| «Well, good for you.
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| But we have something too.»
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| So said my aunt.
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| A bowling alley and lunch counter
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| filled with fellas on their lunch break,
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| from the Western Electric plant at a slant across the street.
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| And next door when So-and-So's men would come in, and the man himself very
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| often.
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| It was guns under the counter every time.
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| Guns under the counter every time.
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| Guns under the counter every time,
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| and bowling on the second floor.
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| Very often he was there himself,
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| and I, of course, had a special small ball as a little girl,
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| and didn’t I grow up, didn’t I grow up to be captain of the Morton girls
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| bowling team? |
| I did!
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| Though I don’t attach much importance to that now, or then,
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| then riding the old Garfield El downtown,
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| and on up to State Street,
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| and back to guns under the counter,
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| guns under the counter every time.
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| guns under the counter,
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| and bowling on the second floor.
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| I never liked Douglas park,
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| and no one likes it now,
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| but that’s neither here nor there.
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| (There, or here.)
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| West of Crawford, where it is I stayed,
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| Chicago straights alliterates.
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| (North, and south.)
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| I lived in the Ms.
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| But it was down on the south side,
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| Dr. Peter Pane and his brother had their doughnut factory.
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| And I mention it now because…
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| That one day
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| (Now I wasn’t there,
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| We were in Davenport at that time),
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| some north side Irish bullets came zipping through that window.
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| In Cicero,
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| never stand at a window!
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| And past the counter,
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| looking for those men,
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| who had their guns behind the counter,
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| and you could smell the boiled cabbage on those bullets!
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| One of them managed to hit a young pinsetter in the leg;
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| wouldn’t you know it.
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| But luckily Panagoulis —
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| Dr. Peter Pane —
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| was there to see to it.
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| He took some special blackberry filling right out of his lunch bag
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| and applied it to the young man’s wound.
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| You see, Dr. Peter Pane was an interesting man,
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| and an even more interesting doctor,
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| as he would use no material or remedy that wasn’t used in the manufacture of his doughnuts,
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| down on 82nd and Kedzie with his brother.
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| But he tempered this by the fact that he would rarely use ingredients that
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| didn’t have some medicinal purpose.
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| Or so he thought.
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| Here in the doughnut factory,
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| they have confectioner’s sugar
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| so sweet it was caustic.
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| And chocolate so bitter that it could kill typhus!
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| Glazing so shiny,
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| it could set back glaucoma.
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| And filling so filling,
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| you didn’t need stitches!
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| The same special blackberry filling that was applied to the young man’s wound.
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| Blackberry filling that came straight from Dr. Peter Pane’s lunch bag.
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| We were in Davenport,
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| with a big restaurant downtown,
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| and I once kept a jackrabbit in the back yard,
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| and I’d walk across the river to Rock Island,
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| to Greek school,
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| on a fine fall day.
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| And I’d look up at the sky
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| and down at the river.
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| But Davenport changed its name to Hooverville,
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| so to speak,
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| and we had to go to Chicago to move in with my aunt |