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established an aerial mail station, and where the air service cross-country routes require immediate stations. A study of the immediate requirements would indicate that the establishment of municipal flying fields will be confined at present to the following cities and towns: Boston, Mass.; New York, N. Y.; Richmond, Va.; Raleigh, N. C.; Columbia, S. C.; Augusta, Ga.; Macon, Ga.; Atlanta, Ga.; Kissimee, Fla.; Mobile, Ala.: New Orleans, La.; Baton Rouge, La.; Beaumont, Texas; Flatonia, Texas; El Paso, Texas; Texarkana, Texas; Columbus, Ohio; Tucson, Ariz.; Phoenix, Ariz.; Yuma, Ariz.; Bakersfield, Calif.; Fresno, Calif.; Buffalo, N. Y.; Syracuse, N. Y.; Albany, N. Y.; Columbus, N. Mex.; Kansas City, Mo.; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Uniontown, Pa.; Daytona, Fla.; Cleveland, Ohio, and Chicago, Ill.—Army and Navy Register, 5/10.

DESCRIPTION OF "N-C" SEAPLANES.-Wing span from tip to tip, 126 feet. Upper wing from tip to tip, 114 feet.

Aileron projections beyond wing tips, 6 feet on either side.

Lower wing span, 94 feet.

Width of wings, 12 feet.

Distance between wings, 14 feet at center and 12 feet at outer tips of lower wing.

Over-all length from front end to the rear end, 68 feet 31⁄2 inches.
Length of hull, 44 feet 9 inches.

Wing area, 2380 square feet.

Weight of flying boat (empty), including wireless installation and all navigating instruments, 15,100 pounds.

Weight full load flying condition, 28,500 pounds.

Percentage of useful load to total load, that is, load not a portion of structure or equipment, 47 per cent.

Weight carried per square foot of wing surface, 12 pounds.

Estimated speed at full load, 79 nautical miles per hour.

Estimated speed at light load, 84 nautical miles per hour.
Horse-power of four liberty engines, 1600 horse-power.

Number of gasoline tanks, nine in hull, one in upper wing above boat hull.

Capacity of gasoline tanks, 200 gallons for each hull tank and 90 gallons for gravity feed tank in upper wing.

Weight of gasoline system, 6 pounds per gallon of gasoline.

Weight of engines, 825 pounds each.

Weight of boat hull (empty), 2650 pounds.

Area of ailerons, 265 square feet.

Area of stabilizers, 267.6 square feet.

Area of elevators, 240.1 square feet.

Area of rudders, 69 square feet.

Displacement of wing pontoons, 1800 pounds each.

Weight of wing tip pontoons, 95-pounds each.

Gasoline pumps are wind driven by small wooden propellers and are in duplicate, an auxiliary hand-operated gasoline pump is provided.

Flying control is of the dual control Deperdussin system with side-byside seating.

Pilots are in hull just forward of gasoline tanks.

Complete sets of instruments provided for pilots, including one compass for each pilot.

Navigating station is in front end of bott hull. Navigator is provided with chart board, charts, and ordinary navigating instruments, including compass and sextant.

Complete wireless installation, including telegraph and telephone and wireless direction indicator, is provided. System should give a radius of approximately 300 miles while in the air and of 100 to 150 miles while on the water.

Electric current is furnished by electric generator operated by a winddriven propellor. Current is delivered to storage batteries. In addition to operating wireless set, storage batteries operate complete lighting system for interior of boat and for wing tip and tail lights as well as lights for night landing.

Wireless operator and engineer are located in main after compartment just aft of gasoline tanks. Each is provided with complete instrument board. Each of these operators has a cylindrical upholstered stool with back rest weighing 5 pounds complete, in the interior of which can be stored the small hand tools required for emergency work.

Cruising speed of boats, about 72 miles per hour.

Gasoline consumption at cruising speed, about 650 pounds average per hour.

Total gasoline carried, about 11,400 pounds.

Cruising radius without wind, about 1476 nautical miles.

Lubricating oil capacity, about 900 pounds.

Crew and provisions, about 1000 pounds.

Crew, five men-two pilots, one navigator, one wireless operator, and one engineer.

Main structure is of Western spruce.

