It ^ "Half-Way Is Not Enough/' Says Powers as Governor Delivers Budget Message

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iVlOO
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America's
iVol. XX, No. 22
a
Largest
p
Weekly
for
It
e
Public
Tuegclay, February 3, 1959
^^
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n
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:
vv.v
'Every Membi
member
Employee*
Price 10 Cents
^ "Half-Way Is Not Enough/'
Says Powers as Governor
Delivers Budget Message
By P A U L K Y E R
A L B A N Y , Feb. 2—Gov. Nelson A . Rockefeller delivered his budget message personally to the State Legislature today, and as was reported earlier, asked for $20
million " f o r necessary salary adjustments for State employees . . ."
There is still no breakdovi^n on how^ the money is to
be distributed.
CSEA Argues Crieyances
On Hours of All Office
Workers in Institutions-
The Civil Service Employees Association, representing the majority of State employees, has let it be known
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — A grievance rection Department, appeared as
it considers the amount asked for by the Governor as "inon behalf of State institutional an interested party.
sufficient for a fair salary adjustment."
The Grievance Board, headed
office employees who work a 40All Association efforts are now being bent in two diby Edward Meacham, took the
hour week while similar workers
grievance under advisement.
rections—to increase the Administration's offer and to get
in other departments and agenThe Arguments
an equitable distribution of the funds available for raises.
J o h n F. Powers, CSEA president, said that "the Association
will not give up on this matter
u n t i l some more satisfactory offer Is made. Om- grul is a 1 2 ' i
percent, $500 m i n i m u m , acrossthe-board pay increase for every
State worker. The
Governor's
budget item approaches t h a t figure only half-way t n d half-way
la not enough."
T h a i Vote on Taxes
I t would appear, however, that
no news on ei'her the spending
of the $20 million or any increase
In that amoun' will be available
until after the outcome of legislative action on Governor Rockefeller's numerous tax proposals.
Efforts by Tbe Leader to sound
out Administration aides on the
matter resulted in the opinion
t h a t no one is goipg to talk about
spending more money until they
actually have it. This means
waiting until the tax measures
are approved — or disapproved.
cies work a 37'A-hour week was
of at least 5 to 6 percent. The
budget proposal of last year failed
to meet the demonstrated need,
and as you know even this was
stricken from the budget. Thus,
despite a factual objective demonstration of the need by the
State's own agency, r.o general
adjustment was provided for State
employees last year.
Studies Available
"Again this year, the salary
study of the State Division of
Classification and Compensation
demonstrates the necessity of at
least a 10 percent general salary
adjustment to bring State salaries
(Continued on Page 14)
Mr. Kelly's arguments were baargued before the State Grievance sically those outlined in an earliBoard last week by the Civil Ser- er letter to the Board. I t read:
" W e enclo.se herewith, as group
vice Employees Association.
representative of the grievants
J o h n J . Kelly, Jr., Association
the papers composing the record
counsel, presented the employees'
of the grievance below, Including
complaint and called as a witthe o r i g i r i l written grievance to
ness Emil Impresa. president of
t h e Institution Directc«r at BrookBrooklyn State Hospital chapter,
lyn State Ho.spital, his letter deCSEA, who originally initiated the
nying the grievance, the appeal
grievance. Also. In attendance was
to the Mental Hygiene CommisWilliam Rossiter, CSEA Mental
sioner and his denal of the grievHygiene Department representaance as an appeal in this matter.
tive.
" W e feel that the :ecord makes
Among other witnesses appearclear the nature of the grievance,
ing were a Miss Monoml and Irvclaimed but for the sake of siming D r u t t m a n , Brooklyn State
plicity we would summarize the
Hospital office employees. Charles
grievance which we ask the Board
E. Lamb, a sergeant in the Corto consider as follows: The institutional office employees are aggrieved In that they are required
to work 40 h o u r j per week as distinguished fron- all other office
employees of the State who are
required to work only 37Va hours.
This patent discrimination Is even
more obvious when it Is realized
that the employees working 40
hours receive exactly the same
pay as their counterparts who
work only 37'/a hours.
The editorial said that "More
" W e might point out that while
and more people are riding piggywe are, technically speaking, the
back upon fewer and fewer who
group representative for those
are producing the nation's wealth
employees at Brooklyn State Hosand providing Its services."
pital who Initiated the grievance,
Sharp Rejoinder
we have also been requested by
J o h n F. Powers, president of
all our Institutional Chapters and
the Civil Service Employees Asby resolution of the Delegates of
sociation. has called on the newspaper to render the hard-working
civil servants of the country an
apology.
Individual employees hrve taken it upon themselves to write
letters to the editor ol the Mirror
The Albany Civil Service Dedemanding
retraction
of
the partment chapter of the Civil
"slur" on the entire civil service. Service Employees Association will
At this writing, the Mirror has hold a Mardi Oras dance Feb. 6
not acknowledged any protests In at 9 P.M. in the new Iron Workits "Letter tc the Edit )r" column. ers Hall, 900 N. M a n n i n g Blvd.,
A representative of The Leader Albany.
Tickets,
which
are
$3
for
has protested both by a personal
chapter members and $3.50 for
telephone call and a letter to the
non-members, will Include all reeditor. (For further Leader com- freshments, snacks and prizement see editorial oo Page 6 ) .
drawing participation.
Mirror Editorial Slams
Public Employees As
Piggy-Back
Riders/
'Unproducfive'
Workers
Powers Writes Legislators
I n the meantime, the Asociation has taken its battle for higher pay to the legislators on an InAn editorial in the New York
dividual basis.
Daily Mirror that termed the maMr. Powers sent the following jority of civil service employees
letter to every A.ssemblyman and as "piggy-back riders" and "unproductive" workers has stirred
Senator.
*
among
" W e are wrilins to you a n d considerable resentment
your fellow legislators to explain public employees.
I n Its January 23, 1959 Issue,
briefly the Stnte employees' salary
situation. We realize that tech- the Mirror began the lea'i editnically ti e question is not yet be- orial with a tirade against Infore you, but is is certain to be creased taxation and cited the
m u c h discussed in the coming ever-growing government employweeks and an understanding of ee force as the cause of "colossal
the factual siluatior. we feel is erosion of your income, your
essential to enlist youi- favorable wealth, your future secm'ity."
The editorial saiu that
for
consideration of the problem.
" W e enclose herewith a copy every six people there was an
of an Association release sum- "invisible guest — the non-proemployee
marizing our feelings toward the ducing . governmental
Burreot proposal. We also believe whose livelihood you are providthat consideration of the recent ing out of yo'T own hard earned
history of this problem Is appro- money."
priate.
Policemen, firemen,
teachers,
"Last year the State's own sal- sanitation wurkers and members
ary study demonstrated a n aver- of the aimed forces were excluded
deficiency l a State salaries by the article.
Civil Service DepK
Mardi Oras Dance
Set for Feb. 6
this Association at the annual
meeting in October, to do all in
our power to rectify this long
standing discrimination."
Membership Memo
The Civil Service Employees
Association, through its Legal
Counsel, drafts and has introduced in the Legisiature each
year about 75 measures to improve the work conditions of
public employees; such as salaries, retirement, hours, etc. Its
legal counsel examines all bills
in the State Legislature each year
affecting public employees, which
number in the hundreds.
. CSEA retains one of the most
capable legal firms in the state.
Its legal counsel assists in the
representation of CSEA before
the executive, legislative and administrative branches of state
and local governments relative to
all important programs. I n addition to legal service at Albany
Headquarters, there are Regional
Attorneys at New York City,
Binghamton, Buffalo, Ogdensburg,
Syracuse a n d Rochester to assist
CSEA Chapters in general matters.
The continuous representation
of public employees by CSEA
merits the membership support
of every state and local government employee. Bring this to the
attention of your fellow public
employees who may not be iueiu<
bers.
Low Cost^ High Qualify
Make Conference Tours
Of Europe A Real Buy
Thiee Conferences of the Civil
Service Employees Association are
offering chartered a - tours to
Europe this summer that are low
In cost but high in quality.
The Capital District, Metropolitan New York and Western Conferences are sponsors of the tours
for which membei-s, their families and paients are eligible. All
three toiu-s sell for less than $700
and this extraordinary low price
Includes round trip air transportation, all hotel space, most meals,
land transportation in Europe,
sightseeing tours, guides, baggage
transfers, etc.
This bargain-priced vacation is
possible becau.se of Association
membership and is limited strictly to CSEA Coiiference members.
Since the average ti'ip to Europe
by air is approximately $1,000
when purchased through ordinary
channels the advantage of participating In the Conference tours
can readily be seen. For New
York State residents, a trip at
this price costs only slightly more
than would a trip to California.
Where To Write
Bookingy
are
already
being
made in all three areM and Interested persons should notice the
proper ^ddress for '>.eir Conference tour and write at once for
applications to asure space. All of
the tours leave In late August,
which wil' assure the Uavelers of
good weather abroad.
Departure date for each of the
Conferences varies but all have
chosen the same Itinerary abroad,
one designed to provide a panoramic view of the best of Europe.
Listed below are the departure
dates for eath conference and the
address to write for information
and application.
Metropolitan Conference — Departs New York August 27, returns
September 18. Write to CSEA
Metropolitan
Travel
Club,
61
Duane St., New York 7, N.Y.
Western Conference — Departs
Buffalo August 31, returns September 22. I n Buffalo area write
Celeste Rosenkranz, 55 Sweeney
St., Buffalo; in Rochester area
contact Mrs. Melba B l n n ,
lis
Manor Parkway, Rochester.
Capital District — Departs Albany August 21, returns September 12. Contact Hazel Abrams,
Room 148, State Education Bldg.,
Albany 1, N.Y.
State Employees C r e
Union Gives 3V2%
Dividend to its Memb
\
A thi-ec and one-half percent
dividend was declared by the New
York State Employees Federal
Credit Union at its p.nnual meeting J a n . 30 at 80 Centre St.
Elected officers were Henry N.
Smith,
president;
Han-y
M.
Hirsch, and Morris Gimpelson,
vice presidents; Solomon Bendet,
ti'easurer, and Lawrence Epstein,
assistant treasu-er and secretaryclerk.
Mabel N. P a n e l l , Mr. Bendet,
Mr. Hirsch and Mr. Ep.'^tein were
named to the Board of Directors.
Committees are Samuel Emmett
and J o h n McHugh, Credit; Seymour Shapiro and Roslyn Sussman. Supervisory, and Harry M.
Cohen and Viola Dee, Educational.
The New York State Ci-edit
Union services State employees in
the Metropolitan New Yor area.
I t has offices in Room 900, 80
Centre St., and Room 1816, 270
Broadway. All eligible state employees are invited to participate
In the activities of the credit
union, both as shareholders and
as borrowers.
C I V U 8 K K V I C B I.EAUGH
A m e r i c a ' ! Leading NewHumcazlD*
(or Public Gmplnyen*
L B A D K R P U B L I C A T I O N S , INC.
•T Duaiir 81.. New Vork 1, N. I
Teleiihon*! IIKekiiiaii S-tiOlO
Entered tu ftecond-clau oiatter Octobci
3. luau, at the poat o f f i c e at New
York, N T under the Act of March
S ISTS. Memoer o l Audit Bureau • !
Circuiatlona.
SubierliitloD Prloe ( I . O O Per f r a i
Individual coplt*. ! • •
B E A D Tha Leader e v e r j weak
tor Job Oppartaultlfa
Paris (Seventh D a y ) . An all-day
motor excursion to Versailles via
the C h a m p s Slysees, the Arc de
Triomphe, and the Bois de Boulogne. A visit to Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Powers in
Europe ( S H A P E ) , a briefing by
senior officers, followed by lunch
in the Officers' Mess. Then a tour
of the palace and gardens of
Versailles, built by Louis X I V a n d
the most sumptuous of all royal
houses. Back to Paris for dinner
at the hotel.
Hospital Recorder
Exam About to Open
Applications for hospital recorder positions at $4,000 will be
accepted by New York City thus
closing date probably will be February 25. The test Is scheduled
for M a y 20.
Any qualified U. S. citizen may
apply.
Minimum
qualifications
are expected to include a New
York State registered professional
nurse licen.se, or a four-year
bachelor's degree plus six months'
experience as medical historian
or medical records libraa-ian in an
approved hospital, or a
high
school diploma and two years'
experience.
The City Civil Service Commission is scheduled to vote the mini m u m requirements on February
3 and possibly open the examination later this week.
MACDUFF BACK
MAC DUFF BACK
I N STATE S E R V I C E
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — James R .
Macduff, who once served M state
motor vehicle commissioner I n
the Dewey administration, is back
on Capitol Hill as deputy tax
commissioner in charge of the
State Treasury. His pay Is $13,500.
Mr. MacdufI is Otsego Republican county c h a i r m a n and is vice
president and member of the
board of directors of the Wilber
National B a n k of Oneonta.
HAROLD CREAL NEW
STATE F A I R D I R E C T O R
ALBANY. Feb. 2 — Harold L.
Creal is the new director of t h e
State Fair.
His a p p o i n t m e n t waa announced by Agilcultu'al Commissioner Don J . W i c k h a m His salParis (Eighth Day). Morning:
ary will be announced later.
the magnificent Louvre art gallerR E G E N T S POST F I L L E D
Mr. Creal, who succeeds Wilies. Lunch on your own. Afternoon
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — Elaine B. liam F. Baker of Syracuse i n the
free to shop and window-shop
Phipfvs,
Patchogue,
has
been post, held the same position for
along the Rue de Rivoll, the Avenamed t r the Public Librarians' four years under the Dewey adnue de r o p e r a , the R u e de la
Tour Description
ministration.
Paix, and the rue St. Honore.
Here is what will be seen a n d
Dinner at a good typical Quartier
done on the tour:
restaurant.
London (Second Day) Land at
Switzerland
London Airport. To the hotel for
luncheon, followed by a briefing
(Ninth Day). The nine o'clock
session conducted by those in express from the Gare de Lyon, a
charge of the European arrange- morning crossing France via Diments. The rest of the day free jon, Macon and Bourg, through
to get your own first impressions the great wine-growing province
of England and the English.
of Burgundy, to the Swiss border.
tiiizvn:
Civil Service
Employees
London (Third Day). Morning
motor coach tour of the West
End:
Piccadilly;
Trafalgar
Square:
Thames
Embarkment;
Nelson's
Column;
Westminster
Abbey; Parliament; Buckingham
Palace and
changing
of
the
guard; Regents Park; Hyde Park;
Pall Mall; etc. O n your own for
lunch. Afternoon motor coach
tour of the oldest section known
as "the City": Tower of London,
with the Crown Jewels; St. Pauls
Cathedral: Guild Hall; Mansion
House; Bank of England; London
Docks; Cheshire Cheese: British
Museum:
Covent Garden, etc.
Dinner at a West End restaurant.
Evening at the theatre, seeing a
London " h i t " .
Luncheon in the dining car, arriving at Geneva in the early afternoon. Time for a drive around
the beautiful little city with Lake
Leman at Its feet, the perpetual
snows of M o n t Blanc over its head
and the Rhone River flowing
through it: the Palais des Nations,
the I L O , the Gothic Cathedral of
St. Pierre, where Jean Calvin lectured and J o h n Knox preached,
the Impressive sculptured group
comprising the International Monument of the Reformation, and
delightful streets and squares of
ancient houses, fountains
and
flowers. I n the evening, a short
journey along the shores of the
Lake to the resort town of Montreux for dinner and a restful
London (Fourth Day). Morning night at a good Swiss hotel.
free for attendance at a serviceMontreux (Tenth Day). The
in one of London's famous places morning free for individual purof worship: Westminster Abbey, suits. Lunch at the hotel. I n the
St.
Margaret's
or St.
Paul's afternoon an excursion to Chillon,
(Church of England), Westmin- one of the best preserved mediester Cathedral ( R o m a n Catholic). val castles in Europe. Dinner at a <
Great (Orthodox) Synagogue, etc. typical Swiss restaurant.
O n your own for lunch. I n the
(Eleventh Day). A day's excurafternoon by motor coach to Eton, sion by motor coach up into the
founded in 1440, Windsor Castle Alpine valleys of the Bernese
built by WilHam the Conqueror Oberland. The scene widens as
more t h a n a hundred years ear- we climb from Montreux till it
lier, and H a m p t o n Court Palace takes in all of Lake Leman and
which dates from Henry V I I I .
the surrounding mountains. Then
London (Fifth Day) Morning
free to shop and see things on
your own. I n the afternoon by
motor coach to Lympne on the
English Channel, with a stop Inroute at Canterbury to see the
Cathedral. Cross the Channel by
air to Beauvais. Visit the Cathedral
and
continue by
motor
coach to Paris. Dinner at the
hotel.
France
Paris
(Sixth
Day). Morning
sightseeing by motor coach: the
Opera, the Madeleine, Place de
la Concorde, Chambres des Deputies, C h a m p s Elysees, Arc de
Triomphe, Palais de Chaillot, Eiffel Tower, Napoleon's Tomb; the
Sorbonne; Saint Chappelle, Conciergerie, Notre D a m e Cathedral,
the IXiileries Gardens, the Palais
Royale; Montmartre, Sacre Coeur
and the Place du Tertre. Lunch at
a typical Parisian restaurant. Afternoon free. I n the evening dinner at the Restaurant Aux Quati-e
Marches, followed by a performance of the Folies-Bergere and
a look at the night life of Montmar tie.
we leave the panorama behind
and traverse an intimate landscape of picturesque villages, sloping pastures and grazing herds.
Chateaud'Oex, Saanen,
Ostaad,
and Sweisimmen are the delightful m o u n t a i n
towns we pass
through until we come to Cplez
on the Lake of T h u n and an excellent lunch. Then on around the
Lake to the town of T h u n with a
fine view of the Jungfrau, and on
to Berne, the beautiful old capital
of Switzerland, where we shall
spend the rest of the afternoon.
By rail, the short way, back to
Montreux for dinner at the hotel.
(Continued on Page 12)
T A X CONSULTANT
NAMED
ALBANY. Feb. 2 — Albert C.
Petite of New York City has been
appointed as a tax consultant to
study ways of simplifying the
state's tax laws. An attorney, Mr.
Petite will work closely with State
Tax
Commissioner
Joseph
H.
Mui-phy. His saJary in the consultant'* post will be $15,000 a
year.
E urope:
Association
announces
ifs annual
EUROPEAN
TOURS
for
1959
You'll enjoy a MONTH-LONS vacation in 6 fascinating
European Countries:
ENGLAND HOLLAND GERMANY
SWITZERLAND ITALY FRANCE
for the budget price of only
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NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE.
ta
THE PUBLIC
EMPLOYEE
COMMISSIONER KRONE HONORED BY CONFERENCE
By J O H N F. POWERS
President
Civil Service Employees Association
Death Benefit After
Retirement
There is an important bill which the Association has di-afted
a n d introduced in the present session which deserves attention and
support from all legislators and public employees. I t is not a glamorous bill — that is one calculated to stimulate a lot of pro and
con discussion, nor Is it one, like the salary bill, which would provide
Immediate benefits. This bill is designed for the future, especially
for those who have made and plan to make their service to the
State a lifetime career.
This bill would increase the ordinary death benefit now paid
to the beneficiary of a member of the State Retirement System from
six months' salary to a year's salary provided the member shall have
a t least 12 yeara of total service credit a.t the date of his death, or
to two years if he shall have in excess of 38 years of total service.
This bill represents life insurance at its best for the public
employees. It Incorporates the life insm-ance principle dii-ectly into
the machinery of the pension system and eliminates the administrative expanse which would occur were a life insurance contract
for public employees written with an outside can-ier.
An
Ansiver
To Our
Critics
This bill also answers those critics of the Association who con«tantly state that our organization's existence solely depends upon
Its cheap group life insurance plan for Its members and t h a t the
Association would never sponsor a life Insui'ance program for all
public employees. This carping is so much balderdash. One glance
Kt the fact.s would eliminate the argument t h a t the Association is
primarily in business as an insurance agent. Only 48,000 of its
80,000 members aarry the Association's group life plan granting some
Insurance interest of this group. The other 32,000 public employees
belonging to the Association, as well as the 48.000, evidently do so
because they believe in the practicability of the Association as an
eflfective instrument to improve the working standards of the.public
employees.
This bill is a good one and offers free life Insurance to public
employees. We hope it receives the favorable legislative treatment
which It merits.
Civil Service Commissioner Mary Goode Krone was presented with a mounted copy of
the "Code of the Civil Servant" when she appeared at a meeting of the Western Con<
ference of the Civil Servant Service Employees Association at Rochester State Hospital.
Miss Krone was surprised to receive the code but Claude Rowell, right, who made th«
presentation was even more surprised when he, in turn, was honored by the Conference
with a citation for his work on behalf of the Conference.
Medical Examination Not
Necessary During Feb. To
Physical examinations can be
a bar to obtaining life Insurance.
Failure to pass such an examination can result in being unable
to provide necessary
insurance
protection for your family.
For that reason, members of
Dr. Allen Mourns
Death of Dr. Ross
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — Dr. James
E. Allen Jr., state education commissioner, has called the sudden
death of Dr. Donald H. Ross,
assistant commissioner for research and special studies, a "true
loss to the State Education Department.
I n a statement, Dr. Allen declared:
"Dr. Ross' deah Is a true loss
to the State Education Department, to me personally and to
all education in the State. Although he was with the Department for a relatively brief time,
he had already made an invaluable contribution toward the solution of today's complex problems
for education. He had a great
respect for quality in education
and conceived this to be the primary aim of all his efforts. To
hi« position of Assistant Commissioner for Research he brought
Imagination, intellectual
ability,
a n d a great capacity for production which earned for h i m a key
role In State education planning
a n d policy making. The State has
lost an able public servant. The
work he did will result in better
•chooU for all the people of the
6tat«."
the Civil Service Employees Association who are under age 50
should act promptly to take advantage of the offer being made
by the CSEA Group Life Insurance Plan wherein coverage m a y
be obtained during the m o n t h of
February without a physical examination.
Applicants 50 years or over will
have to take the usual medical
examination at the expense of
the insurance Company.
Any employee of the State, or
of the Counties of Westchester,
St. Lawrence, Chemung, or the
Cities of White Plains, Ogdensburg, Potsdam, Newburgh, Elmira who are or become members
of CSEA, may apply for Its lowcost Group Life Insurance.
Applications for this Insurance
can be secui-ed from any CSEA
Chapter or from CSEA Headquai'ters Offices at 8 Elk Street,
Albany, N. Y . and 61 Duane
Street, New York City. To comply
with the special offer, completed
applications must reach the CSEA
Headquarters Office at Albany on
or before Februaa-y 28.
