AUTOMOBILE AND WANT AD v SECTION. ; PART THREE HE OMA AUTOMOBILE AND WANT rAD SECTION, ' PART THREE VOL. XLIX NO. 18. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, ; OCTOBER 19, 1919. 1 C SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS "HELLO MARS!" SIGNALS TO GO FROM FORT OMAHA AND SCIENTISTS EXPECT TO GET RETURN FLASHES , Prof .Todd Will Attempt to Rise 50,000 Feet 'in Biggest Balloon Ever BuiltLeo Stevens to Be PilotExpect Ascension in Near Fall That Mars Is Inhabited Is Firmly Believed by Soundest Scientists in the World -It Is a "World a-Thirst," Says Prof. Lowell, Without Water, the Canals Being to Convey Melted Ice From the Poles Has Little Specific Gravity and Elephants Could Spring About Like Gazelles 50,000 Feet Will Take Astron- : omer and Pilot Into What Is Called a "Vacuum" They Will Have Oxygen Tanks Great Height Will Enable Observer to Rise Above Dust Aura of 1 Upper Atmosphere. v. . Astronomers and meteorologists of the whole world are tremendous ly interested in the balloon trip to be made 50,000 feet into the air from Fort Omaha by Prof. David Todd, the noted American astronomer, in an attempt to signal to the planet Mars. Notable experiments and explora tions of the upper air from balloons have been made by the United States Weather bureau. July 30, 1913, it sent, up from Avalon, Catalina Island, balloons with recording in struments which reached the enor mous and American record-breaking height of 32,643 meters, or 20J4 miles. v It was also at the famous Lowell observatory at Flagstaff, Ariz., that the late Prof. Percival Lowell spent more than 10 years studying the planet Mars, reaching his famous and much-debated con clusions that Mars is inhabited, that the intelligent beings there are light ing for life, as their planet is a des ert plain without oceans or other natural water bodies, all of which have evaporated. "A World A-thirst" The inhabitants of Mars, which Prof. Lowell calls "a world a-thirst," have, therefore, the astronomer Lowell declared, constructed a huge network of waterways or canals, connecting the centers of popula tion north and south, with the polar caps, to get the melting snows to furnish the, necessary water to crops and vegetables and stave off the final drying up of the planet. Vis iting astronomers to Mt. Wilson observatory, Pasadena, have also taken photographs there of Mars from the 60-inch telescope, and as soon as the new 100-inch telescrope on Mt. Wilson is completely assem bled and in working order it is ex oected that other specialists on - Mars will visit there and take other! ntintrtrrnnti anrt nhrtf3tirin.c Ttli is the largest and best equipped as tronomical laboratory in the world. The staff of the observatory itself, though interested in all forms of astronomical research, are primarily onn.a.n.il .111 f 1. e- 1 1 J X r 1 1 r. f m WUIICl IKU Will. VUHI position of the sun, and to the sci entific world the Lowell observa tory at Flagstaff has been consid ered the foremost Mars laboratory for the study of the most interest ing of the world's planet neighbors. For, though Mars is 35,000,000 miles away at its closest point, it has always possessed a great inter est for astronomers, first, because the seasonal changes on Mars are , not unlike those on the earth; sec ond, because the planet, though one fourth the size, is much , older than the earth, and, says Prof. Lowell, "the struggle for existence in the Mat's decreptitude and decay would tend to evolve intelligence to cope with circumstances growing mo mentarily more and more adverse here." Biggest Balloon in World. Professor Todd's great attempt to communicate with Mars will take place this fall, according to the an nouncement made by A. Leo Stevens, United States balloon in structor at Fort Omaha. The bal loon will be the largest ever made, and will be piloted by Mr. Stevens, who is one of the pioneer balloon ists of the country. Mr. Stevens says the balloon will be divided into two compartments, the upper one containing hydrogen gas and the lower one fresh air. Professor Todd, who has visited all parts of the world in brder td study Mars under the best possible conditions, has, Mr. Stevens says, constructed a special signalling apparatus to use in his efforts to talk to Mars. . To Penetrate Vacuum. The experiment t of Professor Todd is extremely interesting, as Professor Todd is an astronomer of standing in the scientific world. If he reaches a height of 50,000 feet he will be the first person to have gone that far into the upper air, though Dr. Berton reached a height . of six and one-half miles (34,320 feet),) and we have an airplane rec ord of 30,500 feet made on January 2 last, at Dayton. v Professor Todd at 50,000 feet should experience a temperature of 55 degrees below zero. It is per fectly possible to stand this, how ever, in a balloon, with . " heating foods, etc. The air, of course grows thinner as we go upward, so that at the height the balloons reached of 2054 mles, there was recorded a thinness of air which might be called a vacuum. At a height of 50.000 feet, Professor Todd, as he of course ' knows and has planned, will need tanks of oxygen in order that he may breathe for any length of time. Above Dust and Clouds. ,"" The experiment will be awaited with interest, and by making it Prof. Todd doubtless desires to escape . the dust particles existing m the lower air: also reaching a region free of clouds and from radiation. These