Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Memories of Bea and Dave, by Rose Hutchison

Rose Hutchison’s memories of Bea and Dave

Personal intro........
My grandfather Evans once said, "One's story is...what
one thinks and believes and writes..." I hope you can
know my grandparents better through me....
Beatrice Cannon Evans
Born: May 18, 1894
Died: August, 1985
Grandma Evans was the 1st of 11 children and
reared (not "raised" she always said that one
raised crops not children) in a well to do
family. Her father was a successful attorney
and her mother was a wonderful homemaker
who was widely read and loved and knew the
scriptures well. Her father died in 1917 and the
family lost everything except their home on 7th
East in Salt Lake City. She knew hard times in
her young womanhood and again during the
Great Depression while rearing her own family.
My father Ted remembers, "we were pretty poor but
Mother never dwelled on that.”
Grandma was a good student and completed
her education through high school but became
ill with thyroid disease and was too sick to
continue on to college. This did not stop her
love for learning and literature. She continued
reading and broadening her mind well into her
later years. An eye condition inhibited her
reading, but she didn't let that stop her, as she
would listen to books on tape to satiate her
literary appetite. As mentioned in today's
program, Grandma was an historian and was
the family genealogist and historian for both the
Cannon and Bennion lines.
As a youth, Grandmother won prizes for her equestrian
skills and continued riding as long as she could. When I
was a child, I remember her riding horses at the cabin
on the Weber River. She was in her 70's.
Grandma became very active in the Republican
Party and was President of the Utah Women's
Republican Group. She was a member of the
Daughters of the Utah Pioneers and, as the avid
historian that she was, had many pioneer
stories to tell. She also loved music and theatre
and did a lot of traveling.
Her greatest accomplishment was in rearing
their 5 boys. Much of which was done alone due
to Grandpa's 17 years of service in an LDS
Bishopric and his running his advertising
agency. My father remembered her mothering
as "fair with a good sense of humor, (she)
laughed but kept us in line (and) liked (our)
curiosity and ingenuity. (She was) positive,
encouraging and (told us we were) good and
could succeed." Most of all she instilled in her
sons faith in God and in good works.
Examples:(Wayne breaking his dinner plate
over Ted's head and of natural consequence
and financial necessity was destined to eat out
of a pie tin. Having inquisitive and active boys,
she put up with dismantled clocks and biology
experiments using a pressure cooker and a cat
that was on its ninth life.)
Since Grandpa had a slogan given him I felt it only
fitting that Grandma be given one too. I drew on the
remembrance of the feeling I always had when I was
with her..."Be at ease with Beatrice".
My fond memories of her are mostly from my
early years...playing in her kitchen with the
toys she had in drawers especially put there for
the grandchildren. The smell of her special
green onion salad dressing, little talks in her
laundry room just outside the kitchen. Knocking on
her door to get the key to their enclosed patio that so
my brothers, cousins, and I could play on the wonderful
wicker birdcage shaped swing that was there.
I have memories of Grandma in her cabin kitchen and
always visiting her to get a treat. And the grandest of
all treats...being invited to sleep in their cabin loft (with
the reminder that Peter fell over the edge so be
careful!)
In my teen years I remember going to her home
after Grandpa died and as her health failed to
stay with her a while so my cousin Lark, who so
lovingly cared for her, could have a little time
to herself and young family. Grandma was
upstairs in her bed asleep and I was down in the
living room playing her piano hoping it would give her
comfort and enjoyment. I was always at ease with her.
A gift she had that balanced Grandpa's energy.
(I was 18 when she died)
David Woolley Evans
Born: March 5, 1894
Died: August 1982
Grandpa Evans was the 4th of 9 children born
into a faithful and hardworking family. His
father started working for the Deseret News
(which was owned by the LDS Church) as an
errand boy and worked his way up the ladder to
become the general manager during a very
difficult time in LDS history. Much of the time
his father was not paid for his work, but
Grandpa said of him "... Father was the kind of
person who would have given his all to the
church if he had been asked to do so." And
such was the family of faith in which he was
reared. Grandpa's mother was loved by all who
met her and was a retainer of friends. Many of
her friendships lasted her whole lifetime and on
into the remembrance of the next generation.
It was said, "Friendship was (her) special talent
and gift." A gift my Grandfather also possessed. His
father was killed in 1906 in a streetcar accident, which
sent the children off to work to support the household.
Grandpa was able to work and go to college
and even graduate in 3 years with a bank
account of $700.00. He served a 2 1/2 year
mission in the Northwestern States Mission and
also served in the Military before he married
Grandma. He was a great lover of literature,
music, theatre, and history, hence this gathering today
to award prizes for biography, which he loved.
Of course, Grandpa is best known for founding
the Evans Advertising Agency, which did much
public relations work, and the many successes
of his career. I had opportunity to read a thesis
written by John C. Speer about Grandpa and
his career and gravitated to the topics that
interested me... Turkey, Water, Symphony and the
popular "Slave with Dave" slogan affixed to Grandpa
from the Agency.
Turkey story--post W.W.II slump..."Eat More Turkey"
1945-1955 increased consumption 400%. It would be
safe to say that Evans Advertising and Grandpa are the
reason this country eats turkey daily rather than just at
Thanksgiving and Christmas.
The Upper Colorado River Storage Project-grass roots
system, congressional support, and Navajo tribal
involvement.
Saving the Utah Symphony-- "pack the house" by giving
away tickets, Mr. Abravanel gave free workshops--
people began buying tickets
"Slave With Dave" -- a colleague Robert Ruff said of
Grandpa he, "would never ask anyone to do what he
was not willing to do himself." It takes an
extraordinary man to elicit such loyalty and hard work
from employees and posterity.
My memories of Grandpa are all attached to
working in one way or another. I don't know
that he ever retired totally from Evans
Advertising. All my memories of him are
performing some kind of work, gardening,
fixing fences, digging irrigation ditches,
building ponds, etc.
My only recollections of him not working are
the annual family Christmas party where I
remember the highlight of the night was
Grandpa passing out Christmas envelopes with
crisp never been used paper money inside. I
don't even remember the denomination of the
gift just Grandpa saying "HO HO HO" as he
passed them out. The next is of him at the cabin
on the Weber headed out around 4 or 5 in the
afternoon to go fishing. And finally, of he and
Grandma out walking their evening
constitutional and the visits to our home along
their route.

(I was 15 when he died)

Memories of Mother Bea, by Vella Evans

January, 8, 2011
Dear Nancy -p I'm writing over-all impressions while I search my memory for stories with details.

For all the times I saw her, Mother Bea was a lady -- a gentlewoman. She was "refined." This was independent of her sense of appropriate manners, correct table settings, the right clothing, etc. (although she had that too). This has to do with her character -- her graciousness, her kindness, her showing deference to others and encouraging them. She was soft while maintaining a subtle sense of humor. When I knew her first, she was in full mental capability, bright and alert. My only struggle, and it was small and quickly gone, was calling her Mother Bea. Joy, Marianne, and Gloria all called her that. It was clearly expected. But I'd been through this "mother" thing before and didn't want to use the name casually.

