Huntsville Oral Histories
- Item Type
- Video recordings
- Date of Original
- September 2015
- Playing Time
- 34:38
- Geographic Coverage
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-
Ontario, Canada
Latitude: 45.33341 Longitude: -79.21632
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- Transcription
00:00
this is Wayne Cooper it is August 12
00:02
2015 I'm interviewing a longtime
00:06
resident of fun so please introduce
00:08
yourself and give us your name birth
00:11
year and birthplace my name is donaill
00:16
do in atl Jack Nichols and I see Kate
00:22
ALS i was born in huntsville on july
00:27
nineteenth nineteen thirty-one tell us a
00:31
little bit about your childhood memories
00:33
parents and home life in particular to
00:36
start with I had a good home life my
00:41
father and mother and I had a sister
00:45
younger four years younger than I and we
00:49
had a good lift we lived on the top of
00:52
mary street and I never when we got our
00:57
first where my father got his first car
01:01
we used to get in every night after
01:04
after dinner and we drive down the West
01:08
End take a trip if we did it I'm sure
01:11
every night that drive home and that was
01:14
our the end of our day to this funny
01:18
Trevor did and we did that for many
01:21
years and then I went to high school up
01:26
public and high school in Huntsville and
01:30
find the after finishing that and my
01:34
mother passed away just as I was
01:36
finishing high school at 39 years old
01:40
she was very young and I was had decided
01:48
that I would like to join the business
01:52
of Wardell business and so I i went to a
01:57
Ryerson in Toronto and I took a course
02:03
called retail merchandising it was a
02:06
two-year course and actually was very
02:11
interesting
02:12
very helpful and the only thing that I
02:15
have regretted of that whole two years
02:18
is that they had a taping course was
02:24
included in this course and I thought I
02:28
don't need to know how to type we've got
02:31
three girls in the office they they can
02:33
read all the letters and do all the
02:35
taping I wish I hadn't said that are
02:39
done that but I go to a movie during the
02:42
type of course let's go back and we bet
02:46
to your earliest memory of a trip to
02:49
Toronto remember the purpose of that
02:51
trip well yes we had relatives in
02:53
Toronto the lived in Toronto and we used
02:58
to go down at least once a year our
03:00
family my father's guard and we leave
03:06
here first thing in the morning
03:07
properties seven or eight o'clock in the
03:09
morning and we drive to your way yeah
03:11
that was lunch time by the time we got
03:14
to Orillia we have lunch and then we go
03:18
on back in the car drive down go through
03:22
barrier around Barry and when we got to
03:27
just north of Toronto we'd start looking
03:31
watching who could see the first street
03:34
car because in those days the streetcar
03:38
did come up I'm not sure how quite how
03:41
far but not not anywhere near Barry so
03:44
we'd watch for our first street car that
03:46
was a big thing then we drive down if we
03:49
go through the parts of Toronto and till
03:52
we got to our relatives home and we'd
03:55
stay there for probably a week and have
03:58
a nice visit and do different things and
04:01
maybe do a little shopping and so on and
04:04
it was kind of a yearly thing we did
04:07
this for for many years and I guess we
04:11
outgrew it or my parents are good and
04:13
that was no longer but
04:16
so it was it was interested in different
04:19
it was nice to go because there were
04:22
many many people who lived in Huntsville
04:25
that haven't been passed bracebridge
04:27
they try to where's that you know never
04:30
heard of it when I got involved in the
04:34
business we would take some of our staff
04:38
and we'd go down to uh to the Royal York
04:40
Hotel and and they would put on up the
04:45
companies that we dealt with what rent
04:49
rooms and they put on displays and then
04:51
we can could own a buy for our spring
04:54
and summer business and then the later
04:57
on we got on for the fall and winter
04:59
business and one people when we'd say
05:03
we're from Huntsville they'd say my
05:06
goodness how long did it take to get
05:09
here you know they thought Huntsville
05:11
was up on the article thing but yeah it
05:15
was it was going to experience and we
