County Wide Winter

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COUNTY WIDE: EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY


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Nelson Family Dentistry Comprehensive Family and Cosmetic Dentistry Michael D. Nelson, D.D.S. Fellow of the American Dental Implant Association

412 W. Main, Grangeville

(208)

983-2422

• Placement and Restoration of Dental Implants • Cleanings and Fillings • Same Day Crowns and Veneers • Safer, Faster Digital X-rays • Root Canals • Full and Partial Dentures

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Let Our Skilled

Decorators Help You! www.lindsleyshomefurnishings.com

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IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS HAILEY RUSSELL — Frost gathering on spiky teasel is a common sight in Idaho County in the winter months.

Contents

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PERSON

OF INTEREST:

Alyson Hanson: former Montana Rodeo Queen

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BUSINESS HIGHLIGHT:

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Katy Ann Fox: artist

AT HOME Monopoly: rules of the game

10 PHOTO ESSAY:

Sculpture of Idaho County

16 PARTAKE:

Canned Apple Pie Filling

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Sundance Services

Homecare LLC Locally Owned and Operated

★ assistance with grooming and bathing ★ transportation to doctor ★ assistance with self-medication ★ exercise Bonnie Smith, Catie Owen, Esther Owen. (Not pictured: Deanna Ricks - owner.) ★ light housekeeping Since 1996, Sundance Services has been ★ grocery shopping and committed to providing the quality errands assistance that allows a person to stay ★ cooking meal prep in their own home as long as possible.

P.O. Box 790 • 710 W North 5th Street • Grangeville, ID 83530-0790

208-983-0041 • 888-459-0313 - Toll Free Personal Care With A Personal Touch

Deanna Ricks, R.N., Managing Officer • Esther Owen, Administrator • Catie Owen, Office Administrator

Plenty of fabric samples to choose from. Classes available throughout the year.

LORIE PALMER

120 W. Main St, Grangeville, ID

208-451-4909

Tuesday thru Friday 9 am - 5:30 pm Saturdays 9 am - 4 pm

It’s not raindrops on roses in Idaho County in the winter but it is thick, frigid frost on teasel. This was taken near Mt. Idaho.

208-983-1332 Fax: 208-983-0825

110 N. College • Grangeville, ID Hours • Rubber Stamps • B&W Copies Mon-Fri • Printing 8am-5pm • Color Copies • Fax Service • Bindery • Computer to Print • Ink Cartridges Saturdays • Computer Forms 9am-1pm • Wedding Invitations • Ribbons • Office Supplies • Lamination to 24’ Wide e-mail: printshop@connectwireless.us 4

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Light collision repair specializing in semi-truck repair and painting. No job is too big or small! Jack Duman and Travis Riggle

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Thank you to our customers for their continued support!

Truck & Auto Paint Shoppe

FREE ESTIMATES 983-6179 Open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 208-962-7043 or 208-983 -6179

EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY


IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS

Nursery & Garden Center • Feed & Animal Health

125 Green Acres Lane • Grangeville • (208) 983-0355

Landscape, Design & 4-Season Maintenance Since 1991 Trust the experts at Green Acres

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•Brakes •Shocks

•Struts •CV Joints •Front Ends

Dallas Sego 935-2999 107 E. Third Street Kamiah, ID 83536

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Main Street & Hwy 95

Grangeville, ID 208-983-7508

OPEN 24 HOURS!

✔ New Shower Facilities ✔ New Trucker Accessories & Merchandise ✔ New Truck Fueling Island ✔ New Paved Truck Parking Area ✔ New Restrooms ✔ And more!

RV DUMP • FULL-LINE CONVENIENCE STORE • ICE

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EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY


IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS

Now doing

BIG TRUCK REPAIRS Open Mon-Fri 8AM-5PM

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1027 Hwy 13 PO Box 27 Grangeville, ID 83530

(208) 983-0027

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124 W. Main • Grangeville 208-983-4203

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Open 7 Days a Week! Monday--Saturday 7:00am-8:00pm Sunday 8:00am-8:00pm COUNTY WIDE

Daily Lunch & Dinner Specials

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Royalty more than pomp:

making a difference Montana Rodeo Queen enjoys life in Grangeville GIVES BACK THROUGH ‘QUEENING CLINIC’ By Lorie Palmer

PHOTOS BY LORIE PALMER — (ABOVE) Alyson Grinestaff Hanson is shown at her Grangeville residence. (RIGHT) Hanson demonstrates a buzz at the queening clinic held earlier this year .

