L9 A THE OMAHA SUNDAY EEE t MARCH 16, 1919. Captain "Eddie" Rickenbacher, Former Omaha Race Driver and Ace of U. S. Aces, Tells His Own Story, of His Experiences ' By CAPTAIN EDWARD V. RICKENBACHER, D. C. S. Legion of Honor Croix de Guerre. An officer who had the job of giv ing preliminary examinations to the young men who wanted to fly once complained to me that two ans wers to his well-meant questions got to be exasperatingly common. The first was to the effect that the candidate didn't know anything about aviation but had always dreamed of doing it. The second came when he was asked if Je knew the names of any of the men who were piloting fighting air planes over in France. Usually, ac cording to -this officer, lie said "Eddie Rickenbacher" and stopped there. The examiner was sure it ved that the average American .th read the sporting page of -the wspaper more carefully tlTan the ont page. A racing automobile .(river's name caught his attention , even in the war news, and stuck and- I got the benefit. If it had been a base ball player, it would have been the same way. I mention the matter here because, as it hapens, when I started in I ,was rrke those boys.' I knew nothingv about 'avi- ;iion and had only dreamed about it. I went overs to France as a chauffeur, after trying to get up a flying unit which the government refused to be interested in for rea sons that I now see were entirely good, though I did not see it clearly then. Once over there, I would uot let them rest until they gave me a lieutenant's commission and sent i me to Tours to see if I could learn to fly. Learned Pretty Fast. I learned pretty fast: Long prac tice in driving a racing car at a hun- dred miles an hour or so gives first class training in control and in judging distances at high speed, and helps tremendously in getting mo tor sense, which is rather the feel of your engine thafy the sound of it, a thing you get through your bones and,, nerves ratb.er than simply your ears. All this is a part .of the physical equipment of j handling an airplane, and it makes a lot of difference if the fellow with the stick knows how to make 'a i turn at 100 miles an hour or to ; allow for passing another fellow at ' twice that. " ; The proof of this is that after five and a half hours dual wilh an in structor tbey let me solo. But be cause I was a good mechanic and ; knew about motors they sent me to Issoudun to be engineer officer. Be ring engineer officer, I never had any regular advanced flying training ac cording to rule. But I took up a s ship whenever I could and learned j that way. ' I remember when I thought it was time to try a vrille or tail ipin. I knew what I was supposed to do. I knew you put the stick over and crossed the controls, but I'd never seen anybody do it. I went up about 12,000 feet, got off some distance from the field and flew around there for every bit of 30 minutes trying to get up my nerva to try the trick, but too scared to begin. At last I said to myself, "What's the matter with you? You've got to do' this," and threw the stick. She wen into the spin all right but I had her back to neutral after just one whirl, and I tell you I was glad when she righted. Next day, I went out and I took 20 minutes to make up my mind to try again. It was only on the third day that I went at the job with any confidence and let her do a real spin. That is still more or less the way I feel about doing a new stunt, after all the flying I have done at the front since. When you try a new thing, you are never quite certain how the machine will behave;- and though you may have confidence in your, ability to get out of anything as long as you have the altitude, there is a sort of hesitation botVin the machine and in you. The trouble is, you do not know what the strains will be on either. The next thing was to get away from Issoudun. The men who had to stick over in this side as flying instructors know how hard it is get away from a field when they've got you tied down to a job there. Those fellows are the ones that have my sympathy, becaus . they have done the work 'and missed the credit. They have staid home and not really home either, but in some par ticularly hot place down in Texas, most likely staid "there and made aces when they were themselves the stuff of which aces are made, and but for the luck of it would be, a lot of them, coming back here now with as many, ribbons and, decorations and Huns to their credit as any of us. , Instead, they have stuck on the job full of dingers and responsibil ities with little chance of promotion and none of fighting or of fame. And, the better they were, the more certainly they were stuck. Because pilots had to be trained in a hurfy, a very large number of pilots, and the very best. men were none too good for the task of training them. I "was not an instructor over there ai Issoudun. But even an engineer officer in France could not afford to be too good. I do not think I was. Still, when. I asked to go -to the front the C. O. said I could not be soared. ' I, conspire with the medical r fflf f v I Ask Mr. Droste Just oij. your right at the head of v the stairs as you enter the bank is the desk of Mr. Droste, Assistant Cashier. If you wish to locate a certoin de--partment, if you wish to get in tbch with an officer, or an em ploye, or if you wish any informa- tion about the bank, ask Mr. Droste. . ' i m ' " .We want to make your banking with us pleasant, and we want to save your, time. Consequently Mr. Droste is always glad to have you call on him for information pertaining to the bank. THE SERVICE OF THE FIRST' is available to everyone requiring the service of a bank. We invite you to come in and learn more of the meaning of this service, and remember, there is always a 'wel come for you here, I . j l CI 1 . , ; , 0 f o 1 I I t U I V,,;:;;;.. .. ..