Saturday, April 25, 2020

Friday, December 31

Friday, December 31 Worked 8-5 today. Took groceries to mom after work. Felt better than yesterday. Bud went to Ron's for New Year's Eve. Got in about 2.

 We went to bed about 10. 

So ends 1965 - work as usual tomorrow.

At the bottom of the page are the addresses for my brother and sister out in California.

Thanks for taking the time to read about my mom's year in 1965. It isn't a great narrative, nor is it a gripping drama on any level, but it's what my mom went through from January to December of that year. It's honest. It's my mom.

I never knew that my mom kept these little journals, and when I first read this one, many years after her death, it took my legs out from under me. The world when you're fifteen, or at least when I was fifteen, wasn't real. Seeing it through my mom's eyes and words make it all come rushing back, but from a direction I wasn't at all aware of. 

I am under the impression that another of mom's diaries - one from 1966 - still exists, and that my cousin Susan may have had it. Susan died several years ago, and the journal might not have been saved. I'm still trying to find it.

Thank you again for reading all of this.

Now, put down the phone, get off the computer, and call your mom if you can.

Follow up, December 31, 2022

My mom was tough as nails when she needed to be, but she is the person almost totally responsible for my ability to laugh when things go in the crapper. I am so proud to be her son.

Mom died January 2, 1979, while Kansas City was in the grips of a massive winter storm. It would turn out to be the coldest winter on record in Kansas City. I talked to her on December 31, but on the morning of January 1, our phones were turned off for lack of payment. My roommate had a high-maintenance marijuana habit, and bought weed instead of paying the phone bill. 

I was completely snowed in, and the morning of January 2, my next-door neighbor trudged through the deep and drifting snow to tell me that mom's nursing home was on the phone. I knew what that was all about. Mom was gone. She lost this, her second battle with cancer. My formerly little round mom was gray, emaciated, and in horrible pain. 

I never got the chance to tell her goodbye, but I am fairly certain that she held on long enough just to see the Rose Parade on New Year's Day. She had always wanted to visit Pasadena for the parade, but it never came to pass. To this day, without fail, I watch the parade for mom.

Mom's interment was delayed until March of that year because the intense cold had frozen the ground so deeply that her grave couldn't be excavated.

------- 

My dad died June 14, 1974 of congestive heart failure. He collapsed at the front entrance to Dr. Wilson H. Miller's offices on the Country Club Plaza. I was working as a carpenter in Castle Rock, Colorado when I got the news, delivered to the job site by my then mother-in-law.

My first wife and I set out for Kansas City early the following morning and we met mom at Passantino Brothers' Funeral Home that night. She couldn't figure out what was wrong with the way dad looked in the casket. The masons materialized overnight and dressed dad in his lodge regalia. We pondered and wondered. Mom, my sister and brother thought the same thing, and the morning of dad's funeral, as we were sitting quietly in the family room of the funeral home listening to an organist's rendition of dad's favorite hymn, "In The Garden," it hit me.

"Mom, you've never seen him relaxed before. This is the first time he hasn't been tied up in tense knots worrying about his life and his family and whether he measured up as a man."

 My mom and dad are buried together under towering oak trees in Bethel Cemetery, our family reserve out on Springdale Road in Leavenworth County, Kansas.

Tuesday, December 28

Tuesday, December 28 - To work as usual. Sonnie came over to see me and they all came over to tell us good-bye. We've had a nice visit with them.

Wednesday, December 29 - Work as usual. we'll be busy this weekend. Pop 99 cents a case. Bud is enjoying his vacation. Helms should be in Gallup N. Mex tonight.

Thursday, December 30 - Worked hard today, Bought groceries after work. Tried to call Sonnie but they weren't home yet. Bud went to drive-in.

The drive-in. I was thoroughly addicted to the drive-in. And girls.

Saturday, December 25

Nice Christmas. A quiet day.

Saturday, December 25 - Opened our gifts. Sonnie and Harm came and we opened more presents, then they went to Harm's folks for dinner and Marv and I stayed and got the house ready for tomorrow.

Sunday, December 26 - Had Sonnie and Harm over for dinner today. Had a real good time - then to Jeans for family party. Bud and I went to the Plaza to see the lights.

Monday, December 27 - Did the washing and then rested the rest of the day Sure have enjoyed my three days off.

Christmas with The Simpsons. 

