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[corresponds to inside cover of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
[illustration]&#13;
Community Library&#13;
Sunbury, Ohio</text>
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&#13;
Day by Day&#13;
&#13;
[illustration]&#13;
&#13;
Doris Davidson Day&#13;
&#13;
Community Library&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
1995&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
Grandchild&#13;
&#13;
Child of my child&#13;
&#13;
Heart of my heart&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Your smile bridges the years&#13;
&#13;
between us - I am young again&#13;
&#13;
discovering the world through your eyes.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
You have the time to listen&#13;
&#13;
and I have the time to spend&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Delighted to gaze at familiar loved&#13;
&#13;
features, made new to in your eyes again.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Through you, I'll see the future.&#13;
&#13;
Through me, you'll know the past.&#13;
&#13;
In the present we'll love one another&#13;
&#13;
As long as these moments shall last.&#13;
&#13;
- Perfect pleasures&#13;
&#13;
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[corresponds to page 2 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Preface&#13;
&#13;
Many of us in our lifetime have been a part&#13;
&#13;
of, or know of, a 5-generation family because it&#13;
&#13;
represents a span of about 80 years.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We have had 8 generations of our family living&#13;
&#13;
since the early 1900's to now. If all the&#13;
&#13;
grandparents back to 1750 were still living you&#13;
&#13;
would have several million grandmas and grandpas &#13;
&#13;
and wouldn't that be a pretty kettle of fish. Talk&#13;
&#13;
about being spoiled!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Of course, you have only a few grandparents&#13;
&#13;
living EXCEPT - you have little bits and pieces of&#13;
&#13;
all these other grandparents in you. and that is &#13;
&#13;
what sets you apart as unique. Perhaps one of you&#13;
&#13;
got grandpa's red hair, or grandma's blue eyes, or&#13;
&#13;
a mind for math, a dread disease, a gimpy knee.&#13;
&#13;
Thank, or blame, your ancestors.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I want to begin by honoring your grandparents &#13;
&#13;
by writing what I know, or have heard about them.&#13;
&#13;
I will then tell of my married life from my&#13;
&#13;
perception, taking it up to the time our children&#13;
&#13;
were married. From there you will have to have&#13;
&#13;
them write their history for you.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I hope you'll enjoy my reflections on&#13;
&#13;
childhood, marriage, work, joys and sorrow of&#13;
&#13;
what, looking back, seems a long, long time.&#13;
&#13;
.2.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
[corresponds to page 3 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Family Tree&#13;
&#13;
Great-Great-Great- Grandparents&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Dixon &#13;
? ? ? &#13;
&#13;
Mary J. Covert Davidson &#13;
Thomas Davidson&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Great -Great Grandparents&#13;
&#13;
Middleton and Sarah Day     &#13;
William and Mary Glenn       &#13;
&#13;
Annie C. Davidson Cline&#13;
Spencer and Maggie Cowell&#13;
&#13;
Great Grandparents&#13;
&#13;
Truman and Katie Day&#13;
&#13;
Cliff and Maye Davidson&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Grandparents&#13;
&#13;
Wendell and Doris Davidson Day&#13;
(PaBee) and (Bee)&#13;
&#13;
.3.</text>
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&#13;
&#13;
I grew up thinking that I only had two sets of&#13;
&#13;
grandparents. Mom and Dad had never mentioned&#13;
&#13;
having any grandparents, so I guess I assumed that&#13;
&#13;
older people didn't have any.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As I grew older and learned about ancestors, I&#13;
&#13;
did ask a few questions but received no answers&#13;
&#13;
that helped so it was stored away some where in my&#13;
&#13;
brain never to be thought of again.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We were down at Grandma Clines one day in 1940&#13;
&#13;
for a family dinner when something came up about&#13;
&#13;
grandparents and Grandma quite casually remarked&#13;
&#13;
that her former mother-in-law was still living. We&#13;
&#13;
were shocked, amazed and questioning at the&#13;
&#13;
announcement. Perhaps stunned is a better word -&#13;
&#13;
after all I was 23 with 2 children of my own and I&#13;
&#13;
had never heard one word about her.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Great-Great-Great-grandmother Dixon&#13;
with Shirley, Terry, Joan&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Immediately we all  decided we would like to&#13;
&#13;
meet her, and Grandma made the arrangements for us&#13;
&#13;
to go to Jericho. How it was accomplished I do not&#13;
&#13;
know - I don't believe Grandma had spoken to Mrs.&#13;
&#13;
Dixon since the divorce 40 years before.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anyway, one Sunday morning several carloads of&#13;
&#13;
.4.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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[corresponds to page 5 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Davidsons (who should have been Dixons -&#13;
&#13;
explanation later,) set sail for Jericho in&#13;
&#13;
southeastern Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
She was there to greet us when we arrived - a&#13;
&#13;
small, frail woman, very quiet and bearing a not-&#13;
&#13;
very-welcoming look. There were no hugs, kisses or&#13;
&#13;
even an intimation of being glad to see us. We&#13;
&#13;
were not invited into the house, all the&#13;
&#13;
conversations took part in the yard where where we finally&#13;
&#13;
posed for a 5-generation picture.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Five generations: Kathleen Davidson,&#13;
Leland Davidson, Grandmother Doris&#13;
Day, Great-Great-Great Grandmother&#13;
Dixon, Great Great Grandmother Cline,&#13;
Great-Grandfather Cliff Davidson&#13;
holding Virginia Davidson&#13;
Front: Shirley Day, Terry Day&#13;
Roland Davidson holding Joan&#13;
Davidson and Wendell Davidson.&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
It was so awkward and I was so embarrassed for&#13;
&#13;
Dad (she didn't even welcome him) that all I wanted&#13;
&#13;
was OUT.  We left with no thought of returning and&#13;
&#13;
no invitation to return, and I never thought of her&#13;
&#13;
again until I began writing this little history.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Now I wonder - was she quiet and reserved&#13;
&#13;
because it was her natural way? Did she resent us&#13;
&#13;
being there: if so, why did she agree to the&#13;
&#13;
meeting? Was it because she realized, and could&#13;
&#13;
not cope with, the fact of how much human contact&#13;
&#13;
.5.</text>
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[corresponds to page 6 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
she had denied herself or been denied by someone&#13;
&#13;
else?&#13;
&#13;
Whatever the reasons, we left and never&#13;
&#13;
contacted her again - nor did she contact us.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Great-Great Grandparents&#13;
&#13;
My great-great-great&#13;
&#13;
grandmother Covert, of the&#13;
&#13;
same generation as Mrs.&#13;
&#13;
Dixon, lived with my Grandma&#13;
&#13;
Cline after she moved to&#13;
&#13;
Galena. She had helped&#13;
&#13;
Grandma for several years&#13;
&#13;
when Grandma&#13;
&#13;
boarded river workers.&#13;
&#13;
Great-Great-Great=Grandmother Mary J. Covert Davidson&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Grandma Cline was&#13;
&#13;
divorced in 1899 from the&#13;
&#13;
father of her two young sons,&#13;
&#13;
Floyd and Clifford. Her&#13;
&#13;
husband had left and never returned, leaving her to&#13;
&#13;
raise the boys alone in an impoverished section of&#13;
&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
Grandma was a large handsome woman with great&#13;
&#13;
coloring, snapping brown eyes, intelligent, very&#13;
&#13;
independent and a caring - but not loving-&#13;
&#13;
grandmother. she was extremely neat, a wonderful&#13;
&#13;
cook and one of her chief pleasures was to host a&#13;
&#13;
family dinner for about 50 people consisting of her&#13;
&#13;
son and his family, 3 stepchildren and their &#13;
&#13;
families and her son with her second marriage.&#13;
&#13;
She enjoyed church and always dressed in her&#13;
&#13;
"good black dress" wearing a string of black beads.&#13;
&#13;
She was a soprano who often sang solos for&#13;
&#13;
funerals. She asked very little for herself and &#13;
&#13;
even today I could draw a picture of house with&#13;
&#13;
every stick of furniture because she never bought&#13;
&#13;
anything new.&#13;
&#13;
.6.&#13;
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[corresponds to page  7 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Grandma and I were&#13;
&#13;
always at odds. It stemmed&#13;
&#13;
from a visit our family had made in Woodsfield. she&#13;
&#13;
rode with us. I was less&#13;
&#13;
than 4 years old and the trip&#13;
&#13;
was tiring me when she began&#13;
&#13;
to hassle me, each of us&#13;
&#13;
getting more and more &#13;
&#13;
argumentative as the trip&#13;
&#13;
went on. Finally we arrived &#13;
&#13;
and things had quieted down&#13;
&#13;
when suddenly she began&#13;
&#13;
telling the host what a&#13;
&#13;
"brat" I had been. I had had&#13;
&#13;
 it and dredging up from&#13;
&#13;
heavens  knows where, I pulled&#13;
&#13;
out a few choice words and let it be be known that I&#13;
&#13;
wanted her to "leave me alone."&#13;
&#13;
Great-Great-Grandfather William Dixon&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
I remember Dad pulling me up by one arm, &#13;
&#13;
grabbing a light with the other, and taking me to&#13;
&#13;
the basement where I got the whipping of my life.&#13;
&#13;
I thought at the time that was highly unfair.&#13;
&#13;
Older people sometimes used these same words when&#13;
&#13;
they were very angry and they seemed to achieve the&#13;
&#13;
desired results; mine didn't.  Never having used a&#13;
&#13;
swear word before, I decided I needed more&#13;
&#13;
practice.&#13;
&#13;
Needless to say, Grandma was not impressed&#13;
&#13;
with me, and it gave just one more reason to&#13;
&#13;
favor my sister over me and influenced her family&#13;
&#13;
to do the same.&#13;
&#13;
My chief source of comfort as a child, other&#13;
&#13;
than books, was my Grandma Cowell who loved me&#13;
&#13;
unconditionally and I returned that love. I spent&#13;
&#13;
a lot of time there as a child because she had the &#13;
&#13;
kind of house a kid enjoys - boxes of buttons, lacy&#13;
&#13;
.7.&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page  8 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
3-D valentines and calendars, a coffee mill which we&#13;
&#13;
used to grind the coffee, a deep featherbed you&#13;
&#13;
could bury yourself in, magazines by the the score, and&#13;
&#13;
the kind of food we liked - coffee and crackers for&#13;
&#13;
breakfast ! DEE-LICIOUS, even though the coffee was&#13;
&#13;
so strong it could have walked to the table.&#13;
&#13;
Outdoors, it was just as fascinating. She&#13;
&#13;
grew a huge rambler rose which covered the fence&#13;
&#13;
and which was an attraction to everyone going by,&#13;
&#13;
especially, it seemed, to the gypsies who came &#13;
&#13;
every summer.&#13;
&#13;
She had a henhouse full of chickens, some of&#13;
&#13;
them setting hens which were hatching chicks, duck&#13;
&#13;
with broods of ducklings, a peahen, banty roosters&#13;
&#13;
and noisy guineas. It was an experience to gather &#13;
&#13;
eggs - you never knew which fowl was going to guard&#13;
&#13;
whose eggs. There was also the most accessible&#13;
&#13;
haymow I ever saw and it was here we played when&#13;
&#13;
the fragrant hay was first mowed and here where we&#13;
&#13;
looked for "stray' nests of eggs. Grandpa Cowell&#13;
&#13;
was very quiet, curt to the point of rudeness but I&#13;
&#13;
knew he was sick and I excused a lot just to be &#13;
&#13;
with Grandma. He was a severe asthmatic who was&#13;
&#13;
not able to sleep at night except in a reclining&#13;
&#13;
chair or on a fainting couch. Even then, we would&#13;
&#13;
hear him up many times at night trying to find&#13;
&#13;
something to help him breathe.&#13;
&#13;
It was at Grandma's that I first heard 2&#13;
&#13;
sounds that always made me think of loneliness-&#13;
&#13;
the sound of the old train whistle as it went &#13;
&#13;
through Condit and the ticking of her Seth Thomas&#13;
&#13;
clock.&#13;
&#13;
Wendell's grandparents were William and Mary &#13;
&#13;
Glenn and Middleton and Sarah Day. He knew none of&#13;
&#13;
them. His grandmother died when Katie was&#13;
&#13;
quite small and she was raised by Abe and Della&#13;
&#13;
McKenney. The McKenneys lived in a neat little&#13;
&#13;
.8.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page  8 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
house in Newark. Uncle Abe&#13;
&#13;
raised produce for the Newark&#13;
&#13;
markets and Aunt Della was a &#13;
&#13;
housekeeper, immaculate,&#13;
&#13;
always in a dark dress with a &#13;
&#13;
crisp white apron.&#13;
&#13;
Middleton Day Great-Great-Grandfather&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Middleton Day was a&#13;
&#13;
prominent farmer in Trenton&#13;
&#13;
Township and Sarah kept up&#13;
&#13;
with him until she became&#13;
&#13;
desperately ill with "brain&#13;
&#13;
fever" and was given no hope&#13;
&#13;
of recovery. The family could not lose "dear Mother &#13;
&#13;
Day" and they prayed long,&#13;
&#13;
hard for her recovery. You remember the old saying&#13;
&#13;
"be careful what you pray for, your prayers might&#13;
&#13;
be answered." Well they were answered. Sarah&#13;
&#13;
recovered and became a a source of great&#13;
&#13;
embarrassment to the family. We think now that she&#13;
&#13;
probably had encephalitis and the disease damaged&#13;
&#13;
her brain for many of her actions from then on were&#13;
&#13;
on the weird side. I had on neighbor tell me that&#13;
&#13;
she used to put the chamber pot upside down on her&#13;
&#13;
head to go visiting the neighbors.&#13;
&#13;
Great Grandparents&#13;
&#13;
Pa Bee's parents were Truman and Katie Day.&#13;
&#13;
I've already told you Katie was raised by Aunt&#13;
&#13;
Della, a little dumpling of a woman who was as&#13;
&#13;
neat, organized and precise as they come. If you&#13;
&#13;
could come up with 3 adjectives to define just the&#13;
&#13;
opposite, that would be Katie. i don' know if&#13;
&#13;
life just beat her down or what the problem, but&#13;
&#13;
when I knew her she was the most disorganized&#13;
&#13;
person you could imaging. Rooms never got cleaned,&#13;
&#13;
drawers never sorted, meals never planned, laundry&#13;
&#13;
.9.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page  10 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
The Day Family Truman Jr., Katie, Forest, Wendell&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
never done, etc., etc.&#13;
&#13;
It's hard to believe&#13;
&#13;
Aunt Della raised her.&#13;
&#13;
She would not learn to&#13;
&#13;
drive, did not care for reading, did not go to&#13;
&#13;
church or go shopping or&#13;
&#13;
entertain herself in any&#13;
&#13;
way. She was very&#13;
&#13;
difficult to live with.&#13;
&#13;
Wendell's dad, &#13;
&#13;
until 1918, was &#13;
&#13;
considered an&#13;
&#13;
outstanding community&#13;
&#13;
man. He was probably more noted for his singing&#13;
&#13;
ability than anything, Possessed of perfect pitch,&#13;
&#13;
he could give the note and key to his fellow&#13;
&#13;
quartet members so they didn't need a pitchpipe.&#13;
&#13;
Further he could pick up a new song and sing it&#13;
&#13;
using scale notes instead of words. He was proud&#13;
&#13;
of his farm building, he was happy to serve on the&#13;
&#13;
school board and as a trustee, but shortly after&#13;
&#13;
his 12 year old daughter died, he began drinking&#13;
&#13;
and to an extent that changed his life and that of&#13;
&#13;
everyone who came in contact with him in ways that&#13;
&#13;
could not have been foreseen by anyone.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Great-Grandfather Comes to Ohio&#13;
&#13;
The year was 1909. He was 13 years old.&#13;
&#13;
He stood there in the drive next to a spring&#13;
&#13;
wagon hitched to a team of horses and looked back&#13;
&#13;
at the building that had been his home for all of&#13;
&#13;
his 13 years.&#13;
&#13;
He had awakened especially early that morning&#13;
&#13;
for he had to take his mother, grandmother,&#13;
&#13;
stepfather and assorted step-siblings down to the&#13;
&#13;
.10.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page  11 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
river to catch the train to&#13;
&#13;
Columbus.&#13;
&#13;
Great-Grandfather Clifford Davidson&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
He was very familiar with the&#13;
&#13;
Ohio River for after his mother's&#13;
&#13;
divorce at the turn of the century&#13;
&#13;
she and her mother had survived by&#13;
&#13;
furnishing room, board and laundry&#13;
&#13;
service to river boatmen, and it&#13;
&#13;
had been his job to drive workers&#13;
&#13;
down to the river each morning and&#13;
&#13;
return in the evening to bring them &#13;
&#13;
home. When asked once how he could&#13;
&#13;
see to drive at night, he said the&#13;
&#13;
road was lit up all the way like a city because of&#13;
&#13;
the many flaring gas wells in Monroe County.&#13;
&#13;
The distance to the river was 6-8 miles, so it&#13;
&#13;
left him little time to  enjoy  much schooling;&#13;
&#13;
livestock had to be fed, chickens raised to provide&#13;
&#13;
food, gardens hoed to furnish vegetables, and&#13;
&#13;
potato patch carefully tended because potatoes were&#13;
&#13;
the mainstay of their diet. Sometimes he was free &#13;
&#13;
to stay at the river awhile and that was when &#13;
&#13;
he would lay his fishing line, baited with chicken&#13;
&#13;
necks, to return the next morning to pick up the &#13;
&#13;
large catfish which would supplement their diet.&#13;
&#13;
He was well acquainted with the huge wharf&#13;
&#13;
rats which he later describes as being "large as &#13;
&#13;
most cats" and with  the enormous mud turtles, so&#13;
&#13;
ugly that they left him with a lifelong aversion to&#13;
&#13;
turtles, turtle meat or even turtle soup.&#13;
&#13;
As he stood there now, he remembered other&#13;
&#13;
things - how his grandmother had always been with &#13;
&#13;
him always there for him, a guiding influence&#13;
&#13;
in his life; how hard his mother had had to work to&#13;
&#13;
give them food and some sort of home; how "old Mr.&#13;
&#13;
Pettay" had delighted, amazed and enlightened him&#13;
&#13;
with his many Civil War stories; how most of his&#13;
&#13;
.11.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page  12 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
uncles, aunts and cousins had already departed&#13;
&#13;
Monroe County for the oil fields of Oklahoma, Texas&#13;
&#13;
and Wyoming.&#13;
&#13;
Now he, too, was leaving and even though he&#13;
&#13;
was excited, he still felt a pang at leaving all he&#13;
&#13;
had ever known. Would he ever see his boyhood&#13;
&#13;
chums again? Or a certain little girl, prettier&#13;
&#13;
than most, who lived on the top of a hill? Why, he&#13;
&#13;
wondered, had his mother decided to leave? What&#13;
&#13;
was the new farm going to be like? Were there&#13;
&#13;
hills in eastern Delaware County? Or rivers?&#13;
&#13;
More immediate worries came to mind. The&#13;
&#13;
spring wagon was loaded to the hilt; Nothing more&#13;
&#13;
could be added, not even grandmother's spinning&#13;
&#13;
wheel which was left in the front room. What would&#13;
&#13;
happen if he should upset the wagon? Or what if a&#13;
&#13;
horse threw a shoe? Or if the wagon lost a wheel?&#13;
&#13;
Or if he became mired in mud? Or if it poured rain&#13;
&#13;
or if or if or-&#13;
&#13;
But now decision time was here and as he&#13;
&#13;
looked around, he said a silent goodbye to his&#13;
&#13;
little home, the hills, Mr. Pettay, his friends,&#13;
&#13;
smacked the lines across the team's rumps and began&#13;
&#13;
his long, long journey.&#13;
&#13;
He followed a route he knew well, up through&#13;
&#13;
Barnesville and Woodsfield. From there he was&#13;
&#13;
supposed to hit Route 40 and head west. He had&#13;
&#13;
nothing for his horses to eat and very little for&#13;
&#13;
himself. In those days of horse drawn vehicles it&#13;
&#13;
was a very common thing for anyone driving through&#13;
&#13;
the countryside to be offered food or water, and&#13;
&#13;
even food and bedding for their horses.&#13;
&#13;
And so it was with the 13 year old boy. He&#13;
&#13;
was helped many times by people who took care of&#13;
&#13;
his horse, sometimes offering him a sandwich or a&#13;
&#13;
haymow to sleep in. One kind hearted couple had&#13;
&#13;
even invited him into their home, allowed him to&#13;
&#13;
.12.&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page  13 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
wash up, gave him a hearty dinner and a bed to&#13;
&#13;
sleep in. Next morning after a country breakfast &#13;
&#13;
he was ready to go again with his rested team. He&#13;
&#13;
never forgot their kindness nor the homes that&#13;
&#13;
housed these people and for years afterward he&#13;
&#13;
would point out each one as traveled "down the&#13;
&#13;
hills" to our reunions.&#13;
&#13;
His trip remained uneventful until he reached&#13;
&#13;
the "Y" bridge at Zanesville. There the horse&#13;
&#13;
refused to cross the bridge and once more he had to&#13;
&#13;
rely on the kindness of strangers. A Zanesville&#13;
&#13;
policeman, after several suggestions had failed,&#13;
&#13;
finally got some blankets, threw them over the&#13;
&#13;
horses' heads and led them across.&#13;
&#13;
The boy began to feel his journey would soon&#13;
&#13;
be coming to an end. And so it was. After 4 days&#13;
&#13;
and 3 nights, he and his faithful team pulled into&#13;
&#13;
the barnyard on Trenton Road "saddle" sore and&#13;
&#13;
weary, but where that&#13;
&#13;
night he could rest in&#13;
&#13;
his own bed, his tummy&#13;
&#13;
full, and satisfied&#13;
&#13;
that he had succeeded&#13;
&#13;
well in finishing a &#13;
&#13;
pretty daunting task.&#13;
&#13;
The 13 year old&#13;
&#13;
old was great-great&#13;
&#13;
grandfather Clifford&#13;
&#13;
Davidson and his trip&#13;
&#13;
to Galena was an omen&#13;
&#13;
of how hard he would&#13;
&#13;
tackle anything and of&#13;
&#13;
how well he would do &#13;
&#13;
it.  My mother was&#13;
&#13;
just as industrious as&#13;
&#13;
Dad and never missed a&#13;
&#13;
chance to to take on&#13;
&#13;
Wedding Photograph of Cliff Davidson and Maye Cowell&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.13.&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page  14 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
anything that would make their life and ours&#13;
&#13;
easier, nicer and better.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Great Grandmother Maye Davidson&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
I know little  about her&#13;
&#13;
early life; she never talked&#13;
&#13;
about her forbearers either.&#13;
&#13;
I do know that Dad soon&#13;
&#13;
forgot his pretty little girl&#13;
&#13;
in the hills because he had&#13;
&#13;
found what he called "The&#13;
&#13;
pettiest girl I ever saw."&#13;
&#13;
I can just remember Mom&#13;
&#13;
in a red flapper dress and &#13;
&#13;
white shoes that buttoned on &#13;
&#13;
the side, her long dark hair&#13;
&#13;
done up in a bun at the nape&#13;
&#13;
of her neck. One day I went to Centerburg with her&#13;
&#13;
and once there I sat in an outer room while she&#13;
&#13;
went inside. When she came I had to look twice -&#13;
&#13;
her hair was gone! You have to understand that in&#13;
&#13;
the mid-20's this was a daring thing to do, and I&#13;
&#13;
didn't know what to say. She was very quiet going&#13;
&#13;
home and I noticed she seemed more and more nervous&#13;
&#13;
as she neared home. But as far as I know, I don't&#13;
&#13;
think she got a negative reaction from Dad. But&#13;
&#13;
her shingle bob was just one small sign of her&#13;
&#13;
progressive thinking.&#13;
&#13;
On her own in later life she developed an egg-&#13;
&#13;