Low Cost
Under the CSEA Group U f e
Plan, an insured member 29 years
or younger gets $1,500 Term Life
Insurance protection for 13o biweekly. Older employees enjoy
proportionately low rates.
I n addition to low cost, the
Plan provides many special features. Claims are paid to beneflclaiies o." deceased Insuied members within 24 hours after notice
of death Is received at CSEA
(Continued on P a f e 14)
Western Conference Hears
Conway, Krone a nd Powers
R O C H E S T E R , Feb. 2 — A
former regional ettorney for the
Civil Service Employees Association now serving in the State
Legislature appealed to public
workers to lend support to Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller's call for
higher taxes.
Speaking before a meeting of
the CSEA Western Conference,
Assm, J o h n J . Conway, former
CSEA attorney for the western
area, said that more taxes were
necessary for the functioning of
the state government.
" O u r state serves its people in
a multitude of ways," said Mr.
Conway, " a n d these sei-vices cost
money. W h e n people talk against
taxation they often fail to realize they are talking against the
satisfactory
operation,
through
sufficient funds, of services we
cannot do without in a modern
society and which only government can provide."
The Assemblyman called on
the civil servants to co-operate
In the Governor's tax program by
"educating" their neighbors a n d
by lending vocal support to the
program. Vlto Ferro, Conference
president, conducted the afternoon session.
Rochester State Hospital chapter, hosts to the event, tendered
a dinner ^o the Conference delegates that evening at the hospital.
Principal speakers n the evening were Civil Service Commissioner Mary Goode Krone and
J o h n F. Powers, Association president. Mr. Powers reviewed Association progress on the legislative scene and assured his nearly
Syracuse Valentine Dance
And Central Conference
Meeting Is Joint Affair
200 listeners the CSEA was bending every effort to gain a fair and
just salary Increase this year.
The Conference presented Miss
Krone with a mounted copy of
the "Code of the Civil Servant."
Miss Krone thanked the Conference and told the guests that " I
finally have my own copy of this
fine document and con now stop
bothering the CSEA whenever 1
need to refer to it. T h a n k you all
so very much."
Claude .Lowell made the presentation and was in turn sui'prlsed when William Rosslter, Rochester State chapter president,
presented him with a Conference
citation for service to the Association.
Other
guests
attending
tho
event Included Vernon A. Tapper,
CSEA third vice president; Raymond G . Oastle, fifth vice president; Robert L. Soper, first vice
president; Joseph Felly, first vice
president; Charlotte Clapper, CSEA secretary; Paul Kyer, editor
of The reader, ar.d C. Edwin
Lacks, president of Specialized
Tours, Inc.
One of the post popular winter County delegates will register at
events in the Civil Service Em- the same time.
The Conference meeting will
ployees Association — the a n n u a l
begin at 1:30 P.M. S. Samuel
dinner dance of the Syracuse
Borelly, who will preside over the
chapter, CSEA — will again be
county meeting, said that the
held In conjunction with the
workshop will start at that time,
quaiterly meeting of the CSEA too.
Central 'lonference and County
At 3:30 P.M., I. 8. Hungerford,
Workshop.
administrative director of
the
Thomas Ranger, president of State Retirement System, will adthe Syracuse chapter, announced dress a Joint meeting of state and
that the dinner dance will be county delegates.
Reservations for the dinner and
held on Valentine's Day. February 14, at 6:30 P.M. in the Hotel dance at $4 per person must be
made by February 7 and may be
Onondaga.
The Central Conference will obtained by writing vo Agnes M .
begin its meeting that day with Weller, Division of Parole, 270
registration of delegates at 9 A. State Office Building, or to Peter
M. in the hotel. J o h n Oravellne, B. Volmes, College of Forestry,
Conference president, announced. Syracuse Unlversky, Syracuse.
NEW Y O U T H B O A R D M E M B E R S
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — Mrs. Carmelia Aulisi of Gloversvllle Is a
new member of the State Y o u t h
Commission. The wife of Fultoa
County Judge Arthur Aullsl, she
has been active In civic and communities' affairs. She succeeds
Mrs. Caroline K . Simon on the
commission.
A D V I S O R Y POST
FILLED
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — Dr. LouU
M . Rousselot of New York City
has been named to the Nurse
Advisory Council to succeed D r .
Raymond S. McKeeby of Blnghamton. The appointment wan
announced by the State Board
of Regent*.
C I V I L
S E R V I C E
L E A D K K
State Exams That Stay
Open Continuously
AppUcatloni are belnc accrptcd I each a t Brockport, Geneseo, a n d
fontinuouily
for tiie followinc! Syracuse.
Requirements include
either one year of experience a n d
Jobs:
5555. Vari-type operator, $3.H0 a h i g h school d i p l o m a or two
to $3,960. Vacancies are m a i n l y years of experience. Fee $3.
8061. Head
anUor, $4,080 to
I n New Y o r k City a n d Albany,
vacancy
each
at
w i t h occasional openings at other $5,050. O n e
locations t h r o u g h o u t the State, In Brooklyn a n d Syracuse. Requirehospitals, colleges, a n d other In- ments are either three years' ex-,
stitutions. Duties consist of oper- perience i n c l u d i n g one year as
ating a varl-typer m a c h i n e , per- supervisor or J o u r n e y m a n status
f o r m i n g general t y p i n g a n d cler- I n a recognized building trade.
ical work, a n d related work as Fee $4.
required. Candidates m u s t have
145. O c c u p a t i o n a l therapist, $4,h a d t r a i n i n g or experience in vari- 300 to $5,310, a n d occupational
typer operation. Performance test therapist (TB service), $4,530 to
only, consisting of selecting type, $5,580. 91 vacancies throughout
p l a n n i n g layouts, and varl-typing t h e State. Duties consist of planfinal copy on paper f r o m clean n i n g \nd conducting a n assigned
or rough copy of moderate diCB- phase of a program designed to
further the rehabilitation of menculty. Fee $3.
175. Assistant
civil
engineer tally a n d physically ill patients.
(design). $6,140 to $7,490. Posi- Candidates m u s t have graduated
tions In the D e p a r t m e n t of Pub- from a n approved school of occulic Works i n Albany. Duties in- p a t i o n a l therapy, or have gradclude performing professional en- V vted from college a n d have satisgineering work of moderate diflf • ; factorlly completed all the re' quirements for a certificate grantculty. M i n i m u m requirements are
ed by a n approved school of occuone year of satisfactory civil ene x a m i n a t i o n will test knowledge
gineering experience involving the
of principles a n d techniques of
design a n d c o m p u t a t i o n of briOges, occupational therapy, the use a n d
grade
separations,
and
other care
of
occupational
therapy
equivalent structures, plus a sat- equipment, effective techniques of
isfactory
combination
of
five instruction, and related knowledge
years of education a n d / o r ex- a n d abilities Involved i n performperience. Fee $3.
ing the duties of the position. Pee
191. Senior clinical psycholo- $4.
gist. $5,840 t o $7,130. Vacancies
a t locations throughout the State.
8057. Veterinarian (small anlT h e work included testing a n d m.ils), $5,840 to $7,130, several
Interviewing patients a n d inmates, vacancies at Roswell P a r k Meconferring with families of pa- r rial Institute i n Buffalo. Retients to gather i n f o r m a t i o n or quires one year of experience i n
t o offer recommendations, a n d practice of veterinary medicine
preparing written reports. M i n - with emphasis on small experiimum
requirements
are
satis- m e n t a l animals. Pee $3.
factory completion of 30 semester
Apl)i-!ations for these jobs will
hours with specialization In clin- l>e accepted u n t i l August 15. Deical psychology a n d one year of tails a n d application forms m a y
full-time experience i n clinical be obtained at the State Departpsychology, a n d one further year m e n t of Civil Service, R o o m 2301,
of a satisfactory combination of 270 Broadway. Specify the n u m education
and/or
experience.
Fee $5.
.TEWISH T E A C H E R S T O D I N E
8051. Institution education sup- AT W A L D O R F - A S T O R I A
ervisor, $5,550 to $6,780 a year,
The thirty-second anni,versary
four vacancies i n the specialties luncheon of the Jewish Teachers
of general home economics, voca- Association will be held a t the
tional, or m e n t a l defective t-!ach- Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on ThursIng. Requirements are six semes- day, February 12 at 12:30 P . M .
ter hours in educational adminis- A n attendance of 1,000 is extration a n d / o r eligibility for, a pected.
teaching certificate in one of the
President S a u l Silver will be
specialties, and two years' teach- master of ceremonies. D r . Alexing experience in such subjects. ander D u s h k i n , professor emeriFee $5.
tus a n d former dean of the School
80::0. Institution education di- of
Education
at
the
Hebrew
rector, $6,450 to $7,860 a year, OiJe University i n Jerusalem, D r Dushvacancy at H i g h l a n d .
Require- kin, the principal speaker, will
ments include possession of, or discuss contemporary education i n
eligibility for, a permanent certi- Israel a n d the United
States.
ficate for service as principal of The guest of honor will be D r .
an elementary school or of a J o h n J . Theobald, Superintendent
•econdary school. Fee $5.
of Schools.
8049. Y o u t h commission area
airector, $7,890 to $9,540, one B I L L P R O P O S E S L I F T F O R
vacancy i n New York City. Re- D O I N G J O B O V E R S E A S
quirements, besides a bachelor's
W A S H I N G T O N . Feb. 2 — Condegree, include
a
satisfactory gress will be asked by the Defense
combination of four years of edu- D e p a r t m e n t for legislation grantcation a n d experience. Fee $5.
ing Federal employees limited re8048.
Supervising
psychiatric employment rights after they have
social worker, $6,140 to $7,490, completed overseas assignments.
The new bill would peiTOit rethree vacancies at Willard, Was•alc, a n d New York City. Require- assignment to the position previments include two years of grad- ously held i n the cor.t'nentai U.S.
uate study i n social work a n d four or Hawaii, if it were open, or
equal or better assignment in the
years of experience. Fee $5.
8062. Supervising j a n i t o r , $3,480 same geographical area, or a new
to $4,360, three vacancies, one j o b on a provisional basis.
State Clerk Test
Closes Feb. 16
T h e last day to apply for clerl-
• a l jobs w i t h New Y o r k State is
Monday,
Februai-y
16. Apply
t h e State Civil Service
to
Commis-
sion, 270 Broadway, New Yoric 7,
N.Y., co4-ner Chambers Street, in
person,
mail. If
eent
by
representative
by
mail, enclose
self-addressed
velope.
Mail
n o t later
by
eight-
stamped
applications
bear a postmarii
or
enmust
than
February 16.
he written test will be held on
S a t u r d a y , M a r c h 21 In eight New
Yoirlc City h i g h schools a n d i n
14
other
examination
centers
Ihrouffhout the S t a t « .
The titles of the positions to be
filled are clerk, file clerk, a n d
Account a n d Statistics clerk. Candidates m a y compete for as m a n y
options as the> desire a n d the
same single $2 application fee
holds for all titles.
Salaiy
starts
a t $2,720
for
clerks a n d file clerks while account a n d statistics clerks begin
at $2,850. There are no m i n i m u m
educaUon or experience requirements.
M e n a n d wor en 18 to 70 m a y
apply. They must be citizens a n d
m u s t have lived In the state for
a t least one yeai' preceding M a r c h
21.
TiMd^Mf,
F r i H w v y
9,
U.S. Is Offering Jobs
In Color Television
ber a n d title of each e x a m i n a t i o n
i n which you are interested.
a d d i t i o n , applications are
accepted continuously
for
147.
senior social worker (public ask a n c e ) , 152. senior social worker (child welfare), 153. senior
medical social worker, 154. y o u t h
parole worker, 169. state social
worker, a n d 183. senior psychiatric social worker. There is n o residence requirement for these jobs
Typist Test
Opens Feb. 5;
Many Jobs
U. S. positions a i e open to m e n
with experience i n color television
as studio l i g h t i n g
technicians,
T V c a m e r a operators, T V equipm e n t repairers, vidio control engineers, lighting technician forem e n a n d T V e q u i p m e n t installer
a n d repair foremen. T h e salaries
range from $2.21 to $4 65 per
hour.
T h e positions are at tiie W a l t e r
Reed A r m y M e d i c a l
Center,
W a s h i n g t o n , D . C., which has t h e
largest color television system I n
the world. A p p l y to the U. S.
Civil Sen'ice Commission, W a s h ington 25, D . C.
GET THE AUCO STUDY
BOOK
MAIL
HANDLER
U. S. POST OFFICE
Previous examinations and answers to help
j oii pass high on your test.
Beginning Thursday, February
5, a n d c o n t i n i u n g u n t i l further
notice, applications will be accepted for typist positions wi<,h
the City of New Y o r k , "piese jobs
p a y $2,750 to start a n d rise to
$3,650.
Applications m a y be picked u p
a t State E m p l o y m e n t Service offices a n d m u s t be filled out a n d
h a n d e d i n at the Piling Section of
the New Y o r k City D e p a r t m e n t
of Personnel, 96 D u a n e Street,
M a n h a t U n , between 9 A.M. a n d
4 P.M. M o n d a y thj-ough Friday.
The State aids the City i n
typist a n d steno re iruitment.
A t y p i n g speed of 40 words per
m i n u t e a n d a good knowledge of
g r a m m a r a n d vocabulary Is required of typists.
09
ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
45e for 24 hour special dslivary
C . O . D . ' j 30c extra
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St., New York 7. N. Y.
Please lend me
copies of books checlcil above.
I enclose check or money order for $
Name
Address
City
...
State
Be iura to Include 3 % Salei Toi
5,9/0-M/fmeM
•
m
About three years ogo, a Correction Deportment employee in
Syrocuse froctured his hip. Complication set In ond todoy he is
still disobled ond out of work.
Fortunately, this man was enrolled in the CSEA (ton of Accident
and Sickness Benefits. Because of his foresight, he has received
o monthly Disability Check for $115.00 for the post 34 .nonihs.
Don't you be hurt twice by the same accident. Protect your
income by enrolling in the CSEA Plan of Accident and Sickness
msuronce. This needed protection is not included In the new
State Heolth Plan.
John M . D e v l i n
Harrison S. H e n r y
Roheii N . Boyd
W i i l i a n i P.Conlioy
Anita K. H i l l
Thonius Canty
Tlioinas I' urley
Charles M c C r e e d y
G i l t s Van Vorst
George Wachub
Geori;e W e l l i n e r
Wiiliiini Si-anlan
M i l l a r d Svhaffer
T £ R
MAIN
President
Vice Fresideal
General Service Manager
Association Sales Manager
Administrative Assistant
I' ield Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
F i e l d Supervisor
148 Clinton St., Schen. clady, N e w Y o r k
312 Madison A v e n u e , N e w Y o r k , N e w Y o r k
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, N e w Y o r k
148 Clinton St., Schcnictady, N e w Y o r k
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, N e w Y o r k
342 Madison A v e n u e . N e w Y o r k , N e w Y o r k
110 T r i n i t y I'lace Syracuse, N e w Y o r k
20 Briurwuod Hoad, l . o u d o n v i l l e , N e w Y o r k
148 Clinton St., Scheiiectaily, N e w Y o r k
3562 Cliapin, Niagara Falls, N e w Y o r k
10 Diinitri Place, Larchniont, N e w Y o r k
342 Madison A v e n u e , N e w Y o r k , N e w Y o r k
12 Duncan D r i v e , Latham, N e w Y o r k
B m S M l P O W S U i / v .
OFHICt
148 C L I N T O N ST.. S C H E N E C T A D Y I. N , Y .
FRANKLIN 4-7751
]9!lf
ALBANY 5-2032
905 W A L B R I D G E
BLDS.
BUFFALO 2, N. Y.
MADISON
>353
J42
MADISON
NEW YORK
AVE.
17, N .
Y.
M U R R A Y HILL 2-7895
THMII«T,
F«tl»r«M7
S,
C I V I L
19Sf
S e i l V i C E
L E A D E R
P a f s
•TOY TICKETS' FOR BINGHAMTON PARTY
K D I T O B I A I .
Eisenhower Experiments
RESIDENT Eisenhower has instituted an experimental
P
grievance procedure that commands the attention of
any public jurisdiction, including a police department that
is bothered with this problem. He has created a board of
appeals in the Panama Canal Zone that will include two
employee members.
The administration of the Zone is under the Army's
juridsiction, so if police forces in states and cities may be
considered quasi-military, which is doubtful, the Canal Zone
employees may be so regarded with no less propriety.
The Canal Zone employees will have the right to appeal
to a five-member board from adverse decisions made at
supervisory or even the top departmental level. The Secretary of the Army will appoint the board members,, one of
whom must be a nominee of the U. S. Civil Service Commission. T w o employees of U. S. agencies in the Canal
Zone are to be appointed with advice and consent of organizations that represent them. The Secretary of War would
not have to appoint any particular nominees of the organizations, but such recommendations are not likely to be
ignored; besides, any nominees whom the Secretary would
consider unacceptable would be succeeded by others, until
two employees are found who arc satisfactory to the
Secretary.
Could Be Far-Reaching
Not only in the Canal Zone but throughout the Federal
service there is employee dissatisfaction over appeals procedures. If the President's plan sensibly being tried out in
a small area at first, works satisfactorily in the Canal Zone
it might become almost universal in Federal service, and
maybe even set an example for state and city police forces
as a compromise on sovereignty over grievances.
Police Eye New Plan
Toys w c r t Hit prict of admifsion at a party of the Binghamton chapter. CSEA, hcM a t
the VFW Clubhouse. Tht gifts wore distributed to children under the Toys for Tots campaign of the 4Sth Special Infantry Company Marine Corps Reserve. From left, J. Foster,
Sergeant Thomas Matts, Leo Bernstein, president; R. Sullivan, R. Hudda, and A. Dexheimer,
all members of the arrangements committee.
U. S. Job Opportunities
The O. S. Civil Service Commission lists its current examination announcements for Federal
Jobs. Examination.s are open for
receipt of applications until fui-ther notice, unle.ss a closing date
is specified. Announcements and
applications may be obtained from
post offices throughout the country, from civil service region offices, or from the U. S. Civil Service Commi.ssion. Wa.shington 25,
D. C. Jobs are in various Federal
agencies, unless a specific agency
is
named,
and
are
located
throughout the country, unless
otherwise staled. Those examinations marked with an asterisk
may be used to fill jobs In foreign
countries. A dagger indicates new
announcements. Salaries quoted
are basic a n n u a l salaries; additional compensation is provided
for any authorized overtime and
for overseas duty.
The President's experiment is being watched closely
by the New York City police because they are trying to
oblaiii improved grievance procedures, in fact, contend that
in reality they ha\e no grievance procedures, since the
right of appeal is absent. Police Commissioner Stephen P.
Kennedy says that departmental decisions on grievances
must be final in the interest of discipline and the effective
policing of the City. He objects ^o any "outsider" having
authority to reverse departmental decisions in grievance
cases. "Outsiders" like civil service commission have authority to review and even power to reverse grievance decisions, and even exercise appellate jurisdiction in disciplinary cases, which are technically something apart from
Agricultural
grievance, but not in regard to police departments. How
Agricultural
Economist, $4,980
far, if at alll, the President's board could or would act
CO $12,770. Announcement 53B.
in disciplinary cases is yet to be revealed.
Agricultural Extension SpecialThe Point
Is in the
'Joint*
The outstanding point in the President's plan is that
authority is to be exercised jointly, not exclusively, hence
contrast with Commissioner Kennedy's policy is marked.
To be sui-e, the Canal Zone employees are not police,
though some of them exercise police functions. Commis"
sionoi- Kennedy can say that no police department has
grievance procedures that strip the Commissione of final
say, but the exclusion of police from the benefit of grievance procedures open to all other New York City employees
is itself an anomoly, and there is no reason why the City
should conform to outmoded and throwback methods instead of setting the pace. If no "outsider" like the City
Civil Sei'vice Commission or the City Labor Department
can have the right to second-guess the Commissioner, as
Ml'. Kennedy puts it, maybe a board like the one to be established at the President's direction would be the solution.
The New York City Police Depai tment Jias a rule prohibiting members of the police force from joining a union.
Commissioner Kennedy strongly endorses that rule, established long before he became Commissioner, and Mayor
Robert F. Wagner fully supports him on that, as on practically everything else.
If the police were members of a union the main goal
of the union no doubt would be adequately protective grievance procedures. The principal goal of the Patrolmen's
Benevolent Association happens to be the same also because
expressive of the will of the policemen themselves.
The PBA has started a court case to compel the Commissioner to grant the police the same grievance procedures
that all other City employees have, but the Commi.ssioner
says that the PFJA hasn't a leg to stand on, in that case,
and that he'll win hands down. W e shall ultimately see
whether the Police Coninii.ssioner, who has soverignty
over i)olicing tlie City, also has sovereignty over labor
relationi.
ist (Program Leadersiiip, Educational Researcii and Trainine),
$8,330 to $12,770: Subject-Matter
Specialization, Educational Media,
$8,330 to $11,355. Jobs are in the
Washington, D. C., area. Extensive
travel
throughout
the
United
States. Announcement 4 ( B ) .
Agricultural Marketing Specialist, Fishery Marketing Specialist,
$4,980 to $11,355;
Agricultural
Market Reporter, $4,980 to $7,030.
Announcement 147B.
Agricultural Research Scientist,
$4,980 to $11,355. Announcement
58B.
Cotton Technologist, $4,980 to
$8,330. Jobs are in Washington,
D. C., and the South and Southwest. Announcement 230.
Warehouse Examiner
(Grain,
Cotton. ?Tiscellaneous Products—
Dry Storage, Miscellaneous Products—Cold Storage), $5,985. Jobs
are with the Department of Agriculture. Announcement 405 ( B ) .
are with the Department of the
Air Force. See any one of Announcements No. 2-43-2 (54). No.
7-64-1 (54), No. 8-32-5 ( 4), or
No, 12-75-1 (54).
•Commodity Industry
Analyst
(Minerals). $4,040 to $8,330. Announcement l O l B .
•Economist, $5,985 to $12,770.
Jobs are in the Washington, D. C.,
area. Announcement 37,
F a r m Credit Examiner, $4,980
and $5,98L. Announcement 396.
