Page 'fwo THE DARE COUNTY TIMES FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1938: lodtaiis L’sed Sign Language ' Sign language was often useful ' to Indians in huntog. because they I could communicate without alarm- i ing the game. Wl'ian in Norfolk Stop at the HOTEL FAIRFAX Headquarters for all cit izens south of the Mason Dixon line when visiting Norfolk and the beaches. Attractive rooms with bath and shower, $2.50, $3 and 33.50, others with bath privileges, $2. Cof fee Shop, Dining Room, Beverage Room. Garage Service. HUGH F. CALVIN Pres, and Cen’l Mgr. THE OLD IRMA’S BONES ARE SCATTERED ALONG THE BEACH Large Summer Colony Built Up About Schooner Wrecked at Kill Devil Hills in 1925 FUN MAKING COMEDY IN MANTEO THE 10TH Kaufman Corned}-, “Old .Man Min- ick," At Sc.hool House Friday; 1_ -.1 Actors WAGES OF SIN IS DEATH; SAYS REV. L. TWIFORD By David Slick Dwarfed in historical back- 1 ground, by the glamour that sur rounds the great Wright Memor ial, the wrecked hulk of the tiiree masted schooner Inna has never theless held its place these past few years as one of the show- points of the Dare County I beaches. I Grounded in 1925 the ship re- j mained almost intact for five ■ years, but the >5tonns of 1931 were ' too much for her, and they did away with a greater portion of the sturdy old vessel, leaving only her stent and a portion of her foreward hull above water even at low tide. Since the first toufi.st drove over Dare County’s ocean highway the wreck of the Irma has been a fa vorite stopping place for visitors, with her stern rising up high on the beach and what remains of her bow dipping into the succes sive breakers she made a picture that seemed to coincide with her surroundings. When the Griggs built their Cro- atan hotel'in back of the wreck the number of admirers was greatly increased until now a small village is centered around the Croatan and the Irma. But the Iiina wasn’t destined to remain a tourist attraction forever. n,:, EAT AT CENTRAL CAPE • Manteo, N. C. ■" ~ For REAL PLEASURE — GOOD FOOD EFFICIENT SERVICE CHEERFUL ATMOSPHERE —MENUS CHANGED DAILY— JOHN HAYMAN, Proprietor FURNITURE AT^ BARGAIN PRICES Get acquainted with our new plan whereby you -in buy furniture at Bargain Prices nd EASY TERMS— CASH or CREDIT. WE TRUST YOU MR. FRANK FACCHINI Who is now in charge of this territory may be reach ed at the Fort Raleigh Hotel on the following dates: THE 6th AND 21st OF EACH MONTH A.J.Legum Furniture Co. The Furniture Man With a Conscience SS6-338 Church Street NORFOLK, VIRGINXA Best Local and Long Distance TELEPHONE SERVICE To Nags Head and Kitty Hawk Beaches, Roanoke Island and Other Dare County Points Use The Telephone Often and Enjoy Your Trips to and From Dare County NORFOLK & CAROLINA TELEPHONE & TELEGRArH CO. Manteo—Elizabeth City—Edenton Giving Dare County People THE LATEST AND BEST Furniture Service Mr. Cage Williams, well known to the Furni ture Trade in your county represents us. The mercliandise he sells is backed by many years of capable, responsible dealing. Our furniture customers number thousands in many northeast ern North Carolina Counties, as well as in Vir ginia. Just send Mr. Williams word at Wanchese and 'ct htm make you acquainted with our furniture stu Vs, our low prices, our good terms, and our service. a I. JAFFE FURNITURE CO* 189 to 199 Washington St. SUFFOLK, VA. Her liull was sturdy, but it was inevitable that some day whet) the waves got a little too strong and the water canie in a little too far tile remains of the three masted Irma would be scattered up and down the beach. ’That day came in the fail of lust year when the Irma, unable to con tinue resisting the fores that hud been heating on her for -so long, broke up. Pieces of the Irma’s hulk will for many years dot the beach in the .icinity of t)ie Croatan, leav ing a reminder of the sturdy ship that mocked the sea for over twelve years. ^Yhereas in the past, interest in the Irma has been in the material side of her; in seeing her battered stern outlined against the horizon, and in scrambling •over her liole and jautny poop- deck, it is hoped tliat the sight of her remains dotting the beach will revive anotlier interest; an inter est in the story of the wreck of the schooner Irma. Patrolling tlie beach a mile north of the Kill Devil Hills sta tion at J:4o on the .morning of -4pril SD, 1925, coast guardsman Marvin Midgett sighted a three masted schooner aground not far fram shore. Hurrying back bo the station Midgett roused the Kill Devil guardsmen and at 2:45 they ar- ri\-ed at the wreck. Within an hour they had landed the ships crew of seven men, including