Hickory Hears Joyful
News
Hickory awoke this morning and celebrated.
The news of the armistice first reached Hickory from
Charlotte in a telephone message to Mr. John M. Stephens, suffering from flue,
and he proceeded to call up several people, among them the editor of the Record.
Then a long-distance call came from Raleigh and Mrs. George
Starnes was told to ring that bell. Which he did. Nearly every house in town
flashed a lighted window.
The Record force
assembled, also John Cilley, Dave Smith, W.E. Miller and a number of others,
and in a few minutes the linotype had set up the copy that had come over the
long-distance telephone. Then Manager Miller made up the form, Edgar Lytle and
the editor saw that the papers were printed, and Lytle hit the streets with a
bundle of papers under his arm. Later Charlie Bagby joined him.
Mr. George Harper, who with Mrs. Harper and Fred May, was
down from Lenoir last night to receive the extra, was telephoned and he and May
put out again for Hickory. Morning newspapers forecast the surrender, but the
Record was the first paper to carry the official news.
It was after 8 o’clock, however, before the real excitement
started. A number of plants dismissed their employes for the day and Hickory
people, some of them wearing masks, proceeded to celebrate. Some plants managed
to operate until noon, with a partial force, but all turned out at noon, and
the crowds came to Hickory. Whistles and bells had sounded and the air was
charged with the good news.
An incident of the early morning was the arrest of Chief
Lentz, Sergeant Sigmon, Deputy Sheriff Kennedy and later Mayor Yount. City
manager Ballew this morning escaped the lock-up with the mayor and police
force. Mr. Starnes ran the big truck out to help out the noise, and later
somebody rescued the officers. As soon as the city manager heard what was going
on, he put off down the road. At any rate, Hickory was celebrating.
And the celebration continued during the day. It was
impromptu, and never organized, but it was celebration just the same. An
organized celebration may be impossible on account of the flu, but the
rejoicing here, spontaneous as it was, shows the good feeling all round.
Hickory will have some more celebrations, but the greatest
celebration when the boys come marching home.
The real celebration will take place tonight at 7:30,
however, when the grand parade will take place. The Kaiser, a straw effigy of
whom has been made, will be attended to properly at the Henkel stables. The
flu—the Record has thought of that and the consequences—but they say the parade
will be held just the same.
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