Story and Photograph by Warrigal Mirriyuula
07 Monday Morning And It’s Coming Down.
Chook Fowler started the day at the Central School. Best to get it out of the way early. That way he wouldn’t be able to concoct an excuse to put it off again.
As he walked across the hall after his introduction, the children all sitting cross legged on the floor, his uniform was doing all the work. The children seemed caught up in an uncertain expectation. It wasn’t everyday that a policeman came to assembly.
He stood on the low podium in front of the children, his tunic buttons glinting under the lights. Using his best policeman’s serious voice he said in a rather too stentorian tone for his young audience, “You headmaster has brought a matter to my attention that I feel must be dealt with swiftly.” conveniently sidestepping the fact that he’d been putting it off for a fortnight as not germane to his current purpose.
“Some of you are behaving like guttersnipes!”
A crash of thunder shook the assembly hall. That seemed to surprise them. He fixed the Kinders at the front in his steely gaze and looked along the entire row. Several of the children squirmed uncomfortably and twisted their little fingers together, their mouths slackly open, their eyes widening as another crack shook the window sashes.
“There have been complaints that some of you, an untidy and irresponsible minority, are throwing your lunch scraps anywhere it suits you, including over Mrs. Bell’s back fence.” Fowler’s eyes immediately darted to the little group of fifth class students, already singled out as the culprits. “It’s unsanitary, encourages vermin and worst of all, Mrs. Bell’s cat “Tinker” fell ill!” Young cat lovers throughout the hall began to scan the room for the culprit but Fowler was now looking directly at young George Cassimaty.
“She had to take it the vet. Cats aren’t supposed to eat salami and fetta cheese. Nor are they likely to thrive on olives, or bread. It blocks them up and they can’t do their business.” The children began to snicker. The stern police sergeant was talking about cats pooing.
“This sort of behaviour has got to stop right away.” Fowler said forcefully.
The children, thinking he meant the snickering, all fell instantly silent. Fowler, surprised by the sudden quiet, having thought just a moment ago that he may have lost his audience to uncontrollable scatological sniggering, recovered and went on, “The school has bins in the playground for that sort of thing and if I hear any more reports of this thoughtless behaviour, I’ll be back, and it’ll be “Goodnight Irene” for the untidy little beggars responsible.” Another shiver of uncertainty rippled through the hall as Fowler covered the room with his hard policeman’s stare.
That should do it, thought Fowler as he turned, and with a wink thanked the headmaster for “this opportunity”. The good-natured sarcasm was lost on the Head who had replied graciously, “Any time.” as Fowler walked from the hall.
George’s guilt kept him thinking. Mrs. Bell was a cranky old stick. It was only the brave that went over her fence to fetch a lost ball. She’d fly out of her back door faster than anyone her age had a right to, swinging her straw broom and threatening mayhem if you didn’t get out of her yard. She’d even turned the hose on him a couple of times when she’d caught him and his mates stealing the nectarines off her tree; but he didn’t want to hurt her cat. George liked cats and Tinker in particular.
George Cassimaty hung his head. All the kids had been doing it, but his was the only lunch with the menu described by the policeman in what George thought of as “the evidence”. Well him and his younger brother Paul, but Paul’s lunch box always went home empty. Paul had an enormous appetite and after Mum had made and packed the lunches for the boys Yaya always packed a little more for Paul; he was a growing boy she said. His mother, the junior Mrs. Cassimaty, was hoping that he might stop growing, around the middle. Young Paul certainly wasn’t little Paul and her elderly mother in law wasn’t helping by packing his lunch box with extra sweet Greek treats.
George felt the beginnings of an uncomfortable obligation begin to stir in him. It wasn’t as if he could hide from his responsibility as part of his little gang of mates. It hadn’t been their lunch scraps that made Tinker sick. He’d have to go and apologise to Mrs. Bell personally. He heard his father saying, “A good man admits his mistakes and makes amends.” George would have to go and make amends with Mrs. Bell. Finding the courage to take the first step, that was going to be the real problem.
Downtown a shop assistant tore off a good length of brown paper from the roll by the big brass cash register and wrapped Beryl’s purchases, sticking the large package down with broad sticky-tape. Porky had promised to teach Little Bill how to swim this summer so she and Clarrie had decided to get the little fellow a new pair of trunks, some flippers and goggles and a snorkel. It would be his big gift from Santa at Christmas. Beryl pushed the package down into her shopping trolley and, standing up on tiptoe and turning, she spied Alice over in Ladies Apparel and Accessories. Alice wanted a new pair of walking out gloves to go with the new summer hat she had bought in Orange a few weeks ago. As Beryl came over Alice was adjusting and admiring some new seasons cotton gloves in a mirror at the counter. Beryl stood by wondering whether she too needed a new pair of gloves and as she tried to make up her mind her eye strayed to a display that featured an elegant clear perspex arm dressed in an equally elegant silk and lace opera glove. The wrist was dripping with sparkling rhinestones. Beryl began to titter behind her hand.