This is all in code unless you know the players. Sonnie and Harm are my sister and brother-in-law. Sonnie, Sonjalee to be exact, is my half-sister by dad's first marriage. I also have a half-brother, Bill, that we rarely see. He lives in L.A. and is a physicist with North American Rockwell. I absolutely idolize him.

Getting the house ready for Christmas dinner must have seemed like preparing Downton Abbey for the Queen, but really, the house is so tiny that you could clean it in a hurry, and whatever else you needed to do was close at hand. We didn't entertain. It was a very small house.

Of course, there's always some kind of get together with mom's family. Dad doesn't go to these parties, I think mostly because he feels generally uncomfortable in social settings, more so with mom's family. The comparisons to his own family are stark in contrast.

The crowning glory of the holidays in Kansas City are the Plaza Lights. The Country Club Plaza, a sort of cowtown Rodeo Drive created by real estate magnate J.C. Nichols had the toniest shops, restaurants, and eateries. On Thanksgiving, the entire city shows up for the lighting ceremony that lights up miles of Christmas lights arranged on all of the buildings of the Plaza over a fifteen block area. The area stay lighted through the first week of January, and people come from all over to see the spectacle.

It's a big deal. 



If you had asked me earlier, I would have said that the first time I ever saw the Plaza Lights was the Thanksgiving night in 1966 that I drove my '57 Pontiac and parked on top of the Hall's Plaza parking garage with Karen Stover in the seat next to me. Now I know I had been there earlier.

In all the years I lived in Kansas City, I never photographed the Plaza Lights. Weird, ain't it?




Wednesday, December 22

Wednesday, December 22 - Florence came in at 9 today. Worked orders and got caught up on my book work this afternoon.

Thursday, December 23 - Busy as the dickens. Worked in checkstand until noon. Bud stayed all night with Ronnie

Friday, December 24 - Snowing as I came to work. Called Bud and told him to stay home today. Terrible driving.

Sunday, December 19

Sunday, December 19 - My Sunday to work

Monday, December 20 - Came home from the beauty parlor and Sonnie was on the phone Later today they were over to say hello! So nice to have them home.

Tuesday, December 21 - Business started to pick up today. Short of help.

Thursday, December 16

Thursday, December 16 - Business is picking up. Had a little snow today. Supposed to have more tonight.

Friday, December 17 - No snow - Worked hard. Bud says it is more blessed to give than to receive so I should spend my gift certificate on him.

Saturday, December 18 - Ran errands this morning. Finished shopping and all that jazz. Real busy today.

I'm a hustler. 
The odd thing is, I actually remember telling my mom this.

Monday, December 13

Monday, December 13 - Got my hair fixed and did washing. Took Marv to Dr. Miller. He feels bad and looks bad too. Finished Christmas shopping I think

Tuesday December 14 - Went to store party and, as usual, had a ball. Played pin the tail on the donkey. Kids gave me a $20 gift certificate from Jones!

Wednesday, December 15 - Called Sonnie. They will start home Saturday morning at 4. Will be so glad to see them.


Dad's health comes and goes. He had four heart attacks three years earlier, in the era before cardiac bypass surgery, stents, and angioplasty. He spent weeks flat on his back, cooked to the gills on Demerol, out at the old St. Joseph Hospital on Linwood Boulevard. He thought the nuns were trying to kill him - this is a Baptist fantasy - and that the pigeons out on the windowsill were actually eagles.

He changed his lifestyle. He gave up the two packs of Pall Malls a day, coffee, and all salt.

Most of the time, he looks and acts pretty strong. When he feels bad, he has the aspect of one of those alien autopsy dummies. Dad died in June of 1974.

Mom got to play games at the store Christmas party! You just can't imagine my mom, blindfolded, spun in circles, and handed a paper donkey tail with a thumbtack in it. I laugh until I cry.

Friday, December 10

Friday, December 10 - Business not too bad. Felt better today.

Saturday, December 11 - Left home at 9 this morning to finish shopping. Marv made an appointment with Miller for Monday

Sunday, December 12 - Stayed home all day today. Cloudy and cold. went down and did washing about 4. No church again today.

Left foot, right foot, repeat.

Tuesday, December 7

Tuesday, December 7 - Worked in the front end alone. Quite a drag.

Wednesday, December 8 - 

Thursday, December 9 - Was so tired today. Thought I'd never make it, but I did.

