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                  <text>This collection contains items related to the history and development of Galena, its residents, businesses and schools. It contains John Bricker Sr's postcard and photograph collection featuring images of Galena and Delaware, Helen Campbell's Slides, the book Welcome to the Village of Galena, written by Doris Bricker, Charlie (C.C.)  Bricker's wife. The personal correspondence of David E. Bricker and his son, Charlie (C.C.) Bricker,  appears here courtesy of John L. Bricker, son of John Sr. and Shirly  Bricker, and  A View of Galena, Ohio,  Both Past and Present by Floyd Siebert,  Adele Dunn and Phyllis Hollifield.</text>
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&#13;
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(38)&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds  to cover of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land rover&#13;
&#13;
1800's to 1900's&#13;
&#13;
By Bernard and Lola Dell Searles&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to title page of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
1800's to 1900's&#13;
&#13;
By Bernard and Lola Dell Searles&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Community Library&#13;
Sunbury, Ohio&#13;
1995</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to Acknowledgement page of From  Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
Acknowledgement&#13;
&#13;
There are several people that have been&#13;
instrumental in aiding me in the writing of my&#13;
"epistle'.  First of all, I thank Bob Green for&#13;
his book To Our Children's Children.  Without&#13;
Green's direction through the questions in his&#13;
book, my memories would never have been written for&#13;
the future family generations. Those questions &#13;
were like a spring board for my project. Second, I&#13;
than my husband, Bernard, for his patience with me&#13;
while relating his experience growing up and&#13;
especially while reliving his army trama and&#13;
travels. Third, I am deeply grateful to Polly Horn&#13;
and Marian Whitney of the community Library for&#13;
their direction and actual printing of the memoirs.&#13;
Last, but not least, my thanks goes to grandson,&#13;
Jay Wampler, for making the family tree on his &#13;
computer and for drawing the cover, "From Horse and&#13;
Buggy to the Moon Land Rover."&#13;
&#13;
My deepest gratitude to all of you!&#13;
Lola Dell (Lolly ) Searles</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 1, Table of Contents,  From  Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
TABLE OF CONTENTS&#13;
&#13;
Chapter I - Lolly  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   .   .  3&#13;
Story of Jennings Family and Lolly from Birth&#13;
to 5 years.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter I I - Bernard  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  15&#13;
Story of Bernard from birth to 6 yrs. and his&#13;
family story.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter III -  Elementary School - BJ - Lola    .  .  .   .  .   22&#13;
A comparison and contrast of our elementary&#13;
years.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter IV - Holidays and Celebrations  .   .    .  .  .   .  .  25&#13;
Special holidays as they were celebrated in&#13;
our separate families and our own family.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter V - High School  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   .  .  .  .   .    .  .  .   .   30&#13;
Both of our experiences as we attended and&#13;
graduated from Sunbury High School.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter VI - The Interval  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .    .  .  .   .   35&#13;
Lola's experience during college and teaching&#13;
during the war years.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter VII - An all Expense Tour .  .  .  .  .  .  .   .  .  .   .  .  44&#13;
BJ's army experiences 1942-1945&#13;
&#13;
Chapter VIII - Marriage   .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .   .  .  .   .  .  .   .  .   . 54&#13;
Our experience of almost 50 years of marriage.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter IX - This and That   .  .  .  .  .  .   .  .   .  .  .   .  .  .   .    83&#13;
Individual stories too important to omit&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.1.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 2  of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FORWARD&#13;
&#13;
This "epistle" is written for pure enjoyment,&#13;
using simple and easy to understand words and&#13;
sentences. It is not to be rated, criticized, nor&#13;
used for solving arguments. Bernard and I have&#13;
shared our experiences, good, and bad, with you. We &#13;
hope they bring more smiles than tears, but&#13;
remember we were never promised a rose garden&#13;
without thorns. Throughout the story Bernard or&#13;
B.J. and Lolly or Jen are synonymous, so we have&#13;
interchanged them often. Lolly's story is told in&#13;
first person; B.J.'s is in third person as he&#13;
related it. During our married years "I" and "he"&#13;
became "we" and "us." We also added a "This and &#13;
That" chapter of happenings that we forgot as we&#13;
 wrote the manuscript.&#13;
&#13;
The last 49 years of married life have been&#13;
full of love, loyalty to each other and family, and&#13;
a laboratory of laughter and mistakes. Now as we&#13;
come to the winter years of life, Barnard says,&#13;
"The old pioneer is heading for the frontier that&#13;
is no longer there." Jen is in his shadow.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.2.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 3 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
LOLLY&#13;
&#13;
Second Sunday, October 10, 1915, a little&#13;
greenish blue eyed girl was born to Bessie Farris&#13;
Jennings and Daniel Oscar Jennings - little Lois &#13;
Dell, a Libra. I have been told that I was a fussy&#13;
baby, but I really don't believe that myth.&#13;
&#13;
My mother died in February 1918 during the flu&#13;
epidemic of WWI. A week before I was five years&#13;
old, Dad married Millie Leach - the best step-&#13;
mother that was ever created. Mother and Dad had&#13;
two children, Raymond Leach (Ray) and Mary&#13;
Elizabeth (Lib). We never used the word "half."&#13;
We were brothers and sisters. I always said that I&#13;
was there first, so they didn't know I was a &#13;
"half."&#13;
&#13;
What a lucky girl I was to have grandparents&#13;
living very close to our family. My birth mother's&#13;
parents, Anna Culver Farris and Daniel Farris lived&#13;
about an 1/8 of a mile from us. Since both my dad&#13;
and grandfather were named Dan, people called them&#13;
"Dan and "Old Dan." As a result I called them&#13;
"Dad and O'dad." From then on, Grandpa became &#13;
"O'dad" to everyone. My step grandmother, Sophia&#13;
Leach, lived in Canal Winchester, and that was a&#13;
day's trip, so I didn't see her too often. Her&#13;
husband was dead when Mother and Dad were married,&#13;
thus I never knew him.&#13;
&#13;
Grandad Jennings's father John was married to&#13;
an Indian. Notice the high cheek bones in some of&#13;
our relatives. Grandad (Jerry) had two brothers,&#13;
Dan who went west on the Gold Rush of '49 and was&#13;
never heard from again, and Oscar who lived on the &#13;
Knox -Delaware County Line Road. Uncle Oscar had a&#13;
music box with big copper disks. As a child I&#13;
loved that music box, but it was sold at an auction&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.3.</text>
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                    <text>From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
to Oatfield Whitney, Sr. I hope someone in the&#13;
Whitney family still has it. Dad was named after&#13;
these two uncles.&#13;
&#13;
Grandad married Mary Elizabeth Williamson and&#13;
had four children - John, deceased at age&#13;
seventeen, Dad, Netta (Kirkpatrick) and Eve&#13;
(Stockwell).&#13;
&#13;
I had many aunts and uncles from three&#13;
families. My birth mother's sisters and brothers&#13;
were close to our family as were Dad's siblings.&#13;
The Farris family was Mae, a maiden lady who lived&#13;
with Grandma, my namesake, Lola Dell who died in&#13;
her youth of scarlet fever, Wello and George.&#13;
Uncle George lived in Philadelphia, and when he&#13;
visited everyone was ecstatic.&#13;
&#13;
Mother's Leach family was quite large. Ray&#13;
who was killed in WWI, Emerson who served in the &#13;
Rainbow Division of WWI, Harold, Tom, Mary, Nan,&#13;
Alice and of course Mother. It was a true&#13;
excursion when we visited Uncle Harold family&#13;
as they lived in Dayton.&#13;
&#13;
Grandma Farris's brothers and sisters, Jay&#13;
Culver, Belle Gorsuch, Bertha Headington and Erne&#13;
Culver, were very close to our family too and were&#13;
always included in family dinners - especially at&#13;
Christmas. Uncle Jay helped Dad with the farming,&#13;
gardening, butchering, etc, but his love was &#13;
fishing. He caught fish were no one else could.&#13;
I have the application for his 1913 fishing license&#13;
which I'll give to grandson Jay someday. Uncle&#13;
Jay's favorite saying was "By Jolly." He prefaced&#13;
almost any statement with "By Jolly."&#13;
&#13;
There is quite a story about Aunt Bertha and&#13;
Uncle Erne that embarrassed the family through the&#13;
years. Aunt Bertha's first husband Howard Trimmer,&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.4.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 5 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
ran off with Uncle Erne's first wife Lucille. That &#13;
wasn't done in those days! Grandma always said&#13;
"To boot, Howard took the best horse and the fancy&#13;
buggy leaving Aunt Bertha with a nag and a&#13;
clunker." By the time I was old enough to&#13;
remember, Aunt Bertha had married Fred Headington &#13;
and Uncle Erne had Blanche as his mate.&#13;
&#13;
My grandfathers were both characters. O'dad&#13;
Farris was a painter and plasterer. He always had&#13;
a big garden, but on a painting job he fell from a&#13;
ladder and had  to let Grandma take over the garden.&#13;
He loved baseball! Every fall he and mother would&#13;
listen to the World Series on the radio.&#13;
&#13;
O'dad's brother was Hi Farris who was Ethel&#13;
Wilcox's grandfather and Mardell Shultz and Bonnie&#13;
Higgins' great grandfather.&#13;
&#13;
Grandad Jennings was a widower and in his 70's&#13;
when I was a child. He lived with us the last&#13;
twenty years of his life and died at age 93 when I&#13;
was a freshman in college. In his youth he was a&#13;
Pony Express Rider. We kids were told big stories&#13;
about his experiences, but when we researched we&#13;
found he had ridden between Columbus and Newark.&#13;
At our house, he drove a horse and buggy, picked&#13;
berries, hunted yellow root, ginseng, etc., and&#13;
sold them to our local drug store. He had no teeth&#13;
but could eat anything he liked. He'd say "I&#13;
better eat it, or it'll spile." He chewed tobacco&#13;
constantly, but in the house he never spit. &#13;
(Mother would have exploded!) During the summer he&#13;
sat outdoors under a shade tree and spit a good&#13;
long spittle. One summer he was sitting under the&#13;
maple tree when a load of gypsies in a big black&#13;
car stopped. One woman tried to touch Grandpa's&#13;
pocket watch, he grabbed his cane and said, "You&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.5.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 6 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
x+x+x-bitch, back off or I'll knock your head off."&#13;
She must have believed him as she went back to the&#13;
car and they left.  Two grandparents so different,&#13;
but we loved them both.&#13;
&#13;
I had a cousin, Honor Farris (McClenathan),&#13;
who as a child came to stay every summer with&#13;
Grandma. She and I played house in O'dad's&#13;
corncrib. Our house was special with spool&#13;
telephones and an outside sun oven where we baked&#13;
our mud pies and cakes and decorated them &#13;
constantly with weed seeds. I'd go stay with her&#13;
in Edison later, but no mud pies.&#13;
&#13;
Dad's sister, Aunt Eva, lived in Berkshire. I&#13;
went to stay with her for a week but got so&#13;
homesick Dad had to come get me after 3 days.&#13;
&#13;
Dad's sister Nettie Jennings Kirkpatrick had a&#13;
large family. Russell, her oldest died quite&#13;
young. Her sons Don and Gerald were near my age,&#13;
Cecil was Ray's age, and Doris was Lib's age. We&#13;
had lots of fun with that family, but we lost track&#13;
of the younger ones, Dorothy and Leah, after Aunt&#13;
Nettie's death from meningitis after having her&#13;
teeth pulled. Aunt Eva had one son, Lawrence, who&#13;
was so much older than we were, we thought of him&#13;
as uncle. Her husband, John Stockwell, had been&#13;
killed when his steam engine went off the old Alum&#13;
Creek bridge on Rt. 37 years before.&#13;
&#13;
We really had no family reunions - but we&#13;
always celebrated Christmas with the Farris family.&#13;
What fun we had. In the summer we had Jennings&#13;
family picnics and in the fall - Leach Family&#13;
picnics. The Kirkpatricks and Jenningses made a&#13;
big group!&#13;
&#13;
Our family were all Presbyterians and&#13;
faithfully attended church. Dad was a trustee and&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.6.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 7 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
later an elder. He always said the preacher&#13;
couldn't flush the toilet unless he called Dad. We&#13;
kids rode to Sunday School with Grace, Edgar and&#13;
Clara Condit. When I was a child, I rode with them&#13;
in a surrey with the fringe on top.&#13;
&#13;
One of the important events of my youth in&#13;
church was Children's Day. We didn't have Daily&#13;
Vacation Bible School, but we spent many days &#13;
practicing for our Children's Day Program. We&#13;
always had new dresses then rather than at Easter.&#13;
The finale of the program was a "Drill" that Miss&#13;
Carrie Wilson taught us. I can hear her yet "1-2-3&#13;
turn" etc. She was strict. Even I didn't giggle.&#13;
&#13;
Our family never took vacations when I was a&#13;
child. My Dad was a farmer and always had cows to&#13;
milk night and morning every day! Once in a while,&#13;
he'd get a neighbor to do chores, and we'd visit a&#13;
step uncle, aunt or grandma. One thing we did&#13;
every year was our State Fair trip. We left after&#13;
the morning chores, took a picnic lunch, left it at&#13;
the Dispatch building for safe keeping and went on&#13;
our way to see all the sights of the fair. After &#13;
we had eaten our fried chicken picnic supper, we &#13;
trekked to the Grandstand for a great program and&#13;
the big finale of fireworks. What a great time we&#13;
had, and the ride home was so peaceful for our &#13;
parents, as the kids were asleep.&#13;
&#13;
An important person in my childhood was my&#13;
Grandma - how I loved her! When we had&#13;
housekeepers after mother's death, I spent many &#13;
days and nights at Grandma's. In the summer we ate&#13;
in a summer kitchen with a four burner kerosene&#13;
stove. There were no screens on the windows or&#13;
door, but Grandma had a big fan she used to keep&#13;
the flies away. I loved it! However, after Mother&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.7.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 8 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
came into the family, she didn't approve, but she&#13;
always let me go to Grandma's. Grandma in her&#13;
sunbonnet, Aunt Mae in an old straw hat, and I&#13;
picked blackberries together in the woods which&#13;
happens to be on our farm now. Grandma could jump&#13;
a fence like a deer. Grandma and I fished together&#13;
at the same place Uncle Jay caught big bass, but we&#13;
caught sunfish and bluegills - lots of them. She&#13;
would fillet every one of those fish and we'd have&#13;
a feast! Grandma always helped with the butchering&#13;
at our house. She let me clean the hog intestines&#13;
(tripe) and help stuff them for sausage links.&#13;
When Dad threshed the wheat, Grandma would bring&#13;
her straw tick down to fill it with fresh clean&#13;
straw; then she and I hauled it on my little red&#13;
wagon up the road to her house - giggling all the &#13;
way!&#13;
&#13;
I know now that Dad was the boss of the family&#13;
- but a loving one. He handled all the finances&#13;
and was always telling, "We missed the sheriff's&#13;
sale this time." He shaved with a straight razor&#13;
and honed it on a big razor strap (actually 2&#13;
fastened at one end). I can't ever remember his ever&#13;
hitting us with it.  All he had to do was crack it&#13;
together!  He did "skutch" me (as he called it ) once&#13;
with a corn stalk all the way home from our&#13;
neighbors for running away. That corn stalk hurt&#13;
nothing but my pride, especially when the folks&#13;
from the Condit Store came out on the porch to&#13;
watch Dan "skutch" that kid.&#13;
&#13;
Mother never worked outside the home, but&#13;
worked constantly at home. She was an outstanding&#13;
cook and baker. Too she mended everything we had!&#13;
I know now what an effort that was as she hated to&#13;
sew and actually didn't know how, but she could&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.8.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 9 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
darn socks and patch overalls. Mother had one&#13;
method for her own money. The egg money was hers&#13;
for groceries, but her big money maker was raising&#13;
ducks every year for her Christmas money. I&#13;
remember one July I came downstairs as a youngster&#13;
seeing Mother pitting cherries with tears running&#13;
down her face and dripping into the pan of &#13;
cherries. A mink had been in the duck pen and&#13;
killed every duck by biting it through the throat.&#13;
There went her Christmas money!&#13;
&#13;
Our family always ate meals together. Dad set&#13;
at the end of the table, Mother on one side and&#13;
Grandad opposite her.  The youngest always sat on&#13;
the right of Dad between him and Mother, the next&#13;
older sat on Dad's left. I sat at the end opposite &#13;
him. Ray thought he was big stuff when he moved to &#13;
Dad's left.&#13;
&#13;
Grandma Farris was the seamstress in our&#13;
family. She made almost all my clothes - many of&#13;
them from Elizabeth Ketcham's hand-me-downs.&#13;
Ironically she was the daughter of the family who&#13;
owned our present home. Grandma always had trouble&#13;
keeping me quiet as she tried on my cloths. She'd&#13;
say. "let it go - it'll never be seen on a&#13;
galloping horse anyway." Mother wanted me to learn&#13;
to sew and had me join 4-H. Grandma and I got A's&#13;
easily. When Lib was four, I made her a dress in&#13;
4_H. Grandma had me rip out the tucks on the &#13;
shoulder so much she had to patch it, but we got an&#13;
A. Lib became the seamstress in the family. She&#13;
tailors shirts, suits and makes beautiful dresses.&#13;
Too she is an outstanding quilter and teaches a &#13;
class in our church.&#13;
&#13;
The Great Depression affected everyone, but&#13;
some how we kept our farm payments paid and always&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.9.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 10 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
had food, vegetables and meat as we raised them.&#13;
&#13;
Hog butchering day was a fun time, but lots of&#13;
work! Uncle Jay and Dad built a fire and put a big&#13;
iron kettle of water over it to get it boiling hot.&#13;
After the hog was shot, they poured the boiling&#13;
water in a barrel to scald the hog. To do this&#13;
they slowly dipped the hog in the barrel scraping&#13;
it across the rim to loosen the hair, repeating&#13;
several times until the hair could easily be&#13;
scraped off the skin. Then they raised the hog&#13;
with a block and tackle and gutted it. They tried&#13;
to choose a sunny but cold day so the hog would&#13;
"cool out" fast. However the process took an &#13;
entire day. The next step was to cut it up into&#13;
hams, shoulders, side meat, back bones, ribs and&#13;
tenderloin. Plus all the fat was saved and the&#13;
next day Dad and Uncle Jay rendered lard from the&#13;
fat in that same big iron kettle. Lard was our&#13;
shortening in those days. From this rendering came&#13;
pork rinds or "cracklings" - Oh so good! Dad cured&#13;
the hams, shoulders and some side meat and stored &#13;
it in the cellar.&#13;
&#13;
Some of the meat was brought into the house to&#13;
the women who ground it into sausage. Grandma and&#13;
Aunt Mae came to help Mother - maybe several days.&#13;
One of the duties of the women was to clean the&#13;
tapes (intestines) and soak them in salt water for&#13;
stuffed sausage. We had a sausage press which&#13;
pushed the ground sausage through a tube to which&#13;
the tape was fastened - presto sausage links!&#13;
Grandma and I had that job, but we made it fun and&#13;
giggled through the process. Some of the sausage &#13;
was made into patties which Mother "fried down" and&#13;
canned, covering it with grease to preserve it. &#13;
Too, she "cold packed' the tenderloin. This was&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.10.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 11 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
the method of putting  the tenderloin in cans then&#13;
putting then in a water bath in a wash boiler and&#13;
boiling for three hours. Delicious!&#13;
&#13;
When we butchered a beef, the front quarters&#13;
were cold packed, but the hind quarters were kept&#13;
in a cold room where Dad cut roasts, steaks, etc.&#13;
as we needed them.&#13;
&#13;
During the Depression we used feed sacks for&#13;
everything. Mother boiled the plain sacks until&#13;
they were pure white as snow and Grandma made&#13;
sheets, pillow cases, and towels from them. The&#13;
printed sacks she made into aprons, and Lib and I&#13;
even had dresses from them. We didn't feel&#13;
under privileged as everyone we knew was doing the&#13;
same thing.&#13;
&#13;
We were always a happy family although we&#13;
worked hard but we enjoyed it and always  had the&#13;
necessities of life. Dad and Mother belonged to a &#13;
community club that played "Rook" and to the Guild&#13;
of the church, a social group for families. Dad&#13;
was a member of the Masonic Lodge in Sunbury, but&#13;
Mother never joined Eastern Star. Mother belonged&#13;
to the "Larkin Club," a group of community women&#13;
who had social meetings, ordered from a book almost&#13;
anything they wanted and somehow received prizes&#13;
for certain orders. Mother did her mending at the&#13;
meetings: Mother mended something constantly.&#13;
&#13;
No one in our family caused trouble. Ray had&#13;
a temper but Dad controlled that early on. Ray&#13;
teased Lib a lot - but Mother didn't understand.&#13;
As a child Lib loved to color pictures with &#13;
crayons, and she was very particular about staying&#13;
in the lines, etc. Ray would take a pencil and hit&#13;
her crayon just enough to send it out of the lines.&#13;
Lib would cry and say, "Ray's mean to me." Mother&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.11.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 12 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
immediately called from another part of the room,&#13;
"Raymond, don't touch Elizabeth. "Ray did not tell a&#13;
lie, he'd say, "I didn't touch her!"  He didn't but&#13;
his pencil was surely knocking that crayon around&#13;
ruining her pretty picture.&#13;
&#13;
Dad worked hard, but always took an hour at&#13;
noon to rest and smoke his pipe. We had one chair&#13;
in the house that was Dad's. Whoever was sitting&#13;
in it was up immediately when Dad entered the room.&#13;
He'd say "Sit still," but believe, no one did.&#13;
His theory was - 'It doesn't pay to sit around &#13;
worrying. If you can do something about a problem,&#13;
get busy and do it! If it's beyond your control,&#13;
let it be!' Also he believed a person had to take&#13;
a stand on his beliefs, but never be disrespectful&#13;
in doing it and be able to take criticism. He&#13;
always said, "You never find rocks under a green&#13;
sour apple tree."  Aunt Mae just didn't understand&#13;
Dad's theory about worry and said, "no one down&#13;
there ever worries, so I have to do it. Someone&#13;
has to take care of them and do a little worrying."&#13;
&#13;
We always had pets growing up. Our old dog&#13;
"Watch" lived to be very old. Our cats were barn &#13;
cats. I can remember Dad squirting milk, and the&#13;
cats sitting there by the cows catching it in their &#13;
mouths while he was milking.&#13;
&#13;
I was born in a big square white house which&#13;
still stands on Rt. 61 just north of and on the &#13;
same side of the road as the Nazarene church, but&#13;
we moved a year later to our family home old 3C, &#13;
the first house east of the junction of old 3C and &#13;
Condit Road. It too was a large two story white&#13;
house with three porches, a summer kitchen and an&#13;
 attic. After my mother died, Dad sold the place,&#13;
all the animals, etc., and we lived with my Uncle&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.12.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 13 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
George in Columbus. I'm not sure of the story, but&#13;
in 3 months Dad had bought back everything, and we&#13;
moved home. When I was teaching in Miamisburg in&#13;
1942, a group of us went to a fortune teller who&#13;
told me the above story which I had never heard.&#13;
When I asked Dad he said, "Yes that happened, but I&#13;
never told. you. You were too small." Scary, huh?&#13;
&#13;
I can never remember having our back door&#13;
locked. In fact - we didn't have a key. After the&#13;
3-C was built, our front doors were kept locked,&#13;
but no one ever used them. Everyone followed the&#13;
stone walk to our back door.&#13;
&#13;
Until after I graduated from college, our&#13;
kitchen and dining room were combined in one room&#13;
with a walk in pantry off it. As a child I do not&#13;
remember an ice box. We would hang our food down&#13;
in the cistern in a bucket to keep it cool. Too,&#13;
our "cellar" was cool, and we kept some foods plus&#13;
all our home canned goods down there. That cellar&#13;
had 12 inch square black walnut beams in it.&#13;
&#13;
We had a "Watkins Man," Dave Allison, who came&#13;
by to sell us vanilla, spices, and liniment. "Nan,&#13;
he was your friend, Joyce Edwards' grandfather."&#13;
He seemed to manage to arrive at our house about&#13;
noon and ate many meals with us. Another huckster&#13;
who dealt with us was a man named Hogue who sold&#13;
fresh fish. Mother always bought or traded eggs&#13;
with him for fresh pickerel. I think they are&#13;
called walleyes now. Mother saved her egg money &#13;
and on Saturday nights we went to town to buy our&#13;
groceries. Until I went to high school, we shopped&#13;
at MacGuire's grocery, and Miller and Tuttle&#13;
Department Store in Centerburg.&#13;
&#13;
After I started high school in Sunbury, our&#13;
family traded at Kroger's and Root's Department&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.13.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 14 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Store in Sunbury. The eggs that we didn't sell&#13;
along the road, we'd trade to Kroger's for&#13;
groceries. Saturday night was a big night as I&#13;
could meet friends and walk around the square while&#13;
Dad and Mother shopped. I'm sure I walked a&#13;
hundred miles during those years. Eddie Haller had&#13;
a popcorn machine and sold popcorn on the street.&#13;
Somehow he liked me and would give me a couple&#13;
sacks every Saturday night to munch on as we &#13;
walked.&#13;
&#13;
We lived on a farm in Condit on the 3-C&#13;
Highway. In fact Dad helped build the road in&#13;
1922. Of course that road is now called old 3-C as&#13;
we have a new Rt. 3.  Dad used his horses and a bit &#13;
slip shovel to move dirt for the road bed. Mother&#13;
hated it as everything was covered with dust the&#13;
entire summer and Ray was a baby.&#13;
&#13;
Turnbulls, who had two daughters Emogene (my&#13;
age) and Marjorie June (Lib's age), lived on the&#13;
corner of Rt. 3 and Condit Road. Francis Ryan,&#13;
Ray's friend, lived close by, too. In summer we&#13;
played croquet - never took the set down except to&#13;
mow. We girls swam in the creek down by Turnbull's&#13;
bridge. Emogene saved Lib's life there. We held&#13;
on to a board to swim in deep water. When Lib fell&#13;
off, I just screamed, but Emogene pulled her out as&#13;
she was going down the third time.&#13;
&#13;
Eloise Tucker was another childhood friend&#13;
with whom I played. One day she sat in a cow pie&#13;
(by mistake). I used Mother's spatula to try to&#13;
scrape it off, but couldn't. We took her clothes&#13;
to her house and put them in the washer with cold&#13;
water. Needless to say we were in BIG TROUBLE!&#13;
&#13;
An event I'll never forget was the Klu Klux&#13;
Klan renting a pasture field from Dad and burning a&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.14.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 15 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
big cross. There were hundreds of people there.&#13;
Only a few wore Klan outfits, but it was the&#13;
biggest celebration of the time. Why Dad let them&#13;
do it I do not know.&#13;
&#13;
Our corner grocery was across from Turnbull's&#13;
house. We ran a running bill which Dad paid every&#13;
week. Charley and Lucy McElwee (Mr. and Mrs. to&#13;
us) owned the store and always gave us candy. Once&#13;
when Ray wanted something and Mother said we didn't&#13;
have the money, he said "Go to McElwee's. We&#13;
don't have to pay for it there." &#13;
&#13;
We lived so close to Grandma and O'dad Farris&#13;
that I was at their house as much as at home.&#13;
O'dad died in 1933,   just before I started college,&#13;
Grandma in 1940. when Grandma died, my Uncle Wello&#13;
gave me a black ugly stand which I didn't want, but&#13;
Mother made me take it. Many years later when I&#13;
married, she gave me the stand. Again, I didn't&#13;
want it, but Bernard said, "We'll take it," and now&#13;
it is one of my most prized possessions. Bernard&#13;
took the black paint layer off with a toothbrush. &#13;
It has birds eye maple insets which couldn't even&#13;
be noticed when it was that awful black. Also I&#13;
have 6 handmade chairs that were my great&#13;
grandmother Culver's. My grandma always wanted&#13;
them, but one of her sisters, Belle Gorsuch, had&#13;
them. She willed them to another sister, Bertha&#13;
Headington, who later willed them to me. Poor&#13;
Grandma was gone, but I have the chairs.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.15.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 16 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
BERNARD&#13;
&#13;
Five Searles brothers come to New Jersey and&#13;
each went to a different state. Frank Peter&#13;
(Bernard's great grandfather) came to Paulding&#13;
County then to Croton and next to Delaware County&#13;
in 1826.&#13;
&#13;
November 18, 1914, Bernard Jay Searles was&#13;
born to Minnie E. Mead Searles and Jay M. Searles&#13;
(Peter's grandson). He joined his brother Arlo and&#13;
sisters Lillian and Mildred.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard's grandparents all lived close to him.&#13;
His grandfather Theodore Peter Searles and&#13;
grandmother Helen Searles lived just a half&#13;
mile down the road from him, so he could always get&#13;
Grandma's cooking including her cookies that she&#13;
kept in her special cookie jar. Grandpa kept dried&#13;
beef (which Bernard loved) hanging behind the&#13;
stove, but Bernard never learned Grandpa's method&#13;
of drying meat. Grandpa Searles was in the Civil &#13;
War in Co. H 121st Infantry of the Ohio Volunteer&#13;
Infantry. He never wanted to talk about his &#13;
experiences in the war but he said to Bernard,&#13;
"Son, someday you'll be in one." Bernard was in&#13;
WWII.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard used to sit on a block of wood beside&#13;
his grandpa to listen to many stories after he had&#13;
helped with chores - shelling corn for the Plymouth&#13;
Rock chickens, sawing wood with a cross cut saw,&#13;
and gardening by learning to plant by the signs of&#13;
the moon. Grandpa also taught Bernard weather&#13;
signs - mare's tails, mackerel skies, rings around&#13;
the moon, and rainbows. For some reason neither&#13;
ever found the pot of gold at the end of the&#13;
rainbow. Some of Grandpa's sayings that Bernard&#13;
remembers are: "Take anything that anyone gives&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.16.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 17 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
you, even if you throw it away on the way home" and&#13;
it's a damned poor ride that doesn't beat a walk."&#13;
Every fall these two buddies gathered walnuts and&#13;
hickory nuts for Grandma's goodies.&#13;
&#13;
The Mead grandparents, Bailey T. Mead and Eva&#13;
Orcutt Mead lived in Sunbury on Columbus Street.&#13;
He was a painter and paper hanger. However,&#13;
Bernard didn't enjoy the profession. He worked for&#13;
two weeks for this grandpa and never received even&#13;
a "thank you," so he quit!&#13;
&#13;
Dad  Searles' sister, Ora Searles De Haven and&#13;
daughter Helen of Cleveland visited the Searles'&#13;
farm for several weeks each summer. During that &#13;
time other aunts and uncles including Mrs. Searles'&#13;
sister, Pearl, and husband Walter Engel came for a &#13;
big picnic.&#13;
&#13;
The Searles family all attended and were &#13;
members of the Methodist Church in Berkshire. The&#13;
kids walked to Sunday School every Sunday to earn&#13;
the special attendance pin. Berkshire also had&#13;
Children's Day celebration for which they practiced&#13;
and again the Searles kids walked in the hot sun to&#13;
practice. This was not Bernard's favorite event!&#13;
&#13;
Bernard realizes now that his father handled &#13;
the money in the family. Times were rough,&#13;
especially during the depression. He also ruled&#13;
the family with a kind hand. There was a big&#13;
cherry tree in their back yard, and when Bernard&#13;
was big enough to pick cherries, he had to use a&#13;
ladder because the first cherry was 30 feet above&#13;
the ground. He was sure this was caused by dad&#13;
pulling sprouts off to switch him for "little"&#13;
mistakes, so when he picked that first cherry he&#13;
ate it! You see his dad had killed a peach tree&#13;
from pulling sprouts. What does this tell you&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.17.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 18 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
about young Bernard? There must have been many&#13;
"little" mistakes! Since Bernard was the baby of&#13;
the family, he was bossed by everyone, or so he&#13;
felt. Older brother Arlo caused  BJ trouble until&#13;
he was big enough to get control of the situation.&#13;
&#13;
One escapade that Bernard remembers is the&#13;
horse purchase. Mr. Searles bought a horse at a&#13;
sale about 15 miles from their home. Early the&#13;
next morning Bernard was supposed to lead the horse&#13;
home, but after several miles he was so tired that&#13;
he stopped the horse by a culvert and crawled on to &#13;
ride. Everything was going well until Dad Searles&#13;
arrived with a sandwich for Bernard's lunch. Mr.&#13;
Searles was not a happy man! He made BJ get off&#13;
"skutched" him, and said "I don't want you to ride&#13;
this horse, lead it!" Again poor Bernard wore out&#13;
and started to ride. In fact, he rode that horse &#13;
up to the barn door. Mr. Searles said nothing. Do &#13;
you think he realized at that moment that Bernard&#13;
had a mind of his own?&#13;
&#13;
The family dogs, Old Fannie and Old Shep, were&#13;
like family members. Do you think they were called&#13;
"old" as pups, or was that word added in honor of&#13;
their age? Once a bull put Mr. Searles up a tree&#13;
until Old Fannie heard him calling, "Fannie&#13;
Fannie." She came running, took the bull by the &#13;
tail and chased him across the field so Dad Searles&#13;
could get down and out of the field. All the &#13;
family credit Old Fannie for saving Mr. Searles'&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
BJ's mother was a good seamstress, sewing not&#13;
only for her family, but for many people in the&#13;
community. She also did beautiful needlework which&#13;
her daughter Lillian learned well from her.&#13;
Everyone in the family has a doily or scarf as a&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.18.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 19 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
keepsake. Also Mother Searles controlled her part&#13;
in the family. They always had their meals&#13;
together, and when she rang her dinner bell,&#13;
everyone headed for the house with no questions&#13;
asked. Anyone who didn't come when the bell rang.&#13;
didn't eat! She fixed a meal one time and one time&#13;
only! Also each person had a special place at the &#13;
table. Bernard sat between his mother and dad. BJ&#13;
is sure that his parents were happy although they&#13;
had to work very hard and be very frugal. They&#13;
belonged to community clubs and enjoyed those&#13;
social times. Dad Searles belonged to the Masonic&#13;
Lodge and both belonged to the order of the Eastern&#13;
Star, serving as Worthy Matron and Worthy Patron,&#13;
and in later years Dad Searles served as Worthy&#13;
Patron for his daughter Lillian.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard remembers his dad believed hard work&#13;
was good for a person and always said that a man&#13;
with a gun and/or a fishing pole would never amount&#13;
to a damn. Peculiar, as Bernard loved to hunt and &#13;
trap and was an avid fisherman, and surely was&#13;
not a failure!&#13;
&#13;
The Searles home on south Galena road about&#13;
one half mile south of Berkshire was a big brick&#13;
house with four bedrooms upstairs and a living&#13;
room, parlor, kitchen and dining room on the first&#13;
floor. Everyday meals were eaten in the kitchen,&#13;
but Sunday, company and thresher meals were always&#13;
in the dining room.  They had a solid oak table&#13;
that would extend to seat fourteen people.&#13;
Nan and Keith have that table as their dining room &#13;
table. now.&#13;
&#13;
The Searles' had a piano in their parlor which&#13;
Bob Searles has now. It is a beautiful piece of&#13;
furniture.  Both BJ's mother and Lillian played the &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.19.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 20 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
piano, and Bernard took lessons, but he hated every&#13;
minute as he couldn't understand his teacher who&#13;
had no palate. She was the daughter of Frank B.&#13;
Willis who was running for president but had a&#13;
fatal heart attack on the stage at Ohio Wesleyan&#13;
while giving a campaign speech.&#13;
&#13;
There were five fireplaces in the house, but &#13;
they were all blocked off as they were not heat&#13;
effective. However, they made good places to hang&#13;
Christmas stockings.&#13;
&#13;
The Searles' front doors were always locked as&#13;
the house was so large that no one could hear the&#13;
front door opening . They kept their food in a well&#13;
as my family did until BJ was a freshman in high&#13;
school. Then they had an ice box and the ice man,&#13;
Wello Crowl, delivered ice once a week. Of course&#13;
living in the country, they had their mail&#13;
delivered by John Domigan in a horse driven buggy.&#13;
However there was not so much junk mail as today.&#13;
&#13;
Dave Allison sold them Watkins goods too, but&#13;
BJ doesn't remember having him stay for lunch.&#13;
Bernard's family traded eggs for groceries at the &#13;
Red and White Store on the corner of the east side&#13;
of the square.&#13;
&#13;
The Searles family farmed, milked cows, and&#13;
raised turkeys. Bernard says that his mother&#13;
raised Turkeys and he chased them. He had many &#13;
chores even as a young boy both morning and evening&#13;
with the light of a kerosene lantern. On chilly&#13;
mornings when he went after the cows barefooted,&#13;
he'd run from cow to cow and stand, where it had&#13;
been lying to warm his feet.&#13;
&#13;
An old gentleman, Emery Young, gave Bernard an&#13;
old ewe, and from that old ewe he had a flock of 33&#13;
sheep which he sold when he left the farm to work&#13;
&#13;
.20.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 21 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
at Sears after graduating from high school.&#13;
&#13;
As a young boy BJ mowed with a real type&#13;
mower, the big yard which surrounded their house.&#13;
He mowed not only his yard but also his&#13;
grandfather's and a neighbor's (Roland Neilson) who&#13;
gave him $.50 for mowing a BIG yard.&#13;
&#13;
Two events of Bernard's youth impressed him&#13;
all through the years. First is the reading&#13;
session his mother had every time the Ohio Farmer&#13;
arrived. Zane Gray had a continuing story about&#13;
Indians and settlers in the magazine. Mrs. Searles&#13;
read the story by kerosene lamp to the entire &#13;
family, and everyone looked forward to the arrival&#13;
of the magazine. The second is seeing the burning&#13;
of the effigy of Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany in the&#13;
Sunbury square after the end of WWI. Sitting on&#13;
his father's shoulders he could see and hear the&#13;
entire celebration. Two of Sunbury's businessmen,&#13;
Herb Irwin and Chan Root, were standing on either&#13;
side of Mr. Searles. They each patted Bernard on&#13;
the shoulder and said, "You'll never forget this as &#13;
long as you live," and he hasn't.&#13;
&#13;
As a small child Bernard like to run away and&#13;
see his neighbors, as I did. The neighbor always&#13;
called his mother, and someone would go after him.&#13;
His mother stopped that by tying him to the&#13;
clothesline!&#13;
&#13;
Although there was a group of boys who played&#13;
together, Carl Hough and Alton Wigton were his best&#13;
buddies. They swam in the creek and slid on the&#13;
ice in the winter. These activities were only when&#13;
there wasn't farm work to be done.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.21.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 22 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - BJ AND LOLA&#13;
&#13;
Bernard went to Berkshire Elementary School&#13;
