_ Cwill S^n/tfieA. L i E A P E R . Americana yoL XX, No. 31 Largest Weekly for Public Tuesday, April 14, 1959 I Jv lU H • - Need,Reasons Fi V o l •^IH A See Page 3 Employeea Priced 10 CenU Deductions Make First New Levitt Raps COP Failure Checks Smaller For Aides To Act On Supplemental Pensions For Retirees A L B A N Y . April 13 — Comp- quiries had been made to his o f troHer A r t h u r Levitt reports fice about the fact that many received a many ^tate employees now are state e m p l o y e e s receiving less take-home pay smaller net payroll check April than they did before the 1959 8th despite the fact that the new inLegislature voted to grant a $20 pay adjustment has been cluded in this paycheck. million pay hike. H e added: " T h e principal reason for this." Mr. Levitt told The Leader, "is the New York State income tax withholding system." The state's chief fiscal officer said deductions have begun from each state employee's pay check in accordance with formulas worked out by the State T a x Commission. A L B A N Y , N. Y., April 9 — State Comptroller Arthur Levitt leveled criticism at the Republicans for killing in Committee a proposal of the inew York State Employees' Retirement System to increase supplemental pensions to retired m e m b e r s of the System. " T h e new higher salary base resulting from the salary increase leislation also requires larger contributions to the State E m ployees Retirement System, higher federal income tax deductions and, in some instances, increases in Social Security p a y ments. "In addition, the bi-weekly paycheck of all State employees this year has also been adjusted to take into account the extra day involved in the 'eap year 1960. The combination of all these factors, in many cases, results in less rather than more Many Inquiries M a d e M r . Levitt said hundreds of in- 'take home p a y . ' " This year's income taxes must be collected during the coming nine months, which makes the deduction larger than usual for this first period of the new p a y ment method. The only statewide Democratic officeholder in Albany did not refer directly to the tax increases, which Governor Rockefeller, a Republican, had sought and obtained. but the inference in his statement was clear. Assn. Members Lend Aid fo National Library Week Pour members of the Civil Service Employees Association are serving on the State's N a tional Library Week Committee, of which Supreme Court Justice Francis Bergan, Albany, is chairman. Mr. Levitt said. "As a result of studies by the Retirement System and by other non-partisan groups interested in pension benefits. I proposed a measure to supplement the pensions now being received by retired employees. To my knowledge this Add Ronan ToWorkshop Speaker List proposal has never been chal- of the State system. The R e p u b lenged nor its merits questioned, licans have done a disservice to yet the measure was blocked in the thousands of persons who Committee. I can only interpret have given lifetime riervi' the the unjustified action of the R e - State. I intend to introduce thie publicans as a further indication measure again next year." of their effort to retaliate for my Delay on Vested Rights stand in opposition to the GoverThe Comptroller also expressed nor's tax program. regret over the postponement of action on measures to grant Eroded Income "Inflationary pressures h a v e vested rights to members of the served to erode fixed income pen- Retirement System and to inthe System's ordinary sions being received by retired crease members of the System. This re- death benefits. Levitt said, " A s in the supplemental lief is necessaiy to restore some the case of of their lost purchasing power. pension, both of these measures Every responsible pi'.blic official were developed on a bipartisan concerned recognizes this need. In 1958, a basis with everyone bill was passed to increase the with the pioWems in agreement supplemental pensions payable to as to their necessity. The R e p u b retired teachers who were mem- licans should have allowed these to come before the bers of the New Y o r k City and measures New York State Teachers Retire- whole of the Legislature for a c ment Systems. lo did not include tion. At the very least, they ^teachers who were members of the should have informed me as to State Retirement System. This any objections hey might have current bill served to give similar had which we could have correlief to these teachers as well rected. These measures will be Dr. William Ronan. Secretai-y to the Governor, will represent as to the other retired members Mr. Rockefeller at the combined Spring Workshop of the Metropolitan and Southern Conferences of the Civil Service E m A L B A N Y , April 13 — State ployees Association. Tax Commissioner Joseph H. The Workshop is being held Murphy has announced four new April 1& and 20 at the Concord appointments. They are: Hotel, Kiamesha Lake. More Tax Dept. Posts Filled Clarence W. Archilwld of Brooklyn as principal estate tax attorney for the Brooklyn District at a salary of 7,770. He succeeds A. Lionel Levy, also of Brooklyn. William Rosenz7/eig of Brooklyn as associate estate tax attorney for the Brooklyn District. He succeeds James L. McNichols of Woodhaven. The addition of Dr. Ronan the speakers' list completes Workshop program, Charles L a m b and Irwin Schlossberg, chairmen of the event, nounced. Dr. Ronan will be evening speaker on April 19. Library Associa- next year." to the The Spring meeting of the E. Western Conference of the Civil coService Employees Association anwill be held April 25 at J. N. the Adam Memorial Hospital, Perrys- Westchester Unit Calls Meeting to Form Section For Non-TeachingWorkers Career held at the Gowonda Legion Post. Reservations m a r be had by writing to Richard Mulcahy eit J. N . Adam Memorial Hospital. The hospital chapter will serve aa host to the Conference meeting. Information Session On Western Conf. Tour of Europe Set Persons Interested in participating in the tour of Europe b e ing sponsored this summer by the Western Conference of the Civil Service Employees Association will have the opportunity to have questions answered personally during the Conference meeting April 25 at J. N. A d a m M e morial Hospital, Perrysburgh. C. Edwin Lacks, president of Specialized Tours, Inc., operators A coffee hour will be held dur- of the tour, will be on hand to ing the afternoon meeting and answer all questions anyone may the evening dinner event will oe have concerning accommodations, eligibility for the tours, etc. An important meeting for non- teaching school Westchester employees of County will .je held April 25 at 11 A.M. in the VetAnother Association member. Jack Spear, who is head of the erans of Foreign Wars Hall, 13 traveling libraries section of the South Third Ave., Mount Vernon. New York State Library, is .serv•The meeting is being sponsing as executive chairman of the ored by the Mount Vernon School statewide program. Unit of the Westchester chapter. The project is sponsored by the Civil Service Employees AssociaNational Book Committee and tion. th« American tion. again Western Conference Meets April 25 at Perrysburgh Last speaker on the Workshop burgh. N. Y., with nomination of panel will be Comptroller Arthur officers for the coming year a, J. Levitt, who will address the highlight of the session. guests at the final dinner on The meeting will begin at 2 M a x Berkowitz of the Bronx as April 20. P.M. Speaker for the afternoon confidential investigator in the The popular event has drawn will be announced in the near department's Special Investiga- nearly 200 reservations to date. future. Vito Ferro, Conference tions Bureau. He succeeds James Those still planning to attend president, reported. V. Buccellato of Brooklyn. who have not reserved hotel acIncluded in the agenda are a Herbert Bradley Smith of W a - commodations may yet do so by report on the recent session of verly as estate tax attorney for either obtaining an application the State Legislature; memberJUSTICE BERGAN Tioga County to succeed William from their chapter president or ship reports and regular Conferof Waverly. Mr. by writing directly to the hotel. ence business. National Library Week Is April M. Donnelly Hazel Nelson, chairman of the 12 to 18 and this year the mot- Smith will be paid on a fee bas- A $10 deposit per person must accompany each application. Conference Nominating Committo is " W a k e U p and Read." Goal is. tee, reported that nominations of tlie campaign is " a betterfor officers will be accepted from read, better-informed America." the fioor during the meeting. Association members lending their aid to this worthwhile program are Joseph F. Feily, C S E A first vice president and an employee of the T a x Department; Prances Hepinstall, College Librarian at the Buffalo State Teaciiers College, and Ruth A d ams, head of tlie children's department. Schenectady County Public Library. introduced The tour, which leaves B u f f a l o August 31 and returns there Non-Teaching Section of Nassau Sept. 31, sells for less than $700. Chapter, C S E A , and Benjamin The price includes round trip air Sherman, C S E A Field RepresentA L B A N Y , April 13 — Walter transportation, hotel rooms, most ative. S. Mason, a career civil servant, meals, land transportation, sightTopics on the agenda for dis- has been named director of per- seeing, guides, porters, tips, etc. cussion are: sonnel for the State Department Applications and brochures d e 1. Salaries. of Agriculture and Markets. The scribing the trip may be had by 2. Working conditionfa. job pays $7,770 to start. writing to Celeste Rosenkranz, 55 3. Fringe benefits. Mr. Mason formerly served as Sweeney St., Buffalo, or Mrs. 4. '''he Association program associate and count:' agent for Melba Bimi, 115 Manor Parkway, for school personnel. Albany County from 1920 to i947. Rochester. Man Directs A & M Personnel 5. Formation of a Westchester Prior to the appointment, he was The tour is strictly limited to Speakers for the event will be County Civil Service Employees a market analyst for the depart- C o n f e r e n c e members, their £dwin Perrott, chairman of the ment. (Continued on Fage 3) I spouses, parents and children. NYCs IDEA MAN OF THE YEAR 3rd A.D. Demos Plan Annual Dance Sing Sing Endorses James Anderson In Conference Election Sing Sing Prison Chapter Scores of prominent city ofn» cials. Including Brooklyn Borough President John Cashmore and City Council Majority Leadev Joseph T. Sharkey, will join 1„^00 other guests Friday evening, May Ist, at the annual dance of the Third Assembly District Regular Democratic organization in the Hotel St. Oeorge, Brooklyn. Plans were announced by Frank A. Cunningham, Jr., and Mrs. Elizabeth R. Struck, organization executives. Cunningham is Chief Clerk of the Appellate Term, S u preme Court, 2nd Dept., Kingg County. He reported that Manuel Price will serve as general chairman of the dance, former Rep. James Heflernan will be honorary chairman, and Rep. John Rooney will head the reception committee. re- cently endorsed James A. Anderson for re-election to the office of president York of the Southern Conference. To New round out the slate, the following other endorsements M. were R. Bollman. dent; Klmer vice Emil presi- Van vi^e president: third made; first vice Wey, second Margaret president: O'Neil, Harriett Sier, fourth vice president; Robert Soper, and treasui^r. Mr. A r erson has served as President, Vice President, E>elegate and a member of the Executive Committee: also chaired and served on many committees in the chapter. PROTECT r^ A L B A N Y , April 13 — The program for the first general session of the 55th Annual Health Conference has been announced by Dr. Herman E . Hilleboe, State Health Commissioner. Approximately 1,800 physicians, nursec and other public health workers from communitie.s throughout New York State and adjacent states will attend the conference May 25-28 at the Olympic Arena, Lake Placid. Among the speakers at the first general session at 8:30 P.M. Monday, May 25, will be New York State Lieutenant Governor Malcolm Wilson. Other speakers will be Dr. Leona Baumgartner, President of the American Public Health Association and New York City Health Commissioner; Dr. Henry I. Fineberg, Presidentelect of the Medical Society of the State of New York, and Oi". Hilleboe. as part of the conference. Outstanding public health leaders from other states and New York State will address the meetings. Among the subjects to be discussed at these meetings are problems presented by staphylococcal infections, especially in hospitals; currert trends in treatment of tuberculosis; viruses in sanitation; radiological health programs, behavioral sciences in health education; rehabilitation aspects of nursing home care; medical aspects of air pollution and recent advances in communicable diseases. The conference, called each year by the New York State Health Commissionei is sponsored by Annual Health Conference. a non-profit organization chartered by the Secretary of State. Participants Among the organizations participating in this year's conference are the Conference of County, City and District Health O f ficers, County and City Health Department Public Health Nurse Administrators, Empire State Health Council, Harvard School of Public Health Alumni, New York State Association of School Physicians, New York State Several Meetinsc Set Health Officers Association, New In addition, a large number York State Publif Health Assoof section meetings will be held ciation and the New York State School-Nurse Teachers Association. C I V I L NKKVICB L K A D E R Dr. Fineberg will sp>eak on •How Public Health and Medicine Work Together," and Dr. aaumgartner will discuss ' Practice of Public Health in Our 1959 World." Plans for the second general session, to be held at 10 A.M. Wednesday, May 27, are nearing completion. AniM-ic*'! IjeadiiiK NewimaiaBln* (or Public ISuiploj'ees L E A D R R PUBI.ICATION'B, INC. • 7 Uumie St., New I i i r k 1, N. I Teletilioiie: BKekinan S'ttOlO Bnteied u woond-cUM matter Octobw a , 1U3U. at the p o i l o d i c e al New York, N Y under the Act of March 8. IS'iR. Henioer or Audit Bureau «> Clrculatlone Bubaerlittlon Priea $4 00 Pet VMU liiillvldiial COI>IM, lOe B E A U Tlie I.eailer e v e r ; week f o r Jub OitportMnlUee A perfect g i f t that laatt a lifetime I ALL STATE KEY & RETURH SERVICE RUSH N A M K , AUDKESS A S D CASH, CHECK OR M O N E T ORDER TO 60 EAST 42nd STREET. NEW YORK 17. N. Y. SPECIALIZED TOURS, INC. DR. H E I N I O ON R E S E A R C H ALBANY, April 13 — Dr. Katherine H. Heinig, associate professor of biology at Albany State Teachers College, has left for the West Coast where she will do special research work during her sabbatical year. opTotor ot ik» successful Europoaii Teurt s p o i t s a f d by th» Civil Service Employ**! Asseclefleii INVITES YOU TO VISIT OUR NEWEST STATE day holiday visiting CALIFORNIA and • •• The U.S. Internal Revenue D e partment's examinatioijobs for starting tax at $3,755 a year, has been extended until April 29. Nearly 1,000 NOW! $1.00 Exam For IRS Tax Examiners Is Extended examiners, for REGISTER \ 0 r fiET 1. A L I F E T I M E Bronze Key T a « mull itoUlen rildinfr flnlih. Engravpd Avilh jronr i)ri-«onal Refrlstration number. A iiniMue Par Bfll key chain. 3. Our litetime gnaraiiiee 1o iiiMUre the safe return (at nnr pxpenvel ot your loBt keys after they a,rB d p p o i l e d in any U.S. Mail Box by the finder, all for only Top money winner among 12 New York City employees who received awards totalling $1,275 last week at City Holl, throHgh the C i t y Employees Suggestion Program, was Joseph Guidueei, a foreman with the Department of Sanitation, who won $250 for devising a ramp-type device to facilitate attachment of snow plows to trucks. Winners of lesser amounts were Anna Jolon, $50; Eugene Tronconi, $50; James M. Moruni, $50; Herman J . Viox, $75; Samuel Kontro, $100; George L Memmen, $100; Roymond Berger, $100; Leo Tamber, $125; Martin J. Voelkel, $125; Hyman Russo, $150, and Ernest D. Consiglio, $100. Shown above, from left: Gen. John R. Kiipatrick, chairman of the Suggestion Awards Board; Mayor Robert F. Wagner, who made the presentations; top winner Mr. Guiducci, and D. R. Todoro, suggestion program coordinator for the Sanitation Department. Malcolm Wilson is Kick-Off Speaker For Annual Health Conference At Lake Placid YOUR KEYS FOR LIFE ap- plications have been received. The jobs are in Internal Revenue district offices in upper and lower Manhattan, and Brooklyn, which serve the Long Island and Metropolitan New York area. Those who filed before the previous closing date, April 8, will take their written examinations April 18, while those who file later will be tested in May or June. round trip all ineiuiivi M>W I NTH. MAV ' plus U . 1 9 Federal Tax 81 (SMO ptui tax from Jan* 1 t * Oet*b*r 11.) *AII f«r*t iubi*«t U CAR eppravol and Chang* witlisat notlc*. Y O U C A N LEAVE ANY FRIDAY via Transocean's " R O Y A L H A W A I I A N " Sfrratocruiser. en a delightful 16 doy tour of Los Angeles, HAWAII and San Francisco. To file, you must have two years' appiopriate experience in accounting, auditing or commercial bookkeeping, or other experience of a type requiring knowledge of law. Appropriate education may be substituted for some or all of the required experience. Forms and further details may be obtained from the U.S. Civil Service Commission, 641 W a s h ington Street, New York, N.Y. You'll ipend two lamoroui d a y s in H O L L Y W O O D and LOS ANGELES, see Hollywood Movie Stars homes . . . DISNEYLAND . . . then on to 10 glorious days in H A W A I I . . . enjoy WaikikI Be«ch and surf, matchless sunny climate, native dances and food . . . and as a final touch . . . UJA Service Unit Names *59 Chiefs After three increasingly success ful years of activity under the chairmanship of Philip Bernstein and Gottlieb Hammer, the Social Service Division of the United Jewish Appeal has named two new chairmen to head its 1959 drive, and has made plans to go full speed ahead to meet this year's needs. Isadore Hamlin, administrative assistant ot the Jewish Agency and Philip Soskis, executive di rector of the New York Associa tion for New Americans, are the new chairmen of the UJA cam paign among social welfare, relief rehabilitation, resettlement and fund-raiblng agencies. 460 $ H A W A I I 2 exhilarating days in San Francisco . . . explore China< town and see the Golden Gate. Here is the answer to all your vacation planning . . . a trip that's all a G O O D holi. day should be . . . exciting, colorful, reasonably priced . . . comprehensive and utterly relaxing. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!!! I I I I I I 1 I I 1 I SPECIALIZED TOURS. INC. • Enclottd pUai* f^nd $ raprtitnting dtpoiiti for r«i*rv«tlons 1 for 1 •o 9o|. Wa would lika to laava I I I I I I I I j ma 2ii FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK I. N. Y. Dtar Sin: n PUait x n d fr»t informction on your Californit H«w«!! V«c«tion. Nai Addrati pcrtoni tSO.OO cach (rafundabi* If you art unabi* (Data) Harlem Valley Hospital Invites Public To See 'Operation Friendship' In observance of Mental Health V/eek. Harlem Valley State Hospital, Wingdale, Invites the public. and patients and their relative* to "Operation 'friendship," •L ptosram to be conducted in the Smith Hall auditorium at the hospital. is described by those who know him as "quitt, unassuming . . a man of honesty integrity . . . a devoted family man and a credit to his community." The motion picture, "Family A f f a i r . " will be shown Xollowed by a guided tour of the wards After an address of welcome and occupational therapy classby Leo P. O'Donnell, M.D., the rooms of the hospital. Refreshhospital's di- ments will be served. The selection committee for rector, the Psychiatric Achievement P s y c li 1 - the atric Achieve- Award Includes: Mr.' Thomas J. ment award to Boyce. member of the board of Peter the hospital's visitors at the hospital; president, Harlem p s y r h 1 - Oaramone, atric aide of Valley Chapter, Civil Service E m the year will ployees Association; Rabbi Josef be presented to S a f f r a , chaplain: Claude Woodln, supervisor, male service; James Barto, chief superstaff attend- Josephine Wright, chief nvKTo ant et the hos- visor, female service; Mrs. Ethel supervisor, occupational pital. by Mrs. Glenn E. Manning, Myers, Harold Stock, chief vice president, Dutchess County therapy; Society for Mental Health, Inc. safety supervisor; Dr. Alfred R. and Mr. Barto has been employed Rlzzolo, assistant director ct the hospital for 14 years. He chairman at the Dues Increase Needed To Avoid CSE A Operating On Deficit Basis In Future Because hospital. Westchester County Aides Gain State Health Plan, Long a CSE A Chapter Goal offers health and hospitalization insurance with options to come under Blue Cross, Blue Shield and the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, In a variety of combination arrangements The County would pay up to $3.08 a month for an individual and up to $6.51 a month for en emThe County's share of the. cost ployee and his dependents. will be an estimated $2'>3,000 a year. The plan, State Errployees Health Insurance P'an, will not become effective until 15 percent of the 4.000 employees Involved glvs their consent to Join. Westchester Chapter, Civil Service Employees Association, accomplished a long time major goal last week when the County Poard of Supervisors unanimously approved a health and hospitalization Insurance program for employees of the County government. The County Budget Committee Chairman. Supervisor Leonard Herman iR., Mount Vernon), said h « hopes the program might be Initiated by July 1. Retired employees, solicitation of whose consent might seriously delay the starting date, will not b« Included at this time, according to tl^.a iJoard. Others not to b« included immediately will be Parkway Authority and Playland Commissifu employees, who are on separate payrolls. SLA Names 2 Deputies " O u r special committee to study and evaluate the association Fiscal Situation has reviewed our financial records on several occasions since the last dues Increase and at two delegate meetings reported that a dues Increase might be necessary. On February 14, 1959 this committee, after another careful review of our f i n ancial history and responsibilities, recommended an Increase In C S EA membership dues to $10.40 per year, r 40 cents bi-weekly for those on payroll deduction. The committee recommended to the president that a meeting of association officers be c a l l e d promptly to review the situation and this was done. As a result, the officers unanimously supported the dues Increase and recommended same to the board of directors: the board approved the proposal and It was submitted to the delegates at the March 3-4 meeting, at which time action was postponed at the recommeniSatlon of the president so that the ohapteas could be supplied with detailed Information before final action Is taken at a subsequent delegate meeting. T w o new deputy commissioners, P o m a n S. Lapinski of >irooklyn and Robert E. Doyle of Schenectady, have bpcn appointed by the State Liquor Authority. The position carries a $9,D38-a->'ear salary. Mr. Lapinski will succeed Joseph R. Pape in the SLA's New York City office, and Mr. Doyle will succeed Raymond C. Bank at the Albany office. State Parole-Aides Attend Bowling Party Nassau Chapter Directors to Meet Walter Szczepanek was chairman with Margaret Schaum as •(i-ohahuian. The Chapter's new office Is opposite the old courthouse in quarters fo-merly occupied by the Nassau Civil Service Commission. Refreshments will be served. Piiss your copy of The Leader Oa t« K Non-Member positions first — the Association work comes on top of this. W h e n our Chapters were small, the u n paid services of Chapter Officers and Committees sufficed to cover the needs of our members. Today Is different. M a n y of our C h a p ters are very large, some spread over a wide area. Government has Thrift, Membership become much more complex and complicated as have the problems "2. By thrifty operation, and of employees. More employees because we gained n,0u0 new need more help. members in one year after in" M o r e individual service is d e stallation of payroll deduction of dues In our State division (which manded along many lines. It la we cannot expect to happen unrealistic and inhumi n to e x again*, we had accumulated as pect the unpaid Officers and of September 30, 1958, a net Committees to absorb all of thli worth, exclusive of our H e a d - additional work. They have requarters Building, of $86,000, plus sponsibilities to '.helr families and $75,000 In contingency reserve — to their health. T h e s j bulwarks a total per capita net worth of of our Association must be given trained and experienced help less than $2.00 per member. "This current year our Income through increased field, publlo and expenses will almost balance, relations, research and headquartaccording to our budget. If the ers staff. Increased dues refund to Association grants Its employees the Chapters will enable the l a r g the same salary adjustment which er Chapters to hire part time State employees receive, we will help to aslst in carrying out e s - . operate In the red. Next year sential Chapter programs, activwithout expanding services we will ities and services. i n - skimping along, without a contingency reserve to protect our members against serious emergencies which may arise, without fully meeting the reasonable demands of our members for needed additlonal service, and through deficit operation become Insolvent. The letter, in the form of a pamphlet, begins with a personal message fr-om Mr. Powers which reads: State-sponsored Mrs. Richard Beachman, Richard Real and his fiance, Carol Preller; A « n e « Weller, Margaret Schaum, Mr. and Mrs, Albert Salerno, Mi', and Mri. Emmet Dunlavey, M a r garet Obrist and Mr. and Mrs Nlcholds Serraro. steadily Mr- Powers' Message Mr. Lapinski, an investigator program with the S L A since 1956, has served as Deputy U.S. Marshall and as field representa'Ive for the Division of Veterans Affairs. Mr. Doyle has been with the Prentlce-Hall Publishing Co. and the T h « Syracuse office staff of the General Electric Co., and was Slate Division of Parole recently Assistant Journal Clerk with the attended a bowling party, the first State Assembly. of Its kind, at the Polish Home Syracuse. The lanes /ere turned over to the guests who had a swell time, they said. Coffee was •erved. The Board of Director, of the Guests, officers and secretarial Nassau Chapter, Civil Service Ktftil members attending were Mr. and M r i Joseph Maxwell, Mr. Employees Association, will hold mid Mrs. Edgar Erb. Mr. and a monthly meeting and grand M r i . Waller Szcsepanek. Mr. and opening at its new office at 15:;7 Mrs. Jeremiah Foody, Mr. and Franklin Avenue, Mlneola, at 6 Mr*. Wallace Kubler, Mr. and P.M., April 15. The of creased costs in operations, the Civil Service Employees Association is requesting membership approval of an increase in dues from $7.50 at present to $10.40 per year. In order to present to all members a more precise explanation of the need f o r such an increase, The Leader this week is printing a message on the dues rise sent to all chapter presidents from A s s o c i a t i o n President John F. Powers. operate at a substantial deficit afid in a short time become f i n ancially unable to protect our members. The last dues increase was put Into effect after a period of four years' operation at a loss and we used our reserves all up. W e lived dangerously so far as our position to protect our members was concerned. W e are at a crossroad — to delay the inevitable decision Is Irresponsible. W e can either take prompt action to asure a strong position In the f u ture or live dangerously as we did in the past. Voluntary Work " O u r members should appreciate the work and sacrifices-made by our unpaid Association and Chapter Officers and Committees as compared to the five cents a week proposed dues increase. If these voluntary services had to be paid for, the proposed dues increase would have to be many times the small amount proposed. "5. The cost of every service and Item used by the As.soclation to serve its members continuously Increases. Your Association O f f l - . cers and staff do not like this situation any more than you and all C S E A member.s like the problem of trying to make your salary check stretch to meet constantly Increasing living costs. The Association is not a luxury — it is not a social activity — It has to do with the member's bread and butter — his job — his salary and other Important work conditions upon which d e pend his standard of living and what he can do for his dependents. "3. CSE.A funds are expended with great care. The Board of Directors elects its own Budget Committee to examine the President's Budget each year and report its recommendations direct to the Board of Directors, consisting of 80 elected Officers. State Departmental ind Conference Representatives, and Representatives of our County Division members. All expenditures are approved In advance by the Board of Directors. An Auditing C o m mittee works throughout the year and a firm of Certified Public " W e hope that you will careAccountants makes a detailed examination of our financial records fully and promptly bring to the at each year eitd and the report attention of all your members all of this firm is sent to all Chapter the facts contained In this letter One Cent a Day Presidents. Our funds are '<ept In and In the enclosed material. B y laws which control the amount " T h e proposed dues increase good control and order. of dues can be changed only by amounts to about five cents per More Service the vote of the Chapter Deleweek or less than one cent a day "Additional Association Services gates represi.ntlng our members and dues of $10.40 would be less it is up than one-third of what the have come into being only as he throughout the state _ cheapest union in state service result of requests from our mem- to our Chapters and members. I charges. In considering this m a t - bers, Committees and Chapters. have confidence in our Chapters ter our members should remember Our Chapters have requested add- and members. I am sure they will the Important work CSEA does itional public relations services consider the importance of the to Improve salaries, work hours, including in-service training, add- work of CSEA to our members vacations, promotional opportun- itional research services and as- and approve the modest dues Inities, retirement arrangements, sistance from Headquarters rela- crease suggested so that we can etc. The success of our organ- tive to Various aspects of em- continue to do a first class job ization determines in large mea- ployee problems and programs. and keep the Association In a position financially to sure the future welfare and hap- Five Field Representatives, with strong piness of the members and their two more to be added moment- meet any crisis which may arise (Continued on Page 14) families. Our members should feel, arily, to service SO.fOO members that C S E A is the most important all over the state Is spreading organization they are affiliated field service very thin. Even with with. the four more field representa"I am transmitting herein tives proposed, each one would statements citing the major fact- service about 7,500 members. G i v ors Increasing the cost of Associ- ing research and public relations ation operation since our last assistance to over '.00 Chapters dues increase; estimate of In- throughout the state by one D i ^ (Continued from Page 1) creased Income which would be rector of Public Relations and one Salary Researcl'. Analyst Is cuttAssociation non-teaching section. realized from the proposed Increase and the possible use of ing things too fine. Several imOther counties in the state such Increase. I would remain portant Committees, Including the Public Relations, have been able to considerably remiss if I did not point out sev- Membership, eral factors which should be of Education and Committee to Stu- advance the lot of non-teaching dy our Fiscal Situation, have re- employees Interest to our members. through an active "1. You may recall that when commended extended services in Association program, Mr. S h e r these areas. the last dues Increase jvar being " W e have been asked to keep man. reported, and conditions in considered. I tried to face the facts as to our responsibility to a Field Representative In one Westchester County are f a v o r our members and at that time I particular Institution for a month able to similar successes. proposed annual dues of $10.00 I and we can't do it. By contrast, Further information may be cited the need for expanded staff a Union employs the full time and services to meet the needs of services of two Representatives to had by contactlnt the Westour members. Annual dues of serve three Institutions In the chester Chapter offices at P.O. $7.50 were finally adopted and same area. only part of the expanded service "4. Our Chapters need more Box 827, White Plains, or by could be established. It is a ques- funds. Chapter Officers and Com- calling White Plains 8-1300, Ext. tion of increasing the dues to mittee members numbering about 319. have the funds to continue to do 4,000 donate freely of their time Non-teaching personnel are a first class job and be in a sound and effort to Assoc atlon work to urged their. fellow financial posltloi to hai dle emer- They are the backbone of C S E A asked gencies which may arise in the Thess ui\selfish members do an workers to attend this import- Non-Teaching Unit to Form future, or . .tlus. ,aHerttatlve oloutstau^ing Job Ui .thetr p^ljlui*"' meetl;ig. Pag* C I V I L F e w ciency, promote expand know-how economy, to do Ayril 14, 1989 5 RECEIVE BROOKIRN ARMY AWARDS 11.S. Career Execs Lauded By CS Commission Head The civil service career executive has proved his value to the nation, Chairman Roger W , Jones of the U.S. Civil Service Commission said at the national conference of the American Society for P u b l i c Administration In Washington, D. C. The career execirtive has arrived because he is needed, stated Commissioner Jones, • and has proved his worth at each step . . . Every alternative so far s u g g e s t e d , whether one of system or of a different kind of officer, has been tested and has failed to give as good an account of Itself." Even the possible weaknesses of the system, he said, have been compensated by better training, by defining the executive's role better, and by transfer to the political executive of functions discordant to the career concept. The career executive has been a long time developing, said Mr. Jones—from Theodore Roosevelt's term as Civil Service Commissioner, through the two World Wars and the N R A era. "By and large," he said, "The businessman did not want an executive career In government. Perhaps the civil servant would do . . . The idea of using career men to do more than carry out policy began to make political sense, as well as to fill operational necessity." I W A i r , L K A D B R and many jobs." With the great expansion of Federal Government in our time, men trained in government were needed to put the new programs into effect. "Budget, personnel, records, accounting, management controls, training — all of them and more — required experts who knew the Government way." "As Government expanded, the career executive was eventually put into more and more places of authority." But there was one stumbling block, he said. The career executive could not find his fully de- Miss Irene DeMartine of the Brooklyn Army Terminal receives a Department of the Army fined place until it was decided Outstanding Rating Certificate from Maj. Gen. Evan M. Houseman. C G , U.S. Armp Transjust what the political executive portation Terminal Command, Atlantic (USATTCA). Miss DeMartine is the general's sec« must be in this Government ex- retary. Also, receiving Sustained Superior Performance Awards and $200 checks each ore pansion—the undersecretaries and (left to right) Nathan Wagner, Gerard Mogariello, Frank Hagen and Frank DeGirolomo. deputy secretaries. This was done by the Hoover Commission's Task 61, D; 62, C; 63, B ; 64, C; 65, A ; Force on Personnel and Civil can be certain, he said, "that 66, C; 67, B; 68 E; 69, D; 70, C; many of these young people do Service. 71. A; 72, A; 73, B; 74, D; 75, D ; have an idea of staying for more 76, C; 77, C; 78, A; 79, D; 80, B ; No Bureaucrat S E W A G E T R E A T M E N T than a few years; that they do 81. B; 82, C; 83. D ; 84, D ; 85, B; WORKER 86, A; 87, B; 88 D; 89, D; 90, B; The career executive is no have the certainty of rising steadNew York City Open Competitive 91. B; 92, D; 93, A; 94, D; 95, B ; bureaucrat, Mr. Jones emphasized. ily through merit; and that their Tentative Key Answers for 96, C; 97, C; 98, D ; 99, D; 100, C. " T o live and to be useful, the careers will bear witness, not to Written Test. Last day to protest to City 1, A; 2, B; 3, C; 4, A; 5, D ; Civil career executive must be capable a bureaucratic aristocracy of ofService Commission, 299 6, C; 7. B; 8, A; 9, A; 10. D ; of acting and taking the responfice holders, but to a flexible and 11, D; 12, A; i : , C; 14. B; 15, C; Broadway, New York, N Y . , is Tuesday, April 28. sibility for his actions." And he useful aristocracy of competence 16, D; 17, B; 18, A; 19, B; 20, C; has on him the watchful eyes of 21. D; 22, C; 23, A; 24, D; 25, A; in the discharge of the public Q U E S T I O N S on civti service 26, A; 27, D; 28, D; 29, B; 30, C; his political boss, of the public business." Social Security answered. 31, A; 32, B; C; 34, B; 35, A ; and and of Congress. 36, C; 37, B; 38, A ; 39, D ; 40, B ; Address Editor, The Leader. 97 Mr. Jones concluded that the The thousands of young men Continuity Is Keynote 41, D; 42, A; 43, D; 44, A ; 45, B ; Duane Street, New York 7. N. T . and women who will enter the career executive is far from a 46, D; 47. A; 48, D ; 49, A; 50. A ; "Say Tou Saw It in It was found, he said, that "the career service of the U.S. in 1959 straw man and is still far from 51, D; 52, B; 53, C: 54, D ; 55, C; 56, A; 57. B ; 58, A; 59, C; 60, D ; The Leader" •ontinuity provided by career ex- will produce many executives in fulfilling his ultimate destiny. •cutlves seemed to increase effi- due time, said Mr. Jones. W e for lifelong Key Answers grace ^ mnfh/t/ check fhafmeans so much anJ elegance... COMMUNITY* THE FINEST SILVERPLATE Every month a i l a t * •mployee In Albany w h o It recovering from o hip injury looks forward to a special envelope. You see, inside this envelope it a disability check for $100 which this w o m a n uset to help meet her regular living expenses I To date, she hat received 30 checks or $3,000. You too can protect against lots of income due to accident or illness by enrolling in the C.S.E.A. Plan of Accident and Sickness. Before another day goes by, gal In touch with one of these experienced inturanct counse//ors in our Civil Service Dopartmtnt. SOUTH S E A S - WHITE ORCHID •Tiade l i l u l u ot Ooiida Ltd. You can set your table with the finest... for Community is top quality, crafted by Oneida Silversmiths, made to give you lifetime beauty. Choose from these smart patterns , . . ' [<ew "Silver Flower" poises delicate blossonui on a slender item of silver . . . "Ballad" has elegance in the modem Tnanner . . . "South Seas" is so different, so desirable . . . "White Orchid" is a reproduction of the world's loveUest flower. Select your service today, enjoy it while you pay. THE C U S S I C SET - 82 Piece Service f o r E i K b t - 1 0 Teaspoon!, 8 Knlvei, 8 Forki. 8 Soup Spoons, 8 Salad Forlu, Butter Knife, S u g u Spoon, 2 Serving Spcom. Cliest free of extra charee. $8975 SAMUEL C. SCHECHTER . 