Monday, December 28, 2009

Christmas is over! As I get older, Christmases seem to come and go with more rapidity, but this year's celebration was great. Elizabeth and her girls spent the night so Santa could be here at the crack of dawn (well, more like 8:30 - all of the adults were chomping at the bit to get to the stockings!); Mary was here from Austin, and Great Uncle Bobby ("What's so great about Uncle Bobby?") was here from Pecos.

I had decorated with help from Andy and Meg who were here for Thanksgiving for our annual Christmas Party, and Mary and Byron helped in taking it all down. I love the sparkly lights and poinsettias, so it seems sort of bare around here now.

We all benefited from an Elizabeth-Dad shopping spree prior to Thanksgiving - new clothes all around (many compliments on my outfits!) and lots of practical gifts like the package opener (once we got one open with a knife, scissors and lots of cursing, it was a cinch to open the seven Barbies and other gifts which were tied/glued down as if made of gold and the mint was making sure of a slow getaway.)

Our menu included the traditional Dean eggnog and traditional chili and beans AND a breakfast egg casserole, cinnamon rolls and other pastries. I tried a beef tenderloin for lunch, but I just don't like rare beef. I'm making beef stroganoff with the leftovers tonight.

While I'm thinking about it, and avoiding looking through the Christmas cards to update addresses, here's how I do our Christmas Party - in case someone should want to continue the tradition.

1. If you are going to need parkers, engage them and the kitchen help early. I once forgot to do this and called the parking company late and we had to beg to get parkers - we got some - probably recruited from the homeless shelter had to cope with a torrential rainstorm.
2. Move all the chairs away. Obviously, if you are having elderly or infirm guests, you'll have to have some chairs, but don't make it easy for guests to sit around. One, you'll never get them to leave and two, they won't mingle around.
3. Decide on a menu that doesn't require forks. The point is to have people wander around. Have food stations everywhere, but not the same food on every station.
4. Have someone act as bartender. You can have glasses of wine poured and set out, but don't let some guest start making mixed drinks.
5. The hosts should stand at the door throughout the party - unless everyone you invited is already present, then you can close the door and go mingle yourself.
6. Invite a variety of people - neighbors, relatives, work friends, your children's teachers. Miss Manners (my idol) says that children need to see how adults behave at parties and adults will behave better if children are watching. This doesn't include your teenager's friends, but at least you'll know where they are.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Measuring Board

Long ago and far away, my father's family had a doorway with a board perfect for measuring the growth of the children. That board was moved from the old house to our house at 523 S. Hackberry. We had a ritual of measuring everyone at Christmas - maybe other occasions.

Once (maybe 1967 or so) the board disappeared. There was a lot of yelling and name calling until the board was found to be sawed in half and employed as bed slats in a new twin bed.

Daddy mounted the old board onto a larger board - giving more room to new measuring. This is a picture of Daddy standing on the kitchen table (green Formica - now at the Brownwood ranch) sawing the board to add to the old measuring board.

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Even later, he added another board since we had used up all the room on the older two boards.

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Here is the board today with Megan and Emma standing near.

The tradition is that Uncle Bobby will hold a Kleenex box over the head of the measuree and mark the increase in height.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Outliers

I've just listened to Outliers by Malcolm Gladewell and I think it is an important book. Hockey and soccer players handicapped by December birthdays - advantage for Bill Gates to have his own computer at age 13 in 1968, culture matters. 10,000 hours of practice to be successful - smartest one or not. Fascinating. Read it.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Shingles shot

Several friends have recommended getting immunized against shingles, which apparently you can get if you had chicken pox as a child. Those who have recommended it have had shingles and shingles is something no one wants. They say it hurts like hell and can leave scars.

So, I asked my GP (now known as Internal Medicine Doctor) and he said to go for it - but said he would go to the pharmacy to get it because he would have to charge twice as much as the pharmacy. After filling out the forms for one pharmacy and running out of time, then later to the Tom Thumb pharmacy, it turns out that you have to have a prescription AND it costs $214 since we didn't sign up for Medicare part D.

Then I dithered - would it be worth it? What if I was too cheap to get it THEN got shingles? I went back and got it.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Becoming blonde

I've always sort of liked my grey/white hair - but now, for some reason, it's turning blonde. Not the pretty kind, either. So far remedies suggested are:
* mix baking soda with your shampoo
* purple shampoo (when I tried this years ago, whole head was purple)
* stop smoking (done about 40 years ago - probably not a factor now)
* stay out of the sun

Nothing has really worked. Maybe the usual Head and Shoulders I've been using for years (and just bought a big bottle from Sam's) has a new formulation, or maybe I need to use more conditioner.

But now I've researched all the local CVSs and Walgreens and Targets - no purple shampoo of any kind! What does that say about their demographics? Are there no women with white hair they need to service?

I did find Sally Beauty Supply (close to Stein Mart) and got some new purple shampoo, but resisted the gel (yuck to have it on your hands) and the spray.

I'm going back today to get both.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Glee

My favorite new show is Glee! Have you seen it? Jane Lynch is the evil cheerleader sponsor (Cathy Wheat, anyone?) and a sweet Spanish teacher takes on the Glee club. Subplots abound: is his wife really pregnant, or pretending?, will the outcast great singer stay with the club or defect? will the football team win with new choreography?

In other news, we have returned from New York and had a great time. Since Byron (I confess, I love it, too) has fallen in love with the movie "Mamma Mia", and has seen it, or parts of it (thanks DVR and U-verse) about 25 times, we got tickets to see the Broadway version. It was different, but still great. Turns out it wasn't Pierce Brosnan's fault on that song - even the professional singer had some trouble with the tune - just a difficult song to sing.

The songs are earworms, though and will haunt you for days.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Remembering Marsue

Remembering Marsue


Who could ever forget Marsue?


