The old rusty Nail
AN E-JOURNAL FOR OLD PEOPLE
I REMEMBER WHEN
Russell
Burton, an Old Person
I remember my folks bought a new 1938 Chevrolet demonstrator for about $600. Back then a car dealer had one car that he used to drive people around to show how it rode and drove. He would roll back the mileage indicator and sell if for a discount. It still had a hole in the grill so that a crank could be used to start the motor in case the battery went dead. A new feature that was there to show potential buyers, remember it was a demonstrator, was a little light that was screwed onto the bottom of the dash that indicated when the headlights were bright or dim. Of course the following year, this indicator was incorporated into the speedometer. The headlight dimmer switch was on the floor board.
Also, that was the last year that the gearshift
was located on the floor. In 1939 it was
moved onto the steering wheel shaft. Of
course, today it is back on the floor.
Another great feature was a push-button radio. I believe that it got about 15 mpg gas
mileage. Gas then was about 5 cents a
gallon.
I worked at a gas station for a couple of years
after high school was out. On every car
that came into the station, I pumped gas, cleaned the windshield, checked the
tire pressure and the motor oil level, and collected the money for the gas and
oil if needed. No credit cards then or self-service gas pumps. I was paid about
50 cents an hour wages.
Clothes were washed using a modern electric washer
that was a tank of soapy water and an agitator.
When the clothes were washed the tank was drained and filled with clear
water. Water was then rung out of the
clothes with two rubber rollers and then the wet clothes were hung up to dry on
a clothes line.
Of course, in the 30s and 40s there was no
TV. Our entertainment consisted of
playing the game of Monopoly, listening to the radio, and reading books. The radio used vacuum tubes that burned out
frequently not transistors. Of course people had hobbies that entertained
them. I was a stamp collector then,
spending hours upon hours finding from which country each of my stamps had
originated. Playing the piano was common.
My mother played one that we owned for many years. We listened to music
played from a 78 rpm black recording disk using technologies invented by Thomas
Edison. Then came the 45s, followed by
the wire, and finally the tape player.
Of course now, it’s all digital down-loaded onto an IPod.
I saw my first TV in 1950 in a store window at
night walking down a small town street. The
picture was a bit fuzzy in black and white of course with a kind of round
picture tube. It was an amazing experience.
Of course, those amazing experiences with advances in technologies are
gone forever. Now, new technologies
arrive in stores daily.
Back then, many homes still had outdoor
toilets. So, a common Halloween stunt
was to tip them over. A house was called
‘modern’ if it had indoor toilets. I remember
visiting my grandparent’s farm in Nebraska
and using their outdoor toilet. They
never did get an indoor toilet.
Recalling my summer visits to visit my
grandparents, my grandfather worked about 250 acres using farm equipment pulled
by two work horses. Chicken eggs were
gathered each day. Milk from their cows
was churned by hand into butter using the cream that had been separated with a
hand operated separator from the milk.
The skimmed milk was fed to the pigs. Each Sunday we had roasted chicken
from one of their unlucky chickens that had been killed by cutting off its head
with an ax and dunked into boiling water to loosen the feathers. Then feathers were pulled off the bird. It was certainly fresh meat.
Of course in 1941 came World War II that dominated
the news for many years. Gas, car tires,
butter, sugar, and meat were rationed.
We had a C gas book of stamps so we could only buy 5 gal of gas each
week. And, we lived in the country! Instead
of butter we used oleo margarine that was called simply ‘Oleo’. It came white with a small sack of yellow
coloring that we rubbed into the white stuff to make it yellow and look like
butter. I understood that the dairy industry
required that oleo be sold white so as not to compete fairly with butter that
was hard to get anyway.
My father ran a German Prisoner of War camp in
Arbuckle California ,
during the end of the war. There are
lots of stories to tell about those times.
I bet very few people in Arbuckle even knew that a POW camp was just
outside their town. After, the war it
was turned into a Mexican National Work Camp.
In those days, Mexican men were allowed to come to the US to work the crops during the summer going
home to Mexico in the winter
with some much needed money for their families living in Mexico . The
camp buildings were torn down many years ago.
In 1950 I entered college at the University of California
at Davis . At that time it was primarily an agricultural
college but with a new Veterinary
Medical School
that I wanted to get into. There was no
tuition fee. The only cost each semester
was $35 to cover medical needs plus $6 for a football ticket for all of the
fall games. I did get into Veterinary Medical School
in 1952 with an all men class. Now days,
most Veterinary Classes are dominated by women. Back then, about 1600 students
attended Davis . Now I believe about 35,000 attend that university.
I belonged to a fraternity house. We didn’t have a TV because we feared that it
would interfere with class studies. So,
I walked over to the Alumni Hall each Sunday evening to watch Jackie Gleason’s
and Sid Cesar and Imogene Coca’s comedy shows. What entertainment that was,
particularly when TV to me was so new.
I worked as a hasher in the fraternity house. I washed and dried dishes, set the table, and
served the food for 35 guys three times each day. For that work, I was given my Board of $60
each month. They still charged me $15
for my room that I shared with another guy.
To this day, I wash my own dishes by hand.
My other job that I had and needed the money to
get through school was working for the U.S. Forest Service as a Back Country
Guard putting out forest fires. I rode a
horse and had two mules to pack and carry in my food over a trail that took 6
hours to get to my cabin for the summer. I was allowed to return to town once
during the summer. I mention this because it was not unlike my grandparents
lived but even more primitive for I did not have electricity or water plumbed
into the house. Remember farmers got
electricity in the 1930a because of Roosevelt ’s
Rural Electrification Program. I used an
outdoor toilet, showered once a week with water running from a large bucket
raised up by a rope under a tree limb.
Coleman gas lanterns were used for light at night, carried in water from
a nearby Spring and I cooked with a wood fueled stove. No refrigeration, so fresh food was only
available when I first moved back there each year. My entertainment was a battery operated
radio. The battery cost $10 and didn’t
last very long, so the radio was used very sparingly for then $10 was lots of
money. You know, I remember those days fondly for those were experiences that
were challenging but rewarding in many ways.
Well, I have reminisced enough for this issue of
The Old Rusty Nail. We must remember
that we are special because we can only have these memories if we lived them. That
is the only way to get them. You can’t go out and buy them no matter how much
money you have. I wonder about the memories of today’s young people when they
get old. Will they enjoy looking back at
them like I and I suppose you do?
As always look for a new column for old people
each month on this Blog.
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