Field Representative Telephone
Operations and Loans), $5,985
and $7,030. Jobs are with the
R u r a l Electrification Administra(Continucd on Page 8)
Visual Training
OF
CANDIDATES
FOR
FIREMAN
PATROLMAN
IP IN DOUBT ABOUT PASSING
SIGHT TEST OF CIVIL SERVICE
CONSULT
DR. JOHN T. F L Y N N
Optometrist
Orthopist
300 West 23rd St.. N. Y. C.
By Appt. Only — WA 9-5919
OPPORTUNITIES IN CIVIL SERVICE
Thoitsauds
of
Posiliooa
for
Aleii
& Women OfTerinB
Thcao
Advanla^ei:
Good Salaries — Promelional Opportunities — Annual Increases
Liberal Vacation — Sick Leave — Pension — Social Security
Classes Meeting for CITY & S T A T E CLERK
~
rhosd iiitereslPd in either or both of ttiesa popular f-xatns are invited to join
our ila98p.'4 wliifh are now meetinR i » Manhattan on Mon. and Wed. eveningrH at
5::t() anil 7::U). Or thoy may attend classes ia Jamaica at Ul-Ol Merrick Blvd.
on TimH. and Fri. at 7 P.M,
HIGH S C H O O L EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Nesdmt
5-Wpek
liy
NoTi-Qradliatei ot Hiltli Si-hool f o r Many Civil
- Kilroll now • ('lass ularU Mon., Kel). » .
SfrvicB
Eiaim
FIREMAN APPLICANTS
|r you hav<* checked the nmclal key answers and Hnd that you rorrertly aniiwereil
' 7 0 or more of the qiieHtiouH, you should Mtart tralnhiK UuintNiiHtely for (lti»
Ithyslcttl exam In which you will he required to iierform tfve dittirult featN.
I*hyi(iral e i a m s may be held within rs or .t nuMithti — aroordiiiK to the
4'ivll Service newsimpprs the Fire <'onimi»sioner desires an early list. Few
men ran irnnH these teHiA without training.
Start at once. Don't wait until you are notified to appear for the eiara —
usually only ahout JO days hefore your test.
Your position on the eliKlhle list depends upon your written rating but 7 0 a
will not be on the lint at all unlesu you pass the physical exam.
Fully Equipped Gyms in Manhattan & Jamaica • Day t Eva. Clasias
Classes for NEW YORK CITY LICENSE EXAMS
• MASTER ELECTRICIAN . Wad. & Mon. at 7:30 P.M.
• STATIONARY ENGINEER - Taas.
Friday ot 7:30 P.M.
• REFRIGRATION MACHINE OPERATOR • Thurt. at 7 P.M.
PATROLMAN —
N. Y. CITY POLICE DEPT.
$6,006 a Ytar Aftor 3 Yoart of Sarvico
Business
and
E c o n o m i e s
Accountant a n d Auditor, $4,040.
Announcement 51 Rev.
*Accountant or Auditor, $4,980
to $12,770. Jobs are in the WasiiIngton, D. C., area, \nnouncement
68.
Accountant and Auditor. $4,380
to $12,770. Jobs are in Oeueral
Accoui.'^^ing Office. Announcement
150 B.
"Accounting Clerk. $3,755. Jobs
are in the Washington, D. C., area.
Announcement 72.
•Actuary, $4,040 to $12,770. Announcement 42.
•Auditor, $4,980 to $12,770. Jobs
are with the Department of the
Army. Announcement 7 (F».
•Auditor, $4,980 to $12,770. Jobs
'•Say
You Saw It
'•'he L « M l f r "
In
(naned Oil 'I'Mlour Week
Includes Uniform Allowance)
I.antura t Ussns in Manhattan on TUiirs. at 1:15. 5:45 and 7:4h
P M.. tn
Jamaica on Mon. al 7:«i() P.M. aiKO cyiii olassea in both locations. Competition
will b« kt'cn. Htart preparatioo early and attain a hitrh pla^e on tiie eliKihle liat,
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
Inttructori with ya«r( of .iptritnc. train you to b.cam. an
AUTOMOIILI MICHANIC — Claites I* L. I. City
ORAPTSMAN — Classes la M a n l i a H a n & J a M o l e a
TV SlUVICi Ik m P A I » MAN — a « s s e s !• ManiiaHaa
AN INVITATION
Anyone iii(eie«ied in securing- a Tivil Service position, H i g h School Kauivalency
Diploma, J^icmme an h Ma^tttr Plitnibsi*. Master Rleotriman, iitatiouary Engineer
or Kelfigeration Machine OpM-ator, i* invited to visit and coiisuU with our
reiHtiarrt. Im our gue«l al a class seasion and obaerva the type and quality
of tha iuHirucdoii offertkj. A •iniiiur invitatioa Is opeu ta those lutereated In
out* V<»<-attonal t'ouritcM.
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN- 115 EAST 1i STREET
PhoM OR 3 - m O
JAMAICA: tt-lS MERRICK ILVD.. bet. J a a a i e a S HllUld* AVM.
UI'K.N
MON
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W A.M.
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Page S i s
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L e a p e r .
S E R V I C E
L E A D E R
B
1959
Federal
Income Tax
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
CIIRISTENBERRY THANKS
Amerlea'M tjargest Weekly tor PnbUc
Employees L E A D E R F O R A I D
Editor, T h e Leader:
Member A u d i t Bureau of Circulatlont
M a y 1 t h a n k Jerry Pinkel.steln,
'i '
Pithliihed every Tup»daY hy
published, a n d P a u l Kyer, H. J .
Bernard a n d N. H. Mager for
LIADER PUBLICATION. INC.
•[•hmaii 3-6010 splendid cooperation from The
f 7 D«aii« t » r « « t . N a w York 7. N. Y.
Leader during 1958.
Jerry Finkelstein,
PiihUnher
I t is gratifying, indeed, to be
P a u l K y e r , Editor
H . .1. B e r n a r d , E . r e c i i l i r a
Editor
the
recipient of such o u t s t a n d i n g
N. H . Mager, Biniiieim
Manager
assistanc" i n b r i n g i n g to the at' lOc per eopy. S u b M r i p t i o n Price $2.00 to m e m b e r ! o» the Civil
tention of your readers a n d our
i
Service Employees Association. $4.00 to non-members.
patrons t h e numerous items of
19
postal interest w h i c h yoiu- paper
disseminates for us, a n d we w a n t
T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 3, 1959
you to Icnow how deeply appreciative we are. W i t h m a n y t h a n k s
again a n d looking forward to a
continuance of our cordial relationship.
Tuesdaj, february S,
By H. J. BERNARD
E V E R Y U.S. C I T I Z E N O R A L I E N living I n the U.S. who h a d
income of at least $600 In 1958 m u s t file a Federal income t a *
return by April 15, 1959, except t h a t persons over age 65 o n December 31. 1958, do not have t o ' f i l e a n y r e t m n if their 1958 i n c o m e
was $1,200 or less. The same figures apply to a j o i n t return of
h u s b a n d a n d wife as to .in i n d i v i d u a l return by either, even t h o u g h
one of the spouses h a d less t h a n $1,200 income.
Unfounded Attack
The combined income is the basis of detei-mination i n a j o i n t
return, even if t h e income of one of the spouses alone would fall
into the no-tax class.
T h e return has one p r i m a r y object, to see t h a t you pay or h a v e
paid the a m o u n t of tax due, n o more, n o less. T h u s a refund is
possible, or a n additional p a y m e n t .
Y M E A N S OF a leading editorial in its January 23 R O B E R T K .
CHRISTENBERRL,
Various Refund
Reasons
Acting Postmaster, New York, N.
The only way to get a r e f u n d is to ask for it. The only way
Y. Post Office
to ask for i t is by filing a return a n d c l a i m i n g the r e f u n d , specifying
the exact a m o u n t . S l a t e whether any r e f u n d is to b3 paid or
credited, by checking the appropriate square on Page 1.
I f your income was less t h a n $600 you'd be entitled to a r e f u n d
of the a m o u n t wltheld from pay. I f you're 65 or over, if income
was less t h a n $1,200, you'd be similarly entitled. T h e reason for t h e
A L B A N Y , Feb. 2 — The State
College for Teachers a t B u f f a l o $1,200 exclusion ib t h a t at ace 65, one is entitled to two personal
has a n opening for a n associate exemptions of $600 each for himself alone, not j u s t one exemption.
The refund i n the case of a dependent who earns less t h a n
dean a t a starting salary of
$8,800 a year. Applications should $600 applies even t h o u g h the supporter claims a deduction for t h e
be addressed to Dr. Robert W . same person as a dependent. This fact is u n k n o w n to m a n y persons.
Also, a child u n d e r 19 at the end of the tax year m a y bo claimed
MacVittie, acting dean.
Qualifications include a doc- as a dependent, regardless of the a m o u n t of t h e child's income.
Another r e f u n d possibility arises f r o m the Social Security tax.
torial degree, administrative preparation a n d experience, successful I f , you worked for more t h a n one employer, each employer kept on
teaching experience a t the col- deducting the Social Security tax w i t h o u t k n o w i n g how m u c h a n y
lege level, a n d strong Interest I n other employer deducted, hence the accumulated deductions m a y
exceed the $94.50 m a x i m u m . P I C A , Federal I n s u r a n c e C o n t r i b u t i o n
teacher education.
Act, mentioned on the form, refers to Social Secui'ity.
issue, the New York Daily Mirror has delivered a
humiliating insult to the majority of public employees by
terming them "Piggy-back riders" and "unproductive Buffalo State
College
workei-s."
Has Dean Post Open
Ostensibly, the editorial was a tirade against higher
taxation but it soon settled down into putting all the blame
on the civil servant. Teachers, firemen, policemen, sanitationmen and armed forces personnel were exempted from
the blast.
In showing such crushing contempt f o r the civil service the Daily Mirror failed to cite a f e w salient facts and
to answer some important questions. Who, f o r instance,
would take care of the thousands of citizens requiring
treatment in State mental institutions? And who would
do so at substandard wages? Does The Mirror provide
private institutional care f o r any of its employees who
The r e f u n d claim is m a d e as a deduction f r o m income tax due
become emotionally disturbed? Or is The Mirror suggest- D R . F I T C H A D D R E S S E S
or paid. B u t getting back SS money from the government applies
ing that public recognition of the need f o r government to N Y C S A F E T Y G R O U P
Dr. Lyle C. Fitch, First Deputy only i n cases of multiple employers.
take care of this condition that renders people unproductT h i s refund possibility is of i m p o r t a n c e also to public emCity
Administrator,
was
guest
ive be rescinded ?
speaker a t the New Y o r k City ployees. since m a n y of t h e m have outside jobs in private i n d u s t i x
Program
C o o r d i n a t i n g or are self-employed i n spare time. I f a single employer deducted
Does The Mirror feel that public health departments Safety
Committee's
annual
luncheon
are no longer needed and that licensing by government is conference a t the Poffe Restau- too m u c h i n Social Security, the excess m u s t be recovered f r o m
no longer necessary to control driving, food inspection. r a n t i n Brooklyn. Fifty-seven rep- t h a t employer.
resentatives of 40 City departThe taxpayer has a choice of forms. The one form t h a t serves
Illegal practices in business and industry?
ments a n d agencies attended.
all general purposes is the 1040. I t permits itemization of deductions,
D a n i e l P. M i l c h m a n , citywide
For a large metropolitan newspaper in daily contact
such as charitable a n d religious contributions, a n d medical expenses.
installed the following
with the world, The MiiTor apparently fails to recognize coordinator,
officers: C a p t a i n J a m e s Fergu- Additional forms m a y be necessary foi* special purposes, as when
the increasing complexity of the needs of a modern so- son, Fire D e p a r t m e n t , c h a i r m a n ; one has income from capital gains like profit f r o m stock sales.
Dr. Gustav I . Steffen, H e a l t h
I n using the 1040, disregard the tax rate schedule supplied by
ciety.
D e p a r t m e n t , vice c h a i r m a n , a n d
the
government because you are reaping the benefit of itemized
Civil service is larger today because it needs to be. George Schrade, M a r i n e a n d Aviadeductions, n o t confiing yourself to the s t a n d a r d 10 per cent deduction,
secretary.
In many fields of operation of a modern society only the
tion. T h e deductible contributions often total more t h a n the s t a n d a r d
government has the resources of funds, communication E M I L B I E P R O M O T E D
deduction, b u t if not, you c a n find out by comparison w i t h t h e
and authority to make that society function properly.
B Y STATE E M P L O Y M E N T
s t a n d a r d deduction. Apply whichever m e t h o d produces the lower tax.
E m l l Bie hp® been appointed O n c e i n a great while the user of the 1040 will find t h a t the standActually, we know that The Mirror is not so unsophassistant
New Y o r k City director ard deduction produces a lower tax, true m a i n l y of u n m a r r i e d
isticated as to deny that the above is true. But The Mirror
of the Division of E m p l o y m e n t , persons with no dependents.
apparently has not taken the trouble to survey what the
State D e p a r t m e n t of Labor. He
cost of government actually is, otherwise it would be as- has been a career Civil Service
Order of
Procedure
tounded to learn that in most instances the public worker employee for 21 years. H e will be
I f your income is a t least $5,000, you have n o choice save to
Is an underpaid employee by standards that corporations. i n charge of the 26 unemploy- compute the tax whether you use the long f o r m 1040 or the short
Including the one that runs The Mirror, set f o r their own m e n t insurance offices i n the f o r m 1040A.
ai-ea. For the past eight years h e
Anybody except a non-resident alian m a y file a 1040.
employees.
has b ; e n superintendent of the
A definite order of procedure expedites completion of the retiu-n:
No one really enjoys paying higher taxes but we all State's u n e m p l o y m e n t Insurance
1. First tackle page 2 of the 1040. This also will t h e n c o n t a i n
pay them, including the public employee, and we pay a n d job-placement programs i n i n f o r m a t i o n necessai-y to the filling out of other parts of the return.
them because w e — t h e privately em,ployed—continually the Syiacuse area.
(a) Deduct contributions to religious, charitable, or other recognized institutions.
demand more service from government.
(b) Deduct taxes, w h i c h include sales tax a n d State tax p a i d
M A U R I N IS CONSULTANT
The vitriolic attack on the public service is nothing
A L B A N Y . Feb. 2 — P r a n k D . i n 1958 on 1957 income. Also deductible are the cost of a u t o license,
more than a show of spleen by The Mirror over the exM a u r i n of B u f f a l o is serving as driver's license, a n d state gasoline taxes p a i d , b u t n o t Federal inpense of living in a costly—'but more comfortable—sociconsultant
to State
I n d u s t r i a l come or other Federal taxes. Real estate taxes are 100 per cent
tty.
Commissioner M a r t i n P. Cather- deductible, even if one rents out a house or p a r t of a house he
To blame the civil servant for this expense is indefens- wood i n Albany a t a n a n n u a l owns, or otherwise gets income f r o m individual real estate ownership. H e should claim the 100 per cent, a n d u o t m a k e the mistake
salary of $16,000.
ible and unjust.
Social Security Questions Answered
I A M 65 a n d insured for Social
Security. I n m y business, I do
n o t know whether my earnings
will be more or less t h a n $1,200
I n a n y yeai. W h a t should I do
About filing a claim for benefits?
S. B.
Y o u should file a claim. I f you
•&n reasonably expect earnings
fo exceed $1,200, benefits will
ba suspended until the end of
• a c h year, a t whic
time you
Will file a report of your earnings
^ d settlement will be m a d e for
fee year rather t h a n o n a monthi o - m o n t h basis.
each year stand for?
B. A.
They stand for Federal Insurance Contributions Act, wlilch is
the authority under w h i c h the
I n t e r n a l Revenue Service collects
the required Social Security contributions from lovei-ed employers
a n d employees.
M Y W I F E I S 56 years old a n d
collecting disability benefits. S h e
has been my sole support u n t i l
she became u n a b l e to work. I
a m 66 a n d never worked under
Social Security. Is It possible for
me to obtain any benefits?
W . O'NV.
W H A T D O the tetters P I C A
Yes. T h e
1858
Amendments
ItUbt appear o n m y W-2 f o r m provide benefits for a dependent
h u s b a n d who establishes he was
receiving over h a l f of his support
f r o m his wife u p to the time
she became disabled. Benefits are
payable as early as September,
1958.
B E F O R E H E D I E D , my husb a n d supported his father as
well as myself a n d the children.
C a n his father get Social Security benefits now?
J . J . E.
Yes. Under t h e new amendments to the Social Security L a w ,
a dependent parent of retirement
age c a n be p a i d benefits even
t h o u g h a widow or children also
survive.
(Continued o n Pace 12)
of applying a reduction ratio, t h a t of t e n a n t ocgupancy to total
occupancy, as when one rents out only one floor of a h o m e a n d
occupies the other. T h e s h r u n k e n deduction applies only to the running expenses, n o t to real estate taxes. T h e safeguard m a y be t a k e n
either by reporting the real estate taxes under the general h e a d i n g
of Taxes (Page 2 of the 1040), the easier a n d surer way, or by deducting the real estate taxes, separately, in full, in the i e n t income
section, b u t only after applying the reduction l i m i t a t i o n to the
operating expenses only.
(c) Medical a n d dental expenses a i e deducted on Page 2.
h e a l t h Insurance cost being a part of this. Special benefit on the
medical score is given t o those age B5 or over. R e a d t h e passage i n
the official insti-uction sheet on t h a t score.
(d) O t h e r deductions include losses f r o m theft, flre, etc., m e m bership dues p a i d , as for instance, to the Civil Service Employees
Association, or for u n i f o r m s a n d special e q u i p m e n t t h a t one requires
to earn the Income, b u t not if such cost is refunded or paid by the
employer, or if the u n i f o r m s are easily adaptable to general use I n
public.
T u r n to page 1 of the 1040 a n d report total Income a n d subtract
(Continued on Pace 7)
TiiMclay, February S, 19S9
C I V I L
S E R V I C E
r E A D E i t
Pag« J^vrn
Federal Income Tax
C O R T L A N D COUTJTY R E L E A S E M C C A R T H Y AND R O S N E R
Clair Moquin, confidential sec- TO T E A C H L I U C O U R S E
Welfare Commissioner Kenry L.
retary to Judge Air>.?3, County
McCarthy and A-.si.-tant Commis(Continued from Page 6)
Judge and Surrogate, has resigned sioner Henry J . Rosner will conallowable exclusions. Gross Income means all t h a t you have taken after 13 years of service. She has duct a course in We'fare AdminI n during 1958. W h a t ' s left is called adjusted gross income.
been active in the Cortland chap- istration at Long I s h n d UniverO n Page 1 the claims for personal exemptions and dependents ter, CSEA, and has held the sity's Graduate School Brooklyn,
Thursday eveninrrs beginning Febara entered.
office of president, as well as ruary 3 at '^.5 Plalbusli Avenue
A taxpayer, to be able to claim a person as a dependent, and various offices.
Extension, Brooklyn,
get the $600 additional exemption, must furnish more t h a n half
the total support of tliat person. I f t h a t person Is a relative it is
not necessary that the dependent live in the taxpayer's household; with the eighth day of absence, unless one was hospitalized, during
If not a relative, living in the household is mandatory, but the rule' any part of the absence period, or unless the absence is due to
about more t h a n half the cost of support still applies. Thus, it is injury.
Social Security pensions are wholly tax-exempt: most other pennot enough t h a t the supposed dependent was furni.shed with room
a n d board. The total cos' of support includes clothes, tuition fees sions are not, though subject to a modified exemption. Workmen's
for education, amusement and other expenses, amounts paid to the compensation benefits are not taxable either, but if un employee
BuppoStd dependent by relatives or others as contribution toward tiuTis over the workmen's compensation benefit to the employer, as
support, as well as amounts earned by the supposed dependent or m a n y public employees do, and collects his salai^ Instead for the
absence period, only the excess of the salary over workmen's comapplied by h i m from capital to the same purpose.
Although a person is a dependent, he m a y still claim for him- pensation is excludable as sick pay.
gelf, as a taxpayer, the $600 personal exemption.
Joint
Also exempt from taxation are the proceeds of « life insurance
policy, on the death of the ln.sured.
Returns
The benefit of a Joint r'jturn is t h a t the tax rate applicable is
ba.sed on half the adjusted gross income, but applicable to the total
adjusted gi'oss income, hence the tax is o.t a lower rate but still
applicable to the full a m o u n t of income. A very considerable saving
is often afforded by filing a Joint return.
Public employees get sick leave, and pay received during the
period of absence because of illness or injury Is called sick pay and
Is not taxable. The amount must be reported on page 1, and deducted from total income, provided the employer himself has not
already omitted the sick pay from the taxable amount, which he
often does, knowing It is not taxable. Siclc pay of public employees
being 100 percent employer-paid, there Is no need for public employees to concern themselves with the technicalities of contributory
or employee-paid plans, where the exclusion applies only in part or
not a t all.
Sick p«y as a n exclusion is limited to $100 a week and starts
Get
cleaner,
Washing
would
Louis De
Salvio,
give Civil
(D-Man)
Service
status
to all persons employed as school
crossing guards.
" I t is . about time that the
women who risk their lives at
school crossings be given recognition for the outstanding service
they are rendering to their communities," he declared.
Mr. De Saivio pointed out the
parttime employees had released
policemen from' this type of duty
for more Important police functions.
Senator Joseph R . Marro, CDMan.) is sponsoring a similar
bill in the Senate.
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For
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Guards
For Pennies A Week
All
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Jobs are with t h e I n d i a n H e a l t h w i t h the Veterans A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,
Program on reservations west of W a s h i n g t o n 25. D . C. Announcethe Mi.sslnslppl
River
and
In m e n t 17 ( B ) .
Alar;ka. A n n o u n c e m e n t lOOB.
Counseling Psychologist (Voca•Veterinarian, $5,430 to $11,355. t i o n a l R e h a b i l i t a t i o n a n d EducaA n n o u n c e m e n t 143B.
t i o n ) , $7,030 a n d $8,330. Jobs are
M a n a g e m e n t E x a m i n a t i o n . $9,890
w i t h the Veterans A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,
to $12,770. A n n o u n c e m e n t 167.
(Continued on Page 9)
Social and Educational
^•Fpdcral Srrvice E n t r a n c e Exa m i n a t i o n , $4,040 l o $5,985. ClosClinical Psychologist, $7,030 to
ing date: April 23, 1959. An$12,770. Jobs are w i t h t h e Veternouncement 170.
ans
Administration.
AnnounceFishery M a n a g e m e n t Biologist, m e n t 430 ( B ) .
E a c h g a r m e n t afforded meticulWildlife
Management
Biologist,
•Clinical Psychologist, $7,030 t o
$4,980 to $8,330. A n n o u n c e m e n t
ous, Individual attention u n d e r
$12,770. A n n o u n c e m e n t 417.
113B.
supervision
of
master
dry
Clinical S j c i a l Worker, $4,980
Fishery
Marketing
Kprcialist,
cleaning
speciali.sts
whose
to $7,030. Positions are with the
$4,040. A n n o u n c e m e n t 156B.
Veteran.s
Administration.
Anwatchword
Is
THOROUGHFishery Methods a n d E q u i p m e n t n o u n c e m e n t 129B.
