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" SCIENTISTS ELATED AT OBSERVATIONS Leave New Haven Assured Phatos Will Bring Val- uable Discoveries. By the Asso YALE VEN work ated 1 VATORY « NEW Their done scientists and astror tot ng to carryins here f i plates on with the sun ind cor ights I | "socia¥ irs next rl L while the scope was constantly operated W. Brow whose work is the caleulating of pos the moon, used a camera whi pendulum ewinging before th beat a second with movement rhotographic pi onized sun and image reached plate thro aperture in the dulum. Tt that the tographs will b finish first amor ken for scientifi purpose BALLOON PHOTOGRAPHS BARRED BY HIGH WIND Michigan Stearns. Wit seven exposures catalozue tele- life tions of h had a lens. A of 4 Th the pho- Jlate synch moon’s here University Scientist Is Forced to Deflate—Clouds Halt Some Hobart College Work. Ass SVA, N Haussman ph he January —Prof. the depar & ment Michigar and generally conditions balloon to photog the su Prof. Haus pared to near here made n the forced unfavorab abandon weather profe raph clouds the total eclipse « take off ut ris s balloon was pre- t Smith Observator lege, Prof. Wiil J University of igan eclipse throu the late noted di graphs were obt last stages the period was hidden Hol Hussey o observed cope used by Brooks, Photo Prof m coverer of com ed of the eclips ty the 1 1ds. IPSE PHOTOS. er at Connecticut College Reports Low Temperature. Har During non GETS ECL Harvard Obser January ard Observa- took photographs on the campus of the ege for Women. dropped from 2 >w zero during students and from two trainle Worcester " SPECIAL NOTICES, IAVE ANY AILMENT. r relief. Dr. T. = FORM TRY MY MAHO! MISS TERL beaut. CADILLAC LIMOUSINES FOR HIRE, models, by tie day, week or month, P Main 9664, OAKLAND 6 old, has run 7.818 bumpers front and rear. loss for HOLSTERING s, refinishing H'S TRANSFER & n.w. Phone North WANTED—FULL OR PART ture from or to New York, F ton, Boston, Atlantic C ¥ v otal Delivery Anso., 1416 F FULL O PART LOAD WANT TURE FROM OR TO BOSTON, NEW YORK PITTSBURGH OR WAY POINTS. SPECIAL RATES. NATIONAL DELIVERY ASSOCL TION. 1416 F N.W. MAIN 1480, . MIMEOGRAPH LETTERS, . 902 Dist. Nat. Baok. ETE CABINET old fu MAKI ture made like imates furnished. ORAGE C0.. 1313 LOAD F ladeiphia, S gusr. "M Tioh, S FURNT RNT. rag. 00 S B W. Bldg. Frapk. INE GAS FOR COLDS, ping cough, etc., adm 0 am. t until 6 pom, 1827 F st n.w._ e M. 7019, INFORMATION WANTED. Complete i o rooms (with or without meals) s d inaugura ton week. Se telephone SPEEL, Cha BRONCHITIS, stered daily from “Willard, THE MUTTAL F COMPANY OF THE T MBIA, Washington, Janu RANCE THE DISTRICT on the first Mon- proximo). at the pany £ 15th street and northwest, ¢ above meeting icle of the bylaws of the “AY the. annual the it business ntment of a chalr: \ meeting aba' elec: L it e app. aduct in between the ho and 5 pm. Amount of prem Amonnt of cas 4 = 5.0 fiat 500,00 niture and o on at 31, 192 By order of the T, PIBRCE 1 WILL NOT BE debts contracted b aist e office board ROT RESPON of managers BLE FOR ANT W. A. KINGSBURY, stiv ring, Md. 26 the best. YOUR ROOF REPAIR PRICES REASONARL MECHANICS OF ABIY TIVOL Compat o EKLY TEIPS Wiliington. Det., _co. Have Examined Today! 0, Main 14 for Don't delsy. IRON expert roofer. Roofing 1121 5th a.w. Compasy Phone Main 34 | Jannings Bryan called yesterday at the White House, conferred for 20 minutes with President Coolidge and told news- paper men that, in accordance with e: perience gained Washington years g0, he must give “the stock answer of in response to inquiries as to the of his visit. That's the answer ago learned to give newspaper when 1 didn’t want them to know was discussed at a conference,” he said. Leaving the White House, Mr. Bryan was photographed viewing the eclipse of the eun, after he had paused to remark: “The eclipse is just like a Democratic defeat. The sun will shine | again.” Encountering the Tennessee natur 1 me: what TESTS OF RADIO DURING ECLIPSE CONFIRM WAVE LENGTH THEORIES| 24.