In high
school I think I always had a job. I was
mostly a sack boy at the Big Apple and Kirks Supermarkets. But I was from time to time a laborer at the Minute Care Wash. The car wash did not pay much, $5 for a eight or nine hours on Saturday and Sunday, a
half day for $3. On Saturday, at the car
wash they also bought us lunch which was a small Krystal or White Castle - like burger and a
drink .
I was
getting more sociable and needed more
money.
I always
admired the pin-boys at the Larry Bell Park Bowling Alley. They would sat out of the way of flying
bowling balls and wooden pins and when a set was knocked down then you hopped
up and arrange the pins and send the bowling ball back. They looked so smooth and authoritarian when they jumped into action. And not only that it paid well.. It paid more than wiping down cars or carry
out groceries.
Of course bowling pin boys is another job lost to automation.
Of course bowling pin boys is another job lost to automation.
I went to
the bowling alley which was in the basement of the Larry Bell Auditorium and
asked the manager for a job. It is a
vague remembrance, but I think Orville Curruth who was a pin-boy put in a good word for
me. It pays to have connections.
The manager,
I forgot his name, looked me over and asked me to help him clear off some brush on some land off Macland or Villa Rica Road Road he
just bought. He said he would pay me
well. He also enlisted a few of my friends: Like brothers Billy Joe and Jack Royal, I, and
Jimmy McEntyre.
We all met
on the land the day we were told to.
There were already brush and
limbs scattered all over. Our first
assignment was to drag all the sawed limbs and brush and put them in one big
pile. Which we did efficiently.
Then the
bowling alley manger/property owner brought a 5 gallon can of gasoline and
doused over the edges of the pile and some splashed more towards the center.
Then he lit
it.
WHOOSH!
A giant flash of fire shot up high.
Our boss started
running, he was smoking and on
fire. I think it was Jimmy McEntyre that
knocked him down and rolled him.
That was
before cell phones and 911, and far from any house we knew of. We put him in a car and drove him to
Kennestone Hospital.
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