HOUSE CALL: LOSING WEIGHT | 3 READER ESSAY: DAY IN THE LIFE OF A HEALTH AIDE | 5
golden
TIMES A monthly magazine for the region’s seniors
FEB. 5, 2018 / VOL. 28, NO. 2
Face the music and dance with Lewiston’s Yvonne Carrie / 10-14
SONG & DANCE
Birthday index:
INDEX:
Page 7 ............................. Donna Kerr Lila DeVault Eleanor Dill Shirley Seeley
AARP Foundation offers free tax help ...................................... 15
DON’T GET BURNED MARCH BIRTHDAY CELEBRANTS: Send your information to Golden Times by 5 p.m. Feb. 15.
Birthdays ......................................................................................7 Briefs ........................................................................................ 8-9 Crossword / solution .............................................................19/14 Cryptofun .................................................................................... 9 House Call: Maintaining a healthy weight ................................. 3 Meeting calendar ..................................................................... 8-9 Senior meal menus / Meals on Wheels ................................ 17/18 Senior meal sites list ..................................................................16
Sudoku / solution .................................................................16/15 16/15 Volunteer Opportunities ............................................................ 6 MUSIC BY THE PARADONS Lewiston Elks Lodge 3444 Country Club Drive 6-8 p.m. Dinner p 6-10 p.m. Music
Tickets available at the Elks Lodge office
Word scramble ...........................................................................16 16 Word search / solution ........................................................... 4/16
EDITOR: Julie Breslin, (208) 848-2241 / jbreslin@lmtribune.com GOLDEN TIMES P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501 goldentimes@Lmtribune.com
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Is physical therapy necessary after acute ankle sprain? Ankle sprains are a common injury that impact thousands of people every day. One statistic would suggest that Levi Frasier, ankle sprains impact as many as 35,000 people per day in the United States. PT The major concern with ankle sprain is if left untreated it may lead to ongoing symptoms and resultant disability. The incidence of injuring the same ankle a second time is as high as 20% within 3 years after the initial sprain. Physical therapy may assist in recovery of function influencing strength, mobility and balance with therapeutic exercise. Physical therapists are also trained to address limitations associated with swelling, limited joint motion and pain. With a proper evaluation and development of a treatment plan the rehabilitation process can then be managed independently. Physical therapy can be a valuable resource to manage your injury effectively and prevent re-injury. Please contact the Institute of Physical therapy for assistance with your ankle injury in relieving pain and restoring function.
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ON THE COVER: This portrait shot of Yvonne Carrie of Lewiston is by Shelly Romine. Read her story on Pages 10-14.
Yvonne Carrie has been there, done that, got the tiara ........10-14 10-14
Make that retirement move you have been talking about. Apartments Available!
TIMES
Social Security: Tools for determining retirement age ............. 15 Reader Essay: A day in the life of a home health aide ................55
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
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Relieving Pain – Restoring Function www.instituteofphysicaltherapy.com
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Why you shouldn’t sweat weight-loss plateaus House Call House Call is an occasional column written by various regional health-care providers. Medical professionals interested in contributing to House Call may contact Golden Times editor Julie Breslin at jbreslin@ lmtribune.com or (208) 8482241.
M
ost people who have lost weight tissue, it looks like nothing happened by making nutritional changes according to the scale, even though have had the experience of that person knows his or her body has weight loss coming to a standstill. At this changed. A better gauge to use is a tape point, it is common to do one of measure to follow waist, hip and two things: Some people decide chest circumference, observing to cut calories further and are how clothes fit or having a body very frustrated when this has composition test. little to no effect. Or more often, True plateaus typically people get discouraged and think show up around the six- to “This isn’t working anymore,� nine-month mark and are to be go back to the unhealthy foods expected. In fact, these plateaus they were previously eating and have occurred in 100 percent regain the weight they lost. House Call of the patients I have moniIt seems like a Catch-22. So tored. The brain controls when what should a person do to suca plateau arrives and how long cessfully navigate a weight loss it lasts. The area of the brain plateau? responsible for monitoring how It is important to clarify that much energy storage is availit is a myth that a person should able (fat tissue) decides that too lose weight at the rate of 1 to 2 pounds a much fat has been lost. The long-term week every week. A person might lose messenger relaying this information that amount of weight on average over from fat tissue, called leptin, decreases. time, but weight loss is not a linear pro- The brain reacts as though the person cess. It can fluctuate significantly from is starving, and it takes measures to week to week. It is common (and normake sure that doesn’t happen. This mal) to lose more weight initially and is a helpful response if food is scarce, then have it slow down. Consequently, but unnecessary in our current state of not losing any weight for a week or two plentiful food. is not a plateau. During plateaus, thyroid hormone Also, sometimes scale weight doesn’t production decreases. Basal metabolic accurately represent what is happening rates slow down. This means exercise in the body. If a person gains a pound during a plateau will not burn as many of muscle and loses a pound of fat calories is it did before or after the pla-
Rayme Geidl
Turning Age 65 soon?
teau. Signals from the brain and body meant to make us feel full do not work as well. The good news is these changes are temporary; but they last longer than most people expect. It is not uncommon for it to take as many as three months before the brain determines there is not a starvation problem. Most of the time, the answer is to be patient, keeping up the healthy nutritional habits that have been established. When a person cuts back calories during a plateau, the measures the brain takes to prevent starvation become even stronger, which usually results in feeling very hungry and miserable. If after a month or two, things truly aren’t changing, this can sometimes indicate an underlying metabolic or hormonal problem that needs to be addressed. A few inexpensive blood tests can determine if a blood sugar or insulin problem is interfering with progress. So don’t give up if your weight loss seems to be stalled. I tell my patients to celebrate plateaus when they arrive, as they mark an important step in the process that no one gets to skip. The key is committing to waiting out the brain’s powerful response to fat loss. ——— Geidl practices at Northwest Metabolic Medicine at 505 S. Mountain View Road, Suite No. 3 in Moscow. She may be reached at nwmetabolic.com or (208) 301-7896.
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Quick Trip is a Golden Times feature showcasing readers’ vacation memories. Readers 55 or older who would like to participate may send up to five photos of a recent trip with very brief (this is a quick trip, after all) photo captions and details on these seven categories: Who went (with ages and cities of residence), Where, When, Worst Memory, Best Memory, Top Stop and Overall Trip Rating (five stars being the best). Electronic submissions are preferred to goldentimes@lmtribune.com, but print photos and information may be mailed to Golden Times at Lewiston Tribune, P.O. Box 956, Lewiston, ID 83501. Questions may be directed to Golden Times editor Julie Breslin at (208) 848-2241. Deadline for the March edition is 5 p.m. Feb. 15. M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
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Wednesday, February 14, 2018 MUSIC BY THE PARADONS
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REHABILITATION â&#x20AC;¢ In-Patient n-Patient and OutOut-Patient Patient
Lewiston Elks Lodge pê3444 Country Club Drive 6-8 p.m. Dinner p 6-10 p.m. Music Tickets available at the Elks Lodge office MOND A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
PART IV
A day in the life of a home health aide F
or my fourth visit, I had to really be careful. This client had no control over her actions, as her brain had been invaded by the deadly Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. This is a disease caused by prions that are transmitted by various means. El Dorado County (Calif.) had 10 cases at once, and two of those were mine. At the time, all known cases were coming from one eye surgeon in the Sacramento area. Therefore, it was believed that it was caused by improperly cleaned instruments used during eye surgery. Since then, it has been found to be transmittable by several different means, such as eating the brains of infected animals and people. In New Guinea, it was customary to eat one’s ancestors, for it was thought that by doing so, all of the knowledge and the skills of the ancestor would be passed on to the relatives. The people I cared for only lasted for three months, but those three months were terrible. The thing that made this so dangerous for me was the fact that this disease causes paranoia. Their greatest fear was of being bathed, especially the shower. I solved this by giving good bed baths. A home health aide has to protect herself. It was my job to bathe, shampoo, brush teeth, dress them, clean the sheets and everything else needed. Creutzfeldt-Jakob sufferers’ brains are seething with contagious prions, and if they bite anyone, they can transmit them through their saliva. I always made prayer an important part of each visit, and while driving to patients’ homes, I pray for them, and also pray that I might be inspired as to how to handle each situation. It would never even occur to me to turn down any assignment, no matter the danger.
