The E-Light Club

After my first mother died my father was the only authority in my life and he was gone most of the time, leaving home early in the morning, getting back late at night, strip mining coal in Altoona, Alabama.

I was eight when my brother, Dave, who is two and a half years older, and I started smoking cigarettes.

A really good honey-flavored syrup.
A really good honey-flavored syrup.

Dad had a syrup factory at our farm near Gadsden, Alabama, where he manufactured Dixie Dew Syrup.   The slogan printed on the label he said he made up himself: “Gives a Biscuit a College Education.”

To get money for cigarettes Dave and I began stealing jars of syrup.  Then we would ride our bikes to Green Pasture Road, a black neighborhood a mile or two away, and sell or trade the syrup for whatever we could get. Money if we could get it, something else to sell, like turnip greens, if we couldn’t.

And when we had enough money, we would peddle to a store we called the “E-Light Club,” on Highway 74, and tell the man our Daddy had sent us to buy cigarettes. Lucky Strikes or Camels, either one.

Many years later I was visiting relatives in Gadsden and I rode out to the old farm place to see what I could see, past the club where Dave and I bought cigarettes when we were children. The club had been closed for years but the weather beaten sign was still hanging there, by a thread.

“Elite Club,” it said.

Coming Monday: The Germ Inspector

 

 

“You’re Fired!”

Mary, who was black, worked for my Dad at his syrup plant in Charlotte, North Carolina, and, after my mother, Alice May Cameron, died in June 1947, he hired her to work at our farmhouse near Gadsden, Alabama, cooking and cleaning.

I don’t know how much he paid her, very little is my guess, in addition to room and board.  But she was able to save some money.

Marjorie Marie Stith
Marjorie May Stith

When I was a boy I went barefoot a lot in the summer.  That fall, I didn’t go to school, I was 5 years old, but when it got cold I needed shoes.  We didn’t have money for shoes so Mary, bless her, bought me a pair. And for that my oldest sister, Marge, fired her and sent her back to Charlotte.

Why?  Because our family didn’t take charity.

After I grew up and heard that story I suspected racism: Our family didn’t take charity from black people.

Sister Marge turned out to be the most liberal member of our family. [She voted for George McGovern, for Pete’s sake.]  So I thought, maybe, more than 50 years later, she might admit she had been a little hasty when she fired Mary. I asked her, and I found out: Nothing had changed.

I could practically see her blood pressure rising: Our family doesn’t take charity. And don’t offer us any, either.

Coming Friday: “No Dogs or Reporters Allowed”