CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES Helping The Heart Fund Helps Your Heart 10/ 47th YEAR, NO. 15. TWO SECTIONS FOURTEEN PAGES 1IOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1958 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Close Frien^J^esf TrueStorvoti* (Kditor's Note: The following background information on More brad City's headstrong outboard inotorboat adventurer mas obtained from persons mho knew him in Swansboro and Jacksonville. They requested that their names not be used). By BOB SEYMOUR Mcl West wax a man driven by obsession. Close friends of the motorboat adventurer at Jackson ville say that his only desire in life was to make an ocean cross ing to Bermuda in an outboard motorboat. "Mel wasn't afraid to die." one of them said. "He showed me the log of his first voyage, telling of his hunger and thirst. Never once did he men tion being afraid. What Mel was afraid of was life," the friend ad ded. "All his life he had never con sidered himself to be a success. After getting out of the Army Mel never stayed at one job for a very long time. He worked for a couple of radio stations before going to Jacksonville, where ho worked at a radio station and tried to op erate a restaurant. "The name of the restaurant was Mel the Beachcomber's. It was a classy place with big sail fish printed on the awning at the entrance. He went into the bus iness with two partners but bought! i them out before the restaurant ! I failed, another friend related. Devoted to Trip | "When Mel finally made up his | mind to go to Bermuda the first ; time, he devoted his time to noth j ing else. He felt that he was fully (prepared to make the trip and 1 i think he would have made it if he See MEL WEST, Page 2 Photo by Bob Seymour The Impossible, a 15-foot motorboat used by Mel West on his first Bermuda trip, sits outside Casper's Marine Service in Swansboro. As soon as it gets a coat of paint it will go on sale like any other used boat. Two Embezzlement Cases Set for March Court Term Two cases scheduled for trial during the criminal term of su perior court, March 31-April 4, in volve prominent Morehead City residents. 11. Earle Mobley, former pwner of Mobley Buick Co. and now disc jockey for a local radio station, is docketed for trial March 31 on en embezzlement count. Also charged with embezzlement is Bruce L. Goodwin, Morehead City real estate developer and insur ance agent. The Goodwin case is docketed for April 3. Mobley's case is the first one on the criminal calendar. He was scheduled for trial during the last criminal term but his lawyer got the case continued when Mobley went to the hospital just before the term opened. Goodwin's case is slated for the fourth day of the week-long term. Goodwin is charged by Wilfred Bay Lewis of accepting $1,150 of Lewis's money as down payment for a house and then converting it to Goodwin's own use. The grand jury returned a true bill on the case in November 1956. The court docket was set up Monday and released Monday af ternoon by the clerk of superior court, A. H. James. Grand Jury Cases Cases against 10 defendants will go before the grand jury. The de Historical Review Reports on 1957 Centennial Issue The North Carolina Historical Review, in its January 1958 issue mentions that the Carteret County News-Times published a special edition Aug. 13, 1957 in observance of the Morchcad City Centennial. The item mentioned the types of articles in the edition and stated that it was dedicated to F. C. Salisbury, Morchcad City, local fiiatorian. Also reported in the review was the October meeting of the Car teret Historical Society. At that time officers were elected, with Mr. Salisbury as president. The review mentioned too that Mr. Salisbury was among the win ners of historical awards given in December 1957 by the North Caro lina Society of County and Local Historians. Deadline Tomorrow All commercial fishermen must have their 1958 boat licenses by tomorrow. Fishermen who do not have their 1958 tags by then will be subject to prosecution. fcndants and charges against them follow: Ernesto. Lewis, speeding; Larry Del mar Smith, Claude Tem ple Bullock. George Gray, Andrew Midgett, and Richard Palmer Jol liff Jr., driving drunk; Edward S. Washington, robbery; Elbert Mann, violation of fishing laws; Arthur Days, fraud; and Harvey Earl lee, driving drunk and mo tor vehicle law. In addition to the Mobley case scheduled for March 31, the fol lowing are also docketed: James Leary and Frederick E. Anthony, false pretense; Edward Slim Wash ington, robbery. Sonny Sykcs, Allen