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Saturday, July 21, 2012

Florida, 1950 Style


by Delores Miller


So it is February 2011 in Marion, Wisconsin.  The Packers have won the Super Bowl and eight more months before more football.   Cabin fever has set in, so time to get to warmer climates, like Florida.

In 1950 Alma and Bill Zillmer and Edwin (Happy) and Beatrice Zillmer embarked on a sixteen day road trek to Florida  driving Happy's new 1949 Pontiac, straight 8.  What a powerful automobile.

Both women kept detailed diaries of that trip, which have surfaced in the Zillmer Family Archives.  Expenses were shared equally.  All were about forty years of age.  Happy drove, Beatrice read road maps, Bill gazed at the country side and Alma wrote in her diary.

4092 miles, 257 gallons of gas, which averaged 16 MPG, price per gallon ranged from 21.8 cents in Wisconsin to 30.0 in Illinois.  The entire expense for the trip seems to be $256.65 for four people, and includes gasoline, motels, eats and entrance fees to attractions.

Alma and Bill were straight off the Dupont dairy farm, Happy and Beatrice were Belle Plaine cheese makers, leaving their businesses in the trusty hands of their children.

Starting off with snow and below zero temperatures, first night stayed in Chicago with niece Ellie Kunstmann.  She gave them the tour of that big city, O'Hare Airport and Michigan Avenue.  This was the days before freeways and four lane roads.  Old Highway 41 towards Florida, saw their first colored people.   How shocked they must have been, no black people in Marion. Notes about crops and farming, pig farms, corn.  Ohio Valley was flooded.  Bill chewed Summertime Tobacco, and spit the saliva out the car windows, making a brown mess along the car doors, and the windows in the back seat should be closed or one got a mouthful of  recycled tobacco spit.

Fort Campbell Kentucky where many drafted young men got their military Army  training.  Wonder Cave, Rock City, Chattanooga, cotton fields.  Visiting always with people they met.  Orange trees in blossom.  Turpentine groves, picked pine cones from the trees.  Flat tire, a dollar to fix.  Strawberry fields, ready for picking.  1070 miles from home and  hit the Florida State Line. Glass bottom boat ride in Silver Springs,  $9.20.  All you can drink orange juice for ten cents.  Outdoor theater. $1,65, Sunday newspaper was fifteen cents.

Cattle looked poorly, always the farmer in their comments.  They range and drift along the country side, no fences, just cow catchers across the highway.  Smudge pots in orange groves ready for the frost.  Tampa and a narrow bridge to St. Petersburg.  Ferry boat across the river.  Shell factory at Sarasota.  Winter quarter tour of the Ringling Brothers and mansion of John and Mabel Ringling where they built the house in 1926 and willed and bequeathed it to the state of Florida.

Still heading south, flamingo birds, land is swampy.  Miami Beach on Highway 101 to Jensen Beach and to Jack and Clara Miller.  Jack was an insurance agent in Marion, Father of Blaine (Bud) Miller.  Clara was a Zillmer cousin to Bill and Happy.   Carl Herman Zillmer, Clara's Father was a Marion businessman and entrepreneur until his death in 1933.  Jack Miller  took the men fishing in the ocean, and all played sheepshead.  Jack had one leg amputated from gangrene and he and Clara travelled to Florida each winter, he did all the driving and they pulled a small camping trailer along which they slept in and ate all their meals.  Clara was a dear soul who lived to be over one hundred years old.

Clara took the ladies to learn the knack of placing shells into flowers, crafting.  Shopping at Fort Pierce.  Bok Tower, Cypress Gardens, water carnival.  Orlando in the days before it became a mecca for Walt Disney. Headed up Highway 1 to St. Augustine, Jacksonville, Smokey Mountains, Eagle, North Carolina.

Moving north towards home, hit flooded rivers, many detours.  Overnight in Janesville by niece Lucile whose husband Ferdinand Willing worked for General Motors.  Back home, five below zero at Bob and Joyce Zillmer's farm, where a group photo was taken (enclosed) of the four happy people.

Remarks in the diary said to 'Enjoy yourself, it's later than you think'.

Let's us take a trip to Florida now in 2011 and get out of the cold weather, inso?


               copyright 2011, Russell and Delores Miller

Friday, July 13, 2012

Race Car




by Frank Beresheim
 
 

 I went to my Doctor's office for my usual visit, taking the back way to get there. It is a nice view of the scenic Catskills, with it's beautiful evergreen trees, hills and small streams. I finally get to town, make a right turn, and find a parking spot in what appears to be a small house, but is my Doctor's office. I struggle to get out of my car and walk a small pathway, huffing and puffing to his office.  I walk through the doorway to the sliding glass window to speak with the receptionist, Mare. She greets me with her usual, hello, followed by, "you made it on time this time, with a smile. She then said has a seat.  Alfie will see you in a few. 
 