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POWERLINE ROAD – Dressed in a hot pink sweat suit with a horse applique on it, baby Montana giggles and coos when her mama holds her at the edge of the fence line to see the horses run in. “She loves them,” smiled Alyson Grinestaff Hanson. Hanson has the love of horses running through her veins. “I competed in my first rodeo queen pageant when I was 11,” said Hanson of Grangeville. Although she did not win that first title of Little Miss Home of Champions PRCA Rodeo, she came back to hold their title of junior queen and queen two years in a row before becoming Miss Rodeo Montana 2013 after she graduated from college. “Being a rodeo queen challenged me in so many ways growing up,” Hanson said. “It taught me how to step out of my comfort zone and strive to be the best version of myself, all the while getting to participate in my two greatest passions, serving others and riding horses.” Hanson said the Lord used the royalty titles in her life and she hopes to be able to pass along to other young ladies some of what she has learned. To that end, she, along with area natives and former local royalty members, Kami Fogelman and Christi Sonnen offered a queening clinic in August. The clinic brought in 16 local girls who spent the day learning about horsemanship skills, public speaking, interviews and leadership development. Hanson said being royalty is more than pomp and circumstance; it’s learning important lead-

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EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY

ership skills that can allow a young woman to have a platform. “It can give you an opportunity to be in the public eye and, therefore, have the chance to make a difference in ways you may have never thought possible,” she explained. “It’s not a beauty or popularity confidence, but so much more. The experience can really boost a young woman’s self-esteem and worth, and allow her to make a positive difference in the world.” Currently, Hanson is a stay-at-home mom to her baby daughter, Montana Lynn. Her husband works for CHS Primeland. “She helps me — with big grins and giggles from the stroller — manage our small AQHA horse operation,” Hanson smiled. “My husband and I are recently the proud owners of a beautiful, tal-


IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS ented stud, Busy Cashin N Dreams, that we are just starting out with.” Hanson’s grandparents moved to Grangeville almost a decade ago to raise quarter horses; her grandfather fell ill several years ago and was not able to do as much with the horses as he had hoped, Hanson said. “That is when my husband, Taylor, and I decided to settle here a little more than a year ago to help manage their operation,” she said. “We really enjoy Grangeville and are having a blast getting involved in the community.” Taylor is from Texas, but Hanson said he is very happy in the Grangeville area. Hanson said she loves to work with young girls and is happy to mentor in leadership skills and other areas. E-mail ALYSONG7@GMAIL.COM.

Welcome to Beautiful Idaho

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LORIE PALMER

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Alyson said she enjoys sharing her love of the outdoors with daughter, Montana.

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Sculpture of Idaho County

Artistic Form: DAVID RAUZI — wild biker, Elk City, Main Street

LORIE PALMER — chinook salmon, Kooskia Visitors’ Kiosk, U.S. Highway 12 DAVID RAUZI — horseshoe elk sculpture, Grangeville, Main Street

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EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY


IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS

DAVID RAUZI — twin engine plane, Randy C. Lynn grave, Clearwater Cemetery

Ken’s

24-Hour Service

Ask About Our 10% Senior Discount

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DAVID RAUZI — hereford cow in flowers, Cattlemen’s Restaurant, Riggins, Main Street

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SOLBERG AGENCY, INC. Real Estate & Insurance “Serving the Prairie for over 50 years”

(208) 983-0450 • Toll-Free 1-877-520-0450 www.solbergagency.com

133 WEST

MAIN

GRANGEVILLE,

ID

83530

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What does the say?

Fox

“I am so thankful for upbringing,” she said. “It taught me to take time to notice the world around me and the importance of generosity and compassion for family and neighbors.”

— Katy Ann Fox

Class of 2005, Grangeville High School

Rural upbringing adds to GHS grad’s art expression By Lorie Palmer JACKSON, Wyo. – Country and farm kids learn to entertain themselves. Just ask 2005 Grangeville High School graduate Katy Ann Fox. “A rural childhood meant that my brother, Jimmy, and I were responsible for our own entertainment and it allowed our curiosity and creativity to take us outside to play and notice the world around us,” she said. “I am thankful that I grew up in a place with a prevalence and dependency on nature.”

