The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion Part 6
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1937.
BESIDES WINK JURDABRALINSKI, THE SIX-FOOT BLOND DREAMBOAT who filled your tank and cleaned your winds.h.i.+elds, there was another reason Wink's Phillips 66 had more than its share of female customers. Clean restrooms! Momma had been ahead of the national mind-set on that score.
At the beginning, the care and maintenance of the station was mostly a male-dominated affair and as a result, most filling station restrooms were poorly maintained. The sinks and toilets were rarely cleaned, and the floors were usually filthy. As one horrified woman said upon leaving one in Deer Park, Michigan, "You could grow a garden in the dirt on the floor in there!" Women rarely felt safe using one and did so only in emergencies.
But at Wink's Phillips 66, Momma always insisted that both the men's and women's restrooms were kept as clean as the bathrooms inside her home. All four girls took turns making sure there was a fresh cake of white soap on the basin and a clean white towel, and that each customer that walked in would be greeted with gleaming white sinks and toilets and a white tile floor that had just been scrubbed with Lysol. A germ would not stand a chance at Wink's. All day long, you would see one of the Jurdabralinski girls scurrying to and from the house with a pail and scrub brush and a towel over her arm. Naturally, there were squabbles about whose turn it was to clean, but it was always done. Wink and Poppa and the other mechanics were never allowed to use the customers' bathrooms. "I don't want you and your greasy hands getting everything all dirty," Momma said.
As more and more women and girls were starting to drive cars, the gas companies finally caught up and started to compete with one another for female customers. A well-known nurse and nationally known health lecturer, Matilda Pa.s.smore, had said, "What better way to lure them into the stations than offering them a clean bathroom?" Texaco formed the White Patrol and maintained a fleet of White Patrol Chevrolets that carried trained cleanliness inspectors around the country looking for dirt in every corner. Texaco station owners hoped to pa.s.s inspection and win a White Cross of Cleanliness award and be allowed to add to their sign the words REGISTERED RESTROOMS. Soon, another company started sending out a group known as the Sparkle Patrol. And Phillips Petroleum Company, not to be outdone, came up with its own cleanliness campaign and hired a crew of attractive young registered nurses known as Highway Hostesses, dressed in light blue uniforms, white shoes and stockings, and a smart military-styled hat. Phillips executives hoped the Highway Hostesses would promote goodwill for the company by their "courteous manner, pleasing personality, and willingness to aid anyone in distress." They also gave directions, suggested restaurants and hotels, and found time to discuss infant hygiene with traveling mothers.
The hostesses started roaming the highways and byways in large cream-colored sedans with dark green fenders and the Phillips 66 logo on the door. Their job was to make sure each Phillips 66 bathroom lived up to the standards of Certified Restrooms. Unfortunately for the filling station owners, they picked stations for inspection at random, so you never knew when one might show up, a further incentive to "keep 'em clean" at all times.
WINK SAW IT FIRST. And as the huge cream-colored sedan with the dark green fenders quietly drove up and turned into the station, it might as well have been a shark. Wink felt the hair on the back of his head stand up. He blinked to make sure he was not seeing things, but no-it was real all right, and it looked exactly like the photograph in the Phillips 66 magazine. He walked over and asked, "May I help you, miss?"
The woman with a long, pointy nose said, "Yes, young man, I'd like to speak with the owner. Tell him that Registered Nurse Dorothy Frakes is here for restroom inspection."
"Yes, ma'am," he said and ran in the back and got Poppa.
Gertrude May, who happened to be looking out the window of the second floor, saw it next. "Oh, geez," she said and started running downstairs to get her twin sister, Tula June, and Momma.
By the time Momma looked out the kitchen window, the woman was out of the car, and Poppa was already talking to her. Momma had never been nervous before, but when she saw how official the woman looked, standing there in her crisp uniform, holding her clipboard under her arm, she suddenly panicked. "Oh, dear Blessed Mother of G.o.d," she said. "Whose turn was it to clean last?"
"Fritzi's," said the youngest girl, Sophie Marie, and Fritzi could have killed her.
