OCR Text |
Show BELIEVES MISERIES OF Bate's fefd, 9 r Penetrates nipper bronelilil tubes with its toothing atediciaslnpan. Stimulates th chttt end back surfaces lika t food. warmios poultice, Warming, soothing relief grand relief comes when you rub good oldVkksVapoRubon the throat, chest and back at bedtime. Its penetrating-stimulating action keeps on working for hours. In vites restful sleep. And often by morning most misery of the cold is gone. No wonder most mothers use VapoRub.fi 1 901 ft Try It tonight- If CU5 home-proved VVAPORUB Th 24 million American aauen-gr aauen-gr automoblln thai survived ttie war seed SO eilllioa mw Hret, so-sordino, so-sordino, to) GovamMnf eitffaetea New passenger lira will oa fiave to be ell-synilietle far same time ta coma. It takes 450 Aibberweet and twa fm m year, working full time, to produce a ton of aalvral rubber. Tha wark af InMrlblnf names aa baadttanas bat baa made eailsr by development of s rubber Mndblatt stencil sheet. Ilia first commercial application ef B. ft Goodrich Company's "Tore Sittc rubber lprtncf b trt ,00 twin-coach bwas te be produced ttilt yeoft BGootliich I Read trie Ads 10MOUOW AlklCHI - "Dtrttvlahle V-VEGETABII IAXATIVI f" -LV '" If you ere ran down became you're not getting all the ASQ Vitamins Ton nd tart taking Scott'e Emuliion to promptly help bring baek erp ana stamina and build fwM(eneea Good-taiting Soott'e l rich la natural AD Vitamin and energy-building, natural sit, Bay today I All druKRists. DON'T BE A SLAVE TO COHSTIPAp Do As Millions Do Eat KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN For Lasting Relief Constipated! Using harsh laxative laxa-tive drugs! Millions have solved tha problem of constipation due to lack ef bulk in the diet. They eat daily dish of KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN, and drink plenty of water for regular elimination! If yon have this trouble and will fok low .this) simple precaution, -yea may never have to take a laxative for the rest of your life t ALL-BEAN'S not a purgative. Provides gentle bulk to aid normal, natural elimination. It's a great, naturally regulating food. ftVe Richer in Nutrition Thaa Whole Wheat Because it's made from the vt'tof cuter layer of wheat, in which whole-wheat protective food ele merit are concentrated. One ounce of KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN pro vides more than 13 your daily iron need to help make good, red blood. Calcium and phosphorus-' to help build hemes and teeth. Whole-grain vitamins to ,he!p guard against deficiencies. Protein to help build body tissue esses tial for growth Get ALL-BRAN your gro ; cer'a. Made by Kellogg'a oi Battle Creek and Omaha. r I SNAPPY FACTS ill I RUBBER pl L, Vj? f4! " "h'" 11 11 "Mi ii I ii in . s g 2J I Sea Tragedies Recalled as Autumn Storms Uncover Rotting Wreckage of Ships on North Carolina' Coast British .and Spanish MenofWar.Clippers Among Grim Relics. By BILL SHARP Once more Caribbean storms have lifted the curtain on hundreds of tragedies which were played out on the lonely beaches of the Outer Banks of North Carolina in the past three centuries but aa usual, It is a fleeting show. Sand swept away by tides of the September hurricane already ia drifting back with mild southwest winds, and before long most of the exposed wrecks will be hidden again. Silent tribute to the craftsmanship of the old-time shipwrights and the sturdiness of their materiala is the preservation of the timbers and planking of these orphans of the storm against generations of grinding grind-ing sand and pounding wave. When iron men went down to the sea in ships with hearts of oak, it was not the ships that failed in the face of the elements. Some of the derelicts now on view aU the way from Nag's Head to Ocracoke Inlet are familiar, and recall re-call many an anecdote. But some re beyond th ken of the oldest coastguardsmen or their records. The Carroll Deering;, One of the most interesting is the ghost ship, Carroll Deering, out of Bath, Maine. She was found on Diamond Dia-mond Shoals in 1921, undamaged. With sails set, with, uneaten food on the table and on the stove, but with only a cat to greet the coast guard crew which boarded her. The Deering passed Diamond lightship the day before, but that was the last sees of any of her crew, and the cat kept her own counsel. Later she drifted onto Ocracoke Island, Is-land, sanded up