Below
you can find many of the stories that make our family unique and special.
Please read on and enjoy these memories shared by your relatives.
These
stories were originally printed in the family cookbook for the 1992 reunion.
Tony Panowicz says,
"I've tried to think of something funny to tell and I find everything,
our whole life, 50
years of it, has been really funny with the Riedmanns. They are just a funny
bunch. Eight different funnies to
live by - all in all it's been great. Wait until I ask if I can borrow a couple
of grand for a couple of months, and
I bet that will turn on the serious 'think about it' faucet. A good bunch of
people."
Madge Panowicz remembers
some of Grandma Riedmann's sayings:
Eska Hoka, de me hubisku.
Pretty Girl, give me a kiss.
Eska Klu, Klu, de me hubisku.
Pretty Boy, give me a kiss.
Yasi dam, fausk ku!
You be quiet or you'll get a slap!
She would hold her hand up, cupped fingers together and
you knew she meant business!
Madge also remembers Grandpa Riedmann always liked his feet rubbed as he lay
in his arm chair after work. He
smoked his cigar and finished a beer. It was the girls job to wait on him when
he came home from a long day at Willow
Springs Bottling Company. "Mom had us trained well."
On Thanksgiving, the Riedmann
family and Visty family would have dinner together. Aunt Jo would make her famous
chocolate pies and Mom would make her sponge cake. Uncle Boris would make us
girls all do dishes with him and would
always have us singing, "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles", "You Are
My Sunshine", and "Swanee River".
Irene Van Moorleghem remembers her Dad used to call people a knucklehead
or a nuts-a-fagin.
He used to say a prayer
to us in German about an angel. We had a Star car. Everyone else had a Model
T, but we had
a Star car. It had a running board on each side which we stood on to get in
the car. It was open on both sides and
Dad snapped on Insinglass windows in the winter. There was a tool box built
in on the running board.
We had a large bing cherry
tree in the back yard and we had to stay home when they were ripe to pick them,
because
the neighbor boys would come over and raid the tree when we were gone. Times
were tight, so the fruit was important
to us to can. In the winter, we counted the cherries in each dish, so we all
had the same.
Dad made bon fires in the
fall with all of the raked up leaves and we would throw in potatoes to roast.
They were
delicious after you got through the blackened outside.
Dad's treat was good home
baked rye bread with caraway seeds and butter and a can of shrimp with white
onions and
vinegar mixed in. The longer it set, the better it was.
Another treat was Sveevil
Kugen at Christmas. It was a German dish. Mom took kolache dough, spread it
in a 9"
cake pan and topped it with chopped onions, fried in butter. This was "his"
treat for Christmas.
Irene also remembers her Mom teaching her in Czech, the word Klebba, which means bread.
She always said, "You are never too old to learn."
Mom canned a lot. She made
a lot of grape jelly and jam. Our Septembers were busy after school, as we would
squeeze
grapes to separate the skins from the inside. Sometimes mom would get 6 bushels
from her brother, Uncle John
Vacek. Every fall, I still remember opening my lunch box and smelling dill pickles
and Concord grapes. Mom also
made grape "Booktha" - Kolache dough spread in a cake pan and topped
with blue grapes and sprinkled with a mixture
of flour and sugar.
She taught us to put a dash
of allspice in creamed chicken to bring out the flavor; and to add a little
sugar to
canned vegetables to bring out a fresh flavor.
A rare treat for breakfast
was what we called "Bubble Gravy." It's tapioca vanilla pudding made
from scratch,
sprinkled with sugar. It was delicious.
Mom's favorite flowers were pansies, dahlias, nasturtiums and geraniums. A treasure
was a mock orange blossom bush
in the yard. It was an oldie.
Mom had a yellow canary
called Perry. When the sun would shine, the bird would sing beautifully. Mom
whistled to
him to get him to sing. When Mom died, the bird died soon after from missing
her.
I remember Mom listening
in the morning while making breakfast, to a man called Byron Head. He'd sing
with the
records (78's). She waited for him to play "When the White Azaleas are
Blooming". She enjoyed hearing him sing with
the record.
On Sundays, she'd "air
out the house." That meant we had to stay in the bedrooms while she opened
the front door on
the south and the back door on the north. It was wintertime and the cold air
would rush through the house.
Mom would then close up the house. Oh, it smelled good and with the sun shining
and polkas playing on the radio, she
would proceed to grab a broom and start dancing around the dining room table.
She was radiant and happy. She loved polkas.
Mom would take left over
coffee grounds, almost dry, and sprinkle them on the living room carpet. That
freshened
the carpet and kept the dust down while sweeping with a broom. No electric vacuums
at that time!
In the spring, Mom would
get newborn chickens and put them under the kitchen stove to keep them warm.
She put boards
around the legs of the stove. She kept them there until they started to jump
over the boards and then they would
be put outside. She killed chickens on Saturday and we'd have them Sundays.
She was an expert on Imperial
Cake. No one made them as good. The nuns loved them, and she sent them to sons
and
sons-in-laws in the service in World War 2. She packed them in popcorn.