Again, some days are just work.

Saturday, December 4

Saturday, December 4 - Business better today. Bud got haircut. Boss announced that we would have Christmas party - the 14th. Hooray!

Sunday, December 5 - My Sunday to work - 65° outside

Monday, December 6 - Got my hair fixed. Went over and picked up Bud's stereo and took it to Mom's. Had flat and had to call Triple-A

My mom loves parties. Store parties are her favorite, followed closely by bridal and baby showers. She was always the driving force behind the party games.

It took me until I was almost seventeen to figure out that Grandma Patton was the keeper of the Christmas presents. It was a safe bet - we only went there on weekends, and I didn't drive.

We were a AAA family, and we would have had them on speed dial if speed dial had been invented by then.

Wednesday, December 1


Wednesday, December 1 - Went down to Wards and picked out stereo record player - real nice

Thursday, December 2 - Not very busy today. Marv is his old sweet self again and I promise that I will never again fight with him about anything.

Friday, December 3 - No business again today.


Mom does her shopping at Wards. She's picked out a stereo for me for Christmas. Seriously. I'm fifteen years old and I don't have even the most basic record player. They aren't standard equipment for nerdy social outcasts.

Mom and dad have buried the hatchet, and mom is racked with guilt. Please understand, this is all new information for me.

















Sunday, November 28

Sunday, November 28 - Spent most of the day in bed. Bud was gone a good share of the day.

Monday, November 29 - Got my hair fixed and went to town. Got most of my shopping done

Tuesday, November 30 - 

Nothing to see here.

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Thursday, November 25

Thursday, November 25 - Bud and I went to Patty's for Thanksgiving and we had a ball! Bill and Sam and Bob and Mary were there. Paul and Linda came over later.

Friday, November 26 - Not much business today.

Saturday, November 27 - Felt terrible today. Diarrhea. Started my Christmas shopping on my way to work. Tried to buy a coat.

Holidays with mom's family were always all-out laugh-fests. Thanksgiving was always the day when we drew names for family Christmas gifts. 

Monday, November 22

Monday, November 22 - Marv and I went to Montgomery Ward and picked out a rug. Went home and Sarah offered us a rug so we took that. Anything is good enough for Dorothy. Took treatment and paid rent - 2 months

Tuesday, November 23 - Took treatment. When I got home Marv had left dishes in sink - nothing done - so I did it then I sat and bawled. What a life!

Wednesday, November 24 - Took my last treatment. Marv is beginning to thaw a little. Big deal! He did make the best pumpkin pies I ever ate.

My tone-deaf dad. It's not entirely his fault, I suppose. He grew up in Fort Scott, Kansas with five siblings in a little house out near the city limits on Wall Street.

When the Great Depression hit in 1929, dad was nineteen years old. He and his family made do, although most were able to keep working at one thing or another. Dad worked at strip-mining coal for quite a while, and then was hired at Mabel Whitside's grocery as a clerk and butcher. 

When he could, he played semi-pro baseball on Kansas barnstorming teams, playing against negro league teams and other exhibition teams like House of David. Dad boxed as what would today be classed as a light-heavyweight. Never a contender, but he won a few dollars in the ring. 

My dad is frugal, and if he can get by without buying something, he does. He was famous for painting nearly anything that didn't move, a coat of paint being as good as buying something new.

Mom and dad went to Wards to buy a rug, and after they got it home, dad told his sister Sarah about it. She offered dad a rug that she had instead, and dad took the new rug back to Wards. Mom was livid. Dad was defensive. Cold shoulders all around. You know things are bad because dad didn't do the dishes. The horror.

Dad's secret weapon in marital negotiation is the kitchen. He bought cheap cuts of meat - chuck roast, round steak - and gave them the treatment. So tender you could cut them with a spoon.

Dad took the knowledge of grains that he developed making fish bait and parlayed that into extraordinary baked goods. His pie crust was the best I've ever had, even unto this day. He originally used a combination of butter and lard, but gradually converted all his recipes to vegetable oil. I won't even start on the huge cinnamon rolls he made. They are the reason for my teenage pudginess.


Friday, November 19

Friday, November 19 - Brian's birthday. Business is better.

Saturday, November 20 - Marv was mad when I left this morning. Bud is going to be gone all day. When I got home he was still out.

Sunday, November 21 - Worked today. Got along fine. Business was fair. Bud stayed home all day today.

