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Walking to the Library Mr. Barle and the Hearing Aid Trick-or-Treat The El Rancho Theater The Law of Supply and Demand The Contact Lense Locking your Doors Arvin's First Community Center The 500 yard Dash Accident Momma and the Pillsbury Poppin Biscuits July 07 August 07 September 07 October 07 November 07 December 07 January 08 February 08 March 08 April 08 May 08 June 08 July 08 August 08 September 08 October 08 November 08 December 08 January 09 February 09 March 09 April 09 May 09 June 09 July 09 August 09 September 09 October 09 November 09
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Growing up in Arvin, California in the 50’s was fun. Twenty-one miles from Bakersfield and only seven miles from the famous Weedpatch, Ca. mentioned in the John Steinbeck’s book “The Grapes of Wrath”. We considered ourselves the town located south-of-the-tracks of a known poor-ole Okie town. The summers were unbearably hot, usually more than 110o, and for us kids running around barefoot in this temperature, it was very uncomfortable. Fortunately, there were not too many concrete sidewalks and you got use to your feet getting hot as they buried themselves in the sand with each step, or hot tar stuck to your feet from the melted asphalt streets as you ran across them, not to dodge traffic, but to keep from getting stuck to the tar. It was a special treat to get to the El Rancho Movie Theater. If your momma was kind and your family was “well–to-do,” she would give you the 25 cents to get in and sometimes another 50 cents to get some candy, popcorn and a soda. Most of my friends lived in the farm labor camp on the next street over from our house and their parents either worked seven days a week or still could not afford to give them the money to get in. They would go out, collect refillable pop bottles, returning them to the local markets for their deposit so that they had money to come also. I would go along and help them look for pop bottles which had been discarded along side of the road. We would often walk miles before we could get enough unbroken bottles to cash in for money for all of my friends to get in to the show. Most of the bottles were worth five cents each. Now the El Rancho Theater was run by a grouchy, rutty faced old man named Ernie Martinez who chain smoked cheap cigars. The popcorn smelled pretty bad and had a smokey flavor, but what did we kids know? Each Saturday Ernie was faced with an endless line of kids who were perpetually 12 years old, because the rate tripled to a unbelievable high 75 cents at age 13. Poor Ernie was faced with the undaunting task of asking each kid his age and trying to trap them by also asking them for their birthdates. After all, you can’t expect 12 year olds to carry drivers licenses – though a few of them had been driving for several years and offered to show their Draft cards as proof they were only 12 years old. He finally got smart and started keeping a list of all the kids’ names and ages. He probably had a more comprehensive list than the information at the schools. More than once, Ernie threatened to tattoo our birthdates on the center of our foreheads, since they seemed to change each week. Go figure! Gary S., Gary N, Pogie and I met there every weekend, along with all my Camp friends and we would play tag and war in the theater. Heads bobbing over the seats, throwing popcorn, jujubes, Dots or what ever we could find. Then the noise of kids scurrying back and forth on our hands and knees trying to get a better vantage location Black Dots candy would be stuck all over our clothes after people had put them into their mouth and then spit them wet onto the floor. In a town with only a thousand residents, there were not that many kids and a lot of vacant seats between the older teenage couples huddled together in a three hour long embrace. Ernie would shine his light on anyone who got too frisky within either group. We finally figured out that the main reason most of us were sent to the movie theater was to allow our parents several uninterrupted hours where they could make more kids. This was the era of the cheap Japanese horror flicks and California surfing movies. Usually each week was the same scenario, you would go into a semi-dark theater with a Hi-Fi playing scratchy classical selections, the action would start with a serial such as BUCK ROGERS; News of the Day showing the latest news from the battle front in Korea; a first rate Disney cartoon; the “A rated” movie; intermission; then a prize drawing MC’ed by Ernie-complete with his cigar; a second rated Looney-Toon cartoon; and the second “B rated” movie. Twenty five cents was a lot to pay, but it was marginally worth it with the prize drawing. As I got older, the weekend adventures with my boy type friends changed as I noticed that some of them were developing bumps on their chest. From that point on it was sort of a pre-drivers education, where you learned to be a contortionist, trying to kiss while seated with a chair arm between each other and not be too obvious. If you got too frisky Ernie would shine his light on the offending couple which would illicit general cat calls by the other couples laughing as the light was trained on you, as clothes was straightened and we sat up straight and tried to deny ever having met the person sitting next to us.