NESS. . . .
No
charge
for
Specialist, $4,040 to $8,330. PosiCounseling Psychologist (Vocam i n o r repairs. Pick u p a n d
tions require sea duty chiefly i n
t i o n a l ) , $7,030 to $11,355. J o b s are
delivery F R E E .
the A t l a n t i c a n d Pacific Oceans.
A n n o u n c e m e n t 108B.
An-I
tion),
$4,490 to
$12,770
nouncement 69 ( B ) .
• I n d u s t r i a l Ilygicnist, $4,980 to
$8,330. Jobs are principally i n the
Navy D e p a r t m e n t . A n n o u n c e m e n t
421 ( B ) .
Industrial
Ilygicnist
(Health
Ph.vsicist), $4,980 to $8,330. Jobs
are i n the Naval Radiological Defen.-se Laboratory, S a n Francisco,
Calif. A n n o u n c e m e n t 12-14-6 (56).
•Meteorological Aid, $3,495 to
$4,040. Jobs are country-wide a n d
i n Ala.ska, Puerto Rico, the Virgin
Aeronautical Research Scientist, Islands, H a w a i i a n Islands
and
$4,490 to $17,500. Announcemtint other Pacific Islands, a n d I n for613.
eign
countries.
Announcement
A i r w a y i Operations Specialist 399.
( S t a t i o n ) , $4,490 plus cost-of-llv•Meteorologist
(General), $4,t * F l i g h t Operations a n d Air- MARDI GRAS AT PETIT PARIS
Jng differential. Jobs are with the
490
to
$9,890.
A n n o u n c e m e n t worthiness Inspector, $5,985 to
Civil Aeronautics A d m i n i s t r a t i o n
In .Mh.inVr W h y TIHI » Wlicrc. if ii,>| at
131B.
$8,330; Airways F l i g h t Inspector, P E T I T I'AKIS, i;iii j o i i iili'liriile ling olil
In
Alasica. A n n o u n c e m e n t
HNavigation Specialist Air, $4,- $7,030 a n d $8,330. Jobs are in t h e Frem-li tiitrlit of revelry before the itre.'it
101-1 (57).
040 a n d $4,980; M a r i n e , $4,980). Civil Aeronautics A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . fast Itoffin^; Of eoilrse. the hDUse h;iB iilanned Honie «i)fM'jal Freni-h reeipen (af if a
•Astronomer, $4,490 to $12,770. A n n o u n c e m e n t 107B.
Closing date: November 20 1958. reci|)e loiilil lie an.vlhins: hut Freneli) f o r
A n n o u n c e m e n t 133B.
Albany, N. Y.
the onc.iflion . . . and many of I hose old
Oceanographer ( B i o l o g i c a l , A n n o u n c e m e n t 169B.
Bacteriologist — Serologist, $4.- Geological, $4,040 to
Frenph vinlaires will be broiiKht lip Iriiim$12,770);
•Foreign Language I n f o r m a t i o n phantly from the wine eellar. No. you
S • 4 7 8 5
680 to $9,980; Biocliemist, $5,430 (Physical, $4,400 to •12,770.), Anh.ive lo ko to New OrlranB to j e t
Specialist, $4,980 to $8,330. J o b s don't
to $10,130. Positions are w i t h Vet- nouneement 121B.
a thrill out of Shrove Tnewlay eonviviallty.
f
are in the W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., P K T I T I ' A K I S , HHiO Mli<li.«on Ave., Albany,
erans Administration. Announce• P a t e n t Adviser. $5,430 to $7,- area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 411 ( B ) .
N.y,
m e n t 163B.
HEALTHY AND HAPPY FEET
510. Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n ,
Forester — Forester
(Range
Keep Your Children
Biologist. $5,985 to $11,355; Bio- D. C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 416
M a n a g e m e n t ) , $4,340 a n d $4,980.
The Beautifully
Remodeled
chemist, Physicist, $5,430 to $11,- ( B ) .
Healthy and Happy
A n n o u n c e m e n t 122 B.
B95 (In the field of RadioisoThey romp around qilile a few more milee
Patent
Adviser
(Electronics),
than
we
adults.
The.v niuHt we;ir ehoea
Helicopter Pilot, $5,985 a n d $7,topes). Positions are with the $4,040 to $8,810. Jobs are i n Fort
built lo cushion the shock of Ktreniioiie
V e t e r a n s A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . An- M o n m o u t h , N. J . A n n o u n c e m e n t 030; Airpiaane Pilot (Fixed W i n g )
excroii^e and rupr^ed Kaniefl only the yuunv
RESTAURANT-TAVERN
hi'art can stand. That's why our Dianu$7,030. Jobs arr at Fort Rucker,
n o u n c e m e n t 159B.
2-21-3 (55).
302 DELAWARE AVE.
fat-lurer installs such features as
the
Ala.
A
n
n
o
u
n
c
e
m
e
n
t
5-106-30
(56).
P
a
t
e
n
t
Examiner,
$4,490
to
$14,•Cartographer $4,040 to $12,770;
Tiue-Glide bro.id baso lealhiT-wolire heel,
ALBANY. N. Y.
steel
shank
and
extra-loni?
leatliBiinside
190.
Jobs
are
i
n
the
W
a
s
h
i
n
g
t
o
n
,
•Historian, $5,985 to $12,770.
Cartographic Aid. $3,255 to $7,030;
Now PrefipntlnK
counter, individual left atul ripht quartern
a n d Cartographic D r a f t s m a n , $3,- D . C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 130B. Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C.,
eonforming: to
the child's ankle bone.
•Physical
Science
Aid—Engi- area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 59.
I'OIAl'ARROT
Vita-Poise
shoes
assure
255 to $4,980. Jobs are i n the
your
children
every
step in comfort. Att
• Jil^MY COSTANTINO
W a s h i n g t o n , D . 0., area. An- neering Aid. $2,960 a n d $3,255.
•Illustrator, $3,755 to $8,330.
sizes and width; aUva.va cmreclly
fitted.
"fillTAK"
nouncements
4-3-3
(53)
a n d Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C., Jobs are in the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C.,
• MIKE FUDA
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 148.
4-3-2 (53).
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 374.
"BASS"
R a d i o Engineer, $4,490 a n d $5,I m m i g r a t i o n Patrol Inspector,
Chemist,
Electronic
Scientist,
• EDDIE SEWELL
Family of Fine Shoes
430.
For
duty
i
n
the
Federal
Com$4,980. Jobs are near l a n d borders
Engineer, M a t h e m a t i c i a n , Metal•PIANO"
Westgrate Shoppinir Center
Commission.
An- a n d i n coastal areas in south—FOR
VOIR—
lurgist, PhysicUt, $4,490 to $12,- m u n i c a t i o n s
A few minutes f i o m the Stale Campiie
"Dininq & Dancing PleaSHr*"
Albany, N. Y .
western U. S. A n n o u n c e m e n t 82B.
770. Jobs are i n the P o t o m a c nouncement 68 ( B ) .
Scientific Aid (Cotton), $3,255
EVERY FRIDAY
River Naval C o m m a n d In a n d
•Information and E d i t o r i a l
near W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., a n d at to $4,040. Jobs are i n the W a s h - Positions (Visual—Still a n d Tele& SAT. NIGHTS!
—XO f O V K K !
—NO MIMMCMI
the Engineer Center, Fort Belvoir, ington, D. C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t vision), $5,985 to $12,770. For duty
SHY? . . . W H Y ?
— l - K K F E r T SPOT F O K —
419
(
B
)
.
Va. A n n o u n c e m e n t 76B.
i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C., area.
• XMAS PARTIES!
•Statistical D r a f t s m a n , $3,255 A n n o u n c e m e n t 27.
We heard you were TIMID
• C h e m i s t — Physicist — Metal- to $4,980. Jobs are i n the W a s h • OFFICE PARTIES!
•Landscape Architect, $4,490 to
lurgist — M a t h e m a t i c i a n — Elec- i n g t o n , D. C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t
A T T K N T I O N O F F K B WORKKRH!
about calling us. We under$12,770. A n n o u n c e m e n t 409.
RKT O I R I ' R I C E l T A I . L 8-90110
tronic Scientists, $4,490 to $12,- 31.
stand and want to help you.
•Librarian,
$5,985
to
$8,330.
770. Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n ,
iSludent
Trainee
(Scientific,
Everyone is here for the same
D. C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 4 6 ( B ) . technical, agricultural, account- Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C.,
Bring the Whole Family
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 67.
reason—The
dread "Bulge."
Electronic
Scientist — Elec- ing, a n d statistical fields), $3,255
for a Delicious Meall
•Management
Analyst,—Budget
tronic Engineer — Physicist, $4,- to $3,755. Closing date: April 2,
Come
in
TODAY.
Pizia
Served
Every
Night.
Examiner. $5,985 to $8,330. Jobs
<90 to $11,595. Jobs are i n Mass. 1959. A n n o u n c e m e n t 172.
are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C.,
a n d Conn. A n n o u n c e m e n t 1-7-1
•Technologist, $4,980 to $12,770 area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 103.
(56).
(for some options, $5,430 to $12,M a n u a l Arts Therapist, $4,040
•Electronic Technician, $3,495 770). A n n o u n c e m e n t 158.
INC.
Special attention to State
to $5,985. Jobs are with the VetValuation Enj;ineer
( M i n i n g ) , erans Administration. Announceto $8,330. Jobs are i n the Washington, D. C., area. Announce- $4,490 to $8,810. Jobs are i n t h e m e n t 146B.
Employees.
B u r e a u of L a n d M a n a g e m e n t , Dem e n t 151B.
•Microphotographer, $3,225 to
Electronic
Technician,
$4,490 p a r t m e n t of the Interior, i n the $4,040; Photostat Operator, Blue51 MAIDEN LANE
a n d $4,980, plus cost-of-living dif- Western States a n d i n Alaska. p r i n t Operator, Xerox Operator,
ALBANY, N. Y.
A
n
n
o
u
n
c
e
m
e
n
t
11-4-2
(56).
ferential. Jobs are i n Alasita. An$3,255 to $3,755. Jobs are i n t h e
(at Chapel)
62-»30«
n o u n c e m e n t 11101-2 (57).
W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., area. AnMonday thru Friday 10-10, 8atuiil>r
146 Stats
(Corner of Eaglel
•Engineer,
$4,490
to
$8,810.
nouncement 20.
General
Jobs are with the Navy DepartAlbany, N.Y.
t-8992
• M o t i o n Picture Specialist: Prom e n t i n foreign countries a n d
•.Architect. $4,490 to $10,130. ducer-Director, $7,030 to $9,390;
Harry
Scorlata
U. S. possessions I n the Pacific Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D . C., Script W r i t e r a n d Editor, $5,985
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 12-95-1 (56) area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 63B.
to $9,890; F i l m Editor, $4,980 to
Rev.
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
•Archives Assistant, a n d Library $9,890. Jobs are i n the WashingEngineer
(Various
branches), Assistant, $3,495 to $4,040. Jobs ton, D. C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t
and all tests
$4,490 to $12,770; Chemist, Elec- are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., area. 157B.
PLAZA
BOOK SHOP
tronic Scientist,
M a t h e m a t i c i a n , A n n o u n c e m e n t 142.
• M u s e u m Aid. $3,495 to $4,040.
380 Broadway
Metallurgist, Physicist, $4,490 to
• C i t y Planner, $5,985 to $12,- Jobs are i n tiie W a s h i n g t o n , D . C..
$11,595. Jobs are with The A r m y 770. A n n o u n c e m e n t 140.
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 407.
Albony. N. Y.
Ballistic Missile Agency a n d RedClerk, $3,495. O p e n t o
men
•Office Appliance
Repairman,
Mail
&
Phone Orders Filled
stone Arsenal, Huntsviile,
Ala. only. Jobs are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , $1.86 to $2.31 a n hour. Jobs are i n
•
WATtHKS
A n n o u n c e m e n t 5-35-1 (58).
D. C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 18.
the W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., area. An• JEWKI.KV
•Engineer (Various branches),
•Communications
C r y p t o a - n o u n c e m e n t 50.
• SPORT C A R ArCESSORIRS
CHURCH NOTICE
$4,490 to $12,770. Most Jobs are i n graphic
•Operators
a
n
d
Supervisors
—
Coding
Clerk,
$3,755.
ALBANY
FEDERATION
W a s h i n g t o n . D. C., area. An- Jobs are i n the Washinglion, D. C., Miscellaneous
Office
Machines,
OP
CHURCHES
nouncement 112B.
$3,255 to $3,755. Jobs ure i n t h e .
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 99 ( B ) .
DELMAR, N. Y.
72 Churches united for C h u r c l i
Correctional Officer (Male a n d W a s h i n g t o n , D . C., aiea. AnEngineer, $4,490 to $6,285. Jobs
a n d C o m m u n i t y Service.
Bnrk at Drimur Meat M k t .
are in the B u r e a u of R e c l a m a t i o n Female), $4,490. Jobs aare i n Fed- n o u n c m e n t 62.
9-3450
•Medical Officcr, $7,510 u n d $8,In the West, Midwest, a n d Alaska. eral pe.ial a n d correctional instiMAYFLOWER - ROYAL COUBT
tutions.
Announcement
9-14-2 810. A n n o u n c e m e n t 415.
A n n o u n c e m e n t 10-1-4 (57).
A P A R T M E N T S - Purrlshed, Un(58).
Medical
Officer,
$9,387
to
$12.Engineer
(Various
branches),
furnished, a n d Rooms. P h o n e 4 Design Patent Examiner, $4,040 662. Jobs are w i t h the P a n a m a
$4,490 a n d $5,430. Jobs are at Mc1934 ( A l b a n y ) .
Clellan Air Force Base, McCleilan, a n d $4,980. Jobs aare i n Washing- C a n a l C o m p a n y — C a n a l Zone
RATES
TO
LOWER
VAN
G o v e r n m e n t O r g a n i z a t i o n i n the
Calif. A n n o u n c e m e n t 12-10-1 (57) ton, D. C. A n n o u n c e m e n t 153B.
ALL POINTS IN N. Y. STATE
Dietitian, $4,040 a n d
$7,030. P a n a m a C a n a l Zone. AnnounceRev.
Write or Phone fur R a i r *
Engineer, Physicist, Electronic Jobs are countrywide a n d i n Pan- m e n t 414B.
Medical Officer, $7,510 to $12,1&7 CHESTNUT
ALBANY, N.Y.
Scientist, M a t h e m a t i c i a n , $6,285 a m a a n d Alaska. A n n o u n c e m e n t
770. Positions are principally i n
5-3526
to $12,770. Jobs are in U. S. Naval 5.
176 State
12 Colvia
•Editorial Clerk, P e r s o n n e l the I n d i a n H e a l t h Program I n
Laboratories i n California. AnAlb.
3-2179
Alb.
89 0114
Western
States
a
n
d
i
n
Alaska.
Clerk, Statistical Clerk, Supply
nouncement 12-14-1 (55).
VOM SALE
420 Kenwood
Engineering Aid ( R a d i o ) , $4,040 Clerk, Traffic Clerk, $3,755. J o b s A n n o u n c e m e n t 360.
ROSS.VNA Bulky Knits Carlieans, maile of
Medical Officer ( R o t a t i n g Inhiifh bulk orlon, slacks, jewelry. bra«a n d $4,490. Jobs are with the are i n the W a s h i n g t o n , D. C., area.
Delmar 9-2212
•letbii, Kii'dles. complete line of Flayt^v
t e r n ) , $3,100; (Psychiatric ResiFederal C o m m u n i c a t i o n s Commis- A n n o u n c e m e n t 134.
jarniiinu. K R A Z Y
MIXKDl'P
8HOr,
Over
107 Y«ar« of
•Equipment
Specialist
(Elec- d e n t ) , $3,700 to $4,500. Jobs are
•ion. A n n o u n c e m e n t 145B.
S u t e St.. Ablaiiy, N . Y .
(AcruM
DIsflngu/iiied Funeral Sarvic*
from
Capitol)
i
n
St.
Elizabeths
Hospital,
W
a
s
h
tronics,
G
r
a
p
h
i
c
Arts),
$4,980
to
•Engineering Aid, M a t h e m a t i c s
Aid, Physical Science Aid. $3,495 $8,330. Jobs are i n the Washing- ington, D. C. A n n o u n c e m e n t 1273.
•Medical Technician,
Medical WE CAN HELP YOU REDUCE
to $4,980; Engineering Technician, ton, D. C., aj-ea. A n n o u n c e m e n t
Jama* P.
Jam** J .
w o e:ia Qluke you feel belter. F H i U K K
X - R a y Technician. $3,255 to $4,- And
$5,470 to $8,330; Physical Science 40 ( B ) .
Jb FI.SUIl.K ii really a health club rrpleU
Katabllhhed 11)10
technician,
$5,470 a n d
$5,985.
Equipment
Specialist, $7,030. 980. Jobs are in the Wasixington, w i t h every aeoeasury fainout fur slenderAlbany's Most Centrally
ixuit and affordiUK heallhier, happier livLocated Home at Time of
Jobs are in the W a s h i n g t o n , D. C.. Jobs are at Metuciien, N J . An- D . C., area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 39.
inr. Separata depts, for men and women,
Need...At N o Extra Coat
area. A n n o u n c e m e n t 154.
n o u n c e m e n t 2-19-7 i56).
• O c c u p a t i o n a l Therapist. $4,040 expert guidance, a Baden-Ba«len BiuUuate
Air Coiidltlonei),
Parking
•naniituse. Plenty of F R K E parkin*. Op*ii
to
$5,470.
A
n
n
o
u
n
c
e
m
e
n
t
160B.
$8,330.
Equipment
Specialist,
•Engineering D r a f t s m a n , $3,255
220 puall St., Albany, N. V.
!)•». Plione a S.IS.'l. F I G U R E & K i S l Q U B .
Occupational Therapist, Physi- 58 Delaware Avenue, Eluniere. 8 piiuutn
Dial e-l8U«
to $7,030. Jobs are i n the Wash- Jobs aje with Army field estabi n g t o n , D. C., area. Announce- lishments. A n n o u n c e m e n t 2-19-8 cal Therapist, Corrective Thera- from Albany city line.
pist. $4,040 to $5,985. Jobs are
(56).
m e n t SO.
UKW
n AMEl)
. MALE
Executive Housekeeper, $4,040 with the Veterans AdminisU'ation.
t'Geodesist, $4,040 to $12,770.
Tk*
to $6,505. Jobs are with the Vet- A n n o u n c e m e n t 141B.
A n n o u n c e m e n t 168B.
A . M B r r l O U S M K N — pari time, earu up
M
C V E I G H
•Physical Therapist, $4,040 t o up to $ii per hour. Wo m i l afford you a
•Geologist, $6,285 to $10,130. erans Administration. Announceterrillfl opportunity to operate a f A H T
FUNERAL
HOME
$5,470.
A
n
n
o
u
n
c
e
m
e
n
t
114B.
m
e
n
t
47
i
B
)
.
Announcement 32(B).
T I M K flour waKin* roule iu your area.
Professional Nurse, $4,040 t o We supply ef)Uipinent aiul accouiils. t'erni•Exhibits Technician, $3,255 to
•Geophysicist
(Earth
Physics,
208
N.
ALLEN ST.
auent, steady. We will train, no belp neeOeomagnetics, Seismology), $4,490 $4,040, Exhibits Specialist. $".490 $9,890. A n n o u n c e m e n t 128.
ALIANY, N. V.
essaiy. N e w trainiiitf provram. Call. N.V.
Staff Nurse. Head dNurse, Pub- CY a iUtt.i, New Jersey, OKauxu 6 6011,
l o $13,770, A n n o u n c e m e n t 5 2 ( B ) . to $9,890. A n n o u n c e m e n t 111.
2-t42t
*aeophyticist
(ExploraFederal Administrative
a n d lic H e a l t h Nurse, $4,040 to $5,470. Floral Park, L . I . ii l t i l « .
(Continupd f r o m Page B)
Won. A n n o u n c e m e n t 137B.
Savings a n d Loan
Examiner,
$4,980 a n d $5,985. Jobs are i n
Federal H o m e L o a n B a n k Board.
A n n o u n c e m e n t 132(B).
Securities Investigator, $5,985
a n d $7,030. Jobs are with .the Securities a n d Exchange Commis«lon. A n n o u n c e m e n t 21B.
ffiigfiie«r)fig-Sci«ntific
WANT THE BEST?
DI:labar
• T H E 3 CLEFS!!
JULES
SHOES .
• D I N N E R S NIGHTLY
BARTKE'S LIQUORS
30%
ARCO
OFF
FEB. SALE
BOB PHILLIPS
GROSSMAN & BEST Inc.
In Time of Need, CaU
M. W. Tebbutfs Sons
OWENS
T u e i J a y ,
Febrnarjr
8,
illWl
1 9 5 9
RUKVICi
LLAUER
U.S. Issues Hew List of Exams
(Continued from Page 8)
Announcement 362.
Education Assistant (Agriculturai. Industrial Arts or General
Shop, Related Trades, General),
$4,980. Jobs are in Federal penal
and correctional Institutions. Announcement 9-14-2 (57).
Educational Therapist, $4,040
to $5,985. Jobs are with the Veterans Administration. Announcement 146B.
Elementary Teacher, $4,040 to
$4,980. For duty in the Bureau
of Indian Affairs In various States
and in Alaska. Announcement
390.
•Operators,
Supervisors,
and
Planners — XabulatinK Machines
and E^aipment, $3,495 to $4,980.
Jobs are in the Washington, D. C.,
area. Announcement 64.
^'Personnel Officer, Placement
Officer, Position Classifier, Salary
and Wage Specialist, Employee
Relations Officer, $5,985 to $8,330.
Jobs are In the D. C. area. Announcement 166.
Pharmacist, $4,980. Positions
are with the Veterans' Administration. Announcement 1653.
•Photographer
(Still,
Motion
Picture, and Process), $3,255 to
$4,980. Jobs are in the Washington, D. C., area. Announcement
19.
Prison
Industrial
Supervisor,
$2.36 to $3.53 an hour. Announcement 8-14-1 (58).
Prison Mechanical Supervisor
(Operating Engineer), $4,490 and
$ 4 , 9 80 . Announcement 9-14-1
(55).
Public Health Advisor, $4,980 to
$12,770; Public Health Analyst.
$5,985 to $12,770. Arinouncement
1253.
•Recreation Director, $5,985 to
$9,890, Announcement 155B.
Residency in Hospital Pharmacy, $2.18 an hour. Jobs are In
the Veterans Administration. Announcement 97B.
Resident in Hospital Administration, $2,400. Jobs are with the
V e t e r a n s Administration. Announcement 88 ( 3 ) .
