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Council Grove Republican from Council Grove, Kansas • 2

Location:
Council Grove, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TWO COUNL GSVE REFITSLICAN MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1926 John Taylor arrived yesterday from 0. W. Whitmarsh drove out to the Denver, to spend several days Chas. Sample home yesterday after- visiting with his parents, Mr. and noon.

Mrs. S. E. Taylor. Mr.

and Hrs. S. A. Barnhart of Ot- Don't forget to read the "Thrift tawa arrived yesterday to visit a few fmj Loan Ass'n. window.

It sure tells the story. (Mon Wed) iRoy Young made a business trip to Wichita today. Everybody who joined the jiew club last Friday night and there friends to arrange for the program that will be given at Canning Creek next Friday night, Februry 5. Refreshments will also be Mrs: Dike and Normandin cooked for threshers for Driggs brothers. Mr.

and Mrs. K. Williams are staying at E. Miller's while they are visiting some friends at Herington. Ira Smith helped Mr.

Bliss finish shucking corn this week. IRoy SlacR was dragging the roads Thursday. Previous to the storm the trail was good, the mail routes fair, but the rest were bottomless. Wjill Boyer's spent Sunday afternoon with Charley Boyers. called on Mrs.

Sam Stranathan last Thursday. Alice Fleming visited the school Friday. Threshing is the order of the day. About four more days of good weather will finish maybe. Roy Slack and family were visiting iG.

B. Franklin Sunday. Leo Ramsey called on M. Fleming last Sunday to get his mother. Little Iona returned with them.

John and Lee Dike are getting up a supply of wood from Amos Herink's place." The Helping Hand Club were unable to have their meeting this week since so many of them were ill. Dikes spent Wednesday evening with Lee Meiers. Mr. Miller of Council Grove and Mr. Chase of the Chase Plow Company were selling implements in the community this week.

Boyer's children and Charles Dike spent Sunday afternoon at the Grover Isaacs home. Mr. Otis, the Wilsey mail carrier of Route 1 is driving a new car. Hubert Heigele made a trip to Del-avan on business Wednesday. 'Little Willo Slack is on the sick list.

Mr. Boyer and Mr. and Mrs. Lilly met at Phil Heigeles Monday evening are requested to be at the Armory SOCIETY AKNA-LOUISB MILLER Monday-. P.

E. 0. 7. Mrs. H.

L. Isbell, assisted by Mrs. E. T. Jacobs.

Tuesday Berean Class I. Christian Church Region Auxiliary Court House D. P. D. Bridge Club Miss Helen Prater.

Past Matrons Club Mrs. Gro ver McCrabb. Tuesday Evening Bridge Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clybornc.

C. L. A. M. Club Mrs.

Grover McCrabb. Wednesday Presbyterian Aid Mrs. J. M. Johnson.

Baptist General Aid Mrs. C. W. Baker. Congregational Aid Mrs.

W. T. Williams. days with friends. Misa Alberta Pullins and Warren Gihnan returned to Manhattan today to enroll for the second semester's work.

Come to the Armory Friday night better floor more room and unore seats. Come to the new club dance music by Carpenter's Orchestra. Mrs. James Lilyestrom and son of Ellsworth and Mrs. Ed Berquist of Marquette came Saturday visit Mr.

and Mrs. Dick Raney. Ralph Steck returned yesterday from Denver, Colo, where he has been for two weeks visiting relatives. Miss Marjory McBride returned last evening from spending the week end in Topeka. Mrs.

Jack Lawrence and Jaconette returned last night from a few days visit in Lawrence with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lane.

Closing out my Millinery Stock, Winter Hats at $1.50 each. New spring hats at $4.50 each, as I am leaving soon. Mrs. R. L.

Shimp, up- Friday, night Feb. 5th, as there is some matters that the club will have to vote upon. Mr. and Mrs. M.

W. Berry of Herington spent Sunday with their daughter, VaLera. Miss Dorothy Clyborne spent the week end in Baldwin with friends. Miss Wiilma Rose was home from Emporia or the week end. (Bob McCaslin returned Saturday from St.

