Puppy Out Of Breath

Puppy Out Of Breath
Doug's stories are now in a book: www.puppyoutofbreath.com

Saturday, June 23, 2012

410 Miles Down The River



It is 410 river miles down the Mississippi River from St. Louis to Memphis, but only 280 road miles.  Traveling by road instead of river, Memorial Day weekend of this year marked the first time I have ever been to Memphis, Tennessee.


This city was named after the city in Egypt, founded 5,000 years ago by the Pharoah Menes; maybe the Egyptian connection explains why I found Memphis to be surreal.


Friday night: walked from the hotel to a nice little bar serving food.  We were eating dinner listening to James Taylor --- until the bartender stopped the music, and shouted: “Zombies!!!”.  Four zombies walked into Bardog, sat down, and perused the menu.  The music was changed to Johnathan Coulton singing about wanting to eat your brains.


Saturday morning: walking the streets of downtown Memphis, I expected to see the typical petunias and marigolds in the municipal planters.  Instead, their street planters were sporting pineapples.


Over to Mud Island on a tram that did not run on top of tracks, it was suspended from the bottom of the tracks.  

Mud Island features a half-mile long in-ground sculpture representing the topography of the Mississippi River, complete with ox-bows.  We followed the river right to the point where it emptied into the “Gulf of Mexico”.  There we saw 10-foot tall swans bobbing in the water.


Saturday midday: walking around a deserted downtown, I wondered where all the people were.  A phone app told us there was a restaurant nearby --- just go down an alley.  The alley was empty, but we did find one door.  It was unlocked, we opened it and walked downstairs.  There we found at least 200 people eating barbeque underground.  No wonder the streets were deserted.


Saturday afternoon: Graceland, a small city devoted to selling you things related to Elvis Presley.  Elvis's house was not as large as I expected; it reminded me that there was a time when celebrities did not live in mega-mansions in celebrity colonies.  Elvis had three televisions in one room --- which put him on par with the President of the United States.

Saturday and Sunday: Beale Street proved interesting, featuring an ATM that appeared to dispense Jell-O shooters:


The company I work for owns a bank.  After returning to St. Louis from the surreal city of Memphis, I bumped into the president of our bank, and told him that I had a money-making idea for the bank.  He perked up and said: “Tell me about it.”  

I described the Memphis ATM that dispenses Jell-O shooters, and suggested that we install these at our bank.  He went along with my joke.  “Great idea, but how will I get the CEO to go for it?”

My answer: Just find out what the CEO’s favorite flavor is…

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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Dentist By Day; Hit Man By Night


Once again I volunteered to be a docent on the Central West End mansion tour in St. Louis.

I arrived for my shift, and found myself stationed between the music room and the library in a huge house built in 1902.  I could have just stood there and told visitors: “This is the music room and over here is the library”, but I wanted something juicy to tell them.

The head docent showed me the secret passage: you pressed upon a section of wall paneling and it opened into a secret hallway.  But I knew I couldn’t tell visitors about the secret passage, because they will want to find the secret passage.  We couldn’t have visitors pressing wall panels all over the house…

Then the head docent lowered his voice to a whisper: “Glennon Engleman, the dentist, was a frequent visitor to this house; he was the brother of the owner’s wife.”

The head docent scurried away.  Why would a dentist be something juicy to talk about?  I took out my phone and googled.  Glennon Engleman’s name came up – on www.serialkillercalendar.com.  Definitely juicy. 



As people came through the music room, I mentioned that Glennon Engleman was a frequent visitor to the house.  The name rang a bell with one visitor: “My house is down the street from a couple that the dentist bludgeoned to death.”  A few minutes later, another visitor said: “My husband was the prosecuting attorney who put that dentist away.”

Then a couple came through the music room.  “We used to own this house, and one day we were standing in the front yard when a van pulled up.  It was the Discovery Channel, and they wanted to film our house for a series on mass murderers.  They brought along the FBI agent who had arrested Engleman in this very house.”



Glennon Engleman was a popular dentist because he was affordable.  However, he trained his female dental assistants in the art of wooing men --- men with big fat life insurance policies.  Once the dental assistant married the man with the  life insurance policy, the dentist offed the husband.

Besides bludgeoning, the dentist sometimes used a rifle, but he preferred dynamite because it left few clues behind.  Then the proceeds from the big fat life insurance policy were divvied up. 

Seven murders have been attributed to Engleman, who was arrested in 1980.  He was incarcerated in the Missouri State Penitentiary --- he actually served as the prison dentist before he died there in 1997.

This was a very juicy tidbit to tell people coming through on the mansion tour.  If the people had a kid, I would ask if their child scared easily.  If they answered no, I would tell the kids about the deadly dentist.

On hearing that a mass murderer used to visit the mansion, little girls would become all apprehensive, and ask me if the dentist was hanging around somewhere upstairs.  Little boys, however, would become all attentive, and ask me to show them the bloodstains…

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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com

Saturday, June 9, 2012

If It Takes A Bloodbath


“If it takes a bloodbath to silence the demonstrators, let’s get it over with.”  These were the words of the governor of California, Ronald Reagan, on April 7, 1970.

I was in New York City on May 4, 1970, when I heard that a bloodbath had taken place.  American soldiers had killed four American civilians on American soil --- not in California, but in Ohio. 

