ROBERT GARDNER -- The Verdict
Soon after the repeal of Prohibition, a liquor store opened on Balboa. It
was on the oceanfront in the space previously occupied by Dirty George
and his hamburger stand.
For us dedicated beachgoers, this was a great improvement. When Dirty
George left, he took with him all his flies, which had become something
of a problem for us. The beach was quite narrow in those days, and the
only way you could get away from Dirty George’s flies was to get in the
water, and there is only so long you can stay in the water without
getting pneumonia.
The liquor store was open a rather short time when it came upon bad
times. Apparently, the man who owned the liquor store liked the product
he was selling because one night he overindulged and passed out on the
floor. Word got around, and in no time there was quite a stream of people
going into the store and emerging with bottles of liquor. No one touched
the cash register and its money because that would be stealing.
The man who owned the liquor store must have been a rather philosophical
sort, or maybe he just figured he was in the wrong business, because all
he did was shrug his shoulders, walk down Main Street to the Pacific
Electric, get on one of those big Red Cars, leave town and never return.
I hasten to add that I took no part in this mass burglary. I was working
that night.
This incident had a peculiar result insofar as we beach regulars were
concerned. Some of the burglars took more than they could carry, so they
buried some of their loot in the sand. When they returned, they couldn’t
find it. After all, one stretch of sand looks much like another stretch
of sand.
After the burglary, we beach regulars would, from time to time, stick an
elbow in the sand and unearth a bottle of hooch. This was before the
invention of beach chairs, so one just stretched out on the sand. I
distinctly remember when I discovered a bottle and we all drank warm
creme de menthe -- ugh!
That incident gave rise to a beach game. One would buy or steal a
watermelon, cut out a plug, pour liquor down the opening, then go out
that night and bury the watermelon in the sand. The next day you arranged
to get to the beach before anyone else, lie down over your buried
watermelon and, when the others arrived, “find” your booze-filled
watermelon, secure some straws and have a cocktail party on the beach. I
doubt that was original, but we all acted as though it were.
The only moral I can draw from all this is that Prohibition drove a whole
generation booze-happy.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His
column is published Tuesdays.
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