5 BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK CITY BA 7.9044 SHittt 200 John M, Devlin liarrisun S. Henry Robert N. Boyd William P.Conboy Anita E. Hill Tlionias Canty Thoinae Farley Charles MeCreedy Giles Van Vorct George Wachob George Weltmer William Scanlan Millard Schaffer T E R President Vice President General Service Manager Association Sales Manager Administrutive Assistant Field Supervisor Field Supervisor Field Supervisor Field Supervisor Field Supervisor Field Supervisor Field Supervisor Field Supervisor 148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York 342 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 118 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York 148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York 148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York 342 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 110 Trinity Place Syracuse, New York 20 Briarwood Koad, Loudonville, New York 148 Clinton St., Schenectady, New York Tuscorara Road, Niagara Falls, New York 10 Dimitri Place, Larchmont, New York S42 Madison Avenue, New York, New Yerk 12 Duncan Drive, Latham, New York T m e i H . t v o v i r m j 4 , » c <^n4wya/nce MAIN o i - n c t 148 CLINTON ST., SCHENECTADY I, N.Y. FRANKLIN 4-7751 ALBANY 5-2032 ^ ^ 905 WALBRIDGE BLD6. BUFFALO 2, N. Y. MADISON 8351 142 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK 17, N. Y. MURRAY H I I L 2-7895 CIVIL . THM^nf, April 14, 19Sf SERVICE LEADER Inferiority Complex Reigns In Civil Service, Says Survey Pag* R T * Thousands of P.O. Jobs, Thousands of Applicants For Subsfifufe Tests Applications are still pouring Job, it was pointed out recently The study found that the major in for the substitute clerk exami- by Robert K . ChrLstenberry, Actbarriers to contact between highing New York Postmaster. Postal ranking civil servants and their nation of the New York City employees enjoy up to 26 days a Post Office, with 6f.C0 Jobs that opposite numbers in private inpay $80 a week. Bernard Katz, year of paid vacation, up to 13 dustry was the lack of the liberal executive secretary of the Board days a year of sick leave, and expense account through which eligibility for inexpensive group many informal work contacts are of Civil Service Examiners, reported that 40,000 people will life Insurance. There are oppormade by commercial business men a have to be examined to fill the tunities for promotion, and in bars, expensive restaurants and system of incentive awards. R e list. at golf courses. tirement is possible at 60 years Already, he said, 17,8r'0 have A more positive approach of age, after 35 years of service, through the mass media to publi- filed for the jobs. Of these, '',435 with $286 a month. cizing government programs to have been scheduled for examPresent Jobs ai-e being filled ining and 1,670 have been tested. Civil servants and those with dispel public Ignorance of them from the June, 1958, list for The filing of applications may relatives in civil service held the is possible and would be very career substitute clerks, with run well into the summer. Mr. field in less esteem than did the desirable, since only a small porKatz noted that 112,000 people more than 12,00) eligibles. Temption of the public is negative in rest of the people surveyed, 38 orary appointments have been its attitude toward civil service. applied for the jobs last year. per cent as against 28 per cent. made down the list to those who But government agencies are usuThere are no education or exThe authors of the study bescored 75.1% on the test. The delieve this is because government ally not provided with adequate perience requirements. New York partment has called in 621. eliemployees feel they are a minority staffs or budgets for public in- City residence is not required, gibles, with 280 vacancies to fill. but does get preference. The group and that mlnprity group formation programs. Appointments are to be effective The conclusion reached by the written tests are taken at the status is low, simply because It as of April 11, Saturday. study was that more attention Morgan Station Post Office, 341 Is a minority group and therefore Appointments for career subdifferent from and inferior to should be given both to making Ninth Ave., Manhat^.an. stitute carriers have canied down the public more conscious and The starting pay is $2 an hour the majority. (Continued on Page 12) better informed aljout civil service and can reach $2.43 an hornPublic employment Is preferred New York City will establish and to maintaining and improving through annual raises, with 10% five new eligible lists, effective by 75 per cent of those who prefer the Important iSublio relations In- added for night work. April 5. They follow with the it because of job security and volved In over-the counter conThe person who applies gets O F CANDIDATES FOR retirement benefits. Also, because number of eligibles: tacts with the general public. The more than a bare application they feel personnel policies are Promotion authors state that "inadequate blank. He gets a kit that demore fair. Assistant foreman, structures mass media programs represent scribes the various types of work group A, Transit 19 Red tape and bureaucratic pro- administrative limitations, b u t under the classification, tells of Assistant resident buildings cedmes in government agencies poorly trained and overworked the steps in getting the Job, and IP IN DOUBT ABOUT PASSING superintendent, Housing were the main reasons given by contact personnel are a positive S I 9 H T TEST OF CIVIL SERVICE gives sample questions. Study is Authority 113 those who did not prefer civil CONSULT liability." recommended; it has been estiForeman, buses and shops, service careers. They also felt mated that one out of three Transit Authority 55 there was mora opportunity for passes the exam. Optometrist Orthopirt Power maintalner, group B, advancement in private Industry. 300 West 23rd St.. N. Y. C . There are plenty of benefits Transit Authority 161 Although most people are satisBy Appt. Only — WA 9-5919 that go with a postal department Power maintalner. group C, fied with the administrative procto help yea get a fc/gk«r gracf* Transit Authority 51 esses of government, they have on elvll t«rvle« Uift may b. The official lists may be In- little knowledge of how the agenobfolned at Tfca Leodar Bookspected at the Leader office, 97 cies work that make up a ifore, 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y. Phone orders aeDuane Street, two blocks north of functioning government. Specific eepted. Call BEekman 3-6010. City Hall, just west of Broadway, governmental operations can, howFor lilt of soma earrent titlet from Wednesday, April 15, to W e d - ever, produce Intense and outtee Page IS. Fully Equipped Gyms In MgnhaHow & Jamaica — Day & Eva. nesday, April 22. spoken criticism. civil servanU' professional esteem for themelves has decreased over th« past 25 years whlla the public's opinion of them has Improved. Civil servants now respect tha Held less than the public does. At least such is the finding of a survey of opinion of the public and of civil servants in the Detroit metropolitan area by the University of Michigan's Bureau of Government. Tha survey found that in comparing attitudes toward public employees as against employees of large companies, 27 per cent of those surveyed felt civic servants were more courteous, while 29 per cent believed both groups would be equally ccJurteous and 24 per cent thought private Indus- try empl^ees would ba more courteous. It seems that people do not consider impersonality and red tape to be exclusive problems of government agencies. Little difference was found between members of different political parties In their attitudes t o w a r d government employees. Those who praised one agency would most likely feel the same way in general toward other agencies. NYC Establishes Five New Lists Visual Training FIREMAN PATROLMAN DR. JOHN T. FLYNN Exam Study Books FIREMAN CANDIDATES LAST CALL FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING! City of New York Exam Has Been Ordered for COURT O F F I C E R . $4,000 to $5,080 a Year In ItlaKliitrates, Special Seasions, D o m r s t i c Reiatioiia, M u n i c i p a l and City G e t yom s h a i ^ f thege golden April^^ . ext^a dividend earnings for you at Emigrant! Emigrant starts y e a r money earning dividends the very same d a f you put it in the bank. But in April yon get a sunnjr seasonal extra. Just open an account... or make a deposit . . . a n y day through A p r i l 14th, and Emigrant figures your dividend earnings from A p r i l Ist^' BVaIo Latest quarterly interest (Regular dividend 3% plus K " wtr* crwUted to balances of $fi or more on depoeit p«r omiMia at eod of dividend period^ EMIGRANT Induftrial SAVINGS BANK • Sand litaroKira lalllng bow I ««i bvild 0 0ood eadi r«Mrv* k on Emigront lavlngi occoualk Endoiod it f . -to open an account in Ikf name(>) o f i — and forward the passbook tqi NAMB , • • Miv • Mr*. • MI« .. •. -ZONICITY (Ui* Raglilerad Moil when ••ndbig cath) H f u B i a v i o o A k • 1 Chamber* $ t v N . Y . t Open Mon. wid Fri. to « P.M. S l a s t 42nd St., N . Y . 1 7 0pm Mon. lo 7 P.M.. FrL to 8 P.M. 7th A v « . * 3 1 i t S t . , N.Y.1 ADDRESS. -STATI- o « r a « > f m e w a a a e f Open Mon. and FrL to 6:30 F M , • • • r » * * T i e M Courtl. Promotional Opportunities to Court Clerk at S8,900 and higher Ages: 21 to 35 Yrs. (Veterans May Be Older) Our Course Prepares for Official Written Exam Be Our Guest at Opening Class WED. APR. 15 at 7:30 PM ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Our •iiecial conrse is conducted by Dr. Vincent J. McI.auKlilln w l i o liai an oiitKtanUlnK record o f success In preparing candidates f o r tiiis e i a n i i n n t l o n . Class Meets at 126 J. 13St. on THURSDAY at 6 P. M. POST OFFICE CLERK—New York Post Offica Thousands w i l l apply and c o m p e t i t i o n w i l l b « keen. Our specially prepared H O M E S T U D Y B O O K covera all phases of tha offlcial e x a m and is on sale at o u r M a n h a t t a n and Jamaica oiBce or by m a i l . N o C.O.D. orders, send check or money order, w e pay postage. . . . S^SO Post Paid Classes Meeting for CLERK, CITY of NEW YORK Manhattan: MON. & WED. at 5:30 & 7:30 P.M. Jomaica: TUES ft FRI. at 7 P.M. HIGH S C H O O L EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA Needed 5-Week by N o n - G r a d u a t e « of High Course • E n r o l l N o w • N e w S c h o o l f o r M a n y C i v i l Scrvica Class F o r m i n g l o Start Soon. PATROLMAN — Exama N. Y. CITY POLICE DEPT. $6,206 a Year After 3 Years of Service (Xlter July 1, 1 9 » » and Based on 4 ' M { u u r W e e k - Includes U n i f o r m A l i o w a n c * ) L e c t u r e Claasea in M a n h a t t a n on T h u r s . at 1:16. 6 : 4 5 and 7 : 4 5 P . M . m Jamaica on M o n . at 7 : 3 0 P . M . also g y m classes In both locations. C o m p e t i t i o n w i l l be keen. Start preparation e a r l y and attain a high place on the e l i g i b l e list. Classes Starting in ManhaHan to Prepare for NEXT NEW YORK CITY LICENSE EXAMS • MASTER ELECTRICIAN OPENING C L A S S MON. APRIL 20 at 7:30 P.M. • STATIONARY ENGINEER OPENING C L A S S TUES. APRIL 28 at 7:30 P.M. • REFRIGERATION MACHINE OPERATOR OPENING C L A S S THURS. APRIL 23 at 7 P.M. AN INVITATION A n y o n * Interested In securing • C i r i l Service position, H I g b School B q u l v a l e n e y D i p l o m a , License us a Master P l u m b e r , Master Electrician, Stationary Engineer or R e f r i g e r a t i o n M a c h i n e Operator, is Invited to visit and consult with our registrars, b « our guest at a class session and o b s e r v e the t y p e and q u a l i t y of the Instruction offered. A similar I n v i t a t i o o Is open to those Interested ID our Vocational Courses The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE MANHATTAN: 115 EAST 15 STREET Phone GR 3-6900 J A M A I C A : 89.25 MERRICK BLVD., bet. Jamaica ft Hillside Aves. UPKN MUN TO FKI 0 A.U U P.M.—CI.OSKIt ON HATIIKIIAVH P « f l « C I V<I Sis W l i E A P E R . Amerlea't tMrge»t Weekly lor Puhlle Emphtyeen Member Audit Bufcau of Circulations I'uhUilied every Tuetday Uy LEADER PUBLICATION. INC. 17 D>en* Str«tt. New Yorh 7. N. Y. lEehmon 3-6010 « E« EH^nrt« LETTERS TO THE EDITOR OB.IECTS T O S M O T H E R I N G OF M A N A G E R I A L I D E A S Editor, The Leader: What's the difference between the dedicated civil servant and the bureaucrat? One difference I have seen Is the ability to get fired up by a good working idea. lerry FinkeUlein, Piihliiher Paul Kyer. Kdilor Richard E v a n i , Jr.. AisistanI Editor H. Miieer, ftushiHst Mtinauer 10« per fopv. Subscription Price $2.00 to members off the Civil Service Employees Association $4.00 to non-members. T U E S D A Y , A P R I L 7, 1959 The Forgotten Ones NCE A G A I N , retired State employees—as Mell as retired public employees everywhere—are the forgotten men and women of our day. Despite encouraging words from Gov. Nelson A . Rockefeller last January when the Legislature was about to begin its 19.59 session; despite strenuous efforts by the Civil Service Employees Association, and individuals, as well, the retired employee faces the coming year with as little in his pocketbook as before. Retired on an income based on less inflationary times, these former workers are trying to eke out an existence on a standard of pay that is at least 20 years behind the times. Efforts have been made to bring their income up but no additional income has ever been anywhere near iufficient. It is a cruel reward for long and faithful service. John F. Powers, president of the Civil Service Employees Association, has called these retired workers "the forgotten people." Nothing could be more true and more sadIf this is what the presently-employed public worker faces as his eventual future can it be too surprising if many want to seek work elsewhere? There can be no more talk on these poor people's plight. There must be some action. O Questions Answered On Social Security But too many young men on the lower managerial levels have come up with Ideas and seen them go through the mill — checiced and recheclced, shaped and reshaped — until they can't be recognized or aren't much use. A few years of that, and the man stops sticlcing out his neck and relaxes dowh into the cynicism around him. Another bureaucrat Is made. From time to time, there Is a strong effort from the top to loosen this up. We can give thanks for that. But sometimes, even a system set up to encourage new Ideas can itself get stuck in the mud. L.S., New York City L E A D E R S T O R Y IS P R A I S E D B Y F U T U R E 'TEST T A K E R ' Fditor, The Leader: Your story In the April 7 issue on how to prepare for examinations was very helpful to me. I am scheduled to take the City promotion test for mo^orman instructor with tha Transit Authority on April 18 and have been studying hard for months, but I haven't been in school for some years and had forgotten the way to organize my studies best so as to pass the test. While some people might think there's not much to the Idfca that the person's mental attitude and diet can affect the outcome of a written examinatior., your article on the subject has convinced me that it can and does. Thank you again, and I am sure that that fitory will be a great help' to me when I take both my written test and the medical-physical. H.C., New York City ¥011 A N D RETIREMENT By FRANCIS M. CASEY Member. CSEA Field Sfo*l Many letters have been received recjuestingr information regarding amount of rctirertient allowances Individual would receive. Since there are many factors involved, it is not possible to furnish individual amounts of retirement allowances through this column. Any member of the New York State Employees' Retirement System, or of retirement age, will be furnished an estimate of their retirement allowance by requesting same from the New York State Employees' Retirement System, 90 South Swan St., Albany, N. Y . I retired from State service in 1958. Can I be re-employed in State service and if so, how much can I earn without Interfering with my pension? You would be permitted to be re-employed In State service and earn an amount not to exceed eighteen hundred dollars per calendar year in any position of a temporary, seasonal or occasional nature, provided that you execute and file with the Comptroller a statement that you elect to have the provisions of the law apply to you, and that your retirement allowance, computed without optional modification, does not exceed thirty-five hundred dollars per year. If you qualify under the provisions of this law, your retirement allowance would not be affected. Law Cases I am an employee of the Buffalo Sidney M. Stern, counsel, sub- State Hospital and I expect to of September, 1958 if the worker mitted to the New Yorli City Civil retire June 1, which will give me thirteen years of service. What I is entitled to disability benefits. Service Commission the followwant to know is will I get a inf report on law cases: However, payments to your chilpension or will I have to draw dren cannot start until an appliJUDICIAL DECISIONS out the money which I put into Court of Appeals the pension fund? I am 66 years cation is filed. Therefore, you Behringer v Parisi. Petitioner, of age and I feel I can't go on should get In touch with your soa veteran, was summarily re- much longer. Please let me know cial secui'lty office immediately. moved from his position of Dist- how I stand regarding the penrict Administrator of the /.Ibany sion. District of the Workmen's ComSince you have attained retireIn January, 1958 my father pensation Board, r i s petition for ment age, you will be entitled to started collecting monthly disreinstatement was opposed on the a retirement allowance if you ability benefits from, his social ground that he was a d^'puty decide to retire as of June 1. Since security account, at the age of 52. and thus not entitled to the pro- you became a member after April I am 22 years of age and have tection of Section 22 of the civil G, 1943, have over five years of never been able to worn, because se vice law. The court, holding service, are over age 60, and preI have been totally and permathat an issue as to the powers sumably have a retirement allownently disabled since I was 10 and duties alleged to have been ance that will exceed three hunyears old. I was told that I could delegated to and exercised by dred dollars per year, you may not collect any benefits on my petitioner exists ordered a hear- not withdraw your accumulated father's accouri at that time. Do ing so that these matters may be contributions in a lump sum from I hav:; to wait until my father sufficiently developed and defi- the Retirement System but must reaches age 65 before 1 can start nite findings made thereon. take a retirement allowance paid collecting disabled child's benemonthly. fits? P. M. J. Appellate Divisilon On what basis were social se- benefits t ^ginning wit'.i the month wirity benefits increased proximately 7% by effective apwith 19697 I t was based on the rise in living costs from September 1954 (when the last benefit Increase was effective) through June, 1968. I purchased a small store last y«ar and had a net profit of •3000, How I- I receive credit for these earnings under Social Seem-ity? J. H. F. You must file a Schedule C with your 1958 income tax return Bnd pay the Social Secu.-'ty S E tax on your net earrings. The bottom portion of your Schedule C will be forwarded by 'he Internal Revenue Servlcf to the Social Secuilty Admini.straUon so that your net earnings can be eredited to your Social Security nccount. I am 53, and since June 1958 I have been receiving monthly disability benefits under the Social Security law because of a permanent and total disability that keeps, nie from working. Ho'vever, I have two children who »re under 18 years of age. Can I »lso get Social Security benefits for these children? W. W. Yes. The 1958 amendments to the Social Security L a « have made U possible for a disabled worker's dependent chlldi-cn under 18 years of f g« to collett monthly No. Under the 1958 Social Security amendments enacted by Congress, a disabled child 18 years of age or olde-, who.se disability began before his or her 18th b i r t h d a y , may collect monthly benefits on the parent's Social Security av-count, If the parent has become entitled to monthly disability benefits. You may become entitled to these benefits beginning with September, 1958, and you should not wait until your father reaches age 65. You should file your claim at once ft. the nearest Social Security offlc«. Ferguson v Kennedy. After pleading guilty to departmental charges, petitioner was dismissed from the police department. He commenced a proceeding for reinstatement but Special Term held the proceeding barred by the four months limitation. The Appellate Division has unanimously affirmed. PROCEEDINGS INSTITUTED Steindler v Felix. Petitioner was classed as an investigator in the office of the comptroller. He seeks reclassification to Principal Special Tax Investigator. I am employed by the Stale of New York and I am a member of the New York State Employees' Retirement System since 1942. I am 57 years of age and participate in the 55-year plan. Would my retirement benefits be greater if I joined the 60-year plan? Would you please explain the benefits and if there Is any advantage for me to change to the 60-yeaf plan? Do I understand correctly that a member of the new 55year plan could, if she desires, draw out in a lump sum what she has In the Retirement System but can only do to before a«e 607 The retirement brnefits fire much greater under tlie 55-year plan, approximatly 16-2/3'^'e Increase In the pension portion alone. Also, his additional contributions would provide an increase in the annuity portion. The 55-year plan members, upon superannuation retirement, receive a pension of one-one hundred twentieth of final average salary multiplied by the number of years for which he has member .service credit and a pt^nsion of one-sixtieth of final average salary multiplied by the number of years for which he has prior service credit or military service credit, whereas under the GO-year plan he receives one-one hundred fortieth of final average salary for member service credit and one-seventieth for prior and militai'y service credit. A member of the Retirement System under either the SS-year or 60-year plan may, if they become a member prior to April 6, 1943. resign and withdraw their contributions in a lump sum m lieu of a i-etirement allowance right up until age 70. Members of the Retirement System, who became members on or aftrr April 6, 1943, may not withdraw their contributions in a lump sum if they are 60 years of age or over and have had five years allowable service. • and their retirement allowance exceeds 300 p"r year, but must take the R>lov,ance In monthly payments. I had seven years service with Ihe County of Westchos.ler, resigned. moved to Brooklyn and two months later went into State service. I left my accumulated contributions in the State E m ployees' Retirement System. Will these seven years of service with Westchester County be included in figuring my pension when I finally retire from State s.