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The Goldendale Sentinel
Goldendale , Washington
November 15, 2017     The Goldendale Sentinel
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November 15, 2017
 
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12-- NOVF_~mnR 15, 2017 GOLDFJ'rD~a.E, WASHINGTON Puzzle Page NONFICTION reader, and conversely, that every reader who visits the library will find his/her book. Today's "Check It Out" book is a personal success story because "On This Date" by Carl M. Cannon is right up my alley. Book, shake hands with reader. Reader, shake hands with book. Nice to meet you. "Fire in the Heart: A Memoir of Friendship, Jan Johnston, Collection Manager Loss, and Wildfire" by Mary Emedck. Fort Vancouver Regional Library District "The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, "On This Date" is a good match for me because I'm a Facebook, and Google" by Scott Galloway. You can email Jan at readingforfun@fvrl.org "what-happened-on-this-day-in-history" kind of a girl. "Slow Cook Modern: 200 Recipes for the WayWe Eat "On This Date: From the Pilgrims to Today, Dlscovedng And I'm hoping that someone else feels the same way. Amedca One Day at a Time" by Carl M. Cannon (Twelve, For each day of the year, Carl M. Cannon crafts a short Today" by Liana Krissoff. 448 paps) story culled from the annals of American history. It's a CHILDREN Have you ever heard of S.R. Ranganathan? He was a compelling collection of notable events, people, and "Frank the Seven-Legged Spider" by Michaeie Razi. mathematician and librarian from India who developed places, and it's a unique way to experience random but Have fun reading about American history- chronologically what are known as the Five Laws of Library Science. These fascinating pieces of history covering a span of over five "Pop-Up Shakespeare" by Jennie Maizels. or not - and learn a thing or two along the way by laws, first proposed by Dr. Ranganathan in 1931, are still hundred years, checking out "On This Date" from the library (available as "The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street" by Kafina Yan relevant, nearly ninety years later, and continue to be Fgr today's date, November 12th, Cannon focuses on an eBook, too). In the spirit of Dr. Ranganathan, may this Glaser. embraced by librarians worldwide. Here are the Five Laws: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the American suffragist leader, book find more than one reader; and, dear reader, may who was born on this day in 1815. The story shares you find more than one book. Elizabeth's memory of her fathers grief over losing all 1) Books are for use. 2) Every reader his/her book. 3) Every book its reader. 4) Save the time of the reader. 5) The library is a growing organism. bring up Ranganathan'e Five Laws because the second and third laws run around my head every time I write this column. Those of us who work in the Collection Development department always hope that every book (or audio book, DVD, eBook, etc.) we purchase will find its three of his sons. She was only eleven when her third brother died, and she recalls her father saying to her on the day of the funeral, "Oh, my daughter, I wish you were a boy!" It wasn't a rebuke but rather a fathers lament for his lost son and his daughters place in a world so indifferent to the rights ofwomen. Elizabeth promised her father that day that she would "...try to be all my brother was: and her crusade for women's rights fulfilled that promise and so much more. If you want to read the book in chronological order, you can certainly do that, but it also lends itself to an arbitrary approach: let the book fall open to a page and dive in; or pick a date, maybe the day you were born, and find an historical tidbit you can forever associate with your birthday. My birthday, unfortunately, has a tragic event tied to it - the crash of Air Florida Flight 90 into the Fourteenth Street Bridge and ultimately the Potomac River. My husband's birthday, however, tells a story about punctation. Love 'era or hate 'em, emoticons are here to stay, so find out how :o) and =^.^= were born by reading "Hello, Smiley" on page 292. New at the Library FICTION "Last Christmas in Pads: A Novel of World War I" by "Seven Days of Us" by Francesca Hornak. "What the Hell Did I Just Read: A Novel of Cosmic Horror" by David Wong. This Is Just a small sampling of the many new titles added each week to the Fort Vancouver Regional Ubrary District collection. Visit the disMct's 15 locations, our webslte at www.fvrl.org, or call (360) 906-5000 to reserve titles or find additional listings. It is true stuffing can be more than just the bread mix that fills in the cavity of the Thanksgiving turkey, but let's face it, that Thanksgiving turkey stuffing is what it is all about! Thanksgiving is Grandma Lydia's holiday. As her kids married off, she made a take Thanksgiving and they could have Christmas. I am positive that simple lot of us deal with the other mother-in-law. She would arrangement reduced holiday stress for the Bread stuffing can be made with seasoned or unseasoned dried bread cubes (croutons) diced or torn up slices of fresh or day old bread from any variety you have available. At Grandma Lydia's we use the basic stuffing, recipe below, to stuff the bird with.Then after making the basic stuffing for the turkey, she always makes sure there is an extra casserole dish of stuffing to pop in the oven after the bird comes out so we can eat