Chapter
10 Turning Twelve and My Teenage Years.
The dress I made in 4H | |
When
I turned twelve, I graduated from Primary September 24, 1939
and started attending the Beehive Class in M.I.A. I did not enjoy
being a Beehive girl. All the girls in my class were two grades ahead
of me in school making me very uncomfortable with them. I went
because Daddy took me! I filled my requirements but only went two
years.
The
same year I started M.I.A. I also started 4H. Now let me tell you,
that was a different story. I was with my friends and happy. Mrs.
Burnet, LaPreal's mother, was our 4H leader. We had cooking one year
and sewing the next, I was in 4H for four years. I grew a lot from my
4H years. Going to 4H Camp every summer was a real fun experience. I
got to meet other 4Hers from all over the county, enlarging my circle
of friends. The first year I got a red ribbon on the dress I made and
got a blue ribbon for modeling it.
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Donna Gooch |
One
of my requirements was to bake cookies to serve the class which I
did. Oh no! I had put celery seed in them instead of nutmeg. (Mother
had put celery seed in an empty nutmeg can). I did very well with
sewing. The Cassia County Fair in late summer was a great time for us
4Hers, setting up and decorating our booth hoping to get a blue
ribbon on the booth. The judging of our projects was a real source of
anxiety. About the most fun was seeing my other 4H friends from camp.
We also got to go to the rodeo for free on the first night. It was a
good time in my life.
Burley High School - the Junior High was on the first floor. | | |
Looking through the fire escape in Jr. High |
Starting
Jr. High was a new experience for me even though I still hated
school. I had a hard time with my studies. It was fun going to that
magnificent three story building. There again was a chance to meet
new friends as the students came from all over the county to the Jr.
High School. This is when I discovered boys.
Myron and I, ready for church | |
I
had some funny run ins with Miss O Rourk, Miss Kiesz, and a couple of
others. A couple of boys were throwing spit wads across my desk at
each other. One landed on my desk so I threw it back. Guess who got
caught? Another time I was running down the hall and around the
corner. Ran smack dab into a teacher, that was not a pleasant
encounter! I loved my home economics class where I learned more
sewing and cooking. Miss Pratt was my teacher. I hated my Physical
Education class. I was taught modesty at home and was very
uncomfortable undressing and showering with a whole class of girls.
Our
School held a track meet each spring that was fun. One year Myron
broke his arm while high jumping. We practiced against other classes
at our our own school and then competed with the Rupert and Paul Jr
High Schools.
The Frost Family in 1940 Back row: Me, Myron, Eunice, and Thelma. Middle: Marion, Lorna, Ira, Vyla, and Irma. Front: Gerald and Kathryn. |
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This is what the contraption looked
like, only I don't think I was smiling like that. |
When
I was about fourteen, Mother took me to town to get my very first
permanent so I would have lovely curls for school. Mrs. Boyd's beauty
shop was upstairs above the M.H. King's 5 & 10. I didn't know
what I was getting in for. Mrs. Boyd started winding my hair into the
darndest contraption. Then she attached some clamps with electric
wires that were connected to a machine. I had to sit there forever.
All of that weight on my head made me slump over. When I tried to sit
up, it pulled my hair. After going through all of that, instead of
the lovely curls I hoped for, it came out frizzy. From then on, we
girls gave each other Toni Home Permanents, which we continued to do
into our married years.
My
first formal dress was another great and painful embarrassment for
me. Mother bought it from Mrs. Eva Crane. She had made it for her
daughter, Minnie. Mrs. Crane and Minnie were both real snobs in our
ward. I was so humiliated wearing that cast off dress of Minnie's to
the Gold and Green Ball. Every kid in the ward knew that it was one
of Minnie's, and I was wearing it. I also had to wear it to the Jr.
High dances. How I hated that dress even though it was a pretty rose
color and just sort of cute, it was where it came from that hurt.
Mother could have made me one so much cuter. I don't think Mother
knew how badly that affected my self esteem. As I mentioned before, I
could write a whole big chapter on embarrassing moments in my life.
Me as a teenager | |
Myron
had a friend, Eldon Lowder, from View. He was the first boy that had
a crush on me, that I knew of. He would ride his bike down to play
with Myron but he really came to see me. But, the boy who I had a
crush on in the 7th grade was Billy Dunford. He liked me
too. He had blond curly hair and very blue eyes. I thought he was the
cutest guy in the school. During the summer he died of an inherited
illness. I was so sad and really depressed the day of his funeral. I
tried to sing happy songs. I was told by some of the other kids on
the school bus that after I would get off the bus every day, Gerald
Hurst and Eugene Christensen would fight over me.
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The Frost girls: Kathryn, Irma, Marion, Lorna, me, Thelma, and Eunice |
Eunice
graduated from high school the spring of 1940 and in 1941 moved to
Salt lake City to go the L.D.S. Business Collage. She lived with the
George Woods family. Daddy and Mother knew him as a missionary while
they were living in Moscow. She later got a job with the Beneficial
Life Insurance Co. and then received her mission call in 1945 to the
Western States Mission. Thelma graduated a year later in 1941 and
she too went to Salt Lake where she roomed with Eunice for the time.
Sunday
December 7, 1941 is the date I will forever remember. When the news
came that Pear Harbor was under attack by the Japanese, terror
gripped my heart. President Roosevelt declared war on Japan on
December 8th and two or three days later he declared war
on Germany as they were allies with Japan. Germany had been trying to
take over all of Europe. Our young men were sent over to Europe and
the Islands of the Pacific. Most of them were just boys. How brave
they were! We had been following Hitler's War in Europe since Mr.
Reeds 4th grade class.
Ration stamps: these are from Book 4
which was issued in October 1943. These
stamps were used for purchasing canned
vegetables, fruit, and juices. | |
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Norma Jo Price and me |
1942
came and life went on. Some food, sugar, coffee, gas, tires,
and even shoes (leather) rationing took place, among other great
changes. We were all issued stamp books for the rationed items. All
of the rubber and leather went to the military along with the newly
developed nylon. No more nylon hose or even elastic! Our panties were
now manufactured with draw strings. One evening Norma Jo and I were
on Main Street headed to the Burley Theater to see a movie. Just as
we got to the ally my string came lose. Oh yes, my panties were
falling off! I stepped behind a big light pole there in the ally with
Jo as a shelter. I hurriedly, readjusted that miserable string and we
went on to the movie. Life was not the same for Americans, rich or
poor. At that time I was fifteen.
Our family car | |
We
teenagers kept Mother and Daddy busy running us to school functions,
ball games, movies, 4H, roller skating, school dances, jobs, and
church activities. When I turned sixteen in 1942 I learned to
drive.. I don't recall anything interesting about mastering the
wheels.
On
July 4, 1943 my dear, beloved, teasing Grandpa Dayley passed away in
his sleep. How I missed that sweet old gentleman.
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Donna, me, and Lorna |
Myron
worked in the hay on a ranch out at Raft River for a couple
of summers. I really missed him and was glad to have him back on
weekends. On November 11, 1943 he went to Twin Falls and enlisted in
Helen Wixom | |
the Navy. He was sworn in and left on the 18th for boot
camp at the Farragut Naval Training Station in Northern Idaho.
The
night before he left for boot camp he and Joyce Gooch took me,
Lorna, Donna, and probably a couple of the other kids, with his date
Helen Wixom, one of my friends, to the movies. It would be the last
time in a long time that he would get that chance. Myron took me on a
lot of his dates with Helen. But I don't ever remember him going to
the dances at the Y Dell.
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