SEE INSIDE: Wilkeson dreams big, page 3 . . . . Potted Plants and drinking, Marianne Binetti, page 5 . . . Prep football previews, page 8 . . . Art from Adam Kenney, page 13 . . . Africa rich in spirit, page 18 . . .
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Judge affirms YarrowBay projects and denies appeal
What’s Inside Views...................................Page 6 Sports.................................Page 8 Arts......................................Page 13 Obituaries.........................Page 19 Classified...........................Page 20
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Hole-in one car...
Black Diamond master planned developments affirmed by Superior Court By Dennis Box Editor
Aaron Mahelona receives car keys and a handshake from Fugate Ford salesman Shayne McNeill Friday. Mahelona was awarded the car from Fugate after hitting a hole-in-one at the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce golf tournament.
King County Superior Court Judge Patrick Oishi ruled Monday in favor of YarrowBay and the city of Black Diamond concerning the Land Use Petition Act appeal filed by Toward Responsible Development. TRD filed the appeal against YarrowBay’s two master planned developments, The Villages and Lawson Hills. The judge wrote in the orders, “TRD’s Land Use Petition fails to meet the standards set forth in RCW 36.70C.130(1) for granting relief.” The judge dismissed the petition “with prejudice” meaning the petition cannot be refiled in that court. The ruling can be appealed to state appeals
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Time for Football
Mark Gunderson, Enumclaw Hornets football coach, works on a drill Thursday at Pete’s Pool field with a group of players. The season opens at 7 p.m. Friday at Pete’s against White River. Dennis Box, The Courier-Herald To view a slide show go to www.courierherald.com. Check the website for scores and live updates of the Friday game.
See APPEAL, Page 3
Sumner woman dies in 410 crash By Dennis Box Editor
A 56-year-old Sumner woman, Pamela C. Bone, died Saturday on state Route 410 between 234th Avenue East and 254th. According to a report from the Washington State Patrol, the collision occurred about 1:15 p.m.
The busy highway was blocked for several hours as police and firefighters responded to the collision. The state patrol report stated Bone was traveling west when she crossed the centerline and collided with a vehicle driven by a 62-yearold Gregory W. Willging of Bonney Lake. He was traveling east. Willging’s vehicle rolled after being hit. He was transferred to Good Samaritan Hospital with injuries. Responding were East Pierce Fire and Rescue emergency personnel and Bonney Lake police officers.
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Buckley man accused of setting fire to neighbor’s van over dispute By Dennis Box and Kevin Hanson The Courier-Herald
set his neighbor’s home on fire, but information Monday indicated he set a van on police fire. The van fire caught a garage and shop on fire. East Pierce Fire and Rescue firefighters were able to put the van and garage fire out before
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The Buckley man alleged to have set fire to a neighbor’s box van Saturday night remains hospitalized at Good Samaritan Hospital. Initial reports were the man had
See FIRE, Page 3
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Wilkeson sets sights on numerous projects By Kevin Hanson
W
Wilkeson in the state Legislature. The trio make up the team from the 31st Legislative District. First among Wilkeson’s ambitious projects is a redesign of the downtown core, which takes in a short stretch of highway and a few side streets. In 2010, the city landed a grant that is paying for planning work. Johnson said there were more than 30 options when the process began and the ultimate goal is to “maintain the traditional look of the town.” That’s the intent, despite the potential for giving a new look to the highway, creating additional parking, upgrading sidewalks and lighting and adding bicycle lanes. Plans also show the possibility of providing some downtown creek access. Leaving town hall and hoofing it along Church Street, the crew headed for the ramshackle coke ovens, a historic reminder of Wilkeson’s mining past. The city has long talked about rehabilitating at least a few of the coke ovens, both as a source of community pride and to potentially attract visitors. The ovens were used in the early part of the 20th century to burn the impurities from the raw coal
Senior Writer
ilkeson might be small in size, but that doesn’t keep the community from dreaming big. Buoyed by the optimism of Mayor Donna Hogerhuis, the historic mining town has platted a course of action that could – if everything comes to fruition – pay economic dividends for years to come. Items on the current agenda also aim to offer an immediate payoff in terms of community morale. City plans were spelled out in detail the afternoon of Aug. 22, when Hogerhuis hosted a session that included Sen. Pam Roach, Bryan Bowden of the National Park Service and Eric Johnson of the SheaCarr-Jewell engineering firm. Also attending were City Planner Kathy James and City Councilmen Ian Galbraith and Terry Endsley. “We’ve got a lot on our plate and so much of it involves the state,” Hogerhuis said when introducing Roach. The mayor intends to host a similar session for state Reps. Christopher Hurst and Cathy Dahlquist who, like Roach, represent
FIRE FROM 1
The suspect apparently surrendered at the Buckley police station about 8:15 Saturday night and was then taken to Good Samaritan Hospital in Puyallup. The Pierce County Prosecutor’s Office said the man was not in custody as of Monday morning and charges have not been filed. Check the website for updates and more details, www.courierherald.com.