After praying about Ella, it came to mind that she might calm down if I hummed little tunes, while caring for her. I must admit I have a head full of songs most of the time, and they just come out of my mouth without me noticing. I had sung little songs to people with severe dementia and it worked, so why not Ella? Her husband had informed me that whenever he tried to put her into the shower she became hysterical and violent; she had bitten him several time. (I wondered how much longer he had before the disease was made manifest in him.) I noticed a big mirror with builtin vanity, so I sat Ella in front of it, where she became mesmerized with her own image. Using dishpans of warm water I began washing her hair, then bathing her by removing just a part of her clothing a piece at a time and covering her with a towel. I have learned many ways to bathe people. All this time, I had worked from behind her, so as to keep her focused on her image in the mirror. All the while, I sang little children’s songs such as, “Popcorn Popping on the Apricot Tree.” She began smiling and tried to sing along. I switched to “Yankee Doodle Dandy” and she began singing along, smiling broadly. All the while, my hands were flying, getting the job done. Her husband peeked around the corner, and he began to smile. Soon she was bathed and dressed, and the bedding changed. The job had gone well. This continued for a few short weeks until she had passed away, and I never was bitten.
Reader Essays
HELEN JONUTZ worked for decades as a certified nurse assistant and home health aide in California. She has changed names and case details in her essay, which will run in installments over the next few issues of Golden Times, to protect patient privacy. She has an associate degree in English and a bachelor’s degree in general education and humanities from Lewis-Clark State College. She was a Boy Scout leader for 61 years and is a repeat Senior Games medalist, winning Athlete of the Year in 2014. Regarding her work as a health aide, Jonutz writes: “I like to get into the heart of the individual, the psychology, the comfort a truly loving caregiver … can bring to persons suffering from cancer, stroke, AIDS, emphesema, etc., can bring. The three installments in this series can be found online at lmtribune.com by clicking on the “Special Pubs” tab and selecting the October, November and January editions.
BY
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Readers are invited to share essays of 600 or fewer words on monthly themes. Staff will choose the best for publication. The theme for March is “Luck of the Irish.” But don’t feel bound by that if inspiration strikes in another direction. The deadline is 5 p.m. Feb. 15. Anyone 55 or older in the readership area may submit one essay per month. Electronic submissions are preferred at goldentimes@lmtribune. com. Essays may also be directed to the Tribune office at 505 Capital St., Lewiston, ID 83501. Entries must include the writer’s name, age, city of residence and contact information. Golden Times edits submissions for grammar, factual errors and to conform with Associated Press style. Questions may be directed to Golden Times editor Julie Breslin at jbreslin @lmtribune.com or (208) 848-2241.
To be continued in the March edition of Golden Times … — Helen Jonutz, 91, Lewiston
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Vo lu n t eer O pportunities Disability Action Center-NW Inc. is a l Project Warm-Up: Join a small group nonprofit organization that assists peoof volunteers to knit, crochet or weave ple with disabilities to live indepenfrom 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Wednesdays. The dently. It offers a variety of services hats, scarves, mittens and lap robes from peer-to-peer independent living created will be donated to more than 30 support, medical equipment exchange nonprofit agencies in the fall. Yarn is and durable medical goods exchanges, provided. Yarn also is needed; see the help with self-advocacy and access to story on Page 8. assistive technology. Contact person is l Quilters group needs volunteers to Mellowdee Brooks at (208) 746help tie quilts on Tuesdays and 9033 or mbrooks@dacnw.org. Thursdays. Need a hand? l The Idaho State Veterans Home Area residents with disabilities needs people willing to read, play who could benefit from the sergames, plan activities and/or just vices listed above are invited socialize with residents. to contact the Disability Action l The State Health Insurance Center-NW. Benefit Advisors (SHIBA) proLend a hand gram needs volunteers to assist The Disability Action Center-NW local seniors with Medicare quesInc. needs a volunteer receptions. Training is provided. tionist in its Lewiston office l A tax aide program offers free Volunteer to answer phones, greet and Opportunites federal and state income tax direct visitors and perform preparation to seniors and lowis a free public service pubvarious clerical duties. Hours to middle-income people. Volunlished monthly are flexible. teers are needed to prepare taxes in the Golden and greet clients. Free training is Times. Its goal provided. is to connect Lend a hand l A food bank needs a team area volunteers Valley Meals on Wheels, which leader to oversee groups of with folks in our provides daily noontime meals volunteers. The leader will work communities to seniors, home-bound and with food bank staff, provide oriwho need their special-needs clients in the entation and supervise projects. services. Lewiston-Clarkston Valley, l A nonprofit organization needs is in need of volunteer drivers. Driva receptionist. General knowledge of ers can choose how often to help out computers and other office equipment — one day a week, one day a month, or is helpful but not required. whenever their schedules allow. More l A local hospital has volunteer positions information is available at (208) 799available at the front lobby information 5767 or valleymeals@aol.com or at the desk, in admissions, day surgery waitoffice, located on the second floor of St. ing rooms and the hospital gift shop. Joseph Regional Medical Center, 415 Sixth St., Lewiston, from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily. Lend a hand CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate) is a national association in need Lend a hand of volunteers. CASA advocates help The WA-ID Volunteer Center, located abused or neglected children who have in the Lewiston Community Center been removed from their homes. Trainat 1424 Main St., provides individuing is provided. The regional office can alized volunteer opportunities for be contacted at jlouisecasa@gmail.com those wishing to serve in Lewiston, or (208) 746-3378. Clarkston, Asotin, Pomeroy, Moscow and the Orofino area. Information and other volunteer openings are available Lend a hand www.waidvolunteercenter.org or (208) Interlink provides volunteers to enable 746-7787. Pressing volunteer needs this elders and those with disabilities to month include: live independently in their own homes. l A senior meal provider needs a substitute The office is located at 817A Sixth St., meal delivery driver. A valid driver’s Clarkston; office hours are 9 a.m. to 4 license and auto insurance are required. p.m. Monday through Thursday. The Kitchen helpers also are needed. phone number is (509) 751-9143. Voll America Reads needs reading tutors unteer applications are online at www. to help students become proficient interlinkvolunteers.org. readers. Volunteers need to be able to ——— commit to at least an hour a week for To submit Volunteer Opportunities items: the school year. Golden Times publishes Volunteer Opportunities in l Food banks need help stocking shelves, the Lewiston-Clarkston Valley monthly as a free public staffing front counters, boxing and service. Area agencies who wish to take part may send distributing food. Current need is for information to goldentimes@lmtribune or Golden Monday through Friday. Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501. All submissions l A nonprofit thrift store needs people to are edited for brevity and clarity, and will run as space work as cashiers and on the sales floor allows. Questions may be directed to editor Julie and to do general cleaning, pricing and Breslin at jbreslin@lmtribune.com or (208) 848-2241. other tasks needed. Deadline for the March edition is 5 p.m. Feb. 15.