advantages, it must be re marked, are relatively of little lira Dortance compared to the limited fa cilities a balloon would afford for ' actual work of signalling. It would seem, all things considered, more practical to erect on the surface of the earth, where the air is free from moisture and dust some sort of sig nalling ai paratus of gigantic propor tions. The pu'Xx interest attending Prof. Todd's experiment will have a beneficial effect in that it will direct widespread attention to other worlds than ours. What may the scientific worjd rea sonably expect to result frenn the balloon trip of Prof Todd? In the first piaco, the experiment indicates that Prof. Todd la'ieves that there must be some foundation of truth for Dr. Lowell's long-derided belief that Mars was (and is) inhabited. "Hello, Mars." Assuming the Martians, as Prof. Lowell did. to be more intelligent than the people of the earh, they would it once recognize regular and intelligently produced flashes as an attempt to say "Hkllo, Mars," and it is hoped, by astronomers, that Mars will, with return flashes, like wise signal "Hello, Earth." If such flashes do come, they will be automatically received and ob served at the Flagstaff (Ariz.) ob servatory, where Mars is always un der observation and every change there registered and noted. Prof. Lowell stated in lectures and books that the inhabitants of Mars were well worth knowing, be cause they are older, planetarily go for the latest information con cerning Mars, with . which Prof. Todd desires to make the first seri ous effort ever made from the earth to communicate with a planet, and to do which he will reach a point above the earth farther than man has gone up to this time. Based entirely on the facts he says he learned as the result of many years' study of Mars, Prof. Lowell gwes a picture of life as it must be on that dying planet. The gravity there being three-eighths of the earth, load would weigh no more than a stone on the earth; falling bodies would sink with grace ful motion. Denizens of Mars, says Prof. Lowell, would be accustomed to this air, and, in fact, having known nothing else, would be able to get along very well, and perform feats of canal digging for instance, which would be considered marvel ous by earth dwellers. On tne physical makeup of Mars, itself, as presented by Prof. Lowell, the pictuie is a bleak one. He calls it a world-wide desert, a.,flat plain, all land, where fertile spots are the exception, and where water is every where scarce. He calls it a "world athirst," where water is the one thing needful. But nature gives forth, so says Prof. Lowell, "one line of salvation to it (Mars) and that lies in the periodic unlocking , . . jgj iK. Skteorograph tohi'eh rose fo a heigh- of 9.7ie feet from Grafon. CatcJjna Istand . speaking, than' we are, and, if one may. carry out Prof. Lowell's con clusions, the inhabitants of Mars will certainly cry out for water when they signal back to the earth, for Mars is a desert, Prof, Lowell contended, and is slowly but surely drying up to the point where life will eventually be extinct a rate, incidentally, which scientists also predict tor the earth and other planets not already dead. Previous Reported Flashes. Soeakine from the standpoint of an astronomer. Mars A. Baumgardt, in charge of the astronomical ob servatory of W. A. Clarke, jr., said: I have read 'with interest of rrof. Todd's balloon . experiment, and I judge that he intends to attempt to signal Mars by means of mirrors. Several years ago there was a re port that signals or flashes had been received from Mars. Doubting not that such flashes had been actually seen, it was later srenerally be lieved that the flashes might have come from the reflections on large seas of ice or snow at the polar caps of Mars. I do not believe that Prof lodd intends to try to do any actual telescopic studying of Mars, because he would gain nothing tor his purpose by going 5U.UUU teet nearer Mars than the earth, and also, the instabrlity of a swaying balloon would make any telescopic work impossible. A telescope cuch as Mr. Clarke s six-inch glass on West Adams street was placed on an iron framework which rests on a con crete base deep in the ground, and no part of the frame touches the building on which it stands. The rumbling of wagons or cars on West Adams street would affect the stability of the telescope were it not so placed, so one may see from this that a moving balloon is impossible for any but signaling purposes' Astronomer's Interested. Those who decline to follow the conclusions of Prof. Lowell that his long observations of Mars proved the existence of intelligent life there. admit, however, that the discoveries at Flagstaff aroused a lively inter est among astronomers as to what is taking place on Mars, that inter est taking its lates form in the' bal loon trip of Prof. Todd. The Encyclopedia Britannica de clares that, apart from the sound ness or unsoundness of his conclu sions, the work of . Prof. . Lowell placed him at the head of all Mars authorities. Therefore, to the Flag staff astronomer's views one must ato , . . 