Show STORMS TO PREDICT SELVES wireless stations to be used to mike maka send sand their own warning ahead storm centers move usually IP in an deterly or northeasterly dir direction atlon alence tho the prediction ot of storms on the atlantic coast Is possible since most moat of 0 them come from the mississippi valley some come up tip the coast from tho the caribbean sea but even in this case wo we have hav no warning but western europe Is less fortunate its tempests como come from froin the at bantle and with little warning european weather men have made as much na as possible a study of the paths patha of american storms atoms across the atlantic and are sometimes accurate in pre dieting dieling the ine I ne tie ot of their arrival the same has b dons done with storms coming up from froin the south atlantic dut but it often happens that storms yary vary either their route or the rate of movement so that predicting cyclones on the coast of western europe is ditore more or less guesswork As a possible help in this respect director andre of the lyons observatory is making a deep study of the galvanometer records of various wireless telegraph stations ile ho has found that the antennae are sensitive to any stray electric currents as well as to messages nna and he h hopes pes to discover a way to make the storms telegraph their own warning ahead of 0 their arrival every storm Is accompanied by electrical disturbances and already M X andre has accumulated a mass mans of evidence to show that each storm in this way gives warning just how to road read ahls evidence is ie the problem to 0 o which he to Is devoting himself |