05:17
did this for many many years and then
05:21
well after i was married my wife Pat
05:25
became very involved in the business
05:28
fact she and I ended up owning and
05:32
running it for several years until we
05:35
decided that we would had enough and in
05:39
the 1980s we closed the business at a
05:43
big sale we had an auction and we had a
05:46
lot of I guess you'd call him antique
05:50
furnishings and so on which went on the
05:53
auction and it was very interested if we
05:56
cleaned it right out too but when we got
05:59
finished we had one small rock with
06:02
about three lady addresses on it and
06:04
that was the end of war dells so was it
06:07
was quite quite interesting a lot of
06:11
interesting people we dealt with them
06:14
and a lot of people that would come in
06:18
to visit my uncle Claude Wardell when he
06:22
was involved in the business and they
06:25
come in to borrow money from and
06:28
out he take them back to our office and
06:31
he get a piece of paper and it might be
06:34
over maybe fifty cents maybe at the most
06:37
a dollar and he'd insist that these
06:39
people sign an IOU for that whatever
06:43
your mom was and then that went on with
06:47
my father he did the same thing and then
06:50
it was my turn and I did the same thing
06:53
for many many years and we had up a chap
06:56
that I'd like to mention his name
06:58
because that name is still in Huntsville
07:01
his name was Russell ward and he worked
07:05
in the lumber camps back up in nero
07:08
oakland park and he'd he'd come in in
07:14
the summertime actually or when he when
07:17
he retired after many years he came in
07:21
and he'd come to be in see dawn I'd uh I
07:25
need a little money so I'd loan him in
07:29
those days I would be big money I loaned
07:31
him fifteen dollars and he said I'll be
07:34
back my pension check comes in on the
07:37
middle September I'll come back and pay
07:40
and he never ever missed a payment for
07:43
many many years and you know so one he
07:48
passed away one of the ward family I
07:51
can't recall it was follow me to see of
07:55
Russell old as any money didn't know a
07:59
thing paid it every every time he paid
08:02
one time he got the money and it was a
08:06
enormous day there was at a big parade
08:09
and he was involved in the parade and I
08:14
think he's had a few drinks and and he
08:17
came in and got the fifteen dollars in
08:20
he came back about an hour later he was
08:23
quite upset Donny says I've got a
08:26
problem he said I've lost my money he
08:30
said i think what i did when i went to
08:33
put it in my pocket I I missed my pocket
08:36
and now he said I'm really in trouble to
08:40
think you could
08:41
we have some more so I said sure Russ no
08:44
problems I gave him another fifteen
08:46
dollars what she signed for and he was
08:50
back on that one of his old age pension
08:53
check and he paid back the thirty
08:54
dollars this time instead of the 15 and
08:58
we had a lot of people the customers
09:00
like that over the years that would
09:03
always have to have a little extra money
09:06
and in those days you know 50 Cent's was
09:11
a lot of money and these fellows used to
09:14
not all of them but some of them what
09:18
one is littless fifty cents then they
09:21
could get over to the liquor store and
09:23
buy a bottle of wine pretty good wine
09:25
for fifty cents a bottle a little more
09:29
than that now so anyway we be carried on
09:35
with the business my wife that I and she
09:40
had rheumatoid arthritis and she became
09:44
very she could hardly walk in your hands
09:47
she couldn't use that well so we decided
09:51
that we closed the store this is in the
09:54
1980s so the store was the business is
09:58
almost honored years old at this point
10:00
so we put a big sign every februari we
10:04
used to have a big sale and we give the
10:10
first ten customers become a dollar bill
10:13
or some always gave the first few
10:15
customers goody to get them here and
10:19
we'd have people lined up the whole main
10:21
street waiting to get in because we
10:24
wouldn't open the door wouldn't unlock
10:26
until nine o'clock and we put on a
10:31
frente wake up made up we got quite a
10:34
name for Ward else having their big club
10:37
annual sale and so when we decided to
10:42
close it we did the same thing only we
10:45
put it as a retiree sale instead of just
