Orson Clark-11/23/81 - Pg 5
getting so many that we had to do something with them. So we went to a store and bought one of these old cement sacks. They were tight. And we bought some fine salt.
Interviewer: Salted them down.
Orson Clark: It was the best fishing I ever had.
Interviewer: When you were going to school, did you get a lot of provisions from Farmington in the way of food and stuff like that?
Orson Clark: We got some. The folks would bring us something and if we happened to come out there were vegetables or fruit or stuff around.
Interviewer: What ward were you living in?
Orson Clark: The Farmington Ward. First Ward.
Interviewer: I mean in Salt Lake.
Lucille Clark: When we moved to Third South, it was the Tenth Ward.
Interviewer: Then those two rooms you lived in?
Orson Clark: That was when we were at Granger's.
Lucille Clark: I don't think we went to church, did we?
Orson Clark: I don't know as we did. I didn't very much because I had to work.
Interviewer: Oh yeah, you couldn't.
Orson Clark: We moved over onto Third South then in a little house that came up for rent. It was thirty dollars a month.
Lucille Clark: Thirty-five.
Orson Clark: She took in boarders.
Lucille Clark: I had boarders all the time we lived in Salt Lake.
Interviewer: You were cooking for a group, huh?
Lucille Clark: My brother came. He had been going to college in the Middle East. He came and was married. He studied medicine and he started at the U. He stayed with us. His wife came back, she had a baby in January . Then in April she came down and then they went by themselves. But he got a little room there in the building where we were. And then my sister was going to the University and she stayed with us. Mother gave me seven dollars and fifty cents