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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1916. Here 1t is Mo g3 still smiliog: et New Per- all the bot d 1t costs tot watet. H S“PP ics ange B __does ber cooking 08 & 2 3 56“:;“800\6 Stovc. fong e famous ‘;1;:, rfectmn o trouble-pro® oof. ‘9 the toves have el ad many ot e 81 burnef sizes by dealers € ST ANDARD OIL COMPANY 1 Offices Nf“"’??g Albany .. Bofalo Bostos i himney 1‘\)“:\); E “v‘ccs model N & ggv:(filb‘c Sold in b 3 3 OF NEW YORK erald want ads I' bring resuits VERANDA FURNITURE Make your veranda attra tive and comfortable. selected from our extensive the trick will be small and benefit derived great A few pieces stock will do The expense A FEW SUGGESTIONS Couch Hammocks $7.50, $9.00 and $12.50. Hammock Standards $8.00 and $4.50. Awnings $8.00. Silk Floss Pillows, 24x24,khaki, red or green, $1.00 each. Steamer Chalrs $1.50, $2.25, $4.50, $6.00 and $6.75. Metal Frame Lawn Benches, 4 £t.,$6.75. High back, brace arm, maple frame Veranda Rockers $3.50. Other Veranda Rockers and Chairs $1, $1.25, $1.75, $2.50 & $2.75 Folding Lawn Settes $1.25 and $1.50. Prairie Grass and Fiber Rugs In all colors and sizes. REFRIGERATORS We feature the famous McKee Refrigerators. Used by Uncle Sam on his battleships—proof positive of their excellence. Twenty- five different models from which to choose. Prices from $8 to $6! WHERE QUALITY HIGHER THAN PRICE. COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS AGENTS For GLENWOOD RANGES A0-56 FORD STREET HARTFORD OVERLOOKING CarPITOL GROUNDS | mask | from Cartain T.. | ran | The flag was raised while the ! buzzed like a swarm of gigantic bum- | seconds, and each time a pair of the | lanta, Ga.; | carthage, AMERIGAN FLYERS i IDOLS: OF FRENGH! Thelr Daring Amuses Admiration [ Men in Joffre’s Army (Correspondence of the Asso. Press). Headquarters of an Aviation Group —Behind the French Front, May 13.— The aviator is an early bird and here, where the nightingale abounds, it is a close race between them to bed at dusk | and to the fields at dawn. The nightingales were rioting in | song this morning when the pilots of | the Franco-American Corps were | making their way to the aviation camp and daylight had just peeped | over the horizon when Captain H...., | commander of the group, ordered: “Bring out the machines!” There was nothing new in this to the seven American pilots who ha been flying in different groups on d | ferent parts of the front for upwards | of a year. All of them had been out with the nightingale a. few hundred mornings, but it announced their ftirst expedition together as a separate unit | of the French aviation corps over Ger- | man territory. Long-planned | smail sheds, machines resembling and short-winged ma- | chines which in comparison Awindled to the proportions of devil flies, rolled on the field and were pushed on the | run to their places until twenty-cight were lined up. Captain H.... razed at the low-lying clouds—excellent for a flotilla crossinz the enemy’s lines—and ordered: “Tell the Americans to be ready.” The Amer- icans, grouped behind their swift chasers, listened to final instruetions who commands the Franco-American flotilla and is proud of it. The din was then too great for verbal orders to be heard, and a soldier with a white signal flag into the field while pilots and machine gunners leaped to their seats, motors ble hees. The flag dropped <nd Cap- big biplane rose to lead The flag was raised and intervals of ahout thirty the column. dropped " at bigger machines followed unti! nine- teen of them were flling towards the German lines. The big machines were gone but the noise increased as the propellers of the smaller but more powerful and swifter biplanes were set in motion. It was time for the Americans— special in speed. The first big plane was approaching the clouds when, with a bound, Captain T.... rose; then followed Lieutenant De- laage of the Frencn Corps, Lieuten- ant William Thaw, Pittsburgh; Ser- geant Elliot Cowdin and Corporal Vie- tor Chapman, New York; Ser: Norman Prince, Prides Cros Mass.; Corporal Kiffen Rocktw Corporal J. M. Me N. C.; and Sergeant Galveston. Texas. Bound