Omaha Sunday Bee PART THREE MAGAZINE PAGES ONE TO FOUR PART THREE ' MAGAZINE , PAGES ONE TO FOUR HE VOL. XLI NO. 50. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE l 1912. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. S cience of Military Ballooning Taught at Fort Omaha F ORT OMAHA has been the scene of much maneuvering with balloons of military size and qualifications dur ing the last week. No 'swooping air ships, nor darting planes; nor even the ponderous contraptions that are supposed to be devoted to the trans fortatlon of passengers, , have been - on parade out there. Uncle Sam's ballooning is carried on in a practical manner. The general government has no use for the affairs that are more' spectacular than useful; when It adopts something for the use of the army. It is because the Innovation has demon strated its utility and its desirability as well. So, try. Especially so if the. -balloon used is of the spherical type with no means of guiding except by air currents. ; The free balloon will finally rest, eight times out of ten, on soil beyond the position 1 occupied by" the foe. Ballooning is fraught with peril even for experimental purpose, not alone when it Is actually the center of a standing army's attack. For experimental purposes the captive bal loon is more generally used. Major Samuel Reber of New York; an instructor of the army signal corps and commanding officer of this branch of the eastern division, has been in charge of the flights and superintending the courses of instruction. Major Reber is vice president while much of experiment has been carried on of the Aero Club of America, and has charge of with aeroplanes and other flying devices, " the that department of the "club that arranges for ! ' I XNTZATIITV ' ' ' i ! fiHijMi- I t';"rsrfw wi ..mr WWW I 7 I mm f& - iriir . MiS 1.-. - P Wi-r-tw HliKSR r ic-i -j '-v I" v hs:A ;Y:txr' ii ' hVi- MWi H VV 1 : : 1 &azMr ? -fc:,. '55?"1')I A I r m. is am a " v'-v.s .v y.-,w:.-. training in the uses and advantages oif balloons as adaptable to warfare Is with the balloons of the '. kind that may be depended upon. So the ma neuvers of the last week were with' big gas bags, Inflated with hydrogen gas, made at the fort, the same sort of gas as will be carried in steel con tainers when the signal corps goes to the front with its telephony, its wireless telegraphy and its captive balloons. A huge dirigible is among the equipment of the balloon house at Fort Omaha, and it was also handled, but on the basis of the spherical free floating balloon. Fort Omaha Is the center of aeronautical in struction for the western division of the army. . It is here the officers and men of the, signal corps come for their practical training in the handling and maneuvering o! the big gas bags, and the work, that has been going on out there Is but a pert of the regular course of instruction. It was hampered In the early' part of the week by the stormy conditions that prevailed, but a number of ascensions were made, and many experiments with instruments were undertaken, all with some success. Ballooning for army purposes has finally come down to a ground-work basis and the assigned task called upon the balloons when war is declared will be fcr three purposes. These are: The observation of the enemy's camp. Scouting purposes on the position of enforce ments and the enemy's strength. Transportation of supplies and men to inacces sible places. This last purposes necessarily would be seldom If ever called into use. But for. observation . and Bcouting the balloon Is the most valuable addition . to the strength of a fighting army. For these pur- poses wig-wag signals transmitting the govern ment's secret code are used. Even the use. of wire less telephony and telegraphy has been tested out to further facilitate the distance the aeronaut can go when wig-wag signals would be Impracticable. Some sort of signalling is known to be absolutely necessary as some mishap might happen to the balloon and its passengers as it crosses the enemy's lines. On most occasions tne men who compose the balloon corps are called upon in actual warfare to be martyrs to their profession and for their coun- fllghts. He is an authority on all. forms of air craft in present and prospective use. He will be stationed at the post during the entire time the course ex tends. , . Besldges Major Reber and the balloon corps of Fort Omaha and Its officers, fifteen commissioned officers of the signal, corps at Fort Leavenworth are ordered here andlll be present during the flights. The visiting officers are: Major Samuel Reber, eastern division, in charge; Captain George E. Mitchell, signal corps, acting director of the army signal school, instructor; .'First Lieutenant J. 0. MarBorgne, Third infantry, Instructor; Cap tain George S. Gibbs, signal corps; Captain Holland Rubottom, signal corps; Captain Parker Hitt, sig nal corps, and Captain Alvin C. Voris, signal corps, students; First Lieutenant Frank S. Bower, Twen tieth infantry; James G. Taylor, Eighteenth infan try; Frank L. McEntee, Jr., signal corps; David L. Roscoe, First calvary; Bert W. Phillips, Twenty seventh infantry; Howard R. Smalley, Eighth cav alry; Charles A. Dravo, Twenty-first Infantry; Karl TruesdeH, signal corps; Second Lieutenant Edmund R. Andrews, Seventeenth Infantry, all students. At least one captive and one t i the free spheri cal balloons at the post were ued for instruction purposes. The post has a'toKi of four balloons, including the dirigible, ' widen are considered to be sufficient for use. Beside the flights a school will be established for the study of signalling from air craft. The use of wireless telephony and telegraphy and the care and preparation of a hydrogen gas station will bo studied in regular set courses. Lectures along these lines will be given by the instructor in charge. Military ballooning or aeronautics is not by any means a new proposition, as has been generally accepted. Neither has there been very rapid ad vancement In the methods of military ballooning over that of a century ago. When the balloon was first used In the French revolution in the latter ,part of the eighteenth century, of late years the aroplane has been used consldrably by foreign gov ernments as aeronautical scouts, with special suc cess by the Italians In the present Italo-TurKO war In Tripoli. - At the Fort Meyers' aeronautical experiments last year and the year before the Wright brothers demonstrated several of their aeroplanes and the government has purchased a number of these. Des pite this fact balloons have been more successful in this country from .a military standpoint than the monoplane or biplane. The first usage of balloons for military pur poses was in 1794 by the French government dur ing the revolution of that year. An aeronautic school was founded at Meuden by