end was lost to sight and almost to memory until the bur ricane scoured out her hull. The George W. Wells, first six-malted six-malted schooner ever built, and then the largest wood vessel afloat, is also exposed. She came ashore In a 1913 gale at Ocracoke. Up at Nag's Head were uncovered gain -the tired ribs of the quaint warship believed by many to be Crumpster of Elizabethan daya. She was first revealed by storm in 1939 nd her primitive construction and fittings aroused much speculation. There is some Justification for the romantic identification, for shipwrecks ship-wrecks antedated colonization of these shores.' The chroniclers of Sir Walter Raleigh's Roanoke Island colony (1587) found the aborigines using crude Iron tools which were believed fashioned from spikes taken tak-en from shipwreck. There is record rec-ord of Spanish shipwreck, at Bat teras in 1358 and some of its) crew were rescued by the Indians. Alas on' exhibition again Is the remnant of the Arlosto, British tramp a victim of an 1899 storm : i-i -..-f-- .,"l,1ln1.n,.1l..mv.-..-T aamnmmiMit. m '. j A mystery among the wrecks aa the North Carolina coast la this portion por-tion af some wooden vessel. Oldest records fail te name her, and It la possible she laundered many generationa age. The first clue to ber plight came one cold, foggy December night when coastguardsman Mathew Guthrie on beach patrol stumbled over the body of dying sailor, who gasped out the news that a vessel was breaking up few hundred yards offshore. A Lyle gun shot could not reach ber, and surfboata could not be launched Twenty-one men lost their Uvea and lie buried atop lonely lone-ly Ocracoke dune. Six more swam and floated shore alive Ironic was the sequel to the death of the tour-masted schooner Anna R. Helndrltter of New York, loaded with dyewood, which came ashore March S, 1942, and ta visible offshore. off-shore. She ran into a gale and put out anchors, but dragged onto the' shoals. Capt Bennett D. Coleman of Springfield, Mass., and his crew of eight survived, saved by the Lyle gun and breeches buoy, and after the captain bad arranged for the "vendue" (auction sale of salvage) - GHOST SHIP This te an that la left ef the Carroll Car-roll A. Deering, aut ef Bath, Maine. A etarnt drove her apoa Diamond Shoals. January 39, 1921. When ceaatgnardsmen boarded ber they found her endamaged. The Sails were aet, food waa ea the table and ' en (be atave, but ne one waa aboard. Only a disconsolate cat reamed the decks. Ne trace waa ever found et any of her crew, although every ef fort waa made.' Since she could not be floated gain, the coast gssrd blew ber ep s K The burned out butt ef an eld achooner, the Kobler et Baltimore, etanda bleakly en s eand bar near Hatteras, N. C. If was uncovered by the fury ef a hurricane. Drifting sands are piling ever It gain, and it will soon disappear frem sight he started for home. While changing chang-ing tralna in New York he was run down by taxicab and killed. Worst Navy Wreck. Off the beach at Nag'a Head is visible vis-ible in calm sea the bell, tank, and boiler of the USS Huron, a warship war-ship wrecked November 24, 1877, with a lose of 108 lives the worst disaster in U. S. naval history up to that time. The crew members were burled on the beach and relatives came, for many years after to search in the shifting sanda for them. Cap'n Jeff Hayman of Roanoke Ro-anoke Island ia believed to be the only peraon still alive who aaw the ghastly affair and ghastly it waa, for subsequent investigation disclosed dis-closed that same of those aboard, were drunk that fateful night when sobriety might have saved both ship and crew. Cap'n Jeff today baa the silver sugar bowl from the Huron captain's table. Such maritime violence haa produced pro-duced lot of maritime heroism. From Oregon Inlet to Ocraeoke Inlet In-let are some 87 holders of Congressional Congres-sional Medals of Honor, possibly the largest group of heroes per capita in these United States. Six of them came aa aequel to the events of August 18, 1918, when the SS Mirlo, British tanker, was torpedoed, and Capt John Allen Midgett and five membera of the Chicamicomoco coast guard station braved a sea of blazing oil to rescue 42 membera of the crew. Strangely enough, the SS City of Atlanta in 1942 was destroyed in the same way and about the same spot, but the Chicamicomoco boya were unable. to get through