Moore, Bill Moore and Harry Moore, assault; Alfred Anderson, violation of whis key laws; Carlton Pittman, public drunkenness; Arthur Days, fraud. Bernard Cooper Willis, non-sup port; Andrew Midgett4, William Henry Jones, Richard P. Jolliff Jr., drunken driving; David Lewis Jeter, speeding. Tuesday, April 1: Lester Wheeler Gillikin, John James Jr., Richard Furlow Hill, Larry Delmar Smith, See COURT, Page 2 MHvin L. West . . . prior to first trip Chilula Goes To Italian Ship's Rescue Tuesday The Coast Guard cutter, Chilula, based at Morehead City, was sbll searching yesterday for the body of one crewman from the Italian freighter which sank 120 miles east of Cape Ix>okout Tuesday. Twenty-seven crewmen from the freighter, Bonitas, were tossed into the gray waters when their life boat capsized. Five were reseued. but 22 drowned. Bodies of 21 were recovered The Chilula was look ing yesterday for the 22nd. The Bonitas sent out its first dis tress signal at 2 30 p.m. Tuesday. It was picked up by a commercial ship and relayed to the Coast Guard. The Bonitas said then that her holds were leaking and she was in immediate danger of sinking. The ship actually went to the bot tom early Wednesday. It was bound from Brazil to Baltimore with a cargo of manganese. The vessel's home port was Genoa. She was of 5,633 gross tons and 447 feet long. In addition to the Chilula, the de stroyer escort Hartley and three merchant ships went to the rescue of the Bonitas. Searching for survivors Wednes day were the freighter, President Adams, five merchant ships, the Chilula, three Navy destroyer es corts, two Marine Corps planes and a Coast Guard plane. The five men saved were the ship's master, Capt. Enazin Marini, Tireman Giovanni Barbaro. deck Ih>> Alfredo Contessi, cheif officer Albo Cardilo and machinist Guisep pi Valinti. Drawbridge Breakdown Delays Motor Traffic The Morehead City drawbridge across Newport River was hung up for half an hour Wednesday morn ing, from 7:55 a.m. to 8:25 a.m. Motor traffic was blocked. David Nelson, bridge tender, said that the power failed due to a short. He believed the short was brought on by extreme cold. People were delayed getting to work and teachers were held up on their way to school. Mr. Nelson made the bridge repairs himself. Small Home Burns Yesterday In Beaufort Firemen Answer Four Alarms, in Freezing Weather, Since Monday Beaufort airmen nave answered four alarms since Monday. The fourth alarm, turned In at 7 30 a m yesterday, proved to be the worst fire. A three-room bouse behind Ed Henry's home on Cedar Street burned Mr Henry's daughter Nancy Beard and thiW small chil dren lived in the house, according to firemen. Anyone having clothes they 'Would like to give the stricken family is asked to ca'l the fire department Firemen will pick the clothes up. Firemen s^id that when they "ot to the fire they found that two sections of hose and a nozzle for the hose on the pump truck had frozen solid in the fire station. "You can throw a cat through the cracks in the doors of the fire station and the town tries to heat the place with a little oil stove," one of the firemen said, assempt ing to explain why the hose was | frozen. At 7 a.m. Wednesday a fire broke out at Luce Johnson's house, 607 Cedar St. Firemen got the blaze under control in less than j an hour. The flames had broken J out between the ceiling and the | roof of the house At 4:3ft p.m. Monday firemen I were called to Cecelia Stanley's home on Pine Street. She had been under her house frying to thaw j out water pipes and caught the sills on fire. There was practically iu) damage. ? Tuesday afternoon the Beaufort rural truck went to Crab Point to I take more water to a fire being fought by Morehead City firemen. Judge Hears 10 Cases Monday | Ohty It cases were*dti the docket for Morekead City recorder's court > Monday. Ten case? were tried and ' ewe, with Elizabeth Gray as de-; 1 fendant, was continued. Wayland Sheafc was defendant in two cases. He was ordered to i pay costs and honor a $20 check he had given to Hoy B. Winstead. In a second case he was found not guilty of stealing a portable radio. William Guthrie drew a 60-day road sentence for public drunken ness. It was his fourth conviction within a year. ? Mack Lane Davis was fined $25 and costs for driving with an ex pired license. Judge Herbert Phil lips explained that the $25 would be returned if Davis got a license within a prescribed time. Husscli E. WUlis Sr., also charged with driving with an ex pired license, showed that he had a new one and was taxed court costs. Lydia