I K L K .
E D N A 1'. A D K l N S d N .
VOII AUE I I K K K I I Y CITED TO SHOW
C A l ' S E before Uie Slirrotali » Court, New
V o . k I'ounl.v. ill Koum 5lH« in tlie Hull
ot Keioril» III the i omil.v ol New York.
Mew York, oil Decdiiber III. lUfiH. iit m .•III
A M., why a .i rlaiii wiitiiiK illiliil O.lober
an. illii'i wlll.ll hue been ullerid (or probiila l>v F. Eiliiiund Siilloii retiilint at
e','1
Wiltoii
Koail,
Tow son,
.M m j laiiil.
•hould not lie probiiteil an Ihe la«t Will
• ml TeHainellt. relating lo leal Uliil per•onul properly, ut Jom ph W iUon Snlluii,
• iKii known aa J . WiIboii Sutton, ileceateil.
V h o waB at tli« tllim ot liU iliatli a
retiilenl of I We»t V.'ilil Slretl. in tlie
Comity ot New Vork. Ni w \ o l k .
Dateil. Allinleil ai»t Se;.Uil, November
t , lU6b.
HllN R. Samuel P i Kal.o.
<LS )
Sun. i.ile. New Voik Connlr.
l l l l L I f A. I X J N A H l ' i ; .
tlerk.
y o u thought
Holiday
of
us for
(at Chapel)
«2-A.108
air to all C.S. laillea. F<|:iiiuni>
PunlVB TnlilcH, .M«eLee}Kiini|it.,
Keliix-A-ci/iir.
J-'aelals
hy Aila of
Anstrhi. Moniltty thru Kriilay JO-10,
Satiirdny B-J.
your
Banquets?
SPECIAL RATES ON REQUEST
B
O
W
L
I
CHURCH
G
MAYFLOWER - ROYAL COLRT
A P A R T M E N T S - Purrished, Unfurnished. and Rooms Phone 41934 (Albany).
COLUMBIA TURNPIKE • EAST
GREENBUSK NEW YORK
PH 77-9306
Albany
HO
Model
•
M o d e l 'planes,
•
Moloriied
•
Display
& Powered
•
Mosaic
Kits
•
Palnf-by-Number
Ra'ilroadt
enginei
Race
Can
Boett
AVE.
Corner Northern
ALBANY.
N.
Open Every NIte 'Til 9
Albony 3-8596
•
•
•
•
Swimming Pool RiEhts
Charcoal Chef
Free Parliins:
Telephone Switchboard Pervlce
• Coclitail LoiMiRe
The Sheraton DeWitt
Erie Blvd.. E. S y r a c u s e
M.4KK FI.AIIKRTV. General M f .
(ii fi-:i:iao
MOVING INTO ALBANY
The
H O T E L RALEIGH
Soma C . S .
e m p l o y e e t find It •
comfortable
spot
to i t a y whil«
m
I
I
10 Treatments $40
g
REGULARLY
%bO
i'aurB« Iiieliiiies 3 KetluclnK Aides
BATH
• H O L L E R M A S S A G E R or BICYCLE or B E L T
TKIMMER
• FIGURA.MA T A B L E M A S S A t i E
Uuee .voitr Chrititmat* Club to (food advantage. He tiinait—taite off llioBe
extra pouniln and inchen—then iMlrchase that parly diets—SIUKS Smaller 1
•
STEAM
m
1
FIGURE & FISI9UE
56 D e l a w a r e Ave., Elsmere, N. Y.
Phone »-5353 f o r FREE GUEST VISIT
Open 9-9 Daily
„
In Time of Need, Call
M. W. Tebbuff's Sons
176 s t a t e
12 C o l v i n
Alb. 3-2179
A l b . 89 0 1 U
420 Kenwood
Delmar 9-2212
Over 107 Years
et
DIstintuished
Funeral
ServUa
C a p i t o l & S t a t e O f f i c a BIdg., so n a a r
shops a n d t h e a t r e s . A midtown
The
and
S...H- B E C K
MEN WANTED
traffic
All
congestion
&
rooms s p a c i o u s
S
monoxida
gai.
cheerful.
Naw
tila baths, e l e v a t o r , 24-hr.
operation,
parking.
Rates
$45
premises,
& up
JET-GAS TURBINE
TECHNICIANS
HOTEL RALEIGH
134 STATE ST.. ALBANY, N. T .
Albany
"Say
4-1291
Yoi> Saw It
T h e Le.-«der"
in
• ''
THE JET SPACE AGE
JNORTHE^^^SCHOOLS''
1$ her*
No
need
to
quit
We will
you if
Jwome .
Hov,n,.Conn
As.
your
present |0b until you ore 7
trained.
.finance
°
help Jcii*
Furs
FURS
AIR C O N D I T I O N E D BUILDING, BUILT-IN
PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM, STAGE. KITCHEN
pgi^ WEEK
and up
In
Worhmattship
AUDITORIUM — BALLROOM
HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY
Stot*
Hom.._
par
mo.
111 <M^T4>!>^ AVK., ALIIAIN'Y
rhone .t-irai
AGES 17 - 45 TO TRAIN AS
$ 11 "J
Finest
hotal
in a q u i e t hilltop location, a w a y f r o m
P L E A S E N O T E ; Before You Buy Home E.iuipment
St'tt I'u. We ran Save You Money!
FOR
they
and families. O t h e r s find it just right
FREE
SPECIAL!
n!c«,
for p e r m a n e n t r e s i d e n c e . So n e a r t h a
room service, restaurant on
HOLIDAY
RadI*
are looking for a homa for t h a m s e l v a s
SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 B r o a d w a y
A l b a n y . N. Y.
Mail & Phone O r d e r s Filled
Y.
7 Minutes froiti Downtown
I.IO Modern R m i . with T V «
Air Conditioninjr
T w o Top Restauranti
You'll Like
CIVIL
Blvd.
•
•
•
•
Motels
ARCO
Toleware
Bring this ad for FREE GIFT!
39 C E N T R A L
Area
CENTRALLY
LOCATED for the Capital
Tri-City A-ea. So units. Telephones, television, tile hatha, air conditioned. 24-lir.
•ervice. A few niinute'B noilh of Albany with pi-oxiniity to Schenectady.
Troy. Saratosa and the North. L A T H A M
MOTEL. Latham. N. Y. STate 6 S671.
Give Something Unusual This Christmas!
•
NOTICE
\TJIANY
FEDERATION
OP
CHURCHES
72 Churches' united for Church
and Community Service
ft II E K
ITpon the petition of ,1. Atthnr Leve
rei>i<linK at 1155 Piirk Avenue. New Y'oih.
V . Y. anil .Gcorire P.P. Bnnni ll. retiiliuB
at .S<nllh Main SliTet. Esmx. Conneiticiit.
Yon and e:i'h of .vou aie heiili.v ciled
to show eanse before the Snrro(:;ile B Conit
cf New York Collnl,v. held at the Hall
vf Heeords in Ihe Coiint.v of New Y'oik.
on tile Itlth da.v of December.
at
half-past ten o ' l l o . k in the forenoon of
that da.v, 11 why the aeeonnt of proceedinjts of said exeeutors sliolllil not lie
Jndii'iull.v Bellied: tj) why two cerlain
nnieonienls bolh daled as of May
1!I51.
one of Iheni between saiil exeeulors aLid |
Rulh Daniialii. the other b i l w w n eaid
»ite.illors. Rnth delle Donne (now UnlU
Duinialiil and three certain corporal ions,
snd all of the acts anil transactions of
•aid exeelllors unilcr and In pu;siian.e of
•aid aitreenimt. shonlil not be aniiroved.
ralifled and-confirmed: .'D why Ihc coninensalion of Messrs. McKenzie. Hyile, W ill•on, Kreni-h & Poor, said execiitois' attorneys shonid not be fixed and allowi'd
ill tlie amount of IfS.flOO.tltl. pins >"•"•»•arv disbnrsenieiils. said sum to c o y r the
I f f i i l fees of said
firm
H '<"' >"'•
paid h'gal servieis rendered by olher attorneys: and 4 1 wiiy the resiitnation of J.
Arthur l.eve as Trnstee under saul decedents Will should not be accepliiii and
that he be relieved from actini.- as rnislee
mod from any and all lurther liability and
rcsponsibilily as «\uh
fidtniary.
IN T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F , we have
MUsed the seal of the
of the said Coniity ol New York
to be l » r e u n l o allixed.
( N e w York
51 MAIDEN LANE
ALBANY, N. Y.
IDEAL FOR BINGOS
4,500 S 9 . FT.—FACILITIES FOR OVER 1,000 PEOPLE
LOCATED AT 900 NO. MANNING BLVD.
ALBANY, N. Y.
PARKING FACILITIES
F o r Further
Details
on Renting
Phone A L b a n y 6-1294
. . .
March 14. (Nov. 25).
8454, Psychiatric social worker,
$4,550 to $5,990. Fee S4. There are
41 vacancle.s Open to all qualified
citizens of the U.S. Minimum requirements include a baccalaurcate degree issued after comple7855. Medical social worker, $4,(Continued on Page 13)
550 to $5,990. Fee $4. There are
93 vacancies In the Department
of Hospitals, which are exempt
from the N?w York City residence
requirement. Minimum requirements include a baccalaureate
:
ASK FOR
degree isoued after completion of
a four-year course in an accredited college or university. In addition candidates must have one ol
the following: A master's degree
from an accredited school of social work Including one school
year In supervised field work in
medical social work; or a master's
degree from an accredited school
of social work and six months of
full-tim paid experience In medical social ca.se work with a social
or health agency adhering to acceptable standards; or a satisfactory equlvaent. Written test
March 14. (Nov, 25)
of two years of acceptable experience. Six months of acceptable experience will be credited for each
school year of approved vocational
or trade school training. Written
test February 7. (Nov. 25).
OPEN-COMPETITIVE
(Continued from Fage 81
In an accredited college or university, and either two yesjs of satLsfactory full-time paid experience on a professional level in
recreation or group work, or one
ye4r of such experience and one
year's experience In community
organization; or a master's degree
in recreation, group work, community organization, or physical
education and one year of satisfactory experience In recreation or
group work, or a satisfactory
equivalent but all candidates must
have a baccalaureate degree and
at least one year of experience In
recreation or group work. Written test February 27. (Nov. 25).
8451. Junior physicist, $4,250
to $5,330. Pee $4. Minimum requirements include a baccalaureate degree with a major In physics
is.sued after completion of a fouryear course In an accredited college or university. Applicants with
a major In chemistry, biology,
chemical engineering or electrical engineeo-inK who have completed at least 15 credits in physics
or one year of satisfactory experience with radioisotopes will be admitted to this examination. Written test February 9. (Nov. 25).
8275. Junior geologist, $4,250 to
$5,330 Pee $4. Minimum requirements Include a baccalaureate degi-ee with a major in geology issued after completion of a fouryear course In an accredited college or university. Persons who
will meet thl' requirement by
June 30, 1959 will be admitted to
this examination. Written test
February 9. (Nov. 25).
8068. Maintenance man, $19.60
ft day. Pee $.50. There are 32
vacancies In various departments
Minimum requirements
Include
two years of full-time paid experience of a nature to qualify
for the duties of the position, or
one year of such experience and
sufficient vocational
or
trade
school training to make a total
\ iAM'Sbf
/miHiEXii
8072. Plumbing inspector, $4,850 to $6,290. Pee $4. Applicants
must comply with the requirements of the New York City
Charter, section 642, viz: Applicants shall be plumbers who shall
have had at least five years of experience as such. Written test
February 21. (Nov. 25).
8477 Probation officer, $4,500
to $5,990. Fee $4. Candidates
must have a baccalaureate degree
Issued after completion of a fouryear course In an accredited college or unlversit>
In addition
candidates must have one of ti e
following or a satisfactory equivalent: graduati m from an approved school of social work as
evidenced by a certificate or
master's degi-ee; or two years of
satisfactory full-time paid casework experience under qualified
supervision In a recognized social
casework agency; or a master's
degree In psychology, sociology,
or criminology, plus one year sxperience as described. Experience
as a social Investigator In the
Department of Welfare will be
accepted. Candidates who expect
to receive their master's degree by
June, 1959 will be admitted to
this examlnatdon. Written test
community'
FUT WALL FINISH
PIERCED ROUND
SERVER
. . . you'll b e glad you d i d !
Honestly, with Nalplex it's
eo eaiy to paint your rooms.
Coes on like a dream. N o
©dor during or after painting. Dries so fast you can
put your rooms right back
into use. Clean up brushes
or roller* with l a p water.
Beautiful colors, too.
r r n n $ 1 9 5
NO Fto.
TAX
So handy for serving tomatoes, eggs, waffles, fritters.
A wonderful gift!
COMMUNITY SERVICES
START AT $24.95
Com* in TODAY tor •
rREE Color CardI
EASY
H.
KAPLAN
PAINT SUPPLY
bw./nfown's
Dept.
6ii>.e
HEINS & B O L E T
1053 2nd AVENUE
New York City
Leading
TERMS
68 CORTLANDT STREET
N e w York City
RE 2-7600
PL 9-3670
TOfl$TMfl$TER
AUTOMATIC
* New Smart Modern
TOASTER
Styling
* Makes Perfect Toast...
FAST,'
with Model 8 0 0
POLAROID®
MODd U14
America's most wanfed toaster . . . now in
new, smartly-modern styling with cool, black
and gold handles, gleaming chrome. Hai
Toast Control Dial, exclusive Superflex
timer for toast as you like it—light, dark,
or in-between—on» slice or o dozen.
Land Camera Kit
SEE US FOR
NEW • LOW,
LOW PRICE!
BETTER LIVING
DISTRBUTORS, INC.
76 WILLOUGBY STREET
Brooklyn 1, N e w York
MAin 5-2600
Free gifts with other kits
I
I
I
i
'I lie r.i»n ra u.;a
..
,
j.
d
iti (III Ke<'oiMU hi>>v K«\<->> 3«>4i
(•ii|ii<*H iti liO iifit»iuiN! U i l l i ' l l i i k iM-w
rttluntiil |*iliit ( o p i f r , .miii
(»
><Mir own dupllcnleh
.«iM>r livhiK room, liiHtfiiU of tiHtiiii; Otfiti dvoe
oil the uiithiUf.
G e t Yours
Today
From
NEW
87 SECOND AVENUE
DEAL
NEW YORK
RADIO
GR. 5-6100
r»gB
'H
! >
C I V I L
Tm
FIRE OFFICERS W A N T
PROMOTION
President Charles J. Freeman
N Y C Uniformed Fire Officers Association, has informed Fire Commissioner Edward F. Cavanaugh
Jr. of the association's opposition
to the Fire Department's proposal to Increase the required service
length in a title as a promotion
requirement.
Commls.sloner Cavanaugh
reoommended that for promotion to
TO
RULE
STAND
captain, battalion chief and deputy chief candidates be required
to serve In the next lower title for
at least six months preceding the
date of the examination. The rule
has been that one day sufTices.
Deputy Chlet Freeman said that
such a change is Impractical, since
nearly a year elapses between the
date of such examinations and the
establishment of the list.
ATTENTION—HOME OWNERS
RECONVERT
I N T O A 2 FAMILY
Y O U R I FAMILY
HOME
HOUSE
AT NO EXPENSE
TO
YOU
FINEST HOMES
AGENCY. INC.
145-36 R e c k a w a y Blvd.
So. O i o n * P a r k 36, N. Y .
J A 9-1441
Your Moeny Back If You Don't Pass The Test
TYPSST CANDIDATES:
RENT A
TYPEWRITER
£X>1MINATJON — D E C . IJ-20
RENTALS
BE 3-5333
( b e t . William & N a s s a u !