My Doctor, Alfie is laid back, never appears stressed, and wants to be called, Alfie. So I go to my favorite seat, an old leather seat with wooden arms which next to a round table filled with magazines, and try to pick one out. He always has some runner magazine, or a bicycle magazine, or some sports magazine, along with women's magazines. As I was looking. Susie, his nurse came to the door and called me in, "Frank, please follow me" and I struggled to get up out of my seat, but nonetheless, I followed her to the first office.  I would probably follow her anywhere  I sat down in the chair where she took my blood pressure, pulse and temperature. I asked how it was and she said it looks like your blood pressure is a little high, 150 over 90, but Alfie will talk to you more about it. 
 
I always thought Suzie was beautiful with her black hair and nice smile, but she lost weight and became a knockout.  I always found myself asking her how do you do it, and she always responds with,"I tell you all the time, watching my diet, and doing some aerobic exercises". She then left the room, closed the door, and that is when I noticed the full length mirror on the back of the door. I got a good chance to see my self, and heard myself say, wow that what you will look like in 10 years, then I realized that is how I look now. 
 
I glanced around the room, looking at the art work Alfie had in the room, he had posters of runs he had been on, NYC Marathon, some bicycle rides he had ridden and a poster from the local theater of a dramatic play that he performed in. My eye quickly went back to the mirror, and again I found myself looking at myself and how much weight I had put on. 
 
Alfie walked in, and he kind of startled me because of my gaze in the mirror.  He closed the door and put his hands crossed behind him, and smiled. You could see happiness behind his glasses, and believed he was a very happy person. He had greying hair, but had pulled back in a long ponytail.  He was mature, but had a very youthful appearance. The way he dressed reminded me of my high school gym teacher, gym pants, sneakers, a shirt and a tie with some cartoon on it. 
 
I got your lab work back, and you know how it reads.  He smiled and said, life is short, but it is filled with many memories, and for some it is but a memory.  He then said "is this how you wanted to be remembered?". I squeezed my eyebrows together and looked at him with my puzzled face, he had always been laid back and this was uncharacteristic of him.  He said too many people they have good and bad memories of others, some are remembered for their personalities, some for their intelligence, and some for their healthy appearance. "Do you like how you look when you look in my mirror?" I was speechless, and couldn't believe he was saying this to me. 
 
 "It is kind of like cars, do you want to be remembered as the lemon or the sleek four hundred and fifty thousand racer cars?" He noticed me sinking lower in my seat, it was then he said "you can be like the race car if you want it". "If I bought you a four hundred and fifty thousand dollar European race car, how would you take care of it?". I said I don't like foreign cars and he laughed, as if it were so funny.  He then turned to me with a serious face, looking me dead in the eye and said softly, " if I bought you that race car, would you check the oil daily?" I said yes, to which he added "would you keep it clean?"  Again said yes.  He then spoke a little louder and said if you had that race car you would take very good care of it right?" "In fact you would probably take better care of then you take care of your self, wouldn't you?" I thought about for a second before saying yes. 
 
He went back to the door, crossed his arms behind him and put his foot on the door, tilted his head down, and said " isn't it amazing that you would take care of a car better than your self?" He went on to say, I have given you medication, sent you to a nutritionist, but you have chosen not to take care of your self". "Frank you can be like that race car, you can be physically fit, you are worth it!". I want you to start taking care of your self like you would that race car, follow a diet, work out, you owe it to your self!" 
 
I walked out of the office, and didn't check in with Mare, or say goodbye to Suzie, and just flew out of there.   As I left the building, I was flooded with raw emotion, first anger, then I came to realize that he told me all that because he really cared. 
 
That was a year ago, since then I worked on my race car, I ride my bicycle 2 hours a day, I do weights a half hour daily, and I eat a near vegetarian diet. I have lost over one hundred pounds, my blood pressure is textbook, I don't need to use insulin because my diabetes is better than a person without diabetes. I keep a small metal toy race car in my pocket, to remind me that I need to take care of my race care instead of eating bad foods, and to remind me I need to go to the gym. I love my race car! 
 
copyright Frank Beresheim, 2012