i i t -*Q ALI- QVIR FRINGE IDWIARD ISI-A|`lDl""" “s i `f‘ 'Hill mass-r _’ __~,.,- LONE "1 H13 Sflldii the Napa! Offzcer Wages -- Problems gs The U. ' f _f " . tcmi-im. ian. by ni. use nn i-IBN the new battle ship Utah, with a full load displacement of 221,003 tons, went into commission ri few weeks ago. an experienced nnvnl oillcer who had been looking her over ' with a proud sense of`patriotic spirit re- mnrltcd-;-- “Sh,o's the cw-aiu of them all. I'd like to help train inn' to dglit." 'i‘he hit; ship as she ploughed her way slowly ii||'tni;;h" the water was in herself an emblem of str-cngtli and a product of all that modern naval de- sliin could make her. Surely she was equipped to give u cood account of herself. In the words of the°naval \-:;p:-rt watching ber, sho was “ready to be taught how to iight." \ _lt_ may not have occurred to persons outside of the navy that it is ns necessary to teach a ship ht?v to act in a battle as it is to teach a pugilist how o act i.u the ring. Yet it is so-emphatically Ro. Even the mighty Utah, with her ten 12-inch 45calibr§ rliies. her heavy Krnpp armor _and hcr complement of 888 |ngt)._,n'ould make n sorry showing against°a very in- ft-rior`siiip if her ofiiccrs and men did not know how to get the best out of ,her during the comparatively short spucc of time when the actual battle is being fought. ~ , "7 ' This is why she is now being made ready for her period of training. and also why the Navy Depart- ment attaches such great importance to the naval drills which nrc conducted regularly by competent .won in»»tini'¢r-of-peace. By naval drills one must take into consideration all the diderent phases of "train- ing" that the ships of the United States Navy go through from out-end of the year to theother. Spe- eini consiricrntion might be given to the periods of tin-gel practice. when the ships are taught to shoot atiatight. for--siiootlng straight is indeed the most im- mediate and important oifcnce and defence which a ship can have. . lint let it not for a moment be supposed that teach- ing it ship to shoot straight means merely getting good gunnere and putting them at the big guns. “The nnin behind thegun" has been s navy watchword for many years, but it is not the man behind the gun who is going to be the prime factor i.n nival battles of the future. A battle ship might have a picked crew of the best gunuers available in all the world and yet not make s single hit in a modern naval engagement. ln fact, if the gunners did their work properly the ship would necessarily miss with all the broadside ,_ guns every time the wrong information as to range, &c., worn communicated from the tire control towers to the gnnnery crews. ~` ¢'i‘he importance of the gunner is accurately to carry out his orders and point the guns as he is instructed to point them. Perfect co-operation between the Dre control tower and the gun pointers would form the ideal shooting ship, as the gunners would he correctly told where to shoot and would shoot as told. But if one or the other‘of these co-ordinate _branches must he sacrliiced it would be better to have mediocre gun- uers and s good tire caan-oi system than good gunners and a system of are control that threw them oi! the target. , o Training n modern battle ship to iight, therefore, consists, among other things, of teaching the oificers in the iire control to spot tho shots on the target' and communicate the range accurately to the gun pointers at the big guns, and in teaching the guns' crews to aiidot “according to instructions" and to shoot as quick- ly. as they can. The rapidity of shots iiretl is, of course, of paramount importance, and in this respect the g||1i;iéney_depends solely upon the crews at the guns. _.tg |5_in..working oirthis problem-that the most ex- pert ordnance 'oiilcers in the navy are devoting_their init' duoriles-.dev by oar. Evorytliins. iimt_mlsl1¢ spoil ,‘iiupr_ovemo,nt in thls_iine is given consideration. The ,luijority of'thls work revolves around the sys- tim of iiro control; which navaiexperts are straining to bring tothe highest point of ediciency. l'.i_‘his tire ¢°|\¢roi system, not only must be eihctive in target practice, but must so stand as to be practical and effective when hostile shots are comihg its way. There would be surprise for many if they realized even a small part of the work which the hhvai ,‘experi.~i 30 through in this process of training a battle ship for nohini battle. ideas are 'constantly exchanged be- twoh those odicers most proiicient inthin line, and the id,” brought out in foreign nsvies are closely scruti- _ind studied. Minnie battles between Atnericsn lll"li0|\lt'ei'g and the best available foreign ships are ' 'giidrsfought under' various conditions in the ;’i.$6f'tbo naval authorities. s ` _ fo, Problembf Military Malts. sn account of one of these battles, fought the oilees of a naval omcor in Washington ydsk, would illustrate by what esns attempt to arrive _st _couciu ions, give sn idea of how modern aval Tiilhlttle lpgins in this . omqgr whose opinions carry t Navy Hsgsrtlllt. and who is daily -Q” , , S. S. Delaware Buuid Oo. All rights Nsorvod.) ___ __ _ _ _ working on the “training of battle ships," sits quietly in his library in the evening thinking about sugges- tions he has heard in talks with his brother ofiicers and the problems which on that day have been dis- cussed. ~ ‘ The proposal of making a_slight change in the mili- tary masts now aboard American ships has just been up for consideration. Some of"'the oiiicers believe these masts should be smaller than they are now, and that the American dreadnoughts should have one in- stead of two of the structures. Other odicers are in favor of keeping the masts as they are because of the tremendous advantage they would give American ships in the early action of an engagement. s Still other authorities are doubtful about the supe- riority of the American skeleton masts over the Brit- ish tripod masts. They point out that the skeleton masts, upon which the all important fire control sta- tions sre situated, are each 120 feet high and from 30 to 40 feet in diameter at the base, and they argue that they form too large 'a target for the enemy, which ' ...-, ~., , ' ,_ _ CH.-uu.o'1‘TE'rowN CANADA sA'rUl