From Sybil Bruncheon's "My Merry Memoirs"...

...lovely... as a child I found a box of Golden Guides once: they included "Recipes From The Donner Party", "Driving Nails Safely With Only Grandma's Fine China", and "Oblong Vegetables and First Aid for Internal Injuries"... I found out later that the box belonged to my Uncle Filbert... who lived in a sod-house outside of town...

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Sybil Bruncheon's "Aren't People Fascinating?"... Melanie Cutterbert.

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Melanie Cutterbert of Mozelin Falls, Tennessee had come from a large family of extraordinarily gifted musicians. They had attracted attention as early as the 1930s on the local talent shows that were broadcast on the radio stations around that part of the Western Tennessee junction with Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas, and Mississippi, and by the 1950s, all of the Eastern Tennessee region knew about them too. They first appeared on Major Bowe's Amateur Hour in 1934, as did their children in the 40s and as their grandchildren did on television on The Ted Mack Amateur Hour. Together over four generations they played over 23 different musical instruments, and most of the Cutterberts played more than one, sometimes simultaneously!!! They were always introduced as the "Mozarts of Mozelin Falls", a title they were so very proud of ...and that was why it was imperative that they kept Melanie's terrible secret... a secret!

You see, although she was as gifted as all her cousins, her maiden aunts, a step-sister, a half-brother, an uncle who was also a third cousin twice removed, etc., etc. She also had a strange idiot-savant thing going on. She had perfect pitch and could play seven different instruments, but she couldn't name them!! And they had to be taught to her as something other than what they were... She learned the contrabassoon as a "floor-to-ceiling piccolo", her balalaika was a "really fat ukulele", and her beloved piano she referred to as her "paralyzed accordion". Melanie went so far as to spend some of her contest winnings on a visiting nurse service which would come by on Wednesday afternoons to take the "patient's" blood pressure, temperature, and other vital signs to make sure it wasn't getting "sicker". The nurses who came knew what was going on and even let Melanie listen on the stethoscope to see that the piano's "lungs" still weren't working...at all. She was heard on occasion though to scold her family if she felt their accordions were making fun of hers because of its handicap, but they loved her dearly and went along with her peculiar obsession. On some evenings, they even wheeled the piano through the garden before dinnertime with a light blanket on it while neighbors came to pay their respects... it all made Melanie very happy... especially if they brought candy and flowers with their "Get Well Soon" cards...

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Sybil Bruncheon's "A Whole Month Of Thanksgiving!"... Abundance??

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Abundance, even in a time of want! Friends, did you know that during the Great Depression of the 1930s so many American families were facing insecurity, and even hunger and homelessness? All across the wide country, fathers tried to hold on to their jobs while mothers struggled to stretch a dollar as far as it would go... even to maintaining a staff of servants who could keep the house clean, the gardens tended, the laundry washed and ironed, and the meals cooked and presented properly! If there was any corner to be cut, it might be in substituting different dietary choices for traditional ones. It wasn't spoken of widely, but, instead of an expensive turkey from the trusty butcher for Thanksgiving, Mother might substitute a family pet. And you know, it wasn't always so stressful or heartbreaking either... especially if it was a neighbor’s dog from down the street.

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Sybil Bruncheon's "THANKSGIVINGS PAST!"... you are what you eat... “TV Dinner”…

...Sadly, this was the episode where the Waltons were trapped for 4 months in the winter on Walton Mountain. They were forced to make their supplies last by dining on some of their own relatives.... here the traditional Thanksgiving dinner has been ...um... prepared: the Jedediah/Sweet Potato Casserole with "bacon bits", the Betty Mae/Waldorf salad with "fritters", the Enoch/"Pigs"-in-a-blanket, the Clementine/Cranberry sauce with "sausage-ettes", the Fiona/ Artichokes and "Sweetbreads", and the Little Biff/S'mores avec "médaillons d'imitation de veau"....

Despite their ...um, "discomfort", the remaining family managed to celebrate the Holiday season happily, and the ratings for this episode broke all records up to that point... even surpassing The Bing Crosby Christmas-Cannibal Special... starring the King Family …as an entire smörgåsbord table. 

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OUR THANKSGIVING HERITAGE!!.... the occasional heartbreak of growing up at Thanksgiving time...

Yes, Ladies and Gentlemen, (and I use those terms loosely!) along with the wholesome lessons about our national day of thanks, there is also the poignant side of the holiday tradition. How many of us as youngsters were shocked when we read John Steinbeck's "The Red Pony", "The Yearling" by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, or "Old Yeller" by Fred Gipson??..... what started out as simple fables of beloved animals and the children that adored them ends in horror and tragedy. That is why, as parents (or friendly adults in the neighborhood!) we must always be careful when allowing our young people to bond with animals that start out as companions...and end up as entrées!

I am reminded of the lovely Ferguson family over on Elco Drive whose three boys ranging in age from 3 to 7 years of age, and with the brightest (almost glaring!) smiles, became quite enamoured with a local turkey named Big Tom at the Clara-Lou Spinnaker Petting Zoo. It was during a charity drive that Mayor Fred Buffington of the town raffled off a complete Thanksgiving dinner with all the side dishes to raise money for a new roof for the Shriner's Lodge Animal Husbandry Pavilion. Every Thursday after school the Ferguson boys would run to the petting zoo to feed their special turkey and pet him and tell him about their school activities; an A+ on a Sumatran geography test, a three-run homer in the Pee Wee League semi-finals, the new wheels on the lavender Soap-Box Derby cart, or being cast as Macbeth in the 3rd grade "Let's Like Shakespeare Pageant"...

And then...one afternoon, it happened. Tom's pen was empty. The boys' dismay immediately alarmed their parents Doug and Kimberly, and the head manageress of the zoo, Miss Edith Kranque. Before the tears could start falling, the adults quickly brought Big Tom out from the janitor's store room where he had been put along with all the Chinese food containers of candied yams with orange zest and apricots, the rustic mashed potatoes, the crunchy buttered Brussels sprouts, the green beans with slivered almonds, the celery, chestnut, and oyster stuffing, and the many other delicious side dishes that the lucky prize winners had won! The grown-ups explained that Tom had just gotten a "haircut" and was taking a nap, and that everyone should whisper about their day at school, but "not to wake him up"!....

The boys were much relieved, although little Dickie said he couldn't see Tom's head, but MIss Kranque explained that birds like to tuck their heads under their wings when they sleep...even if their wing was missing feathers and had a light coat of herbed butter with sage on it!!.... And then it was 6 o'clock and time for the boys to go home. There was just one more problem; the Ferguson family happened to have been the lucky winners of the raffle!!... an unhappy coincidence!... Miss Kranque asked Doug and Kimberly what they would like to do... they looked over at the boys petting Tom and getting all buttery. They were smiling those special smiles  that childen do with beloved pets, so Doug and Kimberly decided they'd rather donate the dinner to The Wayward Wives Of Sailors Home on the corner of Key Street and Holgate..... And on the Friday after Thanksgiving, they would tell the boys that Tom had moved to sunny Ft. Lauderdale, where Grandma used to live ....before she passed away...

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