Showing posts with label dimes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dimes. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2011

From dimes to dollars to hundreds to millions ...


by Pat Laster

When I was a child, the oldest of eight, at Christmas we would be given a whole dollar and allowed to shop in Sterling’s, a five-and-dime store. One dollar, at a dime each, was enough to buy every member of the family a special gift: A hankie for Mom, comb for Dad, barrettes for sisters, marbles for brothers, and writing paper for the teacher.
As we got older, we were given a dollar per gift. And after I began teaching school, I sometimes gave my college-age siblings a hundred dollars for Christmas!
Nowadays, spending a hundred dollars or more for two weeks of Schwan’s frozen foods is nearly a given, especially when Kid Billy is to be home from Henderson. Monthly expenses that top a hundred dollars are the tithe, the electricity bill, car- life- home insurance premiums, dental checkups, and the AT&T wireless statement.
Though no one I know claims to be worth a million dollars, it is not uncommon to see—in many news articles––figures of so-many million this or that. I haven’t yet taken an entire page of news and underlined every “million(s),” but I have jotted down many instances where the word is used–– either in a headline or in the body of the article.
Like not being able to fathom the ozone layer extending twenty miles, I can’t imagine anything in the millions except grains of sand, stars and gallons of water in each ocean. What follows are some sentences/statements that use the m-word.
• Wal-Mart employs 1.6 million people. Americans spend $36 million at Wal-Mart every hour of every day.
• In 1942, the Progressive Farmer had one million subscribers.
• Millions of Americans are out of work . . .
• A savings of $200 million will accrue by closing 3700 post offices.
• Construction on an $11 million apartment complex in west Little Rock began August 8 2011.
• The US sends $100 million in food aid to Africa.
• Twenty-four million people are receiving food aid in Kenya.
• The Arkansas Education Department is planning to carry over $36.2 million from last year’s budget to this year’s.
• Thirty-five million “unique” users in the US every single month come to MySpace, according to T. Vanderhook, CEO.
• There were 25 million landline telephones at June 2011’s end, down from 26 million at the end of 2010.
• Here’s a lottery prize of $99 million in Ohio.
• A man is accused of sending 27 million spam messages to Facebook users.
• Two million people lost power recently in the Southwest.
• A $1 million lottery prize was worth only (only??) $680,000 after state and federal taxes.
• A California woman won $9 million in the Super Lotto. . .
• Jon Huntsman, a 2012 presidential candidate, owns assets of between $16-$71 million.
• A header in Sunday’s paper: “Vikings lock Adrian Peterson into long-term deal; could be worth $100 million.”
About as many articles deal with figures in the billions of dollars, so that soon, perhaps, sports figures and presidential candidates will pull down and/ or be worth billions of dollars.
Unless, of course, a Depression occurs and the dime is once again the measure of wealth.

c 2011 Pat Laster dba lovepat press
Check out Laster's first novel, A Journey of Choice, at online book sellers.