This cook book was created by the Fruit Dispatch Company in 1942. It contains fifty-six different banana recipes as well as illustrations and "how-to-do-its." Recipes include entrees, breads, desserts, milkshakes, sauces and toppings, and salads.
An index of Appalachia related articles published in the Louisville Courier-Journal. The articles cover a broad range of topics, focusing specifically on their application in Appalachia; topics include literacy, family structure, agriculture, and...
This pamphlet was created by home economist Martha Logan circa 1950 to advertise Swift'ning Make-Your-Own-Mix, a shortening product of Swift & Company. It includes thirty recipes incorporating this ingredient, and serves as a preview to the cook...
Rumford Sugarless Recipes is a pamphlet created by Rumford Chemical Works in 1944. It includes seven sugar-free recipes using Rumford Baking Powder, and serves as a preview to the Rumford Complete Cook Book, which contains twenty sugar-free recipes.
This pamphlet was created by Rumford Chemical Works in 1946. It contains twenty recipes for using alum-free Rumford Baking Powder in biscuits, muffins, cookies, cakes and frostings. It serves as a preview to the Rumford Complete Cook Book, which...
Topics include the importance of improved rural school houses, Mountain feuds, some celebrations of the Lincoln Centennial, and "Hardshell" Baptists. (31 pages)
Topics include Appalachia during the Civil War, an address by Theodore Roosevelt regarding Berea College, and a lengthy solicitation from President Frost. (33 pages)
Topics include Mountain Types, Mountain Homespun (weaving), addresses given by President Frost and others at the Berea meeting at the Old South Church, and a biographical sketch of John G. Fee. (21 pages)
Topics include the philanthropy of Dr. Pearsons, Berea's extension work in counties where feuds are prevalent, the Annual Report to Donors, and Berea's tax exempt status. (32 pages)
This inaugural 37-page issue sets the tone for the issues that will follow, generally including 3 or 4 articles about the people of the region or the college and short contributions found variously under the headings of Personal Testimony, Items,...
Topics include Appalachian America, an account of a debate whether the earth is flat or round, and an introduction to some of Berea's teachers. (35 pages)
The main item in this issue is an illustration-rich 22-page article, "The Cumberland Mountains in the Struggle for Freedom" by Rev. William E. Barton. (27 pages)
Articles include Hymns of the Slave and Freedman, and address by then Professor Woodrow Wilson on behalf of Berea College, and University Extension work in the Southern mountains. (32 pages)