I found Mother Bea interesting. She was smart and competent in many ways, but seemed a bit uncertain of herself. She said once that she felt intimidated by Hugh B. Brown's wife, Zina (who lived in the ward), because Zina knew the gospel so well and was so prominent and well-respected. She could never keep up with David W. Evans' energy and ambitions -- she just wasn't strong enough. He wanted to keep his hand in politics, so he encouraged her to attend the meetings of the Women's Republican Club and then become president. And because I was the typist among the daughters-in-law, she'd ask me for help with their quarterly newsletter. I think this started me on the road to defection, as the article on preventing John F. Kennedy from being elected a second tjme appeared just before his death. Well, that and DWE's extreme confidence as king-maker. Just made me uneasy.

DWE often invited guests in for dinner or "up the Weber"; and she'd be expected to entertain them as if she had a cook and a maid and a hostler. She did have Klara who cleaned wonderfully, but it was Bea's job to set the table correctly including any candles and other decor. She was to cook a party meal. She was to be animated and gracious. The reality was she was in her 60s, 70s, and 80s; and such psychological and physical stress cost her a lot. Always when she'd have Family Sunday, the meal would not be finished when we arrived, and she'd be lying on the bench in the kitchenette having had to "tip over" at the last minute. Usually a son would mash potatoes and make the gravy (often Ted).but we all helped. Always the china plates were in the warming oven, the lamb would be perfectly cooked, the mint sauce ready, the Mother Bea green onion salad dressing ready (I hated it at first), the beets ready to open, and the lemon chiffon pies on the service porch sitting on the washer -- three of them, cut into six or eight equal portions, each portion with whipped cream and a maraschino cherry. If it was just a small family dinner, the children would sit in the dining room with waxed paper under their place settings to protect the table cloth. I think no one resented this. If the families who came included many, the children would sit at the table in the kitchenette and generally behave themselves. Certainly no food fights. Bea had visibly good manners and I think she just expected those around her would have good manners, too. It mostly worked. The sons' generation cleaned up after the meal. Once Wayne was washing stemmed pink goblets and I was drying. I held the stem with my left hand, put the towel in the bowl with my right hand, and twisted. The bowl came off -- broken. I couldn't believe it. I protested I hadn't been rough with the goblets. I was just drying them. And to prove it, I did the same thing with another, and the bowl broke off the stem again. I was horrified, but Bea said it was absolutely no loss, she'd paid only 25 cents a piece for them at a wonderful ZCMI sale. I appreciated her attempt at rescue, but even then, I knew better. A full set of something is what you need.

Mother Bea didn't sew a lick but Marianne and Gloria and I did. Therefore, when she had to tip over the night before flying to San Francisco or Washington D.C or Europe, she'd ask if the daughter nearest at hand would please help shorten the hem of her skirt or some such thing. I sometimes thought it was poor planning on her part, but now I realize that a woman's energy can easily give out at the end of long preparations and big excitement / expectations. She was always grateful for anything I did for her. When she came back from one trip to Europe (I'd not been a member of the family very long), she gave me a set of black beads -- I think ivory died deep black. And she told me she'd bought them in an antique shop in Windemere, England, and they could be worn only by a woman with jet black hair. I felt royal. As best as I could tell, she always brought back gifts, often for everyone. And she took pleasure (plus time and energy) shopping on her vacation for something to give others.  

Bea did challenge some of my behavior, but immediately softened the challenge. Once when I took toddler Lark upstairs for a visit, I was having a hard time getting her to come back to the apartment with me. Not wanting to resort to strength, I said "Larky, let's go down now and have a drink of chocolate milk before bed." Bea looked up and said, "I think chocolate milk isn't very good for children." But then she added, "My, isn't Lark growing up to be beautiful." On another occasion, very early in our ,marriage,  I was reading to her from a news magazine and came across the word "automaton" which I pronounced "auto matin." She gently suggested that it might be pronounced "ah tom  a ton," but added that there are often different pronunciations for the same word. And once, completely out of nowhere, she commented "You don't go to all your church meetings," but without missing a beat added "but, we have a lot of meetings and a person can go to too many." The strongest and most lasting criticism was her comment, "Vella, you always err on the side of right." Doesn't pay to look too closely at that.

I was amused by her devotion to family as it seemed unequal. Her father was described as being without fault (except that he served others at his own fatal expense). She was also proud of high-achieving cousins and spoke of the Cannons a lot. Finally I think one of her brother's said she grew up knowing her father better than anyone else -- that he was devoted to Bea and gave her the most attention. And maybe it was as simple as birth order as first children usually relate to their father. In addition, he died while he was young enough that most of her memories were of his strength and goodness. I prefer to remember Bea in her strength and goodness, also. She was a lovely transplant from a gentler time. I feel privileged to have known her. 