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Birthdays > Feb. 10
Donna Kerr, 82
Eleanor Dill, 90
Donna Kerr of Lewiston was born in 1936 in Orofino, where she attended school through high school. On Sept. 25, 1954, at age 18, Donna married Art Donohue. They had four children â&#x20AC;&#x201D; one of whom died â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and one grandson. Besides being a wonderful mother, Donna worked as a telephone operator and later as a typist for a probate judge. Favorite pastimes include camping trips her family took each year, crocheting, cooking and baking. Her cookie jar was always full, and she could bake any kind of pie you wanted. Donna will be honored at a 2:30 p.m. celebration Feb. 19 at Wedgewood Terrace, 2114 Vineyard Ave., along with other birthday celebrants. The public is welcome to attend; reservations are requested by calling (208) 743-4545.
Eleanor Dill of Lewiston was born at home to Richard and Blanche Hartman Hall in 1928 in Winchester, her hometown until 2016. Eleanor married Douglas Dill in 1947 and became a farm wife near Woodside until they moved closer to town in 1958. Four children were born to them during that time. When Doug died in 1989, Eleanor moved back to Winchester and joined the morning coffee group, accessed the library and spent more time with family and friends. She loved all yard work, flowers and caring for her well-used birdbath in the summer. Every winter, she watched dozens of deer and turkey feed in the neighborâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s yard. Eleanor hates cold weather and snow, so she especially loved her cruise to Mexico and her Hawaiian vacations. Before dementia robbed her of her skills, she made many lovely quilts and embroidered pillowcases. Eleanor has five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. She lives at Cascadiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Kindred Transitional Care and Rehabilitation.
Lila DeVault, 94 Lila DeVault of Lewiston was born in 1924 in Casper, Wyo., the third daughter of Arthur and Liela Hirengen. Her family moved to Lewiston in 1938, and Lila attended Lewis Clark Training School her ninth-grade year. She then went on to Lewiston High School. In 1942, she and Lee Card were married. They had three sons â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Rick, Dale and Leonard â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and one daughter, Karyl Lynsdorff. In 1974, she married Everret DeVault. They enjoyed spending winters in Yuma, Ariz., in their motorhome. Lila worked at Omark, then moved on to being â&#x20AC;&#x153;Your Lady Painters,â&#x20AC;? doing interior painting in peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s homes. She is an excellent seamstress. She made four wedding dresses, along with bridesmaidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; attire. She also made American Girl Doll clothes.
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> Feb. 10 Shirley Seeley, 80 Shirley Seeley was born in 1938 to George and Kathryn Schlader in the Burnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospital in Orofino, the town where she still lives. Shirley spent her 12 years of schooling in the same building, graduating in 1956. She and Gerald â&#x20AC;&#x153;Budâ&#x20AC;? Seeley were married Sept. 21, 1957, in Orofino. Bud died July 4, 2009. Shirley is proud of having lived in Clearwater County all of her life, in the two towns of Headquarters and Orofino. She has five children, seven grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Grandson Brad Huffman is deceased. Shirley and friend Guy Jurgens are active in the Orofino Senior Citizens organization.
To submit birthdays: Birthday announcements starting at age 70 and every year after will be accepted for free publication in the month of the birthday only. Length limit is 200 words. All submissions must include the name and contact information of the person submitting information. Recent photos are welcome â&#x20AC;&#x201D; please no dated pictures. To have photos returned, please include a stamped, selfaddressed envelope. Submissions may be sent to goldentimes@lmtribune.com or Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501. Questions may be directed to editor Julie Breslin at jbreslin@lmtribune. com or (208) 848-2241. March birthday announcements must be received by 5 p.m. Feb. 15. M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
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Briefs Project Warm Up needs yarn donations
AARP offers smart driver courses
A local volunteer group that makes coldweather items for the less-fortunate needs yarn. The group creates hats, scarves and lap blankets that are donated each fall to more than 30 area nonprofit agencies for distribution. Yarn donations can be dropped off at the WA-ID Volunteer Center, 1424 Main St., Lewiston. The center notes it is unable to accept wool yarn. More information on this and other donation and volunteer opportunities is available at (208) 746-7787, www.waidvolunteercenter. org or www.facebook.com/waidvolunteercenter, or check out the Volunteer Opportunities list on Page 6.
AARP is offering driving safety classes in February in Lewiston and in March in Lapwai and Moscow. The two-day sessions are 8:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Idaho and Washington drivers 55 and older who complete the course may be eligible for a three-year insurance discount. Idaho drivers of any age who complete the course may be eligible for a reduction in their traffic law violation count. Cost is $15 for AARP members and $20 for nonmembers. Early registration is strongly recommended by calling the course instructor. Planned sessions are: l Feb. 15-16 at CrossPoint Alliance Church, 1330 Powers Ave., Lewiston with Kay Gaines, (208) 816-3450 l March 15-16 at the Mimiipuu Health Center, 111 Bever Grade, Lapwai with Lucinda Simpson, (208) 791-5025 l March 20-21 at Good Samaritan Moscow Village, 640 N. Eisenhower St., Moscow with Elaine Broyles, (208) 883-8612.
Lewiston Parks & Rec plans jaunts Residents 50 and older are eligible to take part in trips being planned by the Lewiston Parks and Recreation Department. All trips begin at the Lewiston Community Center, 1424 Main St. Registration is required and can be completed at the Parks and Rec office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays; by calling (208) 746-2313; or online at www. cityoflewiston.org/parksandrec. Monthly Lunches: Explore local and regional eateries on the first Friday of every month. Cost: $15 per person covers transportation but not meals. l March 1: Palouse Caboose in Palouse is known for its barbecue. Registration deadline: Feb. 26 Other trips: l â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Sound of Musicâ&#x20AC;?: The beloved musical will be performed at the INB Performing Arts Center in Spokane; all ages are welcome. Departure time: 2:30 p.m. March 24. Registration deadline: Feb. 28 Cost: $135 per person covers ticket and transportation. l Tulip Festival: This weekend tour to the Skagit Valley will visit â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tulip Townâ&#x20AC;? and the RoozenGaarde garden. Departure: April 13, returning April 15. Registration deadline: March 1. Cost: $375 covers transportation, admissions and a double-occupancy motel room.
