Issue 141 - Tidbits of Sheridan and Johnson Counties

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A LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED PAPER - THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT - KEEP SHOPPING LOCAL!

Sept. 12 - 18, 2016 Kysar Publishing Licensed

Issue 141

For Ad Rates call: (307) 655-5095

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“The best cure for insomnia is to get a lot of sleep.” W.C. Fields TIDBITS® SAYS THE “I’S” HAVE IT!

by Kathy Wolfe There are a lot of interesting people, places, and things that begin with the letter “I” and this week Tidbits is investigating several of them. • When type is printed in italics, the font slants slightly to the right. This isn’t a new typeface, but rather was first used in Italy in 1500, hence the name “italic.” Italics are used for a number of purposes, including emphasizing a word in print. Books, plays, and periodicals are written in italics, as are names of ships, foreign words, and the Latin genus and species names in biology. • Although elephants usually come to mind when the word ivory is mentioned, there are several other tusked mammals, including the walrus, hippopotamus, sperm whale, narwhal, and wart hog. No matter the species of animal, the chemical structure of tusks is the same, similar to that of bones and antlers, except that ivory has no blood vessel system, making it much denser than bone. Dentine, the main component is a connective tissue of minerals and protein. International trade in ivory has been illegal for decades, but continues underground, with 1 lb. (0.45 kg) bringing in $1,000. The tusks of one elephant can be worth more than ten times the average annual salary in most of the African countries where the elephant is found. (Continued on Next Page)

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Tidbits® of Sheridan and Johnson Counties Tidbits Presents the

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HEALTH PAGE

The “I’S” HAVE IT! (continued): • If you’re suffering from icterus, your skin and the whites of your eyes will appear yellow. The more common name for his ailment is jaundice, from the French word jaune, meaning “yellow.” Bilirubin is a yellow substance produced when the liver breaks down old red cells. When the substance is at high levels, the yellowish pigmentation appears. The condition is common in infants around Day Two of life, and can be alleviated by exposing the baby to light and sunlight, which promotes the production of Vitamin D. Hepatitis, liver cancer, and bile duct blockage can also produce icterus. • Idaho is nicknamed the “Gem State” because almost every known type of gemstone has been found there. In fact, its state gem, the star garnet, can only be found there and in India. This mountainous state was the 43rd state admitted to the Union and has an area larger than that of all the New England states combined. It’s believed that the name Idaho traces its origins to the Shoshone language, translating “the sun comes from the mountains.” Two major grocery chains, Safeway and Albertsons, have their roots in the state of Idaho. Famous folks born there include baseball great Harmon Killebrew, Olympic skier Picabo Street, and actress Lana Turner. • Izzard might sound like a rare animal or one of its parts, but it’s actually the Old English word for the letter “Z”. The expression “from A to izzard” means “from beginning to end.” If you “don’t know A from izzard,” you don’t know even the most basic things. Izzard is related to the British use of “zed” for Z, while the Scots call it “ezed.” • Ibex and ibis might look like similar words, but these two creatures are vastly different. The ibex is a wild goat with large curved horns that lives in the European Alps. Its habitat is the mountainous regions from 5,900 to 10,800 feet (1,800 to 3,300 meters). The ibis is a long-legged wading bird related to the heron. Its long slender, downwardly-curved bill enables them to probe mud for food. Florida’s University of Miami has chosen the white ibis as its school mascot because of its bravery. Legend has it that the ibis is the last creature to take shelter before a hurricane, and the first to reappear when the storm has passed. • The driest known object in the Solar System is Io, one of the moons of the planet Jupiter. Discovered in 1610, it’s also the most geologically active object, with more than 400 active volcanoes. This moon is named for the mythological priestess Io, a mortal lover of Zeus, ruler of the Olympian gods. According to Greek mythology, Zeus turned her into a heifer in order to hide her from his wife. • Can you translate this sentence? Those who are impavid have no iatrophobia. To be impavid means a person is fearless; therefore, he has no fear of going to the doctor, which is iatrophobia. • If a word is imsonic, it’s also onomatopoetic. What in the world does that mean? These are words that have been created to imitate a natural sound, such as honk, beep, buzz, cuckoo, meow, quack, and purr. • If someone can follow your ichnograms, you’ve simply left your footprints behind. • We all have that one inaniloquent friend – one who is prone to foolish or empty babbling! • When we mention a school as being “Ivy League,” it belongs to a group of eight long-established U.S. universities in the eastern part of the country. The group includes Harvard, the nation’s oldest institute of higher learning, founded in 1636. Harvard was initially a school for the clergy, gradually becoming secular in the 1700s. Yale was founded in New Haven, CT in 1702 as a training ground for political leaders and clergymen. Today it is home to the second-largest academic library in the U.S., second only to Harvard. Princeton University was founded in 1746 as the College of New Jersey, its name until 1896. Founded in 1740 by Benjamin Franklin, the University of Pennsylvania was established in Philadelphia with a focus on education for public service and commerce. Providence, Rhode Island’s Brown University was founded in 1746. The smallest of the group is Dartmouth, established in 1769 in Hanover, New Hampshire. Located in New York City, Columbia University was founded in 1754 by a royal charter of King George II of England. The final Ivy League college is Cornell, founded in 1865 in Ithaca, New York. During the 1800s, “planting the ivy” was a traditional ceremony at many colleges, and the ivy-covered walls reflect the efforts of students each Spring. It wasn’t until the early 1930s that this group of universities were described as “Ivy colleges.” They term “Ivy League” was first used in 1954, when the NCAA athletic conference was formed and the eight schools became part of the Division.