I first met Marsue (originally named Mary Susan, maybe, or Margaret Susan) right after we had moved to Dallas in 1969. We went to dinner at a prix fixe restaurant on Lovers Lane (I think it was $17 for four courses!) and it was a big deal to get a sitter for Elizabeth and go to a French restaurant!


The occasion was that Marsue’s niece had gotten married and she and new husband, who was a policeman, were spending their honeymoon visiting her Aunt Marsue in Denton. Marsue brought them to Dallas to meet the relatives.Also in attendance were my mother-in-law and Byron’s sister and her husband, Bill.


Bill, the son and grandson of oil men, played lord of the manor, even though my mother-in-law paid. He sent the salad plates back because they weren’t chilled and sent the entree back because the plate wasn’t warmed.


Marsue’s first marriage was when she was a student at the University of Arkansas. She had been Valdictorian of her Little Rock High Schoool class. (Her two older sisters had also been Valdictorians, but they had been in school in Warren, Arkansas - so much smaller schools.) She was very bright.


Marsue pledged Pi Phi, as had her sisters and mother, but somehow she met a serviceman and they secretly eloped. He then was sent to New Mexico on assignment.


A few months later, when the marriage became known, her parents (her father was a judge on the Supreme Court of Arkansas) simply packed her up and put her on the train to “go be an Air Force private’s wife.” Two children later, the marriage broke up. Many years later, Marsue found out that her father had paid her husband to “go away and never come back”. He never did.


Marsue returned with her children to the U of A and received her undergraduate degree, Masters and Doctorate. She moved to Denton as a college professor at then North Texas State, married a music professor who looked like an early Bert Bachrach, reared the children and taught college English.


Divorcing husband #2 after finding him in bed in their house with a student, she continued teaching, which was when I fiirst met her.


She would occasionally come to Dallas and Fort Worth to see relatives, and sometimes bring her mother Miss Tillie to vist her first cousin, my mother-in-law.


We met many of her beaus in Dallas, and she also invited us to Denton to partake of her famous (and inexpensive) lasagna dinners. I always admired her for her open hearted welcome to her friends and noted that even though she really had no disposable inccome, she could invite people over for a convivial and entertaining meal.


For some reason, she decided that I should give her permanents. My own last experience with a permanent was in junior high when my mother’s hairdresser left it on too long and I had the worst hair possible for about three months, untill it could be trimmed off. I haven’t loved my straight hair, but I’ll take it instead of a permananet any day!


Anyway, Marsue would get a permanent kit from the drugstore and I would wind those little rollers in her hair, and we would stay up late, drink some Scotch, smoke and laugh.


She would give me advice:

1. Always take a hostess gift, even if it just a pack of napkins or a candle. It’s the thought that counts.

2. A lady always has a freshly ironed hankerchief in her purse.

3. Reciprocate invitations. Don’t let someone invite you too many times without inviting them back. You don’t have to match a big dinner out or a special occasion like a play or ball game, but you can have them over for lasagna. Also, if someone accepts your hospitality too many times without reciprocating, something is unbalanced in your relationship.

4. Fold your towels in thirds. (I don’t know why this is a rule, but I faithfully fold towels in thirds.)

5. Write the names and dates on the back of pictures - you will forget who that kid is or who was standing by Aunt Katherine. (She was right - I still think I’ll remember.)

After George died (more about him later), we had Marsue come to Dallas to cheer her up and I got down all the unidentified photos from Mae Rene’s house and had her go through and identify them.


Later as Elizabeth grew up and became an unruly teenager, Marsue would invite her to come to Denton on the bus (!) to stay the weekend. What a relief to have a fun, safe and interesting place for Elizabeth to go! She invited Katherine, too, but Katherine resisted after being invited to get naked in the hot tub - and Mary may have gone a couple of times. It was an adventure for them and respite for me.


After my darling sister-in-law Shazie died in a car wreck, Marsue decided to befriend the widower Joe Mike - another first cousin once removed. His daughter Kathy was already in college, Bear was a junior or senior in high school and Frances was 14 or 15. People more unlike than Shazie - laid-back and casual in manner and dress, and Marsue - who still had a Southern idea of meals at the dinner table and getting dressed up - are hard to imagine. But for a brief time, Marsue and Joe Mike were a couple. She came on too strong for Frances, who was appalled and shocked by the forced intimancy of Marsue trying to take Shazie’s place.


Joe Mike was running for district attorney and Marsue was from an important political family. I think she put up signs and helped organize his campaign. He won that election, and she went back to Denton and pulled strings to get Bear into North Texas. He even lived with her for a while, until they couldn’t agree on what comprised proper hygiene and other housekeeping matters. The romance faded.


Marsue’s next adventure was as an exchange teacher in Lodz, Poland. I arranged for her to talk about her trip at the Craig Class and she was fascinating.


When she returned, she met a man who had been a year behind her in high school and they decided to marry. They were both interested in music and the joke at the time was that the music they chose for the ceremony would last longer than the reception. It did last almost longer than the marriage. We became suspicious when the groom asked Byron to help him change his last name to Marsue’s - rather than the usual reverse. It turned out he was trying to escape some very bad debts.


She had already accepted a teaching assignment in California (Pomona?) before the wedding, so he moved into her house while she went off to teach for three months. When she returned, her cats were gone and he became violent in arguments, once even brandishing a kitchen knife. She learned later that he had had her cats put to sleep while telling her that they had just run away.


Next, she availed herself of an early dating service and met an Air Force veteran whose job in the service was to produce the radio music program for the troops. He was not the usual genial type, but seemed steady and reasonably well-off. She gave up her tenured job in Denton and moved with him to Arizona where she used her retirment money and savings to buy a house.


She knew things weren’t going well when she returned from a trip to find that he had moved out with all his furniture.


During that time, she discovered a lump in her breast, and I went out to help hold her hand when she had the biopsy - which fortunately was benign.