Safety Inspector, $4,040 and $5,985. Announcement 16B.
Scientific Illustrator (Medical),
$4,040 to $5,985; Medical Photographer, $3,755 to $4,980. Jobs are
LLOYD
THOMSON
RETIRES
Lloyd V. Thomson, president of
the Probation and Ptrole Officers
Association of Greater New York
for 15 years has retired. He
served with the Department of
Welfare, and 17 years with the
Domestic Relatioiis Court's Probation Department. He retires as
case supervisor In Queensboro.
with the Veterans Administration.
Announcement 1643.
Social Insurance Advisor, Social
Insurance Research Analyst, $7,030 and $8,330 a year. Announcement 1053.
•Statistician
(Mathematicjil),
$6,285 to $12,770.
(Analytical.
Survey), $5,985 to $12,770. Jobs
are i n the Washington, D. C.,
area. Announcements 275 find J21.
Transportation Tariff Examiner
(Freight), $5,470; Rate and Mileage Clerk, $4,980. Jobs are n the
Interstate Commerce Commission,
Washington, D. C. Announcement
135B.
TWO ON BOARD
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — William T.
Boland, Elmlra, and Alfred A.
Schenone, Brooklyn, have been
reappointed to the Medical Grievance Committee of the State
Board of Regents for five-yeoif
terms.
RE-APPOINTED
JVessel and Aircraft Sanitation
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — Arthur R .
Inspector (Foreign) — Quarantine
Border Inspector, $4,040; Quaran- Kirwin of Albany has been retine Inspector Trainee, $4,980. appointed to the State Boaj-d of
are with the Public Health
License Exams Open Jobs
Examiners of Certified Shorthand
Service. Closing date: March 31,
Repoi'ters for three years.
Applications are being received 1959. Announcement 174B.
continuously by New York City
for the license examinations. The
titles follow: Install oil burning
• • y o u c a n finish • I
equipment; Install and repair underground storage tanks, to wit:
gasoline, diesel fuel oil and other
v o l a t i l e inflammable liquids;
master electrician; master plumber; master rigger; master sign
hanger; motion picture operator;
portable engineer
(any motive
H You mutt be t 7 or over and have left Khoel. Write for
power except steam); portable en• FREE 95-page High School booklet today. Tells you hew.
gineer (steam); refrigerating maAVERTcANlicHoJ^^^
""
chine operator (unlimited capacity) ; special electrician; special
rigger; special sign hanger; stationary engineers; structural weldI M W . 43nd St., N * w Vatli J * . N. V. Mmmw S S y a n I * - l « 0 4
H
er.
Send me your free 55-page High School Booklet.
^H
Apply to the Department of
Name
Age
H
Mi
Personnel, 96 Duane Street, New
§ta •Address
•"••1 • • • •
w i l Apt
l BBB
New York 7, N. Y .
rHIGH
S
C
H
O
O
L
!
• AT HOME IN SPARE TIME •
I
W/iere to Apply
For Publk Jobs
The following directions tell
where to apply for public Jobi
iind how to reach destinations
in New York City on the transit
system.
NEW Y O R K CITY—The Department of Personnel, 96 Duane
Street, New York 7, N. Y . (Manhattan) two blocks north of City
Hall, just west of Broadway, opposite The Leader office. Hours
9 to 4, closed Saturdays, except
to answer inquiries 9 to 12. Tel.
COrtlandt 7-8880. Any mall intended for the NYC Department
of Personnel, other than applications for examinations, should ue
addressed to the Personnel Department, 299 Broadway, New
York 7, N. Y. Mailed applications
for blanks must be received by
the department at least five days
prior to the closing date. Enclose
celf-adJressed envelope, at least
nine Inches wide, with six cents
In stamps affixed.
STATE — First Floor at 270
Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.,
corner
Chambers
Street,
Tel.
BArclay 7-1616; S^ate Campus
and lobby of State Office Building, Albany, N. Y., Room 212;
State Office Building, Buffalo 2,
N. Y . Hours 8:30 to 5, closed
Saturdays; Room 400 at 155 West
Main Street, Rochester. N. Y.,
Wednesdays only, 9 to 5. Also, an
Information office has recently
been opened at 221 Washington
Street, Binghamton. 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 mall
Mail application should be made
to State Civil Service Department
offices only; no stamped, self-addi-essed envelope to be enclosed.
U. 8.—Second 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 6, Monday through Friday;
cl se l Saturday. Tel. WAtkins 41000. 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. Mail applications require no stamps on
envelope for return.
TEACHING J O B S — Apply to
the Board of Education, 110
Livingston Street, Brooklyn 1.
N. y .
Exam Study
Books
to htlp yos gef e hlqktr grade
en civil lervlce tesfi may be
ebtelaed at Tke Leader Soot•fore, 97 Ouane Street, New
York 7. N. Y. fkese orders accepted.
Call lEekmaa )-iOIO.
For Ihf of lOBie cerreef titles
•ee Page IS.
So Claim Forms
Or Other Red Tape
In H.I.P.!
H.I.P. members enjoy the advantage of fully prepaid medical service
provided by family doctors and specialists working together as teams*
Once they receive care from the medical group of their choice, ihey
have no bother with claim forms, delayed reimbursement or
extra charges.*
They have no need to accumulate bills in order to qualify under a
deductible policy, — n o need to keep detailed records.
They have no need to discuss medical fees or family income yUh the doctor<
They have no need to Morry lest a reimbursement fee schedule >vill
fail to meet the doctor^s charges.
The H.I.P. patient is a paid-up private patient.
•The only extra charge that may be made for a service given by an H.I.P. Medical Gronp
Is
$2.00
for a home visit both requested and made between 10 P.M. and 7 'A.M.
H.I.P. members
are protected by
preventive medicine
H.I.P.
prepaid medical care
through group practice
for private patients
HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER NEW YORK
625 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22
THESE NYC EXAMS Federal Jobs Open In
CONTINUOUSLY OPEN Metropolitan Area
LRfSAI,
NOTIOR
T H E UNDKK.SUJNKD H A V E F I L E D A
Upcllllc uti) ot l.iniMiil i'aitMcrshlii, In i>iirHuaiK'L' III Scclitiil UL ot the l-artliiTuliIri
Liiw lit Now Voilt Willi llio Coiinly f i c i k
liii' Ni-w Voik (.imnly, MllinK lorlli Ihi
•tivo January 1, IUf.ll, o ( a
aliun
f s l i i p to entiaso iii tliu Keni l t c i l 1'
U. S. positions i n the Metro- tai-y sciences), G S 11 a n d 12.
a course of study registered by
I
and brokurugu
liiisinewl
al
the University of the State of
Hudson Valley — Nursing as- under tile name of F. S. MOSKLKY &
8497. Assistant civil engineer, New Y o r k ; or g r a d u a t i o n from B politan District t h a t represent the
C O M P A N Y Willi its principal ollicu at 50
|6,050 to $7,490 u year. Fee $5. senior h i g h school a n d four years most urgent needs of the U. S. sistant, G S 2; nursing assistant Coiiiiicss S i r e d , Boston. Massaihusctts,
a New York otllce at I'UI Droadway,
M i n i m u m requirements are a bac- of satisfactory practical experi(psychiatiic), G S 2, a n d stenog- and
New York City. Thu term ot the partiiercalaureate degree In civil engin- ence i n civil engineerii.g work; or are listed herewith by area, with rapher a n d typist, G S 2, 3 a n d 4. Bhip IS lour M'ars to Deirniber III, IIHW.
The iiaiiics and addresses of the Limited
eering Issued after completion ol a satisfactory equivalent. ( U n t i l the
applicable
pay
grade
or
Western New Y o r k State — I'arliicra are ( 1 ) Arthur Perry, I'cBail
a four year course In an accred- further notice).
Laiio, Diivc. MaasnchiisetIs;
(2)
Arthur
hourly wage.
Stenographer, G S 3; radio re- St. .1. WhitiiiK. Jr., ^51) Brook Street,
ited colle'Te or university
and
8423. J u n i o r mechanical enginKraniiiishaiii
t
entrc.
Ma-ssai
liusctts,
and
three years of satisfactory ex- eer, $4,850 to $6,?90 a year. Fee
New Y o r k City — Alphabetic pairer, $2.24 per h o u r ; meteor- Roifer )1. Whitniiin, III Curtis SIrcct. Kgypt,
perience in civil engineering; or $4. M i n i m u m requirements are a
Massachusetts,
as
Trustees
it/w/o
Max
O.
logical
e
q
u
i
p
m
e
n
t
repairer,
$2.28
g r a d u a t i o n from a senior h i g h baccalaureate degree i n mech- card p u n o h operator, G S 2 a n d
VVhitim;: Cti Richard K. Ttionidikc,
•chool a n d seven years of satis- anical engineering i.ssued upon 3, a n d stenographer a n d typist, per h o u r ; ground radio installer, Valley Stieet, Beverly Ij'arms, Masaachuand i l . LcHniori Wanipsiin, 5 Fayer$2.32 per h o u r ; wire communica- setta,
factory practical
experience in completion of a course of study
weather Street. Cambridge, Maasachuaetts,
civil engineering work; or a sat- registered by the University of the G S 2 a n d 3.
aa
Truatei'S
u / A r t . Seventh o/w/o Neal
tion m a i r t e n a n c e m a n , $2.25 per
Rantou; and ( 4 ) Mnigaret M. Hayne, ItSO
Long Island—Nui'sing assistant
isfactory equivalent combination State of New Y o r k ; or graduation
houi", a n d $2.32 per h o u r ; tele- .Madison Avenue, New York, N e w York,
of education a n d experience. (Un- from a senior h i g h school a n d (psychiatry), G S 2; stenographer
i:anoll S. Bayne, 30 Sulton Place, New
type m a i n t e n a n c e m a n , $2.24 per York. New York, and H. Lawrence Bogert.
til further notice).
four years of satisfactory practi- a n d typist, G S 2 a n d 3; card
•Ir., 7111 Park Afcntic, New
Yofk,
U
cal experience in mechanical en- p u n c h supervisor, G S 4 a n d 5; hour.
Trustees U/Art. Fourth o/w/o William
8499. J u n i o r elcctrical engineer,
Hayiie. The airgregate contribution o l the
gineering work; or a satisfactory
New York a n d New Jersey — Limited Paitnera is $700,000. The c
$4,850 to $6,290 a year. Pee $4. equivalent c o m b i n a t i o n of educa- t a b m a c h i n e supervisor, G S 4 a n d
M i n i m u m requirements are a bac- tion and experience. (Until fur- 5, tabulf-tion planner, G S 5, 6 A c c o u n t a n t a n d auditor, G S 5 tribiitions o l the Lit led Partners are to
bo returned at the e
calaureate degree in electrical en- ther notice).
t h r o u g h 12; airways operations ot the partnership, piration ot <he t t r m
a
n
d
7,
a
n
d
training
officer
(milievent
ot tlie death c.tcept niat in the
gineering isstied u p o n completion
specialist, G S 5 thi'ough 8; archi- Porry, 1/3 ot his < ot Limited Partner
of a course of study registered by
contribution is to be
returned
tect, G S 5 t h r o u g h 15; budget tioiial 1/33 atmonths
thcreaftei-, an addithe University of the State of
th.
xpiration of U monthi
Ihereafl
officer, G S 9, 10 a n d 11; elecNew Y o r k ; or graduation from a
A C : T I V I T I K S 4»F K M P L O V E E S I N
S T A T E
I
the
balance
at the expiralion of 1
genior h i g h .schol a n d four year.s
jnths thereafter. N o Limited
tronic sciertist, G S 7; electronic
has
made
any
asrieement
to make
m e l a Guzzino, chairlady of the
Pari
of satisfactory practical experitechnician, G S 6 t h r o u g h 9; en- addil nal contributions, has any right la
enco
in
electrical
engineering
arrangements commi'.tee, a n d to
I
or
reii'ivo
pioperty
other
than
gineer, G S 5 t h r o u g h 15; li- ilcnu
work; or a satisfactory equivaleaah ill1 rclurii for his contribution, or any
her staff, Rose Steiner, M a r g a r e t
)
substilute
ail
asaiitnco
otUer
than
ent combination of education a n d
The s t a t e Bureau of Motor
brarian, G S 5, 6 and 7; organiza- riifht t
adniiniatrators,
or
the
e: leclitora,
txperience. (Until further notice) Vehicles honored Isabel T. Mc- W h e l a n , Lela R o s s m a n , a n d I d a tion a n d methods examiner, G S 9, his
under
his
will.
The
share
ot
protrustee
Nadell, i r appreciation of their
till or other conipenaation to which each
11 a n d 12; physicist, G S 5, 6 a n d Lit iited Partner is entitled is interest al
8450. Recreation leader, $4,000 Guiness with a testimonial dinto $5,080 a year. Fee $3. M i n i m u m ner on her retirement, The dinner good Job. Miss McGuiness was 7; reseaa-ch psychologist, G S 9, till rale ot li% per annum payable
rterly on his contribution. Additional
requirements are a baccalaureate was held J a n u a r y 22 at the W h i t e presented w i t h a white-gold wrist 11 a n d 12, a n d recreation leader, IILiiu liled Partners m a y be admitted. Thei-e
degree issund after completion of
watch, a check for $100, a n d
priority of any one Limited Partner
G S 5, 6 a n d 7.
over another Limited Partner. The reB four year course In a n accred- Turkey Restaui'.wit, M a n h a t t a n .
m a n y personal gifts from friends
maininif
general paiinera may continue
^
l
o
n
g
tliose
present
for
the
ited college or univer.sity, includApply to the U. S. Civil Service the business
on the dealh, retirement, or
ing or supplemented by 18 credits occasion were Commissioner Jo- a n d co-workers. J u d g e J o h n R . Commission, 641 W a s h i n g t o n insanity of a general partner during and
throuchout the term of the partnership.
In recreation, physical education, seph P. Kelly, Deputy Commis- Cahili, w h o has k n o w n Miss McSUeet, N. y . 14, N. Y .
John O. Stiibbs. 5!I0 Gay Street, Wcstwood.
or group work; or a baccalaureate
guiness for m a n y years, acted as
Massachuaetts; Harry C. Bobbins. 38 Modegree so accredited
and
six sioner W i l l i a m A. CaiToll, Assist- toastmaster for the occasion.
styii Street
Swampscott. MassachusettB:
Chailcs C. Ancbincioas, l ! : o E. 70th Street,
m o n t h s of satisfactory paid lead- a n t Deputy Commissioner Morris
U^.CAI. NUTICB
New York. New Y o r k ; Howard M. Biacoe,
Welcomes
a
i
e
extended
to
the
ership experience in organized re- J . Solomon a n d former Commis.Ir.. fi Jov Street, Boston, Massachusetts:
creational programs; or a satisfollowing new members, all of C I T A T I O N — Kile No. P 2150/1955 — Frederick'C. Braun, Jr.. 27 Red Oak Place.
sioners Charles A. H a r n e t t , I .
T I I K P E O P L E OF T H E S T A T E OF NEW
Massapeuua. Lonir Island, N e w Y o r k ; W .
factory combination of education
w h o m are employed i n the Divi- YORK, Hy the Grace of liod F i e e and Ellciy Bright. Jr., 14 . AlKonquin Road,
und experience, but all candidates J a m e s Brody, Niles R , Becker, as
Worcester.
Massaihusetts;
Rodney
W.
sion
of
Employment:
D o n a l d Indcpendenl.
must be collcge graduates. (Until well as m a n y other p r o m i n e n t
TO;
ANNE
M A R I E EBL.L,
HUGO I... Brown, Bancroft Road. Andover. MassaPaulis, P h i l i p E. Picker, Stanley B E L L , E L l Z A l i K T H A . B E L L . HUGO L . chiisetls; Arthur A. lirowne. O l l B Sprinsfurther notice).
people with
whom
Mi.<-s McB E L L , JK.. D A L E B K L L . SUSAN BELL, niill Koad. Indianapolis. Indiana: F. Wad.B. R i z m a n ,
Philip
S h u l i d m a n , A L I C E A . B E L L . M A T H I E U B E L L , being worth Busk. Lowell Road. Concord. Massa8498.
Junior
civil
engineer. Guiness has been assi>ciated over
the persons interested as creditors, legatee, chiisells; Charles V. Cutter. 880 North
•4,850 to $6,290 a year. Fee $4. the years i n her capacity as sec- D o n a l d J . W h i t e , Helen I r e n e distritiutees or otherwise in the estate of Lake Shore Drive. Chicaso.
niinois:
G I L H E R T E L E E Z E I l OKCUTT BELL lalao Charles M. Enders. S Peter Cooper Road,
Scully,
Sidney
L.
Lilien,
M
a
r
y
I
.
M i n i m u m requirements are a bac- retary to the commissioner.
known as Gilbert E.O. Bell and G.E.O. B e l l ) , New York. New Y o r k : Harold G. Laun,
calaureate degree in civil enginC a l l a h a n , E. M . L a h n d t , J . E. ilei'cased. who at the time of his death
Lincoln Park West. Cbicatro, Illinois;
Orchids were presented to Carwaa a resident of the Boroueh ot Man- Preslon J. McNiiiicn. i:!S Abingdon Aveeering issued upon completion of
S c h m i t t , Helen M . Stone a n d hattan in the County ot New Y o r k , State nue Kenilwortb, llllnnis: Frederick S.
Moseley. H I .
Ifl Walnut Road. South
ot New York. SEND G R K K T I N t i :
Geraldine M . Waggoner,
Hamilton. Maaaaehusetis; Ben: P . P . Moser p o i i the petition of National Bank of
Wcatcheater. a national banking association ley Siirinir Street. Ipswich, Massachusetts:
having ita principal otliee at No. 31 Mani- Arthur I'nrry, Jr., SpenK-.r Brook Koad.
aronei-k Avenue. White Plains, New York, Concord, Masaachiiaetts; Joseph A. Richardson ;;0(i Winsliiw Road, Waban, Maaaa Exeiiltor of eaid Estate.
Hachlisetts; Henry B. Rising. 5S Hundrede
Voii and each of you are cited to show Circle
Wellesley
Hills.
Massachusetts:
before the Surrogate's Court of our Richard K. Thorndike,
The
Motor
Vehicle
B u r e a u cause
Valley Street,
Coiintv of N e w York lo be held at the
Chapter, C S E A , is h a v i n g its sec- Hail of Records in the Cniintv of N e w Beverly Farms. Massachuaetls: Robert 9.
1 I.O.JK NvA.VliNU
York
on
the
24lh
dav
ot
March,
lil51).
at
ond a n n u a l St. Patrick's DinnerWeeks. Jr.. 40 Griggs Road. Brookline
Frnn Iiinlnlclion
Easy Piijments
o elock in the forenoon ot that day. M.a.asi •huaetts; and Ernest J. Woefel, 5
Muni See us before von hny or siKn anyHOW TO GET
Dance, Tuesday, M a r c h 17th, a t 10:.tO
why the account of proceedings ot said Siimi It Street. Peabody, Masaachueette.
t l i i n j . Tremcmiloiis ihsioiint on all pcmnit &
That Part Tim* Job
the Circle I n n .
National Bank of Westchester, as Executiiipplln.. KlffM-ll Prod.
Coney Island
ot the Last Will and Testament of
A handbook ot job opportiinitii'S a' allablt
After dinner, music for d a n c i n g or
Avo.. Hlilyn, NI S-::ii.55.
said deeeasMl. should not be judicially
now t>y S Normau KeiDKold & Harold
MILLER. MARGARET, a/k/a M A R I «
will
be
supplied
by
P
i
a
n
k
Cusato's
settled,
and whv the aforesaid Hugo L .
l.ist for studentB. for employed adults
M I L L E K — File No. P SSIOB, 195S —Bell. Gilbert E. O. Bell, Jr.. and Elizabeth
and people over US Get thia Ir iluabic Orchestra.
C I T A T I O N . — The I'cople of the State of
A.
Bell
should
not
be
required
lo
pay
to
F A R r VIM I':. Aia'.i! i-.vtia nioni-y llie easy tfUids for $ 1 5 0 plus 10c for mai in*
C h a i r m a n of the C o m m i t t e e is said Executor the sharers of Federal and New York, By thn Grace of God Free and
way. Sell til fi'llow workers ami fritmlB. Send
to
L E A D E R BOOK
STORE,
07
Independent, T'o the heirs at law, next of
J o Cashin, C o - C h a l r m a n
Betty New Y o r k est.ate taxes apportioned to kin
I'KRSONAl.l/.KI)
FINE
CHINA
ASH Du.ani Street.
N Y C
and
distiibutees
ol
MARGARET
them reapeclivclv. or such portion thereof
T I I A Y S , Bhiiipi'l post paiil. Senil tor di
O'Neil, Pern Vosburg, Ticket Com- as
M I L L E R , also known as M A R I E M I L L E R ,
remains
unpaid.
taila
,il r,(l
for sample with
deceased,
if
living,
and
it
any
of them be
mittee, Beverly M a r g i o t t a , Pubyour nam . Write
t I'J.'t, c/o Thi
I N T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F , we h a v « dead lo tlieir heirs al law. next of km,
licity C h a i r m a n .
I.i-ader. 1)
.N. y . City. .
caused the seal of our said Suri'ogatc's distributees, legatees, executors, adminiBnnane
NEED A HOBBY for fun and rclaiatioD?
irators. aasignecs and successors In interReservations must be i n by Court to be hereunto aflixcd.
4 Oruan Lessons—S5. Including Use o l
W I T N E S S . HonoraW S, S A M U E L est, whose names and places of residence
HELP
WAISlKn
MALE
Orsran. B r o w n s Piano l A OrganI Mart, M a r c h 11th.
Di FAl.CO. a Surrogate ot our aio unknown and cannot be ascertained
Tri-City's Largest—125 I'ianos & Omani
The Chapter sincerely hopes for
aaiil County, at the County of
after due diligence; JOHN M . H E N D R I E .
WANTKD.
Tart tin
worki
In Sloi k Ph. 8 8553 1047 Central A » «
New York, the Z'Ind day ot R I C H A R D A . I I E N D R I E .
a n outstanding attendance a n d (Seal)
i'enialo. 3 option il hi
Albany, N Y
, daily, write
January. 1i)59.
YOU A R E H E R E B Y C I T E D TO SHOW
Bii.v :tl)l. I'/o 'J he Leade
they're certain a good time will
07 Dnane S t ,
P H I L I P A. r O N A H U E
CAUSE before the Surrogate's Court New
New York Cily.
Cleik of the Surrocrate s Court
be h a d by all.
York County, at Room 504 In the Hall of
Rccorda in the Counly of N e w York, Nfvr
NI:U' TT .II\RI:I)
FEMALE
Yoik on February 24th. 1059, at 10;30
H A I R removed perm aneiitly, eleclrolyeie.