Shoppers Service Guide
Business
A handbudU of job opportunities svallable
af>w. ti7 S. NormaD Feini^oM & Harold
Lint for students, for eniplo.ved mluUs
and peopio over 06. Qet this tnvaluable
fuidn for $1.50 plus 10c for mailinff
Band to
L E A D E R BOOK
STORK
Dlians Street. N Y C.
HELP
WANTED
MALE
PART-nME
Enlra
$100 • $.iOO
month.
Work lO-lB honi-s. Ideal for husband-wife
team. Call Circle 7-0618.
EARN
EXTRA
MONEY
t'l.OOB W A X I N O
rreo Instru'tlons
Easy Payment!
Mmil Sea us before you buy or sign anythin«. Tremendous discount on all eapnit *
supplies Kleen-.'t Prod. 8077 CoDoy Island
AT., Blilyn. Ml 8 - 2 ( L 6 S
Opportunities
WOMKN. E i r n part-time money at home,
aildreitinr envelopes (typtinff or lonerhand)
for ailverlisers. J U l l $ l for inslructlon
Manual tellimt how (Money-baeU gnarantee> aterllnff Valve Co.. Corona, N . Y .
Books
BOOKS
OF
Al.L
I'lIBI.ISHERS—Civil
Servies & Review—JOE S BOOK SHOP.
S.'iO Broadway. Albany. N . Y.
Organs (Instruction)
SALE
T Y P E W R I T E R BARGAINS
Smlth-$17.50: Underwood-$t>3.B0; o t h e n
Pearl Bros, 416 Hnilth, Bkn, T K fi-3024
HOUSEHOLD
A
JOB
M 09 P E R HOUR. Work ^ s many houri
as you wish. Demonstrating s new and
ania7.ing invention. For particulars, call
ALbany 8-8800.
Home
Repairs
ATTICS - BASEMENTS - ALTERATIONS.
PANELLI.S'G.
ETC.
WOODWORKING
SHOP. J A-E-N-I-K-E. z r s i Webster A » e
HI.
N Y.. KO 4-0513
REPAIR
&
SPRAY
HOl'SES OUTSiniO
TO LOOK L I K E NEW
GUARANTEED 10 YEARS
Modern
.Maintenance Co.
KA
0-2000
Typewriter*
Addlnq Machines
A d d r e s s i n g Machines
MImeoqraphs
UuaianlenI
Also rieiilala.
itciwln
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER C O .
110 W. sard 8T., NKW VUKK 1. M. I .
t UeUea S 8080
NECESSITIES
KURMTURE,
RIGS
A T PKirKI4 VOU C.*N A F F O R D
Furnituia. appliances, gifts clothing, etc
at real savings Municil>al Employees flervic« Room 4':8 15 Park Row CO 7-5390
SECRETARIAL
COURSE
Help Wanted • Female
NEED E X T R A X M A S CASH?
I f avail 3 hrs per eve. " - 3 eves a w k :
you can eanr $40-$50 wk as a Jewelry
Vastilon Show Director. N o exp nec; truiuIng provided, Immed. openinKS. P H O N E
MRS. PRI.NCIPE. K I 7 0U56
Albany
N K E I ) A HODBT for fun and reIax.ition?
4 Or'gan Lessons—$3. Inclndinff Use of
Organ. Brown's Piano (& Organ) Mart,
TrI City's L a r g e s t — I ' l S Pianos ft Organa
in Stock. Ph. 8 sas'j. 1047 Central A n .
Albany. N. Y .
FOR
Classes forniiiu now. i-losing Oct. 10th.
1US8.
AU
3-8775
Painting &
$9,990
Fabulous c o u n t r y villa — eo«slstlnq of f o u r b e d r o o m s , f a m lly-sixed kitchea. r a i s e d llvinq
a n d dining rooms, b a s e m e n t ;
oil HW h e a t . S e p a r a t e 3room q u e s t c o t t a q e plus a d d i tional livinq q u a r t e r s o v e r a
d e t a c h e d 2 - c a r q a r a q e . Real
rural livinq y e t close t o school
a n d shopping. Exclusive with
us.
LISCAI.
TYTELL
PART-TIME J O B
OPPORTUNITIES
HOW TO GET
That P a r t Time J o b
AREA
Sunrise and WelwooJ A v e .
Llnclenliiirst 5 3:i75
Fee $5.
TYPEWRITER
GET
BABYLON —
LINDENHURST
Decorating
M . W BKCKER.MAN
P A I N T I N G , paper hanging. Interior and
Exliirior work. 3417 Corlear Ave.. K I
3-3SH4, Mornings 'till 12 ft after 4 P J A .
BOOKS
T H E BOOK ROOM. 28.1 Slate St., H block
west of Stale Olflee Bldg.. Albany, N . Y
Tel.
4-8S0;l.
Hours
9:30-5:30.
Bibles,
books,
cards,
sacred
records,
Sunday
School materials.
Tuondajr, N o T c m b e r 25, I9!>8
L E A D E R
Time Real Estate
Delivery; a f t e r t e s t , pick up.
All later.t makes, 30 y e a r s e x p e r i e n c a .
123 FULTON STREET
V i c e
Vi Acre Brick Estate
2-Car Garage
Circular Driveway
CALL NOW
roua
•I
THAT HOME FOR
CHRISTMAS
I t Is not too late to get that new
home for Christmas. List Realty
has irany exclusive homes with
many vacancies that you oan
move right in. T w o large and
up-to-date offices located at 16013 Hillside Ave., Jamaica. This is
very easy to reach by subway,
use E or P trains to Parsons Blvd.
The South Ozone Park office is located at 135-30 Rockaway Blvd.,
and you are free to call JAmalca
9-5100 for prompt and reliable
pick-up service. List Realty is
truly one of the great progressive
firms selling homes in every sections of Queens, Hollls. Springfield Gardens, St. Albans, Jamaica,
South Ozone Park. You name it
r.lst has it—with many two f a m ily
homes
reasonably
priced.
WE GUARANTEE, THE RENTAL OP ANY APT. BUILT BY US!
WE CAN NOW OFFER A 30-YEAR FHA MTGE. PLAN TO OUR
CUSTOMERS.
CALL US FOR A FREI SPECIAL APPRAISAL.
WE ALSO SPECIALIZE IN REMOVING ALL VIOLATIONS.
ASK
US TO SEE SAMPLES OF BASEMENTS, ATTICS. PATIOS, AWNINGS, KITCHENS BY WHITEHALL AND GARAGES.
FOR
SE
MOTUE
MOORE. GEORGE
G.—CITATION.—The
P E O P L E OF T H E S T A T E OF NEW Y O R K
bv the Grace of God Free and Independi^nt
TO M A R G U E R I T E M. JUDSON. S T E L L A
M. T H A Y E R . M A R I A N F E R R Y . J U L I A
F E R R Y , an infant over 14 years of ago;
M A S O N F E R R Y , an infant over 14 years
of age: D A V I D JUDSON; W I L L I A M JUDSON' F R E D E R I C K D, JUDSO.V. an Infant
under 14 years of aite; S H E l l K Y E L I Z A B E T H JUDSON. an infant under 14 years
of age; J A N E T M A R I E JUDSON, an infant
under
14 years of
HBH: E T H E L
M.
W I L L S ; GEORGE R. W I L L S , an infant
over 14 years of ase; C A R O L W I L L S ,
an infant under 14 years of a w : JENNIFER
WILLS,
an
infant
under
14
years of age; C L I F T O N B. S I B L E Y ; J A N E
S I B L E Y , an infant under 14 years of age;
D A V I D C. S I B L E Y , an infant under 14
years of age; C H A R L O T T E T . W O S T E R ;
M A R Y E L I Z A B E T H H U M B E R T ; JAMES
W . T H A Y E R . JR.; JAMES W . T H A Y E R .
I I I . ; JOHN R. T H A Y E R ; JOHN R. T H A Y ER. JR.. an infant under Ihe age. of 14
veara: P A T R I C I A A. N A G O R K A : GEORGE
M. T H A Y E R ; GEORGE D. T H A Y E R ; DONA L D M. T H A Y E R : C L A U D I A P. H A R R I S ,
an infant over Ihe age of 14 years;
B A R B A R A L. S T E V E N S ; R I C H A R D
A.
STEVENS, an infant iimler the aite of 14
years; D A V I D O. S T E V E N S , an infant
under thhe age of 14 years: DOUGLAS M .
STEVENS, an infant under the ase of 14
years' T H O M A S 1'. T H A Y E R : T H O M A S 0.
T H A Y E R ; C A R O L Y N T H A Y E R , an infant
over the age of 14 years; B A R B A R A T .
BOYBSTUN:
MARGARET
ANN
BOYDS T U N ; B E V E R L Y L. RICHARDSON, an
infant over the age of 14 years: MAJlG E R Y T . M I L L E R ; W A R R E N Q. M I L L E R ,
an infant under Ihe age of 14 years;
R O B E R T B. M I L L E R , an infant under the
age of 14 years; L A W R E N C E A. M I L L E R ,
an infant under the age of 14 years;
E L I Z A B E T H T . CHASE: JOHN JUDSON
Jr.;
THE
NORTHFIELD
SCHOOLS
(founded by Dwight L . M o o d y ) : John
Judson. John Judsun. Jr.. an infant over
the age of 14 yerirs: and imborn issue of
GEORGE G. MOORE, deceased being the
persons interested as ciedilors. legatee*,
devisees,
beneficiaries.
distriltulees,
or
otherwise in the estate of GEORGE Q.
MOORE, deceased, who at the lime of his
death was a resident of New York County.
New York SEND G R E E T N G :
START THE NEW YEAR IN YOUR OWN HOME
Springfield G a r d e n s
1 family, insul. brick, df^tached
A garace, o n 35x100 lot. 6
rooms, S spacious airy bedrooms, oil heat, full basement,
many extras Included.
P r i c e $14,500
$19,000
S p e c i a l on New Homes In Oueeiis a n d N a s s a u . 12 d c v e l o p m e n t t
to ehoosa from.
Call
SMITH & S C I S C O
Real Estate
192-11
LINDEN BOULEVARD.
L A 5-0033
INTEGRATED
EXCELLENT RESIDENTIAL
AREA
HEMPSTEAD. L.I.
NEW
DELUXB
RANCHE.S
6 ROOMS
$15,990
O N L Y 10% D O W N &
STILL LOWER D O W N
PAYMENTS T O
THOSE W H O
QUALIFY
ALBANS
$16,800
ST. A L B A N S
1 f a m i l y d e t a c h e d . 4 m a s t e r tixe
b e d r o o m s , 1 </i b a t h s , b e a o t i f a l
l a n d s c a p e d , 50x100 p l o t , « a s ,
stoam h e a t , q a r o g e
$16,500
OTHER GOOD lUYS
HAZEL B. GRAY
2 FAMILY HOUSES A v a i i a b l *
f r o m $18,500
Deal directly with Builder i Say*.
Can be seen by Appointment only.
IV 9-6388
ST.
SO. OZONE
PARK
2 family, d e t a c h e d , 4 r o o m s «p
4 a n d s u n p o r c h down, m o d e r n
kitchen, finished b a s e m e n t , f a rage
Sewers, built In oven, ceramic tilii
baths, plus other
custom
built
features.
Lie. Broker
109-30 M E R R I C K B L V D .
JAMAICA
E n t r a n c e 109th Rd.
IV 9-7888
UNITED NEIGHBORS'
HOMES
AX 1-5858.9
DECIDE NOW
to go on the greatest
holiday ever offered !
RIT IN T I A N S O C C A N - S
PRESSURIZED "ROVAL H A W A I I A N *
CONSTELLATIONS
R o u n d Trip — AU
Inclusive
Holiday ^514
«
™
•All far*, wblsci l« CA* app>a>«l and dtafig* witlioul KOIicsi,
H*r« u fom CH«AC«, lo»t(tova<a*
tion in Hawaii and Colifofnio, Tak«
Ul For litlW mora Ihon
cost of
M VOCOHM • ! KOMT, you con K<iv«
2 <tayt i<t glomorouA Hollywood or«d
lot An««l«H 10 doyt m fobulow*
Hawaii and 1 day* iti faicirratino
Son Froncitc* , . . Sm Hollywood
movi« ktort' hoHMt, Oibn«yland. Enior
Woikiki 6eoch and »wrf, notiv* done*
(n9 af>d food. Explor* Son Froncifco'ft
Gold«n Got* ond CKinotown • • *
luKuriow* Trontocaon Air Lines "Royol
Howoiion** pr«k»urii«d Coniteliotion*
will tp«*d you* to af\d from yovt
4r««im vocotioi^
Upon the petition of GEORGE GELSTON MOORE. JR,. residing at 81 Forest
Aventie. New Roehelie. New York. M A R I A N MOORE, residing at 138 East a4th
Street, New York. New Y o r k . E T H E L M.
KELLY,
residing
at Melrose.
Natehei.
Mississippi, and said GKORGE GHL.STON
MOORE. JR.. H A R R I E T B. S I B L E Y , residing at 74 I.elghlon Road, Wellealey,
Massachusetts and GEORGE 0, M, B U L L ,
residing at 4 « « l Allan Road. Washington.
D. C. as Plxeeutors. etc. of Fannie M, Bull;
deceased, as Trustees, etc. of the L,ist Will
and Testament of George G. Moore, deceased. excepting the trust created for
Stella M, Thayer and olliers.
You and each of you are hereby cited
to show cause before the Surrogate's Court
of New York County, held at the Hall of
NOTICE
Records in the Connly of New York, on
the lUth day of December, 11*38. at half
BE A P P O I N T E D Stale Notary Public n o «
past
ten o'clock in the forenoon of that
Write for t'REE details—Medcr Agenc*.
day. why the account of proceedings of
ftSU f i f t h Avenue, New York SO, N T
GEORGE GEl.STON MOORE. J R „ M A R I A N
MOORE, E T H E L M. K E L L Y , and GEORGE
L o w C o s t • M e x i c a n V a c a t i o a GELSTON MOORE, JR., H A R R I E T B .
$1.80 per person, rin/bd. * bath In iU- S I B L E Y , and GEORGE G. M. BULL, as
sort MEXICO Fabuloiia low cost vacaflbm. Executors, etc. of Fannie M. Bull, deceased,
Send )i::,UO for Direetory.
Satisfaction as trustees, etc. of the Last Will and Tiw
Quaranteed
H
E, B.-IHault, 110
P o i t tament of Goorge O. M<iore,, deceased, excepting the trust created (or Stella M
Ave, N, Y St. N. T .
Thayer and others should not Ue Judicially settled.
Appliance
Services
I N T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F , we have
caused the seal of tiia SurroT R A I Y
H K K V U I . N U COUP,
gate's Court of the said County
Sales ft Service • reeond. Relrigs Stoyi
of Now York to be heieilnlo afWash, Machines, combo sinks, Guarauteed
fixed. W I T N E S S .
HONORABI.K
T R A C Y U E K R I C E R A T I O N — C Y 2-5000
(Seal.)
S, Samuel Dl Falco. a Surrogate
24U K H U 81 ft l : : o i Castle Hill A T . B S .
of our said County at the Coun
t y lit New York, the 7IU day of
UTILITIES
NovHuiber in the year of Qur
l.ord one (jiousaud nuie hundred
91'NDKLL CO,. INC. 300 Central Avenue,
and fil'ly-ei^hl,
Albany. N . Y . Tel. 4.;;H00. Quaker
P H l l . l l ' A, DONAHUE,
KltcUous. SI. Charle* KitcUuiu.
Clerk al tu« Surrogate's Court.
