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PAGE TWENTY-SIX _ _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FOR SAFETY _ OF OTHERS Crack Fliers Selected to Test New Airplanes—Parachute | “Only Protection Oct. 30.) The us is the big thin, And airplane crack tly courted, are 1 A re given thor. y Are adopted Cook Jicid ve crashed to dale commercial aircraft Kies, An hip is tuilt. A pilot is as. signed to does, ') ‘ime in ye “nc epilogue rei the sto¥y of the 1 religious sect., s than a half Ohio. lands are ‘The few colonic us Dittatield, Macs and Mount Lebanon, N. ¥., Founded 150 Years Ago the adherents of ““Mothe | una tur. of alge bra! ever figures more largely than in a test flight at MeCook Experts Picked r Corps picks the} for these jobs. It stion of risking x (By FLORENCE BORN so hard to forget you, of having at it all is i for test pilots men who understand ' dd that it all is in the pins and will know what the For [bless the first da trouble is: will be able, after the earn for woh, ft pull throu to tell! ar in the dark heaven. expertly and hout hesitation what love-light thy it ae oie " un in your bri ’ i aaiieeh quanticy No, I cannot forget, though I try chute, which he wears init (Phis comparative th 1 am trying so hard to forget you, silk is his sole protection and through Hut, " akes keener the pain, tests at McCook fickd they have been, Acd Ton! ut, perfected to a point where they rarely | \nd r face again. fail, And every pilot. kille They tel ied another, Cook field ad the m And with jewels your presence does I know You loved me, and no other, “CHICAGO STREET : HONORS ANCIENT _SOOTTSH CASTLE (A) ng so hard to forget you, am tr 1 no right to think of mate with Deecmber, mot go out of hand, ps you'll remember 1 Souls not understand. E ‘ich on wgo fire I shail never forget the sad moment, as then long the lake. ts than L offered, stly and fine. that Ig urned the gold Children’ Ss Cael Monument to Infant (P) narrates the “wondrous bl ustied rock’ pel proud” of Roslyn’s h y line of high and! that} rons Saint teen 1i more ¢ Chicago, Oct. | of people who iy pa squares away know nothing Thildren's Corn the story conne: ing. The place i and Orchard Street just west of Li coln Park. Almost the tent “oon Tho 1 Hfow| ner yout the} ro, oF] of Chicago. dd medieval chapel his the beautiful i ! differing from ull the other chapel pillar: ly curved in secret by an Who the apprentice was th the yi'lar is to this s the ‘ane of Ros! tle is remem- ered here thousands, of miles from Seotinad, i irrevocably has become linked with one of the biggest of 3 : events in the hi Paty. # of ft Otengo. Polo Encroaches on j Southwest Rodeos| BOP) A Jupetioi H x" goes glimmer- ing, in is at of Southw ; eri Texas because of the growing tereSt in mountain polo.” The game regular polo—draws great crowds } from the ranching communities of this section during the summer months and in aymeasure has revived | « the old tournament riding that once | so popular. | Mi 0. Chicago; the world's lar a ipGunees by nown, but | sheltering feet ad xe ros The't twenty a roses, wi the American Be ‘ childhood, ‘in this en: ildren’s hos- | florists within half | “e group fe other \ childhood charities} sides the Hans Christian and a mon feeds Se eer an nn ee Anders to Eugen vor: mercial produ directly spital ibule of one of the! churches, St. Paull street from the pate Here in the v city’s statelic Corn Show Entertainer and these same men become 'y expert at polo, After imination tournam among the ‘mountain teams, the win, ; ners challenge various United States Ar ms from rby posts for uperior tra rsemanship of Veghee-eepE= wanes: renes: -s0nee. eeeey: seme the Army players, thi Beau ty the cowboys. i Une Own Regalia i The cowboy players frown on the jard uniferm and saddle used by rmy teams, and eling. proudly to 1} ercent tow uniform- colored Their only standard accoutre: mailet and ball. First: if mht on re- it, which idjost In the tusiee af boating aes pallets, but he usually headpiece as quickly t for the