Monday, May 7, 2012

IN THE IMMORTAL WORDS OF MR. JINKS...

My folks took my sister and I to Coney Island a few times every summer. I was about ten when after a big night of fun, fireworks and junk food, we headed back to the car.  Along the way, dad, as was his custom, pointed to the distant, Half Moon Hotel and reminded us of its link to murder incorporated.
BUILT IN 1927, THE HALF MOON, (IN THE BACKGROUND TO THE LEFT OF THE PARACHUTE JUMP), WAS A 14-STORY HOTEL ON THE BOARDWALK.  ITS BEST KNOWN AS THE LOCATION, (NOVEMBER 12, 1941), WHERE MOB INFORMANT, ABE RELES (THE EPITOME OF A RAT), WAS PUSHED OUT A WINDOW, HOURS BEFORE TESTIFYING AGAINST CRIME BOSS ALBERT ANASTASIA.  LATER DURING WWII, THE HOTEL SERVED AS A NAVY CONVALESCENT CENTER.  IN THE LATE 40's, IT BECAME A MATERNITY HOSPITAL AND IN THE 70's,  IT WAS CONVERTED INTO A SENIOR CITIZEN HOME.  THE HALF MOON WAS DEMOLISHED IN 1995.
When my family turned onto Surf Avenue, somewhere between the Colossal Slide and the Bumper Cars, two kids about the same age as sis and I, approached.  They were carrying a shoebox with holes in the lid.  Inside, we soon discovered that they had won three mice, at a carnival game. The girl said, "Our parents will kill us if we bring these home."  Then in unison, they begged us to take the vermin off their hands.

I was shocked!  Even forty-seven years later, I'm still surprised that mom accepted them.  I guess she saw the excited looks on our faces, the price was right and she didn't see any harm.  Our new pets were easy to tell apart, one was black, another white and the other brown. During the drive home, dad said he'd buy a cage the next day as my sister dubbed them, Moe, Larry and Curly. 

Dad parked in our driveway.  While we were getting out of the car, the brown cutie, (Curly), escaped in the darkness. Oh well, so we had two pets.

It was an especially hot night and our house wasn't air conditioned.  So twenty minutes later, it was easy to hear our Tugboat Annie-like neighbor from four doors down, cursing and screaming bloody murder.  We all assumed that her house was getting vandalized and ran outside.  There was a small crowd in front of her house as we saw her husband laughing as he held our Curly by the tail and taunted his wife.

On the walk home, after our third mouseketeer was restored to us, I imagined that if our lady neighbor was as tough as I thought, she would have eaten him.  From that night on, I never feared her again.
NYUK, NYUK, NYUK, JEROME "CURLY" HOWARD (1903-1952)...THE ULTIMATE VICTIM OF SOIKUMSTANCE...WAS THE FIRST OF THE THREE STOOGES TO DIE.  MY CURLY THE BROWN MOUSE, SURVIVED OUR TUGBOAT ANNIE-ESQUE NEIGHBOR AND WOULD OUTLIVE HIS TWO BUDDIES.
My sister insisted that our pets stay in her room.  On Sundays when my grandmother babysat, granny couldn't stand the sight of them.  So, one day a week, the cage and all three inhabitants were exiled to Siberia, (our basement). 

Moe and Larry soon died.  But Curly was vital and was going strong months later.  My four-year old cousin Cal came to visit and I brought the cage into my room.  Then I took Curly out and we played with him on the floor.  Before long, Curly darted between us and scurried behind the open door.  Cal tried to "head" him off and closed the door.  Curly's head was crushed between the door and the door jamb.  He writhed in agony for a few seconds and died.  To this day, his vibrating body is still a clear and haunting image.

Other than that experience, (and those mice were pets), I have never seen a mouse, in any place that I lived.  In fact, I was twenty-two, the first time, I saw one in someone else's house. My friend MBF got married in 1977 and rented a basement apartment, near the Kings Plaza Mall, in Brooklyn.

If you've never experienced this type of invasion, it's quite disconcerting.  Usually you see a sudden movement out of the corner of your eye.  It happens so fast that you figure it's nothing.  The next time this impulse gets your attention, you realize you must investigate.