She loved Arizona and got a job teaching English to would-be pilots at Embry-Riddle. There she met George, invited him home for lasagna and told him to quit wearing the toupee. George really was a rocket scientist, having worked at NASA. He was a darling dumpling of a man and clearly adored her. They married and were very happy until his death of cancer.


In the meantime, her son graduated from the Air Force Academy, married and had two sons of his own. Her daughter graduated from TWU in dance and went on to marry (in my wedding dress, by the way) and move to the East Coast and she and her husband became dance instructors. They have three or four children.


A couple of years ago, Marsue took up stained glass making and made us several wonderful stained glass crosses, which I treasure. She loved her Episcopal church and was very active in it.


We would see her infrequently as she seldom visited Arkansas (long-time smouldering feuds with her sisters), but we talked every month or so and exchanged emails.


She somehow injured her hand working with the stained glass and ultimately lost a finger to amputation when the infection couldn’t be resolved.


For Christmas I usually sent her an amarillys bulb. On day in early January two years ago, I got a call from a lady who said that she was living in the house at the address I had used, and that she was sorry to tell me that Marsue had died back in the summer. She said that Marsue had gone a cruise and had been dancing, fallen and hit her head. I later learned that she hadn’t died instantly, but had been taken to a shore hospital and died there.


I was shocked that neither of her children or her surviving sister had let us know, but what a way to go!


I used to say that I never needed to do much rebelling or naughty things, because I could always do them vicariously through Marsue. She wasn’t exactly Auntie Mame, or a hippie - she was a law unto herself, and I was lucky to be swept into her orbit. I miss her.




Sunday, August 23, 2009

Our Cruise!

Our cruise to the Baltic ends tomorrow with a flight from Copenhagen to London, London to Chicago and Chicago to Dallas. We'll be home tomorrow night about midnight. We'll be tired - but it has been fun and we've really learned a lot. Who knew Estonia was such a brave place? Hooray for Estonia!

I intended to write everyday, but with limited time (we've hit Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Russia, Estonia and Sweden again), unreliable internet access, and tours every day, plus a lot of eating and drinking, I haven't had time.

I'll have to look at the hundreds of pictures I've taken to remember where we've been, then write it up.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

U-verse

Have you been seeing the ads for the new AT&T service U-verse? We've seen them, heard them on the radio and received several mailings as well. Two Saturdays ago, two young salesmen rang our doorbell and sold us on the system. University Park has a deal with Charter, - even after a city survey which detailed the complaints the whole community had with Charter service.

Anyway, apparently AT&T called "monopoly" and has wedged into our area. We had two salesmen - one experienced one and one newbie (sort of like good cop-bad cop). Whatever we figured out wasn't just right was always the new guy's fault. We were promised "everything Charter was giving you, plus more channels, faster internet, free installation, AND lower cost per month" After about and hour and a half, we'd signed up and waited while the new guy tried to make contact with the installers. After about 15 minutes, they left saying that the installers would call that afternoon.

By Wednesday, I called (they had neglected to leave us a personal card) the main office and was shunted around to finally hear that someone would call. On Friday, I went to a corporate office (not the cell phone office on Lovers Lane, but the one on NW Highway next to El Fenix). They were shocked that someone hadn't called to install, then disputed what the salesmen had sold us (now it was more because of our two lines and the multiple TVs), but they promised Byron over the phone of a cash-back - not of $100 but $275. The installers came on Monday.

All good so far - except that the phones were dead. We got the phone people out Tuesday and they fixed the phones - except for the City + Country Pets line (not connected with our home lines at all - different number, different bill). It is now ringing on our main home number. Apparently Elizabeth can get messages from the remote call notes, but that's all.

Harold, the installer, said he just couldn't figure it out and said a more experienced technician would have to come out to see where the phone line came into the house, since he couldn't find it. He would have someone out on Wednesday.

On Thursday, two new men showed up to survey our experience with the installers - not getting the word that something was still wrong. They couldn't figure it out either and said someone else would be out to fix it.

I've called Harold 4 times and left messages and called Chris (in the last duo) three times who always says "I'll have Harold back out today!"

The TV part of U-verse is working great, though. I can record programs on all the TVs and watch them on any other TV, and there seems to be a good selection of movies (we did have HBO on Charter, which is extra on U-verse... we should learn to have salespeople put it in writing...sigh)

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Quiet, Hot, Not so busy

It's been a quiet weekend here in the Bubble.

Byron went to a conference in Austin then on to the ranch where he met Mark and Megan. The prospect of being even hotter than Dallas and being stuck doing the bed making, laundry, cooking and cleaning didn't appeal. I stayed at home and worked on a Directory (the first one for a large organization - so lots of bits and pieces). I think it is basically done, if people would just stop moving, marrying, changing their names, resigning and dying!

I helped clear up stuff at the Library, enjoying having our old Director back as an interim. Tried to eat healthy and do 20 minutes a day on the Wii. (That tennis is addictive, but I haven't made it to 900 yet. My Wii Sports age yesterday was 29!)

Projects for next week:
*Figure out clothes for the cruise. I told a friend we were cruising and she gave me some solid advice - "Your clothes don't need a vacation. Leave most of them at home. You'll never see most of the people on the cruise again - they won't care if they see you in the same outfit more than once." She had other good advice: take snack bars and spend time looking at the sights, not having a mediocre meal that lasts three hours; put your name and numbers on the top of your packed stuff in your suitcase, so they can find you if the bag gets lost; take extra camera and watch batteries; if you see something you like, buy it - you probably won't see it again.
* Finish up the Directory and don't tell anyone we're not going to print for a month.
* Work on the backyard. The grass is mostly dead. It's time to put in a ground cover.
* Think about getting the shingles vaccine. Dr. Armstrong said to get it from CVS - cheaper there than at his office. Side effects?
* Worry about whether I sprained my kneecap by slipping on a sweet gum ball while getting out of the car and hitting it on the edge of the door. I'm icing it, but it will sure be sore tomorrow.
* Learn how to work the camera Byron brought me back from Austin.
* Resist eating all the delicious-smelling German bread he also brought.
* Hope the guys from AT&T show up to do the transition from Charter tomorrow at 8 a.m.