"Oh, no!" Now Momma was really scared. Fritzi was terrible at cleaning. Momma grabbed her by the shoulders. "Fritzi, look at me. Did you remember the soap?"
"Sure, I did."
"Did you scrub the sink?"
"Yes, and it wasn't all that dirty anyway."
Momma looked out at Poppa, still standing there doing a lot of nodding. What was he saying? Then, suddenly, the nurse briskly turned on her heel and marched toward the women's bathroom with her clipboard held high, like she was headed for battle.
In the windows of the house, five pairs of eyes were fixed on the door, waiting for the nurse to reappear, but after several minutes, she still had not come out. Momma twisted her ap.r.o.n. "Oh, I wonder what's taking her so long?"
Tula June said, "Maybe she had to go to the bathroom or something."
Another minute went by and then they got a quick glimpse of her leaving the women's bathroom and entering the men's room. Momma said, "Sophie Marie, go and get my rosary. I'm a nervous wreck."
A short while later, Momma was still staring at the station and working her beads when the nurse came out of the men's room and spoke to Poppa. Again, there was lots of nodding, and he kept looking over and pointing at the house. "Oh, geez ... what's he doing ... for gosh sake," said Momma.
The nurse turned and walked over to the house, climbed up the steps, and knocked on the door. Sophie said, "She's at the door, Momma. Should we hide?"
"No, no-just stay where you are, girls," she said, as she took her ap.r.o.n off and smoothed her hair. She took a deep breath and opened the door.
"Are you Mrs. Jurdabralinski?"
"Yes, I am."
"h.e.l.lo, I'm Nurse Dorothy Frakes from Phillips Petroleum. Congratulations on having scored a perfect 100 and having the cleanest restrooms I have ever had the pleasure to inspect. Why, you could eat off the floor in there, Mrs. Jurdabralinski, and so, at this time, I would like to personally present your official Certified Restroom emblem."
Momma was so overwhelmed, she burst into tears while Fritzi nattered in the background. "One hundred. I told you so. Ha-ha-ha," Fritzi said. "I don't know why people don't believe me."
After that day, Registered Nurse Dorothy Frakes became just plain Dottie, and the whole family loved it when she stopped by. She never bothered to inspect the bathrooms again. She just liked to go to the house and sit down, put her feet up, smoke a cigarette, relax a bit, chat with Momma and find out how all the girls and Wink were doing, and then head on out on her appointed rounds. "I'll tell you, Linka," she said one day. "I know being a Phillips Highway Hostess may seem glamorous to a lot of people, but it can get mighty monotonous at times. If you've seen one bathroom, you've seen them all. And if it weren't for nice people like you, I'd turn in my uniform tomorrow."
THE NEXT DAY.
SAt.u.r.dAY, JUNE 11, 2005.
SOOKIE DECIDED TO CLOSE ALL THE SHADES AND LOCK ALL THE DOORS, and other than feeding Peek-a-Boo, she stayed upstairs. Her nerves were so on edge, every time the phone rang, her heart would start to pound, especially when she saw it was Lenore's number, so she finally took the phone off the hook.
At around twelve-thirty, she went downstairs. Lenore had her DAR meeting from twelve to one, so she was safe on that account. She was headed back upstairs when suddenly the doorbell started ringing. She heard someone calling out her name, and it wasn't Lenore. It was Marvaleen. Oh, Lord ... just what she didn't need right now-a visitor.
She went over and unlocked the door and said, "Hi, Marvaleen."
"Oh, there you are. I was just about to leave. I was on my way to yoga, and I thought I might take a chance on finding you at home." Then Marvaleen looked at her intently and asked, "Sookie, do you get colonics?"
"What?"
"Colonics."
"No ... I don't know what it is."
"They're like a very high-powered enema."
Sookie made a face. "Oh, Lord ..."
"Oh, no, Sookie!" she said. "I've already had six high colonics, and I've never felt better in my life. Edna Yorba Zorbra says that before you can ever move forward with your emotional healing, having a clean colon is absolutely necessary. It's all part of learning to release the old negativity you've been holding on to."
"I see."
