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Sunday, June 30, 2019
PROUD TINA
This morning on the CBS SUNDAY MORNING NEWS SHOW was a
feature on Tina Turner. Wow! She hasn’t hardly changed at all over he past
54 years when I saw her in person at the Royal Peacock in Atlanta.
July 10, 1965, I arrived home from a two-year active duty
obligation in the Navy. Within two or
three days I got with old friends Monty and Johnnie and went to Atlanta to the
Royal Peacock, a predominantly black club. This was on the eve of Georgia’s
integration.
Ike and Tina Turner were the headliners. Their music was well known, top 40 type.
If I remember correctly The Royal Peacock did not sell booze
but you were welcome to bring your own, if you bought their ice and
mixers. We and a table of Tech students
were the only white people there.
Ike, Tina, and the Ikettes came out at hyper high loud
rhythmic energy. The action and music
were high pace. It makes you want to
jump up and start clapping and dancing. Again, if I remember correctly, there was no
dancing, it wasn’t allowed.
Ike put on a neat show with his guitar and tongue. His tongue whipped in and out, like a snake’s tongue with the beat of the
music and he held and stroke his guitar handle in a very sexual manner.
Tina had her own show going.
She either had on a very short dress or one with a split up to her
thighs. She and her Ikettes put
choreographed well synchronized moves while singing and dancing.
I think when we left, we were panting over keeping up with
the high-energy performance.
SUNDAY FUNNIES!! HUMBUG's Voting Machines
This is from the pages of HUMBUG Magazine in the 1950s. Illustrated by Al Jaffee and editor Harvey Kurtzman - ready when you are HK!
Al Jaffee is in his late 90s is still produces very detailed cartoons in MAD magazine.. He is the oldest and the longest running cartonnist of MAD Magazine.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
John and Adeline Woody Petty
GO
WEST YOUNG PETTYS! John Franklin and Adeline Woody Petty. John is the
son of Elijah Petty and Sarah Parker. Adeline is the daughter of
Conrad Raburn and Elizabeth Hunt Woody. Adeline was born in Fannin Counry, Georgia, 1859 and John was born in the same county in 1856.
They were married 1881 in Fannin County. They had ten children.
Here is the only note I have about John:
John received the bulk of his father's estate.
They were married 1881 in Fannin County. They had ten children.
Here is the only note I have about John:
John received the bulk of his father's estate.
In the book "PROGESSIVE MEN OF WYOMING" They moved to Sand Creek,
Laromie County, Wyoming in 1887. Later owning a farm on the Wheatland
Flats.
- Gary Griswold
Here is a far fetched thought: John Petty is the brother Daniel Webster Petty. Daniel Webster Petty is the father of William Elijah Joseph Petty (my mother's father). William Elijah Joseph was also born in Fannin County. William Elijah Joseph Petty moved his family to Gillette, Wyoming for a few years. I wonder if Wm Elijah Joseph was aware his uncle John lived in the same state? And if so, is that why he moved there?
- Gary Griswold
Here is a far fetched thought: John Petty is the brother Daniel Webster Petty. Daniel Webster Petty is the father of William Elijah Joseph Petty (my mother's father). William Elijah Joseph was also born in Fannin County. William Elijah Joseph Petty moved his family to Gillette, Wyoming for a few years. I wonder if Wm Elijah Joseph was aware his uncle John lived in the same state? And if so, is that why he moved there?
Friday, June 28, 2019
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Throwback Thursday, Philadelphia Navy Hospital
Throwback Thursday – 30 Days in the Philadelphia Naval
Hospital.
It appears that I have a Panadol cyst again.
This is my fourth time with this kind of cyst.
It reminds me of February or March 1965 of my first Panadol Cyst.
At NAS Lakehurst, NJ, I had an infected sore-like thing on
the end of my tailbone. It was infected excreting
a smelly pus. The medical department of
the base sent me to the Naval Hospital in Philadelphia.
After the operation I was in a open-bay ward with many
patients. After a few days I was moved
to another opened-bay ward – but no other person was there. I had the whole ward to myself.
I had to report to the ward above me twice a day for the
medical people to clean and change my bandage and for sitz baths. With Sitz baths you fill a small tub with hot
water, dump some healing stuff into the water and it down. Usually there were three to five of us.
To earn my keep, so to speak, when I was well enough, I had
to sweep down the long lonely bay I was staying alone.
Since I was the only occupant it was always fairly clean. A couple times I didn’t get around to
sweeping it down and nobody noticed.
At the end of pay, was two patient rooms. One was a airplane pilot who was in a crash
and he was burned to a crisp. He was covered with bandages. Only by accident I saw some of his cooked arm
when they were changing him.
The other room was an old senile old man who talked out of
his head. The male-nurse told me they
had no idea who he was, he was found on
the streets mumbling to himself. . He
was so unfasted he had no body motor controls.
Why was he in a Navy hospital?
Because he probably served in the Navy, based on a tell-tell tattoo.
Both these men reminded me a book I had recently read JOHNNKY
GOT HIS GUN by Dalton Trumbo.
I walked into downtown Philadelphia one day. It was a long walk. I stopped in a bar for a drink and started talking
to an old lady in a Red Cross uniform.
She bought the drinks. And again.
Also, I made friends with one of the male nurses. We liked the same literature. He had me over to his apartment one night
with dinner for he and his wife.
The Personnel Office for Officers had a woman that needed typing help. I filled her need by doing some typing for
her. We talked about this and that. In a couple of days she said she did some research
and found that after I was released from the hospital the next week I would have less than 90 days to
serve. They would have to cut me orders
to report back to my squadron in Lakehurst or since I will have less than 90
days they can terminate my active duty.
I jumped for joy.
Then I thought about it.
I made some good friendships at Lakehurst and did not like the idea of
leaving them and not seeing them again.
And besides I left my co-worker, friend, my car to use while I was in the
hospital, so I told they lady “Thanks but no thanks.”
If I knew what was in store for me I possibly might have had second thoughts. When I saw my little blue Volvo my friend was
keeping for the first thing I noticed was the door was being held on by a
rope. Secondly, I was to be
questioned. I accidentally left the safe
opened with tests in it. A guy by the
name of Montgomery stole a test and later during a search the test was confiscated. It was my fault he had that test, an oversight,
but my responsibility anyway.
What got me through that investigation was when questioned
Don would get behind me and make faces at the investigating officer. You would have to have been there.
Hunter Sister-In-Laws , 1940sw
The Hunter mothers of Marietta in the late 1940s
Left to rightr: Janie Petty Hunter, Willy Collins Hunter, Jeannetrte Quintal Hunter, Sarah Frasurer Hunter, Lola Jean Turner Hunter and Ruby Langley Hunter
Left to rightr: Janie Petty Hunter, Willy Collins Hunter, Jeannetrte Quintal Hunter, Sarah Frasurer Hunter, Lola Jean Turner Hunter and Ruby Langley Hunter