Monday, June 29, 2009

New York

I'm off tomorrow to NYC to have a family reunion with my siblings, Bobby, David and Mary Bird. The occasion is David's visit to his daughter Dorothy, who has just completed her Masters at Drew University in New Jersey, and the rest of us, from various parts of Texas, are going to see him. We've got tickets to see Angela Lansbury in Blithe Spirit on Broadway.

It's too bad Byron isn't coming, because we saw Angela Lansbury 43 years ago in Mame while we were on our honeymoon. I've written her to see if she will autograph my 1966 program. We'll see.

We stayed at the Plaza on our honeymoon, and several years ago - before they tore most of it down to make condos - they had a promotion that if you could bring a bill from your honeymoon, you could stay there for the same price. Of course I couldn't find the bill - but I have since found it. $31.50! I do remember ordering room service and Byron was horrified that it cost $7.50 (for coffee, eggs, toast and bacon).

We are planning to have some wonderful meals, visit and play some bridge in memory of Mother and Daddy.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Girls' trip

My high school girls group met in Dallas and we had a great time. Age is creeping up with us, though, as Lynn is suffering from Parkinson's, which is a really terrible disease. We met in Dallas to make it easier for her - but nothing is easier for her. Her darling husband (also a classmate and former date partner of the four of us who didn't marry him) stayed with her to make sure she got her medication on time.

Somehow, even though we weren't the best of friends in high school, we have become dear friends now. You just never know.

Unlike another group with which I travel, this group stays in nice hotels - with a spa that offers massages and facials. We all have a separate room, so no worrying about snoring, farting, inability to sleep, wanting to read, needing to smoke, etc. My other group even books places which requires two to a bed - which is OK but suboptimal.

The spa at the Stoneleigh was great - as was the whole staff, who got to know us and waited on us hand and foot. The only drawback was the slow food service in their restaurant Bolla. Great food and a bargain at 4 courses for $40 - but slow, slow. It took about 10 minutes to get granola for breakfast. How long should it take to pour granola into a bowl?

On another day, I had hashbrowns for breakfast - topped with red onion chips and sour cream. Yum! But not served quickly. I wonder if they hoped that keeping the few diners they had at the table, they seemed more busy.

We visited the Dallas Arboretum (always worth a visit, highly recommended), Sam Moon (king of inexpensive jewelry, luggage and stuff), Half-price Books, Taco Diner and Sprinkles!

My friends are ready to come back next year.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Comfort reading

I always have a book. I keep old paperbacks in the car in case I decide to stop at a fast food place for lunch (or any other place to eat). The trick is to have a book you are interested in enough to read during a meal, but not interested enough in to take it in the house - thus depriving yourself of a book to read when the need arises. I've been known to detour to a book store to pick up something to read while I eat, if I can't get home.

I don't understand people who don't read while eating alone. Reading at the table used to be forbidden when I was growing up. We could read the paper (the funnies, of course) at breakfast, but since lunch was in the dining room with a tablecloth and Peggy serving and the whole family present - books were not allowed.

The pattern changed a little when we got TV - we would eat supper in the kitchen and watch our one channel.

Now both Byron and I read through meals AND have the TV on.

Comfort reading is also what I have when I can't sleep. They say that stewing in bed while not sleeping is counter-productive and makes for bad memories of your bed. So I usually move to my chaise longue where I have a good light, and read. I usually don't choose that new thriller or the psychological mystery at that time. This is the time to reread an old, comfortable favorite. Some of mine are the Mary Lasswell novels about the three old ladies in San Diego, Agatha Christie mysteries, Phoebe Atwood Taylor's Asey Mayo and Leonidas Witherall mysteries, the Cheaper by the Dozen books, or Betty MacDonald's "The Egg and I" or her Mrs. Piggle Wiggle books. You don't want anything troubling, which might keep you awake.

Now that I have a Kindle (thank you to the family for the Mother's Day gift!), it will be interesting to see if my pattern changes. i tried it out this morning at Panda Express. I downloaded "Tea for the Traditionally Built" by Alexander McCall Smith and it is great. A wonderful feature is your ability to choose the size font that you can read most comfortably.

It will never take the place of the book in the bathtub, however.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Party paranoia

I'm having a luncheon for the Junior League of Dallas Garden Club Committee, of which I'll be President next year. It's a turn-over meeting, meaning that past officers are supposed to "turn over" their notebooks (this is the Junior League, you know). It would have been so easy to just invite them all to the Woman's Club or to a restaurant - but no - I decided to host them at my house.

I figured that for the cost of the Woman's Club, etc - I could entertain at home and get some of the things around the house fixed for the same cost. - Like replacing the St. Augustine grass in front that has grub worms (I did add nematodes, which are supposed to kill the grubs), getting the front door painted, polishing up the front door knocker and door knob, putting out colorful, perennial, shade-loving plants, and cleaning up the house. (Except for Byron's study - we'll just shut the doors on his study.)

I'm having chicken salad, fruit salad, rolls (Sister Shubert), two-bite brownies and potato chips - which all sounded easy last week.

Tip - put all the serving dishes - plates, glasses and polished silverware - in the dishwasher before the party. I made the mistake once of not doing this and having a guest look askance at a plate with dried-on scrambled egg.

It will all be over at 1:30 tomorrow, and as Rick Reilly says "1 and a half billion Chinese don't care."

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Gaga

Gaga said, referring to writing Lolah Mary every day - that if you write to someone every day, there is always something to say. If you write once a week, you have to work at finding something to say. Very true. I'll try to write something every day.

