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Box 5

 Container

Contains 16 Results:

Journal, 1922

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 11
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents February 19 "I was so exhausted that I had to go to bed for awhile. It is the nervous strain of trying to take care of the children and work at the same time that wears me out. Charles really does most of the work himself and yet I find myself growing weaker and more nervous everyday." Mary gets up at 5:30 every morning and works all day. Charles is a salesman of sorts canvassing...
Dates: 1922

Journal, 1922, 1934

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 12
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents This journal begins with notes on food, their classification, sources and uses in the body. About bread she says: "Bread is the most common and the most important article of diet. Absolute cleanliness is necessary in bread making. 1 slice of bread made with milk is worth 4 slices made with water." Recipes follow for such dishes as Currant Loaf, Eggs for the Typhoid convalescent,...
Dates: 1922; 1934

Journal, 1922

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 13
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents July 8 "I asked C. to tend children while I got us & our clothes ready for the Powell reunion to be held at Ed's tomorrow. He said he would & then kept me waiting while he did first one odd job then another. I hadn't felt well in the morning by the middle of the afterward when C. was ready to take the children I was so worn out that I had to go to bed. He did a small washing leaving the...
Dates: 1922

Journal, 1922

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 14
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents On the way home from Church in Upton Mary and family were caught in a cloud burst and took shelter in a nearby house: "I looked with envy at the sparkling cleanness of the linoleum on the floors, the ruffled white curtains, the snowy bedspread seen through the open bedroom door, the colors of the new braided rugs on the kitchen floor vieying [sic] with the geranium blooms in the windows. When at...
Dates: 1922

Journal, 1922-1923

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 15
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents 1922 October 24 "He [Charles] unloaded the car and then took us and went house hunting. We found only one house that was still for rent & it was $22.50 a month & small at that. After we got home C. called up Noel Pratt and learned that we could rent his house next door for $25.00 a month. We just about decided to take it. I couldn't sleep for thinking how grand it would be...
Dates: 1922-1923

Journal, 1923

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 16
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents 1923 May "We have company everyday and all day. Inez & Mrs. McKibben and Effie and our other neighbors who are not too busy. How I envy people who have time for visiting and yet when I think how blessed I am to be the mother of these four lovely children it passes my understanding." May 6 "C. & I took our darling baby to meeting and had him...
Dates: 1923

Journal, 1923

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 17
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents It is apparent that the care of four very young children so close in age is a strain on Mary emotionally and physically. August 12 "I was terribly ill during the evening and part of the night. I thought I was going to die. C. administered to me & finally I went to sleep." August 24 "Felt very worn & weary on waking up this morning, but...
Dates: 1923

Journal, 1924

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 18
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents April 18 "We are out of money and don't know where to go to borrow. Charles could not go to work because he couldn't buy a gallon of gasoline to take him there. He took the few pennies I had in my purse and went up town to seek counsel of the bishop. I am so weak & have so much pain that I find it hard just to sit up and write these few words. Well they say the darkest hour is just before dawn,...
Dates: 1924

Journal

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 19
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents April 19 "It is now 3:00 A.M. I have to keep putting musterole on Norma's chest and her cough doesn't get any better. I am about exhausted with worry and lack of sleep. I feel greatly tired in my spirit over things that are not my fault or Charles's or the children's. I am almost heart broken with the long continued strain of puzzling problems, anxieties, and misunderstandings. I will say that it...
Dates: 1844-1949

Journal, 1934

 File — Box: 5, Volume: 20
Identifier: III
Scope and Contents April 4 "Our baby is six weeks old today. I had to stay in bed for three weeks after coming home from the hospital. A nurse hired by the Metropolitan Life Insurance company used to come nearly every morning and give me a bath, but the bulk of the nursing of both me and the baby fell to Charles' lot." In this era of depression in the early thirties, when the Relief Society of the...
Dates: 1934