10:50
our yearly sale and
10:53
uh we closed it and we ended up we had
10:57
an auction at one time I wanted it
11:00
during that we ended up with a rack like
11:06
a rocket clothes rack with probably
11:08
about three dresses on it and we sold
11:11
everything else is gone bordelles was
11:13
gone we sold we had our own hangers war
11:17
delica bordelles the busy merchants
11:20
printed on them they were wooden and we
11:25
got it we just don't have it nothing
11:29
left anymore after that and so what for
11:33
me it was a very interesting and
11:38
valuable part of my life for most of my
11:42
life at that time and when I got
11:46
finished and got everything cleaned up
11:49
we sold the building and no algonquin up
11:54
fitters is in there it has been in there
11:56
for quite some time now and but we still
12:00
have someone I still have some of the
12:02
the old things from more Dells which are
12:06
nice to have my daughter was at nah but
12:11
married for I think 25 years or more and
12:14
has 33 boys two of them finished
12:18
University the other one just starting
12:21
so I guess I I shouldn't say I guess
12:26
I've had a very good life long life I
12:30
just turned 84 years old this past July
12:35
and I have no complaint the only
12:40
complaint I have now is that I can't
12:44
remember things you know if I think
12:46
you're doing very well done I'm going to
12:49
seed your memory on a couple of things
12:50
what are your memories of the war del
12:52
Holm in this film the war del Holm was
12:56
odd located i'm trying to think of the
13:00
name of the street do you remember where
13:01
i am an elm street at west road west
13:05
road west rule
13:07
that was the old Wardell Matthew War
13:10
dolls hold home well it wasn't old then
13:13
I guess but it was his home and we spent
13:18
a lot of time as children in this house
13:21
with we had Christmas there we have
13:24
birthdays there we had free while
13:27
everything even the odd funeral I think
13:29
we had there to over the many years and
13:33
the hope of the home is still there it's
13:36
got to be well over a hundred years old
13:39
or people living in it still and now
13:42
it's at a look quite a bit of upgrades
13:45
so on over the years I haven't been in
13:47
it for many many years but it's it was
13:52
an old Huntsville original I believe I
13:54
think so yeah um you told me earlier
13:58
about a trip to Toronto a special trip
14:00
to Toronto to see the king can you tell
14:03
me more about that yeah we the king and
14:07
queen were about to visit Toronto and we
14:12
had you know we had videos and things
14:14
that we could know what's going on and
14:19
we drove down and which took it's about
14:24
a four or five hour trip to Toronto and
14:27
to visit our relatives to stay with them
14:31
and we had a chance to see the king and
14:33
queen of England which was quite an
14:36
exciting adventure in those days I can't
14:40
remember what year but I was probably
14:42
about maybe in my teens when this
14:45
happened so but I guess I remember um
14:50
your first employment my first
14:54
employment was at war Dells I was 12
14:59
years old and we became a very very
15:03
business busy at Christmastime read
15:06
everybody do the shopping their
15:08
Christmas shopping and so on and we
15:11
didn't have modern cash registers or
15:14
anything so we had we had a
15:19
a metal line that went down to our
15:22
office and we put the customer's bill
15:25
and the customers money in this
15:30
container and pull it pull up but handle
15:35
and it would shoot the money down to the
15:38
office the girls in the office would
15:41
make the change and send it back to us
15:44
and this is how I often feel sorry that
15:48
I didn't keep those things to have you
15:52
know as a memory but I don't I guess we
15:55
were so glad to get rid of them and get
15:57
cash registers what show we're so much
16:00
easier it took us a little while to
16:01
figure out how to work them but it was
16:06
good so you endured the technological
16:08
change yeah um tell me a little bit
16:11
about your your observations of the end
16:15
of the Second World War celebrations in
16:17
Huntsville yeah a second world war i
16:20
think i was about probably 14 at the end
16:24
of the war and of course all of a sudden
16:28
the war was over and everybody was
16:30
celebrating them including the whole