More Gaga sayings: When she was worried about not being able to remember something, her friend Dr. Dick (Smith) said: Your brain is like a tape recorder - it gets filled up. Sooner or later, you have to delete something to remember something new (like - where are the keys? What did I have for lunch yesterday? When is that meeting/lunch/program?)

Another favorite Gaga saying "It's a great life, if you don't weaken!"

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Grammy's birthday

We were honored to be invited to attend Grammy's 97th birthday celebration. As the in-laws of her grandson - that's a pretty extended family circle!

Grammy is in great shape - even broke her hip about a year ago and is walking well without even a cane! We should all be so lucky. And how nice that her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren (not to mention in-laws and former in-laws as well) to come celebrate from all over the country.

The photenia is in bloom, which means that we're all sneezing, coughing and suffering from it and other blooming plants. On the good side, my azaleas are starting to bud out.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Burford family

All my stories about the Burfords are, at best, second or third hand - but interesting family lore. Take them with a grain or two of salt.

The story I've heard is that Freeman was an aspiring oil man who married a big oil man's young daughter - maybe they eloped? They bought a big house in Dallas once owned by Shepherd King, another oil man who had come on hard times. The family lived there briefly before Carolyn and Freeman divorced. The house then became headquarters for some large company (insurance, maybe) before being bought by Caroline Hunt's company and turned into the Mansion, one of the best hotels in Dallas.

One story has Freeman being accused of dealing in "hot oil", which happened during the early days of Texas oil. Some oil men and the government worried that all the oil would be pumped out too fast, and the price would drop, so a system called depletion allowance was devised. Wells were only allowed to pump so much per month. Some oil men ignored the restriction and continued to pump. The story I remember is that Freeman was not allowed to travel out of the North Texas area because he could be arrested if he appeared in some other counties.

The Burfords had three children - Bill, Carolyn and Ann. One story is that during the divorce proceedings, the children wanted to go with their mother and Freeman actually whipped Bill in the courtroom to make him change his mind. He did change his mind, but after a while, Bill and Carolyn packed their things and ran away to live with their mother.

Bill was very bright and won a Fulbright to study in England and became a well-known poet. He declined a paid position on the board of Skelly oil, and reportedly his father said "OK, you want to be a poet? You can starve like one," and withdrew all financial support. Bill was sent to a boarding school where he was friends with Marlon Brando, and received his doctorate from Johns Hopkins.

He met Lolah Mary Egan at SMU and after they married, Bill taught at the University of Texas at Austin and was a very popular teacher. He had not finished his dissertation, and when the administration found out, he was let go until he could finish it. His mother-in-law paid the fees for him to finish. It was on Marcel Proust.

Carolyn Skelly Burford never remarried, but had a high-profile life wherever she lived. According to one story, because of the divorce, her father's estate was divided between her and her sister. At the time of her divorce, the estate was very valuable since oil was high. However, when Old Man Skelly (which is what Daddy always called him - never having met him) died, oil was down and the estate much less valuable. The sisters sued each other to the detriment of both.

Carolyn had a fabulous collection of jewelry which was frequently stolen. There is a Vanity Fair article about her which made her sound very sad. She had had (the story goes) very unfortunate results from plastic surgery and became a sort of recluse. She would give huge parties and never come down stairs to attend them herself. There was also a rumor that she would go into shops and pick things up - the store would just send a bill to the accountant and be paid.

Freeman and his new wife were to go on a cruise, and a pastor (maybe from St. Michaels?) counseled him to make some allowance for Bill and Lolah and the children, even though they were still estranged. Freeman did set up trusts before his death. I believe he died shortly after returning from the cruise.

Bill got a job teaching at the University of Montana, Missoula, and Lolah began writing her novels, beginning with "Vice Avenged, a Moral Tale." published by MacMillan.

Freeman Weedman Burford

While looking up the Burford-Egan-Dean connection, I found this bio of Freeman Burford, the father of Byron's sister's husband. He died in early 1967 and I never met him. More stories about him in next post.

Freeman Weedman Burford was the son of Guy and Harriet (Weedman) Burford.
He was a successful oilman.

Freeman Weedman Burford was born 8
August 1900 in Farmer City, IL to Guy Ernest
and Harriet (Weedman) Burford. The family
moved in 1905 to Muskogee, OK where Guy
Burford entered the oil business. Ultimately,
the family moved to Dallas, TX. Freeman
Burford died 7 January 1967 aboard the
steamship, Mariposa, as he and his wife were
returning from Australia where they had been
visiting the U.S Ambassador to that country.

Mr. Burford was a prominent public figure for
four decades and once considered running for
Governor of Texas. He was a distinguished
veteran of World War II in which he was
awarded the Bronze Star Medal, Legion of
Merit, Croix de Guerre and the French Legion of
Honor.

Freeman Burford attended public schools in Muskogee and was a graduate of Shattuck
Military School in Fairbault, MN. He attended the University of Oklahoma School of
Law.

He entered the oil business in Oklahoma in 1921 and in 1926 moved to Shreveport, LA
where he was Vice President and General Manager of Crystal Oil Refining Corp. He was
the organizer and General Manager of Burford Oil Company in Pecos, TX in 1929 and of
the East Texas Refining Company in 1931.

He was a pioneer producer and the first refiner in the East Texas oil fields, selling his
producing properties to Magnolia Petroleum Company in 1935 to become an independent
producer and natural gasoline manufacturer in Louisiana, Arkansas, and Texas.

He entered the Second World War and was a graduate of the Command and General Staff
School in Fort Leavenworth, KS. He was a full Colonel and oversaw the operation of
3,500 miles of gasoline pipelines, which supported the Allied war efforts. He was
awarded medals to commemorate his performance in those roles.