St. Albans, N. Y .
2 family shingle detached A
garage, on landscaped plot. 8
rooms, 4 & 4. Oil heat, niccly
decorated, all modern. Many
extras.
CLIP A N D
j • Pt«oBa MAd froa Holiday Kit elvlnfl d«toil»d inlofnMtlafi
M A I L THIS j
on th« Callfornla-Howallaa Holidoy.
C O U P O N I Q 6<>cloft«d piooM find * ., , _ ropratcnting dapotlH for
for
TODAY
IvndobU il you or* u«H>bl« to 90^
AddroM
Cll,
„
ItmH
i^gitlorif tcHoduUd ftigkN lo Ckkago,
lU OHmIo
TRANSOCEAN AIR LINES
Americo'v Fprpmoit Supplemtntof An Cdrri«r
lOS ANGEIES
OAKIANO-SAN
30 Rockefeller P l a t a , N e w York
CHICAGO
HAUFOi%
> REAL ESTATE «
HOUSES — HOMES - PROPERTIES
CALL
BE 3-6010
CALL
BE 3-6010
THE BEST GIFT O F ALL —• YOUR OWN HOME
LONG
LONG
ISLAND
ISLAND
LONG
ISLAND
THE ADVERTISERS IN THIS SECTION HAVE ALL PLEDGED TO THE SHARKEY- BROWN LAW ON HOUSING
INTEGRATED AREAS
HOLLIS GARDENS
GAPE GOD
I N T E G RA T E D
ONLY $300 DOWN
The Charm of A Lovely Countryside
SACRIFICED
FOR ONLY $14,990
* 3 Mastar • • d r e e m i
Celorod
• 18 Ft. Living Room
* l a n q u o t Dining Room
$17,000)
TO
ALL
CASH
s o . OZONE PARK
• E-S-S-E-X
F a .
^
a
a
a .
SPRINGFIELD
GARDENS
COTTAGE
$9,990
$300 C A S H
140-24 R o c k o w a y Blvd.
SO. OZONE PARK
r
$l, l»0 Down To A l l
•
1 FARE ZONE
1 & 2 FAM-BRICK
I ' A H K rL.^CIC, I-iaA
U i i i l r j n a|il. luiubr, 1 rni* $ 7 1 6 0 .
kui>i t>ii prtmieta.
Sc«
FURNISHED A P T .
(itltv T-4115
1 AND S FAMIl.t
HnUHEa r « B
RR AA RR EE
8ALB
Cvioiia ana Kut Elmhurat. (Iiitrrr.)
DA t - S l i « . TW S-M?*—AGKMT
•
•
TWO FAMILY
Gl $725 CASH
•
•
•
•
•
•
MOTHER & DAUGHTER
BRICK $9,900
$300 CASH
L
FRKK
PICK
I P
UNBELIEVABLE $1S.990
B U n . D E K » CI.OSROUT —
6 ruonn. 3
€ u m p l « l i ! l j tai'hiit a i i l i . nr p i i v . L<-a,h.
public
A ) f a r round buuiti witb
lu kiiiiimer vara(U)D —
Hurry.
T r a d e R » » U y . »:(.") CouUlin St. ( H f i i i p • Ukd T p k t . K raru>iUK>lal« — C B 8 OU^S.
AUTOS, new and used.
Sec
weekly listing In advertising columns of The Leader.
U,
S.
$600 DOWN
2 Fam. $91.65 mo. $14,200
1 Fam. $90.30 mo. $14,000
Bung. $91.36 mo. $14,150
$800 DOWN
1 Fam. $93.00 mo.
2 Fam. $95.02 mo.
Bung.
$97.04 mo.
2 Fam. $98.39 mo.
I Fam. $101.08 mo.
Security
curity
changes.
ALBANS
D e t a c h e d , 50x100 plot, 1
family, 8 rooms, 2 b a t h s ,
4 bedrooms, goroge, gas
h e a t , e x t r a s . A1 a r e a .
listI
REALTY
135-30 Rockaway Blvd.
So. Ozone Park
Tan W y i k K x i i i r m li> l l i i r k i i w n j
Blvd. e v i l - O C K N 7 ilii.v« ii » e » l l
J A 9-5100
ALSO
»
160-13 Hillside Ave.
Jamaica
i
i
i
i
OL 7-3838
or F Traliin <o l-ariKinii Blvd.
on
THE
$13,900
$450 DOWN
HOLLIS — 2 family brick,
two 5 room apts., finished basement, oil heat.
Asking
$19,900
$2,000 DOWN
ST. ALBANS—2 family,
41/2 and 41/2, oil heat, garage,
modern,
40*100.
Asking $17,700—$15 week.
iBelford D. Harty, Jr.(
132-37 1S4tli St., J a m a i c a
Fl M 9 5 0
Smithtown, L. 1.
Law
ex-
plained in simple language. Send
for free circular
$14,600
$14,900
$15,200
$15,400
$15,800
S P E C I >t L
ST.
Asking
1958 Amendments to the
Social
$11,500
$11,900
$12,100
$12,200
$12,400
$12,800
$13,200
$13,800
XMAS SPECIALS
I.
HKIJvil !l-AAVn, N o Miin.y Down I Stvpii
room Huuttti un one a<-re. Double Kalaire.
full I f l l a r .
txt:a«. More
land
a\allable, f l 2 . 6 U 0 .
$450 DOWN
1 Fam. $74.52 mo.
1 Fam. $77.21 mo.
1 Fam. $78.50 mo.
Bung.
$79.23 mo.
2 Fam. $80.58 mo.
1 Fam. $83.28 mo.
Bung.
$85.97 mo.
1 Fam. $90.02 mo.
ST. ALBANS — 7rooms,
oil heat, finished basement, 1 car garage, washing machine and other
extras.
OL. 8-2015
The
mo. $9,450
mo. $9,990
mo. $10,990
mo. $11,000
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
LIVE RENT FREE
Jamaica
OPPORTUNITY
H O M E S near o m
Canipua
A v « . Dllt.
«rnm
tl7,3U0
T e l A l l u n T » .14a7. «-6li:i6
$61.71
$64.69
$71.43
$72.11
i
YOUR
SKRTKB
Blvd.,
IJiiitetl
OLympia 8-2014
WratcrD
Fam.
Fam.
Fam.
Fam.
L
LOIS .T. ALLEN — A N D R E W E D W A R D S
Licensed Real Estate Brokers
168-18 Liberty Ave., Jamaica
Branch OHice: 809 Broadway, Westbury
K08ENDAI.B
8lt(
SI.BOO down
1
1
1
1
l
OLympia 9-6700
114-44 SutphIn
TO FIT
POCKET"
MOVE RIGHT IN
ALLEN & EDWARDS
Roadi
^
•
Beautiful BuriKalow, H years old. Lartce plot. Expansion attic,
full basement; rear terrace. Many extras. $1.5,500 gross.
HOIXIS—Brick, legal 2-family; .5 up and 5 down; full basement. 10 years old. $21,500.
IF Y O U R PRESENT HOME DOES NOT FIT Y O U R NEEDS
EXCHANGE IT FOR ANTHER. SEE—
•
E I G H T larire roonit on 80x100 plot, b<'autilui Split L « v f t . alniont n<;w. ^dodn-D
tlioroii^hout. Atfam h«>at. Yoii can f i l h e r
or
K o BroUcra. Call owner
BArelay 7-0120
tiuvhliis.
totiiU
•
7 DAYS A WEEK
Hundreds of listings all locations
NEW L E G A L 2 FAMILY
* !i H
prITmU
r u m l n b e d 'IVar
•
'iWiffisiisSliSii.
FA 5-6432
PORT JEFFERSON.
•
A L L TYPES OF COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
Hollywood Kitchens & Baths, Wall Ovens, Finished Basements
MODELS " A " — H a m m e r s l e y & Tiemon Avenue
MODELS " B " — 9 4 8 East 214th S t r e e t
MODELS " C " — 9 2 7 East 226th S t r e e t
MODELS " D " — 1 3 7 S Burke Avenue
RIVEHSIDB DHIVE,
avai'tmeiils. l u t w r a c l a l ,
T r o j a n
^^
^ A X 7.7900
Unfurnished Apts.
Brooklyn
•
C A L L
JAmaica 9-2000
LIST REALTY ONLY
>
CALL US NOW
JAMAICA
TU 1-1150
•
South Oxone Park, 2 p r i v a t e
a p t s , 2 kitchens, 2 b a t h s , full
N e a t a n d modern d e s c r i b e s It! b a s e m e n t , oil h e a t ond d o u b l e
Built on a b e a u t i f u l l y land- g a r a g e .
s c a p e d 50x100 plot with g a r a g e
BRING DEPOSIT
and gas heat.
143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.
G r e e n A White Signs f r o m Boston & E a s t c h e s t a r
•
Baisley Park, b e a u t i f u l d e t a c h e d
house, 2 l a r g e p r i v a t e o p t s . —
Full p r i c e f o r this 6 room house full b a s e m e n t , g a s unit a n d
on a 40x100 plot, has g a r a g e , double g a r a g e , 40x100, nr. Lake.
1 block f r o m t r a n s p o r t a t i o n a n d Live Rent Free.
shopping.
ONLY $14,500
N T E G B A T E D
Follow
•
$6,500
A lovely 5 room Colonial For the family who likes land,
home with full basement, a beautiful 7 room home with
on
approximately
automatic heat & loads of garage,
extras. A fabulous deal for 80x100 landscaped corner. A
terrific buy for only $14,990.
only $12,500.
Ask for B - n O l
Ask for B-1700
•
•
•
J A 3-3377
$300 CASH
4
^
A
Richmond Hill, Hollis
So. Ozone Park,
J a m a i c a & Vic.
•
Parson Blvd. i ft 8th Ave. Sab.
OPEN
W H Y
These hemes are
exclusive with
"HOMES
•
JAMAICA
I - 2 STEAL
NO CASH DOWN
Gl
From
^
> $300DownToAII
AVL
INTEGRATED
I
DOWN
RENT???
r
•
EXCLUSIVE WITH ESSEX!
Springfield
BAISLEY
Gardens
PARK
NO
ST. ALBANS
7 DAYS A WEEK
159-12 HILLSIDE
SP 6-0800
I N T E G R A T E D
K
•
REALTY
Fraa Pick Up S e r v i c e
Subway.
OL 7-6600
168-20 Hillside Avenue. Jamaica
Open 7 Days A Week 9 to 9
. ^
BETTER
OPEN
REAL ESTATE CO.
r
Only $61.91 a Month
114-57 Farmers Blvd.
NATIONAL
^ M M r -I n
ONLY $390 DOWN
* All-Scienc* M o d o m K i t c k t a
* Playroom-Slxed Bosemant
* Awning C o v c r o d F l a g i t o n a
Patio
* Automatic H e a t
* EXTRAS INCLUDE —
WASHING MACHINE:
DRYER: REFRIGERATOR:
SCREENS. STORMS, a t e .
• iVi H y g * Reomt
• 1 </i Hollywood
Til* l o t h t
WHY PAY RENT?
D e t a c h e d , «. p o r c h ond b a t h ,
featuring 3 master bedrooms,
g a r a g e , oil unit, 2 r o o m s a n d
b a t h in finished b a s e m e n t . Extras
included.
w a y , l a n d s c a p e d plot, excellent
neighborhood,
convenient
to
everything.
Residence Within the City's Limits
SId* Hall
HURRY! BRING SMALL
DEPOSIT
ST. ALBANS $12,990 SOUTH OZONE PARK
D a t a c h a d , 7 room Colonial, 3
m a i t a r b a d r o o m s , full b a s e m e n t ,
$9,500
a u t o m a t i c h e a t , p r i v a t e drive-
RED ROSES
'490 CASH
L
BUNGALOW
AND
AT
$9,990 ST. ALBANS $10,000
YOUR h o u i e hunting will i t o p
whan you t e a Hiii c h a r m i n g , euttom built c o t t a g a , 50x100, p a r k D e t a c h e d , 50x100, finished b a s e Itlia l a t t i n g , finiihad b a s a m a n t , m e n t with kitchen a n d b a t h r o o m ,
garaga, g a t haat, lorga bad- g a r a g e , immaculate throughout.
rooms.
RED BRICK
(VALUED
INTEGRATED
Social
Se-
LEADER,
87 Duane Street, Kew York 7. N.Y.
SACRIFICE
Modtrn 9-Rooni Houst
•*lui l a n e rMreatlon tiMiin. Hut
n a l e r ull heat, it-ear l a r a i e . H
aire.
nalklng
dlalaiir*
ta
acliooli.
chur,-he«.
ahuitplMg
eeuter and H.H. ttatlon. Heattonable.
Call O w n e r a t
ANdrews 5-1571
M
P«f« TwcIY*
C I V I L
IN rONKCRS
$1495
W I L L S MOTORS
n
RItrerdala Ave.
1.0
Ml.
*58 PLYMS & DODGES
. i _ C O M E
BEQUntEMENTB A P P R O V E D
LEFTOVERS
S E E . ^
THE NEW
BRIDGE MOTORS, In*.
Vacttiry AnthurlTiMl Bronx Dea1«r
FIAT
2346 Grqnd C o n e e a r i *
(Vet. 183-184 Sts.)
CY 8-434S
19S9 S I M C A S
A f t o on dlnplay
THE BEST SMALL
CAR FOR YOU
la Mir
Only $1098
itive and two promotion examinations. The open-competitive tests
lire ft*- assistant director of research (youth activities^; junior
architect; program review asslsttant; senior street club worker;
and supervising research assistant
(youth activities).
The promotion tests are for
foreman auto mechanic. Police
SrrTir*
AmUalil*
All
SPECIAL
DISCOUNT
BKI.VN.
ES 5-7676
tVa c a r r y many fine Uted Can
ronq/ng from $99 to $2199.
$1539
DELIVERY
Foreign Car Division o f :
Itnn
Uroa.lwaj
(nnir
$495
St.)
I'l, 7-r.OlO
VH^nv t.p to .35 Miles per
«allon on reunlar easoline.
a-Doora — 4 Door» Statloo
Waeons.
I)itmp.llatf. Dpilverj
Authorized KeSolo - Plyniooth Dealera
94-15 NORTHERN BLVD.
UNTIG RENAULT
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Merriek
Rd.. Rnrkvllla
RO 6-«)'!H0
Centra
WARTBURG
M O D E L S
30 MONTHS TO PAY
GERMAN
•
SELECTED
ONLY
AVAILABLE
AT THE RIGHT PRICES
KARGMAN
$1,677
MOTORS
I.
S e e It f i r s t
at MEZEY
FOR
'»«
'.IS
•R3
S3
frwr^
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
M E Y E R T H E BUYER
Broadway (near 69
P L 7-6910
St.)
s m - 9 3
NOW
ECONOMICALLY
CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES
FOR A S
1229 2nd AVE.
IT^AAAAAAI TE 8-2700
Eqaity
^
1
LOW
AS
$79 PER MO.
MEZEY MOTORS |
lo. n,i. AUTHORIZED
LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALER
Lease witk
BRAND NEW
1959 GARS LEASED
PRICED FOR
III
A L L MAKES & MODELS
ARE AVAILABLE
JACKSON MOTORS CO.
(64 St.) j 94-15 NORTHERN BLVD.
3 REASONS
IL 7-2100
WHY
BOND IS THE RIGHT PLACE
TO BUY YOUR
NEW
FORD
O R A - 1 USED
CAR
• LOWEST PRICES
• HIGHEST TRADES
• DEPENDABLE SERVICE
Come
and iind e a t tor y o e r i e l f .
BOND
85-24 ROCKAWAY BLVD.