-rvice? In computing your retirement allowance when you are eligible to retire, the allowable service earned while employed in Westchester County will be included. I was in State service when 1 was inducted into Military Service during World W a r II, and served twenty months. I understand (hat I will recehe credit for these twenty months in the New York State Employees' Retirement System. Do I receive credit also In the Annuity part of my retirement fund? If you were on active duty between July 1, 1940 and December 31. 1946. was honorably discharged and returned to your position with the State wiihin one year from the date of your relea.se from actiw duty, you will receive free credit for the allowable service, with both shares of your retirement allowance being paid by your employer. At time of retirement you will receive one-sixtieth of your final average salary for the allowable time under the 55-year plan find one-seventieth under the tiO-yeur plan. For Real Estate Buys Kee Page 11 A Fingerprint Expert By Any Other Name -Is What? " W h e a is a fingerprint expert Court group has agreed to amend not a fingerprint expert?" That's its appeal by giving some concest^rhat various fingerprint techni- sions to the other three groups, cians in New York City civil but it still contends it does more highly .skilled work than do men Bervioe are trying to find out. T h « fingerprint technicians in in the other groups. But the Magistrate's Courts, under the other groups contend otherwise. The promotion examination banner of the "Association of ringerprint Experts of New York held recently for senior fingerCity," have retained attorney print technician was open to the Bamuel Resnicoff to try for a re- Magistrates Court group and to allocation of their Jobs from the Personnel Department group, grade 6, $3,500 to $4,580, to grade but not to the Correction D e B, $5,250 to $5,330, with a change partment and Transit Authority In title from fingerprint techni- groups. All three groups of finger•lan to fingerprint officer. outside Magistrates Meanwhile, fingerprint techni- printers •lans with the Transit Authority, I t h « Correction Department and t h e Personnel Department, who took the same examination and were appointed from the same eligible list as those in Magistrate's Court, are after the same rtolassification of pay grade and J o b title. Courts want to know why, if the Magistrates group do more highly skilled work, the personnel Department group siiould be included in the senior technician examination, and It not, which Is what they contend, why the Correction group and the Transit group should be excluded from It, which they we.e. » These three groups are of the opinion that they do equally "esponslble work with the Magistrates group and that a unified appeal for reclassificaUon coming from all four groups would have more chance of success. The latter three groups of flngerprinters are, by the Assoolfttlon's charter, either members pr prospective members of the Association, which the Magistrate's flngerprinters now describe in their appeal as "comprising •11 the flngerprlnt technicians in OttF Magistrates Courts, City of Neiw York." The Magistrates FREE B O O K L E T by U. S. GOT•rnment on Social Security. Mail only. Leader. 97 Duane Street. Maw York 7. N. Y. r M M CHIPS M M 1, A; 2, B; 3, A; 4, D; 5, B; 6, C; 7, B; 8, B; 9, D: 10, C; 11, B; 12, C; 13, A; M, A; 15, C; 16, A; 17, B; 18, D; 19; D; 20, C; 21, B; 22, D; 23, C; '>A. C; 2.5, A : 26, D; 27, B; 2" A; 29. C; 30. A; 31, D; 32, M ; 33, C; 34, B: 35, D; 36, C; 37, A; 38, C; 39, B; 40, C; 41, A; 42, D; 43, C; 44. C; 45. C; 46, A; 47, A; 48, D; 49. C; 50, B; 51, B; 52. A; 53. C; 54. D; -)5. A: 56. B; 57. A; 58. D; 59, A; 60, C; 61. D; 62, A; 63, B; 64, C; 65, D; 66. A; 67. C; 68, D; 69, A; 70, B; 71, A; 72, C; 73 B; 74. A; 75. D; 76, A; 77, B; 78, B; 79, A; 80, C; 81, D; 82, D; 83, A; 81, B; 85. C; 86, C; 87, E; 88, K ; 89,S; 90. E: 91. K ; 92, P; 93, A; 94, D; 95. L: 96. S; 97. J; 98, H; 99. 100. B. I HOW YOU CAN FINISH • AT HOME IN SPARE TIME I I If yoH ara 17 or over and have dropped OHt of selioai, wrifo for FREI Loiioii and FREE Booklet. Tellt how yon CON eara an American S«heol Diploma or ecialvalency eertlAeate AT HOME IN SPARE TIME. A M E R l t A N S C H O 6 I . Dept. 4 AP.85 HM W. 41«4 tf., N*w Vwk U , N. T. Mwm MywH t - M M Send me your free 55-page High School Booklet. {Name Agg. JEont. .Stat« OUR 63rd Y E A R Books IntpKralnl OWNER LIQUIDATING ESTATE MT. A I . I I . W H : $78.84 >fonthIy. This home witli 7 rooms foalurrs a morieni Voiimr^town UUchon. new hcaliiiR unit, aluminum storms nnd srrcpns. .1 flrr alarm syslom, plus a lovely oversizp picture window. Many outslancJin^ features included, Cloao to subway. ST. ,\I.B.\N«: $255 moulhly. Ideal for Tamily comfort. This home features 4 mantpr sl7!e bedroonis. For extra oonvenimiee It incliulefl '^-ear parage, fully automafie heat, storms and screens, modern kitchen and modern tile bath, A true quality home and area for a once-in-a-life-time buy. This offer cannot be duplicated. Call e.state agent: SANTI FlpliNtnne BETTER APPEARANCE M J I HIGH SCHOOL i I Exam Study t» htip foa gtf • kfghtr graifa on cMI itrvlet faifs may b« obfoincd at Tkt Leader look•lor*. 97 Ouan* Sfrtef, Mew fork 7, N. Y. Pkene ercferi aeeepfsd. Call lEekmon 3-6010. For IM of >sm« eurrcnf tltl»$ It* fagt 15. l-.'in70 ENJOY GOOD VISION mfeRCNce! FIND OUT TODAY ANSWERS MOTORMAN New York Promotion Tentative Key Answers for Written Test: ^ast day to protest to City Civil Service Commission. 299 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y., is Tuesday. April 18. '^POTATO TAsre Tffi woMDeRFUL KEY ^ ^ (2, ^J WITHOUT EYEGLASSES >HW WAV Wear Contact Lenses OLD W.4T 1. 2. COMPLETELY INVISIBLE WORN COMFORTABLY S. VISIT L A Y T O N S A N A M E WITH FOR A T R I A L D E M O N S T R A T I O N INFORMATION. aMAI.I. — A C T I AI. SIZE OVER 40 V E A R S OF O P T I C A L S K R V I C E OR C A L L P L A Z A 5-0498 FOH F U R T H E R S. We LAYTON, INC. OPTOMETRIST ft OPTICIANS 130 EAST 59th STREET. NEW YORK CITY Bctwavn Park and Lexington Ave. only Blue Shield COFVTN more th«n 160,000 New York State Employee* and their familiet under the Three Part Statewido Plan, Tailored to protect your family against the financial burden of minor illness, serious illness and catastrophic illness, the Statewide Plan includes Blue Cross hospital benefits^ Blua Shield doctor beneiits and added Metropolitan Major* Medical coverag*, AND ( BLUE SHIELD COVERS ALMOST SEVEN MILLION NEW YORK STATE RESIDENTS^ BLUE C R O S S - P A Y S MOST HOSPITAL BILLS IN FULL Today's new era of medicine means new drugs and medicines, new life saving equipment, new and modern techniques. And, many of these items are expensive. A recent actual- bill from the Blue Cross files show $2,244.95 paid in full for a New York State employee. Laboratory examinations alone were $293.50. This is just an illustration of the kind of bill you could face and the kind of job your Statewide Plan can do for you. BLUE SHIELD-APPROVED BY THOSE WHO KNOW MEDICINE Doctors know the problems of paying for medical care. That is why they developed Blue Shield as the method of paying doctor bills. And, that is why more than 23,000 doctors in New York State are participatini phyaiciam. T o back up your Blue Cross for hospital bills, Blue Shield covers surgical and in-hospital medical cars by your own private physician, plus allowances for anesthetists fees and for radiation therapy^. Provides payment in full for nonmaternity care by any participating physician - - if your annual income is $6,000 or less ($4000 if single). MAJOR-MEDICAL*-PAYS UP TO $15,000 IN BENEFITS It's a comfort to know that many "extra" medical expenses such as prescribed drugs, home and office doctor care, and x-ray treatment ara included. Pays, after a $50. deductible, 80% of covered medical expenses. And, Major-Medical alone provides up to $7,500 in Medical expenses in a calendar year and $15,000 total for each individual. For tuU iniormaiion about tht low-ao9t Stattwid* Pluu «e« your peraonnel or payroll officer today! IBTXTK C R O S S * a^xid ALBANY, BUFFALO, JAMESTOWN, NEW YORK, ROCHESTIR, 8YRACUSI, IITICA, WATIRTOWM •ftevidid by UetniMUtu Ult laiumM Goiaptiiik LROAL STATE TESTS NOW OPEN NOTICK W R I G H T , J O S E P H I N E L . H. — CITATION. — THE PEOPLE 0»' THE STATE OF NEW YORK BY THE GKACE OF OOD F R E E AND INDEPENDENT, TO: ROBERT D. B R I G H T , I n d i v i d u a l l y , Hiid M c x e c i i t o r o f the I.ant W i l l and T c s l i i m c n t of Blanche Dcnio Biiirht. d e c e a s e d ; EDWARD HAPGOOD BRIGHT; TIMOT H Y ORNE BRIGHT; BEATRICE DENIO BRIGHT WOODWARD; MICHAEL PIJOAN BRIGHT TRIJJILI/) WOODWARD, «n infant under the sue of fourteen years; ROBERT D. BRIGHT, JR.; DAVID H. WRIGHT; E. STEVENS WRIGHT, an infant over tho asre of f o u r t e e n y e a r s ; P E R S I S S. W . DYOTT; G E O R G E R . B. D Y O ' F r ; M A R K HAMILTON DYO'rr; MICHAEL STEVENS D Y O T T ; E V E L Y N C H E R Y L D Y O T f , an I n f a n t under t h e age of f o u r t e e n y e a r s ; LAWRENCE L. WRIGHT; LAWRENCE A N T H O N Y W R I G H T ; an i n f a n t o v e r the age of fourteen years; S A R A H P E R K I N S WRIGHT, an infant over the UKB uf l o u r t e e n y e a r s ; lieinff the persons inter•sted as beneficiaries or o t h e r w i s e tinder the Last W i l l and T e s t a m e n t of Jose phine L . H. W r i g h t , deceased, of the •rust created under A r t i c l e S E C O N D f o r t h e benefit of B l a n c h e D e n l o BriBht, deceased, and others, said decedent havintc died on June 4 , I D I U , a resident o f the City, County and S t a t e o f New Y'ork, BEND G R E E T I N G : Upon the petition of The Hanover B a n k , a c o r p o r a t i o n h a v i n i its principal o f f l e e at N o . 70 B r o a d w a y , C i t y , County and S l a t e of N e w Y o r k , aa trustee of t h e trust herein. T O U and each of y o u a i e h e i e b y c i t ( ^ to show cause before the Sunogales C o u r t of N e w Y o r k City held at the H a l l o f R e c o r d s in the C o u n t y o f N e w York o n t h e l U t h d a y of M a y , 1 0 6 » . at half p a s t ten o ' c l o c k in t h e f o r e n o o n of that day, why a judicial settlement should n o t be had o f t h e account o f proceetTI n r s of T h e H a n o v e r Bank, as trustee under t h e L a s t W i l l and T e s t a m e n t of Josephine L. H. Wright, deceased, of t h e trust created under A r t i c l e S E C O N D f o r the benefit of B l a n c h e D e n i o B r i g h t , deceased, and others, c o v e r i n g the p e r i o d f r o m June 10, 194S t o J u l y 7, 1W58. and p e t i t i o n e r b e a u t h o r i z e d t o p a y o v e r oneh a l f of t h e p r i n c i p a l of t h e trust f u n d h e r e i n accounted f o r to R o b e r t D. B r i g l u . and o n e - f o u r t h of the principal of the I r u i t f u n d herein accounted f o r to Edw a r d H a p g o o d B r i g h t , and w h y the L a s t Will and T e s t a m e n t of Blanche Denlo Bright, deceased, and m o r e particularly A r t i c l e s S E C O N D and S E V E N T H t h e r e o f , • h o u l d not be construed, and w h y , iC it •hould be d e t e r m i n e d that an invalid trust w a s created i n s o f a r as the appointment of one-fourth of the said trust herein t o T i m o t h y Orne B r i g h t , w h y the Last Will and T e s t a m e n t of Josephine X . H . W r i g h t , deceased, and m o r e parWcularly, A r t i c l e S E C O N D t h e r e o f , should n o t be oonslrued and w h y . if it siiould be determined that the further trust created for the benefit of Robert D. B r i g h t , as t o h a l f of t h e said one-fovirni U v a h d , w h y t h e said one-eighth o f the trust herein should n o t be held in f u r ther trust f o r R o b e r t D. B r i g h t , and w h y m c h o t h e r and f u r t h e r relief as t o this Court m a y seem just and p r o p e r in the premises should not be granted. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, we have caused tho seal o f tlie Surrog a t e ' s C o u r t of t h e said C o u n t y of N e w Y o r k l o be h e r e t o a f fixed. W I T N E S S , HONORABLE 8. S a m u e l Di F a l c o a S u r r o g a t e <••*!.) of our said Coiint.v, at the C o u n t y of N e w Y o r k , the '.ifi d a y o f M a r c h in the y e a r of Oiir Lord one thousand nine hundred and f i f t y - n i n e . • / PHILIP A. DONAHUE C l e r k of t h e S u r r o g a t e ' s Court Hundreds of Jobs wil' be filled from examinations conducted by the New York State Department of Civil Service, for which fillhgs are open now. ^^nless otherwise indicated, candidates for these examination," must be United States citizens and mus^ have been legal residents of New York State for at least one year immediately preceding the examination date. See the key at the end for requirements indicated by symbols. 2027. Traffic and park officer. Long Island State Park Commission, summer only, requires four months residence in the 10th Judicial District, until April 17. 2055. Senior rent examiner, $5,280 to $6,460, until May 8, Requires four months legal residence in Fifth, Seventh or Eighth Judicial Districts. 2056. Junior rent examiner, $3,670 to $4,580, until May 8. 2057. Assistant building electrical engineer, $6,140 to ,7,490, until May 8. 2058. Assistant forest surveyor, $3,870 to $4,810, until May 8. 2059. Junior forest surveyor, $3,480 to $4,360, until May 8. 2060. Railroad equipment inspector (electric), $5,020 to $6,150, until May 8. 2061. Stationary engineer, $4,080 to $5,050, until May 8. 2062. Farm manager, $4,770 to $5,860, until May 8. 2063. Safety field representative, $5,280 to $6,460, until May 8. 2064. Safety field representative (fire), $5,280 to $6,460, until May 8. 2065. Safety field representative (police), $5,280 to $6,460, until May 8. C I T A T I O N . — T H E P E O P L E OF T H E iTATE OP NEW YORK, BY THF. CRACE OF GOD, FREE AND INDEP E N D E N T T O A t t o r n e y General of the • tate of N e w Y o r k ; P o l y x e n i Kiribirogl o t i ; K y r i s k i K m o l i d e s ; Y o s k i m C. A b a t •Idis; P a n t e l i s G. A b a t z i d i s : Dometriui O. A b a t z i d i s ; Consul General of Greece; and to " M a r y Doe" the name "\rary D o e " being f i c t i t i o u s , the a l l e g e d w i d o w of Nicholas Sarafldis, also known as ' K i c h o l a s H . Saraftdis and N i c h o l a s Sarafldes, deceased, if l i v i n g and if dead, to t h e e x e c u t o r s , a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , distributees and assigns of Mary Doe" deceased, w h o s e names and post o f f i c e a<ldi'esses are u n k n o w n and catmot after diligent Inquiry be ascertained by t h e petitioneiherein; and to the distributees of Nicholas flaralldis. also known as Nicholas H. •arafidis aJid Nicholas SaraHdes. deceased, w h o s e names and post o f f i c e u l Aresses are u n k n o w n and c a i m o t after diligent inquiry be ascertained by the petitioner herein; b e i n g t h e persons interested as creditors, distributees or otherwise in the M t a t e of N i c h o l a s Sarafldis, also k n o w n a« Nicholas H. Sarafidis lUld Nicholas SaraftdcB. deceased, w h o at t h e t i m e o f hlft death w a s a resident of East « 6 t h Street, N e w Y o r k , N . Y. Send G R E E T I N G : n p o n the petition of T h e Public Ad• l i n i s l r a t o r o l the County of N e w York, having his office at Hall of Records, R o o m .30U, B o r o u g h of M a n h a t t a n , C i t y and County of N e w Y o r k , as administ r a t o r of the goods, c h a t t e l s and credits o f said deceased: T o i l and each of y o u are h e r e b y cited to show cause before the Surrogate's Court of N e w Y o r k C o u n t y , held at t h e Ball of Records. Room fiUU, in the C o u n t y of N e w Y o r k , on the l U t h d a y of M a y , 1960. at h a l f - p a s t ten o ' c l o c k In t h e f o r e n o o n of t h a t d a y , w h y the accM>unt of proceedings of The Public Administrator of the County of New York, as administrator of the goods, chattels and creilits of said de^-eased, • h o u l d not be j u d i c i a l l y settled. In I'estlniuny Whereof, We have cause<l the seal of the S u r r o g a t e ' s C o u r t o f I h e said County of N e w Y o r k t o be hereunto affixed. Witness. Honorable J O S E P H A. COX a S u r r o g a t e of o u r said C o u n t y , at the C o u n t y of New York, (leal) the Uth itay of A p r i l In the y e a r of o u r L o r d one t h o u s a n d nine hundred and f i f t y - n i n e . P H I L I P A. DONAHUE Clerk of the S u r r o g a t e ' s C o u r t . FREE B O O K L E T by U. S. Gov •rnment on Social Security. Mall only. Leader, 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y. YANKEE TRAVELER N. Y. TRAVEL CLDII Albany 4-6727—«2-3851 Troy, ARscnal 3-0680 T o Ihe best dining places and play areas. L v . Troy & Albany. Tankre Traveler Travel Club buses take you over Ihe enuntryslde of Northeastern N e w York State. Sunday, A p r i l the Ittth, Adventure In good eating at Putricla Murphy's Candle Light Restaurant. $iS.80. May the «,1rd and 24th N e w Y o r k City r h m t r e T o u r , Tickets f o r either M y Fair Lady or Red Head. Transportation luggage, gratuities. Theatre tickets. In the urrhestra. ('.{8.00. S P K N I ) LESS, SEE M O R E ; W I T H YANKEE TRAVEL TOIR A LIMITED SPACE NOW AVAILABLE For Monthly PARKING Coll E. Wagar, Mgr. .3-9800 •r apply Pigeonhole Parking 55 C H A P E L STREKT ALBANY. N. Y. In Time of Need, Call M. W. Tebbutfs Sons 176 state 12 Colvin Alb. 3-2179 Alb. 89 0 1 U 420 Kenwood Delmar 9-2212 Over J 07 Y»ar$ OliflRfHliked fumral CHURCH NOTICE C A P r r O L AREA COUNCIL OP CHURCHES 73 Churches united for Church and Community Service 2066. ehlef, Bureau of Fire Safety. $9,220 to $11,050, until May 8. ROOM FOR RENT—ALBANY 2067. Chief, Bureau of General L A H G E , L i g h t ik A i r y . N e w l y d e c o r a t e d . ALL YOU WANT TO EAT . . . N e a r ( 1 b l o c k ) t o all S t a t e B l d g t . $6-$8 A n d w h a t Is still m o r e iinportniit, the Safety. $9,220 to $11,050, until t i n g l e . $ 1 6 d o u b l e . P h o n e 4 - 3 4 1 0 , daya, k i n d o l f o o d t o g i v e y o u an m i p e i l t e . 2-6788 evenings. Y e s , y o u ' l l l e a v e o u r t a b l e satisfleil w i t h May 8. o u r p o r t i o n s , s a t i s f i e d m o r e o v e r that y o u 2068. Safety consultant, $6,140 h a v e eaten the b e s t . O u r buyers p u r c h s e e only flrst-qunllty foods lor our chefs; to $7,490, until May 8. A U T O S , new and used. See and o\ir French c h e f s — h o w w e l l y o u ' l l *''2467. Head nurse, Tompkins k n o w , o n c e y o u ' v e eaten h e r e — l i n o w h o w weekly listing: in a d v e r t i s i n r t o p r e p a r e t h e i r dishes t o mnlte d i n i n g County, $3,660 to $4,655, May 8. a pleasure. P E T I T P A R I S , lOflO M a d i s o n **2468. Senior nurse, Tompkins columns of The Leader. Ave., Albany, N. Y . County, $1.68 to $2.08 an hour, until May 8. J * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ^ **2469. Supervising nurse, Tompkins County, $3,995 to $5,035, until May 8. 