Classes at the Parks & Rec Residents 50 and older are eligible to take part in these classes at the Lewiston Community Center, 1424 Main St. Registration is required and can be completed at the Parks and Rec office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays; by calling (208) 746-2313; or online at www.cityoflewiston.org/parksandrec. l Lunch-time chair yoga: This is an energetic and fluid class, introducing participants to all-inclusive yoga techniques that can be used anywhere. No previous yoga experience or materials are required. When: 12:20 to 1 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays Feb. 20 to March 15 (session 4) and March 27 to April 19 (session 5). Cost: $50/person or $45/person with a friend. Registration deadline: Feb. 13 (session 4) and March 20 (session 5). l Tai chi: Tai chi is a series of 20 gentle, whole-body movements. Ten movements will be taught in each six-week session. When: 11 a.m. to noon Fridays, March 2 to April 6 (session 4) and April 20 to May 25 (session
5). Cost: $50 for each individual, $45 with a friend, and $10 per drop-in class. Registration deadline: Feb. 23 (session 4) and April 13 (session 5). l Low-impact exercise class: This 10-week exercise program is designed to improve balance, flexibility and strength. When: 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays, March 26 to May 31. Cost: $20 per person per session. Registration deadline: March 26.
Weekly events at the Parks & Rec Regular weekly activities at the Lewiston Parks and Recreation Department include: l Line dancing: 10 a.m. Mondays and Thursdays l Pinochle: 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays l Painting group: noon Thursdays l Bridge: noon Fridays l Senior lunches: Noon Mondays and Tuesdays, and 11:30 a.m. Wednesdays. Suggested donation: $4 per senior and $5 per non-senior guest. Senior Nutrition Program home-delivery meal options are available seven days a week: (208) 743-6983. All activities are open to Lewiston-Clarkston residents 50 and older and are held at the community center at the Lewiston Community Center, 1424 Main St., www.cityoflewiston. org/parksandrec or (208) 746-2313.
Valley Community Center offers activities Activities offered at the Valley Community Center, 549 Fifth St., Clarkston, include: l Foot care: By appointment Mondays, (509) 330-1857, and Wednesdays, (208) 743-1459; call for cost l Painting class: Noon to 3:30 p.m. Mondays l Fitness class: 10:15 to 11:15 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays l Pinochle: 12:30 to 3 p.m. Tuesdays and Fridays l Line dancing: 10:15 to 11:15 a.m. Wednesdays l Blood pressure checks: 11:30 a.m. Thursdays l Bridge: 12:30 to 4 p.m. Thursdays; 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays. l Senior meals: Noon Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays at VCC and Asotin Methodist Church, 313 Second St., Asotin.
Meetings 25% off 2 months following your move-in! Your Retirement Apartment Padded carpets, kitchenettes, 3 meals per day, refreshment & snack bar, expanded CableOne package, Wi-Fi & telephone service, weekly housekeeping and a maintenance free environment. Your Private Assisted Living Apartment Carpets, 3 meals per day, refreshment & snack bar, expanded Cable One package, Wi-Fi, weekly housekeeping, maintenance free environment. Nursing assistance with daily activities. Telephone services are provided to all private pay residents. You can arrange a tour by calling (509) 758-5260 and enjoy a free lunch on us.
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THURSDAYS: Weight Watchers, 5 to 7 p.m., Valley Community Center, 549 Fifth St., Clarkston Fridays and Saturdays: Weight Watchers, 8 to 10 a.m., VCC Feb. 14: VCC board meeting, 9 a.m., VCC Feb. 17: Sons of Norway, 11:30 a.m., VCC Feb. 20: 6th Street Senior Center board and membership meeting, 9 a.m., at the center, 832 Sixth St., Clarkston Feb. 21: Lewiston City Library board meeting, 5 p.m., library, 411 D St. MOND A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
Asotin County Library plans activities The Asotin County Library has a handful of free adult events planned for this month: Holiday closure: Presidents Day, Feb. 19 Book Night @ your library: Discuss “The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry” by Gabrielle Zevin; 7 to 8:30 p.m. Feb. 22. The Job & Career Catalyst Center: Open 2 to 5 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays and 1 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Tech help: With Robert McDonald, 10 a.m. to noon Saturdays. Activities are at the downtown branch of the Asotin County Library at 417 Sycamore St., Clarkston, (509) 758-5454. The Heights branch is at 2036 Fourth Ave., Clarkston, (509) 758-4601; and the Asotin branch is at 215 Second St., Asotin, (509) 243-6010.
Board and membership meeting: 9 a.m. Feb. 20 Coffee and cookies: 10 a.m. to noon Monday through Friday Music: 10 to 11:30 a.m. Wednesdays Dancing: 7 to 10 p.m. Thursdays and Saturdays, $5. ——— TO SUBMIT BRIEFS: Groups and organizations may submit event information pertaining to seniors in the region for free publication in the monthly Golden Times magazine. All submissions are subject to editing and space restraints and must include the name and phone number of the person submitting the information. Questions may be directed to editor Julie Breslin at jbreslin@lmtribune.com or (208) 848-2241. Submissions may be sent to goldentimes@lmtribune.com or Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501. Information for the March issue must be received by 5 p.m. Feb. 15.
Each number corresponds to a letter. Solve the code related to ...
BAKING: (Hint: 7 = E)
CRAFTS: (Hint: 13 = B)
Lewiston library schedules events
M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
WEDDINGS: (Hint: 8 = E)
ORGANIZATION: (Hint: 15 = L)
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th Answers: BAKING: measure, sift,12 oven, dessert; CRAFTS: yarn, paper, 2341 $YH &ODUNVWRQ +HLJKWV glue, hobby; HEALTH: fitness, gym, exercise, bride, When it’sdiet; timeWEDDINGS: to move... groom, reception, ceremony Come Home!™ 523110B-18
ORGANIZATION: (Hint: 15 = L)
FEB. 26: Seaport Quilters, 7 to 9 p.m.., VCC ——— SUBMIT MEETING INFORMATION: Golden Times publishes Meetings Calendar monthly as a free public service. Submissions must include the organization’s name, meeting date, time and place and a contact name and phone number. Information may be sent to goldentimes@lmtribune. com or Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501. The deadline for the March edition is 5 p.m. Feb. 15.
MARRIED 70 YEARS
HEALTH: (Hint: 24 = E)
Answers: BAKING: measure, sift, oven, dessert; CRAFTS: yarn, paper, glue, hobby; HEALTH: fitness, gym, exercise, diet; WEDDINGS: bride, groom, reception, ceremony
C A L ENDAR
you or a couple you know is closing in on 70 years of marriage, Golden Times wants to know about it. Couples celebrating their Platinum Jubilee are invited to share their stories. We’ll try to run your love story, along with a wedding portrait and current photo, in the Golden Times edition that corresponds to your anniversary month. Here’s what we need: A brief synopsis of how you met, your lives together and, most importantly, how you managed to stay together all this time. Submissions should be 500 or fewer words as told by the couple, please. Text and photos submitted by email are preferred and may be sent to goldentimes@lmtribune. com. Paper copies may be delivered to the Lewiston Tribune office at 505 Capital Street or mailed to P.O. Box P.O. Box 956, Lewiston, ID 83501. Questions may be directed to Golden Times editor Julie Breslin at (208) 848-2241. Deadline for the March edition is 5 p.m. Feb. 15.
