The Okie Legacy: Candy Bob...

Soaring eagle logo. Okie Legacy Banner. Click here for homepage.

Moderated by NW Okie!

Volume 7 , Issue 25

2005

Weekly eZine: (366 subscribers)
Subscribe | Unsubscribe
Using Desktop...

Sections
Alva Mystery
Opera House Mystery

Albums...
1920 Alva PowWow
1917 Ranger
1926 Ranger
1937 Ranger
Castle On the Hill

Stories Containing...

Blogs / WebCams / Photos
NW Okie's FB
OkieJournal FB
OkieLegacy Blog
Ancestry (paristimes)
NW Okie Instagram
Flickr Gallery
1960 Politcal Legacy
1933 WIRangeManuel
Volume 7
1999  Vol 1
2000  Vol 2
2001  Vol 3
2002  Vol 4
2003  Vol 5
2004  Vol 6
2005  Vol 7
2006  Vol 8
2007  Vol 9
2008  Vol 10
2009  Vol 11
2010  Vol 12
2011  Vol 13
2012  Vol 14
2013  Vol 15
2014  Vol 16
2015  Vol 17
2016  Vol 18
2017  Vol 19
2018  Vol 20
2021  Vol 21
Issues 25
Iss 1  1-8 
Iss 2  1-15 
Iss 3  1-22 
Iss 4  1-29 
Iss 5  2-5 
Iss 6  2-12 
Iss 7  2-19 
Iss 8  2-26 
Iss 9  3-5 
Iss 10  3-12 
Iss 11  3-19 
Iss 12  3-26 
Iss 13  4-2 
Iss 14  4-9 
Iss 15  4-16 
Iss 16  4-23 
Iss 17  4-30 
Iss 18  5-7 
Iss 19  5-14 
Iss 20  5-21 
Iss 21  5-28 
Iss 22  6-4 
Iss 23  6-11 
Iss 24  6-18 
Iss 25  6-25 
Iss 26  7-2 
Iss 27  7-9 
Iss 28  7-16 
Iss 29  7-23 
Iss 30  7-30 
Iss 31  8-6 
Iss 32  8-13 
Iss 33  8-20 
Iss 34  8-27 
Iss 35  9-3 
Iss 36  9-10 
Iss 37  9-17 
Iss 38  9-24 
Iss 39  10-1 
Iss 40  10-8 
Iss 41  10-15 
Iss 42  10-22 
Iss 43  10-29 
Iss 44  11-5 
Iss 45  11-12 
Iss 46  11-19 
Iss 47  11-27 
Iss 48  12-3 
Iss 49  12-10 
Iss 50  12-17 
Iss 51  12-24 
Iss 52  12-31 
Other Resources
NWOkie JukeBox

Candy Bob...

"Most people know that Colonel Bob (Candy Bob) Kirkbride made candy for the kids at Christmas time, and I found the following passage in a small paperback book that I thought you might like to use.

    Muleshoe Ballads of Oklahoma Bob by Marjorie Sawyer Munson in collaboration with Colonel Bob Kirkbride, pp. 30-34, Maxwell Printing Company, Alva, Oklahoma, 1944 -- CANDY BOB

    To the Old-Timers I'm still "Candy Bob,"�
    For I've made a heap o' taffy in my time
    And peanut brittle 'nough to bog a mule
    In quicksand.

    Yep, forty years I've been catering to sweet teeth,
    Ever since I learned the gentle art
    Of candy-makin'!
    Learned it at Custer City, Oklahoma,
    From an old man in a carnival
    That I seed throwin' taffy around a hook
    With kids all around him.
    He told me how he learned the trade
    Back in the nineties:

    A little homeless waif he was
    In New York City. His first recollection
    Was sleepin' in a barrel and eatin'
    At a near-by chapel. Didn't know no name,
    So named himself "Bill Chapel."
    Only thing he knowed
    Was how to pick a pocket:
    Used to pick mine every day
    Just to show he could.

    Well one day Bill
    Picked the wrong guy's pockets -
    A millionaire's, to be exact.
    And the old boy took the kid
    And made a man of him.
    Through him they pinched a whole pick-pocket ring
    And busted up the gang:
    And the millionaire sent this kid to Italy,
    Where he learned the candy business;
    And I learned how from him.

    I came to Alva in 1908
    And went to a rodeo picnic at Divers' Ranch
    When Jim Sullivan and Roy Moyer
    Won the ropin' contest:
    They sure could do the stunts,
    But it hadn't got to the movies then.

    That day I had my kettle full
    With ten pounds of sugar sirip.
    Had it cooked just right
    And poured it out onto a marble slab
    With all the kids around -
    For where there's candy, there is kids -
    And I'd put my hook in a locust limb
    When a cowboy Mike came sauntering along.

    "What's that?" he asks,
    Pointin' to the ten-pound chunk.
    "That's That's sweetness long drawn out."

    "Huh!" he counters. "You can't draw that far.
    Why don't you leave that to the women
    And come rope a steer?"

    "Could do that, too," I answers, and picks up
    My coolin'� chunk of sweets,
    And puts it on the hook
    Ready for the pull.

    "Throwin'� it, eh? I'd like to see you
    Throw a rope! Why don't you do some bull-doggin'
    Or some real ropin'? You can't pull that ten feet!"

    By now the candy was growin' white,
    And I was standin' back about five feet;
    And I give the candy another hitch
    Around the hook,
    And offers, "What you bet?"

    He looked a little scared,
    For the batch was lengthenin' out.

    "Twenty feet!" he says, "I bet you can't!
    Ten dollars I bet you Candy Bob -
    Ten good sweet plunkers, Candy Bob!"

    "That's good with me," says I.
    "And if you mean just what you say,
    Call the champion to hold the stakes!"

    So they all yelled, "Moyer!"� and over he come,
    Just having won the ropers' contest;
    And each of us planted him with a ten-dollar bill,
    And then I started on my project.

    The candy was gettin' airy and light by then,
    And never did stick to my hands
    Same as I've seen sometimes;
    And the crowd sure gathered 'round,
    And the stuff began to stretch and stretch
    Long and slim from the locust limb.

    By now I was standin' full ten feet back
    Showin' what I could do with a candy rope:
    Curled it right, and curled it left.
    I sent it in waves, in ringlets, in twirls.
    I coulda done the Great Crinoline, like Will Rogers,
    If after all it hadn't been sticky stuff;
    And all the time I was steppin' back,
    Farther and farther from the tree,
    With all the kids yellin' fit to kill.

    And now I had to work fast as a termite
    For fear the stuff would cool on me;
    And when I made the twenty feet
    Everybody cheered as loud as the siren.
    But I knowed I could throw that far;
    I was bettin' on a sure thing -
    But I didn't know how much farther.

    Thinner and thinner spun the rope,
    Now as white as snow.
    And farther and farther I steps back,
    With my candy rope draggin' as though'twould break.
    And finally, when I didn't dare to make it thinner,
    I called a halt.
    And Moyer brought his tape-line out,
    And there it was, away from the tree,
    Twenty-seven feet and two inches over!
    And I had won my bet.

    Then I threw on the marble slab
    The whole shootin' works.
    And I folded Mike's ten-dollar bill
    Inside my purse, and said,
    "Ten dollars was all I wanted for it, anyhow;
    Kids, I'll be Santa Claus,
    And here's your candy!"

    And I've been Candy Bob
    Forever after."
-- Jim   |  View or Add Comments (1 Comments)   |   Receive updates ( subscribers)  |   Unsubscribe


© . Linda Mcgill Wagner - began © 1999 Contact Me