^
^
^
TERRIFIC DISPLAY—ALL
^
MODELS & COLORS In STOCK .4
A l i e Uted C a r Cloieeuts
^
'at artinK
Cpa Antumatle
'S.l r O R i > Hedan Fordamatie
-OS OLDS Sedan Hydraniatla
and miiny otli.
MOTORS
S
.9000
M
^
2
MOTORS^
Authorir.i'd
l.lncoln-Mereury
D e a l e r4
^
1229 2nd
Ave. (64 St.)
VOLKSWAflEN
f79a
IIOIKIIC Sedan, elean, sharp . .«<t4S
B U I f K Very elean
»Mn
CUKTSLKR I'leaa
«I0S
I87II
COVERAGE
ANY DRIVER
I N S U R A M E NEKVICE
CI L-L!J33
EZEY
Atlantic Ava. at WoodhaTeo BUd.
ozoNB pari
Bklya
'58 MERGURYS TTT^
LANTIC AUTO SALES
VI 9-7474
St..
Save! Advance Discount
IMMEDIATE
ANY C A R •
IMPORT
sa Klvsrdale Ave. -:- Yonkera, N .
VOnkera S-S44«
PA*
Open
R A 8 - 2 5 2 4 q o| 6
TR 5-2914
7 M o v l n i Parts in Motor.
WILLS
8 MONTHS TO
A. Roslow. 669 Fulton
• Up to 411 Milea to GaL
USED CARS
IL 7-2100
SMALL
DOWN
PAYMENT
ONLY $1895
KARP VOLVO
S»»
LEFT
JACKSON MOTORS CO.
of Klrnt 3 rosltioB at
i.lmerock, Conn.
• t .Speed Box - Dual Carba
Also Available
IIP
D**OUUU
EXCEPTIONAL
— BUY —
S R N S A T I O N A L Rn'EDIISH CAR
winner
OCnn
1957
DE SOTO
VOLVO
ft 8howrnoma
HS9-20 illlUl.la A t « . Jamaica A X 1-0700
Ul lilllsl.lo Ave. Janiaira OL 7-8K00
Tha only .Vnllioriied Dealer In Quceni
Open Eves 'till 9:30
n
BRAND NEW
P L A T E S A T 0N< E
JOK l » l M A R T I N O
48-OS Northern Blvd.
K O E P P E L MOTORS, Inc.
ALSO
JUST O N E
0.H7 r O l K T H A V E .
B R O O K L Y N , N . V.
Near Belt P'kway fie St.
Ferry Exit
GE 9-UI86
A i t t T k a ' i Nawatf
Imperfetf ^ a r
A L L
FORD
Aufherhed
Ford Dealers
FORD OF GERMANY
0
34-21 0ns.Blvd.Ml
Elmhurst 111
CONDON MOTORS
TAUNUS
^
EMIGRANT
BANK
1958
HAS
OZONE PAIK
grant Industrial Savings Bank,
announced a new development in
the field of gift certificates. T h e
donor obtains an attractive certificate from the bank. The recipient exchanges the gift certificate
for a savings account pas.sbook in
his name.
Although this .service is obtainable in time for Chri.stmas,
the Emigrant gift certificate may
be obtained the year round for
use on any occasion — graduation-s,
birthdays,
anniversaries,
and so forth.
PARTY POOP
Comment of a pessimistic eligible: "Many are called but few
are chosen."
M'XiAI, JVOTK'R
LI dlow 4-':»0nl
i.rtJAi,
with
0 Minimum Cash Down
0 :i Yeai-a to P a y
0 Hiifhpst Trade-in
Allowances
Lar^e Heleetlon
of New & I'sed
Cars
FOR FAST ACTION
CAI.I, OK » - t i I 8 «
AhIc for MR. KASTON
(OM
e i T O JEROME A V E N l ' E
NORTH OF I K i s t ST., BRONX
SA^
con own a
1959
CARS
CARRAZZA
pay
ijdA (A.A X AAA. AA
Employeei
*ntlu(riipd ncSoto Plymouth Dulera
OI-IS NORTHKKN BOULEVARD
I L 7-2100
MEYER THE BUYER
• I'p to AS miles
per ( H i . Lo ml
•quipped
I.o ml
Now f o r t h e firtt time
Civil Service
J A C K S O N MOTORS C O .
QUALITY
• Greater Reonomy
IMMEDIATE
3 6 monfhs to
CIVIL
SERVICE
EMPLOYEES
HEADQUARTERS
FOR USED CARS
DRI.IVERED
fkOM
S P E C I A L DEALS
for
CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES
for
'AS m i K K Slalinn Wagon,
. L-ZS. N/H. Sharp
• M CIIKVKOI.KT SlMirt» Cou|i«
Har.ll..... R /H. riiMn . .
»•"••
'59 ENGLISH FORDS
Over
I S L A M ) AVE..
• Better Performanra
ON 9UEENS BLVD.
EUROPEAN MOTOR CARS
Wtlil ( 0 M ; V
FIAT
thowroomt
• n» Mii«i to noi. «r itft. ou
•
F O R F I V E N T C TESTS
tect, all departments.
C L E 4 R 4 N C E S>ILf
D r a s t i c Reduction u
Ntw
S-544a
Tonken
f H e s d U f , N o r e m l i e r 25,
L E A D E R
Easy Payments
NOVEL GIFT-CERTIFICATE
PL
T h e New Vorlc City Civil Serv- Department and Department of
Anf Ow, Anf DriTcr, !• MlnnU
Minn
•wiM
John T, Madden, chairman of
OrKN iAT. ice Commission iia-i approved re- Public Works; and Junior archiBE 3-2290
XTZ Brakrrac*
the board of trustees of the Emiquirements for five open-compet-
'58 ENGLISH FORDS
^'.r
riHl«« m oneol
9 I « Itawn
. . .
S E R V I C E
TF, 8-'^700
Open KTea'4
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^
I.F.r.AI. NOTICF,
C I T A T I O N — Tha People ut the Stale
of New York, by the Grace of tiud, Fiea
and Independent TO Attofney GcnLTal of
tl.o Stale of N e w York, Anna Tabaekova.
Verona DtirlMOVa. KinU Cipko. Viucencia
Millli'ka. i'avel Cipko, Anna Allluniazu,
Latlislav Cipko. Kineat Cipku. Ulsa CiP'
kova. Jonef Cipko, Paulina Cipkova de
Kuhn: Emilia M. <le Palmeiro ami Joaa
Man«-ar ai didtribnlKea of Maria Mansar,
dervaaed: Wolf, Popper. Koas. Wolf &
Jonea and lo " M a r y D o e " lha name " M a r y
Due" buinff fletitioiia. the alleK'ed w i d o w
of Joseph Cipko, defeased, if livinc and if
dea.1. to the aaecutois, administratora, distribntees and aaaisna of " M a r y Doe ' da
<-eaaed wtiose names and post oHloe addroMses ara iinknown and cannot after
dilixenl intiniry be asi-firlained by the pell
lioner herein; and lo the dislributees o1
Joseph Cipko, de<.-eased, whose names and
post olfloe addiesst's are unknown and
I'annol after dllsenl inquiry ba as. eriained
Ity the petitioner herein: beinr tlie persona
interested
as crt'dilors. distributees
or
olherwise In the estate of Joseph Cipko,
d.'eased, v»ho at the lime ot Ilia death
wm a resident of S71 East lOlh Slrsel.
New York. N. Y . S.-nd ( I K E E T I N G :
NO'ric'p;
I N S T A L L A T I O N OF CONVECTORS «
A I ' F M ! K T F . N A N T WOUK
S T A T E OFKICR HUII.DINO
80 C E N T R E ST.
NEW YORK CITY
N O T K E TO BIDDER.S
Se,\Ied iiropos.ils eoveiins- ronstrnetion
and H e a t i n j Work for the InslallHtioli of
t'onvi-etors. Valve s Traps and Appiirtenant
Work, Slate Om.n Bliil.linir, HO Centre St..
New York City. In .i.conlauce Willi Spe.-ifl.alioii No. I I T ' . ' X C ami a.conipanyinir
drawiiiEs. will be received by Heni-y ACohi-n. nirertor. Bureau of Contrai'ts. Deparlni.'nt of Piiblie Works, n t h
Floor,
'Hie Oovernor Alfred E. Sniitli Slate Offlee Building, Albany. N . Y., until 2:00
o'clock I'.M., Eastern Sland.ird Time, on
Wednesday, nervmber 17. 1H.5S. when they
will be publicly opened and read.
Each proposal miisl be maile upon the
form and aiibmitted In the envelope provi.leil therefor and sluill be accompanied
by a certifled check made pavable to the
Slate of New York. Commissiiiner of Taxation and Finance, in the amount .stipulated
in the proposal as a guaranty that the
biilder will enter Into the contract If It be
awarded to him. The speciRcntion iiimibcr
must he written on the front o( the
envelope. The hl:ink spaces In the prnpos.il
must be tilled In. and no chvisre ah.-ill be
made In the phr.iseoloKy of the proposal.
I'nip.is.lls thill carry any omissions, erasures, alterations or addllions may be r<(iei lc.I as informal. The Rl.ate reserves the
rlKht lo reject any or .all bids. Successful
bidder will be reiiuiied to (five a bond
conditioned f o the faithful performance of
the contract ami a separate bond for the
payment of laborers and materialmen, each
bond in the sum of 100% of the amount
of the contract. Ilrawiiii-s and apeciflcallon
ni.iy he examined free of charge at the
follnwing: otflces:
Stale Architeet 370 Broadway,
New
York City.
Stale Archilect. 4lh Floor. Arcade Bldi.,
t.'in 4 S « Broailw.iy. Albany 7. N. Y .
District Supervisor of Bldir. Constr..
Stale Offlce Buildins, 3,1 E, Washington
St., Syracuse, N . Y .
District Supervisor of •Rldg. Constr.,
nenesee Valley Reirional Market, 900 Jefferson Knad. Richesler 2,1. N. Y .
District Engineer, tt.f Court St., Butfalo.
N. Y.
Drawings and specifications may be oblaliied by calling at the Bureau ot Contracts. (Branch niflcel 4lh Floor. Arcade
Bid?,, 4S0-4RH Bioadwa.v. Albany 7. N . T..
or at the Slate Architect's Olflce. 18th
Floor. "ITO Bro.idwaj, New York Citv, and
by making deposit f o r each eel of S.'S.OO
or by mailing such deposit to the Albany
atldress. Checks should be made pavable
lo tho Slate Deparlnicnt of Public Works.
Proposal blanks and envelopi-s will he
furnished
without
charge.
Tlie
.«!lat«
Architect's Standard Construction & Meclianical Speeincalions will be required f o r
this project and may Iw purchas.-d from
the Bureau of Accounts and Finance. Denarlment of Public Works. 14lh Floor.
The Oovernor Alfred E. Sniilh Slate Oflice Building. Albany, N. Y., for the sum
of S.I.OO each.
D V T F D : n-l,'<.,=i8
GRC/N
W I L L I A M S , C L A R A . — P 1445. 1958.
— C I T A T I O N . — T h e P,-ople of the Slate of
New York By the Grace ot God Fri'e and
Independent. TO? H A R R Y S. H A L L . D A V I D
P. S H C ' I T L K W O R T H .
HERBERT
L.
SHHTTLEWORTH,
A ONES
PiiNSON.
O i . i V E CONIM, A R T H U R F. S H U T T L E WORTH. N E L i . I E FIT'CH, A N N I E H A M MOND. D A I S Y S M I T H , C O N N I E DUPONTF.T, if living, and if she be dead, to her
heirs at law, next of kin ami dislributees,
whose names and places ol residen.e are
all iinltnown. an.i if stia died subsequent
to de<>edcnt herein, lo her executors, . d minislralors, legatees, devisees, assigneea
and sii.i.-essors in interest, whose name*
and plai-es ot a.ldress are unknown, and
cannot, after due diligence, be aaeerlaincd,
Ihe next of kin and heirs at law of CL.ARA
W I L L I A M S , de.-eaa,Ml, send greelins:
Whereas, GEORGE R, R A M S A i i i R , who
resi.les al 27:! First Avenue, the Cilv of
New York, has lately applii'd to the SurroUpon the pelilion ot The i'ublio Ad- g a t e s Court of our County ol New York to
niinislralor of the f o n n t y of New York, have a certain inslrunienl In wriling bearhaving hia otfl.'e at Hall of Kecords, Kuom ing date July 4, 11)57 relating to both real
:illU, Bc.roiiKh of Manhallan. City and and personal properly, duly proved as the
I'ounly of Ni'W York, as adminlatartor of last will anil ti-alameiit ot C L A R A W I L the (Iioils, chattels and eiedits of .aid L I A M S , deeiasi'd. wl.o w.is si the lime of
de.'eaaed;
her dealh a n-ai.lent o( ,'llil Easl 18lh
You and ea^'h of you are hereby cited Street, Ihe County uf N e w York,
to show e:iuje bi-fore the Surrogale'a Court
Tlierefoie, you and ea.'h of yon are cited
of Now York County, held al the Hall of to show . an.se beti.ro tlie Snrr.i.;ato s Court
Ke. onis. in the (..unty ot N. w Y'ork. nn of our County ol Nev.7 York, al Room 504
Ilia :iOlh day of Dc.'enilH.r, 1I)5H, at half- in the Hall ol Reionls in the I'ounly ot
past too o'eloek In the forenoon of that Now York, on lha :i»lh day ot
her,
day why the ai'eounl of proieedinga o l one thousand nine hundr.'d and tilty-eight.
The Hublio Administrator ot the Coiuiiv lit half past ten o'.lock in thu lorcnoon o l
of N o w York, as admlnislralor of tho that day. why Ihe said will anil t.slameht
toads, Challi'la and eiedits of auid de- should not l.a adniitt.'d lo probala as a
i-easerl, should not he juilioially aellled. will of real and personal property,
In Teiitimony Whereof, Wo have eausetl
in tesliiiiony whereof, we liiive caused
the seal of tha Suri-oaale's Court of Ilia
the seal of tho Surrogat.'a Court
said County of N e w YoiU to be hereunto
ot the said County ot N e w York
atlUed,
to ba liereunlo alllied. WilnehM.
Wilneas. Honorable S. Samuel 1)1 Falro,
HonorabI* S. Samuel Di Falco.
» Surrogiilo of our said County, at tho (1, 9.)
Hurrog.ito of our said County o l
County ut N e w York, the I4th
New Vork, at aaid county, tiie
ilay of Novoinber in the year of
I'ith day of Noyemtier in ttio
our Lord
one thousand
uiito
year of our Lord one thousand
(Seall
hundred and llfly^-iuhl.
nine hiiiiilrcxi and lilty elght.
I ' U i l . l P A. I K i N A H U E
I ' H I L I P A. IlONAHllbl
Uorii uf the aurruifute'. C o u r t
Clerk ut Uie Surioitalu'. Court
At a Special Term. Part 11, of the City
Courl, Slale ot N e w York. CoHllly of New
York, at the Court House at t^ily Hall
Park, Borough of Manliatlan, City ot New
York, on the l » l h day of November, l<),'-,».
Pn-s.'nt: Hon. F R A N C I S E. R I V E R S ,
Justice
In tho ni.atler of the Application of
MORRIS S A U F A T Y for leave to oiiango
his name to M A R C S A U G E N T .