poultry route in Columbus to help with income. As&#13;
&#13;
with every new project that one of us thought of,&#13;
&#13;
it meant a lot more work for some of us. And so it&#13;
&#13;
was with mom's "egg route." For a number  of years&#13;
&#13;
I was at my folks every Friday to help dress out&#13;
&#13;
chickens and later, turkeys. I would return in the&#13;
&#13;
evening to help wash, candle and crate eggs.&#13;
&#13;
This was all done in the hardest way possible&#13;
&#13;
- boiling water in a large pot into which we&#13;
&#13;
scalded the chickens, removed the feathers and&#13;
&#13;
.14.&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 15 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
dressed them out. Several years later, in a small&#13;
&#13;
effort to modernize the operation, my folks&#13;
&#13;
purchased a "de-featherer."&#13;
&#13;
once dressed, the fowl were put on ice, the&#13;
&#13;
egg crates loaded into the car trunk, and the next&#13;
&#13;
day Mom and one of us drove to Columbus where we&#13;
&#13;
unloaded our produce at various stores and to&#13;
&#13;
regular customers.&#13;
&#13;
Many things about Mom will come up as I talk&#13;
&#13;
about growing up but right now I want to leave you&#13;
&#13;
2 recipes which I consider mom's, not mine,&#13;
&#13;
although you've eaten them at my house not her's.&#13;
&#13;
Tapioca Pudding&#13;
&#13;
1 box of Pearl Tapioca- Soak overnight in&#13;
&#13;
tepid water&#13;
&#13;
Beat 5 egg yolks&#13;
&#13;
Add 3/4 c. sugar&#13;
&#13;
1/2t. salt&#13;
&#13;
Heat 1 1/2 quarts of milk and tapioca to almost &#13;
&#13;
boiling. Pour in egg mixture, stirring&#13;
&#13;
constantly, and bring to boil. If necessary&#13;
&#13;
add more milk, After it boils should be the&#13;
&#13;
consistency of unbeaten whipping cream.&#13;
&#13;
Remove from stove and add 3/4 TBS vanilla.&#13;
&#13;
Noodles&#13;
&#13;
Make a well in 1 1/2 c. flour.&#13;
&#13;
Add 3 egg yolks&#13;
&#13;
2 whole eggs&#13;
&#13;
1/2 tsp. salt&#13;
&#13;
1/3 tsp. baking powder&#13;
&#13;
1 tsp. vinegar&#13;
&#13;
Blend until it makes a ball you can roll out.&#13;
&#13;
May be necessary to add more flour. Roll out&#13;
&#13;
thin, let dry then cut for noodles.&#13;
&#13;
.15.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 16 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Mom was a wonderful cook, and most of her life&#13;
&#13;
baked using wood burning stove. The temperature of&#13;
&#13;
the oven read "Low," Med," and "Hi," and her way &#13;
&#13;
of testing it for baking was to put her hand in the&#13;
&#13;
oven for just an instant, and this way she was &#13;
&#13;
able to  tell whether it was right for cakes or&#13;
&#13;
bread, meringues or cookies and she hardly ever had&#13;
&#13;
a bad baking day.&#13;
&#13;
One thing I remember about Mom is that after&#13;
&#13;
supper was over and we kids would be occupied with&#13;
&#13;
homework, she would lower the oven door and sit on&#13;
&#13;
it for warmth in the wintertime. it seemed we were&#13;
&#13;
always cold prior to 1950, and I've often said&#13;
&#13;
since that if I had to choose between eating and&#13;
&#13;
being warm I would choose to be warm.&#13;
&#13;
The Davidsons&#13;
Doris M, Roland, Kathleen, Leland&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Washing day was another trial in living then.&#13;
&#13;
Early in the morning a huge tub of water was&#13;
&#13;
brought to a boil, then the clothes thrown in and&#13;
&#13;
stirred occasionally. They were then transferred &#13;
&#13;
to  cooler water where they were hand scrubbed,&#13;
&#13;
rinsed and hung out to dry. Who does not remember&#13;
&#13;
frozen clothes standing at attention on every&#13;
&#13;
clothesline or going upstairs to find frozen&#13;
&#13;
clothing draped on stair railings, etc.&#13;
&#13;
When I was first married it was necessary that&#13;
&#13;
laundry needed to be done by hand washing. In&#13;
&#13;
.16.&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 17 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Those cold 1930 days many times we used what was&#13;
&#13;
called a double blanket, about 70" by 140" which I&#13;
&#13;
would challenge any one of you to wash by hand.&#13;
&#13;
From washing this way, we graduated to a &#13;
&#13;
"Bass" washer which rocked the clothes clean then&#13;
&#13;
you hand cranked them through the wringer. Later&#13;
&#13;
with electricity, you simply fed the clothes&#13;
&#13;
through the wringer. And then, heaven be praised,&#13;
&#13;
came the automatic washer and dryers. No wounder&#13;
&#13;
one of my friends said she'd trade her husband&#13;
&#13;
rather than lose her washer!&#13;
&#13;
Our first soaps were the homemade lye soaps;&#13;
&#13;
the we graduated to Fels Naptha, the soap on every&#13;
&#13;
homemaker's shopping list. Later came the&#13;
&#13;
wonderful scented soaps and the detergents we have&#13;
&#13;
today, small things in the greater scheme, but&#13;
&#13;
great for their added effectiveness in cleaning and&#13;
&#13;
for their convenience.&#13;
&#13;
The life that I describe as mine in childhood&#13;
&#13;
was very similar to that of PaBee's; it was farm&#13;
&#13;
living and everything that one family did then was&#13;
&#13;
like everyone else's work. But in order to write&#13;
&#13;
of childhood, I must write in first person.&#13;
&#13;
One of my earliest memories in that of being&#13;
&#13;
bundled up like an Eskimo and riding on the school&#13;
&#13;
wagon pulled by two teams of horses, which was&#13;
&#13;
driven by dad.  Everyone in those days wore long &#13;
&#13;
underwear - heaven when you first put them on, then&#13;
&#13;
something quite different after the first washing.&#13;
&#13;
They stretched so you had to lap the leg over, then &#13;
&#13;
try to put on long stockings over that bunch of&#13;
&#13;
material, then add lace-up shoes. On the outside&#13;
&#13;
we wore a heavy coat, muffler, gloves and a hat&#13;
&#13;
that covered everything but our nose.  Even so we&#13;
&#13;
were frozen when we reached school, after following&#13;
&#13;
a route on a mud road so rutted the wheels sank  to&#13;
&#13;
.17.&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="144975">
                    <text>[corresponds to page 18 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
School Bus of Half Century Ago . . .&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
To School We Go - One of the first school buses in this area is pictured in the above picture&#13;
taken this time of year in 1921. This horse drawn bus was operated by Clifford Davidson, who&#13;
lives just across the Delaware Licking County Line on the Croton Road, who hauled pupils from that area into Hartford School at Croton.&#13;
Article from the Sunbury News&#13;
&#13;
the axle, then following a route through school and,&#13;
&#13;
down Hogue road and into Croton.&#13;
&#13;
Dad and I had no chance to warm ourselves as &#13;
&#13;
we returned and headed home. In addition to that &#13;
&#13;
route, Dad had already been up 2-3 hours doing&#13;
&#13;
chores, thawing pipes, pumping water, milking, then&#13;
&#13;
harnessing the team for the trip. And this process&#13;
&#13;
was repeated at night in reverse.&#13;
&#13;
I hated this part of winter - the baby lambs,&#13;
&#13;
pigs and calves that had to be warmed with hand-&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 19 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
held bottles or even brought into the house. I&#13;
&#13;
hated the smell of winter in the icy cold rooms&#13;
&#13;
before the stove was fired, and everyone in the&#13;
&#13;
country hated nature's call to the bleak outhouses.&#13;
&#13;
When I was in high school, I had only one friend&#13;
&#13;
who lived in the country and who had a bathroom. I&#13;
&#13;
hated the kerosene lamps we used and the chimneys&#13;
&#13;
we used to clean wadding up old newspapers and&#13;
&#13;
wiping the soot from inside.&#13;
&#13;
But I loved the snowslide the neighborhood&#13;
&#13;
boys always made on Searles hill - it seemed, once&#13;
&#13;
made, to last all winter. I loved the books I&#13;
&#13;
could read in winter, the corn we popped, the time&#13;
&#13;
spent around the kitchen table doing our homework.&#13;
&#13;
As soon as supper was over we cleared the table,&#13;
&#13;
grabbed an apple and did our homework helping each&#13;
&#13;
other.&#13;
&#13;
One of winter's  big tasks was butchering - a&#13;
&#13;
chore that involved all of us. We were not&#13;
&#13;
involved with actual killing of one of our&#13;
&#13;
animals. Sometimes the beef would even come from&#13;
&#13;
another man's herd. Beef could not be consumed as&#13;
&#13;
readily as pork, so unless one had a HUGE family,&#13;
&#13;
it was customary to choose and pay for either a &#13;
&#13;
front or hind quarter or a side of beef. We used&#13;
&#13;
little hamburger - so the meat was cut into roasts&#13;
&#13;
and steaks and small pieces were sorted out, cut&#13;
&#13;
into bite size bits and canned.&#13;
&#13;
Butchering took place on the coldest day&#13;
&#13;
possible, because of spoilage. A beef was usually&#13;
&#13;
shot, then hauled up by block and tackle to hang so&#13;
&#13;
that it could be gutted, the skin removed and the&#13;
&#13;
quarters divided so they could be handled easily.&#13;
&#13;
A pig was usually strung up, its throat cut, &#13;
&#13;
then dressed out. Pork was made into hams,&#13;
&#13;
shoulders, loins, while small pieces were ground&#13;
&#13;
into sausage, then canned as patties of put into&#13;
&#13;
.19.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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[corresponds to page 20 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Casings for link sausage. Small fat pieces were&#13;
&#13;
kept out of sausage and rendered down to make the&#13;
&#13;
lard which was our source of shortening for baking&#13;
&#13;
and frying. After rendering, the fat pieces were&#13;
&#13;
known as "cracklings."&#13;
&#13;
The whole family joined in turning the&#13;
&#13;
grinder, cutting up meat, getting cans ready. The&#13;
&#13;
entire kitchen was taken over for this task, even &#13;
&#13;
the kitchen table.&#13;
&#13;
It was necessary to work, fast because we had&#13;
&#13;
no refrigeration. Our first meal was usually liver&#13;
&#13;
and onions because you couldn't can it or give it&#13;
&#13;
away. We, as all farm folk did, used almost every&#13;
&#13;
part of the pork including heart, tongue, and&#13;
&#13;
sweetbreads. Remembering those hectic times, I&#13;
&#13;
will say I'm happy to buy my meat from the counter.&#13;
&#13;
Winter was a good time for Dad to take the &#13;
&#13;
horses down to the blacksmith shop to be shod.&#13;
&#13;
What heaven to walk into Curt's little shop where a &#13;
&#13;
blazing fire was always going.  I've watched him&#13;
&#13;
shape the shoe, then nail it on the horses. This&#13;
&#13;
always made me shudder because I felt it hurt them,&#13;
&#13;
not knowing that hooves do not feel pain.&#13;
&#13;
Once in a while I got to ride to Condit or&#13;
&#13;
Croton with him when he took in the cream which we&#13;
&#13;
had separated from the milk. Back then you&#13;
&#13;
received a premium price for butterfat. Having our&#13;
&#13;
own cream and eggs meant that, if homemade ice&#13;
&#13;
cream was on the menu, we could just skim the pot&#13;
&#13;
and have cream in abundance, thus making jillions&#13;
&#13;
of little fat cells for us to carry around a&#13;
&#13;
lifetime!&#13;
&#13;
This same cream was used to make butter. It&#13;
&#13;
seemed to me our little arms was always moving -&#13;
&#13;
churning butter, making ice cream, whipping icing,&#13;
&#13;
picking up potatoes, beating rugs, hanging clothes,&#13;
&#13;
blackening stoves, carrying water and PUMPING&#13;
&#13;
.20.</text>
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[corresponds to page 21 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
WATER! The latter was  a never-ending task. We&#13;
&#13;
pumped and carried water for cooking and drinking,&#13;
&#13;
for laundry and rinsing, for watering thirsty&#13;
&#13;
garden plants, for field hands and harvest help, &#13;
&#13;
for bathing and cleaning and above all for the&#13;
&#13;
cattle. Can you imagine 20 -30 cows trekking across&#13;
&#13;
the Sahara Desert all day each wanting her share of&#13;
&#13;
water right now? One big slurp and there went all&#13;
&#13;
the water we'd spent 20 minutes pumping. Today we&#13;
&#13;
turn a tap for all that.&#13;
&#13;
Spring it meant shedding "longies" and looking&#13;
&#13;
forward to new birth. Grandma Cowell and most farm &#13;
&#13;
women raised chickens by letting "setting" hens&#13;
&#13;
hatch them. My mother, however had a heated&#13;
&#13;
incubator which was stationed just outside our&#13;
&#13;
bedroom. In it she placed her eggs, and every&#13;
&#13;
night I would see her turning the eggs, dipping her&#13;
&#13;
fingertips in water now and then. What a miracle&#13;
&#13;
to see these little bedraggled creatures break out&#13;
&#13;
of the egg, shake themselves and turn into a little&#13;
&#13;
yellow fluff ball.&#13;
&#13;
But that's the only time they're pretty.&#13;
&#13;
Chickens are dumber than a wire fence. It they get&#13;
&#13;
cold, they pile on top of one another and smother&#13;
&#13;
themselves; if it rains, they don't know enough to&#13;
&#13;
come inside; if they get into a tree, they roost on&#13;
&#13;
the highest branch; if you plant one plant into the&#13;
&#13;
ground, they will smell it out and scratch it out.&#13;
&#13;
I grew to hate them except for eating. When they&#13;
&#13;
appear on my table, I feel like saying, "Aha!&#13;
&#13;
Gotcha!"&#13;
&#13;
Summer was a hectic time on all farms. the&#13;
&#13;
entire season was spent in sowing, planting, and&#13;
&#13;
preserving food for livestock and ourselves.&#13;
&#13;
After breaking one's back growing a garden,&#13;
&#13;
then came the hot, hard task of getting everything&#13;
&#13;
.21.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 22 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
into a can. The first step meant going to the&#13;
&#13;
cellar (the expression all farm people use for&#13;
&#13;
basement) and bring up the fruit jars. They were&#13;
&#13;
washed in hot water, rinsed, then put into boiling &#13;
&#13;
water to kill all bacteria.&#13;
&#13;
Our produce - which ranged from all kinds of&#13;
&#13;
berries to apples, cherries peaches, plums, beans,&#13;
&#13;
beets, carrots, tomatoes and other -was then put&#13;
&#13;
into jars and cold packed. My mother once canned a&#13;
&#13;
quart of yellow string beans which she placed in&#13;
&#13;
the can one by one making a can of beans as&#13;
&#13;
beautiful as a painting. She entered it for years &#13;
&#13;
in the local fair's canning exhibit and won at&#13;
&#13;
least 6 blue ribbons for it.&#13;
&#13;
We kids picked the berries that were canned,&#13;
&#13;
and for blackberrying we really protected&#13;
&#13;
ourselves. We all wore long sleeves, long pants,&#13;
&#13;
heavy shoes and a hat, trying to avoid thorns,&#13;
&#13;
sweat flies and bees. It was hot sticky work but&#13;
&#13;
how proud we felt when we each delivered out pail&#13;
&#13;
of berries to Mom.&#13;
&#13;
We also used to go with Dad to hunt, mushrooms,&#13;
&#13;
and we'd bring home a big pail of sponge mushrooms&#13;
&#13;
which were simmered in butter and served on oven-&#13;
&#13;
toasted bread for a real treat. Dad could always&#13;
&#13;
find mushrooms, and I guess I assumed one could&#13;
&#13;
always find them, so I never asked where they were&#13;
&#13;
found and he never told me.&#13;
&#13;
Nutting was another experience we looked&#13;
&#13;
forward to; we'd pack in the car, go south looking&#13;
&#13;
for open fields which held walnut, hickory and &#13;
&#13;
chestnut trees. Sometimes we'd even find&#13;
&#13;
hazelnuts. No one ever chased us out of a field&#13;
&#13;
but it wouldn't work that way today. Nuts were&#13;
&#13;
very important to us for use in salads, cakes and&#13;
&#13;
pies as well as to enjoy just in eating.&#13;
&#13;
My folks would make a picnic out of driving to&#13;
&#13;
.22.</text>
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[corresponds to page 23 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Clyde to buy cherries; in fact picnics were a &#13;
&#13;
common thing during our summers. We would drive to &#13;
&#13;
Indian Lake for visits or to Cedar Point where we&#13;
&#13;
would be allowed to ask a friend to go along. The&#13;
&#13;
folks always enjoyed all the local fairs, the&#13;
&#13;
Hartford Fair especially being enjoyed as an all-&#13;
&#13;
day outing which family picnics all over the&#13;
&#13;
grounds. We always went back for the Davidson&#13;
&#13;
reunion in Southern Ohio (another picnic) and my&#13;
&#13;
folks were always visiting or having visitors in&#13;
&#13;
during the busy summers.&#13;
&#13;
Dad, in summer, was just as busy outside, he&#13;
&#13;
was one of the first to own and operate a corn&#13;
&#13;
husker and threshing machine. Later on he owned an&#13;
&#13;
ensilage cutter and later still a combine.&#13;
&#13;
It was not until the coming of the self-&#13;
&#13;
propelled combine that country women were relieved&#13;
&#13;
of one of summers biggest concerns - that of&#13;
&#13;
feeding 12-20 men three of four times a year during&#13;
&#13;
harvesting season.&#13;
&#13;
The men had already tied, bond and shocked&#13;
&#13;
the wheat and oats before threshing, and, also,&#13;
&#13;
later, shocked, the corn. Then came the chore of&#13;
&#13;
getting the grain into storage bins and this meant&#13;
&#13;
extra help and food!&#13;
&#13;
With no refrigeration, the woman's day usually&#13;
&#13;
began with a hasty trip to town to purchase meat,&#13;
&#13;
then home to prepare baked goods from scratch, peel&#13;
&#13;
a peck of potatoes and get a balanced meal on by&#13;
&#13;
 noon. We only failed once. One time the men had&#13;
&#13;
already been called in, and while Mom was&#13;
&#13;
attempting to drain the potatoes for mashing, the&#13;
&#13;
lid came loose and the cooked potatoes fell on&#13;
&#13;
the ground. Hired help couldn't have a meal&#13;
&#13;
without potatoes so back to the field they went&#13;
&#13;
while we hurriedly began peeling a second peck of &#13;
&#13;
potatoes.&#13;
&#13;
.23.&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 24 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Haying had to be the dirtiest, hottest work of&#13;
&#13;
all. It occurred in the hottest months and on the&#13;
&#13;
sunniest days, and if the hay had been rained on&#13;
&#13;
after having been mowed it was the dirtiest.&#13;
&#13;
Before the days of balers, we used to mow the&#13;
&#13;
hay ( heavenly fragrance), rake it, then load it on&#13;
&#13;
to wagons by using a hay loader, spreading it&#13;
&#13;
evenly on the wagon until we had a full load, then&#13;
&#13;
take it to the barn. There a large fork was pulled&#13;
&#13;
down from the mow, set into the hay, the fork then&#13;
&#13;
pulled back into the mow and dropped the hay to be&#13;
&#13;
mowed away in different sections of the haymow. No&#13;
&#13;
matter how careful you were you always worried &#13;
&#13;
about spontaneous combustion for about 2 weeks&#13;
&#13;
after haying time was over.&#13;
&#13;
Then came the baler, and while several steps&#13;
&#13;
of haying were eliminated, so also was much of the&#13;
&#13;
fun and companionship of old time haying. In time,&#13;
&#13;
as horses were no longer an every day farm animal&#13;
&#13;
and as large dairies became obsolete, so also did&#13;
&#13;
haying as one knew it.&#13;
&#13;
As a child, other than the fun things we did &#13;
&#13;
with our parents, I enjoyed 4-H Club, Condit Church&#13;
&#13;
and music, both our player piano and piano lessons.&#13;
&#13;
We never did much in our 4-H cooking club. I&#13;
&#13;
only remember making white sauce and serving it on&#13;
&#13;
crackers. UGH! But 4-H did give me one of the&#13;
&#13;
nicest experiences I had as a child, that of&#13;
&#13;
attending 4-H camp. The camp was near Utica&#13;
&#13;
and going there was my first experience sleeping with a&#13;
&#13;
group of young girls, sharing my meals  with them&#13;
&#13;
and enjoying tall stories told around the campfire.&#13;
&#13;
It cost $5.00 a week and I don't know yet how my&#13;
&#13;
folks could have sent me, but it was a wonderful,&#13;
&#13;
invaluable experience.&#13;
&#13;
Our player piano was always in use by us and&#13;
&#13;
our friends, We learned timing and how to carry a&#13;
&#13;
.24.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 25 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
tune from it, so that my few piano lessons were not&#13;
&#13;
too difficult for me - I just wish I'd had more of&#13;
&#13;
them.&#13;
&#13;
We went to Condit Church with a carload of the&#13;
&#13;
Saunders children, attended Sunday School and&#13;
&#13;
church where it was difficult for Lolly and me to &#13;
&#13;
restrain our giggling at some of the atrocious hats&#13;
&#13;
worn by the older women. I began playing piano for&#13;
&#13;
Christian Endeavor at age 11, and until 1976 played&#13;
&#13;
piano or organ for Sunday School or church a good&#13;
&#13;
share of the time.&#13;
&#13;
I remember the church before the various&#13;
&#13;
restorations. I also remember serving rabbit&#13;
&#13;
dinners during hunting season, Thanksgiving turkey&#13;
&#13;
dinners, ox roasts and now smorgasbords.&#13;
&#13;
Mabel and Wendell going to School&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
PaBee was living much the same life that I had&#13;
&#13;
had until he was about 6 years old. He attended&#13;
&#13;
grade school at Sinkey schoolhouse on Ross Road,&#13;
&#13;
Opal Stockwell, teacher. He later entered the&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury School to which he drove for several years,&#13;
&#13;
he was a good student and could have been an&#13;
&#13;
excellent student had he received any encouragement&#13;
&#13;
at home. His one great area of enthusiasm in high&#13;
&#13;
school was his baseball team - undefeated in the&#13;
&#13;
four years he played on the team. That interest in&#13;
&#13;
baseball stayed with him his entire life and he&#13;
&#13;
held an especial love for the Cincinnati Reds until &#13;
&#13;
the week he died.&#13;
&#13;
.25.</text>
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[corresponds to page 26 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Neither of his parents attended his high&#13;
&#13;
school graduation and he left home shortly after to &#13;
&#13;
go live with an aunt and uncle in Columbus while he&#13;
&#13;
attempted to finish a business course at Bliss&#13;
&#13;
College. This schooling was cut short because of&#13;
&#13;
his father's continuing alcoholism and he was&#13;
&#13;
called home to help with the farm and to care for&#13;
&#13;
his mother.&#13;
&#13;
I wish I could tell you that he had a happy,&#13;
&#13;
carefree childhood, or even that he enjoyed an&#13;
&#13;
upbringing with lots of hard work interspersed with&#13;
&#13;
joyous times, or that he had the support of loving&#13;
&#13;
grandparents or caring relatives, but he had none &#13;
&#13;
of these. Still, he turned out to be a loving,&#13;
&#13;
proud, supportive father and grandfather and I&#13;
&#13;
guess that's all you really need to know.&#13;
&#13;
* * * *&#13;
&#13;
My school days on the other hand were very&#13;
&#13;
happy. I've already told you how my parents liked&#13;
&#13;
to go places, see people and enjoy living, and it &#13;
&#13;
kinda rubbed off on me.&#13;
&#13;
School work was very easy for me - my one big&#13;
&#13;
trouble was that I couldn't see. Back in the days&#13;
&#13;
when airplanes were a novelty, one flew over our &#13;
&#13;
house one day and we all ran out to have a look. I&#13;
&#13;
could not see it; my folks couldn't accept this and&#13;
&#13;
and accused me of being "difficult"  so nothing was done&#13;
&#13;
for several years. Finally it was so bad that I&#13;
&#13;
could see nothing on the blackboard at school and &#13;
&#13;
when I finally saw an oculist he was shocked - and&#13;
&#13;
so were my parents - that my eyes were so bad. As&#13;
&#13;
a result, I've worn glasses all my life.&#13;
&#13;
However those early days days forced me to read a &#13;
&#13;
lot and that served me well in school. One of my&#13;
&#13;
major bragging points to my kids was that I came&#13;
&#13;
in second in an all county spelling bee and later&#13;
&#13;
was valedictorian of my class. I think I was&#13;
&#13;
.26.</text>
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[corresponds to page 27 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
prouder, though, of the fact that I made the second&#13;
&#13;
