March 7 — Share a favorite recipe from your mother or grandmother’s kitchen. Why is this dish your favorite? If you don’t have one that’s been passed down, describe a favorite holiday or other meal you shared with your family.
I've been slowly sharing the family recipes from my mother and grandmother on Friday posts, so I'll not repeat myself here.
My grandmother LeMaster used to have the biggest meals when we would gather for Christmas time or Easter. I can remember the noodles and mashed potatoes - the noodles were always very thick, almost dumpling like. One dish that she made that I don't see much of any more was hominy. I'm pretty sure that my first exposure to it was at her house. Beef and noodles were another dish I can remember.
My grandmother Wright was the one who started me on enjoying cottage cheese. She liked to eat it with canned pineapple. I will eat it with either milk and sugar, or with pepper, I don't care for fruit in mine.
I know there are others but at the moment I'm drawing a blank.
Once again, in honor of National Women’s History Month, Lisa Alzo of The Accidental Genealogist blog presents Fearless Females: 31 Blogging Prompts to Celebrate Women’s History Month.
Monday, March 07, 2011
Fearless Females: Grandma's Kitchen
Labels:
Fearless Females,
LeMaster,
Wright
Sunday, March 06, 2011
Sunday's Obituary: Wilma Lucille LeMaster (1931)
Source: Commercial-Review, Portland, Indiana, December 9, 1931, page 1.
Wilma LeMaster Dies Yesterday
Wilma Lucille LeMaster, infant daughter of Chesley F. and Clara L. (Burkey) LeMaster, died about 1:30 o'clock Monday afternoon at the home, one-half mile west of Salamonia. Death was caused by an intestinal conditinon which followed a heavy cold.
The child was born October 6 of this year, being 2 months and 2 days of age. It is survived by the parents, and the following brothers and sister, Donald, 17, Doris, 15, Ralph, 9, and Dale, 4. She is also survived by the maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Burkey, of East Walnut street, this city, and the paternal grandfather, L.C. LeMaster, of Salamonia.
Funeral services will be conducted Thursday morning at 10:00 o'clock from the home of the parents, located on the old LeMaster homestead, one-half mile west of Salamonia. Interment will be made in the Salamonia cemetery.
Sunday’s Obituary – if you have obituaries of family members and ancestors, consider posting them along with other information about that person as part of Sunday’s Obituary. This is an ongoing series developed by Leslie Ann at Ancestors Live Here.
Black Sheep Sunday: Bandit Suspects' Plot For Escape Is Frustrated
Source: Pharos Tribune, Logansport, Indiana, April 7, 1925, page 11
BANDIT SUSPECTS' PLOT FOR ESCAPE IS FRUSTRATED
Kokomo, Ind., April 7 - Discovery of ten saws, concealed in the cells of Harry Pierpont and Thaddeus Skeer, held here on charges of looting the Southside bank, following their arrest in Detroit last week, frustrated their escape and probably a wholesale jail delivery. F.C. Hunington, Pinkerton operative, found the saws yesterday afternoon when the prisoners were being examined in city court. A thorough search of the entire jail failed to reval [sic] additional saws or tools for escape. One bar in Skeer's cell had been severed.
Homer Miller, prosecuting attorney, is investigating today in an effort to determine how the saws were smuggled into the jail.
A cordon of police guards, heavily armed, has been thrown around the jail in apprehension that gangsters may attempt to release the prisoners. Pierpont is said to have boasted when captured in Detroit that he would never face trial.
Miss Louise Brunner of Fort Wayne, whose unconcious indiscretion furnished police with the clue that led to the arrest of the alleged bandits, has been released on bond and has returned to the home of her mother.
Police deny that Skeer, said to be the lover of Miss Brunner, confessed to the Kokomo holdup to save his sweetheart, whom he feared was to be prosecuted. In this confession it is alleged that Skeer also implicated Pierpont in the Kokomo, Noblesville, Upland and Marion bank robberies, together with Everett Bridgewater, who is still at large.
The accused men will be given a preliminary hearing in city court Thursday.
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Harry PIERPONT (1902-1934), was my maternal 2nd cousin twice removed. Later an associate of John Dillinger, Harry was finally executed by the State of Ohio. This is one of the articles I've discovered in documenting his criminal history.
Black Sheep Sunday – create a post with the main focus being an ancestor with a “shaded past.” Bring out your ne’er-do-wells, your cads, your black widows, your horse thieves and tell their stories. And don’t forget to check out the International Black Sheep Society of Genealogists (IBSSG). This is an ongoing series at GeneaBloggers.
Labels:
Black Sheep Sunday,
Bridgewater,
Brunner,
Pierpont,
Skeer
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