16:34
town hot self and read the main street
16:36
you could hardly move on for people
16:38
celebrating and driving up and down and
16:42
it was really exciting to see that the
16:46
war was over and in Canada and the
16:50
states and so on had won the war so we
16:53
got wicked then get back to normal how
16:56
do the people celebrate down where their
16:58
fireworks serving like that I can't
17:01
recall fireworks I think most of the fun
17:04
I can remember getting on the back of a
17:07
truck with a whole bunch of other people
17:09
and driving up down the main street
17:10
singing and hollering them I don't I
17:14
don't I can't recall fireworks now they
17:18
could have been there may have been but
17:19
that's a long time ago that's the look
17:22
at ya thank you for that done now I know
17:24
that you received your elementary and
17:26
high school education in US
17:28
I'd like you to make comment on some
17:31
memorable teachers classmates special
17:35
events that occurred in the schools
17:36
while you were going there I concede
17:39
your memory Harry Thornton was the
17:41
principal yes any any thoughts and
17:45
memories of Harry in particular Harry
17:48
Thornton was just the first principle
17:51
when I went into high school he was the
17:56
principal and he was quite strict but he
18:01
was a good principle and he ran up good
18:03
school and for many many years until he
18:07
retired and I made a lot of friends over
18:12
not during that time in Huntsville high
18:17
school there are too many of us left
18:20
anymore I had good friends like but Joss
18:25
key I'm trying to think some of the
18:30
others teen jersey on Teen Jersey a no
18:33
Tina I believe still living but passed
18:37
away about a year ago I also have my
18:41
younger cousin bill Nichols who I ended
18:45
up working for in that so funny emails
18:48
after I said we closed our war dells and
18:52
I work for bill for probably 15 or 16
18:57
years I guess and had a good
19:00
relationship there bill and I became
19:02
well I shouldn't say became our our
19:06
fathers were brothers and Bill and i
19:09
were really brothers too we we were we
19:16
were brothers more than than just
19:19
cousins we were first cousins but so we
19:23
had a great time bill unfortunately
19:26
passed away about a year ago and but he
19:30
was younger he was six is six years
19:33
younger than me and I still hanging in
19:37
there well they say about the good dying
19:40
young
19:41
yeah I remember going to the Fall Fair
19:46
every every September being marched over
19:49
to the falls there at the arena grounds
19:52
I was in elementary school do you
19:54
remember that happened doesn't remember
19:56
a 1-up episode that was really I thought
20:00
quite interesting and quite funny this
20:04
would be in September and all the school
20:06
kids would march over to the arena and
20:13
it was quite a big deal I was standing
20:16
out in front of our store with and there
20:19
were two or three Americans standing
20:21
there and they were watching all these
20:24
kids going by and waving and flags and
20:27
having a great time and then one fellow
20:29
looked at the others they said look at
20:31
all those kids my goodness they must
20:35
have a lot of cold nights up here at the
20:37
lawyer indeed that was true yeah um
20:41
backdated to your experiences at Ryerson
20:45
and coming back to huntsville um you
20:48
took retailing what was the what was the
20:50
phrase that you used retailing retail
20:53
merchandising authoress what did it
20:54
called the course it was a two-year
20:56
course I need a lot of good friends
20:59
there I kept in touch with not a lot of
21:03
them but one particular one who
21:05
unfortunately passed away about a year
21:08
and a half ago I used to hit a cottage
21:10
up to here in Huntsville and we became
21:13
very good friends over all those years
21:15
but as you get older and everybody else
21:21
gets older along with you so I don't
21:23
have too many friends left I understand
21:27
and again we may be reiterating
21:31
something but you you went to Ryerson
21:33
really at the urging of your father and
21:36
grandmother yes my father at this time
21:41
was very very active and
21:44
and my grandmother and my uncle Claude
21:48
Wardell own Wardell store and he was
21:54
quite interested and hopeful that i
21:56
would go through get some proper