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High Tom, Floor Tom, Base Drum and Snare, Hihat, 1 Crash Symbol, 1 Ride Symbol. $400 obo call 240-4499 1/2 Grassfed Beef for Sale: $1419.30 includes everything on 342 carcass weight (processing, deliver to Sheridan, Miles City, or points between). All natural, slow grown on pasture, grassfed and finished. Quarters, Eighths, Sixteenths, and individual cuts also available. LOHOF Grass-Finished BEEF. com. 406-784-2549. lohofmeats@gmail.com

For Sale: Kamik Snow Boots Size 10, Never Been SERVICES AVAILABLE Worn, Pd $84.99. will sell for $45. firm. Call David @ Home or pet care, trans3 0 7 - 6 2 0 - 2 5 0 1 portation, house projects, grocery shopping and more For Sale: Mobile Home Lot - call Errands & Extras 307, 630 Mobile Dr. in Ranches- LLC--your Personal Aster, WY Call (307) 655-2310 sistant Service 752-1623. FSBO 1 Kleiber Drive Dayton,WY $193,000 Dayton, WY (82836) Quiet and secure would describe this recently remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on a corner lot with mountain views. Fenced backyard, mature trees and close to school and parks and swimming pool. Home has 2 car attached garage, gas fireplace and metal roof. All newer appliances included. Front and back wooden decks. Plenty of room on lot for camper and toys. Email susan_wieser@yahoo.com

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Of Sheridan & Johnson Counties

Published weekly by Kysar Publishing. Call (307) 655-5095 bkysar@sjtidbits.com

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Tidbits® of Sheridan and Johnson Counties

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Featuring Local Celebrities, Inspirational Stories, and Local Businesses

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Cornerstone Home Lending This Week Tidbits had the opportunity to interview Lana Kitto, Branch Manager/ MLO of Cornerstone Home Lending. Tidbits: When did you start this business? What path brought you here? Lana Kitto: I started in the business in 1999 as a lender in Wasilla Alaska. In 2001 I began to build up the MT/WY mortgage team with US Bank Home Mortgage. The path that brought me to being a mortgage lender began as I was doing home equity loans as a personal banker. I was having to refer all my mortgage referrals to a coworker as I wasn’t licensed to lend on the mortgage banking product. I began to inquire as to what his role entailed and was intrigued with the intricate process of home lending. T: How is your business different from your competitors? L: I have a saying at work that “a loan is a loan is a loan” but what makes the difference is the lender. I have been doing this for so many years and witnessed a vast plethora of scenarios, so not much catches me off guard. What makes me different from my competitors would be up to the clients to determine however, I do feel that I have a creative edge in finding lending solutions. I am very patient and have will to close loans even when they seem un-closable! My company has a creed that we close loans on time. Partner all this with great clients, a lender with a sense of humor and the magic happens. T: Who has influenced you the most in business? L: The influences over my career are the women and men in my industry that continue on each day making home ownership a possibility. The regulations have changed so much over the last decade. The team I began lending with is the Attorney at Law same team I lend with today. We are a group that supports Providing General Legal Service With and challenges each other. That is my influence each day Special Interest In: and I’m most grateful to this professional group that are my Criminal Defense • Personal Injury • friends. Business Law T: If you could start over would you do anything different? 49 South Main • Sheridan, WY 82801 L: If I could start over would I do anything different, wow this is a deep question! My instinct would be not to work so many late nights, but that is what makes up part of my brand! My clients reach out to me at any hour of the day and I respond. I am often at the office until midnight making sure that I get those cliNew 2016 ents into their homes and as a result I have missed a few too many Collections things that I should have been at. I can’t say I would change much from as what I enjoy today is a result of hard work, fostered relationships Faviana, and mutual respect with industry professionals. Tony Bowls T: Are there any major obstacles that you overcame to get & More! where you are today? Latest L: Major obstacles get obliterated when found in my way. I know styles of that sounds a tad conceited but the reality is, I set hard goals for myTuxedos $40 self and I have high expectations of my performance. I love to find off ways to work through obstacles both personally and professionally. We can There are lots of obstacles that we overcome in this industry and I’m grateful for every one of them. match all T: What do you like most in your career/company? colors! L: My career is very challenging. The paperwork aspect is daunting to any normal person and the humor part in our industry is that we are anything but normal. I love working with people and building the New this year! trust it takes to get from application to closing. I like the challenges Prom buyback I’m faced with in finding solutions and getting loans approved. The program! company I have partnered with is like nothing I have seen in the receive 40% of market. It is innovative and creative and supports me in my enyour dress deavors. I couldn’t be happier with Cornerstone and how they have back! more details in made my life and career a joy to wake up to each day. store. T: What are your interests/hobbies outside of work? L: My interests and hobbies outside of work are… um... I work all the time! In all seriousness, I love my family and doing anything that involves them, except yard work - I leave that up to them. We love to boat on Lake De Smet and to travel and discover new towns and