In 1957, at the tender age of 11, Capitalism had hit me hard. I learned that people would pay you to mow their lawns. I loved this task so much, that I would have paid them for the privilege. I was outside and got to handle heavy equipment. Well, at least the equipment was heavy for an 11-year-old boy. Not only did I have a lawn-mowing service in Arvin, but also, when my parents went traveling. We would barely get into the house of the relative that we were visiting, before I was asking if I could mow their lawns. They were glad to agree, if for no other reason that to get me out from under-foot.
Some lawns proved to be quite tricky for a geeky, 90-pound boy from Arvin where everything in the town was flat. Our relatives lived in the cities back east and their small lawns were on such a slope that if you slipped on the wet grass, you slid all the way to the sidewalk on your rear end. I left more than one home with green grass streaks down the backside of my pants. Others lived on farms that had grass up to your knees. Still, I loved the smell of new-mown grass and the steady whirr that the lawnmower blades made as they spun.
Then there was the issue of different equipment. I used everything; from swing sickles, to push mowers, rotary mowers, reel mowers, electric mowers and even mowers that used a white-gas and oil mix. I became quite adept at small engine repair and troubleshooting. This talent proved quite useful, such as the time that I accidentally reversed, the non-vented gas can lid with the vented gas tank lid, not noticing that the lids were the same size. The mower, which had been working fine, suddenly would not start, after I had filled the gas tank.
When we got back to my Grandfathers farm outside Louisville, Kentucky, my Uncle Dee dragged out my Grandfather’s old white gas/oil rotary mower. He started the mower on the patio, eased it into the front lawn, cutting a patch about three feet square. He then handed me the starter rope that was used to start the mower and the one-gallon can of gas/oil mix. He pointed to the Dixie Highway that ran in front of my Grandfather’s farm, about five acres away and said, “Go that a-way!”
There stood before me, grass that was almost a foot tall, as far as my little eyes could see. If the mower was stalled, you would have to drag the mower clear back to the patio, then wind the rope around the starter pulley to get a single pull effort to get it going again. In addition, there was no throttle cable, only a string with a loop tied in it, near the rear cross handlebar which ran to the carburetor. With the loop around your finger, you constantly played with it to keep the mower running, racing the engine as you plowed into the tall grass. When the mower ran out of gas, I had to walk three miles down a hill to the Conco Gas station, where I could buy the white gas and oil separately. I was never so glad to hear my parents tell me it was time to go home that year.
One of the yards that I mowed each Wednesday after school in Arvin, was Mrs. Bishop’s yard. She lived right across from my Aunt Helen and Uncle Bud Warns on the corner of Myer Street and Orange Avenue. Her lawn was quite large and I would mow it, once a week, for $1.50. Her adult son came over one Wednesday and watched me mow the lawn from her porch. He pointed out, that I should lower the mower one notch, and mowed the lawn both directions, rather than my customary one direction. By doing this, I would only have to mow the lawn every other week, as he handed me my usual $1.50 for that week, even though he had doubled my time and effort while cutting my wages in half.
I told my Father and Brother about this and they convinced me that I was foolish to agree to those terms. They insisted that I should go right back over there and demand double wages for double effort. I marched back over and told them my terms and they told me that they would think about it.
The following Wednesday, after getting out of school, I rode my red-Schwinn bicycle over to mow Mrs. Bishop’s lawn, as I had every other week. There was Butch, the kid that lived behind my Aunt and Uncle who had a wooden leg due to an auto accident several years earlier, there mowing MY lawn. I watched from my Uncles driveway, as he gladly mowed the yard both directions and received his $1.50 wages. This was his only yard that he had to mow, and like me, when I started, he would have probably paid them for the privilege to mow it.
Rather than being happy that my handicapped friend had a job, I felt betrayed and cheated. Then, I should have been glad that I was not the one being required to do the double effort for half the original wages. I unfortunately, dwelt on the fact that I had lost a client and a friend at the same time. These are the same feelings that everyone feels when they lose their job to people who are willing to do the same job, or more, for the same or less money and this was my first big lesson of the Law of Supply and Demand.
THE END
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