2471. Director of nursing, Westchester County, $6,230 to $7,990, until May 8. Open to residents of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. Chief surface line dispatcher, You haven't eaten until you've tasted the September 3-23, test December 2. S & B Bus Service R.D.-I, Box 6, Ranuelaer, M A Y F L O W E R • R O Y A L COITRT A P A R T M E N T S — Furrlshed. U n furnished, Mid Rooms. Phone 41934 (Albany). ef Service ARCO CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS and all tests PLAZA BOOK SHOP 380 iroadway Albony, N. Y. Mail & Phone Orders Filled A R E y o u a sale driver? A r e you lamiliar w i t h the A l b a n y city sti-eetsy A r e y o u o v e r ',25 Veaiv o l a « e V T h e most m o d f r n radio e q u i p p e d l a x i fleet ia n o w accepting appiioatioiis o l eniploynieiU, I I y o u m e e t the a b o v e rctuiircments. I ' A K T T I M E W O R K A V A I L A B L E . COMM18810N.S U P T O 4 : 1 % . W E S U P P L T tiA8. OIL AND MAINTENANCE. A I ' F L Y r i N E H I L L H T A X I , 181 Lvk St., A l b a n y , N . Y . , b e t w e e n U and l l i S O A . M . <UUy. NEW... THE CHARCOAL GRILLE ROOM steaks cooked to order, before your eyes, over an open fire in oiir C H A R C O A L G R I L L E R O O M . . . Open 10 A . M . to mignight. Assistab\ supervisor (cars and shops), September 3-23, test D e cember 11. Structure maintalner, group D, October 7-27, test January 25, 1960. NEW Assistant foreman fistructuresE ) , October 7-27, test January 15, 1960. in ALBANY at the SHERATON Assistant supervisor (turnstiles), October 7-27, test January 6, 1960. - T E N E Y C K HOTEL. Merqan J. Smitb, Mgr. ?**********«****************»******»************•»!! FOR STATE EMPLOYEES Commercial Bank CHECK-CREDIT is an ideal way to borrow money when it is needed... YOU CAN BUY WHAT YOU WANT, WHEN YOU WANT, WHERE YOU W A N T . . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ / This service was designed for responsible people such as State Employees who live or work in areas served by The National Commercial Bank and Trust Company. Dignified . . . your name is distinctively printed on all checks. Life Insurance protection . . . at small cost. Monthly statement . . . indicating checks paid, balance due, interest and available credit. Available to everyone . . . age 21 snd over. Repay by mail . . . or in person at anv of our conveniently located Offices. A continuing credit . . . as you repay, the money becomes available again for your use. Private . . . your checks look like all others. Individual as well as joint accounts for husband and wife. Obtain an application at your nearest National Commercial Bank Office or fill in and mail the coupon below. SEND FOR Y O U R A P P L I C A T I O N - T O D A Y I Use this handy chart to help you select the amount of your credit This ich.dul. thowi hew t h . amount of cr.dit !i d.Urmln.d, U i . any paymtnt bttw*.n$20. and (400; multiply by 4w.lv*. That will b . your amount of crtdit. Monthly Payment $ 20 $ 50 $ 75 $100 COMMERCIAL BANK CHECK-CREDIT The National Commercial Bank and Truti Co. P.O. Box 748, Albany, N. V. Amount of Credit $ $ $ $400 Moxintum Credit I A M A STATE I M P I C Y E E . P l E A S t SEND MB 240 600 900 AN APPLICATION FOR C O M M E R C I A L SANK CHECK-CREDIT. ( P l s o i * Print) $1,200 $4,800 Name... Addrsil... $5,000 ..tloK... City... THE NATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY ALBANY, N. Y . MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT 2S> Offices * • % * • * » Serving INSURANCE Northeastern CORPORATION New York REPORT ON NYC EXAMS E X - F I R E M A N SUES FOR REINSTATEMENT E G R E S S The following table is the current progress repart on the most popular New York City examinations. The present status is given, followed by a statement of the next step: Housing caretaker, investigations being conducted. Establishment of list when investigations are completed. Qualifying medical-physicals completed. Fireman, Fire Department. Medicals are still going on. 3,481 failed the written test. Plumber & plumbing inspector, examination completed. Tentative key answers released. Asphalt worker. A promotion examination was given February 28 for 644 workers. Key answers released. Probation officer written ex.-,m held for 404 applicants. Refrigerating machine operator. 605 will take license tests April 18. Motor electrician. 125 will take license test April 19. Elevator starter, written test held. Tentative key answers published. Question 49 changed from " C r to " C " or " D " . Ihructure maintainer (promotion), performance test completed. Result notices mailed. Sewage treatment worker, 1,822 scheduled for written examination April 4. Tentative key answers released. Assistant s t a t i o n supervisor, Bureau of Transit, corrected list notices sent to 157 eligibles. Motorman, Bureau ofTransit. 431 tooV written test April 4. Motorman instructor. of Transit. 418 to take test April 18. Inspector of buildings, changes in key answers: item B, from D to D, B and C; 13, from C to C and A; 26 from C to C and B. Patrolman, Police Department, list established with 3,831 names. College office assistant, list established with 340 names. 3e AnAn^el Mr. Marrero, represented by Attorney Samuel ResnlcofT, claims that his dismissal was arbitrary because not based on his work performance, but on alleged facts which were unrelated to his duties as a fireman. : A M A Z I N G NEW UNIVERSAL give ELECTRIC HOUSEWARES - The Very Best America's '1 Coffeemaker 'p^/T^J^ UNIVERSAL HAILED BY DOCTORS FOR RELIEF OF ASTHMA, SINUS, AND ALLERGIES wMt oil th* from only A remarkable new "Puritron" has been developed by electronic scientists. It is being acclaimed by doc-; tors after they buy it and! see it work in their o w n j h o m e s , f o r their o w n f a m i lies - and for their patients in their offices and operat* ing rooms. laiMus WwrM $19.95 Matching TOASTER P U R I T R O N clears any r o o m of irritating dust, odors, pollen and smoke. It's better than a kitchen exhaust fan. Ifco porfwt cemponien piMO M htt on4 onvrolo Juit f»itt In; It'i r * n a W « I RSAO WHAT DOCTORS AND USiRS SAY AROUT PURITRON I "SurpaiMd alJ u p c c U t i o n l . P e r f o r m , miracle, for a dust allergy patient'* (Pcnnajrivania doctor) . . . " F o r the first time Z woke up without sinus trouble" ( New Jersey M D ) . . . "Controlled a stubborn form of respiratory allergy in my daughter, a g . t " (Southern physician) St George Assn. Plans Communion Chapter 67 of the St. George Association, of the New York City Health Association, will hold its third annual Holy Communion and Breakfast this Sunday. Holy Communion Service will be held at 8 A.M. at St. Bartholomew's Protestant Episcopal Church, 50th St. and Park Ave. Communion Breakfast will be served In the Empire Room of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. Frank J. Marrero, dismissed as a fireman (F.D.) last year while servlnrf his probationary period, instituted reinstatement Bureau proceedings in the New York written County Supi'eme Court. Just " F i r s t time In 13 years my aon has ttepl with hia mouth c l o s e d . . . not fighting to breathe. N o sore throat, no cracked lips. T o the inventor and manufacturer, my thanks." • " T r i e d so far only one day and found it gave marvelous relief. Thanksl" • " I get asthma with hay fever and that's why I bought Puritron. Believe me It la wonderful. Makes me breathe e a s i e r . . . and sleep. ( A H testimonials above wera ansoliclttd.) Downtown's Leading Dept. Right Universal |uit $ 1 9 . 9 5 Gifts From UNIVERSAL ROEBLINC Store HEINS & BOLET 155 EAST 44th STREET NEW YORK MUrrtiy Hill 2-4441 68 CORTLANDT STREET NEW YORK CITY RE 2-7600 r « r Real Estate Baya S e e P a t e 11 " S a y Y o u Raw I t i n T h e Leader" HOW MUCH PROTECTION DID GHI GIVE STATE EMPLOYEES? The type of doctort' preventive and curative servicei (both In end out-of-hotp!tal) used by itate employee* covered by the G H I Option ii summarized below: A detailed report of Doctor Bill Insurance payments made under the G H I Option during the first 12 months of the State Employees' Insurance Program has been prepared Temporary Health Insurance Board, The extent of for the Doctors' GHI services paid for, as documented in the report, Is of importance Out-et-He$pltal Doctors' Homo Colls Visit to Doctors' OtRco Surgery Dlof noitic X-Rays Dtagaostic Lob Tests AHHital Physicals ImmHiiiiatlans Woll-laby Caro IMiysie-Tlierapy Spociaiist ConsHltetloMs Allorglos VIsltiRf Nurse Service to all state employees. OVER 80% OF GHI INSURED EMPLOYCES RECEIVED BENEFITS The GHI Option paid for 1U,66^ Home and Office Visits — almost three and one half Doctor Calls f o r every G H I subscriber and dependent. But there Is more to G H I protection. Utilization of forms of doctors' «ervices showed that G H I paid f o r than five claims per employee iK-HutplM Surqory Medical C e r e MWtoruity Spociaiist Ceesuitatioes Radiatioe Therapy all more contract, PAYMENTS FROM FIRST VISIT TO ANY DOCTOR Total or Office Visit without any dollar Insurance. You tan, of course, choose my deductible doctor or co. 1 I IK i n I I i• MyjTHlOOCIW Bills* 67.3% 32.7% For more Information about G H I . om- Subscriber Relatlong Service is ready to explain Uie vaiious beneflU, protections, fees, limitations and exeluslons under the G H I Option. Please feel free to call or write for prompt, courteous attention. 'rrba 0Mm( Kon-Prufl( MvdUiil InturMicc Orianliiitlun 100.0% RIMIMIIR: No matter which Medical Optlea yo« have chosoN, I V i R Y state omployoo has tke seme 120-day i i u e Cross Hospital Piaii Coverage. anywhere in the world. iMftTlffoOCTMIIlU DOLLARS PAID FOR C L A I M S -i^Sarvic* BtntfiU and iti* CounHai In which th* G H I Option it avaiUbU art fully datcribad In your Iniuranco Handbcok. G H I makes payments f r o m the very first Doctor's Home Call BENEFITS* Btriinf the N«w York ComiiiuiiU)" GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE, INC. 221 Fourih Avenue, N. Y. 3, N. Y. • • run iH( DOCTOR etiis * SPring 7-6000 ^MVS THE OOCTOR BIllS* t i'V 1 L fit S E R V I C R L E A D E K REAL ESTATE BUYS Heo/d Leodt Of New York EAST ELMHyRST & FLUSHING 1 family, l-'liinhjuif. M Iririfft rooms w i t h trnruyp, M b ^ s f o ^ sliinjfM by .Tohtn M a n v i l l f ' . oil htntipr. l»ritv 913,000. Low Down Paytntvjf. I V r n n , JACKSON HEIGHTS T w o Xaniily. 5 an.I il. hrick jfiarfire brass plumblnip. KjcreMi'iif comliUon, tfood buy at ^'-{1.500 witU teriin. NEW 1 ft 2 FAMILY HOMES AVAILABLE 26-OS 94th Street JaclHon H e l i t h n — T\V 9 8 7 1 7 Open Sunday B e t w f w n V i - 4 I*. M . HEMPSTEAD NOW BUILDING VICTORIA MILLER BROKER. IV 3-6024 UPSTATE PROPERTY M 4,290 A r t l « Hmcllpv A L B A N Y CAIMTOI. HISTKK T C H K A l - I I O S I I ' X It A C K K VOKS N o . 1 8 l f l A l l a i i i i i n t 4 Imilini. h o m e , b a t h , cellar, h . w . oil linat, lot (III * liilU. I ' r l c e $5,BOO. — Nu. n ; j ; l A l t a m n n t 4 bcilrin. h o m e , b a t h , Jipti'., cnllar, ;i s c i e s . T r i c e $0,000. — N o . i m r K n o * S beilnn. home, b a t h , c e l l a r , about acre. P r i r a ll>r>,500. — N o . 1817-B 1.1 aiTi'i, inacihii, rd, in Heldcrberita. I ' r l r e lennl. — No. lHn» .Sti>nli.r M i c l m r U o i i Gary Realty Co. EO 3-4666 Sales Aqents Stands for Qualify and Progress" DONBAR ESTATES Shoppers Service Guide tales Help Wanted—Men FULL OR PART TIME ADVERTISING N O V E L T I E S CALENDARS PRINTING Bring daily comniissiun when y o u • e l l o u r line. incUuliiiK i m p r i n t e d B a l l PiMH low a.s l o r lUO & embossed Calc-nclars linv as $.5.115 f o r 100, B i g Season N o w on. A L S O B I G LINE ONION LABHI, KISINESS I'RINTINU. tULI. on I ' A U T TLMH. BIG F R E E SALES KIT Sec M r . F i n k e l s t e i n N A T I O N A L IMtESS OF N . Y . • 8 1 B r o a d w a y . N. V. Room 700 T i i w - W e d . II .') T h u r s . 9-4 :;)0. B-7 i $1.80 p»r parson, r m / b d & bath in Resort M E X I C O F a b u l o u s l o w cost vacaHbnB, Send $!{()(» Tor Directory. Satisfaction Guaranteed R E. Briffault. 110 Post Ava. N Y » 4 . N y Business Opportunities WOMEN Earn part-tnne m o n e y at h o m e , addressing envelopt's ( t y p t m g or l o n g h a n d ) f o r adverti.sers M a l l $1 for Instruction M a n u a l tellUig h o w ( M o n e y - b a c k gua.~antaal S t e r i i n j V a l v e Co.. Corona, N . Y. FOR SALE TYPEWRITER BARGAINS S m l t h . $ 1 7 SO: U n d e r w o o d - $ 3 3 , 6 0 : o t h e r s Peurl Uros, 47U Sniith, Bkn, T H fi-3024 Services T K A ( V 8 1 < ; K V I t l N 0 C'OKF, Sales Sl S e r v i c e recond Refrigs Stoves. W a s h . Machines, c o m b o siniis. Guaranteed T R A C Y H E t n i l O K R A T I O N — C Y 2-5800 2 4 0 H 140 St & l ' : 0 4 Castle H i l l A v . Bx OPPORTUNITY flrsat deniiiihi in Itieriilivu iu-iiuty Held. One day Cri^c trial. L e a r n at M. L E W I S •OHOOL BEAUTY OULTUHE, < » West ; H t h S t . . N Y , UR a-(iau5. Keep your job. Work part time. Earn O'.iOO-S.iOO moLiih Can build into f u l l t i m e business. Ideal h u s b a n d - w i f e teams. Circla T-0818. TALENT WANTED For House For Sole SUFFOLK C O U N T Y Low C o s t • Mexican Vocation Appliance lli:i.l> WANTED l\l II.I-: and FKMALE UTILITIES Books BOOKS Off ALL i'URLISHERS—Civil Service & R e v i e w — J O E ' S BOOK S H O P 550 B r o a d w a y , A l b a n y , N Y K.'.'ortlinj;!;, Sontrs P u b l i s h e d and i u|i\riKlued. t ' o n t a c t : .Mr. Palatta T\V T-'ilMO Hf.7,P K A\TEl) . B-LiUl th:M.4LE PART-TIME JOB OPPORTUNITIES HOW TO GET Tliat Part Time Job A handbook o l j o b o p p o r l u n i l i c B a v a l l a b i t B o w . by S Norman Feingold h Uarold pill (ot sludoiiis, for e m p l o y e d adults » n d people ovoi 05 Gel this I n v a l u a b l e fulde for $ 1 5 0 plus 10c for mailing lend to I.EADDU UOOK STORE, 07 Dunne Street. N Y C CORBITT, GERTRUDP. ( a l s o k n o w n as MARY GERTRUDE ( O R H l T T l . — File N o . P S55, 1 U 5 9 — C I T A T I O N . — T h e P e o p l e o f the S l a t e of N e w Y o r k , By the Grace of God F r e e and Independent, T o C h a r l o t t e De Clinclianip DM Buiiexic. YOU A R E IIERKIIY CITED TO SHOW C.\USE b e f o r e the Surros:ite'.« Court, N e w Y o r k C o u n t y , at R o o m 5 0 1 in the Hall of R e c o r d s in the County of N e w Y o r l t , N e w Y o r k , on M a y 11, 10511. at 1 0 : 3 0 A . M . . w h y a certain writiut; dated July 3, 1958 w h i c h has been o f f e r e d f o r p r o b a t e by T h e H a n o v e r B a n k , located at 70 Broadw a y , N e w Y o r k , N, Y . , and by A l b e r t B, M a g i n n e s residinit at ! t l ' ; N o r l h Street, White Plains N , Y , Hhould not be probated as the last W i l l and Testament, rehatine t o real and |icr.<onal p r o p e r l y , of Gertrude C o r b i t t lal-io k n o w n as M a r y Gertrude C o r b i i l ) Deiea.scd. w h o w a s at t h e t i m e o t h e r d e a l h a resident of 7U0 P a r k A v e n u e , M a n l i a i i a n , in tha C o u n t y of N e w Y o r k . N e w Y o r k . Attested and Sealed March 13, H O N . 3. S A M t r K L Di F A L C O . Surrosate. New Y o r k County. P H I L I P A. D O N A H U E . Clerk. KELLEY. DRYE. N E W H A L L & MAGINNE.S, Attorneys for Proponents. 70 B r o a d w a y , N e w Y o r k 4, N e w York, [Seal.] Typewriters Adding Machines Addreising Machines Mimeographs UuaranlemI Also Kentils, Prepare for HYC Test— Application Open Soon Kepalrs ALL LANGUAGES TYPEWRITER C O . 119 w . e a r d s r . , N K W v o u k ciiuisiia a - 8 o s e Clerk Study Book rh« Authentic Arco Volume, $3 i , N. I, LEADER BOOK STORE 97 DUANE STREET NEW YORK 7, N. Y. Personal Notice • AIR removed PLM'manejitly. clcctroiysl^, DO r e g r o w l h tiuurantecil iu e\i'ry case, 2H yciirti' c x p c : i c n c e Krucst und Mildred Swansou, 113 Slate, A l b a n y . N . ? • -1UHS, R O O M ranch w i i h i-n.-ln^-il c a r p o r t on 7 6 l l 0 0 p l o t , gas heat, f - n l r a l l y located f o r e m p l o y m e n t . fta.Tilii'e .H8.500. E O 9-24.'!l. Call a f t e r 5 P . M . Dated, 1939. AlfTOS, new and used. See weekly listing in a d v e r t i s i n g column* of The Leader. "Say You Saw It T h * Leader" In HAZEL B. GRAY Lie. Broker 109-30 MERRICK BLVD. JAMAICA Entrance 109th Rd. AX 1-5858-9 HOUSE FOR S A L E Orange County R e t l r l n r soon? L i O e rent f r e e iii 2 - f a m i l y house in the c o u n t r y 60 m i . f r o m NYC SIW.OOO o n l y 3 yrs old. R e n t e d a p t . carries W r i t e B o x 141 c / o T h e L o a d e r , 1»T D u a n e St., N Y C , LEGAL. 3 U N D I C L L CO.. I N C 3 0 0 Central A v e n u e , Albany. N Y T'l 4.i;,S00 Quaker M a f d A & R DIVISIONS •I, Dr. Henry T. Heald, president of the Ford Foundation, has acThe followiut directions tell where to apply for public Jobs cepted the chairmanship of the and how to reach destinations Public Service Division of tfte In New York City on the transit Greater New York Fund's 1959 system. appeal, according to Clifton W . NEW YORK CITY—The DBPhalen, president of the New Yorlc partment of Personnel, 96 Duans Telephone Co., general chairman Street, New York 7, N. Y . ( M a n for the Fund campaign. This hattan) two blocks -.lorth of City Hall, Just west of Broadway, opyear's solicitation will begin In posite The Leader office. Hours May. 9 to 4, closed Saturdays, except to answer inquiries 9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880. Any mall InINTEGRATED tended for the N Y C DepartmenI R A N C H • NO C A S H G.I. of Personnel, other than applications for examinations, should ue addressed to the Personnel D e partment, 299 Broadway, New T h i s terrlflc non-development County ranch Is reduced $ 1 , 5 0 0 f o r q u i c k sale, York 7, N. Y. Mailed applications Fcnliiri'.3 larira bedrooms, diuluK for blanks must be received by r o o m , eat-in k i t c h e n o v e r s i z e d g a r a a e , the department at least five days b,TFrmrnt, set back on a q u a r t e r acre plot. prior to the closing date. Enclose self-addressed envelope, at least nine Inches wide, with six cents in stamps affixed. STATE — First Floor a. 270 452 SUNRISE HIGHWAY Broadway, Ne-w York 7, N. Y., corner Chambers Street, Tel, BAyshore 7-1350 BArclay 7-1616; S'^ate Campus 1 m i l e east of .5th A v e . , U a y s h o r * and lobby of State Office Building, Albany. N. Y „ Room 212; State Office Building, Buffalo 2, N Y, Hours 8:3P to 5, closed Saturdays; Room 400 ai 155 West ^..ain Street, Rochester, N. Y., HOLLIS Wednesdays only, 9 to 5. Also, an 1 f a m i l y , 7 larse rooms, partly finished Information office has recently b a s e m e n t , w o o d b u r n i n g tireplace, oil been opened at 221 Washington heat, l a m e dining r o o m . A l l in a b e a u l i f u l residential area. M a n y , m a n y e x i r a a . Street, Blnghamton. All of foreSee this at once, going applies also to exams for county jobs conducted by the $16,300 State Commission. Apply also to HOLLIS local offlcPT of the State Employ» f.aniily, b r i c k , 3 r o o m s d o w n and ment Service, but only In person r» roimiK up. O n l y 9 y e a r s old. modern or by representative, not by mall. t h r o u s h o l l l . C o n v e n i e n t t o schools and t r a n s p o r t a i i o n . A l l f o r only Mail application should be mads to State Civil Service Department $18,900 offices only; no stamped, self-addressed envelope to be enclosed. P u t trailer h o m e on tlii* A l l a n i o n t l:;o acrea, big dairy barn, coiicrcta s i l o , niiiU house, 2-story bld<. x 4 0 , rrpek. fine tractor workable aoii, all llll:il>la ("o home) n e w maodni. nl., mi. from A l b a n y . P r i c e JiH.OOO. t e n i i j — N « . 1HS7 S i ' h o h a r i s sec. B8 aciet, r>0 t l l l a W a , d a i r y barn 7 2 x SO w i t h slaiicliioni, bowls, elec., etc. Been w o r k e d & ready t o goM i l k h o u s e , ftranery, c b i i k e n l i m l w (no home) P r i c e -liH.SItO w i t h Sil ,(•()(» pnit, home) P r i c e $(l,5(>» witli IHLUOU pnit. Scores ol o t h e r s . F r e « c i r c u l a r N o . 130. O l B f e open weekends. P l u m e I I N c o n 1 - 8 1 H W A L T n E I X , A l . T A M O N T , N . If. I.ociiff.|) on R r o a i l w n y 3 lilooks o f l i r b a i i AvmtiiH, W r M t h i i r y , I . . . I n i K K C T I O N S : Nortlii-rii S t a t o I ' a r k w a j r ti> t : « i t (I'lwt A v e . ) . Turn riKliI on I'ONt A v e , HOMHI t o (Hd Conntr.r KOMII. T u r n l e f t on Old r n n i i t r y Kond 1 nille t o Vrhun A v i i . 