Chapter 11 Quitting School
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Me and my little sisters: Marion, Kathryn, me, Irma, and Lorna |
At
seventeen I was only a sophomore in school and hated it. My greatest
joy during those years was roller skating. I loved to go to the
Play-More-Roller-Rink on the corner of Main and Albion every
Wednesday evening, slip into a pair of rented shoe skates and get out
on that floor. I was in Heaven as I waltzed around and around the
rink to the music, noise, shouts, laughter, and my friends. I took a
lot of tumbles but got right back up and was off again. I was very
good on a pair of shoe skates but as I stated earlier, I could not
stand up on ice skates. I could do almost every thing on roller
skates but waltz backwards. On March 10, 1944 while trying to learn,
I fell and chipped my knee cap. That was very painful and took me off
of skates for a while. (It got me out of P.E. at school which I was
happy about.) Mother was working swing shift at the potato processing
plant. On Wednesdays we would stay in town after school and skate all
evening and ride home with her when she got off shift at 11: p.m.
Once in a while I went skating on Sunday nights as well. It was a
sin so it is a wonder I didn't fall and break my neck. Sometimes the
folks would go to a movie while us kids skated.
The Frost Family - January 1944. Back: Lorna, Me, Myron, Eunice, and Thelma. Front: Marian, Gerald, Ira, Irma, Vyla, and Kathryn. |
Ready to go to church | |
I
was equally as happy on the dance floor at the Y Dell Ballroom. The Y
Dell was the finest dance hall in all of the Magic Valley. All the
Big Bands played there at one time or another. Thelma and her friends
had danced there and now it was my turn along with Lorna and Donna.
We were not allowed to date until we were sixteen, so before then
Daddy and Mr. Gooch took turns each Saturday night taking the three
of us to town and then came back to get us. One night Mr. Gooch
forgot to come after us. The three of us walked the three miles home
along the railroad tracks dressed in our finest dance dresses. It was
pitch black that night, we could hardly see our hands in front of our
faces and we were really frightened. All of a sudden a pheasant flew
up in front of us. Three young girls about died on the spot. With
much fear, we did make it home okay on very shaky legs.
Another
night I got stranded alone after the dance. A young couple along
with a soldier boy from Paul saw my plight and offered to take me
home. I was very grateful and also frightened at the same time. As
soon as they got me home I thanked them as I jumped out of the car
and run to the house as fast I could.
I
danced away many, many Saturday nights. One night as the evening
progressed the power went off, but the band went right on playing.
Happily, we continued dancing in the dark. When the power came back
on, the light on the big shining crystal revolving ball revealed a
lot of lipstick smeared faces. I had a date with Jerry Stroller from
Paul that night. The outdoor dance floor was great on hot summer
evenings. I met a lot of very fun people at the Y Dell. Many years
later, I was very unhappy when I found out that they took down that
crystal ball and made the Y Dell into a bowling alley.
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Me in 1943 |
My
employment during those teen years really varied. I picked potatoes
for farmers that paid. I did babysitting and light house work for
Afton and Wade Baker. My first job uptown was at the Woolworth 5 and
10 Cent store on Overland. On October 30 1944, right after I got to
work my cousin, Ila Martingdale, came in to tell me that Uncle Lenard
Drussell had shot and killed Aunt Cora during the night. I also
worked at M.H.Kings for a short time. Later, I worked at a dry
cleaning establishment on Main Street but I was too slow, so my boss
got me a job at the bakery on Overland. I was working there when we
got the word about Myron's ship.
The
job I grew the most from was working at JC Penny's on the corner of
Overland and 13th. Mr. Burns was the manager and a great
boss. I clerked mostly in the shoe department, but also other
departments. I worked a lot in the stockroom checking in incoming
merchandise and pricing everything. I loved being the first to see
the new merchandise. I worked with some wonderful people there.
Betty Session and I were the window trimmers. We also hand printed all
the store's signs and prices. It would have been a wonderful
opportunity if I had stayed with Penny's. It could have turned into
a window trimming career. I worked there for two summers and after
school.