it the day after Thanksgiving. The casserole version usually gets a few extras, like a bit of thyme or rosemary and extra broth from the simmered turkey giblets. Depending on your family's tastes the stuffing can be as simple or as sophisticated as you desire. The basic recipe below was my starting point. I hope you find it as helpful as I have. Basic Breed Stuffing Rather bland without broth, but excellent for stuffing turkey, chicken or laying beneath pork chops. • 2-5 slices of your choice bread or 2-4 cups dried croutons • 1 small onion, chopped into 1/4 inch pieces • 2-3 ribs celery, chopped into 1/4 inch pieces • 1/2 teaspoon sage • 1/2- 1 cup of water, (depends on how dry the bread is) Dice with a knife or pull bread apart into chunks with fingers and put into a mixing bowl, add onion, celery and sage. Toss like a salad then add the water until the mixture sticks together but isn't gooey. Stuff bird Thanksgiving day morning, and not before, just before putting in the oven, then bake bird. Scoop the stuffing out before cutting the bird and serve with the meal. For an extra casserole dish of stuffing, make a double batch using chicken broth instead of water then pop the casserole dish in the oven after the turkey comes out for 'tomorrow's left over lunch'. Choices: Use broth instead of water. Add thyme and/or rosemary and/or any other herb and spices you like to the broth or water prior to mixing in. Make your own croutons (dried bread soaks up more flavored broth or water) by dicing bread ~ p6ppingit in'the'0ven on lowest setting and stirring every 5 to 10 minutes until the cubes are your kind of c~'unc@ For a different type of crunch, add any kind of nut you like and have on hand-but remember- sometimes it is better to try a small experiment, say a cup sized ramekin, just incase the flavors refuse to get along (you know, like some family members at Christmas.) Saute the veggies, and try other combinations like carrot and green pepper, or fennel root and shallots. Some folks like dried fruit, raisins, apricots, apples or cranberries to suck up broth and add flavor to their stuffing. I like smoked oysters every now and then. And meat is good, especially sausage in a bit of corn bread stuffing. Choices for bread stuffing are endless, and frugal, and that is why they are so much fun. By Merek Figure out the enciphered letters to reveal this week's quote• Here's how the puzzle works: JXBKGQKNBG is GOLDENDALE One letter represents another. Here B replaces the two L's, Ks are the two D's and G stands in for the E's. One-letter words, letter frequency, apostrophes, punctuation and word patterns are all clues. The cipher key will be different for every puzzle. QMX AJG QK LXQ QMTCLR NKCX TR CKQ QK BTCN AMK LXQR QMX WEXNTQ DKE NKTCL QMXB. -SXCZJBTC ZKAXQQ The answer is in the next paper. (Hint: A represents W) Last week's answer: THE ONLY THING WORSE THAN BEING IS HAVING SIGHT BUT NO VISION. -HELEN KELLER BLIND Lik, Th, Sentinel on Facebook SUDOKU i; :! Get a Pain-Relieving Knee Brace At Little or No Cost to You YOU May We Do AllThe Paperwork Shoulder Braces, Ankle eracez, Back Braces Also Available i 3 6 9 6 2 8 7 9 5 1 7 3 ~ StatcPoint Media Fill in the blank squares 8 8 7 3 Us Right Now 2 3 7 6 4 9 row, column 9 8 7 5 in the grid, making sure that every and 3.by-3 box includes all digits 1 through 9. ACROSS ........................................................................................ 1 ) Supplant illegally 38) It's abuzz with activity 6) Jazz lick 39) Like light-colored coffee 10) Bear in a fairy tale 40) Cinematic showdown time 14) One deep in thought 41) Mars explorer 15) Case for tweezers, scissors 42) Fall or spring period and such 44) Fine table linen 16) Place in Mongolia (with 45) Not one 29-Down) 46) 252-gaUon measures 17) Tower of London guards 47) Common fundraiser 19) Steering wheel option. 50) Some gobblers 20) Roulette bet 51) Little green man 21) Proper companion'? 54) It's seen among the reeds 22) Dot above the i, e.g. 55) Political patronage 24) Whodunit helper 58) Extremely dry, as land 25) Full, round coif 59) Creative starting point 26) Evangelist Billy 60) Sir Michael, the actor 29) Prudish person 61 ) Tireless carrier 33) Apply thoroughly, as lotion 62) Thumb one's nose at 34) Monitor's beat 63) Work with the hands 35) Chowder type 36) Oil pricing grp. 37) Some Greek vowels BUTCHER FOR A DAY Aa_ron.__Zarri_e I 2 3 I1 12 13 14 ; 17 1 m m m m m u m m 26 27 28 30 31 ~2 u~m 33 mmm 36 39 42 47 48 49 ~1 52 53 Nm~ 54 58 m 61 r DOWN l) Boss on a shield 2) Sicced a lawyer on 3) Like Goodwill goods 4) NBA official 5) Arrange beforehand 6) Fix a half hitch 7) Piece in the paper 8) Chinchilla's coat 9) Carryable amounts 10) Thick side whiskers 11 ) Came down and settled 12) Popular shopping locale 13) Pre-deal chip 18) Calla lily, e.g. 23) Infuriation 24) Nothing much, to farmers? 25) "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh" singer Shernaan 26) Increases 27) Indian coin 28) Nantical direction 29) See 16-Across 30) Martini feature 31 ) Frugal one 32) Sort of board 34) Mumbo jumbo 37) Courageous 41) Try to clean out the house? 43) Famous mule of song 44) Ready for the dentist's drill 46) Sweet white wine 47) "Friends" paleontologist 48) First Genesis victim 49) Fairway warning 50) Unclean, like non-kosher food 51 ) Canal for 43-Down 52) Legendary Home 53) Skipped town 56) Tribute with stanzas 57) Legged it Free Daily Crosswords Copyright © FreeDailyCrosswords.com Edited by Timothy Parker