team all-county basketball team twice while in high&#13;
&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
School, as I said, was really easy for me; I&#13;
&#13;
skipped first grade, something that I later felt&#13;
&#13;
was a mistake because it place in a group 1 1/2&#13;
&#13;
years older than I, but I seemed to fit in&#13;
&#13;
reasonably well.&#13;
&#13;
From reading to choir work, from class plays&#13;
&#13;
to group parties, form math to basketball,&#13;
&#13;
everything interested me, even all girls baseball&#13;
&#13;
team which played four years and never won a game!&#13;
&#13;
It was the fellowship that was important to us.&#13;
&#13;
School was a time when we began to reach out&#13;
&#13;
and make friendships and do things which did not&#13;
&#13;
necessarily include our family.&#13;
&#13;
Prior to entering high school, we entertained&#13;
&#13;
ourselves mostly  with neighborhood kids and with&#13;
&#13;
activities that took no money but did sometimes&#13;
&#13;
require a little creativity.&#13;
&#13;
I remember our old "swimming hole" and really&#13;
&#13;
the name tells it all. The boys would dam up a&#13;
&#13;
certain part of the creek each year to make a small&#13;
&#13;
pond perhaps 8 feet across, about 10 feet long and&#13;
&#13;
maybe 5 feet deep. As I remember it now, I wonder&#13;
&#13;
how our parents could ever have allowed us to swim&#13;
&#13;
in such a place. Cows waded across it leaving all&#13;
&#13;
kinds of bacteria, the bottom was slimy with thick&#13;
&#13;
mud oozing up between our toes and invariably, when&#13;
&#13;
you go out you took 2 or 3 leeches off your feet&#13;
&#13;
and legs. Makes me shiver now to think of it! &#13;
&#13;
Croquet was one of our favorite games, and&#13;
&#13;
most of the summer, there would be a ferocious&#13;
&#13;
contest going on in our side yard, with frequent&#13;
&#13;
yells and fights and accusations the "you moved&#13;
&#13;
the peg' or "you didn't even nick it."&#13;
&#13;
.27.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 28 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
We also played "red rover,"  "Annie Over the House,"&#13;
&#13;
'tag," "hide the Thimble" among other simple games.&#13;
&#13;
We were not coddled in learning; I learned to&#13;
&#13;
ride a bicycle when my brother took me to the top&#13;
&#13;
of a hill, and gave me a push. The fact that I hit&#13;
&#13;
an iron bridge was inconsequential, I had ridden a &#13;
&#13;
bicycle, by golly!&#13;
&#13;
The same thing happened with a horse; I was&#13;
&#13;
put on its back, bareback. No saddle or stirrups,&#13;
&#13;
just a rein and and a mane and away I went (after a&#13;
&#13;
good healthy swat on its rump) holding on for dear&#13;
&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
Wendall Day Graduation&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Doris Davidson Day Graduation&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Our entertainment was family-oriented and very&#13;
&#13;
simple, but we thought nothing of it because all&#13;
&#13;
the kids we knew lived the same way.&#13;
&#13;
The Depression hit in 1929 and although we&#13;
&#13;
.28.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 29 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
were shielded from wanting for food or clothing, it&#13;
&#13;
did affect us in many ways. There simply was no&#13;
&#13;
money for anything other than survival. We ate&#13;
&#13;
only because we raised almost everything on the&#13;
&#13;
farm. But our class could not order rings, we had&#13;
&#13;
no Jr-Sr Prom, clothes were made to last for years.&#13;
&#13;
There seemed to be no future in furthering your&#13;
&#13;
education and few could afford it anyway. 1930&#13;
&#13;
began the worst decade I've lived through.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Marriage&#13;
&#13;
Wendell and I married young, settled on a &#13;
&#13;
farm, which was strike one for me; I never wanted&#13;
&#13;
to be on a farm - I dreamed of living in a small&#13;
&#13;
town large enough to have a library, swimming pool,&#13;
&#13;
movie theater and some shopping.&#13;
&#13;
Our family began with the birth of Terry, one&#13;
&#13;
of the nicest things to ever happen to us, but&#13;
&#13;
shortly after his birth our disasters began. We&#13;
&#13;
lived in an old ramshackle house, barely furnished,&#13;
&#13;
and returned home one bitterly cold, snowy night to&#13;
&#13;
find 6 inches of snow across our bed. We &#13;
&#13;
decided to sleep in the room where the stove was&#13;
&#13;
and laid Terry down on a small settee nearby.&#13;
&#13;
About 2:30 I was awakened by a peculiar noise&#13;
&#13;
and shook Wendell to awaken him. He stumbled over&#13;
&#13;
to the door just behind the settee and immediately&#13;
&#13;
a sheet of flame shot about 6 feet across the room.&#13;
&#13;
I grabbed Terry, ran out barefoot clad only in a&#13;
&#13;
thin nightgown, into about about a foot of snow.  I ran&#13;
&#13;
downhill, put him in the car and ran back to get&#13;
&#13;
Wendell who groggy, was lacing his shows. It was&#13;
&#13;
impossible to get any clothes - they were in the &#13;
&#13;
back room where the fire was blazing - so we got in&#13;
&#13;
the car. 15 minutes later the house fell in.&#13;
&#13;
Along with our clothes, we lost everything else we&#13;
&#13;
owned.&#13;
&#13;
.29.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 30 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
We later discovered that the sound which had&#13;
&#13;
awakened me was mice. Our house was a true salt&#13;
&#13;
box with one-half the rear forming a bedroom, and&#13;
&#13;
also a catch-all back shed which had an opening to&#13;
&#13;
a dirt floor cellar. It was from this cellar that&#13;
&#13;
mice were running and squealing because they were&#13;
&#13;
being burned alive.&#13;
&#13;
There was no place to go but his folks.&#13;
&#13;
People say that you can find humor in any situation&#13;
&#13;
or that you can always make "the best of any &#13;
&#13;
situation." My answer to that is that these people&#13;
&#13;
have never lived with an alcoholic who becomes&#13;
&#13;
progressively meaner as he drinks.&#13;
&#13;
By the time we moved there, PaBee's dad was 62&#13;
&#13;
and an incurable alcoholic, miserable and with the&#13;
&#13;
disposition of a cross-eyed rattlesnake. Katie was&#13;
&#13;
50, both of them young enough to be doing a lot of&#13;
&#13;
work.  That was not the case. Trum arose early in&#13;
&#13;
the morning (he catnapped all day) turned on the &#13;
&#13;
radio to the Early Worm whose theme song "The Music&#13;
&#13;
goes Down and Around" blasted through the house.&#13;
&#13;
If I even hear the beginnings of this song to this&#13;
&#13;
day, I get almost physically ill and very depressed&#13;
&#13;
because it reminds me again of a time that took so&#13;
&#13;
much away from me.&#13;
&#13;
I did not know it at the time of the fire, but&#13;
&#13;
I was pregnant with Shirley, therefore doubly&#13;
&#13;
miserable.&#13;
&#13;
Shortly after the fire and already living with&#13;
&#13;
less than nothing, someone stole our only source of&#13;
&#13;
any spending money - 35 large hens which provided&#13;
&#13;
us with eggs to sell.&#13;
&#13;
As if all this weren't enough. Truman took our&#13;
&#13;
car to go to Kentucky to bring back an expectant&#13;
&#13;
mother, her husband and 2 year old son to to move in&#13;
&#13;
with us.&#13;
&#13;
Usually Trum sat by the radio until noon, then&#13;
&#13;
.30.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 31 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
went to town to drink all afternoon, coming home&#13;
&#13;
abusive and raving. I remember one day in&#13;
&#13;
particular as I was cleaning the kitchen cupboard,&#13;
&#13;
a large area that filled one wall of the kitchen,&#13;
&#13;
that among umpteen dishes of old potatoes and&#13;
&#13;
cooked beans I came across something so foul-&#13;
&#13;
smelling that I pitched it on the spot. All hell&#13;
&#13;
broke loose that night when Trum couldn't find his&#13;
&#13;
favorite chunk of limburger cheese!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Shirley and Terry in 1936&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
It all became too much for me and with&#13;
&#13;
pressure from Wendell, his folks moved down the&#13;
&#13;
road and we stayed in the 'white house' - but at a&#13;
&#13;
price. displaying his benevolent nature yet again&#13;
&#13;
Truman insisted we could not stay without a hired&#13;
&#13;
hand and be bestowed upon us the sorriest human&#13;
&#13;
specimen I've ever known, and for 4 years he shared&#13;
&#13;
every meal with us plus giving us no privacy. I&#13;
&#13;
was wondering what I had ever done to deserve a&#13;
&#13;
life like this, and decided the only way to have a&#13;
&#13;
.31.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 32 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
life was to buy the farm, leave and try to find&#13;
&#13;
work elsewhere or leave on my own.&#13;
&#13;
Thru OW Whitney, Sr. , who contacted a friend in&#13;
&#13;
Delaware we were able to get a loan that a bank&#13;
&#13;
would not have given us in a million years, and&#13;
&#13;
with it bought the farm and got rid of a great deal&#13;
&#13;
of baggage at the same time.&#13;
&#13;
Evidently PaBee had been thinking along the&#13;
&#13;
same lines as I had because, unknown to me, he had&#13;
&#13;
enrolled in a correspondence course in Air&#13;
&#13;
Conditioning. When he went to Youngstown for his&#13;
&#13;
diploma, they were so impressed with him that they&#13;
&#13;
offered him a lifetime teaching job starting at&#13;
&#13;
$100.00 a month. It was a fortune at that time and&#13;
&#13;
we'd have grabbed it except now we had a farm to &#13;
&#13;
run. It was not to be the last time I wished we'd&#13;
&#13;
never heard of farming.&#13;
&#13;
In addition to his A/C course, PaBee was&#13;
&#13;
working for ASCS measuring fields in eastern&#13;
&#13;
Delaware County for map work for agricultural use.&#13;
&#13;
Burt the most important thing he did in the late&#13;
&#13;
1930's was work to sign up eastern Delaware County&#13;
&#13;
to get REA lines to the country. My folks had&#13;
&#13;
electricity brought in in the late '20s and one of&#13;
&#13;
my strongest memories of home is of looking into&#13;
&#13;
the awestruck face of my mother when she looked up&#13;
&#13;
at one bare bulb hanging down from the ceiling and&#13;
&#13;
saw it light up with electricity. The coming of&#13;
&#13;
electricity changed the farmers' lives more than&#13;
&#13;
anything else ever had or ever would.&#13;
&#13;
When I married, we had Delco system which&#13;
&#13;
furnished electricity until about 8:30 at night&#13;
&#13;
than was off until morning for recharging. So&#13;
&#13;
Wendell worked long and hard trying to get signups&#13;
&#13;
from residents or to get easements where necessary.&#13;
&#13;
some farmers absolutely did not want any lines near&#13;
&#13;
their place, but after the company went around them&#13;
&#13;
.32.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 33 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
and they began to see the merits of electricity&#13;
&#13;
use, they begged to be allowed in.&#13;
&#13;
Electricity did come to us and almost the&#13;
&#13;
first thing we did was to buy a refrigerator&#13;
&#13;
replacing the old icebox which dripped over the&#13;
&#13;
back porch. We also got an electric stove to&#13;
&#13;
replace the wood-burning stove I'd used for canning&#13;
&#13;
and cooking and a washer so I would not have to&#13;
&#13;
hand wash ever again. All in all by the end of the&#13;
&#13;
30's life was looking better, but it was a time&#13;
&#13;
that hurts me even now to look back on and a period&#13;
&#13;
in my life that I never want to live over.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The coming of electricity also helped the&#13;
&#13;
men's work greatly. From pumping water to milkers&#13;
&#13;
for cows, it shortened their hours considerably.&#13;
&#13;
Most men jumped at the chance to quit hand milking&#13;
&#13;
and instead put on milkers. Then stood back to&#13;
&#13;
watch electricity do the work.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Motors in every conceivable piece of machinery&#13;
&#13;
took the hard labor out of loading, pumping water,&#13;
&#13;
filling bins, and emptying grain.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In time, electricity did almost everything on&#13;
&#13;
the dairy except call the cow home. It also &#13;
&#13;
warmed farrowing pens and kept heat lamps on baby&#13;
&#13;
lambs and calves. In short, it was a godsend.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The 40's saw Terry and Shirley beginning&#13;
&#13;
school where both were to have many enjoyable&#13;
&#13;
times. In late 1941, however, came Pearl Harbor&#13;
&#13;
and a drastic change in our lives. PaBee went to&#13;
&#13;
work at Curtiss Wright, and most of our close&#13;
&#13;
friends left the farm for the city jobs that&#13;
&#13;
represented a new life for them. Rationing began&#13;
&#13;
immediately, and since gas was being rationed, it&#13;
&#13;
was necessary if you drove that you share your car,&#13;
&#13;
so Wendell took a carload to work. I was left&#13;
&#13;
without a car and with a farm to halfway manage&#13;
&#13;
while he worked.&#13;
&#13;
.33.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 34 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
With the war came rationing which applied to&#13;
&#13;
coffee, sugar, butter, shoes and many other&#13;
&#13;
necessities. We couldn't do without coffee so we&#13;
&#13;
traded sugar stamps for coffee stamps and made&#13;
&#13;
other adjustments to get along. I found it very &#13;
&#13;
difficult to get silk hose and bananas were&#13;
&#13;
virtually unavailable to us.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
PaBee's brother, a gunner on a warplane, was&#13;
&#13;
was shot down in late 1944 and was MIA for almost 11&#13;
&#13;
months and held prisoner, we later learned, in a&#13;
&#13;
Russian war camp. He returned in early November&#13;
&#13;
1945, the same week Rick was born, and I returned&#13;
&#13;
home from the hospital to find that Katie had&#13;
&#13;
deposited him on my doorstep, the visit to last for&#13;
&#13;
the next 6 months. I had been through an emergency&#13;
&#13;
appendectomy just 5 weeks before Rick was born, so&#13;
&#13;
I was not what you would call overjoyed to take on&#13;
&#13;
this extra burden of caring for one more person.&#13;
&#13;
Rick at 6 months&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.34.</text>
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[corresponds to page 35 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
The kind of house&#13;
we always bought.&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
We were working very hard, both of us working&#13;
&#13;
off the debts we had incurred. We paid them by&#13;
&#13;
never buying an unnecessary item, hand fed all&#13;
&#13;
kinds of baby animals (sheep, pigs, calves)&#13;
&#13;
sometimes bringing them into the house, sitting up&#13;
&#13;
all night with a farrowing sow and getting up 2-3&#13;
&#13;
times a night to check on baby chicks.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our House - 1958&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
We  did all of&#13;
&#13;
our own painting and&#13;
&#13;
wall papering and&#13;
&#13;
even some re-&#13;
&#13;
modeling. We had a &#13;
&#13;
wall storage unit in&#13;
&#13;
our kitchen the front&#13;
&#13;
of which went almost&#13;
&#13;
to the  ceiling&#13;
&#13;
leaving a space of&#13;
&#13;
about 8 inches.&#13;
&#13;
Behind this 8 inch&#13;
&#13;
gap was a foot drop,&#13;
&#13;
the perfect catch-all for everything you wanted to&#13;
&#13;
get rid of and absolutely best place in the world&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.35.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 36 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
for a mouse to run.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I always felt that dirt was sifting down&#13;
&#13;
through this cabinet so one day when I was alone I&#13;
&#13;
took a stepladder in and began tearing it down.&#13;
&#13;
The cupboard was gone and the kitchen floor was&#13;
&#13;
full of boards when PaBee came home, but he set&#13;
&#13;
about helping to carry out the wood. I will say&#13;
&#13;
that whenever we did anything - and there were many&#13;
&#13;
remodeling jobs after that - he would go along with&#13;
&#13;
it if I started it.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We did the kitchen, later on added a bathroom,&#13;
&#13;
then did the front part of the house.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Wallpapering was an every other year job for&#13;
&#13;
most rooms because we heated with coal and paper&#13;
&#13;
soon became dirty. PaBee handled the ceiling and I&#13;
&#13;
did the cutting and the sidewalls. On this&#13;
&#13;
particular day we had papered the dining room and&#13;
&#13;
were  pleased with the nice bright paper and the way&#13;
&#13;
it looked. Wendell went to bed in preparation for&#13;
&#13;
his graveyard shift and I stood in the kitchen&#13;
&#13;
ironing. At midnight I started toward the bedroom&#13;
&#13;
to awaken him. As I started into the dining room I&#13;
&#13;
heard a faint noise and looked up to see, on top of&#13;
&#13;
the porch door, two HUGE eyes glaring down at me.&#13;
&#13;
I screamed, Wendell came running and switched on&#13;
&#13;
the light.  By that time the thing was in motion,&#13;
&#13;
and in the light we saw that it was a hug barn owl&#13;
&#13;
that had come down through our sooty chimney. He&#13;
&#13;
was even more alarmed than I was, flying all over&#13;
&#13;
the room and depositing soot on everything his feet&#13;
&#13;
or feathers touched. After several minutes, we&#13;
&#13;
caught him, threw him out, then looked around. Our&#13;
&#13;
new paper, ceiling and all was covered with sooty&#13;
&#13;
marks. We could not and would not re-paper so I&#13;
&#13;
cleaned it as well as I could and called it a bad &#13;
&#13;
day.&#13;
&#13;
I also remember another situation when soot&#13;
&#13;
.36.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 37 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
was a major issue for us. I looked out my kitchen&#13;
&#13;
window one evening to notice PaBee getting out of&#13;
&#13;
the car very slowly.  Then I noticed his arm in a &#13;
&#13;
sling, he came home with a broken right arm. That&#13;
&#13;
day he had climbed a 10-foot ladder in order to do&#13;
&#13;
some electrical work on an A/C unit in a top-level&#13;
&#13;
recess. As he backed out to start down the ladder,&#13;
&#13;
a bare wire on the drill cord touched  an electric&#13;
&#13;
wire and he blacked out and fell toward the cement&#13;
&#13;
floor 10 feet below. He could have been&#13;
&#13;
electrocuted, but the fall broke the current&#13;
&#13;
connection, and then he was lucky a second time. A&#13;
&#13;
colored man just happened to be passing by and saw &#13;
&#13;
him and caught him, preventing a serious injury or&#13;
&#13;
possibly even death. So a broken arm was a good &#13;
&#13;
exchange for  a crushed skull or electrocution.&#13;
&#13;
By the time he had told me all this, we were seated&#13;
&#13;
at the table when all of a sudden we heard a loud&#13;
&#13;
"whoomp" from the basement. I knew immediately&#13;
&#13;
what had happened and tore downstairs only to find&#13;
&#13;
it full of black smoke and 2 pieces of pipe blown&#13;
&#13;
apart. I couldn't get them together, Wendell was &#13;
&#13;
no help and black smoke kept puffing out the pipe.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When we finally got it fixed, we just stood&#13;
&#13;
and looked at one another. Our faces and hands &#13;
&#13;
were black, his white coat was black,  but it was&#13;
&#13;
when we went upstairs that I just stood and cried;&#13;
&#13;
every thing was black - walls, curtains, bed&#13;
&#13;
clothes, food, anything you could name. The only&#13;
&#13;
things not covered with soot were either under the&#13;
&#13;
top bedcovering or behind closed doors. I know now&#13;
&#13;
that the insurance company will bear the expense of&#13;
&#13;
cleaning up. I spent weeks trying to clean rugs,&#13;
&#13;
curtains, clothes and dishes.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was not a good day in any way.&#13;
&#13;
Furnaces have always caused us trouble, and&#13;
&#13;
once the stoker-fired furnaces was almost the cause&#13;
&#13;
.37.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 38 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
of a house fire. Our entire family was away one&#13;
&#13;
night, each of us to a different meeting. I was&#13;
&#13;
next to the last coming home and when I entered the&#13;
&#13;
kitchen, a blast of very hot air hit me in the&#13;
&#13;
face. I flew to the basement where I found the&#13;
&#13;
furnace and pipes so hot that beams were popping&#13;
&#13;
and crackling. I had no time to call anyone; I&#13;
&#13;
just picked up a hose and directed it at the beams.&#13;
&#13;
The water from that fell on the furnace where it&#13;
&#13;
steamed. Eventually I could manage to open the&#13;
&#13;
furnace and found the source of the tremendous &#13;
&#13;
heat. The firebox was full to the top, the fire&#13;
&#13;
was just a red  hot mass the stoker was still&#13;
&#13;
showing coal in. I knew I would crack the firebox&#13;
&#13;
by using water, but I had no choice so I directed a&#13;
&#13;
mist onto the top of the hot coals and continued to&#13;
&#13;
soak until some of the coals turned gray. Luckily,&#13;
&#13;
the firebox did not crack. I discovered later that&#13;
&#13;
one of the kids came home, thought the house too&#13;
&#13;
cool so instead of turning the furnace up one&#13;
&#13;
degree, turned it all the way over so that the&#13;
&#13;
stoker ran continuously, filling the furnace to the&#13;
&#13;
brim.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was now the late 40's and we were still&#13;
&#13;
driving a 1934 Chevy because cars, too, had been in&#13;
&#13;
short supply, so one day we decided to refurbish it&#13;
&#13;
and give it chipped, faded coat a new coat of&#13;
&#13;
paint. What we were able to get was not a pretty&#13;
&#13;
shade of green, but it worked and we were&#13;
&#13;
reasonably proud of it, so a friend of ours, Griff,&#13;
&#13;
decided he'd paint his old car also. So he chose&#13;
&#13;
his paint carefully applied it, went to bed and &#13;
&#13;
awoke the next morning to find it covered - simply&#13;
&#13;
covered - with small flying insects.  You can see&#13;
&#13;
life was not too easy during the war years.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Wendell continued to work at North American,&#13;
&#13;
then later was asked to join Huffman Wolfe, a major&#13;
&#13;
.38.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 39 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
contracting company, as foreman for the A/C&#13;
&#13;
department. During his time here, he worked for&#13;
&#13;
almost all the large Columbus establishments (OSU,&#13;
&#13;
Battelle, Big Bear, The Union Co., Meat packers) as&#13;
&#13;
well as in factories along the Ohio River and for&#13;
&#13;
NASA at Goddard Air Force Base in Maryland. Later&#13;
&#13;
in life he received a patent for a control which he&#13;
&#13;
developed. He also developed a "chill table" for&#13;
&#13;
OSU at the time of the equine encephalitis&#13;
&#13;
outbreak. This table was used to almost freeze&#13;
&#13;
various species of mosquitos so they could be used&#13;
&#13;
over long periods of time to help determine which &#13;
&#13;
ones carried the disease.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I was very gratified once at a Union meeting&#13;
&#13;
where I heard several men talking saying that&#13;
&#13;
"PaBee was the best A/C man in the State of Ohio."&#13;
&#13;
I always felt that if he had been able to get an&#13;
&#13;
engineering degree, he could have developed&#13;
&#13;
something very worthwhile.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was in the 40's that one of the greatest&#13;
&#13;
changes in all our lives began to appear in&#13;
&#13;
numerous homes. TV had arrived and life would&#13;
&#13;
never be the same again.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I'll never forget the excitement engendered by&#13;
&#13;
a little 6x6 screen whenever OSU played football.&#13;
&#13;
Almost everything passed for entertainment - even&#13;
&#13;
the showing of the stations logo. But it also&#13;
&#13;
brought much more; we, for the first time could see&#13;
&#13;
