Carpenter . tt, 97Orange St., New Haven, Conn. ; Chandler, 123 Greenwich ave., Green-wich, Conn. Massachusetts—President, John Hanigan, 98Front Worcester, Mass.: secretary, , Jr., 75 Bond St., Holyoke, Mass. New .Jersey—President, Samuel Botterill. 118Main St., E. Orange, N. J. ; secretary, .TamesH. Reeves, 1446 lladdon ave., Camden, N. J. New York—President, T. M. Guerin, 290 2dave., Troy, N. Y. ; secretary, John Rice, 523W. 50th New York City. Northwest State Council—President, P. , 910 S. Ninth St., Tacoma, Wash. ;secretary, J. F. Weatherby, 863 E.


Carpenter . tt, 97Orange St., New Haven, Conn. ; Chandler, 123 Greenwich ave., Green-wich, Conn. Massachusetts—President, John Hanigan, 98Front Worcester, Mass.: secretary, , Jr., 75 Bond St., Holyoke, Mass. New .Jersey—President, Samuel Botterill. 118Main St., E. Orange, N. J. ; secretary, .TamesH. Reeves, 1446 lladdon ave., Camden, N. J. New York—President, T. M. Guerin, 290 2dave., Troy, N. Y. ; secretary, John Rice, 523W. 50th New York City. Northwest State Council—President, P. , 910 S. Ninth St., Tacoma, Wash. ;secretary, J. F. Weatherby, 863 E. ShermanSt., Portland, Ore. Oklahoma—President, T. H. Clark, Tulsa,Okla. ; secretary-treasurer, F. A. Davis, 404W. 8th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Rhode Island—President, R. B. Scott. 35 New-port ave., Newport. R. 1. ; secretary, M. , 182 Glenwood ave., Pawtucket,R. I. Texas—President, R. S. Greer, Beaumont,Tex.; secretary, J. E. Proctor, 833 Colum-bian St., Houston, Tex. 58 THE CARPENTER. You Get the Job H Thats what the trained man, the expert in his line, hears today from the manthat hires—the foreman, the architect, or the contractor. Training lands the job—training that means high-grade work and a short cut toresults. And training wins quick advancement to still better jobs. The day of the Jack of-all-trades is passed. This is the time of the concern can afford to place a high-grade equipment in the hands of low-grademen. Competition forces employers to meet skill with skill. The business of the International Correspondence Schools is to supply training;to give job-getting and job-bettering ability; to raise salaries. Every month upward of 300 I. C. S. students write to Scranton to tell of positionssecured or bettered—of earnings increasedand prospects brightened—through study ofI. C. S. Courses. Last month the numberwas 416. The letters come from every sec-tion and from all sorts and conditions of men. All got the education—the


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