Friday, January 2, 2026
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Oriental Cabbage Salad

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I haven’t had turkey dinner yet, and I’m writing about using up the leftovers! The cabbage salad has been one of my favorites for a very long time I find it refreshing and unique, not to mention a rather healthy mixture for the days following the holidays. When I first had Oriental Cabbage Salad it was without the addition of chicken or turkey. Once you start adding the protein to the dish you’ll find you rather enjoy the addition.

I’ve used this recipe on road trips and picnics just to mention a couple of great uses of the salad. This year I’m serving it either with Thanksgiving dinner or the days following as a main entree. You will see my notes for using sugar substitutes in the dressing. Some might even reach for honey instead of the granulated sugar. I have to mention my sister, Judy, for showing me how great the salad is with the chicken or turkey addition. I had never enjoyed it this way until we met while teaching school.

One thing I do like to do is to wait to add the dry noodles until I’m ready to serve the salad, This way the salad stays a bit crunchier and the noodles don’t soften up quite so much. I remember the time I traveled with the salad. The dressing was in a pint jar, the noodles crunched and in a Ziploc bag, while the remaining salad ingredients were in a large Ziploc bag. A bit of fresh fruit and a sweet muffin quickly completes the meal.

Last week I celebrated our son’s marriage by honoring he and his fiancee, Paige, in the column. This week I can tell you the happy couple are on a warm and toasty honeymoon. Mom has been

sleeping for 2 days and I think I’m finally ready to hit the regular routine of life. I’m planning our delayed Thanksgiving Dinner, (Sunday) and getting ready to have my knee replaced. Believe it or not I can hardly wait! It will be my 2nd knee replacement.

The next few weeks are going to be chaotic and you’ll be tempted to grab fast food sandwiches and other not so healthy edibles. Pick up a salad pouch and a roasted chicken at the grocery store instead. Prepare a stuffed baked potato or breakfast for supper.

Have an outstanding week, and try not to overload yourselves with too much cooking! Happy Thanksgiving, The Covered Dish.

Oriental Chicken Cabbage Salad

1 bag shredded cabbage

1 package ramen chicken soup, includes the flavor packet

4 green onions finely chopped

½ cup sauteed slivered almonds

1 tablespoon sesame seeds roasted

1-2 tablespoons butter, salted or not-

1-2 cups chopped chicken breasts, cooked, of course-

½ cup oil

4 tablespoons sugar or substitutes work too.

3 tablespoons white vinegar or cider

½ teaspoon ground pepper

Saute the almonds and sesame seeds in the butter. Place the cabbage, green onions, almonds, chicken and sesame seeds together. In a large bowl. Crunch up the dry noodles to add last. Put the chicken soup flavor packet, oil, sugar, vinegar and pepper in a jar and shake until well blended. Pour over salad close to serving time and add the dry noodles. Enjoy.

JFK REMEMBERED 62 YEARS AFTER ASSASINATION

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Richard Shank
Columnist

 

ABC News is to be commended for a special broadcast aired November 24, two days following the 62nd anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. After watching the two-hour special, this viewer was no closer to solving the puzzle on who all were involved in the tragic event more than six decades ago. Perhaps, there are some happenings we are not to know the full story, including the 1937 disappearance of Aviatrix Amelia Earhart. 

I have found it fascinating to visit with a couple people who knew JFK, as he was affectionately called, to ask what he was really like. When JFK’s good friend Washington Post Executive Editor Ben Bradlee visited Hutchinson in 2001 for a speech at the Dillon Lecture Series, I inquired about his friendship with Kennedy. Bradlee responded although Kennedy was blessed with wealth, he was never into things and objects. Kennedy drove an Oldsmobile, and Bradlee did not remember him being a particularly good driver. 

Helen Thomas, the famed UPI White House correspondent, also a Dillon Lecturer, knew Kennedy and said no President had a better vision of what America should be than did JFK. 

I, for one, miss a President who had a genuine sense of humor like JFK who brought smiles and laughter to a nation waged in a Cold War with the Soviet Union.

 In a 1962 White House dinner for Nobel Laureates, Kennedy gazed across a room filled with honorees and said, “I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent and human knowledge that has ever been gathered together in the White House, with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone.” 

When a young man asked Kenned how he became a war hero, the President responded, “It was involuntary. They (the Japanese) sank my boat.” 

Commenting on the daily briefings regarding international issues, Kennedy said, “I do not think the intelligence reports are all that hot. Some days I get more out of the New York Times.”

During the 1960 campaign, Kennedy drew applause when he said, “Do you realize the responsibility I carry? I am the only person standing between Richard Nixon and the White House.” 

In 2015, while in Boston, we stopped by the Kennedy Presidential Library on the campus of the University of Massachusetts and it was deserving of the tour we received. Kennedy preferred the library be built on the Harvard University campus where he graduated, but it was not to be. A faction of Bostonians opposed the construction with protestations of creating traffic congestion in the area. Meanwhile, across town, the University of Massachusetts came to the table with an offer to provide 10 acres of prime real estate, and the family was only too happy to accept. I remain puzzled that Harvard turned down an opportunity to house the Kennedy Library, and assume there is more to the story. 

