1000 Positions Open ITotel, res^taurant, rlub and institutional field calllne for trainttl men. Thou>an<l* of positinn^i a ManaKer, AjsUtaiit ManaKiT. Steivartl. Iloom Clerk and other inii«»rtant positions payinu $2,000 to $7,500 a year, open annually. Nearly one hillion dollars' worth of NEW irOTKLS. rU'HS AXn INSTITl'TIONS belnd built this year will need almost 100.000 trained men and women. Lewis- TruhKvl theM stiirt at salaries up to $2,500 a year, with living often included. Previous Experience Proved Unnecessary Qualify for a ra>rlnatins, well-paid position — our Ter^onal Coachirie I'laii uiiapts tlio tralninc to jour need-i. in .spare time. Lewis-trained men of both jounit and mature ane winning sueress. A Kood grade-school education, plus Lewis Spceiall/.ed TrulniiiK. (luullfled you. All of your tn»ininB under the personal supervision of Clifford I«wl«, wild wtw Appointed Hanaifinic CunHultant by over 300 hotels thruout the United Sutea. Send wuiwin today for Free Book. "Your nfft Opportunity ." explain- tnii our Money-Back AicreemeiU and our Personal Coachinic I'lan. -FREK DOOK COUPON- - ■ I.KWIS HOTKL TRAINING SCHOOIJ?, ' I Room DW-27(i6. WiwhinKton. U. C. | I Send me without nbtiiration the Free Book^ "Your Riir Opi»ir- t tunity," and details of your Personal Coachinir l'>«n. ■ I I I NBm« ■ • I I Addrras I City State. , All This for Only 15 Cents Send only 15c RIGHT NOW and receive The Pathfinder every week by mail for the next 13 consecutive weeks. In these 13 issues you will get 426 pages, with 300 pic- tures, 900 unusually interesting articles on people and tilings you want to know aljout. 1800 picked news items from everywhere, 2500 jokes, Sfiuihs and cracks, stories, etc. Newsiest, snappiest, most entertaininit paper in the whole world. The biffi:est l.=^c worth YOV ever saw. Send now. Address Pathfinder. Dept. 76, Washington. D. C. AVIATION TRAINING 5 means Mrnins-power in ONE YEARI^ One-vt-ar o>urse quulilles tnr Trim^tifni IMInfj liceti'^e at I*arlts Air Oilleiif. world's lariitst rii lUan Avint ion si hon!. llcen-ied since K*:!'.) I)y T". S. l>eiit. of CfimnuTce. Charactpr emphasized; pai - I'iK'f endorse I'arks standards of iralnliii; iind di-clpHne. Ctifuhinuc frrr. PARKS AIR COLLEGE, Section 12-PS Parks Airport, East St. Louis. III. Only Eight Woeks To Het a Big Job • AUTO MFXH.AXICS. oaMly learned in S weeks throuKh the McSweeny Shop-i*lan method, is a .'special- ized, biG;-pay trade that banishes forever the need to lt)ok for a job. Trained Auto Experts are NKEDED. N*o books or lessons. Actual, practical training wilh real tmils on real etiuipment. Write TODAY for IJi;^ Free Book and Low Tuition Offer. Act N'OW. McSWEENY SCHOOLS, Dept. A-6-12, Cleveland, Ohio. Wireless (Radio) and Morse teleerapby tauiifat thonmnhly. School, oldest and lariCMt: enii<)Me<i by TeleRTRpb, ttmli". Railway and Government officials. Unusu^kl upportunitieft, Rxpeaa««i low— can earn part, Calaloa frea, DODGE INSTITUTE, Hart St., Valparaiso, Indiana. Hi^ School Course in 2 Years You can complete this simplified High School Course at home inaidp of two years. Meeta all requirements for en- trance to coUeire and the leadint? professions. This and thirty-six other pmcllral oourfloa aro dcucribed in our Kree Bulletin. Send for It TODAY. AMERICAN SCHOOL Dept. H-948 Drpxel A v.&58th St. c A.3. 1923 CHICAGO A definite program for getting ahead financially will be found on page four of this issue HOW NAVY PLANES LAND ON CARRIER'S DECK (Continued from page 58) their call to planes, a large board on which are hung metal cut-outs, replicas of the several types of planes. Thus, by sticking the cut-outs on the board, the pilots can deter- mine without actually filling the 880-foot deck with airplanes just how many planes will fill a given area and in what positions they should be lashed down. While the carriers are intended to carry on the flight deck and be able to launch seventy- two planes, on one occasion the Saratoga had jammed on that broad expanse more than one hundred bombers, scouts, and fighters. The entire group was so arranged that all could take off under their own power! That is, it was not necessary to discharge any from the catapult. Of course, the fighters, weighing little more than a ton, can rise after a shorter run than is required for the scouts. The bombers need e%'en more room. But