the fire. On the same day and within an hour helpless watchera on the Banks aaw German submarine sink two other vessels and damage still another. The AUanta'a bones now rest by those of the Mirlo. One of the most dramatic events of sub warfare waa on August 8, 1918, when Diamond Lightship, guarding the easternmost tip of Diamond Dia-mond Shoals, was sunk by submarine subma-rine gunfire. Capt W. L. Barnett and bis crew roared over the boiling shoals 13 miles to the beach. Barnett Bar-nett now retired, Uvea at Buxton. The lightship added ber skeleton to that fabulous Graveyard of the Atlantic, At-lantic, Diamond Shoals, where Ue so many metal hulks that compasses of passing ships ere pulled off north by a much as I degrees. Modem "Flying Dutchman." The peculiar configuration of the North Carolina coast with the sandy capes Jutting out causes marinera anxious preoccupation with this area. Most dangerous are Diamond Shoals an extension of Cape Hat " , : -7 - PC ... vj -M-naw- m aiam rh Ik :: I'M teras, 13 miles into the Atlantic, an area of constantly shifting quick sanda. It la a maxim of sailors that once on the Diamond Shoals, no vessel ves-sel ever comes off. The Maurice R. Thurlow proved an exception, however, when she ran aground in a 1927 storm. The coast guard removed ber crew, but when a cutter came down to try ta pull her off, no trace of the vessel could be found. Thirteen daya later the schooner was sighted by the Dutch tanker, Sleidrect, in the North Atlantic. At-lantic. A general order was released to run down the modern Flying Dutchman, but though she was reported re-ported from ' time to time, the aea wanderer waa never overtaken and no one knows What became of her. In the shoals Bes another famous ship the' pioneering Federal ironclad, iron-clad, Monitor. Following her engagement en-gagement with the Confederate Mer-rlmac Mer-rlmac in Hampton Roads, March 9. 1862, the damaged Monitor waa sent aouth in tow of the sldewheeler Rhode Island. A gale aprang up and the little "cheesebox" sank on the shoals with a loss of 16; 49 others oth-ers were rescued by the Rhode Island. Is-land. N Hatteras ia a control point in setting set-ting courses. for coastwise and West Indian shipping, because the shortest short-est route lies near the Cape. Northbound North-bound shipping finds a favorable current by staying in the Gulf Stream, which brushes the tip of the ShoaU, while southbound traffic goes between the Stream and the coast where there ia a southerly current sweeping down from the arctic. Thus, ships pass aa close to the Cape aa they can. Alexander Hamilton recommended recommend-ed a lighthouse at Hatteras in 1794. and it waa completed in 1798, but waa too low to provide an adequate signal. In 1870 a new Ught, 190 feet high, waa built (highest brick light in the world) and served until 1936 when the encroaching sea led the government to erect still another light further Inland at Buxton. Diamond Lightship a'lso was anchored an-chored it the tip of the Shoals, and a navy radio direction station was set up at the Cape. Inasmuch as the new ateelgirder lighthouse is not visible to ocean ships by day, the cape now has four navigation aids for the mariner the old spiral-striped spiral-striped brick tower es a day warning; warn-ing; Diamond Lightship; the new Buxton Light; and the modern radio finding station. ' Na "Shipwreckers." While it is probably true that for many years shipwrecks were the "principal importation" of the Banks, there appears no evidence to support the charge that long ago the Bankers practiced shipwrecking and. looting. However, some homes are partly fashioned from the timber of old ships, and many a bouse con-tains con-tains articles salvaged from doomed ships or bought at the "vendue.") In this connection Is recalled the most popular legend of the village of Straits in Carteret county concerning concern-ing a preacher for whom Starr Methodist church there ia named. During the severe winter of 1813 so the story goes the citizens of Straits were atarving after a crop-killing crop-killing drouth the previous summer. Frozen sounds prevented fishing, and the Napoleonic ware and British blockade made commerce Impossible. Parson Starr thus resorted re-sorted to prayer: "If it ia predestined predes-tined there be wreck on the Atlantic At-lantic coast" ho pleaded, "please let It be Thy will that it happen