After the War, he became President of the Sid Richardson Refining Company (1947-
1960); owner and President, Harbor Terminal Company (1959-1962) and was an
independent oil operator at the time of his death.

He married Carolyn Skelly, daughter of William G. Skelly who founded Skelly Oil
Company in May 1927. They had three children: William S. Burford, Ann Burford,
and Carolyn Burford.

The couple was divorced after 1935 and Mr. Burford later married Jacqueline Faison of
Greenville, AL. There were no children of this marriage.

Mr. Burford was a colorful and strong personality. He was a strong proponent of Texas
industrialization and was in great demand as a speaker in the 1930s when he proposed a
program to make credit available to tenant farmers to buy their own farms. He considered
running for Governor of Texas but declined.

He was a key figure as a custodian of the Cotton Bowl in Dallas during which time the
enterprise prospered.

In 1935, Freeman Burford bought a large home in the Dallas area that was destined to
become what is now the Mansion at Turtle Creek Hotel. After the divorce, Carolyn
Skelly Burford retained the house for many years and reverted to the use of her maiden
name. Articles have been written about the house and featured in the Dallas Morning
News.

The first Mrs. Freeman W. Burford (Carolyn Skelly) was a colorful figure in her own
right having suffered more than one jewel robbery and theft. She died in 1996 in her
home in Newport, R.I. An article in the December 1999 issue of Vanity Fair gave an
account of Carolyn Skelly.

Freeman Weedman Burford achieved considerable success both in business and in the
Dallas community at large. He was arguably one of the most successful business people
in the Weedman family.

Friday, February 13, 2009

One of the more interesting "it's a small world" stories is that when we decided to get married and the families got together, it turned out that Byron's sister Lolah had married Bill Burford. Bill's father, Freeman Burford, was an oil man who built an oil refinery in Pecos.

When Daddy graduated from the University (of Texas at Austin) in 1932, the depression was still on and jobs hard to find. He had majored in business and could type, though. (Apparently his handwriting was so bad that he had permission to type out his exams - which probably was maddening to other students trying to think!)

Somehow, through Pecos connections, Daddy got a job with Burford's East Texas Refining Company making $100 a month as a typist. Daddy lived at the YMCA. Family lore says that Daddy made extra money by playing catch with Bill Burford (his father not having time to teach him.)

Freeman Burford married Carolyn Skelly, the young daughter of a very successful oil man - and I think for a very brief time they lived in Pecos.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Alarm Clock Club

Maybe people living in big cities think living in a small town would be pretty boring, but living in Pecos in the 1950s or so was pretty much fun for my parents. In those days, TV had just arrived and for years we only got CBS, which might explain why they had to make their own fun.

The Alarm Clock Club was mnade up of couples who agreed to host the group once a year, or so. The host couple provided drinks and three (no more, no fewer) hors d'oeuvres. The guests would arrive at 7 p.m. and the party was over when the alarm clock rang at 9 p.m. exactly. Then they all adjourned to the Pecos Valley Country Club for dinner.

The PVCC at that time was housed in the old air base officers club with a bar, booths and a big hardwood (oak, maybe?) dance floor. Our high school dances were held there, and the different high school sororities would decorate the club with crepe paper and balloons. We would shake out that floor wax so the splinters in the floor would be smoothed over.

The club had shuffleboard games and a pool, with a canteen where you could order food. I think I spent almost every summer day at the pool.

At that time in Texas, only private clubs could serve "liquor by the drink", but restaurants could serve "set ups". They would charge extra for club soda or tonic water, and the patron would bring in a flask or bottle in a brown paper sack and surreptitiously add the booze. Hence the popularity of private clubs.

There was no actual gambling at the PVCC, but sometimes the club would buy those little tickets which if you tore it open and found three cherries, you won more little tickets. It was a great way to keep the kids quiet while we drank our Shirley Temples or Roy Rogers.

The food, as I recall, was pretty good. My favorite was the Steak Diane, which they fixed tableside and flamed! Pretty tall cotton for West Texas.

The Alarm Clock Club spawned a younger version - the Ding-a-Lings.

The Alarm Clock and the PVCC both have dwindled due to deaths and people moving away. One old timer told me that in the old days, they would pay Joe Henry, the long-time bartender and local favorite, to stay open late and that these days they couldn’t even stay up till 9.

The club finally tore down the old club and the new one is in a triple-wide modular building and has an open membership. It still has fried chicken for Sunday lunch, but is even closed on Saturday nights.

Iced in

Since it is 21 degrees and the streets are covered in ice, I can't get out to go the Craig Class - ironically the program today is a review of "Hot, Flat and Crowded", I would like everyone to be entitled to my opinion of Big Rich, a new book by Bryan Burrough about the big Texas oil fortunes.

I stayed up late last night reading about Hugh Roy Cullen, Sid Richardson, Clint Murchison and can't wait to read the parts about H. L. Hunt. However, I'm appalled that the author or his editor has misspelled the name of the Texas towns Burkburnett (he writes Buckburnett) and Waxahachie (he writes Waxahatchie).

Burkburnett is actually named for a man named Burk Burnett.
Here's the Wikipedia entry:

Originally settled by ranchers as early as 1856, this community was known by some locals as Nesterville. By 1880 the town had a small store with a population of 132. From 1882 until 1903, a post office operated there under the designation Gilbert, named after the north Texas pioneer Mabel Gilbert. In 1906, a nearby wealthy rancher named Samuel Burk Burnett sold over 16,000 acres (65 km²) of his land in northern Wichita County to a group of investors who were seeking to extend the Wichita Falls and Northwestern Railway north through Oklahoma and Kansas.[4] Within Burnett’s former land near the railroad, lots were auctioned off the following year and a post office was established. The town was named Burkburnett by President Theodore Roosevelt, who visited the area for a wolf hunt that was hosted by the wealthy rancher Burnett.[5] In 1912, oil was discovered west of the town attracting thousands to the area and by 1918, an approximate twenty-thousand people had settled around the oilfield. The Great Depression would have a negative impact on the town’s population, which would be boosted again in 1941 as Sheppard Air Force Base would be established nearby.