21:59
education and come back and end up on
22:02
the store which I did and I've never
22:06
regretted it we had many I have many
22:10
many years in this door and made a lot
22:14
of friends and it more dolls I still
22:19
have people say what I really miss your
22:22
store and you know we're closed in
22:24
nineteen eighty and now this is 19 @
22:29
2015 so I had a pretty good name over
22:33
after all those years I like to touch on
22:36
your great-grandfather Matthew Wardell
22:38
it was a general merchant in town
22:40
whooping does his store here in the
22:42
1890s and try to relate to us some of
22:46
the lesser known facts about Matthew
22:48
that not just everyone with no but you
22:50
would know because you're a member of
22:52
the family when now my great-grandfather
22:56
was I guess he was pretty still active
23:01
in the business and they had this chap
23:04
came in they used to stay up until
23:06
midnight and on 30 nights and this chap
23:12
came in you wanted to buy a pair of
23:14
pants to work in and so Matthew showed
23:18
him the pants and told him how much they
23:23
were and he decided that they couldn't
23:26
couldn't pay that much and it probably
23:28
they be twenty dollars at the very most
23:31
maybe even not much that much but anyway
23:34
so they bickered and dickered and fella
23:37
left and came back a couple of times
23:40
Matthew wouldn't wouldn't lower his
23:44
price so the fellow finally came back
23:48
just awfully close to midnight that's
23:52
when they closed but anyway he got in
23:56
before the
23:57
store was locked up and closed and he
24:00
said that he'd take the pants he finally
24:02
decided he'd buy the pants and I got
24:06
father of a great grandfather's price so
24:10
my grandfather great-grandfather they
24:12
looked at him he says you're too late it
24:15
felt that what do you mean he said we're
24:17
closed we don't do business on Sunday
24:20
and he wouldn't sell the patents well I
24:26
understand your grandfather your
24:27
great-grandfather Matthew was
24:30
responsible for the loss of its first
24:32
store in hustle in 1911 how did that
24:34
happen well yeah they had the store
24:36
which is across the street from for the
24:39
present building is and they had a big
24:43
big box stove I guess you'd call it in
24:47
the store do well to help heat the
24:51
building is well they lived above the
24:53
store in those days and and he put a
24:58
whole bunch of cardboard and paper and
25:01
lit of matching got a great big fire
25:04
burning in actually it got so bad that
25:08
it burned the star dog or the whole
25:10
building down and then they had to
25:13
locate across the street from where that
25:16
where the present building is
25:18
understanding math you liked his name
25:22
and can you tell us the story about
25:25
about Matthew wanting you to be named
25:30
Matthew yes when I was born I guess I
25:35
was the first well I was the first
25:37
grandchild or a child born and Matthew
25:43
offered my father five dollars if they
25:46
need me Matthew and my dad turned him
25:50
down that's that which is kind of mean
25:53
but I'm for at fortunately I have a
25:58
grandson called Matthew he has a twin
26:01
brother which is really nice
26:03
for me wonderful now you are the last
26:07
dollar Wardell start family business
26:09
spanning four generations starting with
26:12
yourself so everyone will know please
26:14
trace your lineage back to Matthew
26:17
Wardell the founder Wardell story so
26:22
should i start with bathrooms now when
26:23
you start with me I was the last person
26:28
involved with more dollar company and
26:32
those days over the years we've become
26:34
an incorporated company and so on and
26:39
before when i had it i bought my share
26:45
from my father Jack Nichols and he and I
26:50
for some time after we had bought Claude
26:54
Waddell's edges we ran the business for
27:00
several years my father and I he became
27:05
unable to handle the affairs of the
27:10
business anymore so i bought my share
27:14
from him and so it wasn't a business
27:19
that even though it was a for generation
27:22
business each person that was involved
27:26
in that business bought their share they
27:30
weren't left the sheer i believe i might
27:33
have been left a little bit at the end
27:35
from my father but most of it was
27:37
purchased by me now the previous