here!" In t few daya a flour-laden, ship wrecked on Core -Banka, and famine waa prevented. Fundamentals Needed In Postwar Education Courses Must Be Centered Around Core of Subjects Stressing Human Relations; Physical Build-up Also Important By BAUKIIAGE Newt Analyst md Commentator. WNTJ Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. (Tula la the second of two articles en the "new reconversion," this one In education.) In a previous column I laid before you the vital need of reconverting our educational eystem if America ia going to meet the challenge of other Ideologies to the faith in our democratic institutions. I pointed out how poorly many of our occupation occupa-tion forcea are testifying to their democratic convictions in the face of the geniality of our former enemies. ene-mies. I took you into the office of Commissioner Com-missioner of Education John Stude-baker Stude-baker who pointed out to me bow reconverting educationally la as important im-portant as reconverting industrially if we are going to meet the problema of the day. Dr. Studebaker said that this could be achieved by making a soUd core of education available te aU. Such a core would be composed com-posed of certain basic studies which educators believe ere essential to a solidarity of democratic thought The commissioner of education sees this core es e reinforcement of mental men-tal iron in the moral structure of the nation. When you talk about making this core available to all, that la not the complete picture. Men like Doctor Studebaker would have this group of basic studies required of all students, stu-dents, not Just made available to them. And thereby, say the traditionalists, tradition-alists, hangs a threat to the elective system under which many institutions institu-tions of learning have been comfort ably educating students. Under the system of free choice, College Joe end College Jane could pick the courses their hearts desired. If their hearts desired a little extra sleep in the morning, they Could pick classes that would not require early rising. If extra-curricular activities were particularly heavy one aemester, they did not have to take economics which waa hard when Turkish architecture archi-tecture waa snap. Too many students have been coming com-ing out of our institutions of learning learn-ing without a basic concept of what our democracy ia aU about say the educators who are crying for reconversion. recon-version. If they don't select the courses that will give mem that concept con-cept they must be "required to take them, these same men say the future fu-ture of our way of life ia at stake. Education Vital Force in State It la a well-known fact that before the Nazis ever dreamed of world conquest they first restrained by force, those who were too old or too wise to accept Nazi indoctrination. The more malleable minds of the young were filled with, the false doctrines doc-trines of subordination to the state, race hatred and exaltation of might Their other anti-democratic and anti Christian principles were poured into the youth until there waa produced a state in which the controlling element of the population waa fanatically loyal to Naziism. Democracy and Christian principles princi-ples once instilled can produce Just as strong a loyalty. Just aa enduring a faith, but there ia a minimum of Instruction In their true meaning that must be made available to ev eryonemore than mat that should be required study of everyone who would be a good citizen. This is the first way in which the destructive destruc-tive forces which ere working against democracy can be arrested. And so Doctor Studebaker presents pre-sents the idea of a "core" around which can be built an understanding understand-ing of the whole democratic system; bow its parts can be fitted into one another and into a world which must cither be closely integrated or explosively ex-plosively antagonistic. There is not space here to consider consid-er the details of the composition of this core. Two examples of the type of studies which Doctor Studebaker feels are essential, and which must be taught much more comprehensively comprehen-sively and for a longer period than they are now, waa given In the first article. They are economics snd geography. There must be basic understandings and skills in .the field of language. By that the commissioner com-missioner means the channels