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PET OF THE WEEK! Grayson is our cat of the week at Second Chance Sheridan Cat Rescue! Grayson is a young, sweet domestic short hair that loves to cuddle and play! For more information about Grayson or any other adoptable cat, please call 307-461-9555 or visit http://sheridancatrescue.org.

PAW’S CORNER By Sam Mazzotta

MUSHROOMS September is National Mushroom Month, and September 10 and 11 have been designated Mushroom Days by a group of mushroom devotees. In conjunction with this observance, Tidbits is conveying some information on these little fungi. • In 1986, the residents of Kennett Square, Pennsylvania were attempting to raise funds for scholarships for local students, and put together the community’s first Mushroom Festival. Vendors gathered along a one-block area to host the event, which has now grown into a mile-long (1.6-kg) stretch, with exhibits, culinary events, kids’ activities, and upwards of 200 vendors, attended by 100,000 spectators. Since 2000, the community’s grant program has donated $700,000 to local non-profits. • Mushrooms are the spore-bearing body of a fungus, classified as such because it has no chlorophyll and produces spores rather than seeds. A single mushroom can drop as many as 16 billion spores. The word “fungus” has its roots in the Greek word sphongos, meaning “sponge.” The part that we see growing above the ground is the fruit of the organism, with a web of tiny filaments growing underground. Because they have no chlorophyll, mushrooms require no sunlight to make energy. • Truffles are mushrooms that grow below the ground and are one of the world’s most expensive foods, highly valued in Italy to flavor pasta sauces. Several varieties can cost up to $1,500 a pound (0.45 kg). The largest and most expensive truffle to date was harvested in Tuscany and fetched $330,000 at auction. Although truffles normally weigh between 1 and 3 ounces (28.4 to 85 g.) this record-holder weighed in at 3.3 lbs. (1.5 kg). • China, the world’s largest producer of edible mushrooms, grows about half of all cultivated mushrooms. (continued on last page)

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Helping in Disasters -- What to Donate? --DEAR PAW’S CORNER: As the flood waters in Louisiana recede, shelters there are calling for assistance in caring for pets that were lost or abandoned when residents fled their homes. I want to help, but I feel a little insulted that many charities are just asking for money up front. I’m sure I could collect pet food or blankets for these shelters and mail them to the area. What’s your take? -- Greg in El Paso, Texas DEAR GREG: While the seemingly constant emails and TV spots asking for money to help shelter animals can be annoying, there are some very good reasons why cold hard cash is often the best option -- particularly in large-scale disasters. First, shelters in a disaster area -- and national organizations like the American Humane Association or the Humane Society that pledge to help -- need specific items, they need them in big quantities, and they need them yesterday. They don’t have time to sort through random donated items to find a few usable things. (For example, shelters don’t use clumping cat litter because it’s a health issue for kittens.) With cash donations, these organizations can buy exactly what they need and get it delivered quickly. Now, local shelters in your area may be OK with donated goods like old blankets, newspapers, unopened pet food and new toys. It’s important to check with them first -- visit their website for a list of needs, and follow up with a phone call to confirm their list is up to date. They also like cash, too. Check out pet charities online at sites like Charity Navigator before donating money, and then decide how you would like to help -- either nationally, or locally. Send your questions or pet care tips to ask@pawscorner.com. (c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.