—Radio broad- sburgh, Pa., and Schenectady, were heard {distinctly in London during the period of obscuration of the sun toda Nefther of these stations usyally i heard d daytime. EXPLAIN LONGER RANGE. Considered as Extension of Dawn Effect. Mich., January 24— ble radio range observed be- Ing and after the.eclipse in ts conducted here today by cDonald of Chicago, president | al Assoclation of Broad- probably was caused by an hatural continuation of the usual | dawn effect, in the opinion of R. H. G. Matthews of the American Radio | Relay Leag k unusual distance and strength of radio at the breaking of dawn have for a long time been noted Shape of Corona Proves Surprising To Astronomers Great Change Brought About Since 1918 by Fewer Sun Spots BY DR. SAMUEL A. MITCHELL, Chairman, Committee on Eclipses, American Astronomical Soedety, Di- rector, Leander McCormick Obmer- vatory, University of Virsinia. Special Dispateh to The Star MIDDLETOWN, Conn., January 24. —The shape of the corona has proved | great surprise. It is two and a| Lalf years since the time of minimum | s jer shape of the corona had changed ma- terially from the typical form seen 1ring sunspot minimum. A streamer was Seen, a little to the right of the vertical, shaped like a spitke and stretching out nearly a solar dlameter. The greatest extension of the corona was seen to the east of the moon, but the angular length was hardly more than a solgr dlameter. There was very little color to the corona—in fact, to the naked eye the prominences were small and incon- spicuous. The eclipse of 1918, por- trayed =o beautifully by Howard Rus- sel Butler in the painting in the American Museum of Natural His- tory, was a colorful eclipse with gi- gantic rosy prominencs The 1925 eclipse was not go gor- geous to the eve, due to the lack of rosy color. Still it was a wonderful spectacle. The shadow bands were seen both before and after the eclipse. The waves had no decided direction of motion. They were very hap- hazard affairs. (Copyright, 1825, by New York World.) GREATvFIRE GEYSERS DART OUT OF CORONA AT TIME OF ECLIPSE an epots, but, strange to say, the | (Continued from First Page.) special long-rangs cameras aboard the Los Angeles. They both were elated with the preliminary results of the expedition. Prof. Peters took eight exposures of the inner corona and Prof. Watts took three exposures of the outer corona. During the picture-taking, they sald the big ship rode without any perceptible motion and they believed their plctures would be almost per- fect. Observer’s Nome Frozen. A. E. Peterson of the Bureau of Aeronautics, was the only member of the expedition to suffer personal in- jury. In the intense cold his nose and the left side of his face were frozen. Despite the cold, he stuck | to his exposed position on'top of the | ship ‘from 7:45 until 10:30, turning the crank of his special long range motion picture camera. Although the sun and the moon put on their act in the open sky, the show was not without its admission price—at least for Uncle Sam. In bringing the Los Angeles to earth it was found necessary to valve 300,000 cuble feet of precious hellum gas, valued, air officials said, at about $20,000. Taking the -air here at 5:45 this morning, the ship moved up to 2,000 feet altitude before proceeding to its destination, & point 10 miles off Montauk Point, Long Island, which it reached at 7:45. At 10 o'clock the ship was headed for home and was over Lakehurst at 2:20 p.m. ing was made at 3:40, but it was 5:20 before the dirigible had been worked into its hangar, a strong cross-wind | | having delayed the work for more| than an hour. Radiating smiles and jokes, William congressional delegation f Pittsburgh and Schenectady Stations Heard i Lon- don When Shadow of Moon Blots Out Sun—Effect Like That of Dawn. | sults from the signal fa |Ing of Canada’s principal scientists A land- | ers and such-like observation towers In California a wife's salary is im- NATRL PHOTDN, entering the White House to present an invitation to the President, the former Secretary of State inquired: “What are all these Tennesseeans doing up here? There must be a project up for deepening some creek in Tennesseo to make it navigable.” While waiting in Secretary Slemp's office to the see the President, Mr. Bryan began telling about the profits that might be made and that he had made in Florida real estate. “After all you have told us I guess some of us Republicans had better take bacl some of the things we said in 1 about your financial ability,” remarked Secretary Slemp and Mr. Bryan joined in the laughter. According to the theory of Mr. Mat- thews, the moon's shadow served as a_medlum of continuing this dawn effect even though the moon and sun were not yet In eclipse. The tests, made by station WJAZ, portable transmitter, were excellent, Mr. Mc- Donald said. ION THEORY PROVED. Effect of Sun's Rays on Radio Is Explained. CHICAGO, January 24.