Metal wing fittings and structural fittings in general are of crome vanadium steel of an ultimate strength of 150,000 pounds per square inch. All flying and landing and control wires are of standard woven airplane cord wire.

Wing covering is linen treated with the ordinary airplane fabric dopes. Gasoline tanks are of aluminum and gasoline piping is partly of aluminum and partly of copper.

Streamlining forms about wing struts are of micarta. Streamlining of flying and landing wires is of rubber covered with rubberized fabric. Main keels of boat hulls are of oak or of rock elm. general of spruce. Planking is of spruce or of cedar. ing is of cedar or of cottonwood birch three-ply veneer. Cowling around engine nacelles is aluminum.

Hull structure is in
Turtle-back cover-

Four liquid fire extinguishers are carried in each boat hull.

Access to any portion of the boat hull by means of wing passages or to any portion of the power plant by means of hatches in the boat hull may be had either while on the water or while in the air.

All control surfaces, such as ailerons, rudders, and elevators, are balanced by a portion of the area forward of the pivoting points in order to relieve the work of the pilots.-N. Y. Times, 5/7.

PARACHUTE DEMONSTRATION.-The first public demonstration of “Life preservers of the air" was staged as one of the special features of the Second Pan-American Aeronautical Convention on May 3.

Lieut. Jean Ors, the noted French aeronaut, whose genius is responsible for the newest aerial safety device, ascended in an aeroplane piloted by Eddie Stinson. As the machine attained a speed of 80 miles an hour and an altitude of 500 feet over the heads of the beholders, Lieut. Ors, who Occupied the seat directly behind the pilot, stepped over the cowl and leaped into space, releasing the air life preserver, which is a new type of parachute, by the jerk of the main suspending rope as he went over the side.

Stinson and his aeroplane sailed on in the straightaway. Crowds below caught the flash of Lieut. Ors' body as it was catapulted from the machine by the tremendous speed of the aeroplane. In a split second the umbrellashaped top of the parachute spread out in a white canopy of safety over his head. Twenty-five feet below, suspended by the guide ropes leading down from the fringe of the "umbrella," Lieut. Ors' plummet-like plunge

earthward was halted before he had descended fifty feet. There was no jerk. The wide spread of the parachute slowed up his descent as gradually as if brakes had been eased on slowly.-Aerial Age Weekly, 5/12.

MISCELLANEOUS

NAVY UNIFORM BOARD.-It is again rumored that a board of navy officers soon will be convened to consider questions pertaining to the uniform of the naval service. For one thing, the present uniform regulations have been amended so often that the present edition is something of a patchwork affair, and there is need for a general revision of them and issue in a new edition. Moreover, a number of changes in the attire continue to be urged. Since adoption of the double-breasted open-collared coat, many officers believe that the overcoat should be of corresponding form. Changes in the cap also have been recommended, in order to make it more distinctly naval in character and less like the form of that of the army. As no collar-marks appear on the new coat, there now is no way to distinguish between line warrant officers-boatswains, gunners and machinists-as all wear the star on the sleeve, and there is need for attention to this detail. The requirement does not affect the staff warrant officers, as, under the amended regulations, they wear their respective corps marks on the sleeve.—Army and Navy Register, 4/26.

ANALYSIS OF JAPANESE SHIPPING.-The Department of Communications of Japan announces that the Japanese merchant marine to-day consists of 2578 steamers and 12,236 sailing vessels. The majority of the steamers are, however, coasting vessels not exceeding 1000 tons. Ocean-going steamers above 1000 tons number 599, their gross tonnage being 1,830,006 and their registered tonnage 1,154,377. Of this number six are above 10,000 tons and eight between 9000 and 10,000 tons. There is only one ship between 8000 and 9000 tons. There are 123 vessels between 4000 and 8000 tons. The smaller steamers between 1000 and 4000 tons are most numerous, numbering 366. The majority of sailing vessels are between 20 and 500 tons. There are only five ships between 500 and 1000 tons, while the vessels between 1000 and 2000 tons number only two.-Shipping, 5/3.