"Anyhow, I go to this terrific gal in Mobile." She opened her purse. "Let me give you her card. I'm telling everybody I know about her. And when you do call, be sure and tell her that I recommended you. She's giving all my friends a ten percent discount and a fifty percent discount on a series of ten. And you really need ten. Hey, maybe we can go together sometime ... and then have lunch afterward. Call me."
"Oh, okay, Marvaleen. I sure will." She took the card and waved good-bye to her friend, but she couldn't imagine anything more she would rather not do than have a high-powered enema and then lunch with Marvaleen afterward. She would just stick with her two tablespoons of sugar-free orange-flavored Metamucil at night.
Marvaleen had always been somewhat of a spiritual seeker and was still seeking. Ten years ago, she had talked Sookie into going to a women's Bible study group, and Sookie had gone through a very short born-again period. She had been so happy, but Lenore had been horrified. "My stars, Sookie ... you can believe in G.o.d, but you don't have to go around town telling everyone! You're embarra.s.sing the family. The next thing I know, you will be handling snakes and speaking in tongues!" Eventually, Sookie told Marvaleen and the group she couldn't come anymore. She still went to church and still believed in something, she guessed, but she wasn't sure what.
But now after what had just happened, she wasn't sure of anything. She had always just a.s.sumed that a person's life was planned out somewhere, and that someone was in charge and paying attention. But the more she thought about it, the more Sookie came to realize just how random the events in her life had been. And in her particular case, alarmingly precarious!
As a baby, she had been just like some cat or dog at the pound put up for adoption, and the people in charge of her had quite obviously given her to a crazy person. Don't they check people out first, before they just hand over a baby? If they had known about Lenore's brother and sister, surely they would have found someone else. Sookie had a good mind to call those people in Texas and tell them they should have been more careful.
It was particularly upsetting when she realized that throughout her entire life, her every move had been controlled by Lenore saying, "Oh Sookie, a Simmons would never do this" or "a Simmons would never do that." She had no idea what a Jurdabralinski would or would not do.
She knew everybody had to have a mother, they even gave poor little motherless monkeys a ticking clock wrapped in a towel as a subst.i.tute. But now, thinking back on her life with Lenore, she wondered if she wouldn't have been better off with just the clock.
NEVER THE SAME AGAIN.
PULASKI, WISCONSIN.
AUGUST 1938.
IT'S FUNNY HOW ONE EVENT CAN CHANGE THE ENTIRE COURSE OF A family's future. For the Jurdabralinski family of Pulaski, Wisconsin, that event took take place on August 9, 1938.
In the 1930s, hero wors.h.i.+pping and movie star crushes were in full bloom. Pictures of glamorous movie stars were plastered on the bedroom walls of most teenage girls, but a new craze hit when a tall, lanky flier named Charles Lindbergh had flown across the Atlantic Ocean. His picture had appeared everywhere. He was in the movies and on billboards, and every boy wanted to grow up and fly a plane like Lindy. All of America had fallen in love with the handsome young Charles Lindbergh, and a year later, they fell in love all over again with his female counterpart, Amelia Earhart, so bold and das.h.i.+ng with her auburn tousled hair and dressed in men's trousers. Girls sent off for her pictures and added them to their photos of their favorite movie stars.
Hoping to cash in on what Lindbergh and Earhart had started and take advantage of the new flying craze that was sweeping the country, Phillips Petroleum came up with an advertising promotion that was sure to be noticed. In a bold move, they hired skywriters to fly over their gas stations and write "Phillips 66" in the air. Most of the skywriters were old World War I pilots or barnstormers, the name given to the men who flew around the country performing aerial stunts, picking up a little extra cash on the weekends. But the pilot a.s.signed to fly over Wink's Phillips 66 filling station in Pulaski, Wisconsin, picked up more than a little extra cash.