“I’m sorry Alice. I’m not laughing at your choice,” Beryl said still chuckling, “they’re lovely.” she said indicating the gloves Alice was admiring in the mirror. Beryl flapped her other hand at the opera glove as she tried to explain and laugh at the same time, “It’s just that I can’t imagine for the life of me who in Molong would want opera gloves.”
Alice nodded assent but was still bound up in deciding between two different pairs of gloves.
While Alice tried to make up her mind the absurdity of the display got Beryl thinking. When it was all said and done gloves on women, particularly in the summer heat of Molong, was just another of those incredibly silly things forced on women by social convention. Out here in the country gloves were something you put on to protect your hands from the damage of hard work or against the bitter mid winter cold, not something to satisfy some unwritten social code. The Women’s Weekly idea that a woman wasn’t properly dressed if she appeared in public with out a hat and gloves and her handbag looped over the crook of her left elbow; well it was too silly; like the notion that only a certain kind of woman wore trousers. Beryl decided then and there that she’d never buy a pair of dress gloves again. Let the ladies at the CWA stare and tut under their breath. Beryl knew how good her scones were and her dark marmalade was admired at many breakfast tables around Molong. Beryl could hold her own and the CWA ladies would just have to get used to it.
Alice had been distracted all morning and finally decided she wasn’t in the right frame of mind for choosing gloves. She pulled them off finger by finger and handed them back to the assistant who enquired whether there was anything else she could help “Madam” with.
“Actually it’s Miss,” said Alice, as though somehow she had only just woken up to this seemingly incongruous fact, “and no, there ‘s nothing more I want.” though of course there was a great deal she wanted if only she could work out what it was and how to get it.
Alice turned to Beryl, “You know Bee, I think I’ve had just about enough of gloves for today. Let’s go and have our tea.” She turned and thanked the shop assistant who had already retired to lean on the cabinet at the back of the counter, her face assuming the bored teenage indifference of the universal shop assistant.
“Hhmmm.” said Alice disapprovingly, then hooked her right arm around Alice’s left elbow and they walked out of the store like two schoolgirls. Outside The Western Stores the rain was belting down on Bank Street so Alice and Beryl got out their brollies and dashed up the street towards the Telegraph, Beryl’s shopping trolley bouncing along behind.
Alice pulled on Beryl’s arm as they came under Jimmy Hang Sing’s awning. “Just wait a moment”, Alice said, indicating the two men sitting in the rain slicked, glistening green Humber pulled up outside the Telegraph next door. It was Doc and that funny German Gruber come for lunch. Alice pulled Beryl into Jimmy’s doorway.
Beryl saw the men and then turned to her friend and said, “You really must sort this out Alice. You can’t go on like this, you work with the man nearly every day.” Alice, embarrassed, turned her head away. Beryl gently laid a finger on Alice’s chin and turned Alice’s face to look into her eyes. “To be frank with you, I’m almost certain that you unsettle him as much as he does you.” Beryl smiled an encouraging smile. “Doc’s never going to make the first move. He thinks of himself as a lifelong bachelor, not the marrying kind. All that flirty ladies man palaver is just to cover his loneliness. I’m certain of it.” Beryl looked straight into Alice’s eyes. She was her best friend and apart from Clarrie and her Mum, Alice was the only other person Beryl felt she could share her most intimate thoughts and dreams with. If Alice and Doc could have a tenth of what she and Clarrie shared she’d be a lucky woman. “You really must tell him how you feel.”
Alice looked stricken. “But I don’t really know how I feel!” Alice exclaimed biting her bottom lip. She was disappointed with herself. A grown woman so discombobulated by a mere man; but then Doc wasn’t just any man. Alice let go a huge sigh.
The men got out of the car, jumped the streaming gutter, shook their coats off under the pub verandah and went inside, so Alice and Beryl stepped out of Jimmy’s doorway, finally entering the pub by way of the carriageway and the back stairs. In a few minutes the kettle was on in the kitchen and Doc and Gruber were seated in the Dining Room going over Mrs. Delahunty’s bill of fare.
This was going to turn out to be a very interesting lunch for them all.

The ladies wearing gloves as part of the fashion of the time was also in vogue at Granville during the fifties when we were living near there at Guildford. I remember my dad being hugely surprised seeing girls in long woollen skirts, black hats, black long stockings and wearing black gloves going to school in orange painted buses. This was during the middle of summer!
He also spoke of elderly ladies in the bus that had blue or even pink hair.