There are about 10,000 people living there now.

Couldn't Penguin Press have consulted a Texas native or a Texas map?

That reminds me of the old joke:

Yankee travelers were driving through Texas and came to a town named Mexia. They got into an argument about how to pronounce it, and the argument got a little heated. They stopped at a fast food place in the town, surged in and demanded of the girl behind the counter.

"How do you pronounce the name of this place?"

She looked dumbfounded, but pronounced very carefully "Dairrrrry Queeeeen."

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Stuffed Deer

When Dad was a teenager, he used to take his friends, Dan Shieder and Joe and Sam Bonney to go deer hunting at his dad's ranch outside of Kerrville. The ranch was about 1000 acres in the hill country of Texas and was pretty rocky with hills and lots of mesquite trees and brush.

The story is that in the old Flanary house in Dallas (a big house on Lemmon Avenue in which Byron's grandparents (A. B. and Lolah Armstrong Flanary and their helpers ((he had Parkinson's)) and his parents Joe and Mae Rene Flanary Egan) lived, there was a stuffed deer. This was not just the head on the wall - this was an entire deer. It lived in the parlor (it was a very big house).

When Judge Flanary died, Joe and Mae Rene moved to the house at 3637 Stratford, with grandmother Lolah and young Byron (aka Biff) who was a sophomore in high school. There was no room for the stuffed deer, so Joe took it to the ranch.

When Byron and the boys went to the ranch to hunt, they would be assigned blinds from which to hunt, so they wouldn't shoot each other. During the night before the early morning hunt, Byron would go out and place the stuffed deer near one of blinds. If the unwary hunter saw the deer and shot it, the others would have a good laugh, and if the hunter didn't see it - an even bigger laugh.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Mary Bird and the race tickets

When we were growing up in Pecos, the summers were hot. Like 120 degrees hot.

Daddy had air conditioners installed at the house - not those window units, but real refrigerated air registers like you'd find in a meat locker. He liked it cold.

Anyway, several weekends during the summer we would take a trip to Ruidoso, New Mexico, which was 285 miles from Pecos in the mountains. It was cooler there and also had the attraction of horse racing at Ruidoso Downs.

Daddy shared a Jockey Club membership with some other man, and we would sit up high in the bleachers with chairs and little built-in desks, have Shirley Temples and bet.

Children, of course, weren't allowed to bet, but Daddy would finance $20 per child for the day. Since there were 12 races, you would have to have at least one winner to have enough to bet on all 12 races at $2 a race. You could keep your winnings, which didn't amount to much, and you didn't have to pay back the $20 if you lost it all.

Bobby and I (the big kids) would study our race programs, buy a tip sheet and maybe end up with $5 or $6 at the end of the day. Mary Bird, who might have been about 6, would choose a horse because of the color of his jockey's outfit or because she liked his name, and she would clean up!

To keep us out of the way during the races, Daddy would have all of us go around and pick up all the tickets that people had dropped, and later in the motel room, we would carefully go through to see if anyone had inadvertently discarded a winning ticket. You'd be surprised that we found at least a couple of winners every day, which we turned in for the cash value.

Mary Bird, however, was the champ. Once she got the hang of it, she would bet not only the Daily Double (you pick the winner in two different races), she would bet on the Quinela (first and second in the right order, I think). I remember that she once won a big Quinela while Daddy had had no luck, and he decreed that she had to pay for the hotel rooms and dinner for all of us out of her winnings. She still kept about $25, if I recall.

Many years later, we had a reunion at Ruidoso and Jonathan was still a baby, so Mary Bird and Bob stayed back with him as the rest of us went to the races. Mary Bird randomly picked out horses and we made the bets for her. She still did better than all the rest of us combined.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Wedding tale

Mary and Katherine gave me a list of stories they wanted me to write down, and I'm about at the end of the list. If you have a story you want me to include, let me know.

The story of our wedding is on a past blog - June 2008. However, there was the Bill Teague saga.

Bill Teague is a friend of Byron's (then called Biff), from his Sigma Nu days at UT Austin (then known as The University). Bill is from Odessa and is a couple of years older than Byron. He was an usher at our wedding in 1966.

We had several pre-wedding parties and Bill would drive over from Odessa - once managing to overimbibe and run into the only tree between Pecos and Odessa, and another time stopping at the stop sign on Hackberry and falling out of his car.

During the festivities leading up to the wedding, he developed a crush on Cheryl Garrett, one of the bridesmaids - as did another of the guys. Bill must have made an oblique pass at her at the rehearsal dinner, and she said something like "If you'd try harder, you might get somewhere."

At the wedding, Bill was so drunk he could barely stand up and showed up with his tux shirt studs fastened on the inside of his shirt, wearing a long-billed baseball cap. One of the other ushers leaned him against the wall of the foyer of the church and kept him from falling down.

At the reception at my parents' house, Bill decided to act on Cheryl's suggestion and sort of tackled her (probably meaning to hug her) and they both fell down on the living room floor - in front of God and everybody. Actually, we had already left, so missed the show.

Mary Bird and others had painted my car up (a Nash Rambler with front seats that reclined all the way), and Kenny Hughes drove us in my car to where Byron's car was nice and clean at Jack & Bill's Texaco station, and we were off to Odessa's Sands Motel, then to NYC to stay at the Plaza.

Later, Bill got his PhD in English and taught at the junior college level. He's lately had some health issues (probably related to too much alcohol) but is doing better.

We fixed him up with Byrd, a Theta sister of mine, and they dated for nine years before marrying. We had dinner with them at the Woman's Club just the other night.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Fin and Feather

Fin and Feather is a hunting and fishing club 18.4 miles from our house. Our son-in-law Mark is a member and talked me into joining last year. There are 41 members in this club which was established in 1893, which is pretty old for Dallas and Texas.