the master, and 45 minutes later the survivors of the ill-fated Irma were drinking hot coffee in the kitchen of the station. Th rescue of the crew -was a rush job; the actual shipwreck was even faster. Bound south to Georgia for a load of pine the Irma had run into a storm off the Virginia Capes on the night of April 28, 1925. Biding empty with a strong north-east wind at her tail the ship made good time, and confident that he was at least fifty miles off shore the skipper let her run. Consequently it was as much a surprise for the master and his ciww as it had been for Midgett •and the other Kill Devil Hill guardsmen to find the Irma hard agrourd iii th. Dare Couir.y banks at 1 45 the next morning. The rescue had been easy, dc- -“lite the driving ram, a high surf, and strong winds, but floating the Irma was a bird of another color, ao the next afternoon when under writers agent Theodore S Meekins took over the Irma, he sold her at public auction. Within a month the junkers had stripped the Irma of all remova bles; two month later the beacli ouilt out to her baran hulk ami soon after the masts and most of her decking were hauled away. For live years the Irma stood, resisting the elements; for seven more her stern sat up on the beach, laughing at the waves that beat at the moss, covered but sturdy p'anks that had been part of her bow. For twalve years, too, she must have rejoiced at the tliought that her primitive wooden hull had out lasted modern steel; for a mile north of her final resting place, at about tile same time that she had come in, a steel tanker had been wrecked and left to the mercy of the sea. Two summers ago, in a storm that the Irma withstood, the tanker went to pieces. The Irma is gone now and all that is left of her is a story of her ■wrecking and a few of her pieces scattered about the beach. But dead and buried though she is the three masted Irma remains a sym bol of her period. Flnt Private Cold Ceia The first private gold coin in America was struck by Ephraim Brasher, a New York jeweler, la 1787. ne figures are crude, tha design amateurish; but it is a rare and precious relic of our nation'i early days. FOR GOOD HEALTHY CHICKENS Use the Famous Elmira Poultry Conditioner and the “Three-minute Delouser” On Sale At The Following Merchants: EVANS BROS., Manteo H. L. DAVIS, Wanchese A. M. CAHOON, East Lake M. L. MIDGETT, Manns Har bor ELMIRA POULTRY SUPPLY CO. Elmira, N^w York —. W. r. A. Federal Theatre of Iljaoke Island -nil present The Elizabethan Flayeis in the well known comedy. “011 Man Minick,’’ which had. some yi ars ago, a long run on Broadway st.nrring O. 1’. Heggie, and inc luliiig Thomas M-eighan and Sidney Booth. It has been c nsidered one of George ICaufmn I’s be.st plays. This playwright la' never had a failure. The leading olayers of this well-known drama group of the Is land will be seen .n the produc tion. Martiii K lJ--gg and Mary Davis Westcott playing the young er leads with Der Murpphy in the name part of OM Man Miinck, about whom all tl,e "ild hullaba loo starts aid cairies on. Other proi mem players include such local favorites as Louis-i M-eekins, Mr • ilyii Daniels, Bilbert Mister, Hovard Twyne, Alvey Midgett, Carrie Carter Vaiinote and Beck '-itueridge, both new comers to the group. This play 'las not a dull moment from the tin i it begins to the end. It is full . f strong action and loads of fui -makiiig lines. It will b-- produced straight through without any curtain drops although a full length three act play; thus doing away with any tedious waits between acts. Mrs. Mathis, the Director, has made this arrangement, believing most folks dislike Hi's long waits betweens acts. The proceeds from this play will go to aid the High School Curtain for the new stage. Mrs. G. T. Westcott, Ji., has charge of financial and ticket plans. 7M Uefealed by 5,IM Seven hundred Texans defeated 5,000 Mexican soldiers in 18 minutes at the battle of Sac Jacinto in 1836. Like to Give Ad-vice Jud Tunkins sa.'-s roost folks are like doctors who like to give advice without taking any themselves. Converted By Holiness, He Destroys Liquor and Now Preaches Converted recently by the Holi- ne.ss revival at Manns Harbor, Bev. 1/20 Twi/ord, one time Free Will Baptist minister ot East Lake and Pitt County, has returned to tiie business of preaching the Gospel, and holds forth each Sunday at the -old Company store back in the woods of Buffalo City, Dare County. Bev. Mr. Twiford who went home from the mourners bench at Manns Harbor and destroyed 110 pints i^f bootleg stock by which he made his living, has fared lorth without purse or script. Hej preached a powerful sermon at Buffalo the past Sunday his sub ject being “The Wages of Sin is-; Death.” In the 7th and Sth verses of the loth eliapter of Acts will be found his text. Here on the Banks of Mill Tail Creek where •only a few year.s ago the fabulous profits from moonshine put two cars at near!