Veterans of First World War Recall Armistice By BOB SEYMOUR Some may call it Veterans' Day but today is Armistice in >?Day for Carteret County's World War I veterans. All of ?rti them remember that day 40 years ago quite well ? from J^rtt'SN Grady Bell, home in Morehead City on sick leave, to tmiiPfc. I. E. Pittman in the front lines between Metz and ww Verdun. Mr. Pittman, now vice-president of Firet-jpitizens Bank, Morehad City, was a veteran ol ' trench warfare and was "up there '"^'shooting them as hard as we could" when the armistice waa M '.' signed. He was with the 81st Di vision. Mr. Pittman recalls that shortly ,nr after the armistice, several Ger man soldiers came over for a visit. "'/The American soldiers, however, 1 1 stayed put. "We had no liberty i'*'i and stayed in our positions for four or five days. Some of the fel J lows, though, piled up logs and 1 started a bon fire as soon as the word came down that the armistice was signed," he said. Things were a bit different in Paris, where John Crump, now of : ' Morehead City, was a chief yeo man in US Naval Headquarters, -i. "By the time people in the United States knew the armistice had n, been signed I was drunk," he de i dares. Mr. Crump says he was one of ' the lucky ones overseas. He had ,r time to enjoy the sights of Paris during the war and shortly after the armistice he toured battle scarred France with a group of friends. Mr. Crump now operates a real estate and insurance office in Morehead City. He has been here since 1926. Grady Bell, who was in More head City when the armisticc was ^ signed, was recovering from pneu monia. He had been in the Navy for only seven months and was as i: ' signed to a coastal supply boat. Mr. Bell was quick to add that his brother, Andrew, spent more =^timc in the front lines than he did in the Navy. Grady Bell had served as mate on a party boat that carried Josephus Daniels on several fishing trips. Mr. Daniels, secretary of the Navy at the time, spotted Bell one iday during an inspection. He walk ed over to him, shook his hand and asked how he was getting along. Evidently the word got around that Bell and the secretary were buddies. "Things seemed to go my way after that," he recalls. "I missed extra duty and dirty jobs and as soon as they started letting men out I was toward the top of ?the list." Floyd Chadwick Sr., Morehcad City, was a corporal in a field ar tillery unit when the firing ceased. "We were all set to move toward Metz. the town everybody said --couldn't be taken," Mr. Chadwick says. "Of course, the town would have surrendered eventually, but the armistice saved the lives of lots of men from this area. "The unit I was with, 113th Field Artillery, was made up of men from Pamlico, Carteret, Craven, Jones and Onslow Counties. We were restricted to our positions and the nearest town, Verdun, was all shot up anyway. We had no liberty until we got to the forwarding area on the way home." Mr. Chadwick, like most soldiers, counted the days he was in France. "1 was there 11 months and 27 days," he says. "The most dis tasteful part of the whole time was while we were waiting to come home. We had. to policc our area, picking up all scraps of metal etc. for salvage crews." First I.t. Joe DuBois, now of Morehead City Chamber of Com merce, holds the distinction of be ing the only officer to serve with both the 26th Yankee Division and :the 31st Dixie Division. ! He recalls the relief of the (trainees when they found out that ?the war was over and they would jnot have to go overseas as they had ;been fearing. "It was a great day," >he says. ? C. L. Beam, Beaufort, county eterans service officer, was a ser eant m?jor in headquarters of the tilt Division. The division was in the front lines up until the last day .and Mr. Beam was sent back to arrange billets for the troops two or three daya later. "I had to find placea for a di vision of men to eat and sleep," Be remembers. "As soon as the armistice was signed it made an entirely different situation. It be came necessary to observe more of the social rules. No longer could we move up and move in where the Germans had stayed." Mr. Beam spent about one year in France and another year in the United States. Robert Atkinson, manager of the Blue Ribbon Club, was in the med ical cofos during the war. "I was with tig 58th Pioneer Infantry Di vision. the only outfit ever moved from the United States to the front lines by presidential order," be aays. When asked what be did when he heard the armistice was signed, be said, "I did what everybody else did ? beaded straight for town) The Germans were in trenches a few yards away and they did the same thing. We all threw down our (una and packs and took off. It