all those marvelous people who had been our radio&#13;
&#13;
friends; we could watch our government in action;&#13;
&#13;
we were exposed to sports we had never known. In&#13;
&#13;
short, television brought the world to our living &#13;
&#13;
room.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Only 50 years previously, our grandparents had&#13;
&#13;
to rely on word of mouth taken by horse and buggy,&#13;
&#13;
Then came the telephone that brought voices into&#13;
&#13;
the home. Soon came the radio which gave us hours&#13;
&#13;
.39.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 40 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
of news and music. Now we could see, hear and make&#13;
&#13;
judgments on almost anything that happened in the&#13;
&#13;
world. I still think of TV as a miracle even with&#13;
&#13;
all the trash it now presents.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Just as the 30's were terrible for us, the&#13;
&#13;
50's seemed to be good. Terry and Shirley were&#13;
&#13;
doing very well in school, Rick had started school&#13;
&#13;
and I picked up two new careers in the decade.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
First of all, an electric organ was installed&#13;
&#13;
in our church one Tuesday and I was supposed to&#13;
&#13;
play it the following Sunday. I did play for&#13;
&#13;
Sunday service but this particular instrument&#13;
&#13;
caused me much frustration for several years.&#13;
&#13;
First of all, I practiced in an unheated church in&#13;
&#13;
winter, and one without cooling in the summer. I&#13;
&#13;
had no organ at home to work with so the adjustment&#13;
&#13;
to stops, foot pedals was a long time coming. In&#13;
&#13;
addition, I had no relief on Sundays.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Then when I began working at Sunbury Savings&#13;
&#13;
in the late 50's, my free time was further&#13;
&#13;
shortened and I began to rebel at having to be &#13;
&#13;
there EVERY Sunday. After all, I was not the&#13;
&#13;
minister! So I resigned, only to return to it &#13;
&#13;
later.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Terry had graduated as valedictorian of his&#13;
&#13;
class and entered OSU where he made the OSU&#13;
&#13;
marching band as a freshman. We were immensely&#13;
&#13;
proud of him and so pleased that in his second year&#13;
&#13;
OSU played in the Rose Bowl.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
He, too , married young. Marge Ross and he&#13;
&#13;
presented us with our first grandchild, Pam, a&#13;
&#13;
precocious child and one who has always been close&#13;
&#13;
to us.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Trying to find a way to help him stay in&#13;
&#13;
school and still live on campus, we invested in a&#13;
&#13;
huge rooming house on E. 16th Avenue, and our work&#13;
&#13;
really began. At one time, the house had held as&#13;
&#13;
.40.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 41 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
many as 40 students, but in a short time we decided&#13;
&#13;
to cut the number of students to 22. This still&#13;
&#13;
represented 22 beds to be made and changed each&#13;
&#13;
week, rooms to be painted, all kinds of repairs to&#13;
&#13;
be made constantly, plus a full basement of shower&#13;
&#13;
stalls, storage rooms, etc. all of which needed&#13;
&#13;
non-ending paint jobs.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Chery and Pam Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When school was in session, Wendell would take &#13;
&#13;
me down to E 16th on his way to work. There I&#13;
&#13;
would work all day trying to help keep rooms and&#13;
&#13;
equipment in order. We would return on Saturday,&#13;
&#13;
work until noon, the cross campus for the OSU&#13;
&#13;
football game.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
By this time, Shirley was working for Woody&#13;
&#13;
Hayes. You've always heard that Woody lost his&#13;
&#13;
temper often; well, Shirley would take just so&#13;
&#13;
much, then her temper would flare. One day when he&#13;
&#13;
threw something she picked up the phone book and&#13;
&#13;
threw it back at him, shattering the glass stopped&#13;
&#13;
desk. Ann, Woody's wife, had a big laugh about it&#13;
&#13;
- thought it served Woody right, and evidently he&#13;
&#13;
thought so, too, because she continued to work&#13;
&#13;
there.&#13;
&#13;
.41.</text>
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[corresponds to page 42 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
He knew we loved football and gave us some &#13;
&#13;
pretty privileged seating spots for several years.&#13;
&#13;
It was also nice to follow Jerry Lucas - Havilcek&#13;
&#13;
and Siegfried through their marvelous years of OSU&#13;
&#13;
basketball.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
During these years I also became a member of&#13;
&#13;
the Searchlight Club, an organization which had&#13;
&#13;
brought me many interesting looks into all sorts of&#13;
&#13;
topics as well as many new friends. It was with&#13;
&#13;
them that I saw my first stage production "My Fair&#13;
&#13;
Lady." It was marvelous and has always remained,&#13;
&#13;
after seeing many , many, stage shows, my very&#13;
&#13;
favorite play with "The Music Man" a close second.&#13;
&#13;
That experience encouraged us to to attend Kenley&#13;
&#13;
productions as will as Mershon shows and even one&#13;
&#13;
show at the Hartman Building. All in all we must&#13;
&#13;
have seen 50-60 productions in the next few years.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
So with Rick in high school, Terry in college,&#13;
&#13;
Shirley in Woody's office and with involvement in&#13;
&#13;
the church, the school board, the rooming house,&#13;
&#13;
farm and our two jobs, we were exceptionally busy.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Terry Day, Wendall Day,&#13;
Katie Day, Doris Day,&#13;
Marge Day holding Kim,&#13;
Pam and Chery Day in front&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When the 60's&#13;
&#13;
came in it was easy&#13;
&#13;
to see a decided&#13;
&#13;
change in the&#13;
&#13;
morals, the thinking&#13;
&#13;
and conformity in&#13;
&#13;
this country. It&#13;
&#13;
was a time kids &#13;
&#13;
began questioning&#13;
&#13;
the authority of &#13;
&#13;
parents and&#13;
&#13;
teachers; it was a&#13;
&#13;
time of the hippies&#13;
&#13;
and flower children;&#13;
&#13;
it was a time when&#13;
&#13;
our country began sliding downhill.&#13;
&#13;
.42.</text>
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[corresponds to page 43 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
It was also a time of tragedy for us and one&#13;
&#13;
of great tragedy for our country. A young&#13;
&#13;
president was killed, and I, who had voted against&#13;
&#13;
him, could not leave the TV. I saw the actual&#13;
&#13;
killing (not a rerun) of Oswald and my scream woke&#13;
&#13;
Wendell and brought him charging from the bedroom.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our personal tragdy was the death of my&#13;
&#13;
brother, Leland, who died 3 months after a massive&#13;
&#13;
heart attack. We had been hit before; Marge had&#13;
&#13;
developed gestational diabetes and lost a child in&#13;
&#13;
1958 shortly after its birth.  Terry then developed&#13;
&#13;
diabetes in his first year of dental school and a&#13;
&#13;
few years later Pam was hit with the same disease.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Kim Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I went to work full-time&#13;
&#13;
shortly after Terry left OSU&#13;
&#13;
and Rick graduated from high&#13;
&#13;
school. Cheryl and Kim had&#13;
&#13;
joined Terry's family, and&#13;
&#13;
Terry and Marge lost another&#13;
&#13;
baby in 1968.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My mother, who had been&#13;
&#13;
ailing for years with&#13;
&#13;
respiratory problems, was&#13;
&#13;
failing fast. We had had a&#13;
&#13;
grand 50th wedding&#13;
&#13;
anniversary celebration for&#13;
&#13;
them in 1963, but from then on&#13;
&#13;
she was on a downhill course&#13;
&#13;
and died in the summer of 1966.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Rick married Carol Walker&#13;
&#13;
and Scott, who had brought us&#13;
&#13;
so much joy, was born. Several&#13;
&#13;
years later Lisa came along.&#13;
&#13;
Lisa walks to her own drumbeat,&#13;
&#13;
but you'll never find a kinder&#13;
&#13;
person. She would take in any&#13;
&#13;
stray animal in a heartbeat and&#13;
&#13;
Richard Scott Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.43.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 44 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Clifton and Lisa Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
she's just as concerned about any human she meets.&#13;
&#13;
During 1968, I began&#13;
&#13;
having health problems&#13;
&#13;
which finally affected me&#13;
&#13;
so that I could scarcely&#13;
&#13;
work. I was diagnosed&#13;
&#13;
with severe anemia - maybe&#13;
&#13;
even leukemia - at a time&#13;
&#13;
when my next door&#13;
&#13;
neighbor, who had suffered &#13;
&#13;
from the same symptoms as&#13;
&#13;
I all winter, was&#13;
&#13;
diagnosed with leukemia.&#13;
&#13;
Kathryn, who had been a&#13;
&#13;
second mother to Rick,&#13;
&#13;
died in 1969. Later that year, after being denied&#13;
&#13;
my normal day off and and after some co-workers had&#13;
&#13;
taken as much as a week off, I walked out of the home&#13;
&#13;
again.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In the meantime and after a very long illness,&#13;
&#13;
my mother died in 1966, but not before she got&#13;
&#13;
to see the satellite circling the earth. She did not&#13;
&#13;
live to see the moon landing,&#13;
&#13;
but Dad did and remarked an&#13;
&#13;
the many changes he had seen&#13;
&#13;
in his lifetime. Starting&#13;
&#13;
with the trek to Galena with&#13;
&#13;
horse and wagon, he had seen &#13;
&#13;
automobiles revolutionize the &#13;
&#13;
USA, had seen the tremendous &#13;
&#13;
train and ocean travel, had&#13;
&#13;
witnessed the birth of the&#13;
&#13;
airplane's reign and now had&#13;
&#13;
seen a man stand on the moon.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
By the 70's Terry was&#13;
&#13;
well established in his&#13;
&#13;
Lee Alessio&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.44.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 45 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
practice, Shirley and  Gina married and Lee was&#13;
&#13;
born, and Rick and Carole divorced.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We had purchased a farm on 605 with Terry as&#13;
&#13;
co-owner.  My brother in real estate had informed&#13;
&#13;
me that  Chamberlain's were selling their farm, and&#13;
&#13;
I asked him to put in a bid at the full price for&#13;
&#13;
us. He laughed and told me it was already sold,&#13;
&#13;
that the buyer could get the money easily, and that &#13;
&#13;
we had little chance of getting it! However, I&#13;
&#13;
insisted and we did get it - we simply didn't have&#13;
&#13;
sense enough to stay out of hard work.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Gino and Lisa at home.&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Wendell's&#13;
&#13;
mother died&#13;
&#13;
in late 1974&#13;
&#13;
and left a&#13;
&#13;
small bequest&#13;
&#13;
to her two sons. When&#13;
&#13;
Wendell&#13;
&#13;
remained&#13;
&#13;
undecided&#13;
&#13;
about what he &#13;
&#13;
wanted to do&#13;
&#13;
with it, I&#13;
&#13;
suggested that he think about getting a trailer so&#13;
&#13;
that we might travel a little.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
He literally jumped at the idea and we&#13;
&#13;
answered an ad for a trailer. We were babes in the&#13;
&#13;
woods in so far as trailers were concerned and how&#13;
&#13;
we managed to "luck out" as we did is beyond me.&#13;
&#13;
We went to see an Avion which could well have been&#13;
&#13;
a Model T for all we knew. We loved it, bought it&#13;
&#13;
and thus began a phase in our lives which was&#13;
&#13;
different, enjoyable and a godsend for Wendell who&#13;
&#13;
had never enjoyed much of what is commonly known as&#13;
&#13;
just "pure pleasure."&#13;
&#13;
.45.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 46 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
We decided to go to Florida. Pam was a&#13;
&#13;
freshman at OSU and could get away by mid-November&#13;
&#13;
and Chery thought she could leave school at that&#13;
&#13;
time, too. So the four of us started out, knowing&#13;
&#13;
not where we were going, knowing nothing about&#13;
&#13;
camping but willing to learn.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We lucked out again. We parked right on the &#13;
&#13;
beach at Turtle beach and the girls and I did&#13;
&#13;
beach combing everyday.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Just before Christmas, we were told our spot&#13;
&#13;
had been reserved and we would have to leave for &#13;
&#13;
another camp. We found a spot at Sun n Fun where&#13;
&#13;
we were to stay for the next 17 years.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Florida was unlike anything we'd ever&#13;
&#13;
experienced. The other campers were like our&#13;
&#13;
closest neighbors - when you parked, they were out&#13;
&#13;
to help you hook up the gas and water, roll out the &#13;
&#13;
awning, and make sure the trailer was level. When&#13;
&#13;
you were ill, they were there with soup, light&#13;
&#13;
desserts or just words of cheer. There was a&#13;
&#13;
church on the grounds; there were bicycle paths to &#13;
&#13;
ride; there was a huge swimming pool, horseshoe,&#13;
&#13;
shuffleboard, square and round dancing and friendly&#13;
&#13;
campfires and card playing groups.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The people became so close that there were&#13;
&#13;
always tears when you left, and anticipation to&#13;
&#13;
return when fall came next year.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The girls were having a ball. We had taken&#13;
&#13;
some of our sand dollars and made Christmas&#13;
&#13;
ornaments out of them. They thought I should send&#13;
&#13;
one each to my card club group; it was finally&#13;
&#13;
decided that I'd send them home with the girls, &#13;
&#13;
and they would deliver them. For our trailer, &#13;
&#13;
lacking Christmas decorations, they scavenged the&#13;
&#13;
throwaways at the cemetery where they found some&#13;
&#13;
beautiful ribbon. We had plenty of pine trees for&#13;
&#13;
greenery and pine cones to use, so our Christmas&#13;
&#13;
.46.&#13;
&#13;
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[corresponds to page 47 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
wreath on the front of our trailer was homemade and&#13;
&#13;
beautiful!&#13;
&#13;
PaBee and Bee&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Christmas came our entire family was there&#13;
&#13;
for several days.  The weather did not cooperate&#13;
&#13;
too well; as it often does in Florida when&#13;
&#13;
Christmas comes the weather turns cold, even though&#13;
&#13;
beautiful, sunshiny weather was the norm until&#13;
&#13;
then.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In the 70's both Wendell and I began new work.&#13;
&#13;
Wendell became associated with 7-Limers, an outfit&#13;
&#13;
that sold farm bins and equipment, and I passed a&#13;
&#13;
realtor's test to work with my brother in real&#13;
&#13;
estate, work which I found fascinating.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Through 7-Limers, Wendell won a trip to Hawaii&#13;
&#13;
for two, so much as I hated to fly, I swallowed&#13;
&#13;
hard and went. When the clerk in Chicago asked if&#13;
&#13;
we wanted "smoking" cabins, I answered before&#13;
&#13;
Wendell could speak and said 'non-smoking." This&#13;
&#13;
little ruse got us to the 1st class cabin on our&#13;
&#13;
.47.&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 48 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
flight to Hawaii, but the rest of our group was so&#13;
&#13;
disgruntled by our good fortune that on the way&#13;
&#13;
home we rode in cabin class.  There really is a&#13;
&#13;
difference between flying cabin or 1st class!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Just as our stage production enlarged our&#13;
&#13;
cultural experience, so also did our various trips&#13;
&#13;
we took with the 7-Limers Group.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
First, of course, was Hawaii and nothing I&#13;
&#13;
ever read quite prepared me for it. I fell in love&#13;
&#13;
with Hawaii when they first put a lei around my&#13;
&#13;
neck and kissed me on both cheeks, and the love&#13;
&#13;
affair took off when we entered our room and found&#13;
&#13;
a freshly cut pineapple sitting in its own juice.&#13;
&#13;
All the usual tourist spots - Punchbowl Cemetery,&#13;
&#13;
Pearl Harbor, their tiered mall - either intrigued,&#13;
&#13;
enticed or caused you to fall into a feeling of&#13;
&#13;
deepest awe and respect.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My favorite part of Hawaii was when we and one&#13;
&#13;
other couple took a car trip around the entire&#13;
&#13;
island of Oahu. We saw the bluest water we'd ever&#13;
&#13;
seen, magnificent cliffs covered with trees,&#13;
&#13;
pineapple plantations and the Queen's palace. I&#13;
&#13;
was most impressed with Polynesian Village, where a&#13;
&#13;
village as used by long ago Polynesians was &#13;
&#13;
erected. It was built around a huge open square,&#13;
&#13;
with buildings on all four side opening on the&#13;
&#13;
inside court. Here children could play, women &#13;
&#13;
could wash and talk with friends, and men could&#13;
&#13;
also meet there to discuss their business. What a&#13;
&#13;
sensible way to live. Children were safe, no one&#13;
&#13;
was ever lonely, and all were safer as a group than&#13;
&#13;
they would have been living alone.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Although the group offered trips to Spain, to&#13;
&#13;
San Francisco, the Barbados and other places, I&#13;
&#13;
only want to tell you about Mexico.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We left Sarasota, went to Tampa and flew to&#13;
&#13;
Dallas. for a good part of this trip we could see&#13;
&#13;
.46.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 49 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Florida and its coastline below us and one could&#13;
&#13;
only marvel when seeing it how the early explorers'&#13;
&#13;
maps were almost precisely what we saw from the air.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We left Dallas for Mexico City, a book in&#13;
&#13;
itself with charming little sidewalk shops, tiny &#13;
&#13;
children begging on every corner, beautiful Mexican&#13;
&#13;
strings playing, gorgeous murals on many buildings,&#13;
&#13;
sidewalk food which looked delicious but which we&#13;
&#13;
were forbidden to eat, huge old churches with gold&#13;
&#13;
icons inside and also as the guards told us "a&#13;
&#13;
thief inside for every religious artifact you saw."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was was at one of the large churches, now&#13;
&#13;
sinking into the soft undersoil of Mexico City,&#13;
&#13;
that we saw the faithful coming into the church,&#13;
&#13;
sometimes having come from miles away and walking&#13;
&#13;
always on their knees even across the paved brick&#13;
&#13;
courtyard of the church.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was here that we rode out to the pyramid&#13;
&#13;
past homes of such poverty and desolation that you&#13;
&#13;
wonder how people could survive. It looked worse&#13;
&#13;
than the shabbiest pens we used to erect for&#13;
&#13;
farrowing sheds. But the pyramid was magnificent!&#13;
&#13;
The steps to the top were very, very narrow and&#13;
&#13;
only a few of our group made it - and only by&#13;
&#13;
placing their feet sideways on the step. The&#13;
&#13;
underground of the pyramid was the great surprise.&#13;
&#13;
It showed a city complete with streets, canals to&#13;
&#13;
bring water into the city and a sewer to dispose of&#13;
&#13;
wastes. It was unbelievable. Added to our&#13;
&#13;
bewilderment was the fact that the hieroglyphics &#13;
&#13;
on the wall looked Egyptian and one wondered if,&#13;
&#13;
indeed, at one time North and South America were&#13;
&#13;
linked together.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We finished our tour in Acapulco, just as&#13;
&#13;
pretty as Hawaii, but much less fun because the&#13;
&#13;
people there did not like us. You could tell their&#13;
&#13;
.49.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 50 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
dislike in everything they did for us. But it was&#13;
&#13;
in Acapulco that we went one night and watched the&#13;
&#13;
cliff divers. We had seen it on TV, but nothing&#13;
&#13;
had prepared us for the narrowness of the gorge or&#13;
&#13;
the steepness of the cliff which the diver climbed.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was also at Acapulco that I first observed&#13;
&#13;
para-sailing. Back at the hotel, I told PaBee I'd &#13;
&#13;
seen something I was going to try. When I told him&#13;
&#13;
it involved heights, he just hooted, getting up on&#13;
&#13;
a stepladder makes me dizzy. Never the less I was&#13;
&#13;
insistent, and by this time about four others were&#13;
&#13;
interested so we looked for the place where the&#13;
&#13;
para-sailing  began.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The person going up is on the beach. Here, he&#13;
&#13;
or she is fit into a pair of coveralls attached to&#13;
&#13;
a parachute sail, and is told that when the boat&#13;
&#13;
started that person was to start running, at which &#13;
&#13;
point you soar into the air. Upon completion of&#13;
&#13;
the ride, the boat coming into the beach begins to&#13;
&#13;
slow and as it goes slower and slower, one begins&#13;
&#13;
to descend and finally is set down gently as a &#13;
&#13;
feather.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Well, I tried it and loved it. You go up so &#13;
&#13;
quickly that you can't realize you've left the&#13;
&#13;
ground and from there on you soar - it must be the&#13;
&#13;
same feeling a bird has as it soars. You descend&#13;
&#13;
so gently that you wouldn't know you were&#13;
&#13;
descending if you hadn't noticed the trees getting&#13;
&#13;
smaller, and when you land you take 2 or 3 steps&#13;
&#13;
and that's all.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When returned to Florida we found these&#13;
&#13;
sailings were prohibited in Florida because&#13;
&#13;
they were so dangerous - some people had been killed in&#13;
&#13;
para-sailing.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Lesson: what you don't know will hurt you!&#13;
&#13;
In the spring of 1976, I was hospitalized with&#13;
&#13;
high blood pressure and had returned home on May&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.50.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 51 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
29th. I called Terry to say I was home and Kim&#13;
&#13;
answered and said she would give them the message,&#13;
&#13;
That was the last time I ever spoke to her. She&#13;
 &#13;
was staying with a friend when they decided to call&#13;
&#13;
a boy to take them to a party. This was never&#13;
&#13;
suppose to happen: Marge was very careful about&#13;
&#13;
controlling Kim's guests and she expected the same&#13;
&#13;
of parents where Kim stayed. Never the less, the&#13;
&#13;
three set out for the party. rounding a curve on&#13;
&#13;
Centerburg Road, the van went out of control, went down &#13;
&#13;
in the road ditch and went some distance&#13;
&#13;
before it hit a tree head on. Kim was killed&#13;
&#13;
instantly.  We were shattered, I had picked her up&#13;
&#13;
just two weeks previously because Marge was in&#13;
&#13;
Washington and wanted assurance she would be taken&#13;
&#13;
care of. I'll never forget how she looked at me,&#13;
&#13;
giggling and repeating a story Mrs. Searles had&#13;
&#13;
told her about how we used to beg for pennies to&#13;
&#13;
buy a gallon of gas. She didn't believe that her&#13;
&#13;
grandmother could have done such a thing - been so&#13;
&#13;
silly - but I just told her we do crazy things when&#13;
&#13;
we are young.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
While the whole family grieved long and sadly&#13;
&#13;
for Kim, life had a habit of just going on and so&#13;
&#13;
