New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1923, Page 5

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| Jjokes and caricatures have been cop- | mancuvers was to mislead the enemy, C“ STT" B“AST AIR Two PLANES MEET jed the world over, a number of well | dislodge him from his fortified pos A known medical ‘and scientific jour- |tions and break through and relieve HEAD'ON lfl AIR nals” are apparently alse on the point | the garrison. of suspension. 46 Killed or Wounded Two Marine Flyers Killed, Another £ columns are said to have been two % officers and. 44 soldiers killed or | Will Probably Die, After Accident \\ound(‘d All of them belonged to Lh.-‘ Fliers Succeed in Making Trip i0| .. omucin. s1yme rvt. | The Spaniards who disembarked at | o kbfill[ 28 HOlll‘S Pensacola, Fld., Aux» 28, —Captain | Afrau under orders from Ardel La- | " George I Hill and Second Licutenant | der, chiet of Beni-Zikha, which i s b Cornelius Mcladden, bpth of the friendly to the Spaniards, met % " New York, Aug. 23.—Twenty-cight | Marine Corps, were killed instantly| nemy between Afrau and Tifaruin, hour coast-to-coast air mail service, a | yesterday and Iirst Licutenant M. A, Bes]eded Deienders of T][al'um’w hey lost 26 men, of which five were || project on which the post office de- | Richal, also of the Marine Corps, was | [ kiilad: “NoneL it the Mther Spsnish | columns suffered losses ,according to | partment has been working more than | probably fatally injured when n\m 3 a year, became a reality yesterday. A | Voight airplanes crashed in mid-air| Fl‘wd by Forelgfl Leglon | the latest information from the fight- plane which , left Mitchel field, near|at an altitude of between 3,000 and| ing zone, Garden City at i1 o'clock Tuesday|4,000 fect near the Pensacola Naval | i While the land forces were engaged morning reached -San Irancisco iast|Adir Station. Madrid, Aug. 23.—Official confirma- [in the advance the naval forces bom- Dight At 6:24 (2:24 New York time.) | McFadden, whose home address 15 |tjon was received here yesterday aft-|barded the coast held by the enemy An eastbound plane which left | Philadelphia, was pilot of one of the | arnoon by the minister of war from |at Alhucemas. The admiral in com- Cheyenne at 6:35 o'clock Tuesday eve- | Planes, with Captain Hill as assistant|{o high commissioner in Morocco of [ mand of the eruiser squadron in a ning without waiting for the San|Pilot. Richal was flying alone in the | pyrafuin, wheeh has been heseiged for | dispatch says the Spanish guns stlenc- |§ Francisco plane which was behind | Second machine. Tifaruin, whichh as been besieged for [ed enemy batteries along the coast, time, arrived at Hazlehurst field at| NO official statement of the crash|gome days by Moroccan rebels. | notably at Cape Quilates. The cruiser | 5:14 last evening, its mail being rush- | has been issued, but strong wind .cur-|™"mp. gpanish troops entered the|Kspana silenced the:enemy guns at ed to New York for distribution on the r?“‘s are be]'l‘_"l""" '!‘]‘ f”“l',“’ “f*‘“-““d ?‘j“‘ town with their band playing the|Alhucemas during the morning, but 5:26 train for the Long Island railroad planes to collide. The plane in Which|,,ya; mareh. The minister of war|the tribesmen resumed their firing in out of Mincola. the two aviators wore killed fell nto |jnmediately sent felicitations to the|the afternoon. | The success of fhe post office’s ef- pefl R By omenats machime QrOp-) goreinon, whight, had held off nw; The premier announced this after- :ort ‘?)1 cut ar)mrvoxlmawly four day'n Hill. was unmarried ‘and his home|" emy notwithstanding repeated vio- | noon that when the tribesmen had e s ;:“;n:’“o'i‘;‘c’::;'"’:uf":h: address was Leominster, Mass. Me- | . other, is the result of the careful de- "“,1}23:,]'::,‘f:i:'ii:,‘;;"“I;:ff'.":"z:"“;b“, 1o |1ations to the garrison. Morocco would be carried out. velopment of a night flyibg route be- | GaE G MR a1 was Anfusa °( The war minister told the news- ——— | 0 3 5 L 2 tween Chicago and Chevonne. ¢ | qon i vet It Richal was injured fn-| \pornen that the Spanish , troops CHINESE POPULATION Almost the same thing happens with every new indus- L a el g el e R U i try. An invention is perfected. It is successful. It Only about 50 persons, among them their objective against fierce resistance Shanghai, Aug. 4.