When it comes to cookies, where
there is a will there is a way!
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[December 16, 2020]
Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without the …wait for it…COOKIES!
While this is not quite the way the song actually goes, for many
folks in Lincoln it is a fact. You can’t celebrate Christmas until
you’ve picked up a few dozen cookies for the Humane Society of Logan
County and the Lincoln Christian Church.
Though two separate events, both are held starting bright and early
on the same Saturday just a couple of weeks before Christmas each
year.
The annual cookie sale for the two entities was one of those events
that was threatened by the coronavirus, but as they say where there
is a will there is a way.
For those who have to have the cookies from the church, the way was
a drive through event hosted this past Saturday morning under the
awning at the church.
Drivers lined up early and by 8 a.m. there was a line in the church
driveway and out onto the street in front of the church. When
volunteers signaled that it was time, they drove one car at a time
under the canopy and placed their orders. The compromise this year
was that buyers could not do their own picking of cookies. None
seemed to mind as they order multiple boxes of cookies by the dozen.
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On the north end of town a similar scenario was going on in the
north parking lot of the Lincoln Masonic Lodge. The Humane Society
of Logan County had begun in November taking orders for boxes of
three dozen. Placing the order ahead of time guaranteed that buyers
would get the cookies they were desiring.
As in the past, there were also cookies, pies, and cakes available
on a first come first served basis for those who were willing to
take a chance and not place an order.
Both the church sale and the sale at HSLC rely on the baking talents
of their members and friends. At the HSLC, Nancy Schaub, who
coordinates the event along with Mick and Diane Turner and Ruth
Green, said that there were 50 bakers who prepared over 350 dozen
cookies, 30 pies and 14 pans of cinnamon rolls. She said that she
thought perhaps the sale was a bit smaller this year because of the
lack of options and the presence of covid, but still, the HSLC was
thankful for what they earned and thankful for all those who helped
get ready for the unconventional bake sale.
In years past at the HSLC shoppers could come in and select their
own cookies by the dozen. That was not permitted this year, but
again, no one seemed to mind. Schaub said that in the end, she
believed that the HSLC earned more than $3,500 from their efforts
this year.
It is good to see that the community will not be suffering from a
lack of sweets this Christmas thanks to the wonderful efforts of
Lincoln Christian Church and Humane Society of Logan County.
[Nila Smith] |