by which we communicate and are communicated with reading, writ BARBS Halt the communities In the United States are not reached by railway, aays the automobile manufacturing manu-facturing association. They have to roll on rubber Instead of rails. e e e Last year more people were killed by. accidental in the rural areaa than in the cities. There were more automobile collisions In the rural and small-town areas. Whyf ing, listening, speaking. Since radio broadcasts are beard daily by multiplied multi-plied millions, critical listening should be a vital part of the basic educational program. Since freedom of expression ia an essential attribute of a democracy, citizens need to develop critical thinking in order to evaluate the powerful influence of communication communica-tion and propaganda constantly brought to bear on them. War Expose Academic Weaknessee During the war, certain major weaknesses in our educational system sys-tem were bluntly exposed. Total rejections re-jections In the war for physical, psychiatric and educational reasons have been almost as numerous as the number of men who served In the army overseas. We may or may not need our young men to fight another war, but regardless of this, we need to Improve schqol pro-grama pro-grama of health and physical education, educa-tion, including the early discovery of remediable defects to be corrected by family physicians and pubUc health agencies. A nation that would be strong, must be strong physically. physi-cally. , Military authorities have also found a major weakness in the work of the schools in the failure to require re-quire older students to carry mathematics mathe-matics to the point of practical mastery. mas-tery. The natural sciences gained larger place in the field of education educa-tion during the war, and they should continue to do so, according to Commissioner Com-missioner Studebaker. No adequate understanding of our civilization ia possible without considerable knowledge knowl-edge of them. Moreover, many careers in trade, technical, professional profes-sional and scientific pursuits, v.. er of industry, business or agriculture, agricul-ture, .are handicapped without a thorough thor-ough scientific groundwork, laid in the elementary and secondary schools and tor many, continued in the colleges and universities. But one of the most basic segments seg-ments of the core, in the opinion of Dr. Studebaker, should be made up of the social'studies. It is upon this group that we have leaned most heavily in training for responsible citizenship and this must continue. con-tinue. History and the other social studies are essential to the grounding ground-ing of our citizens in the American tradition of political liberty, e L knowledge of the structure of our republican form of government, and a firm attachment to the democratic faitfl. Doctor Studebaker says. I said that it is the belief of important im-portant educatora that a core of this type must become a "must" in the curricula of the nation, thereby casting overboard the traditional elective system whereby a student Is given pretty much free choice in what he will study. This new approach ap-proach ia emphasized in one of the most widely quoted documents of recent re-cent publication, the Harvard study entitled, "General Education in a Free Society." This work haa startled a number of people coming as it does from the institution that saw the elective system reach its most extreme form, tor It recommends recom-mends the abandonment of that system. sys-tem. In this document the chief priest of the elective system points out the weaknesses of that long-cherished method. Of course. It ia one thing to aet up curricula that will insure the tact that those attending school will get the basic studies. It is another to see that these required subjects are made available to all. Ia it possible, to produce and democratically distribute dis-tribute this basic core to aU America? Amer-ica? Not yet That ia another must in the new reconversion. The expenditures ex-penditures now made on this priceless price-less commodity are inadequate. But I am not dealing here with the finances fi-nances of education. That is a subject in itself. Suffice it to aay that' even with greater funds this product ss. blue-printed by the experts, ex-perts, cannot be produced In the existing plants any more than the peacetime models and