On reading an.i tiling the pelilinn of
MORRIS S A H F A T Y , verified the lilth day
lit November, 1H58. pr.ayiiig tor a cliangs
of name ot the petitioner, it being reiiuested that he be permitted to asstimo
the name ot MARC .SARGENT in tiie pla.-a
and stead of his pri'sent name, and tha
Court being salistied that tlie said petition
is true, and it appearing from the aaid
petition and the Courl being satialled lhal
there is no reasonable objeclion lo the
change of name proposed, and it furlher
duly appearing lhal the petilioner w a »
born on the lllith day ot Dccembcr. 1919,
in llie Cilv or Houston, Slale of Texaa.
NOW. on motion ot T.EE P R E S S M A N ,
atlorncv tor the aaid petitioner, it is
O R n E R K D . that the aaid M O R R I S SARF A T Y , born nn the Klilh day ot December.
1!»1», in the city ot HoUBton, state ot
Texas be. and hereby is aulhoHzed to
assume the name of M A U P S A R G E N T in
place and stead of his present name upon
complviiig wilh the provisions ot Artii-lo
« ot the Civil Rights I . a w and of this
onler, namely.
That this order be entered and the aaid
petition upon w h i c h it w a s granti'd Iw
filed within ten days from the dale hereof
in the omce ot the Clerk ot tlie City
Court, County of New Y o r k : that within
:;o dnvs from the date of entry hereof,
a eopv ot this ordi'r shall be published
once in the Civil Service Leader, a newspaper published in Ihn County ot New
York, Slate ot New Y o r k ; ami that, wllhin torlv davs after the making of llils
oMer, proof of auch publication by alllilavlt
shall lie filed w i l h the Clerk of tho City
Courl. County ot New Y o r k .
That, tollowing the due flling of th»
said petition and entry of said order mm
hereinbefore diivcted. the pilblieatlon ot
such order and the filing of pr.Mit of publication thereof, and. on and after tho 30
d.ay of December. 111.58. lha petitioner
MORRIS S A R F A T Y . shall he known a« and
by the name of M A R C S A R G E N T , w h i c h
hit is hereby aiithori7.e<i to assume and by
no other name.
SINTER:
^ ^ ^
Justice of the"'City Court:
County ot New Y o r k
At a Special Term. Part 11. of the City
of New York held in and tor Ihe Coiliity
of N e w Yoi-k, at the Court House there.
5'S Chinibers Slreet. In the Borougli of
Manhallan. City ot N e w York, on
13 day of Dei-ember 1H58.
Present: Hon. F R A N C I S H. R I V E R S ,
tli*
^ " i n 'the M a i l e r of the Application of
S T A N L E Y JARON For Leave to Cliang.
his Name and lo Assnnia lha N a m . ot
S T A N L E Y JAROSINSKI.
Upon rea<ling and filing tho petltloB o t
S T A N I . E Y JAUON verified tho 71 h day o l
November 1H5S, praying tor ienv« to u siime Ihe name ot S T A N L E Y J A R O S I N SKI In place and stead of his present
name and the Conrt being aatlsBed thoieby
that Ihe avernienti contained in aaid petition are Irne and that ther. » ' e no re»sonable objections to the change ot n a m .
(imposed:
N o w , on motion of C H A R L E S 0. CABROLT,. FQ.. attornev tor petitioner. It I .
ORDERED that S T A N L E Y JARON b o m
In Jeliiorna. P.dand on O.lober '.{3, 1914.
he and he hereby la anlhoriied to assuui.
Ihe name of S T A N L E Y J A R O K I N S K I
on
and after Ihe day ot December
ll»5«,
upon conilition. however, that he .hall
comply wilh the turthor provisions ot this
order: and It is furlher
ORDERFD
that this order and
th.
aforem.'niioned petition be tiled wilhin ten
.lavs from the dale hereof in Ihe Olflo<i
of the Clerk of this Court and that a copy
ot this order shall wilhin twenty d a y .
from the entry thereof Iwi published oniM
in the Civil Service I,eader. a newspaper
liuhliKhed In the City of New
York,
County of New York, and that within forty
ilsvs after making of this order proof of
such publication shall be flled wilh the
Clerk of the Cily Courl of New York In the
County of N e w York, and it is further
ORDKUED that a copy ot this order
and the papers upon which It Is itased
shall Iw served upon Ihe Allien Registration Division. Immigration and Naluralllatlon Servli^e. Washington. D. 0. wilhin
twentv days after entry and that proof
o l auch servl.o shall be filed w i t h t h .
clerk of this Court In Ihe County of Nevr
York within ten days . t i e r .iicii aorvic«|
and It is turlhor
O R D F R K D that followlnir t h . flIIng o l
Ihe petition and the order as iierelnbefor.
directed and lha publication ot .iich or.lec
and Ihd filing of proof ot iiubllcation
thereof; and the service of a copy nf said
papers and of the order a . hereinbefore
directed th;tt on and after tho ',23 day of
neccmtier 19B8, ths piMltloiier shall bs
known by the name of S T A N t . R Y JAROS I N S K I and by ao other uanio.
ENTEii
a.
Justio. •! ih. F,Olt•/ O
uui*
«.fVIL
Tuestlay, Novemlier 25, 1958
Bulletin for
Mental Hygiene
Employees
T o u r All-Menfal
became
organized
Hygiene Employees
in nineteen
hundred
JlssoeiatioH
and
five.
It is an organiiation of employees in the D e p a r i m e n t
of Mental H y g i e n e who have b a n d e d together for the
purpose of promoting those objectives which would insure better working conditions; a d e q u a t e salaries; promotional opportunities; realistic personnel policies; resolution
of problems and the general welfare of its members.
W h o , e x c e p t an association of the employees themselves, is in the best position to know institutional problems and has a keen interest in the solution of these
problems?
H o w Does The Mental Hgiene Employees
A s s o c i a t i o n G a i n Its O b j e c t i v e s ?
W o r k i n g closely with C . S . E . A . ; and through its representative, this association prepares resolutions and promotes legislation for the welfare of M e n t a l H y g i e n e employees.
The M . H . E . A . has several meetings each y e a r with the
Commissioner of Mental H y g i e n e and the Director of
Personnel. A t these meetings those problems are discussed
which do not require legislation but may b e solved by a
d i r e c t i v e from the Commissioner's office. This is a common meeting ground and sounding board for suggestions
a n d recommendations for the benefit of the institution
e m p l o y e e . M a n y pertinent questions have been satisfactorily answered a t this c o n f e r e n c e .
The M . H . E . A . periodically meets with the Director of
C l a s s i f i c a t i o n — D e p a r t m e n t of C i v i l S e r v i c e , In behalf o f
reclassification, upgrading, and fringe benefits for the
Institution employee. Similar meetings are held with the
Director of the Budget.
W h a t C a n T h e M . H . E . A . Do F o r
SERVICE
LIADIR
OPEN-COMPETITIVE
(Continued from Page 9)
tlon of a four-yefir course in an
accredited college or university.
In addition, candidates must liave
one of the following: A master's
degree from an accredited school
of social work including one school
year in supervised field work in
psychiatric social work; or a master's degree from an accredited
school of social work DIUS six
months of full-time paid experience in psychiatric social case
work with a social or health
agency adhering to acceptable
standards; or a satisfactory equivalent. Written test March 14.
(Nov. 25).
Page Thirteen
enoe In architectural work ;or
graduation from B senior high
school and seven years of satisfactory practical experience in
architectural work; or a satisfactory
equivalent.
Candidates
will be admitted to the written
te.st provided they do not lack
more than one year of the foregoing requirements, but they will
be required to file a supplementary experience paper when th:,y
believe they have fulfilled the requirements. Written test January 16. (Nov. 25).
8497. Assistant civil engineer,
$6,050 to $7,490 u year. Pee $5.
Minimum requirements are a baccalaureate degree In civil engineering Issued after completion of
a four year course in an accredited college or university and
three years of satisfactory experience in civil engineering; or
graduation from a senior high
school and seven years of satisfactory practical experience in
civil engineering work; or a sat8440. Purchase inspector (equip- isfactory equivalent combination
ment), $4,550 to $5,990. Fee $4. of education and experience. (UnMinimum
requirements
include til further notice).
four years of satisfactory experience In manufacturlnt;, purchas8345. Assistant electrical ening, selling or inspecting a varie- gineer, $6,050 to $7,490 a year.
ty of equipment, or a satisfactory Pee $5. Minimum requirements
equivalent. Written test February are a baccalaureate degree in
25. (Nov. 25).
electrical engineering issued after completion of a four year
8075 Stationary engineer (electcourse in an accredited college
ric), $22.72 a day. Pee $.50 Min- or university and three years of
imum requirements include Ave satisfactory practical experience
years recent e perience in respon- in electrical engineering work; or
sible charge of the operation of graduation from a senior high
high tension electrical plants, or school and seven years of the
two yeais of such experience and foregoing experience; or a satisan acceptable electrical or mech- factory equivalent. Written test
anical engineering degree, or two January 21. (Nov. 28).
years of such experience and th.ee
years satisfactory experience as
a journeyman electrician, or a
satisfactory equivalent
Written Paralyzed Vets Honor
test February. 8 (Nov. 25).
Police Capt. Heogher
8344. Assistant architect, $6,050 to $7,490 a year. Pee $5. Minimum requirements are a baccalaureate degree in arcfiitecture issued after completion of a fouryear course in an accredited college or university and three years
of satisfactory practical experi-
T h e Efstern Paralyzed Veterans Association selected Captain
Pearse Meagher of the New York
City Police Department to be the
recipient of their first "man of
the year" award.
Jobs in Yonkers
T h e Yonkers Municipal Civil
Service Commi.ssion
announced
three open-competitive examinations to be held February 14 and
for which applications will be
received until Wednesday, December 10. The jobs are research associate, $5,900 a year; assistant
museum director, $4,400;
and
senior museum aide, $4,200.
Candidates for senior museum
aide must have been legal residents of Yonkers for at least one
year preceding the examination
date. The other two examinfltions
are open to any qualified resident
of the United States.
Apply to the Yonkers Civil Service
Commission,
Room
316,
Health Center Building, Yonkers,
N. Y .
SENIOR F A C T O R Y I N S P E C T O R
L I S T C O N T A I N S 94 NAMES
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 — The New
York State promotion list for
senior factory in.spector in the L a bor Department, containing 94
names, was established this week.
Also e.stablished was a 63-name
open-competitive eligible list for
factory inspector. Salary for the
senior title is $5,020 to $6,156, snd
for the open-competitive, $4,300
to $5,310.
BRIDGE-TUNNEL OFFICER
L I S T SOON T O BE ISSUED
T h e New York City eligible list
for bridge and tunnel officer Is
expected to be ready Wednesday,
November 26. he list will contain
3,667 names. T h e written test was
held February 8. Qualifying tests
for housing officer have also been
completed, and the list should be
ready before the end of Uie year.
Me?
Through its power and prestige, as it composes the
largest departmental group of employees In t h e S t a t e of
N e w Y o r k ; it therefore, can influence the realliatlon of
the following objectives:
1. A s e r i o u s s a l a r y s t u d y t o r e f l e c t t h e
a n d responsibilities of e a c h title.
dutlea
2. A s a l a r y s c a l e c o m p a r a b l e w i t h t h e c u r r e n t
t r e n d in i n d u s t r y , a n d in c o n s i d e r a t i o n o f t h e p r e s e n t c o s t of living.
With controlled heati
3. C o r r e c t i o n o f e x i s t i n g i n e q u i t i e s in t h e s a l a r y
structure.
4. Modernixed pension system.
5. V e s t i n g o f r e t i r e m e n t r i g h t s .
6. P r o m o t i o n a l s e r i e s f o r
Attendants.
7. E n c o u r a g e C i v i l S e r v i c e a s a c a r e e r t h r o u g h
a s t u d y t o i m p r o v e p r o m o t i o n a l o p p o r t u n i t i e s in
A L L titles. Emphasis should be noted f o r the c l e r i c a l
workers.
8. D i f f e r e n t i a l In s a l a r y f o r e v e n i n g a n d n i g h t
duty.
9. 37-V2 h o u r w e e k f o r office w o r k e r s .
10. A d d i t i o n a l i n c r e m e n t a f t e r 2 5 y e a r s o f
service.
W h a t C o n I Do F o r T h e
M.H.E.A.?
I can b e c o m e a m e m b e r ; an a c t i v e m e m b e r . I can
recruit members and in so doing I will help the M . H . E . A .
to help me.
Dorris
Mental
Marcy
Marcy.
Blust, S e c r e t a r y
Hygiene Employees
State Hospital
N. Y .
2 Sizet
11 and
12 Inch
See Us For
Low, Low
Price
Association
I w i s h t o join t h e M e n t a l H y g i e n e E m p l o y e e s A s s o .
c i o t i o n . E n c l o s e d is $1 in p a y m e n t of d u e s f o r
1958-59.
Nome
ToasmasTER
Title
/lufOMOttC, fH/P^m
Institution
Building No. or H o m e A d d r e s s
or
S e e y o u r i n s t i t u t i o n r e p r e s e n t a t i v e w h o is a m e m ber of the B o a r d of D i r e c t o r s of M . H . E . A .
By
William J. Rossiter. President - M.H.E.A.
Rochester State Hospital
Rochester, N. Y.
•
Enjoy this n e w , easier and better way
of cooking . . . fries, grills, roasts,
bakes, stews.
• C o n v e n i e n t control k n o b ; c o o k i n g
g u i d e o n handle; signal light tells w h e n
p a n is at correct temperature.
U n i f o r m , controlled h e a t . . . cooks
food at right t e m p e r a t u r e for fiavoi
perfectioa
e Square shape gives extra capacity;
slanting walls m a k e food easier t o turtL
BETTER LIVING DISTRIBUTORS, INC.
76 WILLOUGBY STREET
Brooklyn 1, New York
MAin 5-2600
CI T i t ;
Piwe Fourteen
SERVICE
Tuesifar, Noirvmber 25, t9S8
LEADER
Low Cost European Trip
For Members and Families
ACTIVITIBSS OP BMPLOYEES IN STATE
New York City
Congratulations
to
Frances
Simpson on the birth of her baby
girl.
Welcome to Dr. Shervert H.
Frazler the new Chief of Psychiatric Research, Internal Medicine,
Also to Dr Howell O. Archard
our new part time dentist who will
be with us until our own Dr. R .
Devine returns.
T h e next regular monthly meeting of the New York City chapter,
CSEA, will be held on Thursday,
December 11 at Oassner's Restaurant, Manhattan, at 6 P.M. All
wholly rebuilt. But many beauti- mainder of the afternoon free, delegates are urged to attend. I m (Continued from Page 3)
ful old facades are left standing, seeing the city. Dinner at the portant matters are to b « disan landscape as it descends to the
cussed.
often with nothing behind them, hotel.
plain of Lombardy and reaches
T h e membership committee met
F r a n k f u r t . (Twenty-second in order to set up a program f o r
and other historic buildings have
Milan. Here shortly after fiive o'D
a
y
)
.
Morning
free.
Last
minute
been recreated. T h e famous art
Hope Mike and Catherine R e y the
forthcoming
membership
clock, we change to the all-first galleries were destroyed, but their shopping; luncheon at the hotel. drive. Those in attendance were nolds have a nice vacation. W e
class ci-ack express, the Settebello, treasures can be seen to the limit Afternoon drive to Rhein-Main M a x Lieberman, president; A1 Co- hear Mrs. Madeline HoefTier Is
leaving us. Sorry to see you go.
which cover the 395 miles to Rome of our time (it would take days Airport for Overseas National A i r - rum. .second vice president; Edward S. Azarigian, treasurer; Sol Get well wishes are extended to
In six hours and five minutes. to view them ali>. Afternoon ex- ways l i g h t home to the U.S.A.
Bendet, former president; James Mrs. Herminio Moreno, wife of
cursion to Nymphenburg Castle.