'I'nrii ( e f l uii I ' r h a n A v e 3 b l o r k s t o K r o a f l w a y . T u r n l e f t o n H r o M l w A f s liliKtk* to m o d e U . Apply iob% 2 GOOD BUYS $21,760 priced from New Low PHA Down Payment! as Low as $600 DOWN 2 FAMILY .5 rooms up and 5 rooms down, large plot. Gas or oil, optional. Mortgage secured. 4 models Where to For Pubiit Drive Fund 1 4 , RUSSELL INTEGRATED NEW — A p r i l $8,990 EDWARD S. BUTTS REAL ESTATE Separate Full Site Dininq Room * Extra Large "Eat-In" Kitchen • Built-in Oven and Ranqe • 3 Extra Larqe Bedroomi • Fully Insulated • Solid Number 1 Oak Floori * Ceramic Colored Tile * Slidinq G l a i s Doori from Dining Room * Brick Livinq Room Wall with Full Wood-burninq Fireplace • Extra Full Bath with Stall Shower in Matter Bedroom T u M i l a y ; U. S.—Second Regional Office, U. 8. Civil Service Commission, 641 Washington Street, New Yorlc 14, N. Y . (Manhattan) Hours 8:30 to 5, Monday through Friday; cl s e ' Saturday. Tel. WAtklns 4 1000. Applications also obtainable Boards of Examiners of separate at main post offices, except the New York, N. Y., post office, agencies also issue applications for Jobs In their Jurisdiction. Mall a p plications require no stamps on envelope for return. NOTICB P U R S U A N T TO A N ORDER OF HONO R A B L E S. S A M U E L D i F A L C O , S u r r o j a t s o t the County of N e w Y o r k , N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N , a c c o r d i n * to l a w . t o all peisons h a v i n j c l a i m s aitainst D A V I D T . B O N N E R , late o f tha City o t N e w Y o r k , in said C o u n t y , deceased, t o present the same, w i t h t h e v o u c h e r s thereo f , t o the u n d e r s i j n e d . A d m i n i s t r a t r i x o t the Goods, Chattels and C r e d i l s o t the said deceased, at the office o f H E N R Y S T E I N B E R f i . attorney f o r l h « Administratrix. N o . 3 4 3 M a d i s o n A v e n u e , In the C i l y and C o u n t y of N e w Y o r k , on or b e f o r a tha 1st day o f O c t o b e r , 1959 Dated, this I S t h day o f M a r c h , 1 9 5 9 , L e i e h C, Bonner, A d m i n i s t r a t r l * E S T A T E OF D A V I D T, B O N N E R CITATION T H E P E O P L E OP T H E S T A T E OF N E W YORK—By the Grace o f God Frea and Independent TO F A N N I E STOCK, E L I S E L , ROSEBURY, L I S A G A L E R O S E B U R Y . an inf a n t under 14 years, N A N C Y LAUREN ROSEBURY, an i n f a n t under 14 years, JAMES CHARLES ROSEBURY, an inf a n t under 14 years, W I L L I A M F , S T O C K JR., C A R L AUGUST KOEHLER, ELSA KOEHLER EDWARDS, CHRISTINE E, KOEHLER, an i n f a n t under 14 vears, CARL A, KOEHLER, JR„ SANDRA E, K O E H L E R , S U S A N E D W A R D S , an i n f a n t under 14 ,vear5, N . A N C I E D W A R D . S . an i n f a n t under 14 years, J U L I E E D W A R D S , an i n f a n t under 14 years, b e i n s t h e persons interested as creditors, Icg-atees, devisees, beneQciaries, distributees, or nthcrwiso in the estate of K A T E E, E N G E L , deceased, w h o at t h e t i m e of her dc,iih w a s a resident ot 203 Central P j i r k W e s t , M a n h a t t a n , N e w Y o r k City, N , Y SEND GREETING, Upon t h e petition o t M A B E L R , B A U E R D O R F . rcsidins at 31 East 73nd Street, N e w Y o r k C i l y . N . Y . as E x e c u t r i x o t the I.ast W i l l and T e s t a m e n t of C H A R L E S R . B . V U E R D O R E , deceased E x e c u t o r o t and T r u s t e e under tha L a s t W i l l and T e s t a ment o t K . V T E E . E N G E L and ot B A N K E R S T R U S T C O M P A N Y , havinit its principal otlica at 10 W a l l Street, N e w York Cily. N,Y. Surviving E.vecutor of and TruBtco under the L a s t W i l l and T e s t a m e n t o t said K A T E E . E N G E L , deceased. Y o n and each o t y o u are h e r e b y cited to s h o w cause b c f o r o the S u r r o g a t e ' s Court ot .New Y o r k C o u n t y , held at tha H a l l o t R e c o r d s , in the County of N e w Y o r k on the l O l h d a y o t M a y 1 9 5 9 , at h a l t p,ist len o ' c l o c k In tha f o r e n o o n o f t h a t day, w h y the F I N A L A C C O U N T o t Procccdinsrs o t C H A R L E . S R. BAUERDORF (ilecc.iscd) and B A N K E R S T R U S T COMP A N Y as E x e c u t o r s o t the L a s t W i l l and T e s t a m e n t of K A T E R . E N G E L . deceased aiiil w h y t h e I n t e r m e d i a t e A c c o u n t o t P r o ceedliiKS of B A N K E R S T R U S T C O M P A N Y as Survivius Trustea under said Last W i l l nnd T e s t a m e n t o f K A T E E. E N ' G E t , . decc,i6cd. should n o t be j u d i c i a l l y s e t t l n l . I N T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F , wa h a v e caused Ilia seal o t tho S u r r o s u t e ' s Court of tlia Bald County of N e w Y o r k t o be herciiiito alllxed. WITNESS. HONORABLE fl. SAMOEL Dl F A L C O , a S u r r o g a t e o t o u r said county. at t h e County o t N e w Y o r k , the 5th d a y . o f M a r c h in tha y e a r o f o u r L o r d ona thousand nina hundred and tlfty-nlna. PHILIP DONAHUE, (L.g.) Clerk a ( t b « 9 u r i u « s l e ' e Oourt T E A C H I N G JOBS — Apply to the Board of Education. 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn 1, N. Y Datr. on Application by Mall All three jurisdictions. Federal, State and City, Issue application blanks and receive fllled-out forms by mail. Both the U.S. and the State accept applications If postmarked not later than the closing date announced. But for N Y C exams, observe the rule for receipt of requests for applications at least five days before the closing date. IS CONVENIENT FOR BUSINESS OR PLEASURE Close to the glamorous theatre-andnightlife, shops and landmarks. J Express subway at our door takes you to any part of the city within a few minutes. That's convenience! A handy New York subway map is yours F R E E , f o r the writing. IMMEDIATE CONinRMEO RESERVATIONS in New York: Circle 7-3900 In AiiMny: 62-1232 In Rochester: LOcutt 2-6400 SInglei from {6.50 O e u b l e t f r o m $10.00 fC. L. O'Connor, Manager \ (i I. V^l L trntUmf^ Atirll > REAL S E R V ilX E L E A ,D,E II ESTATE > HOUSES - HOMES - CALL BE 3-6010 Page PROPERTIES CALL BE 3-6010 THE BEST GIFT O F ALL — YOUR OWN HOME LONG ISLAND fIcTca LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND THE ADVERTISERS IH THIS S E C T I O N HAVE ALL PLEDGED TO THE SHARKEY- BROWN LAW ON HOUSING N T I G R A T E D Only $300 Cash Down Payment MOLLIS — ST. ALBANS SOLID BRICK S400 DOWN $13,250 L a r t * 1 fomily with landscaptd plot, 3 bedrooms, modern kitchen and both, oil heat, garo9e. $79.50 Monthly to LIVE 90x100 LANDSCAPED PLOT 8 rooms, 2 patios, S bedrooms, oil heat, extras galore. OWNER ST. ALBANS $9,990 $300 GASH JEWEL REALTY 993A Prospect Ave. HOLLIS HOMES TO FIT YOUR POCKET" . . . SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANY HOME JAMAICA Parson Blvd. 6 & 8th Ave. Sub. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Hillcrest. Mollis, South SOUTH OZONE PARK 2 JA 3-3377 FAMILY $12,250 Fully detached, oil heat, nice land. Separate entrance to upstair* apt. Nr. everything. Bring Small Dapositl HURRY! LIVE RENT FREE R A T E D 1 FAMILY Detached, i rooms, oil heat, 1 car garaqe, full basement. Move right in on title. H Detached heme in Boisley Park, 5 rooms & 4 rooms, (apts), 2 baths, full basement, 40 x 100 plot, 5 rooms and bath bungalow in backyard. Needs handy.' mon. $1,500 cosh required. OWNER'S S A C R I F I C E U R R Y ! Large Selections of 1 & 2 FAMILY $9,000 to $12,000 U R R Y LET US SHOW YOU HOW MUCH OF A HOUSE YOU C A N BUY FOR SO LITTLE MONEY FINANCING IS NO FROBLEM IN OUR O F F I C E NATIONAL ! Many Unadvertised SPECIALS REAL ESTATE C O . 168-20 Hillside Av*. Jamaica 135-30 ROCKAWAY BLVD SO. OZONE PARK Tan Blvd. E or F T r a i n to T o r s o n t BITII. H 7 lai'KC r o o m s — newl.v re»ircocHfed. Mafrnlficent m o d e r n U»l<hen w i i h d e l i g h t f u l l y f u i n i ^ h f d (iinetle, family dining lootn, flabornte living room. f^nn 'drenched p o r c h . T h r e e bvSirht., airy b e d r o o m s , tiled b a t h . F u H k^aeement. Garajre. M.^ny e x ' r a e . I'ri.^ed rifrht at $ 1 6 , 0 0 0 . JA 9-5100-5101 O L 7-3838 O L 7-1034 160-13 HILLSIDE AVE. JAMAICA FULLY DETACHED — ON PINE RESIDENTIAL STJIEET Ozone Park & Vicinity 1 FAM. $51.22 mo. $7,900. 2 FAM. $64.69 mo. $9,900 BUNG. $62.00 mo. $9,500 1 FAM. $68.06 mo. $10,400 BUNG. $74.80 mo. $11,400 2 FAM. $82.81 mo. $12,500 1 FAM. $78.17 mo. $11,900 1 FAM. $82.81 mo. $12,500 SPECIAL 2 FAM. $700 DOWN Fully detached on oversized plot 5 room apt on first floor, 3'/j rooms upstairs, oil heat. A1 area. tlVE RENT FREE Also n'>-<>ke Expreat to Open ^ DajH A « > i l i 0 to 9 OPEN 7 DAV8 A VICINITY 135-21 ROCKAWAV BLVD. SO. OZONE PARK 2 4 OLympia 9-6700 FREE PICK CP f a m i l y i n f i l l biii-k & d, o j i b « a t , NEW 1 4 cohoole, 8EHTICB 114-44 Sutphin Blvd.. T r o j a n United $300 CASH INTEGRATED C A L L JAmaica 9-2000 2 ST. ALBANS deia»hetl with )iK'lude«1 .HI feaiage, landicap«l plot, 7 roomt, SI 7.000 J a m i l i f i w i i h all traneporlalion. Low ^ SPECIAL niodirn ieaiure*, locMfd n^ar fbcppinj S6S.94 a Month CorrUa Eaky T e r m s A r r a n j K l 30 Yeor P.H.A. Mortgages Down Jamaica laien PajnicnlE. call to WESTBURY tee Other N t w H o n i r i * R » a l r i In O u M n t anil N a x a o . L O W D o n n P a j D i v n t a , Kaky T e r m s arralised 192-11 Lee Roy Smith •SEE HOLMES FOR HOMES' LINDEN BLVD. ST. ALBANS LA Price: $13,990 1 f a m i l y , aiibeeloa all convtniencf-K. shingle, SI 0.990 Rii'InslTe With I t ! BETTER REALTY Allen M. Sclsco n S. FRANKLIN HEMPSTEAD throughout in« balh. STREET IV 9 S800 Down: $990 « bemitUul decoralfd rooms, gaf heat, LET'S GET ACQUAINTED Personal, Prompt Service near Price: $14,490 Down: $990 Many ether avo/lab/e — Call for Informaiion Hundreds of listings in Queens, Nassau & SufTolk H O L L i a — 4 bedrooms, w/w caiDeting. washing machine, cambination screen storm window.s. 2 baths: 2-cai" garage. J . J . FRANKLIN HOLMES Price: $17,000 ST. ALBANS 34, N. Y. 119.40 MERRICK BLVD. L A U R E L T O N S P R I N G F I E L D G A R D E N S — 2-family. strictly residential, completely landscaped with rose blushes. S ' i & ."5. brick patio; garage. 7-2800 Price: $19,500 i r S. OZONE PARK 513,500 Vacont — immediate Possession ^ 6 Large Rooms — 3 Bedrooms L All 4'/4 r o o o i i . m o d e m r u n . h . featiirei l a m e k n o t t y p i n e k i t c h e n , oil, h . w . h<;at, f u l l b a s e m e n t , irarage, patio b r e c z e n ay and l a r g e lanilscaped p l o t , ST. ALBANS. N. Y. S 0033 }8.9f0 C h a r m i r i f , fl r o o m h o m e , r o o m s iill on 1 floor pItiH attic and f u l l b a e t m e n t , Bct on 7 5 x 1 0 0 gardpn tilot, fully equipped w i t h extras. T r u l y a ftuburban paradise, SMITH & SCISGO 1 J a n i H j , eolul bri>'k, 6 larti- r o o i i d , p a i q u e t and oak floors V M i M i a n blinde. eloitii windowB a-nd sori-ene, H o l l y w o o d colori-d l u l l d i n i n g r o o m and m o i l e m k i i c h e n . P r i c e d f o r last •ale. 7 . A A , 0 A / - O O U U HEMPSTEAD & HEER $10,990 C A L L US NOW W U RookaM-ajr LIST REALTY CORP. $315 CASH INTEGRATED $790 GASH S300 DOWN TO ALL 159-12 HILLSIDE AVE. SPRINGFIELD GARDENS. Detoched home with large rooms, 2 kitchens, 2 baths, finished Two extra large opts, 5 and 4, basement and oil unit, garage 2 car goroge, oil heat. Owner and extras too! reduced price for quick sale. ONLY $10,490 South Ozone Park location. $360 CASH GOODYEAR WHY P A Y RENT? MOTHER & D A U G H T E R 2 FAMILY BRICK New Cassel, Westbury, N. Y . ED 3-6055 INTEGRATED STATE 2 FAMILY BRICK $7,500 This modern bungoiow set on o SOxlOO landscaped plot, con be yours with carry charges Including taxes as low as S i 7 per month. Has gas heot, garage, refrigerator and many extras. 6 rooms & bath for cwner 3-room apartment to rent Separate entrances J-car garage At shopping and soliooli L I V E R E N T FREE A STEAL HURRY WITH DEPOSIT OL. 7-6800 87-56 168th St., .TamHica REALTY SP 6-0800 <|> T LEAVING • • • • • Individually Styled -:In Braiitifiil Westbury Near schools, churches and transportation. FREE Detached, 6 & porch and both, features 3 master bedrooms, full basement. Automatic heat, extras included. 114-57 Farmers Blvd. I N T E G NEW HOMES JAMAICA $9,990 BETTER ST. ALBANS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Free Plcli Up Service Prom Subway. RENT S. O Z O N E PARK $12,990 Ranches-Split Levels-Cape Cods Detached. 75x100, separate opts, 5 and bath down, 4 and bath Hp, OHtomatic heat, full basement, e x t r a s included. GOOD INCOME PROPERTY. BANK INCOME P R O P E R T Y $12,990 $350 DOWN Low Down Payments $10,990 2 FAMILY 2 FAMILY $450 \ $400 CASH DOWN TO ALL Economical Warm Air Heat—Full Boiement • Landscaped Plot Oversize Gorge • Completely Redecorated Move Right In! $75 Monthly — 25-Yr. FHA Mtge. • E-S-S-E-X 143-01 HILLSIDE AVE. JAMAICA AX 7.7900 ALLEN & EDWARDS 4 i 4 4 4 ^ LOIS .1. .4LLEN — A N D R E W E D W A R D S Licensed Real Estate Brokers 168-18 Liberty Ave., Jamaica Branch Office: 809 Broadway, Westbury OLympia 8-2014 UNFURNISHED APTS. ST. ALBANS IVi ROOM — B ROOMS - SBS sno t ROOMS (Ultra Modara) )12S 3 ROOMS - S18 Wh. C A L L HARTY — Fl M 9 S 0 . OL. 8-2015 ST. A L B A N S . 1 family bii.k, « r o o n i i , iiuiderD k i t c h e n , t l l « ba<h. ittxed t a i a ^ e , oil tieat. attached. U( tithborliood, I ' r l r e I ! $450 C A S H 2 O Z O K E P A R K — Six A |rooins. frame. Oil heat. G a - " rage. Finished basement. A A s k i n g $9,900 $18 W k l y . 0 ^ l O L L I S — Six rooms. C a - A (rage. Corner plot. Brick a n d ? |fieIdstone. Gas heat. M o d e r n ^ ' thruout. A Asking $13,450 $ 2 0 W k i y . X >ST. .%LBANS — a-family, I rooms down, 3 rooms up. ' y e a r s old. Garage. ^Asking $17,900 huse overBeti MARTIN SIMMS. Agent SPruce 6-7219 Pass your copy of The Leader On to a Non-Member S A 8w A ISWkly.^ |Horty Real E s t o t e J I 180-23 Linden Blvd. k Fitfldstone M 9 5 0 W # K I V I O H S I D B D U I V B , I Vi * « ^ pnviU apartnianli luttrrarlal. rurnlthcd TKir luitu 1 «!)• C I V I L Pag* Twdr® S E R V I C E T i M d h f , A p r i l 14, 19S9 L E A D E R FILINGS CONTINUE FOR THOUSANDS OF P.O. JOBS batches, with little waiting time from a p p l i c a t i o n to exam. Scheduling of examinations for Individuals has been simplified, without the complex and sometimes baffling mailing of notices as before. substitute carriers have carried the score down to 83.3%. The department has sent for 302 ellglbles, with 128 vacancies. A p pointments are effective as of April 11. Testing is fast and in big (Continued from Pace 5) t * those with scores of 90%. Seventy-three have been called, with 37 vacancies to All. Appointments are to be effective as of April 18. Appointments for permanent YOU AUTO BUY YOUR PONTIAC N«w or Used ON OUR CO-OP SAVING PLAN 1840 E. Tramont Av«., TA 3-5100 Pontlac Mod«l & Yr. Dasired NAME J ADDRESS I PHONE TliU coupon win bring you full Informmtlon about our money saviny plan. New Cars • I 959 ' Authariisd Sales & Ssrvic* BUIGK noci CORP. • • Broni > • > > • • & USED C A R BUICK Ned Miller & Sons MERGURYS^^- PIC DISPLAY—ALL * » MODELS & C O L O R S in STOCK 4 Alto U%»d Car Cleseouft 'S4 IITDDE Ciw Automatio 'S3 roitn Sedan Fordaniatie 'S3 (>I.nS Sedan Hydraniatie and many othrra eZEY ^ ^ ^ * MOTORS^ Authorized Uncoln-Mereurj' Dealer^ 1229 2nd Ave. (64 St.) TB B-K700 FORD O F Open 231 E. 161 St. 4 • 8-3100 • LEGAL NOTICE! 4 ^ (64 S t J j GERMANY pO}W^tEDSEL-«0'FORD GERHARD MOTORS l U I BOSTON RO.-KI MSSS U M I . TREMOITT >VI. BX. Enjoy up to 35 Mile* per ralloa CD regular g:aaoline. 2-Doora — 4-Doora Station Wagons. Immediate Delivery 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 OF N E W T O R K , By the Grace of God. Free and Independent. T o Attorney General o ( the State ot N e w Y o r k ; and to " M a r y Doe" the name " M a r y D o e " beinr fictitious, the allesed w i d o w of Albert Nielson. also known as Albert Nielsen, deceased, if livinsr and if dead, to the executors, administrators, distributees and assigns of " M a r y Doe" deceased, whose names and post office addresses are unknown and cannot after dilisent inauiry be ascertained by the petitioner herein: and to the distributees of Albert Nielson, also known as Albert Nielsen, deceased, whose names and post office addresses are unknown and cannot after diligent inquiry be ascertained by the petitioner herein; beinff the persons interested as creditors, distributees or otherwise in t h ^ estate of Albert Nielson, also k n o w n as Albert Nielsen, deceased, who at the time of his death was a resident of 116 East 17th Street, New Y o r k . N . Y . Send G R E E T I N G : Upon the petition of The Publie Administrator of the County of New York, havinir his office at Hall of Records. Room ;109, Borousrh of Manhattan, City and County of New York, as administrator of the B-oods, chattels and credits of said deceased: K O E P P E L MOTORS, Inc. nND ^^ji^igm VERY LOW LEGAL NOTICE; Afliarlco'i N s w c i f Importacf C a r (Just C of Grand Concourse) LUdlow The application form. Card .Form 5000-AB, can be obtained, I in person or by mail, at the Board of U.S. Civil Service EX- TAUNUS L O L D W I S I O N t e M M B H M B W H B M I CALCON 4 a Showroom* ISS-SO Hillside Ave. Jamaica A S t-B700 I3U-01 IlllUlde A v e . Jamaica U L 7-8800 Tlie only Authorized Dealer In Queeni. Open Evea 'till 9 :3a •* Top $ I In the Imported | Car Field E nglish m V B M O N i Y BUY YOUR NEV/ or U S E D CAR IN A GROUP Por FREE Information—Fill In and mail this coupon to: Automobll* Editor. Civil Service Leader, 97 Duano St., N. Y. 7 I Date. Kindly advise how I can buy my car in a group and save. It is understood that I am not obligated in any way. Car desired Model (New) (Used) leee******** Year Name Address Telephone Th. Civil S . r v l c . L . a d . r do.i not i . l l n.w or us.d can or .ny automotlv. m.rctiandii., Thli ii . ( . r v i c . .nclutiv.ly for the b . n . f i t of our readari and . d v . t h . r i . FORDS FOR 1959 Cfioosc from the Greatest Selection In New York $ 1 9 5 . . . IMME0I4TE HERE—AND « 9 .95 I'ec W k . DELIVERY ABROAD S T A I N T O N . E D Y T H E D A V I S . — P-3848. 1U58. — C I T A T I O N . — T H E P E O P L E OF T H i i S T A T E OF N E W Y O R K . BY T H E GRACE OF GOD F R E E A N D I N D E P E N D ENT. To: M U R I E L STAINTON THYGESEN. S Y L V I A STAINTON BANCROFT, MORGAN MOLTZAU. F R A N K BANCROFT. ANN BANCROFT, EDWARD KING DAVIS. JOHN A . K. D A V I S , I S A B E L L E DAVIS McBRIDE, G E R A L D D A V I S . F A N N Y RUSSELL ANDREWS. DIXEY ANDREWS SMITH, L E I L A N I RUSSELL ANDREWS, J, E D W A R D D A V I S . G E R A L D D A V I S , JR., RICHARD STOTTKO ANDREWS. JR., MARTIN MOLTZAU, DIANE DAVIS. LINDSAY N E L L SMITH, L A N I L A M K I N S M I T H , C A R Y R I C H A R D SMITH, the said Muriel Stainton Thygeseii and tlie said Sylvia Stainton Bancroft being tlie sola distributees, next of kin and heira at law of Edytha Davis Stainton. deceased, and all of the above mentioned being persona named as executor, testamentary trustee or guardian or beneficiary in the paper writing dated June 23, 1031 purporting to be tha last will and testament of said Edvthe Dnvis Stainton, deceased, on tile in the office of the Clerk of the Surrogates' Court of New York County, but which if in fact executed by the said deceased, w a s revoked by the last will and testament dated April 13, 1954 and offered You and each of you are hereby cited f o r probate in this proceeding, send greetto show cause before the Surrogate's ing: Court of N e w York County, held at the Hall of Records. Room 609, in the CounWHEREAS, U N I T E D STATES TRUST ty of New Y o r k , on the 15th day of C O M P A N Y OF N E W Y O R K , having its May 1969, at half-past ten o'clock in principal office at No. 37 Broad Street. the forenoon of that day. why the ac- New York 5. New York, has lately applied count of proceedings of Tlie Public Admin- to th Surrogates' Court of our County of istrator of the County of New York, as New York to have a certain instrument In administrator of the goods, chattels and writing bearing date April 13. 