all have the advantage of an initial wind velocity of twenty to thirty miles an hour as the car- rier boils ahead. In the early days of carrier flying, take- offs and landings were more complicated than today. Then before a plane took off, it was hooked firmly to the deck while the pilot raced his engine. When the propeller finally was turning fast enough to lift the plane's tail from the deck, the hook was released and away the ship sped. Xow, the take- offs are normal in every respect with no trick gadgets to aid. ALSO, in the old days of 1928 there was apparatus on the deck that not only halted the planes' forward movement, but also kept them from skidding sideways. This ' was found to be unnecessary, as each plane, through a trick in the arresting gear, tends to "hunt" the center of the deck. Some pilots think the day will come when they will dash down from a long patrol, hit the deck on three points, pull on the brake, and stop without any external aid. -Mready this has been accomplished as an experiment. The late Lieut. T. G. Fisher, killed last sum- mer when his fighting plane dove into the Pacific while dropping dummy bombs on the radio-controlled destroyer ex-Stoddert, landed on the Saratoga without the help of the arresting gear. Since it was a test and had not been attempted before, the deck was cleared of airplanes and the "crash barrier" was not erected. As the Saratoga steamed into the wind, Fisher swept in, landed on the ramp, and with his brakes .=;lowed down his plane. I saw a French instructor at Rockwell Field during the early days of the World War test the air by holding up a wet finger. If even a slieht bceze cooled one side of his finger there was no flying that day. Now the carrier pilots fly in all sorts of weather, sometimes landing in a rainstorm. THIilR jobs demand that they be able to find their way around the ocean not only during inclement weather, but also to fly long distances from their ships. A hundred- mile jaunt either for a single scout or a whole squadron is only an incident in their flying lives. Occasionally pilots become lost. Even though from an altitude of 5.000 feet they can see a carrier thirty-five miles away on a clear day, in a haze a carrier becomes a tiny spot on a vast expanse of sea. .^t such times an extra dose of oil on the fires sends a heavy cloud of smoke billowing upward. On a calm day, the smoke rises to a great height. A pilot can see this black streamer fiftv miles away. Amazingly Easy Way to Get Into ELECTRICITY Dissatisfied with your job? Not making enough money? Then let me show you how to prepare for a real job and how to make real money— inELECTRICITY, the great money -making field ! TWELVE WEEKS of Practical Shop Training Come to Coyne in Chicago and learn Elec- tricity the quick and practical way - by actual work on actual machinery and equipment. No nseless theory. Tii« aver- age time to complete the course ia only 12 weeks. You work on real dynamos, switchboards, armatures, auto and air- plane engines, transmitting stations, etc. — everything from door Bella to power plants — in full operation every day! No previous experience necessary at Coyne. Free Employment Service toStudents When you graduate, we'll do all we can to help you get the job you want! We employ three men on a full time basis whose sole job is to help secure positions for students. Also, we'll help you to earn while learn- ing. Some of our students pay a large part of their living expenses through part-time work we get them. Get all the facts! Coyne Is 32 Years Old Coyne has been located right here in Chi- cago since 1899. Coyne training is tested — proven by hundreds of successful gradu- ates. Get all the facts! It costs nothing to investigate. JUST MAIL THE COUPON BELOW FOR A FREE COPY of MY BIG ELECTRICAL BOOK, telling all about jobs. . .salaries. . .opportunities. This does not obligate you. Just mail the coupon! I H. C LEWIS, President ^ I Coyne Electrical School, Dept. 91*73 I I see S. PaoUna St., Cbleago, 111. | ■ Dear Mr. Lewis:— Without obligration send me | your bifir. free catalog and all details of Free I I Emplosrment Service. Radio, Airplane, and Au- I tomotive Electrical Courses, and bow I may ■ I "earn while leamine." I I I I Name | j AMr... I ^ City State J DECEMBER. 1 93 1 139 Cor
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