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A
Father's Legacy
Martin Vol.
2 (Continued from Vol. 1)
When I Was
Growing Up, Did I Have Any Animals?
What Were Their Names? Was It Important To Me To Have A Pet?
I would like to begin these answers
by saying that I have previously answered these questions along with the
next 4 or 5 questions that follow but some glitch in the way I handle
this computer I managed to accidentally delete every word of it...Woe
is me.
Answers as follow -- Yes I did have an
animal, but she was not really mine because she belonged to the entire
family. I am speaking of Tiney-gal our pet dog, that I mentioned earlier.
Tiney was a beautiful dog that looked somewhat like a small Collie but
my mother said she was very likely a Spits & Rat Terrier mix. Tiney
was really my Mothers special friend and she would talk to her and ask
her questions and Tiney would always respond by way of my Mother speaking
for her with a ventriloquist type of voice and if you were listening
in on the conversation, you could become enchanted and come to believe
that they were actually talking to each other.
My Mother was a very special, well-educated Lady
and I loved her very much. Mother was a 'people person' and could mix
very well, with any group of people, but she was much at ease with all
animals.
Tiney was such a good mouse & rat catcher
that our neighbors would ask to borrow her, to help kill out a rat of
mouse nest. Tiney only had one litter of pups but we did not keep any
of the puppies. The one we kept the longest time was given to my Uncle
John & Aunt Dollie. We had already named him Rudy because it was
probably the most popular name of the day due to the great romantic
movie star by the name of Rudolph Valentino.
Yes, we had a cat(s) and it also was a family
pet. The cat was usually just a common mixed breed and often had the
run of the house and yard. You know how independent cats are and how
they somehow don't stay around a real long time, so as a result of this
trait, we just named them all 'Tessie-Cat' as they came along.
***
Tell
You About My Mothers Cooking.
Can I Recall My Favorite Meal?
The answer is understandably rather simple since
every one knows that I like any food that is properly prepared &
ready to be eaten. Mother was a very good cook -- She made the best
meatloaf, the best homemade rolls, the best food selections that could
be arranged. But let me tell you about her mince meat pies and above
all her super special, out of this world Lemon Pie.
One day Mother baked a Lemon Pie with a fancy
meringue top and set it out to be ready for the forthcoming meal. The
flies were kinda messing around the fixings and someone got the notion
that they should spray the room with the Flit (Flit was the fly spray
of the day, but had a kind of coal oil smell).
Well, anyway it just made a mess
of the meringue and no one would even attempt to eat the pie, but I
somehow reasoned that if you removed the meringue from the top of the
pie that the pie would be ok. So, guess who ended up with the whole
pie? (Makes you think of arithmetic when you start talking about
certain portions of a pie, doesn't it?)
***
Did I Ever
Get Into Fights With Other Kids?
Did I Ever Start A Fight? Or Stop One?
I only had one experience that could
be regarded as a fight by some people but for the most part I would
not classify that occasion as a regular fight as I think your question
seems to address.
It was during Physical Education
class and we were playing volley ball on the gym floor. I did not seem
to please one of my team mates by the manner in which I played the game
and he kept bad mouthing me every time I made a bad play.. This went
on for some time until I finally got tired of hearing it and I decked
him forthwith.
Mr. Dyrlie, our teacher, stopped
the game and announced that Delton & I were to put the gloves on
for a boxing bout to be scheduled two weeks ahead in order to settle
the matter for good.
Until I had gone to Uncle Purlees
farm I had been quite frail and a likely target to be bullied around
but since I had filled out and had gotten in pretty good physical shape,
I knew I could handle myself. My dear brother, Calvin, was quite a scrapper
and seemed to always come out ahead when he had a fight. I went to Calvin
for some sage advise. Calvin advised me to not let Delton get the first
blow and besides when I needed to punch him to just hit him square in
the face --- I wasn't sure I could actually hit someone in the face
& such a thought would have never occurred to me. The match finally
began & after I knocked Delton down several times the coach stopped
the bout and made us shake hands. Delton Shillings and I became very
good friends and some few years later, Delton lost his life in battle
during WWII.
Did I Ever Start A Fight?
Answer is No.
Did I Every Stop A Fight?
Answer is Yes. Hollis Medford was a kid that lived just outside of our
immediate neighborhood but he seemed to always be unhappy about something.