1954 relatcredits of said deceased, should not be ing to both real and personal property, judicially settled. I N T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E - duly proved as the last will and testament OF. We have caused the seal of the of Eilvthe Davis Stainton. deceased, w h o Surrogate's Court of the said County of was at the itme ot her death a resident New Y o r k to be hereunto affixed. o l The Savoy Hotel, Bournemouth, EngW I T N E S S . H O N O R A B L E 3. S A M U E L DiFALCO, a Surrogate of our said County, at the County of N e w York, the 2nd day of April In the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifty-nine (SEAL) P H I L I P A. D O N A H U E Clerk of the Surrogate's Court CLEARANCE SALE Drastic Reduction on New '58 PLYMS & DODGES LEFTOVERS BRIDGE MOTORS. Inc. Factory Authorized Bronx Dealer 2346 Grand Coneourte (Bet. 183-184 Sti.) CY 5-4343 1959 S I M C A S I R A L P H HORGAN, Inc. Authorized Catholic Aides To Hear Rev. Reel Rev. Henry J. Reel, of the I m maculate Conception Seminary, Huntington, will be the speaker at the annual communion breakfast of the Nassau County Catholic Employees Association, Garden City Hotel, on April 26. Chairman Edward J. Rock has announced that more than 400 public employees will receive Holy Communion at the 8 o'clock masa at St. Thomas the Apostle church in West Hempstead. The mass will be celebrated by Rt. Rev. Monsignor Joseph A. Smith. The breakfast will be served at 9:15. °AAAAAAA< TE 8-2700 . A A A A A A A I CliyOCAII ! Serviced and O U I I D C A M I Tested in our O W N SHOP I before certified lor O W N * LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER ^1229 2nd AVE. O U R 4 ECONOMICALLY PRICED FOR CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ^ > ^ O" TTTT SAAB-93 aminers, U.S. Post Office, Room 3506, 33rd Street near Ninth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., or to the Director, Second U.S. Civil Service Region, Federal Building, Christopher Street, New York 14, N. Y . You must be a citizen, at least 17 years old, and weigh at least 125 pounds _ a l t h o u g h the weight requirement Is waived for veterans. It is also waived if you can shoulder a 100-pound mall sack in a lifting test. Postal service jobs have long been known as reliable, longservice jobs. Substitutes usually move up to regular jobs, according to appointment seniority. And the higher-level jobs are generally filled by pror^otlon from service people. (• I"! MEZEY MOTORS:< lo. ml. authorized Cars Aak >H«N« onr N . W C . t Leasing PI.D | « « L E '59 > > > > Used Cars | HILLMAN | UrCL M N E W Right Now APUZZO P O N T I A C See it first at MEZEY /TTTX • The job requires enough physical ability to do the work, which requires strong exertion — long periods, of standing, wallclng, t h r o w i n g and reaching, plus handling heavy mail sacks. You should have at least 20/30 vision In one eye, with or without glasses. Also on display In our tbowrooma Dealer land. — T H E R E F O R E , you and each of you ara cited to show cause before the Surrogates' Court of our County of New York, at the Hall of Records in the County of New Y o r k , on the 30th day of April, ona thousand nine hundred and Hfty-nine at half-past ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day, why the said will and testament should not be admitted to probate as a will of real and personal property. I N T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F , wo hava caused the seal ot the Surrogatea' Court ot the said County of New York to be hereunto affixed. W I T N E S S Honorable S. Samuel Di' Falco, Surrogate ot our said County of N e w York, at said county, the 10th day of March, in the year of onr Lord one thousand nine hundred and flftynlne [ N e w York Surrogates' Court Seal.l /»/ P H I L I P A . DONAHUE. Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. HOUSE HUNTING? SEE PAGE 11 1842 Broadway at 60tK St, Opposlta tba CuUseum—PL T-ITOO L o . Ml. I FIAT e Better rerform•ne. e Qrcatec Eeooomf • Up to s a mllaa per gal. L o ml DELIVERED FKOM ni23 S P E C I A L DEALS for C I V I L SERVICE EMPLOYEES 'a. when Civil Service ' employees always . gef a BETUR DiALI SNTlMMRiniflMRt WOUTIMT MTlOl; .wH y . « * . a V a ' l l» " 1959 Plymouth Chrysler imperial hi LOWEST PRICESI II08EST TRADE-INS! | EISIEST TERMS r o r e i f o CIU D i v U l o . o f i CARRAZZA a n e JEKOMB A V E N U M NOKTH o r 181>t B-r., B R O N X |Lll4t.w < U S E D C A R S N^TO QIIKEM8 BI.VD. ELHRCRHT, L.L TW t - l I M Tttcwkj, April CIVIL lf!f9 »B RVICV L B A D B » Ptof* Tbirtcv* Limited time only! Your RCA Victor dealer offers you AT NO EXTRA COST ...when you buy any RCA Victor Stereo Hi-Fi from M79»® ^284*' total value for just T k « M a r k i X . S-ln-l " I N i i i f tHnc" p k l i a p . Cuol empltflcr. In fotir ItnhlMi. (SHP9) C t a p I t U witk rtcird likrari. SAVE '85! Four hundred minutes of your favorite pop tunes — or more than 6 hours of the greatest musical classics. This sensational bonus is yours if you buy your RCA Victor Stereo Hi-Fi now! In one fell swoop, you get the "Victrola" console of your choice—plus a basic library of the music you enjoy most in thrilling "Living Stereo" sound. And what sound! It's the way yon hear it "in person"-with depth and direction. These RCA Victor consoles play all your old records, too-better than ever. In Danish Modem, Traditional, and French Provincial styling. See your RCA Victor dealer with the *^ave-on-Stereo" values - today I » W f 4 M MtiMMilly o ^ v w H t M l b t pri<M YOUR CHOICE OF ONE OF THESE DELUXE LIMITED EDITIONS of ten long-playing 12-inch "Living Stereo" records AROUP t - A L L If OF THE 6REATEST CUSSICAL SdECTlONS BY iMthovan Brahtnt Copland Debutty Dvorak Franck Moustorgsky ProkoTieff Ravel Rimtky-Kenokoff Rossint Soint-Saent Stravinsky Tchaikovsky « R O U P l - V K U I I OUTSTANDIND POPULAR A R T I S N P*rry Come Bln« Crotby-Rosemary CtooMy Th« N«w Glenn Miller Orchettro, directed by Ray McKinley The Robert Shaw Chorale The Three Suns Okk Sdiory's New Percuitiea h m The Melachrlno String* end Orchestra Xavler Cugat and His Orche«tr« Ames Brothers Esquivel and Hts Orchestra nbto True Stereo High Fidelity Requires 8 ft. Separation Between Speakers. RCA Victor Stereo High Fidelity is True Stereo High Fidelity! IICA victor Mark XII (Model SHPU) 3-Spe<k«r C o n s o l e t t e • R e s p o n s t i 70-20,000 cycles • Dual Amplifier * " L l v l n i Stereo" tone arm and stereo pickup • 4-Speed changer • Separate ival bass, treble and loudness controla In 4 finishes priced from t t U . W iRec«r4 llbraiy n^t IncJ. yith ttils unit) RCA Vlcter Mark XI (Model S H P l l ) S^speakers • "Living Stereo" arm and stereo pickup • Dual amplifier • 4-speed record changer • "Master Control" panel • Input jacks for auxiliary speaker or tape rtcotder • tn 4 finishes. $t7t,N RCA Victor Mark VIII (Model SHPil) 4-Speakers • Duel Amplifier • 4-Spe*d changer • "Living Stereo" arm and olamond cartridge • "Master Control" panel « In mahogany, oak, mapl* or walnut veneers and hardwoods from $ 2 4 9 . U With AM/FM tuner (Model SHCI), $329.95 RCA Victor Mark VII (Mode) SHPT) 4'S|wakers • Dual Amplifier • "Living Stereo" arm and diamond pickup • 4Speed changer • "Master Control" panel • In mahogany, maple or cherry bisque veneers and hardwoods from $27«.tS With AM/FM tuner (Model SHC7). t3M.9« ® RCA^^CTOR RCA Victor Mark VJ (Model SHCS) "Supercharged Chassis" with Dual Amplifier • Diamond Stylus • "Room Divider" llnished back • 4-Speakers • 4-Speed changer • AM-FM radio • Danish lowboy console in mahogany, oak or walnut veneer* end iMrJimods f r e a i n t M TREVOR RADIO & A P P L I A N C E S 836 LEXINGTON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY TE 8-0840 Need For CSEA Dues Increase \ (Continued from Pace 3) to threaten the future welfare of our members. "Careful consideration will be tlven to a Special Meeting of Chapter Delegates to be 'leld In tha near future to consider and decide this question. Tses For IncreaM I over field representatives and on the Job training for them, and who would handle the most difficult field service problems $7,500 Total $34,500 2 research assistants, State Grade 14 — 1 to specialize in salary research and other services to State Division, iind the other to specialize in salary and other research services 'o County Division Chapters; to enable greater Individual service to members in their programs for improved salaries, fringe benefits and work conditions $11,500 tive work Involved in providing increased and mor» Individual services to members and enable efficient supervision of increased staff and expanded programs. State Grade 23 $9,000 Total $20,500 Estimated cost of necessary travel based on previous experience; also employer cost of R e tirement and Health Insurance Programs; also payroll taxes covering Social Security, Unemployment I n s u r a n c e , Workmen's Compensation and Disability Benefits for the foregoing possible additions to staff _$38,500 Combined Total $240,500 Possible expanalon of special legal program to extend beyond service now given in connection with disciplinary cases ? A build up of our contingency reserve is most desirable to assure that the Association will be able to successfuly cope with any future emergency which thi-eatens the welfare of our members. An estimate of increased income from proposed increase in dues will make possible use of additional Income to expand staff to meet the needs of members, provide more financial help to Chapters, and build up coutin1 stenographer and 1 clerk to »ency reserve to protect their welfare In any future emergency provide increased clerical filing, typing and stenographic services which might threaten them. $7,000 Estimated Increase In income In research section $18,500 from Increase in dues from $7.50 Total to $10.40 pei year, based on 80.2 public relations assistants. 000 members $232,000 State Grade 14 — 1 to specialize (Dues of $7.80 per annum were in promotion of State Division approved by Delegates on March programs and activities related 4 . 1959 to take effect 10/1/59) thereto, and 1 to specialize in Increased cost of dues refund programs of County Division and to Chapters based on 25% refund activities related thereto; to enof total dues Income $88,000 able more close liaison between (Refund of 21% approved by Chapters and their local press Delegates on March 4, 1959 to and to better convince the public as to the value of the servtake effect 10/1/59) Average annual increase in cost ices rendered by government and of operation. Based on experience better regard for public employ•Ince last dues increase on Oct- ees. and to enable better utilizaober 1, 1&55 which reflects steady tion of the Association's 80,000 Increased cost of every service members throughout the State to and item used to serve our mem- keep legislators infornr.ed as to ber* Tills increased cost Ices the details of our programs and not include additional staff, nor the need for their adoption and Chapter refund and Leader sub- to secure the support jf social, •criptions resulting from mem- fraternal, business and other orbership growth $22,000 ganizations to CSEA proposcils Possible additions to staff to $11,500 provide expanded services on 1 stenographer, 1 clerk to promore individual basis. These estvide additional filing, typing and imated costs cover the positions stenographic services for addiat maximum salary of grade but tional positions in public relado not include adjustments in tions section $7,000 •alary which would affect these Total $18,500 positions which may be put into 1 senior account clerk to assist •Ptect in state service effective with additional accounting work April 1. 1959, which are being $4,500 determined by the Legislature at 2 stenographers to be added tha date this statement Is preto headquarters central stenopared : 4 additional field representa- graphic pool to care for intives. State Grade 17, to reduce creased volume of correspondlarsa areas now served by present ence: la com.ection with servflald men and enable more fre- icing additional membership and staff positions and quent and longer Chapter visits additional and more Individual service to thus provide increased service to $7,000 flaembers .a $27,000 our members 1 field supervisor. State Grade IB, to enable close supervision because CSEA responsibility for Blue Cross-Blue Shield payroll deductions ceased, enabling reduction of five clerical positions. This work responsibility change also Involved loss of gross income to the Association of an average of $24,000 per year. I n stallation of system of payroll deduction of dues, now covering over 65,000 members, requires 26 postings of payments to individual member accounts compared with one posting under previous direct payment jystem. 3. Increased legal service. (a) Special legal .service established to help protect members facing loss of Jobs through disciplinary proceedings. (b) Additional Assistant Legal Counsel furnished Headquarters. (c) Federal legal suit, successfully concluded, holding that maintenance furnished for convenience of employer not taxable under federal income tax — saved thousands of members millions of dollars. members; Group Life Insui'ancs — 45,000 members; Accident & Health Insurance . - 35.009 members; deducted on payroll 26 times yearly and also used In other Headquarters procedures. MAJOR F A C T O R S I N C R E A S I N G 4. Increased cost of Civil ServCOST OF O P E R A T M ' N SINCE INCREASE OF D U E S F R O M ice Leader. S500 T O 57.50 P E R A N N U > I ( a ) Cost per member subscripEFFECTIVE O C T O B E R 1. 1955 tion increased from $1,375 to 1. Achieved temporary finan- $1,825 effective October 1, 1955. ( b ) Cost per member subscripcial stability. During the year prior to the dues increase effect- tion Increased from $1,824 to ive October 1, 1955,CSEAoper- $2.00 effective October 1, 1957. ated at an actual l0'8 of $25,000. (Present cost represents increase 2. Additions to staff tc par- of approximately 50 percent of tially meet demands for addi- cost in effect prior to October 1, 1955). tional service to members. (a) Metropolitan Office Rep5. Increased cost of Chapter resentative (manages New York refund. City Branch Ofifce, acts as Field (a) State Division refund inRepresentative in Metropolitan creased from $1.00 to $1.50 per New York City). member effective October 1, 1955 (b) Two new positions of Field (affecting currently over 72,000 Representative in cui-rent budget members). to be appointed promptly. (b) County Division refund (c) Administrative Trainee to decreased from $2.00 to .<(1.50 aid in Headquarters administ- per member effective same date ration, in current budget tc be (affecting currently over 11,500 members). appointed promptly. (Net change — Increased cost (di Secretary for New York of Chapter dues refund — $30,City Branch Office. (e) Five Clerk-Typist positions 000 annually.) 6. New York City Branch O f — to handle increased filing, typing, clerical and iccount clerk fice leased, opened and equipped. 7. New Headquarters equipwork resulting from 40 percent increase in membership. CSEA ment. (a) Basic I B M machine acsaved the expense of a larger addition to the force by install- counting equipment installed to ation of I B M equipment. Size of enable efficient and economical 1 assistant executive director to Headquarters staff same as for handling of accounting and paycare for Increased administra-year ending September 30, 1957 roll deduction of dues — 65,000 (b) Offset printing equipment Installed to improve and handle increased amount of reproduction of forms, form letters, bulletins and other printed material used In large quantities to service 80,000 members, (About one million sheets annually.) (c) Additional addressograph equipment and, files Installed to supplement previous equipment to handle production of 56 complete mailing lists containing over 80,000 names during tha year to tribute Leader newspaper weekly and for audit purposes, 5 million addresses on mailing strips, plus o^her mailing lists of Board of Directors, C h a p ter Officers, newspapers, etc. used for specialized purposes. 8. Increased cost of personal service. CSEA provides its own employees with the same salary grades for comparable positions as in state service. It provides Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, Workmen's Compensation and Disability Benefits Insurance as required by law. It provides on an optional basis a Pension - Trust arrangement which, everything considered. Is not as liberal as the State R e tirement Plan, and a Health I n surance Program which is about the same as the State Plan. The cost of the Retirement P r o gram and the Health Insurance are shared by the employer and the employees. CSEA employees have the same work hours and the same conditions prescribed under the State Attendance Rules. 9. Every service and item purchased by the Association to provide services to our members has continuously Increased in cost. All business, whether public or provate, faces the same problem. To mention just a few — all personal service, postage, express, telephone, train fares and travel expenses generally, office supplies, heat, light, building supplies, building services, printing — no service or item has escaped tha increase. CHARTS SHOW PROPOSED EXPENDITURES OF NEW INCOME Budget Including Proposed Additions Our Budget Now . . • CHART C CHART A TRAVEL $M,000 Our Necessary Expenses Now Equal Income Dues Increase NOW - or - We Operate atDeflcIt CHART I 1 CHART AVWAtti ANNUAL INCREASEO COST OF OPERATION L».009 1 U M MOO 700 I MO soo PUM.IC RELATIONS k TRAINING tll.iOO 1 1 COMPAR ISON - If 4COME !> EXPENSES OSEA — VAItlOUS YEA RS ADMINISTRATION AND CLERICAL 400 (20,MO I I IfU V 0 / •M '6/ 'M YEAR T u « « 4 « 7 « April 14<» C I V I L 1 9 i f STOP WORRYING ABOUT YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST PASS HIGH the EASY ARCO WAY License No. 1—Teaching Common Bronchos $3.00 • Molntenanco Man . . . . $ 3 . 0 0 • Mechanical Engr $3.00 Auto Maehlnitt • Moll Handler $3.00 Auto Moehoiilc .... a Mointalner's Helper A u ' t Foromaii (A & C ) . . . $3.00 (SaRltatlen) $3.00 AHoRdaNt $3.00 • Maintainor's Helper (E) $3.00 Beginning Offieo Worker $3.00 Bookktoptr $3.00 • Mointalner's Helper (B) $3.00 •ridgo & Tunnel Officer $3.00 Captain (P.O.) $3.00 • Maintainor's Helper (D) $3.00 Cor Maintainor $3.00 $3.00 Chemist $3.00 n Motormaa $3.00 C . $. Arith ft Ve« $2.00 • Mot«r IMi. Opar Civil Inglneer . . $3.00 • Motor Vehicle License Examiner ... $3.00 Civil Service Handbook $1.00 a Notary Pubiie . . S2.50 Unomptoymeiit Insurance Clolmi Clerk $3.00 3 Nurse Practical & Public Claims Ixamlner (UnemHealth $3.00 ployment Insurance) ..$4.00 n o n Burner installer . . $3.50 Clerk. OS 1-4 $3.00 • Pork Ranger $3.00 Clerk 1-4 $3.00 • Parole OfRcer $3.00 Clerk, Or. I $3.00 • Patrolman $3.00 Clerk, NYC $3.00 • Patrolman Test* in All Complete Oulde to C S $1.50 States $4.00 Correction Officer . $3.00 • Playground Director . . $ 3 . 0 0 Dietitian $3.00 • Plumber $3.00 Electrical Inglneer . . . $3.00 • Policewoman . . . $3.00 Electrician $3.00 • Postol Clerk C a r r i e r $3.00 _ Elevator Operator $3.00 • Postal Clerk in Charge • Employment Interviewer $3.00 Foreman $3.00 • Federal Service Entrance • Postmaster, 1st, 2nd Exams .. $3.00 a 3rd Class . . . $3.00 • Fireman (P.D.) $3.00 a Postmaster. 4th Class $3.00 $3.00 • Fire Capt. $3.00 • Power Maintainor a Fire Lieutenant $3.50 a Practice for Army Tests $3.00 a Prison Ouord $3.00 • Fireman Test* in ail . .$3.00 States $4.00 • Probation OfRcer • Foreman $3.00 • Pubiie Management & Admin $3.00 a $3.00 • Oardener Assistant . . . $3.00 • Public Heolth Nurse . . .$3.00 $3.00 n H. S. Diploma Tests $4.00 n Railroad Clerk $3.00 • Home Training Fkysical $1.00 • Railroad Porter ..$3.50 • Hospital AHendant ,.$3.00 a Real Estate Broker • RefrlgeraKon License .$3.50 Resident lallding Superintendent $4.00 a Rural Moll Carrier . . . $3.00 S3.00 n Housing Caretaker . . . $3.00 • Safety OfRcer $3.00 Housing Officer S3.00 • School Clerk a Police Sergeant $4.00 Hew to Pass College Entrance Tests $2.00 a Social investigator . . $3.00 • Social Supervisor . . . . $3.00 • How to Study Pest $3.00 Office Sckemes .. $1.00 • Social Worker • Senior Clerk NYS $3.00 • Heme Study Course for Civil Service Job* $4.Vi • Sr. Clk., Supervising Clerk NYC $3.00 • How to Pass West Point $3.00 n state Trooper and Annapolis Entronce Exams . .$3.S0 • Stationary Engineer ft .$3.50 Fireman n Insurance Agent A $3.00 Broker $4.00 • Stone-Typist (NYS) • Steno Typist ( O S 1-7) $3.00 • Investigator (Loyalty Review) . . . $3.00 • Stenographer, Or. 3-4 .$3.00 • Stone-Typist (Practical) $1.50 • Investigator a Stock Assistant . . . $3.00 (Civil and Law Enforcement) $3.00 • Structure Maintainor . $3.00 • investigator's Handbook $3.00 a Substitute Postal Transportation Clerk . $3.00 • Jr. Accountant $3.00 ...$3.00 • Jr. Attorney . . .$3.00 n Surface Line Op. ,. $3.00 • Jr. Oovernmeat Asst. ..