1 77-" . fell A"' (fete ,-P I :m mi W Weteht rf Auto of mine .v t IK wiMir tr n r. ifS MK&milSi idea of a "fttrhanZ of the remnant of water that each year gathers as snow and ice about the poles.' People Worth Knowing. Prof. Lowell, writes: "Thus, not only the observations we have scan ned lead us to the conclusion that at this moment Mars is inhabited, but they lead us to the further one that these denizens are of an order whose acquaintance would . be worth the making. ' Whether we shall ever converse with them in any more instant way is a question upon which science at present has no data to decide. More important to us is the fact that they exist, made all the more interesting by their precedence of us in the path of evolution. Their presence cer tainly ousts us from any unique or self-centered position in the solar system, but so with the world did the Copcrnif an system, the Ptol emiac, and the others survive this deposing change. So may man. To all who have a cosmoplanetary breadth of wind it cannot but be pregnant to ' contemplate that we have warrant for believing that such life now inhabits the planet Mars. . V ; Last Spark of Life. , "A sadder interest attaches ' to such existence that is, cosmically speaking soon to . pass away. , To our eventual descendants life on Mars will no longer be something to scan and interest. It will have lapsed beyond the hope of study or recall. Thus to us it takes on-an added glamor from the fact that it has not long to last. For the proc ess that brought it to its present pass must go on to the bitter end, until the last spark of Martian life goes out The drying up of the planet is certain to proceed until its surface can support no life at all. Slowly but surely time will snuff it out. When the last ember is ex tinguished the planet , will roll a dead world through space, its evolu tionary career forever ended." The original discoveries : of the long, regular, straight lines on Mars were made in 1877 by the astrono mer Schiaparelli, and the study of these markings taken up by Prof. Lowell, who, after years of observa tion of them at his Arizona observa tory, declared in his book. ; "Mars as the Abode of Life" (Macmillan), "there is nothing in the sky so pro foundly impressive as those canals of . Mars." He declares that they are absolutely straight, and some are 250 miles long, and one, named the "Eumenides-Orcus," runs 3,450 miles. As Mars is only 4,220 miles through, a canal 3,450 miles long curves in its own plane, and thus may be likened to a straight line running from London, England, to Denver, Colo., or from Boston, Mass., to Bering strait. Studying the biannual quickening and darken ing of the lines or canals, Prof. Lowell reached the point where he declared the canals were filled with water from the meltinar polar snows. which, passing through the canals, brought vegetation along the canals of life. Prof. Lowell also discov ered immense double canals and oases or junctions. Canals to the number of 585 had been charted up rence Lowell of Harvard, to im Elephants Good Jumpers. Fighting for life as the inhabitants of Mars must be, according to Professor Lowell and remembering that a ditch can be dug seven times easier on Mars than on earth, the construction of this immense net work of canals was a task that could be and was accomplished. There were no mountains to dig through, and as an elephent on Mars could jump as easily as a gazelle, think of what the workers with intelligence could accomplish in their desperate fight for water! The oases are some 75 miles across, giving sufficient space for living and the means to live, and those may will be the cities of Mars. , A Sound Scientist. Prof. David Todd, who plans to make the balloon trip to study Mars, has been director of the Am herst (Mass.) College, Observatory since 1881, and has been at various times in charge of government as tronomical expeditions to Tripoli, Barb&ry, Russia, and the Andes to study the eclipses, and was chief of the Mars expedition to the Andes in 1907. He is a member of all of the leading astronomical societies of the world, and is regarded as a sound conservative scientist, given only to publishing his discoveries and mak ing no unsound conclusion there from. Professor Percival Lowell, was a brother of President A. Law- the as tronomers of which university, in cidentally, never agree with Profes sor Lowell's conclusions about Mars. Professor Lowell always de clared that he made no surmises in stating that the lines he saw on Mars were the result of intelligent construction, but the facts them selves lead to no other conclusion than that Mrs was inhabited. Prof. Lowell, who was a man of independ ent means, endowed his observatory at Flagstaff, and his Mars works is being carried on there by Dr. V. M. Slipher and other scientists who were Professor Lowell's associates. Finds Two-Headed Snake. Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 18. A baby snake with two separate and distinct heads was found by S. E. Fitz, a local fisherman. The heads are divided at the neck and each is thoroughly equipped to function as a head tongue, fangs, eyes and all. Fitz made the discovery following a battle with a mother snake. He was wading in Conochegue creek when the old reptile attacked him. with head uplifted and hissing like escaping steam. Fitz killed the snake and took it to the bank, where, after dissecting it, he discovered the freak. Future Is Problem for Builders Upkeep of Car Depends on its Weight and the Ma- i 1 tin. I-U A T T 3 I rnnnwiinfiAn' teriaia wmcn Are useu in ius wuowuwvu, Cost of. Operation Is the Main Issue. By H. A. TARANTOUS. . Unquestionably the most serious problem that has confronted engi neers since the beginning of the au tomobile industry has