Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 18 Aug 1932, p. 14

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leut remstance. It )as. of ooure,'occur r.4 te, you butore naw thet the. most lmport- anit ting Inthe world toyou le ypur succoe. Tou wmnt t o suoeed, E'very normal youn persan should anid oan. "Ihat shal 1 I d o"' lethe thouqght upper- most inyour mmd Just now.. lé can heip eyou make vour dresme. of succese. o a e true. le w*ou4 remind you aima0 that ýtoday ta b e succesaful you màut b. trained for smreparticular lins cif wrk, aà r for sous profession. There in raam In. every line c0f'endeavor, even now for the. Well tirained persan. Ikewièe the1 b msnes a caîl- Ing~ for î retned help. 2Ie time has passsd whenthe untrained eu hope ta achieve a n y manner. *e wouin reminuc or yaoa reali;. that. suc00ce .0 la ot a mat- ter of luck, b ut a matter o f training, the socner yau will be o n th roa4 to soge meamure of, oucceuo'f, ad the measure is limited ofly.b 77 yur own ABMLITY and DETERMINATION to sucéed. In aur service to the publia as business educators we have traincd soores and bumdres o f younn people and pladed tii..m In godd positions. Suroly. thon, it muet ocour t o you that we cen train 7011 and securs f,ô.r you Just as goo4 a place as we have for athera If youwill write us, or call UNI. 3 0 0 4, we.will send you aur sixteeni-page oatalog, BUSINESS EDUCATION. lThiS Will,ÈIVO fUli details .0. f varions courses we offer in, our Day and Eveni~ng School. If you wish you m a y begin next Monday, or any Nonday light. type >with illuminated binnacle. At the, Streamed log (00). Course for Wau- taffrail was the log, its pointer gradtially kegan gas buoy. moving around the figures on the face 1Whh, being interpreted, mearns: that as the rotator. trailing astern spun f rom at,5 a. m., with the Sun flot yet up but the force of the passing water. The dial, land-. and sea-scape'bright in the, glow of the Sea Scouts Iearniede was graduated 'in morning twilight, Albatross,. with eleven land. miles (5,280 f eet),,flot in nautical Winnetka Sea, Sc outs aboard, let go her miles (6,080 fèet), this being Only one mooring and under motor I.moved -of. numnerous instances in which the through the basin toward :the open lake;1 practice on the Great, Lakes di ffers f rom that five minutes, later she liad passed that on the ocean. Down below, in that th e breakwater, her log ,vent over astern -with.a zero reading, and lier prow point- ed northward for thue big black buoy which bobs above a shoal one mile out f rom WT'aukegan hiarbor. On the chart i the cabin a prick wvas made which rep- resented a point one hundred yards due east of the naval station's harbor en- trance. From that point a line was to * e, gradually drawn. growing longer day by day to eventually, two weeks later. rejiresenit.559 .8 miles of f reshwater trave1. Take, Forty Winks' There had been no difficulty iti rousing. the cre\v of AIlbatross on this, the first morning out. Thci fatniliar cali of the bos'n, "Rise and shine," had not'been necesary; ost of the men had taken no more than 40 \vinks. Bunks instead Wilmeite 3n321781 G»nlee 744- freshened, diminished, or changed itsd- ren 741 ~rection, it, was necessary to decrease, ini-t M.uoe ilisfl OAbo ojo..us. ,crease, or Vary te amount ofsail, so, for instructing the Sea Scouts elements of celestial navigation- ng the sun" and, the Iike--and cd the skipper by way of interest: ,k bis, dead reckoning positions.. [e the ship's library contained, W. H. Osilo' Prinoipal 115 2 Central Av.

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