Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Lindsay Lake Creek Home Burns.


In October 1936, Doris who was 11 years old at the time, was upstairs playing in their Lakecreek home when it was struck by a lightning bolt followed by a ball of fire that came down the light cord handing in the room. The thunder was so loud she jumped in bed and covered up her head. When her initial fright subsided she went down stairs to get her coloring book, and could hear the crackle of fire and saw a cloud of smoke rolling over the fields. Allen and Wrex who were hauling hay in a nearby field saw the smoke and rushed the team and wagon so fast toward the house one of the wheels came off, but they just kept coming. The Heber fire truck soon arrived but there was no fire hydrant to fill the truck's water tank so the house burned to the ground, however the crew was able to save things on the main floor.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Pa's old Chev truck.

This old Chevrolet truck was perhaps made some time during the 1940s. My Dad used it for whatever he needed to haul - - livestock, hay, grain or whatever.
It is parked by the Boxelder Trees about 25 yards North East of our old home in Joseph.

Ford Maverick about 1971

We had this one after coming to Orem. This is another car I didn't get a photo of so I found a similar one on the Internet. This looks better than the one I had. This one was a "lemon" - - an oil burner. It burned so much oil it fouled the spark plugs so I'd take them out periodically and clean the carbon and crap off them.

1967 Ford LTD

1967 Ford LTD. I didn't get a photo of it so I went Online (Internet) and found a similar one. Generally speaking, I've liked General Motors cars better than Fords. We had this one for a while after we moved to Orem.
Note: I did like the Ford Ranch Wagon quite well that we had in Nephi.

1951 Oldsmobile 88


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Friday, October 2, 2009

1951 Oldsmobile 88

I wish I had a close up picture of the Oldsmobile - - two tone black & white. As I recall I bought it when we were living in Kearns. It was the car Starr was born in. Doris' physician was Dr. Boston whose office was on the 2nd floor of an office building on Nephi's Main Street. He had given her a shot to induce labor. We started town the stairs when Doris said she didn't know if she could make it to the car. We finally did. I stepped on the gas for a mad dash to the Juab Hospital, but we didn't make it. Just as we arrived Doris said something like, "She's here!" They rushed out and wheeled mother and baby inside. P. S. I believe that's Doris barely visible standing by the bush.

1968 American Motors Rambler

1968 Rambler - In our driveway in Orem. Looks like Sara sitting on the trunk holding Mimi. Rodger wrecked this one. He side swiped a fire plug on South Main St. in Provo. It mashed in the drivers side door. I didn't try to get it repaired.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

1960 Ford Ranch Wagon - Nephi

The 1960 Ford Ranch Wagon is another one I didn't photograph so I got this photo on the internet. I believe ours was the same color but wasn't this classy. We got it while in Nephi. Some of the floor board had rusted out by the back seat. I recall one time we were moving slowly down the road when Lindsay's leg dropped through the hole. Does my memory serve me correctly, Lindsay? No injuries !

1959 BUICK INVICTA

I didn't think of taking a photo of the '59 Buick Invicta. I bought it in about 1968 shortly after we moved to Provo from Nephi from Dick Hundley who ran a car repair garage in Provo for many years. I'm color blind but I think it was light Brown. So I found this Black one on the Internet. It has these huge fins on the back that gives it a rather unique appearance. It had great power with about 400 cubic inch engine. Of course it was a gas hog but gas was cheap in those days.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

HONEY MOON CAR

After having a great wedding Luncheon hosted
by Doris' Mom & Dad in Heber City, we prepared
to leave on our honeymoon in my 1941 Chev. As
you can see, Fritz Averett, Ken Anderson and others
did a good job of decorating the car. But that wasn't
all. It wasn't until we began climbing some of the
steep mountain passes and the car heated up
that we began to smell a strong odor and it wasn't
roses. It was Limburger cheese that those guys
had put on the exhaust manifold of the car.
It gradually went away after a day or two.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Tea Party - July 4, 2009 - - Grandpa & Steve

Tea Party - July 4, 2009


TEA PARTIES: Americans nationwide are fed up with Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and the rest of the corrupt crew who are in the process of destroying our freedoms, and our traditional values, and we are, as were the Americans during the Revolution, being subjected to "taxation without representation." We must take our country back. Tea Parties are one way we can work toward that goal. The most effective way is to study the issues and the candidates and then in the up-coming elections vote the scoundrels out of office.
I don't know how many other members of the family attended one. There was one in Heber City. I ran into Lori and Steve at the one at Lakeridge Jr. High so we were able to sit together. There were some very spirited talks including one by State Attorney General Mark Shurtleff. The only negative aspect was some of the music, much of which was Rock that about blew you away with the volume. I needed ear plugs. They could have selected some great patriotic music on CD, both vocal and instrumental that I believe would have been much more to the liking of old War Veterans like myself.
I'm attaching a picture a couple of pictures taken at the Tea Party.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

1973 AMC Hornet

The car is sitting in from of our Orem home.