Billy Bevins's uncle had been a flier in World War I. He started his own flying school when he came home and taught Billy to fly when he was fifteen. Billy had been flying ever since. It was a good way to make a living, and in Billy's case, a good way to meet girls. He had done it all, from barnstorming to crop dusting, and had even flown a Davis Waco with the Baby Ruth Flying Circus. It was an advertising blitz unlike anything the country had ever seen. Billy would fly over county and state fairs, racetracks, and crowded beaches in his red and white plane, dropping hundreds of tiny rice paper parachutes-each one bearing a small Baby Ruth candy bar-on the crowds below.
It was a great job; however, one day, after too many drinks, Billy took it upon himself to fly in between the buildings in downtown Pittsburgh and it caused a riot in the streets. Several people almost fell out of office windows trying to grab the candy bars as they floated by. Traffic was snarled for the next two hours as people left their cars sitting in the streets to look for Baby Ruths. The next day, Billy was fired. Now he was back to barnstorming around the county and skywriting on the side.
THE PEOPLE IN PULASKI had been waiting for weeks for the skywriter to fly in. In preparation, Poppa and some of his farmer friends had brought in tractors and cleared out the large field in the back of the house, and Wink and all his friends got busy and cleared out all the rocks and made a long, smooth runway where the plane could land. When word got out that he was coming one Sat.u.r.day morning, the entire town went out into their yards or stood waiting in the empty lot behind the filling station. Pretty soon, they heard the sound of a faraway motor. Fritzi was the first to see the plane and shouted for everyone to look up. Soon, a large white "P" was being formed in the sky. The entire crowd stood looking up in awe as the word "Phillips" was spelled out, then the number "66." As the icing on the cake, the pilot flew the plane straight down toward the ground and then back up and formed an arrow that pointed right down at the station. He then made a large circle in the sky, came back around, and landed the plane to wild applause from the waiting crowd.
But the pilot who opened the door and jumped down from the plane was not like anything they expected and a far cry from Charles Lindbergh. Billy was a short and stocky young man with a wide grin who clearly loved his work. "Hiya, pals!" he said as he made his way over to the filling station with the crowd following behind him. Fritzi was blown away. She had never seen anyone so confident, so self-a.s.sured, and she loved the way he had said "Hiya, pals!" with such flair. It was as if he had stepped right out of a movie.
Billy walked over to the station and posed for pictures and gave radio and newspaper interviews for about an hour. Later, he waved good-bye to the crowd with a "So long, pals," and went inside the house next door and was treated to lunch with the Jurdabralinski family.
During his visit, they learned that he had flown over that morning from Grand Rapids. Wink was enthralled as he sat and listened to Billy tell tales about his flying exploits as a barnstormer and stunt flier. After lunch, they walked him back to his plane and waved as he took off to the east. They all agreed it had been the most exciting day of their lives.
It had also been a very good day for Billy. He had flown away with a large paper bag full of good Polish sausage and homemade candy that the mother had packed for him, plus something else. He had learned the names of all four daughters.
NOT LONG AFTER BILLY'S first visit, someone heard the sound of a plane circling above the town. They all came out and looked up and saw that it was the skywriter back again, but this time, after he had finished, they saw he had written in large white letters across the sky, HEY, FRITZI, HOW ABOUT A DATE?.
Billy had a hunch. Fritzi was not the prettiest sister. Sophie, the youngest, was the beauty, and the other two girls were swell looking, too, but there was something about Fritzi that he liked. She had real spirit, and he was looking for a gal with spirit.
When Momma stepped out and looked up and saw the message in the sky, she shook her head. She had been concerned about something like this happening. She was afraid that of all her children, Fritzi would be the one who would run off from home, looking for some wild new adventure. And she could tell by the way Fritzi had pushed her way past everybody to sit by Billy Bevins at lunch and how she had hung on to his every word, this might be it.
TWO DAYS LATER, WHEN the family was having dinner, Billy Bevins called the phone number at the filling station, and Wink ran over to the house to get Fritzi.
After a few minutes, Fritzi came back to the kitchen looking flushed and excited and announced to the table, "Billy's coming to get me on Sat.u.r.day and fly me to Milwaukee for dinner and dancing!"