—Tests made by the portable station WJAZ at Escanaba, Mich.,, during the eclipse today virtually confirmed what has been practically understood, accord- ing to radio engineers here, that lonization of atmospheri atoms re- sun’s rays. The re- ception lere durlng the eolipse of the station’s radiocast program was big improvement over daylight transmission, but not so satisfactory s at night MILLION IN CANADA GAZE ALOFT IN VAIN Even Planes Unable to Get Above Cloud Banks That Hide Face of Eclipse. By the Associated Press. TORONTO, Ontario, January 24— Armed with smoked glass and camera film against the heralded peril of an eclipse of the sun, estimated crowds of 1,000,000 persons gathered along | the Canadlan path of totality today only to suffer disappointment. Dense clouds prevented a view of the eclipse. At Longs Corners, where a gather- had met with complete mechanical devices for reglstermg all phases of the eclipse, the phenomen was only 10 per cent visible and no photo- graphs could be takn. It was deter- mined from that point, however, that, during the period of totality, radio receptivity was re:-ored to its night- time effectiveness, and observers re- ported that their magnetic needle showed definits variation when the moon was directly between mun nad earth. The temperature, which had been steadily rising, remained sta- tionary for 15 minutes, although it did not fall as was reported in other places. Two officers from the Canadian air forces at Camp Borden, who took photographers aloft in an effort to plerce the clouds, returned to report failure after climbing 9,000 feet. They sald they belleved the clouds ex- tended another 3,000 feet upward, At Ottawa an unidentified man, who police belleved was so startled by the sudden darkening of the heavens that he thought the end of the world was upon him, jumped over Pooleys Bridge over the OMawa River and was carrled away under the ice. TAR, WASHINGTON, 9= ), JANUARY PLANES GET FINE | ECLIPSE PIGTURES Some of Results Declared Most Valuable Ever Achieved in Astronomy. By the Associated Press. MITCHEL FIELD, N. Y.. January —One of the oldest sciences, astronomy, collaborated with one of the newest, areonautics, today in adding to the sum total of the accumulated wisdom of the ages. Uncle Sam’s Army Air Service aban- doned the pursuit of war lore to work with sclentists, 1ifting them 2 or 3 miles above the earth’'s crust that they might better record data of the total solar eclipse. Although it was yet too early tonight to forecast the exact sclentific value of the data gathered, those en- gaged in work said they were sured the results ranked with the best ever achieved In this form of Investiga- ton. Dr. Todd in Charge. Dr. David Todd, venerable emeritus professor of astronomy at Amherst, who has spent most of his 70 years in star gazing, was in general charge of opera- tions at the military post here. Dr. Todd, In a preliminary and un- offictal report, said he considered the greatest work of the Mitchel Field expedition the knowledge gained con- cerning the “jumping rabbits” the phantom shadow bands of the moon’s shadow at the moment of the eclipse’s totality. Hitherto there had been but little accurate knowledge of these strange ebon bands, which leap and trolic grotesquely before the shadow of the moon at an incredible speed Photos of Shadows. Maj. Davenport Johnson of this post, and his observer, Dr. W. J. Luy- ten of Harvard, centered their atten- tion on this phase of the phenomena. With thelr plane floating above West Point, they got a couple of excellent photographs of the mysterious shad- ows. Capt. F. W. Flickinger, in charge of the ground observers of this particular phenomenon, also got plctures recording the mad gallop of the “jumping rabbits” across the snows of the flying fleld. Still other ground observers noted the race of the bands across the faces of build- ings. Valuable data concerning the “jumping rabbits” were belleved to be also contained in a photograph ob- tained by Lieut. G. W. Goddard, chief of the photographic division of the Air Sery Goddard" specially ds photograph, made with a signed camera, shows