One of the favorite gathering spots in town was Jean Shaw's store
and pool room. Her store served food, mostly hamburgers, and her pool room was a
"hangout" for some of the people in town.

I may not be correct on this, but Jean went
to work in Mr. Norman Brinkley's store at an early age, perhaps even working for
Marion Brinkley later on. To me, Jean was somewhat of a mystery--for as long as
I knew her, she worked very hard in the grocery business, and it was seldom one saw
her in a dress--she always wore a pants outfit which, of course, was much more
befitting her chosen occupation than frills when handling heavy cartons of
grocery supplies, shifting crates of soft drinks, sweeping floors, and managing
her poolroom. When Jean decided to go into business for herself, her store was
just a dozen steps away from the front door of our theater. It was a small L-shaped
store and was attached on the left-hand side by a much larger two-story building.
The very enterprising Jean Shaw cut a door between the larger building and the
adjoining smaller one, and created an entrance from the store into her poolroom.
Jean and her mother were always most kind to me, and I can still recall her mother's
laughter and sparkling eyes--and those wonderful thick hamburgers she'd make on
Friday and Saturday nights! Eating one of Mrs. Shaw's superb homemade hamburgers,
along with a Coca-Cola, must have been the epitome, the sheer ecstasy, of blending
together excellent food, a hungry stomach, and wonderful friends!
--O'Berry, 1990

The main entertainment, in those days, was just to get together and
talk about your farm and about what was going on. And back then, you didn't worry
about what was going on in China or in Russia. You didn't care nothing about that,
not a darn thing. The only thing you wanted to talk about

was somebody who
was sick or either you just sat there and talked about the farm, the weather, and all
that kind of stuff, just laughed and talked. We'd sit around the store on Friday and
Saturday nights and there would be around a hundred people there.
--Nixon Tutt and Carl Brinkley, 1995