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Fox is the daughter of Jerome Fox of Grand Junction, Colo., and Sue Crea of Fenn. This pastoral upbringing helped foster a love of art in Fox. “When it comes down to it, painting is just playing with colored dirt,” she smiled. That playing in dirt has helped earn Fox some fairly hefty nods from the art world. Fox was recently named the Art Association of Jackson Hole’s 2015 Artist of the Year. Working in oil paint and ceramics, Fox has carved a niche for herself that is “only just the

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beginning” of her creative lifestyle, she said. “Ask anyone — I’ve always been a little weird,” she laughed. “[Grangeville art teacher] Ms. Nevel was ever encouraging, and my mom never doubted that I could make anything.” However, it wasn’t until she was fulfilling her last requirements of her art minor at the University of Idaho that she realized she “truly belonged in the tribe of artists,” she said. After graduating with a business economics degree and art minor, she devoted herself to learning the language of painting at the Academy of

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EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY

Art University in San Francisco, Calif. “As I worked through my degree, I found painting was my bliss and the tool that I needed to create, communicate, see the world around me and live,” she said. She obtained her master of fine arts in painting in 2012. “The importance of looking within and asking what I need to keep going, be inspired and make this work is difficult and crazy and I haven’t been See Fox, Page 14


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Continued from Page 12 able to predict any of it,” she admitted. “I’m just thankful for the support from my family and friends in my bold and wandering ways.” Fox still travels to Idaho County a few times a year to the place she grew up – her mother lives at Fox’s grandparents’ house where Fox spent a lot of time in her younger years. “I come back whenever my mom bribes me with apple pie or Salmon River tomatoes,” she teased. Jackson is less than 20 miles from the Idaho state border, so she is never truly far from home. “I am so thankful for upbringing,” she said. “It

taught me to take time to notice the world around me and the importance of generosity and compassion for family and neighbors.” On encouraging others to follow their dreams, Fox has some advice: “Ask questions, read books, learn about the world around you and ask for help from people who are older and smarter than you,” she emphasized. “There is room for all of us and we all belong somewhere whether it is near or far from where you currently stand.” Fox’s art can be viewed at Daly Projects, 125 E. Pearl (downstairs), Jackson Hole, Wyo. Her web site is WWW.KATYFOXART.COM.

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Recipe: Canned Apple Pie Filling

Great for crisps, hot pie during cold winter By Lorie Palmer I love locally grown apples. I get a lot of them for free alongside roads as I glean throughout the county and sometimes I buy them from area residents. These apples have a wonderful taste and are great for fresh pies and crisps. But it’s also nice to have a fresh, hot apple pie in the middle of a cold winter. Here’s a recipe for apple pie filling that I have changed just a bit to use the spices my family likes. Ingredients • Apples (7 quarts peeled, cored and sliced, about 8 pounds of apples) • Sugar (4 1/2 cups) • Corn Starch (1 cup) or 1 cup of Clearjel (some modern canning practices say cornstarch is not a good thickener to can with. It is what I used but you need to read

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about it and make sure you feel safe with it. It’s mostly a heating issue where you need to make sure the filling is heated thoroughly). • Cinnamon (2 teaspoons) • Cloves (1/4 teaspoon) • Salt (1 teaspoon) • Water (10 cups; this seems like a lot but you will need it; don’t skimp) • Lemon Juice (3 tablespoons) and extra water Equipment • 7 quart jars, lids and rings (I actually ended up with 6-1/2 quarts. If you have a choice, use widemouthed jars. They are much easier to fill). • Jar lifter • Large pot with rack (for canning) • Large saucepan • Cutting board & implements of peeling/coring/slicing • Big bowl