Tuesday, November 16

Tuesday, November 16 - One of the best days of this year. Meat strike is over. Bill didn't have a heart attack - a muscle spasm. Took first of 6 x-ray treatments. Wasn't that a wonderful day? I think so.

Wednesday - November 17 - Meatcutters came back to work. Very quiet.

Thursday, November 18 - Business is picking up again. Bud went to Philharmonic tonight.

The strike is finally over. The meatcutters signed a new contract, and took down the picket lines. Kroger was one of the last to agree to terms, as I remember.

The Kansas City Philharmonic was led by the world-famous Dr. Hans Schweiger. I had been fortunate to be a regular visitor to hear the orchestra through the efforts of the Kansas City Public Schools. From the fifth-grade on, there were regular field trips to the Music Hall in Municipal Auditorium in downtown Kansas City.  Sundays in our part of Kansas City were always filled with music. The Italian houses always played Caruso at full volume, and we listened to The Kansas City Hour, a weekly showcase of the Philharmonic under the baton of Dr. Schweiger. Their adopted theme music was Richard Strauss's comic opera, "Der Rosenkavalier." The music still  gives me goosebumps.

The auditorium itself was an art deco wonder, and had a 10,000 seat arena, an exhibition hall, a little theatre, and the magnificent Music Hall. 

When you walked into the Music Hall you were struck by the sheer size and scope of the place. The walls were scalloped, and covered in red fabric, accented with gold stripes. The proscenium seemed small by comparison, but the feature that always blew me away was the ceiling. It was sculpted in the shape of a lyre, and the hall followed those curves.



I don't remember what that night's program was, but I remember being taken by my trumpet tutor, Mr. Thomas. He was a friend of one of my dad's fishing friends, who was friends with the Philharmonic's concertmaster. Got that?

I also remember that this was the night when the world opened up. I was able to meet Dr. Schweiger backstage after the performance. Mr. Thomas made sure I got to meet the first-chair trumpet and several other musicians. Dr. Schweiger gave me an album of Schubert's Symphony No. 8, the Unfinished Symphony, recorded by the orchestra and signed by him. I knew what i wanted to do with my life. Of course, this would change dramatically in 1969.

Saturday, November 13

Saturday, November 13 - Cold and rainy. The police were out 4 times today - finally put Dale Sherman in jail for the night. Hess was out and cussed out Johnson and Lon. Went home disgusted, disheartened, discouraged.

Sunday, November 14 - Drove with Lee, Myrtle, and mom to the cemetery. Came home and learned that Bill had been rushed to the hospital - heart attack or pneumonia. No visitors, What a year!

Monday, November 15 - Got my hair fixed at a new place. She did a good job for $1.75 Called Sims and Hesser and i have to have more x-ray treatments starting tomorrow. Bill's the same.

Dale worked with mom. All I remember is the reports that he was bad news. Every store has one like him. Hess was a company VP, and called store manager Ken Johnson and Co-Manager Lon Unsell on the carpet. Who knows why.

Myrtle is mom's aunt from Topeka - the rich relatives. They headed to our family reserve in Leavenworth County to visit family. 

Mom's brother Bill is a cop in Overland Park, Kansas. He always struck me as a bit high-strung, but nice enough. He's in trouble.

Wednesday, November 10

Wednesday, November 10 - Bud is still home from school. Worked - business is better all the time. One by one the clerks drift back.

Thursday, November 11 - Bud is better. Started a period today so I'll probably have to take more treatments. Jean is still mad at me.

Friday, November 12 - Business is pretty good considering everything. Bud wanted to go to the drive-in tonight and I said no. He recovered shortly.

Things are getting back to normal as the remaining clerks cross the picket lines and go back to work. The union bosses are livid, but people have to eat.

Mom is dealing with continuing effects of her cancer surgery and the treatments.

The drive-in. Always the drive-in.

Sunday, November 7

Sunday, November 7 - Went to Mom's church. Had dedication services for new altar. Then went to Patty's for dinner. Bob and Mary came over. Hope Bob someday will feel the same about me as he used to.

Monday, November 8 - Marv and I wrote checks and paid all our bills for the month. Then I went and got a permanent. Real good one, too.

Tuesday, November 10 - Bud has the intestinal flu. He started vomiting and couldn't stop. Slept practically all day. Sam M____________ is back in the store with us.