which still stands on Rt. 37 across from the &#13;
present Bent Tree Golf Course. His neighbor Paul&#13;
Curtis Williams started in first grade with him and&#13;
graduated with him 12 years later. Kindergarten&#13;
was not heard of in those days. When a child was&#13;
ready for school he went. Of course Bernard walked&#13;
to school with the other neighborhood kids for the&#13;
first four years. The school was consolidated with&#13;
Sunbury just before his fifth year, and he rode the&#13;
bus from then on with his dad as driver. Since&#13;
there was no cafeteria, Bernard carried his lunch,&#13;
and he says he lived on cheese and bologna&#13;
sandwiches.&#13;
&#13;
I guess Condit wasn't as advanced as Berkshire&#13;
as I went all eight grades to country school about&#13;
1/2 mile from my childhood home. In fact it was&#13;
next door to our present home at 4568 North State&#13;
Route 3, and the kids carried water from this house&#13;
to the school for our big common water jar with its&#13;
dipper. Condit was proud of that one room brick&#13;
schoolhouse with the big round stove in the center&#13;
which the teacher fired. In my eight years, we had&#13;
five different teachers who not only taught but&#13;
acted as janitor too. A coal shed and two&#13;
outhouses completed the school "campus." Of course&#13;
I walked to school too with a group of kids from&#13;
down the road. We had no Phys-ed in those days and&#13;
didn't need it. Although I started school in&#13;
September and wasn't 5 until October, I made it! I&#13;
was driving my Dad crazy so the teacher, Mabel&#13;
Huffman, made a deal. She'd let me try, if it&#13;
worked OK, if not I'd repeat the grade. Everything&#13;
was easy and so much fun! As a result, I passed&#13;
&#13;
.22.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 23 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
every year and graduated from high school at age&#13;
16.&#13;
&#13;
One of our games in elementary school was&#13;
"ante-over" the shed. The bigger boys played it&#13;
over the school house. Tag, Run Red Rover, Hide&#13;
and Seek were good games too. In winter we slid&#13;
down the hill in a field near the school house.&#13;
&#13;
I was very cold in the winter so Mother made&#13;
me wear long underwear. When I got to school, I'd&#13;
go to the "outhouse" and roll my underwear above my &#13;
knees. Sometimes I'd forget to put them back down&#13;
before I left school, so I'd have to fix them while &#13;
sitting on the front porch before going into the &#13;
house.&#13;
&#13;
As I look back on it, we had some strange&#13;
people in our school. We had a bully in our&#13;
school, Hezz Conner. One day as we were lined up&#13;
to march into school at recess, Hezz set Violet&#13;
Condit Lee's hair on fire. The last I heard of him&#13;
he was in jail. We had 2 brothers (Forest and Jim&#13;
Edwards) in school who really disliked even the&#13;
idea of going to school. In the spring and fall&#13;
during good weather, they'd jump out the window and&#13;
go home. No one ever did anything about their&#13;
escapades.&#13;
&#13;
One fall a boy, Willard Schoonover, ran away&#13;
from school out into a corn field where he sat&#13;
beside a big cornshock. A storm was brewing so the&#13;
teacher took the entire school, all 15 of us, out&#13;
to hunt him. When we found him, he picked up a&#13;
big, big rock and holding it over his head said,&#13;
"Don't come near me or I'll drop it!" The teacher&#13;
made us all turn around and go back to the school.&#13;
All the way back I kept thinking, I'd have said, &#13;
"Go ahead!' and I'd have gone right up to him.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.23.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 24 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I'm sure he was bluffing. Later during the storm&#13;
Willard came in dripping wet to sit by the big&#13;
stove to get dry.&#13;
&#13;
We always had programs at school which the&#13;
community attended. One Christmas, Dad picked up&#13;
all the neighbors in our big sled pulled by two&#13;
horses to take them to the school program. The&#13;
program was so long and the students had to stand&#13;
on the stage the entire time. I had to go to the&#13;
bathroom so bad, so I did! My long underwear was &#13;
really absorbent, so nobody knew! BUT after that &#13;
cold sled ride home, the long johns were frozen&#13;
stiff when I took them off. Even Mother thought it&#13;
was funny!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.24.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 25 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
HOLIDAYS AND CELEBRATIONS&#13;
&#13;
I can't remember birthdays when I was&#13;
very young, but during my teenage years I always&#13;
invited friends for a meal. Mother was an&#13;
exceptionally good cook and loved making special&#13;
dishes. One time 4 girls were birthday guests.&#13;
They weighed themselves before dinner and after.&#13;
Each of us gained either 4 or 5 pounds. As I grew&#13;
older I always helped Mother celebrate all&#13;
birthdays.&#13;
&#13;
Christmas was a great time at our house. We&#13;
always had a real tree with popcorn strings, and&#13;
beautiful glass balls, and real candles. Dad let &#13;
us light the candles once on Christmas Eve, but he&#13;
stood by with a bucket of water to douse it in case&#13;
of fire. In 1934 Columbus and Southern Light&#13;
Company came to the corner below our house, and Dad &#13;
built his own electric line to our place. From &#13;
then on we had electric Christmas lights. However,&#13;
we always had a real tree.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Searles and the boys cut their Christmas &#13;
tree from their own woods, and Mrs. Searles and the&#13;
girls decorated it. Bernard made paper chains and&#13;
sewed popcorn strings but ate more than he strung.&#13;
They had no lights or candles - too dangerous.&#13;
With all their fireplaces there was plenty of room&#13;
to hang their Christmas stockings. Each sock had&#13;
an orange, some candy and a surprise.&#13;
&#13;
Even after Bernard and I were married until&#13;
Nan was married we still had real trees. After her&#13;
marriage in 1969, we bought an artificial tree for&#13;
$13.95 on sale from Sears (their first). Now the&#13;
same tree is $89.95, but we still have our same&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.25.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 26 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
tree. However, last year, 1994, we did not put up&#13;
a tree - we missed it!&#13;
&#13;
Every year Mother made pounds of homemade&#13;
candy - chocolate drops, stuffed dates, divinity,&#13;
chocolate and peanutbuttter fudge. She'd hide it&#13;
from us until she was ready to use it, and we never&#13;
did find her hiding place, but we tried! Too, she&#13;
bought nuts in the shell - pecans, English walnuts&#13;
and Brazil nuts. Oh, were they delicious! Bernard's&#13;
mother made pounds of candy, too. H e especially &#13;
remembers peanutbrittle and seafoam that melted in&#13;
your mouth!&#13;
&#13;
Christmas morning, Mother and Zada Longshore &#13;
raced to see who could call and wish the other&#13;
"Christmas Greetings" first. Zada kept that&#13;
tradition with me until her death.&#13;
&#13;
Our Christmas dinner was always at Grandma&#13;
Farris's place with my birth mother's family as the&#13;
Leach tribe (Mother's family) were too far away. I&#13;
know now  that Mother was really closer to my birth&#13;
family than her own because of the distance.&#13;
&#13;
The Searles and Mead families always came to &#13;
Bernard's parents for Christmas dinner and gift&#13;
exchange in the afternoon. It's kind of ironic&#13;
that all of us had big Plymouth Rock roosters&#13;
roasted and stuffed with dressing. Neither family&#13;
had turkey. Grandma's house was small, but the&#13;
 joy and love were big-big!&#13;
&#13;
After I began teaching, I bought enough gifts&#13;
for Lib  so that she could open one each day from&#13;
the day I arrived until Christmas. She really&#13;
enjoyed the times I had early dismissal for&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
&#13;
The year Ray graduated from high school he&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.26.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 27 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
wanted to give his senior picture to his girl&#13;
friend. He was to take my car and pickup his&#13;
picture in Delaware. We had a terrible ice storm,&#13;
but Ray couldn't take "No" for an answer so we slid&#13;
all the way to Delaware and back, but &#13;
Ray got his pictures. &#13;
&#13;
Years later Bernard wouldn't take "no " for an &#13;
answer either. Dad told me to call Bernard and&#13;
tell him not to try to come out on the ice on the&#13;
Christmas Eve of 1945. He came, he fell, he&#13;
conquered! In spite of falling flat on his  rear in&#13;
our driveway, he brought my present, stayed a while&#13;
and spent an hour getting back to Sunbury (4&#13;
miles). I was sure he had had an accident, but he&#13;
made It!&#13;
&#13;
We never celebrated Halloween as a family, but&#13;
when I was in high school, I'd stay overnight with&#13;
my good friend Mildred Gelston Amstutz, and we'd&#13;
get a group to go around Sunbury, ringing&#13;
doorbells, throwing shelled corn on porches, and&#13;
turning over chairs. We thought we were big stuff!&#13;
The high school boys often went out in the country&#13;
and tipped over "outhouses." In fact when I came &#13;
back to teach in Sunbury and lived at home, some&#13;
boys tipped over Dad's "two-holer." Of course it&#13;
wasn't used any more, but Dad was angry!&#13;
&#13;
Bernard went Hallowe'ening with his buddies in&#13;
Berkshire, but they were never destructive nor did&#13;
they tip over "outhouses." There was no such thing &#13;
as "trick or treat" during our youth. By the time&#13;
Nan was a child, "trick or treating" and dressing&#13;
in costume was the custom. Even in the country&#13;
parents drove their children around the&#13;
neighborhood. I always took Nan as Bernard was&#13;
milking cows at that time. Later when she had Jay&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.27.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 28 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
he enjoyed "trick or treating" too. After Nan was&#13;
older the community children came to our house.&#13;
The news traveled fast that Lolly had homemade&#13;
popcorn balls. Kids took for themselves and their &#13;
parents.&#13;
&#13;
Both Bernard's and my families had lots of &#13;
Easter eggs. Our mothers colored the eggs and hid&#13;
them in the yard. Also both mothers made their own &#13;
chocolate covered candy eggs. - delicious! Since&#13;
both families were church oriented they stressed&#13;
the Christian beliefs of the Easter story.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth of July was a big day in our community.&#13;
A huge celebration was held every year at the&#13;
Charley Rinehart home on Centerburg Road. The Mt.&#13;
Pleasant Church had a program, homemade ice cream,&#13;
cake and pie and fireworks for a finale. Everyone&#13;
from surrounding communities came, except&#13;
Berkshire. Bernard had never heard of this big&#13;
affair. His family always had their own&#13;
celebration with firecrackers and homemade ice&#13;
cream. One year at about age eight, I remember in&#13;
particular; I was the center of attention. A&#13;
couple days before, I had been wading in our creek&#13;
and cut my foot very deep. I was determined to go &#13;
to the Rinehart celebration, so Dad made me&#13;
crutches out of croquet mallets. What a night but&#13;
it was fun! By the way, I still have the scar from&#13;
that cut! As a child I enjoyed this fireworks , then&#13;
as a teenager I enjoyed meeting  the gals and guys&#13;
and having fun!&#13;
&#13;
When Nan was in high  school, she was a life&#13;
guard at our local pool with Polly Whitney Horn.&#13;
Polly organized a synchronized swimming team which&#13;
gave a program on July 4th weekend. Nan and&#13;
Malinda both participated in this production which&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.28.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 29 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
was outstanding. Several years later Sunbury had a&#13;
Flea Market, food, program and fireworks at the&#13;
high school. Our Sesqui and Bi-Centennial programs&#13;
were very special. Bernard and I were co-chairmen&#13;
with Bill and Margaret Fisher for the Bi-&#13;
Centennial. However Dan and Eva Jane Williams&#13;
helped much more than the Fishers. Mary Perfect&#13;
had charge of the Flea Market. For the Sesqui&#13;
Lucille Peregrine Campbell and I wrote and directed &#13;
 a play "Our Town - Sunbury" which surprised many &#13;
people. The closing scene was of Nan portraying&#13;
the Statue of Liberty with a big flag from  FT.&#13;
Hayes behind her - very inspirational!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.29.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 30 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and I both went to Sunbury High School&#13;
(now an elementary school) on Harrison Street and&#13;
graduated together in 1932. Our class rings cost&#13;
$12.25. Mine was the smallest and Bernard's was&#13;
the largest. I could put my ring inside his&#13;
easily. There was no school bus in my area my&#13;
freshman year, so I rode with Wendell Day. He took&#13;
Pauline Lane Reuwee and Merrill Courter, too.&#13;
Wendell played all sports, so we were always late&#13;
getting home. One day Pauline, Mary Hayes and I&#13;
decided to take a ride in Wendell's car although&#13;
neither of us had ever actually driven a car. I&#13;
shifted gears, Pauline steered, and Mary put on the&#13;
brakes. For some reason we never got out of the&#13;
school yard as one of the trees got in our way. It&#13;
dented a fender - well crumpled it. Mr. Day made us&#13;
pay for it or he said he'd tell our parents. I had&#13;
to get that money from Dad, but I couldn't ask for &#13;
a large amount, so I talked Mr. Day into paying on&#13;
the installment plan and never mentioned "fender"&#13;
at home. I bought so much paper, pens, pencils,&#13;
etc., but they finally paid the bill. Mother was&#13;
glad to see the big yellow bus the first day of&#13;
school my sophomore year. Pearly Stockwell was our&#13;
bus driver and was still driving the bus when Nan&#13;
went to school. Bernard's dad drove his bus. &#13;
Actually sometimes Bernard drove for his dad in&#13;
emergencies.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard had a trap line which he ran night and&#13;
morning during his high school years. He caught&#13;
mink, muskrat, skunks, coon, and possum. After&#13;
skinning and stretching the skins on shingles, he&#13;
sold them to a fur buyer. He bought his own&#13;
clothes and some "spending money" - fun money.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.30.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 31 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My spending money came from my summer jobs. Our&#13;
neighbor Charley Lane, paid me 2 cents per quart to&#13;
pick strawberries for him. Money didn't add up&#13;
very fast. Too, I dressed chickens for a couple of&#13;
ladies for 25 cents a chicken. I was in the money!&#13;
&#13;
We had a class of 25 people who graduated.&#13;
Our class was the first to wear caps and gowns.&#13;
Bernard was so angry as he had worked in a stone&#13;
quarry to get enough money for a new suit and had&#13;
to cover it with an ugly gray gown.&#13;
&#13;
We had no Jr..-Sr. prom our junior year as one&#13;
board member would not let us dance in the school&#13;
building. We had a big party at Annabel Mundy's&#13;
home, a big brick house in Berkshire which was&#13;
later the Berkshire Nursing Home. We thought we&#13;
were big stuff! We'd shown Henry Wilson, Sr. that&#13;
he couldn't boss us!&#13;
&#13;
Since we had no Jr.-Sr. prom to finance, we&#13;
had no Junior play, but we had a senior class play&#13;
and I had the role of Patsy - the slowest hired&#13;
maid in the world. That was surely not type&#13;
casting, but I had so much fun doing the part.&#13;
Bernard also had a part but his was a handsome&#13;
young man. He didn't have to act!&#13;
&#13;
School was easy for me, but I was only&#13;
salutatorian of our class. Mildred Gelston was .3&#13;
points ahead of me. We were best friends and I&#13;
spent many "overnights" with her to go to&#13;
ballgames, parties, etc. I loved school - enjoyed&#13;
studying but also had lots of fun. My social life&#13;
didn't include dating per-se as Dad thought I was &#13;
too young, and I was!&#13;
&#13;
I was not a rebel, but I was mischievous-&#13;
doing things like putting a tack on our principal,&#13;
Homer Fisher's, chair, setting an alarm clock to&#13;
&#13;
.31.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 32 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
ring in Glenard Buell's history class - but putting&#13;
it in Lucille Cornell Bailey's desk. That time I &#13;
got the giggles early and was sent out of class&#13;
before the alarm rang. I missed all the fun!&#13;
Bernard always said that I had good discipline when&#13;
I taught because I had done everything in my high&#13;
school years and knew what to expect.&#13;
&#13;
In the ninth grade, Bernard broke his right&#13;
arm cranking a Model T Ford school bus. He had to&#13;
use his left arm for a long time and tried to do&#13;
his homework although it was unreadable. Teachers&#13;
gave him good  grades for his efforts - especially&#13;
the algebra teacher, Miss Huston. Bernard was her &#13;
pet!&#13;
&#13;
This same teacher caused me to have the&#13;
nickname "Lolly." She insisted on calling me Lolla&#13;
Dell. She'd say "Lolla Dell, go to the board." Of&#13;
course the boys made it Lolly Dell, then  "Lolly"&#13;
which has stayed with me all these years. However,&#13;
Bernard has always called me "Jen" from Jennings.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard says that he never liked school, but&#13;
he was always there. He never skipped even one&#13;
day. I skipped school 1/2 day my senior year.&#13;
Junior Whitney, Bess Ross (later his wife) and&#13;
Snooks Baker and I went to Alum Creek and skipped&#13;
stones in the water. The ride was the most fun as&#13;
Junior had an old Model T - no top, no floor boards,&#13;
painted in wild colors. The gas was controlled on&#13;
the steering wheel by a lever that was worked by&#13;
hand. What a bunch of junk, but we had fun! Of&#13;
course our superintendent, Mr. G. E. McFarland,&#13;
caught us, and we had to make up our time after&#13;
school. Luckily I was a helper on the Debate Team,&#13;
so I had excuse to stay with Mildred Gelston.&#13;
&#13;
I know it seems strange now, but we didn't&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.32.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 33 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
have gym classes in high school. Our principal was&#13;
our science teacher (all classes), and the&#13;
superintendent taught the high school math except&#13;
algebra and practical senior math. Miss Carey, our&#13;
English teacher, had a maroon corduroy suit that&#13;
she wore every day from October to May. The boys &#13;
made fun of her all the time. Right then I vowed&#13;
that if I ever became a teacher I'd have enough&#13;
clothes to wear something different every day for a &#13;
month, and I did! After Miss Carey left we had an&#13;
outstanding English teacher, Angeline Stanforth,&#13;
who inspired me to teach English.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and I both were brown baggers with the&#13;
most boring lunches, - peanut butter and dill pickle&#13;
sandwiches for me, and peanut butter and cheese for&#13;
BJ.  As bad as it was, neither of us would carry a&#13;
lunch bucket so we could have a variety. Most of&#13;
my friends were town girls, but I had my country&#13;
lunch group too. Truthfully, I guess the town girl&#13;
group was a clique. Bernard's friends were the&#13;
boys in the Ag class. Since he worked so hard, he&#13;
never had time for sports.&#13;
&#13;
I had an extra year in high school as Dad&#13;
thought I was too young to to go to college plus money&#13;
was scarce. During that year I took typing and&#13;
Spanish and acted as an aide to the teachers. Mr.&#13;
Roland Neilson was the 8th grade teacher, but also&#13;
the high school music teacher. Whenever he went to&#13;
the high school music class, I was sent to the 8th&#13;
grade class and actually taught some classes.&#13;
&#13;
The fall of '33 I enrolled at Otterbein&#13;
College in Westervile. Bernard farmed with his&#13;
dad for several years until he got a job at Sears.&#13;
Later he drove truck for John Shultz and visited&#13;
every state in the U.S. at that time. He worked&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.33.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 34 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
for Shultz until he received his Greetings letter&#13;
saying "Your friends and neighbors have selected&#13;
you to to serve your country." He says he's still&#13;
looking for those "friends and neighbors." From &#13;
1933 to 1945 our paths did not cross although we&#13;
did correspond during the war.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.34.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 35 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
THE INTERVAL&#13;
&#13;
When I entered Otterbein, a friend of Mother's&#13;
(Esther Moore) made arrangements for me to live in&#13;
a dorm (Saum Hall) where the girls did their own&#13;
cooking. Pauline Barton and I were roommates our&#13;
freshman year, but she didn't like the cooking &#13;
aspect and moved to another dorm. Ruth Morrison&#13;
Johnson became my roommate the rest of my college&#13;
years. We ate more burned toast and burned beans &#13;
than I knew existed.&#13;
&#13;
My sophomore year was an experience I'll never&#13;
forget. Second and third floors had a feud - only&#13;
at nights! During the day we were friends, but oh,&#13;
the nights! We really did some crazy things like&#13;
cooked spaghetti in beds, mattresses carried to the&#13;
storage room. and rubber bands around the middle of&#13;
our clothes, for a few. Ruth and I cinched it when&#13;
we took clothes to another dorm stuck them in&#13;
closets at random. That ended the feud and almost&#13;
ended us. When our antics became too noisy, Ma &#13;
Ferguson, dorm matron, would pull the switch to&#13;
darken the entire dorm except the bathroom lights&#13;
which had to be lit. Many a night Ruth and I took &#13;
our blankets and math books to study math in the&#13;
bathtubs wrapped in our blankets. We just had to&#13;
have our math for our tough Professor Glover who&#13;
still graded on the curve in his math classes. The&#13;
next year Ma Ferguson made me her assistant for&#13;
which I received room and board, so I ate at&#13;
Cochran Hall. Too I was moved with Ruth to a&#13;
downstairs room. Ma said she had to bring the &#13;
noise downstairs. One of the requirements at&#13;
Otterbein was Chapel every day at 11:30 A.M. with 3&#13;
cuts allowed a semester. We were seated&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.35.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 36 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
alphabetically and roll was taken very easily and &#13;
thoroughly.&#13;
&#13;
Otterbein was such a friendly school and small&#13;
enough that every one knew everyone! As a result I&#13;
was active in many organizations. There were no&#13;
national social fraternities and sororities, but&#13;
local. I joined Kappa Phi Omega (ΚΦΩ). We had a &#13;
large pledge class and kept the actives busy. Of&#13;
course they retaliated with stupid ideas like&#13;
asking for hair from each of the professor's dogs,&#13;
asking for a nickel's worth of ride on the&#13;
Greyhound Bus then having to walk back to town. &#13;
Our motto was and is "Sisters and friends until the&#13;
end." Although there aren't many of us left, we're&#13;
still sisters and friends.&#13;
&#13;
During my years at Otterbein, I was active in &#13;
the Drama Department and a member of Cap and &#13;
Dagger, honorary drama and speech organization. My&#13;
favorite professor was Prof. John Smith, my speech&#13;
teacher. He not only taught the principles of&#13;
speaking; he also taught the principles of living.&#13;
One of the plays I remember best was "She Stoops to &#13;
Conquer" produced in the band shell in the park by&#13;
the Alum Creek. I had a fun part in that play.&#13;
&#13;
I worked on the school paper "The Tan and &#13;
Cardinal" for two years. Too, as a member of WAA&#13;
(Women's Athletic Association), I played intra-&#13;
mural sports; namely - basketball, volleyball, and &#13;
cageball. My junior year I was chosen as one of&#13;
the Winter princesses for basketball homecoming.&#13;
&#13;
As a senior, I was one of five chosen to be a &#13;
part of "Who's Who in Colleges and Universities."&#13;
This was indeed an honor.&#13;
&#13;
One of my best friends at Otterbein was Mary&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.36.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 37 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Otsuki, a Japanese protege of an outstanding&#13;
minister of the times in Columbus, Dr. Roy&#13;
Burkhart. Mary taught me a great deal about&#13;
caring, prejudice, and true friendship. When I&#13;
wanted to bring her home, Dad wasn't sure, but  he&#13;
learned to love Mary as  did everyone who met her.&#13;
&#13;
We had several foreign students at Otterbein&#13;
who taught me many new ideas of different cultures&#13;
and made me see the wrongs in our own culture. For&#13;
instance, we had an African Prince who could not go&#13;
to the local movie at Kaufman's theater, unless&#13;
there was a white person on either side of him. If&#13;
he ate at Williams Grill better known as Willies,"&#13;
the college hangout, he and his companions had to &#13;
sit in a rear booth. Too "Willies" would not sell&#13;
a bus ticket to black or oriental students. They&#13;
had to buy them from the bus driver.&#13;
&#13;
During my junior year of college, we had &#13;
problems at home. Mother had gall bladder surgery&#13;
at Mt. Carmel hospital. Three days after her&#13;
surgery, Lib ten years old, had an acute attack of&#13;
appendicitis and had surgery at Mt. Carmel too. I&#13;
stayed in the hospital with Lib overnight and&#13;
visited Mother as I could. Dad said he paid for&#13;
1/2 of the new wing of the hospital that was built&#13;
that year. There was no hospital insurance in&#13;
those days.&#13;
&#13;
In the midst of all these happenings, I had&#13;
several jobs to help with college expenses. I baby&#13;
sat for professors' kids, ironed white shirts for a &#13;
very "persnickety" lady, cleaned house for a lady&#13;
who kept her table set for her dead son who had&#13;
committed suicide, and worked as a waitress at&#13;
Willie's for banquets and special parties.&#13;
However, my social life didn't suffer. I attended&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.37.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 38 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
most of the fraternity dances and parties but never&#13;
had a serious boyfriend - just friends.&#13;
&#13;
During the summers a group of Otterbein&#13;
students worked at Seaside Hospital at New Dorp,&#13;
Staten Island, N. Y. Otterbein let us take exams&#13;
early, and we traveled by bus to New York, then by&#13;
ferry to Staten Island and then by a small train to&#13;
New Dorp to this big charity children's hospital on&#13;
the beach of the Atlantic Ocean (Seaside). Student&#13;
nurses from a Catholic hospital in upstate New York&#13;
took their pediatrics training there. The children&#13;
brought there lived in the slums of New York and &#13;
many had never seen green grass. They came on a &#13;
Sunday, had tonsillectomies on Tuesday and left the&#13;
following Saturday. Then there were two wards, an&#13;
orthopedic and a cardiac ward, that stayed all&#13;
summer. The experience in that hospital almost&#13;
changed my career. When I returned to Otterbein my&#13;
senior year, I worked for and received a&#13;
scholarship for Western Reserve Nurses Training in&#13;
Cleveland. My dad said, "I spent this money. You &#13;
teach one year; then if you still want to be a&#13;
nurse, we'll talk."&#13;
&#13;
So I started looking for a teaching job and&#13;
found one at Miamisburg, Ohio. In those days (the&#13;
dark ages) women could not teach if they were&#13;
married, and my good friend Evelyn Nichols was&#13;
planning to be married, so she gave me first chance&#13;
at her job - even before she resigned. Another&#13;
dear friend, Ella B. Smith, was teaching music&#13;
there and put in a good word for me. After twenty&#13;
attempts, I wrote a perfect letter of application&#13;
and was given the job for a salary of $1035 per&#13;
year teaching 8th grade arithmetic, English and&#13;
penmanship. Had I known about the penmanship&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.38.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 39 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
class, I wouldn't have had such a perfect letter.&#13;
I was the first person in the class of '37 to have&#13;
a job before graduation, thanks to my friends. Dad&#13;
was an intelligent man. He knew I'd get involved&#13;
besides getting in debt and would forget nursing.&#13;
&#13;
My days at Otterbein were very happy days,&#13;
plus I received a good Liberal Arts education with&#13;
a B. A. degree in Education, credited to teach the&#13;
following subjects: English, Speech, Mathematics,&#13;
French and Social Studies. Friendships made at&#13;
Otterbein have been lasting through the years.&#13;
&#13;
For 7 years I taught at Miamisburg from 1937 -&#13;
1944. Four other teachers and I lived with a&#13;
wonderful woman, Rose Murray, whom we all called&#13;
"Mom."  I paid $8.50 a week for room and board -&#13;
cooking like my mother's. She treated us all like &#13;
her daughters which we enjoyed. Her own daughter&#13;
Helen lived with us until she married. Those&#13;
Miamisburg days were good ones, and I still have&#13;
visits from some students there.&#13;
&#13;
The summer after my first year of teaching I&#13;
returned to Staten Island, but the next summer I&#13;
started graduate school at Ohio State which I never&#13;
completed after that term.&#13;
&#13;
During the summer of 1939, Mom Murrays's&#13;
daughter, Helen, and ex-daughter-in-law, Lila Mae,&#13;
and I went to the World's Fair in New York City.&#13;
The next summer I spent a great deal of time&#13;
helping care for Mother's sister, Alice, who was&#13;
ill with terminal cancer. She was being cared for&#13;
by Mother's other sister and husband, Nan and John&#13;
Pierson, in Canal Winchester. I came home on&#13;
weekends but spent the rest of the time with the&#13;
Piersons. Their daughter, Evelyn, and I became&#13;
very close and I later taught in Sunbury for her&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.39.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 40 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
husband, Tommy Lang.&#13;
&#13;
In 1939 I bought a new Chevrolet Coupe from&#13;
Wllliamson's in Sunbury for $939 financed through&#13;
General Motors. Can you believe I was naive enough&#13;
to let Dad and Ray convince me that Ray should put&#13;
the first 1000 miles on my new car? I loved that&#13;
car and still had it in 1946 when I married &#13;
Bernard.&#13;
&#13;
Cars were not available after the war. A&#13;
person had to put his name in sort of a lottery and&#13;
hope he was lucky, as each dealer could get only a&#13;
few cars. Bernard had his name in with two dealers&#13;
but no car! My old Chevy kept us going for several&#13;
years.&#13;
&#13;
Soon after my car purchase, World War II came&#13;
along. I can remember as if it were yesterday when&#13;
the news came over the radio on December 7, 1941,&#13;
of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. I was grading&#13;
papers as usual, at Mom Murray's desk. Both of us&#13;
started to cry. We were sure we were doomed! The&#13;
next day President Roosevelt declared war.&#13;
Immediately our lives began to change. Rationing&#13;
was set into place with shoes, gas, sugar, meat&#13;
and butter available only through stamps. Our&#13;
school was closed for several days as the teachers&#13;
gave out the stamps in the Miamisburg area. The&#13;
stamps were rationed according to need, size of&#13;
family, occupation, etc. it was really difficult&#13;
as no one was happy with his/her allotment. Some of&#13;
the rules were very strange. For example, the&#13;
school was not given gas stamps to use the buses&#13;
for athletic events, but teachers were given extra&#13;
stamps if they would drive different teams to&#13;
events. I drove the first string basketball team&#13;
to every game.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.40.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 41 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
Since my parents were farmers and had their&#13;
own meat and butter, they gave their meat and&#13;
butter stamps to Mom Murray, so we ate well. Shoes&#13;
were a problem for me but manufacturers  began&#13;
making shoes with synthetic soles - no leather.&#13;
They didn't last long, but I had shoes!&#13;
&#13;
Up to this time time women wore silk hose but they &#13;
couldn't  be found, so nylon hose came into&#13;
existence. How we hated them! In the summer girls&#13;
"painted" their legs with regular leg make-up.&#13;
That worked well unless the gal was in the rain -&#13;
oh me, streaked legs!&#13;
&#13;
Since Miamisburg was so close to Wright&#13;
Patterson Air Force Base, we had air-raid drills every &#13;
week. One drill which consisted of getting the&#13;
kids out of the building and into to nearby homes was&#13;
to be used if we had an early warning. The other,&#13;
getting the kids under the desks, was to be used&#13;
when their was no previous  warning. The kids took&#13;
the drills seriously as the propaganda was indeed&#13;
specific and graphic.&#13;
&#13;
All the eligible men teachers were drafted or&#13;
volunteered leaving the women with many jobs. For&#13;
instance, besides my regular  teaching duties, I&#13;
acted as treasurer  of the high school activities&#13;
accounts and as truant officer for the entire&#13;
system.  Also I was score keeper for all basketball&#13;
games with no remuneration for any of these extra &#13;
jobs.&#13;
&#13;
Many of the high school boys worked in the&#13;
factories in Dayton that had been converted to make&#13;
war materials. Those boys made enormous  salaries&#13;
plus were in school full time - when I, as truant &#13;
officer, forced them. My principal, Frank Young, &#13;
and I spent several days in court to keep the boys and&#13;
&#13;
.41.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 42 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
girls in school.&#13;
&#13;
I had a special friend whom I met at Seaside&#13;
Hospital that became a captain in the infantry.&#13;
When he was on leave he  visited our family in&#13;
Condit, and I went to Chicago to bid him goodbye&#13;
when he went overseas. He was critically injured&#13;
at Normandy.&#13;
&#13;
To help morale (or so I said ) I wrote to many&#13;
boys from home and from Miamisburg. One day a group&#13;
of us gals went to a palm reader in Dayton, and she&#13;
told me that I would receive a letter that day from&#13;
the man I would marry.  When I picked up my mail,&#13;
there was a letter fro M/Sgt. Bernard Searles. I&#13;
said, "Little does she know' we'd never marry!"&#13;
Well, we married - 49 years of marriage this May -&#13;
50 in 1996.&#13;
&#13;
I taught at Miamisburg for seven good years&#13;
for a principal who taught me to be organized,&#13;
punctual, responsible, and yet have fun teaching.&#13;
Surprisingly he had retired from Miamisburg and was&#13;
Nan's supervisory professor when she was a student&#13;
teacher at Otterbein.&#13;
&#13;
In 1944, Mother had a severe heart attack and&#13;
Dad needed help at home although Lib was there.&#13;
There was an opening at Sunbury High School on&#13;
Harrison Street in the same building where I had&#13;
attended high school. Tom Lang (my step-cousin-in-&#13;
law) was Superintendent. He hired my for $2000 a&#13;
year and at the same time he hired Helen Griffith&#13;
as home-ec teacher. We became the best of friends&#13;
and worked on many projects together, such as team&#13;
dinners before games, washing the basketball suits,&#13;
selling tickets at all games to name a few. These&#13;
duties were over and above our regular teaching&#13;
duties and all without pay!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.42.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 43 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mother improved from her heart attack and was&#13;
able to enjoy grandchildren in later years.&#13;
&#13;
Lib worked at the Farmer's Bank - now City&#13;
National and rode with me. The only time we ever&#13;
quarreled was when she was late. She'd brush her&#13;
hair and fiddle around until one morning I left&#13;
her. Oh, that caused trouble as Dad had to stop&#13;
milking and take her to work. He yelled at both of &#13;
us!&#13;
&#13;
April of  1945, President Franklin Delano&#13;
Roosevelt died, and we were sure we'd lose the war&#13;
but the war was beginning to wind down. On May 7,&#13;
1945, Germany surrendered, that day is Known as VE&#13;
Day. On August 6, 1945, the first Atomic bomb was&#13;
dropped on Hiroshima, Japan; then a second on&#13;
Nagasaki, August 9. Japan surrendered August 15,&#13;
1945! Those were big days in our lives at that&#13;
time. Many of our friends from home, college and&#13;
Miamisburg were killed or injured. We who went&#13;
through WWII never want to do it again!&#13;
&#13;
That fall I went to see Lillian Searles, a&#13;
dear friend of mine, and guess who opened the door?&#13;
M/Sgt. Bernard Searles. He says that I told him I&#13;
came to see Lillian - not him! Maybe I did.&#13;
Before this story continues I'm going to have&#13;
Bernard's army experience chapter that will bring &#13;
him up to date when he opened the door for me.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.43.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 44 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
AN ALL EXPENSE TOUR&#13;
&#13;
Related by BJ&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In the late 30's Bernard quit working at Sears&#13;
and began working for John Shultz who had a&#13;
trucking business in Galena, Ohio. It was while&#13;
working there that BJ received that infamous letter&#13;
from Uncle Sam stating, "Your friends and neighbors&#13;
have selected you."  In March 1942, Bernard was&#13;
inducted into the U. S. Air Force at Fort Hayes,&#13;
Columbus, Ohio, and was sent to Jefferson Barracks,&#13;
Missouri, for basic training. His next stop was&#13;
Airplane Mechanic School at Englewood , California,&#13;
from which he graduated with honors. The&#13;
government enjoyed giving the men travel&#13;
experience, so it sent BJ's group back to Columbia,&#13;
S. Carolina, where they were formed into a cadre&#13;
for the 340th Bomb Group of the Twelfth Air Force.&#13;
Also at Columbia they were visited by a violent&#13;
hail storm that ruined fourteen planes. Thanks to&#13;
the ground crews of which BJ was a part, the planes&#13;
were repaired in a few days. The next move was to&#13;
Walterboro, S.C., where the group received&#13;
"overseas" training for running missions.&#13;
&#13;
January 30, 1943, the group climbed into&#13;
waiting trains and headed for a secret destination,&#13;
which everyone knew was Camp Stoneman at Pittsburg,&#13;
California. Bernard called this the monsoon season&#13;
as it rained every day. In spite of all the rain&#13;
and inclement weather, the group had days of stiff&#13;
tests, including imaginary air raids, debarkation&#13;
nets, obstacle course, and twelve mile hikes with&#13;
full packs.&#13;
&#13;
The men were issued heavy cold weather&#13;
clothes, and rumors flew fast. The flight crews&#13;
left first, and on Valentine's Day the ground crew&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.44.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 45 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
marched on to a G. I. Ferry, sailed down the bay to&#13;
board the U.S.S. West Point wile the band played&#13;
"Auld Lang Syne."&#13;
&#13;
For the next forty-two days the group enjoyed&#13;
(?) and all-expense-paid tour of the Southern&#13;
Hemisphere. Bernard was seasick for may of those&#13;
days. They stopped at New Zealand to drop off and&#13;
pick up mail, then went on to Australia where they&#13;
picked up some food -"bully" beef and catfish.&#13;
After one day on land, again they headed to sea to &#13;
their next stop Bombay, India, where they smelled&#13;
the smells and saw the sights. Bernard has trouble&#13;
describing the filth there.&#13;
&#13;
The GI's were told to walk always in groups of&#13;
three. As BJ and two other fellows were walking&#13;
along a street, a small boy kept bothering them, so&#13;
one guy gave him a penny to scram. He left but&#13;
soon came back with a baby saying, "Yours - you&#13;
paid." Some how the men got rid of him. The men&#13;
were also told to eat only what could be peeled&#13;
while they were off the boat. In spite of the&#13;
advice many became victims of the GI's." They&#13;
soon learned that "FAYN-mo-ra-HEED?" meant "Where&#13;
is the toilet?"&#13;
&#13;
Finally the 240th reached their destination -&#13;
Suez. The boat anchored of shore, and they were&#13;
taken ashore in rickety native boats. On shore&#13;
they were herded into rickety trains that took them&#13;
to their field-camp, El Kabrit, Egypt, on Little&#13;
Bitter Lake beside the Suez Canal. Kabrit was a&#13;
big camp with buildings, but they had so many&#13;
shrapnel oles in the roofs and sides that the&#13;
birds had taken over. There was sand everywhere -&#13;
not a tree in sight - which made it very difficult&#13;
to set up tents. They had their first mail call&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.45.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 46 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
there plus a shave and haircut for twelve cents.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard had quite an experience at Kabrit&#13;
during a rip-roaring sandstorm. BJ and another GI&#13;
were sent to the airstrip to moor down the planes.&#13;