-. ....... f V.. '.' Photo CoDvriKbled by Harris &tJwlnir. '" Major Tames A. Meissner, D. S. C. (8 Huns); Major General William L. Kenly, Director of Military Aeronautics: Cantain Edward V. Rickenbacher. D. b. C. of Omaha. Neb.. (26 Huns) and Captain Douglas Campbell, D. S.-C. (6 Huns), photographed in front of headquarters, Division of Military Aeronautics, Wash ington, D. C. Meissner, Rickenbacher and Campbell were all members ot the JWh Aero squaaron wnose Daage was tne xiai-in-me-iung. , n officer. He does not know' it yet. but I did. I got myself sent to the hospital for tw weeks and at the end of that time I went to the C. O. and told him that it had been proved that I .wasn't indispensable be cause the other fellow had done the job better than I did. He could not deny if and he let me go. That gave me my chance to try my luck as a fightiivg pilot. I have had extraordinarily good luck. Every man who has been flying for any length of time at the front and is still alive has had good luck. It is scientific murder. The men who have learned their trade go at it that way, and as long as they do go at it that way they have an 'excellent chance toaccumulate victories and survive nevertheless. The experi enced fighting pilot does not take unnecessary risks. His business is to shoot down enemy planes, not to get shot down. His trained eyes and hand and judgment are as much a part of his armament as his machine gun and a 50-50 chance is the worst he will take or siould take, except where the show is of the kind that either for offense or defense justifies the sacrifice of plane and pilot. , Both Wise Birds. It is not the old hand and the expert flyer and air fighter who gets another of the same sort. Both are wise and shy birds. You will see a couple of that kind meet now- and then over the line and watch them circling experimentally around each other. The next thing you know, each has sized up his antagonist as just as good or better than himself and both have sheered off and are flying away to look for a more promising victim. What each is hunting for is an enemy who can be pounced on suddenly unawares and a getaway made before his comrades are on the victor's tail. The obvious ly inexperienced pilot is the game the .scientific air fighter goes after, and the majority of victories are won that way. But on the other hand, it, is the novice who usually gets ttie famous ace by doing at some moment the unexpected thing. He rashly attempts or blunders into a manoeuver which ii dead against all the sane rules and that is some thing against which the master of the-game has not provided and- is not forearmed. Sheer foolhardiness or plain clumsiness has done what skill and experience could not do. Or else accident does it, engine trou ble. a jammed machine gun, or an oversight. I remember an incident which might easily have made an end of me. His First Hun. . An approved method of attack was to dive out of the sun at the rear most boche of a Hun formation, shoot him down if you had the luck, chandelle or spiral upward and dive again at the next tailenderf I tried the trick once and got as far as the first act on the program, but I had shut off my pressure and forgot about it, and when, after crashing my first Hun, I tried to regain my altitude, the Spad refused to climb. I had to go into a roll which fot my gravity feed into action, but by that time the boche jhre.all com ing at me in a bunch with their guns spirting. There was nothing lor it but to diva with full power, which in the case of a Spad means going down at the rate of about 300 miles an hour, and fortunately wa were pretty high tip. With half a doien Huna after me, I went down o,wu feet that way. and though .1 had some trouble getting her out of th$ dive, I managed it and got away in spite of the fine target I made. . "Dropping Out. This narrow escaoe mav he used to bring out a point illustrated by the case of the doughboy who got tired of marching and dropped by the roadside. An officer ordered hmi to get back to his place and added that he had better be glad he was in the infantry, because if he had been in the air and dropped out he couldn t get back. Flying is one of the safest jobs in the armv as long as you do not drop tmt. If you do drop out, you are a dead man and dropping out means, usually, that you have made a mistake or let go of your