DON KAMPA
reminisces on his cousins

VERN and MARGE ROBINSON
and
JOE and RED STIMLER
 
written 1997


"Marge and Vern would often come over and spend the weekend with us. As I mentioned earlier, Vern was the greatest non-producer I ever met in my life, but he was a very resourceful and handy guy when it came to doing things. . . . Anyway, they came to see us when I was working nights at Firestone.
"One time he came over with Marge and dropped her off at the house, then he came down to the shop to pick me up. He came in while I was changing clothes in the store basement, and he noticed a big merchandise display stored down there. He looked at that, and he said, 'Boy, you could make a good ping pong table out of that. I wonder if they would give you that display.' So I asked the boss if I could have it, and he said, 'Sure, take it and get it out of there.' So we took that and made the nicest ping pong table out of it. We had quite a sizable basement in our house, and we set it up there. We proceeded to have ping pong tournaments every weekend. Many times we'd play until daylight. Vern was the type of guy that if he was winning, he wanted to rib you and laugh and have fun, but if he started losing, it wasn't fun anymore. Of course, I had never played ping pong before, and he had played quite a bit. So he beat me at first. He was really having a wonderful time razzing me. Then, as time went on, I became better and better. When I started beating him, it wasn't funny anymore.
"We had another cousin in town, Joe Stimler, and his wife, Red. They would come over and join us in the ping pong tournaments. We all made our own fun and recreation. On our first anniversary, Dorothy and I celebrated by getting two nickel beers. They had nickel beer at the grocery store. Then we listened to our new radio. That was our big celebration, and we enjoyed it."
from "Gram and Gramps," by Don Kampa (1997) pp. 74-76.

"We were closer to our friends when we lived in St. Paul than we had been in Minneapolis. Some friends would come over now and then to play cards or socialize. Our cousins Joe and Red Stimler lived in St. Paul and they would come to visit. Some Swedish people who were friends of Dorothy's from when she was working lived on a farm over in Wisconsin. They had us over there for a few weekends. I relished the farm food. That was great, as I recall. They had apple trees. We'd come home loaded with apples."
Ibid., p. 79.

"After leaving Claremont, I wasn't involved with any sports until I came back to St. Paul from Milwaukee. My cousin Joe Stimler was interested in pheasant hunting, and he kept asking me to go with him. Finally I wrote to my brother Ed who had my dad's old double-barreled shotgun and asked if he would send me the gun. He did, and that's the one I used. Joe and I went pheasant hunting up around the St. Cloud area. It was my first real taste of hunting. I was a confirmed hunter after that."
Ibid., p. 171.

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Last modified: March 24, 2007
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