it was for us.  Farm work had to be done, and in &#13;
&#13;
the early spring and summer months of 1978 it began&#13;
&#13;
to seem as though this cycle might fail.  It had&#13;
&#13;
rained constantly, it was now almost June and the&#13;
&#13;
planting had not been done.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One day I offered to help work ground on our&#13;
&#13;
farm on Rosecrans Road, and getting out of a large&#13;
&#13;
tractor that was unfamiliar to me, something went&#13;
&#13;
wrong and I fell, lighting on my back on the&#13;
&#13;
packed, hard ground. I knew immediately something&#13;
&#13;
was wrong because of the "prickles" in my spine and&#13;
&#13;
I lay as quietly as possible until PaBee found me.&#13;
&#13;
In the hospital I was told i had chipped one&#13;
&#13;
.51.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 52 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
vertebra and compressed two other. I was home in&#13;
&#13;
a short while, fortunate to be walking but in much&#13;
&#13;
pain for a year afterward.  Even today,  it bothers&#13;
&#13;
me.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
P. S. I was never on a tractor after that.&#13;
&#13;
The 80's were also a decade I would not want&#13;
&#13;
to live through again; this, although many&#13;
&#13;
wonderful things happened to us in those 10 years.&#13;
&#13;
It began with the farm crises which were going&#13;
&#13;
on all over the country.  Farm prices had dropped&#13;
&#13;
drastically, forcing many farmers to borrow money&#13;
&#13;
at an exorbitant rate of interest, and causing them&#13;
&#13;
to go further behind each year. We were no&#13;
&#13;
exception; the fellows had overextended the farming&#13;
&#13;
and we were working harder and going deeper in debt&#13;
&#13;
with every move we made. I thought perhaps that&#13;
&#13;
all our years of hard work had been done for&#13;
&#13;
nothing.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
1980 - Sue, following the birth of Kaleisha,&#13;
&#13;
was found to have incurable cancer. Kathleen and I&#13;
&#13;
visited her many times at University Hospital, and&#13;
 &#13;
twice in the next 9 months she was released for 2-3&#13;
&#13;
days at a time, time which she spent with me and&#13;
&#13;
her baby. She died on April 15th, 1981 on the same&#13;
&#13;
day that Tyler was born to Rick and Shelley.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The day she was buried, my dad suffered his&#13;
&#13;
first heart attack. When i called to inform Terry,&#13;
&#13;
Marge told me that Pam had just been told she&#13;
&#13;
needed laser surgery on her eye. The operation was&#13;
&#13;
not a success and she lost the vision in that eye.&#13;
&#13;
She and Marge made several trips to John Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
Hospital where she was treated further, but by the&#13;
&#13;
end of 1981, she was essentially blind. Her&#13;
&#13;
kidneys began to fail and it was necessary that she&#13;
&#13;
.52.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 53 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
go on dialysis, a very harsh experience.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Dad entered the hospital in July and was never&#13;
&#13;
well again, dying in late December.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
1983 was the year from hell: Kathleen fell&#13;
&#13;
and broke her hip - was in Zanesville hospital, a&#13;
&#13;
long trip for us to go to see her. Chery donated a&#13;
&#13;
kidney to Pam, operation taking place at OSU&#13;
&#13;
hospital. At the same time I was losing two of my&#13;
&#13;
closest friends to cancer. I, too, was facing&#13;
&#13;
major surgery and returned from the doctor one day&#13;
&#13;
to find a thunderstorm approaching. I heard a &#13;
&#13;
terrific clap of thunder, and not too long after&#13;
&#13;
PaBee called to tell me that he, Scott and 2 of&#13;
&#13;
Scott's friends had been hit with lightning. One&#13;
&#13;
of Scott's friends died that evening at Mt. Carmel.&#13;
&#13;
I had surgery later that summer.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1984 Kathleen, just beginning to recuperate&#13;
&#13;
from hip surgery, was hit with cancer. Then began&#13;
&#13;
chemotherapy with all the bad side effects and I&#13;
&#13;
spent innumerable hours going back and forth to Mt.&#13;
&#13;
Vernon.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
1985 came along with our golden wedding. Both&#13;
&#13;
Kathleen and Roland came, both looking terrible.&#13;
&#13;
Roland entered the hospital in July and died very&#13;
&#13;
late in the year.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
1986 and 1987 brought our greatest sorrow.&#13;
&#13;
Terry had been very ill for a long time but he&#13;
&#13;
visited us in Florida in January and, although I&#13;
&#13;
cried bitter tears after he left, I had not thought&#13;
&#13;
of the possibility of death. He had been planning&#13;
&#13;
to start a dairy - don't ask me why - but he died&#13;
&#13;
very suddenly one night after visiting Shirley. He&#13;
&#13;
was such an ideal son, such a loved person, such a&#13;
&#13;
good person that I'll never be able to understand a&#13;
&#13;
loss like this.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1988 we received another real blow when&#13;
&#13;
Gerry died unexpectedly. She and Wayne had been a&#13;
&#13;
.53.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 54 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
close part of our lives for a long time and it was &#13;
&#13;
hard to imagine being without her.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1989, we celebrated Kathleen's 5 year&#13;
&#13;
remission from cancer. This was in April; in&#13;
&#13;
October, she was told the disease had returned and&#13;
&#13;
she had 2-3 months to live. She died on Christmas&#13;
&#13;
Eve 1989.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
This terrible time ended with illness on my&#13;
&#13;
part. A severe leg pain was diagnosed (after a&#13;
&#13;
year) as being spinal stenosis with affects the &#13;
&#13;
sciatic nerve. That was followed by a year of&#13;
&#13;
severe dizziness which was never diagnosed,&#13;
&#13;
although numerous tests were made.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
So finally the 1980's came to an end. In that&#13;
&#13;
whole decade, there were few weeks when we did not&#13;
&#13;
have someone in the hospital, seriously ill.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Without our friends and participation in&#13;
&#13;
outside activities, the above years could have&#13;
&#13;
buried us, but with our friends we did manage to&#13;
&#13;
have some nice times.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
First of course, was the crowd at Sun N Fun.&#13;
&#13;
there was always someone there to talk to, eat&#13;
&#13;
with, go fishing with, or just sit with. We&#13;
&#13;
participated in church and choir and that alone&#13;
&#13;
kept us busy. The camp also put on a variety show&#13;
&#13;
each winter, and that kept us busy for several&#13;
&#13;
weeks during January and February.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When we returned home in the spring, we&#13;
&#13;
resumed our activities with the TTT camping club.&#13;
&#13;
We were such an odd assortment of people (all ages&#13;
&#13;
and occupations) that you would have thought we'd&#13;
&#13;
find no common meeting ground, but we had a ball&#13;
&#13;
together. One of the older members was the&#13;
&#13;
sprightliest one quiet one did beautiful&#13;
&#13;
needle work; the former school coach was a great&#13;
&#13;
storyteller; all of us were good eaters. We always&#13;
&#13;
.54.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 55 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
had one great potluck dinner and then had leftovers&#13;
&#13;
for Sunday dinner.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
At our house once, I asked each member to come&#13;
&#13;
prepared with a program item and not one failed to&#13;
&#13;
come up with either a reading, a quiz, a magic&#13;
&#13;
trick, a poem, a silly game, or a musical&#13;
&#13;
rendition.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
At Christmas time we always had a special&#13;
&#13;
dinner prepared by us and held in a beautiful old&#13;
&#13;
house in Granville. Gifts were exchanged, and then&#13;
&#13;
we left to meet again in early spring. The group&#13;
&#13;
still meets occasionally, but the camping ceased&#13;
&#13;
after the death of some of most loved members.&#13;
&#13;
The Sunbury News, Thurs, May 2, 1985&#13;
Wendall Days&#13;
Celebrate Anniversary&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.55.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 56 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Then there was our golden wedding in the 80's.&#13;
&#13;
Unknown to us, our kids met one night while we were&#13;
&#13;
in Florida and planned a party, even going so far&#13;
&#13;
as to make up an invitation, a copy of which is on&#13;
&#13;
the next page. We were reluctant to have anything&#13;
&#13;
done for us, because it would occur one month after&#13;
&#13;
we returned from Florida and we felt it would be a&#13;
&#13;
really rushed time.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
But the kids prevailed, so the day came. It&#13;
&#13;
was beautiful, the food was delicious, and the&#13;
&#13;
people who attended just amazed me, all of the TTT&#13;
&#13;
club was there, many church friends, neighbors,&#13;
&#13;
children of old friends of ours, work-related&#13;
&#13;
friends and many friends from Sun N Fun including&#13;
&#13;
some from Indiana, Michigan, Canton, and many&#13;
&#13;
places in central Ohio. It was a marvelous day and&#13;
&#13;
one which we relived and remembered many times.&#13;
&#13;
Golden Wedding Anniversary&#13;
May 5, 1985&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.56.</text>
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&#13;
[image]&#13;
&#13;
.57.&#13;
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[corresponds to page 58 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
During the 80's we also took several trips&#13;
&#13;
with Wendell's company. We were anxious to go to&#13;
&#13;
the Barbados, and much as I hate flying, I will&#13;
&#13;
have to say our flight there and back was&#13;
&#13;
beautiful. As soon as we landed in Barbados,&#13;
&#13;
however, I was ready to leave. I cannot understand&#13;
&#13;
what the Britishers see in it. It's very small,&#13;
&#13;
has none of the lush tropical growth you would&#13;
&#13;
expect, has birds that fly into the restaurants and&#13;
&#13;
sit on your table, has snakes that crawl in bushes&#13;
&#13;
over your head, and does not have nice beaches.&#13;
&#13;
One of our group went swimming close to the &#13;
&#13;
shoreline and was washed repeatedly against the&#13;
&#13;
sharp, rocky crags found there. He was injured&#13;
&#13;
quite badly. Do you get the feeling that we didn't&#13;
&#13;
appreciate Barbados? You're right.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Repparts had come down to Florida to keep&#13;
&#13;
our dog "Sugar" while we were gone. We drove to&#13;
&#13;
Miami in the motorhome and left the Honda for them.&#13;
&#13;
They used the car once, lost the key, and were&#13;
&#13;
stranded in camp for a week; we parked about a mile&#13;
&#13;
from the terminal in Miami and returned to find the&#13;
&#13;
motorhome  wouldn't start; neither of us cared for &#13;
&#13;
our Barbados vacation. You'll discover &#13;
&#13;
that some vacations are like that.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Houses We've Owned&#13;
&#13;
My first home was a rather small house for&#13;
&#13;
what was, for the most of my life at home, a home&#13;
&#13;
for six. It consisted of a nice sized kitchen, a&#13;
&#13;
very narrow room that was called a dining room with&#13;
&#13;
a closet at one end, an ample bedroom, small living&#13;
&#13;
room and two upstairs bedrooms with the tiniest&#13;
&#13;
closets ever made. My folks began by remodeling &#13;
&#13;
the kitchen, getting running water for the first&#13;
&#13;
time in the early 1930's. Later, they enclosed&#13;
&#13;
part of a porch to make a nice dining room, and&#13;
&#13;
.58.&#13;
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[corresponds to page 59 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
later added several feet on the west side to&#13;
&#13;
enlarge the living room and put in a bath.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I never enjoyed this last addition I was&#13;
&#13;
married and living in the poor little house which&#13;
&#13;
burned. We then moved to the "white" house which&#13;
&#13;
we remodeled, doing the kitchen first, later adding&#13;
&#13;
a bath and later redid the front part of the house.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Every house I had lived in until then was&#13;
&#13;
miserably cold. At home we carried heated sad&#13;
&#13;
irons to bed to warm our feet so we could fall&#13;
&#13;
asleep. To go to bed each night we carried a&#13;
&#13;
lantern to light our way and one night I turned it&#13;
&#13;
upside down to blow out the flame. Needless to&#13;
&#13;
say, flames shot out and our screams brought Dad up&#13;
&#13;
the stairs in record time.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The miserable cold did not subside in the&#13;
&#13;
white house because it was not insulated and the&#13;
&#13;
windows were so loose they rattled.  Each morning&#13;
&#13;
when I picked up Terry his little hands looked like&#13;
&#13;
swollen sausage links because he had gotten so cold &#13;
&#13;
in the night.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Just when we got this house renewed we moved&#13;
&#13;
down to the gray house and began restoration all&#13;
&#13;
over again, this time stripping the downstairs&#13;
&#13;
rooms, insulating it well and installing an&#13;
&#13;
automatic furnace. It was during the late 50's&#13;
&#13;
that we also built a large cement block swimming&#13;
&#13;
pool which was a major source of enjoyment for many&#13;
&#13;
 years.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We lived there for many years but work in&#13;
&#13;
houses did not cease for we bought the rooming&#13;
&#13;
house which was endless work, but it provided a&#13;
&#13;
home for Terry and Marge while he finished his&#13;
&#13;
education.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Houses 5 and 6 were those on the Chamberlin&#13;
&#13;
farm, and while we did not remodel them, our&#13;
&#13;
hammers and paintbrushes were always in reach.&#13;
&#13;
.59.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 60 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
When we purchased property on Rosecrans Road&#13;
&#13;
and restored house no. 7, I decided I'd had enough.&#13;
&#13;
We had improved every house we had owned, spending&#13;
&#13;
hours and hours in hard, dirty work. And it was a &#13;
&#13;
task repeated over and over, because some of this&#13;
&#13;
was rental property and each time a tenant moved&#13;
&#13;
out, almost always we had a major renovation facing &#13;
&#13;
us.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Then even my little Florida home betrayed me.&#13;
&#13;
Dad died at Christmas time in 1982 and we stayed&#13;
&#13;
home that winter. We always stored our trailer in&#13;
&#13;
a field near the camp, taking the precaution of&#13;
&#13;
using plenty of insecticide and mildew killer.  We&#13;
&#13;
wrote down asking the owner of the field to take&#13;
&#13;
our check and renew the bug and mildew &#13;
&#13;
preparations.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
But when we walked into the trailer on an &#13;
&#13;
exetremely hot day in mid-October 1983, we almost&#13;
&#13;
turned and ran.  Everything we could see was either&#13;
&#13;
covered with dirt or had been chewed by something.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
George Main had often told us that we could&#13;
&#13;
use his place at any time and we really had no&#13;
&#13;
choice at this time. We started with garbage sacks&#13;
&#13;
and removed EVERYTHING from the trailer, every&#13;
&#13;
towel, bed linen, drapery, curtain, small clothing &#13;
&#13;
items went into sacks and were taken to the laundry&#13;
&#13;
where we spent 3 full days just washing, drying,&#13;
&#13;
and folding. We stayed at Main's home for three &#13;
&#13;
nights but decided we had to move the trailer so&#13;
&#13;
that we could obtain hot water and electricity. We&#13;
&#13;
proceeded to wash down every square inch of the &#13;
&#13;
trailer, washed every utensil, dish, piece of&#13;
&#13;
silverware and finally after 4 days of hard,&#13;
&#13;
sweltering work, we cleaned and swept the carpet.&#13;
&#13;
Then little by little, we replaced our laundered &#13;
&#13;
items.&#13;
&#13;
.60.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 61 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
We do not know what caused the damage -&#13;
&#13;
Florida has some hideous flying insects that could&#13;
&#13;
have been what chewed some of the linens. What I&#13;
&#13;
do know is that we never trusted that particular&#13;
&#13;
guy with our trailer again.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was only when we built that I was able to&#13;
&#13;
move into a clean, warm house for the first time&#13;
&#13;
and what a blessing it was, and is for me. No&#13;
&#13;
remodeling, no painting, no snow on my bed, no&#13;
&#13;
unwanted mice in my basement! I love it!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Remembering Sights, Sounds, and Smells&#13;
&#13;
If someone were to blindfold me and lead me&#13;
&#13;
into an old time school cloak room I would know it&#13;
&#13;
at once by its smell - a mixture of damp woolen&#13;
&#13;
mittens and coats, boots and the ever present smell&#13;
&#13;
of bananas and peanut butter sandwiches in lunch&#13;
&#13;
pails. Peanut butter in those days must have been&#13;
&#13;
blended with glue - one bite and your jaw locked.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Many of the boys in our school trapped animals&#13;
&#13;
for their fur which would sell for a small sum.&#13;
&#13;
Every once in a while they would come to the&#13;
&#13;
classroom after having tangled with a skunk and&#13;
&#13;
would have to be sent home by the teacher with&#13;
&#13;
orders to become bearable before returning.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Smells that I remember; fragrant new-mown hay;&#13;
&#13;
the hot iron smell in Curt's blacksmith shop; the&#13;
&#13;
smell of bees and honey, freshly turned earth, cold&#13;
&#13;
ashes in the ash pan. I especially remember the&#13;
&#13;
smell of freshly baked yeast roll, and will always&#13;
&#13;
remember how grandma hid her bananas in the closet&#13;
&#13;
and we found them by their odor.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Among the beautiful things we've experienced on&#13;
&#13;
the farm have been the phenomena of Nature. It has&#13;
&#13;
.61.&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 62 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
been years since I've seen a showing of "northern&#13;
&#13;
Lights" but I remember one night in the 1950's when&#13;
&#13;
Wendell and I sat in our side yard and witnessed the&#13;
&#13;
bright white light that lit up the sky, Old Mother&#13;
&#13;
Nature outdid herself throwing bight orange, green&#13;
&#13;
and blue streamers halfway across the sky.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One frosty winter night Wendall called me to&#13;
&#13;
"come look" at something. Going outside, I looked&#13;
&#13;
up at a full moon which was completely encircled by&#13;
&#13;
a large rainbow-colored corona. The corona was so&#13;
&#13;
far from the moon that they seemed to have no&#13;
&#13;
relation, even though you know that the moonlight&#13;
&#13;
shining on frost crystals had caused it.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Another unforgettable sight happened as we&#13;
&#13;
were going over Murphy's Hill. Wendell was driving&#13;
&#13;
and as I looked to my right I saw this bright&#13;
&#13;
thing, larger than a star, with a long streamer&#13;
&#13;
behind sailing across the sky. I yelled but&#13;
&#13;
Wendall  was unable to get the car stopped until&#13;
&#13;
just shortly before it hit ground. Even so he was&#13;
&#13;
impressed with his first sighting of a 'meteor' and&#13;
&#13;
I was almost speechless. It was a lot more&#13;
&#13;
breathtaking than my first glance at the satellite&#13;
&#13;
we all followed.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We used to shock corn in the days before&#13;
&#13;
combines. The corn was cut and tied into small&#13;
&#13;
bundles which were than set into standing shocks.&#13;
&#13;
There is nothing more mysterious or beautiful than&#13;
&#13;
a large field of shocked corn under a bright, full&#13;
&#13;
October moon. They always reminded me of rows of&#13;
&#13;
tepees, and I could imagine that I could almost see&#13;
&#13;
Indians creeping across the field much as they did&#13;
&#13;
.62.</text>
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[corresponds to page 63 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Hundreds of years ago when they left their&#13;
&#13;
spearpoints, pestles, axes, and grinding stones for&#13;
&#13;
us to find!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One of the prettier farm sights is that of a&#13;
&#13;
field of rowed soybeans just beginning to bush out&#13;
&#13;
a little. Since the advent of pesticides, which&#13;
&#13;
enable one to overcome the large weeds that smother&#13;
&#13;
beans, farmers have gone back to drilled beans&#13;
&#13;
which aren't nearly as pretty.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Wheat and oats are always gorgeous. Bright&#13;
&#13;
green just as we enter winter and again in earliest&#13;
&#13;
spring, they then turn into a beautiful golden&#13;
&#13;
color in summer. when the wind is gentle with&#13;
&#13;
them, the stalks bend and ripple like a giant wave.&#13;
&#13;
It used to be that we threshed wheat, separating&#13;
&#13;
the grain from the straw and putting the grain on&#13;
&#13;
wagons or in sacks and thrusting the straw out of&#13;
&#13;
the machine and into a large stack. We couldn't &#13;
&#13;
wait for the stack to form so that we could climb&#13;
&#13;
to the top and slide down the shiny side.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Of  course with the coming of combines, it&#13;
&#13;
meant that farmers could harvest their crops at the&#13;
&#13;
time they wished without waiting their turn in the&#13;
&#13;
"threshing ring." And the wives could celebrate&#13;
&#13;
also - they no longer had to prepare those&#13;
&#13;
monstrous dinners that the men remember so fondly.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Flashback and Feedbacks&#13;
&#13;
We had a big laugh at Lee's expense, when he&#13;
&#13;
went fishing in Canada and stayed in a rustic log&#13;
&#13;
cabin. Along with usual inconveniences such as no&#13;
&#13;
electricity, running water, etc. they were using&#13;
&#13;
something that he had never seen before and which&#13;
&#13;
in his words absolutely "grossed him out." It&#13;
&#13;
.63.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 64 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
turned out it was a fly strip, an item which used&#13;
&#13;
to hang in every farm kitchen. You open it and as&#13;
&#13;
the narrow mucilaged strip unrolled it caught and&#13;
&#13;
trapped flies in its sticky mess. Revolting, yes,&#13;
&#13;
but it saved a lot of swatting!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Flies were one of the worst things we endured&#13;
&#13;
as children. They lit on you when you were hot and&#13;
&#13;
sweaty, they crawled on you as you tried to sleep.&#13;
&#13;
They bedeviled the cows and horses beyond bearing&#13;
&#13;
causing the cows to switch the milkers and even to&#13;
&#13;
hold up their milk. They blackened screen doors&#13;
&#13;
before a storm. And worst, they crawled on every&#13;
&#13;
bit of exposed food, ruining picnics and family&#13;
&#13;
get-togethers. It was a time of rejoicing when DDT&#13;
&#13;
finally got rid of most of them.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mosquitos and ticks didn't seem to be the&#13;
&#13;
pests then as much as now. Maybe because we went&#13;
&#13;
to bed early, thus missing the mosquitos. What we&#13;
&#13;
did have to hurt us, because we were forced to go&#13;
&#13;
barefoot, were the thorns, rusty nails, pitchforks,&#13;
&#13;