Into Skies. “onnell, Hall, These little biplanes with powerful motors are the fruits of the svolution of aviation during the war—built to match the best German machines In speed, carrying only the pilot, a ma- chine gun and the minimum require- ment in feul. Instead of rising gradn- ally like their predecessors, they bound upward with an ascensional power heretofore unattained. They | are so dangerous in a fight that the pilot has to go into the adversary's | territory to hunt an engadement. That wag what the Americans, especially chosen for these machines, were to do. There were nine of these, together | with nineteen of the big hombarding biplanes, in sight together for an in- stant; then the head of the line dis- appeared In the clouds. The ‘“hunt- ers,” as the speedy machines are called, overhauled the last of the hig- ger fliers and went out of sight ahead of them, while Thaw's “Tris” and Cap- tain T....’s “Fram,” the two pet | doga of the camp, were still bark- ing after them. Even soldiers habituated to {his spectacle for nearly two vears never tire of it. They watch the last ma- chine until it is out of sight, then turn back without comment to the sheds to await the return. The si- lence and solemnity of the camp after the bustle of the departure was de pressing. The seventy soldiers of the camp knew that some of those brave boys might be missing when the roll wag called again. Time passes With marvellous rapid- ity on fighting expeditions, aviators say, but the two hours maximum wait in camp to see if they all get back s always long Watches are out after ninety minutes and eves are | turned in the direction taken by the fiiers. At the ninety-ninth minute, perhaps, a speck appears high above the horizon. “There they come,” that passes around the everyone is on the field. chaser,” says one. word camp and “It's a “Number two is a bombarder,” sa another. Tn a few minutes twenty-seven specks are counted: then there is another walt and voices are hushed. A ‘‘hunter” circles around the camp, dives down- | ward at a dizzy pace, skims along the fleld without slowing up, until break- ing against the wind it comes to a thrilling stop. The elghth seems to flutter as approaches, tips and dives Field glasses are levelled him. had his tall plece carrfed 3 cries one. “It's Thaw,” sayvs another, “and there's something wrong with his propeller.” Alter- nately rearing, diving, and sliding on its wing, the machine comes down convulsively like a wounded hird. ““He's going to break a bhit of wood!” exclalmed a French soldler, | expressing in characteristic aviation language the prospect of a smash. The machine rears again after a dive which took it dangerously close to the earth, veers around abruptly against 18 the it fittnlly. nt red tin you will reac cess Patended July 907 ~ A supply of Prince Albert awaits you wherever to- bacco issold. Toppy red bags, 5¢c; tidyredtins, 10c; handsome pound and half-pound tin hu- midors and that nifty crystal-glass humidor with sponge-moistener top that keeps th: to- bacco in such prime shape —always! the wind, bumps along the ground a hundred yards and stops. ‘“Thaw's one of the few pilots who could bring home a busted machine like that,” said a soldier. “But where's Chapman?” All big biplanes are now in and and soldiers are all searching sky anxiously. Then a cry from the field. A speck has just emerged from the clouds. Chapman, driven out of his course hy the shell- | ing in which Thaw's propeller v damaged, had finally found his way, and lands now with the last drop of | gasoline in his reservoir. “The disgusting thing about ir,” said Thaw, while the mechanics wers tak- ing an inventory of the damage, “‘was that the fellows over there across the line wouldn’t come out to fight.” the pilots the NOT CHICKENS. Press.) “CANARIES,” (Correspondence of the Asso. London, June 19.