1965 Mercury Comet - Starr

1065 Mercury Comet purchased from neighbor, John Van Dorn for $150 as I recall. Had it painted. Starr striking a pose.















1968 AMC Rambler - Sara on Trunk

Rodger wrapped this one around a fire plug.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

CHICKEN SURGERY

Saturday, January 31, 2009

The above title should arouse some curiosity. It is so brief it might more accurately meet the definition of an anecdote rather than a story. In any case the event took place in the life of a pioneer couple. It was told by Mary Day (husband Frank) at our Cherry Hill 5th Ward social August 17, 1991. The following account was related by her parents, Brother and Sister Elbert Brown, and happened shortly after their marriage which was somewhere around the year 1910:Sister Day's maternal grandfather had given her parents a cow name Daisy and 12 chickens for a wedding present. They packed their belongings in a wagon and with their milk cow, and chickens drove to Hatch, a town located in a Sagebrush valley in Idaho. Mary said she couldn't find it on the map, but it was near Bancroft. Their farm was infested with gophers. The County (or some agency) paid a bounty for each gopher tail, which they collected in a match box. One way of eradicating the rodents was to use poison wheat. One Sunday they came home from church to find their chickens deathly ill from eating the wheat. Being very resourceful people and needing every chicken, they proceeded to perform a surgical procedure on each chicken which consisted of cutting the "crop" open, removing the poison wheat, washing the crop out thoroughly with soap and water - - then sewing it back up with needle and thread. They considered their efforts a huge success as they lost only two of the chickens.

NOTE: Just a few comments on "chicken or bird physiology" from Dr. Parker. As you know, chickens have no teeth. The grain or whatever they eat goes from their esophagus to the "crop," which is called by some, their "doggy bag," where it's temporarily stored. From there it goes to the gizzard (which you might call their teeth), where the food is ground up by bits of small gravel they must eat to aid digestion. If you've ever helped cut up a chicken, pheasant or whatever and have saved the gizzard to eat you'll find it has a very tough lining that you peel off and throw away. Without the tough lining in the gizzard the grinding process would destroy it. So, fortunately when Brother and Sister Day got home the poison wheat was still in the "crop," and they were able to clean it out. I might add that gophers were a real pest on our farm and hard to get rid of. The worst thing they did was to make irrigating harder by tunneling underground, thus diverting the water so it wouldn't run down the rows to the end of the field.


January 31, 2009
Grandpa Parker

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Lindsay's VW Wreck


About 6:00 AM on the morning of July 1, 1974 Lindsay was on his way to work at the Church Welfare Farm near Elberta, Utah when he went to sleep at the wheel and rolled our '67 VW.
Although it came to rest on the wheels, it was totalled. It occured at a turn near a R.Rd crossing about 2 miles East of the small town of Goshen. Fortunately a woman came by shortly after the crash. She saw no one as she passed but happened to look in her rear view mirror and saw him standing up. She returned and at this point I will need to firm up some details. Either she took him to the Payson Hospital or called an ambulance to come and get him. In either case Mom and I went to the hospital and observed the doctors as they dug the gravel out of his body and gave him further treatment. He had a skull fracture and broken jaw which they wired shut. For several weeks he lived on juices or malts which resulted in dental cavities. Had Mom and I been aware of Water Piks I'm sure we could have spared him the cavities. Sorry Lindsay.
I took the picture of the VW at a Santaquin wrecking yard where it had been taken. Ron Dennis, a Mechanic in our Ward gave me a couple of hundred $$ as I recall for the engine.

P. S. If anyone who reads this has corrections or additions to add let me know.


Monday, January 12, 2009

Parker's Summer Trip to Yellowstone Park



During a Summer in about 1965 .when we were living in Nephi Doris and I took the family on a trip to Yellowstone Park in our 1953 CHEV Station Wagon pictured here. (Rodger is by the car) All went except Starr who was still a baby. Ione Sperry, the Bishop's wife cared for her while we were gone. We rented a small cabin there so we didn't have to worry about the bear bothering us in a Tent. It was a scenic and enjoyable trip - -many different species of wild animals, geysers, beautiful water falls, rivers, evergreen forests, etc. Yellowstone is one of the world's wonderlands. It was established in 1872 and was the first national park in the world. Yellowstone lies on a plateau about 8,000 ft. above sea level. Can't recall who it was but, one of the kids was fishing from a bridge and dropped their pole in the river that runs through the Park.


All good things must come to an end. We packed up and headed for home. As I recall, we made a stop for something when we were still in the Park. It was in a wooded area. When we were ready to resume travel, I started the car but when I put my foot on the Clutch pedal to put it in gear there was no connection. In checking underneath I could see that a bolt connecting the pedal mechanism to the shifter had fallen out. We were miles from any garage so we were "between a rock and a hard place." However, Kimball and Marcia came to our rescue. Unbeknowns to us they had gone out in the forest and offered a prayer and came back with a wire coat hanger they had found. As the saying goes, "A little child shall lead them." They saved the day because in just a few minutes I was able to reconnect the Clutch and we were on our way and returned home with no more incidents.
P. S. Lindsay said it was his pole that was dropped in the river. All efforts to get it were in vain.

January 12, 2009


FSP

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Sarah Sweat Lindsay - - Pioneer Mother


I've been going through Doris' family historys she's compiled in 3 ring-binders. They are very interesting and inspiring. Her mother and mine were two great "pioneer" women as they raised their families under the most trying conditions. One example of her her mother's great spiritual faith and fortitude happened in 1911 when her husband Bennett was called on a mission. She was expecting so he asked to wait until after the baby was born - -then they were surprised with twins which they name Louis and Louie. They already had a little girl named Ethel which made 3 babies. He then considered whether or not he should go with her additional responsibility. She never wavered in her faith and encouraged him to go. He was gone for 26 months. Imagine the hardships with no electricity, no washing machines, cows to milk, and animals to care for !

Attached is an old black and white photo with Sarah Lindsay and the three children.


FSP - - January 10, 2009