I think Mother met Daddy at a party or dance. Her parents had recently moved from the farm to Freedom. It presented the perfect opportunity for young want-a-be farmers. So she proposed. They were married June 10, 1939 in Enid in St. Francis Xavier rectory. She was not Catholic so marriages in the church were prohibited at that time. The only attendees were a couple of his sisters. They went to an ice cream place called Weibels Home Dairy for banana splits and off to Freedom for their wedding night. They spent that night in a detached room called "the little house" outside Grandma and Grandpa Phillips home. She said Aunt Mattie had collected a set of cream color dishes with wildflowers on them from some retail business giving them as premiums for doing business with them as a wedding gift and had them on her cedar chest when she returned home. Almost immediately after their marriage they spent wheat harvest near Bison helping his folks. I asked her what it was like moving in with her Mother-in-law. She said they liked her because she could milk cows. She set up her bedroom suite in the littleused livingroom. She remembered spending time there when Grandma Balk took in her son Leo and his family after he could no longer teach because of a brain tumor. They had a little mentally retarded boy named Clifford. She recalled spending a short time over on another farm near Douglas cooking for Daddy and Grandpa Balk. They slept on the grainary floor.
When they moved to the farm south of Freedom they felt like they were on top of the world. Her folks gave them the farm for I think their business arrangement was her folks got 1/2 the profits after harvest each year. A good start for young people and good retirement for the older folks. She said they only had her bedroom suite, a round oak table (which she regettably sold in an auction for $3) and a few chairs in the livingroom. They helped with widowed Aunt Mattie`s 3 boys. She was setting one of them behind the stove for some transgression when she heard about Pearl Harbor being bombed on the radio. Patriotism ran high after that-tires,nylons,meat,gasoline for cars, probably other things were rationed. If you were invited to dinner at someone`s house it was customary to give the hostess a meat coupon. The mailman picked up any tin cans one might empty for the war effort.
Karen joined them 13 months after they were married. She was born at home with a Dr. and Grandma in attendance. She said maybe that`s why she didn`t have another child for nearly 7 years.
Mother cooked for and took care of the family and a variety of hired farm hands. At one point they kept Golden Belt`s school marm for a session. She later married a widower neighbor and was one of Mother`s best friends.
This is getting long and I was afraid I couldn`t come up with enough stories for Mother. More next time