LaPreal Boyce | |
Thelma
moved to Salt Lake where she met a handsome sailor boy and it
was true love. She and Jay Jackson were married July 20, 1944 in the
Logan Temple. They waltzed right off to California where Jay was
stationed in the Navy.
Sunday
May 28, 1944 was a great big step in my life. I moved into town with
Norma Jo Price as my roommate. We rented a motel type room from
Freers on the corner of 16th and Oakley Ave. I was
working at JC Penny's and Jo worked at Western Auto. It was a whole
new experience for me being on my own. It was a lot of fun and we got
along very well. On August 1, 1944 I moved back home to get ready to
go back to school.
My friends and I infront of the Seminary Building: Marjory Bunn, me, Lorerra Espenosa, Glenda Burgess (in the back), and Lavon Loveless. |
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In my very own formal |
I
have always had good friends, most of them were good girls.
There was this other group that got me to sluff school a couple of
times with them but when they tried to teach me how to smoke, that
was the end. I dated a lot after my sixteenth birthday with fellows
from school and also from Rupert and Paul. It caused Mother and
Daddy some concern because I did not not always come home when
expected some nights. One such night Donna and I double dated the
Fenten Brothers from Paul. After the movie we sat in the car in our
driveway until quite late. Daddy, imagining all sorts of mischief
going on, finally came out to investigate only to find the four of us
in a political argument. Not a one of us knew what we were talking
about. That had to give Daddy a good laugh. One of the most fun
dates I had was with Vaughn Hobson. We attended the Jr. Prom and I
wasn't wearing Minnie's dress.
The
first of many major mistakes that I made during my lifetime was
dropping out of school during my junior year. At eighteen years old,
I was two years older than all of my classmates who were only
sixteen. But I did continue go to Seminary the rest year and
graduated on Sunday May 11, 1945. Brother Allred and Brother Jenkins
were our teachers and they were a great influence in my life. In the
three years that I went to Seminary, I was able to use my artistic
abilities.
After
Myron had gone into the Navy he shared with me his secret, that he
was finishing school and wanted me to also. I did go back but I was
so far behind and did not have the courage to remain. It has been a
lifelong regret and embarrassment to me. Had I stayed in school, I
would have graduated in 1946.
I
moved back into town again, this time I lived at Mrs. Beaver's
rooming house on East Main Street, right across from the East Park. I
had a tiny room of my own that was at the back of the house. Theo
Gooch and Dora Sagers shared a room and two others girls shared
another room.
Myron in the Navy | |
I
was living there then we got the word about Myron's ship, the USS
Spence. I,
along with the rest of the family were horrified when on January 12th
we got the news that his ship had been lost in a typhoon on December
18th. As I remember it, Mr Gooch had read it in the newspaper, and
came and told us. We would not give up hope
until we got finale word from the government which seemed to take
forever. On January 15th
Daddy and Mother received a telegram stating that Myron was missing.
Then on February 8th
another telegram arrived saying there was no possibility that he had
survived.
Germany
surrendered on May 8, 1945. Daddy let me take the car to town with
the other kids to join the crowds driving up and down the streets
honking their horns. What a great and glorious day that was. Japan
surrendered on August 15, 1945. On September 2, 1945 the surrender
was signed on board the U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay. I along with
all of America was overjoyed with the ending of World War ll. At
last we had peace after a very long dreadful 3½ years which took the
cream of the crop of our young men into battle in unknown lands and
on ships at sea. Thousands to never return. It was when all the other
men were returning home that saddened our hearts when our son,
brother, and my best friend was not among them.
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The Idaho Falls Temple in 1945 |
Prior
to leaving on her mission in August 1945, Eunice and I went to Idaho
Falls with other young women of our ward to see the new Idaho Falls
Temple before it was dedicated. We rode in the back of Wade Baker's
truck. It was raining so it had a canvas over the top. I had to sit
in the very back of the truck and by the time we got to Idaho Falls I
was completely splattered with mud. Eunice and I both gave way to
tears as she helped me clean up the best we could with out the
benefit of a shower and clean clothes. The Temple was so beautiful,
I knew that it is God's House.
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