The sand was so fine and the wind so strong that&#13;
the visibility was practically zero. BJ heard a&#13;
human cry and told his buddy to keep talking so he&#13;
could follow his voice to get back from&#13;
investigating the cry. He found a little boy&#13;
sobbing his heart out. The child had come into the&#13;
air strip through a hole in the fence but could not&#13;
find his way back. The sand and tears had made&#13;
mudballs on his eyes. Neither could understand the&#13;
other, but BJ made the child understand to trust&#13;
him. Bernard took water from his canteen, washed &#13;
the child's face, put a wet handkerchief above his &#13;
eyes, and started back to his pal, following his &#13;
voice. The little boy clutched BJ's hand until&#13;
they got back to headquarters where an interpreter&#13;
learned where the boy lived, and he was safely&#13;
returned home.&#13;
&#13;
At this camp in Kabrit, in between repairing&#13;
his plane to chase Rommel across the sand, Bernard&#13;
went to see the Sphinx and the Pyramids, plus rode&#13;
a camel. He has the picture to prove it. British&#13;
soldiers were helping in the Rommel chase, but the&#13;
8th Army got most of the credit.&#13;
&#13;
Later at Medenine, Tunisia, the men dug their&#13;
slit trenches and tent "cellars" in the hardest&#13;
ground they had seen. Too, this place had been a &#13;
mine field, supposedly cleared, but the men were&#13;
very careful withtheir shovels and feet! They &#13;
were just getting settled and feeling halfway&#13;
comfortable, when (you guessed it) they had to move.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.46.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 47 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Their new home (?) was in Sfax, Tunisia, in the&#13;
midst of an orchard of peach, apricot, almond and&#13;
olive trees and many grapevines. Bernard said the&#13;
grapes were bigger than his thumb, purplish-green&#13;
in bunches about a foot long - delicious! The&#13;
fruit diet was welcomed after their mess hall food.&#13;
BJ said he lived on grapes for a week. They also&#13;
found beans, giant peas, and scallions ready for &#13;
picking. The Germans had left in such a hurry they&#13;
didn't have time to pick them.&#13;
&#13;
Easter Sunday was a bad day for the 340th. It&#13;
dawned bright and sunny, but turned out to be&#13;
black! Church was held in a poppy field under the&#13;
wings of planes. Just after noon they were briefed&#13;
for a bombing run, and as the planes circled the&#13;
field, two collided, plummeted to the earth, and&#13;
burned killing both crews. A good friend of BJ's&#13;
was killed in that collision.&#13;
&#13;
Soon after that a colonel's ship took a direct&#13;
hit, killing all the crew, they thought, but later&#13;
several were located in German hospitals. They had&#13;
settled down into the business of real war! Night&#13;
after night they hit the trenches when raiders came&#13;
over, and the ack-ack started.&#13;
&#13;
By May the enemy had been driven into the Cap&#13;
Bon peninsula, so the 340th left the cleanup to the&#13;
infantry and began destroying coastal batteries at&#13;
Pantelleria. The result was the demoralizing of&#13;
practically all defenses. After this drive, "The&#13;
first all out aerial offensive" white crosses of&#13;
surrender were displayed on the ground, and the&#13;
ground forces occupied the island in no time.&#13;
&#13;
When the 340th left Cap Bon, the Germans&#13;
started on Enfedaville. They were warned to&#13;
surrender to the "Golden 18" (their name for the&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.47.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 48 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
340th B-25's) or they'd be "done in" within 20&#13;
minutes. They didn't; the 340th did, and the&#13;
battle of Africa was over; the Axis folded in&#13;
Tunisia.&#13;
&#13;
The rest of the stay at Sfax was uneventful&#13;
except for the horror of  the war known as the&#13;
 "GI's." Two necessary elements for this were speed&#13;
and accuracy. Some made it; some didn't; some &#13;
didn't try and bought new underwear and pajamas. &#13;
Next thing - it was moving day again.&#13;
&#13;
The next stop was Hergis, Tunisia, which was&#13;
and is all sand, thistles, and cacti close to the&#13;
Mediterranean Sea with a mountain range in the&#13;
back. While here at Hergla, they picked up a&#13;
donkey and took him with them from then on. Life &#13;
at Hergla was crazy. In the morning there were&#13;
gnats; during the day, flies, lizards, scorpions,&#13;
and mice and at night mosquitoes and desert rats.&#13;
&#13;
After supper one night a group of US B-25's&#13;
bombed Lampedusa, and with the help of the RAF they&#13;
had cleaned up Africa, Pantelleria, and now&#13;
Lampedusa. For the next three weeks they worked&#13;
hard getting eggs at 25¢ each and watermelon at a&#13;
dollar each. July 3rd they began bombing Sicily,&#13;
calling it the Sicilian Shuttle Service. To get&#13;
close to their targets, they moved again this time&#13;
to Comiso, Italy.&#13;
&#13;
Comiso had been a regular Italian airfield&#13;
well equipped with permanent buildings, but when&#13;
the 340th arrived the buildings were shells.&#13;
Little did the guys know when they previously&#13;
bombed the place that they'd later have to clean it&#13;
up.&#13;
&#13;
They found lots of Italian and German planes &#13;
that had made their last landing and had been left&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.48.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 49 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
crippled. Those Americans GI's reconditioned the&#13;
enemy planes and soon had them ready to fly with&#13;
the allied insignia. Jake Morgan, BJ and Rocky&#13;
Petrozzi fixed one. Rocky was the only one who&#13;
could read Italian to decipher parts, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Many missions were flown from Comiso to spots&#13;
like Randazzo, Adrano, and Messina (at the time&#13;
"the most heavily defended spot in the world").&#13;
Between missions the men relaxed in the grape&#13;
arbors. After the dust and the "C" rations at&#13;
Hergla, the free fruit and clean air made Comiso&#13;
seem like GI paradise. August 25th the group&#13;
held a birthday party, and everyone was sure that&#13;
after entertainment and eats, they'd be moving, and&#13;
the next day they did!&#13;
&#13;
They went to Catania, Sicily, only to find the&#13;
British Eighth Army camped all over the place. The&#13;
place was on a big crater, and the buildings were&#13;
shells. The group "sort of" pushed the British&#13;
over enough to get room for the 340th. They missed&#13;
the orchards and vineyards, but they had a sandy&#13;
beach nearby.&#13;
&#13;
Just as they sat down to dinner one night, the&#13;
Germans surprised them with a raid, but British&#13;
guns all around the area opened up and not too much&#13;
damage was done. They went back to meat and&#13;
vegetable stew without much meat. They had&#13;
frequent Jerry (German) raids with not much damage,&#13;
and the 340th flew quite a few missions to Italy&#13;
with they-hoped much damage. Again came order to &#13;
move. The A party left with the tents, and for&#13;
three days the rest found shelter wherever they&#13;
could as it poured rain and the mud was deep.&#13;
&#13;
At San Pancrazino, Italy, the only difference&#13;
was that the mud was blacker. For the first time&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.49.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 50 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
they were out of tents and into buildings. The&#13;
weather was cool and cans of every kind were made&#13;
into stoves. Bernard took a pipe from a wrecked&#13;
plane and made tubing to run gas through to his &#13;
group's stove.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The first Christmas packages arrived here.&#13;
Bernard's friend Joe Blanche had two sisters who&#13;
were nuns. They sent a card board fireplace and&#13;
Christmas socks filled with goodies. Lillian sent&#13;
Bernard a big book of cookies and goodies which were&#13;
completely ruined from getting the box soaked with&#13;
fuel oil.&#13;
&#13;
Again the group moved to Foggia, Italy,&#13;
but the 340th was scattered all over southern Italy&#13;
for almost a week. Rain had everything a mess!&#13;
Some trucks were stalled on roads, some skidded&#13;
into ditches, and no one wanted to feed or help&#13;
them. When they finally got off the highway and&#13;
into Foggia, mud came half way up the jeep&#13;
radiators. Some of the guys used farm buildings&#13;
instead of tents, but it was a toss up - mud on the &#13;
outside or manure on the inside. Bernard chose&#13;
inside, manure and all!&#13;
&#13;
At night the guns of the Adriatic seemed too&#13;
close for comfort. Finally the 340th got their&#13;
planes in the air., sending missions to Sibenik,&#13;
Jugoslavia, Port Gruz, Albania, and Guilianova,&#13;
Italy. Thanksgiving came and went. Some of the&#13;
fellows found sleeping quarters in a farmer's farm&#13;
building. Bernard and Jake Morgan found a famer&#13;
who sold them straw to fill their mattress covers&#13;
for a good warm bed. Soon everyone was following&#13;
suit. Christmas Day was like any other rainy day.&#13;
Bernard remembers eating his Christmas dinner on a&#13;
manure pile at one of the farms. The group still&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.50.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 51 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
had their donkey, and he was getting fatter&#13;
everyday. In fact, he was kind of a pet.&#13;
&#13;
New Year's Eve - rain again! However at&#13;
midnight every gun and rifle let loose. New Years&#13;
Day, 1945, was a mess! A gale sept in over the&#13;
sea; tents were down; men wallowed in the mud, but&#13;
the chow lines were a quarter of a mile long as&#13;
usual and ankle deep in mud. Later good weather&#13;
set in, and they got settled for the winter - they&#13;
thought. - Wrong! Orders came to move to Pompeii,&#13;
Italy.&#13;
&#13;
At Pompeii their airfield was cut into the&#13;
grape orchard and vegetable farms of Terzigno at&#13;
the base of Mt. Vesuvius. There was always a halo&#13;
of smoke over the crater, and at night the bubbling&#13;
lava sent orange spurts up into the sky. They felt&#13;
safe though - safer than from the German bombs.&#13;
They were bombing Naples just twenty miles away.&#13;
&#13;
The Anzio beach head was opened up by the&#13;
Fifth Army. The 340th lost more than a dozen&#13;
planes on that beachhead. On March 15, 1945, the&#13;
340th was told to level Monte Cassio Abbey because&#13;
the Germans were entrenched there and were killing &#13;
too many Americans. They had a little help, but&#13;
the mission was accomplished. The next night&#13;
thirty-five German bombers went over the camp on&#13;
the way to Naples and left some calling cards.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and Jake visited Mt Vesuvius, looked&#13;
down in the crater just before leaving for R. &amp; R.&#13;
The next day, Vesuvius erupted, 340th lost many &#13;
planes and had to evacuate. Axis Sal announced&#13;
that the 340th was "finito." She didn't know the&#13;
12th Air Force. Of course, they had to move to&#13;
another location. They missed their donkey and&#13;
that night they had steak and gravy. Bernard&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.51.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 52 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
swears they ate the donkey, but says it was good,&#13;
even if it was tough,&#13;
&#13;
The next stop was Paestum, Italy. the men&#13;
thought they would have at least three weeks rest&#13;
before planes could be replaced, but in three days                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     &#13;
they were operating full scale. They began bombing&#13;
transportation and communication targets - tunnels,&#13;
railroads, and highways. As the Germans repaired&#13;
the damage, the U.S. would bomb again. The weather&#13;
was great - sunny Italy. The Germans had an all &#13;
out raid on the camp; once more they were&#13;
practically wiped out. Again the 340th came&#13;
through and by July they had an all time high for&#13;
"hits." The group received Bronze Star citations&#13;
for participating in major battles.&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Germany had surrendered in May, the war clean&#13;
up was winding down in Europe and by the end of &#13;
July men started going home. In August many of the&#13;
340th were leaving. Bernard let Rocky Petrozzi to&#13;
early as he was so in love with Minda. In fact &#13;
they were married before BJ arrived home.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard's tour of duty was almost over. He&#13;
had started as a crew chief with one plane the&#13;
"Sahara Sue" as his responsibility, then flight&#13;
Chief with 6 planes and finally Line Chief of the&#13;
486th Bomb Squadron, with all twenty-eight planes&#13;
and their ground crews under his supervision. From&#13;
private he rose to Master Sargeant, the highest&#13;
rating for a non-commissioned officer.&#13;
&#13;
Finally Bernard was at the dock ready to board&#13;
the boat for the U.S.A. The Inspecting Officers&#13;
checked his bags and said that he had to turn in&#13;
his prize gun, a little Italian Beretta. Bernard&#13;
said, "If I  can't have it neither can you." With&#13;
that he threw it in the bay. The second day out he&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.52.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 53 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
heard "Sunbury!" There was Jack Hedden a hometown&#13;
boy who was cook on the ship. He fed the guys ham,&#13;
ice cream - all kinds of food they hadn't had for&#13;
three years. You guessed it! Everyone was sick&#13;
plus had the "GI's" - what a mess!&#13;
&#13;
The first Atomic bomb was dropped on Japan&#13;
August 6 while BJ was en route home, the second on &#13;
August 9. He landed at Norfolk, Va., then was sent to&#13;
Camp Attebury, Indiana where was released from the&#13;
service a free man!&#13;
&#13;
Bernard arrived in Columbus August 18, 1945,&#13;
with no one to meet him. He went to Mildred and&#13;
Dwight Satterfield's to find that sister Mildred&#13;
was expecting twins who were born the next day&#13;
August 19 - Larry and Lora. Next stop - Sunbury&#13;
where in a few days, he says Lola knocked on his&#13;
door and said, "I didn't come to see you, I came to&#13;
see Lillian." After giving three and a half good&#13;
years on his life to his country, he was ready to&#13;
forge on.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.53.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 54 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MARRIAGE&#13;
&#13;
On November 18, 1945, Bernard's birthday, he&#13;
called for a date. From then on we dated steadily,&#13;
were engaged in March, and married May 26, 1946, in&#13;
the Condit Presbyterian Church with the Rev. Hugh&#13;
Ash officiating. That ended my teaching career&#13;
temporarily as married women could not teach in&#13;
those days. We had to have the wedding on Sunday&#13;
as we had had a very wet spring, and Dad didn't&#13;
want to take time off for a wedding in case the&#13;
ground dried and he could plant corn. Since no one&#13;
worked on Sunday, that was a safe day. Our wedding&#13;
was to be very simple. I hand wrote twenty-five&#13;
invitations to family and close friends. Lib was&#13;
my only attendant, and Carl Hough was Bernard's&#13;
best man. I didn't want a formal wedding dress, so&#13;
I bought two "simple" dressy dresses, blue for me&#13;
and gold for Lib, made exactly alike. We both wore&#13;
headpieces to match and long white gloves that went&#13;
above the elbow. I carried my Eastern Star Bible&#13;
with a beautiful white orchid which I later wore as&#13;
a corsage. Bernard and Carl wore navy blue suits.&#13;
Roger Day, Hal Tippett and Bob Burwell, all my&#13;
students,  were ushers.&#13;
&#13;
I walked down the aisle myself as I didn't&#13;
want Dad to give me away. Even at the age of&#13;
thirty I couldn't accept the thought of being given&#13;
away.  It could have been because of the trauma of&#13;
housekeepers after Mother's death. Naturally, I&#13;
was a little nervous as I started down the aisle as&#13;
the church was full; people were even sitting in&#13;
the windows. Just as I stepped in the door, Morgan&#13;
Chamberlain whispered in a voice that could be&#13;
heard all over the church, "You should'a been a&#13;
preacher!" I ain't never seen a crowd like this in&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.54.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 55 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
this church!" My nervousness left me!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our reception was in the big Sunday School room&#13;
as the basement had not been built yet. My&#13;
neighbor teenagers, Iris Spences and Evelyn&#13;
Shoemaker who were also my students, helped my&#13;
friend Mildred Gelston at the hostess table. Mr.&#13;
Gelston,  Milly's father, a professional baker,&#13;
baked our wedding cake. The person who found the&#13;
tiny wedding ring, baked in the cake, was to be the&#13;
next bride. Milly found it, and everyone cried,&#13;
"Foul!" People were sure she knew where the ring&#13;
was, but actually she had no idea. No one used&#13;
paper plates in those days so I borrowed dishes&#13;
from friends, but Mary Ellen Miller was the main&#13;
lender. The workers had a problem as they had to&#13;
heat water on a kersone burning stove, wash and dry&#13;
the dishes by hand, and serve from a tiny&#13;
classroom, but they made it.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and I didn't wait to witness the&#13;
clean-up. We took Carl Hough and his wife to the&#13;
Deshler-Wallick Hotel in Columbus for dinner. We&#13;
left them soon after dinner and headed for the&#13;
first night of honeymoon (I knew not where) in&#13;
a downpour of rain,. Bernard had reserved us a&#13;
hotel room in Wooster, Ohio. The next day we went&#13;
on to Niagara Falls - the popular honeymoon site in&#13;
the 40s. In the center of the city was a building&#13;
that looked like the subway stations in the middle&#13;
of New York City. After much begging form me, BJ&#13;
and I decided to go to this building and ride the&#13;
Subway. To my chagrin, we found it was a public&#13;
toilet. BJ's never let me forget that episode!&#13;
&#13;
The honeymoon was great, but we were eager to&#13;
get back to our own little house on Morning Street&#13;
in Sunbury. We bought it from Mrs. O.W. Whitney&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.55.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 56 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
(Pearl) agreeing to pay $25 a month until cleared.&#13;
Bernard saved money in the army from his pay and&#13;
poker winnings, so we completely furnished our &#13;
house with brand new furniture - all paid for and&#13;
ours! Bernard had worded for weeks before we were&#13;
married painting, sanding, and varnishing. He even&#13;
built a dining booth in the kitchen. Everything &#13;
was so new, so beautiful, and so perfectly&#13;
finished!&#13;
&#13;
Bernard managed John Shultz's big hardware&#13;
store in Galena, and his dad sold machinery for&#13;
Shultz. Several months after our marriage, BJ came&#13;
home early and wanted me to go to Delaware with&#13;
him. I jumped at the chance, as I was home alone&#13;
all day. As we were coming home, I remembered that&#13;
I had eggs and potatoes on the stove cooking for&#13;
salad. Well - we didn't have potato salad that&#13;
night; the eggs had exploded and were splattered on &#13;
the ceiling. The potatoes were burned to a crisp&#13;
as was the the beautiful new copper bottom stainless&#13;
steel pan. One shower present to the dump!&#13;
&#13;
Lib and Tom Brenner were married in September&#13;
of '46 after he came home the Navy. She made &#13;
a gorgeous dress from from a parachute that Tom had sent&#13;
home.  We went through the borrowing of dishes,&#13;
etc., for her wedding too. I was always upset&#13;
about her always being late and had said she would&#13;
be late for her own wedding. She was on time, but&#13;
the florist brought in the flowers after the guests&#13;
were there.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and I wanted a baby so much and we&#13;
were really happy to find that I was pregnant in&#13;
November, but surprised to find that Lib and Helen&#13;
Jennings had both been pregnant since September. I&#13;
think I was sick every day of my pregnancy. My&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.56.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 57 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
favorite food was popcorn and coke (cola - not&#13;
drug) which I kept close by me - even by my bed.&#13;
Lib and Helen had their boys Jerry and John in&#13;
June.  I guess Nan couldn't wait until August as&#13;
she was born July 17, 1947 - Evelyn Anne Searles.&#13;
&#13;
Her birth was a surprise as we had been in Dr. &#13;
Livingston's office on the eve of the 16th, and he&#13;
said, "You're doing fine, but you have a month to&#13;
 go and you'll gain more weight." I had gained only&#13;
13 pounds and weighed 115 lbs. When Bernard called&#13;
the doctor at 2:00 A. M. he couldn't believe him,&#13;
but sent us to White Cross Hospital on Buttles Ave.&#13;
in Columbus. There were so many post-war babies&#13;
the place was overcrowded. Everytime BJ went out&#13;
for a smoke, he'd lose me as I would be in another&#13;
hall. These escapades went on all day and until&#13;
11:30 PM July 17th when Evelyn Anne Searles, 5 lbs.&#13;
2 oz. and 18 inches long finally decided to be born&#13;
with the help of doctor's forceps. She had a&#13;
bruised eye and and a funny shaped head because of the&#13;
forceps, but she was our baby! Everything was soon &#13;
"normal," but her eye turned blue in cold weather&#13;
until she was 5 years old. She lost weight in the&#13;
week at the hospital and weighed only 4 lbs., 8 oz.&#13;
when we brought her home. We all carried her on a &#13;
pillow as she was so tiny! She was our pride and&#13;
joy!&#13;
&#13;
For six week she cried! BJ says that we wore a &#13;
path in our dining room rug walking the floor with &#13;
her. Ray had told Mother we were spoiling her.&#13;
When she was six weeks old, Mother had a family&#13;
dinner, and I told Bernard not to pick her up even&#13;
if she screamed. She did! Finally, Ray picked her&#13;
up, took her to the kitchen, weighed her and&#13;
brought back a formula saying, "Fill this before&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.57.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 58 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
you go home and feed her tonight." We followed his&#13;
instructions, and she slept through the night --&#13;
first time in six weeks. Dr. Ray Jennings had&#13;
diagnosed correctly! I was told that I was like a&#13;
holstein -- plenty of milk, but no butterfat or&#13;
nutrients. iIstopped nursing her immediately!&#13;
&#13;
Dad kept talking to Bernard about the the Ludy&#13;
Ketcham place and wanted him to buy it. B.J. and&#13;
Dad made all the arrangements, and Bernard bought&#13;
the 76 acre farm--- machinery and animals. The&#13;
cattle were used to no one but Mr. Ketcham, so no&#13;
one could ever milk them. Burr Edwards bought the&#13;
cows out of the stanchions. He backed the truck up&#13;
to the barn door, stepped in the milking parlor,&#13;
pulled the rope to open the stanchions and whoop --&#13;
- they all dashed into the big truck wilder and&#13;
more scared than a wild beast.  In February 1948,&#13;
we moved to the farm. It was awful! The house was&#13;
dirty; the yard was brambles and weeds; the wild&#13;
cows were gone, but it was still awful! Now 47&#13;
years later we are still on that same farm. the&#13;
house is comfortable; the yard is beautiful; the&#13;
barn is empty except for groundhogs. It is home-&#13;
sweet-home!&#13;
&#13;
How well we remember cleaning the grimy walls!&#13;
Tom and Lib helped us scrub. We put Jerry and Nan&#13;
in a play pen while we worked. Ketchums had had a&#13;
kerosene four burner stove that sent film and dirt&#13;
everywhere! After we scrubbed the walls, we&#13;
papered. In time that oily film came through the&#13;
paper, so we scraped and dug off all the paper and&#13;
painted. Again the oily film filtered through. &#13;
Now this was not an overnight project. It took&#13;
years! Finally, by 1969 when Nan was married,&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.58.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 59 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bernard had finally paneled the downstairs. B. J.&#13;
conquered again!&#13;
&#13;
In our early married years we labored! Bernard&#13;
still worked for John Shultz, farmed at night,&#13;
milked cows, and raised sheep. I tried to raise&#13;
chickens (hated them) and had to chase sheep, it&#13;
seemed constantly. The fences were bad on the&#13;
whole farm. Soon Bernard had to quit his hardware&#13;
job to farm on his own and with Dad on rented land.&#13;
&#13;
On a hot, sunny afternoon while Dad and Bernard&#13;
were making hay, I took Mother to Centerburg to get&#13;
groceries. Two-year old Nan was standing in the&#13;
back seat with a balloon which flew out the window&#13;
as we went around a curve. Truthfully, I do not&#13;
know what happened, but I was told a tire blew out.&#13;
Anyway we went into a ditch, hit a culvert, which&#13;
pulled the rear wheels off the car, turned us over&#13;
on our side and threw Mother across the road. Nan&#13;
and I were not hurt except for a cut on Nan's knee&#13;
from which she still has the scar. Mother was&#13;
bedfast the rest of the summer. We just couldn't&#13;
get her to walk. I was devastated! Ray and Helen&#13;
were in California where Ray was stationed in the&#13;
service. He called in early fall and said that he&#13;
was coming home and wanted Mother to meet him at&#13;
the pump at the end of the side walk. Lo and behold&#13;
by the time he arrived, she met him at the pump.&#13;
&#13;
The Reppart families, Wayne, Gerry and Bonnie&#13;
and Sam and Mary Margaret (Mayme) and boys, Bob and&#13;
Harold, were our best friends. Wayne, Gerry, BJ&#13;
and I used to play canasta until 2:00 A.M. We'd&#13;
put Bonnie and Nan to bed and play away. Of&#13;
course, the men were the ones who had to get up and &#13;
milk. However, they wouldn't quit while we girls&#13;
were ahead. Soon we got six couples together and &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.59.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 60 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
started "Card Club." From the original group&#13;
including Dale and Lucille Bailey, Wendell and&#13;
Doris Day, Wayne and Gerry Reppart, only Sam and&#13;
Mary Margaret, Dud and Gladys Townley, and BJ and I&#13;
are left. We have added other couples, but always&#13;
we're losing more.&#13;
&#13;
Ray had a cottage (??) on Lake Erie that was &#13;
large enough to sleep the entire card club. For&#13;
several years in August when the cows were dry, all&#13;
of us spent a week-end there, playing cards,&#13;
eating, swimming, and enjoying one evening at Cedar&#13;
Point. Stories, food and laughter did abound! We&#13;
always thanked Ray for those fun times.&#13;
&#13;
By the time Nan was three years old, married&#13;
women were teaching, and Sunbury asked me to&#13;
substitute. Bunice Hicks (Bunie, to Nan) was&#13;
thrilled to keep her and loved her as her own, so I&#13;
did substitute work.&#13;
&#13;
During the summers we had kids here all the&#13;
time. Jerry and Malinda Brenner, Lib's Children,&#13;
spent a lot of time with us. I had Jerry on a&#13;
chair in one room and Nan on a chair in another&#13;
room half of the time. They said Linda was my pet.&#13;
Lillian invited Mildred and Dwight's kids, Nancy,&#13;
Carol, Larry and Lora, to stay with her, but after&#13;
two days they would come to our house for two or &#13;
three weeks. I think that all these cousins helped&#13;
to keep Nan from being spoiled. She always had to&#13;
share.&#13;
&#13;
New Years  Eve of 1949 Dr. Livingston spent the&#13;
night until 4:00 A.M. at our house. Yes, Doctors&#13;
made house calls in those days. Doc had given Nan&#13;
a penicillin shot to which she violently reacted.&#13;
He never left her side until she was out of danger.&#13;
His comment was, "I missed a party, but I'll&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.60.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 61 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
probably feel better in the morning."&#13;
&#13;
The most traumatic event in our first six years&#13;
was the death of Dad Searles. We knew he had&#13;
leukemia, but for several years blood transfusions&#13;
kept him able to function well. In August 1952 he&#13;
became very ill and was in the hospital but wanted&#13;
to come  home so badly. The doctor warned us that&#13;
his death could be devastating to watch, but&#13;
Bernard took the chance and brought him to our &#13;
home. The entire family, kids and all, were here&#13;
for the three weeks that he lived, except the last&#13;
week Dwight, Mildred and family went on a vacation&#13;
which had been previously planned. We couldn't get &#13;
in touch with them in time for them to get here&#13;
before his death. Contrary to the doctor's&#13;
prediction, Dad just slept away. This house was&#13;
like Grand Central Station, people coming and going&#13;
at all times, sleeping anywhere, eating constantly&#13;
(so it seemed). Bernard and I were exhausted!&#13;
&#13;
After Nan started to school, I substituted&#13;
regularly, sometimes six weeks at a time. Mother&#13;
was not well, so I helped down home as much as I&#13;
could. Bernard says that my constant message to&#13;
him was a note saying "Hamburg's on the counter.&#13;
I'll be down home."&#13;
&#13;
Bob Searles was living in Newark and somehow&#13;
contracted meningitis. Arlo and Alice had to stay&#13;
with him in isolation, so Bernard did Arlo's&#13;
feeding of his rabbits and calves. Minetta,&#13;
Phyllis and Joan stayed with us for six weeks.&#13;
Joan and Phyllis constantly quarreled until I laid&#13;
the law down saying that we did not fight at our&#13;
house. After that was settled we had a good time.&#13;
Bob recuperated fast and was able to start Barber&#13;
School in 1957. Later when he took his State Board&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.61.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 62 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
tests, Bernard was his subject. Bob passed with&#13;
flying colors. He started a barber shop in Sunbury&#13;
and attended Ohio State majoring and graduating&#13;
with a degree in accounting. Today he still has&#13;
his barber shop and an accounting office side  by&#13;
side on the west side of the square in Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
The summer before Nan's fifth grade we took our&#13;
first real vacation. Ray, Helen, and their three&#13;
kids, (Karen, John and Steve), Bernard, Nan an I&#13;
spent two weeks in Canada at Moredolphen Lodge on&#13;
an island in McGregor Bay.  Helen had told me that&#13;
we were being picked up in a yacht and taken to the &#13;
island. Her yacht turned out to be 2 rowboats&#13;
paddled by Indians whose only comments were "Ugh."&#13;
It was eleven o'clock at night, pitch dark no&#13;
moon, scary. Eight of us plus the Indian were in &#13;
one boat, and all our gear was in the other one.&#13;
When I asked the Indian if he where he was&#13;
going, his only answer was "Ugh." I put my hand on &#13;
the rim of the boat, and my fingers touched the&#13;
water! I told Helen. Her answer was, "Lolly, our&#13;
life jackets are in the other boat." What an &#13;
experience!&#13;
&#13;
We did have a great vacation, and when we&#13;
returned home and were opening our mail, I saw a&#13;
letter from the Big Walnut Board of Education. Just&#13;
then the phone rang, and Supt. Marvin Miller&#13;
said, "Searles, we hired you while you were gone."&#13;
I didn't want to teach full time, but he talked me&#13;
into starting the year, as he had no sophomore&#13;
English Teacher. His famous line was that as soon&#13;
as he found a teacher, I could quit. Twenty years&#13;
later the board had not found a teacher and didn't &#13;
want to accept my resignation, but I forced them!&#13;
&#13;
When I started teaching full time , our home was&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.62.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 63 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
hectic at times, but we all cooperated and life&#13;
wasn't too complicated. That first year, the&#13;
spring of 1958, Dad and Bernard were in an&#13;
accident. B.J. hit the road so hard on his butt&#13;
that he bruised his brain. Evidently a blood clot&#13;
was formed in his hip and moved to his lung. Ray&#13;
sent him to the hospital as an emergency case and&#13;
33 days later he came home. I never missed a day &#13;
being there with him.&#13;
&#13;
I made Nan ride the school bus as I didn't want &#13;
her to think she was above the other kids, but&#13;
after she started high school we rode together. &#13;
In the mornings we never said a word to each other&#13;
until we reached school. As she got out of the&#13;
car, she'd say, "See You," and I'd answer, "O.K."&#13;
but after school ---Oh me! We both talked a mile a&#13;
minute, and sometimes one of us would know&#13;
something the other hadn't heard. Bernard says&#13;
that he never knew what was going on as we&#13;
completed our discussion before we got home. &#13;
Weekends at our house were full of kids. I made&#13;
chicken sandwiches by the dozen.&#13;
&#13;
On Nan's 16th birthday, Bernard put up a big&#13;
tent, and we had 16 girls for a camp-out-birthday&#13;
supper, and the works! About 2:00 A.M. we heard a&#13;
blood curdling scream. Bernard grabbed his pants&#13;
and dashed out to the tent. There were two high&#13;
school boys on motorcycles trying to crash the&#13;
party. Bernard walked up to them and asked, "Were&#13;
you boys invited?" They didn't look up, but shook&#13;
their heads, "No." Bernard just said, "Then, boys,&#13;
there's the road." We had no more interruptions&#13;
that night.&#13;
&#13;
Mother's condition was worsening, so Dad found&#13;
someone to stay with them during the week. On&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.63.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 64 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
weekends, I cleaned their house and fixed meals.&#13;
Lib did the washing. Finally Mother was&#13;
bedfast, and the last several weeks Lib and I&#13;
stayed every other night so Dad could get some &#13;
rest. We'd lie on the floor on either side of her&#13;
bed so we'd be sure to hear her. The last week Dad&#13;
and I actually sat and waited for her to stop&#13;
breathing. In February 1963 she finally got to&#13;
&#13;
rest. Wayne Reppart stayed with Bernard the day of &#13;
the funeral as BJ was very sick with the flu --&#13;
actually fell of his chair that morning.&#13;
&#13;
November 1963 was a traumatic time for all&#13;
Americans. Pres. John F. Kennedy was shot&#13;
and killed. The news came over the P. A. systems at &#13;
school and a hush fell on every classroom. School&#13;
was dismissed for the next few day until after his&#13;
funeral. Dick Starkey was here cutting wood with&#13;
Bernard and they wouldn't believe Nan and me when&#13;
we came home and told them. It was a new&#13;
experience for all of us.&#13;
&#13;
In 1964 Bernard was sent as a commissioner to&#13;
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church at&#13;
Oklahoma City. When he came home, his comment was,&#13;
"I can't believe the politics in the Presbyterian &#13;
Church."&#13;
&#13;
Nan was very active during her high school years&#13;
in several school organizations plus 4-H and Youth&#13;
Fellowship in Church. She played the clarinet and&#13;
was a majorette in the band.  The summer of '63 she&#13;
was chosen as the first Hartford Fair Queen. What&#13;
a time! She had her hair done at Brigitta's Beauty&#13;
shop -- came home upset ---wet it --did it over very &#13;
agitated. Finally we arrived at the Fairgrounds  &#13;
late, but it didn't matter. There had been &#13;
a terrible wind storm which had blown down tents&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.64.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 65 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
with rain and mud. It was awful. The only good&#13;
thing about the entire night was Nan's being chosen&#13;
queen. Bernard said, "If the good Lord forgives&#13;
me, I'll never go to the Hartford Fair again!"&#13;
&#13;
Nan and Keith became good friends when they took&#13;
Algebra II together.  Keith came out and I'd help&#13;
both of them. If he was here after 9:30, his&#13;
mother would call and say, "Is Keith  there? Send&#13;
him home right now. His curfew is 10:00 P. M."&#13;
During her senior year she and Keith began dating. &#13;
Nan and Jerry Brenner graduated together in June&#13;
1965. We had an open house here for both of them.&#13;
&#13;
During Nan's high school years Bernard began&#13;
working scales at Mt. Vernon Stock Yards. By 1965&#13;
he was offered a job as Livestock Inspector for the&#13;
state of Ohio which he accepted. My dad thought he&#13;
had done the wrong thing, but it was the best thing&#13;
that ever happened to us. Bernard felt that he had&#13;
to take the job to be able to send Nan to college.&#13;
&#13;
The fall of '65 Nan entered Otterbein College.&#13;
She was not permitted to come home the  first six&#13;
weeks, but we could visit, so one Sunday we went &#13;
down to take some goodies. Bernard stayed in the&#13;
car while I went up to her room in Cochran Hall.&#13;
As I opened her door, she burst into tears,&#13;
sobbing, "I hate this place!" Her roommate was&#13;
very homesick and was going home, giving up on&#13;
college. Immediately I suggested that if Nan hated&#13;
it, maybe she should also quit before we had to pay&#13;
more money. I can hear her now sobbing and saying,&#13;
"I never quit anything in my life. I'm staying."&#13;
After her roommate went home , her friend , Joan&#13;
Shultz Fuller, became her new roommate and life&#13;
became beautiful. They had a great time for the&#13;
year-- even bats flying in their room.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.65.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 66 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The freshman year was exciting for Nan, but also&#13;
rather traumatic. I had gall bladder surgery in&#13;
the fall; then in February I had a complete&#13;
hysterectomy. When Dr. Livingston first&#13;
examined me, he said, "Lois Dell, you're pregnant."&#13;
B. J.'s comment was that can't be at age 51. Mayme&#13;
took me to a specialist, and as we went through&#13;
Westerville, we saw Nan and Joanie, I told them&#13;
the news and Joanie was ecstatic, "isn't that&#13;
wonderful, Nan?'&#13;
&#13;
Nan's comment, "Yeah, I guess." No need to fear&#13;
-- no need to fear -- a tumor the size of a &#13;
football ---no malignancy. surgery went well, and&#13;
I was back teaching soon.&#13;
&#13;
Joanie quit school so Nan's sophomore year she&#13;
moved to Clements Hall with another roommate.&#13;
Linda Brenner graduated from high school the spring&#13;
of '67, so we took her with us on a vacation to&#13;
Virginia Beach as her graduation present.&#13;
Everywhere we went people thought she was older&#13;
than Nan, the college sophomore, which upset Nan.&#13;
They had a great time at Virginia Beach, but Linda&#13;
got a painful sunburn. During 65-67 Keith was in&#13;
the armed services and spent time in Viet Nam.&#13;
&#13;
Nan's junior year she was made counselor to&#13;
freshman girls in King Hall. Her junior year was&#13;
both traumatic and exciting. The first traumatic&#13;
event was the sudden and unexpected death of my dad&#13;
in November, 1967. Dad and Dick Spearman were&#13;
picking corn with Dad driving the tractor and Dick&#13;
on the wagon. Dad called back to Dick saying, "I'm&#13;
making one more round; then I'm quitting." At the&#13;
end of the round, Dick went around the wagon;&#13;
there lay Dad on the ground - dead. Evidently he&#13;
fell from the tractor. As he lay on the ground&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.66.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 67 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
with his 5-buckle arctics on, all we could say was,&#13;
"He always wanted to die with his boots on."&#13;
&#13;
In March of 1968 on a serene Sunday evening Nan&#13;
and Keith were traveling down Rt. #605 minding&#13;
their own business when a Holobaugh boy backed out&#13;
of the drive right in front of them. Keith took to&#13;
the ditch to miss him and would have been fine if a&#13;
culvert hadn't stopped him very suddenly. There&#13;
were no seat belts in those days, and Nan lunged&#13;
into the dashboard ruining her two front teeth. We&#13;
contacted Dr. Terry Day who came to his office and&#13;
started a long and painful process which after&#13;
several weeks left her with those two front teeth&#13;
capped.&#13;
&#13;
Another exciting event of '69 was the engagement&#13;
of Nan and Keith. They came to tell us of their&#13;
plan which was not to be married for at least a&#13;
year. The other exciting and important events were&#13;
the completion of her college work at the end of&#13;
the first semester of the 68-69 year and&#13;
Worthington Public Schools hiring her as a full&#13;
time teacher at Worthington High School beginning&#13;
the second semester of the 68-69 year. This year&#13;
(1995) she just completed 26 1/2 years at&#13;
Worthington, teaching in the new Worthington&#13;
Kilbourne High School. She must be doing something&#13;
right! Oh, yes, she received her B. A. degree from&#13;
Otterbein June 1969.&#13;
&#13;
Best laid plans are sometimes changed. On July&#13;
20,1969, (the day Armstrong walked on the moon) Nan&#13;
and Keith were married in the Condit Presbyterian&#13;
Church with the Rev. Jim Dowd officiating, assisted&#13;
 by the Rev. Doug Orbaker (at Lola's insistence-- a&#13;
mistake). When Nan and Keith met with Orbaker in a &#13;
pre-marital conference (another of Lola's&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.67.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 68 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
mistakes), Nan asked him a question, and his answer&#13;