New York. (Twenty-third D a y ) . Casey of the CSEA; Sidney Sachs one of our kitchen men who Is ill
Dinner in the restaurant car.
Joan M. Johnson; Minna W e c k - at Mt. Sinai Hospital.
Dinner at the world-famous H o f - Return on Sept. 18.
Italy
stein; K a y York; and Louis M o r brauhaus.
Specialized Tours, Inc., operator
ganstern. Miss Johnson, of the
(Note: If His Holiness is reccivHeidelberg.
(Twentieth
D a y ) . of the first and highly successful Brooklyn College of Medicine, reIn?, an audience will be arrangi^d
T h e day begins with a morning tour, again
will
conduct
the corded the meeting. T h e followtor those who wish it.)
All R a y Brook was saddened by
ing motion made by Sol Bendet
train ride through the Swbian hill journey.
Rome. (Thirteenth D a y ) . Mornand seconded by A1 Corum was the deatii of Or. Adolph Hochcountry, reaching Heidelberg in
passed unanimously: " I move that wald, widely known pathologist,
ing sightseeing of the Eternal
time for lunch. T h e afternoon
every delegate who Increases his who died at the Ray Brook State
City, including the Cathedral of
seeing Germany's oldest and most
membership by at least 10 percent, Hospital where he had been a
St. Peter and the Vatican Mustaff for four
famous
University
town,
unwith a minimum of 10 mmbers, as member„ of . the
,
leum. Lunch at the hotel; afterA L B A N Y , Nov. 24 - I t will be of July 1, 1959, be given a scroll y®®*"®Hochwald was born in
scathed by the war and looking
noon: visits by coach to Piazza di
like a stage set for " T h e Student back to the farm for several of , or Plaque of recognition, this to Czechoslovakia on Kept. 5 1906
Spagna, Trinita dei Monti, Pincio
Prince." T h e Castle, the Univer- Governor Harriman's ^ p aides ' And further that this award be the son of Elias and Erna Fischel
Hochwald. He studied medicine
Paric. Villa Borghese Park, Pansity, the quaint Ritter House, the once the Republican administra- distrlbuted'at ail affaVr to b r g i v e n ' ^ " " ^
professional career
theon, Quirinaie and Mussolini
tion
of
Nelson
A,
Rockfeller
takes
Palatine
Museum, with the
for the purpose."
I C z e c h o s l o v a k i a . He came to the
Forum. Dinner at La Cisterna in
T h e chapter is happy to ex- United States in 1941 as a graduTwelve Apostles Altar, carved by office.
Trastevere.
assistant in Medicine at the
For e x a m p l e .
Conservation tend welcome greetings to the
Riemenschneider, greatest of wood
Rome. (Fourteenth D a y ) . Morn- carvers, etc. T h e afternoon at lei- Commissioner Sharon J. Mauhs, following new members, all from Massachu.setts General Hospital,
He taught pathology at
ing, siRhtseeing: Piazza Venezia, sure. Dinner at the Red Ox Inn who draws a state salary of $18,- the Rent Commission. 81 W i i - Boston.
'loughby Street, Brooklyn: Loretta the Women's Medical College of
Capitol, Palatine, Roman Forum or the atmospheric Perkeo Restau- 500 plus $3,000 in expenses, will M. Bannon, James J. Byrne, Rose Pennsylvania, at Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, and in the
and Coilseum. Lunch on your rant.
go back to farming near Coble- M. Cartino, Agnes A. D'Anzieri,
Medical College of New York UniSamuel
Goldberg,
Anna
M.
Long,
own. Aflernoon free for shopping
Heidelberg. (Twenty-first D a y ) . skill and praf-tice the law, if re- John H. McDonnell, Francis V. versity. His death was due to a
and individual pursuits. Dinner at
Morning free. Lunch at the hotel. placed.
O'Connor, Sarah S. Pacheco, R o - circulatory ailment. He will be
the hotel. In the evening, a perT
h
e
Schoharie
County
Demobert Padula, Enrique C. Santiago, greatly mls.sed by his fellow docI Early pfternoon train to Frankformance of an open air opera
Celia Siegel, David Smith, Flor- tors and his many friends here
crat
is
being
boomed
by
some
confurt—a trip of about an hour. R e at Ray Brook.
at the Baths of Caracaila.
servation groups as the kind of ence M. Stark, Ada T . Terry. JosT h e chapter extends its sympaeph A. T o p f , and Law rence While.
Rome. (Fifteenth D a y ) . T h e
commissioner that Governor-elect
Happy birthday greetings to thy to Mrs. Mildred Webb on the
morning free. Lunch on your own.
Rockefeller should keep, regard- Virgil Seymore. Ben Kramer, Nat death of her mother, Mrs. Miles
In the afternoon an excursion to
LaRue.
less of his personal politics.
Rogers, and Ben Lurie.
A special meeting of the R a y
Tivoii and the unique gardens ol
Happy Thanksgiving Day to all.
Daniel J. Carey, State CommisBrook Chapter was held in the
the Villa d'Este. Dinner at the
Main Building Employees' Dining
T h e annual meeting of the sioner of Agriculture and Markets
hotel.
Room. A t this time the delegates
Craig Colony and Hospital School at $18,500 plus $3,000, is in partRome. (Sixteenth D a y ) . Morn- of Niu'sing Alumnae Association
to the annual meeting of the CSnership with his two sons, James
EA In Albany, President Eugene
ing free. About 12:30 board a first- was held at Biggs Hall recently.
T h e Psychiatric Institute chapand Edward, in a farm operation
McAuliffe, Treasurer Loretta B a class expie.ss for Venice. Luncheon Mrs. Ruth M. Jones, R.N., retirter of the CSEA will hold a meetpresident,
was
chairman. in Tompkins County. He is ex- ing on Tuesday, December 2 at 5 la, John Bala and Emmett Durr,
in the dining car. Arrive Venice ing
Chairmen of the standing com- pected to join the back to the P.M., in the 10 North Classroom, gave their reports concerning this
In time for dinner.
meeting. President McAulifife apmittees presented their annual farm movement.
opics of interest will be discussed
pointed a grievance committee to
V e n i c e . (Seventeenth D a y ) . reports.
and everyone is urged to attend.
consist of three members; Olin
Morning, a chance to attend serPlease notify the secretary, Mrs.
T h e winner of the fund raising A L L P A S S S T A T E
Ewet. Thomas
D'Onofrio
and
Amy
Perez,
in
the
Engineering
o
f
vices in one of Venice's great project was Jacqueline Post, who
Alyce McCormack.
SUPERVISOR TEST
fice If you plan to attend the
churches. Afternoon sightseeing was presented with a beautiful
While recently in Albany, Mr.
All seven candidates in the New meeting.
brass-base table lamp by Mrs.
on foot: Piazza San Marco, the
McAulilTe attended a Board of
Mary Ellen Griflo, R.N., chairman York Slate test for promotion to
Welcome back to Charlie H a g Directors meeting of the CSEA
Doge's Palace, tiie Prisons, Bridge of the project.
motor vehicle district office super- esmeir on his return to duty after which was held at the Hotel T e n
of Sighs and the Rialto. Lunch at
New officers for the coming visor, Department of Taxation being ill. Welcome back also to
Eyck.
K i t t y McCausland from her trip
the hotel. Dinner at a typical year are: Janet Collins, president;
W e wish to welcome the followand Finance, passed. The salary to Washington where she visited
Ruth
M.
Jones,
first
vice
presiVenetian restaurant.
ing new employee: Thomas Reilly
range
is
$7,500
to
$9,090.
her son who is at Catholic Uni- Anna
dent; Harold Dor.sey, second vice
Hough,
Donald
Kenny
Austria
versity
of
president; Mary Jane Maggio, secveisuy
oi "Washington.
wasnington. Also to sheiln O ' R p H I v r-oM wn-^^R V.V ,
(Eighteenth D a y ) . Transfer by retary; and John McNulty, treasN E W L I S T ISSUED
waterbus to railroad station for urer.
A L B A N Y , Nov. ^24 — T h e New
Elected
to
the
board
of
directors
' Ou/slncei^condolences are exBillows,
departure by first class train via
were Joshua Little, Evelyn Os- York State open-competitive list tended to Richard Johnson on the
the Dolomites and the Brenner
borne, Edna Carney, Philip L a - for pharmacy inspector-narcotics loss of his father and to Virgilio ONE Y E A R W I T H O U T I N J U R Y
Pa.ss through Austria to Munich, Rosa. and Robert Miller.
T h e cargo operation division of
investigator, $5,020 to $6,150, was Galante on the loss of his mocapital of Bavaria. Luncheon In
Miss Collins announced that a established last week. I t contains ther.
the Brooklyn Army Terminal has
We're still rooting for Harold completed 12 consecutive months
the dining car. Dinner at the hotel committee will be selected In the
n ^ r " f u r u r e " t o p F a ^ and promote
names. Sixty took the test on Pierce who is still on the road to without a disabling injury to civil
In Municii.
the annual Christmas party.
' M a y 10.
recovery.
service personnel.
Germany
Ray Brook
Some Dems Going
"Back To The Farm'
Craig Colony Nursing
Alumnae Meet. Elect
Psychiatric Institute
Munich. (Nineteenth D a y ) . T h e
morning Is spent seeing Munich.
Heavily bombed, the city has been
ROME STATE SCHOOL EMPLOYEES COMPLETE COURSE
Hilleboe Seeks More
County Health Depts.
A L B A N Y , Nov. 24 State Health
Commissioner Herman E. Hilleboe is campaigning for the establishment of additional full-time
health departments In New York
State at tiie ci unty level.
Although four counties of more
than
100,000 population
have
created county departments. Dr.
Hiiieboe .said, the campaign is not
complete. Seven counties with
100,000-plus populations still have
not modernized their public health
services, he said.
There are now 20 county health
departments in the state—14 have
been set up since 1946 when state
aid for sucii units was increased
to 75 percent of the first $100,000
and 50 percent of spending in excess of that figure.
T h e reason for urging county
depaj-tments. Dr. Hiiieboe said. Is
that a single board of health
gives a breadth and uniform high
quaUty to public health services.
Employees of the Rome State School who recently completed State School, Catherino Huguenin, and Lennea Swanson,
a course In the fundamentals of supervision ore pictured after group leader. Standing from left: James Nash, Stanley Ziarko,
Pauline Shaver, Mary F. Barry, Raymond Rushlow, Catherine
receiving their certificates. First row. from left: Lucille End- Haley, Mary Pendorf, George Bowers, Jr., Mary Rubino,
ler, Shirley Greer, Dr. Charles Greenberg, Director of Rome Allan Stoddard. Irene Koilowski, and Gladys Pttrit.
T«Md>r« NoT«iaW fs, i m
CIVIL
STOP WORRYING ABOUT
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST
PASS HIGH
the EASY
ARCO WAY
Admliilstrativ* A i i t . -..$3.10 •
AeeoMiitaiit & Auditor $3.00
Apprtiitie*
$3.00 a
Auto Eiiqliiamaa
$3.00 •
Ant* Maehlnltt
$3.00 •
Aafo MaehoiiU
$3.00
n
Ati't Fortmaa
(SaRitatien)
$3.00
• Aii-t Traia Difpotchar $3.00 •
• AHaadant
$3.00
• leekkaapar
$3.00 a
• I r i d g a ft Tuaaal O f f t c a r $3.00
• C a p t a l a (P.O.)
$3.00 •
• Cor Malntalnar
$3.00 •
• Chamltt
$3.00 •
• C. S. Aritk » Voa.
$2.00 a
n Civil Englnaar
$3.00
• Civil Sarvlea Haadbaok $1.00 n
•
• Claims Examiaar (Uaam*
ploymaat l a i a r a a c a ) . .$4.00
• Clark. GS 1-4
$3.00 •
• Clark 3-4
$3.00 a
• Clark. Gr. 2
$3.00 •
• Clark. G r o d a I
.
$3.00 •
a Complata Guida t o CS $1.50 •
• Corraetioa Officar
$3.00
• Diatitloa
$3.00 n
• Elaetrieal Enqlaaar . . . $3.00 •
n Elactrieiaa
$3.00 n
• Elavotor O p a r a t o r . . . $3.00 a
• Empleymant Intarvlawar $3.00 a
• Fadarol Sarvica Entraaca
Exomi .
$3.00 •
• FIramaa (F.D.I
$3.00
n FIra C o p t .
$3.00 a
• FIra Llautanoat
$3.50 n
•
a FIramaa Tasts la oil
Statas
$4.00 •
a Foramoa-Sanltatioa . . . $3.00 •
• G o r d a n a r A i s l i t a n t . . . $3.00 a
• H. S. Diploma T a i t i
. $4.00 a
n Homa Training Fhyslcot $1.00 n
• Hoipitol Attandont . . $ 3 . 0 0 •
•
Resldant Building
Suparintendent
$3.00 •
n Housing C o r a t o k a r . . . $3.00 •
• Housing Officar
. . $3.00 a
•
• How to Pass Collego
Entranea Tests
$2.00 •
a
• How t o Study Post
Office Schemes
..
$1.00 •
•
n Home Study Course f o r
Civil Service J o b s
$4.91
n
• How t o Pass W e s t Poiat
•
and Annapolis Entraaca
Exams
. .
$3.M
n
n Insurance Agent A
•roker . .
.
$3.S0 •
•
•
Investigator
(Loyalty Ravlewl . . . $3.00 •
a
O Investigator
a
(Civil and Low
Enforcement)
$3.00 a
n Investigator's Handbook $3.00
• J r . Accountant
$3.00 n
a J r . Attorney
. . .$3.00 a
• J r . Government Asst. . .$3.00 •
n J r . Professional Asst.
$3.00
• Janitor Custodian . . $3.00 n
• J r . Professional Asst.
S3.00 a
n
• Laborer - Physical Test
Preparation
. . ..$1.00 •
n Laborer Written Test
$2.00 a
•
• Law Enforcement Positions
. $3.00 •
N Ljw
Court Steno . . $ 3 . 0 0
• Lieutenant (P.D.)
$4.00 •
• Librarian
$3.50
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
FREE!
License No. 1—Teochlag
Commoa I r a a c h a i
$3.00
Mainteaaaca Maa . . . . $ 3 . 0 0
Machaaical Eagr. . . . . $ 3 . 0 0
Maintaiaar't Helper
(A & C)
. . . $3.00
Molntainer's Helper
(E)
$3.00
Maintainer's Helper
(»l
$3.00
Maintalner'i Helper
(D)
$3.00
Messenger (Fed.i
....13.00
Motormaa
$3.00
Motar Vah. O p a r .
$3.00
Motor Vehicle License
Examiner
$3.00
Notary Publie . .
$2.50
Nurse Practical & Public
Health
$3.00
Oil Burner Installer . . $3.50
Pork Ranger
$3.00
Parole Officer
$3.00
Patrolman
..$3.00
Potrelmaa Tests In All
States
$4.00
Playground Director . . $ 3 . 0 0
Plumber
$3.00
Policewoman
$3.00
Postal Clerk C a r r i e r
$3.00
Postal Clerk la C k a r g a
Foreman
.$3.00
Postmaster. 1st. 2Rd
ft 3rd Class
S3.00
Postmaster. 4th Class $3.00
Power Maintainor
$3.00
Practice for Army Tests $3.00
Prison Guard
$3.00
Probation Officer
$3.00
Public Health Narsa . . .$3.00
Railroad Clerk
$3.00
Railroad Porter
$2.00
Real Estate Broker
. .$3.50
Refrigeration License _$3.50
Rural Moil C a r r i e r . . . $3.00
School Clerk
$3.00
Police S e r g e a n t
$4.00
Social Investigator . . $3.00
Social Supervisor . . . . $3.00
Social Worker
$3.00
Senior Clerk NYS
$3.00
Sr. Clk., Supervising
Clerk NYC
$3.00
S t a t e Trooper
. . $3.00
S t a t i o n a r y Engineer ft
Fireman
$3.50
Steno-Typlst (NYS)
$3.00
Steno Typist (GS 1-7) $3.00
S t e n o g r a p h e r , Gr. 3-4 .$3.00
Steno-Typlst ( P r a c t i c a l ) $1.50
Stock Assistant
. . . $3.00
Structure Maintainor . $3.00
Substitute Postal
Transportation Clerk . $3.00
S u r f a c e Line O p
$3.00
Tax Collector
. . $3.00
Technical ft Professional
Asst. ( S t a t e )
..