The buses had the engines sticking out at the front like sedans and direction indicators that would be activated by a mechanical hand with hinges and levers. I used to be careful not to get poked when passing the bus on my bicycle, especially after been shouted several schooners at the Locomotive.
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Another favourite was the “twin set” with double pearl string.
The pearl of course becoming more common as Japanese culturing techniques spread leading to the famous “Mikimoto Pearls”. By the early sixties a girl just wasn’t dressed without her Mikimotos.
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Pardon me Madam, but yor Mikimotos are showing.
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I found this very amusing…Warrigal is very knowledgeable about ladies wear; a kind of ‘what not to wear’ for country women, I think I can relate to this…
I’m learning new terms: walking out gloves?!
All in all, another enjoyable story, Waz even managed to use one of his favorite words ,’discombobulated’.
Did you look that one up, Hung One On?
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Not yet H, but I have no idea what it means even though Gerard did tell me some time ago
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I am discombobulated much of the time!
Another fascinating read, can’t wait for the next installment!!
I wonder if men’s neckties will ever go the same way as lady’s gloves? I still own some (ties, not lady’s gloves), but am at a loss to find somewhere to where them, given that the only people in Newcastle who wear ties are Real Estate agents, and gay women!
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Gruber never wears a tie but then as you’ll read, Gruber turns out to be all manners of odd. His going tieless being amongst the least of his eccentricities.
Since our fire the only tie I ever wear is a Pooh Bear tie. It has little Pooh Bears waddling all over it eating honey from a pot with the legend, “No Rush, No Fuss, No Bother.” It’s just a cheap acrylic tie, mainly blue. It was swag on a Disney gig years ago.
Suits me down to the ground and accurately reflects my attitude when obliged to wear a tie. No matter the circumstances, if he situation calls for a tie I will none the less not be rushed or fussed into any position that would bother me.
Probably explains why those tie demanding clients don’t call anymore.
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WM, can you do a Windsor knot?
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Not unless the winds are in the right direction.
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H, as they say in legal circles, “under separate cover” I have sent you an image taken from the Molong Express during the winter of 1954. I’ll send it to MJ too so he can put it up if the fancy strikes him.
For others, the image is an ad from the paper for The Western Stores and features, you guessed it, ladies gloves; as well as some items of clothing that used to go by the name “foundation garments”. Sounds like something the ladies of the first fleet might wear.
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Warrigal , thanks for the lovely pics. People in the olden days didn’t really need those foundation garments, and now it’s too late, nothing will save us…
In his ‘price- observing’ way, Gez claimed all the items pictured were terribly expensive. Were they ? I did not even notice the prices.
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Yes H, they did look exxy to me too. My parents couldn’t afford to shop at The Western Stores all that often. Most of our clothes were made by Mum until well after we moved to Orange. My father even had a brief flirtation with hair dressing to try and reign in the family budget. Anything to save sixpence. Enough sixpences and you’d saved a quid.
My earliest recollection of knowing my parents income was probably from the early sixties when Mum was earning about 15 quid a week and dad about 19 or 20 quid a week. I can’t be bothered doing the conversion but it seems to me that would make a bra about a hundred dollars. Sounds like expensive support to me.
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A sixpence was a Zac. Waz.
My dad’s first wage in Australia in 1956 was 17 quids and a few bobs. He used to ramp this up to over 20 quid by doing overtime. His paypacket he shoved under mum’s dinner plate on payday. All he wanted was his beloved Rotterdam Shaq and sit in his comfy chair with an adjustable back by means of a rod that would slide up and down into the back of both timber armrests.
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Actually H I am hämmentynyt most of the time
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…ten out of ten for this one, umlauts and all…
Moving away from ‘yo’ in big steps !
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Gees, how can I get the hit rate up on one of the best Australiana stories ever?
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Flatterer.
You could ring, email, visit and or send a letter to everyone you know.
Mind you I’ve tried that and it doesn’t seem to have worked. Maybe you’re the only one that would characterise this yarn as “one of the best Australiana stories ever”.
After spending yesterday at The State Library looking up back issues of the Molong Express I’m beginning to discover just how inaccurate many of my memories are.
Maybe my Molong is a kind of “Brigadoon” Molong; not exactly how it was but rather how it might have been if things were just a little different.
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Warrigal, looks like your Molong is a bit like Brkon’s (Gerard on UL)Bratislava, too good to be true.
Someone asked Brkon/Gez : Do you equate Bratislava with Utopia?
I’m not being fair to your story here, am I ? It’s not a bed roses out there in the bygone Molong…
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My Molong is only just getting to the end of the set up. The real action hasn’t even begun yet. By the time we’ve finished sojourning in Molong there’ll be crushed roses everywhere.