the house was threatened. Early reports indicate the 52-year-old man was involved in a dispute with a neighbor over money. The neighbor reportedly escaped unharmed. The incident occurred in the 6800 block of 245th Avenue East.
APPEAL FROM 1
city and YarrowBay. Black Diamond Mayor Rebecca Olness wrote in a message to the paper, “Once again the court confirms that the city followed the law and did the right thing.” The appeal was argued before the judge Aug. 3. The ordinances approving the two developments were passed unanimously by the Black Diamond City Council in September 2010.
court. The judge affirmed approval of the permit ordinances for both projects and the adequacy of the environmental impact statements. The judge also directed TRD to pay the “cost and statutory attorneys’ fee” for the
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 3
Wilkeson Mayor Donna Hogerhuis, Bryan Bowden from The National Park Service and state Sen. Pam Roach stand in front of a coke oven in Wilkeson Aug. 22. Kevin Hanson, The Courier-Herald extracted from nearby mines. Bowden said a two-day work session in October will fine-tune plans, which could include everything from an interpretive trail to a small amphitheater. Bowden’s time and expertise has been made available to the city due to a grant Wilkeson received from the Park Service. Also on the city’s horizon is the building of a small skate park, a popular idea among many kids in the town of less than 500 residents. Hogerhuis said the city has applied for a state grant to build the concrete attraction not too many steps from
Town Hall. The city will know within a week or two how high it sits on the funding priority list. Also on the agenda is rehabilitation of Town Hall and stabilization of the creek that runs through town. Hogerhuis said the city has already received a $75,000 state grant to renovate Town Hall’s wood-frame windows that feature peeling paint and are far from energy-efficient. A grant has already paid to replace the hall’s old oil furnace with an modern heat-pump system that brought air conditioning to Town Hall.
OBITUARY
Dorothy Kreklow, who would become his wife. He worked at Federation Forest State Park before returning to the construction industry and working for G.L.C. Inc. in Enumclaw for 21 years. He loved fishing, hiking, skiing, camping, mushroom hunting, birds, plant identification, dogs, animals and music. He played the piano, harmonica and drums, sang and loved to whistle. He was a great story teller. He is survived by sons Evan and Glen Carnes of Snohomish County and sister Melanie Carnes Solonsky and husband Allan of Bainbridge Island, Wash. He was preceded in death by his father, mother and brother Marvin. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions to any environmental conservation organization. Plans are tentative for a celebration of his life in Greenwater or Lake Ozette. His ashes will be placed on Harstine Island next to his brother Marvin at the same time as his mother, who died June 23.