Verses we sang as kids were:
I see London
I see France
I see __________ underpants.
Mom taught us that when we didn't sit like ladies.
When someone tattled and
it wasn't true, we'd say:
Liar, liar
Your pants are on fire.
When we fought, or someone called us names:
Sticks and stones will break my bones,
But names will never hurt me.
This was said in a sing-song fashion.
My mom always sang this
to my kids, and I sing it to my grandkids. They all love it.
Fishy, fishy in the brook
Daddy caught them with a hook
Mommy fried them in a pan
_______ ate them like a man.
When we got in trouble with
someone:
Shame! shame!
Puddin' tame,
Everybody knows your name.
What's your name?
Puddin' tame. Ask me again and I'll tell you the same.
What's your name?
John Brown. Ask me again and I'll knock you down.
Their first home was on 3rd street between Pine and Williams. They moved to
504 Martha Street in 1921. The first 7
children were born at home. Madeline Marie arrived at the rented home on 3rd
street on 9-16-20. Irene Josephine
(1-20-22), Frances Anne (5-26-23), George Boris (Michael) (10-5-26), Alfred
Adam,Jr. (6-12-28), Lawrence John
(8-5-30) and Ruth Ann (4-2-33) were born at 504 Martha in the front bedroom.
Louis Michael (1-22-35) was born at
St. Catherine's Hospital.
Dad sold the house in 1959 to Ed and Donna Nimerichter. They are still living
there.
CHRISTMAS AT 504
Irene Van Moorleghem
We always celebrated Christmas
on Christmas Eve. On the 23rd we would string popcorn for garland. When we woke
up
on Christmas Eve morning, there was a sheet hung over the living room archway.
Everyone had to use the back door
that day. We would watch the sheet, and when moving air made the sheet move
we knew Santa was in the living room.
In the evening we would hear the front door open and feel the cold air through
the sheet. The tree lights would go
on and we heard heavy stomping and paper rustling, and then (and it seemed like
an hour) a school bell would ring
in the closed room and the door would close. Dad then lifted a corner of the
sheet from the bottom and let the
littlest look in to see if Santa had gone. He then lifted the rest of the sheet
and we all got to look. We knelt
while Dad said a prayer and then sat patiently for Dad to call our name.
When George Riedmann was 2 or 3 years old, he had a harmonica that was his favorite.
Nobody touched it. He was
a cutie with his curly blonde hair, bib overalls, and hugging his harmonica.
His sisters spoiled him a lot. He
was their first brother. Irene says she almost killed him. She gave him green
grapes and he went into convulsions.
She never forgot it. Their mom cried so hard.
George Riedmann remembers," When Mom would put us to work cleaning
and polishing. We'd grumble, and she told us it would be
easier if we said this rhyme and repeat it faster and faster: 'Polish it in
every corner.' Keep repeating it. Try it!
Our treat was going with
Dad on Sunday morning to check out the Pop plant. One Saturday, we left a rake
in the
yard and someone stole it, so Dad wouldn't take us on Sunday for 4 weeks. The
boys used Dad's tools and never
put them back, so Dad chopped a hole in the floor and put a plank in front of
the tool drawers to keep the boys out.
Lory found a way to crawl under the work bench and put his hand up under to
get the tools out. They put the tools
back, and Dad never knew.
We all had to walk to Bancroft
Dairy on 3rd and Bancroft and get gallons of milk at 5 cents a gallon. A bread
man
would drive into our back yard and bring Mom day old bread. So the boys would
stuff potatoes in the tailpipe of
his truck and then hide. When he'd start the truck, the potatoes would shoot
out and hit the dirt bank.
Dad's favorite expression
was 'Roundhead. 'Some
of the things Mom and Dad would say were:
If you don't stop
crying, I'll give you something to cry about.
I don't make pop for
you kids to drink, I make it to sell.
If you can't talk
and work, don't talk at all.
If you're going to
cry, I'll put you in the coal bin.
We had a stack of beer cases
in the back yard and we'd have to chop those to burn in the furnace instead
of coal.
Dad had an old Stake truck that had hard rubber tires, and when he would turn
the corner on 6th & Dorcas, the tires
made a lot of noise on the brick streets. The chains connecting the stakes on
the truck bed would rattle, and
we could hear him coming from 2 blocks away.
Dad always hid the money
from the day in the pop plant at night. He hired 2 Indian boys and they found
out where he
put it, so they stole it and never came back to work.
Every night Dad would stop
at the Glass Front Bar at 13th & Williams and get a glass of beer for 10
cents. The
bartender would see him coming and have 2 glasses sitting on the counter for
him. He only stayed 10 minutes.
At work, George always called his Dad, 'Boss.'
They bottled Squirt, Dr.
Pepper, Orange Crush and O' So Grape. Al and I would want to learn how to mix
pop and
when we would ask Dad, he'd say, 'All in good time. You will have your turn.'
I was 36 when my turn came and I got
to mix pop.