gip. There have been stories about the recklessness of the American flyers, and no doubt they went for the Hun wherever they could get at him and some took very long chances, but on the front as I saw it, the American aviators in this regard came between the French and the British. The French were inclined to be cautious as a settled military policy of get ting the best results with the least expenditure of valuable lives and costly planes. The British ' were foolhardv as a matter of orinciole and morale, because they found that they got the test resulta with their people in that way. Compared with the French, playing their own game in the way they had settled down to it toward the end of the war, our men seemed reckless. Com pared with the British they seemed cautious. But, of course, the three systems had nothing to do with the courage of the three nations or of individual Frenchmen, bnglishmen or Americans. The French and English had each worked : out a method of scientific murder that did the job. We were working out ours with the experience of both to help us and the methods of both' to choose from. The result was, gen erally, a sort of compromise. The Flyer's Age. Right here I may mention ai a matter of interest, that in point of maturity for this work, the English man of 18 is about even with the American of 22. Our men are gen erally at their best as flyers be tween the ages of 22 and 26: the English are best between 18 and 22. I have been asked why, and I think it is due to differences in early edu cation in the two countries rather than to anything directly connected with the British and American practice of training flyers. Returning for a moment to the French People Indignant Over .Delay of Indemnities France, With a Deficiency of $10,000,000,000, Finds . Herself in Situation Which Recalls the "Green " backs" in America After the Civil War; Her Credit . Is Good But the Franc Is Weak Abroad and at Home. -. stories of recklessness on the part of our aviators, there were men like Frank Luke, whose record is one of the brightest glories of our air service and who gave his all, his life, to the cause. Luke s is Huns include 11 balloons, and.to get a balloon you have to go through the antt-aircratt ana ma chine gun barrage and the Naming onions they send up to protect it. Getting a balloon is so much more difficult than getting a plane, in fact, that the Germans credit a pilot with two victories for every balloon brought down. Luke from the beginning jwai a wild man in the air. He would take off and playfully do a series of loops within a few hundred feet of the ground. That sort of thing was strictly forbidden in my own squad ron. Men and planes are too valu able and too difficult to replace at the front to berisked unless there is real reason, for the risk. But after a run of hard luck such as came along sometimes when we had lost a lot of men and the spirits of the others were beginning to show the Strain, I used to go out myself and do all sorts of Stunts right out , in front of them. It had a surprising moral effete The men said, "Any way, they haven't got Ricken bacher's goat." On the next sortie they went up lull of pep and snap and ready to go anywhere and do anything. . Hat-ln-Ring Squad. My own aquadron, the Ninety fourth (Hat-in-the-Ring), had a fine record. We were the first American sauadron in the game: we had the first ace and the highest record of air victories of any American squad ron at the end of the war, and final ly, we had a chance to go into Ger many at the head of the American army, which was a magnificent cli max to the unit's active career and an experience not to be forgotten by any of us flying over those cities and castles and vineyards along the Rhine that we had been thinking of as theilistant goal of all the fighting that went before. Some of the men who have been flying over there in FranM came back saying they are fed up and have had enough of the air. But I do not think Lam one of them. The sky means something to me it never meant before. When 1 look no ana see the sun shining on the patch of white clouds up in the blue, I begin to think how it would feel to be up somewhere above it. winging awiftly through the dear air, watching the earth below and the men on it no Kbigger than ants. I rarely go to church except with my mother wnen I am at home,, to show that a plaint .T . , ' 1 I A. 1 f xeDrasica raisinjj nas j noi uccn wasted on her boy but there is something spiritual I don't know what else to call it irvthe feeling you get up there. .At least it seems so to me, though somebody sug gested that it was just, in a tnagnl tied form, the feeling of superiority, or exaltation, or whatever it U, ol the man on horseback or in a swift automobile ai he looks down, ai he sweeps past, upon the man on foot To Continue Flying. At all events, I expect to keep oa flying and I expect a part of the future of flying to lie in the scope it gives to the initiative of the Ameri can boy in the sort of thing; that nunting usea to mean to mm in un days when there was hunting close at hand for almost every