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If Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie had lived in Midland then, that's where they would have lived, on Park Drive. Herbert Henry Dow lived in a home on West Main Street and then you turned onto Park Drive. This made the bun taste a little greasy which when mixed with catsup made a taste that was to die for. You got your hamburger really quick that way and just before the hamburger was ready for the bun, Rod would slap a bun down on the grill, too. He stood there with a spatula and smashed the hamburger down on the grill and then sort of mushed it around. When you ordered your hamburger he cooked it right there on a grill that was in plain sight. Rod was a tall guy (when you're small everyone is tall) and he wore a white apron and a white hat sort of perched on the side of his head. It was called Rod's Hamburgers and it had the best hamburgers in town. It was so narrow there was only room for booths on one side. Scrunched on the other side of the Frolic Theatre was a building that looked like a streetcar. Their meals were excellent and they also sold ice cream and candy bars. The Frolic Sweet Shop was next to the Frolic Theatre on the corner of Gordon and Main. Their slogan was "It's okay to owe Kaye's." You could "lay" something away for as little as 50 cents and then every week you paid something on your layaway until it was paid in full. There was a store called Kaye's Clothing Store on Main Street. And there was a magazine by the checkout counter called Woman's Day that cost a nickel. Jane Parker made a chocolate cake that was almost as good as Mom's. supermarket was on the corner of Benson Street and Main. They seemed so authoritarian I thought they probably had the power to put people in jail if you made any noise in their facility. That's why for years I thought the two elderly women with the snow-white hair, dark dresses and pearl necklaces owned the library. When I was little I just assumed that whoever was at the desk owned the place. I guess that's why I grew up with eclectic tastes in reading. Not knowing anything about children's literature, he chose what he thought looked interesting. Now you can read all the books you want."Įxcept I didn't go to the library for awhile so Dad picked out books he thought I would like. Then one night he came home with the library card and handing it to me, he said, "Here, Babe.
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Another night it might have been a box of crayons and a nickel tablet with the picture of an Indian in full headdress on the cover. One night it might be a book of paper dolls. I had been quite sick and missed the last half of the third grade and every night Dad would drive downtown after work and pick up something to bring home to me. When I was eight years old I got my first library card. The Andrew Carnegie Library and the Midland Community Center were side by side on Townsend Street just around the corner from Main Street. When we got back to the car, we would start singing the songs and Mom would say, "Can't you wait until we get home to start singing?" Mothers were notorious critics. When Jean and I got older we would buy the magazines that had the words to all the latest songs.
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Mom would look at the movie magazines and home magazines trying to decide what ones to buy. Every Thursday night we stopped at the McCandless News Agency where Dad would buy magazines with names like Liberty, The Saturday Evening Post, Colliers and Look. McCandless' son, Jack, at Carpenter Street School. McCandless News Agency was on Main Street and I was in the same grade as Mr. I thought how can the policeman know if the car was parked too long if the car wasn't there when he got back? I asked Dad why he did that and he said it was so the policeman could tell if the car was parked too long. As he walked by the parked cars he would make a mark on the front tire with the chalk. got all over the clothes which were hanging on the clotheslines.Ĭity Hall was a large red brick building on Ashman Street and it also contained the police department and the fire station.Ī young man in a policeman's uniform walked up and down the street carrying a long stick with a piece of chalk on the end of it. Housewives hated windy washdays because then fine cinders from the great smokestacks at The Dow Chemical Co. was located on Main Street and when you got your electric light bill in the mail you actually went downtown and paid your bill in cash. He was the boss of everybody and he could fire you if you weren't doing your job right. He always wore a suit, a white shirt and a tie, even in the summertime. There was a floorwalker at the dime store and it was his job to see that all the clerks were keeping their counters nice and tidy and that customers were being waited on promptly.