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This volume weighs five pounds and is held by one leaf. So much for the quality of binding and paper.

This new edition of

Battles and Leaders of the Civil War

IS SOLD ON AN EASY PAYMENT PLAN

It has been prepared especially to meet the demand of an increasing population and a new generation. This work, in four volumes, 3098 pages, is the greatest exposition of the world's greatest war ever printed. It rivals the War Records themselves in completeness, authenticity and detail, and is vastly more interesting. Generals Grant, Sherman, Johnston, Beauregard, Col. Mosby, Capt. Ericsson, and hundreds of others, men from both sides, are its editors, making it accurate and impartial; its illustrations, over 1700,-maps, and diagrams give

a panoramic view of this awful struggle; and its index, referring to every important person and event, with statistical tables of the opposing forces in every engagement, makes it a veritable

Cyclopedia of the Civil War.

What history is so complete? What history can be so complete ?

If you want a reliable source of information or a complete reference library, or love American history, you cannot afford to be without this work, especially at the reduced price and under the new plan of payment.

Napoleon Bonaparte:

A History. Complete in Four Volumes Editorially, mechanically, and artistically this work is a wonder. It is the only complete, impartial account of the great Emperor's life. All others have tended toward hero worship or erred to an equal extent on the other side. Professor Sloane was thoroughly equipped for this work through exhaustive study of all the Napoleonic literature obtainable and by extensive travel over the scenes of Napoleon's struggles, affluence, and subsequent downfall.

Eighty-seven artists have contributed to its pages, including the most famous military painters of France. About one-third of the three hundred pictures are reproduced in the original colors by a special process far superior to lithography. It is a veritable art gallery giving a pictorial history of the Napoleonic wars.

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Special Offer and Terms in a Handsome Booklet Write a postal card like the following: Send me, free of charge, according to offer in THE TECHNICAL WORLD, a prospectus of (either or both), containing sample pages, illustrations, etc.; also full particulars regarding prices and terms.

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THE CENTURY CO., Union Square, New York

EMPLOYMENT DEPARTMENT

Positions Wanted

(Continued from page 86)

WANTED-Position as electrician by young man of 28 years, having had about nine years' experience. Can furnish first-class references from former employers and prominent business men in different places employed. Least salary accepted, $25 per week. Address The Technical World, No. 103.

A young man, 28 years of age, desires a position as draftsman in Joliet or immediate vicinity. He has had eight years' experience in the machinist's trade, and six months in drafting. Least salary accepted, $60 per month. Address The Technical World, No. 105.

A young man, 19 years of age, with eight years of experience, wishes to obtain a position in Chicago or Northern Illinois, as electrician or machinist. Can furnish references if required. Would accept no lower salary than $14 per week. Address The Technical World, No. 107.

WANTED-Position as chief engineer by middle-aged man with twenty-two years of practical experience. Holds first-class engineer's license. Least salary accepted, $125 a month. Address The Technical World, No. 108.

WANTED-Position selling and setting up farm machinery, corn and grain harvesters, threshing machines, etc., by an American School student. Experienced in farming. Address John S. Clough, North Haverhill, N. H.

WANTED-Position as stationary engineer in Western Canada, by a man of eighteen years' experience. References furnished if desired. Address Allan Monkhouse, Markham, Ontario.

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J. W. Fawcett, Sheffield, England, is assistant engineer at the Norfolk works, where they have an electric plant of 700 H. P., both driving and lighting the works. He also has charge of twenty large boilers, all the engines, and seven locomotives; and his spare time is spent in collecting information in regard to the most economical method of running machines and motors.

Mr. J. F. MacWilliams has recently moved from Meridian, Miss., where he held the position of superintendent of the Light and Railway Company, to Freeport, Illinois, on account of the ill health of his wife.

A. J. Hazelton, of Chanute, Texas, who was a brick-yard engineer when he began his studies in the winter of 1898-99, is now general manager of a plant that manufactures and sells 20,000,000 of brick a year.

D. Forno, Inangahua Junction, West Coast, New Zealand, is an earnest student, and writes that he considers the correspondence system a grand idea, offering splendid advantages to those who, in their boyhood days, had no chance of obtaining an education; and he believes that many more would turn their attention to study if they but realized the benefits to be derived from instruction by correspondence.

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(Continued on page 90)

THE TECHNICAL WORLD

FOR

APRIL

Will Contain Among Many Other Articles

The Present Status of the Submarine
in the United States

by Robert G. Skerrett, Washington, D. C. A thoroughly
readable article, full of valuable information, bringing our
knowledge of submarine boats up-to-date.

A Graphical Method of Recording
Data for Boiler Tests

by Carl S. Dow, S. B. A clear exposition of this important
subject.

The Making of a Captain of Industry

Chapter II-Organization-by Henry M. Hyde. A bright,
pithy and popular series of articles, giving success in a nut
shell.

Long Distance Power Transmission
by Henri F. Chadwick, S. B., President Westinghouse Tech-
nical School, Pittsburgh. Methods used in the United
States and Europe.

A People's University

by William E. Curtis, the famous Washington correspond-
ent. Opportunities for the wage earner.

The Trans-Siberian Railway--Pekin
to St. Petersburg

by Alfred S. Johnson, Ph. D. The political and strategic
significance of the great railway.

Each of these Articles will be profusely illustrated

Besides the above articles, The Technical World for April will contain
an unusual number of bright, attractive discussions on matters of real inter-
est. No person desirous of keeping in touch with the advances in the
industrial and engineering world can afford to be without The Technical
World.

For the next thirty days, to give you an opportunity to appreciate
the value of THE TECHNICAL WORLD, we offer you a six months'
subscription for forty cents. Remember, this offer will not hold good
after the fifteenth of April.

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Graduate and Student Notes.

(Continued from page 88)

Edwin Payne, Kaharama, Taranaki, New Zealand, is much interested in electrical engineering, being one of the directors of a new electric light company organized in his city. He wishes to have an intelligent understanding of the plant in which some of his capital is invested, and' for this reason is taking a correspondence course in Electrical Engineering.

A. Pamley, of Barrow-in-Furness, England, recently assisted in the supervision of a series of evaporative trials of a Babcock & Wilcox boiler. He writes that the work was new for him; and had it not been for the information which he has gained from his instruction papers in the course which he is taking, he would have been placed at serious disadvantage with the experts; but owing to the instruction thus received, he was able to furnish a finished report, instead of mere data.

H. William Jackson, 19 Cope street, Coventry, England, when he enrolled as a correspondence student, was junior draftsman at Albert Herbert's Tool Works. Six months ago he took charge of the drafting room of the Kilson Lighting Company, which was quite a promotion for a young draftsman who had been at work only twelve months.

J. Buckingham, of Hawera, New Zealand, writes entertainingly of his life and work in the far East. He is in the employ of the Railway Department, but is spending all his spare time in study on his Electrical Engineering course, with a view of making a specialty of that line of work.

William H. Nicholson, Leslie Hills, Culverden, is employed at a sheep station in the back country of New Zealand and has charge of an electric plant. Realizing the necessity of a thorough knowledge of electricity he is diligently pursuing a course in Electrical Engineering which he finds of much assistance in his daily work.

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(Continued on page 96)

The More Completely Equipped the Boiler and Engine Room is with Penberthy Equipment, the More Complete is the Plant

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Penberthy line of Ejectors, Steam Rams, Low Water Alarms, Water Gages, Gage Cocks, Valves, Steam Gages, Oil and Grease Cups, Water Heaters, Lubricators, etc., have been adopted everywhere as the most thorough, practical and reliable. Write for catalogue.

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