Growing up my mom always had this mug in a cabinet. I think it belonged to her mom before bit I'm not sure. It was never used for drinking. Just to hold pens and whatnot. It was always nice to open mom's cabinet and see a face smiling back at me. It now resides in Studio 312. This is James Nelson, an avid fan who declares he is my first "groupie." Well versed in martial arts, he knows his stuff!
The picture below is of my Great Grandfather, John Leonard Britton. It was taken in 1913 when he was just 17. He became a popular preacher in the Ozarks and there is even a book written about him entitled "Missions In The Mountains." CLICK HERE
in 1913: The President until March 4th was William H. Taft. It was Woodrow Wilson after March 4th. On March 13 Pancho Villa returns to Mexico from his self-imposed exile in the United States. On July 3rd The 50th anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Gettysburg draws thousands of American Civil War veterans and their families to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. On October 3rd The United States Revenue Act of 1913 re-imposes the federal income tax and lowers basic tariff rates from 40% to 25%. On October 10th U.S. President Woodrow Wilson triggers the explosion of the Gamboa Dike, ending construction on the Panama Canal. On december 23rd The Federal Reserve is created by Woodrow Wilson. The U.S. Flag had 48 stars! In 1913 bread cost an average of 5.6 cents per pound. Today according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics the average loaf costs $1.422 per pound. Milk was .32 a gallon. A dozen eggs were only .30! A new home was $3,395.00. A new car was $490.00 A gallon of gas for that car was only .12! And get this....the federal income tax was only 1%. Which mean the average household only paid about $12.96 a year in federal income tax! 1913! - That's what a nickel soda pop taste like! My brother, Paul, and I were visiting the petroglyphs near Carrizozo, New Mexico last week and decided to take some side roads. When we did, we discovered this. We thought it was a barn or maybe even an old house but a local woman told us it was an old cavalry headquarters from the 1880s!
This boy can sing at my funeral.....not anytime soon but maybe someday! |
JASON CURTMANTHE BLOG! Archives
March 2018
Categories |