RANDALL CARNES Randall John Carnes, 60, died Aug. 17, 2012, at his Buckley home. He was born Nov. 15, 1951, in Olympia, Wash., to Samuel M. Carnes and Pauline S. Hitchcock Carnes. The family moved to Des Moines, Wash., in the early 1960s and he graduated from Mount Rainier High School in 1970. He worked at Crystal Mountain Ski Resort Randall Carnes in many capacities for 15 years and built homes when there was no snow. He served as a Merchant Marine in Alaska before moving to Greenwater, where he met
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Page 4 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Duck race, golf tourney to help charitable cause It’s duck season again – at least, that’s the claim made by members of the Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation and Enumclaw Rotary. The two organizations are combining to promote the 23rd annual duck race, which raises money for charitable causes. This year’s duck race will take place Sept. 8. A change is that ducks will float down Boise Creek through the Enumclaw Golf Course, with perhaps as many as 4,000 ducks launched into the water near the 16th green. For many years, ducks plunged into the Green River at Flaming Geyser State Park; the past couple of years brought a duck drop, which the rubber ducks spilled over the side of a hot air balloon. Ducks are on sale for $5, available at the ERHF office, St. Elizabeth Hospital and the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce. They also are being sold by Rotarians and mem-
bers of the Healthcare Foundation board. The first duck across the finish line will net its owner a $1,000 cash prize. Second place is a pair of round-trip airline tickets on Alaska Airlines and third place is a boat tour for four around Lake Washington. Four other prizes, all valued at $100 or more, will be awarded. On the same day, the Healthcare Foundation and Rotary are sponsoring a family-friendly golf tournament, with kids encouraged to participate. The fee of $35 per person covers nine holes of golf, one seat in a golf cart and refreshments on the course. The fee is $30 without a cart. The tourney will operate under a scramble format with four-person teams, with a shotgun start at 12:30 p.m. For more information about either event or to register for the golf tournament, visit www.enumclawrhf.org or call 360802-3206.
Local hospital part of healthcare merger Enumclaw’s St. Elizabeth Hospital is one part in a newly-announced plan that would create a major healthcare system throughout the Pacific Northwest. Catholic Health Initiatives and PeaceHealth, two nonprofit health care systems, have signed a nonbinding letter of intent to create a new, regional system that would aim to improve care and access for individuals, employers and communities across the region. St. Elizabeth is owned by the Tacomabased Franciscan Health System, which is part of Catholic Health Initiatives, a faith-based system with headquarters in Englewood, Colo. The proposed – and yet unnamed – partnership would combine seven CHI hospitals in Washington and Oregon with nine PeaceHealth hospitals in Washington, Oregon and Alaska. The new organization would include nearly 26,000 employees and about 950 employed physicians serving in hospitals, physician clinics, outpatient care clinics, long-term care facilities, laboratories and private homes across the region. PeaceHealth is based in Vancouver,
Wash. The new organization, with annual revenues of almost $4 billion, would attempt to build on the strengths of both organizations to better manage care and resources in a rapidly changing health care environment. “As a part of Catholic Health Initiatives, we believe this partnership will expand and sustain our healing ministry that has been essential to the quality of life in our South Puget Sound communities since 1891,” said Joe Wilczek, Franciscan’s chief executive officer. Franciscan services that would become part of the new regional system include St. Elizabeth in Enumclaw, along with St. Joseph Medical Center, Tacoma; St. Francis Hospital, Federal Way; St. Clare Hospital, Lakewood; St. Anthony Hospital, Gig Harbor; the Franciscan Medical Group network of clinics, physicians, and professional providers in Pierce, King and Kitsap counties; Franciscan Hospice and Palliative Care; and all other Franciscan programs. The medical center on Griffin
See HOSPITAL, Page 16
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ENUMCLAW POLICE REPORTS TRUCK VS. POLE: City police assisted with traffic control the morning of Aug. 24 after a large truck hit a power pole on Southeast 436th Street. Power lines wound up draped over the semi. The scene was turned over to firefighters and Puget Sound Energy. SCHOOL VANDALISM: Extra patrol was requested Aug. 24 for Kibler Elementary School, due to ongoing issues with minor vandalism. VEHICLE ATTACK: A man called the police the afternoon of Aug. 24, advising that a woman was attempting to hit him with her vehicle. An officer contacted both parties and advised all to cease and desist. They agreed to comply. ONE HURT: City police assisted the Washington State Patrol and local firefighters with a one-vehicle accident at 8:30 a.m. Aug. 23. The accident, which occurred on 244th Avenue Southeast, resulted in the female driver being transported to St. Elizabeth Hospital. The investigation was turned over to the WSP. THREE PROWLS: Approximately 60 compact discs with an estimated