Christmas in Mayfield

Ray G Swallow Family Christmas in Mayfield, UT in 1948. Originally recorded on wire, this has been transferred first to a cassette tape, then to Compact Disc and now to MP3 file format.

Introduction by Donna Swallow Gowans

Introduction by Doyle Swallow

Introduction by Ray George Christiansen

Whispering Hope sung by Doyle Swallow and Ethel Swallow Christiansen

Sweet Bird 1 sung by Ray G Swallow

Silent Night sung by Elva Foote Swallow

Sweet Bird 2 sung by Ray G Swallow

Christmas Candles sung by Donna Swallow and EllaFay Swallow

Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer sung by Lee Christiansen

Hi-Yi-Yi sung by Ray George Christiansen

Teach Me to Pray sung by Myrna Ann Christiansen

Smiling Through sung by Ethel Christiansen

Old Shep sung by Edith Swallow

Smile the While sung by Doyle Swallow and Ethel Swallow Christiansen

Ending comments by Ray George Christiansen

A lesson in Physics

An Early Lesson in Physics…
Ray with a fish

It was 1953, I was 12 and on a scout camp out. We had a lesson on
cooking pork, veggies, etc. under ground with hot coals. This system
of cooking was based on a method used in the Pacific islands. It sounded
like a good idea so one of the guys put a can of Tomato Soup in the ground
buried in hot coals.

Me? I put a can of creamed corn in my own hole along with the hot coals. Time passes and we have completely forgotten about our buried food. We are busy looking for snakes, yes snakes. I didn’t say we were smart scouts.

BANG!

One of the boys standing next to me lets out a yelp, puts his hand to the back of his neck brings it forward and sees a red liquid smeared all over his hand.

“I’ve been shot” he shouts standing there with eyes wide and suddenly falls to the ground face forward.

Panic seizes the group of 20 odd scouts as we all hit the ground and crawled on our bellies to the aid of our friend.

Fortunately someone figured out that tomato soup is not blood, that the bang was not a gun shot, and me, I retrieve my can of creamed corn from the ground with a very long stick.