Old Days Poolhalls
I guess most all the old days poolhalls were just as described by the forum posters.
Back when I was 14yrs. we had three poolhalls in town, the one I most frequented (Rods) you had to be 14 yrs. to enter with signed parents permission, mostly just the 14 to 25 yrs crowd.
Another was Barney's , it was a 21yrs. and up guy's , a pretty rough place.
Then there was Wayne's, it was a restaurant in the front part with a big half glass partioned window and door going into the poolhall., it was 18yrs. and up for the longest then the age limit was dropped down to 16yrs. to enter.
All these poolhalls had three snooker tables and two 4x8 pool tables.
I remember several Friday & Saturday night's going to the Warren Pastime Theater with friends when I was about 12yrs. or so of age and watching the same movie both nights, then going to Wayne's to get a coke float and setting at the back booths of the restaurant so I could peer through the plate glass window and watch the old men play snooker.
Those tables had leather pockets at the top half and a metal bottom, when the balls were pocketed it made a loud unique sound you could here for miles!.....j/k
By the time I was old enough to get into the poolhall at Waynes, I was already a pretty good little shooter, played snooker mostly. The wall was lined with sturdy chairs up on a wooden deck about a foot from the back door to the partioned glass window, spit-toons, cigarette butts all on the floors, burn marks on all the tables, very smokey atmosphere, domino tablles and lots of loud talking.
This old man named Mr. Creed and his son Bobby Creed worked there, they wore aprons and you called for Rack, and they would come running to get the balls in place for another game.
The coke machine was in the back, with stacks and stacks of different brand colas, knowone ever dared steal a hot cola, just never entered one's mind for very long, people were just more honest back then than they are now.
I remember watching Mr. Creed retip all the cue's that needed repairing, he used Elk Master tips and Tweents glue, he put on a tip holder and rubberbands to hold the tips in place, seemed like he would place about 10 to 15 cues behind the hot water heater on Mondays to leave over night and the next day the sanding festival would start, he was pretty fast though, didn't take him long to finish up all the cues.
Only the top tier players played (snooker) on the front table by the big windows, the lower class players were on table two, and bottom of the pack used table three.
One summer back in 1974 three players came to town, two were snooker champions from Canada, a guy named Al and one named Terry, can't remember the others name, he was a pool player from California, my brother Calvin ran into them in Little Rock,AR. and told them they could play him all they wanted in Warren.Ar. and also would get lots of other action, guess they liked the action, they stayed for three months in the local motel.
The county of Warren was Dry, so lots of older guy's would slip in drinks in cups, or go outside to their vehicles and drink a snort or drink a cold one, some would hide their whiskey or Dr.Ticneirs in the bathroom in the cracks in the walls or overhead ceiling.
Seems like no one had a two piece cue back then except , out of town hustlers, the locals always had their special cue that they would hide somewhere in the poolhall, and you dared not get caught shooting with it by the one who hid it , or an ass beating may take place.:grin:
You never heard of getting stiffed by anyone on a gambling wager, it was almost unheard of, if you did , you got an ass whooping and was bared for life from the hall.
You never heard of getting weight either, you played your opponet head up, the best man won!
I learned alot from those old timers, learned that you didn't necesscarily have to be a run out player to win at snooker or pool, but be the smartest player with safety's, you keep a man in the dog house most of the time his will to win deminishes!
Those were some good ole days, I will remember them forever!
David Harcrow