Based on Kennedy’s love of water and sailing, it seemed only natural his library should be built alongside Boston Harbor with a backdrop of the Atlantic Ocean. His sailboat Victura, a gift from his parents, is displayed outside. The library, an 11-story glass pavilion gives the visitor a panoramic view of the vast ocean beyond. 

Apparently, Kennedy and his staff kept good records, the library is a repository for 50 million pages of documents, 400,000 still photographs, 7.5 million feet of motion pictures , and 11,000 reels of audio recordings. 

His Presidency set in motion a series of initiatives, many of which survive to this day. Four months after assuming the presidency, Kennedy summoned the nation to send a man to the moon and return him safely to earth. Kennedy created the Peace Corps and in doing so sent thousands of Americans to developing nations to teach everything from agriculture to literacy. In doing so, Kennedy may have done more for American diplomacy than all the diplomats who have served in our nation’s history. 

A tax cut, initiated by Kennedy, and passed following his death, returned money to taxpayers and increased government revenue, something that has not been duplicated before or since. 

And, let us not forget Kennedy restored his predecessor Dwight D. Eisenhower to the rank of Five Star General, a fitting tribute to a man who spent a lifetime defending his country and its way of live. 

More books have been written about Kennedy than any  other President, excluding Abraham Lincoln. Only 4 of the 34 Presidents who preceded him knew Kennedy, and many  of the 11 who followed him tried to imitate his style and charisma, only to find out there was only one JFK. 

Speaking at the groundbreaking for the Kennedy Presidential Library in 1977, his brother Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy called JFK a universal man. “He could talk with a poet or prime minister, start an astronaut toward the moon, reach a black child in the south, throw a spiral pass, haul a sail and make a Russian blink,” Senator Kennedy said. 

Ronald Reagan had special words for Kennedy. “He seemed to grasp from the beginning that life is one fast moving train, and you have to jump aboard and hold on to your hat and relish the sweep as it rushes by,” Reagan said. 

Perhaps, Kennedy summed up his philosophy best in nine words in what some call his greatest quote. “No problem of human destiny is beyond human beings,” Kennedy said. 

 

JUST A LITTLE LIGHTA Train Story—Right Under My Nose

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By Dawn Phelps

 

I have lived in Miltonvale or nearby for many years—my first husband and I moved here in 1971.  A few years ago, my husband Tom pointed out some things to me that I never noticed before, things that I had driven by time after time, things Tom had known about since he was a little boy.

What Tom pointed out to me lies parallel to 24 Highway on the left side if you are driving from Clay Center or the right side if you are driving toward Clay Center.  The same “thing” can be seen from the gravel road that turns east right at the big curve by Tootleville Park, cutting diagonally through the field.

Once Tom pointed these “things” out to me, they were obvious.  It was like lights came on!  And from now on, I will watch for the signs of these “things” in the future as I drive east on Highway 24.  

What I am referring to is the old railroad bed for the Union Pacific railroad track that ran from Miltonvale to Clay Center.  At one time in history, Miltonvale was the end point of the railroad track.  

Miltonvale, which was almost named Tootleville for its founder Milton Tootle, was the east end of the track—the terminus—where the track ended in 1881.  That is where the trains turned around.

The first railroad line was the Kansas Central which was a narrow-gauge railroad.  The narrow tracks were later taken up and replaced with wider tracks.  The railroad was also extended westward to Concordia and beyond. 

Dick, Tom’s brother, used to hop the train with his friend Bill when they were little boys.  They took train rides to Concordia and back until the conductor became wise about what they were doing.  That ended their train-riding fun!

The Santa Fe railroad also began a route through Miltonvale, and today it is the only train that runs through the town.  Another thing Tom showed me was where the old Union Pacific railroad depot used to sit in years past, not far from the Coop building downtown.  The Santa Fe line also had its own railroad depot close to the Coop as well.

Later, the old Union Pacific depot was moved about three miles east of town by Paul Walker to 345 N. 280th Road.  That is where my first husband Ralph and I lived for many years.  The depot still has the old ticket counter in it, and the depot is listed on the historical railroad register even though lean-to sheds were added to the sides of the depot.

So, for years, I lived with a piece of Miltonvale history, the old depot, in my backyard while I lived in the country.  And for years, I have driven past the old railroad bed.  I just needed someone (Tom) to point out what I had been looking at but had not really seen.

The old Union Pacific railroad bed was always there—a train story–right under my nose. 

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Lovina Shares her Mother’s Column from 31 Years Ago

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For this column I’m going to share some excerpts from my mother Elizabeth Coblentz’s columns from November 1994. Joe and I lived in a house trailer across the driveway from Dad and Mom and had only daughter Elizabeth. 