Exactly three months before Kent State, I was an American soldier.  At the time of the shootings, I was an American civilian.  The news chilled me.  People like me had just killed people like me. 

A demonstration was being arranged in the nation’s capital to protest the shootings; I resolved to go.

I needed to borrow my parents’ car.  I have no idea how I presented this request to them, but they agreed and let me drive their car to Washington DC.  I arranged to stay with a friend there, and headed south.

As I drove into Washington, I saw soldiers on rooftops looking down at my parents’ car.  My first thought: how nice that they are protecting me.  But then I realized that they weren’t protecting me; they were protecting the buildings from me.

The protest took place on a Saturday morning at the Lincoln Memorial.  It came off without a hitch; there was a feeling of great goodwill in the air.

That evening, my friend had to go to work and I was alone in his apartment, which was on a nice quiet tree-lined residential street.

Uh oh --- not so quiet.  I heard a sound I knew from being a soldier: bootsteps.  I looked out the window.  Troops were marching down the tree-lined street.

Then a smell hit me.  It was not tear gas; it was CS --- a crowd-control gas I knew from Basic Training.  I made sure the apartment window was shut tight, and stepped away from the window.

American troops had killed American civilians only a few days before; American troops were now marching down the street outside.

I sat there alone with the sound and the smell and the darkness --- I had never felt so alone in my life.

I waited until morning before going out to inspect my parents’ car.  The troops had been lobbing CS, and I was afraid that canisters had dented the car. 

There was no damage; I exhaled.  I headed north and returned my parents’ car. 

I did not tell my parents that the nation’s capital was an armed camp.  I did not tell them that I had been afraid.  I did not tell them how thin the membrane is between being a soldier and being a civilian, and if this had all happened when I was in uniform, I do not know what my role would have been.

- . -

A 3-minute You Tube video "Ohio" by Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnOoNM0U6oc


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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com

Saturday, June 2, 2012

High Voltage Has Disappeared


It was the first tourbus I had ever rented.  There were thirty-six people on board who were looking forward to seeing all the things I had promised them on a tour of the Near North Riverfront.  This was a working neighborhood in St. Louis, five miles long, and deserted on a Saturday.

The bus started up, crossed under an Interstate, and whizzed by the first place I wanted to talk about: a motorcycle place that creates “ratted out track bikes.”  I realized that I had asked the bus company for a bus with a bathroom on board, but I had not asked the bus company for a driver who could read my mind.

The two-hour tour became a dance: I had to tell the driver how fast to drive, where to turn, and when to stop --- meantime using the bus microphone to tell people what we were passing, while trying to remember that I was facing a different direction from the passengers and that my right was their left…

Among the things I had promised people that they would see:

            Where the uranium was refined for the bomb dropped on Hiroshima
            A shredder that could turn a Ford F-150 into tiny strips of metal
A dive bar that featured spaghetti wrestling on Thursday nights
            2 water towers built by Walt Whitman’s brother
            A dive bar where you could drive your motorcycle right into the bar
            A street that turned into a drag strip at night
            The locale where Kier Dullea (of 2001: A Space Odyssey) made his first movie
            The site of what had been St. Louis’ largest Indian mound
            The street corner where the leader of McGinty’s Rats was machine gunned to death in 1943

I also promised people that we would make two photo stops: at High Voltage and at American Timber Salvage.


Things were going fine until we hit two enemies of efficient touring: trains and entrancement.

The industries at the Near North Riverfront don’t work on Saturdays, but the railroads do.  This neighborhood is like a model railroad layout: the trains are remote controlled and have no humans on them, not even an engineer.  And the trains are long.  The tourbus had to stop and wait and wait for a train to pass.

The bus parked at the levee and we all walked through the floodgate to see Missouri’s first documented Underground Railroad site. In 1855, six slaves rowed across the Mississippi River here, hoping to obtain freedom on the other side.  

We walked to the Freedom Crossing Interpretive Center which was in an old Coast Guard station, staffed by enthusiastic AmeriCorps volunteers.  The center had a platform where you could overlook the river.  The tour people lingered on the platform, entranced by the history of the spot and entranced by the swiftly moving river called “The Father of Waters.”

I had to plead with people break their trance and walk back to the bus; we had more to see, including St. Louis’ most colorful building: High Voltage Tattoo.

The bus continued on.  We saw a place to buy used school busses, an abandoned railroad trestle that will be turned into an elevated park like the Promenade Plantee in Paris, a Buddhist compound, and the sculpture studio that created Bad Outlet (an educational mascot for Pacific Gas and Electric).

Over the microphone, I read a review from Yelp written by Emily of San Diego: “I have never been so excited to have a taxicab drop me off in front of a nondescript building in a desolate industrial area in a town I am unfamiliar with.”  The bus then drove by Smokio’s, the barbeque joint that Emily was praising.

I got the passengers pumped up.  We are now three blocks from High Voltage.  We are two blocks away!  Get your cameras ready!!  You will want to take photos of High Voltage!!!

The bus stopped.  I gasped.


High Voltage had disappeared since the last time I saw it.  The once-colorful building was now painted a bland tan.  No more medieval flanged maces.  No more tattoo needle dripping blood.  No more clown and devil flanking the doorway.  Disappeared.

It was a lesson for me.  A tourguide’s goal is to show people things that are new to them.  But a city is always changing, and there will be things that are new to the tourguide.


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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com