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I used to get up on Saturday mornings and drive all the way to Snowville.  For breakfast at Mollie’s Café.  When gas was cheap and before the pandemic.  I decided to make a return visit this past weekend.  For decades, Millie’s was operated on by the grandmother of a friend.  His sister waited on tables.  She was a devout Minnesota Vikings fan, and we used to talk football as I ate my massive and delicious breakfast.  The grandmother passed away, and the sister found work at the Oneida County Sheriff’s Office.

Snowville has a population that hovers around 170 people, but there are three places where travelers can get a meal.  A friend told me a story several years ago about Friday night family dinners at Mollie’s.  His kids were attending BYU, and he lived in Buhl.  The kids would drive north, and their parents would drive south, and the family would have a reunion in Snowville. 

This is what real America is supposed to represent.  Families and these unique stops along our rural Interstates.  Each with its own flavor and motif.  Mollie’s has created memories for generations.

There’s new management.  The people there are still friendly and ensure coffee cups are filled.  There have been some changes to the menu.  I ordered an old American breakfast staple.  Home fries, eggs over easy, sausage, and sourdough toast.  It was more than filling. 

But, however, I’m not sure…

The toast was apparently stale before it was toasted.  It had some yellow streaks that may have been butter.  Home fries can be crispier.  Small details, but for a fellow who rarely gets out for breakfast, these are all important issues. 

I’m hopeful this was simply an aberration.  I genuinely want to go back.  I prefer spending my money on family operations versus the cookie-cutter corporate models.  I’ll visit Mollie’s again.  It’s like a Rockwell painting, and our culture needs the connection to better days.

Mollie's Has Served Travelers

The toast could have been better.

Credit Bill Colley.
Credit Bill Colley.
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Good Diners are an Oasis for the Soul

Generations have relaxed and filled up their stomachs.

Credit Bill Colley.
Credit Bill Colley.
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The Atmosphere is Relaxed

The staff is friendly.

Credit Bill Colley.
Credit Bill Colley.
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I Want the Owners to Succeed

There's a great legacy.

Credit Bill Colley.
Credit Bill Colley.
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LOOK: The most extreme temperatures in the history of every state

Stacker consulted 2021 data from the NOAA's State Climate Extremes Committee (SCEC) to illustrate the hottest and coldest temperatures ever recorded in each state. Each slide also reveals the all-time highest 24-hour precipitation record and all-time highest 24-hour snowfall.

Keep reading to find out individual state records in alphabetical order.

 

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