Middletown offering dinner, history
and library activities
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[OCT.
14, 2003]
MIDDLETOWN
-- "Read all about it." The annual Knapp-Chesnut-Becker
"all-you-can-eat" turkey supper at the middle school in Middletown
is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 18, from 4 to 7 p.m. K-C-B is also
hosting a newspaper exhibit at the supper.
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The menu is as follows: turkey,
dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, cranberries,
assorted salads, rolls and butter, pie or cake, and beverages.
Donations are $7 for age 10 and above, $3.50 for ages 4 to 10 and
free through age 3.
A Lincoln College Museum exhibit
entitled "A Moment in Time" will be on display. The historical
exhibit is under the direction of Ron Keller and Paul Gleason --
both college instructors and museum personnel. A cross section of
newspapers from the 20th century will present news of major events
many viewers will recall from childhood or youth. This provides an
opportunity to see national news details that are omitted when the
material eventually makes it to American history textbooks but
appeared in the press at the time.
Personnel from the Knapp Library/Museum
also will display books, quilts and other memorabilia.
Eddie Dirks, a Menard County historian,
and his wife, Dorothy Jane (Allison), will display and sell copies
of "The Menard County Schools." Dirks and his wife were instrumental
in the book project.
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Bill and Phyllis Bryson,
representatives of the Logan County Genealogical and Historical
Society, will have displays, along with copies of the newly
published book on Logan County veterans, which will be for sale.
At the conclusion of the supper there
will be a 50-50 drawing. Donations are $1 each or six for $5. Donors
need not be present to win.
The turkey supper is a benefit for the
Knapp Library/Museum, "a dream come true." The library-museum at 101
S. Clinton St. in Middletown is housed in the oldest commercial
brick building in Logan County. The structure was built around 1840,
according to Judge Lawrence Stringer's "History of Logan County"
(1911), and was "an architectural gem on the prairie."
Proceeds of
the benefit will help provide a copy machine, cases for newspapers
and maps, a television set and other necessities for a modern
library. Patrons of the library may borrow books and other materials
free.
[News release]
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