27:40
generation to your father was your
27:43
grandmother and what was her name and
27:45
how did she die into Matthew Wardell my
27:49
grandmother was Maude Nichols she
27:55
married a man by the name in nickels and
27:59
unfortunately I don't think she'd been
28:01
married that long she became pregnant
28:04
with my father and her husband died
28:10
before my father was born so I never
28:14
knew my grandfather
28:15
but that's how that's part of our
28:18
history and Maude was Matthew word else
28:22
doc Matthew was it yes okay now we got
28:26
that straight now I think that we've
28:29
indicated pretty thoroughly to the
28:32
audience so far that ordell's store was
28:36
pretty important to Huntsville it was
28:37
really a hustle institution for more
28:41
than 90 years approaching a hundred
28:43
years besides longevity one in your mind
28:46
made war dells an institution and that's
28:49
tough think what made as far as I can
28:52
see or from my experience when my father
28:57
and my father's brother grenville
29:00
nichols became involved in the business
29:05
then in those days we didn't have
29:08
tourist business like we do now or did
29:11
for many years my father and his brother
29:14
Grenville I would load up a car with
29:18
merchandise and they go around to the
29:21
resorts and set up a display of the
29:24
different kinds of merchandise we
29:28
carried and that was really how the
29:32
tourist business got started because
29:35
these people come up and they wouldn't
29:38
be like it is now but but there would be
29:40
several people who come from the states
29:43
or Toronto or wherever to have a holiday
29:46
or maybe build a cottage or something so
29:49
they got to know that that's well had a
29:53
good at least one good store in it that
29:55
they kick him in and do their shopping
29:56
and that's how our business our tourist
29:59
business really got started even before
30:02
that I'm thinking that you mentioned
30:06
that Wardell store really grew up with
30:10
herself yes it did grow up with
30:13
Huntsville many many many years ago on
30:20
the people that workers that work in the
30:23
bush cutting lumber and so on we get
30:26
paid by check or with a check and they
30:33
would come in and the staff award else
30:37
would make sure that they had enough
30:40
money on him to cash the check for these
30:43
guys because they would live they would
30:46
work until you know friday by the time
30:49
they got in there was no such thing as a
30:51
bank being open banks were an open on
30:54
saturday so they were able to cash their
30:57
checks at Wardell and this is how i
31:01
guess how it helped grow no one else
31:05
grow too because they were had
31:10
merchandise to sell and they also could
31:13
cash checks for these fellows and it
31:16
worked out quite well to that end then
31:19
Ward else became a bank really yes now
31:24
you excited to me some time ago a case
31:29
in point rather extreme case in point
31:32
but the man that came in and bought two
31:34
suitcases could you tell us that stuff
31:36
yes this chap would come in he was one
31:39
of the workers in the back in the in the
31:41
lumber business he came in many years
31:44
ago and he bought two suitcases and he
31:48
he by fella both with clothes new
31:52
clothing that he bought from for more
31:54
dells and then he had the whole weekend
31:58
to put up in order to put in and so on
32:01
so he'd find himself a lady friend and
32:04
and he'd spend a bit of time or the
32:08
weekend with this lady friend and he
32:11
spend his money and by the time he was
32:15
the weekend was over he didn't have any
32:18
money left but he had two suitcases full
32:20
of clothing so he'd bring back one of
32:23
those suitcases to get his money back so
32:27
he wouldn't be completely out of money
32:29
and he did this for some time until
32:32
finally the stuff ordell's realized what
32:36
he was up to they were
32:37
River his bank so we refused to sell
32:41
them any more clothing and wouldn't give
32:44
him any money for any of the clothing he
32:46
had but that was kind of an interesting
32:49
story very interesting one more thing
32:52
you mentioned to me that Ward else phone
32:55
number was number one what does that
32:58
signify to you or else had the first
33:01
phone in Huntsville and as a result the
33:05
phone number was number one so when
33:09