was, "Ask your dad; he knows more about &#13;
Presbyterian rule than I do."&#13;
&#13;
Lib made --no, styled--- Nan's beautiful wedding&#13;
dress. I can see them yet in our living room with&#13;
Nan holding the end of a bolt of material gathered&#13;
in her hands at her waist. Lib asked, "How long&#13;
do you want your train?" Nan turned turned and pointed in&#13;
an arc around the floor, and Lib started cutting.&#13;
I couldn't believe it, but all turned out perfect!&#13;
Nan and Lib visited several stores and picked out&#13;
the good points of several wedding dresses and from&#13;
pictures, word descriptions, etc. (no pattern) Lib&#13;
styled a beautiful gown. She also made all the&#13;
attendants gowns with 'floppy" hats to match.&#13;
&#13;
Many  showers were given for Nan by friends in&#13;
Condit, Westerville, and Worthington. She had so&#13;
many lovely gifts that we cleared an upstairs&#13;
bedroom and used it just to display her gifts.&#13;
Keith's mom, Virginia Wampler Ward, assisted by her&#13;
sisters, had the rehearsal dinner at her home. Not&#13;
only was it a beautiful affair, but also the food&#13;
was delicious!&#13;
&#13;
Mom Shaffer, the mother of my deceased best&#13;
friend from college days was here for the wedding&#13;
and of all things made applesauce for the freezer&#13;
the morning of the wedding. Those apples just&#13;
couldn't spoil! The good thing about the moonwalk&#13;
on the kid's wedding day was that people didn't&#13;
linger at the reception. Everyone including the&#13;
family wanted to see the moon spectacular&#13;
televised. Keith says he never forgets their&#13;
anniversary as there is always a newspaper article&#13;
about the event. (moon walk --not anniversary).&#13;
&#13;
After the honeymoon, Nan and Keith lived in an&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.68.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 69 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
apartment in Worthington, but soon with our help&#13;
bought Grace Condit's little house in South Condit.&#13;
Keith enrolled in the Newark Branch of O.S.U. and &#13;
was on their golf team. The kids decided to &#13;
surprise BJ and me for our 25th anniversary, May&#13;
26, 1971, with an open house at our place. Nan&#13;
said they were celebrating 25 as we'd never make&#13;
50. We may fool her as we have just one more year.&#13;
There was such a big crowd at our party, people&#13;
everywhere, and we received many lovely gifts. As&#13;
usual Dwight had his beer in his camper. Even the&#13;
children noticed his many trips to check the&#13;
camper. I would never let him keep his booze in my&#13;
house, so all through the years he brought his&#13;
supply in his camper. In spite of his faults, we&#13;
liked Dwight and had lots of fun with him, Mildred,&#13;
and the kids. He was so good-hearted and would do&#13;
anything for anybody.&#13;
&#13;
As usual, when things are going great, something&#13;
happens.&#13;
&#13;
Keith was in the hospital for testing on his&#13;
back when a young intern found a lump in Keith's&#13;
throat. Result-- May 1972 surgery--which proved to&#13;
be removal of his thyroid--with that terrible word&#13;
"cancer." Dr. Joe Bonta, an excellent surgeon,&#13;
performed his operation. He was good, but his&#13;
bedside manner with anyone but Keith was awful!&#13;
Definitely he didn't care for mothers-in-law!&#13;
Keith came through the ordeal, and because of  his&#13;
problem, his brothers and sisters (even cousins)&#13;
were saved through surgery, too. Later in 1975&#13;
both he and his brother--Jim, had to have their &#13;
adrenal glands removed-- another traumatic time for&#13;
the family.&#13;
&#13;
July 8, 1973, BJ and I had just returned from a &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.69.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 70 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
week's vacation at Paradise Lake  in Michigan, dead&#13;
tired. At 1:30 A.M. we were awakened by a call&#13;
from Lillian. By the time we got to her house she&#13;
had had a stroke. Her husband, Luther Carnes, was&#13;
shaving before he could call the squad. For days&#13;
she lay in Grady Hospital in a coma. When she&#13;
regained consciousness, she was paralyzed and taken&#13;
to the Condit Nursing Home. After a few days&#13;
Luther had her moved to the Salyer Nursing home in&#13;
Centerburg, her home until her death in 1980.&#13;
&#13;
In December of '73 Keith had to have another&#13;
surgery to remove abnormal tissue from under his&#13;
chin. In spite of all his health problems, Keith&#13;
graduated from Ohio State and was hired the fall&#13;
of 1974 by the Granville School System as a phys-ed&#13;
teacher in the Middle School. He had coaching&#13;
responsibilities too, so they sold their Condit&#13;
home and bought a house on Sunset Drive in&#13;
Granville.&#13;
&#13;
We had several fishing vacations with Nan and&#13;
Keith their first eight years of marriage. There&#13;
was Otsego, Michigan; Big Sandy, Tennessee;&#13;
Kentucky Lake; and the Deluxe at Gaston Lake. Each&#13;
has a memory! At Otsego we seined minnows with a&#13;
big net held by several people who waded out in the&#13;
water, and we really caught the minnows which the&#13;
group used as bait. Big Sandy had willow flies&#13;
that helped BJ and Keith catch Big blue gills by &#13;
the dozen. Nan caught the big bass at Kentucky&#13;
Lake. Jim and Jane Shriner went with us to Gaston &#13;
Lake. The whole trip was unbelievable! To begin&#13;
with, I was afraid we'd have primitive conditions -&#13;
- what a mistake! We had a beautiful cottage,&#13;
screened in porches, two bathrooms, and three&#13;
bedrooms. The water skiing was great, and the&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.70.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 71 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
fishing was unbelievable. Did I get razzed about&#13;
primitive housing?!?&#13;
&#13;
In August of 1975 Don Hood and Linda Brenner&#13;
were married in the Condit Presbyterian Church.&#13;
There was a small conflict about the American flag.&#13;
Someone carried the flag out, and B.J. carried it&#13;
back in, but it was out during the ceremony. I had&#13;
the rehearsal dinner to help Lib, as Don's parents&#13;
did not offer help in that area. Our new room&#13;
made from our porch had no rug yet, but it had&#13;
windows and screens so we used it. We had thirty &#13;
people here, and we had a feast. Keith and Nan&#13;
washed all the dishes.&#13;
&#13;
In early fall of 1975 we had a call from Paul&#13;
and JoEllen Elfrink, neighbors of Luther Carnes&#13;
(Lillian's husband). They were very upset and&#13;
nervous, as Paul had found Luther hanging in the&#13;
barn. He had committed suicide. They had called&#13;
his daughter, Wilma and she said, "Call Bernard and&#13;
Lolly. They know what to do." of course, we went&#13;
up to the place immediately. By the time we&#13;
arrived, the sheriff and Funeral Director were&#13;
there. What a mess! We all were in a dither, but&#13;
I called Wendell (Luther's son) and he promised to&#13;
start immediately from his home in  Cordova,&#13;
Tennessee. The next morning someone had to go to&#13;
the nursing home to tell Lillian. Guess who?&#13;
You're right, Lola Dell had to do it. Poor Lillian&#13;
was devastated! The day of the funeral another&#13;
travesty happened. Someone broke into Luther and&#13;
Lillian's home. Wendall had sent Lillian Hummels &#13;
through the years which were placed alongside&#13;
cheaper figurines. Only the Hummels were taken.&#13;
Antique picture frames were taken, but  picture&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.71.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 72 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
had been ripped out and left. Silverware and china&#13;
plates that had belonged to Wilma and Wendell's&#13;
dead mother were taken, but no ordinary dishes or&#13;
pots and pans. To top it off beautiful quilts that&#13;
Lillian and her mother had made were taken. No&#13;
modern things like TV's or radios were bothered!&#13;
None of these items were ever recovered.&#13;
&#13;
In November of 1975, Bernard had to have a lump&#13;
removed from his throat, but no malignancy. Dr.&#13;
Bonta was his surgeon and actually treated me like&#13;
a human being.&#13;
&#13;
The year 1976 was a busy one! In February Keith&#13;
had back surgery which was very painful. March15,&#13;
1976 a beautiful tax exemption came to Carl and&#13;
Betty  Cocklin's, our god-daughter, Kelly. When the&#13;
phone rang early that morning, I thought it was a&#13;
teacher calling to say he was sick, I answered the&#13;
phone with "What now?' Betty very gently and&#13;
softly told me she had just called to tell me she &#13;
had a baby girl.&#13;
&#13;
June of 1976 I retired from teaching---finally!&#13;
When I handed in my resignation, the board would&#13;
not accept it, but Sam Reppart said, "You might as&#13;
well, she's made up her mind."&#13;
&#13;
That spring there were many parties and&#13;
dedications to me. The senior class dedicated the&#13;
year book to me. At the choir concert, the group&#13;
dedicated a song "Lolly Come a Runnin'" and gave me&#13;
yellow mums. The FHA had a surprise "This Is Your&#13;
Life" and everyone from A to Z was there. It was&#13;
great. They gave me a charm bracelet filled with &#13;
charms to remind me of teaching years. After the&#13;
dinner, Nan and Keith with the help of Mayme had an&#13;
open house at the Repparts. The faculty retirement&#13;
party was at LaScala's. Mr Burt was also an&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.72.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 73 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
honored retiree. Later in the summer Beulah&#13;
Fritsche with the help of Rusty Slack and Bill&#13;
Fraley, had a surprise chicken barbecue. That was&#13;
a lovely party! To top everything America was&#13;
celebrating its Bicentennial, and BJ and I were co-&#13;
chairmen of Sunbury's celebration. Busy-- Busy!&#13;
&#13;
After such a busy summer we decided we needed a&#13;
vacation. January 5, 1977, we left with Sam and&#13;
Mayme Reppart for our first trip to Florida. For&#13;
two weeks we toured every mile and saw every&#13;
attraction from Jacksonville to Key West, down the&#13;
west coast and up the east coast, and  around the&#13;
middle. More exciting events happened than I can&#13;
put on paper. One that just can't be omitted it&#13;
the saga of Mayme's underwear. She had her packing&#13;
finished---- even had to sit on the suit case to get&#13;
it closed -- was dressed, girdle and all when she&#13;
saw a pile of underpants she had forgotten. She&#13;
couldn't open the suitcase, so she just put them&#13;
on--one at a time over the girdle etc. At our &#13;
first stop, she was telling me the story, not&#13;
knowing that the men could hear every word! When &#13;
we came out, BJ began to razz her about her&#13;
escapade. To this day he reminds her to be careful&#13;
how she packs.&#13;
&#13;
We spent a couple of days in Leesburg, and  the&#13;
men fished with Leon Campbell while Mayme and I&#13;
shopped with Lucille. At night they taught us to&#13;
play 6 handed bid euchre--what a game!  Leon was&#13;
slightly deaf, but he told the men to listen for&#13;
Big Jim, an alligator that stayed near an island in&#13;
the lake and he roared unbelievably loud. They&#13;
were fishing in a fiber glass boat which&#13;
reverberated sound greatly. Bernard has always had&#13;
gas problems, and we had had baked beans for lunch.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.73.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 74 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As they floated quietly by the island, Bernard had&#13;
a problem. Need I say more? Leon shouted, "Thats&#13;
Big Jim! Listen, there he is!" Not only once did&#13;
the sound reverberate but quite often as they sat&#13;
and fished, Leon would say, "There he is again:&#13;
there's Big Jim, but I can't see him!" Sam and&#13;
Bernard just laughed; they knew! The guys couldn't&#13;
wait to get to the motel to tell Mayme and me about&#13;
that experience. You know, we heard Big Jim quite&#13;
often as we traveled around Florida. All the time&#13;
we were there it was cold and windy. Sam and BJ&#13;
both wore their pajamas under their trousers. When&#13;
we stopped at Sarasota to see Wendall and Doris&#13;
Day, we had to scrape ice off the windshield. That&#13;
trip was one we will never forget!&#13;
&#13;
In June of 1977, Lawrence Stockwell hurt his&#13;
leg. I had to change bandages quite often, take&#13;
food to him, and try to clean his house. It was&#13;
awful! Nan couldn't take it. Also Arlo was very&#13;
sick at Riverside Hospital with cancer of the back.&#13;
Poor Leona (his second wife) didn't get much&#13;
cooperation from his family, so we helped all we&#13;
could. On June 11, at 1:00 P.M. he died. Only&#13;
Leona, BJ and I were there. We took Leona home,&#13;
tried to call his kids, went to tell Lillian; then&#13;
when we finally arrived home, Wendell Carnes had&#13;
come in so I fixed him a meal. What a day! On&#13;
June 13 between calling hours for Arlo we had&#13;
twenty-five for supper. After calling hours&#13;
thirteen came back. All that time, we were picking&#13;
peas when we could, and Zada Longshore was hulling&#13;
them for me. What a lady!&#13;
&#13;
The winter of 77-78 was snow, snow and more&#13;
snow! Jan. 26 to Jan. 29 was the "killer Blizzard &#13;
of '78" We were without electricity, heat --&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.74.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 75 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
water. All roads were closed. Zada Longshore was&#13;
in a panic but we couldn't get to her. Finally Dud&#13;
Townley and Wayne Reppart got through the drifts&#13;
and took her to Wayne's where they had a wood-&#13;
burning stove. BJ and I made it to his shop where&#13;
he had a wood burning stove. We were like&#13;
marshmallows; we'd toast on one side a while, turn&#13;
and warm the other side. We could heat water and&#13;
soup. All my house plants froze. Thank goodness,&#13;
Lawrence was in Florida or he would have been in&#13;
trouble.&#13;
&#13;
By March the weather was better, but we were &#13;
still having snow. I was cleaning our walls,&#13;
stepped crooked, and broke my right ankle. Dr.&#13;
Stout put me in a cast to my knee. What a time I&#13;
had! Crutches were impossible for me to use. I&#13;
fell with one leg up on the dryer and the other in&#13;
the air--- what a mess. Bernard had an interesting&#13;
experience while I was incapacitated.  Now BJ is a&#13;
good cook, but I guess communication was our &#13;
problem. He was making dried beef gravy and asked&#13;
how much flour to use. I have a 1/4 cup measure in&#13;
my flour bin and told him to use not quite a&#13;
cupful--- meaning the 1/4 measure. Before long I&#13;
heard him banging pans and muttering, so I asked&#13;
what was wrong. He said he was just getting a&#13;
bigger skillet; then he said the stuff was too&#13;
thick -- like paste. I told him to add milk. Next&#13;
I heard, "Jen, Ive got to go to town for more&#13;
milk!" Again he was getting a bigger skillet. I&#13;
hobbled out to the kitchen. Instead of my flour&#13;
measuring cup, he had used a cup! Even the cats&#13;
wouldn't eat it. Later I had a walking cast and a&#13;
walker, and I was raring to go!&#13;
&#13;
The big day in 1978 that surpassed everything&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.75.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 76 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
was August 9 when Nan and Keith brought Jay Ryan&#13;
home --- 3 days. He had been born August 6, &#13;
1978 in Parkersburg, West Virginia. Both Nan and&#13;
Keith were in summer school working on their&#13;
Master's Degree, so I went over every morning at&#13;
6:30 AM for two weeks and kept Jay. He was such a&#13;
doll and so good. I say that the reason he's so&#13;
smart is that he and I talked all the time his&#13;
first two weeks. Well, I talked and he smiled.&#13;
Keith finished his Master's at Ashland, but Nan&#13;
waited until Jay was older. At Keith's graduation&#13;
as he walked across the stage to get his degree,&#13;
Jay, about two then, stood up on my lap and yelled,&#13;
"That's my daddy!"&#13;
&#13;
1980 was quite a year. In March we went with Sam&#13;
and Mayme to Florida to try to find some warm&#13;
weather as it had been so cold when we had gone &#13;
earlier. Nan called us to come home as Lillian was&#13;
very sick with Leukemia. We raced home, arrived&#13;
March 18, and went to Mt. Vernon Hospital to see&#13;
Lillian; she was not good, but was so glad to see&#13;
us. The next morning March 19, 1980, the hospital&#13;
called us, but by the time we arrived she was gone.&#13;
We felt she just waited for us to get home. In&#13;
August of 1980, Mildred Satterfield had a cerebral&#13;
hemorrhage and lived just a short time. Bernard &#13;
lost two sisters within six months. He is now the&#13;
only one left of the Jay Searles family.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard retired from the Ohio Department of&#13;
Agriculture in December of 1980. They had a big&#13;
party for him at Berwick Party House, even had Nan&#13;
and Keith as special guests. He received a&#13;
beautiful engraved watch, a citation from Governor&#13;
Rhodes, cash to buy his choice of fishing rods,&#13;
plus the prize gift ---a cow pie that had been&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.76.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 77 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
dried and varnished with a fountain pen in it.&#13;
They called it the "Bull-Shit Pen."&#13;
&#13;
Sometime during June of '81 Bob Searles and&#13;
Joyce were married. She's a good gal and will be&#13;
good for Bob.&#13;
&#13;
The summer of '81 Nan and Keith sold their house&#13;
so fast they couldn't get in the one they were&#13;
buying, so they stored their stuff and moved in &#13;
with us from June 19 - July 29. At times it was a&#13;
little crowded, but we made it. Jay was so much&#13;
fun. When they moved to Spring Valley Drive, their&#13;
present home, he kept wanting to go home. Now he&#13;
doesn't remember that home on Sunset at all.&#13;
&#13;
December 22, 1981, BJ got up acting very strange&#13;
-- no coordination --- slurred speech, etc. Dr.&#13;
Rupp sent him to Riverside where they diagnosed--&#13;
stroke. I had planned to have Christmas dinner, so&#13;
I sent the turkey and all the trimmings to Lib, and&#13;
she had the dinner. BJ and I spent Christmas and &#13;
New Year's Eve in the hospital, but he came home&#13;
Jan. 1, 1982. When the kids came over, Jay&#13;
asked, "Grandpa, where'd you get this stroke? You&#13;
sure messed up Christmas!" He recuperated very&#13;
well, and by March we were ready to go to Florida,&#13;
but we stayed at one place, Clermont, and did a lot&#13;
of resting and walking.&#13;
&#13;
During the spring of '82 Keith took another turn&#13;
in the hospital. He, BJ and Keith's brother, Jim,&#13;
had what they called hospital wear (several pairs&#13;
pajamas and a robe). Whoever used them last kept &#13;
them until the next fellow needed them. Keith had&#13;
to have his thyroid roots removed. Truthfully, he&#13;
used the hospital wear more than the other two.&#13;
Again Dr. Bonta performed miracles, He was good--&#13;
even if I didn't like him personally.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.77.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 78 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Things moved along rather smoothly. Jay was&#13;
growing cuter every day. He had a great baby-&#13;
sitter, Di-Di, whom he dearly loved. After a year&#13;
or so she had a little boy who was a good playmate&#13;
for Jay. Nan took Jay to nursery school in&#13;
Worthington and continued his kindergarten years&#13;
there. We went to his graduation from kindergarten&#13;
with cap and gown and the works.&#13;
&#13;
The summer of 1984 was quite an experience.&#13;
Nan, Keith, Jay, Bernard and I took a month's&#13;
vacation touring the West. Bernard bought a new&#13;
van, Nan planned the trip, Keith did most of the&#13;
driving, and Jay and I played. We saw beautiful&#13;
scenery, took many pictures, and even visited&#13;
friends ---Bill and Helen Bingman and Ron and &#13;
Miriam Moore. Too we spent the 4th of July week-&#13;
end with Jerry, Cheryl Brenner and family. Points &#13;
of interest were: The Corn Palace, Yellowstone,&#13;
Old Faithful, Black Hills, Tombstone, Tucson&#13;
Outdoor Museum, Jackson Hole, Tetons, Grand Canyon,&#13;
Zion National Park, and Wall Drug Store to name a few.&#13;
&#13;
After we were home a few days, BJ and I went to&#13;
Princeton, N.J. for Tom and Ann Warner's wedding.&#13;
Also we hit the Outlet Stores in Lancaster, Pa. On&#13;
the way home we stopped to visit BJ's army buddy,&#13;
Rocky Petrozzi and wife, Minda, in Mingo Junction,&#13;
Ohio. What happened I don't know but my hip began&#13;
hurting. I could scarcely walk. Dr. Rupp said it&#13;
was a swollen hip joint pressing on the sciatic&#13;
nerve -- bed rest for five weeks. I ended up&#13;
getting a back brace which I wore for several&#13;
months. We had to give up going to BJ's army&#13;
reunion in Indiana. December 20, 1984, Jay had&#13;
tubes put in his ears and adenoids removed and ate&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.78.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 79 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
chicken at night for supper. Some kid!&#13;
&#13;
September of '85 Bernard had to have surgery on&#13;
his carotid artery -- 95% clogged. Since the one&#13;
had been 100%, it was a must! He came through &#13;
surgery fine, recuperated fast, and we were  ready&#13;
to have some good days, and we did!&#13;
&#13;
For several years we had great times playing 6-&#13;
handed euchre with Sam, Mayme, Leon and Lucille&#13;
Campbell, also with Dean and Jane Cockrell and&#13;
Howard and Thelma Link. Of course, we had card &#13;
club in there quite often too. Sam's, Leon's and we&#13;
spent some good times at Scioto Downs at the races.&#13;
&#13;
One of our greatest thrills in 1985 was because&#13;
of Keith and his basketball team. Tech Granville&#13;
Blue Aces were the Sectional champs and went to the&#13;
District at the Coliseum. Sam, Mayme, BJ and I&#13;
never missed a game. After they won the District,&#13;
the players held Jay up to the basket to help cut&#13;
off the net. The next step was Regional at the&#13;
University of Dayton's gym. Again we followed the&#13;
team. the last game of the Regional they lost the&#13;
game, but they finished the season tied for 5th in&#13;
the state. They went the farthest any Granville&#13;
team had ever advanced. I tell you, the games were&#13;
thrillers -- nail biters -- whatever. Three of &#13;
them were won in overtime. One night during the &#13;
tournament game, the Newark radio announced, "All &#13;
of Granville is going to the tournament. Will the&#13;
last one out of Town turn off the lights?"&#13;
&#13;
The summer of '86 both Nan and Jay became&#13;
Thespians. We went to every play, but our&#13;
favorites were Jay in Tom Sawyer and Nan in the&#13;
female version of The Odd Couple. Both did &#13;
outstanding jobs; we were so proud! Bob and Joyce&#13;
went with us and were really impressed!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.79.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 80  of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
The last day in May in 1987, our neighbor, Kathy&#13;
Klamfoth, bought us a puppy, a pure white German&#13;
shepherd, and so cute. he looked like a puffy&#13;
snowball. Bernard named him immediately --&#13;
"Frosty." Through many days of patient (?)&#13;
training and discipline by Bernard, Frosty became a&#13;
well trained and intelligent dog. From that little &#13;
fur ball he developed into a 140 lb. mass of&#13;
muscle. When he stood on his hind legs behind me,&#13;
his front paws were over my shoulders.&#13;
&#13;
In 1989 Keith had to have more back surgery.&#13;
How that boy came through all his surgeries and how&#13;
Nan handled the trauma, I'll never know. In 1990&#13;
Keith began having what the doctors call  atrial&#13;
flutter. The top of his heart beat much faster&#13;
than the lower part. He had to have his heart&#13;
stopped and put back in sync at least four-five&#13;
times the next five years; it worried me, and I'm&#13;
sure it upset Nan and Keith.&#13;
&#13;
We enjoyed Frosty so much, but all good things&#13;
come to an end --December 16, 1992, he had cluster&#13;
seizures one after another until finally, he&#13;
couldn't take it any more. He had been on&#13;
medication for a couple of years, but this time&#13;
neither the vet nor medication could help him.&#13;
Gene and BJ buried him down in the field where&#13;
Dusty and Jay's dog Patch were buried. We surely&#13;
did and still do miss him. We had many dogs during&#13;
the years, Judy, Tippy, Ginger, and Dusty. We&#13;
loved them all, but Frosty was different.&#13;
&#13;
The next summer Sara fuller brought Bernard two&#13;
kittens supposedly to take Frosty's place. Those&#13;
kittens were cute, but they soon became cats who&#13;
had kittens who became cats who had kittens and so&#13;
on! We gave one cat and kitten away, but in 1995&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.80.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 81 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
we still had 2 cats and 8 kittens plus 3 male cats.&#13;
We took all but the three males to the Humane&#13;
Society. Maybe now we're safe.&#13;
&#13;
Just before Christmas (three days before) in&#13;
1993, as I was backing out the back door with my&#13;
hands full, I fell kerplop on my back because of&#13;
cats at my feet. PAIN! I couldn't let BJ touch &#13;
me, but some how he did get me up. Nan and Keith &#13;
took me to the emergency while Jay stayed with &#13;
Bernard. I floated through Christmas and New Years&#13;
on pain pills. Nan, Keith, and Jay kept everything&#13;
on an even keel as they were on break. I finally&#13;
was able to walk, but the damage has never been&#13;
cleared, but I'm walking! By March of '94 I was &#13;
able to have a cataract removed and a lens implant&#13;
in my left eye.&#13;
&#13;
June 17-27, 1994, Nan and Keith celebrated their&#13;
25th anniversary by taking a two week trip to Hawaii&#13;
with a cruise of all the islands. Jay stayed with&#13;
us, but attended a Sports Training Camp at OSU for&#13;
almost one week. He is such a great kid! August&#13;
6, 1944, Jay celebrated his 16th birthday and got&#13;
his driver's license. He had already taken driver&#13;
training and passed that with flying colors, so&#13;
August 6, was the Big Day!&#13;
&#13;
The fall of '94 I began falling quite often --&#13;
seemingly for no reason. However, in October I&#13;
blacked out; Joyce took me to the Emergency at St.&#13;
Ann's and they kept me. After a week of testing, I&#13;
was sent to Mt. Carmel for the insertion of a pace&#13;
maker. The bionic woman is on the go again! Again &#13;
Keith was having heart flutter problems and&#13;
insisted he have  a stress test. Result -- in three&#13;
days, Feb. 13, 1995, Dr. Dan Watson was doing a&#13;
a triple by-pass. Two arteries were 100% clogged and&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.81.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 82 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
one 85%. May 1st, though, he was able to be back&#13;
teaching and said felt better than he had for&#13;
five years. Talk about trauma ---Poor Nan!. Keith&#13;
was just starting therapy and on his way home from&#13;
the first treatment, saw their car out in a field.&#13;
When he stopped, there was Jay on a stretcher with&#13;
blood running down his face. Nan came home from&#13;
school to see a note on the garage door saying "Go&#13;
to Licking Memorial --Jay in accident." That was&#13;
quite a day! Jay was not seriously hurt&#13;
physically, but he was hurt. We hope he has had&#13;
his first and last accident. I wasn't there, but&#13;
although Jay was cited, Grandma says it wasn't his &#13;
fault --just an accident.&#13;
&#13;
Here we are June 1995, but the story doesn't end&#13;
here, Nan and Keith are thinking about retirement,&#13;
Jay is just thinking; we're pausing for the time&#13;
being in the story; the rest is up to you. The &#13;
future is approaching, and you readers are the ones &#13;
to continue the story. BJ and I hope you have as&#13;
full a life as we have had. Remember, the sad&#13;
events make you appreciate the happy ones.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.82.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 83 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
THIS and THAT&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and I have experienced so many&#13;
happenings that really don't correlate with other &#13;
events, so as we reminisced we jotted them down&#13;
here and there. In this chapter we're sharing them&#13;
with you with no particular rhyme nor reason.&#13;
They may be "one-liners," paragraphs or a page or&#13;
two--- just as they happened. Believe me, they go&#13;
from the ridiculous to the sublime! Isn't that&#13;
life?&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
In 1948 when we moved to our present home at&#13;
4588 N SR 3, Herb Brenner (Tom's brother) helped us&#13;
move. As he walked down the upstairs hall, we&#13;
heard him yell, "Wow! Lolly's got an electric&#13;
privey!"&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
I'm sure you have heard the statement "Enough&#13;
food for threshers." This statement originated &#13;
years ago. Farmers had no combines back in BJ's&#13;
and my youth. Instead was a machine called a&#13;
binder used to cut wheat and oats. It cut and&#13;
bundled and tied the grain. The farmers took the&#13;
bundles (sheaves) and placed them in a shock-- four&#13;
sheaves in the middle, one on each side, and one on&#13;
top. If these were made correctly, the grain&#13;
stayed dry even during a rain. Both Bernard and my&#13;
dad were good "shockers." After the grain was &#13;
thoroughly dried, it was threshed by a machine&#13;
which separated the grain and blew the straw and &#13;
chaff into a big pile to be used for bedding in the&#13;
winter. Frank Gallogly was the separator operator&#13;
and owner in our community. Dad thought he was the &#13;
best! He could manipulate the blower to make an&#13;
almost perfect cone-shaped straw pile. In&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.83.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 84 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bernard's area Lou Girberd and Lester Hoy had the&#13;
threshing outfit. For years it sat at the Girberd&#13;
place at the corner of Rt. #3 and Lewis Center Rd.&#13;
&#13;
The threshing was done by a group of neighbors &#13;
who went from farm to farm, taking their wagons to&#13;
the field, hauling in the sheaves, then pitching&#13;
them into the separator. The Threshing crew (about&#13;
12-14 men) were big eaters, and the women cooked&#13;
great meals for them. Remember no refrigerators&#13;
and hot weather, so everything had to be done in&#13;
one day. They women were up early, killing and&#13;
frying chickens, making pies, cooking vegetables&#13;
with good old mashed potatoes and gravy --"meat on&#13;
the bones food!" Grandma and Aunt Mae always&#13;
helped us. If it rained, we were in trouble!&#13;
Understand now what "Food enough for Threshers"&#13;
means?&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
One day Dad Searles was cutting wheat with the&#13;
binder when a bad storm was brewing. Dad sent BJ&#13;
and Arlo on to the house and was opening a wire&#13;
gate at the line fence when a bolt of lightning &#13;
struck a tree, jumped to the metal fence posts,&#13;
traveled down the fence, knocked Dad Searles down&#13;
so hard he rolled, and burned an imprint of a file&#13;
he was carrying in his pants pocket on his leg. &#13;
That imprint was on his leg for weeks. He also had&#13;
nerve reactions from the strike.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Dogs have played an important part in our family&#13;
life. I have told you about our last dog, Frosty,&#13;
but several others were very meaningful to us too.&#13;
Tippy was a German  Shepherd that was  very&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.84.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 85 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
protective of Nan and me and our property. When&#13;
Craig Hicks tried to help us by doing the milking,&#13;
Tippy wouldn't let him pick up the pails and&#13;
milkers. One time he jumped through a glass window&#13;
and chased Wendell Day back into his car. We never&#13;
felt afraid, but one evening Bernard was gone, and&#13;
a hobo started walking into the yard. Nan called,&#13;
"Here, Tippy! Here Tippy!'&#13;
&#13;
The next thing I knew the hobo was saying,&#13;
"Here, Tippy," and there they came up the yard with&#13;
Tippy licking the man's hand. I fed the guy fast &#13;
and sent him on his way before dark.&#13;
&#13;
Our Irish sett -- Ginger -- came to us I guess&#13;
because she loved us. She jumped in Bernard's&#13;
trailer and came home with him from the mill. We&#13;
found that she belonged to the Allen Fisher family,&#13;
so we contacted them and Allen came and took her&#13;
home on a Saturday morning.  On Sunday when we&#13;
returned from church, she was lying in our front&#13;
yard and greeted us with much tail wagging and&#13;
barking. Again we contacted the fishers, but when&#13;
Allen came after her, she sat behind Bernard and&#13;
would not move. Allen finally said, "She likes you&#13;
better than us, so I'll send you her papers." She&#13;
never left our yard! Ginger would lie on the&#13;
floor; then Nan would lay her head on Ginger, and&#13;
they'd take a nap together. It was ironic how she &#13;
was critically hurt. A strange old white cat came&#13;
here, and Ginger was chasing it out of the yard&#13;
just at dusk. Ginger could go only to the driveway&#13;
edge, but the cat darted into the road. An&#13;
oncoming car saw the cat, swerved into our drive to&#13;
miss it and hit Ginger. We were all heartbroken.&#13;
&#13;
We had a German shepherd dog, Dusty, who was&#13;
very intelligent. BJ had trained him to shake&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.85.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 86 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
hands among other things. When we ate our meals,&#13;
Dusty sat on a chair near the table. One day as we&#13;
were eating lunch, our neighbor came in. Bernard&#13;
said "Dusty, this is Lee Ball, shake hands with&#13;
him. Dusty flipped that paw out to shake. Lee&#13;
said, "By Gawd, that's the smartest dog I ever&#13;
seen!"&#13;
&#13;
Another day I had baked a butterscotch pie for&#13;
dinner. Bernard was teasing Nan that it was his,&#13;
and she'd pull the pie near her. They pulled the&#13;
pie back and forth until kerplop-- it fell to the&#13;
floor. Dusty was off the chair, gave three gulps -&#13;
- no more pie! Both Nan and BJ were a little&#13;
ashamed.&#13;
&#13;
* * * &#13;
&#13;
All the kids have "barefoot" stories. I couldn't&#13;
wait to go barefoot, but I'd stub my toe the first&#13;
day  -- enough for me! My dad always said that my&#13;
feet were so narrow because I never went barefoot.&#13;
BJ loved to go barefoot, and his feet were so tough&#13;
he could chase rabbits across wheat stubble.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Through the years, Bernard had many people&#13;
working for him during hay making. Some were&#13;
students of mine; such as, Keith Wampler who became&#13;
our son-in-law (no connection), and Glen Evans who&#13;
went to school and said, "You know Mrs. Searles&#13;
can cook!" Some were older  men. There was Clyde&#13;
Nichols who chewed big wads o f gum although he&#13;
didn't have a tooth in his head. When he'd come in&#13;
for dinner, he'd plop his gum on a fence post, then&#13;
pick it up as he went back to work --- chewing or&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.86.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 87 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"gumming it with a grin. One time it rained and&#13;
for three days the men couldn't work. The first&#13;
day back to work when Clyde came out after dinner,&#13;
he spied his wad of gum on the post and said, "By&#13;
Golly, there's my wad! and stuffed it in his mouth&#13;
and began to gum it!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
One of the ironies of World War II was the&#13;
rationing program. Those of us at home never had&#13;
enough gasoline, our rationing stamps were always&#13;
too few and many trips had to be cancelled. On the&#13;
other side, BJ said they wasted gas using it for&#13;
everything from cleaning their uniforms to piping&#13;
it to their tents for cooking and heating. We&#13;
willingly went without meat, sugar, and butter so&#13;
the soldiers could eat well. Bernard never saw&#13;
sugar, butter nor meat (except Spam, dried beef and&#13;
their special donkey) until he was on his way home.&#13;
The black market took care of that!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Our grandson, Jay, about to be seventeen, has&#13;
been our pride and joy since day one. if some day&#13;
his children read this book, believe, he was a&#13;
good kid! As a child, he had some choice sayings&#13;
which I'm calling&#13;
&#13;
"Jay-isms"&#13;
&#13;
Jay had spent several days with us and had been&#13;
a very good boy. I asked him if he was always that&#13;
good. He said, "Yes, I am, Grandma, but sometimes&#13;
my parents get confused and think I am not."&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.87.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 88 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A dear friend of mine died, and Jay, as a little&#13;
boy, was concerned about the burial. "Grandma, you&#13;
mean they put her in the ground?" When I tried to&#13;
explain, he said, "Well, when I die, I'm going to&#13;
take a flashlight so I can see where I'm going."&#13;
&#13;
On that same topic, he was curious when we&#13;
bought a cemetery lot and put up a monument. "Why&#13;
did you  buy such a big lot?" he asked Bernard.&#13;
Bernard told him there would be room for BJ and me,&#13;
his dad and mother, and for him and his wife, if&#13;
they wanted to be buried there. He said, "Well, I&#13;
don't know about Mom and Dad, but I want me and my&#13;
wife there." I asked him what about his kids. He&#13;
said, "They can look after themselves."&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
One day Nan and Jay were shopping, and everyone&#13;
they met seemed to know Jay and talk with him. Nan&#13;
couldn't understand and said, "Jay, how does&#13;
everyone know you and like you?"&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, Mom," he said, "I'm just a lovable guy!"&#13;
He was -- and is!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
At age six, Jay had to have a large mole removed&#13;
from his stomach. The doctor used a local&#13;
anesthetic, and the procedure was slightly bloody&#13;
which he mentioned to the attending nurse. Jay&#13;
retorted in a second, "Doc, you made the mess, you&#13;
clean it up."&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
On the wall in an upstairs bedroom, I have my &#13;
dad and mother's wedding certificate framed with&#13;
their picture. Jay asked me years ago who they&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.88.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 89 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
were. I told him it was my dad and birth mother.&#13;
His eyes just shone as he asked, "Grandma, were you&#13;
adopted?" When I told him that my mother had died&#13;
and that I had a step-mother, he said, "Boy am I&#13;
lucky! Step-mothers are mean!" Of course, I&#13;
explained that my step-mother had been wonderful to&#13;
me.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When Jay was in the seventh grade, he was very&#13;
small, but he wanted to go out for junior-high&#13;
football. This coach made this little guy the&#13;
center. I couldn't understand why the smallest kid&#13;
on the team was center. Jay said, "Grandma, I'm&#13;
the only one that can remember the plays." Later&#13;
in the season he was telling me about his game&#13;
saying, "Grandma, when you're center, and everyone&#13;
falls on top of you, Boy, it's dark down there!"&#13;
This year he'll be an eleventh grader and is going&#13;
out for "Receiver" on the team. I wonder what&#13;
he'll say to be put in the next book?&#13;
&#13;
Not long ago Nan asked Jay to do a task he&#13;
didn't particularly enjoy. He reacted by saying,&#13;
"Why do I have to do that?" Nan gave him that look&#13;
which means you're on the edge, Bud, and said&#13;
"Because I am your Mother!"&#13;
&#13;
Jay understood that look and the message and&#13;
smiling so sweetly said, "Okay, I can handle&#13;
that!"&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When Bernard had his stroke, we postponed our&#13;
Christmas party until he was able to enjoy it.&#13;
When we finally had our dinner ad gift exchange&#13;
Jay asked, "Grandpa, where'd you get that stroke?&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.89.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 90 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bernard said, "I sort of messed up Christmas,&#13;
didn't I?"&#13;
&#13;
Jay said, "Yes but that's O.K. Just don't get&#13;
any more strokes."&#13;
&#13;
* * * &#13;
&#13;
Just before Jay started school I had him at&#13;
Lazarus letting him pick out some clothes for his&#13;
Birthday. He chose the loudest and brightest&#13;
"Jams" that anyone could imagine. As I went to pay&#13;
for them, the following conversation took place ---&#13;
Grandma -- " Jay, they won't let you in school&#13;
in these!"&#13;
Jay -- "Oh, they'll let ME in!"&#13;
Clerk -- "What makes you so special that&#13;
you'll get preferential treatment?"&#13;
I thought, Oh dear, here it comes. My Dad's the&#13;
coach.&#13;
Jay -- "Ma'am. I am special! I'm adopted."&#13;
(I could have kissed him)&#13;
Complete silence -- Jay walked away, and the&#13;
clerk was very apologetic,. I was very proud!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
My dad could sell Eskimos ice, I do believe. We&#13;
sold eggs along the road, and Dad was proud of his&#13;
salesmanship. One day a bashful young man stopped,&#13;
and after talking with him for half an hour, Dad&#13;