and barbed wire pieces all of which were as&#13;
&#13;
attracted to my feet as if I had a large magnet in each &#13;
&#13;
foot. I remember one summer I hobbled on a &#13;
&#13;
badly infected foot caused by stepping on a stone.&#13;
&#13;
Finally came the day when I could go outdoors&#13;
&#13;
again, and almost the first thing I did was step on&#13;
&#13;
a pitchfork! I hated doctors, because each time I&#13;
&#13;
saw one, the remedy was  either castor oil or a &#13;
&#13;
puncture of a foot wound.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As I said in the beginning, these things I&#13;
&#13;
have written are remembrances of our life together.&#13;
&#13;
For your parent's childhood, you'll have to get&#13;
&#13;
them to write them down. However, in looking back,&#13;
&#13;
I think of many things I do not wish to forget.&#13;
&#13;
.64.</text>
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[corresponds to page 65 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
When Terry and Shirley were little, they&#13;
&#13;
became known to one another as "Bus" and "Baby" and &#13;
&#13;
those names stuck through high school. We did not&#13;
&#13;
have anything to do with the names being used and&#13;
&#13;
where they came up with them, I do not know.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Shirley did not have to talk early; Terry&#13;
&#13;
anticipated everything she wanted and they seemed&#13;
&#13;
to develop a language of their own. When we could&#13;
&#13;
not understand her, he interpreted her words.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
RicK was anxious to get going in the world;&#13;
&#13;
he's still impatient. He never crawled and when we&#13;
&#13;
got him a walker at 6 months he turned our kitchen&#13;
&#13;
into a racing track. He could charge full speed&#13;
&#13;
ahead and turn on a dime and he learned to walk at&#13;
&#13;
9 months.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We lived in a drive back about 100 feet from &#13;
&#13;
the road and just across a narrow road; at the foot&#13;
&#13;
of the lane stood 2 full grown trees just wide&#13;
&#13;
enough apart to get a tractor through.  One day&#13;
&#13;
after parking the car on top of the hill, wheels&#13;
&#13;
turned slightly to the bank, we entered the house&#13;
&#13;
for a cup of coffee. Shortly afterward, we looked&#13;
&#13;
out and our car was gone! Running out, we finally&#13;
&#13;
spotted it across the road in the field south of&#13;
&#13;
the house. We ran down see how much damage had&#13;
&#13;
been done to the car. Inconceivable as it might&#13;
&#13;
seem if you had ever seen those trees and how close &#13;
&#13;
they were, there was no a mark on the car. Even&#13;
&#13;
more inconceivable was that on the back floor of&#13;
&#13;
the car, Shirley and Terry were still playing with&#13;
&#13;
something. Evidently when they got in and shut the&#13;
&#13;
door, that was enough to start the car downhill.&#13;
&#13;
But I think I'd be safe in saying that if one were&#13;
&#13;
to park a car on the exact same spot, the chances&#13;
&#13;
.65.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 66 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
would be about one in a thousand that it would go&#13;
&#13;
through those two trees unmarked.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Terry used to stand by the east dining room&#13;
&#13;
window every morning and when the milk truck drove&#13;
&#13;
in he'd always say, "ere goes-a milka tuck". He&#13;
&#13;
spoke slowly and distinctly and we understood&#13;
&#13;
everything he said, but he couldn't explain that&#13;
&#13;
Italian accent. He also said, "bi-sa-ca-shew" for&#13;
&#13;
bicycle. You figure!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Pam could not say "horse." Over and over the&#13;
&#13;
word came "force." One day PaBee tried to help&#13;
&#13;
her with her pronunciation, teaching her the "ho"&#13;
&#13;
sound and forcing her lips into the position to&#13;
&#13;
make the sound. Over and over they tried with Pam&#13;
&#13;
making the sound. Then he said, "Say I see a &#13;
&#13;
horse." And Pam said, "I see a force." I guess&#13;
&#13;
it's something  you just out grow.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Lee and Gina weren't with us as much when real&#13;
&#13;
small, but PaBee never forgot one sight of Lee. We&#13;
&#13;
walked into their kitchen shortly after Pearl had&#13;
&#13;
given him a Sugar Daddy and in Wendell's words&#13;
&#13;
"That kid had chocolate from his head to his feet"&#13;
&#13;
and Pearl was just standing there laughing.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Shirley, Geno Jr., were 2 beautiful babies&#13;
&#13;
with their dark curls, one with blue, one with&#13;
&#13;
brown eyes and their wonderful complexions. I wish&#13;
&#13;
I'd had a color camera when Shirley was small.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Chery was always the quiet, thoughtful one in&#13;
&#13;
the family. She didn't argue, and she would&#13;
&#13;
usually go along with anything Pam suggested but&#13;
&#13;
once in a while she would dig in her heels and&#13;
&#13;
.66.</text>
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[corresponds to page 67 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
resist. Chery is till the very organized person&#13;
&#13;
in the family.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Lee and Scott had the knack of our generation,&#13;
&#13;
that of creating one's own entertainment. They&#13;
&#13;
use to take twine and hitch up a pretend plow (a&#13;
&#13;
stick), then plow a ditch and plant seeds. They&#13;
&#13;
once used twine string to tie 3 pretty large boards&#13;
&#13;
together which they imagined was an airplane. The&#13;
&#13;
next thing we knew they were "flying" out a second&#13;
&#13;
story window. And do you remember the time they&#13;
&#13;
found an old lantern and were filling it with&#13;
&#13;
gasoline in preparation for a campfire? That&#13;
&#13;
lighting would have buried half our farms.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Lisa was always the independent child and&#13;
&#13;
as she grew older, tended to impress or shock you&#13;
&#13;
with her insight or actions. But I'll never forget&#13;
&#13;
one day at home she invited a few kids in to&#13;
&#13;
play in our motor home. Hanging in the trailer was&#13;
&#13;
a beautiful Della Robbia wreath bought at the Twig&#13;
&#13;
bazaar and so loved by me that I took it to Florida&#13;
&#13;
with me. When I entered the trailer an hour or so&#13;
&#13;
later, there sat four kids at my table each with a&#13;
&#13;
cereal bowl, the bowls full of cherries, grapes&#13;
&#13;
raspberries and every other fruit from my wreath&#13;
&#13;
which they had dismantled. Lisa probably recalls&#13;
&#13;
to this day my first look and the words, "you kids&#13;
&#13;
are not leaving here until every grape is back on&#13;
&#13;
the vines and all the wreath is put back as it&#13;
&#13;
was." Of course, they couldn't do it, but spent a&#13;
&#13;
few hours of trying and possibly learned a lesson in&#13;
&#13;
the process.&#13;
&#13;
.67.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 68 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Tyler Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Tyler Day was the last of &#13;
&#13;
our grandchildren, a&#13;
&#13;
little red-head who made a &#13;
&#13;
good impression upon&#13;
&#13;
everyone who saw him. He&#13;
&#13;
stayed with us many times&#13;
&#13;
when small, and I miss him&#13;
&#13;
greatly since he moved to&#13;
&#13;
Findlay. Tyler had some&#13;
&#13;
speech problems which&#13;
&#13;
lasted well into his&#13;
&#13;
second grade, but he's a&#13;
&#13;
great student and a great&#13;
&#13;
kid.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We never allowed our children and&#13;
&#13;
grandchildren to sleep with us. One night when&#13;
&#13;
Scott was about 3 years of age, and staying over&#13;
&#13;
with us, a terrific thunderstorm came up. It&#13;
&#13;
awakened me and I hear Scott, who was on the sofa&#13;
&#13;
just outside our bedroom, begin to stir. Finally I&#13;
&#13;
heard him creep over to our door but he didn't say&#13;
&#13;
anything. I waited then called out, "Scott do you&#13;
&#13;
want to come in here with us?" With one bound, he&#13;
&#13;
was in our room saying, "Funder scares me to deaf."&#13;
&#13;
Snuggled between us, he was soon sound asleep, his&#13;
&#13;
fears of "funder" forgotten.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A farm is not only long hours of hard dirty&#13;
&#13;
work, but a place of many accidents and dangers.&#13;
&#13;
Within 2 1/2 miles of our farm, I could think of 17 &#13;
&#13;
major accidents, 13 of them resulting in death most&#13;
&#13;
of them were very young people, only 2 of these 13&#13;
 &#13;
being adults.&#13;
&#13;
On of the saddest funerals I ever played for&#13;
&#13;
was for a small boy who was playing in the pasture&#13;
&#13;
.68.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 69 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
and fell into an iron stake set out to hold a salt&#13;
&#13;
block.  He died in his father's arms a few minutes&#13;
&#13;
later. Another child fell from a silo, one caught&#13;
&#13;
his hands in the moving gears of a grain drill,&#13;
&#13;
another suffocated under loose saw dust.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
There were tractor upsets, chain-saw&#13;
&#13;
accidents, car accidents, mowing machine and&#13;
&#13;
combine worries. Each piece of machinery on the&#13;
&#13;
farm could become a death instrument in a flash, so&#13;
&#13;
it was small wonder that one was continually&#13;
&#13;
admonishing everyone else to "be careful."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Chamberlain farm and its owners have been&#13;
&#13;
especially hard hit, with major accidents which&#13;
&#13;
included four deaths. After the lightning strike&#13;
&#13;
on our farm, PaBee never cared to go back out to&#13;
&#13;
the farm.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
However, both of us did help Terry try to get&#13;
&#13;
his dairy herd in order in 1987. He died just a&#13;
&#13;
week after we were there to help, and both Wendell&#13;
&#13;
and I lost all interest in the farm. I still own a&#13;
&#13;
part of it, but it's rented out and I see little of it.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Did you ever wonder why you call your&#13;
&#13;
grandparents "Bee" and PaBee"? Well, here's the answer.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I had always wanted a nickname but the name&#13;
&#13;
"Doris" is not the easiest name in the world to use&#13;
&#13;
to coin a nickname, so I was always known by my&#13;
&#13;
my full name, "Doris Marie."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Then when I was twelve, we welcomed into our&#13;
&#13;
family my kid brother, also known by the name of&#13;
&#13;
Wendell.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When he began talking tried to get my&#13;
&#13;
attention, it was impossible for him to  enunciate&#13;
&#13;
.69.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 70 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
my full name, calling me instead "Do Bee." Later&#13;
&#13;
he shortened it to Bee, has called me that all his&#13;
&#13;
life, and finally gave me a nickname that stuck,&#13;
&#13;
because most of my family used it in addressing me&#13;
&#13;
as did your grandfather, my Wendell.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I was made a grandmother at a young age and&#13;
&#13;
had no objection until a neighbor, 25 years my&#13;
&#13;
senior, began referring to me as "grandma." so&#13;
&#13;
when Pam began talking, I encouraged her to call me &#13;
&#13;
"Bee." That was fine until she began calling&#13;
&#13;
Wendell "MaBee" at which time he asked her to call&#13;
&#13;
him "PaBee." To this day, all the grandchildren,&#13;
&#13;
some of our nieces and nephews and even some of&#13;
&#13;
their young friends address us this way.&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
And that , Lee,  is why when your teacher asked&#13;
&#13;
you to tell something about your grandparents you&#13;
&#13;
told her "I don't have any grandma or grandpa -&#13;
&#13;
just Nani and Nuner, Bee and Pabee!"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My life as you can see has not been glamorous&#13;
&#13;
or exciting, but one of much hard work and, at&#13;
&#13;
times, one of frustration.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
But along the way, there had been so much to&#13;
&#13;
enjoy - friends, music, church, family books for&#13;
&#13;
learning and pleasure, fairly good health, a sound&#13;
&#13;
mind - that I can't complain.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To those of you who thought this writing was&#13;
&#13;
on genealogy, no. That was not the purpose of&#13;
&#13;
this. But about a month ago I found a writing done&#13;
&#13;
by one of my ancestors in the mid 1700's and I'm&#13;
&#13;
having a copy made for the back of the book so that&#13;
&#13;
you can read it and truly appreciate how much you &#13;
&#13;
have.&#13;
&#13;
.70.</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to page 71 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
I would remind you, too, that I'm glad:&#13;
&#13;
You don't pump water for a dairy - a turn&#13;
&#13;
of the tap does it.&#13;
&#13;
You don't do hand washing - you have&#13;
&#13;
automatic washers.&#13;
&#13;
You don't hang up wet clothes - you use a dryer.&#13;
&#13;
You don't stoke the furnace several times&#13;
&#13;
a day - it's automatic heat.&#13;
&#13;
You don't light candles or lamps - a flip&#13;
&#13;
of the switch make light, etc., etc.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In addition, mixes of all kinds have&#13;
&#13;
shortened cooking immensely. Supermarkets hold all&#13;
&#13;
kinds of canned fruits and vegetables or even fresh&#13;
&#13;
produce. It's hard to believe that we rarely saw&#13;
&#13;
celery or lettuce when I was a child, and an orange&#13;
&#13;
in our Christmas stocking was a real treat.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It's been an amazing change that I've seen in&#13;
&#13;
my lifetime in everything from transportation to&#13;
&#13;
clothing, education to morals, foods to indoor&#13;
&#13;
conveniences. As someone said, "Enjoy today. You&#13;
&#13;
are living better than any king lived a century&#13;
&#13;
ago."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In conclusion, I have just a word for you, my&#13;
&#13;
grandchildren.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We've enjoyed each and everyone of you&#13;
&#13;
regardless of whose genes you wound up with.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We've shared your illnesses (cried many tears&#13;
&#13;
over you), your good times, your first word, your&#13;
&#13;
first step.  We've rocked you, singing "Rock-a-Bye&#13;
&#13;
Baby" ten thousand times, changed you, consoled&#13;
&#13;
you, hugged you, argued with you, yelled at you and&#13;
&#13;
yes, even spanked one of you once.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
And through it all, we had a ball. Hope you &#13;
&#13;
did, too.&#13;
&#13;
Love,&#13;
&#13;
Bee and PaBee&#13;
&#13;
.71.</text>
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[corresponds to page 72 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Our First Great-Grandchildren&#13;
&#13;
Erik Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Ryan Day&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
4 Generations&#13;
Rick, Wendell, Scott, and baby Erik&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
.72.</text>
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[corresponds to page 73 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Our Family Today&#13;
&#13;
Birthday Gathering for Doris&#13;
1991&#13;
1st Row: Marge Day, Scott Day,&#13;
Pam Day Given&#13;
2nd Row: Juanita Day, Doris&#13;
Day, Wendell Day&#13;
3rd Row: Chery Ortlieb, Shirley&#13;
Alessio, Lisa Day, Rick Day&#13;
4th Row: Jim Ortlieb, Gino&#13;
Alessio, Mott Given&#13;
&#13;
.73.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unnumbered page 74 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
Lewis H. Davidson. The following&#13;
&#13;
sketch from the pen of Rev. Lewis H.&#13;
&#13;
Davidson, of Washington township,&#13;
&#13;
a few additions, appeared in the&#13;
&#13;
Freeport Press of April 16, 1890. It&#13;
&#13;
shows some of the many hardships&#13;
&#13;
endured by the pioneers in general,&#13;
&#13;
and this truly representative family&#13;
&#13;
in particular.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"My great-grandfather, William&#13;
&#13;
Davidson, was born in Ireland, and&#13;
&#13;
emigrated to the United States in very&#13;
&#13;
early days, and after being married,&#13;
&#13;
and having four sons, was captured by&#13;
&#13;
the Indians before the Revolutionary&#13;
&#13;
War, and was lost to all knowledge of&#13;
&#13;
his friends. My grandfather, William&#13;
&#13;
Davidson (second), on my father's&#13;
&#13;
side, was  born November 20, 1747. He&#13;
&#13;
was married first to Rosanna&#13;
&#13;
Hutchinson, who was born in Wales.&#13;
&#13;
This union resulted in five children -&#13;
&#13;
three sons and two daughters. His&#13;
&#13;
second  marriage was with Barbara&#13;
&#13;
McDale; result eight children - five&#13;
&#13;
sons and three daughters. My father,&#13;
&#13;
Lewis Davidson, was of the first set&#13;
&#13;
of children, and was born in Fayette&#13;
&#13;
County, Penn., March 23, 1773. My&#13;
&#13;
mother, Mary Davidson, daughter of&#13;
&#13;
Lewis Davidson, full brother of&#13;
&#13;
William (second), was born in Allegany&#13;
&#13;
County, Md., September 23, 1778. Her&#13;
&#13;
mother's name was Nancy Todd, and she &#13;
&#13;
was born in England. My mother was&#13;
&#13;
one of fourteen children, all full&#13;
&#13;
brothers and sisters. My father and &#13;
&#13;
mother were married in Fayette County,&#13;
&#13;
Penn., in July 1798, by Rev. James&#13;
&#13;
Roberts. the result of this union was&#13;
&#13;
twelve children - eight sons and four&#13;
&#13;
daughters - namely: William. Nancy,&#13;
&#13;
Rosanna, John S., Mordecai W., Lewis &#13;
&#13;
H., Susanna., Mary., Jesse., Thomas&#13;
&#13;
L., Joseph C., and Jonathan S. In &#13;
&#13;
1802 my father and mother , with a&#13;
&#13;
number of other families moved down&#13;
&#13;
the Ohio river in large canoes&#13;
&#13;
fastened together, and landed on the &#13;
&#13;
west side of the Ohio river opposite&#13;
&#13;
where Catlettsburg is now located.&#13;
&#13;
After remaining there about one year,&#13;
&#13;
my father bought land in French grant,&#13;
&#13;
in Scioto County, Ohio, where they &#13;
&#13;
remained until March 1909. I was born &#13;
&#13;
at that place February 23, 1809. This&#13;
&#13;
location proved to be sickly - chills&#13;
&#13;
and fever. Here two of their children&#13;
&#13;
died: Nancy and Rosanna. My parents&#13;
&#13;
proposed to move back to Pennsylvania,&#13;
&#13;
and having sold their land, and  the&#13;
&#13;
weather becoming fine the last&#13;
&#13;
week of March, they commenced the&#13;
&#13;
tedious journey, packing all they&#13;
&#13;
intended to move on two mares. My&#13;
&#13;
mother carried me in her arms on&#13;
&#13;
horseback, and an older brother, John&#13;
&#13;
S., behind her and Mordecai W. was in&#13;
&#13;
father's arms on the other mare, and&#13;
&#13;
William who was in is tenth year&#13;
&#13;
walked. They come to the Muskingham&#13;
&#13;
River at Zanesville, April 2, 1809, &#13;
&#13;
and my mother forded that river with&#13;
&#13;
me in her arms. They had fine weather&#13;
&#13;
to travel in, and all went well until&#13;
&#13;
they reached the big Stillwater Creek,&#13;
&#13;
between where now in Smyrna and&#13;
&#13;
Moorefield. One of their mares, being&#13;
&#13;
 very warm, drank too much water, and&#13;
&#13;
by the time they reached the John lamb&#13;
&#13;
farm, one mile east of Moorefield, she&#13;
&#13;
was so sick they stopped, and there&#13;
&#13;
she died. This stopped them in their &#13;
&#13;
journey to Pennsylvania.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"My father rented a small cabin&#13;
&#13;
nearby and remained there that summer&#13;
&#13;
and next winter. During that time he&#13;
&#13;
entered the quarter section of land&#13;
&#13;
which L. D. Latham now occupies, three&#13;
&#13;
miles west of Freeport. On March 10,&#13;
&#13;
1810, my father moved his family down&#13;
&#13;
on the east side of Big Stillwater,&#13;
&#13;
and stopped with Daniel McGloughlin,&#13;
&#13;
who then lived where the widow Bevans&#13;
&#13;
now lives. In a few days he erected a&#13;
&#13;
cabin on his own land, and soon moved&#13;
&#13;
into it. It had a "cat-and-clay"&#13;
&#13;
chimney, split puncheons for a floor,&#13;
&#13;
clapboards pinned together with wooden&#13;
&#13;
pins for a door to keep out wolves, as&#13;
&#13;
well as everything else, but which did&#13;
&#13;
not prevent us from hearing the wolves&#13;
&#13;
howling a few yards from the door. We&#13;
&#13;
were also surrounded with other wild&#13;
&#13;
game, such as bears, deer, turkeys,&#13;
&#13;
and smaller game, which were much used &#13;
&#13;
for food by families, the hides of the&#13;
&#13;
deer dressed for clothing. Those were&#13;
&#13;
trying times, indeed! Daniel Esley&#13;
&#13;
had a little mill at that time, built&#13;
&#13;
of small logs, standing where the Hess&#13;
&#13;
mill is now located. The dam was&#13;
&#13;
built of brush and dirt, and very&#13;
&#13;
leaky at that, and when it was very&#13;
&#13;
dry weather we often had to pound&#13;
&#13;
out corn into meal in a hominy block, and&#13;
&#13;
live on potatoes, squashes, pumpkins&#13;
&#13;
roasting ears, and beans. In 1812 my&#13;
&#13;
 father erected the first hewed-log and&#13;
&#13;
shingle-roofed house that was ever&#13;
&#13;
built in the valley of Crab Orchard,&#13;
&#13;
carrying nails for the roof from&#13;
&#13;
Newellstown (now St. Clairsville) in a&#13;
&#13;
sack on horseback, and paying a high&#13;
&#13;
price for them. But just when the new&#13;
&#13;
inhabitants had cleared a few patches&#13;
&#13;
to raise corn and potatoes, the&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to unnumbered page 74 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
distressing War of 1812 called all the&#13;
&#13;
able bodied men in Ohio to arms; as it&#13;
&#13;
is well known that Ohio and the&#13;
&#13;
western frontier suffered more than&#13;
&#13;
any other part of the United States,&#13;
&#13;
on account of the alliance between the&#13;
&#13;
British and Indians, the British&#13;
&#13;
offering the Indians  a high price for&#13;
&#13;
every white scalp they would produce.&#13;
&#13;
At this time father was suffering&#13;
&#13;
badly with rheumatism as to be unable&#13;
&#13;
to work, having lost the entire used&#13;
&#13;
of his legs, yet he did not escape the&#13;
&#13;
'draft,' and I remember well his being &#13;
&#13;
carried from the house by two strong&#13;
&#13;
men to be put on horse back to ride to&#13;
&#13;
New Philadelphia to answer his name, &#13;
&#13;
and prove his inability to go to the &#13;
&#13;
front. I can not recollect the&#13;
&#13;
excitement when word reached this part&#13;
&#13;
of the State that Shipley and Warnock&#13;
&#13;
were killed by the Indians about forty&#13;
&#13;
miles from this place. Immediately&#13;
&#13;
following this report the entire&#13;
&#13;
neighborhood about Freeport was &#13;
&#13;
alarmed over a rumor that an Indian&#13;
&#13;
attack was to be made upon them; and&#13;
&#13;
from far and near families flocked to&#13;
&#13;
the village for safety, which was&#13;
&#13;
found in a house of huge round logs&#13;
&#13;
 that had been erected for the very&#13;
&#13;
purpose it was called to serve. Our&#13;
&#13;
family was among those who hastily&#13;
&#13;
sought this shelter, and while en&#13;
&#13;
route on horseback, riding behind my&#13;
&#13;
father, I remember falling from the &#13;
&#13;
horse and rolling down a steep&#13;
&#13;
embankment, which so hurt me as to&#13;
&#13;
cause me to cry aloud. My outcry was&#13;
&#13;
only hushed when warned that unless I&#13;
&#13;
would cease the Indians would hear me&#13;
&#13;
and come and massacre us all. Some&#13;
&#13;
two days in doubt and expectancy were&#13;
&#13;
passed in the village, when, the fears&#13;
&#13;
of the settlers subsiding, they&#13;
&#13;
returned to their homes. When the war&#13;
&#13;
closed, this part of the State settled&#13;
&#13;
up rapidly, and soon the people became&#13;
&#13;