Mouse catching is not for the squeamish, so MBF and I half-heartedly tried but failed miserably.  However, the next day MBF solicited the aid of his father-in-law. Within a week, I got a call saying that his wife's dad used Sicilian ingenuity and some household items to capture the bugger. Lured by the scent of a spoonful of peanut butter placed in a steep-walled soup tureen...greased with butter, the rascal crept up a ramp made from a broken Venetian blind slat. At the top, the hungry pest fell into the bowl.  The combination of the high walls and slippery slope assured that the little bastard couldn't escape. I wasn't exactly heartbroken that I missed the profanity-laced ceremony when MBF's father-in-law dumped his quarry in the toilet.  At least with one flush, the varmint had a proper burial, at sea.

It's at this point that many of you empathize for the fallen critter.  It's easy to forget that these filthy, gnawing, disruptive devils, foster disease and are the scourge of society. After all, since we were children, cartoon, Lilliputian-like mice are associated as cuddly, heroic or as underdogs.
BEFORE THE AGE OF TALKING MOVIES, WALT DISNEY DEVELOPED HIS ENTIRE EMPIRE AROUND MICKEY, (AND MINNIE).  AND TODAY IT'S GLOBAL POPULARITY IS STRONGER THAN EVER.

Think about it, cartoon mice are always sympathetic characters.  They are at the bottom of the animated food chain and are hunted by boring farmers, mean old ladies and of course, hungry cats.  Certainly we Baby-Boomers know Jerry's struggles to survive Tom.  The generation before that knew the travails of Ignatz as he avoided the certain death of Krazy Kat's romantic advances.
THE CRIME SOLVING DUO OF, "SNOOPPER AND BLABBER" AIRED 45 EPISODES FROM 1959-1961.  IN MOST ADVENTURES BLABBER, COMPLETE WITH SPEECH IMPEDIMENT, WAS THE SUBORDINATE MOUSE TO A CAT, SUPER SNOOPER.

Other cat and mouse cartoon rivalries featured, "PIXIE AND DIXIE," against Mr. Jinks, "HERMAN AND KATNIP" and let's not forget the cartoon inside the, "SIMPSON'S" cartoon, "THE ITCHY AND SCRATCHY SHOW." 
"PIXIE AND DIXIE," RAN FROM 1958-1961.  THEIR CAREER WAS CUT SHORT IN PART BECAUSE THEY DID THEIR OWN STUNTS.  IN THOSE MINUSCULE 57 INSTALLMENTS, MR. JINKS' CATCHPHRASE, (IN A MARLON BRANDO IMPERSONATED VOICE), "I HATE MEECES TO PIECES," BECAME A NATIONAL PHENOMENON.

Other cartoon mice that were highly esteemed were, "MIGHTY MOUSE," "SPEEDY GONZALEZ," Minute Mouse from, "COURAGEOUS CAT," and a favorite of my early youth, "SNIFFLES."
"SNIFFLES," WAS PRODUCED AS A THEATRICAL CARTOON STARTING IN 1939.  THE TWELVE SHORT SUBJECTS PLAYED OFF HIS CHILDISH SWEETNESS WHILE STRUGGLING WITH THE PERILS OF A DANGEROUS WORLD.

On the other side of the Atlantic, the English had heroic, "DANGER MOUSE."  I checked this program out but perhaps something was lost in the translation.
"DANGER MOUSE" AND HIS SIDEKICK PENFOLD WERE HUMOROUS SPIES.  THIS SUCCESSFUL SHOW AIRED 161 EPISODES FROM 1981-1992.  WHEN I WATCHED THE RERUNS WITH MY SON IN THE LATE 90's, WE BOTH AGREED THAT IT, "WASN'T OUR CUP OF TEA."
I was afraid that my whole cutesy perception of mice was going to change five Decembers ago.  I was in my garage and out of the corner of my eye, I thought I saw a sudden movement behind my bicycle.  It's amazing how thirty years later, I immediately correlated that impulse with MBF's basement apartment. 

I stood still, stared into the clutter and waited.  In a short time my suspicions were validated.  While trying to decide how to proceed against the mouse, I took a closer inspection of the area. I found tell-tale signs of a rodent infestation like; organized bits of straw, tiny turds and of course gnawed through cereal boxes as well as spillage from a hole at the bottom of our dog's forty-pound food bag.