A.M.,' why a certain writing dated Novemno rcBrowlh triiarainteeil in every case.
ber 2l8t 193«. which has been olteied 1
2K years' experien.•e. Ernest and Milprobate by E D W A R D M. SI1>LS, residing at
dred Swanson, 113 State, Albany, N. Y .
1 , P.ark i l o w . New York 3K. N . Y . should
Cost nine Jewelry
I t you like ppiiple and:1 CoBtnme
Deputy Commissioner N o r m a n
,1 1088.
,t be probated as the last Will and Testa» o u can e:iin $15 pe • diiy and
G a l l m a n has designated Salvatore
ent, relating lo real and personal propFASHION s n o w
TLRF.CTOR. M
President of
Albany
ty
ot M A R C i A R E T
MILLER,
a/k/a
m e or ineatinent re- E I . H C T R O L Y S I S : Hal r qiiii'kly and perm- Pilippone,
TME
anily removed. Spec ial rate $4 per hour.
•uirtMl. K
M A R I E M I L L E R . Deceased,
tr
C A L L T W (t-7449.
T
a
x
a
t
i
o
n
a
n
d
Finance
Chapter,
Miss Ellic. 251 Wes t 8(ith sireet, N.Y.C.
time of her death a resident of 35 West
C.S.E.A., as D e p a r t m e n t ChairIS CONVENIENT FOR
SU 7-7S51.
S4lh Street, New Y o r k . In the County ot
New Y o r k , New Y o r k .
m a n of the M a r c h oi Dimes for
Department ot I.lie liKsurance Company deBUSINESS OR PLEASURE
Dated. Attested and Scaled January 8th,
1959.
•liiw to add Id ilH s:il"H staff in the Albany
trI-Clty area, a inlleee trained man, eap- WOMEN Earn part-time money at home, The
Chapter is wholeheartedly
CloMtothe
HON. 8. S A M U E L D I FALCO,
•bln of dealini: with important clients, and adilreasini envelopes (typtinl? or lonshand)
(Seal)
Surrnnate. New York County.
glamorous
nHidiiiK in the Altiany Tri-City area. This for advertisers Mall $1 tor Instruction behind M r . Flllppone in the cam'
P H I L I P A. DONAHUE.
aian will be employed on an adeauate
p a i g n a n d it is anticipated t h a t
Clerk.
Manual telling how (Money-back (Uarsa
theatre-and•alary and trained in an advanced analysis
this
will
be
one
of
the
most
suctee) Sterling Vaivs Co., Corona. N. T
•sehnique: I he averase earnings ot the esnightlife,
shops
cessful campaigns of recent years.
tablished m:iM in our oricani^.ation la In
P O R T E R , CORA C L A R K E . —
CITAa n d landmarks.
M e e s j ot $11)1)011, Previous experience not
FOR
SALE
T I O N . — P 115. IB5H. — Tlie People ot
•ecessaiy. raiulidates must have dependents,
ART CONFERENCE PLANNED
the Slats ut New York By the Orace of
•uccent baekffrouiid and be of potential
T Y P E W R I T E R BARGAINS
God Free and Independent. T o M I N N I B
Oianagement
timber.
Phone
or
write
A L B A N Y , Feb. 2 — P l a n s are
nith $17.50: Underwood-$22.50: other*
CLARKE
POSEY,
LUCUXE
BRYANT
Clarence T, Fo uliei it, ronnecticut General
G I N N , JACK B R Y A N T . R A Y
BRYANT.
irl
Kros,
476
Smith.
Bkn,
TK
5-80M
L i t e Insurance Company. Albany 2-3307,
being completed for the 21st anB O Y K I N B R Y A N T , the next ot kin anil
• t i e r 8:00 P.M. Albany 8-7f307.
heirs at law ot CORA C L A R K E P O R T E R ,
n u a l I n d u s t r i a l Arts S p r i n g ConExpress
deceased, send ifreetiiiff:
A M B I T I O U S M I ; N — part time, earn up
ference to be held at the State
MAX HECKKKMAN
Whei-BBS. CORA M A R T I N B A G S D A L K ,
subway at
np to $H per hour. We will afford yon a P A I N T I N G , pat.er hangiDir, Interior and
who resides at I t s Green Valley Road.
Teachers College at Oswego M a y
ierrlfle optioitiinily to operate • P A R T
our door takes
Exterior work. S417 Corlear A y e , Kl
Winston
Salem, North Caiolina, hae lately
T I M R floor waxinif route In your area
3-3584, Mornings •till 12 Sc alter 4 P J i
7-8. I n d u s t r i a l arts teachers f r o m
pplied to tbo Surrogate* Court ot » u r
you to a n y part
W o supply eiMiiiimeiit and accounts. Perm
Counly
of
New Y o r k to have a cartaln In•nent, •teaily. We will train, no hejp orcall parts of the state will attend.
of the city within
strument iu writing: bearing date Marcb
Msary. N e w training program. Call. N.T
Kl,
11)51,
relating
to holh real and personal
a few minutes.
Dr. W a l t e r
Crewson,
associate
C r 3 intl.l. New .leraey, O R a n r * 6 5811.
property, duly proved aa thn laat will and
f l o r a l Park. I..1 2-lfl44.
That's convenience!
OF
ALL
P U 1 U . I 9 H E R 8 — C i T l l commissioner for elementary, secBOOKS
teslanient of CORA C L A R K E P O R T E R , deSI
ce & Review—JOE'S BOOK SHOP
ceaeed. who was at the time of her death
ondary a n d a d u l t education will
A h a n d y New Y o r k
550 B iadway, Albany, N . Y
a resident of » 1 5 West UMth Street, New
Y o r k Cily, the Counly o l New York.
be the principal speaker.
subway m a p is yours
Therefore, you and each ot you are cited
F R E E , f o r the writing.
to show cause before tbo Surrogate'. Court
$I HO per person, rm/bd « bath In Reof uur County ot N e w York, at the Hall
IMMEDIATE
CONRRMEO
sort MEXICO Fabulous low coat TacaOhM
ot Records in the County ol New York,
Send fiOi)
for Directory.
SatlsfactioB
on the 271 h day of February, one thousaud
RESERVATIONS
Guaranteed
B
E. B:'tnault. l l o
foal
nliia hundred and tifty nine, al half-paet
Ave. N Y .14. N Y
ten o'clock in the (orenooii ol that day.
In Nsw Yoili: Clicto 7-3900
to ktip y o i gaf a ftlgltr ( r e d *
why thu said will and testament ihauM
In Albany: 62-1232
en civil tarvie* tests may
not be admitted to (iruliate a* a v i U ot
In Rochsstsr: LOcust 2-S400
real and peitional property.
ebtalnad of Tk« Laodar looftT K A C Y B K K V K ' I N U I'UKI*.
lu testimony whereof, we have caueed
Typ«wrlt«r(
$tor*, 97 Oaan* Str»»t,
f«w
Slngta* f r o m t & S O
Sales 4 Service • reiond Retrins Stovee.
the seal ot the Surrogate'! Court
Adding Mackiiiaf
York 7, N. Y. fhont ordart meOoubla* f r o m f l a O O
Wash Machines, combo sinks. Guaranteed
of the saiil County o l New York
Addressing Macbiaei
T R A C Y R E F R I G E R A T I O N — C Y 2-51)00
lo he hereiinlo alHxcd. Wltneee,
capfad.
Call BEakman 3-MlO.
C. h. O'Connor, Managtr
240
E
140
St
&
1204
Castle
Bill
AT.
Ua
Honorable
S. Sanuiel Dl Falso,
Mimaoqraphs
for list ot torn* cvrranf titl—
(1, S.]
Surriigale ot our »:iid Counly of
Guaranlecil Also rienlala, Kfpatn
$eo fago IS.
New York, at s.'iid county, the
ALL LANGUAGES
i : ; i h day of January in thk year
ot our I.ord one thousand nlue
TYPEWRITER CO.
liundnsl and fitly nlue.
You
It la
tl> W, (3rd HT., NKU V<>UI1 1, N. I
.4IINDELL CO., INC. 300 Central Avenue.
P H I L I P A. bONAHIJK.
Albany. N Y. Tel. 4-2H00 Quaker Ma'd
Xho UiMler"
Clerk o l the Surrogate* C v r l .
Kitchens St. Cliarlee Kitcben*.
OPEN-COMPETITIVE
MYB in NYG
Shoppers Service Guide
EARN EXTRA MONEY
Albany MYB
PART-TIME JOB
OPPORTUNITIES
EARN EXTRA MONEY
Organs (Instruction) Albany
Personal Notice
Albany Tax
ATTENTION LADIES!
FOR YOUR LOW LOW PRICE
TVellmgton^
ESTATE ANALYSIS
Business Opportunities
Painting & Decorating
Bookt
te|
Low Cost - Mexican VacatioH
Exam Study
Appliance
Servictt
75
UTILITIES
Cllelsea 3 HOIK
Books
"Say
Saw
Tuesday, February 8, 1^59
CtVlL
SERVldE
LEADER
Page Eleven
« REAL ESTATE >
HOUSES — HOMES — PROPERTIES
CALL
BE 3-6010
ggg^
^ I P J
Q P
CALL
^LL — YOUR OWN HOME
LONG ISLAND
"
LONG ISLAND
LONG
ISLAND
THE ADVERTISERS IH THIS SECTION HAVE ALL PLEDGED TO THE SHARKEY- BROWN LAW ON HOUSING
I N T E G
R A T E D
ST. ALBANS & VICINITY
1 FAMILY
$12,600 2 FAMILY
4 larq* reomt and perch, med• m throagheut, automatic oil
k«at, larg* lid* and rear yard,
full basemtnt, near •veryHiinq.
HUHKY!
SACRIFICeH
WIDOW'S
DONT FAY RENTI . . .
ONLY $300 DOWN
2 FAMILY
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
$M,990
Two separate apts, 6 and 4
rooms, include finished basement,
30x100 plot, cottage In rear to
rent, located In beautiful Richmond Hill.
. . . LIVE RENT FREE
$11,800
Fully detached, 9 room bungalow
ityled home
including 4 room
apt to rent out, full basement,
new
plumbing
and
fabulous
75x100 plot.
Live RENT FREE
ST. ALBANS
$9,990
Detached Cape Cod on 50x100
landscaped plot, finished basement, garage, automatic
gas
heat. 0»Jy $300 CASH
REQUIRED
WHY FAY RENT?
BETTER
REALTY
>T. ALBANS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Free Pick Up Service From
Subway.
JAMAICA
Parson Blvd. i ft 8tk Ave. Sak.
OPEN
7 DAYS A WEEK
159-12 HILLSIDE AVE.
114-57 Farmers Blvd.
HOMES TO FIT YOUR POCKET . . .
SPECIAL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD
SPECIAL
Jamaica,
Handyman
Special
Legal 2 family, 2 full separate
5 room apts, needs repair and
paint. Full Price $9,900.
$11,900
Mother & Daughter
$13,900
Tan W'^cke RxprfNfi to Rorkiiway
Blvd. eilt-OPKIV 7 rinjH a wrek
C A B L E , E D W A R D H. — K I L E No. P SaO.
1988. — S U P P L E M E N T A L 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 OK N E W
Y O R K , BY T H E GRACE OK GOD F R E E
A N D I N D E P E N D E N T . TO T A X COMMISSION. S T A T E O f N E W Y O R K . SUSAN C.
EDWARDS, E M Z A H E T H E. S Y L V E S T E R ,
A L B E R T L. S Y L V E S T E R . JR.; S U S A N S.
HOPWOOD. SUSAN E. W A G N E R . M A R G A R E T E. MORRIS, D U D L E Y E. MORRIS,
DUNCAN
EDWARDS,
JR.:
RUTH
K.
F R I C K E B , J A N E E. M o C L E L L A N D , EUNICE E. T E N N E Y ,
ALEXANDER
EDW A R D S , ROBERT E D W A R D S :
The followinK persoiiB who are UifanlB
over 14 years of aKe: .tOUN J. C A R L E . I I :
A M Y SYLVESTER. DUNCAN SYLVESTER.
R O B E R T P. W A G N E R . JR.: A L E X A N D E R
E. MORRIS, SUSAN E. T E N N E Y , M A R N I E
EDWARDS, D O R O T H Y E D W A R D S , JOHN
EDWARDS;
The following: persons who are iiifaiils
under 14 years o l aire: D U N C A N W A G N E R ,
E L I Z A B E T H L E I G H EDWARDS, D U N C A N
E D W A R D S , .IRD: K E V I N K. EDWARDS.
JACOB E. FRICKF.R, .'IRD: P E T E R JOHN
FRICKER.
VINCENT
MoCl.ELLAND.
GEORGE K. M e O L E L L A N D . JR.: SCOTl'
MCCLELLAND, L Y N N RENAUD CARLE.
D U N C A N M e C L E L L A N D . V I C K I W. T E N
NEY,
HARREL
S
TKNNKY.
.'IRD:
C H A R L E S T . T E N N E Y . JR.: D U N C A N E.
T E N N E Y , J A N E EDWARDS, A L E X A N D E R
EDWARDS,
JR.:
ROBERT
EDWARDS,
S A L L Y EDWARDS:
YOU A R E H E R E B Y C I T E D TO SHOW
CAUSE before the Siinoffate's Court. New
York County, at Room ft04 In the Hall of
R f < w i l « in the County of New Y o r k . New
York, on March B. 105(1, at l ( ) : a o A.M.,
why a certain writinic dated Deceniber S,
lliftS, and a codicil thei-eto dated Se|»temher 20. lf>58. which have been o f f e m l for
probate by Ernest liner, residlnif at 14li
72nd Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., ehoilld not
he probated a« the last Will and TostametU, relatinir to real and nersonal property, of Edward H Carle, Deceased, who
wae at the time of his death a resident
of Keswick. Albermavlfi (^ninty. Viri;ini.-i.
Dated, Attetsed and Sealed, January 26,
IBBfl,
HON. « . S A M U E L Di FAT.CO,
(Seal)
SurroKate New York Cnnnty
PHNAP A. D O N A H U E .
Clerk. '
E-S-S-E-X
143-01 HILLSIDE AVt.
JAMAICA
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE.
JAMAICA
2 FAMILY
$7,500
DETACHED BRICK
ST. ALBANS HGTS.
Baisley Park, solid brick detached home on large 40x100
plot, 9 rooms, 2 baths and full
basement, garage and extras.
Needs a painting—but remember the Price!
$22,600
JAMAICA
Huge 1 family home of stucco,
8 rooms, 2 kitchens, 2'/i baths,
wood burning fireplace, finished basement, new copper plumbing, many e^it-a";.
$18,500
BRICK
$300 Cash
JAmaica 9-2000
OLympia 9-6700
135-21 ROCKAWAY BLVD.
SO. OZONE PARK
114-44 Sutphin Blvd.. Jamaica
Legal 2-family, 6 igoris
down, 4-rooms up, Dishwasher,
air-conditioner,
finished basemrnt, garage.
$1,700 Down $19Wkly
SPRINGFIELD GDNS.
6'A room brick
ranch,
nite-ciub
finished
basement, patio, ga -a^p.
FKEE
PICK
CP
$1,900 Down $25Wkly
Belford D. Haity, Jr.
BRRVICE
132-37 1S4th St.. Jamoico
Fl 1-1950
FHA & Gl MORTGAGES
ARRANGED
LONG ISLAND SPECIALS
E. E1,MHURST — 1 family bungalow, B rooms, dctarheil. Ijlot 40x100.
1 car garase, brass plunibinir, oil heat,
hardwood rioors, kitche?i ranne, modern throuerhout. Price $ l l , 9 ! ) ( l . Small
dawn payment. Immcdiale occupancy,
J.\CKSON H E I G H T S —
1 lamily
brick dwelling, semi-iletachrd. 8 rooms,
rooms down, 5 rooms on Rei-ond
floor, par(iuet lloors, IJI'HBS plumbinfr,
rantre, refrieeratnr, modern kit>'hen and
bath, storm win(lo\vs. si-recnH. Venetian
blinds, oil heat, gariiKc. palio-lfrrare,
beautiful yard, immediate ot''ni)aney.
Price $18,000. L o w down Daymcnt.
OTHER
1 & 2 fAMILY
HOUSKS
New Conslruellon
E. E L M H U R S T —
S room Cape
Cods. 5 spacious rooms firbt floor,
upstai-s.
plenty
closets,
ceramic
tile bath, piaster walls. k n o U j pine
cabinets, oak
floors. buiU-in ranre
and oven. Karaite, BUS lieiit. plot 40x100
b:as8 plumbins. Price Si'M.DOd.
HAZEL B. GRAY
Lie. Broker
109-30 MERRICK BLVD.
JAMAICA
Entrance 109th R4.
AX 1.5858.9
J . J . FRANKLIN HOLMES
ST. ALBANS 34. N. Y.
119-40 MERRICK BLVD.
7-2800
HOUSES TO FIT ALL INCOMES
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
HERMAN CAMPBELL
REALTY
Bungalow, convenient !oc-tion. Well landscaped. New plumbing. Excellent buy.
Only: $12,500
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
HA 6-1151
Advertisement
Arranged
NEW l i O M E S ALSO
Furnished Apts. ^
Brooklyn
AVAILABLE
ALLEN & EDWARDS
L O I S .1. ALLEN — A N D R E W E D W A R D S
Licensed Real Estate Brokers
1G8-18 Liberty Ave., J a m a i c a
Branch Office: 809 Broadway, Westbury
OLympia 8-2014
S
OL. 8-2015
INTK(iK<lTKU
ROOSEVELT, L I.
To Lease or Buy!
NEW 4 BEDROOM HOME
2 full baths, modern, large plot.
Can take over high Gl mortgage.
IV 3-6024
-Say You Saw I t I n
The Leader"
House for Sale
a niluutn fruiii F l U r l m Stats
i room rani-h, cuiubiimliou «loiiu—ucreen
windows. S » f i i l t , ' « .
Urtiitwood a - d i T i — E v e n i n n 4 Wwki'uds.
8 K V E N room house (or aula. NO C A S H
N K E D K U I One acre, more land available. Full cellar, double rurave. hot
water heal, owner transferred, saoriflee. $11,600. SKIdin y-SSaa. Centrallj
located lur eniploymeut.
HI i-3i72
:i;t.'!] .Tun.'lion HH.I.
(Near Nortlie'lr l ! l v d . )
JacliHun HclBhtH
basement. Good conR e d u c e d to $22,500
A Satisfied Customer Is Our Best
I
J
BEAUTIFUL HOMES
REASONABLY PRICED
DOWN: $790.00
Mortgages
AX 7-9691
Asking
$13,900
$16 WEEKLY
BAISLEY PARK
C A L L
Solid brick 5/5. Largs rooms.
dition. ExceUent transportation.
LARKINS
7 rooms, brick and stucco,
garage, 60x100, Natural
fireplace, also barbecue
pit.
South Ozone Park, 2 private
pats, full basement, oil heat
and double garage, convenient
for all transportation, shopping
and schools.
9UICK SALE NEiEDEDI
LAURELTON
i V i vacant rooms, oil ifeam. lorq*
plot •xcollont buy for torn* on*
who can handio tools. Won't last
a day after this advertisement.
HOME
EAST ELMHURST
Solid, all brick, ranch, Custoa
built, 6 large rooms, 3 master
size bedrooms, full siie diningroom, 25 ft. living room, plat
60x100, only 3 years young. Excellent buy at
$75 MONTHLY
ST. ALBANS
1-family solid brick English tudor, 6 large rooms, parquet and oak
floors, v/b, st/w & screens, modern kitchen li bath, large garage,
nice location, a give-awav at 513,780.
2 GOOD BUYS
$390 C A S H
A NEW YEAR
RESOLUTION!
OWN YOUR OWN
"SEE HOLMES FOR HOMES"
E or F Traill to I'ariiona Blvd.
SPECIAL
$800 DOWN!!
OL 7-3838-1034
W
NOVICE
Y o u ran live in the Ist floor 4
room apt. for Irsa than rent and be
paying o f f property at same time. This home has 3 n e w kitehens and
bath, a new oil t»team unit, separate meters, this is a legal 2 family
home and both aplK. will be empty at. closing of title. Upper floor rents
f o r $86 monthly, property is 40x100. fully lands'-aped.
blocks from
•tores, sfhools. subway, bus. ln«!peot this home before you rent any
apartment.—B-1723.
T r o j a n llniletl
OTHER SELECTIONS TO
CHOOSE FROM
LIST REALTY CORP.
LEGAL
FULLY DETACHED 2-FAMILY
$58 Monthly Pays All Including Heat
CALL US NOW
Detached, 8 rooms, oil heat,
large plot, separate entrances
upstairs apt, beautiful area.
M'-st Be Seen.
135 ROCKAWAY BLVD.
SO. OZONE PARK
$9,700
$750 Cash Down To All Buyers
Large bungalow with 6V2 rooms
& bath, finished basement and
3 master size bedrooms on oversized plot, featuring unifor
hot air heat.
$77 a Mo. Pays All
JA 9-5100-5IQI
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
$15,500
2 FAMILY
Detached, 6 rooms, 2 car garage, gas heat, vacant, loads
of extras.
CALL
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
SO. OZONE PARK
$375 C A S H
$10,990 $9,900
Pci h & Vielnit '
1 FAMILY
HANDYMAN
Fully dPtaflM'd Coloniul type home with new ehing'Ied flUiitig, aliuninum
•riven. B forma anrl doori. cyolone fem-ed padren plot. 1 blork it ores and
•ubway bus. Inside you
find 5 large roonia pine finished baaenient.
new iraR Rteam heating, modern kitrhen with tpfrig-eralor includetl. Hard*
wood floors thruout. Many extras included.—6-1733.
ONLY $350 CASH
$10,500
Two spacious apts, 5 and 4
rooms on extra large plot, cen>
venient to subway, shopping
and schools In Jamaica.
r . 3 0 0 DOWN TO ALL
Ozcne
4
4
$450 Cash Down for All Others
$77 Monthly, 25 Yr. FHA Mortgag*
INCOME
2 FAMILY
WHY PAY RENT?
Hollis, South
mo. $9,500
mo. $9,990
mo. $10,330
mo. $10,700
mo. $11,500
mo. $11,900
mo. $12,300
mo. $12,500
No Cash Down For Gl's
i
N T E G R A T E D
INTEGRATED
Hillcrest,
1 FAM. $61.44
1 FAM. $65.01
1 FAM. $67.04
BUNG. $69.73
2 FAM. $75.12
1 FAM. $77.82
1 FAM. $80.51
BUNG. $81,86
$13,500
AX 7-7900
JA 3-3317
SP 6-0800
BAISLEY PARK
$7 Herkimer Street, betwoM
Bedford & Nostrand Ave., beaatifully furnished one and tw«
room apts., kitchenette,
gat,
electric
free. Elevator, Near
8th Ave. Subvifoy. Adults. Se«a
dally.
