CHAPTER
4
Going
Home
About half way between Flat and McGrath we met a nice new
red plane. Matt said it was Frank Dorbandt. When we stopped in McGrath,
Dorbandt came with Oscar and others, fueled up and took off. Oscar beat
me to Anchorage.
We met Aina and Gus in Seward on their way home. We
boarded the steamship Alaska on which they had come and headed for
Seattle that
evening. It was dark when we entered the Gulf of Alaska, where a fierce
storm
was raging. I became sea sick. Oscar had no problems and was no help to
me, for
he kept going out and coming back, saying in Finnish, "My gosh, this is
s
terrible storm--the worst I have ever seen." It was a great relief when
in
the morning we got out of the Gulf and into the Inside Passage.
Aunt Bertha had her brother-in-law build a house in Palo Alto,
California, during the summer of 1930, and she and her daughter,
Gertrude, moved there.
I stayed at Oscar's a few days, then boarded a Greyhound
for Detroit, where I looked around for s used car. They were plentiful.
Because
of the depression, people out of work were forced to sell their cars
for money
to live on. I settled on a fancy used 1931 Hudson Super-Six sport
coupe, a
two-tone red, with lots of nickel plate, and a spare wire wheel and
tire
mounted in s fender well in both front fenders. The salesman said four
hundred
fifty dollars, but sold it to me for three hundred seventy five.
I kept the Hudson for about four months, then traded it
in for a down payment on two new Ford dump trucks. I got work in
Trumansburg, New York, with a contractor on a road job for both trucks,
with my brother
Leonard driving the other one.
The first job was hauling gravel, loaded on by an old Erie
steam shovel. The operator was a big man and so fat that he barely fit
behind
the operating levers. When I backed up the first time with my brand new
truck
to be loaded and did not get back quite far enough to suit him, he
hooked the
bucket in front of my tailgate to jerk the truck back, kinking the tail
gate
into a V and bending in both sides of the box.
He sat there laughing so his huge stomach flopped and
yelled, "I'll teach you right from the start how I want you to back
in."
He kept swinging and hitting the gate with the bucket and
finally partly straightened it, but never did latch tight.
I started out getting a dollar and a half an hour, out of
which came gas, oil, tires, upkeep and my wages. Obviously it was a big
mistake
getting the trucks. To make matters worse, every young man around the
area, who
could raise a down payment, bought dump trucks. Work was so scarce that
to get
work to make the payments they offered to work for one dollar and a
quarter an
hour.
One of the salesmen at the Ford dealers came to us with a
deal to form a company by pooling all our trucks; he would work for us
as
manager. We agreed, forming Valley Truckers. Our manager got
us a better job
at Roaring Branch, Pennsylvania, with an Italian contractor from
Pittsburgh. He
had a contract to build several miles of farm-to-market road. The first
job was
to haul flat rocks from steep hillsides.
This was rattlesnake country, so often one was coiled
under a flat rock, warmed by the sun. The old timers stepped back and
stoned
them to death. We dumped the rocks on the road, where a gang of men
stood them
up by hand one against the other. Heavy rollers then rolled them flat
on top.
This was a very slow method but did end up in a good
solid road. I drove over it in 1968, thirty seven years later, finding
it still
surprisingly smooth. When the base rock were all in, our next job was
to haul
wet gravel from a creek.
A steep downgrade led onto a blind railroad crossing. My
brakes were wet and useless, when I heard a train whistle. I turned
into the
bank just in time to see the Black Diamond flash by. My truck was
severely
damaged.
After the gravel layer was all in, spread, and rolled
down, we hauled crushed rock ten miles from gondola railroad cars. The
foreman
of the job was a small, very skinny man, who had lost the fingers on
his right
hand except for the thumb. He was a mean little devil and would bawl us
out for
every little thing, shaking that thumb at us, especially if he caught
us trying
to drive slower to save our trucks. Each time he rode with us, though,
we put
the headlights on to signal the other drivers. This saved us from a lot
of
tongue lashing.
As one job was finished our manager had another located.
We worked in Canton, Williamsport, Jersey Shore, Mansfield and Osceols,
all in
~ Pennsylvania. Our trucks were so beaten up that we had trouble making
the C
monthly payments, for upkeep expenses were so high. In the fall of 1932
we
dissolved Valley Truckers. The Ford dealer started repossessing our
trucks,
taking mine with the agreement that they would be returned if I ~~
could start
making payments.
I began to help dad on the Plantation. We could not make
ends meet by selling milk in forty quart cans, so dad and I went to the
village of Owego to round up customers for bottled milk. We were
getting two cents a
quart in cans, but could sell in bottles for eight cents. I ran the
milk route
and our business grew. We were soon required by law to purchase a
pasteurizer.
I had been dating Hildur Kertu. Her folks were from Finland
also, had lived in Minnesota, then moved to Spencer. She had one
sister, Hulda,
who was going with, and later married, Sulo Huhta.
We all went to the Finnish midsummer picnics, family
picnics, the movies, Grange square dances and the house and barn
dances.
We have often laughed at how Sulo and I boosted the
girls, some mornings, in through their bedroom windows five feet off
the
ground, while their parents were in the kitchen having coffee,
preparing to go
milk the cows. Those Halsey Valley Grange dances often lasted all night
and we
were not ones to leave early.
Hildur and I were married in Buffalo, New York, on April sixteenth,
1933, with Hulda and Sulo as witnesses. We can say we were among the
thousands that went to Niagara Falls on a honeymoon. Soon after, Hildur
and I
went to the 1933 Chicago World's Fair. That was when Wiley Post flew
solo
around the world, got lost between Nome and Fairbanks, landed on Flat
City's
short field and nosed over, bending the propeller. Joe Crosson brought
a new
prop from Fairbanks, and got the plane ready to go while Post slept.
Hildur was teaching school in Crumtown, in a little one
room country school, for twenty dollars a week. She had about sixteen
children
in the elementary grades, nearly all children of that Finnish
community. It was
her second year of teaching. I have often joked that I married her for
her
money, for we had a hard time financially. Our folks gave us potatoes,
eggs and
milk, to help out.
Hildur had to drive about twenty miles round trip to her
school. She taught the rest of that year, and also the next fall and
spring.
Her wages really fed us, for I had trouble finding work, getting only
odd jobs.
We rented a small furnished house on a hillside, for
twelve dollars a month. We remember with regret the antiques in the
house and
the 1903 Peerless automobile which the old lady owner gave me. The car
and the
barn burned down a few years later.
My sister Lempi generously loaned me the money to redeem
my trucks. I got a few days of work now and then with the town of
Spencer Highway Department. After trading my two trucks as a down
payment on a new
one, I got a good steady job with the Tomkins County Department of
Highways.
The job was so much easier than working for contractors so I made
money. We
followed the jobs to Newfield and then to Dryden, both in Tompkins
County.
Later that fall Aina and Gus came to visit. Hildur and I
decided to go back to Alaska with them, so I wired Alex Mathieson for
the
oiling job on his dredge. A wire came back, "Job waiting."