|
|
Twins
have double fun as they turn 90
Laughter could be the secret to a long life
Wanda English Burnett, Editor
Laughter might be the key to a long life. Even it its not,
twin sisters, Eva Marie Mess and Neva Mae Hinners, who will celebrate
their 90th birthday soon, say laughing is just good for you.
Eva, who now resides at St. Andrews Health Campus, Batesville,
and Neva, who lives at Manderley Health Care Center, Osgood, were
glad for the opportunity to get together as they shared memories
with The Versailles Republican, just one week before their 90th
celebration.
The twins, who are both in good mental and physical health, say
things have certainly changed over the span of their lives. For
example, they didnt have electricity in their rural Pierceville
home they shared with parents, Earl and Rose Knowlton. We
had lamps - kerosene, Neva noted. Sure did,
Eva chimed in. This is how they got their lessons
or homework as todays students might say.
They told of a simpler time even though it was hard. We
thought we were rich, Neva said, with Eva agreeing. We
got one thing at Christmas, Eva told, remembering Christmases
past with a twinkle and a nod at her sister. They shared a secret
about one time when they got into the presents ahead of schedule.
The girls attended grade school in Pierceville, finishing their
education at Milan, when they graduated high school in 1936.
Soon after high school both girls married - Eva, who Neva pointed
out is the oldest, married first. She and Joe Mess were married
on September 6 with Neva following suit on March 1 to Arthur Hinners.
They have lived close to each other most of their lives with a
couple stints apart. Telling about moving to Michigan for a short
time, Neva remembered, I couldnt hardly wait to get
home - because Eva was there. Eva had the same sentiments
when she was separated by miles from her sister.
Although the two are not identical twins, their minds are on the
same wavelength. Remembering outdoor plumbing or more commonly
known as an outhouse, Eva said, It was cold in the wintertime.
Neva began, Makes you appreciate... Eva finished the
sentence, ...what you got now. They both erupted in
laughter.
Eyes twinkling, the two shared many stories of pranks played on
each other. Vividly remembering the cow incident,
Neva said her sister would get her to come to the barn. Seeing
a cow lying down, she would entice Neva to get on it. That
thing would raise its hind end up and Id go flying off,
she made a swooping motion with her arm. Eva laughed with Neva
giving her the look.
They remembered the days of horse and buggy and their familys
first car, a Model T. We went to Cincinnati to get the car,
they told. On the way home, they picked up an extra passenger,
a billy goat! It was me and Eva and the billy goat sat in-between
us in the back seat of that Model T, Neva told.
The goat was so well mannered on the ride home, Neva thought he
would make a great playmate. However, once outside the car, he
showed his true colors and butted her promptly. The women laughed
together at the memory.
They loved music, with Eva on the violin and Neva on the piano
they made music together. They said they both took lessons and
could read notes, but they also played by ear. Both women agreed
they just followed each others lead and had a great time
with it.
They remembered evenings of listening on the party
line. You know we cranked the phone, Neva said. Oh,
yes, three long rings, two short, Eva said, while they locked
eyes and again, laughed. Well, they didnt have television,
computers or Internet, said they couldnt afford the newspaper,
so they enjoyed hearing the news on the party line.
(For the younger generation, a party line is where you could pick
up the phone and hear other peoples conversations, before
telephone lines were private.)
While the twins were different in some ways, Eva loved the outdoors
and Neva loved to cook and sew, they still had many similarities.
Both had husbands who were in WWII. The ladies lived back at their
childhood home during that time. We would buy a month's
worth of stamps at a time, Neva said. And then write
our husbands every day. Yes, every day, Eva
said, with pride. I didnt like anything about it,
Neva said, referring to the war.
They tell of a time when life was hard, money was scarce, the
luxuries of indoor plumbing and electricity unheard of. Their
dresses, and yes, they only wore dresses, were handmade by their
mother. They heated with a wood or coal stove and had no air conditioning
in the summer. Their food mostly came from being preserved at
home and they couldnt remember eating in a restaurant as
a child. They got plenty of exercise because they walked nearly
everywhere they went - even to school.
And yet, they simultaneously agreed, People dont know
what it is to live. They said back then was
really living. They were happy, life was good.
Whats the secret to living a long fulfilled life? Neva says,
Its being good and faithful to family, to everyone,
really. Eva agreed, and together they laughed.
Eva and Joe had two children- Jack Mess and wife Sandy, who live
in Elrod; Donna and husband, Fred, of Cincinnati. Neva and Arthur
also had two children - Tom and wife, Rita of Seymour and Mike
and wife, Carolyn of Pierceville. Together the ladies have more
than 20 grand and great grandchildren.
A birthday celebration in the form of an open house will be held
Sunday, March 2 from 2-4 p.m. at St. Andrews Health Campus, 1400
Lammers Pike, Batesville. Their families invite the community
to participate in the event.
The twins agreed they are pranksters and weren't for sure exactly
how they would celebrate their exact date of birth - March 4,
1918 - but, you can bet it will be fun and they will be laughing.
Their children describe them as characters, who truly enjoy
life.
 |
| THEN: The above picture of Eva Mess, left, and Neva
Hinners, right, was taken at their high school graduation
in 1936.NOW: Below they are pictured again, Eva, left,
and Neva, right, just a week before their 90th birthday celebration.
(Wanda Burnett Photo) |
 |
|

|