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Saturday, December 31, 2016

Who Else was in the WCTU Cookbook?

Yesterday I posted about the Linn County WCTU Cookbook which I own. While I was researching to see if my mother had submitted any recipes I noticed some other of my relatives were also in the book.

My grandmother, Mrs. O. J. Albertson of Halsey, had 5 different recipes:
      Quick Blackberry Jelly
      Jam Cake
      Buttermilk Cake
      30 Minute Angel Food Cake
      Boston Cream Pie

My Dad's sister, Aunt Vida, Mrs. Cecil Dawson, submitted 1:
      Hot Water Pie Crust

There were 11 recipes from Bond cousins:
Ruby Hayes Standish submitted 4:
     Rice and Hamburger Balls
     Baked Sweet Potatoes
     Ginger Drop Cookies
     Christmas Pudding
Nellie Bond Isom submitted 4:
     Scalloped Corn and Tomatoes
     Chocolate Roll
     Peanut Crinkles
     Grape Marlow
Irene Bond Clingman submitted 2:
     Spanish Dowery Cake
     Orange Cookies
Madge McVey Bond submitted 1:
     Butter Scotch Taffy

And there was 1 recipe from a Falk cousin:
Nellie Falk Vannice
     Steam Pudding

From attending family reunions over the years, I can attest that family members were good cooks.



Friday, December 30, 2016

My Mother's In a Recipe Book



Sometime in the later 1930's or early 1940's the Linn County W.C.T.U. (Women's Christian Temperance Union) published a cookbook. I have a copy in my collection. Some of the recipes included the name of the contributor. Since I knew my mother (Wilma Falk Albertson) had belonged to that organization at one time, I checked through the 60+ pages to see if she had furnished any of the recipes.

And I did find two. Even if she hadn't won the cake baking contest (see blog post: December 13, 2016) she did submit a recipe for Red Devils Food Cake. I don't remember her baking that, but I do remember the other recipe: Washboard Cookies. They were made with coconut and they were really good.


Maybe I'll try to make some myself using her recipe. It will be next year (2017) before I get around to it.

Thursday, December 22, 2016

More Christmas Cards From the Past

Last year I posted three Christmas postcards from my father's (Lester Albertson) collection  Here are three more.





Tuesday, December 13, 2016

She Didn't Win First Prize



I have been reading in old newspapers on-line and found my mother mentioned in May of 1928 in the Harrisburg section of the Albany Democrat-Herald, Albany, Oregon..

It stated that she had an entry for cake bakers at the local Achievement Day. She was Wilma Falk, a teenager who belonged to the 4-H cooking club which had been organized a few months before.


Wilma came in third in that contest. But that's all right because I know that by the time I was her daughter she could bake very good cakes.

Thursday, December 8, 2016

The Cottage Grove connection to the Potter Sewing Club

I now live in Cottage Grove Oregon and I discovered that there is a connection between  the 
Potter Sewing Club and Cottage Grove.  

My Grandmother Albertson belonged to the Potter Sewing Club and I posted about that day before yesterday, December 6th. One of the first mentions I found in the newspaper was March 1926 when my aunts assisted the hostess in serving lunch. The hostess that day was Mrs. Jesse Safley. She is the connection to Cottage Grove. How? Her husband, Jesse Safley was a brother of Franklin/Frank Safley. By the 1920 census Frank and family were living in Cottage Grove.


I feel like I have an even closer relationship to the Safley family. One of Frank's daughters was Isabelle. Isabelle Gates Woolcott recruited me to work as a hostess at the Cottage Grove Museum over ten years ago and after her death I continued to work there and am still volunteering. Isabelle's daughter is a member of the Board for the Museum, so see her frequently. I find it so fascinating that her grandaunt was assisted by my aunts back in 1926; so they all could enjoy that "dainty lunch."  

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

My Grandmother Albertson Belonged to the Potter Sewing Club


In checking the newspapers for Albany and Corvallis, Oregon, I found several items telling about meetings of the Potter Sewing Club in the Peoria area.

A March 1926 Albany paper told that my father's two sisters helped in serving a "dainty lunch."  In November that same year, my grandmother Mrs. Orin [sic] Albertson was the hostess for the afternoon and again my aunts assisted in serving.

The meeting held in March of 1931 was reported in the Corvallis newspaper and Mrs. O. J. Albertson won first place in a memory contest. In March of 1933 Mrs. O. J. Albertson was one of the hostesses and my mother, then Miss Wilma Falk, was one of the invited guests. Wilma won one of the prizes.

It was in October of 1933 that the club held a Halloween party. Mrs. O. J. Albertson was one of those who told ghost stories and she also won one of the first prizes in the "clever contests." Mrs. O. J. Albertson was one of the joint hostesses in June of 1934. Among the invited guests was my mother, now Mrs. Lester Albertson. The Corvallis newspaper reported: "A lovely lunch closed the afternoon."


If only reading the newspaper accounts, the club did more eating and playing games than sewing.

Friday, December 2, 2016

Did Grandfather Albertson Have a Car?

It was on November 28th when I wrote that my Grandfather Falk was listed on the database of Oregon motor vehicle registrations from 1911 to 1946.

But what about my Grandfather Albertson, Oran Jesse Albertson, who also lived in Oregon. I did a search for Albertson and Ancestry provided 214 results from that database. So I started looking at the pages of results with twenty entries per page. It was on the fourth page that I found him: O. J. Albertson of Rt. 1, Halsey, had registered a vehicle in January 1927. It was a 1923 Ford touring car.


This was almost six years later than my mother's father had registered a car. At the beginning of 1927 my father was nineteen years old. Now he had a car that he could use. Could that help him with girls?