boy, and that sport in maay forms still meant to him and always will mean to him. Whatever happens or does not happen in the way of the com mercial expansion of aviation, flying will always have the sporting ele ment, and military aviation, which, through the fortune of war,-is sa much in advance of other forms ol flying, must be kept alive and strong as the backbone of, the others. In a very real sense, the future of aviation in this country, is in thi hands of the men who hare been trained to fly in the army, who have mastered the i art either on fields on this side or at the front, not with out paying a heavy price for it In the lives of comrades just as good but not to lucky as themselves, i John P. Tarbox, executive' enrt. neer ot Curtlsi Engineering corpor ation, saya airplane stabilizer are needed and will be produced soon In such -form aa to make airplane of great commercial value. - .... -1 ' -; : A t? $ -:t 'f r ' : ' - - - Funeral Horn of - Stack & Falconer HTC-Arrt?w Oar On Thoagat Is Service , TL Kancf 64 33rd A Paraaaa OMAHA By NABOTH HEDIN. ' Staff Correspondent of Universal Service. ' (Special Ctble DUpatch.) Paris, March IS. The French slogan today is "Peace and Pay." "Germany must pay first,'-' resounds or stares from every tribune, sign board and newspaper. Mass meet- ings are held and .resolutions are sent to the Chamber of Deputif s de manding that before the French tax payers are aaddled with new bur dent Germany must pay for the damages it has caused. The French budget has been more than tripled and there is a $10,000,- 000,000 deficiency which must be raised forthwith. The Chamber last week voted- to have 3,000,000,000 francs additional paper money printed. This makes a total ot36, 000,000,000 francs of paper money in circulation as against less than 6,- -000,000,000 before the war.. Econ omists argue the excessive circu lation of paper rsney it responsible for raising the prM.' j The situation Hcalls the "green backs" in America after the civil war. French credit is good.but there is no denying that the franc is weak both 'abroad and at home. The rising prices make the situa tion -fi many people desperate, es pecially that of salaried men and women. Last Sunday employes of the government who are underpaid joined labor unions as a means to raise their incomes. Applied to America, this is as if the American government employes joined the federation of labor or the I. W. W. for concerted action. , The French capitalist class is wor ried by talk of confiscation of one fourth o everybody's property to pay the war deficit. France looks with anxiety toward the discussion at the Quai D'Orsay Saturday of the reparation problem. For the amount which Germany is to be sentenced to .pay is a vital question for France. Returning sol diers do not like to pay for the war which they have won. The fresh activity of the peace congress in fixing the preliminary treaty of peace pleases the French who consider the congress has not paid sufficient attention to Germany. The Paris Midi says editorially: "Mr. Lansing declares we hare ar rived at a critical point in the world's affairs, and that we ought to have peace without delay. The American secretary of ttate is a thousand times right and it is not French opinion which contradicts him. "Nobody here understands why we have been waiting ever since Novem ber 11 or 123 days to say: 'These are the new German frontiers, these are the future German military ef fectives, these are the debts Ger many must oav.' ' i iVe xsuat act twicklx aad the French do not understand why there is such delay. We hae persistently shouted here and the French press generally has done so that the first subject for the conference to tackle was the question of Germany. Now we are finally getting there. Indeed, it is 'getting there' to announce that Germany is in peril through lack of activity for her factories and sup plies for her markets. It is clear that when the supply ships enter the boche ports the question of the new frontiers will be settled in a sensi ble fashion. It it clear that the debt r,,rmanw nvap- 11 will be known then and that she will recognize thatl pledges are not to be promised but "?. . - . ....... ihougn tne trencn peace delega tion now ooenlv shares the "Ameri can view regarding the' necessity of 1..! .... .' ) ... . A supplying ucrmauy in uiu iu yui anarchy in that country, Chauvinis tic sections of the French press make ironical references to Secre tary Lansing's insistence on this subject. - The government inspired yrti$ has abandoned this attitude. At regards the repeated implica tions that the society of nations pro ject delayed the conclusion of a pre liminary' peace, I am able to state on authority that this is entirely falser The league project did not in the slightest delay the formulation of the military, territorial, naval and fiscal terms to be imposed on Ger many. Separate commission! were ap oointed for these subjects and they have been working independently. While it is true that the league of nations commission had is report ready first, thanks to long night ses sions under the propulsion of Presi dent Wilson, the other commissions have been working unhampered by the league plan ,and would not be ready until now even if the league of nations had never been planned. JBriefly, those who fry to make the league project the "goat" for the delay, know not whereof they speak. Omaha Boys at Camp Mills Waiting to Be l-V . 