Mom and her brother have some friction. Whether it's related to her crossing the picket lines, I don't know.

The bills get paid. This makes my mom happy. The strike was wearing her out with worry.

When a kid my sizes starts puking, it gets your attention.

Thursday, November 4

Thursday, November 4 - Worked again today. More threats but I don't care. Jean is mad at me but Bob isn't. Marv worries about me getting hurt and I'm having a ball. Mr. Oliver was in and patted us on our backs.

Friday, November 5 - The men in our store are all "afraid" to come back to work. The same ones who ran out the back door during the hold-up. I'm still having a ball. feel great about the whole thing.

Saturday, November 6 - Worked as usual. Came home exhausted. Bud went to the drive-in and got in about 12. I didn't sleep well.


Mom is dancing with the devil, and she's leading. 

She's crossed the Meatcutters' picket line and gone back to work. This causes a fair amount of friction within the family as well as at work. Mom's sister, my aunt Jean - the mean one - is a meat wrapper and her husband Frank is a meatcutter, both of them working for A&P. Jean would be inclined to read mom the riot act for crossing the lines.

My uncle Bob is a Kroger meatcutter. He totally gets why mom wants to go back to work, and supports her decision. 

Dad is concerned, and rightly so, that mom is in danger. The Meatcutters has the support of the Teamsters and has been putting sugar in the gas tanks of anyone who crossed the picket lines. Tires were slashed. Mom escaped from the violence, but was repeatedly threatened. It seems that in 1965, even rabid union members wouldn't intentionally hurt a woman. The men in the store know there are ball bats waiting for them, though.

We got phone calls at home at all hours of the day and night. They were not nice. A guy came to pick me up at school, claiming that my dad had been in a car wreck. My dad didn't have a car of his own in those days, so I made a beeline back into the school and called him. Bogus. My suspicions may have saved my life. They never found that guy.

Eventually, we changed from our old phone number, BE (Benton) 1-6111 to the palindromic BE 1-7132 (231-7132) It was an unlisted number, and my little heartthrob pal Patty thought that was the coolest thing she had ever heard of.

Mom was never too impressed with the courage of the men in her store. The year before, the day before my birthday, on a Friday, when the store had the most cash on hand, three armed, masked, men entered the store at 31st and Minnesota Avenue, emptied the tills, forced mom to open the safe, and pistol-whipped the women who were working behind the counters in the bakery and the deli. Every single solitary man in the store fled out the back door, and took cover in the fire station across the street, while the four women did battle with the assailants. At one point, two shots were fired into the ceiling. The silent alarms were triggered, and by the time the police arrived, the robbers were speeding away toward Missouri. They were caught just before they reached the Intercity Viaduct, and all three spent time in the Kansas Penitentiary in Lansing, Kansas.

After his release, the leader of the hold-up became a respectable businessman in Kansas City, operating a palette wholesale business. With her permission, he came to see mom a few years later, and apologized to her. They had lunch. She invited him to her church, and introduced him to the congregation. They prayed together. They stayed in touch for a number of years.

Ain't my mom something?

Monday, November 1

 


Monday, November 1 - Went to school. Marv had snow tires put on. Laid the law down to Bud about his activities, his car and his grades. Worked 5 - 9. Long evening. 

Tuesday, November 2 - Went to school. Then home and to bed exhausted. More phone calls and decisions. At 9 Mick called and we decided to go back to work. 

Wednesday, November 3 - Went to work and am so relieved. Clarence Dunn came in and told us we would be fined. So now I'd work no matter what.

I was a social lion in those days. Yeah, right. I have no idea what mom was on about, although I did spend quite a bit of time at the drive-in with Sandy and her little topless pal, and Ron and Mike took up the rest of my spare time. 

We didn't do anything particularly exciting. We just hung out.

My grades were dismal. I got behind in school two years earlier after a ten day stint in the hospital to have my tonsils out. (There's a story there. I'll fill you in later.) After I got out of the hospital, I had another seven days at home for an unrelated infection. By the time I got back to school, my advanced classes - SMSG Math, Immersive Spanish, Instrumental Music, and Language Arts - had all moved on, and I was hopelessly left behind. You know that feeling when you miss a day and you come back and everyone is speaking Esperanto? Multiply that feeling by twenty.