There’s the flood in a few months, (actually happened), a train wreck later next year, (actually happened) and the death of the swaggie which may turn out to be murder, (invention), oh all manner of goings on, plus a wedding and a funeral, I’ve sketched a bank robbery but I’m not sure about that.
My intention is not to draw some theoretical literary utopia but rather to humanise the ordinary. There’s no theory here, it’s just these characters, the people of Molong going about their lives. The critique if it exists at all is in the actions they take, the things they think and say, the relationships they make.
Anywhere can be utopian with the right frame of mind, just as it can also be a living hell. These characters will probably continue to see the good in things. That’s how they are.
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Warrigal, does Bank Street cross with interest rates?
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Only at the high end of the street.
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Alice looked stricken. “But I don’t really know how I feel!” Yes she does it is that you are too polite to say so. She wants him, she lusts after him, she is just like the rest of us that can’t really say how we feel.
By the way I have the same feelings about a pie and chips.
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Gluten free pie I hope Hung?
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No one knew how they felt back then. Feeling things was a sign of weakness, an indulgence. Passsion was something that Wogs, Dagos, Frogs, Iti’s, foreigners in general displayed. It just wasn’t British.
Remember most Australians at this time still thought od England as “home”. We were good British stock suffering a kind of cultural and geographical excommunication from our birthright. Government honestly believed that rules were the answer. Everything else was also so set about with “do’s and don’ts”, rules and regulations, proscriptions and prescriptions, that honest authentic emotion was hardly ever seen until the individual broke down and either went off like a cracker or collapsed in a weeping heap.
The greatest tragedy of these times was the number of persons who literally fought their innate selves all their lives and ended up empty husks with no real life to remember.
Alice is somewhat like this. A good daughter of strict Presbyterians, she’s bought into the whole “do as the lord says and it shall be revealed to you” line. So she doesn’t smoke or drink, she doesn’t approve of colourful language, I suspect when I get around to it, she will be somewhat perplexed about sex too.
But a change of heart is coming.
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A change of heart or a change of foundations? Nola Dykevere would have approved of Alice.
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I have fond memories of a similar ‘greasy spoon’ caff in Brixton’s Electric Avenue (that avenue made famous by that song that goes, “Gonna rock down to, Electric Avenue, And then we’ll take it higher!” by the name of ‘Tommies’… we used to grab breakfast there on our way to work (ie. before we went down the underground to catch the tube up to Green Park or Leicester Square for a day’s busking…
Just off Totenham Court Road there was also another cafe frequented by all the buskers by the name of ‘La Giaconda’, but known mostly as ‘Jo-jo’s’…
In fact I have quite a funny story about ‘Tommies’ and another busking friend of mine… one day, if I can find the time, I’ll have to write it up; I’m sure it will amuse…
Nice story Warrigal.
🙂
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T2, Did you have a curry on the way home after a few lagers?
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Very frequently Hung! Now how did you know that? At one stage we (I and a couple of busker friends) had a squat in Railton Road, Brixton; locally known as ‘The Front Line’… but there were some excellent Indian restaurants on our way home and if we’d had a good enough day to have enough money left over for a curry after a night at ‘Matilda’s’ in Notting Hill Gate, we’d often stop for a curry on the way home.
I’m amazed today when I look back at those days and realize that, all in all, they were the happiest of my life, in spite of their many hardships!
BTW, check your own blog, Hung; there’s an invitation to a bit of an Easter do, but I’m informed it’s now happening on Saturday, not Sunday…
I really hope you can make it, Hung; I can be your transport if you can be my roadie? I want to take Suzie-girl (SG) along too so I need someone who can help me load her and the amp into the car… Jane is also invited; I’ve checked with Paula, (of Hell Hospital fame) and she says you are both welcome; all you’ll need to bring are your bathers and a towel, and some grog if you drink… I’d love you to meet Paula, Hung; she’s a real character; vivacious, lively and funny; I’m sure you’d both love her!
Please get back to me soon to let me know if you can make it!
🙂
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T, I’ve discovered that there was genuine competition between the Chinese restaurant of the day and another cafe run by Greek brothers called Cassimaty.
The Chinese owned the evening market while the Cassimaty brothers ruled the ladies lunch and tea set during the day.
Beryl and Alice would no doubt have gone to the Cassimaty’s “Pantheon Cafe” for their morning tea.
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Gez took the boys to the Goulburn country fair whilst Daughter and I did some shopping and had a coffee at the Goulburn’s Greek establishment ,the Paragon.
The macchiato was good and came with a glass of iced water. According to Daughter the decor of the place is so old style it’s almost fashionable again. The seats were comfortable and it was nice and cool in there…
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Hmmm, dark marmalade, yo
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…..on an English muffin.
God knows we all love an English muffin.
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Washed down with sweet tea, yummie
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