Louis, where he has been for a month. Fish moss at the Rexall Store C. Prater made a business trip to Topeka the latter part of last week. Bradley Alexander is here from Osawatomie for a few days visit. M.

E. South Circle Mrs. E. R. Sonnenberg.

Girl Scouts Court House Past Noble Grands Mrs. J. L. iSeagondollar. Thursday Mrs D.

Kneeland went to Kansas stairs over Durland White. 28 2c Beta Delphians Library yhilomathian Club Library Jolly Fifteen Miss Anna Gray Dress making of all kinds Mrs. Anna Curnutt 704 E. Main Street. 27 8p.

Friday Delta Kappa Delphians Library Utili Dulci Club Mrs. J. D. Long East M. E.

Aid Miss Anna I UBS DES MOINES Gray and Mrs. W. W. Brokate. City the last of the week to visit with friends.

Spectators will be admitted free at the new club dance at the Armory Friday night, Feb. 5th. Carpenter's Orchestra. L. W.

Jackson from Denver, visited Sunday at the home of his uncks George Smith. Mr. Jackson is attending the Santa Fe convention held at Topeka t'his week. Lou Cochran of Los Vegas, N. M.

Regular Auxiliary Meeting The regular meeting of the Auxil iary of the American Legion will be held Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock, Election Tuesday The Coach New officers for the coming year will be elected by the Berean class of the Christian Sunday School at its meeting at the church Tuesday. The members wiil assemble at 2:30 o'clock. Well, we had quite a showed Sunday and it is quite cold again. ISlyde Eberhart will work for Em-me'tt Roberts this season. Pearl Baker is on the sick list.

Mr. Herman and family moved from the Swenson farm Wednesday up near Alta Vista. Nellie, Marvin, and Donald Caley are all quite sick with the grippe. Marion Orton visitd at Charley McDivitt's Friday. Carl Krause and son Virgil had car trouble Saturday on the way home from Council Grove and had to have his car pulled home.

Albert and Harry Menhart moved ths stock and implement from the Swenson farm in this neighborhood to the one occupied by Mr. Meinhart near the German church. Harvey Kahle and brother Orley In ten years of value leadership, Hudson Super-Six performance, quality and price advantage have never been so outstanding as today. The Coach has long been acknowledged because of its utility, performance and value. Now among luxurious cars, the beautiful Brougham and the Sedan give Hudson the same unrivalled position among luxurious cars.

They have all the distinction of finest custom built cars, with a price advantage based on the world's largest production of 6-cy Under cars. The Brougham U450 7-Pass. Sedan 1650 Freight and Tax Extra These cars may be purchased for a low first payment and convenient terms on balance. Attends Shrine Club Dinner C. J.

Wolff, who with Mrs. Wolff is spending the. at various points in California, was a guest at the first social event of this season for the Hollywood Shrine Club, given Saturday, evening, June 30, at the Maonic temple at that place. The banquet was a stag affair and an enter tinment was given in charge of Noble Ed W. Rowland.

stopped here yesterday to visit with Mr. and Mrs. John Cole and family, on his way to Topeka to the Santa Fe convention. Mrs. J.

R. Rees returned from Topeka where she spent the week with Mr, and Mrs. Lon U. Britt. Mrs.

Ethel Eldredgg spent Sunday in Dunlap with friends. Fish moss at the Rexall Store Robert Block went to Kansas City yesterday on business. Dancing tickets for members of the new club will be 75 cents at the Armory Friday night. Carpenter's Orchestra. Mrs.

Marcy Page was shopping in town this morning from Munkres Creek. Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Fadk end family of Alta Vist were trading at local stores this morning. Mrs. Chas. Sampel was a county seat visitor today from Kelso. Mr.

and Mrs. J. Mitchell of the ParkeTville community were trading witjh county seat merchants today. Dr. 'and Mrs.

