Orson Clark-11/23/81 - Pg 17
Interviewer: We'll have to try to run down a copy.
Lucille Clark: I forget the name of it.
Orson Clark: "My Farmington" is the name of it, I think.
Lucille Clark: There are a couple over here that don't belong to the church. But she is very interested. They bought Uncle Joseph's home and they are restoring it the way it was built. You see they had a fire and then they took off the upstairs and just made the one story. Now they have taken the roof off and they have put the upstairs in. They are putting the trimmings that were there. She has a picture of it. They are just a young couple. They don't have any children. She sings very well and she has come to our church to sing quite a bit. They haven't converted them yet, but they are a nice couple.
Ruth Knowlton: I think just love them, you'll be surprised what happens. Just loving and fraternizing. Friendship them.
Orson Clark: I remember they borrowed it. I'm quite sure as I remember that she returned it.
Lucille Clark: She brought it back and then she came after it again.
Orson Clark: Well, maybe. I don't remember the second times but I remember her coming back. She had it quite a while and then she brought it back.
Lucille Clark: I'm wondering if our daughter, Lucille, took it with her.
Interviewer: Books disappear. I know that all too well.
Ruth Knowlton: I remember one time when we lived in Nashville, Tennessee. We received a telephone call at 3:30 in the morning. It was Clark's mother, she couldn't sleep.
Interviewer: She was frantic trying to run down a book.
Ruth Knowlton: She had been looking all that previous evening for a certain book. She called Clark in Nashville, Tennessee at 3:30 in the morning to find out whether he had the book or not.
Interviewer: I didn't.
Lucille Clark: Our youngest daughter is very interested in things like this. She took some books. She wanted to take Aunt Annie Tanner's book and I don't know whether she took that "My Farmington" or not. I can't find it in here or over here.