sold him two dozen eggs. The next day when we&#13;
walked into church, there was the young man in the &#13;
pulpit. He was our new minister who had come to&#13;
make a pastoral call on our family. Dad never let&#13;
him get past the pump in the backyard, but sold him&#13;
two dozen eggs the poor man didn't want.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.90.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 91 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
While Bernard served in the army, he had some&#13;
interesting experiences that had nothing to do with&#13;
the war. He and several buddies had a chance to go&#13;
to Rome where they saw the ruins of the Coliseum&#13;
and to the Vatican where the Pope had a special&#13;
audience for the American GI's. Many of Bernard's&#13;
friends were Catholic, So Bernard felt a little&#13;
strange as he didn't understand everything.&#13;
However, it was a special feeling when each one&#13;
held up a coin that the Pope blessed by touching&#13;
the coin gently, saying a few words in Latin.&#13;
&#13;
Another time he had the privilege of visiting&#13;
the Dead Sea, Jerusalem, the Garden of Gethsemene,&#13;
and Bethlehem. At Jerusalem there were orange&#13;
groves with oranges as large as IGA's ($1.00)&#13;
muskmelons. When he went to the Wailing Wall in&#13;
Jerusalem, He scratched his name with a pocket&#13;
knife on the wall.&#13;
&#13;
As they visited Bethlehem, the guide would&#13;
always say, "As the story goes, "this is where such&#13;
and such happened. Christ's birthplace was&#13;
impressive because of the simplicity but the guide&#13;
would not be specific.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When Bernard's sister, Lillian, married Luther&#13;
Carnes in the early 50's, we not only gained a new&#13;
brother-in-law, but also a niece and nephew,&#13;
Luther's daughter, Wilma, and son, Wendell.&#13;
Wendell had always been close to us. He graduated&#13;
from Ohio State, was a pilot in the Air Force, and&#13;
after leaving the service, worked for Federal&#13;
Express, first as a pilot, and now as a flight&#13;
engineer. He has a pace maker exactly like mine.&#13;
Many of the spoons in my spoon collection were&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.91.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 92 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
given to me by Wendell from all his travels to&#13;
different countries through Federal Express. &#13;
Wendell Carnes is very special to us because of his&#13;
kindness to Lillian, his generosity to our church,&#13;
and his thoughtfulness to Bernard and me.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
We were honored to be chosen by Carl and Betty&#13;
Cocklin to be god-parents to their baby girl,&#13;
Kelly. She calls us Grandpa Bernard and Grandma&#13;
Lolly, but  writes G-Ma and G-Pa which, that plus&#13;
our address brings us mail from her where'er she&#13;
may be. Kelly spent a year in Norway her junior&#13;
year in high school and has just finished her first&#13;
year at Toledo University in Ohio. Many popcorn&#13;
balls and pounds off fudge went her way during those&#13;
two years. Kelly's grownup now, but when she was&#13;
a wee little girl, she ad Betty were driving home&#13;
from Sunday School when Betty heard her mumbling&#13;
and asked, "What are you saying, Kelly?"&#13;
&#13;
"Oh," said Kelly, "We're learning a big prayer.&#13;
It starts, "Our Father who are in heaven. How'd you &#13;
get your name?." Good question, Huh?&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When I bought my car before I was married, Tom&#13;
Brenner's trunk key to his Chevy fit the ignition&#13;
of my Chevy. Now this caused some interesting&#13;
situations. Tom and Kenny Feasel were the best of&#13;
friends, and what one didn't think of, the other&#13;
did. I never knew where I'd find my car. One&#13;
incident I'll never forget. I took Lib and her&#13;
girl friend to a movie at the Palace Theater in &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.92.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 93 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Columbus. After the show about midnight when we&#13;
went to the parking lot to pick up the car, there&#13;
was no car! We looked and looked and were just&#13;
ready to call the police when Tom and Kenny came&#13;
driving up, laughing their heads off. I didn't &#13;
laugh! The strange thing was that they didn't know&#13;
we were in Columbus, but just happened to drive by,&#13;
saw my car, and had a bright (?) idea.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Bernard and Dad worked together for many years.&#13;
Bernard always took water to the field, but Dad&#13;
couldn't be bothered. However, he'd drink Bernard's&#13;
water all the time. Bernard bought at least 20&#13;
thermos jugs, as he'd set them under the wagon out&#13;
of the sun, and Dad would forget, back up the&#13;
wagon, and crash bang another thermos was broken.&#13;
The worst part was no water until Bernard bought&#13;
another thermos. Dad would say, "Boy you're going&#13;
to have to get another jug; something happened to this one."&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Speaking of water - - -  we had ice water with all&#13;
our meals. One day Nan was dressed in her&#13;
majorette uniform to go to a football game as soon&#13;
as she finished her dinner. She sassed her dad not&#13;
once, but twice, but after the second time, BJ&#13;
flipped his glass of ice water in her face. After &#13;
she gasped for breath, not saying a word, she went&#13;
upstairs to dry her clothes. When she came down,&#13;
she said, "Mom, will you take me?"&#13;
&#13;
I quietly answered, "No your dad will take&#13;
you." Bernard said they had a very quiet ride.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.93.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 94 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The incident was never mentioned again. In fact, I&#13;
had forgotten about it until two years ago Nan&#13;
said, "I told one of my kids today that he should &#13;
have my dad. He'd learn to control his mouth."&#13;
She even told her class what had happened to her&#13;
and the lesson  she had learned. The kids enjoyed&#13;
that little "gem."&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
On summer when Jerry and Nan were six and Linda&#13;
was four, they were here playing and wanted to go&#13;
to the creek, and as usual, I warned Nan and Jerry&#13;
to watch Linda carefully. They had been down by&#13;
the creek about 15 minutes so I called them to&#13;
check. Jerry and Nan answered, but no Linda. They&#13;
hadn't seen her leave. I was petrified! We went&#13;
up and down the creek bank, calling constantly. I &#13;
looked in the barn, around the yard, and came in&#13;
the house to go to the bathroom. We had only one&#13;
upstairs in those days. There was Linda on the&#13;
stool smiling sweetly. She had been watching out&#13;
the window, but never answered our calls. I could&#13;
have choked her! Believe me, Jerry and Nan didn't&#13;
accuse me of having her as my pet that day!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
We had another bathroom experience. One summer&#13;
night about 11:30 a car drove in our drive,&#13;
stopped, and a woman got out, so Bernard went to&#13;
the door. The woman opened the storm door, barged&#13;
by BJ and headed for our downstairs bath -- no&#13;
lights anywhere except in the bathroom. We were so&#13;
dumbfounded that neither of us could say a word.&#13;
Then she came out, sat in B. J.' chair, and&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.94.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 95 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
started to make a phone call. Bernard did say,&#13;
"Where are you calling?" It was a call to her boy&#13;
friend in Fredericktown, and she needed him to help&#13;
her as she was having car trouble. Bernard said,&#13;
"That's a toll call." She assured us she would pay&#13;
and gave us a reference. She was a bar tender at a &#13;
bar on East Main Street, Columbus. The boy friend &#13;
came; they stayed in the car until 2:00 AM. We &#13;
stayed up too, but we never found out whether he&#13;
helped her or not, and we never saw any money for&#13;
the call.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When I went to Otterbein the depression was just&#13;
ending, but money was tight. Money was scarce at&#13;
the Jennings house, so Dad made an agreement with&#13;
the treasurer that he'd make payments whenever he&#13;
sold hogs or cattle. Can you imagine colleges&#13;
making agreements like that today?&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I have mentioned the housekeepers we had after&#13;
Mother's death. The last people who stayed with&#13;
Dad and me Clyde and Helen Carpenter, newly &#13;
married couple. I loved both of them! Since it&#13;
was summertime, we ate in the summer kitchen on a&#13;
table that had leaves held up with a bar, but that&#13;
table was very unsteady. One day Clyde leaned&#13;
against the leaf, upset the table, and broke every&#13;
dish on it! I was so scared, but I guess Dad was&#13;
so in love, as he was soon to be married to mother,&#13;
that he never said a word. Helen cried, but I do &#13;
remember Clyde saying, 'Accidents do happen." Dad &#13;
still never said a word!&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.95.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 96 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Today kids have cars soon as they reach 16.&#13;
Bernard had to wait until 21 and then he had to buy&#13;
his own. On his twenty-first birthday, he bought a&#13;
used Model A  Ford Roadster from Mack Blayney at the&#13;
Junk Ford Agency in Sunbury. He paid $90, but not&#13;
in one payment, but in payments of $5.00 a week.&#13;
You see he was making only $14.00 a week at Sears&#13;
in Columbus. He kept that car until 1939 when he&#13;
traded it to Brake's Garage in Sunbury for a '38&#13;
Plymouth. During the war, Dad Searles couldn't buy&#13;
a car, so BJ wrote a letter to the courts to&#13;
transfer his car to his dad which the judge did.&#13;
&#13;
* * * &#13;
&#13;
Nan was baptized December 28, 1947, at the&#13;
Condit Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Joseph&#13;
Lindsay. That kid screamed through the whole &#13;
ceremony. As we were leaving the church, Rev.&#13;
Lindsay said to Bernard, "You know the child gets&#13;
her disposition form the father." BJ never cared&#13;
for that minister after that day. Later, March 30,&#13;
1958, she joined church on her own and never&#13;
screamed once.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard was a member of the Berkshire Methodist&#13;
Church when we were married, but joined the Condit&#13;
Presbyterian Church soon after our marriage. I had&#13;
been a member since December 1923. Bernard served&#13;
as both trustee and elder. I never held an office,&#13;
but I taught Sunday School, led Youth Fellowship,&#13;
and  taught Bible School for many years. As of&#13;
December 1995, I'll have been a member at Condit&#13;
for 72 years. Miss Grace Condit was a 75 year&#13;
member. That's my goal!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.96.&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 97 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When I was a teenager, our minister, The Rev.&#13;
Thomas, helped the youth make an outdoor basket-&#13;
ball court which is now a parking lot. We had&#13;
league games every week with other church teams and&#13;
a tournament at the end of the season. Those games&#13;
plus our Christian Endeavor (youth fellowship) made&#13;
up my social calendar for the summer.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When Nan and Bonnie Reppart Caudill were&#13;
small, they played together a great deal. One day&#13;
they were playing in a wading pool, stepping out on&#13;
cement, making foot prints. All of a sudden Nan&#13;
came crying into the house. Sobbing her heart out,&#13;
she cried, "Mom, Bonnie says I have flat feet, do I,&#13;
Mom?"&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
There were three Grace Condits in our community,&#13;
so they were identified by their husband, or a&#13;
lack of one.&#13;
&#13;
Dane's Grace was leader of our church choir and&#13;
tried her best to teach me to play the piano, but I&#13;
wasn't a very receptive pupil. Ed's Grace was our&#13;
next door neighbor, and after her husband's death&#13;
rented her farmland to Dad and Bernard. To this&#13;
day Bernard can picture her peeking around the&#13;
window curtain to watch him go to the field. For&#13;
some reason, don't ask why, the fuses for&#13;
electricity to the barn were in the house. One day &#13;
a storm was coming; BJ was unloading baled hay into&#13;
the barn when a fuse blew and the loader quit. He&#13;
went to the house, knocked and knocked on the door,&#13;
but Grace wouldn't answer. He had to walk home,&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.97.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page  98  of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
call her on the phone, and ask her to please let&#13;
him in to change a fuse. She did, but BJ was&#13;
upset!&#13;
&#13;
Then there was Miss Grace Condit, a pillar of&#13;
faith, who lived with her brother and sister, Edgar &#13;
and Clara Condit. After their deaths she lived&#13;
alone in  a big old barn of a house, all made from&#13;
black walnut. One evening, we had a terrible storm&#13;
-- hail, wind and rain. As soon as we could we&#13;
went up to check on Grace. There was a big tree&#13;
blown across her driveway, the whole top lying on&#13;
the roof of her house,; the chimney had been broken&#13;
off and bricks were lying everywhere. We ran to&#13;
the back door and called for her. She answered&#13;
cheerfully, "Come on in." There she was sitting in&#13;
a rocker reading a book by the light of a kerosene&#13;
lamp. We told her about the tree, chimney, etc.&#13;
Her answer was, "I know, but the roof didn't fall&#13;
in, so I couldn't see that I should get upset."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bernard also farmed her farm. By this time&#13;
farmers were using combines. It seemed one year&#13;
that during the week we'd have rain, but on Sunday&#13;
the wheat was ready to combine. For several weeks&#13;
this happened. Finally, Bernard said, "Grace, if&#13;
the wheat's dry next Sunday, would you mind if I&#13;
combined it?" You see her family never worked on&#13;
Sunday. They milked their cows, but wouldn't ship&#13;
the milk. The ate Sunday meals but did all the&#13;
cooking on Saturday. Can you imagine her answer?&#13;
She said, "Bernard, I think there will be another&#13;
day; if there isn't we won't need the wheat." The&#13;
next week the combining was completed. After she&#13;
sold her farm she bought a little house in South&#13;
Condit. A neighbor found her sitting in her&#13;
rocking chair where she had peacefully died with&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.98.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 99 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
the Bible in her lap. Ironically, that house was&#13;
Nan and Keith's first house.&#13;
&#13;
During our growing up years there were Blue Laws&#13;
which prohibited dancing, shows, sports, business,&#13;
etc. on Sundays. No one worked on Sunday except to&#13;
do the very necessities. No stores or gas stations&#13;
were ever open on Sunday. It was the Blue Law that&#13;
Miss Grace Condit's family adhered to more strictly&#13;
than many of us, as they were of the Puritanical&#13;
Presbyterian Church. The first year my dad planted&#13;
corn on Sunday because of a wet spring, the&#13;
community was sure that none would grow. All the &#13;
people  planned their shopping so their shelves were&#13;
full over Sunday. Probably that's why we went to &#13;
town every Saturday night. How times have changed!&#13;
Now, Sunday is the biggest shopping day of the&#13;
week. By the way, I have never heard of the&#13;
repealing of the Blue Laws. People just began&#13;
ignoring them.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
When I was about 4 years old, I was traipsing&#13;
after my dad who was cutting hay with horses in a&#13;
field by my grandma's. The horses stepped in a&#13;
bumble bee's nest which caused havoc. The horses&#13;
went wild as they were getting stung. So was I!&#13;
Dad yelled, "Go to grandma's. The darned bees&#13;
were in my curly hair. I was crazy! Grandma took&#13;
care of me, but I was badly stung on my head. I&#13;
couldn't stand to have my hair brushed for days.&#13;
To this day just seeing a bee makes me shiver.&#13;
It's ironic, but when Nan was 4 years old, she was&#13;
in the barn with Bernard when a bumble bee stung&#13;
her on the tummy. She immediately began swelling&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.99.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 100 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
from her stomach to her knees. The doctor had to&#13;
give her a shot. So --- both of us stay away from&#13;
bees.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
July 4, 1959, Bernard won his first and last&#13;
prize. The firemen had a raffle for an aluminum&#13;
boat, 5 horse motor, and boat trailer at $1.00&#13;
per chance. Eldon Frakes had one ticket left just&#13;
before the drawing. BJ had 90 cents: I gave him a &#13;
dime. The M.C. drew the winning name ---Bernard&#13;
Searles. I went flying up to steps to the stage,&#13;
but Chuck Nettelhorst wouldn't give me the prize --&#13;
my name wasn't Bernard. June 21, 1995, Bernard&#13;
gave the outfit to Carl Cocklin who loves to fish.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In September 1985, Bernard had surgery to his&#13;
right carotid artery. Since the left side was 100%&#13;
clogged and had already caused his stroke earlier,&#13;
he had to keep the right artery clear. He didn't&#13;
know it, but the surgeon had to stop in the middle&#13;
of the surgery as his blood pressure went so low.&#13;
He came through the surgery, though, and is still&#13;
going strong. His big problem is in the back&#13;
and legs -- probably poor circulation.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1994 Bernard bought new choir robes for the&#13;
entire adult choir at our church plus an organist&#13;
robe for Bonnie Caudill. They are beautiful.&#13;
&#13;
Presbyterian blue!&#13;
&#13;
* * *   &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.100.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 101 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bob Searles has been very close to Bernard&#13;
through the years. When he was a kid Bernard was&#13;
teaching him to fish. One day they were at Lime&#13;
Rock just east of Sunbury which was deep -- deep&#13;
then. Bob caught a nice fish and was pulling it in&#13;
when he lost it -- just at the top of the water.&#13;
Before Bernard could do anything , Bob had waded in&#13;
after that fish and was blubbering in water over&#13;
his head. Bernard retrieved him , but that ended&#13;
the fishing that day.&#13;
&#13;
Bob's fist marriage to Deana Ball ended in&#13;
divorce after fifteen years, but they had  three &#13;
lovely children, Teri, Tami, and Bobby. During&#13;
these years they were at our house at least once a&#13;
week, and the kids were like our grandchildren. We&#13;
had a tradition on Christmas Eve that they all met&#13;
us at our church for candle light service, then &#13;
came to our house for chicken sandwiches and&#13;
goodies plus a gift exchange. After the divorce&#13;
Bob tried to keep the tradition, but we soon lost&#13;
the girls which hurt us very much. We weren't even&#13;
invited to their weddings, nor have ever seen their&#13;
children. These things broke our hearts. However,&#13;
Bobby has always stayed in touch. He had a&#13;
beautiful wedding (which we attended) marrying his&#13;
wife, Linda. They with their darling Elizabeth Ann&#13;
join us with Bob and his present wife, Joyce, some&#13;
time during the Christmas holidays.&#13;
&#13;
Joyce has been an integral part of our family.&#13;
The first time Bernard met her at the State Fair,&#13;
he came home and said, "Well, Bob's finally found a&#13;
gal with some sense." She very seldom misses a&#13;
week that she's not out here to check on us, and&#13;
we've really had some fun-time shopping trips.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.101.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 102 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Jay asked that this event be included in the&#13;
book, as he feels the punch line is important. One&#13;
day Bernard and Jay were putting a toy boat&#13;
together. They zoomed through the project but had&#13;
two pieces left over that were needed to make the&#13;
boat run. So --- they ad to take it apart and&#13;
start again. Bernard said, "Jay, let this be a &#13;
lesson to you. Always read the directions before&#13;
you start a project."  "Always read the Directions" &#13;
has become a slogan for the Searles-Wampler family.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Nan is very appreciative of the fact that Marian&#13;
Whitney gave her a thorough background in music.&#13;
For several years, Marian taught Nan not only to&#13;
play the piano and read music, but also to&#13;
understand music theory and to appreciate all types&#13;
of music.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
The absolute worst thing that has ever happened&#13;
to me happened at Seaside Hospital. I was working&#13;
the cardiac ward when a small child, probably 6-7&#13;
years old, became very nauseated. A nurse had me&#13;
pick her up and hold her in my arms while she&#13;
changed the bed. all at once the child's eyes&#13;
rolled back in her head; there was a tremor all&#13;
through her body. I'll never forget it! My arms&#13;
shook , and I could scarcely call the nurse. She &#13;
took one look and went for  a doctor. I was still&#13;
holding the child while her muscles jerked&#13;
involuntarily. The doctor came and pronounced  her&#13;
dead. BUT he had me carry her down to the morgue.&#13;
She was so tiny and thin, and now her body was&#13;
limp. I couldn't talk about it for day days, and now&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.102.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 103 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
as I write I have goosebumps thinking of the&#13;
tremors.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Our Canadian vacation with Ray, Helen, and kids&#13;
was full of exciting events, but Karen had an&#13;
experience that she remembers yet after almost 40&#13;
years. Each day the camp gave a prize for the&#13;
largest bass caught. also the lodge prepared a&#13;
lunch -- without any meat -- for the guests who&#13;
went fishing. Everyone was supposed to catch fish&#13;
and fry them for lunch. Ray, Helen, John, and&#13;
Steve went in one boat, but we met at noon for lunch.&#13;
Fishing this day had not been good, but Karen&#13;
hooked a nice one. she listened so carefully to&#13;
Bernard as he'd say, "Give it a little line. Reel&#13;
in slowly. Ease out a little. Hold it! (etc-etc-&#13;
finally) Yank! Reel in!" Karen landed a 14 inch&#13;
bass. She was so proud! Alas, when we met Ray's&#13;
boat, no one had a fish but Karen. she was not&#13;
going to let that fish be eaten,  but smooth Ray&#13;
convinced her that her fish couldn't win the prize&#13;
as it wasn't big enough. Karen cried; Ray and &#13;
Bernard consoled her by taking her picture with the&#13;
fish in several positions: we ate the fish! After &#13;
fishing for a while, we went back to the lodge for&#13;
the awards. The fire flew! No one had caught a &#13;
bass all day. There were pike-- nice ones -- but&#13;
no bass. Karen would have won the prize -- oh,&#13;
what an unhappy girl. Ray was a sad father, and to&#13;
this day he hasn't been able to get Karen to say,&#13;
"It was O. K. Dad." no Sir! We ate her prize!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
.103.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 104 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When Bernard and I were first married, he was&#13;
Master of the 400 F&amp;AM Masonic Lodge of Sunbury,&#13;
then went on to be a 32 degree Mason in Scottish&#13;
Rite and a Shriner. He is a 50 year member of the&#13;
Sunbury Lodge, but is not able to be active any&#13;
more. He is proud of nephew Bob though who is a 33&#13;
degree Mason and still going strong. Both of us&#13;
are members of Sunbury Columbia Chapter #33 Order&#13;
of the Eastern Star, and I am a 50 year member--&#13;
not active either. It think it's old age.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Lib was about 4 years old; I was a teenager and &#13;
easily embarrassed. We had a minister whom I&#13;
admired very much, but I made the mistake of saying&#13;
in front of Lib that he wore a hair piece. One day&#13;
when he visited us, Lib said to him, "Mr. Rice,&#13;
Lolly says you wear a wig, do you? I could have &#13;
died right there!&#13;
&#13;
Without any embarrassment, Rev. Rice took off his&#13;
toupee and said, "Yes Lolly's right, do you want&#13;
to touch it?" We were having troubles in our&#13;
church, he was sent to Condit to heal the&#13;
church's wounds. Do you understand how he could do&#13;
it? He was a special person. &#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Karen requested that this story be included in&#13;
"the book'. Before Aunt Eve (Dad's oldest sister)&#13;
died, she gave me a small Indian pouch which&#13;
according to the family story was given to her by&#13;
her Indian grandmother. I have given it to Nan to&#13;
keep for posterity. We don't know whether the&#13;
story is true, but we do know that the pouch is&#13;
very old, badly worn, had made from a strange&#13;
material, has little beads making Indian designs,&#13;
and was Aunt Eva's prize memento. That's good&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.104.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 105 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
enough for us!&#13;
&#13;
Some of my ex-students want me to tell you some &#13;
school stories -- just two.&#13;
&#13;
One Hallowe'en someone (no one could find out&#13;
who) drove around the Big Walnut High School and&#13;
shot holes in the windows. My room was one that&#13;
was hit. That winter we were having a snow storm,&#13;
and Bill Sherbourne was sitting in the back of the&#13;
room in front of a window. All of a sudden, he&#13;
raised his hand and asked to move as the snow was&#13;
coming in the holes. Before I could say a word,&#13;
Ralph Smith said, "Sit there! If you hadn't shot&#13;
holes in the windows, the snow wouldn't be blowing&#13;
in."&#13;
&#13;
I said, "I guess that's it, Bill.' Principal&#13;
Estel Miller was glad to hear the story.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
My speech class was in charge of all the&#13;
assemblies and chapel programs at Big Walnut. We&#13;
gave plays at Christmas, Easter, and Thanksgiving&#13;
assemblies, some serious and some "funny". We did&#13;
everything from Red Baron to Christmas Carol. In&#13;
one Thanksgiving play Jim Holobaugh as John Alden&#13;
was showing how sharp his knife was for carving the&#13;
turkey. He took a hair  from his head to split with&#13;
the knife, hit his finger, then left the stage. As&#13;
he came back stage, blood was spurting from his&#13;
finger. He took one look and passed out. I turned&#13;
to my student teacher only to see her sliding down&#13;
the wall. I gave every one I could an ammonia&#13;
capsule and started working on Jim. The play was&#13;
progressing on stage, and the kids had to ad-lib as&#13;
Jim was supposed to return. Jerry Brenner came to &#13;
the door, looked back stage and saw me working with&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.105.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 106 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Jim. Jerry said, "John Alden is real busy -- he&#13;
won't be back for a while." I got Jim awake, gave &#13;
him an ammonia capsule, and sent him back on stage.&#13;
Jerry said, "It's about time you got back here."&#13;
We got through the play! The audience never knew&#13;
our problem.&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
After Bernard had been overseas for a couple of&#13;
years, he sent me a letter saying that when he got&#13;
home, he was going to buy an airplane, set it&#13;
outside his bedroom window, and throw rocks at it&#13;
every morning. That's one goal he never &#13;
accomplished!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
1995 Teen Age Humor&#13;
&#13;
Jay asked me what the height of conceit is. I&#13;
couldn't answer. He said, "A fly lying on his&#13;
back, in the water under a bridge yelling, 'Raise &#13;
the bridge!'&#13;
&#13;
July 15, 1995, HOT! Nan, Keith and Jay had a&#13;
yard sale in our front yard. The humidity was so&#13;
high that the heat index was 114 degrees. Jay&#13;
said, "you know it's hot when Grandma fans with a &#13;
fly swatter."&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Jerry Brenner stayed with us the first four weeks&#13;
and the last six weeks of his first grade in&#13;
school. Danny was born September 5, 1953, so we &#13;
kept Jerry. Tom and Lib moved to their present&#13;
home on Hartford Road in the spring of "54, and as&#13;
a result were in the Croton school district. They&#13;
didn't want to move Jerry, so he stayed with us.&#13;
&#13;
The fist day of school Jerry got a paddling for &#13;
running the hall. When he came home and told&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.106.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 107 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
us, Bernard told him not to worry, he had just made&#13;
a mistake. That evening we went down to see my dad&#13;
and Jerry told him about the paddling. Dad&#13;
said, "Young man, come here!" He turned him over&#13;
his knee and really paddled him, saying "When you&#13;
get a paddling at school, you get one at home!"&#13;
Poor Jerry , he was so upset.&#13;
&#13;
The last day of school I was getting Jerry's&#13;
clothes ready for him to wear. All at once, Jerry&#13;
began to cry and said, "Please, Aunt Lolly, don't&#13;
make me wear that shirt. That's my paddling&#13;
shirt!' He wore a shirt of his own choosing.&#13;
&#13;
Don't tell me that paddling doesn't make an &#13;
impression!&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
As I have mentioned several times throughout my&#13;
writing, the Condit Presbyterian Church has been a&#13;
vital part of our lives. How I could have&#13;
forgotten the wind storm that almost destroyed our&#13;
church building I do not know. The Rev. Larry&#13;
Warner was our minister and Bernard was chairman of&#13;
the trustees when the catastrophe happened. The&#13;
wind blew out part of our beautiful stained glass&#13;
window of Christ praying in the Garden of&#13;
Gethsemane and twisted the frame of the building.&#13;
The whole eastern section of pews was ruined by&#13;
rain and debris. The congregation was devastated,&#13;
but immediately joined with the trustees to try to &#13;
repair the building. A contractor, Mr. Lowendeck&#13;
from Newark, was hired for the job. In the&#13;
meantime we had church in the gym of what is now&#13;
the Harrison Street Elementary School.&#13;
&#13;
The contractor straightened the building and&#13;
pulled it together with cables which still hold it.&#13;
When you look up to the ceiling and notice "beams"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.107.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to page 108 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--no- no-they are boxes holding and concealing the&#13;
cables. The broken parts of the window were&#13;
replaced and are not noticeable. The congregation&#13;
donated money for pews spirited by Bill Whitney who&#13;
donated the first pew for his family. When we&#13;
"oldies' say we have a church pew, we really do.&#13;
The old pews that were usable were sent to a&#13;
Methodist Church in West Virginia, thanks to Larry&#13;
Warner's idea. Is it any wonder that we are proud&#13;
of our church-- the people-- and the building?&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
We have proof that Indians inhabited our farm&#13;
many moons ago. Bernard and Jay have found flint,&#13;
arrowheads and small tools, but Bernard plowed out&#13;
the great one right in front of our barn. It is a &#13;
stone ax weighing eight pounds and in perfect&#13;
condition. An archeologist dated it as being about&#13;
5000 years old. Bernard was offered $500 for it, &#13;
but he said, "I'll keep for grandson Jay."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
* * *&#13;
&#13;
Here we are in 1995. BJ and I have tried to&#13;
give you a glimpse of life from the horse and buggy&#13;
days to the space program and the walk on the moon. &#13;
The future is open to you. Keep busy both mentally&#13;
and physically; keep a sense of humor, and above&#13;
all, keep the faith! Bernard warns, "Don't be so&#13;
heavenly perfect that you are no earthly good." Our love&#13;
pours out to you and yours.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
.108.</text>
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                    <text>From the Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover (112)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 109 of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Sunbury News&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, September 21, 1993&#13;
&#13;
Preserving local history with memoirs&#13;
&#13;
by Brian Miller&#13;
&#13;
"The most precious commodities of all- peoples' own recollections&#13;
of their worlds - seldom get preserved at  least in a proper and permanent way."&#13;
&#13;
So writes Bob Greene, columnist for the Chicago Tribune, in the&#13;
introduction to his book, "To Our Children's Children: Preserving&#13;
Family Histories for Generations to Come."&#13;
&#13;
His book inspired Polly Horn, director of the Sunbury Community&#13;
Library, to get local residents going on writing their own memories..&#13;
&#13;
"The people that are doing it are just having a wonderful time, bringing&#13;
back things that they haven't talked about for years and reliving a &#13;
life they had forgotten about," said Horn.&#13;
&#13;
Two of those doing it are Lolly and Bernard Searles, Ohio 3 in Trenton&#13;
Township. Lolly, 79, is a retired school teacher, and her husband, 80,&#13;
is a retired livestock inspector and mail carrier. They worked on it&#13;
throughout the summer. Now in its very final stages, it is 125 typed pages.&#13;
&#13;
They worked together on it in the evenings. She did the writing since&#13;
she is more comfortable with that skill.  But Lolly said; "Bernard has a &#13;
memory like an elephant. He remembers things I don't.&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury resident Marian Whitney, retired former editor of The Sunbury&#13;
News, is the first person to finish hers. She said as you become&#13;
more aware of your past you remember things you hadn't thought &#13;
about in years.&#13;
&#13;
Whitney, 85, recalled a packaged flower garden, a sheet that had seeds&#13;
implanted in it that you spread out on the ground. "It was on of the&#13;
highlights of my childhood," she said.&#13;
&#13;
Greene's book is designed to trigger the memories by asking questions&#13;
on various topics and times in ones life. It contains sections such as&#13;
"the house you grew up in", "childhood neighborhood", "romance and&#13;
relationships" and holidays".&#13;
&#13;
Lolly says straight out "if it hadn't been for the book, she never would &#13;
have done the project."&#13;
&#13;
The book of memories are individual works and they bear the&#13;
personality of the authors. Whitney included pictures with hers: Lolly and&#13;
Bernard had no pictures. They designed their own covers.  Lolly and&#13;
Bernard's has a horse and buggy on the top and a moon rover on the &#13;
bottom to signify the two centuries the book represents: the 1800s to the&#13;
1900s. It was made by their grandson.  Whitney included several&#13;
family recipes in back such as "Marian's bread and butter pickles."&#13;
&#13;
"Everybody can do their own thing," said Horn.&#13;
&#13;
Both the Searleses and Whitney said they did the project to preserve&#13;
memories for their families. The Searles' daughter, Nan, has read it,&#13;
said Lolly.&#13;
&#13;
Whitney said her favorite things is seeing the reaction of her children&#13;
and grandchildren to it. All of her five children and all but one of her&#13;
15 grandchildren have read it.&#13;
&#13;
"It's the little things, the insignificant things, that seem to mean a lot&#13;
to the grandchildren," said Whitney "Not the facts of life."&#13;
&#13;
Lolly remembered butchering hogs and the aftermath, hanging up&#13;
and scalding the carcasses, and rendering the lard.&#13;
&#13;
She also remembered from her days as a student at the Condit grade&#13;
school bringing buckets of water from the house they now live in to &#13;
the school, which did not have its own supply of water. The pupils all&#13;
drank out of one dipper.&#13;
&#13;
Bernard had many memories&#13;
&#13;
Please see MEMORIES, Page 2&#13;
&#13;
Photo : Lolly and Bernard Searles look over a notebook into which Lolly wrote down their memories. The notebook later became a  book of memories and will be preserved in the Community Library.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 110  of From Horse and Buggy to the Moon Land Rover&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MEMORIES&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
about his four years in the armed services during World War II and about&#13;
time spent with his grandfather, a Civil War veteran.&#13;
&#13;
Several people are in various stages of writing their books of&#13;
memories, according to Horn.&#13;
&#13;
Horn said most of them are comfortable writing longhand, rather&#13;
than on a computer. She had supplied them with shorthand notebooks, &#13;
which have two columns. They write in the left column, and when they &#13;
reach  a stopping place submit it to the library, and a typist puts it on a &#13;
computer. It is sent back for additions, corrections, and changes, and &#13;
then resubmitted for more typing into the computer, and so forth. The &#13;
left column gives them a place to put things they remember later and &#13;
want to insert in the book, Horn said.&#13;
&#13;
The end result is a laser-printed hard bound book of memories that is&#13;
kept in the library's collection.&#13;
&#13;
The library sponsors a group that meets once a week to help people get&#13;
going in what can be a difficult process.&#13;
&#13;
"The hardest thing for people to do is to think back," said Horn. "You&#13;
get so caught up in today you forget what you did as a child and yet your&#13;
memory is really in good shape, if you can get back there."&#13;
&#13;
The meetings play an important role, Horn said, in helping people &#13;
overcome their fear of writing.&#13;
&#13;
"It may take them four or five meetings before they write a word,"&#13;
said Horn, who said the meetings give people a chance to talk about&#13;
their writing.&#13;
&#13;
There are about 12 people who are regularly attending the meetings,&#13;
Horn said. The meetings take place on the second Wednesday of each&#13;
month at 2:30 p.m. at the library.&#13;
&#13;
The library bought 25 copies of Greene's book, which Horn said people&#13;
can keep as long as they need to.&#13;
&#13;
As far as the books or memories, Horn plans to put them on the library's&#13;
shelves , as long as the authors don't mind.&#13;
&#13;
"I let them circulate to let people get ideas on on their own," she said. "I&#13;
want one of them to be put back because it's a part of our history that's&#13;
lost to the community.&#13;
&#13;
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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</text>
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                <text>Farris family--genealogy&#13;
Jennings family--genealogy&#13;
Leach family--genealogy&#13;
Local History--Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury&#13;
Personal narratives--Bernard Searles (1914-1999)&#13;
Personal narratives--Lola Dell Jennings Searles (1915-2001)&#13;
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                <text>This is the family history of the Bernard and Lola Dell Searles' families. Narrated by Lola (Lolly ), she describes their childhoods, family celebrations and holidays, education and professional careers, as well as Bernard's time spent in WWII.</text>
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                <text>Editor Marian Whitney; Community Library, Sunbury Ohio&#13;
Editor Polly Horn; Community Library, Sunbury, Ohio</text>
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&#13;
From the Beginning&#13;
&#13;
Verna Cushman Bergandine&#13;
&#13;
[cover photo: Verna Cushman Bergandine]&#13;
&#13;
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[illustration:Community Library Bookplate]</text>
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From the Beginning&#13;
&#13;
Verna Cushman Bergandine&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Verna Cushman Bergandine]&#13;
&#13;
Community Library&#13;
&#13;
1996&#13;
&#13;
Verna C. Bergandine  [signature]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 2 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Land in Champaign Co., Ohio known as the Darby Plains was purchased by parties&#13;
&#13;
from the New England States in 1819. After considering Hartford for the settlers&#13;
&#13;
from Connecticut, New Albany for the New Yorkers, the name Woodstock was&#13;
&#13;
chosen for so many arriving from Vermont.  After a while the Yankee School District&#13;
&#13;
became the Woodstock School District.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Five families from Connecticut came in 1819, among them William Gifford. The &#13;
&#13;
following year five more families joined the Colony including Harvey Cushman.&#13;
&#13;
These two names of early settlers are the ones that are of interest to me.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Harvey Cushman was a direct descendent of Robert Cushman of London , business&#13;
&#13;
agent for the Pilgrims. He and wife Lucinda Bennett Sears brought their young&#13;
&#13;
son, four year old Franklin, with them from Massachusetts.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Harvey was a man of many interests. He was a farmer, Attorney, Physician and Inn&#13;