—*Canaries” become the popular term for girl mu- nition workers whose skin and hair become yellow from working over Special §:2 A straw Hat we originated and gave our own name because It typifies our highest ideals of style and distinctiveness. Has the low crown and wide brim so popular this season See it. Try it on. You'll like the w v it feels and looks. Many other styles for your se- lection. S-M-T- famous Fitting service with Every Hat. STACKPOLE-MOORE- TRYON GOMPANY QUALITY CORNER 151 Asvlum Street AT TRUMBULL, HALTVPORD. e comes | has Prince Albert has always been sold without premiums or coupons. Quality is its standard—and my,how the millions of smokers have ap- proved of it, too! ¥ R. J. Reynolds Tobaceo Co. factories rtism is so certain shell Their patric do not hesitate to dis fumes in England. that they themselves for the | hind the guns. are also better paid than the girls who do not run the same risks. GERMAN MONEY FOR Permission to Outside Capital Enter Country Arouses Protest (Correspondence of the Asso. 'ress). Budapest, via London, The action of the Hungarian parlia- { ment in consenting to a bill permitting | German capital to exploit the new fields in ania has aroused | flood of criticism. The oil flelds, unex- | ploited were discovered only three years ago, but there has been a widespread public belief that they | would prove to be a natural treasure worth untold millions to Hungary. Concessions for their exploitation have now been turned over to the Deutsche Bank of Berlin, in return for the lat- ter’s promise to invest $5,000,000 in the work development. This i characterized by the oppowition as “selling our birthright for a mess of pottage.” The center of each of the two Tran- June a iti vet, My Low Fees Are a Bless- ing to Suffering Human- ity, Who Can Least Afford to Pay the High Prices Often Asked by Special- ists. No Need for Money Matters to Stand Any Longer Be- tween You and the Relief You Seek. READ EVERY WORD OF THI% OFFER suffer from nervous troubles, DON'T physician or DELAY ! at once, BUT If you chronic Consult a | whole of céent { they - HUNGARY OILFIELDS oil |, INGE BERT the national joy smoke stands clear-as-a-whistle above national or state restrictions on the use of premiums or coupons be- cause they have never been given with Prince Albert. To offer such inducements would mean that Prince Albert’s quality would have to be reduced to meet their cost! ‘We prefer to hand smokers quality. One test of Prince Albert will prove this toyour absolute satisfaction! It will prove that P. A. cannot bite, cannot parch! Your enjoyment of its fine flavor and coolness will be supreme! The patented process by which Prince Albert is made cuts out bite and parch! Prince Albert came unheralded a few years ago; today it has made three men smoke pipes where one was smoked before and has given cigarette rollers a new idea of makin’s joy. To meet the approval of such an army of men of varied tastes, P. A. must have everything we or its most enthusiastic admir- ers ever claimed for it. And Prince Albert has all that! It rings true and real and you just adopt it for all time quick as you get that taste and aroma into your smokeappetite! Because, it answers the fondest tobacco desires you or any man ever did express! R.J REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. sylvania fields consists of a group of | oil springs “‘gushing up from the earth | in a quantity sufficient to supply the Europe with gas and also for | ual objections, urging that “the flelds should be exploited and or ized by the state in order that should serve as a national sour wealth, and thus replace the coal, mostly imported from many.” One of the speakers dec) | “this ofl will now fall to the Gern who will take care that the gas not be any cheaper than the coa One of the newspaapers has explained the transaction in an i view with Tisza, in which he says the transaction was necessary be Hungary has not enough money tq velop the oil flelds herself. oil not only for lighting but industrial purposes.’ Just how far the concessions to the Deutsche Bank go, is not yet clear, but there appears to be no doubt ll\:\\’ will give German capitalists a | clear advantage and control in a field where Hungarians had long hoped to build up a purely national enterpr When the bill granting the conce: sion was brought up by Count Tisza, the independence party raised its us- MAKE YOUR OWN PAIN Save 58 cts. per gal. 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