Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1941 — Page 6

PAGE 6

This is the way Badward Manning, 1026 S. Randolph St. took to the

Drivers Back on 100 State «i

: : ! Schedules After A of When he was 14 he and his older | eS ter Ena of brother, Howard, built and flew a | 5-Day Strike. glider |

y Ive was 16 he leamed to fiy

ye more than 100 Gaily runséf

, Pennsylvania

Yn Ny et at 19, he has joined the | Nn Midian were resumed nC h ing a ; FUSWRIEE Civilian Refresher Training IR (A and within | of the fveJday-old Sie ahEGymceg Wn Washi i the R AR, ve strike was called last aay . y nik Hed Associstion of | Fade is to leave Tor California Ry Yd Motor | airliner Sunday to take his British | 3 (A. PF. job at $18 & week, room and board and ns of fixing He leaves a Job as engine in-

> be an officer |

IR =~ =u

0 consider is de & New Contract to replace shich expired Nareh Spector at the Allison plant here which has been paying him around BARN Aas 4 on BANE th agreement Iv ng Xe $55 a week, but mcludes no ying provides th all Gifference & y Shall be submited to the Secretary Now, back to the glider. He and Labor wiv . nis brother were students at Man-

" k 2% Sad a Pdward Manning Whe maior fscues clade waee in. Gal Training High School when —

pened reduction of Dhowrs for Uhey built it. After it Was ready fying course at Municipal Airport

fly they were pushed around - ees and & closed x considerably by varmous sir Helds Several hundred employ ces of tin [ them would give the boys Pompany in Indians were affected. | PON to take off ing last February through a Chicial : ¥ went © Rushville cago recruiting commitice and Six : s ‘That was weeks ago went there (0 take flight Fadie needed charted mage wd physical tests.

thn ugh 1 Butler University. He began to get into British fy

GERMAN FUNDS ATT ACHED

i y YO Ai A e 3 WASHINGTON, May 8 ing negotiations to fly a plane and Of course, I dont know exactly |

—Attornes Gen wor Robert Jak | soon Ive @id hat I'm getting into,” he Says) German 1 F. Farve: unas of W He has been flying around here| with a smile. “They tell me Il . A SNtion F. Fa en Modustrves In and there for the last four years jhave six months of training in Calhave t on ’- Ci § Sanit o E New Yor R meanwhile complet tg his courses] iformia and a little more nC Sanada. ah. a tach ed by the Govern. at Manwal and taking a year of and then they just say, ‘Youll bej ment because the COOrakioD failed | mechanical engineering at P ih the regular R. A. F' That's a8

ALL GREYHOUND Boy Who Flew Glider af 14 FEW SELECTEES RUNS RESUMED Expects R. A. F. Post Soon

MAKE CLASS 1A

FRIDAY, MAY 9,

Local Board Figures Show | 11 Per Cent in State Are | Available and Fit.

A little more than 11 per cent of | all Mmdiana Selective Service regis. | | rants are available and fit for serve ite, a compilation of local board | classifications made by the State Selective Service headquarters | showed today. i | Figures collected by the state) | headquarters from the 152 local | boards in the state revealed that 140,605 registrants have been classi- | fied. Another 0.072 have been tenta- | tively placed in Class 1 and are awaiting physical examination. Out of the group so far classified, almost 14000-—0r about 1135 per | cent—have been placed in Class 1. |A. Most of this group is already in| | service, |

Dependency Placed First

Dependency has been the reason | Jor the greatest number of defer | ments. Over 100000 registrants | about V2 per cent of those so far classified--have been put in Class III-A, deferred because of depend. ency. Here is the way a typical group of one thousand registrants would be [classified by Indiana local boards | at the present time: i In Class I-A, physically fit and lavailable for service, would be 114) men Another 43 would be availe able for service but fit for only lim- | [ited training and therefore classi. |

mn,

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[fied In IB. i | Fourteen are students who have] | been deferred until the end of the present Choo] year.

wo NSWEr an anui-rwst suit University ang the CAA Primary | far as they will tell me.” Ty. 25 At Important Jobs Twenty-five have been geleres

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inecessary to the national health, | | mierest or safety. These defers # iments will all expire within a max- | ® imum of six months, after which | many of the IT-A men will probably | be raised to I-A.

Into Class I-A, deferred be-|

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dll be deferred in Class IV-A be-| cause of having completed servi ! Two will be aliens who have nat] | taken out their frst papers and | therefore are not accepted for serve jce. They will have been classified in IV-C. Six will be deferred be- | cause they are ministers or divinity | students and place in IVsD | One will be placed in IV-E as a | conscientious opposed to both compatant and noncombatant service He will not be taken for military i service. but either has been or will | be assigned to a civilian camp {where he will do conservation work.

At Bottom eof List |

A group of 68 will have been | | found either mentally, morally or { physically unfit for service. These {go at the botiom of the list in | Class IVF, | The remaining two men out of | the thousand would be split between I-A-Q (conscientious objectors opFn to combatant service only, and | | assigned to a branch of military | Service in which they will not be required to bear arms), I-B-O (conscientious objectors opposed to | combatant service but physically Iqualified for limited service), IV-B | (officials deferred by law, such as) | judges and congressmen), and IV- | B-S (students who also are conscientious objectors). i Out of this typical group of 1000; { registrants, 46 will volunteer for| |service and about 27 volunteers will! win I- A, classification and be acpe by the Army. i 3 : : i Local boards will disagree with : ? {eight registrants who consider them- | : : ~ ; Jonna selves as necessary men and ask to! iy be deferred in IT-A. These, if they are physically fit, will find their way mio I A

F. CUSTER TROOPS 4 TO BIVOUAC HERE

| More than 10000 troops of the | Fifth Division, now stationed at Ft, { Custer, Mich. will move into Ft. | Harrison ny or for an overnight vouae, the stop en route to madmen 6.PIECE BEDROOM OUTFIT “r= | vers scheduled to begin in June. { Col. Walter S. Drysdale, Ft. Har- | . | rison commandant, said the Fifth ® Full or Twin Size ® JR. Inch Chest | Division will move by motor trans- Bed

| ports to the maneuver area in the | south in two columns, one of which | * Big Vanity with 30- * Comfortable Cotlon ing! Note the satin-like finish

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T he DULANE [ voust at the local Army reservation. | Mirror neers. the substantial construc

The “West Column,” scheduled to » . \ 'bivous¢ here will be under com- | * Vanity Bench tion throughout!

This semi-dr: ve model has SI ee Aha Sngul | mand of Col. M. J. Gunner, com- | | mander of the 10th Infantry Regi- | iment. Elements of the column od | include units of the 11th Infantry, | which was stationed at Ft. Harri- | {son here for 18 years prior to its | recent transfer to Ft. Custer. Other {units of the 11th Infantry are in | Bermuda and Trinidad, serving as a | garrison for new U. S, Naval bates | leased from the British,

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