Bratcher wa? fined $15 and costs for public drunkenness. Willie J. Nolan and William James Griffin were charged costs. Nolan was fined for driving with expired out-of-state plates. Griffin had to pay for allowing an unlicensed minor to drive his car. Two defendants, charged with speeding, forfeited their bonds. They were Hazel B. Small and Pasquale "Pat" Marino. Wins Public Speaking Contest HWlo ny Mob xeymour Anne Herbert r??i?f? a *25 uvln|ii bond from American I .talon pott commander Joe DuBoia Anne, a freshman at Morebesd CKy High School, woo first place In a Legion apeakiag coo teat at the achool Tuesday. She represented Unrobe ad City at the district contest ia Jacksonville last night. BUI Maaden, left, waa rnaner np and Virgil But, akcaad from left, waa third la the contest. Jadges were Mr. DnBois, Floyd Chad wick 8r. aad B< 12-Degree Temperature Sets New Low for Carteret County Calico Creek, above, drains into Newport River north of Morehead City. A solid sheet of Ice*, right above, stretches from shore to shore. The skiff. Miss Calico, sits tight in the ice. North River was almost frozen solid. Only pockets of black water showed through here and there. Photo by tioo aeyuiour During Sunday night thr Carolina Water tank at 5th and Arendell Streets overflowed and the water froze at every point It fell. The cedar tree above is bowed under the ice. Icicles drip from the stop sign. Fifth Street, at the right, was a sheet of ice for two days. Wilmington Bares Iron Fist Again in Port Rate Inquiry Students to Aid In Heart Drive Mr*. Bryan Loftin. chairman of the Junior Woman's Clubs Heart Fund drive. Beaufort, announced that high school students who will assist in the drive Sunday after noon will meet at Guthrie-Jones dm it store at 2. Junior Woman's Club members will take them by car to the neigh borhoods where they will make col- ? lections. After the house-to-house canvass has been made, the club will treat the students to hot choco late at the drug store. Students in the following organ izations will assist with the drive, according to Mrs. Loftin. Future Homemakera of America. Debating Club. I ibrary Club, Varsity Club, Tri lli-Y. H-Y. Four-H, Prayer Group. Fu ture Teachers of America, Beta Club, and home economics stu dent ?. Tlastic heart containers have been placed in' business houses throughout town. Persons may al so place their contributions in them. Trerv Moved Cargo trees along Cedar Street. Beaufort, which will be the new hiiihway 70 through town, arc be ing moved. Public utility poles will be moved soon. Grading op- j ?rations were under way yester ' day. I Following an informal inquiry Monday by the State Utilities Com mission, Raleigh, on Southern's proposal lower rates into More head City, Mason King, vicc-pres ident of Southern in charge oi traffic, said that Southern will pro ceed with its plan to put the lower rates into effect. Wilmington is bitterly opposed to the proposal. Wilmington, thi state's other deep water port, waf represented at the hearing by Mayor J. E. L. Wade, Frank A Downing, who is employed by WU minvtton as a traffic rate consul tant, and Wilmington's attorney Mr. Yow. Present from this county were Mayor (ieorpe Dill, Robert Dar den of Southern Railway. J. R Sanders, Rttfus Uutner, all from Morehead City; A. T. I eary Jr, of the Beaufort and Morehead Railroad, and the RAM's legal counsel, I)r. Beverly Lake. ? Representing the SPA was Col lier Cobb Jr. Utilities ommisaih ? rs conduct ing the inquiry were Stanley Win borne, chairman. Sam Worthing ton and Harry Westcott. Governor's Rcquetf The inquiry o*v Southern's pro posed rates into Morehead City if being co ducted by the utilities commission at the request of the governor. The governor has asHW the commission fir an impartial report on how the lowered rates would affect the state's economy. Mr. King, in speaking to the commissioners, said that he saw no reason why Southern could not haul freight the additional hundred miles to the port of Morehead City at no extra cost to the shipper. See RATE INQUIRIES, Page 2 Beaufort Chamber Announces Holiday Schedule for 1958 Members of the Beaufort Cham her of Commerce will observe the * j some holidays this year that they did in 1957 Chamber president ?i Konald Earl Mason announced the ' j following results of balloting by j chamber members: I Thirty-eight ballots were sent out and 22 were returned. Seven Voted for Easter Monday, 19 for July Fourth, 17 for Labor Hay, 21 for Thanksgiving, 22 for Christ mas. 22 for the day. after Christ mas. eight for the second day aftbr Christmas, and 19 for New Year's Day, l?.r>9. Since a simple majority deter ' mines the holidays, all the days listed except Easter Monday and fhe second day after Christmas will be observed as holidays. Tide Table Tides at thr Beaufort Bar HK.1I IXV.V Friday, Feb. 21 j 10:00 a.m. ] SJ a m. . 