removal of Andale r aud se Preemie a yc@whoy polotsts s as ueh may to “sideline” a steer, even using.chaps. Their “often verges. onto fouls | sof movements Saneny | he ated Spm shsinests d rules of the game. tain of the rooti fF by the Henry rdien, the Wor! TR secay ny Gorden, th ui cach afternoon’ North Dakota State Corn Show Tgeaea. An. Apion a pte gon wes: Peeing ber 10, aM 12 tn 13. lly afield \ TRYING TO FORGET hine, When you promised that you would me mine. uld not be mine, ch would tell of her love tishment of the “Children’s. Cor-| Plan 100 Acre Rose Garden Near Chicago (P) est Tose garden were two commercial florists on which greenhouses | early one million square e plants will be erected. =} say have F siaplaced uty in public favor, Millions of these blossoms ure shipped { ! from Chicago every year. The climate | and soil here, florists say, ble to roses, though all the com- |, jon is under glass. | There are more than 10,000. regis- tered clubs in London. | i op of Moun’ Ameri cabarets , ye | Thousands Honor America’s Dead in Cemetery at Paris: is, or lying below, there is an attraction for that twenty thousand people from the | ¢ | 1,500 men of the A, E. atury and aequarter Meacham, Issachar Bates mine S. Youhgs, missionaries jto Lebanon, Ohio, where they ithe banner of ‘the wilderness, Despite opposition, the jtrew and became weaithy. ). (P) t Valerien, The On the slopes | with all Paris n. They were sober, indus’ | plows, and honest. tourists which vies with the | murringe and depended upor of Montmartre. The faci! from other denomination or world” to keep up their member- F., men of | possessions into the passed SHAKERS SECT. | 2rica, len ce Half Thowsand Remai nins ‘to be told of hakers, once power- “eenuury ago the vned and farmed ‘thousa ds | the best lands in Obio, as | tracts in the east. of others, ynd. the Shakees | * Boat.tat East Sante nd West “Al- | hor but a few dwindling hundreds, | More ‘than a céntury and a half; | Loe” came to America from England, | stablished the first colony of [Shakers in New York state. Nearly !new faith, came over the Alleghenies | Shakers in’ the new te bought the best land in the re- They abo! i | i | Ly To- | in the nfain- rbury, This r Ann | John | Benja- | of the | set up sect Shak- trious, eris “from | United States are visiting there ‘his | ship. But they offered the convert | indicates its drawing power. | little beyond a life of pence and 3 is the American cemetery at| quiet. When a man and his wife) nes, where lie the bodies of joincd the sect, all their material Hila: icartion or died erwrmente | CZ,cheyennnay ane. the conlegs! thes James Duncan the caretaker, has Bib fad Lives Atihoet Monastic ’ compiled a short history of gach 'divi-| shakers made their life tlmost sion’s battle record, giving the names | j,onastic in color. Like monks and of those buried fable fo 4 fore |! nuns they toiled for their chu yone nrvisiting “the gemetery may sined the, The aa Kad oe tarae pa le press ite Ce ia nd all sources in the hands of the This book is a revelation, for it! church made it a coniniunistic enter- Am mg is the drawing eld of honor against ractions ‘A prise. til the later'years of the churc Shakers believed that Adam ar Revisited my bud- There was little intellectual life, und education was not encouraged un- h. The | nd Eve , bud- vere the physical progenitors of man, dia etme of the many register jut” that man’s spiritual nature ! * teas Sire ee sprang from the mythical union of ; Jesus and Ann Lee. Italy’s Royalty Owns “hut ‘the chureh ‘and communistic Ancient French — | near-by res- she effeet- w, the es- LIM, Cou and his Plans for! rles- 1 100 acre tract have two ing Premier is most fa- on the tombs the pames of Umbel | nor, w fo of Henry Hil of Fogler was Archbishop + Reach te Charles-Felix of Sardinia, Hautecombe it in that year the abbey was alm in ruins, practices did not prosper. rdinia, was buried herg.| generation since. isitor looks around he ready AD 1619, but this apparently euely, for the type of clock. ten days for ecac! for cach winding. | Sells Cattle to Be nt of Savoy, 1189, Beatrix wife of Thomas J, i |. 