|
Garden County News
July 20, 1917
Oskosh, Garden County, Nebraska
DRAWING
MAY BEGIN SATURDAY
Drawing of lots for
the selective draft not only will determine what men are to be called
to the first war army, but will show in what order the others will
be liable for service when later armies are organized. It was revealed
tonight that a plan of drawing would be followed under which a definite
place in the waiting lists will be given everyone of the millions
who registered. Those standing at the head of the list in each county
or city district will be called first before the examination boards
and then the obligation will pass on down the lines as men are needed.
This does not mean
that a separate name or number will be drawn for everyone of the
country's 9,800,000 registrants. In fact, every number drawn, under
the theory of the plan, will represent more than four thousand men,
one for each of the registration districts.
OUTLINE
OF THE SYSTEM
Details of the system
have not been made public, but an outline of its principal features
follows:
Every registration
board has numbered the cards in its possession in red ink, beginning
at No. 1 and continuing to a number corresponding with the total
in the district. At the drawing numbers will be used ranging No.
1 to a number corresponding to the total in the largest district
in the country. The first number drawn will determine what man in
each district is to be taken first. If it be No. 10 for example,
it will mean that the man holding card No. 10 will be called for
examination before any of the other mean in that district.
The second number
drawn will determine what man is to be taken second, and so on as
long as men are needed. Those not needed for the first war army
will retain their positions on the list and these will determine
the order of their liability when they are needed.
DRAWING
TO MADE PUBLIC
The drawing will be
public and each number will be announced as it is drawn. At the
offices of most local exemption boards the red ink numbers of the
registrants are already posted, so that registrants may inform themselves
before hand of their respective numbers.
Obviously there will
be high numbers drawn for which there are no corresponding registrants
in small districts. The smallest district in the country is understood
to have but 187 registrants and the largest about 7,000. Whenever
a number beyond the total in any given district comes out it will
operate as a blank for that district. Thus if the theory works out
evenly, the larger districts will be constantly assessed in excess
of the smaller on a pro rata basis corresponding to their size.
Liability will be
fixed by the order in which the names come out. There are some 6,000
districts with numbered registration cards, so the first number
drawn will represent the first 6,000 to appear before the exemption
boards.
It is estimated that
50 percent of the men examined will be exempted or fail to pass
the physical examination so more than a million probably will appear
before the board before the 687,000 or more wanted on the first
call are obtained.
The drawing will be
held during the week of July 23. Only twenty-four states have completed
the organization of their exemption boards and the posting of red
ink numbers. The drawing cannot be held until all states are complete
so that no juggling of numbers will be possible.
The drawing will probably
be held in the big reception room of the War Department, adjoining
Secretary Baker's offices.
ALL
DETAILS NOT DISCLOSED
Officials are unwilling
to disclose the details, but the suggestion which seems to have
the most support is that the numbers, stamped on thin slips of paper,
will be inclosed in non-transparent gelatin capsules and placed
in a large glass vessel, to be removed one at a time.
The number of capsules
which will be necessary will be equal to the total in the largest
district. Thus, under the present arrangement 7,000 numbers will
have to be drawn. Information so far available indicted that the
drawing will work out this way. There are 4,550 exemption districts.
When the first number is drawn-say No. 10-it will be recorded with
the serial number (10) following. The record would show that the
men whose cards bear the serial number 10 in each of the 4,550 exemption
districts would be the first to appear before the exemption boards.
Presumably the announcement made at the drawing would be No. 1,
serial No. 10.
To prevent embarrassment
among those who are exempt the War Department has decided to give
with each exemption certificate a bronze badge bearing the inscription.
"Exempted-U.S." It is desired to prevent any suspicion
of being slackers.
The law specifies
that exemptions are not permanent unless the cause for which they
are granted is permanent. For instance, if a man should be exempted
on the first call because of a dependent relative and that relative
should die or become self---supporting before the second call the
registrant would be liable for service under the second call. It
will be the duty of the exemption boards to keep watch of such cases
and recall the men who have been passed over once, but whose statue
may have changed before the second call is made.
FEAR
OF FURTHER POSTPONEMENT
Some fear was felt
at the War Department today that the delays in organization might
cause further postponement of the draft. It is believed that the
drawing might take place Saturday of this week. It then became evident
that it could not be held before next week and indications that
it might be the latter part of the week before everything was ready.
One of the states where there has been the most confusion is New
York. The new estimate of population by the census bureau as a basis
for the draft, it is explained, is not to be taken as a genuine
indication of the actual population of cities and communities. As
the object of the estimates is to fix a fair basis or establishing
local quotas, industrial centers with disproportionately large numbers
of young men subject to draft have been given figures, probably
considerably in excess of the number of people actually within their
borders.
As soon as the local
organizations are complete, appointment of the district exemption
boards will be announced. These boards, one or more in each federal
judicial district, will pass upon the appeals from the local bodies
and will have jurisdiction over claims for exemptions on account
of industrial and agricultural or other necessary enterprises.
Examination for the
boards proposed from forty-five states already have been sent to
the President by the provost marshal general's office.

This page last modified: Tuesday, February 8, 2000
|