He didn't have any close friends
and sometimes he left the impression that he was looking for someone
to fight. Well, I guess I was the chosen subject to get his head bashed
in because Hollis met me on a rather secluded area and announced that
he acquired some knucks, to wear on his hand, and he intended to try
them out today, and on me. I didn't think too kindly of such a method
of fighting and besides it struck me as a form of cheating. I wasn't
sure that he couldn't whip me without the knucks but in order to buy
time I explained to him that he just may have to end up eating those
knucks if he persisted and when I got by with that I pushed a little
further by shaming him for having to stoop to such a low level, that
he had to use knucks to beat me and besides, why not do it in a crowd
in order to demonstrate how brave a fighter he really was. You know
what, he dropped his head and turned and walked slowly away, never looking
back. Hollis and I got on friendly terms after that but we never did
go on vacations together, or go hunting together.
By the way, have you ever tried
walking away from an unpleasant situation without looking back? I've
done it, and I can assure you that it is very difficult to do.
***
What
Chores Did I Have To Do When I was Growing Up?
Did I Get An Allowance?
After Dr. Gordon announced that I was suffering
from a lack of Vitamins D & A and a lack of Calcium my parents borrowed
a cow from Uncle Purlee to bring to our place in order that we could
have a reliable source for all three. This did not foreclose on my privilege
to ingest copious amounts of the fore mentioned Cod Liver Oil (imported
from Norway). When we got Betty Jo home she soon gave birth to a
heifer Calf, which I named Little Pet. I was promoted to the position
of Cow & Calf tender, which meant, leading Betty Jo out to the edge
of town (edge of town was only a short distance back then) so
she could graze. I would stake her out to graze and through the day
I would go to her location and move her over to a new spot.
I also carried bucket after bucket of water to
her. I didn't know how to milk a Cow, in fact at first I was sure that
some Cows gave only sweet milk and then there was a special sort of
Cow that just gave buttermilk. Daddy milked Betty Jo for a while then
Calvin let it slip that he too could milk a Cow and from then on it
was Calvin's job to do the milking twice a day, Morning and Evening.
I begged Calvin to let me try milking Betty Jo but he would say "Oh
No! Pop would get him if he knew he was letting me do that; however
eventually he relented and would let me watch real close to see how
it was done. After a while, he would look over his shoulder to see if
anyone was watching, and if the coast was clear he would actually let
me try my hand at it. Well of course Calvin was about the best con artist
I ever knew (besides he had read Tom Sawyer) and as a result
I became the sole manager of Betty Jo & Little Pet.
We kept the Cow for a reasonable time before
we took her back to Uncle Purlee's but he told us to keep the Calf for
a while longer, so we brought her back to Ardmore with us. It worked
out that much later Little Pet would become my very own Cow and this
came about by Aunt Lucy & Uncle Purlee giving me the Calf because
I had spent two summers down on the Farm working with them. This was
a gift from the Heart because I never felt that I had earned anything.
I was happy just being on the Farm with them
and whatever chores I had done were done because I wanted to do them
and I enjoyed learning a valuable lesson of life... That you earn your
bread by the sweat of your brow.
Some years later when I went out to Lone Grove
to help DeWitt & Ruthelle (Susan) on their Dairy Farm I took Little
Pet out there to join Dewitt's milk herd.. But that is ahead of my story
for now.
Then You
Asked If I Received An Allowance --
No & I would be surprised if any of the kids
did receive an allowance back then. If a young boy had any money of
his own he had to earn it and it was usually from a part-time job, if
he could find one. Usually a boy would try to get a paper route to earn
at least two dollars a week, but since there was a limit to those positions,
a town boy would go from house to house until he found someone interested
in having their lawn mowed (with an old fashioned push mower)
or some trash hauled off.
If he had a garden, and worked it properly, sometimes
he would have a surplus of vegetables and would go around town looking
for someone interested in buying them for less than they would have
to pay at the Grocery Store. A boy that lived in the country had a fair
chance to work doing farm labor.
This could be working in the fields or cutting
fire wood, helping to bail hay, milking cows or about anything some
neighbor may need help doing. If he was lucky he could make 50 Cents
or maybe a little more than that. Usually though, his work was already
scheduled for him at home, doing what his daddy needed to try &
make a living for the family. Usually there was no work available for
the young girls, because back then there were no fast food places but
if they were lucky, and were old enough, they may could get a Job at
Kress, or some other 5 and 10 Cent store for 6 Dollars a week.
Usually the girls stayed at home and helped their
mother doing the general house work like cooking, sewing, washing clothes
or picking and preparing food from the garden. Sometimes a close neighbor
lady may need her to baby sit for her for a special occasion. Those
times were extremely hard for the family to get by financially.There
was a World wide depression going on & The United States had just
gone through the collapse of the Stock Market, the drought and resulting
Dustbowl had destroyed the crops in the "Breadbasket" States.
Even the boll weevil destroyed the most drought resistant crops, such
as Cotton.