types of Industrial In-dustrial commodities can be produced pro-duced by machines equipped for war production. Nor la the personnel and the training of that personnel adequate. ade-quate. by Baukhage The highest suicide rate among women ta found In Japan and Germanic Ger-manic countries. Maybe their own wives didn't like 'em any better than the Allies did. a a At the army air torcea center In Orlando, Fla., they are perfecting motor vehicles which will operate over the enow. Query: where do they get the snow in Florida? SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS iTwo-Piecer Is Young V Smait I - Tttga 4a an tinuattalta . Two-Piece Frock . A YOUTHFULLY smart two-niece two-niece dress for those occa sions when you want to look your best. The blouse buttons down the back and is cut to give that popular popu-lar nipped in look. Note the grace ful gored skirt. a a a Pattern No. 1394 Is designed for sizes 10. 12. 14. 18. IS and 20. Size 13, short sleeves, requires 3 yards of 35 er 89- Inch material. Here's sweeter, tastier bread 4Kn IF YOU BAKE AT HOME Get Fleischmann's active fresh Yeast with the familiar yellow labeL Dependable it's been America's favorite for more than 70 years. Try This Amazing Cream Paste Thi HoldsYour Dental Plates Fin. ; and Comfortable All Day Log Or You'll Get Double-Your-MoneyBacl! I Sara 6M I I Cowaaby I .V .rVWsVKf TXi. ... Mu.aW laWUkJU Double Tew Money Bock en This Offerl 0 1 you act now, you can try Stare without Having- to buy the regular size. Just mall coupon and get generous Introductory tuba eontainlnt full 7-day supply for only 10. But that's not am We're eo aura you'll be ompletely thrilled with tha way StS WW Jou ; plates feel and fit that wa don tniere offer you unoney-back guarantee but double-your-money-baefc Don't delay t Our euota of introductory tube Is limited. SO wa U1 not ba ablo to repeat tbla offer. i, mi M..n;i;j,i,n,ivr'rvi ntaTa M ajm ) A . I ' ""wuauy targe flntU Current conditions, slightly rnoreT" required in ailing orders fn, . 7. t moat popular pattern number, , Send your order to: , I 8EWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEM lie M.,. Saa Francisco, Calit Inclose 25 cents in coini ha ai pattern desired. w,w Pattern No.. Name Address Si.. Try Making Couh Syrup at Home, Quick Relief Saves Big Dollars. No Coo.' No matter what you usually natt, coughs due to colds, you'll b than surprised, wben you mak, n this aimple borne mixture unj J" it trial. You'll wonder why n never need it before. It cwto dees the work In a hurry. .- Make a syrup by stirring eW granulated sugar and one eui water a few momenta, until e solved. No cooking Is needed-tt'(1 trouble at alt Or you can astern eyrup or liquid honey. If desired. ( Get from your druggist 2ft tmt of Pines. Pour this into a ptntbotu and fill up- with your syrup. makes a full pint a family snp and gives you about four tlmaj much for your money. It taste) ta: nd never spoils. Children Ion k And for quick action, you've am Seen its superior. It loosens tti phlegm, soothes the irritated branes, eases the soreness, sub breathing easier, and lets yon Pinex ia a special compousd ( proven ingredients, in concentre form, a famous reliable sootiii agent for throat and bronchial ia tationa. Money refunded if it doeat please you in every way.-Adr. STIFF JOINTS and BRUISES L Muscular Aches and Pains Sprains Strains with FLEISCHMANiTS FRESH YEAST YEAST, IT'S FULL STRENGTH so it goes right to wri No waiting. No extra steps. Fleischmann's &s active Yeast helps make bread that's more i licious ana lenaer, sweercr-rascmg every a . ... x . .i . ,-.,r L i a Ta ff'; Bere'a your opportunity to ar. risk tha remarkable eream-pu, baa already Helped over .j 31 the misery and embarrassment , ill-fitting dental plateit t u K generous 7-day tuba 01 Bta '7,j understanding. ou need aendosw, rr . ...in a.a. wnn'nt not CODll'' delighted, you'U get not Ju to,; back, but DOVBLB-rOV'fu-BACKl So nail coupon nowl . t Ind teete-Nate Treubles ana ..... - just touw no ' whea your dentures 'JrZt ably secure from the them ia until you . how wonderful to JJe ta ton, irritated gums e . . . bow aiervelom to ewf , and chewing all the fpJ . . muI tn talk, laugh. without fear of yourpl" Take sdysnug ot tm. .-epeateo oner. m" ' .. . TA"w"., Dtpt. .' 47s ruth avsm n , r tiih. af ataze. Bntlo?,."iia It I'm sot Mrf2r f double sir Hai Ilia fPl AAJraat. i |