Vella Evans

Memories of Grandma Bea, by Gayle Gable

Memories of Grandma Bea
I don't have any very early memories of Grandma.  Perhaps my earliest ones are from when we lived in California.  Grandma and Grandpa would come to visit us from time to time.  When they were at our house, I remember racing to practice the piano before my sister.  Grandma loved to hear us practice.  Grandpa would ask us to play for church at the cabin after we got a little older. Grandma liked to go to the beach.  We liked that too. When we came to Salt Lake in the summers, Grandma would take us to town to hear the organ concerts at the Tabernacle.  She was a guide at the Beehive House and would give us personal tours. I remember driving with them to go to the cabin.  We would often stop at either Hires for a root beer float or at the Spring Chicken Inn in Wanship for a treat.  Sometimes we had to wait until we got to Wanship if they wanted to take ice cream to the cabin.  Grandma would tell us Cannon family stories and we would sing songs.  I remembe singing "When it's Springtime in the Rockies.  Grandma was so elegant on her horse in her riding clothes as she and Grandpa went out for a ride on their horses.
I remember that she liked to eat- or should I way- drink strange things.  She juiced all kinds of things, especially vegetables.  She would give us samples to try.  The mixed concoctions were OK, but the straight parsley juice was awful.  Carrot juice was OK and celery juice was tolerable. Grandma was a good cook.  I remember some Sunday meals in the dining room on 12th East.  As one of the children, I had wax paper under my place so that I would not ruin her breautiful tablecloth.  I remember her making turkey soup from the left overs and serving it to us in the breakfast room.  She also had whole wheat bread and tiny whole wheat  crackers.  The soup was so good.l  I have tried to make it, but it never tastes the way she made it.  I remember breakfast at the cabin with her whole wheat pancakes.  We have the recipe, but it never tastes like it did at the cabin.  I have many of her recipes, but I cannot find some of the ones I remember best- tomato aspic, cole slaw.  I'm sure she was one of those cooks who tasted and adjusted as she went along. 
Date Nut Bread
1 c. chopped dates 
1/2 c. raisins ( seeded, muscats preferred) 
1/2 c. walnut pieces (black walnuts are best)
1/2 c. brown sugar 
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp soda
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tbsp butter
1 egg
1 c. whole wheat flour
Add soda to boiling water and pour over dates, raisins, brown sugar and butter.  Let stand until cool.  Add sifted dry ingredients.  Add nuts, beaten egg, vanilla.  Stir only to mix.  Pour into prepared pans.  Let stand 5 minutes.  Bake at 375 degrees for 45 minutes to 1 hour for large loaf.  Makes 2 small or 1 large loaf.
Mint Sauce
1 scant c. mint leaves, measured after put through food chopper
1 c. lemon juice (canned OK)
1 1/4 to 1 1/3 c. sugar, depending on how sweet you like it
1 level tsp salt 
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
Put in heavy enamel saucepan or casserole and heat to below boiling point.  It can be reheated a time or two to advantage.  Let stand a day or over night.  This standing warm draws out the flavor of mint as steeping does to tea.  The high sugar content makes it keep a long time- maybe indefinitely.  Keep it in the refrigerator or freezer.  Thickness of sauce can be varied by adding more or less mint.
Chicken A La King  from her sister Anne Silver
1/3 c. chicken fat or butter
1/2 c. green pepper cut in thin strips
1 c. (about 1/4 lb) mushrooms, sliced
4 tbsp flour
1c. chicken stock
1 c. milk- 1/2 c. cream
1/2 c. sliced pimento (or less according to taste)
2 - 3 C. diced cooked chicken
salt, pepper ( can use bouillon instead of salt)
2 egg yolks, slightly beaten (This is rich, may be omitted)
Heat fat, add green pepper and mushrooms.  Cook over low heat about 5 minutes or until soft.  Add flour and stir until blended.  Slowly add stock and milk.  Stir over low heat until thick and smooth.  Add cream, pimento and chicken.  Heat thoroughly and season to taste.  Into slightly beaten egg yolks stir a little of the hot sauce; slowly add to remaining sauce, stirring constantly.  Serve immediately on buttered toast or patty shells.  Makes 6 large servings if 3 c. chicken is used.
Green Onion Salad Dressing
1 bunch green onions with tops cleaned, dried in towel and chopped fine
juice of 1 lemon ( canned OK)
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
1/3 to 1/2 tsp salt
about 2 rounded tbsp honey 
Size of onions bunches and lemons varies greatly.  Taste for amounts.  It should have a sour sweet taste.  Let stand in bottle in refrigerator.  Add a little olive or safflower oil to salad when tossing.
Lemon Chiffon Pie
Grated rind of 1 large ripe lemon (when not ripe lemon rind can be bitter)
1/3 c. lemon juice (Grandma used a little more than this)
1/2 tbsp unflavored gelatine
1/3 c. cold water
4 large eggs
1/2 c. sugar
pinch of salt
Graham cracker crumbs moistened with butter or margarine
Whipping cream to top pie
Soak gelatine in water 5 minutes.  Heat lemon juice and rind in top of double boiler.  Add gelatine and water mixture.  Stir until dissolved.   Add egg yolks, well beaten and combined with sugar and salt.  Stir until it thickens to thin gravy like consistency.  Fold hot mixture into beaten egg whites.  Pour into moistened graham cracker crumbs lining pie dish.  Chill to set.  Before serving add whipped cream sweetened to taste and flavored with vanilla.
Mother's Orange Ice Cream (Zina B. Cannon)
6 quart freezer full
Grated rind of 1 or 2 lemons
3 qts. whole milk 
3 c. sugar
8 eggs
1 qt orange juice
juice from 3 lemons 
1 pt. whipping cream, whipped
Cook rind, milk, sugar, eggs together in double boiler.  Add orange juice, lemon juice, whipped cream when cold in freezer.
Mother's Plain, Vanilla Custard Ice Cream
About 4 qts. milk
6 tbsp flour
2 c. sugar (use brown for variety and rich flavor)
6 eggs, slightly beaten
1/2 tbsp salt
1 tbsp vanilla
1 pt. cream, whipped
Cook 1 1/2 qts. milk in double boiler. ( Add what is necessary after cooled and in freezer)  Mix flour, sugar, eggs, salt and stir into scalded milk in double boiler.  Add vanilla and whipped cream after custard is ice cold in freezer.
Ginger Snaps (I don't know if this is the recipe, but my father loved this kind of cookie and reported that they always had them to eat when they were young.)
1 c. molasses
1/2 c. shortening
3 1/4 c. flour
1/2 tsp soda
1 tbsp ginger
1 1/2 tsp salt
Heat molasses to boiling point and pour over shortening.  Add dry ingreients mixed and sifted.  Chill thoroughly.  Roll out thin and cut.  Bake on cookie sheet in moderate oven.
Much later in my life, my children and I lived in her basement for several years.  Grandpa died while we lived there.  As Grandma got older and more forgetful, her stories began to change.  We loved her anyway.  She would often come downstairs and just walk in.  That was true even if I was in the bathroom.  She was lonely and just wanted to be with people.  I quickly learned that if I was to get anything done, that I would have her follow me around as I did my work and she talked.  We spent many happy hours together before we moved to our home on Gilmer Dr. 
Grandma was a grand lady and I am greatful that I was able to know her when she was much younger and quite spry and also when she was old and feeble. It's great to be an Evans! 


Memories of Beatrice C. and David W. Evans, by Edmund C. Evans

Some Memories of Beatrice C. and David W. Evans
By Edmund C. Evans
Presented at the Evans Biography Award dinner