—China has J. E. Whitbeck, superintendent of the { ] E » e A s al % . . . SlBrs dfvaion o theair il am EERM AN P”B”SHERSIU; rbesmen. _One column com: | population ot ' 436,004.053. m(mmné- creates a market. ‘Then, owernight, a hundred imitation manded v . Sa 3 e o the nual, re *hi | : 3 ; i i i i S devices spring up to take advantage of that market. W. E. Clickner, detailed by Postmast- er Morgan for the arrival, were at an encircling movement against | post office. The figure is only a Hazlehurst fleld when the 'cm.y,m\., |enemy positions' around Mirafuin, | vague estimate, compiled from re- | ) plane landed. Word had been receiy- while another column, commanded by | rorts of provisional offices, as no | It’s only natural. €d that Pilot' E. Eugené Johnson had Col Scaone, delivered a frontal at-|systematic method of census taking is ’ . i left Cleveland, Ohio, at 2:02 yesterday e tack. The principal object of these | followed. It’s natural but not always good. For while the or- Vard trip. whien sty reauive| Wages Paid and Low Returns! | iginal invention was the result of long experiment and development, the new devices are often hurriedly built three and a half hours. At 5 o'clock & plane d in the sky, P 1 o [4 | mintes ?n‘l;e’:::?e t?}i?d]c o ool Cause Heavy Losses % ' and are usually inferior. They are almost always fun- Bised th seetdohndoR slim outs. Ho imeeae ey ) 1 damentally unsound because their producers are ham- had-arrived 59 minutes ahead of his| Leipsic, Aug. 28.—The entire Ger- pered by the need of evading the basic patents of the man publishing business has been schedule. | ¥ e thrown into confusion as the result | ‘ 2 original product. Johnson, who had refused to yield . to the advices of physiclans, and nurse | O the s PIMIMAN: of Mage e he basic i ; i lgures exc standar, | The consumer meanwhile has heard of the basic in- waited only long enough to satisfy the 3 1 i to abandon reprints or new editions | &lq a i : ‘ vention. He has heard of its performance and the satis- attacks, King Alfonso, who is an | been subjugated the plans of the atander, also dispatched congratu-|Spanish government for pacification of a severe attack of is i Ruaok o of fenalliyig in bad, gy e i Bublishers have decided | hotographers. :’“m::dplf;'m"':: ::";;:f‘of‘; };;‘;(m the standard German works, and | 2 T L 3 C d % / 436-mile alrway intervening hetween | 1Y 3150 are cancelling contracts with | faction it gives. And in his mind he identifies its name Stiaining. an altitate. o 1o’ 'ime | which had been planned for the holi- = X 8 with the industry in general. He buys one of the new Veathor and Wind, e i Ime ' : i devices and it fails. He does not blame the imitator With favoring| ™ “ippe multiplicr agreed upon by pub- weather and Wi d, h id he Y EALLE 00.- R/ 2 p opened up for all she's worth, in the | 1gnCTsfor, e Surrent weck Is 1.u10.- AR 4 alone, but the original as well, whose name has become a generic term for all similar devices. tast lap of the race. rdi novei which use S Loine Iotags o mall was e e U"O 8 i DeHaviland plane and dispatchod by | the priees of sciontife sroris have alo AT Exactly this thing has happened with Nokol. Be- cause it was the first, and for a long time, the only auto- automobile to the Mineola station.|ready placed these works out of the Bome of the letters reached their ad-|reach of students and the public li- Cause 1L : 4 matic oil heater in the field, Nokol has come to mean, in d‘re;:el in the eity by 9 o’clock last | brarics. night. Germany's best-known comic weck- F you are going to play in the sun—or sit | g 2 ruhe wostwird plano which success- 1y, Die Fiiegende Biactter, Is thrent- it el e e the minds of many people, any oil heater. It has come ly went through to the coast be- |ened with extinction s It of t1 ; et ¢ N S 5 4 * : 2 its Journey Tucaiuy moring un. | economic Iiculties. which arc. con- bag of lime drops along. The juice of the to stand for automatic oil heating in general. der the guidance of C. Eugene John- | fronting publishers all over Germany. lime, and sugar make a cooling combination. |8 5 Avak Nolial Waa inats Crstier son, who returned with the Cheyenne | With a weckly wage scale of 36,500, The handy bag fits nicely into the side Since the first Nokol was installed many oil heaters have come on the plane last night. 