Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 33, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1935 — Page 4

PAGE 4

URGE STATE TO INCREASE FUND FORT. B, WORK Association Members Stress Sanatorium Needs; Elect Officers. The Indiana Tuberculosis Association in Its closing session late yesterday at the Lincoln adapted a resolution requesting the General Assembly to grand appropriations lor additional sanatorium needs. New officers elected yesterday are Dr. Paul D. Crimm, Evansville, president; Donald DuShane. Columbus, first vice president; Dr. C. J. Mclntyre, Indianapolis, second vice president; Mrs. William Gremmelspacher, Logansport, secretary, and Dr. E. M. Amos, Indianapolis, treasurer. Others on the executive committee are Woodson Carlisle, South Bend; Dr. J. V. Pace, Rockville; Mrs Hugh C. Friend, Vincennes; Dr. W. D. Hice, Terre Haute; Miss Anne Lutz, Lafayette; Dr. Will Martin, Kokomo; Mrs. Karl Gilbert, LaGrange, and Dr. M. H. Draper, Ft. Wayne, retiring president. Dr. J. H. Stygall, Indianapolis, was named president of the Trudeau Society, which met with the association. Dr. R. B. Anderson, South Bend, was elected vice president. and Murray A. Auerbach, executive director of the association, secretary of the society. The Trudeau Society requested that the Legislature provide another state tuberculosis sanatorium and fireproof buildings and enlarged facilities at the Rockville Hospital. Dr. William McQueen, superintendent of the Marion County Tuberculosis Hospital at Sunnyside, presented a paper describing and stating the advantages of pneumolysis, an operation to sever adhesions holding the lung to the chest wall, in the treatment of nul- | monary tuberculosis. Visiting physicians witnessed an operation of this nature Tuesday i afternoon.

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IWANT to tell you a strange story. ... A story where fighting airplanes and a fighting air force took part in a bitter campaign between warring hostile tribes . . . without firing a shot. In the northwest corner of India —in the Khyber Pass country, immortalized by Kipling—are a war- : like people who have resisted the might of England. They live in mountainous country . . . and down between the peaks are yawning chasms ahd boiling torrents. Conflicts between hostile tribes break out with seasonal frequency in this section. The people are hardy warriors who recognize only the law of the gun. Some time ago in Afghanistan, not far from the Indian border, rival factions proceeded to depose a king. Rebel tribes roamed the count y, cutting off British, French and Italian legations from the principal city of Peshawar. For days the outside world was without newa of these legations. The British legation was in far the worst position and its large and spacious grounds were bombarded daily. As the warring tribes swarmed back and forth over the country, the fate of the legations became more perilous every day. Since it was next to impossible to establish ground communication

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I with the legations, the British i turned to the Royal Air Force for help. The R. A. F. had been pai troling the Indian side of the border , from the air. Under the guise of establishing a weekly air service, the first plane i was dispatched from Peshawar to Kabul, where the legations were l established. The flying officer arI rived over the British legation and j observed signals telling him "not to land" but to “fly high." He had been ordered to drop a message and some cloth panels so that airmen could be signaled. To make sure his message was delivered, down came the British pilot. He dropped his burden, watched it fall on the legation grounds. Then the rebels opened fire on him. One bullet pierced his radiator, another the oil pump. . . . But we’ll have to continue this story until tomorrow. QUESTION: What is the center of mass of an aircraft? The center of mass, often incorrectly termed the center of gravity, is the point in a plane at which the greatest portion of weight lies. It j is the one point on which an aircraft could balance itself longitudinally and laterally when in contact with nothing but that point.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

$1,300,000 FOR STATE ARMORY WORK IS ASKED Indiana Program Is Outlined in Washington by Gen. Straub. By Timt SpcciiX ' WASHINGTON. April 18.—Adj. Gen. Elmer Straub and Maj. N. L. Thompson of the Indiana National Guard appeared before the Senate Military Affairs Committee yester- . day to urge the earmarking of $30,000,000 of work-relief funds for National Guard armory construction throughout the states, Indiana's armory building program would call for expenditure of $1,300,000. It includes a $250,000 addition to the Indianapolis armory, anew naval militia armory j at Indianapolis costing $325,000, j and munitions, radio and oil housings at the Indianapolis Guard Air- I port costing $75,000, Gen. Straub said.

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-APRIL 18, 1835