                There is a certain degree of risk in asking a fond son to make public statements about his parents.   Remember, you wordsmiths, that fond not only means, “loving; affectionate and tender” but it also may mean, “foolish, silly, simple and weak.”   There certainly is nothing to prevent a person from being both simultaneously. 
                I am grateful to be asked to share some of my memories and feelings about the two people whose enthusiasm for history, appreciation for excellence in writing, and love for their Western American heritage and Mormon religion made this award possible.   I might also note that they represent the economic extremes of writing.  Mother’s books were entirely a labor of love from which she never earned a farthing and Father wrote for money for nearly 70 years. 
                Mother was the oldest of 11 children.  Her father John M. Cannon was one of the small group of Mormon youth who were sent “back East” to get educated.  He received a Law degree from the University of Michigan, returned to Utah and had a very lucrative law practice, put a great deal of his wealth into the sheep business with his brothers-in-law, the Bennion boys.  He died at 52 and his family lost almost everything in the post World War I crash of the livestock market.  Her mother Zina Bennion (sister of Milton Bennion, noted educator and teacher of teachers) read and studied as voraciously as a widowed mother of 11 could do.  Her habits of using her free time to read no doubt influenced my mother’s habits of reading and preserving history. 
                My mother was an excellent student who received awards and scholarship in her early education but was denied collegiate studies by a period of severe health problems in her late teens and early twenties.  She loved to read and teach and at a very young age was a member of the General Board of the LDS Primary Association which allowed her to travel throughout the state in the company of LDS Church leaders giving speeches and instruction to women many years her senior. 
                She mothered her five sons, taught us to love learning, and filled us with stories of the history of our own families, our country and of the Manx, Welsh, English and Scottish ancestry she loved so much. 
                I can never remember when mother was not passionately involved in family history.  She was the family historian for both the Cannon and Bennion families and wrote, edited or contributed to several books of family history and wrote countless historical sketches for the family news letters that she generated for at least 50 years. 
                She had an unusual and poorly understood eye condition that made reading very difficult.  (Her eyes created unequal sized images whose conflict gave her severe headaches and painful eye strain.)   She learned to write with her eyes shut using a ribbed backing behind the paper so she could conserve her limited eye strength for reading.  She was considered visually impaired enough to be eligible for the Federally funded “Talking Books for the Blind” and she read the classics while many other women were listening to the original radio “soap operas” …Ma Perkins, Portia Faces Life, and Our Gal Sunday.” 
                How often she t old me, as I was frittering away my time reading “trash”, that story of Guttenberg’s terrible anxiety that his invention of moveable type would release a scourge of wicked, wasteful writing on the world.  He and she were both correct in their concern. 
                Father was in the middle of a family of 9 children whose ancestors included musicians, poets, diarists, and whose father, until his untimely death in a streetcar accident, was manager of the Deseret News.  None of these progenitors ever attended college.  Father was the first.  He worked and studies his way through a four year course at the University of Utah in three years, spent some time as a newspaper writer but quickly gravitated into the advertising and public relations world where he worked for others until he was nearly a50.  He then started his own advertising and public relations firm “on a shoestring”.  This has grown into one of the nation’s large firms with offices in many cities.
                How many pages of writing he did in his life is unknowable.  His goal in writing was to change other people’s behavior.  This was sometimes direct advertising telling the housewife why she should use beet sugar or turkeys.  Sometimes it was telling politicians and the general public why the waters of the Colorado River should be used carefully…and why the Upper Basin States  must band together to preserve their rights under the Colorado River Compact.  Sometimes it was to further the political causes that he championed…never as a candidate but frequently as a “King Maker.”  Sometimes it was as a devout believer in his religion in preparing a series of cards for the young people of his church entreating them to “Be Honest with Yourselves”….He gave them sound, attractive reasons for good behavior, illustrated professionally by his staff artists.  Sometimes it was as a grateful, believing advocate of higher education.  He could easily write glowingly of his Alma Mater, the U. of U, serve enthusiastically on the board at USU, and teach courses in public relations at BYU.  I don’t think he ever could cheer for any other team than Utah in athletics. 

                Father saved thousands of letters, clippings, articles and quotes about the things that had touched his life.  For the last two decades until his accidental death at 88 he hurried home from his work at the office and went to his room where he joyed in writing hundreds of pages of his own life history using the documents he had saved.  It is my guess that it was t his experience that focused him on the idea that there was so much history and biography that needed to be saved.  The idea that some of his resources could be given to stimulate others to work at biography gave him great joy.  He wanted to give real recognition to the most excellent writers.   However it was as important to him that the less polished writers would be stimulated to tell the stories that they knew.  He was just as happy about the poorly organized, badly constructed, ungrammatical efforts of the novice as he was about the polished work of the pro.  His dream, which he shared with mother and the rest of us, was that many many people would be stimulated to preserve the stories of work, faith, drama and humor that fill our lives and enrich others in the telling.  

Memories of Grandma Bea, by Scott T. Evans

Nancy:  Here are some memories that come to mind when I think of Grandma Bea.  (By Scott Evans)

My memories revolve around the Weber.  Occasionally, we would be invited to go with Grandma and Grandpa and stay with them at their cabin over the weekend.  We would be able to sleep in the loft overlooking the front room.  I remember Grandma Bea’s pancakes in the morning and how well she tolerated my questions about everything.  I remember catching fish and bringing them to her sink.  On one occasion, I was out catching frogs, toads and snakes.  I caught a snake which obviously did not want to be caught because the snake bit me on the thumb and decided not to let go.  So I ran into Grandma’s kitchen with the snake still attached to my thumb.  It was then that I found out that Grandma was not at all fond of snakes.  She told me to “get that thing out of here” immediately.  I remember her telling me not to hold onto the horn of the saddle when riding a horse.  I remember riding with her and Grandpa up to Yellow Lake and back after church.  I remember her telling me stories of when she was a little girl.  I remember her telling me stories of my father and my uncles when they were young.

I remember asking her why she didn’t shut her eyes during some of the prayers (obviously I didn’t either).  She told me that she raised five boys and needed to watch them.  I remember dandelion tea, mint sauce, and lamb chops (which I didn’t like but dad made me eat it anyway).  I remember picking rhubarb.

Like my Grandma Todd, I remember that she always seemed to be “put together.”  She always was dressed well, even in what I would call her work clothes.  I remember a certain “wrap” that I think was a fox.


But for the snake incident, I don’t ever remember a cross word from her.  Finally, I sometimes while I was in our front yard, I remember when she was calling for Grandpa Dave.  She had a certain call for him that I can hear now.  That was one of the benefits of living just down the street.

My Personal Witness of BCE, by NEP




Born on May 18, 1894, my Grandma Bea is “older than the state of Utah”!  I love it!  But something even more amazing and wonderful to me is that Grandma Bea is my own personal link to a greater past - to our steadfast pioneer ancestors who settled in this valley and rubbed shoulders with the early prophets.  Through the long span of my grandma’s arms, I have a personal living connection to my faithful family in the early days of the church and what a blessing this has been for me!


When I first came to know Grandma she was nearly 70.  In an endearing way, she has always been old to me.  And yet, her timeless faith and charm are still alive in me.  


My earliest memories of Grandma Bea are in her home, which was right across the street from ours on a hilltop overlooking the valley.  Sometimes we would go over to play in her kitchen where there was a wooden pull-out drawer filled with ancient toys.  Above the toy drawer was an old black rotary desk phone.  Grandma never really expected us visitors, but managed to find something for us to eat when we looked in her barren fridge.  The usual offering was from a bottle of apple cider that smelled funny and never seemed to run dry.  The other choices were wedges of fresh cucumber, or a stalk of rhubarb from the back garden with salt on it.  I had plenty of these.  


