The captiveballoons, and other landmarks, enabled them to keep to their course.
2
With regard to observations from captiveballoons much depends on circumstances.
3
In communicating between points on land, poles of great height can be used, or captiveballoons.
4
We saw two captiveballoons, used by the French to direct artillery fire on their enemies.
5
This lamentable deficiency was remedied in great measure by recourse to topographical photographs taken from the captiveballoons.
6
The Germans used captiveballoons, whose officers signaled the points in the Belgian defense at which they should aim.
7
By means of captiveballoons, currents of electricity between the higher atmosphere and the earth are kept passing regularly.
8
Meanwhile, as captiveballoons, the German and other armies used them for observation and the direction of artillery fire.
9
A dozen of those captiveballoons which the soldiers call "sausages" formed an aerial semi-circle and kept watch.
10
A French flyer had dropped it that afternoon with intent to destroy one of the German captiveballoons and its operator.
11
He saw high up in the air three captiveballoons, from which some of Hooker's officers looked upon the Southern intrenchments.
12
We had no sooner taken wing than the aeroplane was sighted by German observers in captiveballoons anchored about six miles distant.
13
Hooker, still in command, was watching on the heights across the river, and there were the captiveballoons hovering again in the sky.
14
At dawn on the second day an artillery duel began across the embankment, the German fire being corrected by observers in captiveballoons.
15
Germany was somewhat later in the field; the military value of captiveballoons was not appreciated and taken into serious consideration here until 1884.
16
Nothing more: wisps of smoke, brief flashes visible even in broad daylight, and a string of captiveballoons, motionless and observant witnesses of all.