Dad's favorite expression
was, 'Do something!' One day the Dr. Pepper sales rep was in and standing looking
out of
the window. As usual Dad got irritated and said to him, 'Do something!' The
guy shot back, 'I am, I'm thinking of
what I should be doing.' We enjoyed that.
We had to give all of our
salary to Mom. We got to keep 10%, so if I made $40.00, I got to keep $4.00
until I was
21. Then I could keep all but $10.00 and that was for room and board. All the
kids did that."
Margie Riedmann Sobczyk
was very young when Grandma Riedmann died, but one thing she remembers is every
time
she asked Grandma what she was doing, the response was always the same: "Making
a pair of pants for a fish."
Bill Van Moorleghem
says,"I remember round galvanized washtubs full of chunks of ice and water.
Just below the
surface - treasures for kids - cold bottles of O-So-Grape and Orange Crush in
thick glass bottles that looked like
they'd been through a bottling machine a million times.
I remember picking apricots
on hot June days at Martha Street. Mushed up fruit was always smeared into the
grass
under the trees. We had to compete with big wasps - with one eye looking for
the fattest apricots and the other
looking out for wasps. One time Ruth Ann got it! I was about four then, but
I can still vividly recall poor Ruth
Ann screaming as she kind of ran in place at hyperspeed. Aunt Ruth was there.
She daubed mud on the sting, which
was supposed to take the sting out. But those yellow-jackets were so big, I
doubt if it really made any difference."
SO CLOSE TO HOME
Chip Riedmann
Upon returning from a delightful
vacation at their Florida home, Lou and Sharon had their homecoming plans go
awry by
an unfortunate series of events.
It all started when they called ahead to arrange transportation from the airport.
Daughter Beth, who was
taking some time off from her career, answered the call and volunteered to pick
them up at the airport. For the
record, I am told by confidential sources, another person was requested to pick
them up, but... Beth, being the
helpful sort, wished to perform this service since she was crashing at Dad's
house. From here everything goes
downhill.
Beth was visiting her sister, Lisa, at her home in southwest Omaha when it came
time to pick up the folks.
Since Beth had been away from Omaha for a while, her sense of direction was
a little out of whack. After hopping on
the interstate to go to the airport, she soon realized that she was getting
closer to Lincoln than she was to
downtown Omaha. I assume it was the change in the number of cows vs. people
that tipped her off. Well, eventually
she did get herself turned around and made it to the airport.
Of course by this time Lou was waiting patiently at the curb for car and driver
(as most of our elders know, you
don't survive five children without having lots of patience). As the usual pleasantries
were exchanged,
Sharon asked Beth to unlock the passenger door for her so she could start loading
the car. Since she was driving
Sharon's car, which had all those fancy buttons on it, Beth pushed the "unlock"
button and jumped out of the car
closing the door behind her. So she says. Actually, she pushed the "lock"
button and sealed the car shut, leaving
the keys in the ignition and the engine still running!
After a short discussion of all the available options it was decided to call
Sharon's sister, Sandy, and ask her to
drive over to their house and get the spare set of car keys. As Sharon returned
from inside the airport, she
explained to all what the plan was. Beth asked if Sandy had her own key to their
house to which Sharon
replied that Sandy would use the hidden key to get into the house. Now it gets
worse. Beth next asked if it was
the key she had been using the past several days and now had in her possession.
Of course it was.
Meanwhile, poor Sandy, who left before Sharon could call her back, arrived at
the house and soon found that there
was no key to be found. She spotted Lou and Sharon's neighbor out puttering
around his house and asked him if
he could be of any help. Well, low and behold (being a good neighbor) he just
happens to have a key to the house!
As they proudly marched over to the house to unlock the front door, they grabbed
the outside screen door and found
that someone had locked it also! Foiled again. Their only option now was to
go find a screwdriver and remove the
whole screendoor frame, complete with 8000 screws, so they could get to the
front door and unlock it. Having finally
achieved entrance to the house, Sandy grabbed the spare car keys, jumped into
the car and quickly and diligently followed
all the detours from Bellevue up to the airport. For those who don't get that
way often, there used to be an old freeway
that connected South Omaha to the rest of the world. Well, at that time it was
under reconstruction and didn't exist.
After two hours of patiently waiting (remember the patience part) Sandy successfully
arrives at the airport, car still running and
bags and tempers still intact on the curb. Next stop - the closest gas station!
JUST FOLLOWING DIRECTIONS
One afternoon, when Betty Riedmann returned from shopping, she found 12-year
old Mary Pat on her hands and knees on
the kitchen floor, smearing Crisco on a pillow case. Being just a little curious,
she asked the young girl what she
was doing. Mary Pat's reply was, "I was making Peanut Brittle, and the
recipe said to spread it onto a greased
sheet. I thought the sheet was too big, so I decided to use a pillow case."
WHAT IS A TIDBIT?
One summer day, Aunt Renie
called and invited everyone down to her cabin. She asked if we could bring some
tidbits to snack on. Betty Riedmann sent her daughter, Mary Pat to the grocery
store for the snacks. When she
returned home, she had in her bag a can of pineapple tidbits. Needless to say,
someone else had to run to the
store to pick up the snacks.