The following year, I was moved down a level to classes more befitting my grades. Jesus, what a crashing bore that turned out to be. I had no recourse, though. My reaction was to stop worrying about succeeding and focus more on surviving junior high school among the general population. Sounds like prison, doesn't it? Yeah, I probably needed a talking to.

My mom has definitely had it up to here with collective bargaining. 

Mom and her buddies have decided to suck it up, cross the picket lines, and go back to work.

This is what is commonly referred to as the "Shit hitting the fan." The union representative has informed mom that this is going to cost her. That grating sound you hear is mom digging in her heels. 

She's tough as they come. She will be tested in the weeks to come.


Sunday, October 31

Sunday, October 31 - Drove to Topeka to get mom. 

Bud spent the day with Ron and Mike and was gone when we got home. 

Everybody is putting pressure on us to do this or that. Mickey and I have decided to stay away from the store till this whole mess is over. 

The union will get us if we go back to work and the company will get us if we don't. One thing is sure - whatever we do it will be the wrong thing.

Mom has figured out that the deck is stacked against her and her compatriots.

She will soon act on that information.

Thursday, October 28

Thursday, October 28 - Worked 9 - 6 today. Bud had to go in early. Teamsters went back to work today and as usual the clerks are holding the bag. No health and welfare insurance.

Friday, October 29 - Bud had to go early today to practice band. Worked 10 - 7. Mickey worked 12 - 9. Went to union office and paid my dues. 

Saturday, October 30 - Got up at 5 to get Bud off for Warrensburg and then couldn't go back to sleep. Worked 12 - 9 - busy as a bee.

The Teamsters held all the cards in the Meatcutters lockout. I can't remember the exact ins and outs of this strike, but it would still be a while before the Meatcutters could go back to the stores. Until then, the Clerks were last in line. I remember my mom getting pretty steamed about the situation, complaining that the Union leadership was still drawing a salary through all of this fiasco. That we were not going to get health insurance through the union has mom sizzling. 

I had to go in early for marching band practice. We didn't practice on the football field like normal people, we marched on the streets surrounding the school. This was our way of punishing the blue-collar neighborhood for supporting us. Marching began at 7:00 a.m. sharp. We didn't march with muffled drums or with cross stick rim clicks. We marched like we meant it. God, it must have sounded awful. 

"Thelma! They're at it again! That damned band is parked in front of the house, beating those infernal drums! Don't they know it's only 7:00 a.m.?" 

"Yes Homer, I can hear them. I'll call the school again."
The Adventures of Homer and Thelma are made possible by actual people who lived in my neighborhood. 
The band, under the baton of one Mr. Harry Bianco, staged behind the school and took off, drums echoing between the houses, north on Chelsea Avenue to Budd Park Esplanade, a couple of laps around the Esplanade, a concert stop where Chelsea split the parkway, and then back to the school for an 8:15 first bell by way of Brighton Avenue. This was and is a tight squeeze down residential streets lined on both sides by Arts and Crafts bungalows. More than once, we had to break ranks to let cars through, although it was a lot more fun to stare them down and make them wait or back up.




Our drum line played a military "B" cadence, and if the band played, it was probably Sousa's "Washington Post". If we played at a football game, our celebration song was "On Wisconsin." I really don't know why. Mizzou's "Every True Son" and "Fight, Tigers!"would have been much nicer. especially for us Missouri loyalists. Jeez, even the Missouri Waltz would have been better than "On Wisconsin." 

Our school was The Vikings. There aren't many good Viking anthems, and Led Zeppelin wouldn't release "The Immigrant Song" for a few more years. I'll have to admit, it would make a nicely intimidating touchdown celebration at a high school football game, especially if the band went storming the opposition's bench, setting fire to their busses and abducting their . . . oops, sorry, I'm thinking of a football game in Bonner Springs, Kansas my senior year.

The funny part was that it really didn't make much difference. We were a small band, even by 1965 standards. I'd guess we had maybe thirty-five kids in uniform, not including majorettes and banner. Musically, we were pretty awful. This set of practices is a last-minute attempt to tighten up our marching skills before the Missouri State Marching Band Championships in Warrensburg, Missouri.

The contest started with a parade through beautiful downtown Warrensburg, followed by a massed band concert at halftime at the Central Missouri State College homecoming game. The bands were judged on marching skills, musicianship, and other intangibles, like if their white shoes weren't stained with horse crap from an earlier parade. 