&#13;
Keeper. He built the first Hotel in Woodstock. In the old History of Woodstock, I&#13;
&#13;
found this account.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"In 1835 Harvey Cushman built a hotel on the east portion of lot 15. In those&#13;
&#13;
days the ceremony of of "raising" a house was attended with the consumption of&#13;
&#13;
vast quantities of corn whiskey. On the day that frame work of the&#13;
&#13;
Cushman Hotel was raised, every man present, except Sylvanus Smith, was&#13;
&#13;
drinking, and most were decidedly under the influence of the whiskey.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When the framework was finally up, it was decided to christen the future hotel&#13;
&#13;
in some such manner as battleships are christened. A bottle of whiskey was&#13;
&#13;
provided the soberest man, who climbed to the top, took a drink of the&#13;
&#13;
contents, then threw the bottle, dripping its contents enroute over the building.&#13;
&#13;
Thus was christened the Woodstock Hotel.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A heated discussion took place following the christening. Some said that hotel&#13;
&#13;
was spelled with one I and others insisted that two were needed. The question&#13;
&#13;
was referred to Sylvanus Smith, he being the only sober man in the crowd.&#13;
&#13;
Smith surveyed the crowd around him and rendered his decision - If this was&#13;
&#13;
a sample of what the hotel was to be, it should be spelled "hot-hell". It proved&#13;
&#13;
to be that for three or four years. Gangs of hoodlums gathered there on&#13;
&#13;
Saturday afternoons, staying until midnight, terrifying the people with their&#13;
&#13;
demoniacal yells, fighting and running horses on the street.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The local residents finally put a stop to the weekly orgies. A vigilante committtee&#13;
&#13;
gathered many eggs and let them age in the sun. The next Saturday night when&#13;
&#13;
the "gang" emerged from the hotel the conspirators turned loose a volley of&#13;
&#13;
eggs. A man has to be pretty drunk not to resent meeting an aged egg face to&#13;
&#13;
face.  The men in charge of the egg brigade must have had practice, for the&#13;
&#13;
mob beat a hasty retreat. The hotel came in for a share of the omelet, and the&#13;
&#13;
next morning presented a grotesque yellow appearance. The proprietor decided&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 3 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
to confine his liquor sales to travelers, and the hotel became a very respectable&#13;
&#13;
tavern.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In the early days no social gathering was fully complete and enjoyable without&#13;
&#13;
dancing. Several terms of Dancing School were taught in the hotel soon after&#13;
&#13;
it was completed. Seldom a Fourth of July or New Years passed without having&#13;
&#13;
a Grand Ball in the hotel ballroom on the second floor."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
For many year, after the hotel was no longer used for travelers, it was a private &#13;
&#13;
dwelling. It was torn down a few years ago, one of the oldest landmarks.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1837 Franklin Cushman married Susan Brown Gifford, daughter of William &#13;
&#13;
Gifford. They had five children, Julius Jehiel, Charles Anthony, Lucy Lucinda,&#13;
&#13;
Warren Sibley, and Daniel Harvey. Daniel died in infancy. Franklin died in 1848 leaving the &#13;
&#13;
young widow to raise the children.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1857 another New England family came to Woodstock to make their&#13;
&#13;
home. Samuel Standish set out from N.Y., N.Y. for Illinois with his family.&#13;
&#13;
Not finding that area to their liking, after three years, came back east&#13;
&#13;
as far as Woodstock. Samuel, a direct descendant of Miles Standish of &#13;
&#13;
Plymouth the first white child born on Manhattan Island,&#13;
&#13;
 India, where his father Miles was a Methodist &#13;
&#13;
Missionary.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
There were five children in the Standish family.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[insert]&#13;
&#13;
News  from Our Files&#13;
&#13;
Fifty Years Ago - 1863&#13;
&#13;
February 25, 1927&#13;
&#13;
Sixty four years ago on the 18th day of February in the little village of Woodstock,&#13;
&#13;
the wedding bells rang out to announce the marriage of Charles Cushman and&#13;
&#13;
Julia Standish. Both are old pioneer stock.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The bride, a descendent of the gruff old captain, Miles Standish, of Plymouth,&#13;
&#13;
was a charming vivacious member of a group of young people, who make life &#13;
&#13;
merry and pleasant not withstanding the dark days of the civil war that were&#13;
&#13;
upon the land.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Charles Cushman was one of the first to enlist in 1861. Two sons, Arthur and &#13;
&#13;
Charles are veterans of the Spanish-American war and a grandson, Frank &#13;
&#13;
Cushman of the World war.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
They have nine living children, Mrs. George Standish, Urbana;  Mrs. John McCarty, &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Asa Owen, Arthur and Charles Cushman, Jr., of Woodstock; &#13;
&#13;
Warren Cushman, Dayton; and Frank, Julius and Jared Cushman of California.&#13;
&#13;
[Clipping from the Marysville Tribune]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[right photo: Woodstock Hotel -1935]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 4 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Samuel, Mark, Miles, Josephine and Julia Augusta. In 1863 Julia&#13;
&#13;
married Charles Anthony Cushman.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Up to now, I have written about some of my ancestors all of whom I had&#13;
&#13;
to become acquainted with through genealogies and books written about &#13;
&#13;
the history of the town where I was born. Now we are in the period of time &#13;
&#13;
when I grew up, I knew the characters in this drama. Of course I didn't know &#13;
&#13;
Julia Standish when she married during the Civil War, but much later when she &#13;
&#13;
was my grandmother I had the privilege of spending time with her. I never tired &#13;
&#13;
of asking questions about her journey from N.Y. in a covered wagon to the time&#13;
&#13;
she finally arrived in  Woodstock, Ohio. She was a petite, gentile lady with a&#13;
&#13;
twinkle in her eye that told of her zest for life. Always busy with projects she &#13;
&#13;
was working on. Sewing, knitting, crocheting lace and working crossword &#13;
&#13;
puzzles. Always  a student she was well read. She had taught school when &#13;
&#13;
she was 16.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Of course when I knew her, she was in her declining years. She had raised her &#13;
&#13;
family of 13 children and knew the heartache of losing 3 of them. Harriette &#13;
&#13;
died of whooping cough when she was 4: Sara, at birth; and Robert died of &#13;
&#13;
spinal meningitis when he was 19.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Garfield was her 9th child, born in 1880. He was my father.  Between &#13;
&#13;
his Junior and Senior years in high school he enlisted in the Spanish American&#13;
&#13;
War along with his brother Charles. They were sent to the Everglades, Florida&#13;
&#13;
 to train; but the war&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo lower left:  Arthur G. Cushman and Charles W. Cushman - 1998]&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Julia (Standish) and Charles A. Cushman - 1928]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 5 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
ended before they went any farther. He was back in time to&#13;
&#13;
finish high school with his class of 1899.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
He went on to Buchtel College in Akron on a scholarship. It was&#13;
&#13;
Universalist College, the denomination of his church in Woodstock.&#13;
&#13;
One summer when he was home between classes, he was working in&#13;
&#13;
 the General Store where he met Mary Ellen Blake from Milford Center.&#13;
&#13;
She was visiting a friend who insisted that she go with her to the store &#13;
&#13;
so she could introduce them. It was a successful attempt at match- &#13;
&#13;
making. They were married in 1903.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Unlike growing up with relatives on the Cushman side of the family, we &#13;
&#13;
saw mom's family only now and then. Milford Center is 5 miles from &#13;
&#13;
Woodstock. In the days before cars were commonplace we  occasionally &#13;
&#13;
went by train. I remember once when my sister and I were permitted &#13;
&#13;
to go by ourselves. I'm not sure what the occasion was. We spent the&#13;
&#13;
afternoon visiting relatives and then caught the train at 6:00 p.m. to&#13;
&#13;
return home. I know I kept worrying about what time it was, afraid we might&#13;
&#13;
miss our train. Mom's brother Uncle Johnny Blake always had a nice car and &#13;
&#13;
would drive over on Sunday afternoon.  Grandma Blake died before I was &#13;
&#13;
old enough to remember her.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[insert]&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAMME&#13;
&#13;
TENTH  ANNUAL&#13;
&#13;
COMMENCEMENT&#13;
&#13;
OF THE&#13;
&#13;
Woodstock Public Schools&#13;
&#13;
UNIVERSALIST CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
ON&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday Evening, May 24 ,  '99&#13;
&#13;
"Non Honores,  sed  Honor."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Music-"On the Sea"............................................Buck&#13;
&#13;
Apollo Quartet&#13;
&#13;
Invocation........................................... Rev.  Colgrove&#13;
&#13;
"Education"....................................Arthur Cushman&#13;
&#13;
"Alexander Hamilton"........................John Houser&#13;
&#13;
"Effects of the Late War"............Leonard Kidder&#13;
&#13;
"Sunshine"......................................Mabelle Kimball&#13;
&#13;
 Music-"Gay   Hearts".......................................Macy&#13;
&#13;
Apollo Quartette&#13;
&#13;
"Clara Barton"......................................Elsie Lincoln&#13;
&#13;
"Monuments of the Ages"..............Nelle Martin&#13;
&#13;
"Grant and Lee"........................Nelson McClellan&#13;
&#13;
Music-Jenk's Vegetable Compound........Macy&#13;
&#13;
Apollo Quartette&#13;
&#13;
"Environments"..............................Howard Sharp&#13;
&#13;
"Oh Why Should the Spirit of Mortal be Proud?"..&#13;
.....................................................................Lena Smith&#13;
&#13;
"Not Honors, but Honor".................Nena Smith&#13;
&#13;
Music-"Ben Bolt"............................................Wiske&#13;
&#13;
Apollo Quartette&#13;
&#13;
Address........................................Hon. O.T. Corson&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas&#13;
&#13;
Music-"Home,  Sweet  Home"......................Buck&#13;
&#13;
Apollo Quartette&#13;
&#13;
"Benediction"..................................Rev.  Colgrove&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
NEWS PRINT,  MECHANICSBURG, O.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (8)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="175069">
                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 6 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo]&#13;
Cushman Family Reunion - 1910&#13;
Great-Gradfather Stanish in the Center&#13;
&#13;
[photo]&#13;
Great Grandma Wetzel's 100th Birthday Party&#13;
Milford Center - 1910</text>
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                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (9)</text>
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 7 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
William Henry Blake, my grandfather came to Milford Center sometime in the 1800's&#13;
&#13;
He fought in the Civil War. He married Emma Parthmore who came from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania with her parents&#13;
&#13;
 and sister, Great Aunt Hattie Parthamore. &#13;
&#13;
The Parthamores came to America in the &#13;
&#13;
1700's. One of them fought in the &#13;
&#13;
Revolutionary War. This I learned from &#13;
&#13;
research a distant cousin had done on the&#13;
&#13;
Parthamore family tree. Great Grandma &#13;
&#13;
Wetzel lived to be 100. The picture is of&#13;
&#13;
her birthday party at the Blake home in &#13;
&#13;
Milford Center in 1919, My mother had three sisters, Carrie, Bertha, and Alice. Her &#13;
&#13;
Two brother Henry and John served World War I.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I was born on November 14, 1914, the sixth child in a family of 11 - We were named&#13;
&#13;
for aunts and uncles from both my parents families. Starting with the oldest, Elsie&#13;
&#13;
Margaret, Robert Henry, William Howard, Bertha Lucille, Julia Virginia, Verna&#13;
&#13;
Louise then Susan who lived only a few days, having been born with a heart defect.&#13;
&#13;
Josephine Martha was next and then the three little boys as we called them when&#13;
&#13;
referring to them collectively, Charles Blake, John Franklin and Arthur Garfield.&#13;
&#13;
Naming the boys came out just right since the last one bore the name of my father.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was a very happy childhood for all of us. My father was firm but fair. The boys&#13;
&#13;
were kept busy with chores and work that went with his occupation. He worked for&#13;
&#13;
the railroad and also had a large tract of land for truck farming. The soil in that &#13;
&#13;
area was a rich black loam which with know how and hard work grew very good&#13;
&#13;
crops. He raised all kinds of vegetables for sale as well as providing a wonderful diet &#13;
&#13;
for the family. His hot beds in the early spring were the source of plants for most &#13;
&#13;
of the gardens in town.  Nearly everyone had a little plot.  Also tomatoes were&#13;
&#13;
canned in the W. G. Lincoln factory. He not only raised many of the plants for the&#13;
&#13;
farmers who grew them but he also produced several acres of them himself. I must&#13;
&#13;
not forget to mention the green beans. that is where we girls came in. I didn't &#13;
&#13;
mind it so much unless swimming and a picnic had been planned for the day the&#13;
&#13;
beans needed to be picked. then I would pray for rain, which was a little&#13;
&#13;
shortsighted of me, because if it rained we wouldn't be going on the picnic anyway.&#13;
&#13;
We girls all did babysitting and housework for some of the families for our spending&#13;
&#13;
money and some of our clothes.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I would describe my mother as being easy going, always happy to turn the disciplining&#13;
&#13;
of us over to my father. We all knew instinctively the things we would probably not&#13;
&#13;
be allowed to do. If something came up we wanted to do that was questionable, we&#13;
&#13;
would first ask Mom. She would say that we'd have to ask Pop.  All in all we were&#13;
&#13;
given much latitude, knowing that the consequences for any infractions would be ours&#13;
&#13;
to deal with.&#13;
&#13;
[photo]&#13;
Charles A. and Julia Cushman - 1923</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (10)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 8 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I stared to school in 1920. Broshes, Clark, Conner, &#13;
&#13;
Corbett, Cushman. That was the order of seating in &#13;
&#13;
the first row in my class, grades one through 12. &#13;
&#13;
During those years things went along pretty much the&#13;
&#13;
 same in the village also. For the most part the &#13;
&#13;
inhabitants were four or five generations from the &#13;
&#13;
early settlers.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was a thriving community, population three &#13;
&#13;
hundred. "Downtown  Woodstock" boasted a Post&#13;
&#13;
 Office, 2 banks, 3 groceries, hardware, drugstore, &#13;
&#13;
restaurant, 2 garages (one in the livery stable of days&#13;
&#13;
 gone by), a Taxi Service (consisting of a Model T &#13;
&#13;
Ford Coup), Pennsylvania R.R. Station,  grain elevator, &#13;
&#13;
family doctor, 3 churches, grade school and high &#13;
&#13;
school and later electric shop and furniture store.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I like to think of Woodstock as I knew it. To my way &#13;
&#13;
of thinking just about the best place on earth! I &#13;
&#13;
wouldn't have changed a thing. I knew  everyone I &#13;
&#13;
would  meet on the streets and where they lived. But&#13;
&#13;
alas, an event over which no one had any control occurred in 1933 that was to be the&#13;
&#13;
beginning of the end of the town as we knew it. President Roosevelt declared a&#13;
&#13;
moratorium on the banks. Ours closed and never reopened. In due time the villages&#13;
&#13;
nearby were to profit by the commerce which formerly was done in Woodstock. The&#13;
&#13;
loss of the bank combined with the times of the depression resulted in business&#13;
&#13;
failures. After a time not even a grocery store was doing business there.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Verna in Grade School]&#13;
&#13;
[bottom left photo: 1929 Back row left to right: Bill, Robert, Bertha, Mom, Julia, Pop, Verna, Elsie &#13;
Front row: Josephine, Charles, John and Arthur]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 9 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I remember the oldest inhabitants fondly. A few of them still wore the lace trimmed&#13;
&#13;
high neck blouses and long dark skirts. One old gentleman still wore a long black&#13;
&#13;
cape when he sallied forth in winter. They were kindly folks some of whom we&#13;
&#13;
called Aunts and Uncles. Often times when we couldn't think of any thing to do we &#13;
&#13;
went to "Aunt Mayme's and Uncle Winn's" house to listen to the phonograph with&#13;
&#13;
the horn. We never asked; but he would ask us if we would like to hear it, knowing&#13;
&#13;
of course that was the reason for our visit.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When I was about twelve we moved to the country. At the time my father went to&#13;
&#13;
farming full time. My sister Elsie moved to Columbus where she went to Ohio State&#13;
&#13;
University and worked part time for Ohio Bell Telephone Co. as a long distance&#13;
&#13;
operator.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Robert was next to go to the University where he made the wrestling team. The&#13;
&#13;
matches were broadcast on radio. We heard them on a set with two ear phones at&#13;
&#13;
my uncle's house. He and my father listened and reported to us what was going on.&#13;
&#13;
The team traveled by train. On the return trip when they had been to Indiana or&#13;
&#13;
Illinois, Robert threw off a note tied to a cake of soap as they went through&#13;
&#13;
Woodstock on the Pennsylvania Railroad. One of the section hands would find it&#13;
&#13;
and bring it to our house. That created much excitement in our little town. Robert&#13;
&#13;
nicknamed "Shrimp", wrestled in the lightest weight class. Even if it appears that I&#13;
&#13;
am bragging, I must say he won most of his matches.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bill also went O.S.U. One of his courses was in Forestry. He and a friend decided &#13;
&#13;
to go to Montana to work in the fire season as a lookout. They did that for two&#13;
&#13;
summers coming back home for the winter quarter. Always an outdoors person,&#13;
&#13;
hunting and fishing, he decided that Montana was where he wanted to hive. He&#13;
&#13;
worked for many years in the Forest Service taking courses in winter at the&#13;
&#13;
University in Missoula. He was married there and returned to Ohio only occasionally&#13;
&#13;
for a visit.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bertha studied Horticulture. She also worked at Ohio Bell when she was in school.&#13;
&#13;
Julia and I came along in 1930 and 32 when the depression was a big factor in&#13;
&#13;
everything one might want to do. College was put on hold for us. After a time both&#13;
&#13;
of us married. I forgot my hopes of becoming a teacher. Josephine went to business&#13;
&#13;
school in Columbus. Charles, upon graduation left the next day for Ft. Bragg, N.C.&#13;
&#13;
as a Second Lieutenent in the Army. The year was 1942. John was starting his&#13;
&#13;
second year when Pearl Harbor was attacked. He left school and enlisted in the&#13;
&#13;
Marines. Arthur was the youngest and the only one at home helping run the farm.&#13;
&#13;
At that time my father bought a smaller farm, one that he and a hired man could&#13;
&#13;
 manage. Art was off serving as paratrooper in the 101 st Airborne.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The two older boys, although married and with families also enlisted in World War&#13;
&#13;
II, Robert in the Navy and Bill in the CB's. When we asked of my mother if she weren't&#13;
&#13;
worried with all five boys in the service, she replied, "I expect them all to come&#13;
&#13;
home." That says much about her wonderful way of looking of at life. Always cheerful&#13;
&#13;
and not wearing her innermost concerns on her sleeve.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 10 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
And now I must go back to my high school days. I always liked school and all my &#13;
&#13;
teachers. One I especially admired was my Music Teacher, Adah Madden. Every&#13;
&#13;
spring she conducted an operetta wherein all the students participated in one way or&#13;
&#13;
another. If not chosen for a major roll, she made chorus seem very important to the&#13;
&#13;
production. She knew how to get the best out of all of us. Our high school girls&#13;
&#13;
sextet was called upon to sing for many occasions. The one I shall never forget was&#13;
&#13;
a funeral. It was for a young mother who died and left six children. The funeral was&#13;
&#13;
held in the little tenant house where they lived. The oldest girl, about twelve, sat&#13;
&#13;
holding the baby. There didn't seem to be any other family members present only&#13;
&#13;
the distraught father and a few neighbors. Rather than sing, I felt more like crying.&#13;
&#13;
Somehow we managed to get through it. The man expressed his appreciation to us&#13;
&#13;
for our part in the service. To say the least, it was a very sobering experience for us&#13;
&#13;
who were usually so happy go lucky.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Basketball was the highlight in winter months. When I was a freshman as a lowly&#13;
&#13;
substitute, I wore the bloomers and middy blouse that were handed down through&#13;
&#13;
the years. My oldest sister, Elsie, then Bertha and finally Julia had worn them before&#13;
&#13;
me. That year new suits were purchased for the first team. Julia's team was the first&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo:'28-'29 Junior Julia is second from left in front row&#13;
Freshman Verna is fourth from left in second row]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 11 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
to appear in the "shorts". They came to the knees but after being so fully clothed&#13;
&#13;
they seemed downright risque. How important it was to look one's best out on the&#13;
&#13;
floor! We rushed home from school on Friday, washed our tennis shoe strings and&#13;
&#13;
curled our hair with a curling iron. The iron was heated by inserting it in the&#13;
&#13;
chimney of a coal oil lamp. Woe to the blonde girls who turned the wick up too&#13;
&#13;
high!  She could count on a few black streaks.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
No chance for me and my friends to get into the game until our sisters had&#13;
&#13;
graduated. Then we were the first team!  My younger sister Josephine also played&#13;
&#13;
basketball. soon after she graduated, all the county schools dropped girl's basketball&#13;
&#13;
from the curriculum.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo:The Woodstock girls&#13;
&#13;
Leah B. Lincoln of North Lewisburg loaned the Citizen this &#13;
&#13;
photograph of the Woodstock girls basketball team in&#13;
&#13;
their 1931-32 season. With some married names added,&#13;
&#13;
the first row, seated, are from left Mary Rhodes Stittings,&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Lucas, Verna Cushman Bergandine, Ruby &#13;
&#13;
Lucas, Harriet Lincoln West and Darlene Westfall &#13;
&#13;
Seaver.  The second row from left are Winifred Clark&#13;
&#13;
Raff, Leah Broshes Lincoln, Coach Willis Pond, Erelene&#13;
&#13;
 Westfall Simpson and Mary Connor Tackman.]&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (14)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 12 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In the summer the favorite pastime was swimming. Brush lake, located two miles,&#13;
&#13;
from town was the place to go. there were no swimming pools until &#13;
&#13;
later, consequently the young people from towns around were there &#13;
&#13;
frequently. We knew many of them from seeing them at events where&#13;
&#13;
our schools competed in sports. At any rate that was the highlight of the &#13;
&#13;
week when we could spend Sunday afternoon at the lake.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One Sunday when I was still in high school, Julia and I met these two &#13;
&#13;
fellows from Marysville, Bob Orahood and Frank Bergandine. Julia and&#13;
&#13;
Bob were married in 1932.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank's family lived in Union Co., starting with his Grandfather, Samuel&#13;
&#13;
Bergandine where in the mid eighteen hundreds he bought a farm in&#13;
&#13;
Allen Township.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Jesse, Frank's father, was born there and married Myrtle Burroughs.&#13;
&#13;
Their five children were born there also. When Frank, the youngest child &#13;
&#13;
was three years old, they left the farm and moved to Marysville.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank's mother's family also settled in that general area. His great&#13;
&#13;
grandmother Holycross lived to be 104. I didn't &#13;
&#13;
know Frank's father. He died in 1930.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Brush Lake - 1929  Bert, Judy, Josephine, Verna]&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: School Picnic at Darby Creek - 1930 Verna, Julia]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom left photo:  My Last Day of School]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 middle right photo: Woodstock High School]                                                  ]&#13;
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                    <text>From the Beginning (15)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 13 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
Frank had graduated from Marysville High in 1929. A fine athlete, he &#13;
&#13;
especially liked playing basketball. In his Junior and Senior years they &#13;
&#13;
won the district Championship. Jobs were hard to come by at that time.&#13;
&#13;
It so happened that the Plant Manager for the Nestle Co., Mr. Grout was&#13;
&#13;
an avid basketball fan. He followed the team and had gotten to know the &#13;
&#13;
boys. Frank applied at the Milk Plant and Mr. Grout found a place for him.  &#13;
&#13;
That is where he was working when we were married in Dec. 1934.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Julia and Bob were living in a double at the time, and we were able to rent the other&#13;
&#13;
side. We spent evenings playing bridge and making popcorn which came from&#13;
&#13;
home. Rarely could we come up with the price of a movie on the small paychecks.&#13;
&#13;
That summer Julia and I would be waiting with sandwiches when the boys came&#13;
&#13;
home from work and off to Millcreek we would go. I don't think there were any real&#13;
&#13;
keepers where we fished, but it was great fun.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As neighbors we borrowed not only the proverbial cup of sugar from each other but&#13;
&#13;
anything else we needed that the other one had. I used her food grinder as often as&#13;
&#13;
she did. When Frank and I later moved  to Sunbury, she presented me with a gift,&#13;
&#13;
a food grinder, a cherished possession which I still use from time to time even&#13;
&#13;
though I have a more up to date food processor.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Annual Commencement&#13;
&#13;
Woodstock High School       May 19, 1932&#13;
&#13;
Reflections From The Operas   Huffer  Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Invocation  Mrs. Hulda Kimball&#13;
&#13;
The Old Refrain  Kreisler  Girls Senior Sextett&#13;
&#13;
Objectives of Education&#13;
&#13;
Health and Fundamental Processes&#13;
&#13;
Worthy Use of Leisure  Winfred Clark&#13;
&#13;
Citizenship  Mary Lininger&#13;
&#13;
Vesper Bells Are Ringing   Van Norman   Boys Senior Sextette&#13;
&#13;
Santus  Schubert  Junior High School Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Vocations  Leah Broshes&#13;
&#13;
Character and Home Membership  Mary Connor&#13;
&#13;
Nightfall In Granada  Bueno  High School Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Listen To The Lambs   Dett Nash   High School Chorus&#13;
&#13;
Goodbye Old Hi   Moore  Boys Senior Sexette&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Class Memorial   Clarence Barnette&#13;
&#13;
Acceptance of Memorial   Harriette Lincoln&#13;
&#13;
Out of Dusk to you   Zamenik   Girls Senior Sexette&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas   W. V. Pond&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Frank - 1926]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 14 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In September 1935, Anne was born at home, She was delivered by &#13;
&#13;
Bertha's husband, Dr. Henry W. Katter of Dublin.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Two weeks later Frank underwent a tonsillectomy. An operation &#13;
&#13;
that usually causes a very sore throat for a few days but not a long &#13;
&#13;
recovery. Not so with Frank.  After surgery and for over a week &#13;
&#13;
following he continued to hemorrhage. We later learned that the &#13;
&#13;
excessive bleeding was caused by an abnormality known as &#13;
&#13;
Von Wilobrandt's  Disease. Of our eight children, all but two of&#13;
&#13;
 them also have  that tendency.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Doctor came to the house many times to try and stem the &#13;
&#13;
bleeding with stitches in his throat. Frank was so weak from the &#13;
&#13;
loss of blood that it was nearly a month before he was able to be up.&#13;
&#13;
Had it occurred today, he would been in the hospital and would&#13;
&#13;
have been given transfusions. With his throat so sore from all the &#13;
&#13;
stitches, about the only thing he could swallow was jello. Small wonder&#13;
&#13;
that from time on he didn't care much for jello. Luckily, Julia and Bob&#13;
&#13;
were close at hand to see us through the ordeal and help with taking &#13;
&#13;
care of Anne.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Uncle Henry came to the same address in Sept. 1937, and delivered Susie.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
By this time Frank was working in the Research and Control Laboratory&#13;
&#13;
where they were experimenting with a new product, Nescafé. By 1939&#13;
&#13;
they were trying it out in the Sunbury Plant and  before the year was over,&#13;
&#13;
were producing it there. Frank had been driving back and forth from&#13;
&#13;
Marysville. In April 1940 we moved to 185 Letts Avenue.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[upper right photo: Anne, 7 months Old, West Second Street Marysville, &#13;
&#13;
Ohio - 1936] &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[lower left photo: Anne and Susie - 1938]&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 15 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My first trip to Sunbury was very reassuring. It would be pretty hard to get a&#13;
&#13;
negative impression of the town when one of the first things I saw was the old Town&#13;
&#13;
Hall. Chuck Nettelhorst was the first person I met when he came to the house to&#13;
&#13;
hook up our gas stove. Mary Ellen Miller delivered milk to us. When she stopped&#13;
&#13;
to collect, we would always have a little chat.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Louise Sheets had just opened "The Little Shoppe". When doing other errands, I&#13;
&#13;
would stop in for a visit with her. The shop was full of so many interesting things.&#13;
&#13;
Anne and Susie noticed the pretty earrings she always wore. Seeing the case full of&#13;
&#13;
them, they asked if she put on a new pair everyday and then put them back in the &#13;
&#13;
case.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Luretta Day welcomed the little girls when I took them to the Methodist Sunday&#13;
&#13;
School. I was invited to join Search Light Club.  It didn't take long for us to feel&#13;
&#13;
that we belonged here.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anne started School in the fall of 1941. Susie, age four, missed her very much. &#13;
&#13;
Several times a day she asked when Anne would be coming home. Mr Strosnider,&#13;
&#13;
our neighbor, was putting sidewalks in front of our house. She spent the day&#13;
&#13;
watching. He later told me that she had announced to him a coming event. She was&#13;
&#13;
wearing a pair of blue coveralls that had been Anne's. She told him she was  saving&#13;
&#13;
hers for the brother.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In April 1942 Uncle Henry came to the house once more and delivered a baby girl,&#13;
&#13;
instead. We named her Barbara.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
During Anne's first year in school she was having tonsillitis often. In the summer she&#13;
&#13;
had a tonsillectomy and was hospitalized for bleeding. Frank and my sister Elsie&#13;
&#13;
were the same blood type  as hers. She had a pint from each of them. My blood went&#13;
&#13;
to replace a pint in the hospital blood bank.  That was before the  Red Cross started&#13;
&#13;
the blood donor program.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Susie suffered the same fate as Anne when she  had a tonsillectomy the following year&#13;
&#13;
and also needed transfusions. Same blood type, same donors. After that we decided&#13;
&#13;
enough was enough with tonsils.  Somehow the others survived the sore throats&#13;
&#13;
without going through the ordeal with surgery.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In  Nov. 1943 , it was Dr. M. W. Livingston who came to the house and this time&#13;
&#13;
delivered the "brother", John Franklin.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
This year the Sunbury Plant received the Army Navy E. Award given for outstanding&#13;
&#13;
accomplishment  in the war effort. Nescafé was packed in the K Rations of the&#13;
&#13;
armed Forces.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The company, feeling the need for increased production, purchased an old Brewery&#13;
&#13;
in Granite City, Illinois, and converted it into a coffee plant.&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 16 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mr. E. C. Teut was the plant manger here.  He left in February to start up&#13;
&#13;
the new facility taking Frank along as Asst. Manager. Little did we know it &#13;
&#13;
was  to be in October before suitable housing could be found. It was a   &#13;
&#13;
nice old house in Edwardsville, fifteen miles from Granite City.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anne had started fourth grade and Susie second grade in Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
Barbara was two and half years old. John 10 months when  we set&#13;
&#13;
out for Illinois.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Once more Julia came to the rescue. She went along to help with the &#13;
&#13;
children and to help get us settled.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I had not seen the house at 215 N. Kansas St. before the day we arrived. I&#13;
&#13;
was more than pleased with what I found. The neighborhood was all I &#13;
&#13;
could have asked for.  Grade school within the block, the Presbyterian &#13;
&#13;
Church two doors from us and neighbors who soon became good friends.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
After leaving Julia at the train in St. Louis to return home,  we didn't see&#13;
&#13;
anyone from home for more than  a year, with gasoline rationing. The&#13;
&#13;
first Thanksgiving we invited all the Nestle "strays" who had moved &#13;
&#13;
there from other places and were unable to get home to be with their families&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Charlie joined our little group in Feb. 1946.  He was born in St. Elizabeth Hospital, &#13;
&#13;
Granite City.  Arriving about a month before he was expected, Charlie was&#13;
&#13;
the smallest of the children weighing in at 5 lb. 5 oz. He was more interested&#13;
&#13;
in sleeping than in taking in nourishment. I worried about his slow weight gain. &#13;
&#13;
By the time he was a month old  he was awake more and hungry. He just needed&#13;
&#13;
a little more time to  get caught up.  By Christmas he was pulling himself up and &#13;
&#13;
walking around the play pen,&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Grandma Bergandine with Susie, John, Anne, and Barbara at 185 Letts Avenue Before We Moved To Edwardsville, Illinois - 1944]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[ bottom left photo: Visit to Ohio in Summer of 1946]&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 17 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Santa had brought John a little tool box containing saw and hammer.&#13;
&#13;
He discovered the rungs of the pen were easy to saw. Charlie soon &#13;
&#13;
the opening for his get-away. When I found him crawling around outside&#13;
&#13;
the pen, I confiscated the saw and pushed the pen against the wall on the side&#13;
&#13;
where the damage was done.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To this day John is very good with the saw. His hobby is working with wood. &#13;
&#13;
He has turned out some beautiful pieces of furniture. One of them, a little &#13;
&#13;
table with cabriole legs, was made from the walnut tree that had been &#13;
&#13;
next to our driveway. It sits in my living room.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1948, Mr. Teut left to start Nescafé production in another plant, and Frank was&#13;
&#13;
made Plant Manager.  About that time he discovered that he was diabetic.&#13;
&#13;
With a change in his diet he was able to control it for a time without &#13;
&#13;
insulin.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
With St Louis only some 20 odd miles from Edwardsville, we were able to &#13;
&#13;
go there occasionally for some entertainment and shopping.  The children&#13;
&#13;
enjoyed the zoo.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo:  John in Wooden Jeep Made During Wartime - 1947]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle right photo:  A trip to St. Louis for Barbara, Susie, Anna, B Orahood,&#13;
Dick Orahood, and John]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom left photo: Charlie at Christmas - 1949]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Grandma Widicus with Charlie, John, Barbara - 1947}&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 18 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Three times during the school year, the Jr. High went by bus to hear the St Louis&#13;
&#13;
Symphony. Susie wanted to be first getting her money in so she would be sure to &#13;
&#13;
get a seat on the bus.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In summer the Municipal Outdoor Theatre at Forest Park put on some very &#13;
&#13;
good  light opera.  Ice Hockey with the St. Louis Flyers and the Cardinal Baseball &#13;
&#13;
team  were two special attractions.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
At the 8th grade picnic,  Anne fell and injured her leg.  The bone was bruised, an &#13;
&#13;
osteomyelitis developed. She was on penicillin and crutches for most of the &#13;
&#13;
summer.  When she was able to walk without the crutches, she wanted to see&#13;
&#13;
the Cardinals play. She knew Billy Southworth in Sunbury. He was manager of&#13;
&#13;
the Cardinals.  Before he left home for Spring Training he would stop for her &#13;
&#13;
when he was taking Carole to school.  She and Frank waited by the dugout. It &#13;
&#13;
was quite a thrill for her when Billy emerged and talked to them.  He was a&#13;
  &#13;
thoroughly likeable person.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When Barbara was about six years old, she and her friend &#13;
&#13;
Virginia Kinsman were fascinated with weddings.&#13;
&#13;
Virginia's father was minister of the First Presbyterian &#13;
&#13;
Church.  He would permit the girls to quietly &#13;
&#13;
observe the&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Virginia Kinsman John Barbara - 1945]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: John, Barbara - 1947]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Barbara with the New Look. Gone Are the Braids. Her &#13;
First "Toni" Given by Her &#13;
Beautician Mom - 1949]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 18 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
ceremonies from the balcony. They took it very seriously in their Sunday&#13;
&#13;
best, wearing white gloves, their Easter bonnets and carrying their pocketbooks.&#13;
&#13;
They felt as much a part of it as if they had been invited guests seated below.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The fact that I lived close to the church and was usually at home, I was occasionally&#13;
&#13;
called upon to witness a marriage. One day my friend and next door neighbor&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Harrison, asked me what was going on.  She saw me hanging clothes on the&#13;
&#13;
line, and in a matter of minutes I was walking down the street toward the church&#13;
&#13;
wearing a dress, heels and lipstick. The next thing she knew I was hanging up clothes &#13;
