. Announcement ... Dept. of engineering. t more faith-fully than vou have, and will ever be ready to put in a good word for you.—Francis Brady, 4 Fourth St., E. Cambridge, Suffolk Mass. Am ever so much pleased with your course of instruction, and consider thatthe monev could not have been used for a better purpose. * * * The instruc-tion is cheap at double the price.—Feed C. Pullin, 2s Lemon St., Newark, N. J. I must take this opportunity of thanking you for the interest you take in me,and also to express my admiration of your manner of Merri-riELD, 2U7 King St., Brookly


. Announcement ... Dept. of engineering. t more faith-fully than vou have, and will ever be ready to put in a good word for you.—Francis Brady, 4 Fourth St., E. Cambridge, Suffolk Mass. Am ever so much pleased with your course of instruction, and consider thatthe monev could not have been used for a better purpose. * * * The instruc-tion is cheap at double the price.—Feed C. Pullin, 2s Lemon St., Newark, N. J. I must take this opportunity of thanking you for the interest you take in me,and also to express my admiration of your manner of Merri-riELD, 2U7 King St., Brooklyn, N. Y. I want to do just the right thing by you as you have so far done with more I thank you a hundred times, and any one you wish to refer to me Iwill cheerfully correspond with.—Geo. S. Sarin, 4 Grove St., Rochester, MonroeCo., N. Y. I am very much pleased with your instructiou.—Henry M. Bohlen. 535 St., New York City. i6 National Correspondence Institute, Washington, D. C. Course in Electrical Kno-ineerinQ^.. HERE is a constantly increasing demand for menskilled in designing, constructing, installing, test-ing, and operating electrical machinery of everyconceivable nature, and as the demand increasesthere is not an equal increase in the supply ofskilled labor. The reasons are obvious. Manywould fit themselves for holding these positionswere it not that their business will not permitthem to leave their homes or they are linanciallyunable to take such a course in institutions established to teach bypersonal attendance. Those who fit themselves by the correspondence method for theelectrical profession, will find without much difficulty some openingeither as Wiremen, Foremen, Contractors, Linemen, Motormen,Central Station Superintendents or Constructing Engineers, wherethey all may obtain a foothold; which, while it may be small froma remunerative standpoint at the beginning, is sure to develop in thefuture into some position of a far more satisfactory


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