been to so de sign a car as to make it economical. Upkeep has been a retarding influ ence even in the purchasing of cars, for the initial cost is hardly ever given so serious consideration as up keep. There are three factors of automobile upkeep which interest the engineer and user alike. These are: Tires, gasoline and repairs. These three fundamental controls of the cost of keeping a car running are re duced almost in the same proportion as the car is scientifically reduced in weight. At the same time that this all-important upkeep is reduced by lightweight construction there comes of necessity a simplification of the chassis and easier handling. lhe car of the future will be a better riding car, a lighter car, a bet ter perfoimer, and paradoxical as it may seem, a larger car than the present one. To Weigh Less. , The light weight construction, which is inevitable in the future car, and which already is being used on a number of present models, may be obtained in numerous ways all of which go to produce a vehicle which will show: 1. Lower operating cost. The av erage cost should -not exceed rail travel. ' 2. Lower consumption of fuel. The average car should give 30 miles per gallon. 3. Less tire wear. The average tire should give at least 20,000 miles service. 4. Better performance. x All of these results may be accom plished for the benefit of the car owner, the manufacturer, the roads and the country as a whole, through the proper use of the correct mate rials, the proper proportioning of the weight of the car, proper design so that lighter materials may be used. That this may be done to produce a superior vehicle has already been shown, since there are a few cars on the market which exhibit prac tically all the characteristics men tioned. In going over these cars and in- studying the subject of light weight vehicles one will find that there is a greater use of alloy steels, aluminum and pressed steel to sup plant the heavier metals such as car bon steels, parts of larger sections, cast iron, etc. In other words, if an iron part weighing 50 pounds can be discarded for a pressed steel part weighing one-third as much and do ing the same or better work there seems no logical reason why the lat ter should not be used. At the same time that a change of metal is con sidered the subject of cost comes up. In some cases an actual saving may be made by the substitution, but in others it means an increase in cost. However, the point to be carried in mind is that the initial increase in cost usually is slight compared with the aggregate savings due to the ac complishments of the lightweight vehicle. More Wood Used. A short time ago it was suggested by one engineer that the body could ,be made of plywood and the frame and axles could be made of wood. While the plywood idea is new and no doubt will be taken up, tne use of wood for frames and axles is far from new. The single cylinder Brush runabout used a wooden axle. Franklin even now continues to use a wooden frame. The point is that car manufacturers in the past have been adhering too closely to con vention instead of carrying the light weight idea to some logical end. Especially have axles been neglect ed and weight reduction here is a most important matter. At the present time, there are some ex tremely good cars on the market good in every respect except that they "eat" tires and gasoline. This is due to the carrying around of too much "dead" weight (weight which is useless). The hard riding . which many cars exhibit with much so-called rebound is due in greater measure to the heavy rear axle and the lack of appreciation by the en gineer of the proper ratio needed between the sprung weight and the unsprung weight (weight below the springs). Better Hill Climber. There is another very important result which light weight brings about. We all know that it re quires more effort to move a heavy mass than it does to move a light one. The lighter mass (the light weight car) will then accelerate bet- ter, it will climb hills better, it will show a higher maximum speed on the road. These are truths which every engineer and many light-car owners appreciate. ' t t . The serious consideration of de sign toward a reduction in weight, the use of lighter materials will un questionably bring the weight of the average touring car of the fu ture down some 500 pounds. In the larger, more expensive cars the weight reduction may be greater than 1,000 pounds. Even our so called lightweight cars of today will be far lighter. Skeletons Unearthed on Massachusetts Beaches Br International Mew Service. Gloucester, Mass., Oct 18. Two skeletons have' been unearthed on the beaches here. One skeleton, apparently that of a young woman, was found at Wigersheek beach. Another skele ton, .that a man, was found on the same shore by two boys. !- Pieces of wood, in which long nails had been driven, were found around the skeletons, as if the bodies were originally in a box. Nothing to identify the skeletons was found. Death Punishment Resumed . for Murder in Missouri Br International Mew Berrta. Jefferson City, Mo., Oct 18. After having been abolished for practically two years, death punish mept is again in vogue in Missouri. At the last session of the legisla ture a bill restoring capital punish ment for murder was passed. Despite much agitation against the passage of the bill, it was passed by the solons, who believed it woM aid in the prevention of crim 1 1 Ji.