Momma turned to her husband, waiting for him to put his foot down and say no, but he just nodded and kept eating. Wink and the other girls were as excited as Fritzi and started jumping up and down. Wink asked, "Can I go, too?" so Momma knew she was outnumbered. And, besides, what could she do? Stanislaw was right. Fritzi was a new breed of American girl with a mind of her own, and nothing she could say would stop her anyway. All Momma could do was go to Saint Mary's and light a candle to the Blessed Mother and pray Fritzi didn't fall out of the plane.
The next day, when Fritzi told her friends about it, one girl said, "Oh, Fritzi, I'd be scared to go off with a stranger like that." The other girl said, "Yeah, aren't you afraid he might get you up in the air and then try to get fresh?" But Fritzi wasn't worried. She had been on too many hayrides with over-six-foot-tall Wisconsin farm boys, and if she could handle them, she surely could handle him. Billy wasn't much taller than she was.
The following Sat.u.r.day afternoon, Fritzi, dressed in a blue suit, white blouse, white shoes, and a white hat, climbed into the backseat of the plane and waved good-bye to her family, while Momma stood there making the sign of the cross over and over again. "Oh, dear Mother of G.o.d, let her live through this." But Momma knew, even if Fritzi did live, they were in danger of losing her. They always said that "Once you've been to Milwaukee, you're never the same."
THE LETTERS.
POINT CLEAR, ALABAMA.
IN THE PAST WEEK, SOOKIE HAD GONE THROUGH ALL THE FOOD SHE had stashed away in case of an emergency. She hadn't stepped out of the house. But now even she couldn't face another frozen shrimp. She really had to do a little grocery shopping. So she waited until noon, when she knew Lenore was safely at the Red Hat Society ladies luncheon. After she finished her shopping, she thought of something else she needed to do while she was out, so she whipped around the corner and parked in the back of the bank.
She went in and opened up their security box and removed the two letters she had written almost three years ago and reread them.
Dear Family, If anything should happen to me as far as my mental health, I am saying good-bye to you now while I am still of sound mind. I want you to know that you are the very best thing that ever happened to me and that you have always been my constant joy and pride. I don't know what I ever did to deserve such a wonderful husband and children. Take good care of each other, and try and remember me when I was well.
I will love you forever, Mother
Then, she opened up the one to Earle.
To My Darling Earle, Promise me if something should happen, please feel free to divorce me and remarry. I want you to be happy, and you need someone to take care of you. Sweetheart, thank you for all the wonderful years we did have. When I'm gone, take care of Mother as best you can, and let Dee Dee help you. She is devoted to Lenore and will be happy to take over the paperwork.
Always, Your loving wife, Sookie P.S. Pleasant Hill has recently raised their prices, so I have checked around for places a little less expensive. Try Brice's Inst.i.tution in Tuscaloosa first. I think they may take Blue Cross.
P.P.S. Marvaleen told me on the QT that she thinks you are very handsome. Just a thought ...
When Sookie reread the last letter, she was so glad Earle had not seen it. Marvaleen? What had she been thinking? Marvaleen was far too new age for Earle. Marvaleen wore thong underwear-not that there was anything wrong with that, but it would be a little too much for Earle. Sookie knew she really was the perfect wife for Earle. He had always said so, and now she could clearly see he was right. She knew exactly how he liked his corn bread: thin and crispy. He wouldn't be happy with anyone else but her. She tore both letters up and threw them away.
Sookie realized that starting today, she was going to have to reset her thinking. For years, she had lived with the fear of the Simmons gene, but now that was a worry she didn't have anymore. Of course, she didn't know about the Jurdabralinski genes, but she was fairly certain n.o.body could be crazier than the Simmonses.
As Sookie drove home from the bank, she suddenly remembered it was Monday and ducked down in her seat and hid as she drove past the cemetery. Her mother's car was there, but thank heavens, she hadn't spotted Sookie's car. That was another thing Lenore had put her through. It was so irritating to think that she had gone to all that ha.s.sle and trouble to move her great-grandfather there, and now it turns out she wasn't even related to him. The man was a complete stranger!
She felt like such a fool. Lenore had made her do all that stuff, knowing full well she wasn't a Simmons. Honestly!
The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion Part 6
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