A priest uses an airplane as a pulpit for his Sunday sermons in a French camp
Item
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Title (Dublin Core)
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A priest uses an airplane as a pulpit for his Sunday sermons in a French camp
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Article Title and/or Image Caption (Dublin Core)
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His Pulpit Is an Airplane
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extracted text (Extract Text)
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“SKY-PILOT" may mean either an aviator or a clergyman,
depending entirely on whether you are speaking scientifically
or slangily. The sky-pilot shown below would seem at first glance
to be a scientific one, since he is standing in an airplane; but he is
really the slangy kind. It is Sunday morning in France, and he
is preaching to the assembled airmen. He is using the observers
seat for his pulpit, and it makes a very good one. This airplane
hurled bombs down at Germans only a short time ago. |
When the service was announced, some of the boys brought
out drums and cornets and practised up on hymns, which they
played before and after the sermon with great fervor.
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Language (Dublin Core)
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eng
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Date Issued (Dublin Core)
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1919-06
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pages (Bibliographic Ontology)
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36
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Rights (Dublin Core)
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Public domain (Google digitized)
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Archived by (Dublin Core)
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Davide Donà
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Marco Bortolami (editor)