The defense of the inside of my house became paramount! Instead of an old world remedy, I went straight to the hardware store and invested in ten, 29c traps.  That night, I discussed my situation at one of my poker games and KURUDAVE, (thirty minutes away), confessed to having the same problem.  We entered into a friendly competition and called it, "THE MOUSE TRAP GAME."  In a short time, I netted four mice to his three.
MGTP TAKES THE HIGH ROAD. BEHOLD THE OLD MOUSE TRAP BOARD GAME.  THE GREAT BWANA IS SUPPOSED TO DISPLAY HIS GREASY, BROKEN BACK MOUSE TROPHIES HERE...BUT I SAY, "NO!"
My wife didn't appreciate the joy of the mouse hunt.  And she was especially nauseated, (her scream confirmed it), when she saw one barely alive, dragging the trap behind him.  I remember running to the garage and having the tune, "WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME AGAIN," come to mind when I saw the ensnared demon limping past an empty anti-freeze jug.

The next day, she made me remove every item from the garage.  It was then I saw the impossible!  In cartoons, you know the little mouse holes in the baseboards? 
I HATE TO SIDE WITH CATS BUT I GUESS THEY CAN SERVE A PRACTICAL PURPOSE.
Well I had always thought mouse holes in the wall were just cartoon schtick, but they do exist.  However, my garage isn't rimmed with wooden baseboards, it has cinder blocks built right onto the foundation.
KURUDAVE HYPOTHESIZED THAT THE MICE GOT DESPERATE AT THE ONSET OF WINTER AND SMELLED THE DOG FOOD.  THEN...MOTIVATED BY A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH, THEY GNAWED THROUGH THE CONCRETE, ENTERED THE HALLOW CENTER CHAMBER AND ATE THROUGH MORE CEMENT TO THE PERCEIVED NIRVANA INSIDE MY GARAGE.

I bought some patch mortar and sealed the holes.  Then we bolstered how our food items are stored.  Luckily, we never had another rodent raid.  Unfortunately, Kurudave can't say the same thing.  The little intruders always return to his garage in the cold months.  Even worse, in a matter unrelated to pestilence, he recently decided to move out of state. 

The day before he left, whatever was left of the poker buddies went over to his place to have a few beers, reminisce and say good-bye.

Just off his kitchen, we were at his bar telling stories when someone noticed, (ten feet away), a brazen mouse on the stove, sniffing a skillet of macaroni and cheese.  That's when Kurudave shook-up an aerosol bug spray and squeezed the trigger. 
MR. JINKS TAKES AIM AGAINST POOR LITTLE PIXIE AND DIXIE AS HE EMULATES CAPTAIN BLASTOFF.

Kuru used some newspaper to scoop up his fallen victim.  Then ala Abe Reles, he threw the annoyance out the window and yelled, "I hate meeces to pieces!"

Yuck! I'm sure glad I sealed my garage.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm afraid to admit that I can not possible even estimate how many mice I have seen in the places I have lived. But I liked the way you included the mice from the cartoon shows. I knew all the ones you mentioned except for the Ignatz? I'll have to Google that. When I lived in Barcelona, the late TV had American cartoons. I liked Top Cat even though there weren't any mice. In Spanish, the show was called El Gato Y Su Bandillo, (The Cat and his Band). --- BLIGOO (Marseille France)

Anonymous said...

Another great MGTP read. Luckily I've never seen mice in my house either. But your description of Curly's last few seconds on earth will affect me the same way it has haunted you all those years...Thanks? For the expected lifetime of heebie-jeebies. --- THEMASTER

Anonymous said...

Funny story...NOT such a funny topic. Remember when I got hurt and was out of work for six months. Well after a while I was just as mentally messed-up as I was physically. So when I heard a strange noise in the kitchen, I was not only spooked but the pain killed me to just get off the couch. Then to see a mouse going to town on a bread stick really pissed me off. Then it ran across the stove and disappeared in the burner hole. I got the sticky "humane" traps but they weren't worth a shit. So I got some of those snapping cheapies and WHAM!...never saw another mouse in my house. --- G-Man the Devils Fan

Anonymous said...

Cartoon mice, I can't get enough. The only mouse I've ever seen in my house was brought in, post mordem, by my cat Eli. --- THEDONALD

Anonymous said...

Tug Boat Annie? Perfect nick-name but did we use that name at the time? I can still picture the husband (can't recall his name!) in his ubiquitous wife-beater.

-H

Anonymous said...

We never had mice. But just like you, we had a pet named Curly. He was a little turtle. We kept him in his plastic cage with the tiny island and the fake palm tree. But we kept him in the dark basement all the time...and he went blind...hey I was like nine... --- JoeMac