August 21, 2012
Wall, SD
I was so tires last night when I posted that I forgot to
include the story behind wall so here it is.
Our History
began with Wall and water!
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WALL and WATER
It was December 1931. Dorothy and I had just bought the only
drugstore in a town called Wall on the edge of the South Dakota Badlands.
We'd been open a few days, and business had been bad.
I stood shivering on the wooden sidewalk. In this little
prairie town there were only 326 people, 326 poor people.
Most of them were farmers who'd been wiped out either by the
Depression or drought.
Christmas was coming, but there was no snow, no sparkling
lights — just viciously cold air. Out on the prairie the cold wind whipped up
dust devils. I could see a Tin Lizzie chugging along the two-laner. Suitcases
were strapped to the running boards. Someone's going home for the
holidays, I thought to
myself. I wished they would stop, just for a cup of coffee, but they didn't.
Here on Main Street, no one was out.
When I went back inside, I turned off the light off over the
soda fountain and joined Dorothy and our four-year-old son Billy in our
"apartment", a room we'd made by stretching a blanket across the
back of the store.
I had graduated pharmacy school in 1929, and after two years
of working for other druggists, I knew that Dorothy and I had to find our own
store. My father had just died, and he'd left me a $3,000 legacy. I'd work
with that.
We were living in Canova, South Dakota, when we began our
search, covering Nebraska and South Dakota in our Model T. As we searched, we
were sure of two things: we wanted to be in a small town, and we wanted the
town to have a Catholic church. In Canova, the nearest parish was 20 miles
away. We wanted to be able to go to mass every day.
In Wall, where the drugstore was for sale, we found both a
small town and a Catholic church. And when we talked to the priest, the
doctor and the banker, they all told us that Wall was a good place with good
people and that they wanted us to come live there.
Dorothy and I were excited about Wall, but when we got back
home and told our families about the plan, we found them skeptical.
"That town is in the middle of nowhere," a cousin
said, "and furthermore, everybody there is flat broke busted."
My father-in-law was understanding, but even he said,
"You know, Wall is just about as Godforsaken as you can get."
But Dorothy and I couldn't give up on Wall, so our families
agreed that we should all pray about the decision. Led by two of Dorothy's
aunts, who were Dominican nuns, we asked God's guidance.
In the end everyone felt that it was God's will for us to go
to Wall. But now that Dorothy and I were all alone here, we wondered if we'd
heard God right.
The first few months went by and business didn't improve.
"I don't mind being poor, " Dorothy said to me. "But I wonder
if we can use our talents to their fullest here in Wall."
When Dorothy spoke of talents, my heart sank. My wife had a
teaching degree and had taught literature in a Sioux Falls high school. Was I
being fair, making her work in this prairie drugstore?
But the next minute Dorothy said, "We shouldn't get down,
Ted. I'm sure we can use our abilities fully here. We can make this place work!"
Dorothy's optimism lifted me. I said to her, "Five years,
Dorothy, that's what I think we should give to this store. Five good years,
and if it doesn't work by then, well, then we'll. .."
"Don't worry about then," said Dorothy. "We'll
make it go. And just think, Ted, pretty soon that monument at Mount Rushmore
will be done, and then there will be an endless stream of people going by.
I'm sure they'll visit us!"
We weren't starving, it's true, and we'd begun to make good
friends in Wall. Our pastor, Father John Connolly, had become a tower of
strength, helping us keep our faith strong. And we had worked hard to serve
our neighbors well. Filling prescriptions for a sick child or an ailing
farmer made me feel that I was doing something good. I also studied some
veterinary medicine on my own so that I could help out farmers when their
stock were ill.
But all of this didn't seem to be enough. I still spent too
many hours looking out the store window for customers who never showed up. I
felt I was wasting too much of my life watching people pass by. Maybe, as
Dorothy's father had said, Wall was Godforsaken.
By the time the summer of 1936 came around, our business
hadn't grown much at all. Our five-year trial would be up in December. What
would we do then? Along with nine-year-old Billy, Dorothy and I now had a
one-month-old daughter, Mary Elizabeth. What hardships was I putting them in
store for?
One hot Sunday in July, though, a great change swept us up. It
started quietly, in the deadening heat of an early afternoon, when Dorothy
said to me, "You don't need me here, Ted. I'm going to put Billy and the
baby down for a nap and maybe take one myself."
I minded the empty store. I swatted flies with a rolled-up
newspaper. I stood in the door, and no matter where I looked, there was no
shade, because the sun was so high and fierce.
An hour later Dorothy came back.
"Too hot to sleep?" I asked.
"No, it wasn't the heat that kept me awake," Dorothy
said. "It was all the cars going by on Route 16A. The jalopies just
about shook the house to pieces."
"That's too bad," I said.
"No, because you know what, Ted? I think I finally saw
how we can get all those travelers to come to our store."
"And how's that?" I asked.
"Well, now what is it that those travelers really want
after driving across that hot prairie? They're thirsty. They want water. Ice cold water! Now we've got plenty of ice and
water. Why don't we put up signs on the highway telling people to come here
for free ice water? Listen, I even made up a few lines for the sign:
"Get a soda . . . Get a root beer . . . turn next corner
. . . Just as near . . . To Highway 16 & 14. . . Free Ice Water. . . Wall
Drug."
It wasn't Wordsworth, but I was willing to give it a try.
During the next few days a high school boy and I put together some signs. We
modeled them after the old Burma Shave highway signs. Each phrase of
Dorothy's little poem went on a 12 by 36 inch board. We'd space the boards
out so the people could read them as they drove.
The next weekend the boy and I went out to the highway and put
up our signs for free ice water. I must admit that I felt somewhat silly
doing it, but by the time I got back to the store, people had already begun
showing up for their ice water. Dorothy was running all around to keep up. I
pitched in alongside her.
"Five glasses of ice water, please," a father called
out.
"May I have a glass for Grandma?" a boy asked.
"She's in the car."
We ran through our supply of cracked ice. I began chiseling
more off the block.
"Say, good sir," one traveler said in a Scottish
brogue, "we're going all the way to Yellowstone Park. Would you mind
filling this jug with your water?"
"Hey this free ice water is a great idea," said a
salesman, sidling up onto a stool. "How about selling me an ice cream
cone?"
For hours we poured gallons of ice water, made ice cream cones
and gave highway directions. When the travelers started on their way again,
refreshed and ready for new adventures, they gave us hearty thanks.
When the day was done, Dorothy and I were pooped. We sat in
front of the store, watching the sun set, feeling a cool breeze come in off
the prairie. In the summer twilight, Wall looked radiant. It looked like a
good place to call home.
"Well, Ted, " Dorothy said to me, "I guess the
ice water signs worked."
They surely did work, and we've never really been lonely for
customers since then. The next summer we had to hire eight girls to help us,
and now that the store is in the the good hands of my son Bill, Wall Drug
draws up to twenty thousand
people on a good summer day.
Free Ice Water. It brought us Husteads a long way and it
taught me my greatest lesson, and that's that there's absolutely no place on
God's earth that's Godforsaken. No matter where you live, you can succeed,
because wherever you are, you can reach out to other people with something
that they need!
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