vir- tually all the area of Warkness in its perspective, and details of sky and earth are plainly discernible at a dis- tance of 100 miles. In the middle ground are plainly pictured the “jumping rabbits,” wihle in the wa- ters of Long Island is reflected the slender crescent of the almost totally obscured sun a bare second before the moon obliterated its surface’and re- leased for a scant life the chameleon brilllance of the corona. At the end of the long-extended finger of Long Island is reflected the glistening horizon. Pictures Are Released. Copies 0f this and other of the re- markable pictures obtained by the airmen will be seen by peopl throughout the country, for Maj. Wil- ltam N. Henzly, jr, post commander, ordered thelr release to news photo- graph_agents this afternoon. More than 100 photographs were obtained by air and ground men, many of them near duplicates. Another interesting development of the Army’'s air work, which probably will keep the men of science con- jecturing for some time, was the phenomena of heat and cold develop- ed immediately before, during and after the eclipse. Twenty-five planes and pilots took the air in the scientific expedition and each of the pilots reported on returning that his thermometer had dropped from 18 above zero at the very instant of totality to 20 below. It was not a gradual drop in temper- ature. The mercury in each ther- mometer dropped like a plummet, the agreed, and rose again to 18 e zero directly totality ceased. The clinb upward was not so fast as the downward plunge, but it was, nevertheless, faster than temperature climbs on the earth's surface. Dr. Todd surmised this Indicated that the atmosphere at the elevation of the planes—from 13,000 to 16,000 feet—had taken on characteristics of theh atmosphere that envelops the moon. This atmosphere, he said, is belleved to contain less inertia than that enveloping the earth, as a re- sult of which it is so sensitized as to record heat and cold changes almost instantly. Cold on Moon. Study of this phenomenon. he added, might lead scientists to the conclu- sion that the air surrounding the moon is constantly subject to these instantaneous changes, with the re- suit that when Luna turns her back to the sun her face immedlately is visited by the most plercing cold—a degree of cold unimaginable to earth inhabitants. Others of the flying expedition brought back excellent photographs of the corona. Several of these were made with “Blg Bertha,” a replica of a German camera, the largest aerfal camera in existence, which, was taken aloft off Greenport, Loug Island, by ASTRONOMERS GET VALUABLE DATA AS MOON BLOCKS SUN (Continued from First Page.) ly disengaged themselves from the line of vision and drifted off on sep- arate paths. The meeting, the embrace and the short promenade they took together ocecupied 2 hours and 20 minutes of clock time. At 9:11 am. they eclipsed. At 10:20 they parted. The phenomenon, and-especlally the mis- placed midnight descending like the crack of doom, awed and filled hu- mans, birds, beasts and even fish with instinctive trepidation. Animals in zoological captivity set up a clamor. Monkeys chattered; deer stampeded; lions rdared. Bewildered horses stopped in the streets. Fowls Go te Roost. Wild fowl, hardly settled upon their accustomed feeding grounds, hastily took flight again to nest, only to return to feed again as daylight overtook their homeward journey. Hens flews to roost, true to eclipse tradition, .and cocks crowed at the phenamenon’s end. Fish in aquaria were seen to gather in schools and seek the bottom of their tank, as they are wont to do at evening. Many large ‘citles, and above all New York, were favored with a per- fect view of the eclipse, ordinary ac- tivities were suspended; all available transportation to countryside points of advantage was crowded; skyscrap- were covered almost to overflowing: men, women and children—old and young, of high and low degree— paused to-crane necks and whisper. President Coolidge used a whole pane of smoked glass to view the magnificent sight from the White mune from her husband's use, and is | House garden, where the penumbra legal grounds for diverce. » and part of the eclipse were visible, Lieut. C. E. Crumrine of Bolling Field, and S, M. Burka of the engineering di- vision of the United States Army. ‘Big Bertha,” narrowly averted the ignomony