&#13;
again. Seeing me at the clothesline was not unusual, in fact hanging diapers on the&#13;
&#13;
line was almost a daily ritual. It was the sudden departure that caused her to &#13;
&#13;
wonder. When Mrs. Kinsman called, not wanting to keep the bride and groom&#13;
&#13;
waiting, I would get there as soon as possible.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Speaking of churches, the Christian church was on the other side of us. Twice during &#13;
&#13;
our stay in Edwardsville, young couples thinking our house to be the parsonage, rang&#13;
&#13;
our door bell. They asked if the minister was in. They wanted to get married.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
On the other side of town the Baptist Minister caused us a certain amount of&#13;
&#13;
involvement. His name was Boergadine. We received many of his Christmas cards&#13;
&#13;
and one year a lovely plant was delivered to our door with a note thinking him for&#13;
&#13;
burying her husband. I called the florist and told him the  flower was not intended&#13;
&#13;
for this address. He insisted that perhaps I didn't remember the lady but he was sure&#13;
&#13;
that Rev. Boergadine would know her.   I finally convinced him that the Bergandines&#13;
&#13;
lived at this address, not the Boergadines.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The itinerants passing through town found our door with a certain degree of&#13;
&#13;
regularity. One man we particularly came to expect on Christmas morning. On this &#13;
&#13;
occasion and in the spirit of the day, I came up with ham and Swiss Cheese&#13;
&#13;
sandwiches and a few goodies that I wanted to share. It finally dawned on me the&#13;
&#13;
reason they knocked on my door instead of the neighbors, they too thought it was&#13;
&#13;
the parsonage.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In September 1950, Jim was born in St. Joseph Hospital, Alton, Illinois. The&#13;
&#13;
other children all brought their friends home to show him off. Charlie's little&#13;
&#13;
friend Jamie Kinsman knocked on the door and asked if she could see the &#13;
&#13;
baby. Jamie was a little younger than Charlie, and he sometimes treated her &#13;
&#13;
as if he were a little superior. After hesitating he told her she could come in &#13;
&#13;
but she was not to touch the baby because he was sterilized. She was used &#13;
&#13;
to Charlie's rebuffs. If he told her he didn't want to come out and play, she &#13;
&#13;
would go home and come back the next day.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Charlie, Jamie Kinsman, Jim, John&#13;
 Edwardsville - 1959]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 20 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
Our good friends. Les and Leanore Marks and daughters, lived across the &#13;
&#13;
street. Les was a funeral director. They lived on the second floor in a large &#13;
&#13;
old brick Victorian house that sat way back from the street surrounded by &#13;
&#13;
a wrought iron fence. Once when Suzanne and Linda Marks with Susie &#13;
&#13;
and Barbara were playing house under one of the large evergreens, &#13;
&#13;
sweeping the pine needles and sending the dust flying, Susie had an &#13;
&#13;
attack of asthma. That night she could scarcely breath. We called the &#13;
&#13;
doctor. He came and gave her a shot of adrenalin and left a syringe for &#13;
&#13;
another dose. He recommended that we take her next day to a specialist in St.&#13;
&#13;
Louis which we did and also at regular intervals for about six months. The treatment&#13;
&#13;
worked and she has not been bothered by asthma since. The Marks girls came to&#13;
&#13;
our house to play when there was a funeral going on across the street.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Back Row:&#13;
 Anne, Susie, Linda Marks, Barbara &#13;
Front Row: &#13;
Suzanne Marks, John Across the street at the Mark's in 1946]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom photo:&#13;
Anne&#13;
Susie&#13;
Charlie&#13;
Barbara&#13;
John&#13;
1950]</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (23)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 21 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The girls had gone from Girl Scouts &#13;
&#13;
and Jr. High activities to band and &#13;
&#13;
choir in High School. Anne played&#13;
&#13;
 French Horn which she liked all &#13;
&#13;
except the part about carrying the &#13;
&#13;
horn to and from school. The &#13;
&#13;
director required practice at home. &#13;
&#13;
It was quite a walk to the high&#13;
&#13;
 school. It was always a keen &#13;
&#13;
competition for first chair between &#13;
&#13;
her and Tommy Reilly.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Susie played clarinet in Jr. High but &#13;
&#13;
going into high school her interest&#13;
&#13;
 was in choir. In the tryouts, she was &#13;
&#13;
one of the two freshmen to be &#13;
&#13;
chosen for the Acappella Choir.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As we go into the year 1953, I &#13;
&#13;
remember it as one that tested my&#13;
&#13;
 abilities to cope. First of all in&#13;
&#13;
 January on a beautiful crisp Sunday&#13;
&#13;
 morning, snow on the ground, I &#13;
&#13;
realized that I would be going to Alton to St. Joseph Hospital. I got the little ones &#13;
&#13;
ready for Sunday School and informed&#13;
&#13;
Anne she would be in  charge until Frank  &#13;
&#13;
returned later. The little ones did not &#13;
&#13;
know that I wouldn't be there when &#13;
&#13;
they came home. In a few hours, Frank &#13;
&#13;
called home and Anne was  able to tell &#13;
&#13;
them that they had a a new baby brother, &#13;
&#13;
Robert Steven.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In March Frank was to leave us for a  &#13;
&#13;
time once more. The company decided &#13;
&#13;
rather than do a complete overhaul on&#13;
&#13;
the boilers in the old building in &#13;
&#13;
Granite City, they would close the plant. &#13;
&#13;
Frank returned to the Sunbury Plant. It &#13;
&#13;
being Anne's senior year we planned to &#13;
&#13;
wait till June to move.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
On morning in April, Susie came down &#13;
&#13;
stairs with a persistent pain in her side. &#13;
&#13;
The doctor suspicioned  appendicitis and &#13;
&#13;
told me to take her to St Joseph &#13;
&#13;
Hospital. He was right. She had &#13;
&#13;
surgery that afternoon. All week while&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Linda Marks, Barbara, Charlie, Jim - 1951]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom  right photo: Charlie, John , Barbara, &#13;
Bob, 4 Months, Verna, and Jim&#13;
Edwardsville, Illinois - 1953]</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (24)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 22 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
she was in the hospital, I went to see her everyday. We managed to keep things&#13;
&#13;
going at home with a little babysitting help from my dear neighbors. Bob survived,&#13;
&#13;
showing no ill effects with someone feeding him and still another person burping &#13;
&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My efforts then turned to getting ready for Anne's graduation. A trip to St. Louis&#13;
&#13;
shopping was necessary. Frank came for graduation, and we had one week to &#13;
&#13;
prepare for the movers.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The older children weren't thrilled with leaving their friends. John had but one&#13;
&#13;
request. That was that our new place would have some boys to play ball with. He&#13;
&#13;
had had it with all the girls. I knew that there was much I would miss about &#13;
&#13;
Edwardsville, mainly  the people; but if Frank was to be transferred anywhere, I was&#13;
&#13;
glad it was to return to Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Coming back to Ohio we were bringing three boys who were not with us on our trip&#13;
&#13;
west.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anne and Susie left by train the day before. when the big moving van pulled away&#13;
&#13;
from 215 N. Kansas St. and our car was packed and we were ready to leave, there&#13;
&#13;
was quite a group gathered around us to say goodbye and to wish us well. The&#13;
&#13;
Marks, Kinsmans, Harrisons and Lucille's  mother Grandma Widicus and even the old&#13;
&#13;
bachelor, Henry Weidey. It was then that I was made aware of the great impact they&#13;
&#13;
had all had on our nine and a half years spent among them. We couldn't have been&#13;
&#13;
happier!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank had been looking for a house in Sunbury from the time he arrived in March.&#13;
&#13;
It wasn't until two weeks before we were wanting to move that one became available.&#13;
&#13;
An elderly man had died, and his daughter barely had time to close out his&#13;
&#13;
belongings before we were here. She assured me that anything I wanted to do to&#13;
&#13;
redecorate would be fine. It was a nice old 2 story house, but it did take some doing&#13;
&#13;
the next few years to make it seem like home. It was on the corner of High and&#13;
&#13;
Harrison Sts. and yes, John got his wish. There were boys in the neighborhood. The&#13;
&#13;
boys soon found way to occupy their time. The girls missed their friends, and the&#13;
&#13;
routine they had left behind. We bought our first television set which added a new&#13;
&#13;
dimension to their summer.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
After school started Susie got a job working at the drugstore for Mr. Hill some&#13;
&#13;
evenings and on Saturdays.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anne started college at Otterbein only nine miles away, but after leaving her there&#13;
&#13;
we faced the realization that for the first time she wouldn't be coming home with us&#13;
&#13;
and we would just have to get used to it.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To close a very busy and eventful year my parents celebrated their 50th Wedding&#13;
&#13;
Anniversary on Christmas Day 1953, with all of their ten children and their spouses.&#13;
&#13;
I was especially glad to be back home in Ohio and able to visit them a few more&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 23 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
times in Woodstock before my father died &#13;
&#13;
in March, 1954, after surgery for cancer.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In the spring John, age 9, was operated on  &#13;
&#13;
at Grant Hospital for appendicitis. &#13;
&#13;
Running true to form he also had &#13;
&#13;
prolonged bleeding after surgery. The&#13;
&#13;
 pattern seemed to be that it took just so long for the bleeding to stop no matter what&#13;
&#13;
 measures were taken. What a relief&#13;
&#13;
 it was when finally there were no&#13;
&#13;
 more episodes, and he was able to &#13;
&#13;
come home.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
By the end of the year we were back &#13;
&#13;
nto the swing of things. With all &#13;
&#13;
the familiar faces at P.T.A., church &#13;
&#13;
and Searchlight Club, it was almost &#13;
&#13;
as if we had never left Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anne took a summer job at Lazarus, &#13;
&#13;
leaving town each morning on the &#13;
&#13;
Greyhound Bus to &#13;
&#13;
Columbus at 7:00 &#13;
&#13;
and returning in the evening at 6:30. &#13;
&#13;
The boys playing in the &#13;
&#13;
neighborhood &#13;
&#13;
knew when they heard &#13;
&#13;
the Nestlé whistle that it was 12:00,&#13;
&#13;
 time for them to be home, hands &#13;
&#13;
washed and ready for lunch when &#13;
&#13;
their father would be home.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[left top photo: Golden Wedding - 1958]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Mom and Pop - 1942]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: In Marysville at Aunt Judy's - 1953 &#13;
Bob is 6 Months]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 24 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
In December  Frank celebrated his 25th year with the company. He and I left by train&#13;
&#13;
from Columbus at 9:30 p.m. and arrived at Grand Central station, N.Y. at 7:30 next&#13;
&#13;
morning. We stayed at the Roosevelt Hotel. Frank  had been to N.Y. several times&#13;
&#13;
on business, but this was my first trip and what a grand time of year to see the City!&#13;
&#13;
To say that it was decorated for the holidays was an understatement.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We were met by one of the men from the corporate office from the Manufacturing&#13;
&#13;
Dept. who frequently visited the Sunbury Plant, and each day another couple, acted &#13;
&#13;
as our hosts to show us the city. The first day we visited the United Nations, then&#13;
&#13;
had lunch at the Rockefeller Plaza looking out at the skaters and the huge decorated&#13;
&#13;
Christmas Tree. The view of the city from the top of the Empire State Building&#13;
&#13;
minimized the size of everything below.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Another time we had dinner at the Stork Club. Sherman Billingsley, the owner&#13;
&#13;
seated at a table near us, recognized the couple who was with us and had a bottle of&#13;
&#13;
Champagne sent to our table with his compliments. After we saw the play,&#13;
&#13;
"Can Can" with the original cast. Guy Lombardo was celebrating his 25th year&#13;
&#13;
playing at the Roosevelt Grill. We dined and danced to his music with the Warren&#13;
&#13;
Bullocks and Harold Colvins. The last evening we were in N.Y. we attended the&#13;
&#13;
Annual Christmas Party at Glenn Island Casino. It was a large affair with 600 guests,&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Nestle Christmas Party in 1954 at Glenn Island Casino, New York}</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (27)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 25 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
the office staff and their spouses. We were seated next to the President, Mr. Dan&#13;
&#13;
Notion. It was than that Frank was recognized for his 25 years of service and&#13;
&#13;
presented with a gold watch.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I have been to N. Y. several times and always enjoyed it but this trip I remember&#13;
&#13;
best, five days of pure fun and excitement. We arrived home on the 17th with just&#13;
&#13;
enough time to make ready for Santa Caus. I am indebted to my mother. She&#13;
&#13;
stayed with the children so that I could go with Frank and also Julia who took Bob,&#13;
&#13;
who was not quite two years old.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Susie graduated from high school in 1955. Her interest was always in music. In the &#13;
&#13;
fall she started at Ohio University. By the end of the first semester she was  &#13;
&#13;
disappointed in the the music program. She came home and the following year &#13;
&#13;
enrolled at O.S.U.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
About that time when Jim was in the first grade our neighbor, an old gentleman &#13;
&#13;
whose name escapes me, died. the previous summer when he was sitting on his&#13;
&#13;
 porch, Jim and Bob would go over and talk to him. I answered Jim's questions about &#13;
&#13;
the funeral and burial and also added that his soul went to heaven. Later I heard Jim &#13;
&#13;
explaining it all to Bob who didn't understand about how he was to get to heaven. &#13;
&#13;
Jim  gave it some serious thought and then said, "They just take the gravity off." Bob said, "Oh".&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We lost two of our family members in 1956. Grandma Bergandine died in August,&#13;
&#13;
having lived to be 78 years old. She was in a wheel chair the last few years. always&#13;
&#13;
a joy to be with, the children loved it when she came to visit. In spite of all the&#13;
&#13;
commotion that was ever present, ours was the place she enjoyed the most.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
My sister Elsie Bowerman died the 26th of December. She was 52 years old. She&#13;
&#13;
had been wanting ice skates and found a pair under the tree that Christmas. She  and&#13;
&#13;
her two daughters, who were students O.S.U. went to the skating rink the next&#13;
&#13;
evening. She had no sooner started skating when she fell to the ice and was gone &#13;
&#13;
almost immediately of an aneurysm in the brain. Elsie was a Phys. E. Major in &#13;
&#13;
college and always excelled in sports. She was captain of her basketball team and&#13;
&#13;
was an excellent swimmer. Our holidays ended on a very sad note.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Sisters  Bertha, Julia, Verna, Mom, Josephine, Elsie &#13;
 Memorial Day -1955]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (28)</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 26 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Barbara went with members of the Big Walnut Choir to a summer camp at Westminster &#13;
&#13;
Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey. She returned home to find that another brother &#13;
&#13;
had taken up residence with us. Jeffrey Miles was born on August 5th, 1957 , at White &#13;
&#13;
Cross Hospital.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank had scarcely returned home from White Cross when it was necessary to take &#13;
&#13;
Susie to University Hospital. She had had a wisdom tooth pulled several weeks before. &#13;
&#13;
There had been some bleeding from time to time, but at this point it continued to bleed &#13;
&#13;
in earnest. The eight days that I was required to be in the hospital, Frank went from &#13;
&#13;
seeing mother and child to being with Susie while the bleeding continued. Her face &#13;
&#13;
swollen with the huge clot that formed. Doctors were undecided as to what should be &#13;
&#13;
done as this was most unusual. Finally they did remove the clot and a day after Frank &#13;
&#13;
brought Jeff and me home, Susie was able to come home.  Having had &#13;
&#13;
so many shots she needed a pillow to be able to sit at the kitchen table.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank was glad to have us all around the kitchen table after eight days&#13;
 &#13;
of shuttling back and forth between &#13;
&#13;
hospitals and the anxious moments he &#13;
&#13;
went through with Susie.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I laid Jeffrey on the davenport when &#13;
&#13;
we came home. Bob was four and&#13;
&#13;
a half at the &#13;
&#13;
time and remembers running in&#13;
&#13;
 to check on Jeff several times while we were&#13;
&#13;
 having lunch. He was fascinated with the &#13;
&#13;
little newcomer. Up until now he had been the &#13;
&#13;
center of attention.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Jeff Gets a Bath on Christmas Morning - 1957]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle left photo: Bob, John, Jim, Charlie - Christmas 1957]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Jeff Playing John's Drums]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 27 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Many exciting events were to come in the next few years. Anne graduated from O.S.U. &#13;
&#13;
in June, 1958, and went to Elyria in the fall to teach 4th grade. Outside at recess with &#13;
&#13;
the class, she fell on the ice and broke her arm. Unfortunately, being left handed it was&#13;
&#13;
her left arm.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bob started to school in 1959. Jeffrey was asked what he would do now that Bob was &#13;
&#13;
in School. He said, "I pay wid Wayme". Rayme Saunders was a neighbor and friend of &#13;
&#13;
Bob.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Once again I was left with just one little one at home till my boys  in grade school &#13;
&#13;
came trooping home at noon for lunch with their father.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank was offered the Nestlé  Plant in Freehold, N. Jersey to manage. It was &#13;
&#13;
presented in a way that left Frank to decide. The opening there came up and &#13;
&#13;
since it was a larger plant, they told him it was his if he wanted it. It would have had&#13;
&#13;
some advantages at this time. It was actually Barbara who  made the decision&#13;
&#13;
final for him when she said, "Money isn't everything, Dad." with a pleading look that&#13;
&#13;
was not possible for Frank to ignore.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Queen Barbara and Her Court at Homecoming - 1958&#13;
Her Football Escort Duncan Whitney to Her Left]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle left photo: Bob, First Grade]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle right photo: Bob sharing Cake on His 6th Birthday with Neighborhood Friends Left to Right: Jim, Amy Stockwell, Bob, Doug Crowl, Mary Ault, Jeff Tom Crowl, Tom Ruthg, Booby Chaffin]</text>
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                    <text>From the Beginning (30)</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="178714">
                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 28 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Jim and Bob &#13;
Sunday School bound in 1958]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: The Boys in New Christmas Sweats - 1959]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle photo: Bob, Frank, Jeff, Verna, John, Barbara, Anne, Susie, Charlie&#13;
January 2, 1959]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom left photo: Bob, Jeff at Aunt Judy's 1960]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Jeff First Grade]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 29 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury Plant was their Research Plant and Frank was told that this was &#13;
&#13;
the decision they had hoped would make. sometimes it took a balancing act to &#13;
&#13;
meet  production demands and also work out scheduling trial runs for the &#13;
&#13;
Laboratory. It required cooperation and the company appreciated Frank's&#13;
&#13;
 ability to make things run smoothly.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In March 1960, Susie graduated from O.S.U. She started teaching Music at &#13;
&#13;
Bellville in the fall. We had two graduates that year with Barbara from Big Walnut. &#13;
&#13;
That fall she started at O.S.U. John was next to graduate in 1961.  He also went to&#13;
O.S.U.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Over the next three years there were three weddings. First Susie to Ed O'Bryan in &#13;
&#13;
April 1961; Anne to Larry Stockert in July, 1962; and John and Polly Reynolds in &#13;
&#13;
January, 1963. A rather sudden change in the household. Although Anne and&#13;
&#13;
Susie were at home only summers, it was not the same without them.  John had&#13;
&#13;
driven to school from home, and his absence was felt even more.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank and I were given a three week cruise to the Caribbean by the Nestle Co. As&#13;
&#13;
we were basking in the sun from one island to the other we learned on the ship's&#13;
&#13;
daily newspaper of the extreme cold in Columbus, Ohio - 25 degrees below zero.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our itinerary included stops at San Juan, St Thomas, St. Lucia, Nevis, St Kitts and &#13;
&#13;
Barbados. Always when we went ashore the natives greeting us with music from their&#13;
&#13;
 steel bands.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We left the ship at Port of Spain., Trinidad, the hottest place I have ever been, to&#13;
&#13;
spend three nights there with the Nestlé people hosting our stay and showing us&#13;
&#13;
around the island. After a picnic on the beach Frank had a case of sun poisoning&#13;
&#13;
with swollen hands so that he had to call off a golf game scheduled for the next day.&#13;
&#13;
By contrast, coming into the hotel out of the sun, the lobby was so cold it almost&#13;
&#13;
made your teeth chatter. The one main road on the island was built by the G. I.'s.&#13;
&#13;
during World War II.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Frank in Nestlé's News - May 1961]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 30 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We flew from Trinidad to Kingston, Jamaica. The Director of Nestlé Operations,&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hay, an Englishman, met us; and he and his wife showed us many interesting&#13;
&#13;
places the three days we spent there. The Straw Market and a visit to the&#13;
&#13;
Governor's Rose Gardens were some of the places. Mrs. Hay was a good friend of&#13;
&#13;
the Governor's wife. I didn't get to meet her as she was as they say, "On holiday in&#13;
&#13;
England." I must say that roses do beautifully in Jamaica, but then the climate is&#13;
&#13;
ideal for both roses and people.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One evening the Nestlé driver drove us and Mr. and Mrs. Hay to Blue Mt. Inn&#13;
&#13;
for dinner. Our table was before a fire on the hearth and dessert was the famous&#13;
&#13;
strawberries grown on the hillside. I remember Arthur Godfrey on his radio show&#13;
&#13;
telling about his experience there and commenting on how great the strawberries &#13;
&#13;
were. He was right!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hay showed Frank some of the Nestlé facilities. Our stay in Kingston went very&#13;
&#13;
fast and next we were driven about 3 hours to the northern shore to Ocho Rios&#13;
&#13;
where we stayed three more days at the Plantation Inn. One thing I noticed on all&#13;
&#13;
the islands where we had dinner, it was always served in the open under the stars.&#13;
&#13;
Their insect control must have been very effective because I never saw a fly or&#13;
&#13;
mosquito which always seem to want to share in the fun on our outdoor events here.&#13;
&#13;
At ocho Rios on the beach I polished off my already very deep suntan. In fact when &#13;
&#13;
all the kids came to the airport to meet us, they  recognized Frank as we came down&#13;
&#13;
the steps of the plane; but they wondered who he had brought back with him.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Ocho Rios, Jamaica - 1963]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 31 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We were driven to Montego Bay where  we took a plane to Miami and on home by&#13;
&#13;
evening.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Susie  and Ed and one month old Christopher stayed with the children while we were gone.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was at this  time we bought my first clothes dryer. With all my eight children, it&#13;
&#13;
had to be my first grandchild whose diapers were dried in it. Of all the housewifely&#13;
&#13;
duties  I performed through the years, I think I enjoyed washing most and that&#13;
&#13;
included hanging clothes on the line. However, I soon realized the dryer was a &#13;
&#13;
better way. I wondered how many miles of clothesline full of socks I had fastened&#13;
&#13;
to the line with clothespins.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Surgeon General of the United States came on T.V.  with the long awaited&#13;
&#13;
announcement of the findings of the Cancer Society on the direct connection&#13;
&#13;
between smoking and lung cancer. The date was Saturday Jan. 11, 1964.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank and I had decided before hand that if what he had to say was bad news we&#13;
&#13;
would give up the habit. It was bad news, and we did not buy any more cigarettes.&#13;
&#13;
With only ten left in the house we made them last till Monday morning, and that was &#13;
&#13;
it!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank had taken up smoking out of boredom in 1944 when he was in Illinois for&#13;
&#13;
several months with the family. Later in 1949, I decided to give it a try, being &#13;
&#13;
convinced by the advertising that claimed if you only "reach for a Lucky&#13;
&#13;
instead of a sweet" maybe I could lose a few pounds. Trouble was there would be &#13;
&#13;
days go by that I would forget to smoke. Finally I learned to enjoy them. Most of&#13;
&#13;
my friends had smoked for years, but I had had no desire to try it. Smoking was&#13;
&#13;
never spoken of as being harmful to health. At least people now are fully informed&#13;
&#13;
about why they should not smoke.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It took two weeks before I didn't want a cigarette. I started new projects that would&#13;
&#13;
keep my mind and hands occupied. Frank's battle with kicking the habit required&#13;
&#13;
much more strength of character as he was surrounded by smokers everyday.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Charlie was next to graduate from high school. The following February on&#13;
&#13;
Valentine's Day, he was struck by a car on the square in Galena. He had stopped&#13;
&#13;
his car and had gone around behind it when a classmate thinking to give Charlie a&#13;
&#13;
scare pulled in toward him. Charlie looked up to see headlights in his eyes and at&#13;
&#13;
that moment was pinned between the two cars. Obviously the boy's judgement in&#13;
&#13;
executing the prank was faulty to say the least.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
On impact Charlie's car was pushed up the incline onto the grass on the other side&#13;
&#13;
of the sidewalk. His glasses and shoes were found several feet away. Deep cuts in&#13;
&#13;
both legs, one to the bone continued to bleed for several day.  Many blood&#13;
&#13;
transfusions were required. He didn't lack for donors. Friends came forth to offer&#13;
&#13;
their blood for him. It was nip and tuck for a time before the bleeding stopped.  It</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 32 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
was three weeks before  he was able to come home from Riverside Hospital. I++t took&#13;
&#13;
a little time before his legs wanted to function as usual. I remember him telling how&#13;
&#13;
scarry it was the first time he started across the street downtown with the green light&#13;
&#13;
and hoping to get there before the light changed.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In March 1966 my mother died. She was 82 and until the last few months had always&#13;
&#13;
been well and very active. Flowers in her garden was her delight in summer.  &#13;
&#13;
Always a fresh bowl of sweet peas on her kitchen table. "The way to keep them &#13;
&#13;
blooming is to pick them everyday",  she said.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
All my  sisters and I enjoyed gardening as much as she did. She had the advantage &#13;
&#13;
of having rich black loam soil which didn't require as much coaxing to get the best&#13;
&#13;
results. A little manure from the barn and her dahlias, gladiolas and asters, which&#13;
&#13;
she called fall roses, were real  prize winners.  Anyone who stopped by always&#13;
&#13;
left with and armful of whatever was ready in her garden.  I think that describes &#13;
&#13;
her best. Her generosity was seen in all her actions. She said, "I enjoy them more &#13;
&#13;
if others have some of them, too".&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When the children were small and I had little time for flowers I was content with the &#13;
&#13;
offerings the little boys brought to me.  I probably had the first dandelions and violets &#13;
&#13;
spotted in the neighborhood. How pleased they were when I made a fuss over their&#13;
&#13;
bouquets and would look for just the right glass to hold their little short stems!&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We started our new house at 217 High St. in August. It can honestly be said that this &#13;
&#13;
house was "built upon a rock." It took several days to dig the basement with a bulldozer&#13;
&#13;
and truckloads of  rocks were hauled away.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We moved in on the 15th of December, 1966. Only the three younger boys were at &#13;
&#13;
home.  Charlie did not move with us as he and Cheryl Saunders were married a few days&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[upper right photo: Mom at Her 80th Birthday Party April 16, 1964]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Digging the Basement at 217 High Street - August 1966]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 33 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
before. It was an exciting time to be settled in the new house and have the children&#13;
&#13;
and grandchildren here for Christmas that first year. The large family room in &#13;
&#13;
basement was more than adequate.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Barbara and Duncan weren't able to be with us until the next day. She was working&#13;
&#13;
in the University Hospital in Charlottesville, Va. where Duncan was in law school at&#13;
&#13;
the University. We were glad to have them for a few days after Christmas.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The next two years were busy ones for Frank. A new product has many problems&#13;
&#13;
to solve before the first batch comes off the line. Several engineers were hired to get&#13;
&#13;
the equipment ready with the bugs ironed out before Tasters' Choice, a freeze dried&#13;
&#13;
instant coffee was in production.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Heavily insulated suits and boots were required for the workers in the "Cold Room".&#13;
&#13;
The men spent a limited amount of time on that detail because of the extreme low&#13;
&#13;
temperature before they were relieved by the next  shift.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Sunbury Plant produced the first Nescafé in 1939, Nestea in 1946 and now in &#13;
&#13;
1968  Taster's Choice made it's debut on the market.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1969 Jim graduated from Big Walnut then started school at C. I. T.   Bob in 1971&#13;
&#13;
and on to O. S. U.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When Jim and Julia Dudas were married it was just Bob and Jeff at home. The sun&#13;
&#13;
did not set on the day of the wedding before Bob had moved all his belongings from&#13;
&#13;
the room he had shared with Jeff into Jim's room. Bob looked at the wedding not&#13;
&#13;
so much as losing a brother around the house but as a  joyous occasion when he &#13;
&#13;
acquired his own room. The feeling was mutual as Jeff expressed much satisfaction&#13;
&#13;
in  having his own space, also.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Jeff was the last to graduate from Big Walnut. From Sept. 1941 when Anne started&#13;
&#13;
to school it was 34 years of contact with the schools. I had mixed emotions with it&#13;
&#13;
all coming to an end. No more PTA. When 7th and 8th grades were in Galena&#13;
&#13;
Building it meant membership in two of them. Always room mother for one of the&#13;
&#13;
children, programs to attend when on of the children performed, Band, boosters and&#13;
&#13;
so many other reasons to be involved.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Almost half my life to that point keeping schedules and seeing that the children of&#13;
&#13;
all ages were where they were supposed to be and on time. Not only grade school&#13;
&#13;
but also high school and college to say nothing of always a little one keeping me&#13;
&#13;
company at home until Jeff started to school.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
And now looking back over the years that were so important to me, I have to think&#13;
&#13;
that I must have been about the happiest person alive in all this tangled web of&#13;
&#13;
activity that some how seemed perfectly normal to me at the time. I suppose one can&#13;
&#13;
say that from this phase of my life I had arrived at retirement the same year that&#13;
&#13;
Frank retired from the Nestlé Co.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 34 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Anne - '53]&#13;
&#13;
[top middle photo: Susie '55]&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo : Barbara '60]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[ middle left photo: John '61]&#13;
&#13;
GRADS&#13;
&#13;
[middle right photo: Charlie '64]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom left photo: Jim '69]&#13;
&#13;
[bottom middle photo: Bob '71]&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo:  Jeff '75]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 35 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Blue Chip Profile&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury Executive Heads Two Organizations&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank D Bergandine heads up two large organizations in nearby  Sunbury, Ohio: his family &#13;
&#13;
with eight children and 11 grandchildren and the Nestle Co. Inc. plant of 240 employes.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bergandine, 63, has been Nestle plant manager since 1953. He stands as Sunbury's leading &#13;
&#13;
industrialist. On average the company employs one of every nine Sunbury residents.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In former years, soft-spoken Bergandine has served as president of Sunbury Lion's Club, &#13;
&#13;
which another businessman said is as close to a chamber of commerce as the  town has, &#13;
&#13;
and the Big Walnut Band Boosters Association.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
He and Verna, his wife, served on the committee that coordinated Sunbury's &#13;
&#13;
sesquicentennial celebration in 1966.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Bergandine is the former  Verna Cushman of Woodstock in Champaign County. She &#13;
&#13;
a former president of Sunbury PTA and now serves on the official board of Sunbury &#13;
&#13;
United Methodist Church.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A lot of Bergadine's leisure time goes to golf. He is a member of Sunbury &#13;
&#13;
and Blackhawk golf clubs.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
AS OF TODAY, Bergandine has been with Nestle exactly 44 years. It was in &#13;
&#13;
1929 that he took a  factory job at Nestle's plant in Marysville. He had &#13;
&#13;
worked two months before that for Scott Seed Co. after graduation from &#13;
&#13;
Marysville High School.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
He worked in production five years, then spent four more in the control &#13;
&#13;
and research laboratory. In 1940, Bergandine was transferred to Sunbury&#13;
&#13;
in charge of the plant's laboratory.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Four years passed and when Nestle opened a plant in Granite City, Ill.,&#13;
&#13;
Bergandine went there as assistant plant manger, becoming manager in 1947.&#13;
&#13;
He returned to Sunbury as plant manager six years later.&#13;
&#13;
Four of the Bergandine children are graduates of Ohio State &#13;
&#13;
University and fifth is a  junior there now.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
THE NESTLE Co. has owned the plant since 1918, when Nestle's only &#13;
&#13;
business was milk products. Until that year , the plant was the Sunbury &#13;
&#13;
Creamery, founded circa 1895.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Nestle, whose parent company is headquartered in Bevy, Switzerland, &#13;
&#13;
has corporate U.S. offices in White Plains, N.Y.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Since 1967, when major rebuilding was done at the plant, main product &#13;
&#13;
from Sunbury has been freeze-dried, instant coffee. Bergandine said the &#13;
&#13;
process was developed for production between staffs at Sunbury and &#13;
&#13;
Marysville Nestle plants and was an industry first.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bergandine said the facility, in 1939, started the first successful, commercial &#13;
&#13;
production of instant coffee, a lot of which went into Army K rations during World&#13;
&#13;
 War II, and its instant tea was probably first in the industry.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
BESIDES FREEZE-dried coffee, the operation today produces a  non-dairy creamer &#13;
&#13;
and fills containers with some products shipped from other company plants.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Coffee beans for the plant come from abroad. But Bergandine gets questions about &#13;
&#13;
producing his own. A seven-foot tall coffee tree, given to him as a seedling by an &#13;
&#13;
employee, is nearing the ceiling of his paneled office. (R. N. Moore) &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: F. D. Bergandine]&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 36 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In Retirement&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: 1975]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle right photo: Nestlé Quarter Century Party 1976]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom left photo: Frank in Nestlé Golf Tournament 1978]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom right photo: Two Nestlé Men Frank and Jeff]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 37 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Jeff was off to O.S.U. where he made the Marching Band and had the thrill &#13;
&#13;
of playing at the Rose Bowl. We were off to Europe on a three week tour which &#13;
&#13;
the Nestlé Co.  provided for Frank's 46 years of service.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our itinerary was planned to the smallest detail. We knew before we left home &#13;
&#13;
where we would be and which of our Nestlé friends would be showing us the sights&#13;
&#13;
in each country. When the men from the plants in Europe visited the U.S. they &#13;
&#13;
always spent some time in Sunbury, it being their experimental plant.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our first stop was London. We arrived there a day before our luggage. Luckily &#13;
&#13;
our carry on bags contained all the essentials. They delivered our bags to the &#13;
&#13;
hotel the next morning.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In London Don and Patricia Cunliffe were our hosts. Don was Plant Manager &#13;
&#13;
at the Hayes Factory. Patricia had accompanied him the summer before on his &#13;
&#13;
visit to the U.S. and they spent several days in Sunbury. They were very &#13;
&#13;
gracious and one evening invited their close friends to join us for dinner at &#13;