This back garden was a mystery and a wonder to me.  It was completely overgrown with mint and rhubarb plants under the old birch tree which once had a rope swing.  There on that back porch my dad tells of Grandpa coming home from work with a plastic toy and declaring that plastic was the way of the future!  They had never seen such a thing.  


We all knew that grandma’s favorite color was “pea green”.  And she had a German cleaning lady named Clara who was also her dear friend.  It concerned me that Grandma would save the water from boiling her vegetables, mainly broccoli, in mason jars to chill in the fridge for drinking later.  I never saw her drink it, but I’m sure she did.  


Grandma’s bedroom seemed so fancy to me, like that of a French lady.  I have images in my mind of rich heavy fabrics on her high bed with posts, jewelry, perfume and a wicker chaise lounge.   And it was dark...Were there even any windows?  Grandma’s room was a place where life stopped breathing and stood still.  
The decor of Grandma’s living room was inspired by the beauty of the great outdoors.  The floors were dark, probably hardwood at first, like those of the forest, the walls were like the foliage of green plants.  And the ceiling was a light blue, like the sky.  When I was in the Salt Lake Temple the other day I realized that the feel of the World Room was just like that of Grandma’s living room, having very similar colors and furnishings as well as the same quiet feeling of peace.
My grandmother had “a blue eye”.  I have blue eyes too, and in a family of all brown eyed people, I felt lucky to have received such a special gift from Grandmas Vella and Bea.  Though Grandma’s earthly vision was weak, I could always count on her clear blue eyes to see into eternity for me.  She also helped me see the beauties of nature as she pointed out sunsets and budding flowers and other things likely to be missed.  I am grateful for her vision, and for her love for me.   
Grandma's hair was curly and metallic red, a condition she maintained at the beauty salon every other week.  I’m quite sure she never washed her own hair at home.  She always wore her trademark cat eye glasses and a summery dress with a belt.  And there was the familiar Kleenex tucked under her expandable watch band for her drippy nose.  
I never saw Grandma drive a car but my dad says she had a license.  She would walk the few blocks to Martin’s Market or have her groceries delivered to her home.  Her order always included two or three bunches of green onions for her famous “Grandma dressing”.  And after a half century of daily consuming this onion dressing, Grandma's breath and dentures, and even her whole house seemed somewhat permeated by this sour smell to my young nose.   
Among my set of early memories at Grandma Bea’s house are the gatherings we had on Christmas Eve with the extended family.  As one of the youngest of their 23 grandchildren, I was invited to sit in the kitchen to eat at a little card table in the corner with the other little cousins.  We wore our Sunday best and tried very hard to hold still.  Grandma served ham and rolls with tomato aspic “salad’; a tomato flavored gelatin with celery in it, on “beds” of lettuce -- a delicacy I never really understood.  
And we listened to what I considered ancient tape recordings of the oldest cousins, particularly Teddy, reciting poetry as young prodigies.  There were envelops with money for the kids, packages with tissue paper, primarily from Aunt Joy, and the ever present concern that we not run through the pains of glass on the French doors leading to the dining room   Another main event at these parties for me were the shock wars we had with the other young cousins, skating on the carpet with our stocking feet to pick up a charge.


When Grandma was not hosting parties she often had an eye patch over one eye under her glasses.  This was fashioned out of folded Kleenex and kept in place with Scotch tape.  I later learned that she suffered from a condition called aniseikonia  - a visual defect in which the shape and size of an image differ in the two eyes.  This would understandable give Grandma headaches and she would often need to rest.  

As I grew into my childhood, BCE grew into what was to be the renaissance of her life.  After suffering since she was 20 from debilitating depression, Grandma had become alive to her truest self.  Despite decades of the best medical treatments of the day, Uncle Ted explained to me that Grandma’s recovery came naturally, and at long last, with menopause.  In a season when other women her age were slowing down and getting ready to sleep, Grandma was increasing in momentum.  She learned to type, and she took the bus to the Deseret Gym where she learned how to swim.  Grandma attended faithfully her monthly meetings of the DUP, and served as President of the Utah Women’s Republican Club.  In this season of her fullness, Grandma also co-authored the much circulated and respected, Cannon Family Historical Treasury.  

As impressive as all these things were, the thing that made me the most proud of my grandma was when she tried to learn to water ski at Lake Powell!  We watched as Uncle Ted pulled her behind the old pontoon boat.  As per instructions, Grandma took hold of the rope and held on tightly.  I think my dad was in the water helping to steady her as the boat took off.  We all watched in horror as Grandma flipped over and was dragged face down in the water for what seemed like a very long time!  She couldn't hear everyone screaming for her to LET GO!  Uncle Ted cut the motor, whirled around, and dove in to rescue his aging mother.  Surprisingly she seemed just fine.  But I don’t think there was a second attempt :)   
I thought of Grandma as very cultured.  She and Grandpa listened to classical music on old reel to reel tapes which was played very loudly in the evenings in their living room.  When they went out, Grandma wore a fancy hat and a mink coat, and a little handbag on a chain over one arm.  They met with their monthly dinner group and had season’s tickets to the symphony, the opera and the theater.  They were important people who had important things to do and people to meet.  
When we were lucky in the summer, we got to go up to the cabin on weekends.  This was a magical place for me!  Of course, Grandma and Grandpa were always there.  Grandpa had official permission from the church to preside at Sacrament Meetings in the big house from the 4th of July through Labor Day weekend.   
We would go fishing, catch snakes and frogs and salamanders, and go for rides on horseback, sometimes with picnics to eat by a stream.  And we would see the names of ancestors carved in aspen trees.  This was where I first became aware of the reality of my ancestors, and of their connection to my Grandma Bea.     
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Grandma had won First Place Lady Side Saddle in the Utah state fair when she was just 16, and she sat proudly and erect in her saddle until she was nearly 80 years old.  It was she who taught me how to ride bareback, holding on with my knees. Their family had lived in Forest Dale near 21st South and 7th East when she was a girl.  They were neighbors to Uncle George M and had “barns and barns” in their paddock, and many gardens to keep.   She and her father took rides on horseback around Liberty Park on Sunday mornings.  He was her mentor and closest friend.    