Answers: BAKING: measure, sift, oven, dessert Answers: CRAFTS: yarn, paper, glue, hobby Answers: HEALTH: fitness, gym, exercise, diet Answers: WEDDINGS: bride, groom, reception, ceremony Answers: ORGANIZATION: folder, sorting, closet, cull
Activities planned at the center, 832 Sixth St. in Clarkston, (509) 758-6872, include: Foot care: 9:30 a.m. Feb. 7 by appointment (509) 552-0545
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Answers: BAKING: measure, sift, oven, dessert; CRAFTS: yarn, paper, glue, hobby; HEALTH: fitness, gym, exercise, diet;
Sixth Street Senior Center plans activities
New Golden Times feature
Answers: WEDDINGS: bride, groom, reception, ceremony; ORGANIZATION: folder, sorting, closet, cull
The Lewiston City Library has a handful of free adult events planned for this month. New library hours: Starting March 3, the library will be open 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Thursday; and 1 to 5 p.m. Friday through Sunday. Holiday closure: Presidents Day, Feb. 19 Coffee & Books: Discuss “Mudbound” by Hillary Jorday; 10 to 11 a.m. Feb. 9. Valen-what?: Valentine or anti-Valentine activities for all ages will include sweets in the Makery and crafts in the Large Meeting Room; 5 p.m. Feb. 13. Local History: The Idaho and Local History Room is open 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays and by appointment. The library, 411 D St., www.lewiston library.org, is normally open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Wednesday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday through Saturday. Information is available by calling (208) 7982525 or library@cityoflewiston.org.
Answers: BAKING: measure, sift, oven, dessert Answers: CRAFTS: yarn, paper, glue, hobby Answers: HEALTH: fitness, gym, exercise, diet Answers: WEDDINGS: bride, groom, reception, ceremony Answers: ORGANIZATION: folder, sorting, closet, cull
9
Keep calm &Carrie on D
‘I have lived enough for 100 lives in my lifetime’
ancer, model, singer, actress, playwright, poet, author … these are just a few of the jobs Yvonne Carrie of Lewiston has held in her lifetime. Sitting in front of a stack of photo albums and scrapbooks, Carrie reminisces about a life she calls “well lived.” “Life is meant to be lived, so just do it … live. Live for the moment, live for the next day. When life knocks you down, get up, get on track and go on.”
“I was a Go-Go Dancer”
Yvonne Carrie holds an old article announcing her performance in a “Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon.”
A native of Florida raised by her grandmother, Carrie, at 18, earned a degree in nursing and married at a young age. When the marriage ended in divorce, Carrie decided to make a move and chose Houston, Texas, as her new home. She was just 20 years old.“I didn’t know anyone, didn’t have any money, and didn’t know By SHELLY what I was going to do.” She saw an ad in the local ROMINE paper for a place which was auditioning go-go dancers. She tried out and was offered the job. FOR Carrie danced alongside five other girls at a time in GOLDEN glass cages suspended from the ceiling. “Six of us would TIMES dance for an hour, and then the next group of girls would come on. The guys were so obsessed with the go-go girls that we had to have security guards take us to our rooms when we got off work.” “I love dancing,” said Carrie. “The only problem I ever encountered was with the wives of the men who would come to the club. You really got some crazy looks from the women. If the men invited you over to the table to have a drink with them, their wives would be throwing daggers at you.” Carrie said that taught her early on to turn down requests to visit client tables. With a goal of moving closer to home, she left Texas and took another job dancing at a club in Biloxi, Miss. It was there that she was hired to perform in place of dancer Jane Mansfield the night after Mansfield was killed in a car accident. When Carrie’s boss approached her and the other dancers about filling in for Mansfield’s act, she was shocked to learn of her death. “She was such a big star. We couldn’t believe she was dead.” After performing in her place, she > See KEEP CALM, Page 12
Golden Times/Shelly Romine
M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
GOLDEN TIMES
11
The cast of â&#x20AC;&#x153;Ol Jed,â&#x20AC;? a play written by Yvonne Carrie, poses for a portrait shot on the set.
Continued from Page 11 and the other girls went back to Mansfieldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s dressing room where her show costumes were hung as a reminder of the performance she missed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I just remember all those beautiful gowns.â&#x20AC;? While working at the Biloxi club, Carrie said she also earned a turquoise blue Corvair. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The boss had a casino located in the back. He was very strict about his girls (dancers) and who they went out with, who they were seen with.â&#x20AC;? When the big rollers came in however, they would ask if the dancers would accompany them into the casino for luck. The club owner was clear with both the gamblers and the dancers on the protocol he expected. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If any of his girls walked back to the casino,
anything they won through the course of the evening would have to be split with the girl who accompanied him.â&#x20AC;? One evening, Carrie was invited to walk back to the casino with a high roller. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He won $20,000 that night, so he had to give me half. I went out the next morning and bought myself a car.â&#x20AC;?
Keep calm &Carrie on
Yvonne Carrie in her modeling days
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Breaking into the movies A couple of years later, Carrie met and married a man from California. â&#x20AC;&#x153;My husbandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s family was very rich and lived next door to Jerry Lewis. My father-in-law was a movie script writer. This is how I got into the movies.â&#x20AC;? While working in private nursing during the day, Carrie pursued acting and modeling part time. She said she had several
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bit parts in films such as “Mad Bull,” “FM” and “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band.” She also entered a number of beauty pageants. “In all the pageants I entered, I was always runner up, always most photogenic,” said Carrie. “I was queen of the Rutabega Festival though,” she said with a laugh.
Kissy face
Keep calm &Carrie on
“I won a kissing contest one time,” said Carrie, “with a total stranger. When I was in Auburn, Calif., they were having this Valentine’s kissing contest at a local bar. I walked up to this random guy and asked him if he wanted to kiss and he said ‘Yeah.’ ” The prize was $100 for the winners. “He didn’t know that there was a kissing contest and asked me when we were going to kiss. I told him when the contest started.” When the contest began, it wasn’t long before the other contestants threw in the towel. Carrie and her partner were lip locked for more than 30 minutes. The next day, the local newspaper ran a picture of the winners. The couple who employed her as a private nurse greeted her the next morning by holding up a copy of the paper, saying ‘Hello, kissy face.’ ”
From the Jerry Lewis telethon to singing in her own band … In 1980, Carrie auditioned for, and received, one of the singing spots on the “Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon” in Ventura, Calif. “I was really proud of that, because there were about 50 people who auditioned for that show.” Tryouts were held throughout the state. Not one to let the grass grow beneath her feet, Carrie started her own band, Patchwork Country. “Linda Rondstadt’s guitar player came in to play for us. I called (Rondstadt) to ask about hiring him. She told me, ‘I don’t want him. You can have him,’ ” Carrie said. “I hired him. We had these big speakers about 6 feet tall, and he was playing guitar — laying back playing the guitar and drunker than a skunk. “He didn’t miss a lick, but he was dead asleep,” Carrie laughed. Carrie found out later that the guitar player and Rondstadt had dated before he was let go. “When I was interviewing him, he told me to call Linda and she would tell me something wonderful. Well, when I spoke to her, she didn’t have something so wonderful to say. He was an excellent guitarist though. I never heard anyone play guitar like him, especially asleep.”
Yvonne Carrie as a go-go girl in the 1960s.
