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while. Fannie had helped Dick in his business at "Dick's Place" next door to the Eagle Hotel, first making sandwiches and soups for her boys' "hunger stops" and then putting them on tne nienu and later expanding it to include fresh oysters brought in daily on the train, and other speciality items. Later she kept herself independent by ness in check by cdurch work and relaxing each evening while watering the lawn. Grandma's reflections continued Tennant, who had died two years before Bernard, and of MayBelle Anderson and Beth Jensen. They all exemplified the industriousness her Relief Society lesson had praised about women. It was time for Grandma to get up and put on clean clothes after bathing and placing her dirty clothes in the chute which emptied downstairs in the kitchen. How Grandma liked being on time for her appointments and, usually left early. Since being chapter chairman of the Red Cross in Sanpete, she had friends in every community in the county, which had helped a great deal in making My Grandpa Bernard and his brothers had been in tho monu~ memorials with their stone mason skills. Now Grandma was seventeen years. She was a good businesswoman and knew in her mind that she made honest deals. Maybe she would make a sale this afternoon and get back in time to take some of the grandkids fishing. That was part of the Epilogue They were of different sizes in stature But all sequoias in strengths and wills. Each with remarkable industrial skills. 104 |