It was kind of a big deal for us, and the trip to Warrensburg and back helped me make a connection with a little strawberry blonde that I had quite frankly, overlooked until we were staging for the parade. I kissed her behind the grandstand before we got back on the bus for home. It was my first real face-sucking episode, and as I remember, I enjoyed it. 

She and I were an item for the rest of the school year, and some years after that, on and off. She was my regular date in Elmwood Cemetery for music practice and homework. And other stuff.


Monday, October 25


Monday, October 25 -Had my hair done and Ball's called me to work. Had other plans but thought I'd better work. Every store has a Mickey.

Tuesday, October 26 - Started school. A long way to go. Marie wants to go to union meeting tomorrow but what's the use. They give you the same snow job.

Wednesday, October 27 - Went to school today. Got along much better. Wish I could go every day.

Mom isn't enjoying working at Ball's, but money is money.

"Every store has a Mickey!" You can use this phrase in nearly any endeavor, because you can always find someone that makes your life interesting in one way or another. Mom's foil was Mickey. Mickey was nice, if melodramatic, and as we would characterize someone like her in today's terms, "high maintenance."

Mom has no interest in going to the Union meeting because she knows the deck is stacked against the rank and file. I went to one Retail Clerks Union meeting in 1970. It was a joke. While the clerks maintained an impossibly high wage for employees, most of what you heard was a canned response to management, heels dug in, and waiting for the money to materialize.

The Retail Clerks and the Amalgamated Meatcutters eventually priced themselves and Kroger out of Kansas City. Mom went to work as a cashier trainer, and I helped her open ten store in the area before the bottom dropped out. When I left Kansas City in late 1972 to pursue fame and fortune as an apprentice carpenter in Colorado, I was making  almost seven bucks an hour. In today's dollars, that's about 42 bucks an hour!!

Mom is getting the hang of the keypunch training. 

Friday, October 22

Friday, October 22 - Worked 5 - 9 - real busy but had a sacker and that helps. went to Thriftway to get groceries. 14 checkstands going full blast, waiting 5 + 6 in each checkstand!

Saturday, October 23 - Patty called this morning and offered to pay my tuition through IBM school. Such a marvel she is!

Sunday, October 24 - Went to Cherryvale again today and on to Coffeyville to Ed's for dinner. Nice day. Beautiful. Clarence is doing all right. Mom Simpson went with us and seemed to enjoy herself.

The other independent stores in Kansas City reaped the rewards of the meat-cutters' strike. Thriftway was owned by the Cascio family, and we would normally never shop there. Dad did, on occasion, buy white Karo corn syrup for his Karp Kandy bait there because they carried it four one gallon cans to a case.

Karp Kandy, Sniffy's green label carp bait was unique in the fish bait universe because it was a white dough bait. I confess that more than once, I ate some of it while I was running the packaging line. It was delicious. All of dad's baits were food-safe recipes. There was nothing in them that could do you much harm. Even the sodium propionate preservative was at levels below your basic loaf of white bread. I also tried dad's experimental anise-flavored bait, and I regularly ate Red Top, Big Thunder, Bud's Best, and once considered for a second the idea of trying some of dad's catfish bait. Once I took the lid off, I changed my mind. Aged, fermented, cheese with just the slightest putrescent aroma of carrion. Yum. Hard pass.*

Dad's Sniffy Bait Trademark Registration with the U.S. Patent Office

Again, IBM is school for punchcard operators. My mom and her sister were closer than you can possibly imagine. 

My aunt Patty died of cancer in 1976. It was really almost too much for my mom to bear. She was as brought down, as pale and unnerved as I had ever seen her.

Back to Cherryvale and Coffeyville. Grandma Simpson went along for the ride.

*Mine was not a delicate palate. I was also fond of Strongheart dog food. Just sayin'.


Tuesday, October 19

Tuesday, October 19 - Ironed most of the day and spent some of the day in front of the television watching Senator Long investigation. Finished ironing.

Wednesday, October 20 - Took Marv to doctor, has flu. He's worried about Clarence. Watched more of Senator Long. Ball's called me to work tomorrow.

Thursday, October 21 - Worked today for Ball's. One checkstand is like all the rest. Ate lunch at Crown and saw Byron. It looks like a long strike.

Ironing. It's a lost art. I was taught at the age of ten, ands I've never asked anyone else to iron anything for me. Back then almost everything was cotton, dress shirts needed starch, and ironing was a necessary evil.