Poetry of life After a move to Auburn, Calif., Carrie began writing plays. One, “Old Jed,” ran for two years straight, Carrie said. “We kept thinking the show had to end, but it kept going because different people would come to the play and they would ask us to do more productions.” “Well, I never really wanted to be a writer,” Carrie said, “but things just started to come to me. I would be driving down the road and would have to pull over so I could write something down. That is how the poetry began.” Since discovering poetry at age 40, she has self-published two volumes of poetry and regularly submits for publication. Starting with Nixon, Carrie has written a tribute poem for most sitting presidents, President Trump being her latest recipient. > See KEEP CALM, Page 14 M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
GOLDEN TIMES
13
This old article about Yvonne Carrie focuses on an album of tribute songs she said she penned after the death of Princess Diana.
Continued from Page 13
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Most administrations acknowledged her work over the years, Carrie said, with the nicest response coming from Nancy Reagan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She wrote me a beautiful letter thanking me for writing the poem about her husband.â&#x20AC;? When Princess Diana and Dodi Fayad were killed in a car accident, Carrie wrote a song about the tragedy and sent it to their families. Fayadâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s father, Mohamed Al Fayad, wrote a thank-you letter the steep hill where they as well, Carrie said. raced, she had to either Soap Box Racer hit a curb to slow herself â&#x20AC;&#x153;I had an 80-year-old down or wait until the car friend who used to build just petered out at the these long soap box cars,â&#x20AC;? bottom. said Carrie, â&#x20AC;&#x153;People â&#x20AC;&#x153;and he always were afraid used to ask me to drive them. to drive them I was too. for him.â&#x20AC;? Sometimes Carrie, who it was really was in her 40s scary,â&#x20AC;? Carrie in Auburn, Calif., at the said.â&#x20AC;&#x153;People tell me how time, recalled being the crazy I was to do that, only woman at that time but at the time, it didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t to drive in the derbies. seem crazy. It felt good, The cars were between because I was competing 9 and 10 feet long and against all those men.â&#x20AC;? were steered with Around the Bend foot boards. Carrieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s latest projects â&#x20AC;&#x153;The only way to stop include writing childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the cars was to use your books, two of which are feet,â&#x20AC;? said Carrie. waiting to be pitched to Because she didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t an editor, and composing want to use her feet on
Keep calm &Carrie on
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a tribute song for the Red Hatters Organization. She volunteers at the ROC (Reach out Center) Rescue Mission in Lewiston one day a week, and sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s taking another crack at winning a tiara. She and a friend, Betty Parker, of Lewiston, will travel to Boise in May to compete for the state title of the Ms. Idaho talent show contest for seniors. Carrie plans to sing and dance for the competition. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If you sit around, life passes you by, and you donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t get anything done. I have lived enough for 100 lives in my lifetime,â&#x20AC;? Carrie said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I am always going and doing something, and you know â&#x20AC;Ś I like it like that.â&#x20AC;?
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Social Securityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s online tools make it easy to calculate your retirement age By Nicole Tiggemann of Tribune News Service
T
aking control of your future is the first step in planning a long and happy retirement. Social Security is making it faster and easier to do this with My Social Security. My Social Security accounts allow immediate access to personal Social Security statements with usersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; earnings records and an estimate of retirement benefits at age 62, at full retirement age and at age 70. While online, users are encouraged to verify their earnings are correct, since the Social Security department bases future benefits on earnings records. All of this and more can be done at www.ssa. gov/myaccount. When users open a My Social Security account, the Social Security department protects information by using strict identity verification and security features. The application process has built-in features to detect fraud and confirm identity. My Social Security accounts can help users figure out how much more they might want to save for the future, but it can do a whole lot more. For example, in the District of Columbia and more than 20 states, users can request a replacement Social
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Security card online. Users can find out which states participate by visiting www.socialsecurity. gov/ssnumber. Many other valuable resources are on the website. Users who are thinking about retiring at an age not shown on their statement can use the siteâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Retirement Estimator to calculate potential future benefits. By changing variables such as retirement dates and future earnings, users may discover theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d rather wait another year or two to retire, to
H OW A Wednesday, February 14, 2018 MUSIC BY THE PARADONS Lewiston Elks Lodge 3444 Country Club Drive 6-8 p.m. Dinner p 6-10 p.m. Music
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earn a higher benefit. Or they might discover this is the time to kiss that work stress goodbye and retire. Instant, personalized estimates of future benefits are available at www.socialsecurity. gov/estimator. Social Securityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s online resources are available day or night. More information is available at www.socialsecurity.gov/ onlineservices. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;â&#x20AC;&#x201D;â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Tiggemann is a spokeswoman for the Social Security Administration.
AARP is offering free tax assistance through April 13 AARP Foundation is providing free tax assistance, preparation and e-filing through its Tax-Aide program through April 13. The Tax-Aide program is available to low- to middle-income taxpayers, with a special emphasis on those 60 and older. Tax-Aide staff are ready to prepare most tax forms, including 1040; schedules A, B and D; child tax credit; dependent care credit; education credit; earned income credit; and schedule C if there are no inventory, no employees, depreciation or expenses greater than $25,000. Taxpayers seeking assistance must bring photo identification, Social Security cards for themselves and all dependents, last yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s tax return and all documents related to their tax return. Assistance sessions will be held at: l Lewiston â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 9 a.m. to noon, Mondays through Thursdays through April 12 at the Salvation Army meal site, 1220 21st St. l Moscow â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., Wednesdays and Fridays through April 13 at the 1912 Center, 412 E. Third St. l Pullman â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursdays at the Senior Center, 325 S.E. Paradise St.