• Ladle • Jar Funnel (if you use smallmouthed jars) I run my jars and lids in the dishwasher with heated dry to sterilize, but they can also be boiled or washed in hot, soapy water. Let the sterilized jars, rings and lids air dry. In a stockpot place sugar, water, corn starch (or Clearjel), cinnamon, cloves, salt and water. Bring to slow boil and let boil a few minutes until bubbly and thickish while you are preparing the apples. Peel, core and slice the apples (I picked up an old corer for 10 cents at the local thrift store. It works great! I like to core first then peel. I have also used a friend’s peeler. It just depends on how much work you want to do and what you want your slices to look like. For apple COUNTY WIDE

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pie filling I like to hand peel and slice). Put the slices in a bowl in a lemon water mix to prevent oxidation browning. When apples are finished, pour water off and add to spice mixture. Place a lid on stockpot and allow to come to a slow boil. Set timer for six minutes, stirring a couple of times. (The apples I used were tart and very firm. They did not break down in this time period and this allowed them to become very hot). Pour filling in jars, wipe jar rims to remove any stickiness, and place lids and rings on jars. Now, this is where I end the process. I do not can in a hot water bath. However, if that makes you feel safer, do so. I have been doing it this way all my life, my mother and grandmothers before me. EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY


106 Airport Rd Cottonwood, ID 208-962-3211 www.budspowersports.com

Mon-Fri 9:00am-6:00pm Sat 9:00am-12:00pm

Handcrafted

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Warning: The Polaris RZR® can be hazardous to operate and is not intended for onroad use. Driver must be at least 16 years old with a valid driver’s license to operate. Passengers must be at least 12 years old. Drivers and passengers should always wear helmets, eye protection, and seat belts. Always use cab nets and doors (as equipped). Never engage in stunt driving, and avoid excessive speeds and sharp turns. Riding and alcohol/drugs don’t mix. All drivers should take a safety training course. Call 800-342-3762 for additional information. Check local laws before riding on trails. Polaris Industries Inc.

IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS

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Daily Specials!

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983-1680 410 North C St. • Grangeville COUNTY WIDE

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IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS

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Down Draft Paint Booth ✔

Frame Machine ✔

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Brad Lockart SHOP FOREMAN

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Warren Snyder BODY TECHNICIAN

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Dan Lustig Service Manager

Michael Snyder Service Advisor

227 N. State Grangeville

983-0320 1-800-289-0889

www.gortsemamotors.com COUNTY WIDE

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Boardwalk to bankruptcy... A board game standard, Monopoly continues to evolve By David Rauzi

K

tax of $150? Are you kidding?” But the end comes, mercifully, and you add up your assets; bankrupt. And you sit back to watch the financial drama come to a close. And then, “It’s still early. Let’s do another game.” Since its creation in 1935, Parker Brothers’ real estate trading game has become a tabletop staple, enjoyed worldwide due to its fast play and quickly learned rules.

ing me.

It’s a rare house that doesn’t have a board game on a closet shelf, ready to go for family holiday get-togethers, a free evening when there’s just nothing good on TV, or perhaps as a slumber party activity. Or, it could just be the opportunity to torture both young and old, pulling them away from electronic devices and forcing them to interact, literally and not virtually, face to face. What’s your favorite? Parents can recall having completed – or at least started – endless hours of Candyland, or Chutes and Ladders. Common to most of us are the classics: checkers (standard and Chinese) and chess, Life, Risk, Stratego, Pictionary and Trivial Pursuit, and Uno. And for the die-hards, more complex strategy and role-playing games continue the fun, from the contemporary Settlers of Catan to Dungeons and Dragons to Axis and Allies. Of course, the standout is Monopoly. Oh, the shudders that run through some folks at the very mention of this game; a significant cause of our childhood trauma when inflicted with our first bankruptcy, or of family disputes (“I want to be the car; you be the shoe!). But apart from those who threw the board up in the air in disgust before stomping off, Monopoly (celebrating its 80th anniversary in 2015) has been a wonderful game in teaching the basics (and perhaps the dark side too) of our capitalist system. Monopoly has been our introduction into not just math but in budgeting and managing finite resources, into property transactions and how additional acquisitions and improvements enhance property values. Where else would kids even pay attention to such uninteresting topics as income tax or mortgages? How cool is it to “Take a Ride on the Reading

