A tiny address book stamped in gold with " Michigan Lithographing Company" on the cover looked to me like an address book. However, it turned out to be a 4 1/2 by 2 3/4-inch diary in dark green leather, one of many sizes and shapes Ruth wrote in over the years. Because I had not read it until after the book was published, it's not in Pieces of a Life.
The picture shows Ruth Meredith Kellogg and her younger brother, Jimmie, fooling around in the back yard on Iowa St. in Chicago where the Merediths had a two-flat. You can see the stucco garage, which matched the two-flat (originally a house), in the background as well as the Petersen's garage next door.
This would have been around the time - the early 1940s - when Jimmie was in the United States Navy. I had always thought that my uncle, James William Meredith, was in the service briefly early in 1942 after the start of World War II. But Ruth's 1940 diary corrects me, as you will see. Uncle Jimmie was a kind, soft-spoken man, but his mental illness gradually controlled his life.
Tuesday, Feb. 27, 1940 - "Jim joined Navy and left for Great Lakes Naval Training Station for 2 months."
Saturday, May 25, 1940 - "Jim home from Navy with Honorary Discharge papers and button."
And that's it - nothing more about what happened, though I had thought Jim left the service because he had had what used to be called "a nervous breakdown." Ruth was very careful not to say much about Jim's schizophrenia in writing. Since there was mandatory military service at that time, perhaps the button was something he could wear to show he had served.
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