prosperous in their undertakings.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"We soon had churches in&#13;
&#13;
Freeport, and church organizations,&#13;
&#13;
good preachers and good congregations.&#13;
&#13;
In early life I became interested in&#13;
&#13;
the Christian religion, my father and&#13;
&#13;
mother being members of the Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Episcopal Church. On April 15, 1827&#13;
&#13;
I united with the Methodist Episcopal&#13;
&#13;
Church of Freeport, Ohio, two sisters,&#13;
&#13;
Susanna and Mary, uniting at the same&#13;
&#13;
time. Thus we joined hands that we&#13;
&#13;
would walk with God during natural&#13;
&#13;
lives, long or short. My sister,&#13;
&#13;
Mary, has gone to the spirit land,&#13;
&#13;
dying in the faith of the Son of God.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My sister, Susanna Latham, it still&#13;
&#13;
lingering on the stage of action, but with&#13;
&#13;
good hope of eternal life beyond the&#13;
&#13;
grave. She is greatly blessed with a &#13;
&#13;
daughter and son-in-law to take care&#13;
&#13;
of her in her declining years.  In&#13;
&#13;
1829 I bought 100 acres of land in&#13;
&#13;
Washington Township, Tuscarawas Co.,&#13;
&#13;
Ohio. On January 7 1830, I was&#13;
&#13;
united in marriage to Lucinda Latham&#13;
&#13;
near Moorefield, Ohio: she was born in&#13;
&#13;
Fauquier County, Va., September 18,&#13;
&#13;
1910. The result of this union was &#13;
&#13;
seven children - four sons and three &#13;
&#13;
daughters-namely: Isiah, Mary, Lucy,&#13;
&#13;
James M., Latham A., Sarah E., and&#13;
&#13;
 Alexander J. Three of theses, Isiah,&#13;
&#13;
Lucy and Sarah, died in Infancy: James&#13;
&#13;
M. volunteered in the United State&#13;
&#13;
service August 9, 1862, and became a&#13;
&#13;
member of Company F, Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
regiment, O.V.I. (he was mortally&#13;
&#13;
wounded September 20, 1863, in the &#13;
&#13;
memorable battle of Chickamauga, and&#13;
&#13;
was lost to all knowledge of his&#13;
&#13;
friends). My daughter, Mary McPeck,&#13;
&#13;
lives near Jewett, Ohio. Latham A. is&#13;
&#13;
living in West Milford, Harrison Co.,&#13;
&#13;
W. Va. Alexander J. is living near &#13;
&#13;
Tucson, Ariz.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"In September, 1830, my wife and&#13;
&#13;
I went to that wild woodland that I&#13;
&#13;
had purchased in Tuscarawas County, to&#13;
&#13;
fix upon a location for a cabin, and&#13;
&#13;
after wading through the high weeds&#13;
&#13;
and brush for awhile, we located the&#13;
&#13;
site near a spring. I had my ax in&#13;
&#13;
hand, ready to cut down the large oaks&#13;
&#13;
that stood all around. I looked at my&#13;
&#13;
better half, and asked if she thought&#13;
&#13;
we could make a living in that place.&#13;
&#13;
Her eyes began to fill with tears, and&#13;
&#13;
turning her back to me , she walked off&#13;
&#13;
to a large oak tree down, the&#13;
&#13;
one I had intended for the foundation&#13;
&#13;
of my house, this being the first&#13;
&#13;
break on those 100 acres. I soon had&#13;
&#13;
my cabin up, and I soon finished my&#13;
&#13;
chimney, then commenced grubbing for&#13;
&#13;
my next summer corn field. When there &#13;
&#13;
was snow on the ground I would chop&#13;
&#13;
rail timber, and when there was no&#13;
&#13;
snow I either split rails or grubbed,&#13;
&#13;
so when the time came for planting&#13;
&#13;
corn I had three and a quarter acres&#13;
&#13;
cleared and well fenced; also in the&#13;
&#13;
meantime had made 2,000 rails for my &#13;
&#13;
neighbors. I will also say my wife&#13;
&#13;
was often seen picking the small brush&#13;
&#13;
on the clearing after working the&#13;
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                  <elementText elementTextId="162463">
                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to unnumbered page 75 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
little garden that I had prepared soon&#13;
&#13;
after we had moved to that place. We&#13;
&#13;
continued on this place until December&#13;
&#13;
1, 1835. During our stay there I&#13;
&#13;
cleared and fenced about twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
acres of land, and made about 8,000&#13;
&#13;
rails for my neighbors. I made oak&#13;
&#13;
rails at twenty-five cents, and&#13;
&#13;
chestnut rails at twenty cents per&#13;
&#13;
hundred.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"In the fall of 1835, my health&#13;
&#13;
failed, and during much of the time I&#13;
&#13;
was prostrated. This was the cause of&#13;
&#13;
our selling our land at that place and&#13;
&#13;
moving to Freeport on the first day of&#13;
&#13;
December, 1835. In April, 1836, I&#13;
&#13;
bought some goods and went into&#13;
&#13;
mercantile business on a small scale.&#13;
&#13;
In the summer of 1837 I changed my&#13;
&#13;
business, and moved out on the Crab&#13;
&#13;
Orchard Creek. In October 1837, I, in&#13;
&#13;
company with a brother, went to&#13;
&#13;
Blackford County, Ind., and bought&#13;
&#13;
eighty acres of land. In November I&#13;
&#13;
rented what was called the Dewey Farm,&#13;
&#13;
on Crab Orchard Creek. Here we&#13;
&#13;
remained for seventeen months. In&#13;
&#13;
1839, having bought the interest of &#13;
&#13;
some of the heirs of the farm on&#13;
&#13;
which I was reared, I erected a house,&#13;
&#13;
where L. D. Latham now lives, and&#13;
&#13;
moved to that place. On May 8, 1842&#13;
&#13;
I received, from the Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Episcopal Church, license to exhort,&#13;
&#13;
and on February 8, 1845, to preach the&#13;
&#13;
gospel. On June 23, 1850, I received&#13;
&#13;
a deacon's orders by the hand of&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Janes, an elder's orders on&#13;
&#13;
 March 20, 1864, by the hand of Bishop&#13;
&#13;
Scott. In December, 1845, I rented&#13;
&#13;
the mill property belonging to Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Driggs, moved to that place, and&#13;
&#13;
remained there until the day of April,&#13;
&#13;
1847, when we moved to what was known&#13;
&#13;
as the Barrett  Mill, having bought an &#13;
&#13;
interest in that property.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"Here we remained until the&#13;
&#13;
first of April, 1851, when , having&#13;
&#13;
sold my interest in the mill property,&#13;
&#13;
we moved back to the mill and farm&#13;
&#13;
property of Nelson Driggs. About the&#13;
&#13;
time we had our corn planted, Driggs&#13;
&#13;
sold his mill and farm to Andrew&#13;
&#13;
Stewart, and came to me and requested&#13;
&#13;
that I release the rent on the farm,&#13;
&#13;
and he would pay damage. Stewart&#13;
&#13;
wished to repair the mill, but wished&#13;
&#13;
me to continue to farm and cut the hay&#13;
&#13;
and tend the corn. In December, 1851,&#13;
&#13;
Driggs put a nice lot of goods in the&#13;
&#13;
house where Turner now keeps his meat&#13;
&#13;
shop, and requested me to move into&#13;
&#13;
that house on the 8th of December,&#13;
&#13;
1851, and took charge of his goods.&#13;
&#13;
In March , 1852, Driggs sold all his&#13;
&#13;
store goods on both sides of the&#13;
&#13;
street to Isaac Holloway and Benjamion&#13;
&#13;
Parsons, and they placed all the goods&#13;
&#13;
in the brick house where Peairs Bros.&#13;
&#13;
now have their store, employing me to&#13;
&#13;
sell their goods for one year. About&#13;
&#13;
one month after I took possession of &#13;
&#13;
the goods Sheriff Boyd of Cadiz came&#13;
&#13;
and demanded the key of the store-&#13;
&#13;
house in favor Driggs' Eastern&#13;
&#13;
creditors. I had then the privilege&#13;
&#13;
of being idle awhile. The owners of&#13;
&#13;
the good replevined them, it soon&#13;
&#13;
passed though the court, and the goods&#13;
&#13;
passed back to Holloway &amp; Parsons, and&#13;
&#13;
I began in my former business.  We &#13;
&#13;
remained in the store until April &#13;
&#13;
1853. For the past two years we had&#13;
&#13;
been receiving rent from a farm of&#13;
&#13;
eighty acres near Tippicanoe, which I&#13;
&#13;
had bought in 1851. In 1851 I rented a&#13;
&#13;
small farm from Samuel Green, and&#13;
&#13;
moved there in April. On January1,&#13;
&#13;
1854, I bought from John Vandota the&#13;
&#13;
farm we now occupy, and moved upon it&#13;
&#13;
March 1, 1854. On the 4th January,&#13;
&#13;
that year, I was appointed by&#13;
&#13;
Presiding Elder J. G. Samson,  to take&#13;
&#13;
charge as pastor, of the Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Episcopal Church at Sewellsville and&#13;
&#13;
Salem, and there I labored nearly six&#13;
&#13;
months, and received into the church&#13;
&#13;
over fifty members . Soon after I&#13;
&#13;
finished my labors there we attached &#13;
&#13;
ourselves to the Tippecanoe Class,&#13;
&#13;
Deersville Circuit; I was called upon&#13;
&#13;
to preach to the people. In 1855, in&#13;
&#13;
a quarterly conference at the Valley&#13;
&#13;
Church, a resolution was offered and&#13;
&#13;
unanimously passed that my family and&#13;
&#13;
I should be exempt from paying&#13;
&#13;
quarterage.  This exemption continued &#13;
&#13;
for a while, and I thought, lest there&#13;
&#13;
be some jealous feelings toward me by&#13;
&#13;
my brethren, I would propose a change&#13;
&#13;
in the matter. I addressed the &#13;
&#13;
following letter to the quarterly&#13;
&#13;
conference, I being sick and not able&#13;
&#13;
to attend:&#13;
&#13;
Tippecanoe, August 27, 1858&#13;
&#13;
Dear Brethren of the Quarterly Conference of&#13;
&#13;
Deersville Circuit, Pittsburgh Conference:&#13;
&#13;
Whereas, at the quarterly conference,&#13;
&#13;
held at Pleasant Valley, there was a resolution&#13;
&#13;
unanimously adopted that myself and my family be&#13;
&#13;
exempt from paying quarterage, and while I&#13;
&#13;
highly appreciate and shall ever feel bound to&#13;
&#13;
appreciate the act of my brethren in passing&#13;
&#13;
this resolution unanimously as a a compliment to&#13;
&#13;
me, I move that the above resolution be&#13;
&#13;
rescinded, and the names of myself and my family&#13;
&#13;
be place among the paying members of the &#13;
&#13;
circuit.&#13;
&#13;
Yours fraternally,&#13;
&#13;
L. H. Davidson&#13;
&#13;
"On September 16, 1857, I was&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unnumbered page 76 of Day by Day]&#13;
&#13;
appointed agent of the American Bible&#13;
&#13;
Society for Guernsey County, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
commencing the 16th day of September&#13;
&#13;
and ending the 29 day of January,&#13;
&#13;
1858. Number of families visited,&#13;
&#13;
894: number of days engaged, 104:&#13;
&#13;
whole amount of cash received,&#13;
&#13;
$402.19: number of addresses &#13;
&#13;
delivered, 28: value of Bibles and&#13;
&#13;
Testaments given to destitute&#13;
&#13;
families, $17.66. A few years ago we &#13;
&#13;
attached ourselves to a class in&#13;
&#13;
Freeport on account of the &#13;
&#13;
convenience, as we are in our&#13;
&#13;
declining years. I have been appointed&#13;
&#13;
executor of administrator of the &#13;
&#13;
estate of the following persons: My&#13;
&#13;
Father, Susanna Buffington, Robert A&#13;
&#13;
Latham, Mary L. Hill. Asa Miller, John&#13;
&#13;
 McCormick, Amanda Bargar, Reuben&#13;
&#13;
 Allen, James B. Jenkins, and Guardian &#13;
&#13;
for Ham Hogue's heirs and William&#13;
&#13;
McCormick. Up to date, January 18,&#13;
&#13;
1891, I have solemnized marriage&#13;
&#13;
contracts between ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
couples. &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My work is now almost finished.&#13;
&#13;
There are a few of my early &#13;
&#13;
acquaintances with me living on the&#13;
&#13;
stage of action; Elijah Carver, Samuel&#13;
&#13;
Wilson, James Kerr, widow John&#13;
&#13;
Phillipps, Zera Davidson and wife,&#13;
&#13;
Robert Mears, Bazil Steel, John&#13;
&#13;
Miller, William Perdue, Robert Wilkin,&#13;
&#13;
Robert Tedrick, Mary A. Stewart, widow&#13;
&#13;
of Andrew Stewart: all these our&#13;
&#13;
youth met each other with warm hearts&#13;
&#13;
and friendly hands, but soon these&#13;
&#13;
hands and hearts will be cold in &#13;
&#13;
death. But if we believe that Jesus&#13;
&#13;
died and rose again, even so them also&#13;
&#13;
which sleep in Jesus will God bring&#13;
&#13;
with Him, and shall change our vile&#13;
&#13;
bodies that they may be alike &#13;
&#13;
fashioned unto His glorious body."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Taken from a book&#13;
&#13;
on Harrison County, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
held in&#13;
&#13;
The Licking county &#13;
&#13;
Genealogical society.</text>
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                  <text>Family Histories </text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
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                  <text>This collection contains family histories that have been written by residents of the Big Walnut area. Items in this collection generally contain genealogical information about the families, personal anecdotes, and images of family members. </text>
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                <text>Author Doris Davidson Day</text>
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                <text>Davidson family--Genealogy&#13;
Day family--Genealogy&#13;
Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury--History&#13;
Personal narratives--Doris Davidson Day (1917-2010)</text>
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                <text>This family history provides general histories of 5 generations of the Davidson, Day, Glenn, Cline, and Cowell families, from 1899-1995. Author Doris Davidson Day puts into print memories of her childhood, marriage, work, joys, and sorrows.</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="144521">
                <text>1995</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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                <text>English</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>31093745</text>
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Text</text>
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                    <text>&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966.]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
BIG WALNUT &#13;
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS&#13;
&#13;
1966</text>
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                    <text>Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966. (p. 1)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unnumbered page 1 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools 1966]&#13;
&#13;
BIG WALNUT SCHOOLS&#13;
ADMINISTRATION &#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
&#13;
R.B. Warner,&#13;
County Superintendent&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Maxine Fiser,&#13;
Supervisor&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF EDUCATION&#13;
SEATED-- Clyde Cochran, President; Sam Reppart. STANDING-- Neal Perfect, Lee Piper, Russell Cring, Vice President; Joe Bukingham, Clerk.&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Jean Aurand,&#13;
Psychlogist&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Hylen Souders, &#13;
Superintendent&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Dean Stoffer, &#13;
Psychologist&#13;
[photo]</text>
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                    <text>Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966.  (p. 3)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to unnumbered page 2 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
SUPERINTENDENT&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
We are pleased to present this third elementary yearbook for the school year 1965-66. This book is an expression of the educational activities of the boys and girls in the Big Walnut Elementary Schools.&#13;
&#13;
It is the earnest effort of every employee of the board of education of the school district to work as a team, to provide programs so that each child might profit from his school experiences and be properly equipped to serve himself as well as being a useful member of our society.&#13;
&#13;
We hope this yearbook reflects to you and to the community that our total direction has been toward formulating a good educational program to service a growing and expanding community.&#13;
&#13;
Hylen Souders&#13;
Superintendent</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 3 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
PRINCIPAL&#13;
James T. Conley&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth Conant&#13;
[photo]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 4 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
Galena Cafeteria&#13;
[photo]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Aubry Lechler&#13;
Gordon Walker&#13;
Mabel Duston&#13;
Millie Kreger&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Gladys Sparks&#13;
Betty Evans&#13;
Lecta Compton&#13;
Joe Compton&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Henry Conley&#13;
Frances Fravel&#13;
Delmar Hall&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Harlem Cafeteria&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to page 5 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
[photos]</text>
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&#13;
GRADE SIX--GALENA&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mr. Stephen Churchill&#13;
Virginia Mann&#13;
Ronald Howard&#13;
Cherry Trautwein&#13;
Rickey Roberts&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Beverly George&#13;
Judy Brown&#13;
Dean Saunders&#13;
Rebecca Hoke&#13;
Lynn Farris&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Robin Browne&#13;
Wayne Reeder&#13;
Jerry Disbennett&#13;
Brenda Swint&#13;
Steven Baughn&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Kathy Sparks&#13;
Danny Abell&#13;
Nona Russell&#13;
Ida Cockrell&#13;
Mark Hannah&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Sandra Miller&#13;
Mike Mosely&#13;
Beverly Davison&#13;
Vickie Sheward&#13;
Gordon Helton&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Mike Hardbarger&#13;
Charles Staton&#13;
Gary Condit&#13;
David Seelig&#13;
Gary Grandominico&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Stanley Whaley&#13;
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GRADE SIX--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
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Mr. Donald Kolodgy&#13;
Sally Davis&#13;
Scott Conant&#13;
Rita Gallogly&#13;
Curtis Boston&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Steve Liming&#13;
Carol Morgenstern&#13;
Charles Dickson&#13;
Connie Sue Muncie&#13;
Kurt Wall&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Linda Beddow&#13;
Thomas Chapman&#13;
Rex Barker&#13;
Judy Sharp&#13;
Billy Bolton&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Rhonda Hubbard&#13;
Larry Decker&#13;
Danny Bell&#13;
Marvie Estep&#13;
Lloyd Page&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Brenda Smith&#13;
Lester Kinniard&#13;
Linda McGrady&#13;
Eric Cordray&#13;
Daniel Riffle&#13;
&#13;
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Debbie Grant&#13;
Jim Prosser&#13;
Debbie Wilburn&#13;
Floyd Perdue&#13;
Diane Burwell&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Debbie Lawless&#13;
Terry Fowler&#13;
Rick Johnson&#13;
Randy Smith&#13;
Tony Peyton&#13;
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Row 1&#13;
Mr. Richard Link&#13;
Rita Noble&#13;
Eric Martindale&#13;
Ruth Castle&#13;
Mickey Davenport&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Helen Riffle&#13;
Debbie Mitchell&#13;
Ricky Lewis&#13;
Carolyn Lucas&#13;
Terry Shively&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Florence Cordle&#13;
Bill Clayton&#13;
Mike Fry&#13;
Kay Allen&#13;
Rick Garrabrant&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Donna Canaday&#13;
Jim Longshore&#13;
Betty Bolton&#13;
Jean Smith&#13;
Jimmy Kaufman&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
LeAnn Cockrell&#13;
Brent Culver&#13;
Brenda White&#13;
Steve Henry&#13;
Robert Wachtler&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Alice Rich&#13;
Jim Keene&#13;
Bruce Price&#13;
Frances Smith&#13;
Gene Ball&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Ricky Salyer&#13;
Mike Smith&#13;
Roger Webb</text>
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6th GRADE--HARLEM&#13;
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Mr. Donald Drury&#13;
Dawn Garee&#13;
Rickie Brown&#13;
Jeannette Piper&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Eugene Goodyear&#13;
Diana Horn&#13;
Bambi Allen&#13;
Jim Clark&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Greg Garee&#13;
Randy Bruce&#13;
Kathy Haines&#13;
Billy Neibarger&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Dick McCoy&#13;
Delores Goodyear&#13;
Danny Scarbury&#13;
Laura Holobaugh&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Gary Piper&#13;
Patty Pullins&#13;
Sara Carr&#13;
Jimmy Schlaegel&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Donna Horn&#13;
Mario Magennis&#13;
Debbie Arthur&#13;
Allen McElwee&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Steven Pierce&#13;
Diana Leaf&#13;
Melissa Ring</text>
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GRADE SIX--SUNBURY&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
 Mrs. Gertrude O'Connell&#13;
Ronnie Moodespaugh&#13;
Linda Cockrell&#13;
John Curtis&#13;
Rita Brookens&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
James Overturf&#13;
John Lane&#13;
Claudia Cook&#13;
Steven Crooks&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Fonda Gallogly&#13;
Joe Groves&#13;
Debra Heyder&#13;
Diana McNett&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Donald Boyd&#13;
Mary Murphy&#13;
Rickey Mead&#13;
Nancy Sechrist&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Danny Roshon&#13;
Raymond Saunders&#13;
Carol O'Bryan&#13;
Richard Newman&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Pat Reppart&#13;
Richard Glenn&#13;
Cynthia Sherbourne&#13;
Jeanine Bird&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Rebecca Cochran&#13;
Danny Saver&#13;
Debbie VanLoon&#13;
Rene' Watts</text>
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GRADE FIVE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mr. Edward Smith&#13;
Mark Perfect&#13;
David Williams&#13;
Mary Cordle&#13;
Gary Salyer&#13;
&#13;
Row 2 &#13;
Carolyn Comstock&#13;
Rebecca Adkins&#13;
Steve Marlow&#13;
Cynthia Smith&#13;
Gary Craig&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Cathy Ames&#13;
William Semon&#13;
David Wilson&#13;
Terry Phillips&#13;
Etta Angel&#13;
&#13;
Row 4 &#13;
Steve Kesler&#13;
Steve Hess&#13;
Rebecca Cantrell&#13;
Charles Porter&#13;
Larry Layton&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Diane Gallion&#13;
Terry Thompson&#13;
Debra Basham&#13;
Donald Cook&#13;
Charles Meade&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Debbie Smith&#13;
Dale Bernard&#13;
Cheryl Schultz&#13;
Louis Bachman&#13;
Esther Spickard&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Dennis Feazel&#13;
John Baker&#13;
Sue Overturf&#13;
Paul Henry&#13;
Margaret Peyton</text>
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GRADE FIVE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mr. Wm. Liming&#13;
Steve Morgenstern&#13;
Karla Levi&#13;
Steve Ulery&#13;
Melinda Curtis&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Chad White&#13;
Joey Shoaf&#13;
Teresa Murphy&#13;
Lee Lindsey&#13;
Michelle Carroll&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Dale Wolfe&#13;
Jody Hill&#13;
Mark Yates&#13;
Dale Davis&#13;
Susan Rigby&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Mike Pittman&#13;
Kathy Fuller&#13;
Keith McClintock&#13;
John Anderson&#13;
Vicky Lawless&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Steve Canaday&#13;
Teri Belknap&#13;
James Evans &#13;
Donna Wigton&#13;
Anita Redinbaugh&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Terry Baughman&#13;
Christine Warner&#13;
Jeff Boudinot&#13;
Cindy Walton&#13;
Gil Godshall&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Zane Layman&#13;
Barbara Boyd&#13;
Mike Chamberlin&#13;
Candy Boxwell&#13;
Ronnie Cooper&#13;
Terry Hummel</text>
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5th GRADE--HARLEM&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mr. Floyd Turner&#13;
Kim Pedersen&#13;
Mark Wurm&#13;
Christine Hill&#13;
David Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Debra Klamfoth&#13;
Janette Garrabrant&#13;
Rodney Blain&#13;
Deborah Cook&#13;