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Railroad” and snap up one of those four properties to start your collection. Or to draw a Community Chest card and end up with unexpected cash windfalls from a tax refund, an inheritance, or winning second place in a beauty contest. Here, somewhere along the 40 spaces of the board, you’ll skirt along properties up for sale, each trip around you’ll be $200 richer. As the play continues, you’ll see the strategies in play of who is overly cautious or reckless, whose biding time for key properties. Who is out for a railroad monopoly, or for those potential high-dollar cash cows in “Damnation Alley” between Boardwalk and Pacific Avenue? Then the rents start tacking on with more and more dice rolls, things are starting to get serious as your bankroll grows

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leaner from payouts and property purchases. And then someone completes a set; houses go up. If you’re caught with incomplete properties here, it’s time to bargain … or wish that player misfortune with the death card of the advanced Monopoly player: Make general repairs on all your property. It then doesn’t take long after to determine who is in the running to battle for financial supremacy, and who else will be just paying out their stack of decreasing bills as a field of mortgaged properties grows before them. Soon, trips to jail are welcome reprieves from continued rent payouts along stretches of properties now filled with houses and hotels. And even the Community Chest seems to conspire against you: “Pay school

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What Are Your House Rules? But what it has also enjoyed more than other staple games is the contributions by players of specialized house rules that enhance the play. Most common of these is the “free parking” rule of money paid to the middle for fines and taxes that goes to whoever lands on Free Parking; or shuffling out properties to players at the start for a quicker game. As part of this story, we asked for people to tell us their board game hacks: “That you could not do anything while in jail, including collecting rent,” said Kevin Duden of Grangeville, “that you could have two hotels on a property. And we allowed borrowing of money from the bank, which usually ended up being the bank ran out and we had to print more to continue playing.” “My grandmother made up her own rules on most card games we played,” said Bridget Barela of Grangeville. “When we weren’t playing with Grandma we’d ask, ‘Are we playing the real rules or Grandma rules?’ At least we are always thinking of her around a game table.” Several respondents also had rules in common, such as the following: allowing borrowing from the bank with interest, freezing assets (no rent collection) for players in jail, fund houses and hotels on properties by renting to other players, allowing buildings on incomplete property sets, and no property purchases until one or all play-


IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS amples (from National Lampoon magazine’s 1973 Miracle Monopoly Cheating Kit):

ers cross “go” a set number of times. One that causes much laughter and frustration is if you don’t notice when someone lands on your property, that person doesn’t have to pay. What Are Your House Rules? Among the game hacks also include additions into the game pieces of higher denomination bills, as well as Community Chest and Chance cards that can extend game play with both increased windfall payments as well as disasters for advanced property owners. For those looking for ideas, here are several ex-

• You break leg on opponent’s property. You sue him for $5,000 and win. (Can be used anytime you land on an opponent’s property). • Termites eat away all your houses. Return them to the bank and collect salvage fee for one-tenth of the price paid. • Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 invoked; divest self of all but one monopoly. • Fire destroys your most valuable hotel. Return it to the bank and collect salvage fee of one-tenth the price paid. • You have won first prize in a beauty contest. Collect $5,000. • Railroad strike bankrupts all your railroads. Retire them from the game. • Life sentence. Got to jail and stay there for remainder of game. • St. Charles decanonized. Subtract 50 percent from all future rent charges on St. Charles Place.

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Tamarack Bowling Lanes

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Open bowling every Friday and Saturday from 4pm-9pm

Ask how we can save you $$$ on Wix® Filters. Come in and ask about our Fleet Discounts!

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Taco Tuesday!

Fri & Sat 9pm-1am

4795 CW

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OPEN 6am-2:30am 7 days a week

the Home of

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Raising the Standard of Care.

We are grateful for our community’s support. Physical, Occupational & Restorative Therapies 24 Hour Skilled Nursing Respite Care Private Rehabilitation Suites Medicare, Medicaid & Insurance Certified 410 E. North 2nd, Grangeville, ID • 983-1131 22

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IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS

“T

here are as many pillows of illusion as flakes in a snowstorm. We wake from one dream into another dream. Ralph Waldo Emerson

DAVIS COMMUNICATIONS

A blanket of snow covers Lions Park in Grangeville. LORIE PALMER

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WELCOME!

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Accepting All Medicare Part-D Plans

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Downtown Grangeville

EVERYTHING IDAHO COUNTY

983-1090


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