Grandma’s father was John M, son of Angus Mousley Cannon.  “MOsley, not MOUSEly like a little mouse!” He was a respected attorney and developer, who had received his training in Ann Arbor Michigan.  As a Counselor in the Granite Stake Presidency, John M was known for his kindness and generosity. “John M Cannon not only loved his neighbor as himself, he loved his neighbor better than himself!”  One of Grandma’s wrestles in life was in trying to come to terms with her father’s post manifesto polygamy, which he entered into out of raw obedience and faith - and only to succor the fatherless and the weak.    
“Though her eyes were small”, Grandma said of her mother Zina, “her blue eyes would always welcome her children home!”  As the mother of 11, whose husband was frequently away on business in other states, Grandma Zina was a gospel scholar who taught the truths of eternity to her family and many others, and put in long hours taking care of her family, home and gardens.  
When Grandma Bea was "the ripe old age of 19”, she “receive a letter from Box B” with an assignment to be on the Primary General Board.  She traveled the region, in her “official capacity”, “sometimes for weeks at a time”, visiting stake conferences with other general authorities, including and especially, Joseph Fielding Smith, who was, “like a father to me.”  After about a year on the General Board, Grandma “had what they called a break down” due to the stress and duress of her assignment, and she went home to rest.  
“Up the Weber”, the family built the “Bea’s Nest” for Grandma Bea, a private little cabin where she could be quiet and away from the commotion of their many family members and friends.  Grandma’s father and Bennion uncles owned a livestock company and took their sheep up to the mountains every summer to grazed.  
Grandma also spent considerable time during this season in St. George with her beloved Uncle David H, who was in the first temple presidency there.  He was doting and affectionate, and he and Grandma exchanged frequent letters when she was away.  Grandma also traveled to California to spent long periods of time with Aunt Ann M, her father’s sister, who “though she never married was a spiritual mother to us all!”    
During this time Grandma Bea’s father also became very sick.  I think it would be safe to say that her father’s unexplained illness contributed to Grandma Bea’s condition as well.  Together they spent many months trying to regain strength at Aunt Ann’s place near the beach in the California sun.  Grandpa Cannon died in his 52nd year of cancer, leaving his beloved Zina a widow.  Grandma Bea, as the oldest of their 11 children, was 21.
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As a teenager Grandma reminded me often of what Uncle Richard L. had said, “You stand on the shoulders of giants!”  I never doubted this, and pondered my good fortune.


Grandma and Grandpa’s house had undergone a few little changes since I had been a young child.  The old rotary desk phone in the kitchen had been replaced by a new fangled, wall mounted phone with buttons, and a very long and tangled cord that reached all the way to the sink.  And they owned the world’s first microwave!  Grandpa was always on the cutting edge of technology.  


Grandma had fungus under her brown fingernails and misshapen toenails.  And her hands were so wrinkled that I felt sorry for her.  Now my hands look just like hers!


Grandma’s bathroom smelled of lavender soap and everyone knew that she liked to “take her jacuzzis”.  Her jacuzzi sat like a firehydrant in the tub, belching bubbles like a pink monster.  And despite its rusty bottom and fraying cord, Grandma trusted it completely.   


Grandma and Grandpa often had celebrated guests up the Weber over the weekend and to their Salt Lake home for Sunday dinners.  I think this was usually Grandpa’s idea, but Grandma always did her best.  And as per her upbringing, Grandma served a roasted leg of lamb with fresh mint sauce, with mint from their garden.  Also served would be a green salad with Grandma’s signature dressing; lemon juice in a mason jar with two bunches of chopped green onions, and plenty of honey and salt to taste.  (At times she added a little vinegar as well.) The broccoli was topped with “broccoli sauce”, mayonnaise seasoned with yellow mustard and dotted with black poppy seeds.  For dessert Grandma graciously offered her labor of love; the much celebrated lemon meringue pie with a maraschino cherry on every slice!  As the years went by chicken broccoli casserole replaced the mutton and beef on Grandma’s table.  Meals were served on china with crystal, linen and candles.
I remember two times when Grandma got frustrated with me.  In the first, I was helping to tear up the salad “one slow leaf at a time” for a dinner party that was apparently way behind schedule.  I soon learned that one could rip large hands full of lettuce when needed.  The other was the time I wore her expensive leather riding boots to hike up the Log Drag, in the mud... I thought that was what boots were for!   It pained me to disappoint her.    
Grandma and Grandpa were always very frugal, wearing the same old clothes and saving every little sliver of soap to form into new ones in a little mesh bag, Despite this, in their later years they became world travelers.  Evans Advertising, an advertising/public relations firm that Grandpa had started during the great depression when he was in his 50’s, had become “the largest advertising agency west of the Mississippi”, with offices in seven cities.  It was in their Phoenix office that my dad worked when we lived there for three years.  
Grandpa and Grandma shared the gospel and nurtured friendships wherever they traveled.  They were great emissaries for the church.  And they often took granddaughters in pairs along for the adventure.  One year Lark and Cousin Ann spent several weeks with them traveling through the Orient.  When Pat and I were 12 and 14 years old we were invited to go with them on a six week trip to Europe! Other girl cousins had similar opportunities.  The grandsons were expected to serve missions, and hence would have their chance to see the world.
While Grandpa’s heavy extra suitcase was filled with Tabernacle Choir records and church literature, Grandma had a cucumber and little bottles of OJ in her purse.  “I do what I call, wilt”, she would say.  She needed to have something on hand for her blood sugar, and would often sit on some stairs or a wall to catch her breath.  After all, they were “pushing 80”!  
In Europe we visited England, Wales, and the Isle of Man, from whence our ancestors had come.  Then we flew to Israel where Cousin Gayle was participating in a BYU study abroad.  From there we traveled to Hungary, still a Communist country, where we learned about poverty and generosity as we choked down our fish entrails soup.  Then it was off to Austria, Bavaria and Germany with our final stop being to Paris, France.  Usually between countries we rode the train.  Wherever we went, Grandpa  “wanted to go where the local people go, and eat where the local people eat”. a philosophy  I readily agreed with.     
Grandma and Grandpa usually had grapefruit for breakfast, which they peeled slowly and ate section by section each morning.  They claimed it was all you really needed.  As growing teenagers, Pat and I felt we were traveling in a semi starving state most of the time, and were grateful when all-you-can-eat continental breakfast was included with the room   In the cities, Grandpa would rent a car and write “USA” in red lipstick on the back window.  Supposedly, this provided us permission or forgiveness for any driving mistakes we might make.  And he loved driving with the windows down.  It never felt cold to him :)  
Grandpa often exclaimed, “The only good pictures have people in them!”  Pat and I were obliged to stand in every one of the seemingly hundreds of pictures Grandpa would take.  I was impressed with the rusty German they could both speak, and they used it in many countries to get around and make new friends.    
During our teenage years, Pat and I were also invited on many weekend trips to the cabin with Grandma and Grandpa.  This was a win/win situation as we would often drive, which helped us all to be safe, and we got to go up to our beloved mountain home.  We ate Kentucky Fried Chicken on Friday nights on the way up for dinner.  We loved hiking the Log Drag, swimming at the Commissary and riding horses around “the loop” on Sunday mornings, shouting our invitation (just in case everyone forgot) that church was at 11:00.   
For breakfast we had Grandma’s famous buckwheat pancakes with orange juice and eggs, and for dinner we had ground beef or fish that Grandpa had caught and had been cleaned in the kitchen sink.  (They had the most powerful disposal in the world!)  Pat and I knew that Grandma would “forget” her rubber gloves, but we didn’t mind helping.  We were grateful to be there.    
Grandpa was usually a little bit gruff with us, but we knew that he loved us and that he had our best interest in mind.  “If it doesn’t kill you, it’s good for you!”, he used to say about many things, and he would stress the importance of eating whatever food was put before us.  
From our bunk beds in the loft bedroom, Pat and I were awakened early each morning to the sound of Grandpa and Grandma let letting out their wind, down in the kitchen.  This unlikely chorus never ceased to amaze and entertain us....Their systems were fermenting!  We determined never to get old.
On our way down the canyon, if Grandpa was at the wheel, he would pass all the slower cars, honking as he went.  This seemed reckless and nerve racking to me.  I once asked him why he kept honking and he explained that there were ants on the road and he was warning them to get out of the way :)   
In their Salt Lake home, a sizzling dinner of “Salisbury steak” and potatoes was usually served for the two of them, and eaten off of TV trays in the living room. Grandpa and Grandma faithfully watched the McNeil Lehrer News Hour together in silence each night, the red bottle of tomato catsup being passed from tray to tray.  When the weather was good, they would take evening walks together.  Grandpa had suffered several minor heart attacks and needed his exercise.  He would pull Grandma along, who was holding his arm for the speed, and Grandpa would hold a small transistor radio to his ear, which was blaring KSL News Radio.  We could hear them coming from way down the street.  
Shortly before leaving on my mission to the Dominican Republic, I took my grandparents to St George for a little vacation in their car.  They had stopped making the long drive by themselves and I was happy to spend some time with them and be their chauffeur.  We visited friends and relatives down the I-15 corridor, particularly in Cedar City, and went to Pine Valley and the nearby national forest to escape the heat.  Grandma and Grandpa told me stories from the past all along the way, and they frequently got into what seemed like heated discussions about the details they each knew to be true.  Mercifully, Grandma knew how to defuse a tricky situation by sticking out her tongue.    
On our way home we passed through Hurricane to Hwy 89 and stopped in nearly every little town along the way to drop in on old “friends”.  I doubted that all these unsuspecting people were really friends of theirs, but they all greeted us warmly and I had to wonder.  I think this kind of friendshipping is a lost art.
This was one of the last times I was to see my grandparents alive together.  Grandpa died as a result of a car accident driving home from the cabin while I was away.
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Grandpa and Grandma had met each other at the old LDS High School where Grandma had served as associate editor of the Gold and Blue.  As a writer, Grandma was very concerned about the proper use of words and phrases.  “Now we say, I don’t think, when we mean I do think.”  And, “How can something be VERY true?  Either it is true, or it isn’t!”  
Grandpa was married to Grandma on Sept 9, 1920 in the Salt Lake Temple by his mission president, Melvin J Ballard.  They were both 26 years old.  After graduating from the University of Utah, Grandpa’s three year mission to the Northwestern States began in the fall of 1915, where he traveled in the summer months without purse or scrip.  Grandpa also served for a time in the US Army during WW1.  He later received an honorary doctorate degree from USU.  He was the first member of his family to get a college degree.  