} every home, they seldom had time to build a garage, Rev. Leo holds forth. Times have not been so good lately and most of the folks now, have cume under the wing of the great Roosevelt beni- ficence and they lean heavily on the preaching at the old store. The house is packed each Sunday with young and old, and there will be seen people from Stumpy Point, Manns Harbor, Manteo, and other places. “I have put sin behind me,” says Rev. Leo. “I am preparing to go up yonder.” “Me too,” said three of his converts who stood behind him. “God speed him on his work,” said an aged woman, “If he can make any one try to lead a better life, and treat his fellowman bel ter, he is doing good, God will bless him.” Ford Exliibit At New York World’s Fiur T he theme' ot the Ford Motor Company's exhibit bnilding at the New York World's Fair In 1939 -will be prophetic of the advances America may expect in transporta tion in coming decades, according to an announcement by Edsel Ford, president of the company. Based upon an exposition of the institutional character of the Ford company and the fundamental pol icies which have directed Its growth during the past 35 years, the fair exhibit will reach its clhnax in “The Road of Tomorrow,” an elevated highway more than half a mile long, -rising upon a series of spiral ramps, traversing the borders of a patio and Anally circling the main hnild- ing on a deep setback at the top of the walls. The exhibit, in fonr rather dis tinct parts, will include an entrance rotunda facing the main -west gate, a spacious Manufacturing Hall, a patio, with pools, playing foun tains and large real areas, and the elevated road. From the west aide of the patio, steps -will rise to a broad mezzanine. There Ford VS and Lincoln-Zephyr cars will load passengers tor the ride over “The Uoad of Tomorrow.” From the loading platform th- cars'will pass to the south, enter th* | spiral ramps, climbing to the upperl level and following the elevat*ai highway as it passes over the mow zanine, west along the south wad of Manufacturing Hall, through a tunnel lined with photomurols; thence circling the top of the build ing, through a glass tunnel high ia the Rotunda; down the ramp to tlw second level, around the patio ana back to the starting point. At night flood lighting will faS upon the cars as they circle the highway- high on the walls ot Manu facturing Hall, playing moving sba dows on the building walls, in full sight of the whole fair grounds. Tha bnilding will occupy the highest i» cation on the grounds. It will b« decorated In white, red and blue 'and will be floodlighted at night. THE CHANCE OF A LIFETIME For gotting only $30 worth of subscriptions to the Dare County Times at the regular rates, we will give you FREE RADIO MADE BY PHILCO A five tube AC set to hook in your light cur> rent socket. Never before has such an offer Lxion given you. This set may be used anywhere elec tric current is available. Just send in $30 worth of subscriptions and get this set. Address: THE DARE COUNTY TIMES BOX 55 MANTEO, N. C. ELIZABETH CITY LEADING FIRMS WHO SERVE THE BEACH TRADE This handy list is for the convenience of shoppers who want the best service. We have prepared our selves especially to cater to the needs of the beach trade this summer. BEAUTY SERVICE IN EVERY FIELD BY EXPERT OPERATORS MILADY’S BEAUTY SALON CAROLINA BLDG. PHONE 905 BEAR FRAME WHEEL AND AXLE ALIGNMENT TOWING CAROLINA DUCO COMPANY PHONE 837 DRY CLEANING FOR EFFICIENT WORK AND PROMPT SERVICE SEND YOUR CLOTHES TO COOPER CLEANING WORKS PHONE 280 DRUGS AND PRESCRIPTIONS ■ DRUGS WITH A REPUTATION EXPERT PRESCRIPTION SERVICE MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION OVERMAN & STEVENSON PH'^NE 321 FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION MILDRED’S FLORIST SHOPPE PHONE 82 NIGHT PHONE 264-W FURNITURE—SECOND HAND ALL STYLES AND TYPES MRS. CALLIE MEIGGS PHONE 250-J FANCY GROCERIES TRY GARRETT’S QUALITY FOOD STORE PHONES 1127 & 1128 MAIN £ kC.\D STS. REFRESHMENT BOTTLED IS ESSENTIAL FOR SUMMER COMFORT JEWELRY BRIGHT JEWELRY CO., INC., WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY AND SILVERWARE —EXPERT REPAIR WORK— A. G. JAMES, Mgr. RUCKER & SHEELY COMPANY ELIZABETH CITY’S BEST STORE TIRES BUY FIRESTONE TEXACO PRODUCTS STEVENS TIRE STORE CORNER WATER & FEARING STREETS