Mike Cluck&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Debra Jacobus&#13;
James Buxton&#13;
Danny Sherman&#13;
Kathy Finnicum&#13;
Mike Inghram&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Susan McElwee&#13;
David Neibarger&#13;
Debra Glassburn&#13;
Jackie McPherson&#13;
Richard Eberhard&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Deborah Wollett&#13;
Harry Stein&#13;
Sharon Mann&#13;
Ronnie Michels&#13;
Theresa Starr&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Martin Townsend&#13;
Kathleen Lines&#13;
Laura Black&#13;
Douglas Garrabrant&#13;
Deborah Tschakert&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Jaunita McClintic&#13;
Tena Hubbard&#13;
Marcelia Rhodeback&#13;
Joan Fisher&#13;
Charlene Clark</text>
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GRADE FIVE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Jean Diehl&#13;
Barry Gallogly&#13;
Marsha Shannon&#13;
Marvin Justice&#13;
Donna Evans&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
David Cockrell&#13;
Bobby Abell&#13;
Debra Krebs&#13;
Rick Meadors&#13;
Debra Day&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Tim Holland&#13;
Rebecca Bond&#13;
Cindy Meyers&#13;
Marvin Hall&#13;
Martha Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Tommy Williams&#13;
Susan Heil&#13;
Richard Zedaker&#13;
David Warner&#13;
Debra Davidson&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Don Warner&#13;
Carol Wigton&#13;
Mick Holly&#13;
Debra Skeens&#13;
Mona Sabados&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Mike Forman&#13;
Evie Bushee&#13;
Kevin Griffith&#13;
Warren Owen&#13;
Karen Evans&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Roy Hood&#13;
Douglas Warner&#13;
Janet Reese&#13;
Don Gallion&#13;
Terry Crooks&#13;
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[corresponds to page 15 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
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4th GRADE--HARLEM&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Kathryn Christopher&#13;
Samuel Myers&#13;
Kathy Garee&#13;
Mike Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Sue Hill&#13;
Ronald Rumery&#13;
Robert Hickman&#13;
Tonia McCoy&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
David Counts&#13;
Debra Moreland&#13;
Randy Thompson&#13;
Douglas Sager&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Jeraldene McClintic&#13;
Billy McNamer&#13;
Cathy Brown&#13;
Tom Steelesmith&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Terri Groves&#13;
Randall Michels&#13;
Bonnie Klamfoth&#13;
Connie Klamfoth&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Larry Piper&#13;
Mary Jane Thompson&#13;
Billy Walker&#13;
Brenda Bruce&#13;
Danny Allen&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Greg Leaf&#13;
Connie Ross&#13;
Phillip Hubbard&#13;
Steve Hiles&#13;
Joe Haines</text>
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[corresponds to page 16 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
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GRADE FOUR--SUNBURY&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Peggy Moore&#13;
Clyde Anderson&#13;
Regena Bell&#13;
Donnie Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Leslie Weber&#13;
Steve Shively&#13;
Tony Sewell&#13;
Sherry Muir&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Ronnie White&#13;
Teresa Cockrell&#13;
Doug Crowl&#13;
Kathy King&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Debbie Crooks&#13;
Jack Hampton&#13;
Barbara Cooper&#13;
Richard Agler&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
 Joy Hildreth&#13;
Jeff Shipman&#13;
Darwin Bingham&#13;
Candy Freeman&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Bret Nolting&#13;
Dottie McKenzie&#13;
Billy Zedekar&#13;
Sharma Burwell&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Brad Arrington&#13;
Mike Westfall&#13;
Cindy Lawhead&#13;
Joan Murphy (Not Pictured)</text>
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[corresponds to page 17 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE FOUR--GALENA&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Helen Kohberger&#13;
Gerald Mowery&#13;
Jean Trautwein&#13;
Donald Mann&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Mary Grandominico&#13;
Wesley Musgrave&#13;
Carol Shiveley&#13;
Susan Turner&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Arden McGinnis&#13;
Susan Cockrell&#13;
Michael Roof&#13;
Janet Miller&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Laura Hutchinson&#13;
Jimmy Burgess&#13;
Connie Blackstone&#13;
Wayman Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Sandra Stauch&#13;
Carolyn Fuller&#13;
Penny Adams&#13;
Wayne Hale&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Betty Longshore&#13;
Ronnie Hood&#13;
Billy Jo Gorley&#13;
Jock McClintock&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Vickie McClary&#13;
Marjorie Sparks&#13;
Robin Deal&#13;
Gary Low (Not Pictured)&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
GRADE FOUR--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Leah Cole&#13;
Randy Barcus&#13;
Diana Cantrell&#13;
Jon Ryder&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Terri Searles&#13;
David Beddow&#13;
Roger Hartley&#13;
Connie Castle&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Chris Ball&#13;
Laurie Stockwell&#13;
Richard Fisher&#13;
Debbie Smith&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Leslie Page &#13;
William Estep&#13;
Julie Abolins&#13;
Ronnie Mead&#13;
&#13;
Row 5 &#13;
Debra Drake&#13;
George Lindsey&#13;
Dale Cochran&#13;
larava White&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Donnie Bernard&#13;
Ruth Leitner&#13;
Fred Beaver&#13;
Diane Alward&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Dannie Johnson&#13;
Michael Bailey&#13;
James Burgess</text>
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[corresponds to page 19 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE FOUR--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1:&#13;
Miss Ruth Mills&#13;
Jon Edwards&#13;
Pamela Christy&#13;
Lee Meadows&#13;
&#13;
Row 2: &#13;
Karen Innis&#13;
Billy Jo Smith&#13;
Darrell Metzger&#13;
Sherry Riley&#13;
&#13;
Row 3:&#13;
David Watchler&#13;
Debra Colley&#13;
Mike Davenport&#13;
Mardissa Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Row 4:&#13;
Darlene Sparks&#13;
Bruce Morganstern&#13;
Robin Meadors&#13;
Billy Smith&#13;
&#13;
Row 5:&#13;
Kay Reese&#13;
Stanley Ecker&#13;
William Jones&#13;
Mara Lee Wheeler&#13;
&#13;
Row 6:&#13;
Danny Grau&#13;
Christa McLaughlin&#13;
David Rupe&#13;
Martha Selvage&#13;
&#13;
Row 7:&#13;
William Stamper&#13;
Eddy Russell&#13;
Erik Holmquist&#13;
Gary Cox (not pictured)</text>
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[corresponds to page 20 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE THREE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Pauline Richey&#13;
Daniel Williams&#13;
Tria George &#13;
Chris Lehrke&#13;
Janet Hines&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Tim Nolting&#13;
Charles Snyder&#13;
Brenda Jackey&#13;
Todd Arrington&#13;
Sharon Yoakam&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Frank Beaver&#13;
Sharon Gallion&#13;
Diane Cooley&#13;
Jack Christy&#13;
Rebecca Wilburn&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Michael Seitz&#13;
Brenda Cordle&#13;
Gregory Emler&#13;
Dann Stapp&#13;
Tine George&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Michael Wilson&#13;
Belinda Meade&#13;
William Puzines&#13;
Laura Sechrist&#13;
Freda Boudinot&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Michael Marsee&#13;
Martha Hall&#13;
Greg Decker&#13;
Cynthia Pohl&#13;
Donald McGlothlin&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Pamela Rife&#13;
Brian Lawless&#13;
Leah Gilmore&#13;
Keith McGrady&#13;
Della Cox (Not Pictured)</text>
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[corresponds to page 21 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE THREE--GALENA&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Virginia Martin&#13;
Charles Maroney&#13;
Cathy Shively&#13;
David Laslo&#13;
Susan Semon&#13;
Billy White&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Steve McNamara&#13;
Marla Mathews&#13;
Gary Milburn&#13;
Peggy Waggoner&#13;
Steve Wilson&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Marsha Hoke&#13;
Lisa Smith&#13;
Keith Wolfe&#13;
Theresa Clark&#13;
Terry Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Electa Davis&#13;
Billy Adkins&#13;
Mark Petry&#13;
Cheryl Bricker&#13;
Steve Breece&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Ronnie Burke&#13;
Max Howard&#13;
Brenda Pierce&#13;
Fay Hannah&#13;
Cheryl Roof&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Cecilia Baker&#13;
Steve Moseley&#13;
Melody Moore&#13;
Bonnie Sparks&#13;
Robert Cordle&#13;
Vicky Thorne&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Jerry Thorne&#13;
Laurie Hannah&#13;
Diana Marlow&#13;
Elizabeth Goodrich&#13;
Debbie Burke&#13;
Nancy Kean</text>
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[corresponds to page 22 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE THREE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Sandra Churchill&#13;
Tommy Jahn&#13;
Debbie McGee&#13;
Darrell Wampler&#13;
Randy Hawkinberry&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Velma Murphy&#13;
Ronnie Margraff&#13;
Brenda Gallogly&#13;
Randle Hughes&#13;
Pam Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Billy Riffle&#13;
Kevin Morris&#13;
Kathy Guiher&#13;
Greg Potter&#13;
Mary Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
 Jimmy Mitchell&#13;
Ronnie Agler&#13;
Sherry Kennedy&#13;
Bruce Canaday&#13;
Guy White&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
 Mike Webb&#13;
Sallye Edwards&#13;
Bobby McGraw&#13;
Sheila Fuller&#13;
Karen Klick&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Cecil Saunders&#13;
Candy Woods &#13;
Jeff Gill&#13;
Theresa Sewell&#13;
Danny Drake&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Lee Lindsey&#13;
Jerry Higgins&#13;
Patrick McGovern&#13;
Tony Russell</text>
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[corresponds to page 23 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
3rd GRADE--HARLEM&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Mary Wilburn&#13;
James Jacobus&#13;
Gary Thomas&#13;
Juliann Fisher&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Claude Cordell&#13;
John Yankie&#13;
Pamela Cluck&#13;
Tony Arthur&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Teresa Hiles&#13;
Timmy Mitchel&#13;
Jill Wurm&#13;
Gary Edwards&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Kandy McClintic&#13;
Tommy Allen&#13;
Barbara Peters&#13;
Chris Madeen&#13;
&#13;
Row 5:&#13;
Vicki Groves&#13;
Ricky Garrabrant&#13;
Beverly Pierce&#13;
Mark Blair&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Steve Finnicum&#13;
Jana Prather&#13;
David Hall&#13;
Sharon Glassburn&#13;
Wayne Bachman&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Floyd Finnicum&#13;
Donna Mayo&#13;
Jack Clark&#13;
Gregory Johnson&#13;
Mike Vanderkamp (Not Pictured)</text>
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[corresponds to page 24 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE THREE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Joyce Conley&#13;
Jeff Bergandine&#13;
Cathy Moodespaugh&#13;
Terry Liming&#13;
Pamela Russell&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Craig Adams&#13;
Gary Perfect&#13;
Cindy Muir&#13;
Jim McKenzie&#13;
Donna Wolfe&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Jeff Ward&#13;
Carol VanLoon&#13;
Cindy Griffith&#13;
Barry Cockrell&#13;
Debora Kean&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Steve Cantrell &#13;
Debra Agler&#13;
Joe Blanton&#13;
Jeff Brown&#13;
Melissa Ward&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Dan Henry&#13;
Donna Justice&#13;
Linda Gendt&#13;
Beth McGovern&#13;
Danny Edwards&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Shirley Conley&#13;
Ricky Lucas&#13;
Julie Bahl&#13;
John Dennison&#13;
Ronald Christian&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Charlene Berry&#13;
Kathy O'Bryan&#13;
Jeff Milem&#13;
Doug Hess&#13;
Ella Cox (Not pictured)&#13;
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[corresponds to page 25 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE TWO--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Mary Link&#13;
Leona Beddow&#13;
Craig Morgan&#13;
Sandy England&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Donald Gibson&#13;
Eric Wagner&#13;
David Hines&#13;
Randy Meadors&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Kim Dixon&#13;
John Bolton&#13;
Michelle Davis&#13;
Steven George&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Dennis Mankins&#13;
Teresa Cordle&#13;
Roby Zieschang&#13;
Jackie Pittman&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Michael Edwards &#13;
Edwin Day&#13;
Carolyn Davis&#13;
Fred Grove&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Renay Mann&#13;
Donald Marshall&#13;
Keli Gregg&#13;
Phil Ross&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Mike Corwin&#13;
Beth Durrett&#13;
Don Wymer&#13;
Julie McMains (Not pictured)&#13;
Matthew Murphy (Not pictured)</text>
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GRADE TWO--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Miss Kris Kullmann&#13;
Edgel Ross&#13;
Connie Carroll&#13;
John Christian&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Stephanie Barnett&#13;
Mike Puzines&#13;
Tom Holmes&#13;
Cindy Kesler&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Dennis Day&#13;
Denise Gallogly&#13;
Steve Beacom&#13;
Rita Sparks&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Barbara Wigton&#13;
Darrell Cooper&#13;
Rita Snyder&#13;
Brook Curtis&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Heidi Dennison&#13;
Jeff Sellers&#13;
Bobby Bowser&#13;
Linda Boyd&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Terry Woods &#13;
Karen French&#13;
Dennis Mitchell&#13;
Cheryl Hughes&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Steve White &#13;
Roger Henry&#13;
Ingrid Holmquist&#13;
Ralph Hummel &#13;
Arnold Bryant</text>
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[corresponds to page 27 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE TWO--GALENA&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Marie Adams&#13;
Johnny Goodrich&#13;
Susan Hutchison&#13;
Steve Nolan&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Mary Adams&#13;
Cinda Breece&#13;
David Hale&#13;
Anita Schultz&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Karl Strohecker&#13;
Pamela Wilt&#13;
Douglas McNamara&#13;
Celeste Swint&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Susanne Wheeler&#13;
Eddie Pierce&#13;
Debbie Gorley&#13;
Wayne Waggoner&#13;
Vivian Mann&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Julia Johnson&#13;
Bobby Baker&#13;
Christine Tomacelli&#13;
Richard Cordle&#13;
Barbara Blackstone&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Eric Sinnett&#13;
Susanna Hamilton&#13;
Jeffery Deal&#13;
Mary Helton&#13;
Randy Hood&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Colleen Howard&#13;
Michael Conley&#13;
Cindy Christian&#13;
Ricky Newlun&#13;
Jeff Low (Not pictured)</text>
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2nd GRADE--HARLEM&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
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Mrs. Helen Smith&#13;
Robert Rhodeback&#13;
Bonita Sherman&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Douglas Hall&#13;
Duane Piper&#13;
Michael Counts&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Daniel Hall&#13;
Carol McClintic&#13;
Hary Lou Kimes&#13;
Alan Davidson&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Vickie Tschakert&#13;
Dwight Piper&#13;
Allen Fling&#13;
Randy Smelser&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
 Susan Finnicum&#13;
Mark Jefferis&#13;
Jeffry Piper&#13;
Cheryl Blain&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Jeffrey O'Quinn&#13;
Donna McElwee&#13;
Steve McNamer&#13;
Debra Line&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Gary Schlaegel&#13;
Daniel Haines&#13;
Gregg Hiles&#13;
Homer Hill</text>
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[corresponds to page 29 of Big Walnut Elementary Schools, 1966]&#13;
&#13;
GRADE TWO--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Nancy Bryant&#13;
David Cooper&#13;
Belinda Conley&#13;
Richard Smith&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Brenda Jackson&#13;
Jeff Wickline&#13;
Joe Wachtler&#13;
Cheryl Hess&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Ronald Glenn&#13;
Kelly Jones&#13;
Mitch Davenport&#13;
Michael Dixon&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Derrill Warner&#13;
Jimmie Phillips&#13;
Cheryl Longshore&#13;
Mike West&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Tamara Searles&#13;
David Nelson&#13;
Richard Crooks&#13;
Sally Wirick&#13;
Daniel Cox&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Cindy Henry&#13;
Doug Boggs&#13;
Chuck Gause&#13;
Pamela Frakes&#13;
David Stockwell&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Wanita Franklin&#13;
Alan Cring &#13;
Sandra Holland&#13;
Kevin Price&#13;
Karin Bailey</text>
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1st GRADE--HARLEM&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Frances Mallow&#13;
Billy Cornell&#13;
Kelly Whitley&#13;
Philip Smelser&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Connie Stein&#13;
Terry Mitchell&#13;
Perry Madsen&#13;
Margie Glassburn&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Gale Gill&#13;
Tamara Garrabrant&#13;
Larry Wollett&#13;
Robert Piper&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Tamara Blair&#13;
Guy Garrabrant&#13;
Cheryl Richardson&#13;
Dwight Arthur&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Ricky Martin&#13;
Theresa Peters&#13;
Frank Meyers III&#13;
Pamela Fyffe&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Alan Clark&#13;
Marsha Garrabrant&#13;
Lawrence Pierce&#13;
Kathy Gill&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Tim Ring &#13;
Teresa Brown&#13;
Jeff Groseclose&#13;
Gary Johnson&#13;
&#13;
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GRADE ONE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1:&#13;
Miss Ruth Freeman&#13;
Billy Leitner&#13;
Darla Shultz&#13;
David Cooley&#13;
&#13;
Row 2: &#13;
Andy Angel&#13;
Polly Conley&#13;
Dean Saunders&#13;
Ruth Page&#13;
&#13;
Row 3:&#13;
Randy Higgins&#13;
Johnette West&#13;
Rodney Meadors&#13;
Mark Cring&#13;
&#13;
Row 4: &#13;
David Linnabary&#13;
Donald Barney&#13;
Lisa Bahl&#13;
Bobby Searles&#13;
&#13;
Row 5:&#13;
Andy Boudinot&#13;
Pam Burwell&#13;
Timmy Barnett&#13;
Lori Beaver&#13;
Danny McKenzie&#13;
&#13;
Row 6:&#13;
Susan Gallogly&#13;
Jim Ball&#13;
Bradley Nolting&#13;
Steven Meadows&#13;
Elizabeth Kusche&#13;
&#13;
Row 7:&#13;
Louis George&#13;
Greg Cockrell&#13;
Lucille Copeland&#13;
Bruce Ward&#13;
Greta Cox (Not Pictured)&#13;
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GRADE ONE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Vera Vroman&#13;
Keith Jackson&#13;
Stephanie Shipman&#13;
Mat Pittman&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Joyce VanSickle&#13;
Bruce Stauch&#13;
Ricky Potter&#13;
Sandra Lucas&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Brad Warner&#13;
Kathy Drake&#13;
Gee Fuller&#13;
Dell Ann Shultz&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Joan McGovern&#13;
Steve Edwards&#13;
Con-Dios Hovis&#13;
Marvin McGrady&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Kim Edwards&#13;
Tom Brown&#13;
Randy Smith&#13;
Thresha Bryant&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Jimmy Smith&#13;
Jackie Parker&#13;
Joe Bolton&#13;
Kelly Bateson&#13;
Martin Hall&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Lois Smith&#13;
Julie Bailey&#13;
Roger Adkins&#13;
Jim Hildreth&#13;
Craig Stapp</text>
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GRADE ONE--GALENA&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Helen Bond&#13;
Donald Semon&#13;
Lizabeth Sinnett&#13;
Jeffrey Mosely&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Kathleen Fultz&#13;
Marilyn Fuller&#13;
Cheryl Brown&#13;
Jacquelyn Maroney&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Eric Musgrave&#13;
Carrie Smith&#13;
Timothy Pierce&#13;
Teresa McGinnis&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Carol Brown&#13;
Robby Pierce&#13;
Paula Noland&#13;
Penny Mann&#13;
Debra Moore&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
Gregory Petry&#13;
Ronald Mackley&#13;
Theresa Tomacelli&#13;
Robert Miller&#13;
Janet Howard&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Stephan Jaschek&#13;
Susie Mullins&#13;
Carol Cockrell&#13;
Kenneth Friece&#13;
Tina Layman&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Russell Johnson&#13;
Nora Rowland&#13;
Edward Deim&#13;
Judy Burke&#13;
David Newlun&#13;
&#13;
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GRADE ONE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Bettie Lephart&#13;
John Kelling&#13;
Cheryl Johnson&#13;
Mike Meek&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Sheri Blanton&#13;
William Burgess&#13;
Andy Quail&#13;
Kay McElroy&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Kevin Reese&#13;
Judy Day&#13;
Philip Hardman&#13;
Sue Anderson&#13;
&#13;
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Brent Williams&#13;
James Clark&#13;
Edwin French&#13;
Debbie Stanley&#13;
&#13;
Row 5&#13;
John Bell&#13;
Donald Stover&#13;
Roger Smith&#13;
Theresa Thompson&#13;
Jimmy Christy&#13;
&#13;
Row 6&#13;
Jack Agler&#13;
Donna Stover&#13;
David Innis&#13;
Ken Marcum&#13;
Deborah Harper&#13;
&#13;
Row 7&#13;
Mike Saunders&#13;
Kathy Bateson&#13;
Billy Yoakam&#13;
Colleen Knapp&#13;
Tony Davis&#13;
&#13;
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GRADE ONE--SUNBURY&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
Row 1&#13;
Mrs. Mary Cosand&#13;
Gregory Bryant&#13;
Curtis Cockrell&#13;
Rebecca Nelson&#13;
Kevin Davis&#13;
&#13;
Row 2&#13;
Harlan Clark&#13;
Steve Laslo&#13;
Marilyn Russell&#13;
Ronnie Davis&#13;
Jeff McNichols&#13;
&#13;
Row 3&#13;
Clifton Conley&#13;
John Burgess&#13;
Mark Fowler&#13;
Joel Pierce&#13;
Pat Bowser&#13;
&#13;
Row 4&#13;
Lisa Rife&#13;
Pat Bowser&#13;
Mark Lawless&#13;
 Carlos Mitchell&#13;
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&#13;
Mrs. O'Bryan--Vocal Music [photo]&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Fritsche--Vocal Music [photo]&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
Miss Scott--Religious Education [photo]&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
YEARLY HONOR ROLL AND PERFECT&#13;
ATTENDANCE--GALENA&#13;
[photos]&#13;
&#13;
FRONT ROW&#13;
Gary Milburn--Perfect Attendance; Barbara Blackstone--Perfect Attendance; Janet Miller--Perfect Attendance; Penny Adams--Perfect Attendance.&#13;
BACK ROW&#13;
Mike Moseley--Perfect Attendance; Stanley Whaley--Perfect Attendance; Cheryl Bricker--Yearly Honor Roll; Wayne Hale--Perfect Attendance; Wayman Lawrence--Yearly Honor Roll.&#13;
&#13;
YEARLY HONOR ROLL 1964-65--SUNBURY&#13;
&#13;
1st ROW&#13;
Marsha Shannon, Etta Jean Angel, Cynthia Smith, Debra Skeens, Rene' Watts, Rita Brookens, Danny Saver, Sherry Muir, Jeff Shipman, John Lane.&#13;
2nd ROW&#13;
Janet Hines, Laura Sechrist, Melissa Ward, Mike Davenport, Theresa Cockrell, Donna Evans, Linda Gendt, Theresa Sewell, Mara Lee Wheeler, Randy Barcus, Ruth Castle.&#13;
3rd ROW&#13;
Karen Innis, Carol Morgenstern, Gil Godshall, Kay Allen, Fonda Gallogly, Nancy Sechrist, Jeff Milem, Brenda White, Candy Boxwell, Jody Hill, James Overturf, William Stamper.&#13;
&#13;
PERFECT ATTENDANCE--1964-65--SUNBURY&#13;
&#13;
1st ROW&#13;
Linda McGrady, Cheryl Shultz, Ricky Mead, Candy Boxwell, Dela Bernard, Kevin Griffith, Teri Searles, Barbara Cooper&#13;
2nd ROW&#13;
Kevin Morris, Ronnie Mead, Richard Fisher, John Christian, Ralph Hummel, Dennis Day, Guy White, Debbie Kean, Marvin Justice&#13;
3rd ROW&#13;
Jimmy Overturf, David Warner, Danny Roshon, Ricky Salyers, Jim Longshore, Cindy Sherbourne, Tom Chapman, Pat Reppart, Florence Cordle, Mark Perfect&#13;
&#13;
YEARLY HONOR ROLL--HARLEM&#13;
&#13;
FRONT ROW&#13;
Debbie Cook, Kim Pedersen, Christina Hill&#13;
BACK ROW&#13;
Mark Wurm, Debbie Jacobus, Jeanette Piper&#13;
&#13;
PERFECT ATTENDANCE--HARLEM&#13;
&#13;
FRONT ROW&#13;
Debbie Glassburn, Debbie Tschakert, Joan Fisher, Donna McElwee, Christina Hill&#13;
BACK ROW&#13;
Wayne Bachman, Rodney Blain, Jim Buxton, Maria McGinnis, Jim Schlaegel, Randy Bruce, Ricky Brown, Michael Counts&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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