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POPULAR AVIATION
December, 1939
RATE: 8c PER WORD
FIRST 15 WORDS $1.00
AIRPLANES?SALE OR TRADE
STINSON T TRI-MOTOn?I.IrnnsMMl until April
1	5, 1940. Complete night Ilyin* equipment. Ship ami motors In excellent condition. Priced right for Imtnediate sale. Will accept trndes. Prefer pood Stearman or Travel Air. Perry i.ee Curtis. Route 1. Hillsboro. Texas.
E2 Cub relicensed. heavy cables. new pyralln anil tires, 9450.00; also A-10 motor. Al Gardner, Conneaut. Ohio.
WANTED: License*! C-2 Aeronca. State lowest cash price. Consider unlicensed ship needing small amount of work for reUcense. .lark Hunt, Tolleson, Arizona.
11*31 FORD Panel Body Truck, Excellent Cnn-dltlon. Rebuilt engine; Trade even on license-able lightplane. Charles Lackey. Potlstown. Pennsylvania.
FOR SALE:	Improved Pletenpol Aircamper
only 45 hrs. Best materials obtainable; cost $675.00. Instruments galore, alrwheels. excellent condition, hangared. worth $400.00. Hans Meyer, St. Bonlfacius. Minn.
DE VRY 1C mm proiector new, sound. to trade for Cub or something simllnr. Wanted. Heath prop. H. Reed, Box 225, Maroa, III.
E-2 CUD, $275. needs some covering. Aeronca-K. cracked, $275. Blrdwing Diplane, needs motor and covering, $75. Nicholas* Beasley trainer. $150 Ilyaway. Pietenpol $100. Unfinished Heath, $60. Hedge-hopper, $50 complete. Send 25c for complete Directory of 100 bargains, located everywhere (not Athens). Used Aircraft Directory, Athens, Ohio.
AIRPLANES, none over $500. T^irge monthly sheet dime. WKJUP. 115 Mill Creek Ave., Pottsvllle, Pa.__________________________
_____________AIRPLANE PARTS___________________
AIRCRAFT BATTERIES?fi-8 Volt. Brand New Exlde. Willard. Spillproof. Approved. $4.50. Aeronautical Trading Co.. Floyd Bennett Airport. Brooklyn, N. V.
TAIL WHEEL WITH BRAKES. Steerable. Equipped with New Departure Brakes, Cockpit Control, Adjustable Brakes. Fits all light Aircraft. $25.00 complete. Aeronautical Trading Co.. Floyd Bennett Airport, Brooklyn. N. V.
WANTED:	Llcenseable right wing for Ameri-
can Lincoln Eaglet. Dean Binder. Conners-vllle. Indiana. R. R. No. 3.
WANTED:	Cub J-2 Struts, landing "vees".
Pox 112ft. Fargo. N. P._______________________
WANTED:	.10 H.P. motor, flying condition.
Opposed preferred pair 8-4 alrwheels. Paul Kelly. Ridgeway, Ohio.
BOOKS
LOWKSr price*?used hooks anti course*. Write Immediately. Merrill Wells Pub. Co.. Drawer H. Roselnnd. New Jersey.
A VI ATION?S rock el Sir.ed Encyclopedia with over fioo questions and answers, photos of oldest, most recent, smallest, largest planes! Written by nationally famous Instructor ami pilot only 10c coin! Leonard Schrader. Dept. 105, Nauvoo 111.
GLIDERS
BUILD YOUR OWN High Performance Utility Glider. Complete plans and Instructions. $12.50 ! ! Kits. $ 19!>.00, $2*9.00. and $3nn.0O. Complete glider $41*5.00. Sen.I tOc for information and pictures. Briegleh Aircraft Company, Van Nuys, California.
GLIDER WANTED?Primary, secondary, utility. Give description, age, condition, price. T. K. Dndson, 51 E. Cleveland, Muskegon Heights. Mich.
SALE or TRADE: Gilder. Detrolt-Gull. secondary. never cracked. Trailer, tow-rope. etc. Soarable $300.00 cash. C*. T. Richardson, Penna. Military College, Chester, Penna.
INSTRUCTION
AIRCRAFT BLUEPRINT and layout course. $1 per lesson. Craft School. Box fi$7. Santa Monica. California.
AVIATION APPENTICES:	Training	for en-
tering Aviation as Appentlces?write Immediately, enclosing stamp. Mechanlx Universal Aviation Service. Wayne County Airport, Dept. n2L Detroit. Michigan.
GRADUATE AIRPLANE MECHANICS. Ton weeks. $1.00 a week! Graduates with leading concerns. Free catalog. United Air School, Elgin. 111.
SEVERAL MEN to be picked for free aviation training. Address Inquiries to National Flying Information Bureau. Post Office Box 27 4. Keokuk, Iowa. Enclose stamp for reply.
HOW TO LEARN FLYING without money. Folder, dime. Ohmeyer, Box 391-F, Hempstead. New York.