000 marks for compositors, increased coat pocket. Every sugar lime drop in it | market, of all varieties and descriptions. Some have been fairly success- 7 prices of paper and continued losses P Y ful. Others have died out before the,end of the heating season in which EILLED IN FALL {ricieculntion thespubliph g husinges sugpssts chas Kihe gnowsRthelliack 1o: they were born, being unable to stand the test of cold weather. These New York, Aug. 23.—Samuel Gru-|is now finding itself operating on a candy-making—has known it, in fact for 0 - ot Uit o it ¥ N ber of Brooklyn today jumped or fell | cost basis in excess of that prevailing eighty years. unsuccessful devices have caused loss to the credulous home-owner, and fram an upper floor of the municipal | before the war, measured in gold % have retarded the growth of automatic oil heating for homes. And among householders who have not distinguished sharply between the various building, landing in Park Row and|values, and with a market anything 2 narrowly missing morning crowds on |but up to the preware standard. I ' herever gOOd Candy (A) SOld | automatic oil heaters on the market it has done Nokol a certain amount their way to work. He was killed|" Along with Dic Fliegende Blaetter, . . 4 { = i ily: In six years it authors for new publications, many of, T M Meanwhile Nokol has grown steadily—phenomenally. has grown from the pioneer and creator of a new industry to a nation- wide institution of the highest repute. Today there are over 22,000 No- kols in use—more than all other automatic oil heaters for homes. com- bined. Nokol has established itself on the firmest financial Lasis as a re- sult of its own efforts and success. Its guarantee is bonded by the Ifidel- ity and Casualty company of New York. It has made its unequalled heat« ing comfort available to every home-owner. Six years of continued research and the combined experience of thous- ands of owners have brought about such improvements in the Nokol me- chanism that Nokol is toda‘ as far in advance of any other home heating system as it was six years ago. Today Nokol gives guarantees of efficien- cy approached by no other device. In the future of automatic oil heating, as in the past, Nokol will continue to be the leader. It is the knowledge of Nokol service to its owners, spread rapidly and inevitably by these owners themselves, that has resulted in NoKol's pheno- menal development and expansion. Nokol's growth is the proof, as ‘well as the result, of Nokol service. 95% of Nokol sales are made on the recom- mendations of satisfied owners. It has ended the heating troubles of home-owners, and done away forever with the dirt and drudgery of coal. It has given them, in some cases for more than six vears, a heating serv- ice as convenient and reliable as electric lighting, cleaner than gas, at less than the cost of coal. Nokol burns oil in your present heating plant. It can be in- stalled in a plant of any type—hot air, hot water, vapor or steam. Controlled by a thermostat it operates automatically, thaintaining an even temperature within doors at all times, burning oily only when heat is needed. Come in and see Nokol at work in a typical heating plant. Send For Booklet “Automatic 0Oil _Heating For Your Home” Oh BO | / 1 CONNECTICUT OIL HEATING COMPANY 3 ¢ heal Lorn riares. | 983 Main Street, Hartford, Conn. Tel. 2-6950 it e em e miv e FRENCH & GLOCK treat is ready. There’s no waiting for the delicious goodness of Post Toasties. And you have two good | New Britain National Bank Bldg., New Britain, Conn. foods —crisp, flavory, energy-giving flakes of toasted ; Tel. 3130 corn, and the cream or milk with which Post Toasties are served. I Nothing better to turn a hungry feeling into hap- . piness. Don’t just ask for ° ‘corn flakes,” say Post ‘ Toasties—they’re different! You can tell Post Toasties I by the Yellow and Red package —if it isn’t wax- I ' wrapped it isn’t Post Toasties. ¥ AU TOMA 71C OIL HEAT, lNG FOR YOUR HOME Tested and Listed as Standard by Underwriters’ Laboratories The New Noko! Is the Quietest Automatic Oil Heater Made THE NOKOL GUARANTELE IS BON DED BY THE FIDELITY AND CASUALTY COMPANY

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