... no little girl looked more like her dad than I did ... |
From there the milkman would deliver to a number of his customers, up and down the street.
The house isn’t as important as the memory of watching a horse pull the milk wagon come down the street and stop at our house.
... Arta, circa 1945 ... |
I used to study the mouth of the horse, its teeth and especially the sticky secretions that hung down from its nostrils.
The whinny of the horse frightened me, but that element of fear must be what drove me to sit on the steps day after day and watch until the milkman came to deliver the milk.
My Grandmother Blanche Scoville lived at the bottom of the hill on Memorial Drive. My mother would walk us from 12th Avenue to the brow of the hill, and then we would follow a dirt path that zig-zagged down to the Bow River and then over to grandmothers. After a good rain rivulets of water would widen small trenches that cut through that walking path. My mother would hold my hand as we would jump over them, when the hills was drier and we were on our way to grandmothers. That fear of leaping over seeming chasms hasn’t gone away.
... behind our 4 A St home ... Note the fabulous ruffle down the front of my mother's dress And can my father's tie really have been that short! |
One day, the test came when I asked my mother for 5 cents to go to 16th Avenue and buy an ice cream cone at Jenkins, the corner store.
My mother said no. Not to let that be taken as the final answer, I remember kneeling down and asking my Heavenly Father to send me an ice cream cone. I was mystified when the day went by and no ice cream cone appeared.
Two no’s.
The second one really hurt.
Arta
I am wondering it the short tie on your father was due to a shortage of silk due to the war. Ria
ReplyDeleteI didn't think of that. In reflection, I can remember reading that all men wore hats. Then the war came and no more hats, and all the little boy's pants became short -- it was all about saving for the war effort.
ReplyDeleteSo yes, I had forgotten about the shortage of silk. That spilled over to silk stockings as well, didn't it.
I look at myself in this picture: long white stockings which must have been held up by garters. So young for that. And still that little white boot that we used to put on children under one year old or those who were just beginning to walk.
Loved reading this memory and seeing the photos. Can't wait to read the next 79 entries.
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ReplyDeleteSometimes I get in here and remove stuff when I don't mean to. That is what happened above. Thanks for saying that you are looking forward to the other 79 entries. They are coming. Slowly. So far I have done 10. Another 70 to go. I hope I get less verbose along that way, but that might not happen.
ReplyDeleteI'm praying for icecream for both of us tonight.
ReplyDeleteI hope your prayers work.
ReplyDeleteI have some Cookies and Cream Ice-Cream in the freezing compartment of my fridge. However, I know that Michael will know the exact height of the ice-cream that was in that tub when he last left it. I am not going to touch that ice cream. If I do, he will have cause to remember me as the grandmother who ate all the ice cream before the grandchildren could get to it.
Better I should buy another secret freezer for what I want to keep as only mine.
Since prayer didn't work for me the first time, I have never put it on my prayer list again.
Loved this entry. Perhaps this is why you love ice cream so much--it's forbidden.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen these photos before. So cute. Hope I can get a scanned copy of them at some point.
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