Stories.
There are so many stories sloshing around in my brain. On a rainy afternoon, I made a list of a half-dozen. I’ll use some names. Some I won’t. You’ll see why.
Courthouse buzz
Dewey Willis was not a big man, but he knew how to make a mighty big stir. He had had all the red-tape runaround that he could stand. I don’t remember what caused Dewey’s temper tantrum, but I’ll never forget the chaos that he caused at the Wayne County Courthouse.
And it was a big buzz—cleaning out the government offices—when he flung a hive of angry bees down the historic hallway.
He got into a little trouble for the mayhem.
But Dewey had the last laugh.
Interview with mayor
The town’s mayor was a barber. I enjoyed stopping by for visits. His shop had two chairs, his and another for visitors.
One day when he and his scissors weren’t busy, the mayor was in a mood to reminisce about his Army days. “Yeah,” he said, “they gave us an IQ test. And I damn near made a hundred.”
I choked a laugh.
And managed to say, “Incredible.”
‘You misquoted me’
The gentleman was old enough to be my daddy. I thought he might rip off his belt and try to whip me.
He snarled, “You misquoted me.”
“I have my notes. Would you like to see them?”
His face flashed fire-engine red.
“Would you like to listen to the tape on my recorder?”
He jerked as if he really was going to snatch off his belt.
Instead, he fumed, “You just ‘misunderheard’ what I said.”
Well, I guess that I did.
Book of stories
John Strickland parked his blue-and-white Dodge pickup in the alley between his fish market and the newspaper.
I couldn’t resist chatting with the always savvy and sometimes barefoot businessman. His life was a book of colorful stories. Here’s one of my favorites:
“We grew up poor on the edge of the Altamaha River. We ate so many cooters [turtles] out of the swamp that out of the back door looked like a hard hat factory.”
John didn’t die a poor man.
During his life, he sold mountains of white crystallized earth out of Ludowici sand pits.
Yeah,
John was a book of stories.
I loved ’em all.
Campaign promise
Alex Hopkins was a timber baron, and he enjoyed embellishing his reputation as a bona fide dirt-road sport. He could go toe-to-toe with John Strickland, reeling off colorful you-can’t-make-up-this-stuff stories. He was bona fide entertainment, too.
Once, Alex ran for a seat on the county commission. One morning, he dropped by The Press-Sentinel. From my down-the-hall office, I could hear him in the lobby. As if he had swallowed a coffee cup of John’s sand, he growled, “If I am elected, they are going to tell the truth, or there will be a fistfight every first Tuesday.”
A few more votes, and Alex would have won.
And I have always wondered what if he had.
Congressman’s request
Remember when you got a free pecan log when you gassed up at Stuckey’s?
Eastman’s W.S. Stuckey had a string of those teal-blue, steep-roofed gas stations that sold candy by the truckloads. His son, Bill Stuckey, was our 8th District congressman.
And now Bill’s daughter, Stephanie, is reviving her family’s roadside heritage with pecans as a key ingredient in her business plan.
Go, Stephanie.
But I digress.
Congressman Stuckey brought his campaign to the Wayne County Press, circa 1972.
As a rookie ad salesman, I was just listening.
Publisher Elliott Brack asked, “Congressman, how can we help you?”
Rep. Stuckey responded, “Elliott, you can help me by endorsing my opponent. Your endorsements are the kiss of death.”
Nah, you can’t make up stuff like this.
dnesmith@cninewspapers.com