10:25 p a. 4:13 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 22 ] 10:33 a m. 4:28 a.m. 10:58 p.m. 4.39 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 23 , 11:04 a.m. 4 57 a.m. 11:30 p in. 5:00 p.m. Monday, Feb. 24 11:37 a.m. 5:26 a m. 5:23 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 25 12:04 a.m. 6 03 a.m. 12:13 p.m. 5:37 p m. A low of 12 degrees Tues day was the coldest it has been hero since the freeze of 1917-18, E. Stamey Davis, weather observer, has re ported. No official records are available on that freeze of World War I days. Temperatures in the forties yes terday seemed like a heat wave in comparison to the near zero wea ther Carteret has been experienc ing since Sunday. The thaw, which started as the mercury climbed to 39 Wednesday, caused many a bursted water pipe. Plumbers have been on the jump ail week, thawing pipes and patch ing those that "busted out all over" when the water started flow ing again of its own accord. The icy winds stopped blowing Wednesday. Through the early part of the week, the intense cold seemed even mere frigid because of the high winds Some gusts on the outer hanks were reported as high as 50 miles an hour. Core Sound Freexes Coast Guardsmen at the Core Sound station were ice-bound this week. Guy M. Styron, Beaufort RFD, reported that Core Sound had not been frozen since 1941. The icc prevented the Core Sound Coast Guardsmen from taking their boats into Atlantic for sup pi lUtf. Instead they had to go along the beach by jeep to Cape Lookout and then by boat to Markers Is land. James Hunnings, command ing officer at Fort Macon, said Wednesday that no boat had been able to go from the Core Sound station to Atlantic for three days. Bookmobile Change The weather prevented the book mobile from making its usual Mon day and Tuesday tour this week. Miss Dorothy Avery, director of the county library, says that the schedule announced for this week will be followed next week. Moses Howard, Newport, called this week "the coldest time I've ever seen." Lota of others agreed with him R M. Williams, county farm agent, says farmers believe the lasting intense cold has done lots of damage to newly-set cabbage plants. One farmer told Mr. Williams that he was going to forget about a cabbage crop and put his now planted cabbage land in irish po tatoes. Other farmers expect to hang on. hope for a good cabbage crop and make some money, since the price will probably lie fairly good due to general truck crop damage along the eastern seaboard. Potato demonstration work that was supposed to be started this week has been deferred until this coming Tuesday because of the cold. Howard Garris and Henry Covington, agriculture specialists from Raleigh, will be here, Mr. Williams said, to get the project started. Meetings Cancelled Some meetings were cancelled due to the cold. Although many schools closed upstate, Carteret schools operated as usual. Due to ice, ferryboat operations on the outer banks stopped. The only travel possible between Ocra coke Island and the mainland was by air. The mail boat, which us ually runs between Ocracoke and Atlantic, could not get out of its Silver Lake mooring at Ocracokc because of the ice. Boats Break Loose lee breaking up in the channel in Newport River and along the shore caused shrimp boats to break loose from their moorings this week. The boats belonged to John Weeks, Henry D. Smith, Ro land Buck, Stanley Buck. Stanley Earl Buck. Winfield Buck. J A. Smith and Tom Watson, all of the Crab Point area. Mr. Weeks reported yesterday that all of the boats have been recovered but they're damaged. He said it was impossible to an chor a boat with a rope because the ice cut the rope right in two. He said chains were the only thiug that could hold an anchor and boat together in ice. The temperature went down to 22 early yesterday morning but had climbed back to 29 by 8:30 a.m. Mr. Davis, weather observer, said that weather should get warmer this weekend, but some showers may fall Saturday. Temperatures and wind direc tion Monday through Wednesday follow: Max. Mia. Wind Monday 32 14 WNW Tuesday ... 27 12 WNW Wednesday 39 17 WNW Ainlt Meet Farm agents of six counties, in cluding Carteret, will meet today in Beaufort County. They wdB be taken on a tour of poultry cntcr prisca.