somebody pick up their phone and in one
33:12
of foam war tells the operator would say
33:15
number please and the first one would
33:17
say number one perfect we're going to
33:24
close down our interview pretty soon but
33:27
before we do I want you two to talk
33:31
about briefly what you did workwise
33:34
after war dells was closed but can you
33:37
elaborate yes after we closed the store
33:41
and we had an auction and you know got
33:46
everything out of the business out of
33:48
the building and so on and then I ended
33:52
up renting the building and then
33:54
eventually selling the building I work
33:57
for my cousin bill Nichols who owned and
34:01
operated the council in emails and Bill
34:06
had offered me a job after I closed
34:08
wargals and which I accepted and I
34:15
worked there for 16 years and I ended up
34:20
as bills credit manager so I spent quite
34:24
a bit of time in small claims court and
34:28
collecting money because in those days a
34:31
lot of people didn't seem to think they
34:34
have to pay bill I just you know he
34:36
could he could handle it without being
34:38
paid so i had tyke i added up make pay
34:42
my salary by the money i collected for
34:45
several years just like the fact that
34:48
you spent so much time
34:50
coppin small claims court you actually
34:53
have a reputation around town being a
34:55
very nice guy over the years we've had
34:58
many good friends in town and I know
35:01
some of them but I'd like to drop a few
35:03
names and ask you to comment on your
35:05
relationship with the memories of these
35:07
people first of all let's start with Bob
35:09
and Jane Hutchison Bob and Jane
35:11
Hutchison were make neighbors of my wife
35:14
and I they lived up the hill above me
35:16
ask brother and over the years that we
35:22
bought as a bit older than I but my wife
35:26
and I had a sauna that we bought and put
35:29
it in our basement and Bob and Jane
35:32
would come down quite frequently in the
35:34
wintertime and have a sauna and as we
35:37
thought we got to know them much better
35:39
too and by my kids my children or our
35:44
children and dodges and children played
35:48
together for many years now we know bill
35:52
Nichols was your cousin but could you
35:54
comment further on on your socializing
35:57
with Bill and his wife Marian bill and I
36:02
I was six years older than bill and so
36:07
you know what's up like that being that
36:09
much older we really didn't really get
36:13
to know each other until we were
36:16
probably late teens or early 20s and
36:21
this is before I even start to work for
36:23
bill and we became much closer we did a
36:28
lot of things together and then as I
36:31
mentioned earlier I was working for him
36:36
and I ended up with his credit manager
36:39
and so then you know we were we were
36:43
like brothers we really were his wife
36:46
Marian kept saying you know your
36:48
brothers and I guess we were more like
36:50
brothers and cousins I know that you
36:54
went to school with bud Jesse and his
36:56
wife Kathy came from Toronto as your
36:58
wife Pat came in Toronto can you comment
37:01
on
37:01
your relationship with button Kathy
37:04
jockey yes bud the caffeine and my wife
37:08
and Pat came down so about the same time
37:13
very close to the same time they're both
37:15
from Toronto didn't know anybody up here
37:19
except button I and it was I think it
37:22
was quite lonely for both of them as we
37:25
became as we had children and so on and
37:29
Pat and Kathy would be seen pushing
37:34
carriages up the main street each of
37:37
them and they became very very good
37:40
friends for many many years and we were
37:44
always friends but just passed away
37:46
about a year ago I still see Kathy who
37:52
is still a sweetheart and we're still
37:57
friends after all those years and that's
37:59
going back 60 years I guess no dying
38:04
even very very generous with your time
38:06
it's been a very long interview perhaps
38:08
from your point of view not for mine but
38:10
from New York's I like thank you very
38:12
much for your unique contribution
38:13
tonsils are all history project Thank
38:16
You Wayne and I've known Wayne for some
38:18
years to i curled with them so we're not
38:21
strangers and we haven't got a fight
38:24
that thank you for giving me the
38:28
opportunity to talk about my life you
38:31
thank you