ARTE RET COU NT Y Ln rM n i-i AGES1T0 4 SECOHD SECTION A Merger ol THE BEAUFORT NEWS (Established 1912) and THE TWIN CITY TIMES (Established 1936) 38th YEAR NO. 46. 10 PAGES MOREHEAD CITY, AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1948 10 PAGES PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAY! si S A Mountaineer Fell in Love with the Coast 00 o 10c ME 5 I: i He Helped Fight a War, Then Became Famous Free-Lancer By Ruth Peeling This is the second and last in stallment of a two-part story on the life of Aycock Brown. The first part appeared in the issue of THE NEWS-TIMES publish ed Tuesday, Oct. 19. "Everywhere we went people told mc how wonderful the story was, and I figured (hat at Ocracokc they would be so pleased they would probably erect a monument to me." smiled the writer. "But when I got there, I got the big gest shock of mv life They were :ts mad as could be. "What do you mean," one of the women of the island asked, "say ing we don't have any clocks here. I have one." Aycock replied, "Yes, but it doesn't run." He went on to ex plain that in the story he was simply trying to point out that Ocracokers mainly reckoned time by the tide. But the week's cruise ended hap pily. Billy Brown, the expected baby who is now 7 years old, wasn't born until after the Ilat tcras returned its passengers to Beaufort. After Dec. 7, 1941. United States was at war. In the files of the sixth Naval district. Charles ton, Aycock Brown was listed as "contact man." Soon this section of the coast was made a part of the fifth Naval district, and Ay cock was given the title of civilian agent for the Navy, becoming one of the few civilian agents in the country. "I couldn't even give Bill Hatscll two weeks' notice that I was leav ing. The Navy wanted me on the job right away, so Amy Muse help ed Bill out and I went from Camp Davis north to the Virginia line, establishing contacts along the coast," the columnist relates. He had served as editor of The Beaufort News seven years . . . he had become a newspaperman. But next to the fishermen them selves, Naval intelligence knew that they could get no one who know the coast better than Aycock Brown, and so he gave up his newspaper work momentarily, to work for Uncle Sam. This involved suoplying informa tion on the depths of water in various coves and inlets along the coast ("I thought the Navy would have known that, but they didn't," Aycock remarked), identifying bo dies that were washed up on the beach, investigating suspicious characters, or lights burning along the coast when they should have been blacked out. Soon he was assigned operation al intelligence work also and was based at Ocracoke. He knew the location of every ship and sus pected submarines in the area and kept patrol boat captains inform ed of convoy and air movements. He lived through a few danger ous moments during the war. One time, on report that there was to be an attempted landing between r 4 Buddies 1 I 1 J ' !x: 'I ;. n ; Si - "t ' ' ' A." i ' - , if;, At Tony's Sanitary Fish Market, Aycock has the cup of coffee that precedes all his meals, art talks things over with Tony him ell , , (Phot by Theodore Baiter) Cape Lookout and Cape Ilattcras, he and a group of other intelli gence men were riding along the beach at night. Coast Guard pa trolmen had been given orders to shoot anyone in the beach. The driver of the jeep was going along in the dark, and finally said that he couldn't see to go ahead another inch without lights, as he flicked the white beams on. Be tween Cape llatteras and Ilattcras village suddenly came a shout out of the dark, "Cut those lights off!" As Aycock climbed out of the ' l'CD someone shoved a gun pgair.st nis cnest a'Hl commanded, Identi fy yourself." "There were a lot of new fel lows in the Coast Guard and I knew they wouldn't know who Ay- cock Brown was, so 1 reached into The work of a master my pocket for identification cards," relates the former intelligence officer, "With that, the patrolman "-'H. "Keep vour hands up or I'll drill a hole through you." "This all happened in a mat ter of seconds," Aycock co'itinucd, "and I w;isn't seared at the time, but when I thought of it later, I realized how close 1 had been to getting shot." At another time al! the civilian vessels from shore 25 miles out to i sea between tape Ilattcras and ! Virginia beach were to lc warned that craft within that area were going to he sunk Aycock was j given orders to gel the warni'g to the fishermen so he look off in a plane from Cherry Point, plan ning to fly over the area, land be side the fish boats ami tell them , to go beyond the l!r -mile line or ( else make port. I As the plane was .t;oin over I Ocracoke. he noticed some trawl ! ers in the harbor which could netp spread the warning the plane landed. Both Aycock one of Aycock's most and the pilot left the plane to talk to the men on the fishing boats. When they returned to take off, the plane had sunk. A section in the bottom part of it had been fitted without a rub ber gasket. "Maybe it was sabo tage maybe it was simply negli gence," comments the columnist, "anyhow if we would have landed at sea, we never would have come home the same way we left." Photographic equipment was at a premium as soon as the war got underway. The Navy had none in this area, so Aycock used what he had until movie cameras and all other types of equipment were sent here. "Then I had so much stuff I couldn't begin to use it all," he remarked. He made pictures of the Russian tanker Ashkabad as it was sinking after being torpedoed by an enemy submarine and made numerous other flights to take pictures of the coastal area for war purposes. At his suggestion commercial fishermen were made confidential observers for the Navy and their boats equipped with radio. A few months before the war was over, Aycock was transferred to Norfolk where he started wri ting "Covering the Waterfront" again. After his contract with the Navy expired on Dec. 31, 1945, he came to Morehead City and opera ted a photographer's studio for Roy Eubanks for about three or four months but the confining four walls made him long more and more for salt wind, sun, and water. It was in the early months of fvi"''vT ,i'A. Going (or a Ride If !! fI szr$ !? 