R. B. Harvey of Wichita who came here Saturday for a visit with Dr. and Mrs. W.

T. Harvey returned home yesterday. Mrs. Velma Remo has arrived from Onxford, Calif, for a months visit with her father, C. T.

Bean and other relatives. She has not been home for a number of years. Congregational Aid A meeting of the ladies of the Congregational Aid Society will be held at the home of Mrs. W. T.

Williams Elim Brothers COUNCIL GROVE, KANSAS Wednesday afternoon at two-thirty. An important business meeting is to be held. MSB are are holding a public sale today and Harvey and wife expect to leave soon, for Western Kansas to make their home. CANNING CREEK Mr. and Mrs.

Ray Williams spent the fore part of the week at Everett Lilly's. John Goms brought some cane seed from Everett Lilly. John Eckhoff bought several loads of kafir from E. Lilly. Mrs.

Isaacs helped Mrs. Huff cook for threshers Tuesday. John and Gorden Tally attended the Cheek sale. Mrs. Ethel Lilly and Blanche Hailey South Circle The South Circle of the Methodist Aid society will meet Wednesday af ternoon at 2:30 at the home of Mrs.

Psychologists Solve Beverage Mystery, E. jR. Sonnenberg. Jolly Fifteen The Jolly Fifteen sewing club will meet Thursday afternoon with Miss Anna Gray as hostess. Boston Tea Party, Say Students of the Mind, Laid Basis for Present Popularity of Coffee in United Stres Tom Rumsey returned last evening from spending Sunday in Topeka.

Mr. and Mrs. Eric Harder were To Elect Officers Miss Anna Gray will be; hostess next Friday to thq East Circle of the Methodist Aid. Mrs. Walter Brokate will be one of the assisting host here from Herington yesterday to STELLA THEATER TONIGHT and TUESDAY A Warner Classic "THE WIFE WHO WASN'T WANTED" spend the day at the E.

J. Harder RECENTLY published statls-tics show 1 the people of the United States are drinking mora coffee than ever before hornet There will be a prize given to the esses. This is the meeting at which new officers will be elected for the coming year. one bringing the most appropriate with Irene Rich and Hunt'ev an amount that requires over twelve pounds per person per annum for its preparation. name lor the new club at tne Armory Gordon, alSO FerilS OI the Friday night, Feb.

5th. Wild" No. 4. 10c and 30c Across the border in CanadaJ Girl Scouts Meeting The Girl Scouts will hold their regular meeting Wednesday at four 'clock at the court house. where dwell a people of the same racial stocks and of as high a standard of living, the consumption is only ana pound net neieon Spaghetti D.

P. D. Bridge per annum. In England, where tustoms and standards ex living are not very different item our Miss Helen Prater will be hostess tomorrow evening- to the members twn, tne consumption i even less. War is tt that the the D.

P. D. Bridge club. Utili Dulci drinks so ranch more coffee than the Canadian or Englishman Because he likes hotter. But why does he like it hcttert The palates of the citiaens of att thtee Dulci embroidery club The Boston Tea Party which will hold its regular meeting Friday gave coffee its flying' start on the road to becoming America's nat.

countries are much the afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. Long oh North Mission street. I Lfifta ionaic coverage. There must be something aside from the taste to accent lor this Motored to Herington.

lfferenee. Mr. and Mrs. N. Dilley, Mr.

and Mrs. Harry White and children spent There is, the pepholegfcts ear, but if we are to find to answer we must turn back the feces of the day Sunday in Herington. history 152 years. A Protest Against Tyranny Past Matrons Club: Tbs past matrons of tbe Eastern Star wOII meet tomorrow afternoon On the night of December 16, 1773, a group of Boston men, disguised as Indians, boarded the ships of the East India Company at the homa, of Mrs. Grover McCrabb R.

who will be assisted by Mrs. J. lees. lying in Boston Harbor, and threw vents gave coffeo a flying start along the road to. becoming our national beverage.