Grandpa’s reasons for choosing Bea were mostly practical.  They were getting older, and she, of course,  “was good stock” with her Cannon and Bennion “blood”, and would “make good babies”, a reason that slightly irritated Grandma, but made sense to her.  
Together they had 5 sons.  Grandma felt it a privilege every time a “man child” was born to her.  I think they all were born at home. “People used to feel sorry for me, that I never had any daughters.  But I had five daughters-in-law-and-in love!”   
“Woo hoo!  Dave!”  I loved the way Grandma called for Grandpa whenever she needed him.   She relied on him and trusted him almost like a child.  In my mind, this both frustrated and delighted Grandpa.  As I recall, he called out “woo hoo” to her too as a greeting whenever he came home from work.  He went into the office every day until he was well into his 80’s.  
Grandma was sick for most of the time her children were at home.  And sometimes she was away for long periods of time trying to get well.  When she was at home, she and the boys would sit by the fire at night while they read to her and darned socks. Grandpa was in the first bishopric of the Garden Park ward, and was often away.  Their family observed family home evening when it was just a pilot program in the church.  

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During the car accident that took Grandpa’s life, Grandma suffered only whiplash.  However, after not many months, she fell and broke her hip, or did her hip break and then she fell?  We were never quite sure.  She did show signs of significant osteoporosis in her back and shoulders.  
Of her experience, Grandma would often announce that she had “two pounds of steel in her hip”, which sometimes became “two tons of steel!”, and then proceed to tell of her Grandmother, Mary T. Bennion, who “broke her hip several times, and without the aid of medical treatment.” Yet, “She never complained.”  Grandma Mary T would teach her family - “It’s not what happens to you.  It’s just the way you take it!”   
I believe this to be true.  I especially liked hearing about this brave great great grandmother of mine.  She was one of three polygamist wives of John Bennion.  She had broken her hip while walking through the snow to feed the cows in her late 60’s.  When Grandma was a girl, Mary T lived, “over Jerden”, and would cross the Jordan River from Taylorsville with her clothes in a bundle on her head to keep them dry.  She would walk all the way to their house to visit them in Forestdale.  When Grandma Mary T had been only four years old and was living in Yorkshire, England, the Prophet Joseph was martyred.  She remembered hearing the neighbors say, “Old Joe Smith is dead!  Old Joe Smith is dead!  Now you’ll never go to America!”  “But they did!”  She also found a cannon ball in her garden after the Battle of Nauvoo.    
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Grandma Bea’s world “after Dave’s death” was in a different dimension - lived mostly within the walls of her own home and in the corridors of her mind.  She had felt sad and alone after Grandpa’s death, and wondered if she could go on.  In a way, I feel as if BCE's life was preserved so that I could witness her beautiful spirit and eternal gifts, which were opened wide to my view in her childlike state.
Grandma’s world included her good friends, the familiar books that she pulled off of crowded bookshelves and left around the house.  She had read Goethe in German in high school, and studied Shakespeare and the arts.  Her other good friends were her memories of family and friends, and she would tell story after story that revealed people’s character and faith.   
Grandma was constantly scribbling notes on yellow legal pads to include in future histories to be written, and writing in the margins of every books, indicating whether or not she agreed with what was said or adding important pieces of information.     
Rob and I came to live with Grandma in her downstairs apartment in the summer of 1984, just 2 weeks after Ben was born.  Grandma said of Ben that he had ”a beautiful ear, just like a seashell”.  This downstairs apartment had been a haven for many of our grandparent’s young married grandchildren and relatives throughout the years.  In exchange for our rent, we shared our supper with Grandma, kept her calendar and kept her company.  We also were responsible for the “light housekeeping”. The brothers took care of the home repairs and the yard.  (Mostly Uncles Bob and Ted.)
“Come into my parlor, said the spider to the fly.”  Grandma stood in the doorway or hallway where one would pass through; left hand on hip, Kleenex dangling from the watchband, clearing her throat with a twinkle in her eye.  There would be no escaping the inevitable string of stories that was about to begin.  It’s a good thing Grandma was so charming!  I tried to learn not to be always in a hurry.   Sometimes I succeeded.  
Grandma’s stories were told verbatim, and with the same animated expressions of delight.  For her each telling was fresh and new, many times each day.  Uncle Ted told me that she had dementia, characteristic for her age, and not necessarily Alzheimer’s.  Grandma’s little stories came in a seemingly random sequence which we memorized.  This came in handy, as we knew where the natural breaks for a gentle getaway might be.  
“There’s no polygamy in our family, no polygamy in our family!”  Grandpa had chided her.  
“Dave always told me, you’re a better writer than I am, but you just don’t do it!”  
“Bob was a happy child”
“Whether you’re an old car or a new car, when you’re out of gas, you’re out of gas!”
“Peanuts, popcorn, chewing gum and candy!”  
“Bones is the framework of the body.  If I did not have so many, I would not have so good a shape!”  
“Who invented sauerkraut?  It was the Dutch!”
“Monday sooooup, Tuesday horse and pepper -- to all our German brothers, we wish the same to you!”  
“Sometimes we waste our food when we eat it!“
“It is HIGH to be a judge!”  
“Wayne’s hair was the color of a new copper penny.”  
‘Ha, ha, ha.  Where’s my pa?  He’s gone to Washington and won’t take ma!”
“Ted wrote the most beautiful letters!”
“A little Cannon Blood never hurt anybody!” (Quoting Elder Holland, who himself had a little Cannon blood.)