of remaining on the ground. The ofl in the cylinders of the big DH-4 especially equipped with lashihgs for the big camera, froze in the morn- ing’s bitter cold. A dozen mechanics worked feverishly transferring the “big box,” to another plane in whose cylinders hot ofl had been poured. The substitute’s engines were kept roaring throughout the operation to avert an- other freezing up process, and “Big Bertha” was taken aloft 15 minutes after the 24 other planes had taken the air. “Big Bertha” justified the troubles taken in her behalf. Dr. Todd said her pictures of the corona unquestion- ably werethe most valuable in exist- ence. All the pilots reported it was so dark at the exact moment of totality that it was impossible for them to read their instruments. It was un- questionably darker in the air than on the earth’s surface, they contend- ed. They also reported having looked down upon a haze over the earth’s surface, shutting off their ‘view of the earth. Ground observers at the same moment had reported that the view of the phenomena from the field was unobscured. \ Baby Arrives With Totality. PASSAIC, J., January 24.—Just at 9:11 am. today, the moment of totality of the eclipse of the sun, a| boy came into the world at the Pas- saio Hospital. He weighs 8 pounds. His mother {s Mrs. Jesse Speck of ‘Weatherford Mrs. Coolidge saw it through smoked glass also. Mayor Hylan of New York joined a throng in Central Park to gaze through a bit of exposed camera film. The boulevards and drives and parks of all the city were crowded. Broad- way's bright lights ran full blast, and street lights did, too, but there was |at By the Associated Press NIAGARA FALLS, 4—Tod 1 eclipse of the sun Niagara Falls gave to nearly two score photographs, formed the cataract into of jewels in magnificent scoplc display. and led en, belleve they have solved the secret of artificial reproduction of the phenomenon’s lighting effects. Black clopds, gathering rapidly to blot out a clear, star-spangled dawn, were rolling Into the eastern sky when the first black nick appeared on the disk of the sun. The cloudbank increased until, just before the period of totallty had been reached, it sud- denly was reft and Niagara's spray was wreathed into rainbows, while eerle lights gleamed through the dancing prismatic of its mingled ice and water. The ragged rift In the cloudbank glowed pulsed like the heart of a smithy's forge. Shadow Smudges Colors. Then the _ onrushing shadow smudged over the oolors like & great blunt finger. The ghosts of rainbows rose in the smokellke mists, the flashing green of the horseshoe crest turned ominously black, and the snow-clad shoulders and island em- Inences of the cataract and raplds paled to chalky whiteness. The sun’ corona flared almost unseen as th rent in the cloud curtain was closed The curtain opened again momentarily, but the period of totality was passed. Tides in Pacific Hold Wide_Range During Eclipse By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif, Janu- 24.—The eclipse of the sun ay exerted an unusual influence ides in the Pacific Ocean The Presidio tide station report- ed a tide of 6.2 feet, approx mately 2 feat above normal. The extreme low tide tonight will be 1.8 feet below normal, marking a difference of 8 feet between low and high tides The magnetic | on the tides by the moon greatly increased during the period of anu eclipse, according to o United es Coast and Geo- Survey office. - , N. Y. January a gara kaleldo- eers to| surfaces ary tou on s uences exerted ONLY CLOUDY MORNING APPEARS IN CHICAGO People of Great Lake City Dis- appointed at Failure to See Eclipse. ted Pre CHICAGO, January 24.—Clouds and mist today deprived millions of peo- ple of the Northwestern section of the country of seeing the greatest heav- enly show of the century in the eclipse of the sun Thousands of Chicagoans rose early to witness the spectacle only to find the morning, even during the perfod of near-totality here, was very little different from any other cloudy morning with mist hanging heavy over the city. While the ¢ smoked- glass and house-top astronomers were disappointed, the most bitter regrét was experienced by scientists and well known astronomers the University of Chicago and North- western University, who had trans- ported expensive equipment to Iron Mountain, Mich, and Williams Bay, Wis., expecting to make an exhau: tive study of the eclipse At Escanaba, Mich, where radio broadcasting experiments were con- ducted during the eclipse, better luck was reported E. F. McDonald, president of the Nationa® Assoctation of Broadcasters, who said that inter- esting reports had been recelved from hundreds of listeners in every State | fn the Union, and some as yet unex- plained phenomena had déveloped. While receptivity during the eclipse was increased for distant points, those nearby reported they heard less clearly, the reports indicated. =1 Have Flowers in Your Home and add 2 touch of Spring to the in- doors. Gude, 1212 F.