Guyton de Mor veau, a noted chemist, and Colonel Coutelle of the military establishment, in charge. Both men were enthusiastic balloonlsts. Four balloons were con structed for the armies north of the Sambre and Meuse and south of the Rhone and Moselle and of Egypt. Ascents were made that year by Coutelle, as adjutant, general of the French army to recon noiter the battle of Fleurus. Other sucessful ascents were made in that campaign. In 1830 during the troubles In Africa successful ascents were made. About this time the efficient balloon corps of the French army was formed. Today It Is one of the ablest departments of any existing army In Europe. During the campaign against Venice In 1849 this corps did commendable work. Both Russians and French used balloons dur ing the Crimean war for reconnolterlng purposes, though not used by any of the other allied armies. The French again had recourse to the balloons during the Italian campaign In 1859. A number of brilliant reconnofsances were made before the battle of Solferlno. Hydrogen gas was used to Inflate the balloons at the battle of Fleurus, while fifty years later a fire balloon was employed. Eugene Godard, In charge of the balloon experiments before Solferlno, favored the fire balloons, as they were not so easily destroyed or forced to descend If pierced by bullets. The Austrian balloonlsts attested to M. Godard's opinion later. Ballooning was slow to be taken up by the British army. It was only after the United States troops had . successfully demonstrated the practicability and efficiency of the balloons that a balloon corps was added to Tommy Atkins' army. Although the British War department was slow In installing the balloon corps, Lord Kitchener, the hero of Khartoum, had a small balloon corps with him during his famous Soudan campaign. TBal loons played a small part in the Boer war in South Africa in 1900. On account of the scattered posi tion of the farces and the heights that (hey. were forced to ascend, however, the balloons proved of very little military use. , Perhaps the most extensive use of military bal loons was during' the siege of Paris. Sixty-four were sent up from the French capital, the first on September 23, 1870, and the last January 28, 1871. Gambettl made his escape from Paris on October 7, 1870, and It was hla escape that pro longed the German-Franco war. Two of the sixty four balloons were never heard of again. They were probably blown out to sea, sevoral were taken prisoners by the Germans, who used them for reconnolterlng purposes. The average size of the Paris balloons were of 70,000 and 72,000 cubic feet capacity. The aeronauts were generally sail ors, and they did their work well. There was but little use of the balloons during the siege for reconnolterlng purposes, their usage being in car rying messages and effecting the escape of leading beleagured citizens. Major General George B. McClellan used bal loons for the i first time In American during his Peninsular campaign in 1862. His balloon staff consisted of a captain, two lieutenants and fifty, enlisted men. Two gas generators! drawn by four horses each; an acid cart, drawn by two horses, and two balloons, drawn by four horses each, com prised the apparatus of the staff. These balloons were always kept partly inflated and were of about 13,000 and 26,000 cubic feet capacity. Their In flation usually required about three hours. They were captive balloons and were used for reconnolt erlng purposes only. It has always been a mooted question as to their availability for the purposes intended. The balloons ' were practically of no service to General McClellan, for during the entire campaign the weather was wet, foggy and rainy, and the settling of the heavy artillery and cannon smoke left an .almost incessant fog over the ground. Much of the Impetus given towards successful improvements of the military balloon got its In ception from the Amerlcna experiments. These experiments have been continuous. The last five years has thown the greatest development. The reason for this Is the general acceptance by all governments that the warfare of the future will not only be upon the soil, or upon the seas, but also In the air. Therefore every leading govern ment Is expending millions and training thousands of soldier aeranauts. There has been a great divergence of opinion' regarding the tyne ol bal- loon that offers the greater value, whether the In flated balloon Idea with its pear or globular shape. or thedirlgible inflated cigar-shaped bag or aero-' plane dea. - ( Top average capacity of the Talloons, used t Fort OmSb is about 12,000 to 16,000 oublo feet! The smallerlamount will be sufficient for experl-J mental purposes, and the greater supply wheat thought necessary. The balloons will have . lift ing capacity of two or three men and a requisite amount of ballast. , , , ; ' ' ' The objection to the .independent. balloon for! war purposes is its unreliability In an emergency.; and Its being absolutely at the mercy and whims of air currents. Once leaving the earth 'the bal loon is practically the master of its own move ments, unless it be of the dirigible class, and evea the ' dirigibles are uncertain ' In ' their whlmi ' If ascending to any great height. The captive bal loon can .be controlled from a given point, ; JThe free balloon cannot be controlled at all. The project of .dropping missiles from balloons Into an enemy's camp, even if permitted under the' rules of civilized warfare, is in a measure wholly' problematical. The releasing of that much weight from the balloon would have the same effect of re-r leasing ballast, and the balloon would keep ascend ing with the decreasing weight. It has been sug gested that balloons might be sent up that carried only .missiles or explosives to drop Into an enemy's camp and that they be dropped automatically, or in the case of captive balloons, they might be dropped by electrical contrivances from the grdund or point from which the balloon was. sent up. The impracticability of such a proposition Is shown again in the uncertainty of controlling the bal loon, though it be a captive balloon, in the air cur-; rents, and the uncertainty of locating the balloon, directly over the dropping point desired. . With, military authorities the matter of using captive, balloons for dropping missiles or explosives into . camps has never been seriously thought of, though; ' Italians are reported to have done so successfully. To date the only use for balloons In warfare are for observation, signaling aid and photography,! and to this end the balloon school at Fort Omaha was organized.1 Approximately $600,000 has al ready been expended In the equipment ct the Fart -Omaha balloon house and hydrogen gas plant Each year an. allowance is made from the regular'' appropriation by congress to the army for .the