&#13;
their home.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
For sightseeing a tour guide picked us all up in her car every morning for the day's&#13;
&#13;
agenda of places we wanted to visit, then back to the hotel to dress for dinner. Near&#13;
&#13;
the end of our stay, I jokingly said to Patricia that I thought the English had taken&#13;
&#13;
a bum wrap from some who accused them of eating only roast beef an boiled&#13;
&#13;
potatoes. She asked me if I had not noticed that we had dined each evening in&#13;
&#13;
French restaurants known for their fine cuisine. At any rate, there were no&#13;
&#13;
complaints about the fare.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank and Patricia managed a game of golf. Neither Don nor I are golfers so we&#13;
&#13;
dropped them off at the Country Club and with their six year old son, Adam, he and&#13;
&#13;
I toured a couple of very old churches in the country side near by. One of them was&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo inserted into article: Frank D. Bergandine]&#13;
&#13;
Nestle Plant Manager Retires After 46 Years of Service&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank D. Bergandine, who has been plant manager of The Nestle  Company's soluble &#13;
&#13;
coffee plant at Sunbury for the past 22 years will retire Sept. 1. He has been with&#13;
&#13;
Nestle a total of 46 years and during that time became involved in the production of many &#13;
&#13;
Nestle's " firsts" which have positioned the company as a major soluble coffee and tea &#13;
&#13;
manufacturer.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bergandine started as a general factory worker in 1929 at Nestle's Marysville plant which &#13;
&#13;
at the time made condensed and evaporated milk and milk powders. In 1935 he joined&#13;
&#13;
the plant's Quality Control Research  Laboratory.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Five years later he was promoted to supervisor of both the laboratory and of manufacturing &#13;
&#13;
at the Sunbury plant, which had been built in 1939 for the first manufacture of Nescafe.&#13;
&#13;
Since then this product has become the world's largest selling brand of instant coffee in&#13;
&#13;
the world.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When Nestle build a new plant at Granite City. Ill., in 1943 to produce Nescafe instant &#13;
&#13;
coffee for World War II armed forces, Bergandine first became its assistant plant &#13;
&#13;
manger in 1944 and then plant manager in 1947.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bergandine returned to Sunbury in 1953 to take over as plant manager, and was &#13;
&#13;
responsible for the first US manufacture of Taster's Choice freeze-dried coffee in the &#13;
&#13;
1960's. This is now the top-selling freeze dried coffee in the country. And he also&#13;
&#13;
managed the first production of Taster's Choice Decaffeinated in 1971, now the leading &#13;
&#13;
brand of decaffeinated freeze dried coffee in the country.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 38 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
500 years old, made of stone and still in use. The graveyard was interesting with the&#13;
&#13;
old tombstones, one of them was Sir Thomas Moore, author of "Ellegy, Written &#13;
&#13;
in a Country Courtyard".  This being the Sunday for Celebration of the Harvest, the&#13;
&#13;
altar was laden with produce and according to tradition was to be distributed among&#13;
&#13;
the widows of the Parish.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I remember fondly the beautiful countryside and the little hamlets we drove through&#13;
&#13;
on that day in the fall of 1975. When it was time to bid farewell to England we left&#13;
&#13;
from New Haven where we boarded the boat to take us across the channel to &#13;
&#13;
Dieppe, France.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
By the time we were settled in the hotel I began having a strange feeling in my chest.&#13;
&#13;
It didn't get any better and by 10:00 o'clock Frank called the desk and asked for a &#13;
&#13;
Doctor.  There was a decided communication gap between his English and my &#13;
&#13;
French but  he decided a shot of valium was needed. It must have been a strong dose&#13;
&#13;
because I was in slow motion for a couple of days. However the pain left and I&#13;
&#13;
managed to get dressed and accompany Frank to lunch the next day which had been &#13;
&#13;
planned for us with the management of the Nestlé Plant.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The French really know how to entertain. I was sorry I couldn't show a little more&#13;
&#13;
enthusiasm at the five course luncheon. The best I could manage was a few&#13;
&#13;
nibbles. They served a different wine with  each course and were very hospitable and&#13;
&#13;
entertaining.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
They took me back to my room and I slept all afternoon and most of the next day.&#13;
&#13;
The following day we left by train for Paris. I had to leave Dieppe with exploring&#13;
&#13;
the town and sights nearby.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We were met at the station by a gentleman we didn't know but he and Frank had&#13;
&#13;
mutual friends in the company. He was very helpful in getting us settled in our hotel&#13;
&#13;
and then took us to dinner. The next evening he and his wife accompanied us to&#13;
&#13;
dinner, at the Eiffel Tower. We spent almost an entire day at the Louvre. It was&#13;
&#13;
only a block from the Concorde Louvre Hotel where we were staying. I was getting&#13;
&#13;
awfully tired but I thought the chance that I might pass that way again was nil and&#13;
&#13;
I just had to see as much as I possibly could.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Another evening we went to the Lido for dinner and saw a show that was a real&#13;
&#13;
extravaganza. The tables were arranged around the stage on three sides. The show&#13;
&#13;
opened with cowboys riding horses racing down the center stage for a wild west act.&#13;
&#13;
Then the floor changed to ice and the skaters put on a show. A desert scene with&#13;
&#13;
camels and veiled women entertained. Topless dancers descended the stairs with&#13;
&#13;
their ornate headdresses of feathers so tall that it looked as if it were a real feat for&#13;
&#13;
the girls to keep from toppling over.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Another day of sightseeing in Paris and then we left from Orly Field for Barcelona,&#13;
&#13;
Spain. We were met by Juan Roccomora. I saw this handsome man standing alone,&#13;
&#13;
I told Frank that he was was our host. Frank said, "What makes you thing so?' I told</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 39 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
him that he was definitely a Spaniard and he was looking for someone. When our&#13;
&#13;
eyes met he came forward and asked if we were the Bergandines. From that&#13;
&#13;
moment he was in charge of seeing to it that our stay in Barcelona was most&#13;
&#13;
enjoyable. He and his wife Carmen picked us up each morning at the Diplomat&#13;
&#13;
Hotel and we were off for the day. Along the Costa Brava we stopped at a little Inn&#13;
&#13;
and had a fisherman's lunch. Traveling in another direction along the Mediterranean&#13;
&#13;
the scenery was spectacular against the deep blue of the water.  In Barcelona Harbor&#13;
&#13;
we saw Christopher Columbus pointing west and the Castle where Queen Isabella&#13;
&#13;
knighted him on his return from his voyage to the New World. The Roccomoras&#13;
&#13;
planned to visit the U.S. in 1977 to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary. To &#13;
&#13;
prepare for it Carmen and their two teenage sons were being tutored in English.&#13;
&#13;
When we rode along together in the back seat on our tours Carmen would ask me&#13;
&#13;
to repeat words so she could hear me pronounce them. She said her teacher was&#13;
&#13;
good but when she spoke in English it still sounded like Spanish.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We looked forward to seeing them again and for the opportunity to show them&#13;
&#13;
around our area. Unfortunately about a year after we had seen them we received&#13;
&#13;
a letter from Juan saying Carmen had  died of cancer. Although our&#13;
&#13;
acquaintance with them was of short duration they lift a lasting impression with us.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our next stop was Nice, France where we spent a couple of nights along the Riviera. &#13;
&#13;
Then on to Geneva, Switzerland.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The old hotel where we stayed in Vevey, the Trois Couronnes, had quite a history.&#13;
&#13;
Built on Lake Leman in 1840 on the site of a 13th Century Castle, it boasted a&#13;
&#13;
roster of guests that contained names of crowned heads of governments as well as&#13;
&#13;
many important travelers. On leaving we were presented with a book from the hotel&#13;
&#13;
containing pictures and signatures of many of them.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One of them was Paderewski shown practicing on one of the grand pianos in the&#13;
&#13;
ballroom for a music festival in 1913.  The scenes that met the eye from our window&#13;
&#13;
was one I am not likely to forget. In the distance the misty Alps majestically pointed&#13;
&#13;
skyward changing reflections on the lake as the sun changed positions throughout the&#13;
&#13;
day.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The first evening we were there Dr. Carl Angst, head of the Nestlé Co., drove us to &#13;
&#13;
a quaint Mountain Inn for dinner. Saddle of deer was the specialty that evening -&#13;
&#13;
a new taste for me which I thought was quite good.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The next few days we spent touring the countryside with different hosts stopping at&#13;
&#13;
places of interest.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
One day at a very high elevation we came to Gruyere Castle. looking down at the&#13;
&#13;
valley below at the cattle and goats, their tinkling bells playing a tune as they grazed&#13;
&#13;
on the hillside is the picture that comes to my mind when I think of Switzerland.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We had lunch in a little restaurant on a road leading up to the castle. We chose the</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 40 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
one that offered only a Swiss Menu. A slab of Gruyere Cheese on a toaster of sorts&#13;
&#13;
was placed on the table from which we scraped slightly melted cheese onto the&#13;
&#13;
smallest of red potatoes, boiled with the skins on, and served with small sweet&#13;
&#13;
gherkins, delicious hot bread and butter, strawberries and cream and of course wine.&#13;
&#13;
The cheese was made in the village nearby and was out of this world.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We visited the large Corporate Office of the worldwide Nestlé Co. Frank, having&#13;
&#13;
spent his entire working life in it's service, really enjoyed seeing where the important&#13;
&#13;
decisions were made that were responsible for all it's fine products.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To top off Frank's enjoyment of our visit Switzerland, Dr. Angst had arranged for&#13;
&#13;
a game of golf on our last day.  Unfortunately it rained the entire day. We left for&#13;
&#13;
Rome that evening with a rain check for a game at Black Hawk on his next trip to &#13;
&#13;
Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We spent the last two days of our tour viewing the ruins of the Ancient City, many&#13;
&#13;
of which I recognized from pictures in my Latin book. I mention this because my&#13;
&#13;
teacher, Miss Hunter, had been to Rome and enjoyed telling the class about what she&#13;
&#13;
had seen. When our translation had to do with a particular building we would ask&#13;
&#13;
the right questions we could get her started on that. We always expressed a great&#13;
&#13;
interest in learning how it was. That reduced the time for translation. If we really&#13;
&#13;
hadn't studied our vocabulary for the day we didn't have to expose our lack of&#13;
&#13;
preparedness.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Miss Hunter was near retirement age and was probably on to our scheme but she was&#13;
&#13;
a good sport and made Latin more interesting.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It happened that we were there on Sunday and on the visit to the Vatican  we saw the&#13;
&#13;
Pope making his appearance from the window and blessing the huge crowds of&#13;
&#13;
people.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
And Miss Hunter, whenever you are, I do thank you for whetting my interest in&#13;
&#13;
Rome with your stories. I enjoyed seeing the Old Colosseum and could picture in&#13;
&#13;
my mind all the events that took place when Julius Caesar watched from the stands.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Veni, vidi, vici - We left for home with the feeling that I came, I saw, I conquered.&#13;
&#13;
As I write this account of our trip I like to remember all the wonderful sights we&#13;
&#13;
enjoyed and the hospitality that was shown us where ever we went.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
And now back home in Sunbury with the laundry and mail caught up I decided I had&#13;
&#13;
better go see Dr. M. W. Liningston about why I wasn't feeling just right.  He took an&#13;
&#13;
Electrocardiogram. He told me I had had a heart attack and that I should go home&#13;
&#13;
and do nothing.  Frank took over with the house hold chores. I went in for tests at&#13;
&#13;
regular  intervals and  by April the Electrocardiograms showed much improvement and&#13;
&#13;
there didn't seem to be any damage to my heart.  As soon as possible I started&#13;
&#13;
walking and have continued ever since. It has become so much a part of my early&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 41 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
morning routine that I hate it when the weather is bad.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Annette Roberts comes along at 6:30 and our route takes us about 2 miles. When&#13;
&#13;
Judy Morris was living she joined us on Greenbrier and the three of us solved many&#13;
&#13;
of the world's problems in our discussions as we walked along. We both lost a dear&#13;
&#13;
friend.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Bicentennial year was celebrated with several events. One of them was a Tour&#13;
&#13;
of Homes sponsored by the Community Library Friends.  Six homes were open to&#13;
&#13;
the public as a fund raiser on May 16, 1976. From 1 to 6 p.m. over 500 signatures &#13;
&#13;
were recorded in the guest book at our house.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
At this writing we are coming upon Memorial Day which has always loomed large&#13;
&#13;
in my life experience. From the time we were children old enough to walk from the&#13;
&#13;
church to the cemetery, we formed lines behind my father and Uncle Charlie. With&#13;
&#13;
flowers handed us by the women of the church we followed up the hill and hunted&#13;
&#13;
a grave with the little American flag on it to lay them on. My father, after seeing to&#13;
&#13;
it that no soldier's gave was missed, led us to the spot where one of our leading&#13;
&#13;
citizens would tell us why we should always honor our men who served their country.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The band that played as we started out in step to the cadence of the drum beat&#13;
&#13;
consisted of three old men playing fife, bugle and drum. To this day when I hear&#13;
&#13;
the music  of  a drum and bugle corp I fancy myself in my best summer dress and&#13;
&#13;
black patent leather slippers - bouquet in hand.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
With the exception of the years when I had children in the Big Walnut High School&#13;
&#13;
Band, I have always gone "Over home" for Memorial Day. During World War II&#13;
&#13;
with the railroad running along beside the cemetery, the speaker and special music&#13;
&#13;
always had to stop and wait for trains to to pass, sometimes twice what with all the&#13;
&#13;
hauling by rail for the war effort.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A large monument stands in the Woodstock Cemetery since 1895. It was built by my &#13;
&#13;
great uncle, Warren S. Cushman to commemorate the family and all the men who&#13;
&#13;
volunteered in the Civil War from Woodstock. Names of 140 soldiers are etched on&#13;
&#13;
 a scroll on one side where above them the sculptor's profile is shown with his bugle.&#13;
&#13;
He was the company bugler.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
On the base of the monument are carved the three main branches on the family tree-&#13;
&#13;
Cushman, Hewitt and Gifford. On one end is Julius Cushman, brother of the artist &#13;
&#13;
in a military fatigue uniform. He was the first Woodcock soldier to die in battle.&#13;
&#13;
Beside the scroll of names is the third brother, Charles Anthony, one of the first to&#13;
&#13;
enlist in 1861. Warren stands beside the family history on the other side. Members&#13;
&#13;
of Woodstock families who have long since moved away come back to see their &#13;
&#13;
soldiers names carved on the monument.  Time and weather have not been kind to &#13;
&#13;
the Portland Cement from which it was made. It has required constant repair to fill &#13;
&#13;
the cracks by the artist's two great grand daughters. A few years ago my brother &#13;
&#13;
and cousin Bailey Cushman replaced the time worn names in the cement with&#13;
&#13;
marble slabs which will be there for time to come.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 42 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
A word about the artist. He was born in 1844, died in 1926 with over 1000 paintings&#13;
&#13;
to his credit.  He studied at the Corchoran Art  Gallery in Washington, D.C. His&#13;
&#13;
portrait of President Rutherford B. Hayes was hung in the Nation's capitol. He&#13;
&#13;
exhibited "Spanish Dancing Girls" at the World's fair in Chicago in 1893. The &#13;
&#13;
painting later sold for $10,000.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Each year at the cemetery on Memorial Day half of the people I see are relatives&#13;
&#13;
although none of them reside in Woodstock anymore.  There are only two houses&#13;
&#13;
where I can name the residents.  My sisters and I join my brother in Mechanicsburg&#13;
&#13;
for a potluck at noon.  In July there is a much larger reunion at Goshen Park and&#13;
&#13;
this year we will celebrate Robert's 90th birthday. He is the Patriarch of the family.&#13;
&#13;
The tradition of reunion started with the first families of Cushman, Hewett and&#13;
&#13;
Gifford. Now it is only the Cushmans who are within  range and some of them come&#13;
&#13;
from quite a distance.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1979 we attended Frank's 50th High School alumni Banquet in Marysville.   His&#13;
&#13;
class was one of those exceptional classes of students that produced several good&#13;
&#13;
athletes as well as many strong ties of friendships that continued through the years.&#13;
&#13;
His High School Principal, Miss Fern Mills was present, ninety years old at the time,&#13;
&#13;
and his baseball coach, Whitney Dutton. It was quite a party that prompted Miss&#13;
&#13;
Mills to comment that she was gad to see that nothing had changed their behavior.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1982. I had another slight heart attack and this time was advised to have an&#13;
&#13;
angiogram. It showed a complete blockage of a small artery and also evidence of the &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Cushman, Hewitt, Gifford Monument in Woodstock Cemetery]&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 43 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
one suffered in 1975 on a main artery. Medication was  prescribed which I have&#13;
&#13;
taken even since.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank had an angiogram two weeks after mine. We told the doctor about his&#13;
&#13;
bleeding tendency and was assured by him that of  the hundreds of procedures he had&#13;
&#13;
performed not one of them had ever bled. Well, he can't  make that statement&#13;
&#13;
anymore.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank was scheduled to go home the same day but just before he was to be dismissed&#13;
&#13;
his bandages and bedding were soaked with blood.  They kept him overnight. The &#13;
&#13;
hemorrhaging continued with at least one episode per day for several days.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When it was the night of my 50th High School Alumni Banquet he didn't want to run &#13;
&#13;
the risk of having to make a sudden exit so Susie drove us to Delaware where  we left&#13;
&#13;
Frank in the good hands of Nurse Barbara.  Susie had the "pleasure" of&#13;
&#13;
accompanying me to the party where she met all my classmates about whom she had&#13;
&#13;
heard stories through the years.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank got along through the evening with no problems, but about 2 a.m. we were up&#13;
&#13;
changing the dressing. As with the tonsils the little one inch incision at the elbow&#13;
&#13;
finally healed.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Our annual family Christmas party  fell on the 20th of December this year, our 48th &#13;
&#13;
wedding date. The children surprised us with a wedding cake, presents and all the&#13;
&#13;
trappings of a golden wedding celebration. It was our last one. On June 26th, 1983&#13;
&#13;
Frank died suddenly.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
At that moment for me the whole world seemed to have stopped. Disbelief and&#13;
&#13;
numbness finally gave way to the thankful realization that he did not suffer an&#13;
&#13;
extended illness. While I didn't fail to count my blessings for the 48 years of&#13;
&#13;
happiness with Frank the wonderful memories made my loss harder to accept.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
That is where my children came in to help me through this period that I can't&#13;
&#13;
imagine facing without them. He had taught well by example. They were there &#13;
&#13;
with help, many times even before I would think of needing it. Surely I have been&#13;
&#13;
blessed. With eight children, fifteen grandchildren and thirteen great grandchildren&#13;
&#13;
there is always a happening taking place. Birthdays, graduations, weddings, new&#13;
&#13;
babies and all sorts of important occasions in between. We never lack for reasons&#13;
&#13;
to celebrate. Frank lived to see all but one grandchild, Jim's daughter, Amy. Our&#13;
&#13;
first great grandchild, Susie's granddaughter, Brooke Elizabeth was born in 1986.&#13;
&#13;
Frank was denied the privilege of knowing any of the great grandchildren. Until last&#13;
&#13;
July it was six of one and half dozen of the other. Anne's granddaughter, Olivia&#13;
&#13;
Lucille was born in Dearborn, Mi., making it 7 girls and six boys.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We looked forward to a little change of scenery in summer when Frank had vacation&#13;
&#13;
from work. The years we lived in Illinois we spent that time in Ohio visiting friends&#13;
&#13;
and family.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 44 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
It was exciting when we set forth on the trip. I filled the Coleman Cooler with ham&#13;
&#13;
sandwiches, potato salad, cake and fruit. We stopped at a rest area just east of&#13;
&#13;
Indianapolis. It was over half way to journey's end, a good time to let the little ones&#13;
&#13;
play in the little creek that ran through the park. After that, it didn't seem so long &#13;
&#13;
till we came to the Ohio line and were in Ohio Country. the older children still talk &#13;
&#13;
about the fun they had at Knightstown, Indiana.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
After seeing everyone and having such a good time we were all just as eager to start &#13;
&#13;
the trip home.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Later on in the summer, a trip to Florida with Jim, Bob and Jeff was the destination for&#13;
&#13;
our get-away. By then the girls, also John  and  Charlie, had summer jobs. After they &#13;
&#13;
were married some of them moved out of state. We visited them which took us to&#13;
&#13;
N.  Carolina, Michigan, Virginia and New Mexico.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Jeff at an early age could spot the Holiday Inn signs a mile down the road. After&#13;
&#13;
riding for what seemed to him like a very long time, he looked forward to a swim in &#13;
&#13;
the pool. Also, he pointed out all the Golden Arches that he spied up ahead. And &#13;
&#13;
many times during these trips, we heard the question, "Are we almost there?"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
After the children had all left the nest, Frank and I spent a couple of weeks in&#13;
&#13;
Florida each winter. That was as long as we cared to stay. Even with the snow and&#13;
&#13;
cold, Ohio was the place we wanted to be.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Frank was the last surviving brother-in-law. After he died my three sisters and I &#13;
&#13;
spent time together at Siesta Key. Long walks on the beautiful, white beach was how &#13;
&#13;
we started the day with sunning and swimming till noon. Evenings we played euchre.&#13;
&#13;
Josephine, not an avid card fan, would have no part of bridge which was the game three &#13;
&#13;
or us enjoyed playing: so euchre was a compromise.  By the time our two weeks were up,&#13;
&#13;
we were caught up on family news and much of the past had been gone over. Mostly&#13;
&#13;
about people and events that took us back to Woodstock. The next year we would start&#13;
&#13;
all over again.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We do not go to Florida any more, but each spring the four of us plan something&#13;
&#13;
together closer to home. If it is any distance, we have drivers who are willing to see&#13;
&#13;
that we get there intact. Susie and Carolyn, Bertha's daughter, are willing to listen&#13;
&#13;
to the same old stories and our arguing about events being discussed as to whether&#13;
&#13;
it was this way or that. Otherwise Josephine is the "designated" driver. She has&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo: Spring Break 1990 in Siesta Key,  Florida  &#13;
Josephine, Julia, Verna, Bertha]&#13;
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 45 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
come many times and driven us to Indiana to her house and brought us back&#13;
&#13;
home. She being the youngest of the four, we absolutely forbid her to get old.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
We were saddened by the loss of two of our young men when accidents&#13;
&#13;
claimed their lives. On April 16, 1988, Scott, Charlie's son, met with death on&#13;
&#13;
his way to work in his truck. He was not far from the Golf course where he was &#13;
&#13;
working when he failed to make the turn.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
In 1991 on May 10th, Christopher, Susie's son, was on his way home from work &#13;
&#13;
at Honda when he was crossing a seldom used railroad with inadequate marking.&#13;
&#13;
A train came along at a fast rate of speed and carried his car down the track.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Chris was 28 and left his wife Vicki, daughter Brooke, age 5 years, and son Blake, &#13;
&#13;
2 years old. Scott was just through school and on his first job which he liked very &#13;
&#13;
much.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The loss to all of us left a large void which is hard to understand, but we can only remind &#13;
&#13;
ourselves of the joy that they had brought into our lives. They are always with us when &#13;
&#13;
we think of the smiles and winning ways of two handsome, tall, blond young men who &#13;
&#13;
were very dear to us.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Life does not always go along as planned.  Divorce results from marriages which were &#13;
&#13;
probably not meant to have been. It is never an easy time when that seems to be the only &#13;
&#13;
solution but somehow life  goes on. Five of my children found themselves in this &#13;
&#13;
unfortunate situation. Four of them have since remarried.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Charlie and Karen Stevens, from Ostrander, bring Natalie and Angie Stevens into our &#13;
&#13;
family. Jim married Debra Winters of Delaware and have a daughter Amy.  John and &#13;
&#13;
Darcie Dunzwiler  from Zanesville married last summer, and Susie and Steve Churchill of &#13;
&#13;
Columbus were just married June 15th. Steve has two children, Susan and Steve III.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Anne also is divorced and living in Rockwood, Michigan enjoying her children and &#13;
&#13;
grandchildren. When my children are happy, I am happy for them.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As I bring my story to a close, it occurs to me that there is a side of my personality&#13;
&#13;
that I haven't mentioned. and that is the need I have always had to create&#13;
&#13;
something with my hands. I wasn't until the children were no longer young before&#13;
&#13;
I could find the time to pursue my interests.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps if I had been content to stick to one thing, I could have achieved more&#13;
&#13;
success. No sooner than I finish one project I want to start something new.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: Verna 1990]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 46 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top left photo: Out to Lunch on my 74th Birthday - 1988 Judy Morris, Betty Jo Guidotti and Me]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[top right photo: 75th Birthday Party at Lindeys - 1989]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[middle photo: My 80th Birthday Party  &#13;
In Front: Barbara, Susie, Me, Anne, Karen&#13;
In Back: Charles, John, Jeff, Bob, Duncan, Debbie, Jim]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[bottom photo: Sisters Julia, Verna, Josephine At My 80th Birthday Luncheon At Barbara's 1994]</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 47 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
However, I always finish what I start. A hooked rug or crocheted lace tablecloth&#13;
&#13;
might have taken a year. But I was driven by the desire to see how it turned out.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
For a few years I was very much in to quilting which was truly a creative process.&#13;
&#13;
From the selection of the calico prints that required going from store to store to find,&#13;
&#13;
to arranging them as to color. That makes the quilt one of a kind which definitely&#13;
&#13;
reflects one's  own artistry even though others may use the same pattern.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
When the adult evening classes in Art were offered at the high school with teacher&#13;
&#13;
Bill Fraley, I signed up and spent many happy hours with some of my good friends&#13;
&#13;
with similar  interests. We were working in oil, and later I had a few sessions in&#13;
&#13;
water color with Ruth Firestone. I mean to get out the paints again; and if some&#13;
&#13;
other project doesn't get in the way, I probably will.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The trees we planted in the yard 30 years ago have grown so tall they shade my&#13;
&#13;
flower beds.  I must hunt for a sunny spot here and there to plant any thing at all.&#13;
&#13;
I love the trees and have to accept the fact that I can't have it both ways, but I do&#13;
&#13;
miss the variety of cut flowers from which I can pick and choose to make &#13;
&#13;
arrangements for my tables. Also the last summer that my friend, Judy Morris was&#13;
&#13;
with us, I enjoyed seeing her face light up when I took flowers to her.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
From the time I started collecting antiques, I have spent hours removing paint and&#13;
&#13;
varnish with all seemed worthwhile when the final finish was being smoothed out&#13;
&#13;
and the beauty of the wood came through. I have brought home items from auction&#13;
&#13;
sales which had definitely seen better days. In fact at times Frank would doubt my&#13;
&#13;
judgement or lack of it. However, he would set to work although grudgingly, on the&#13;
&#13;
drawers making them glide smoothly and any other repair that was needed.  With the&#13;
&#13;
removal of the old finish and the results of my labors in restoring the piece, he was&#13;
&#13;
as excited as I was over the transformation.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
I believe that this sums up the important events in my life that I recall. Although I&#13;
&#13;
put off starting it for one reason or another, I have actually enjoyed remembering&#13;
&#13;
details that I hadn't thought of until I needed to put them in writing.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
As much as I enjoyed the places and people I came to know in moving where Frank's&#13;
&#13;
work took us, I feel privileged to have spent so much of my life in Sunbury. a good&#13;
&#13;
place for family, and friends that make life exciting and worthwhile.</text>
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                    <text>[corresponds to numbered page 48 of From the Beginning]&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
[photo:  Shep and I September 1996]</text>
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                <text>From the Beginning</text>
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                <text>This family history tells the stories of the Bergandine and Cushman families, the Bergandine's world travels, and how it came to pass that Mr. Bergandine became the manager of the Sunbury Nestlé plant. Many photographs are included.</text>
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                <text>Author Mrs. Verna Cushman Bergandine</text>
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                <text>31103203</text>
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                <text>Bergandine family--Genealogy&#13;
Cushman family--Genealogy&#13;
Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury--History&#13;
Verna Bergandine--Personal Narratives--1914-2016</text>
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                <text>Community Library, Sunbury, Ohio</text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Frontier Day Show</text>
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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Personal narratives--American--Early 20th century&#13;
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Travel--United States--Florida--Miami-Dade County--Miami--Early 20th century </text>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Frontier Day Show,&#13;
&#13;
put on by Shriners at&#13;
&#13;
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            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <text>Daisy E Green Wheaton</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1923</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="173161">
                <text>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
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                <text>Daisy Wheaton Stereographs </text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>Stereograph</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>English</text>
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          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Still Image&#13;
Text</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                <text>30210312451981 </text>
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        <authentication>8eb033ec655d69edbc9f8fc52f197a08</authentication>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Churches</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>This collection contains a variety of materials from churches and church-related programming in Delaware County, Ohio. The collection currently includes material from Baptist, Methodist, Episcopal, and Presbyterian congregations. </text>
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            </element>
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      <name>Still Image</name>
      <description>A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.</description>
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      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="185908">
                <text>Full View of the Aged Old Blue Church </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Churches--Presbyterian--Delaware County--Ohio&#13;
Kingston Township--Ohio--Delaware County&#13;
Local history--Ohio--Delaware County--Kingston Township&#13;
Presbyterian church buildings--Kingston Township--Delaware--Ohio</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>This color picture shows a full view of the aged and empty Old Blue Church, located in Kingston Township, Delaware County, Ohio.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="185911">
                <text>1974</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="185912">
                <text> http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="185913">
                <text>Photograph</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="185914">
                <text>Still Image</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="185915">
                <text>12022209</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Sunbury </text>
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              </elementTextContainer>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="2590">
                  <text>The Sunbury collection contains documents on a variety of topics related to the history and development of Sunbury. Item types represented in this collection include diaries, maps, meeting ledgers, business documents and histories. </text>
                </elementText>
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Future Farmers of America Banquet</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="191345">
                <text>Local history--Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury&#13;
Newspapers--Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury News&#13;
Photography--Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury&#13;
Public schools--Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="191346">
                <text>This photo was taken at the Future Farmers of America Banquet in the cafeteria of the Big Walnut High School.&#13;
&#13;
If you know more about this photograph, please contact the library at 740-965-3901 or email history@yourcl.org.&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="191347">
                <text>Photographer Bill Whitney; The Sunbury News</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>circa 1952</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="191349">
                <text>Editor O.W. Whitney; The Sunbury News&#13;
Associate Editor and Publisher Bill Whitney; The Sunbury News</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="191350">
                <text>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/&#13;
</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Photograph</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Still Image</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                <text>120120234</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Galena </text>
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              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="2582">
                  <text>This collection contains items related to the history and development of Galena, its residents, businesses and schools. It contains John Bricker Sr's postcard and photograph collection featuring images of Galena and Delaware, Helen Campbell's Slides, the book Welcome to the Village of Galena, written by Doris Bricker, Charlie (C.C.)  Bricker's wife. The personal correspondence of David E. Bricker and his son, Charlie (C.C.) Bricker,  appears here courtesy of John L. Bricker, son of John Sr. and Shirly  Bricker, and  A View of Galena, Ohio,  Both Past and Present by Floyd Siebert,  Adele Dunn and Phyllis Hollifield.</text>
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      <name>Still Image</name>
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      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Galena Brick and Tile Mill</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>early 1900s</text>
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          <element elementId="37">
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            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
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                <text>Charter Member of the Galena Historic Foundation: John L. Bricker</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="181525">
                <text>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Helen Campbell Slides</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="181527">
                <text>Photograph</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Still Image</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Local history--Ohio--Delaware County--Galena&#13;
Manufacturing industries--Ohio&#13;
Photography--Ohio--Delaware County--Galena&#13;
Small business--Ohio--Delaware County—Galena </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="181530">
                <text>This photograph shows the Galena brick and tile mill with smoke coming out of one smoke stack.&#13;
&#13;
If you would like to tell us more about the Galena Brick and Tile Mill, please contact the library at 740-965-3901 or history@yourcl.org. </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="182082">
                <text>926920220510 </text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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</itemContainer>