—Advertisement. thousands INDIGESTION Instant Relief! 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They used two direct spectro- scopes. Cleveland Astro- May Have Mixxed Corona. Prof. Dustheimer said he believed their efforts to photograph the sun's corona had been frustrated by the clouds. He was certain that clear negatives had been obtained of the | first, second and third contacts. J. Gordon Ogden, head of the sci- le department of the Pittsburgh schools, who had established an inde- pendent station on the roof of the hotel, declared his belief that he had obtained photographs of the corona. He was using specially developed equipment, Mr. Ogden sald, and was confident that it had eliminated the obstruction of the cloud wisns at the first part of the perfod of totality. Instruments set up on Goat Island by an expedition from the General Electric illuminating laboratory in | Scheneotady recorded data from which it will be possible to reproduce | artifictally the light display on the Falls occasioned by today's eclips in the bellef of W. D'Arcy Ryan, head | of the laboratories | | Eclipse Reunion Gathers Veterans Of 1869 Phenomena By the Associated Press. LE SUEUR CENTER, Minn., Jan- Uary 24.—An eclipse reunion was held here today by a number of ploneers who saw the eclipse of 1869. Recalling the terror caused by the eclipse of 55 years ago, Thomas Dewire said that when it appeared between 3 and 4 pm., August 7, 1869, he saw persons running for safety. There was only curiosity today. — HOPES OF OBSERVERS SHATTERED BY CLOUDS Yerkes Astronomers Will Wait for Seven More Years Fruition of Dreams. By the Associated Press IRON MOUNTAIN, January 24.—Satisfaction that others su. ’Cepdtd where they failed, and that |seven vears hence they may be able [to fulfill their temporarily shattered hopes, was the consoling factor which tonight tempered the disappointment of Yerkes Observatory astronomers in their thwarted attempts to observe today's eclipse from Pewabic Hill near here. The expedition was a flat failure from the standpoint of observances. While there is a remote possibility that Yerkes men will make the trip to Summatra to view the 1926 eclipse, Prof. Oliver J. Lee and other ofcials sald that they might also visit Labra- dor in 1933 for the eclipse scheduled lh;{e. he four astronomers compri: the Yerkes official staff for lhzrl:)xcnfl!l expedition, " disbanded and left for thelr homes late tonight. for Mich., e W. B. Crocker Dies in ilawnii. HONOLULU, January 24—Willlam Blodgett Crocker, aged 60, said to have been a member of a well known New York family, died in a hospital here today. Mr. Crocker came to Hawali last August in an effort to recover his health. 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S e s R TR T i S R == |0|———[m[——=[o]—[x of Service High school graduation or its equivalent is rance to the day school. n for admission, giving =atisfactory references, is required from all students. Thers is n o advance payment of any kind, the first month being on trial. The course of study is strictly limited to those subjects having a dir capacity. The placement service received quests from employes, ect bearing on earning 1,098 re- and placed 641 people in positions during the first 8 months of 1924 This school is owned and operated by more than 20 business men a; nd educators of national prominence, including members of the faculties of New York, Wisconst 2460, private branch e: departments. Transportation Buflding n and Yale Universities. For information call, write or ‘phone Main xchange connecting all Washington School f;)r Secretaries 17th and H Produced i with Dr. J. Thomas Kelley. n co-operation Offices 100 Broadway. 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