$3.00
Telephone O p e r a t o r . .$3.00
Thruway Toll Collector $3.00
Towermon
. . . . . . . $3.00
Title Examiner
$3.00
Train Dispatcher
$3.00
Transit Patrolman
..$3.00
Treasury Enforcement
Agent
$3.50
War Service Scholarships .
$3.00
SKBVICB
Page Fiflcca
LEADER
Latest Eligible Lists
STATE
INSTITI TION KAFKTV
PICK VISOR
( P i i n i i . ) , nKFAKTMKNT OF
MKNTAI, HYdlKNK
1. Quintan. K i h i i c i s , Klica
. .lOS.IS
2. B a j r r , William, llli. a
. .102H5
n. Elllnit, Waltvr, Omli'iisbui'S , . . . 1 0 2 5 5
4. Smith, HJirry, Roinn
.,10055
6. Anchtw, William, MliWIctown , H»55
A. Kiili, Jnhii, Kt Jamrf
. . BH50
7. Karra, I>ftni*niH. Wa!48alc . . . . . , 9 7 7 5
« . CldiiH, OnaiiT, Stony I'nt . . , , . 0 7 5 5
« . Bciinlein, Rohfrt, Mt Morrli . , .m45
10. I.anabrr. Jsmf». Verona . . . . . 9715
11. Gray. Howaul, B S,Traeuiw . . , , . 9 7 1 0
I a. T a l o l . Paiiil, Tliirlln
. ..BOSS
1.'l. M«'I>4>nn*'ll, .Tohn. bronx
. , .9imo
14. llVilpmlortt, Wallei, C f l I»lip .., Brtsr.
IB. Mnhon, Hniry, Kpnmnre . . . . .,, oiiso
IB. M a h o n f j , R.ibfrt, N Hartford . . . 9 H 0 5
17. Grprn«ootl, I'aiil, Bklyn . . . . . . . 9 5 5 5
I ft. SipftrnB. K^lwai-il, Rhinphei-k,
. .95:i0
19, Parmlte, Raymond, Binjhamtnn .11400
20. Kt>onvh, Raynionil, Donffnn His . . f l 4 0 5
y i . Btthfr, Wp^lpy, Ogdrnnbiii-^ , . . . 9.'lrt5
Hprnifln, William, Prarl Rvr , . .9.'155
2,'), Deprw, Lloyil, Hyile Park . , . 8.140
24, Murphy, John, Jnmai>>a , . , , . . 9:t:i5
2B, Rilry, rrank, Qiiwni! V l r . , . . . !i.105
2fi, Rcmp, William, Lindrnhrai . , . .n-ins
27. Dinicn, C f il, N Y C
. 0';45
•2S, Mprritt, .lamca. Pearl Rvr . . . .9'n5
20. Marlrr, Hemy, O anpebnrff . . . . O H O
:tO, I.nttnnaUi, William. N Y C .
..9155
.'11. Nelenn, JHmep, Brenlwood
. 01,^)5
.32. E< kt Ihcrter, D. T., Binirliamton . 11005
3.1. H e r f . h . Walter. Islip Terr . . .,H!t75
,14, .Iaknho»«Ui, r . S., Utipa
SO'IO
M5. Ryan. ,lohn, Syrarnse
8H45
.m, MolTit, Mayniiril, Ml Morris
RR15
37. nemilt, < harle», Richnind HI . . , RTriS
,'lfi, Hianilia, GrorKe, Amenia
.S715
,10. Butfher, Ralph, S Dayton
HrtS.'i
40, Brenner, Georre, Hiifhland
8(175
41, Porter, Robert, Ofilensburir
42, ,Teppeeen, I^nler, Baypborp
S.105
4.'). Tetiber. Ra.*Tiiond, E Northprt . . S.'SOO
44. Zimlintliaim E. J., Povpr Pins , , R 1 « R
4fi. It.irtii.lp, Franoia, Rome
8455
4fl. Kirwan, T.oiiia, Buffalo
8185
47, Clottl, Ant-.lo, Rome
S.IIS
48, Boiinell, Ei)>t!ird. Qnppna VlK ...8.110
4», Mi. balowpki, A. P., E Norlbprt , R^IIS
50. M.Shaiar, Fraiioia, Oranirebnrf , .81!)0
Rl, Kilmer, Mali'olm, Hyde P a r k . . . 8 1 3 5
52. P.'bipppr. I.onia. Bronxvl
81
R."), Stampi, .lo»ea)h. .lackan Hst ...70.15
54, Wallaee, ,Iohn, WnodsidB
7010
6S, LamnnJi, .lobn, Bklyn
7Rr!5
ee. S b f r l o . k , Stephen, Wappnitr F1 , ,7815
l o a r d of E d u c a t i o n
UPBCIAI. n K P I T V f l . R R K ( P r i i m . ) .
Rl ••KK.MK CtH K T , FIHVT H K P A K T M K N T
1. Srasow, Hora.*, N V f
104711
3, Politier, Leo, I'liiinview
0004
3, Tl'sler, IsUlor, NVC
0058
4, HershllPld, Siimuil NYC
O!''.; I
5, Moses. William, N Y C
08:15
fl. Millstpin, RichanI, Forest Hla ..OTTO
7. McOownn, Kianiie, Huntini;t<m . , l ' " l i 8
S, Waterman, Bert, NYC
0744
9. Applebanm, Herbert, Bellerose , 0744
10. Nadell>er|f, A., NYC
nv:i
11. CblHtfk, Philip, NYC
0714
12. Reltman. Theodore, NYC
01111
1.1. Solonjon. Benjamin, Bronx
11(1.11
14, Rablnuwicl, Markus, N Y C
HB72
15, Bell, Ralph, Vally SIrm
|I5:17
10. Crowne. .lulitls, Ftiisbinir
0525
17. H»ller. Solomon, Hklyn
»4S8
18. Callaeher, William, N Y C
0421
19. I.ipkind. NovniBn, NYC
11,102
20. Elsenberr, Sidney, N Y C
11.1(12
21. K.iplan, Louis, NYC
«.15S
22. Brown, Abrani. NYC
0208
2.1, Bobrowsky, Samuil. Bron*
0204
24, Finkpl, Kmanliel. N Y C
0204
25, Ivans. Edwin, N V r
O'.Md
26, Dtlvinsky, Abe, N Y C
0024
27, Aneello, Frank, N Y C
8051
28, Jai'obs, Anirustus. NYC
H822
20, Rosenblatt, Allieit, N Y C
87,1B
nn, ninaiioli Alrred, N Y f
(!T.13
.11, Josppbaon, .loseiib, Bronx
8728
.12. Kesten, ,Ia<'k, Bron*
8720
.l:t, Elson, Lewis. Ml Vernon
8(1.18
•14. Rosoniweir. Louis. NY'C
8(1.1.1
.15. Crnisp. Charles. Bklyn
8548
.1(1. plppr;tor. Herbert. Vntly PIrm . . . 8 4 0 0
•17. niekheiser, B. W., W:inla»h
8170
.IS. RniPiiherir, Morris, N Y C
8080
.19. Hoenis, l i s t e r , N Y C
7077
INTBKMF.DIATE f l . R R K (Prom.).
r O l N T V , TOWNS. Vll.l.AGES AND
V I ' F . d A I , DlSTRin-.M.
W I')^T<'HK!I^TF.K C O l ' N T T
1. Dobevly, Mneve, While Plna . ,
2. Groepnian, r , E.. White Pins , .
а, Jonen, Gnuaip, Mt Vernon , , , .
4. Denhani. Dorothy, Hawthorne .
б. F . H 1 H , Vircip, While Pins , . . .
« . T.anyi, Elizabeth, White Pins .
7. Brurilaae, Ri>»;emary, Yonkers ,
5. BuriKea, Lillian. White Plna .
ASSISTANT HEATING ANO
V E N T I L A T I N G ENGINKKH (Prom,),
M.*IN orrKE.
B E P A R T M E N T OF P ( III.IC
1. Allen, Howard, Troy
KORim
8267
E.NOINKERING M A T E R I A L S A N A L Y S T
(Prom.),
D E P A R T M E N T OF P I BI.IC WORKR
1, Williams., Richard, Albany
0550
2. Birkmayer, Don, Troy
II.100
4. W,tsh, Edward, Albany
81.15
.1. Walsh, r . nielt, Albany
92:10
SENIOR ENGINEERING M A T E K I A t S
ANALYST (Prom.),
D E P A R T M E N T OF P I HI.IC n O R K S
1. (Srad.v. Erlwa-d, Trn.r
01(14
2. Everleth, Raymond, N Balllmore , 8:)20
INDEX AND HFrORDING ri.ERK
( P r o m . ) , <01 N T V ( LEHH'S O F F K ' E ,
YVEyTCHESTER I ' O I N T V
1. Bell., Helena, Yonkere
TOflO
2. Lamanna, Carmine, Hawthorne . . 7 7 0 0
Intensive Coach Courses
Cem!n|
SCHOOL
CLERK
New Title: School Secretary
New Salary S ;.6l>0-$.'i.l50
INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION
Class meets Sat. at 9.10 a m .
berinning Deo B
W r i t * or Phone tor Information
l a i t e r n School
AL 4-S02t
7%I nroaiiway, N, T. H (near nth 81.)
Please
write me
School Clerk clasa.
(rea
about
tha
•fama .
^ddresa
Boro
PZ
City
Exam
Coming
L7
14
March
PROBATION
OFFICER
for
INTENSIVE COURSI
COMPLETE PREPARATION
Clasa meets Tluirsday at 6:30
berlnnlns Drc 4
Write or Phono for Inrormation
Eaitern School
A L 4-502F
Rroadnay, N. T. .1 (near Rlh 8t.>
Please
write me Tree about tha
Probation Officer clasa.
Nama
iddreaa
Boro
PZ
L8
YARITYPISTS
.Tr, & Asst Civil. M f c h . Elpo Entineer
Civil, Mpch, Elec En»tineer-Drn(tsman
Civil Enirineer
Buildinir Inspector
A^al Areliileet
Enitineeriiilt Aide
Marine Enirineer
Maintenancp Man
Sunt Constniition
Siibwav Exama
DKAFTING-DESIGN-MATHKMATKS
Elm-Ironic, Mech. Arch. E l e c l . Strno.
Aire. Bhleprls. Bld(c Eit'ir. SurTpyinlt,
Civil Serv, Arith. Atlcebra. Geom. Trig.
CaV. Phvsics. Prep KiiKinper Colleeee
IN GREAT DEMAND
Prepare
In all
for hlchly P A I D Pnaltlona
ClTll Hrrvire ( a t e i o r l e a —
NEEDED N O W ! I
A-G-B N-0 S-A-K-K-l-E-R
CATHERINE REIN'S
LICENSE PREPARATION
V A R I T T P I N a R('H(I(IL
874 Brosdwar. NVC (IKanierrr T-S1M
Pi'ofcasional F.ncr. Ar<-hitect, Surveyor
Master Electrician, Stationa'y
Eiiar,
Refrirer. Portable Enirr. Oil Burner
MONDELL
Exam
INSTITUTE
JOB SECURITY
HIGH WAGES
sno W 41
154 W 14
W I 7-20RB
Biancliea Bronx. Bklyn, .lam , Hempstead
Over 48 yra Tlaininir h Placini tholleand Civ. Sve, Tech & Ennineer Exania
IN
IBM
3 WEEKS
LEARN TO OPERATE
KEY PUNCH, SORTER. TABS
COLLATOR & REPRODUCER
OPERATION A WIRING
PRINTIHG PRESSES
1250 MULTILITH*
and OFFSET
SECRETARIAL
Msd., Leial. Exec,, Elec. Typing
Swtchbd, Compt,, ABC Sten. Dictpbn
MANY JOBS
AVAILAILI
Wa
will Not Accept You Unleaa
We Can Teach You.
P A * AS vnil I . E A R N
A T NO E X T K A ( O S T
Vlalt or Phone for F R E E Booklet
Dept. H
8H W. n'way
cor. Chambera
scHjiois P R I N T I N G
N. V.
W O 'i-4 3.S«
A L L S U B W A Y S STOP A T O t R UOORB
P R E P A R A T I O N For f I V l l . CKKVICB
Co-Ed.
•
DAV * EVB.
F K E E Liretlnia Plaremenl S e n i c *
MANHATTAN
ADELPHI-EXECUTIVEV
I T I ' « KINGS H W V .
M 5-fllBX-3
13(10 F L A T B t ' S H A V E .
Nr. Bklyn CoD,
F 1 R E M A
AND OTHER CIVIL SERVICE PREPARATION
MENTAL AND PHYSICAL
CLASSES
PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION
Complete, Recnlallon-Slze Obalarle Course, Including Hlsh Wall
• Small Groups
• Individual Instruction
* Full Membership Privileges * Free Mcdical Examination
Phjilral
You Will Receive an Invaluable
New Arco "Outline Chart of
New York City Government."
With Every N . Y . C . Arco Book—
Phone or
Clasars —
Mental A
Write Dept. M
Central
Classes
Phona or Write Drpt.
Brooklyn V k J / ^ A
58 Hanson Place
Physical
• IVIWA
8T 8-7000
WItera L.l.R.H. and All Suliwaja Meet
BRONX
UNION
V k J ^ A
M
• IVIwA
ME 1 T800
470 East IRla St.
Hrunchrs uf the V..M.C.A. of Greater New
York
ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
4 5 c for 24 hour t p a c i a l delivery
C . O . D . ' s 30c M t r e
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St.. New York 7. N. Y .
P l a a t * tend m *
I enclote c h t c l
or
money
busliicaa
c o p i e i of b o o k i c h s c k e d
o r d e r for $
Name
ebove.
Free! No Obligation! |
$3.00 Photo Gift Certificate •
Come in for demonstration! s
SebooU
MONKUK SCIIOUL-IBM C U I R S E S . Kcynunch, Tabulating, Wiring ( A P P R O V E D FOB
VETSI.
Aci'ounliiiK.
UuBincta
Adiniiiislratio.'
Switchboard
(all
Uva
boarda)
W A R D SIHOOI.N, 1IM> Clluluu Ave., Albany, N . f .
Comiitoiuelry. Uay k fcve Clasacs S P K C I A L P h K P A R A T I O N FOR C I T Y , « T A T B
*
C E D E K A L TESTS. Eaal Trcuiont Ave. 4l Hoaluu U-I., Bronx, K l Z-AtlOO.
Secretarial
HEINS & BOLET
Addreu
City • • . • • . • • . . • . • • . • * . . . • • . . . . * • • . . .
sere t»
State
Incfarfe 1% Sales Tm*
Downtown's Leading D a p t
Storo
68 CORTLANDT ST.
PB o
N. Y. City
KE A-/OUW
D R A K E S , IS4 NASSAU S T R E E T , N.V.C. SecretariaJ
D»y-Nigbt Write fur Catalog BB 8 iS4U
Accou.-<tiDg. Drafting, J o u r o a U s ^
W A R D K t l l U U I N , 7U0 (liillun A v e . (.Manning M(|.) Alhali.v, N.V.