'wv': ATI l,u v , , s I Sf.WEW.O.W ! ,,, mm mmmmm "Aren't you coming with us, Daddy?" seems to be the question in Stormy Gale's eyes as she stands beside her mother in the new family car. Brantley's at the wheel. Stormy Gale seldom sees her daddy. He's usually at Manteo, iniiskect heaven knows where! well-known shots. 1946 that Tony Scamon, Morehead City's famous restauranteur, in an expression of gratitude to Aycock, set North Carolina's well known columnist on the road that has led him today to fame and sobriety. It's a story few people know. One day Tony walked in to see Billy Aycock who was still of the opinion that the best way to relax was with a bottle. Tony told him that he would like to do him a favor, for it was Aycock who first put his name in print, (The owner of the Sanitary Fish Market caught the first sail- I i & Morehead City, Beaufort, Malta (Guess Who Took This One!) fish ever taken off the Carteret coast back in the days when sail fish were never dreamed of here as a likely catch for sports fish ermen. Aycock sent the story off to the stale papers. That was the beginning of reams of publicity which has been written ubout Tonv). "I knew Avcock wanted a good camera, one like his friend, Loomis Deane, a Life photographer, has," Tony relates. "So I asked him how much a camera like that cost. He told mc $350." Aycock finishes the story. "Not long after that conversation, Tony walked in and handed me three one hundred dollar bills ami a I I '6i?: I "Stan fiaij t I TofMl ,ts " Railroads hurt operate around the clock every day and night of the yenr. Although they know this, leader of 16 raU road unions are demanding a five-day, Mon day through Friday, week for one million railroad employes. They want 48 hours pay for 40 hours work in itself a 20 wage increase. They also demand a minimum of 12 hours pay for any work performed on Saturdays, and 16 hours pay for any work performed on Sundays and holidays. On top of all this they want an additional increase of 25c an hour for every employe 1 You'd Pay the Bill! Summing up these demands, they mean that these union leaders seek to force the railroads to give 'one million employe an annual raite which would average $1600 per employe! The total cost of this would be no 1ms than 154 billion dollars per year, which is more than twice the expected net income of the railroads this year. You'd pay the bill, because if these in creased cost are forced on the railroads, fifty. I decided then that here was my chance to do free-lancing, writi.ig and photography." The beautiful shots of the Caro lina coast with that well-known ' credit line, Photo by Aycock Brown, is evidence enough that Tony made a good investment, that Aycock proved he had the stuff men are made of plus the ability to take photos that arc works of art. To top it off, he turns at the kinds of stories readers like to see in their newspapers. Some of the talcs he tells are branded by critics as lies and gross inaccuracies, others are kinder and say our columnist is inclined to exaggerate al times. If it is in accuracy or over-exaggeration, it's never intentional, it has never hurt anyone, and !(! per cent of the time it has helped. Call it whal you will, he turns out what we in the newspaper business call "good copy." Aycock considers his best publi city job the one on Dean Israel Noe. Noe was dean of an Epis copalian cathedral in Memphis, Tenn , and in the late thirties tried to prove that "a human being could lake on the Godhead bodily, Aycock says. The dean fasted for 30 days, eating only cashew nuts and drinking orange juice. Final- j ly to regain his health he had I to he sent to John Hnnkin.i: hnmii. tal in Baltimore, and in the mean time his communicants at Mem phis, having become outraged at his actions, demanded his resigna tion. Dean Noe then came to the Car teret coast and preached to various congregations. In the summer of 193!), because the Episcopalian had become so popular here, Aycock . - . I, MSI i I . they must have still further rate and fare increases. Demands Unreasonable Those employes have had substantial raises during and sitoethe war. Their average week ly earnings are higher than the average weekly earnings of workers in manufacturing indus tries. They have more job security than the average worker in American industry. They also enjoy paid vacations, a retirement sys tem and other advantages more generous than the average worker receives. In contrast with the demands of these IS unions, which add up to the equivalent of 48c an hour, the Conductor and Trainmen recently settled their wage request for an Increase of 10c an hour. On lhe Job Here on Boguc Banks, Aycock Path fisherman, left, on the recent tried to sell the idea to Atlantic Beach interests to sponsor a Sun day afternoon sermon by Dean Noe at the beach, turning the dance hall into a "Cathedral by the Sea." Nobody liked the idea but Ay cock got $15 to finance what was undoubtedly thought a crack pot scheme. Publicity on the service in the "Cathedral by the Sea" went We are publishing this and other advertisements to at first hand about matters which are important queries Randolph Smith, Salter catches of spot. (Photo by Robert G. Lows) out all over the slate and beyond and the afternoon Dean Noe preached the beach was jammed. The upshot of it all was the call ing back of the dean by his con gregation in Memphis where he Is preaching today to nearly u thou sand communicants. Perhaps the thing thai put Ay cock Brown's name before mora people than anything rise was the Sec MOUNTAINEER Page 3 Railroads Run for Everybody Not Employes Alone The railroad industry must serve not one but many groups producers, businessmen, ship pers, passengers and the general public night and day, every day of the year. These union are proceeding in utter disregard of this important difference between railroads and other industries. Industrial plants can be shut down over weekends and holidays, but freight, mail, express and passengers must continue to move, Everybody who tnlert rail road employment knows this. Strike Threat On September 18, 1948, the leaders of these 16 unions began taking a strike vote. But the threat of a ttrike will not alter the opposition of the railroads to such unreasonable demands! talk with you , to everybody, 1