About two weeks ago, one of the members with a cabin (there are only 19 cabins) decided to sell his cabin at a sealed bid auction, and I won. The cabin itself is maybe marginally functional, but I'm now entertaining visions of tearing it down and building a cool two bedroom cabin with a long front porch looking out on the lake with a stone fireplace (gas logs so no ashes to clean up).

We've never lived in a new house - how cool would it be to have a new cabin?

Monday, January 12, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Wake up, baby!

My grandmother Dean (Bam) was the oldest of 10. Her name was Mary Medina Breeding. (also spelled Madina)
Her siblings were
Louise Antoinette
Robert (a girl)
Florence Crozier
Ida Louis (Louis is correct)
Clarence (another girl)
Margaret Cecilia
Alice Elizabeth
Arthur (only boy)
Laura

Margaret and Florence never married, and Louise (widowed twice) and Rob (widowed) all lived in Carlsbad, NM, where Daddy was born. Louise had married into money and had a nice house I remember visiting - mainly because she had several layers of Oriental carpet nailed to the floor. Her sisters all lived in a little house in the poor part of town that lacked paint and maybe indoor plumbing. This was probably the old family house from their childhood. Louise didn't like to share.

At Christmas, Daddy would go, or send Bobby, to pick up the great aunts and have them come for the family celebration. He always bought corsages for all the ladies, including babies. Your age and status decided your corsage. Mother and the grandmothers got huge purple orchids. The young ladies got cyndibium orchids, younger ladies got gardenias and babies got carnations. The carnations got pinned on the babies' backs, so the pin wouldn't stick them. The old great aunts fell into the young lady category.

I'm pretty sure my grandmother wasn't best thrilled to have her sisters there, but Daddy loved having the whole family around.

Anyway, Elizabeth (the first grandchild) was about a month and a half old that Christmas and the aunts were there. Bobby's favorite story of Louise is her saying "This egg nog is too strong! Gimme another cup!"

Elizabeth was asleep in the old infant seat which would get you arrested for child abuse today (soft plastic with a metal stand hooked on the back) on the floor of the living room when Louise noticed her for the first time. She poked Elizabeth with her cane - "Wake up, baby. Wake up!"

There is also a great photo of the aunts all sitting on the couch in the living room with their legs a little spread - leading all of us younger generation to relate to the dicta - You aren't old until you sit with your underwear showing!

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Mother and Daddy on the cruise

There are three stories about Mother and Daddy on a cruise.

The first two involve John and Barbara Stuart, who, as UT representatives, were in charge of this trip of Flying Longhorns. I think this cruise went to Greece and the Deans and the Stuarts had many adventures, including mule rides up and down a mountain and also finding a cab driver with no English who took about two hours to find their hotel in the middle of the night.

On this particular cruise, there was a dress-up night and Daddy took his WWII Naval uniform, which, even though had had a big placket added to the rear of the pants, was still too tight. After the party, they decided to throw the pants overboard. They conducted a Viking funeral, complete with flowers and a trumpet solo.

At the end of the cruise, John heard a commotion in the Purser's office and went to see what was wrong. He found Daddy and another man arguing over their bar bills. Apparently Daddy was offended that the other fellow had a larger bar bill. "I ALWAYS have the biggest bar bill!" he asserted.

The other cruise story took place in 1976 - which was the bicentennial of the U. S. In the celebrations leading up to the country's 200th birthday, Mother and Daddy, with several other couples from Pecos, took lessons in dancing the minuet. After learning the steps and acquiring costumes, they performed a couple of times for school children and at the country club. Later, on the cruise, they were demonstrating the dance on a slick marble floor and Mother slipped and fell. She broke her coccyx (tailbone). It was a painful injury and she had to sit on a "doughnut" pillow for several months after.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Wii Fit

Taking a break from Kitchen Table Tales - I have a Wii Fit! I bought the basic console before Christmas and Katherine and Mary and I played on it.

The Wii Fit came today (I couldn't find it at any store here) and it is cool! The good news is that I have improved my Wii Age from the 72 on the basic Wii to 61 on the Wii Fit. It may turn out to be one of those relentless fitness programs that is impossible to cheat.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Kitchen Table Tales - Driving on the airstrip

I'm writing about these in the order requested - this one would have been at the very bottom on my own list!

When I was in high school, I was given my grandmother Dean's (Bam), Chrysler New Yorker - a two-tone green four-door sedan. It had all the bells and whistles like power steering and power windows. Unfortunately, by the time I got it the windows didn't work, which in Pecos was a serious problem. If I got the windows down, the dust got in and if I got them up, it would be 125 degrees inside.

Anyway, the Pecos airport had twice-weekly flights on Trans-Texas Airways (we called it Tree Top Air) which Daddy and some of his friends talked into serving the area. Sometimes they even mounted campaigns to fill the planes in order to meet the minimum passengers to keep the service going.

The airfield was left over from WWII, when Pecos had a big flight training operation (flat land and lots of blue sky), and the field was not fenced. I was out driving with a friend and we decided to look for Cat's Eye Cave - which was a large abandoned pipe. When you looked through it, the far end looked like a cat's eye.

As we were driving around, I looked up and saw a plane getting ready to take off, and I was right in its way. I stomped on the gas and the plane lifted off. I don't know how close I came to being hit by the plane, but it felt very close.

Later, as we were sitting down to lunch at the house (we always had a formal lunch at home since the schools didn't have cafeterias) the radio was on for the noon news and it was announced that a car had driven in front of a plane, and issued a description of the car.

Once I was identified as the culprit, Daddy asked if I wanted to go confess or not, and I chose not to confess. The authorities didn't find out, or at least didn't let me know they found out. However, some members of my family like to bring it up.