1268, who was uncle to E! brother Boniface, 1270, I, the Red 1, vena If, 1497, and Felix of "Savoy, King of Sar others buried here. Savoy, King purchased the Abbey af) the title of “wheat queen.” in 1824 When he visi Sublette, Kans., Oct. Formerly" known” asthe bought and restored it. Keeping theTelephane at Your Command. | Is an Endless and Expensive Task In your every ‘of difficlt to ia a effort required to service al- ways at your . i Hee gh, army of of erie M , se constantly at sil hears, hours of tt pha rand. tam in at Alas of weather. ‘Their work eeping the perish ‘at your Se vias re- quires = = of money for Wages, new equipm mate = out erigls 0 repair anrent and colonies founded on these beliefs and There re_desertions; schisms broke out. | Within comparatively few yours the cond wife of Umberto] was the first owner, so that its his- 1 to rest, in 1849, whem] tory dates well back in the 1700's./ ‘hristine of Bourbon, dowager| And it has been willed through agi Curiously, the works bear the ee is too, It runs | ‘eat: | Kansas ‘Wheat Queen’: 30.—(#). “cattle of queen,” Mrs. Ida Watkins now has No woman—and few ‘non—planted mote acres of wheat or tharvested a larger crop than did Mrs. Watkins oes Wao) The above picture is of the displ: ing a few samples of the attract this year. , Sood “Kansas land and it is virtually); {all planted to wheat, had time to figure the total yield.| bi $60,000 it, beying, nineteen, P and sell ing in competition with her men neighbors. ‘Then she heard the pé q tas rose f¥0! ir, Hautecombe, Savoy, PI Die Sete aye See ea Sclduin visited | by ita owner the; membership in Ohio dropped. trom Oh, would that some one could have saved you, titular rulers of Italy, the ners of more than a thousand to the one lone From a life fraught with endless despair. Hautecombe on the shore of ¢| Shaker still in Lebanon, and the f Rourget in France is. as eet ‘ | total membership in all the colonic Lam trying so hard to forget you, them as any spot in their own countiy./in America ‘from more than 6,000 to And the home I once thought would be ours, Within the stately brake na! the an- less than half a thousand. When 1 held you and fondly caressed you, cient abbey no fewer than forty-three ae cane el x Hl 4 love, ‘neath the stars. | members of the. royal onsaiete ei | Grandfather Clock 1 Ah ‘ee! uken, i 3 x And itis just here} *: ae iiitea: buried. The most recent royal visitor | Dae eee vs at in vain for repose, 10th yam ot is Totebean: me Has Run | 200 Years: ae vould that my } you had taken, Prince Umberto, the Italian crown | ‘And crushed ‘neath your hect with the rose. princes: "| Peoria, I, Oct, 30,-)—-Most | tween the suburban homes of two Royal Apartment Vacant. | everybody “is familiar with Longfel- | Chicazoans who had ancestral asso- They tell me today you're unhappy, The Abbey of Hautecombe wan|low’s poem about the grandfather, ciations with the neighborhood of 1 life you now sce, founded by St. Bernhard in 1196.* Ey} clock that stood on the stairs “pick- Sieg rele. ih. Scotland. Oxo, of For the lord you have wed is unfaithful, the old abbey an apartement is kept} ing the Xears away. ¢ these Chicago Scots was William C." ‘Ani your wealth adanon ever in readiness for the Kise. sf Many persons posses grandfather; * Gowdy, al counsel of the Chi ‘ ites ae a Italy, but it has never been used by] clocks, but few are as old as the one cago “& western Railroad, and} They tell me you long for your freedom, | the Italian royal family. A few years] in the home of James Robert Harri- | the other was David Goodwilli Though you rule in the world as a queen, | ago the King of Italy visited the Ab-| So, 72, inventor and manufacturer,! Jeadi er of this cit While the love you once scored is a phantom, | bey incognito, and it was only some| which has been ticking steadily © © hurdheaded pi To taunt you of what might have been. days later that the monks learned| through nearly 200 years for