IBM r O M P l . K T K hVh'I'KMM ( U l U S E
(Wiring «
Mariiiue 0|>4'intion)t
Sortera,
Tuliulutors. tullalura, He|i'u<l"crrs, Culculutura, Auilllary
Machines.
OPBHATOM
WUMKN:
t'umtilclr key Punch pluH hasic oiicralion for machUea
, lUtMl. Uay A aveuiug. M t u Jl vtuuieu. Tel. I<-'4U07 or writa lut liifurmaUosi.
Patronage
FINGER LAKES COMMISSION EMPLOYEE RETIRES
(Continued from Page 1)
outgoing
Dewey
four years
ago
administration
were
responsible
for making It difficult for the new
Rockefeller admnlstraton to oust
some
Democratic
jobholders.
Present state jobs which might
be defended successfully aganst
G O P ouster attempts Include two
Public Works Department posts.
They are assistant superintendent of buildings and grounds, held
by Frank J. Colligan, and superintendent of the Capitol, held by
Frank C. O'Connor.
No Freezing
(Continued from Page 1)
meiu heads to take up any cases
involving Civil Service questions
"in the normal way with the Civil
Service Commission."
Mr. Harriman recalled that he
had joined Mr. Falk In 1954 In
objecting to the freeze applied by
the Dewey Administration.
Mr. Falk's term on the commission runs until Feb. 1. 1961. He
was appointed In 1947 by Mr.
Dewey.
Statement by Falk
President Falk issued this statement:
"Governor Harriman has not
requested that the Commission
freeze into the competitive class
appointees of the Dmocratlc A d ministration.
"There have been informal discussions with some department
heads about the possibility of covering into the competitive class
certain members of their staffs.
In most cases, however, when I
explained my position — which
is unchanged from that of four
years ago — they did not press
the matter further.
" I t is greatly to the credit of
the Governor and his administration that there have been so few
requests of this kind.
I have received formal applications from department heads Involving less than a dozen positions. In acknowledging these applications, I have naturally stated
my attitude. But any Commissioner who wishes to pursue his request for competitive class status
for any employee may be sure
that it will be put on the Commission calendar and that the
matter will be put to a vote in the
usual manner."
It was the fight over the post
now held by Mr. Colligan that
may be used now to provide legal
ammunition for the Democrats.
Olin M. Cummings, center, for 30 years an employee of the Finger Lakes State Parks ComThe former assistant superinmission, is presented with a watch by officials of the Commission upon his retirement. From tendent of buildings and grounds
left are Donald E. Ryan, assistant general manager; H. E. Sisson, maintenance supervisor; — a $13,410 job — was RepubliWarren W. Clute Jr., former commission chairman; C a r l Crandoll, secretary-engineer; Mr. can Charles E. Walsh, Jr. He
Cummings; Allan H. Treman, chairman of the commission; Albert F. Forbes, a former chair- fought the Harrman administraman, and Henry K. McAparney, commissioner from Watkins Glen.
tion ouster in the courts on the
grounds he was protected In his
ACTIVITIES OF KMPLOYEES^nttOUCHOUT_NEW YORK STATE
job as a veteran and that the job
was not at the policy level. The
as and John Maher on the death and David Luckey.
A welcome to the following new court ruled in Mr. Walsh's favor
of their sister Mildred.
and ordered his reinstatement but,
Our sincere sympathy to Fi-an- members of the Association: Clin
T h e Westchester chapter, CSEA
ton Van Gelder; Edwin Poorman
announced Its schedule of activ- ces Jordan and Dorothy Van Lone Robert E. Myers; Robert D. Mont- although he won his fight, he
tles for the next few months. On on the death of their father Cor- ford; Frank J. Laper; Margaret chose not to return.
Monday, December 1, the chapter nelius Murphy. Mr. Murphy was D. Esposito; Dr. Muzzafer Alkan;
Both Mr. Colligan and Mr. O'will hold its regular December a retired employee of the hos- Anthony Bond; Ronald T . Eva; Connor are veterans. This same
pital.
meeting in the County Office
L a n y R. Prinde; Francis Long; legal precedent is expected to be
Cornelia Smith, former head of
Building in White Plains, N. Y., at
Merton Temple; Simone Swan8;30 P.M. At this meeting there the O.T. Department recently vis- son; John B. Maleski; Sebastian used in similar situations in other
will be a report from the nominat- ited friends at the hospital.
Uutero; Peter Adams; Richard state agencies.
Bernice Robinson has returned
ing committee and nominees for
T h e biggest and virtually autoHibbard.
the chapter elections in aJnuary to her duties in he O.T. Dept.
If you are not a member of the matic turnover in jobs will come
will be selected. The business of after .several days disability due to Association it is to your advanat the top echelons. State departthe meeting will also Involve re- an injury.
tage to join so that you may take
Hazel Covert recently enjoyed a
ports from the Committees on
a part in our endeavors to secure ment heads, counsels, deputies,
Credentias and Constitution and weeks vacation from her duties a salary increase; vested retire- and division heads are in this
at tiie hospital.
By-Laws.
ment; better retirement benefits category.
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Harding of
The Annual Meeting of the
and many other benefits.
These are the lucrative jobs,
the
O.T.
department
recently
vaWestchester chapter will be held
T h e time has come for us to,
paying up to $20,000 a year plus
cationed
In
New
York
and
aton Monday. January 12 in the
stop rendering assistance to non•ame building. The chapter is tended the World Series.
members
regarding
insurance expenses and, in soma cases,
Many
of
the
wards
were
decomaking plans to make this the
claims, grievances or any other chauffer-driven cars.
largest and most important of the rated for Hallowe'en. Much credit benefits which we have extended
goes to the patients, ward personyear.
In the past as we feel it is very
A re-organisational meeting of nel, student nurses and the O.T. unfair to the people who pay their partment of Public Works, pro- Mrs. Theodore Melnick on their
the City of White Plains unit was department personnel for these dues regularl/. The assistance we motions to assistant lands and bundle of joy — a baby girl; Mr.
held in City Hall, White Plains decorations.
have given non members has been claims adjuster took place for and Mrs. Delk on their tax exMrs. Ethel Brown recently spent financed by the members. If you Jack McKinney, Paul Kemmer, emption — also a baby girl.
and due to the interest shown by
Our deepest sympathy to Mr.
city employees at this meeting in three weeks with her daughter feel that thirty cents per pay day and Howard Long. That Departbecoming again an active unit of and family in Michigan.
is too much give it a thought the ment also welcomed six new em- and Mrs. Harry Brown on the
Mr.
&
Mrs.
Homer
Duncan
vathe Westchester chapter, another
next time you need help as you ployees; Beverly Hart, stenogra- death of his sister; Mrs. Alice Ruff
meeting has been called for Wed- cationed at Lake Placid.
will be refuse;. We regi-et tiiat this pher, and junior lands and claims on the demise of her husband;
MIS.
Marion
Stewart
and
Mrs.
nesday, December 10 in City Hall,
is necessary but it has become very adjusters J o s e p h
Greenberg, Mrs. Margaret Mangan on the
returned expensive.
(luring which unit officers will be Florence Swick have
Harry R. Connors, Raymond F. death of her husband; Mrs. I r v elected for the coming year. It is from vacations.
Hamm, Jr., John V. Ormsby and ing Cohen on the death of his
Mrs. Lena Champion Is enjoywife; Mr. William O'Connell on
also tentatively planned to have a
Albert E. Horrigan.
member of the Health Insurance ing a months vacation.
Norman Dee, senior clerk in the the death of his brother; Mr. EdMarie Fisher has returned from
Plan of Greater New York speak
Highway
Department,
recently ward Walker on the death of his
Henry Ciaraldi, junior engineer. spent his vacation at Lake George father; Adelaide Kavanaugh on
concerning the advantages it o f - vacation.
Mrs.
Pauline
Thomas
was
reEngineering Department, recently in the Adirondacks. One of the the death of her brother; Edna
fers as one of the options in the
State Health Insurance Plan. T o cently honored by a surprise completed a Civil Defense train- highlights of his trip was an all Winston on the death of her fathbirthday
party
at
her
home
given
ing course given by the Depart- day excursion to Port Ticonderoga er; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donodate, Howard Griffin has been
hue on the death of her brother;
elected Temporary Chairman of by Mrs. Ruth Olnty, Mrs, Gladys ment of Health, Education and via the SS Ticonderoga.
Carroll, Welfare. T h e name of the course
the White Plains unit and Anita Carpenter, Miss Mary
Carl Skelly, principal engineer- Mr. Von Carswell on the death of
Mlnck Temporary Secretary. Se- Mrs. Virginia Graves, Mrs. Evelyn was "Public Health in National ing technician, became the father his wife. Our sincere sympathy
lected as Departmental Repre- Troutman and Mrs. Elizabeth Or- Disasters." Classes were held in of an eight pound baby boy who aLso to the family of Mrs. Carrie
Geneva and Romulus, N. Y . I n will be called Gary.
McCourt who died following her
•entatives were the following: man.
Mrs. Gladys Swarthout of I n - connection with this, Mr. Ciaraldi
Jacob Miller, Incinerator; Vera
Paul Ciaraldi, ten year old son retirement from the hospital after
Carpenter, Library; Robert Socka, terldken exoresses her thanks to is attending a meeting in New of Henry Ciaraldi, Junior engi- many years of service. She will be
City
concerning
"State neer, has won a scholarship to the sadly missed by her many friends.
Engineering; Eva Craig, Recrea- her many friends and fellow em- York
tion; Joseph Maloney, Road Main- ployees for their thoughtfulness Agency Preparedness t l a n . "
W e hope that Mrs. Rose De
Memorial A i t Gallery in Rochafter
her
recent
fire
at
her
home
tenance; Arthur Farrell, Garage
A new employee in our Engi- ester.
Felllppo will enjoy many years of
and Shop; Robert Dougherty, Real also for the gift and financial as- neering Department is Frank H.
Robert G. Osterman, eigineer- happy retirement.
sistance.
Estate.
Saunders, engineering aide. He is ing aide, was married to Rosemary
T h e president of the chapter
Herbert
Yells
and
Maurice the son of William Saunders, Sr. Ann Montesano at St. Margaret and the delegates who attended
A meeting for School District
Bond
have
returned
to
their
duwho
recently
retired
from
the
Deemployees in the City of Mount
th meeting of the Civil Srvice
Mary Church in Rochester.
partment of Public Works.
Vernon has been temporarily set ties following illnesses.
While deep-sea fishing off the Employees Association and Mental
Congratulations
to
Marilyn
Promotions to permanent engi- coast of Florida on his recent Hygiene Employees
for Friday, November 28. BenAssociation
jamin Sherman will aid this unit Jones and John Maleskl who have neering aide were given to David honeymoon, Phil Lane, Engineer- gave a very interesting report at
decided
that
two
can
live
as
cheapW. Brnnessel, Edward M. Fi'ench ing Aide, Rights of Way Depart- the employees' meeting. The main
In setting up a program and in
establishing their organisations. ly as one. The marriage will take and Salvatore San?uedolce.
ment, caught an 8'/a ft. long sail- resolutions were concerni-ig the
Those delicious Barracini choco- fish. It Is being mounted In saary increase and the correction
Piesident Richard P. Schulz has place the latter part of the month.
Mrs. Frances Blake has returned lates preceded Joe Mclntyre's re- Florida and will be shipped to of salary inequities. T h e resolution
appealed to all members of the
turn to the office when his vaca- him in Rochester. Also caught on on salary was for a 12'/a percent
Westchester chapter to lend their from a vacation in Florida.
Mrs. Beatrice Bogardus has been tion ended. W e enjoyed the treat, the same trip was a 20 lb. bara- increase on gross pay with a min•upport to the new membership
imum Increase of $500 for all
cuda.
and re-organisational work ahead. vacationing in Florida with her Joe.
Hilde Bragenheimer, clerk in
W e have several new employees State employees. Another resoluAny people desii'lng to volunteer daughter and fam ly.
Melvln
Quinn
has
returned
to
the Payroll Department, flew to in the Engineering Department. tion was that all new employees
their services may call the chapter
California recently
where
she William Cottorone, John R. Bren- receive the same vacation as the
Office at White Plains: 9-1300, Ext. his duties after an injury.
We welcome the following new spent three weeks visiting rela- nessel, Walter E. Mosclcki, and old employees. Lillian Hammond
819 on any working day between
employees and invite them to be- tives and seeing the sights and William E. Wagner, who are en- and Mary Mescia were also sent
the hours of 10 and 12 A.M.
come members of the Association: beauty spots of Los Angeles, San gineering aides; James E. Kellogg to attend the meetings In Albany
Gwendolyn Peltz; Francis Laper; Diego, San Francisco and Mexi- and Frank S. LoCastro, senior as trainees for future participaDr. Vincent Bull; Catherine P. co. While there, the 104 degree engineering technicians; Allen R. tion at meetings In the Capital.
Bull; Kay Clark; Shirley A. Shir- heat was most "unusual," but no Skopp, engineering technician; T. They both are to be commended
for their sincere efforts on behalf
Aithur Johnson, Edward Lim- ley; Harlan J. Hami-lck; Gunhild tremois occurred during her stay. Rchard Kelly, Junior engineer.
Sandra
Beeman; T h e pictures she brought back are
of the chapter and we wish to say
ner and Joseph Rizzierl attended Christensen;
Francis
Long;
Julia
S.
Perry;
very interesting.
thank you. Mr. Angelo Prainito
the annual meeting of the CSEA
John W. Christensen; Anthony
A luncheon given by the girls
reported on the Mental Hygiene
In Albany.
Employees Association meetings
Mr. ifc Mrs. William Rogers have Bond; Marie F. Morgantl; Nora of the District Office for Eddie
Biooklyn State Hospital chap- and many of the resolutions were
returned from a vocation trip M. Dalley; Mauieen S. Keady; Quanz, who retired August 1, was
through Pennsylvania, Maryland. Janet M. Arnold and Carol M. held at the 277 East Avenue ter, CSEA, will hold Us annual to accoid with the CSEA platLong.
Restaurant. Among those attend- fall-winter danc on Friday, De- form. At this meeting, Mr. Oasey,
Virginia and West Virginia.
Tlie following employees have ing were former employees Mrs. cember 5 at 9 P.M. in the assemb- Field Representative, CSEA, was
Mr. & Mrs. Lester Conkling
have been vacationing through the resigned their positions; Anthony Jane Bader, Mrs. Marlon H a m - ly hall. There will be conUnuous present and stated the viewpoint
New England States and the St. Bonavia; June Moss; John H. mon, Mrs. Florence Roggl and music. W e ask the cooperation of the Association,
Carey, Jr.; John Von Bergen; Mrs. Audrey Zabel. A gift certi- of all members to make this affair
Lawrence Seaway.
Robert Warne has returned Gordon L. Pratt; Peggy Powell; ficate was presented to the honor a huge success.
Our congratulations to Dr. and Pass Tour Copy of The Leader
f r o m a vacation In New York Alice Gallagher; Paul Christen- guest.
sen; Patricia Christensen; Dr. RoIn the Depai-tment of Rights of Mrs. Ddckys on their new addlCity.
D a to • Non-Member
Our alucere aympathy to Thom- dolfo Bramanti; Wllma Bacolaa W a y and CldOios, District 4, De- Uoa — » baby gUl; to Mr. and
Westchester
District No. 4
Wiliard State
Brooklyn State
Download