But the virtues of the drink itself, and the measures taken by the manufacturer during the various stages the article passes through on its way to the kitchen, afford ths real basis for the position coffee holds today. During the ers of coffee's widespread popularity in this country the manufacturer, by means of experimentation and research, has evolved many improvements in the method of preparing coCee for tha pot. For instance, it has been tha almost universal custom to roast coffee in large quantities, but now a machine has been developed that improves the taste- of -coffee by roasting small quantities at a In accordance with this latest development in the art of coffee roasting, the coffee is passed in their cargoes of tea into the sea A Typical Coffee House of the Eighteenth Century. The Sign of the Green Dragon at Boston, Massachusetts. f.

events, tea came to be considered a symbol of tyranny. The drinking of it was practically discontinued throughout the thirteen col as a protest against the unjust Hostess to Clams most acceptable substitute for meat taxation measures and oppression Mrs. Grover McCrabb will entertain of the mother country. -This- tomorrow evening for the C. L.

A. The Boston Tea Party was one of the most dramatic of the many S. bridge club. onies, soiree took its place. And although more than a century and a half has Passed nines tha Tenant.

Presbyterian Aid The Ladies Aid will ment against tea was first aroused, that feeling, according to the professors of psychology, persisted, SubcCTISpimiSlv nf ttnnyaa tfn-rvi meet Wednesday afternoon at the usual hour at the home of Mrs. J. M. SPAGHETTI has almost a romance it was first made centuries ago in China, though the Japanese claim a variety made from rice instead of wheat, which is much older. The Chinese type was introduced into northern Europe very early, and copied by the Italians.

Then a strange thing happened the North-em Europeans forgot how to make it, so that by the fourteenth century the Italians were the only people using it. and they kept the process a secret (or a full hundred years. Then the French learned how to make it. Now spaghetti can be purchased by any housewife anywhere, ready to serve and even cooked with a delicious sauce. A medium size can which I.VL11 father to son, and laid the founda Johnson.

smau quantities through par-1 tion ror tne overwhelming pobu Iarity of coffes in the United and potatoes it not only gives a healthful variety, but it saves time and keeps down the butcher's bills. 1 Housewives will wish to try all the several brands of canned spaghetti and see which their families prefer. The kind that' is prepared in the way the Italians' like it best, with- cheese and tomato sauce, is likewise a favorite with Americans, as both tomatoes and cheese are rich in vitamins, and cheese contains protein, lime and phosphorus the tissue-building substance of meat To save dishwashing, heat the can, unopened, in boiling water, open and serve. Spaghetti' can also be heated served in a casserole with grated Jteese sprinkled over the top, or arranged in alternate layers of clieest spaghetti. Cheese, like spaghetti be purchased in tins and kept always fresh on the supply shelf.

Tuesday Evening Bridge dramatic events leading up to the Revolution. A few months later the Sons of Liberty, assembled in the Merchants' Coffee House in New York, heard that two tea ships had arrived in the harbor one turned away from Boston, the other coming direct England. The Nancy, from Boston, was met by protesting delegation; and, heeding the warning, the master turned out to sea. The "master of the London, the other tea ship, elected to stay. His tea found a resting place in the bottom of New York Harbor.

As a consequence of these Members of the Tuesday Evening Bridge Club will meet tomorrow night states. Constant Improvements in Treating Bean However, the satisfaction the at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry tuuts revolving over carefully regulated fires. This permits constant ventilation: and a purifying circulation of fresh air carries off the fumes of roasting preventing their absorption by the coffee.

While this machine tom'm small quantities at a timo, the total output per hour is far greater than that produced by foticar Clybcrne. Baptist Aid American of today derives from his cup of coffee is by no means dependent upon events occurring The General Aid of the Baptist vciuxv ma JMVOlUtlon. Th(a will make four good helpings, or pre-: vide two people with the main disr of the meal, costs practically nothir compared with the cost of meat. -Consequently canned spaghetti is church will meet Wednesday after -noon at 2:30 with Mrs. C.

W. Baker as hostess..

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About Council Grove Republican Archive

Pages Available:
98,053
Years Available:
1840-2001