value of $500 were taken the evening of Aug. 23 from a vehicle parked on Nielson Avenue. Also, ammunition was reported stolen from a vehicle on Florence Street and a GPS device was reported taken from a vehicle on Clovercrest Street. TRESPASSING: Officers were asked Aug. 22 to patrol a residence on Harding Street. A named subject is a male nephew of former tenant but it was noted anyone at the scene should be considered trespassing. YOUTH ASSAULT: Police were called Aug. 22 following a report of a 12- or 13-year-old boy assaulting an 8-year-old boy at a McHugh Place location. The officer settled the issue. FACEBOOK NO CONTACT: An officer contacted a reporting party Aug. 22 because a posted information on Facebook that was possibly in violation of a no-contact order. The person was advised to cease posting information on Facebook. PROWL PROBLEMS: Police were asked Aug. 21 to provide extra patrol during the night at a Warner Avenue parking lot, due to an ongoing problem with vehicles being prowled. SUICIDAL SUBJECT: Police were told Aug. 21 of a suicidal subject who had been at St. Elizabeth Hospital but departed prior to officers’ arrival. The subject was located about an hour later and was returned to St. Elizabeth for a voluntary commitment. WARRANT ARREST: A person attending Enumclaw Municipal Court Aug. 21 was arrested on an outstanding warrant issued by Auburn. A corrections officer transported the person to meet with Auburn authorities and custody was exchanged. WELFARE CHECK: Enumclaw police checked Aug. 21 on the welfare of someone at a Southeast 448th Street. The person was eventually turned over to medical personnel and transported to St. Elizabeth Hospital. HANDGUN TAKEN: A handgun was reportedly taken during a vehicle prowl that occurred during the early-morning hours of Aug. 20. The incident took place at a Charwila Lane address. SCAM AVOIDED: An employee of a Cole Street bank told police Aug. 20 a customer, who was attempting to send money, was potentially the victim of a scam. Police confirmed the suspicion, the wire transfer did not go through and no money was lost. HARASSMENT: A Douglas Fir Drive resident told
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police Aug. 20 of ongoing harassment by a neighbor who was driving by the home, making obscene gestures and taking pictures. An officer contacted both parties and advised the neighbor to stop the harassment. The reporting party was advised to obtain an anti-harassment order through the court system. VEHICLE PROWLS: Police took reports of two vehicle prowls Aug. 19. An incident on Initial Avenue resulted in a portable GPS device being taken; during a prowl on Paramount Drive, a GPS device was taken, along with an iPod adapter and a knife. There were no immediate suspects in either case. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: Police took two calls Aug. 19 regarding a man who was walking along Semanski Street, yelling into a phone and threatening a female. It was determined the man was the subject of a domestic violence report that had just been taken, relating to an incident at a Warner Avenue address. Prior to an officer’s arrival, the suspect was picked up by someone driving a white truck. THREAT MADE: A citizen told police Aug. 19 a man in a gray Toyota pickup had threatened him before driving away. The reporting party could not positively identify the man in the pickup. SUSPICIOUS: A man walked up to an Enumclaw home at 10:40 p.m. Aug. 18 and told the residents he was there to talk to their 11-year-old son about an xBox game. The man was not known by the family, but he knew their names. He quickly departed in a gray or bark blue Honda. Officers responded but could not locate the man. FIRE HAZARD: Police responded at 10:45 p.m. Aug. 18 to a report of people lighting and releasing paper lanterns. Officers made contact and warned of the fire hazard. The subject confirmed all lanterns were out when they reached the ground. JUST STOP: A man told police Aug. 18 he was being harassed and threatened by another man. When contacted, the alleged suspect said it was the other man causing the problem. Both were advised of laws against harassment and threats and both agreed to stop. MEDICAL HELP: Police responded at 9:37 p.m. Aug. 17 to a report of a possible overdose. A vehicle was parked at the emergency room entrance at St. Elizabeth Hospital. Hospital staff took the occupant for a medical evaluation and the vehicle was moved. Other occupants in the vehicle had to find a ride from the hospital. FIRE INTERRUPTED: A Kibler Elementary School employee notified police Aug. 17 after spotting three males of junior high age lighting paper on fire near a trash receptacle at the back of the building. Two fled on foot and one on a bicycle; none were located. RESISTING ARREST: King County Mental Health sought police assistance Aug. 17 with an involuntary commitment at St. Elizabeth Hospital. The subject fled, but was located and arrested several blocks away. An officer was to send a citation through the mail for resisting arrest. DRUG CHARGES: A traffic stop the afternoon of Aug. 17 on Chinook Avenue resulted in two people arrested on drug charges. A few hours later, a traffic stop on Wells Street resulted in a female taken into custody on both a drug charge and for an outstanding arrest warrant. The male driver was released at the scene, but instructed to take care of his warrant. The vehicle was impounded.