RED CROSS HOME SERVICE FINDS ALLOTTEES FOR BUREAU OF WAR RISK INSURANCE.-The Bureau of War Risk Insurance has asked the Red Cross to assist it in locating 37,226 persons to whom allotment checks have been sent and which were returned to the Bureau because of incorrect address, removal from old address, or similar reasons. Up to May 1, 9204 persons were found through the efforts of Home Service workers.

The local Red Cross Home Service Section has a list of all checks misdirected to addresses in the county of All persons who have not received their allotment checks, and who believe they may be among those missent, are advised to call at or write to the Home Service office, which is located at and which will assist them in secur

ing their money.

CURRENT NAVAL AND PROFESSIONAL PAPERS

UNITED STATES

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW. January.-The Lack of Uniformity in the Law and Practice of States with Regard to Merchant Vessels, by Fred K. Nielsen. Private Property on the High Seas, by Graham Bower. Ships in Enemies' Ports as Prizes (editorial), by C. N.

Gregory. Pleasure and Racing Yachts in Prize Law (editorial), by C. N. Gregory. International Participation in Courts-Martial (editorial), by George Grafton Wilson. Prisoners of War Agreement between United States and Germany (supplement).

WORLD'S WORK. May.-American Admirals at Sea, by Lieut. Francis T. Hunter, U. S. N. R. F.

REVIEW OF REVIEWS. America's Aviation Policy, by Rear-Admiral Robert E. Peary.

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. May 3.-Increasing Visibility through Knowledge of Camouflage, by Robert G. Sherrett. Our Latest Dreadnought Idaho. May 10.-Sound Ranging Devices. What the Weather Man Thinks of Ocean Flying, by Willis Rey Gregg, U. S. Weather Bureau.

AERIAL AGE. May 19.-Glenn H. Curtiss on the Transatlantic Flight. Principles of Aeroplane Construction, by Captain James Vernon Martin.

GREAT BRITAIN

NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER. April.-The New Light on Jutland (with diagrams), by Sir George Aston.

FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW. April.-The Truth about the Battle of Jutland, by Archibald Hurd.

UNITED SERVICE MAGAZINE. April.-Some Reflections on Submarines, by Rooinek. Wanted-A British-American Naval Entente, by Charles E. T. Stuart-Linton.

DIPLOMATIC NOTES

FROM APRIL 20 TO MAY 20

PREPARED BY

ALLAN WESTCOTT, Associate Professor, U. S. Naval Academy

PEACE TREATY HANDED TO GERMANY

The German peace delegates arrived in Paris on April 29, and on May 1, in a brief ceremony, exchanged credentials with representatives of the Allied Powers. On May 7, the anniversary of the sinking of the Lusitania, the peace treaty was handed to the German plenipotentiaries in the great hall of the Trianon Palace Hotel at Versailles. Six leaders of the German delegation were present, with eight secretaries and interpreters, and they were met by representatives of the 22 states which had declared war on Germany.

Premier Clemenceau in his opening speech stated that all observations made by the German delegation must be in writing, that there would be no oral discussion, and that the limit of time for consideration of the terms would be two weeks (until May 22). This limit was later made May 29.

In his reply, spoken in German, Count Von Brockendorff-Rantzau admitted the defeat and powerlessness of Germany, but denied that she alone was responsible for the war. He referred to "hundreds of thousands of non-combatants who have perished since November 11 by reason of the blockade," and insisted on a peace in accordance with President Wilson's fourteen points.

MAIN TERMS OF PEACE TREATY.-A full official summary of the Peace Treaty was issued on May 7 and appeared in the American press on May 8. The parts relating to the League of Nations are given elsewhere in the Notes. A briefer summary follows:

It is the longest treaty ever drawn. It totals about 80,000 words, is divided into fifteen main sections, and represents the combined product of over a thousand experts working continually through a series of commissions for three and a half months, since January 18. The treaty is printed in parallel pages of English and French, which are recognized as having equal validity. It does not deal with questions affecting Austria, Bulgaria, and Turkey, except in so far as binding Germany to accept any agreement reached with those former allies.

Following the preamble and deposition of powers come the covenant of the League of Nations as the first section of the treaty. The frontiers of Germany in Europe are defined in the second section. European political clauses are given in the third, and extra-European political classes in the fourth. Next are the military, naval, and air terms as the fifth section, fol

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