TO LEASE OR BUY
BIGHT larite rooms on huge 80x100 plot,
bi-autltui siilit level. Modern thioughout
with steam, oil heat. In lovely Port
WashinKlun, L . l . Ko brokers. Call owner at UAri lay T-Sl'JS
FURNISHED APT.
HIVEltSIDE OUIVG. 1
apartments tuterraclai.
(alliv
T-tllt
* tSH p r l < « u
rurnisbni TUa
FREE
BOOKLET
by
U . S.
GOT-
e m i n e n t on Sociit Security. Mall
only. Leader, 97 Uuane Street.
New York 7. N V
AUTOS, new a n d used. Se«
weekly listinK tn a d v e r t i s i n g
coluinns o( The Leader.
P « F «
TWCITS
C
I
V
I
L
S
K
K
V
I
C
E
L
E
A
D
E
R
f MMdhij,
F a b r u M y
S,
] 9 S f
HONORED ON RETIREMENT
YES, GASOLINE
15c PER G A L
FIND
OUR EDSEL- UO.FORD
FOR INFORMATION
PRICES
E I F F E L AUTO SALES L T D . VERY GERHARD MOTORS
i 0 4 f B'WAY AT 215th STREET
l U I N t T H RD.-KI l - m S
LOW I t N L T M M t r r AVE. I X .
Wl 2-5570
IN rONKERS
'59 PLYMOUTHS
•
ALL MODELS IN STOCK
TERRIFIC DISPLAY—ALL
MODELS I. COLORS in STOCK 4
•
4 / 1 0 Used Car Closeoufi
j
t
•
GRANT MOTORS INC.
420 SO. IROADWAY
•
B
W
i
Y
•
O
U |
M O T O R S ^ Florence Mahor was honored by associates in the State Insurance Fund at a retirement
llmln^
luncheon. The party, held at O'Connor's Restaurant, Albany, was attended by one hundred
M i l
1229 2nd Av«. (64 St.)
T E T E T R 8-S700
Olien K i r c s 4 persons. From left, John Forest, District Manager; Vera Bates, luncheon committee chair^ A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A j
man. Miss Mahar; Marvin Clarey, administrative deputy, Workmans Compensation Board;
John F. Powers, president, CSEA, and Neal Gray, retired.
CAR
ONLY $1895
nf F I n t 3 r o i l t i o n
I J o i e r o r k , Conn.
4 Hiteed B o x - Dual
/Man A v a l l a h i r
*
J
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SRMSATIIiNAI. SWEniSB
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YONKERS
VOLVO
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A u t l i o r i z r d l.lnrnln-Mrrrurjt
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.COME
ITINERY OF CHOICE EUROPEAN TOUR GIVEN
Centt*
SEE
(Continued from Paee 2)
Montreux, (Twelfth D a y i . The
morning free to shop and laze.
Shortly after one o'cloclc we board
the express for M i l a n . L u n c h In
the dining car. The afternoon
watching the passing Alpine scene
as the t i a i n clhnbs u p to the
spectacular tunnel through the
Simplon Pass, and the gentler
I t a l i a n landscape as it descends
to the plain of Lombardy a n d
reaches M i l a n . Here shortly after
five o'clock, we change to the
all-first class crack express, the
Settebello, which cover the 395
miles to Rome in six~hours and
five minutes. Dinner in the restaurant car.
THE NEW
FIAT
THE REST SMALL
CAR FOR YOU
Only $1098
MHM « • O a l . o f
•
M
•
•n-Tle*
tT.llabI*
Rrt.
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Sa.
Over
EUROPEAN MOTOR GARS
900* t O N K T
lill.AND
AVE.,
BKI.YN.
ES S-7i76
HEADQUARTERS
FOR USED CARS
W« carry many fin* Uttrf C a n
raaglag from $99 to $2199.
Italy
(Note: I f His Holiness is receiving, an audience will be arranged
for those who wish it.)
Rome. (Thirteenth D a y ) . Morning sightseeing of the Eternal
City, including the Cathedral of
St. Peter and the Vatican Museum. L u n c h at the hotel; afternoon: visits by coach to Piazza di
Spagna, Trinita del Monti, Pincio
Park, Villa Borghese Park. Pantheon, Quirinale and Mussolini
Porum. Dinner at La Cisterna In
Trastevere.
J A C K S O N MOTORS C O .
A i i l l i w i a e d npSolo P l y m o u t h Oralera
V4-IS N O R T H R R N
ROVI.EVARD
IL, T - « 1 0 0
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at MEZEY
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NOW . . . L«as« with Eqaity
ECONOMICALLY
PRICED FOR
CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES
BRAND NEW
1959 GARS LEASED
Rome. (Fourteenth D a y ) . Morning, sightseeing: Piazza Venezia.
FOR AS LOW AS
Capitol, Palatine, R o m a n Porum
and Coilseum. L u n c h on your
own. Afternoon free for shopping
and individual pursuits. Dinner at
ALL MAKES & MODELS
; 111 lo ml. AUTHORIZED
-4
the hotel. I n the evening, a perARE AVAILABLE
LINCOLN-MERCURY
formance of an open air opera
at the Baths of Caracalla.
^
DEALER
Rome.
(Fifteenth D a y ) . The
H 2 2 9 2Hd AVE.
(«4 St.}^ 94-15 NORTHERN ILVD. IL 7-2100
morning free. L u n c h on your own.
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I n the afternoon an excursion to
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MEZEY MOTORS I
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I
I
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I
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SAVE MONEY
BUY YOUR
NEW
or
CAR
U S E D
A. Roslaw. i&9 Palton
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IN A GROUP
>lm«r;ca's
Imported
Par FREE lafarMatioii—Pill la aad mail this caa^aa ta:
Aotamablla Editar, Civil Sarviea Laadar, 97 Daana St.. N. Y. 7
.
Kindly
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advit*
hew
undaritoed
I can
that
buy
I am
my
not
car
Date
in a
ebK9ated
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group
in
and
any
(Now)
sa^e.
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way.
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AUNUS
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DOWN
PAYMENT
> • « a • a a • I
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Addrau
faUphona
Th. CivN S.rvlc. L.ad.r de.i not <.11 n.w ar ui.d c.rt ai
.ny .utomaiiv. m.rch.ndii., Tliii it . i.rvic. .icluiiv.ly (ei tli.
b a n . ( i t o f our r.ad.rt «ad .dv.tti.n.
I
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St..
Rklya
Car
Kiijo.v iM» t<» <^5 Milt'R per
KalUiit on i-fi;ulur suuulintt.
;M)(ioi-.<i — 4-Duui-a Station
WajfcuH.
tiumrdiute Delivery
KOEPPEL MOTORS, Inc.
«
Mliowrooms
IIUt iCK HlllaiHi' A « f . Jamalra A H l - » 7 a a
I.IM OI H i l U i i l r A v r . JaiMaUa 01. 1 - l u m t
Titg uMljr A4nli(ii'i7tHl £)»*iilrr in Q u f r a a
Oiieii Idvt'a till 8 :tO
C L E A R A N C E SALE
Drastic Reduction on New
'S8 PLYMS & DODGES
LEFTOVERS
BRIDGE MOTORS. Inc.
fr'arluiy
.^iilhurlAad H i u i i i
2344
Crand
(•at. 1I3-1S4 St(.i
ttralrr
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CY S-4343
1959 SIMCAS
uii du»i»Uiy
III o(tr khuM rtkomc
Tivoli a n d the unique gardens of Early afternoon train to Frankthe Villa d'Este. Dinner »at the furt—a trip of about an hour. Rei m a i n d e r of the afternoon free,
hotel.
Rome. (Sixteenth D a y ) . Morn- seeing he city. Dinner at the
ing free. About 12:30 board a first- hotel.
class express for Venice. Luncheon
Frankfurt.
(Twenty-second
i n the dining car. Arrive Venice D a y ) . M o r n i n g free. Last m i n u t e
i n time for dinner.
shopping; luncheon at the hotel.
V e n i c e . (Seventeenth D a y ) . Afternoon drive to R.hein-M«in
Morning, a chance to attend ser Airport for Overseas National Airvices in one of Venice's great ways flight home to the U.S.A. .
churches. Afternoon
sightseeing
R e t u r n to U.S.A. (Twenty-third
on foot: Piazza San Marco, the D a y ) .
Doge's Palace, the Prisons, Bridge
Specialized Tours, Inc., operator
of Sighs and the Rialto. L u n c h at of the first and highly successful
the hotel. Dinner at a typical tour,
again
will conduct
the
Venetian restaurant.
journey.
Austria
(Eighteenth D a y ) . Transfer by
waterbus to railroad station for
departure by first cla-ss train via
the Dolomites and the Brenner
Pass through Austria to Munich,
(Continued from Page 6)
capital of Bavaria. Luncheon in
I HAVE I I E A U D tile Social
the dining car. Dinner at the hotel Security tax is going u p in 1959.
in M u n i c h .
I have a job covered under Social
Security t h a t pays me $3,000 each
Germany
year. I also a m self-employed o n
M u n i c h . (Nineteenth D a y ) . The a part-time basis a n d make about
morning is spent seeing M u n i c h . $2,000 a year. W h a t will my new
P. E. V.
Heavily bombed, the city has been tax rate be?
I n 1959 the Social Security tax
wholly rebuilt. B u t m a n y beautiful old facades are left standing, on wages will be increased to
2'2 percent for the employee. T h e
often with nothing behind them, tax on your wages will be $75.
and other historic buildings have Y o u r employer will m a t c h this
been recreated. The famous art contribution. Since only the first
galleries were destroyed, but their $4,800 of your earnings in 1959
treasures can be seen to the limit is taxable, you will pay selfemployment tax only on the difof our time (it would take days ference between your total wages
to view them all). Afternoon ex- and the $4,800 ($1,800). The selfcursion to Nymphenburg Castle. employment tax in 1959 will be
Dinner at the world-famous Hof- 334 percent. The tax on $1,800
self-employment income would be
brauhaus.
$67.50. Social Security taxes are
Heidelberg.
(Twentieth
D a y ) . scheduled for further increases i n
The day begins with a morning 1960, 1963, 1966, a n d 1969.
train ride through the Swbian hill
country, reaching Heidelberg in
I F I L E D application for a dis1955 but was
time for lunch. The afternoon ability freeze i.
seeing Germany's oldest and most turned down on the basis t h a t
my disability was not
severe
famous
University
town,
unenough to keep me from doing
scathed by the war and looking any type of work. D i d the 1948
like a stage set for "The Student amendments liberalize the requirePrince." The Castle, the Univer- ment t h a t a worker must be so
J . E. B .
sity, the quaint Rltter House, the severely disabled?
No. The 1958 amendments did
Palatine
Museum, with the
not change t h a t requirement. T o
Twelve Apostles Altar, carved by qualify, a worker still must be
Riemenschneider, greatest of wood so severely impaired that he cancarvers, etc. The afternoon at lei- not engage in any substantial
sure. Dinner at the Red Ox I n n gainful activity.
or the atmospheric Perkeo ResI WAS RECEIVING
widow's
taurant.
Social Security benefits from 1958
Heidelberg. (Twenty-first D a y ) . until May, 1957. I remarried i n
Morning free. L u n c h at the hotel. June. 1957 and m y checks were
stopped. I heard the law was
clianged so that I may now qualify for benefits again. Is this
C O U N C U . POST F I L L E D
true?
P. V. J .
A L B A N Y , Feb. 2 — The State
The new amendments do m a k e
Board of Regents have appointed changes in the provisions I'egardB e i n a r d N. Kalinkowits of New ing remarriages. Y o u did not
furnish enough information
to
York City to the Psycholoty Ad- permit a determination whether
visory Council to All the unex- you qualify for benefits. You
pired term oi Dr. R.0II0 May of should contact your local Social
Security office which will advise
New York, who resigned.
you If you are eligible under the
new rules.
Social Security
Answers
ON SPECIAL C O M M I T T E E
ALBANY,
Feb.
2 — Samuel
Polatnick of Queens Village has
been named to the Regents Question Commitlee for Citizenship
Education. He succeeds
Hazel
Koiey of New Y o i k City.
IS IT N E C E S S A R Y to obtain
a doctor's statement before I go
in to file for disability benefits?
No. Your Social Security office
will furnish you with medical report forms to give or send to the
physicians who have treated you.
(Continued on Page 13)
TiMcdayt
F d i r e w y
9,
I f S l f "
C I Y
I
L
»
e
i
l
V
I
C B
L B
A
D C
STANDARDS AND PURCHASES CHAPTER DINES
r*gm
IT
TbfetM*
SOCIAL SECURITY
QUESTIONS ANSWERED
(Continued from P a r e 12)
W H A T I S the difference between filing for a disability freeze
a n d filing for disability benefits?
V.O.J.
A disability freeze serves to
protect a n Individual's
benefit
amount
and
also
his
benefit
rights i n case he is disabled for
a period longer t h a n six m o n t h s .
N o benefits are payable o n a
"freeze"
application.
CSenerally.
t h e "freeze" applies i n case of
disabUity while t h e person is
under 50 years of age. A n application for dlsabiUty benefits also
protects ones rights a n d benefit
a m o u n t , a n d i t Is also a n application for
disability
insurance
benefits for those 50 or over.
four m o n t h s . W h e n should I apply
for benefits? T.C.
I f i t appears t h a t you will
continue disabled Indefinitely, you
should report t o your social security office for filing.
R E C E N T L Y , I hired a parttime employee to h e l p m e i n m y
home. I a m p a y i n g her $20. a
week. W h e n I asked for her
Social Security card she .^aid she
didn't need one as she is past
age 65. Is she correct?
C. V. J .
No. S h e needs a Social Security card a n d Social Security taxes
m u s t be p a i d o n her case wages,
regai'dless of her age.
I F I P A Y a household workel
less t h a n $50 cash In a calendar
quarter, do I have to pay t a *
I H A V E B E E N totally disabled for Social Security purposes
L. V. J .
I f the total a mo- nt of cash
paid i n a quarter is le.'ss t h a n
$50, n o Social Security tax i i
paid.
Graduated Pension
Plan for U.S. Weighed
The Sfat* Division of Standards and Purchases chapter, CSEA. held its first dinner meeting at Larkin's Restaurant, Albany. The principal speaker was lla Hallowell of the Department of Civil Service who discussed health insurance. One hundred attended. From
left, seated, Sal De Russo, chapter vice president; Harry Kolothros, president, and Miss
Hallowell. Standing. John Spoth, member of the chapter executive council; Winifred Mireault, secretary and Helen Williams, chairman, social activities.
WASHINGTON,
Feb. 2 — A
" g r a d u a l " retirement system for
post office a n d other civil service
employees of the U. S. is under
st&dy by t h e Senate Post Office
a n d Civil Service Committee.
A n employee would be able to
retire before normiai retirement
age a n d would begin receiving
whatever a n n u i t y he h a d qualified
for u n d e r present I f w . H e would
t h e n go back t o work o n a partt i m e basis w i t h his old agency
a n d work fewer a n d fewer hours
u n t i l he decided to go i n t o f u l l
retirement.
MYO List Soon
To Be Established
FARMINGDALE UNIT INSTALLS
T h e final p a r t of t h e big opencompetitive New Y o r k City m o t o r
vehicle operator exam was completed a n d t h e list will be ready
soon. The last step, just completed was the qualifying medical-physical sessions, w h i c h beg a n J a n u a r y 5. There will be over
3,000 names on this new list.
T h e list is needed soon because
as f a r back as December, 1957
there were 81 vacancies t o be
filled a n d now there are at least
173, all filled by provisional appointees. S t a r t i n g pay for these
jobs is now $3,750.
C A M M E R O I N $11,500 P O S T
A L B A N Y , Feb. 2 — T h e new
director of public relations for
the State D e p a r t m e n t of Public
Works, starting P e b r u a i y 5, will
be Nicholas D . C a m m e r o of G o shen. T h e post pays $11,500 a
year.
M r . C a m m e r o spent 12 years I n
the newspaper business as a reporter o n politics a n d government
prior to his new a p p o i n t m e n t .
Clerk
Study Book
rhe Authentic Arco
Volume. $3
Prepare tor NYC Tesf—
Applleation
Open Soon
LEADER BOOK STORE
SODEN HEADS TRANSIT POLI
The newly elected fH-esident of
97 DUANE STREET
t h e Sergeant's Benevolent AssoNEW
YORK 7, N. Y.
ciation of the New Y o r k City
T r a n s i t Police Is Eugene V. Soden,
it was a n n o u n c e d recently.
O t h e r elected include Carl BenF R E E B O O K L E T by U. S. Govson, first vice president; Eugene
e r n m e n t on Soeial Security. M a i l
Moschella, second vice president;
H e m y R . K l e i n , secretary, a n d only. Leader, 97 D u a n e Street,
New Y o r k 7, N. Y .
Isaac K . Lazoff, treasurer.
Iff you want to
Ihiow
wliat's liapponing
to you
to your chances of promotion
to your job
to your next raise
and similar matters!
The Farmingdale Non-Teaching Unit, Civil Service Employees Association, installed officers.
Those present included John Hassel, treasurre: Mrs. Marie Dillion, secretary; George Dillon, president; Mrs. Ethel Doty, vice president: Irving Plonmenbaum, president of the Nassau chapter, was the installation officer at the Woldon E. Howitt High School.
FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY!
Here Is the newspaper t h a t tells you about w h a t Is happening i n civil service, w h a t is h a p p e n i n g to the Job you have a n d
the job you want.
M a k e sure you don't miss a single Issue. E n t e r your subscription now.
Retirement Questions?
T h e price Is $4.00—That brings h i m 52 Issues ef t h e O v l l
Service Leader, filled w i t h the government Job news he wants.
Y o u c a n subscribe on t h e coupon below:
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
97 Duoiie Street
New York 7. New Yorh
I enclose $4.00 (check or money order) for a year's subscription
Retirement Is everyone's oualiiess a n d everyone has retirem e n t problems. TIte Leader
wishes to asiilst its readers i n
tills I m p o r t a n t a n d
difBcolt
fleld a n d will a t t e m p t to answer any questions on the subject through a c o l u m n i n this
newspaper. Send your questlona
to " R e t i r e m e n t Editor. T h e
Civil Service Leader, 97 D u a n e
St., New Y o r k , 7. N. Y . "
swers will appear In
umn.
to the Civil Servlse Leader. Please enter t h e n a m e listed below:
An-
the col-
•"lAME
ADDRESS
CITY
ZONE
1
i '
Group Life Flan
(Continued from Page 8)
Headquarters, without fusa or red
tape. Payment of premiums Is
made
through
convenience
of
payroll deductions.
The CSEA Plan now covers almost 45,000 of Us members and
had been oteadlly developed and
Improved throughout the years.
At present Insured members enJoy 30 p f cent additional Insurance coverage, m i n i m u m $500,
without payment of additional
premlum.s. The
Plan
provides
double indemnity for accidental
death and waiver of premium becaase of disability prior to age
60. I n addition to these Improvements, the premium charges to
Insured members unrter the Plan
have been reduced on several ocoaalons.
Only for February
This special iffer is good only
dui-ing the m o n t h of Februai?
1959 and it is suggested t h a t this
matter be brought to the attenlon of your fellow employees who
may be eligible for CSEA Group
Life Insurance.
Within
CSEA
circles, the usual statement relative to its Group Life Insurance
is. "How can I afford not to have
It?"
The continued development and
Improvement of the CSEA Group
Life Xnsui-ance Plan has been
made pos.sible by ever Increasing
numbers of its members who become Insured under the Plan.
Total paid members lip of CSEA
U currently about 83,000. Any
employee of the State or any
political subdivision of the State
la eligible for membership.
R E N A M E D TO P E N S I O N POST
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — Governor
Rockefeller has reappointed J .
Frank Wood of New York City
for a five-year-term as a member
of the State Commission on Pen•ions.
25 ARMORY MEK RECEIVE 2S-VEAR AWARDS
Iff ?
m
' tmr
'
I m^
53 members of the Metropolitan Chapter, Armory Employees
State of New York, received 25-year awards Thursday night
at a testimonal meeting and buffet dinner at the Squadron
A Armory in Manhattan. A combined record of 1,635 years
of service was racked up by the award winners, whose
years with the State's armories range from 25 through 41.
Receiving the 25 year award pins and scrolls were: Jack
Delisi, George H. Paront, George Fisher, William J. Hennerty, Edward Roth, Frederick J. Schiming, William J. Mahar,
John Howard, Edward Kuska, Edward Attenborugh, Clarence E. Quinlan, Harry V. Lindberg, John P. Mitchell, Marty
Ambrose, John J. Bannon, C a r l E. Rohlsen, William Hein,
ACTIVITIES OF EMPLOYEES
Westehester
Richard P. Sciiulz, upon reelection as President for the
ooming year, of the Westchester
Chapter, Civil Service Employees
ft.
Association, re-endorsed and reviewed for those attending the
meeting held Monday evening,
January 12, the 4 Point Program
adopted by the Chapter last Fall.
President Scliulz called for full
Frank O'Brien, Daniel M. Flood, Dennis Killein, James C .
Jensen, Thomas McKiernan, Thomas G. Mugivan, John F.
Michalak, Francis C. Corrigan, Charles A. Peterson, James L.
Garden, Edward Lattanzo, George Burkey, Michael McKiernan, Patrick Morris, Edward J. Molloy, Ernest Johnson.
Frank B. Ridout, Harold S. Waring, S. Leroy Forte, Joseph
McGrath, Isreal Kestin, Richard C. Montoux, Francis W.
Cleveland, J. J. O'Connor, Frank E. Wallace, Joseph J .
Emery, William E. McDonald. Martin J. McKennan Michael
HIaden, Aloysius C. Purvis, John T. Leers, John S. Murphy,
Patrick Reddin, A. J. Jacques. William B. Baird and
Joseph Popisil.
support of the local Units in obtaining the objectives of this
Program. The Four Points are:
1. Improvements in the State
Retirement System, with special
emphasis on vested pension rights
and variable pensions based on
the value of the dollar.
2. The coverage of all chapter
members in various units of government under some form of
health iusurance on an "employer-employee
share-the-cost"
basis.
3. Longevity increments i n all
salary schedules for municipalities and school districts throughout the County.
4. Payroll deductions in all
mvmicinalities and school districts
for such items as life insurance,
health and 'Occident insurance,
Association dues, etc.