“Could you be true to blue, if brown had smiled on you?”
“Whenever Elder Maxwell spoke, I felt as if he was talking right to ME! “
“That nice young man from Taylorsville”  (Bruce Lindsay - KSL TV).
“Oh this wonderful, terrible English language!”  
“Now that word fill.... Phil Grant.  Where does the word phil come from?  Philadelphia, city of brotherly love...”
“Someone once told me, put on some lipstick and look alive!”
In the evenings when we would take Grandma her dinner, she’d be sitting in the living room on her red velvet couch.  You could tell how long she’d been there by how far she had slunk down into the cushions, her books and papers all around her.  Sometimes her skinny legs in knee-high hose were nearly the same altitude as her shoulders.  These were some very long days for Grandma.  
“Don’t scald me!”  She would say.  Sorry, Grandma.  I was always surprised at how cool she liked her soup.
Grandma was on her own to get her breakfast and lunch.  She usually would “take some yogurt”, and deposite the containers that never went bad in every room of the house.  She also still enjoyed her grapefruit and cucumbers.  For a treat she would “take” some root beer without ice or macaroons, which my dad would supply for her.   
Thanks to her sons, Grandma continued to hold seasons tickets in her old age to the ballet, opera and theater, only now there were three tickets; one for her and two for her married grandchildren who took turns accompanying her.  She never used a walker around the house, but she held our elbows whenever we went out.  She especially liked holding on to the menfolk.  
My dad and his brothers met quarterly to take care of Grandma’s affairs.  David F provided legal services and David Seal was their accountant.  I was grateful for everyone’s excellent care.  Grandpa had set up grants for his grandchildren that helped pay for college and missions, and life insurance for all the newly married couples.  My own two semesters in japan were funded by this money, as I think, was my mission.  Grandma and Grandpa seemed to like my choices, and grandma especially liked the fact that I was, “trilingual!”  I was grateful to be a “Cannon” she could be proud of.  
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After we’d been living with Grandma for about a year she had what seemed to be a series of mini strokes.  This happened over a period of several weeks.  Grandma didn’t appear to know what had happened to her, but her ability to function had been greatly decreased.  And it seemed like for some reason she couldn’t hear.  I had to yell at close range to be understood.  After a few days I saw something dripping out of her ear onto her shoulder and we realized she had a double ear infection.  Her hearing was restored with a course of antibiotics, but the effects of the stroke remained.    
One day I found Grandma in the bathtub with the water drained.  She was unable to get herself out of the tub!  She was in good spirits, although wet and cold, and I stepped in to try to lift her out.  I had her put her hands behind my neck and hold on tight.  We started to laugh as we struggled and fell.  She was so weak and slippery, like a giant fish!  We were finally able to get her to a sitting position on the edge of the tub and swing her legs around so she could stand.   
The brothers decided that if she was going to stay in her home, Grandma would need extra surveillance.  They set up an infrared alarm system that went off in our bedroom every time she dropped her foot over the edge of the bed.  I think they had no idea how many times Grandma decided to head to the bathroom in the middle of the night!  Pretty soon Grandma was sleeping in a hospital bed that had been set up in the living room.  And after a few weeks she was taken to a rehab center for more professional care.  She had been able to stay in her home as long as possible.  I think it was a blessing for her - as it certainly was for all of us.    
Grandma’s condition steadily deteriorated in the care center.  She had developed pneumonia and her lungs were filled with fluid.  It was shocking for me to see her in such a compromised state.  The noisy pump by the side of her bed would go off every few minutes in a vain effort to relieve her gurgling respiration.  Grandma was drowning within her own self!  Somehow she remained characteristically calm in her desperate state.  And mercifully, she spent much of her time asleep.  I would sometimes see her looking up to the ceiling as if communicating with somebody there.  
At last I felt like Grandma’s burden was more than I could bear.  We approached Lark and Craig, who had also been involved in her care, and suggested that she be given a priesthood blessing.  They readily agreed, and with “the brother’s” permission we went over on Sunday evening to bless her with God’s love, and to offer her release.  
When we entered her room it was alarming for me to see someone I love in such a state of complete physical distress.  Certainly, we all cared for Grandma deeply, but I seemed to be the only one in the room unable to cope with her situation.  Ashamed at my weakness, I quickly removed myself to the hallway outside her door where I plead with the Lord to take her home.  “She doesn’t belong here anymore”, I sobbed to him.  
After a few minutes, Rob encouraged me to go back in before we left to say a last goodbye.  It was all I could do to force myself back into her presence and give her a tearful kiss on the forehead.  I expressed my true love to her and we left.  Grandma Bea passed away within a day or two of the blessing.  We never saw her again in this life.
Beatrice Cannon Evans died on July 12 of 1985, “in her 92nd year”.  
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It was my special gift to get to know our Grandma Bea so well.  I am grateful for the chance to love and be loved by this shining star in our family!  I am a witness to my family of Beatrice Cannon Evans - preserved with lemon juice and honey, she was a woman of faith and a noble daughter of our Heavenly King!  She was a living miracle in my life - my own personal ancestry was alive and coursing through her veins.  Her love and light are alive in me still.  I am ever aware of the strength of her presence, warming me through the veil - bright as eternity!  
I love you, Grandma Bea!