| One of our colleagues was in Cazaux at the time of the fatal fall of the student pilot Gavault. He allowed himself to respectfully point out to Colonel Felix-Marie, who had just arrived at the camp to exercise the functions of general and whose talent as an organizer of aeronautics is universally recognized, the slowness and defect of the medical service. The major on duty did not arrive until twenty-five minutes (watch in hand) after the fall, and the stretcher that removed the dead man still bore the blood stains of the last accident. |