I honestly don't know what investigation my mom is referring to. If anyone has a notion who Senator Long was and why he or anyone else was being investigated, let me know. It must have been something worth reporting if it was on television.

Dad has the flu, and is concerned for his brother.

Ball's was another Kansas-side independent grocer. Mom got the call to work there for a bit and finds that if you've seen one grocery store, you've seen them all. I will back her up on that.

Byron is Byron Scanlon, co-manager at mom's store on Minnesota Avenue and soon to be store manager at the Kroger store at 60th and Leavenworth Road in Kansas City, Kansas. Super-nice guy, and eleven months from this date, he'd be my first store manager. Mom hooked me up with a job as a sacker just after my 16th birthday. Eleven miles one way from the house in Missouri. Worked my way up in the Kroger system until I moved to Colorado late in 1972.

Saturday, October 16

Saturday, October 16 - Bud was in American Royal Parade. Big deal. Plan to go to Cherryvale tomorrow. Spent afternoon running errands. 

Sunday, October 17 - Drove to Cherryvale. Ate breakfast at Garnett and supper at Osawatomie. Had a real pleasant day considering everything. I would like to have stayed but Marv decided against it.

Monday, October 18 - Got hair fixed and helped do washing.

I can't tell if mom's being sarcastic or supportive. yes, I know she's being supportive, it's just her attempt at brevity. The American Royal Parade is definitely a big deal in Kansas City, although in recent years they've shortened it quite a bit.

It used to stage up near Quality Hill, then meander down to the base of Main Street then down to Grand Avenue, all the way to Union Station. Here is actual footage of the parade the year before featuring our very own Northeast High School marching Vikings. They show up around 1:12 Note the sparkly uniforms and white shoes.



This view is on Grand Avenue, at 17th Street, facing west. 

The trip to Cherryvale, Kansas would have taken six hours in those days, counting a food stop, down US 69 by way of Pittsburg and Parsons. "Breakfast at Garnett." We probably left the house at four in the morning. Our trips were always marked by the meals we had. For years one of regular stops on the way to Fort Scott was in Louisburg, Kansas. The small cafe had a neon sign with an illuminated coffee cup with glowing neon steam coming from it. The pancakes were hot and slathered in butter and syrup and the milk was frothy and ice cold. Sorry, I got sidetracked thinking about road food.

Dad is a homebody. He'd rather spend the whole day driving than spend the night in Cherryvale. I get that from my dad. I'm also pretty sure he was a bit envious of his brother Clarence. They were both butchers, but Clarence had a meat locker in Fort Scott and then moved his business to Cherryvale when dad moved back to Kansas City to keep mom happy.

Uncle Clarence then built a nice ranch house in Cherryvale. His son Roger let me drive his four-speed Corvair Monza this trip to town. They were the most affluent of the Simpsons, although you would never accuse them of being well-off. Compared to us, though, they were in high cotton.






Wednesday, October 13

Bud has been home for three days with a sore throat

Wednesday, October 13 - Met Marie and went to Sav-on. As poor as I am I hope they don't call me. What a mess! The four of us had coffee together and then home to wait it out.

Thursday, October 14 - Dodgers won the pennant. Rained all day. Didn't budge out of the house. Lucille Simpson died at 4 this morning. We may go down Sunday.

Friday, October 15 - Went to the store to pick up my check. Kroger will mail them. Stayed home the rest of the day. Bought groceries at Thriftway.

Mom and her friends are busy trying to find work. Sav-On was an independent store on the Kansas side of the State Line, and as I remember it, was more warehouse than supermarket. Industrial metal buildings and bare concrete floors were not impressive to my mom's way of thinking. The sound echoed around those places like a box canyon.

My dad was a big Dodgers fan, mostly, I think, on the strength of Sandy Koufax, although dad seemed to talk a lot about Walter Alston. I was a Don Dysdale fan. I don't think mom had a dog in the fight, but the pennant is duly noted.

Lucille Simpson is the wife of my Uncle Clarence, dad's brother. He and Lucille live in Cherryvale, Kansas. She died young, at fifty-four. It's a couple of hundred miles to Cherryvale from home, so any trip there will be an adventure. I'd bet we'll stop in Fort Scott and pick up Grandma Simpson.

Mom can't even cross the picket lines to get her paycheck.