4-5-1945
The children have chairs strung through three rooms playing train. Bruce and Steve have altercations over who is to be engineer and with Ruby's help finally arrange two chairs as the engine, for one engineer and one for the fireman."Clang, clang," shouts Steve and the train is off rattlety bang.
Our daughter stands to one side, complete with old hat, coat, gloves, and high-heeled shoes, dolls and suitcases.
With the harassed air of a tired mother, she glances impatiently up and down.
"I wonder when the train will come. I wish it would come. Dont cry baby."
Finally Steve shouts back, "Clang, clang now you must say 'what a nice set of cars! Arent they pretty?' Here we come! Clang, clang"
Our daughter obliges and follows up with, "Why don't you stop some time? You have to stop so I can get on."
She is just settled when a suggestion from Ruby in the kitchen results in Steve calling out, "Fort Dodge 15 minutes for lunch!" And the whole crew and passenger list troops into the kitchen.
"Peanut butter sandwiches, please."
Ruby tries to convince them that her lunch room isn't open and they had better try somewhere else, but she is presently fixing peanut butter sandwiches and wishing she hadn't mentioned Fort Dodge.
When they are back on the train, Steve starts them off with a violent, "Whoo hoo, and a deafening, "Clang, clang." The passenger has trouble with her baby and Steve calls back helpfully, "Why don't you just pretend she died?" The passenger is horrified, but the whole affair breaks up with the arrival of Mr. Oyer and for the next 15 minutes they are plumbers assistants.
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4-19-1945
On Tuesday when I went down to do my huge weekly washing, the middle doohinkus in the machine tub wouldn't budge. Helplessly, I peered underneath where the engine (pardon me, Mr. Carter and Mr. Garrels I mean motor) where the motor was making queer noises and sort of smoking. I gave up right then, turned off the electricity and hurried upstairs to make telephone calls.
Mr. Heimbruch came out early Wednesday morning, examined it and expressed himself as helpless in the emergency; it being something only the Montgomery Ward people could handle. It was their machine to begin with. He assured me that he might be going to Fort Dodge soon and would take it over for me. And that very noon, he stopped for it and took it away. People are really very good!
So that's why the Martins machine was pretty busy for a while Thursday morning.
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4-26-1945
Sometimes I think I'm just not the "Mother" type. I love my children and I take good care of them, but I can be casual about them too. Until they're sick, that is, and then I'm the worst old clucking mother hen you ever saw but I'd rather do my clucking in the daytime. Not for me the midnight vigils and warm milk and crooning lullabies at two o'clock in the morning. I feel like no ministering angel at that time of night. I'm just irritated and very sleepy. I feel that after a long day, I should be getting my sleep, and so should the children.
I have them, though midnight vigils, I mean. I've popped in and out of bed from 11 o'clock until dawn for four consecutive nights with three measly, itchy children (perhaps I didn't do it with special grace but I did it). First one, then the other until I wished that they'd all call at once for a change and get it over with. So they did and served me right, too. It was quite a feat to get a drink of water for one, the itching ointment for another, and get the other one to the bathroom simultaneously.
I remember one night when Bruce had a cold and couldn't sleep comfortably. After two hours of getting up with him every 15 minutes, I gathered him up in a blanket, went downstairs and prepared warm milk and coffee. We settled ourselves on the davenport and he stayed happily awake until 6:30 in the morning. (I stayed awake, too, though not happily.) Fortunately it was Sunday morning, so I prepared oatmeal, coffee and orange juice and left a note beside the toaster leaving instructions that Bruce and I were not to be disturbed until we woke up.
Our daughter used to have the occasional habit of waking blithely at one o'clock in the morning demanding food. She did it once when we were visiting Grandma and Grandpa. Mother woke up while I was trying to discourage her, and I can still hear Mother's indignant outcries as she clattered down to the kitchen, "No grandchild of mine is going to starve in this house!"
- "A man reserves his greatest and deepest love,
- not for the woman in whose company he finds himself
- electrified and enkindled, but for that one in whose
- company he feels tenderly drowsy."
TRUE LOVE
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