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412 E. Third St., Moscow, (208) 882-1562, meals at noon on Tuesdays and Cottonwood Community Hall Thursdays 506 King Street in the Nezperce Senior Citizens basement, Cottonwood, (208) 792-2465, meals at 501 Cedar St., Nezperce, (208) 937-2465, meals noon Tuesdays at noon on Mondays and Craigmountain Senior Center Thursdays 413 Nezperce St., WinOrchards United Methodist chester, (208) 9246581, meals at noon on Church Wednesdays 1213 Burrell Ave., Lewiston, (208) 743-9201, Grangeville Senior Center meals at noon on Mon108 Truck Route, Grangdays, Tuesdays and eville, (208) 983-2033, Wednesdays meals at noon on Mondays and Fridays Orofino Senior Center 930 Michigan Ave., OroJuliaetta-Kendrick fino, (208) 476-4328, Senior Citizens Center meals at noon on Tues104 S. Sixth St., Kendrick, days and Fridays (208) 289-5031, meals from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Palouse Senior Meals Wednesdays and Fridays 220 E. Main St., Palouse, (509) 878-2301, meals at Kamiah Senior Center noon on Wednesdays 125 N. Maple St., Kamiah, Pomeroy Senior Center (208) 935-0244, meals 695 Main St., Pomeroy, at noon on Mondays, (509) 843-3308, meals Wednesdays and Fridays at noon on Mondays, Lewiston Community Center Wednesdays and Fridays 1424 Main St., Lewiston, (208) 743-6983, meals at Potlatch Senior Citizens noon on Mondays, Tues- Potlatch Senior Citizens
Meal Site, 645 Pine St., Potlatch, (208) 875-1071, meals at noon Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
Pullman Senior Center
325 S.E. Paradise St., Pullman, (509) 338-3307, meals at 11:45 a.m. on Mondays and Fridays
Riggins Odd Fellows Building 121 S. Lodge St., Riggins, (208) 628-4147, meals at noon on Tuesdays
United Methodist Church
313 Second St., Asotin, (509) 758-3816, meals at 11:45 a.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays
Valley Community Center
549 Fifth St., Clarkston, (509) 758-3816, meals at noon on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays
Weippe Hilltop Senior Citizens Center
115 First St. W., Weippe, (208) 435-4553, meals at noon on Mondays and Thursdays
Pullman Meals on Wheels (509) 397-4305
Valley Meals on Wheels (208) 799-5767
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leWiSTon Senior nuTriTion Program — When: Noon, Mon./Tues./Wed. • Where: Lewiston Community Center, 1424 Main St. and the United Methodist Church, 1213 Burrell Ave. • Cost: $4 suggested for seniors age 60 and older; $5 for nonseniors • note: Menu is subject to change 6 Chicken-fried steak/mashed
5 Chicken fettuccini/green
potatoes/peas/three-bean salad/fruit/garlic bread
beans/spinach salad/fruit/roll
T
M
12 Hamburger steak/mush-
room gravy/mashed potatoes/ peas rolls
13 Spaghetti/carrots/coleslaw/
7 BUFFET: (starts at 11:30 a.m.):
Roast beef
W
14 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.):
Chicken
garlic bread/fruit
19 CloSed For
21 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.): 20 Lasagna/green beans/salad/ Ham
26 German sausage/sauer-
27 Meatloaf/mashed potatoes/
PreSidenTS’ daY
garlic bread/fruit
green beans/pea salad/fruit/bread
kraut/veggies/salad/fruit/roll
28 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.):
Pork loin
Senior meal menuS for february
Senior round Table nuTriTion Program — When: Noon, Tues./Thurs./Fri. • When: Valley Community Center, 549 Fifth St. No. F, Clarkston; and the Asotin United Methodist Church, 313 Second St. • Cost: $4 suggested for seniors age 60 and older; $7 for nonseniors • note: Menu is subject to change 6 Hamburgers with fixings/baked
beans/tater tots/gelatin with fruit
T
M
13 Company casserole/green beans/
salad/Texas toast/strawberry shortcake 20 Baked potato with ham-n-cheese
sauce/veggies/applesauce/roll/cookie 27 Roast beef/mashed potatoes/baby
carrots/juice/roll/ice cream and cake
8 Baked fish/peas-n-carrots/scal-
W
loped potatoes/juice/pudding/wafer
TH
9 Clam chowder/salad bar/
cheddar biscuits
F
15 Chicken casserole/peas/roll/
16 Minestrone soup/salad
22 Finger steak/jojos/peas/apple
23 Taco soup/salad bar/Texas
dessert
rings/roll
bar/Texas toast toast
moSCoW Senior nuTriTion Program — When: Noon Tues./Thurs. • Where: Great Room of the 1912 Center, 412 E. Third St. • Cost: $5 Suggested for seniors 60 and older; $7 for nonseniors. • details: Salad bar is available at 11:30 a.m.; soup/dessert available at each service. • note: Menu is subject to change • online: http://users.moscow.com/srcenter 6 Chicken a la king/biscuits/veggies/fruit
M
T
13 Meatloaf/mashed potatoes/gravy/
veggies/bread
20 Pineapple chicken/veggies/rice 27 Pork chops/scalloped potatoes/veggies
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NP-C, Owner
Libby & 13th Street TenderCare Homes Corner ofClarkston, WA
noodles/veggies
F
1.
You’ll protect your family from unnecessary pain & expense.
2.
You’ll say goodbye in a way that uniquely reflects your personal style — not someone else’s.
3.
You’ll lessen the financial burden. Our easy payment plans make it easy for you to comfortably pay for your funeral over time, at today’s prices, so your family won’t have to find the money later.
4.
You’ll minimize disputes between your well-meaning relatives.
5.
You’ll show your love in a way your family will never forget.
1225 E. 6th Street • Moscow, ID (208) 882-4534 www.shortsfuneralchapel.com
www.tendercarehomes.net (509) 758-2119
(%
M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
22 Meatballs in brown gravy/butter
It’s the right thing to do for you and your family. Here are five important reasons to plan your funeral now:
Private Rooms with Bath Personal Care Assistance Home Cooked Meals Medication Management Gretchen Geni COME BY & VISIT! McCrae Evans
Honoring Your Loved Ones Since 1997
reds/veggies
Why Should I Prearrange Services?
COZY FAMILY HOME SETTING
An Adult Family Home
TH
15 German sausage/sauerkraut/roasted
What You Need to Know About Prearranging
CELEBRATING 20 YEARS OF SERVICE TO YOUR COMMUNITY!
Manager
8 Spinach lasagna/fruit/veggies
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valley meals on wheels — February menu Meals are delivered to established clients between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. 365 days of the year, with delivery guaranteed by 1 p.m. each day. Individuals can have a hot meal delivered to their residence for $3 per day or a hot meal and a sack lunch for $4 per day. More information is available by calling (208) 799-5767. Menus are subject to change.
sunday
Monday
tuesday
wednesday
thursday
friday
hot: Beef stroganoff/ egg noodles/ creamed corn sack: Turkey-n-cheese sandwich/marinated cucumbers/pudding
hot: Roasted turkey/mashed potatoes/ broccoli-cauliflower sack: Krab-salad sandwich/green salad/ fruit cocktail
hot: Rosemary pork loin/macn-cheese/carrots sack: Roast beefn-cheese sandwich/ potato salad/ cobbler
hot: Spaghetti/ meatballs/ green beans sack: Curry chickensalad sandwich/pea salad/Black Forest cake
red potatoes/ lima beans sack: Ham-n-cheese sandwich/three-bean salad/brownie
hot: Pot roast/ hot: Chicken hot: Sweet-n12 sour pork/brown 13 mashed potatortellini/carrots toes/veggies rice/baby corns sack: Roast sack: Pastrami-nbeef-n-cheese sandsack: Egg-salad wich/pasta salad/ sandwich/Green salad/ cheese sandwich/coleslaw/seafoam salad Mandarin oranges lemon pudding
hot: Turkey tetrazzini/cauliegg noodles/ flower lima beans sack: Ham-n-cheese sack: Chicken-salad sandwich/cottage sandwich/pea salad/crisp cheese/pineapple/cake
hot: Baked ham/scalloped potatoes/ green beans sack: Tuna-salad sandwich/beet salad/cookies
hot: Chicken cordon bleu/ rice/broccoli sack: Turkey-n-cheese sandwich/potato salad/applesauce
hot: Ham macn-cheese/cauliflower sack: Turkey-n-cheese sandwich/cottage cheese/peaches
hot: Sesame chicken/roasted potatoes/carrots sack: Tuna-salad sandwich/pasta salad/ brownies
toes/peas sack: Ham-n-cheese sandwich/carrot-raisin salad/fruit
hot: Lasagna/ broccoli sack: Seafood-salad sandwich/ potato salad/ cobbler
sack: Roast beef-n-cheese sandwich/coleslaw/ cookies
hot: Rosemary pork loin/macn-cheese/carrots sack: Roast beefn-cheese sandwich/ potato salad/ cobbler
hot: Spaghetti/ meatballs/ green beans sack: Curry chickensalad sandwich/pea salad/Black Forest cake
hot: Barbecue chicken/roasted red potatoes/ lima beans sack: Ham-n-cheese sandwich/three-bean salad/brownie
hot: Chicken marsala/ mashed potatoes/green beans sack: Tuna-salad sandwich/cottage cheese/pears
5
6
11
18
hot: Tuna cas-
25 serole/peas
hot: Garlic-herb hot: Chicken20 pork loin/rice/ fried steak/ green beans mashed potatoes/creamed corn sack: Pastrami-nsack: Egg-salad sand- cheese sandwich/ wich/three-bean salad/ broccoli salad/cake chocolate pudding
19
hot: Chicken
26 marsala/mashed
potatoes/green sack: Egg-salad beans sandwich/beet salad/ applesauce sack: Tuna-salad sandwich/cottage cheese/ pears
hot: Beef
27 stroganoff/
egg noodles/ creamed corn sack: Turkey-n-cheese sandwich/marinated cucumbers/pudding
7
8
hot: Chicken
14 parmesan/
15
hot: Meatloaf/
21
hot: Roasted
28 turkey/mashed
potatoes/ broccoli-cauliflower sack: Krab-salad sandwich/green salad/ fruit cocktail
22 mashed pota-
1
saturday
9
16
17
hot: Turkey pot
24 pie/corn-carrots
23
2
hot: Barbecue
10 chicken/roasted
3
hot: Chicken hot: Sweet-n5 sour pork/brown tortellini/carrots rice/baby corns sack: Roast beef-n-cheese sandsack: Egg-salad wich/pasta salad/ sandwich/Green salad/ Mandarin oranges lemon pudding
4
Over Age 65 Health Plans with or without RX?