six gen- tical Ch as much given to, that the vi tor they had shown round erations ue De arisen mie. a poctr:, but the fact remains that ~“| the monastery was its royal ownet,| keeps perfect time and the works| , When years after the af fire the two on, as the volley of encouraging or| Evangelical Lutheran is a memorial} for Haut pad is the property of the} Which are of brass show no paid men canie ‘o agree on the name of the | discoura; yells gives little clue te} to a baby boy, the son of a washer-} Italian crown. of the Hand of Time. mew sirect which was to take the! the ; that | weman with no ether kin. _ ‘The ancient timepiece was brought | place of their lot line they selected are| ‘oiling for years over tubs this) Tombs Are Historic. te America fron England about 1800 the name of t tle referred to in! es.! mother, a wit :; The forty-three royal tombs in the| by Robert Harrison, grandfather of Sir Walter mous “Ba life ambition | chapels and crypt of the Abbey date| the present owner. It was willed-to! of Lovely The n the splendid chureh doorway a vhen Anne-Germaine de| Robert by his father, who probably i | } one of the several new i: titutions which h She ow 1,950 acres of bilities and and slowly She has not] fe at 60,000 bushels worth at least is a conservative cstimate. s, Watkins’ husband died | ree cattle |, he managed holdings of southwestern offened in the C Kansas | of th built up in wheat! ¢2lit seljing out the ded to her. wheat lang Just “TOO BAD e carried within th cattle b } tiful « » Were’s a gun I fou ‘re unde rrest for Baldes nth collec ‘ 5 romp is | a radio expert NOW | AY MO Think ot the folks at home—wiho "*can never get anything,” nowbeing ableto hearthestationsthey’ vebeen “aimee ‘reading about in the paper. Throughan amazing discovery...every- one now has this new freedom of the airs No more squeals or howis...they’ve been banished. In their place are sta- tions. ..tuned in and out at will. ‘No more fuzzy distorticn, Selectivity, scis- sor-like in separation. This is the radio sensation that is ready for you now... By those informed re- We Brig Trighe-Life”* ' garded. a year ahead. Here isan achieve- | ment vou will certainly consider worthy | of complete i investigation. Scientists Discover New Principle Scientists: made a discuvery. Erla engi- neers, collaborating with the’ distin- guished staff.of the Radio Frequency Laboratories, have done what they term “erasing regeneration’’... the cause of squeals, howls and distortion. Manu- facturers have often sought to climinate it. But never mcceeded « except by sac- s distance. and volume~too great a penalty. Now regeneration is banished . . . but without loss, There is an actual gain in reception. , No wonder the new Erla na (REL) is considered a year -NOD-IC Receiver Stations Formerly as Difficult as“A Message from Mars” Now Come in” as Easy as a Telephone Call 4 \ ERLA Advantages. —a Year Ahead! ¢ Makes everyoue an expert in getting distance. Banishes squealsend howls forever. ~ i Does not radiate into. 7 neighboring anteanae. Reproduction positively lifelike. Razor-keen selectivity with actual gcin in volume. ahead. Few now will be satisfied with old-fgshionedreceivers—especiallywhen the improved Erla (RFL) may be pur- chased so very reasonably. Beauty Unrivaled— Value Unapproachéd You'll be delighted with Erla cabiness, too. Consoles that are true “period” reproductions, in rich two-tone antique finish. The DeLuxe model is especially attractive in quartered andmatehed burl walnut...a true art object worthy. of a distinguished place in any drawing room. And thevalue . .. whether of table cabi- nets or consoles . . . just cannot be dupli- cated. Manufacture under one roof, accomplishes these ‘‘one- profit’’ benefitsfor you. Just for your own protection you willsvantto sce thenew Erla (REL) frst. At stores listed below or demonstrated. in your own home if you desire. Price range of table cabinets, $89.50 to $95.50, Consoles, $129.50 to $285.50 Fa ceoatlade Radio Scion e Distributors or Phons 338 Bismarck, N, Dak.