What’s Up ~ June, 2025

Hein-Baker Trio

Garth and Bethany spent much of May chasing warmer temperatures as the “Mud Season” in the mountains was especially harsh this year. With day trips to the Denver Botanic Gardens as well as quick trips to Las Vegas to celebrate Garth’s birthday and one very therapeutic (albeit short) trip to Moab, they survived and are looking forward to a drier June. Garth will be traveling  to Roseville, CA at the end of June to pay respects to Sharon Hein.

Chance writes that he is “learning to love Tokyo.” He nailed his big 1800 word policy paper analyzing Shell Global Oil with a 96.6% grade. He works out of a local gym every day, and goes out with his friends on weekends. In May he traveled to Kyoto on the Shinkansen  (the Japanese bullet train) with friends from school. Chance is going to have some great stories to tell when he returns!

Jason and Erika’s Family

 Jason and Erika were especially busy in May, preparing for Max’s graduation and managing their real estate and catering businesses. 

Devon traveled to Denver twice in one week to attend Max’s graduation and his birthday/graduation party. Her friend, Steve, from Denver, visited her in May. She attended a one-woman show at the local community theater and enjoyed that very much. Devon also had a huge legal victory in a case she’s been working on since June, 2020, where the prosecution conceded that her client’s conviction was based on false evidence and agreed to resentence him to time served. Devon is looking forward to going on an Alaskan casino cruise in June, with her friend, Seth, who worked with her at Sadden and is her neighbor in Long Beach.

Tyler traveled to Denver to attend Max’s graduation. She is now in San José, CA, completing a three month internship for Adobe. Tyler reports that her internship is going amazing so far and she is super happy. She is also in a startup accelerator program for entrepreneurs. Between starting her company, LifeQuest, and her internship, Tyler is super busy! But she is completely in love with San Jose and she says that “the Abode headquarters are beyond amazing.” Tyler has three goals this summer: Crush her internship, get LifeQuest off the ground, and continue to become the best version of herself.  

Connor is working at All Bird shoes on the Pearl Street Mall in Boulder.  He likes his job and loves the fact that he’s earning money again. He renewed the lease on his apartment for another year and is looking for a new roommate, starting in August. In his spare time, Connor goes the the gym, runs errands, spends time with friends and interviews for an additional part-time job. In May, Connor attended the final concert of his favorite band from high school, Honey, at The Summit in Denver.


Max graduated from Cherokee Trail High School and is looking forward to going to Colorado State University this fall. His summer job is fixing cracks in people’s windshields. In his spare time Max hangs out with friends and writes thank you cards.

Grandma and Grandpa

Grandpa is still trying to get his energy level back. He is going to wear a heart monitor for two weeks to help his cardiologist diagnose his situation. Grandpa lost another family member last month when his sister-in-law Sharon (brother Joe’s wife) died after a long illness. 

Grandma is happy working outside. Her garden is especially beautiful this year because of lots of rain. She had a lovely birthday and enjoyed hosting the family for breakfast after Max’s Graduation.

What’s Your Favorite Summer Food?

Garth ~ Watermelon with lime and Tajin

Bethany ~ Palisade Peaches

Jason ~ Strawberry salad with steak

Erika ~ Grilled vegetables with any protein. Usually with some sort of pesto for dipping.

Devon ~Fruit cup with Tajin

Tyler ~ is too busy to eat.

Connor ~ Cantaloupe

Chance: Gyoza. It’s a Chinese dumpling with a Japanese spin. They go great with drinks as a fatty food to absolve a bit of alcohol, and they have decent protein inside. Very delicious

Max ~ Watermelon

Grandpa ~ A nice, juicy grilled hamburger

Grandma ~  Ice Cream 

Blueberry Muffins

Yield: 12 muffins

Heat oven to 400 degrees.

Whisk together in large bowl:

1 1/2 cups flour, 3/4 cup sugar, 1/2 tsp salt and 2 tsp. baking powder

Using a glass measuring cup that hold at least one cup:

Add 1/3 cup vegetable oil and 1 large egg.

Fill measuring cup to one cup line with milk. Add and stir in 1 1/2 tsp vanilla

Add 6-8 oz fresh blueberries

Fold all ingredients and scoop into muffin tins lined with paper.