MISCELLANEOUS
GIANT 32" assembled silk parachute, drop from plane, kite. etc. $1.50. Airline travel insignlas for car or luggage .10c. Blackburn Aircraft. Burlington, Wisconsin.
ROLL FILM DEVELOPED, two prints each negative. 25c. We repair rani?*ra? B??ll. P-1351 George, Chicago.
ATTENTION COLLECTORS* For original program llrM American Air Meet. pin. Dominguez Field. Sail Diego day Evelyn B'trle^n. Airport. Albany, Ore.
WANTED 10 fellows: Am starting fly<rtg rl*ib. For details wrile to E. Gunnel.	\Y*jm	End
A vnn 11n M V f'
For ............
Avenue. N. V. C
COR HESPONDEN<?E courses and ??durational books, slightly used. Sold. Rented. Exrhanc-'d. All subjects. Satisfaction guaranteed. Cush paid for used courses. Complete details and bargain catalog Free. Send nam*?. Nelson Company, L-237, Manhattan Building. ?*lti<-ago.
GRADE "A" Slip covers. Silk Thread Sewed. Low Prices. ATC Propellers. Ost?rgaard Aircraft, Dunning, Chicago.
"WISH correspondence with United States l**vs interested In Aviation. Fernando Villanmr. Parade Street. Corozal. B. H.?
________________patents__________________
PATENTS secured. Two valuable imokleis sent free. Write immediately. Victor J. Evans & Co.. 158-P, Victor Building, Washington. D. c.
PATENTS:	Low	cost. Book and advice free.
L. F. Ilandotph, Dept. 372, Washington. D. '\
PROPELLERS
PROPELLERS for Airplanes. Ice sleds, snow sleds, boats, dehydrators. fans, frosi-flghters. Hubs, countershafts, face plates. sn?*n- sled skis. Worlds largest propeller catalog. in?\ Banks Propellers. Hangar No. ?. Love Field. Dallas. Texas.
PROPELLERS:	Airplanes. Sleds. Boats, lat-
est three-blade Airliner, lowest prices. Blueprints. Famous 98 Trainer, twoplace monoplane now $4.95. Information with Flying Manual. I3?-. Standard Propellers. Ft. Worth. Texas.
SITUATIONS WANTED
JOB as mechanic. Experience. Name wages. Eddy Klundt, Box 87. Alfred, N. D.
WANTED: Job as apprentice mechanic?Theoretical training accept Hying time pait salary. Milford Markham. Sprlngvllle. N. Y.
COMMERCIAL PILOT wants fob. Army Air Corps experience. Three and one half years Aeronautical Engineering in College. Mechanical experience. Single. Will travel, p. o. Box 3 13, Phenix City, Ala.
Lake Pontchartrain was entirely too rough to try a landing. But about a mile southwest of the airport was the Industrial Canal. Sure it was?and so was a 25 mile cross-wind and a very narrow approach and landing, but it was home, so around I went again, feeling for the water. It was as dark as a closet. I made the approach long and low, dropping slowly. The landing was an anti-climax. It came off too smoothly. After that there was nothing to do but taxi up on the beach, where my friends were waiting for me.
There were some mighty interesting figures waiting for me too. Of the 81 gallons of fuel, my plane had consumed 61 gallons, and had used one quart of oil. The official reqord has not yet been received from Washington, and, although the actual distance flown was 1,186 miles, we expect the new record to be listed as approximately 1,120 miles. The old record of 902 miles was held by Dewey F.ldred and established in January, 1939, in a Taylorrraft. Traveling at an average speed of 87.85 m p.h., my flight took
l3'/i hours. I had averaged 18.5 miles per gallon, at a cost of 1.04 cents per mile. Not bad, eh?
You might think from this that I?d been through enough for one day and you'd be approximately right. Except for one thing. Somcbody?d thought up a swell publicity angle, and they were waiting with a microphone from WWL at the end of the flight.
That was when I really started getting frightened.
KND
Manufactured Workers
(Continued from page 45)
tory than the present educational system, which generally provides enough training to qualify its product for positions on the street corners,'selling newspapers.
The Baltimore program is a logical step from another cooperative venture instituted two years ago by Martin and the school board. At that time, the cooperating groups started a course in blueprint reading, which is held every
Saturday morning from October through May at the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, a local technical high school of high standing nationally.
Phis year Martin supplied 20 instructors from his engineering ami manufacturing departments. The class had an enrollment of 425. of whom 148 were seniors at the institute ami 175 others were Martin employes seeking voluntarily to better themselves. livery non-einployc graduate of this year s i 1?US-1939) course, like those who graduated last year, was given an opportunity to work at the plant.
Like Martin, the school authorities feel pretty good about the success of the second training program. Not only because they?re helping their students get jobs with a future but because they are, in a very real sense, making a definite contribution to the safety of the country. It isn?t far-fetched for them to say, as some have said, that their help in providing Martin with trained men to build the airplanes with which the Army Air Corps is being built up


Chapman, Henry B. Chapman-035
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