There was much unrest around the world and soon
the entire World would be engaged in a World Wide War and consequently
many Nations would be destroyed - Millions of people would be left dead
before WWII came to an end.
***
Who Gave
You Your First Job? What Kind of Job Was It?
How Much Money Did You Make?
The answer to number one is I applied at the
local Daily Oklahoman & Times Distributing Office for a paper route,
but there was a long waiting list ahead of me. I managed to talk one
of the Route boys into letting me go along with him on his route, for
no pay at all. I reasoned that by being seen around the Distributing
Office and creating the illusion that I was 'available' if someone happened
to quit his route this may give me an advantage over others ahead of
me on the list.
Yes, I was given a route and it was made up of
only about 100 subscribers and the area covered Main Street, First Avenue
SW, Broadway Street NW and all streets in between. The Morning route
which was the Daily Oklahoman route started around 4 o'clock in the
morning and the evening route, which was the Oklahoma City Times, began
in the afternoon about the time school let out. I did not have to collect
for the papers, we had a supervisor to do that since money was involved
and the Circulation Manager wasn't sure how trustworthy the kids were.
I forgot to mention that there was still another edition, which was
like a third route and that was the Sunday Oklahoman. None of the 3
routes were made up of the exact same number of customers and there
would be some people that would take the Daily Oklahoma but not the
Times. Then we had some customers that subscribed to the Times but neither
of the other two publications.
The Sunday route actually had more customers
than either of the other two. At that time the Newspaper office was
located in a building just north of the present Sprecklemyer Printing
Co. and directly across the street from the bus station, which was located
in the east wing of a much larger office building. The newspapers arrived
atop a Jordan Bus that came from Oklahoma City at least twice a day.
That building is long since gone and is presently the'Exchange National
Bank' along with a Drive Through business lane is now located in that
location. Across Main Street directly North of the then bus station
was the 'Ardmore Hotel' but is now refurbished and is the home of the
"Lincoln Bank & Trust Co". Across the street (C St.) east
from the bus station was the largest grocery store in Ardmore known
as the A&P Grocery... This building is referred to now as the Clay
Building, but is owned and used by the First Baptist Church which was
and is located one block south at the corner of First Ave. and C St.
SW. I was paid a weekly wage of $2.00 in Silver Certificates -- which
are now labeled Reserve Notes. (Paper money).
I had wanted a bicycle every since I could remember
and each Christmas I had hoped that my present, of all presents, would
be a big shinny brand new bicycle, but it never happened. Bicycles were
very expensive and probably cost at least twenty five dollars. I know
my Mother and Daddy just could not afford to buy such an expensive gift
for me. Fortunately, the first paper route I had was a walking route
but I knew that if I ever got a larger route which could pay more money
I would have to have a bicycle.
My Dad could buy certain items through the Drug
Store at wholesale price and when I discussed my problem with him, he
suggested that I bring a certain amount of money to him, to be placed
in the Store Safe. Then when I had saved enough to pay for the bicycle
he would place the order for it. I don't remember how long it took to
save up enough to justify ordering the bike but when Pop felt that I
had enough money on deposit he ordered it for me. I put the bicycle
together and now I was ready to go for a larger route. My next paper
route, with the Oklahoma Publishing Company, was six miles long and
located in the SW part of Ardmore. Since that route had more customers,
I earned $3.50 per week.
I carried that route for quite some time but
eventually managed to get a route with the Daily Ardmoreite. The earnings
were better and I only had to get up at 4 o'clock in the morning, and
that was Sunday. I was expected to be finished in time for Sunday School
& Church, which I was.
Our family was always in Church on Sunday morning,
Sunday evening, Wednesday evening for Prayer Meeting and every evening
of the year whenever a Revival was going on, which could go more than
two weeks at a time. Oh yes, & Bible School every morning during
that period of the Summer. I should also mention that during the summer
time it was common practice for the Church to find a vacant lot, in
some part of town, and pitch their rather large tent (Tabernacle) on
that location. The summer revivals lasted for as long as the people
attended the meetings and especially if there were people being saved
or making professions of faith.
I carried the first Daily Ardmoreite route for
some time and later graduated to a much larger route which turned out
to be in the NE part of Ardmore. There were virtually no paved streets
in that part of town and when it rained it really was a tough route
to carry. The route was a large one but many of the customers were late
to pay their bills and I had to pay for the papers out of my own pocket
when they failed to pay me. Eventually, I discovered that you couldn't
get anybody arrested for not paying their bill and since I was loosing
a lot of my profit, I quit the paper business for good. (amen)
[End of Vol. 2, Next is Martin
Vol. 3] |