We were having lunch at home and talking about Ron's growing up years. He said, "I had one pair of shoes that I wore everyday for school. My dad and I sometimes go to the shoemaker and measured my feet I wore those and sometimes had store bought shoes for church. I usually had only one pair of jeans and one shirt. My (step-)Mom would make me a shirt and then I would have two shirts to wear.
"We ate everything we grew in our garden; once in a while someone would give us some beef, but most of the time we ate venison and elk that we got hunting and turkey. We usually only had to buy a 50 lb bag of sugar, or several fifty pound bags of flour. We did have a cow or two and milked them and had our own milk. We would separate the milk and get cream which my Mom would make butter, cottage cheese or regular cheese. We would give some separated milk to the Hawkins family and they gave us blocks of cheese they made from the milk. It was a trade and no money was exchanged and we had what we needed. We had a few pigs and at the meat and fed the pigs the bad milk or left over food. I remember one time my friend in crime and I decided we wanted to paint the pig with black ink. That was not a good idea but we did it anyway and suffered the consequences.
"My Mom would can tomatoes and we'd have tomato juice, whole tomatoes, canned peaches and that kind of thing with our own trees Dad raised. We had chickens so we had plenty of eggs to eat. We would eat our big meal at lunch and walk home from school for lunch. We all ate together, the hired hands would eat with us. We had a Mexican maid who did the cooking and cleaning for us and helped out with the house.
"My Dad, Flloyd Waser, was a school teacher at the Juarez Academy for about forty years. He was a very strict man and demanded obedience and corrected us as we needed it. I remember one time one of my friend and I set fire to the barn and we ran and hid under my bed in the bunk house. My Dad found me and gave me a lickin'.I was about six years old.
"I used to have to brings the cows in from the upper pasture and down to the corral in the evening time. I was a bit lazy sometimes and a couple of times I'd make the mother cow (who lost her baby calf) think her calf was calling and by wailing like a calf. She would heat me imitate the baby calf and she would come running down to find her young. After about a week of that, she was wise to me and would come running down like before. I was kind of mischievious then."
"At age eight my father baptized me in the cold water in January in the river in our town. Not too many attended it since it was so cold. But my Dad did the baptism and we walked back to our house soaking wet and cold. There wer o fonts in those days at the church in Colonia Juarez. I attended elementary school at the local white building that was first grade to eighth grade. High school was at the Academia Juarez where I graduated and then went to BYU. I really had to study hard and long hours to make it through that first year. I was not exactly up to speed for BYU college classes. I earned a lot and worked at it. I worked to earn my tuition in those early days and reported to work at four o'clock in the morning. I had very little time to do much of anything else with classes and study time. I worked as a janitor in the McKay building and then worked in the cafeteria at the Cougar Eat.
"I tried out for the BYU basketball team and made it. But there were so any good guys on the team that I knew i would not get much playing time and that my study time would suffer. So I quit the basketball team and know it was the best decision to do at the time with the competition of outstanding players who became NBA basketball players, like Nemelka, etc."
Ron finished his first year at BYU and went on a mission to Western Mexican Mission, which was the west coast of Mexico from Tijuana to Mazatlan, Mexico. It was about a thousand miles long. " After serving in the mission I went back to BYU and roomed again with my brothers, LeRoy, Lee and John who lived downstairs from the Mexican restaurant, El Azteca." I met Connie Jensen in my student ward and dated her a while then married her December 17, 1966 in the St. George Temple. My parents came out from Mexico and met us there at the temple. We made our home in a tiny apartment in Provo walking distance from BYU."
Friday, May 22, 2015
A Few Of Ron's Childhood Memories"
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