Very Cool....
....And interesting cookbook.
What's fun to see is all the different foods that were available in Kansas at the time; in the days of really well-developed rail networks, the good ladies of Topeka had access to asparagus, lettuce, bananas, pineapple and halibut, among other perishables not commonly raised in Western cities of the time.
Those women were not unadventurous, either: Spaghetti is one of the offerings, a recipe for mayonnaise is given, and you could have a cheese souffle if you wanted.
In reading the recipes, certain names appear over and over, and correlating the recipes with the contributor sometimes allows one to play the game of guessing what the lady in question was like, though I confess some of my imaginations have no source in the cookbook. I fancy that Mrs. Pius Voelker never wasted a morsel of food, complained a lot about her digestion and regaled her luncheon buddies with endless tales of obstetrics gone wrong. Kate Montague sounds like a lively and pretty, but completely proper young matron - she would never snap her garter at a traveling salesman, but he'd wish to Heaven she would. Oleita Stark and Eda Stark sound as if they might have been sisters - Oleita the glamorous one, Eda the good housewife. Mrs. A.F. DeBacker was, presumably, a lady of Position and Means - her and her fancy-Dan veal loaf!
Thanks for linking this!