It is Monday and such a nasty wash day. The wash is drying, but the rain made me take some bedding in, but now that the rain quit, I hung it back outside. So much being on the clothesline. I just hope it dries. It looks dark in the northwest sky again. We are drying some clothes on a rack inside in front of the Hitzer wood burning stove. Now would be good to throw the wash in a dryer but that’s life around here… no electricity. But I always think hanging the wash outside makes for such a fresher smell.

Sunday morning we had breakfast with daughter Lovina and Joe which is across the driveway from us in a house trailer. I must say it was an enjoyable morning. It was just like going out for breakfast. We had a good breakfast of fried eggs, fresh fried potatoes, bread buns and toast, ham, cheese, butter, jelly, coffee and rolls. We did the dishes and came back in our house. What a treat to not prepare breakfast in your own kitchen. At noon we had lunch guests: daughter Lovina and Joe and daughter, son Albert, Sarah Irene and family, and daughter Liz and Levi and family. In the p.m., daughter Leah, Paul and family gave us a visit. The family had an enjoyable day together. It’s always good to see the children come home. Was such a nice, sunshiny, warm day. 

My sciatica gave me another whirl last Wednesday which kept me from going to help get ready for the wedding of my niece. But at least I made it to the wedding. Such a painful backache when sciatica comes for a visit, but now I feel relief from it. It just strikes all at once. 

A cold morning with temperatures at 24 degrees this November 23, the day before Thanksgiving Day. Reckon the rest of the garden goodies look a droopy sight right now.  Had most of ours out of the garden but the lettuce was still so nice and kept growing. Had such nice fall weather. 

Thanksgiving Day has appeared on the calendar, and it is here already.  What are you all planning for the holiday?  We have no plans as yet of what we’ll do.  Although, as always, a stuffed turkey was put in the oven early this morning for dinner.  Thanksgiving dinner we usually think of turkey but some like chicken better, so at times we have both on the Thanksgiving menu.  Also, sweet potatoes, cranberry salad, pumpkin pie, pumpkin bread, and mashed potatoes and gravy are also on the list.  I am sure some of the children will stop in.

We have many things to be thankful for this 1994 Thanksgiving Day for the bounteous harvest, even if we had such dry weather and for the good health God has given us.  I often think how those Pilgrims of many, many years ago must’ve had many struggles.  We’ll never know the terrors they braved through.  Last Thanksgiving Day we had what you would call an enjoyable workday with a stuffed turkey on the menu.  Son Albert helped Ben and Joe plow our garden with our team of Belgian horses and plow and they were all here for dinner and then Ben helped Albert plow his garden. Good to have those gardens plowed in for the spring.  Then they hauled a couple loads of wood up from the woods which is badly needed for those woodstoves.  Some have their Christmas family gatherings on this holiday, and some choose this holiday for their wedding day.

I hope you enjoyed reading my mother’s column from 1994.  What great memories I have of the holidays spent together.  From our family to yours, have a Happy Thanksgiving and God bless!

 

Turkey Burgers

This is a wonderful way to use leftover turkey after a Thanksgiving feast – we finely chop the cooked meat in place of ground turkey.

1 pound ground turkey
2 cups cooked rice
¼ cup chopped onion
¼ cup ketchup
1 egg, beaten
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
½ cup ranch dressing (optional)
1 ½ teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
¼ teaspoon garlic powder

Combine the ingredients, mixing well.  Shape into 10 even patties.  Cook over medium-high heat in a hot skillet coated with cooking spray for 10-12 minutes per side.

Recipe from The Cherished Table by Lovina Eicher

 

Lovina’s Amish Kitchen is written by Lovina Eicher, Old Order Amish writer, cook, wife, and mother of eight. Her three cookbooks, The Cherished Table, The Essential Amish Cookbook, and Amish Family Recipes, are available wherever books are sold. Readers can write to Eicher at Lovina’s Amish Kitchen, PO Box 234, Sturgis, MI 49091 (please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a reply); or email [email protected] and your message will be passed on to her to read. She does not personally respond to emails.

 

New License Plates Are Here!

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Upgrade your License Plate and Make a Difference! Support Conservation and enjoy access to all Kansas State Parks with a Kansas Wildlife & Parks license plat

Why Choose a Kansas Wildlife & Parks Plate?
Support Conservation: $35 of your annual $50 fee goes directly to conservation efforts.
Access All Kansas State Parks: No daily permits needed! A $15 portion of your fee covers your annual state park vehicle pass.

Tax Deductible: Your $50 donation is tax-deductible.
Plates Available:
Deer: Supports wildlife conservation
Fish: Supports fisheries management
Bird: Supports non-game species conservation
Camping: Supports state park improvements
Cost:
First Year: $90 total ($40 one-time plate fee + $50 annually).
Renewal: $50 annually (plus regular registration fees).

Get Yours Today!
Visit your local County Treasurer’s office
Ask for a Kansas Wildlife & Parks plate.
Complete the steps and pay the fees.
Your new plate will be mailed to you!
Access All Kansas State Parks: No daily permits needed! A $15 portion of your fee covers your annual state park vehicle pass