Remembering Mother’s Day
Mother’s Day, 2nd Sunday in May, brings
back many memories for this aging farm boy.
Back in the later years of the Great Depression, my twin brothers and I
had no money for fancy cards or any kind of Mother’s Day Present. I ‘d obviously heard that Mother’s Day was
coming, because we’d made homemade cards at our country school.
I think it was Pa who suggested that we might pick
some violets for our mother for Mother’s Day.
On the far north edge of the woodlot, back of the house, was an open
hilltop, where beautiful violets grew. I
was but a little shaver, and my brothers were smaller still, but we found our
way to the edge of the big woods and picked a nice big bouquet of violets.
When we arrived home, and stumbled into the kitchen
with our special present, Ma was more than a little surprised. I noticed she had tears in her eyes and I wondered why she was crying as
she found a little jar, filled it water and
put our violets in it. Together we said, “Happy Mother’s Day.”
“Thank
you, thank you,” she said. “What a wonderful Mother’s Day present.”
President
Woodrow Wilson proclaimed Mother’s Day a national holiday on May 9, 1914, and that
it should be celebrated the second
Sunday of May each year. But Mother’s
Day goes back a long way before 1914. After the Civil War, a group of mothers
began working to organize a Mother’s Friendship Day, as a way to bring the Union
and the Confederacy once more together. Other groups of mothers in the late
1800s saw Mother’s Day as a way to organize and promote world peace.
Today,
Mother’s Day is celebrated in some 50 countries of the world. I read somewhere that more Mother’s Day cards
are purchased than for any celebration.
THE
OLD TIMER SAYS: Call your mother and wish her the best on her special day. You might
give her some flowers as well.
WHERE
TO BUY MY BOOKS:
You can buy my books at your local bookstore.
order online from bookshop.org, or purchase from the Friends of the Patterson
Memorial Library in Wild Rose—a fundraiser for them. Phone: 920-622-3835 for
prices and ordering, or contact the librarian: barnard@wildroselibrary.
Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division Street
Wild Rose, WI 54984.
www.wildroselibrary.org
If you live in the western part of the state,
stop at Ruth’s home town, Westby, visit Dregne’s. and look at their great selection of my books.
Order a book from them by calling 1-877-634-4414. They will be happy to help
you. If you live in northcentral
Wisconsin, stop at the Janke bookstore in Wausau (phone 715-845-9648). They have a large selection of my books.
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