UNUSUAL ANIMALS: SEAHORSES It’s time to bone up on the more than 50 different species of seahorses found around the globe. • The scientific name given to seahorses is Hippocampus, which translates from the Ancient Greek word hippos, (horse), and kampos, meaning “sea monster.” In looking at the tiny fish, with its head and neck resembling that of a horse, it’s easy to see where it received its name. • Seahorses are classified as “bony fish,” with a skeleton of bone tissue rather than cartilage. They have no scales, but rather bony plates of armor arranged in rings around their bodies. Each species has its own specific number of rings. • Size of these sea creatures ranges from less than one inch (2.54 cm) up to 14 inches (35.6 cm) long. The smallest is the pygmy seahorse that is 0.5 inch (13 mm) long and lives in the waters off Indonesia and Malaysia. The big-bellied seahorse ranks as the largest species, and can be found in the waters off Southern Australia and New Zealand. • Each seahorse shows it uniqueness in the small crown on its head. Each crown, known as a coral net, differs in size and design. • Only two types of fish swim upright, seahorses and razorfish, propelling themselves with their dorsal fin, located on the back of their body. The pectoral fins on the sides of the head are used to steer themselves while swimming. Even with these methods of locomotion, seahorses are poor swimmers. They would rather rest in one area, holding on to seaweed or coral for days at a time. Sometimes they hitchhike through the waters by attaching themselves to floating debris. • Seahorses have a prehensile tail, meaning it is able to pick up things and hold them. This enables them to swim in pairs by wrapping their curled tails around another’s tail. • Seahorses are part of the diet of penguins, tuna, rays, and crabs. If a seahorse manages to avoid its predators, it lives from 4 to 6 years. They do have an important defensive ability, that of changing colors to blend into their environment, protecting them from predators. In a matter of seconds, seahorses can change from purple to yellow to gray to black. While on the lookout for predators, the seahorse can move one eye at a time. Yet, less than 1% of the babies survive to adulthood. • Because they have no teeth or stomach, food passes through the body very quickly, requiring them to be eating almost constantly, sucking up food through their long snout. A tiny 2-week old creature might consume 4,000 shrimp a day! • Unlike any other species, the male seahorses are the ones who carry the young. As they mate, the female deposits up to 1,500 eggs in the male’s pouch, where they are fertilized internally. The male typically wraps his tail around nearby coral or seaweed to wait it out. The female’s body becomes slimmer, while his expands as he carries the eggs for about 45 days, until the baby seahorses are born fully developed. The male is then finished with his part in reproduction, and takes no part in the lives of the offspring. • Not surprisingly, a group of seahorses, (which are often referred to as the Stallions of the Sea), is called a herd.


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Tidbits® of Sheridan and Johnson Counties

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MUSHROOMS (continued): • There are about 10,000 known species of mushrooms in North America alone. Of these, 50% are inedible, meaning woody and indigestible. About 25% are edible, but lacking much taste. Another 20% will make you sick, meaning they will severely irritate your digestive tract, resulting in vomiting and/or diarrhea. Just 4% are tasty, and the remaining 1% can kill you. • Edible mushrooms are loaded with health benefits. Research indicates that eating these fungi can help reduce blood pressure, reduce cholesterol, boost the immune system, and reduce stress. They are rich in copper (necessary for red blood cell production), selenium and zinc, which both strengthen the immune system, three B-complex vitamins -- riboflavin, niacin, pantothenic acid – which release energy, and potassium, necessary for all cell functions. A 100-gram serving contains more fiber than the same amount of celery. • A person who collects mushrooms for consumption is referred to as a mycophagist. • If you have a “fairy ring” in your lawn, it’s actually a mushroom formation that causes the fungi to grow in the outline of a perfect circle. Some of the oldest living fairy rings grow around England’s Stonehenge monument, with rings up to 328 feet (100 meters) wide. According to some legends, fairy rings mark the site of witches or fairies dancing, while others say the rings show where the Devil set his milk churn. • The largest living organism on Earth is a 2,400-year-old giant mushroom in Oregon. This honey mushroom species covers 2,200 acres (8.9 sq. km), and is a parasitic variety that consumes wood and is slowly killing off the trees in the forest by creating a destructive white rot.

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