Change can happen 24/7
• We have plans starting from $42 per month without RX • Go with who knows the business
W Wh e c en hang ha ng ges do do ha app ppen e , we en we’r ’rre on iit. t O t. ur tteam eam ea m When changes happen, we’re Our acts ffast acts ac astt to c as om mplet ete te an a sses ss essm es smen sm e t an en and d pa p p rw pe wor ork k complete assessment paperwork ffo or a sm smoo ooth h ttransition ra ans nsit itio it ion to o io ur c ommu om muni niity ty.. for smooth our community.
• Lower price vs. higher price explained in simple language
CALL TODAY!
Call to make an appointment | 208-746-7046
Brookdale Lewiston
www.rickwoodsinsurance.com
Assisted Living 2975 Juniper Drive Lewiston, ID 83501
1053 21st Street, Lewiston
(208)746-8676.
24100
(Across from Lewiston Albertsons)
BrookdaleBrandWorks 15502 HA
Open Monday - Friday | 8:30am - 5:30pm 523405B-18
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For more information, call
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Bringing New Life to Senior Living ®
©2017 Brookdale Senior Living Inc. All rights reserved. BROOKDALE SENIOR LIVING and BRINGING NEW LIFE TO SENIOR LIVING are the registered trademarks of Brookdale Senior Living Inc.
brookdale.com 523720B-18
MOND A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
C r o sswo r d P u z z l e CLUES ACROSS 1. Shaded inner regions 7. Overlapping part of a garment 13. Type of smartphone 14. Fall apart 16. Football’s big game (abbr.) 17. Crocodilian reptile 19. Of I 20. Swamp plant 22. Sun can help you get one 23. Hops, __ and jumps 25. Cuckoos 26. Small cavities in rocks 28. American traitor 29. Tooth caregiver 30. Popular fish 31. Ottoman military leader 33. Anger 34. Fish of the mackerel family 36. Some people can’t eat it 38. Amer. Revolutionary War battle 40. Misleading ads 41. Atomic number 76 43. A type of castle security 44. Sunscreen rating 45. Very fast airplane 47. Vigor 48. 007’s creator 51. __ and that 53. Indicating silence 55. Brown and gray rail 56. Nocturnal insects 58. Make an incision 59. Norwegian village 60. Commercial 61. Criminal 64. Northeast 65. Clouds of gas and dust in outer space 67. Mysterious things 69. One who won’t be forgotten 70. Starts over
CLUES DOWN 1. Straighten 2. Gives medical advice (abbr.) 3. Touts 4. One’s job 5. Afflict in mind or body 6. Proofed 7. Capital of Angola 8. Social insect living in organized colonies 9. Ones who are financially compensated 10. Jacket
Solution, Page 14 11. Electron volt 12. Tuned 13. Syrian leader 15. Reduces 18. Congress’ investigative arm 21. Make uneasy 24. A fake 26. Any thick messy substance 27. Goad 30. Titan 32. Continental Congress delegate for NY 35. Peyton’s younger brother 37. Fiddler crab 38. Delivers the mail 39. Liliaceous plant
42. Mountain Time 43. Where wrestlers work 46. Secured 47. Dog breed 49. Where rockers perform 50. Nostrils 52. Express doubt 54. Pointer 55. Slang for sergeant 57. Selling at specially reduced prices 59. Six (Spanish) 62. Holds nonperishables 63. Between northeast and east 66. Exist 68. Meitnerium
“Professional In-Home Health Care” A helping hand can make all the difference
With our Professional Home Care, many individuals can continue to live independently in the privacy and comfort of their own homes. Up to 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. We offer from basic personal care assistance provided by trained in-home caregivers to Certified Nursing Assistants to Registered Nurses. Call us TODAY to schedule your FREE PERSONAL CARE ASSESSMENT.
Lewiston/Clarkston (208) 746-3050 Moscow (208) 882-0616
52092 3B -1 8
Alternative Nursing Services Kamiah (208) 935-2204 Grangeville/Orofino 1-800-930-3050
CALL TODAY FOR A FREE IN-HOME ASSESSMENT! ~ 1-800-930-3050 M O N D A Y, F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 8
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Call or visit your local ďŹ nancial advisor today.
Dean E. Roy, AAMS
Brad Melton, AAMS
Scott Arnone
Brian E. Bailey, AAMS
Trevor E Arnone
1024 16th Avenue Lewiston, ID 83501 (208) 798-4742 1-877-798-4770
1702 G Street Lewiston, ID 83501 (208) 746-1114 1-888-746-1123
302 5th Street Suite 1 Clarkston, WA 99403 (509) 758-8119 1-800-441-2308
303 Bridge Street, Ste.3 Clarkston, WA 99403 (509) 758-8731 1-866-758-9595
1455 G Street Suite 101 Lewiston, ID 83501 (208) 746-2308 1-844-746-2308
Patrick Cruser, AAMSÂŽ
Greg Bloom
Jeff Bollinger, AAMS CFP
Jay Mlazgar, AAMS
Carolyn Hicklin
Eastside Marketplace 1420 S Blaine, Suite 22 Moscow, ID 83843 (208) 882-4474
609 S. Washington Suite 203 Moscow, ID 83843 (208) 882-1234
212 Rodeo Dr. Ste. 810 Moscow, ID 83843 (208) 883-4460
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Sherrie Beckman, AAMS
Christian Leer, AAMS
940 Bryden Avenue Lewiston, ID 83501 (208) 746-3875 1-800-646-8316
740 5th Street Clarkston, WA 99403 (509) 751-1610 1-877-751-1610
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1366 Bridge Street Suite B Professional Mall IT 1260 SE Bishop, Suite C Clarkston, WA 99403 Pullman, WA 99163 (509) 758-8353 (509) 332-1564
Stephanie Johnson Matt Sartini, AAMS
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517 Thain Road Lewiston, ID 83501 (208) 746-7167 1-877-490-7167
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