$3.00 • Tax Collector • Jr. Professional Asst. $3.00 n Technical ft Professional Asst. (State) .. $3.00 • 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 Preparation ..$1.00 • Title Examiner $3.00 n Laborer Written Test $2.00 a Train Dispatcher a Transit Patrolman ..$3.00 n Low Enforcement Post tiens . . $3.00 • Treasury Enforcement Agent . . . . $3.50 n Law Court Steno . .$3.00 • Lieutenant (P.D.) $4.00 n War Service Scholarships $3.00 • Librarian $3.00 S E R V I C E • •• ••• •• •• FREE! ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPOH 4Sa for 24 hour sp«c!«l delivtry C.O.D.'i 30c M t r * LEADER BOOK STORE 97 Duane St.. N e w York 7. N . Y . Pl**i« itnd m * 1 •ncloit chsck or money HELP W A N T E D — MALE «beve. Work ond study program for June 1959 and recent high school graduates interested in a coroer in Police work. REQI I R B M E N T 8 : Same ai« for Poliee OfHeer with tile eitee|>tlon tliat dat« of birth niiiht be between July l « t . II>8I) iiiwl January Idl, 1)M'{. City * Small Groups Membership Privliegei IMinn* or Brooklyn Central Write Dept. * Individual Instruction • Free Mrrtical Exnmlnntion L IMloiir or IN N E W VORK € 1 T * Personnel l)e|iartmeDI I l l - H t b Arenue (eor. ISth M . ) New York I I , 1>Jew York I N T K H Y I K W I N G HOCBK Monday ibrouicli Friday H::in A.M. to H : 0 « l-.M. Satiirda.T, A^rll l l t t i and 18th 8:30 A.M. to l?:t>0 noon I N X E W JERtsEV Holland Tunnel »lerviee Hulldlnf ISth Street « Proront HUttt i e n e y C l t j , N e « Jertoy OR Teterboro Airport Atlantlr A i l a t l o n Hangar Indiihtrlal ATeniie Teterboro. New ieriiey I N T E R V I E W iXti HOl'RN .Monday IhrouKli l''riday 1 •<:«<> noon to 8 l « 0 P.M. $iallird».v. Avril l l t b and IRth Ht.lO A.M. to ] V : 0 0 noon JOB SECURITY HIGH WAGES IN 3 WEEKS AVAILABLI CiTll Servicc Job. in Printin* Open BKUSH UP N O W l PAY AS YOU LEARN AT NO EXTRA C O S T T l . l t OP Phon« for r R E E Booklet Uept H B » w . u'wiir cur. Cliiiinber. SCHOOLS P R I N T I N G N.». jWO S-4M30 A L L S U B W A T S STOP A T OUR DOORS State "Say You Saw I t In The Leader" ME »-Tsoe S2,750-$3,K50 FILING r O APRIL 21 INTENSIVE COURSE THOROUGH PREPARATION DRAFTING ft DESfGN Electronic. Mefh. Stnic. Pipinif, PlumbinR, ShM-t MetHl, Blueprint Read'ir. Bltip Connlr Entimtting. Surveyiiiif. Tech Illn«k1r«tion. MATHEMATICS Civil Svce A l i l h . Alit. Geoni, Tiin. Cato. I'lvvsic.. Prep Heseiitn. Oollefee, Class meeU I'liiiraililyi at Write 01 riione (or J«l AL 4-5029 Broiiihvn.T. N Please write Clerk claes n:.'IO-8:S« Inrnrmiitlon Eoitern School V. .'l (iit « l h St.) me FREE about tht ^ama Addreii Boro rz Lie PREPARATION Prof Enffineer, Arohitect, Sni'veyor Stationary Enfirr, Kefitneralor Oiter, Porlable En^r. MHJtler Elei?lni'in.n, CL.VSSIES D A T S , EVES A .SATS MONDELL City Exam Expected Later On for INSTITUTE 2.10 \\. 4 U t (7-8 A i e « . ) V I ^•^^0I>^) Brancheit: Rronx, JnmHii-n. Heinp><tei)d 4t» .years Preparing ThoiirHiiilp Civil Service Technical A Engineer EjiBme ASSISTANT LEARN IBM INTENSIVE COURSE COMPLETE PREPARATION T A B U L A T I N G — KEY P U N C H At the Olcii^st Exuhieive IKM. ichooJ IN N E W YORK C I T Y Ba.lc & Advanced Tahtilating Conree. Latent equip, used inclndeB: No. 407. No. 083. Xo. IS14, No. OTY, & Ko 6B!J n".4 K E Y PUNCH C1.AH8 S T A R T S E V E R Y MON. T I H T I O N » 7 » 8 H 0 « T C O D R S E S — D A T OR E V G F R E E T e x t B o o k . — F R E E Plarement Ko Experience Needed Open 9 AM 9 F N Come In. Call or Write Aceeiintiiif With Outstanding instructors classes of limited size personal attention will be scheduled a.t,the proper time by EASTERN S C H O O L 721 Broadway, N. Y. S Scko«l CH 4 7070 AL Thar® are unlimited oprortuDlitM tor mea trained as Kadio, T«]«rviitioD aud Electronic Technicianf. Here it a field that offers you & choice of either full lima or spare time earninv*. Radio-Television Tneritnte will train you so that in a few nhort months >ou can earn while you learn. Courses available to suit your time schedule. N E W E S T COL'RHES: 2 niffhi a wpek. o n l j $fl.00 a diiys a wftek onl.r 19.00 • ludividualized I n t l n K l i o n • Lie. hy Univcrsit.v of &1ate of K . T . • Approved for Vets Visit our rlaHKrnoms. plioiie or write for profepeclUH LR. RADIO-TELEVISION 4-5029 IBM In Just A Few Short Months INCREASE Y O U R INCOME For Wen and Women K E Y PUNCH. S O R T E R , T A B S COLLATOR & REPRODUCER OPERATION & W I R I N G • SECRETARIAL Med.. Leiral. Exec., Eleo. T y p i n » Switehd., Compt., ABC Stem., Dlctphn. P R E P A K A T U I N For C I V I I . 8 R R V I C B Co-Ed. a n.lY * KVE. F R E E Lifetime iMacenient ServiM ADELPHI-EXECUTIVES' laao KINtiS HWV. Nl fl-tll««-S F I . A T n U S H AV Nr itklyn Coll. INSTITUTE 1'.:; CDlumliii. Avenne, N. V. » a L ¥ fi-48Be N E E D A DIPLOMA? Let us help you pass the N. Y. State test. QUESTIONS on civil service Duane Street, New York 7, N. I . and Social Security answered. Address Editor, The Leader. 97 Send ONE D O L L A R for our printed booklet of expert material. Equivalency UPEKATB PRINTING PRESSES 1250 MULTILITH* and OFFSET YMCA CLERK CLASSES TI:KS & T H I RS. C to 10 I'M Jr. & As«t Architect, Mp<'h. K!co Kiiicr Civil, Mech. Elec Kn^rDrRrti-njHn Cil.v Clerk BuildiuK SUM, Civil Ensr-W.S. SnbwR.v Evanie Engineering' Aide Maiiit. Helper Ciihioilinn Jr. Draftsman Boilri* liif-prctor Bid?. Struct Eng:r H s. K«!iiivalei»«'y Stationary Kntcr LICENSE «B C I T Y EX.\M C O M I N G IlINE 20 r O R fXAMH t«: THE PORT O F NEW YORK AUTHORITY t^rlte Uept BRONX UNION Y M f ^ A • IVIWM M Hiinmin Placa « T »-;000 Where L 1. R R and All Snl.nuy Meet 470 Knu I d l s l St Rrani'hee « f the Y.M.C.A. af Orentrr \e»T Vorfc Machin* HOUSE HUNTING? SEE PAGE 11 •e sure fe fnclude 1% Vale* T « i • Full 320 W 4:3 St., N . Y . (23rd D . ) Name Addreu CLASSES Instruction Coinptete, Regnlntlon-^lKe Obntnrla CAlirde, InrlufMnit HiRh J r . & Asst. Civil Engr. POLICE CADET JOBS ProfpsMonal CI.ASflES W E D *• m i , 1(1-1 P M , l - I O I'M RBm'IREMENTK: 0 « t e of birth helHiwn August ai, and H « t > « « « i b « I , I B M ; IT. <'ll1irniihii>: mlntmiim Ii4>litht A* 8 " ; niililiHtim I4A Ibc.; Ylnloii VO '^0 without r j r g l u u M ; Hlph H«-hi>ol diploma or ahlf^ Hiuiialmi'.v .^rtlflrate; Honorshlr Ikint'ltarftvi if former member of Arme.] For«e«. MANY PHYSICAL P. 0. CLERK $4446 a year to i t a r t $4654 offer 6 months AnnHoi increases thereafter to $5720 maximum. Pifteca FIREMAN CANDIDATES UL.XSSES WKD * I Kl, lU-1 I'.M. T in I M POLICE OFFICER TO Page R Navy Apprentice is heldinq compefitiv* •xaminations for LEARN E CITV-STATE-FEDFRAL THE PORT OF NEW YORK AUTHORITY A P P l . Y I N PKHKON O N L Y between April » t h anil April «!tn4 D Civil Service Coaching MANHATTAN copies of booli checked order for $ A The new position combines the duties of two positions, now abolished, titled director of special services and farm labor coordinator. •• You W i l l R e c e i v e an Invaluable N e w A r c o "Outline C h a r t of New York C i t y Governnient." W i t h Every N . Y . C . A r c o Book— E P U T N A M NA1HED A « M EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT A L B A N Y , April IS — Horace M. Putnam, Wayne County f a r m er, har been named executive assistant to Don J. Wlckham, commissioner of Agriculture and Markets. Mr. Putnam will receive a salary of '9.538 a year. a AdmliiUtratIv* Aitt. . Aeeemitant & Auditor Auto Cnqlnomoii . . . . L FREE B O O K L E T hy U. S. Government on Socia' Security. Mall only. Leader, 97 Duane Street. New York 7. N. Y. ADVISORr P.O. lox l i t S SERVICE N. Y. I . N. Y. SCHOOL DIRECTORY HU8INK88 8CUU0LS l MO.VKOK 80HUUI.-IHM l O l HMUS. Keypunch, Tabulating. Wiring ( A P P R O V E D FO VETS), AccouminB, Biitiiieee Aiiniiiiibtiation, Switchboard (all live board* Coniptumetry. Day it Eve. C'luMea. bPEl^iAL P R E P A E A T I O N FOR C I T Y STATE F E D E I t A L TESTS. Ka>t 'I'reniont A t e . it Uottou Kd., Itrunt, Kl »-a<lOU. L E A R N I.B.M. K K V i - l N C I I I N U . All akea Uay or evening Tuition $35. K E Y P U N e H SCHOOL. I ' L a z a 6 « X 8 a . o o u r « . Free trial lettua. SwrcUrlal URAKRN, 154 NASSAU ttTRRBT. N.V.C. Seoretulal. Accounting, Drafting, L>ay-Ni«ht. Write (or Catalog BE Joumallna. M u • I • H I L T O N ' S A I . K A W .Ml tilO A C A I I E M V . Specializing In Accordion * Guitar. I n a t m . menta loane<l tree. Muelo Inalnirtlon In all luelrumenti. Begianera A advanced eludonla. Special discount. i 6 Siaie Ht.. Albany, N. V. t(a 0946. In Troy. T R O Y MUSIC ACAD.. S4tl t'ultoD St., ARier.al 8-7t<ee. STATE COMMERCE DEPT. HONORS NEW CHIEF ACTIVITIES OF EMPLOYEES IM STATE Suffolk If any member has a auestion concerning civil service, the retirement system, Social Security, etc., send It to the Chapter Box, No. 223, Bay Shore. If your officers are not able to assist you, we will contact the proper agency and obtain the Information requested. The next regular Board meeting will be held on Thursday, April 23. Suffolk Chapter, Civil Service Employees Association, Is very happy to welcome a brand new unit to the fold. The Suffolk County Mosquito Control Commission group of about 80 men has Joined C.S.E.A. in a body. Officers elected for the current year are: President, Robert A. Merrltt of Sayville; Vice President, Edward J. Valder of Shirley; Secretary. Francis L. Arata of Isllp; Sergeant-At-Arms. Harold The Mt. Morris Hospital ChapE. Hulse of Mastic; Financial Secretary. William M. Gazzola of ter of the Civil Service Employees Ea.st Patchogue, and Treasurer, Association voted in the followPlerson C. Van Orstrand of B a y - ing ofllcers for 1959: president, Oliver Longhine: vice president, port. secretary, Ahce Chapter President Arthur J. Irene ^Lavery; Miller recently met with the River- YowellT ^treasurer, Harriet McThomas head Town Superintendent of Caughey; ' d e l e g a t e , Highways and the Town Attorney Pritchard; alternate d e l e g a t e , on a dismissal case involving one Margaret Lopez. The executive council members of our members. After presentation of the employee's case in- for the various departments were cluding his rights as a veteran, also elected. Delegates and alterMr. Miller was successful in ob- nates: clerical, Elmer Pfiel and taining reinstatement with full Violet Hoagland; grounds, John back pay amounting to several Barrett and Sam Esposito; houseIsabelle Chapell and hundred dollars. This is one of keeping, the many ways in which C.S.E.A. Elsie Goldthwaite; maintenance, and Joseph •erves its members. If any of David J o h n s t o n your fellow workers have not yet Mauro; dietary, James Truby and Joined, do them a favor and give Charles Adamson: miscellaneous, them an application. No Civil James Cicero and Carl Frletag; Service employees can afford not laundry, Mildred Grover and Anna Morris; nursing and medical to belong to C.S.E.A. The Annual Dinner Committee Helen Fagan and Jane Bryant. The Chapter's annual spring has been appointed: Chairman Edmund Buziak of Riverhead dinner for the Installation of Highway; George Albin, Brook- officers was held at the Ridge haven Highway; Glendore Raub, Restaurant on Saturday, April 4. Health Department; Valborg Platz, Health Department: John MacKlnstrie. Babylon Village Sanitation; and Robert A. Merrltt, A meeting of the Psychiatric Mosquito Control Commission. Institute Chapter of the C.S.E.A. Tentative plans call for the dinner was held in the 10 North Classto be held in September this year. room. Although it was a poorly Watch the Leader for further attended meetings, it was an interdetails. esting one. On March 5, representatives of Bills that possibly would pass a number of our Town Highway units and the Mosquito Control the legislature were discussed, and Commission group held the first at the top of the list, as always, of several meetings to discuss was the salary bill which has galarles, attendance policies and come to pass. W e know it's not fringe benefits of their individual what we wanted but a half loaf departments. The object of these is better than none. Joint meetings is to coordinate W e are grateful to John l-'ower and standardize programs for the of Group Health Insurance for ooming year. his interesting talk regarding the The Chapter Board of Directors makings and workings of this regretfully announces the resig- plan. I'm sure the members know nation bf the treasurer, Richard more about this plan than they A. Pearsall. Richie and his family did before. W e also want to thank have embarked on a new business Sam Emmett. member of the venture and there just are not Statewide Membership Committee, enough hours in the day for him for his fine talk on membership. to carry on with his job at the Exeryone knows how important Babylon Town Highway Depart- membership is to any organization ment, his duties as treasurer of such as ours. Mr. Emmett is First the highway unit. Chapter treas- Vice President of the New York urer, and this new business, too. City Chapter. C.S.E.A. The Chapter is sorry to be the All the employees of the Psyloser in the choice Richie had to chiatric Institute are happy to make, but we wish him all the hear that our own Director, Dr. luck in the world for a happy Lawrence C. Kolb, is on the road to recovery after being hospitaland prosperous future. Suffolk Chapter was represented ized for a spell at Harkness at the annual delegates meeting Pavillion. Also Mrs. Mary G a r a In Albany by Eve K. Armstrong foli, the Chapter's Treasurer, is and Merry Arnott. They have staited on the road to recoverybrought back much information after undergoing surgery at the on the proposed dues increase and same hospital. .. a written report will be sent to Welcome to our new Dietitian, each unit witWn the next few Mrs. Faigal Snyder. W e hope weeks. you'll like being with us. Mt. Morris Psychiatric Institute Guest of honor April 1 at the New York State Department of Commerce 50th anniversary party was its newly appointed Commissioner, Keith S. McHugh. The afFair was held in the Crossroads Restaurant in Latham, near Albany. Commissioner McHugh will take office May 1, after retiring from his post as president of the New York Telephone Company. Shown above, from left: Commissioner McHugh; Jane Todd, Deputy Commissioner of Commerce in charge of the Women's Program; Acting Commissioner Ronald B. Peterson, and Labor Commissioner Martin P. Catherwood. The party was sponsored by the Commerce Dept. chapter of the Civil Service Employees Association and the Department's Goodwill Association. AUBURN SETS ANNUAL PARTY A C T I V I T I E S O F K M I M . O Y E E S Albany Tax The nomination dinner of the Albany Taxation and Finance Chapter, Civil Service Emplo.vees Association, will be held Thursday, April 30, at Jack's Restaurant, State Street, Albany. Dinner will be served at 6 P.M. and the meeting will follow immediately Chairman of the nominating committee Is John Allendorph, Corporation Tax Bureau. Assisting Mr. Allendorph will be George Hayes, administration mechanical section; Mabel McNamara, Truck Mileage Tax Bureau; Matthew Breltenbach, income tax files; Evelyn Hoey, Income Tax Bureau ( R A P P S ) ; Elsie Campbell. Income Tax Bureau (training); Kathleen Mesick, Miscellaneous Tax Bureau. The official report of the nominating committee will be made at the dinner meeting when officers, representatives and delegates of the Chapter meet primarily to prepare the slate of candidates to be presented to the members at the election meeting in May. President Salvatore Filippone has appointed Bernard Schmahl of the Corporation Tax Bureau as dinner chairman, and all reservations must be made to him no later than April 27. Chairman Schmahl has announced that a short social hour will follow the meeting. Westcliester Committee members of the Auburn Prison Chapter, C.S.E.A., plan the Second Annual Retirement party of the Auburn Prison Employees, to be held the evening of Monday, April 27, at 7:30 at the Polish Falcon Club. The new Deputy Commissioner of Correction, Benjamin Weinberg, will represent hli Department. Th party will honor retired employees. Many •tate and local legislative leaders have been invited. The Westchester Chapter, Civil Service Employees Association, will hold its spring meeting in room 232, County Office Building, at 8:30 P.M. on April 27. The agenda will include submitting of resolutions which members may wish to bring before the next Statewide convention of the Association. In addition, a round table discussion by Chapter unit leaders will be held dealing with unit programs and how to make them effective. Participating in this discussion will be Andrew J. Dowdell, president, county employees unit; Howard A. Guffen, Jr., president. White Plains city employees unit, and John Martens, president, Greenburgh Town employees unit. Richard P. Schulz, Chapter president, will be moderator of the discussion. All members and prospective members of this Chapter or other Chapters ars T H K « U « ; H 0 U T Invited to attend. This meeting will provide an exchange of thinking on the various problems of the units represented in the discussion and of other units of the Chapter. Refreshments will be served. Hewaric State Scliool The many friends and associates of Mrs. Hazel Martin, Head Nurse at the Newark State School, wish to express their deepest sympathy in the recent death of her husband, Bruce Martin. A group of Senior Medical Students from the University of R o chester School of Medicine visited the Institution on Tuesday, February 24. Following a talk by Di\ Harry Feldman, supervising psychiatrist, they were taken on a tour of the various departments of the school. Charles I. McAllister, Director of Mental Hygiene Education Services, Albany, spent two days at the school last week. Twenty-eight senior students from the psychology class of the Palmyra-Macedon High School, under the supervision of Ronald Lalik, teacher, visited the Newark State School on Wednesday, February 25th, and were escorted through the Institution by Mrs. Frances Green, Instructor of Nursing. Mrs. Emma Utter, occupational therapist, is still confined to the employees' sick bay at the Vaux Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Ann Quinn, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Manley, and William Stevens are attending Civil Service Employees Association meetings in Albany this week. Condolences are exte.ided to Mrs. Francis Muskett in the recent death of her mother. Mrs. Marie Donaldson, staff attendant, has been a patient in the Clifton Springs Sanitarium for a few days Mrs. Pauline Fitchpatrlck, staff attedant, has returned to her homo in Lyom following surgery wishe.'i to express sincere thanks at the Barber Hospital. She to all those who remembered her with cards, flowers, and :<ifts. Fifty-six patients of the Newark State School journeyed to Rochester on Wednesday, February 25, to witness the Shrine Circus at the New York State Armory, as guests of the "Circus D a d dy Commltte«". Transportation N E W ¥ O R R S T A T E costs were covered by donations from the Monroe County Chapter of the A.H.R.C. This is an event which is eagerly looked usual, the boys and girls were forward to each year, and, as thrilled with the performance. Mrs. Hazel Welcher is convalescing at the Newark-Wayne Community Hospital following surgery. Harry Douglas is still confined to his home by illness. Anthony DeAngelis is recovering at his home from a broken arm sustained in a fall on an Icy street. Mrs. Carol Henry, R.N., has returned to her duties at the Boys Hospital, after being absent for some time following the birth of her son. LaVern Chatfield a.nd Herbert LeRoy are confined to the Employees Sick Bay in the Vaux Memorial Hospital by illness. Mi-s. Catherine Cook has accepted a position as staff nurse at the Newark State School. Mrs. Marian Shaffner Blatt and Mrs. Martha Heald have been re-employed c* the Newark -State Schol. G I L B E R T HEADS FARM BUREAU STATE A L B A N Y . April 13 _ George R. Gilbert of Chenango County is the new director of the Bureau of State Institution Farms. He succeeds Robert J. Race of O x ford an appointee of the H a r riman administration. Mr. Gilbert will supervise 43 farms In his new post. State farms produce more than $3.5 million worth of food each year. RETIREMENT! Retirement is everyone's DUbiness and everyone has retirement problems. The Leader wishes to assist its readers in this important and diilicult Held and will attempt to answer any questions on the subject through a column in this newspaper. Send your question* to "Retirement Editor, The Civil Service Leader, 97 Duane St.. New Yorli, 7. N. V." Answers wiii appear in the column.