Bake about 15 minutes.

Johnny and Ruth Quinn

Uncle Johnny killed a man at the Green Lantern Saloon in St. Paul. He said it was self-defense. But it probably wasn’t.

My Irish grandmother, Irene Fay, born in 1886, was the oldest of six children. Her brother, Owen, died when she was twelve and he was ten years old. Her father was killed instantly in a train accident, when she was in high school. She had a painful limp, probably caused by a bone that didn’t heal properly. She had a hard life.

Grandma was a kind, serious, hard-working woman, She married my grandfather, Robert Jones, when she was seventeen and he was twenty-four. Grandpa was a studious, hard-working, Welshman, who never drank a drop of alcohol.

Irene’s younger sister, Ruth Fay, was her opposite. Ruth was fun-loving, friendly, exceptionally pretty and always ready for the next drink, even if it wasn’t legal.

Ruth married Johnny Quinn in the St. Paul Cathedral in 1923, three years after the start of prohibition. I can only assume it was a Roaring 20’s courtship, filled with music, dancing, and bootleg liquor. Ruthie’s hair was short, she dressed as a flapper and she loved to drive a car. Johnny was a small-built, dapper, charming Irishman. 

Ruth and Johnny moved Chicago and opened a speak-easy, in a two-story house across the street from Wrigley Field. A frequent customer was Hack Wilson, one of the best outfielders the Chicago Cubs ever had. Hack’s hitting record rivaled Babe Ruth’s. He spent so much time in Ruth and Johnny’s nightclub, he chose them to be godparents to his son. 

Johnny was a member of Chicago’s North-Siders, an Irish gang, headed by Bugsy Moran. The South-Siders, the Italian gang headed by Al Capone, were their enemies.

As a child, I loved to hear Johnny and Ruth tell stories of gangsters running out the back door of their house. I grew up hearing stories of machine guns hidden in violin cases, of people being gunned down in the streets, of crooked policemen, and gangsters “with a heart of gold.”

Feb. 14, 1929, the day of the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, Johnny’s life was miraculously spared. Johnny and another man were in Detroit, on a run to get liquor from Canada, when Al Capone’s gang killed five members of the North Siders. Ruth had gone to St. Paul, to live with my grandparents, because, as she told us later, “The heat was on.” 

Ruth learned the news of the massacre on the radio, and eagerly waited to hear the names of those killed. When Johnny’s name was not on the list, she was ecstatic. “My Johnny is alive!” Three days later she got a telegram, confirming the good news.

Ruth and Johnny moved back to St. Paul, but were again the focus of prohibition-era drama. They were regular customers at the Green Lantern, a seedy, Irish saloon notorious for illegal activity. Among the regulars were Johnny and Ruth, Grandma’s sister, Margaret Hurley and her husband George, and their youngest brother, Frank Fay.

My grandmother tried to shield Grandpa from her family’s illegal activities. She hurried downstairs every morning to check the newspaper to see if any of their names were mentioned. When they were, and it happened frequently, she would carefully cut out the article before Grandpa had a chance to read the paper.

“Irene, why is there this hole in the front page of my paper?” my grandfather would ask.

“There was a coupon on the other side. I cut it out so I’d have it when I went to the store.”

At the Green Lantern on the night of March 19, 1931, Uncle Johnny shot and killed Frank Ventress, a big, belligerent man who fought with Johnny and Frank earlier in the day. Johnny was convicted of second-degree murder and sent to the state prison in Stillwater, Minnesota. Until the Governor of Minnesota commuted his sentence, Ruth visited Johnny in jail every week. He was still “her Johnny” and they were always very much in love.

I wish I could tell you that Johnny and Ruth lived a straight life after he returned home, but that wouldn’t be true. Prohibition was repealed, so they needed to find another business. They bought a small dry-cleaning business in St. Paul, and set up an illegal gambling operation in the back. They ran that business until Uncle Johnny died of natural causes in 1963.

Ruth lived for 15 more years and died in 1978. She was always the life of the party. She drank whiskey out of porcelain tea cups. She was always beautiful. Always everyone’s favorite aunt. Always a baseball fan. Always generous. Always ready with a laugh and another story. 

I was lucky to have an Aunt Ruth and Uncle Johnny in my life. Everyone should be so lucky.