1 . II- Ketumed to nomes Eighteen Omaha boys were among the total, of 2,163 officers and men who sailed on the Steamship America Febru'ary 10 from Mar seilles and arrived in New York March 2. The men now are at Camp Mills awaiting to be mustered out of the service. The Omaha boys are: Dvy, Harold W. Rlchlaon, Ralrb B. Beatrice Reports Big Real Estate Deals During the Past Week Beatrice, Neb., March IS. (Spe cial.) George Zager, a farmer liv ing near DeWitt yesterday purchas ed the old Griggs farm of 200 acres southof that place of WW. Barm by for $240 per acre. . ILf. Barmby a year ago purchased the tame farm from Mr. Griggs for $140. This thowt an advance of $100 an acre during the last year The farm is well improved. " Glen Watson, young son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Watson of this city, died last evening of pneumonia after a' brief illness. The Beatrice Poultry association held itt annual meeting and elected these officers: 'President, Julius Neuman; vice president, T. B. Ful ton; secretary-treasurer, D. O. Kassing: superintendent. S. A. Sey mour. Thelates for the next thow and the selection of the judge will be made later. ' Word was received here of the death by influenza of Mrs. Clara Heiliger, which occurred at her home at Holyoke, Colo. The de ceased formerly lived at Plymouth, to which place the remains will be taken for burial. The deceased was 23 yeart of age and leaves no fam ily except her husband. Heavy showers, the first of the season, tell in this section ot the state. The ground is Sn excellent condition for spring seeding and winter wheat never looked better at khis season of tne year. A number of farmers are at present engaged in selecting their teed corn for this year. 1 - " - r. K. Andersen ot filley hat pur chased the quarter section farm of Carl Sorensen near that place for $26,400. Judge Wray of York, Neb., ad dressed a small crowd at the high school last evening on the new wel fare ordinance, which was recently passed by the city commissioners. A petition signed by -fhe required number of voter? was recently filed with the -commissioners requesting them to call a special election for the purpose of submitting the prop osition to the voters, but the com missioners decided not to call an election, so the ordinance will not become effective until 1920. Judge Wray is president of the welfare board at York, which has success fully looked after theaters, public dances, etc. - C. of C. Committee to Urge Changes in Blue Sky Law Changes in the Nebraska Blue Sky law will be proposed by a com mittee of the Chamber of Com merce, named by Francis Brogan. This committee comprises Messrs. W. E. Rhoades, chairman; Yale C. Holland, Chas A. Goss, W. S. Weston and Thomas 'A. Fry. Dickson, TUdan W. Eaelln, Earl 6. Johnson, Walter O. Montmormcy, F. I Oiborna, Robtrt O. Pans, Ana-tlo . Penny, Fran T. Rldiway. Roy Rockwell, Loula H. et. Clair, Lynn R. Shannon, dward O. Shropshire, Cl7d C. Stabler.' Arthur A. Thompson, I. H, Isletv.aits & yasAerlerd. T, Q, L'Alliance Francaise Will s MeeUt Mrs. Martin's Today The members of the French Al liance will be entertained at the home of Mr. and .Mrs. Charles W. Martin, 632 South Thirty-seventh street this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Dr F, T. Despecher will give an illustrateiTlectura on yartailiea, 4 A MESSAGE ' TO MOTHERS C V Miss Lutie E, Stearns of Milwaukee whose ability to interest an audience is well known ; - in the Omaha Circle of Woman's Clubs and Educators r WiirSpend the Month of April IN OMAHA ' The enthusiasm with -which Miss Steams' lecture1 "The Bitter Cry of the Children" has been received recently in St. Louis, Duluth and Milwaukee has oc- casioned the Alamito Dairy Company tomake arrangements with her so that the various organizations of JDmaha women : the Home Economics Classes, Mothers' Circles, Ladies' Aid Societies, Municipal Nurses, Qrade Teachers' Association and Woman' Clubs in general may have the pleasure and priyilege of hearina: not onjy the above-mentioned talk, but also Miss Stearns' enter taining semi-serioua discussion regarding what adults are to drink! after the nation goes dry. - " ' ' ' . ' No charge will be madefor Miss Stearns' services, but Club Sec retaries are requested to please make application for dates at their' earliest convenience so that cofliction of dates may be adjusted to the satisfaction ai-everyone concerned: t'. i PHONE DOUGLAS 409 AND ASK FOR MRS. NOEL, who will be" pleased to furnish further details. Any organizations who prefer to do so may have the -use of the Reception Room of the Alamito Dairy in which to hear Miss Stearns talk otherwise Miss Stearns wUl be glad to address them at their regular meeting place.' i 7 4 J ; f i