Representatives from the following Units attended the Meeting: The County of Westchester,
The Cities of W h i t e Plains, Peekskill and M o u n t Vernon, The
Towns of Greenburgh and Ossining. The Villages o f . M t . Kisco,
Tarryton, Bronxville, Mamaroneck
& Portchester, School District
Employees, Water Works Employees,
Following a short businees meeting, refreshments were served by
the social committee.
Resignation
on February 15
of Mrs. Phyllis Brown, Secretary
for the Chapter for the past three
years was announced by Mr.
Schulz. Dr. and Mrs. Brown leave
shortly to take up residence in
Portland, Maine. Dr. Brown recently accepted the Post of Director of Public Health for the
City of Portland. Dr. Brown has
been a Direcor of the Chapter for
the past year. Dr. and Mrs. Brown
have two children, Jennifer and
Christopher.
Twenty-five-year service awards last week were presented to 53 New York State Arm
ery employees at a meeting and buffet dinner in the Squadron A Armory, Manhattan. The
icture shows the armory workers' guests of honor. From left back row first: Cassell
rockett, chapter secretary; Jack Delisi, Armory representative. Civil Service Employees
Association; Frank Mugavin, chapter vice president; William J. Maher, post president;
George F. Fisher, treasurer; Commander Joseph L. Hopkins, Commander of 'the State
Naval Militia: Frank E. Walloce, chapter president; Brigadier General Jacob H. Heraog,
Adjutant General to the State of New York, and Lt. Colonel Joseph A. Middlebrooks.
fiscal officer of the Stat* Oivlsion of Military Naval Affairs.
t
mi:>
T H R O U G H O U T K E W VOIIK STATE
GUESTS OF HONOR AT AWARD NIGHT
i
ff
Onondaga
The Onondaga County
Civil
Service Employees Association has
been saddened with the death of
three of its members:
George Barzee, maintenance sifpervisor of the Onondaga County
Office Building, Mr. Barzee had
been employed at the County
Courthouse for 30 years.
Gilbert F. Mosher, case worker.
Welfare Dept., died after a short
illness.
Miss Lillian Rausch, telephona
operator for the Welfare Dept.
for 27 years.
Our sincerest sympathy is extended to members of their families.
Speed recoveries are wished to
H. B. Leary of the Contract and
Purchase Department of City H a l l
and
Leonard
Kalska,
maintenance worker, Syracuse Public
Library. Mr. Kalska is at the
Veterans Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y .
The regular monthly meeting
of the Board of Directors of the
chapter will be held on Tuesday,
February 3rd. in the Municipal
Referance Library, at the City
Hall.
Pay Raise
(Continued from Page 1)
into line with private industry
and other public Jurisdictions. W e
might also add t h a t our own Association's salary study demonstrates the need of more tluan 12
percent to bring about parity. We
have copies of each of these studies and would be happy to make
them available for your consideration and study, if you so desire.
"As always the State employee
bases his claim for salary consideration on facts and logic t h a t
are irrefutable. W e do not seek
preferential treatment or sympathy; we merely ask for a fair
consideration of the problem and
simple Justice In meeting the demonstrated need."
T W O R E G E N T S POSTS F I L L E D
ALBANY, Feb. 2 — The State
Board of Regents has reappointed
Ruth
Phillips of New Rochelle
and Carl Remer of Delmar to the
Public
Librarians'
Certification
Examination Committee for fiveyear terna.
STOP W O R R Y I N G ABOUT
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST
PASS HIGH
the EASY
ARCO WAY
AdmlHlttratIv* A » t . -..$3.50 • Liceasa No. 1—Teaehiag
Commoa Eraaches
$3.00
Aeeeaiitaat A Auditor $3.00
AHta EHgiaamoa
$3.00 • Molateaaaco Maa . . . . $ 3 . 0 0
$3.00
Aiito MacMiiI$t
$3.00 • Mechanical Eagr.
$3.00
Aato MsckoaU
$3.00 • Mall Handier
a Maintaiaar-t Helper
Alt'* Foramoa
(A & C )
$3.00
(Sanltatieii)
$3.00
A f i ' t Troia Dlipgtckar $3.00 • Maintaiaar's Helper
(E)
$3.00
AHcadant . . .
. . $3.00
••ginning Offie* Worliar $3.00 • Maiataiaar't Helper
(•)
$3.00
••okkaapar
$3.00
Maiataiaer'f Helper
•ridge & Taanai Officar $3.00 •
(0)
$3.00
Captain (P.O.)
$3.00
Motormaa
$3.00
Car Maintainar
$3.00
M o t v Vak. O p w .
$3.00
Chemist
$3.00
Motor Vehicle Licenso
C. S. Arith a. Voe.
$2.00
Examinar
$3.00
Civil Enginaer
$3.00
Civil Serviea Handbook $1.00
Notary Publie . .
$2.50
Unampleymant Insuranea
Nurse Practical l> Public
Cialmi Clark
$3.00
Health
$3.00
Claimi Examinar (UnamOil Burner Installer . . $3.50
pioymant Inaaranea) ..$4.00
Park Ranger
$3.00
$3.00
Clark, GS 1-4
Parol* Officer
$3.00
$3.00
Clark 3-4
Patrolman
..$3.00
$3.00
Clark. Or. 2
. . .
Patrolman Tests la All
Cemplata Gulda to CS $1.50
States
$4.00
Corraetioa Offlear. . . . $3.00
Playground Director . . $ 3 . 0 0
$3.00
Diatitiaa
Plumber
$3.00
$3.00
Elaetrical Enginaar
Policewoman
$3.00
, .$3.00
Elaetrleiaa
Postal Clerk Carrier . $3.00
. $3.00
Elavator Oparator
Postal Clerk la Charge
Employmant Intarviawar $3.00
Foreman
. . . .
.$3.00
Fadaral Sarvica Entranea
Postmaster, 1st, 2ad
Exams
$3.00
ft 3rd Class
..
. . $3.00
Firaman (F.D.)
$3.00
Postmaster. 4th Class $3.00
Fira Capt.
$3.00
Power Maintainer
$3.00
Fira Llautanant
S3.50
Practice for Army Tests $3.00
Fira HydroHlles
$4.00
Prison Guard
$3.00
Fireman Tests la all
Probation Officer
. .$3,00
$4.00
States
Publie Management &
$3.00
Foremon-Sanitatioa
Admin
$3.00
$3.00
Gardener Assistant
Public Health Nurse . . . $ 3 . 0 0
$4.00
H. S. Diploma Tests
Railroad Clerk
$3.00
Home Training Physical $1.00
Railroad Porter
$3.00
Hospital AHandant . .$3.00
Real Estate Broker . . .$3.50
Resident •uilding
Refrigerotion License .$3.50
.$3.00
Superintendent
Rural Moll Carrier . . . $3.00
$3.00
Housing Caretaker . .
School
Clerk
$3.00
$3.00
Housing Officer
Police Sergeant
$4.00
How to Pass College
Social Investigator . . $3.00
..$2.00
Entrance Tests
Social Supervisor
$3.00
How to Study Post
Social Worker
$3.00
Office Schemes . . . $1.00
Senior Clerk NYS
$3.00
Home Study Course for
Sr. Clk., Supervising
Civil Service Jobs
$4.95
Clerk NYC
$3.00
How to Pass West Point
State Trooper
.$3.00
and Annapolis Entrance
Stationary Engineer tk
Exams
. . . . .$3.50
Fireman
„.....$3.50
Insurance Agent &
Steno-Typist (NYS)
$3.00
Broker
$4.00
Steno Typist (GS 1-7) $3.00
Investigator
(Loyalty Reviewl . . . $3.00 _ Stenographer, Gr. 3-4 .$3.00
n Steno-Typist (Practical) $1.50
Investigator
a Stock Assistant
. . . $3.00
(Civil and Law
Enforcement) . . .
.$3.00 n Structure Maintainer . $3.00
n Investigator's Handbook $3.00 a Substitute Postal
Transportation Clerk
$3.00
n Jr. Accountant
.
$3.00
$3.00
• Jr. Attorney
$3.00 • Surface Line O p
. . $3.00
• Jr. Government Asst. ..$3.00 • Tax Collector
• J r . Professional Asst. . $3.00 • Technical & Professional
Asst. (State)
..
$3.00
a Janitor Custodian . . . $3.00
a Jr. Professional Asst.
$3.00 n Telephone Operator ..$3.00
• Thruway Toll Collector $3.00
• Laborer - Physical Test
$3.00
naratlon
$1.00 • Title Examiner
$3.00
• Laborer Written Test
$2.00 a Train Dispatcher
n Transit Patrolman
$3.00
• Law Enforcement Positions
$3.00 • Treasury Enforcement
Agent
$3.50
n Law
Coart Steao . .$3.00
•
Lieutenant (P.D.I
$4.00 • War Service Scholarships
$3.00
• Librarian
$3.50
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The Kerpel Schoo. of D e n t a l
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Infroduced
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T h e introduction of the new
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a n d receive professional training.
The new day courses will be offered on M o n d a y s a n d Wednesdays on the one h a n d , a n d o n
Tuesdays a n d Thursday on the
other, both from 8:15 A.M.- to
1:15 P.M., while the aame days
10 P.M. courses.
*
Herbert Libert is registrar of
the Kerpel School, 127 C o l u m b u s
Avenue. New Y o r k 23, N. Y . ,
ENdicott 2-4702.
ONTARIO COUNTY NEEDS
PROBATION OFFICER
The O n t a r i o C o u n t y Civil Service Commission is seeking probation officer applicants for jobs
p a y i n g $3,500 to $3,900 a year.
The last filing date for this
e x a m i n a t i o n is M a r c h 27. The
test will be April 18 i n C a n a n daigua. New Y o r k .
O n t a r i o C o u n t y residency for
one year is required a n d candidates m u s t be between the ages
of 21 a n d 55.
COUNCIL REAPPOINMENTS
A L B A N Y . Feb. 2 — The State
Boaj-d of Regents haa reappointed
M a r y D. B u r r , Sbaten Island, Dr.
T h o m a s H a l e J r . of Albany a n d
R t . Rev. Msgr. J o h n P. B o l a n d
of B u f f a l o to the Nurse Advisory
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City E x a m
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ACCOUNTANT
New Salary: $5150-$6590
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SPRING REGISTKATION
January 27-21-29, 6-t P.M.
ClasiM legin February 2n<l
Tuillen $ • per Sem. Hour
REQUEST CATALOG S
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N E W K S T COURSES:
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INSTITUTE
DENTAL LAB TECHNOLOGY
1 2 7 C o l u m b u f A v e . , N . Y . 2 3 EN 2 - 4 7 0 J
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ACCOUNTANT EXAM
Train in the O N L Y School ii
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Fur Excellent
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l o t h St.. N. Y . C.
Learn from E x p e r t !
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ROCHESTER STATE ENGINEER WINS AWARD
By J A C K SOLOD
hUafion — The Unwanted Guesf
"The process of Inflation In this count'y started 10 years ago
and with minor Interruptions has persisted ever since." These words
ar« from the m o u t h of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Martin.
H « could have added " a n d will continue to exist in the foreseeable
future." It's in the cards inflation is here to stay a long time.
Long term contracts already In effect guarantee automatic pay
rises to millions of workers in the automobile, construction, trucking
and chemical industries. Steel workers, with an average wage rate
of $3.00 per hour now, will be looking for more money and a shorter
work week In their new contract this year. According to the Grocery
Manufacturers of America, the price of food consumed in 1958 was
4 billion dollars higher t h a n In 1957. Most of this rise can be attributed to higher prices.
Government
Is
Expensive
The cost of government at all levels continues to rise. It's a
sur« thing that all-time peaks will be reached in Federal, State,
City and local spending. Higher taxes on gasoline, cigarettes. Increased hospital and medical expen.ses. repairs, auto insurance, postage rates, public utilities, newspapers, magazines, etc., the trend
continues up, up, up.
Hardest h i t In this Inflationary merry-go-round are the pensioners and government workers. To the people existing on a pension
based on non-Inflated dollars, every rise in the cost of living takes
food away from the table. The Federal Government, by increasing
social security benefits, has at least done something to ease this
hardship for millions receiving old age and survivors' benefits. The
State of New York should and must raise retirement benefits for
those faithful employees who have retired from State service and,
t l u o u g h no fault of their own, find themselves on the brink of
starvation. This is an obligation which can not and must not be
•hlrked.
Civil
Servant
Suffers
The worker in Civil Service is al.so a victim of this vicious
Inflationary trend. Generally speaking, his pay Is m u c h lower t h a n
Similar work In private Industry. Beguiled by security, pension, and
fringe benefits which are paid for by payroll deductions from the
worker's check, the civil servant after years of service finds himself
saddled with debts, pension loans, and a reduced standard of living.
I personally know officers In the N. Y . State Department of Correction who are forced to clothe their children with cast off clothing
donated by more affluent metnbers of the community. The feeling
of humiliation and shame that goes with this kind of living does
not reflect great credit upon the State of New York. M a n y officers
now being appointed find themselves with a take-home pay under
$60 per week. Street cleaners in New York City get $100 per week.
I n Los Angeles, sanitation workers get $120 per week. Correction
offlcers In N. Y . State prisons are engaged in the rehabilitation of
lives, in the shaping up of Juvenile delinquents, in the protection of
society against rapists, murderers, arsonists, and the dregs of
humanity.
More Realistic
Pay ISeeded
The present salary range for this important job is $4,080-$5,050
per year. A more realistic pay scale should be from $5,000-$7,000
par year.
The State Legislatuie is now in session. Governor Rockefeller
has promised "adequate salaries." The civil servants in New York
State are hoping that the Governor meets this salary problem in
the same efficient way he has tackled the tax problem.
Inflation Is here to stay for all workers, Including the State
•Ivll servants.
A C T I V I T I E S OF E M P L O Y E E S IN
Public Works - Dist. 4
January's new father of the
m o n t h Is Charles D. Smith, Assistant Civil Engineer of the Rights
of W a y Department. He is now
the proud father of four children,
three girls and one boy. His wife
tave birth January 24th to a 7
pound, 3 ounce, baby girl whom
they have named Susan Marie.
Susan will not have her own
special day for her birthday however. but will have to share it
With her oldest sister, Margaret,
as she picked Margaret's birthday as her time of arrival.
k e l t h Pierce, a very successful
duck and goose hunter, recently
enjoyed a h u n t in the swamps and
water of Mattumuskeet Lake In
North Carolina. This Is a game
refuge area which can be hunted
with a special permit and nominal fee for the blind rental. A
|ulde and dogs are hired and
then comes the long early morning walk by wading out in this
vwy shallow lake to the duck
blind. O n this trip, Keith bagged
three geese and one duck. I f you
want to enjoy the call of the
wild geese and have some sport
also, take a trip to North Carolltu In January.
Three Sea-Bee reservists will
))• spending part of their winter
A warmer chniates this February.
Not only do they get a chance to
leavt Rochester's snow and slush
for • ooupls of weeks, but tliey
STATE
get paid for the vacation as well.
Chief W a r r a n t Officer "Gillie"
Hess is going to "Specialized
Training" to study Insect control
in Jacksonville, Florida, while we
in Rochester study snow and ice
control. Third Class Petty Officers Carl Skelly and Jack Leonard
are going to stop combatting the
elements here in Rochester to do
a little combat training under the
watchful eye of the Marine Corps
in Paris Island, South Carolina.
Even though we know the boys
will have a rollicking good time
on their Navy vacation, we hope
they get back to Rochester without any mishap.
The bowling season has just
gone over the half-way mark with
the Conchelos still leading the
league with a 63 win — 27 loss
record. The big thing now is the
battle for a place on the team
that will represent District No. 4
at the Convention In New York
City in March. The men on the
following list have the best chance
so far of being chosen; J . Muench,
H. Tlllock, C. Timmons, J . Boscarino, F. Grover, J . Conchelos
and R . Tylock. Fred Grover and
J o h n Muench are the League's
top bowlers with their 172 averages, Bus Warden with an average
of 151, rolled a three game total
of 627. Ted Bennett so far this
year is the most Improved bowler
with Bob Loftus holding
the
League steady with his 123 average.
Stanley Copland, a Rochester State Hospital engineer, has won $200 for submitting an
idea on rehabilitation of coal handKng machinery. The award was presented to him, on
behalf of the State Merit Award Board, by Dr. C. F. Terrence, hospital director. Seen
here at the event are, front row from left, Claude Rowell, P. J. McCormack, business
officer. Dr. Terrence, Mr. Copland, George Boehm and Edward Banner, in rear are A.
Salzer, C a r l Galloway, William Fullington, Thomas Osborne and Elmer Sperry.
A C T I V I T I E S OF E M P L O Y E E S T I I K O U G H O U T
Industry
On January
14, 96 persons
gathered at W a l n u t I n n for a
steak dinner in honor of J o h n
Letts, who retired the first of
the year. Mr. Letts was a painter
in the mainenance department
for 17 years. A bag of silver dollars was presented to h i m by his
co-workers.
J o h n Neubeck has succfigded
him, and Dominick Nuccitelll has
transferred from Boys' Supervisor to maintenance department.
The seventh A n n u a l breakfast
meeting for department heads of
the State Agricultural and Industrial School was held on January 7.
Mrs. Arthur Roberts is in charge
of the 1959 March of Dimes.
Each year a basketball game Is
held between staff and boys and
proceeds are donated to the March
of Dimes. This game this year is
scheduled for January 28.
Following a major operation
Mrs. Ella Jasnau is recuperating
and corning along fine. W e understand Mr. George Reese Is also
doing well after major surgery.
Vera Costello has returned to her
teaching position after a long
convalescence following surgery.
Mrs. Mildred Schroeder is a patient at Highland Hospital with
a spinal disc injury. George Bancroft will return to work shortly
as housefather following serious
illness. Mr. Fred Beeldt is on
sick leave from his position as
housefather.
participate In the 1960 W h i t e
House Conference on Children
and Y o u t h . He will represent 40
States as delegate of the National
Conference of Training School
Superintendents.
A n n a W a l t has resigned as
evening telephone operator and
Mrs.
Elinor
Houseknecht
has
joined the telephone operators.
Mrs. Viola Lake has been appointed account clerk in the business office. Their husbands both
are Boys' Supervisors at Industry.
Recent appointees as Houseparents Mr. and Mrs. Koski, Mr.
and Mrs. Beeldt, Mr. and Mrs.
Mackenzie.
The engagement of Patricia
Anne Costello to Salvatore Tantillo has been announced by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J o h n B.
Costello. A late summer wedding
is planned.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mason
have left to spend their vacation
with their son and daughter-inlaw, Lt. and Mrs. J o h n W . Mason
at Bartow Air Base. Florida, and
were accompanied by Mrs. J o h n
Mason's Family, Mr. and Mrs.
J o h n Teschner of Henrietta.
Mrs. Betty Green reports t h a t
$55.00 was collected at Industry
for Christmas seals. She reports
1958 was a good year and thanks
those who contributed.
Mrs. Jesse Dedrick spent Christmas in Dallas, Texas with her
son and his family. Mr. and Mrs.
James Young spent the holidays
with their daughters in Florida
and Louisiana.
Marcia Elliott, dental hygienIst, enjoyed A month's vacation
in Florida vislling relatives.
A Rosary Society has been
formed at the Chai»»l of the
Good Shepard and Mrs. Arthur
Roberts has been elected Presldent,
Patricia Callahan, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Callahan,
and Robert Carone were united
in marriage on December 27th,
1958.
The a n n u a l mixed doubles bowling tournamervt was rolled on
January 2nd. Norman Olson and
his partner took first prize. Vlcki
Faugh and hev partner came In
for second prize.
Industry Chapter of the Civil
Service Employees Association at
a
recent
meeting
decided
to
sponsor an automatic washing
machine for the use of employees.
This has been Installed In the
Administration Building.
Superintendent J o h n B. Costello, has been designated to
Manhattan State
The recent announcement on
the Arthur Murray TV program,
concerning a donation of TV sets
to M a n h a t t a n State Hospital, was
heartily welcomed and appreciated by the patients, who derive
great pleasure from television.
All possible credit must be accorded to our employees responsible for most efficient service
rendered an injured steelworker
on the 8th floor of a new building under construction on the
hospital grounds.
Safety Officer J o h n J. McDonnell; Egbert Wilson, R N and attendant Alexander Shaw raced
up the eight flights of stairs to
the side of the injured m a n and
administered first aid. O n the
ground waited Drs. Clauss and
Redler, who gave further attention.
W e are happy to report the
steelworker is coming along very
well, and extends his sincere
thanks to all concerned.
Rochester State
The Rochester State Hospital,
C.S.E.A. would like to congratulate the staff of the hospital
newspaper "The Spokesman" on
its first anniversary. The patients
and employees have worked hard
to make the pape a success. The
employees association e x t e n d s
best wishes for another good
year.
George Stevens and Bill Rosslter
are circulation editors and
ue
busy contacting supeivisors and
department he..ds In the effort
to Increase subscrlptlom, which
NEW
YOIIK
STATE
are $1.00 a year. Association
members are urgeJ to give their
support to "The Spokesman."
A Merit Award presentation ct
$200.00 was given to M r . Stanley Copeland, Principal Engineer,
by Dr. C. F. Terrence, Director
and Mr. P. J . McCormack. Business Officer, on behalf of the
State Merit Award Board. The
award was for introducing
a
method of rehabilitation to the
coal handling equipment due to
the effect t h a t parts could not
be purchased. This was accomplished with a saving In cost to
Institutions of thousands of dollars and without interruption to
the power plant service.At a special meeting of the
executive committee of tli- chapter Pearl Miles was elected corresponding s°cretary. This office
was open due to the illness of
Mrs. Lavern Archibald, who recently resigned. Mrs. Archibald
has promised to remain active on
other committees.
John Kelly To Be
Panel Participant
J o h n J . Kelly, Jr., counsel for
the Civil Service Employees Assn..
will be one of three speakers on
a panel discussion titled "Labor
Relations in the Government Service" to be held Feb. 10 at 8
P.M. In the State Health Department Auditorium, Al^iany.
Other panelists will be J o h n
Delury, president of the Uniformed Sanitation Mens Local
831, Teamsters, and Dermot T.
Dunne, district civilian personnel directo- for the Third Naval
District, both of New York.
The discussion is being sponsored by the Capital
District
chapters of the Public Personnel
Association and the American Society of Public Administration.
Moderator will be Dr. Sterling
Spero, professo of public administration and de n of the graduate school of New York University.
WAINWRIGHT
GETS
POST
ALBANY. Feb. — Carroll L.
Walnwrlght J r . of New York City
has been named assistant counsel
to
Governor
Rockefeller.
Mr.
Walnwrlght Is a brother of U.S.
Rep. Stuyvesant Walnwrlght of
Suffolk County.
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