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Page 5 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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Look to R&B to find roots of today’s music People sometimes ask what I think of modern rock, rap and the pop scene in general. I usually say I don’t think much about it; that is, I rarely pay any attention to it. Consequently, if I’m asked where modern rock seems to be headed, I haven’t the slightest idea, though some of my favorite New York critics predict it’s headed to oblivion. Given the Justin Bieber phenomenon, I might suggest that within five years the members of America’s most popular bands will all be younger than 13 – unless the Rolling Stones are still on tour. If I’m not qualified to speak on today’s pop music and where it’s going, I can certainly tell you where it came from. Trust me on this one. The notion of rock ‘n’ roll was a creation
of the mass media as much as anything else. Back in the 1950s, the powers that be realized American youth – adolescents, really Wally DuChateau – had an enormous Columnist amount of money. How to tap into this market was the question of the day. So, the record companies and Hollywood teamed up with Madison Avenue and decided the best way to exploit teenage commerce was to promote the idea that kids were different from their parents; in other words, the notion that teenagers had a separate culture with their own music, movies, clothing and radio stations. Thus, James Dean became an overnight superstar, a mop of male hair became a symbol of rebellion, Dick Clark unleashed “American Bandstand”
Wally’s World
and no self-respecting teenager within a 50-mile radius of Seattle would listen to any radio station but KJR. While their parents enjoyed Benny Goodman’s swing and watched the Lawrence Welk TV show, American youth was listening to a new kind of music called rock ‘n’ roll. But in fact, there was really very little new about it. It was simply a new label for a musical style formerly called rhythm and blues. The “blues” came from legendry giants like Leadbelly and the tradition is currently carried on by performers like B.B. King. The “rhythm” came from many musicians in Memphis and New Orleans. One of the earliest, most renowned and most innovative proponent of R&B was the pianist and singer Fats Domino of “Blueberry Hill” fame. (Early rock ‘n’ roll really didn’t create a hell of a lot of anything, other than Presley’s pelvic gyrations, until it turned into hard rock in the late 1960s when, in fact, there actually was a
“generation gap” between kids and their parents.) Of course, today there are many R&B bands within the Greater Seattle region, promoting the fine tradition of Domino and Booker T. and the M.Gs. Locally, Craig Gamon’s group, “The Pleasure Hounds” is an excellent example. They deliver authentic, down-home, gut-level R&B. If you haven’t yet experienced their stylings, check them out some weekend in the ginmills around town. (They’ll be appearing Saturday at Rendezvous on Myrtle Avenue.) Whether the Hounds ever make it in the big leagues outside Enumclaw is anyone’s guess. They’re certainly good enough but R&B bands are a dime a dozen. Even the good ones. As with any art – whether music, writing, painting or whatever – how successful the practitioners become is determined not only by their products, but by who they know.
Time to start thinking about fall garden tasks Is it safe to use “gray water” to water my container gardens? By this I mean the left over water from cooking or washing? I live in a town with high water bills and my summer water bill is a shocker. R.T., email Shades of gray when it comes to reusing water can be a bit dirty – but never recycle water that has soap suds unless you are sure the soap is mild with no phosphates. This means if you hand wash your dishes with Ivory soap and then occasionally use the water in the dish pan to water your pots you’ll be fine. Don’t try to recycle water from washing clothes. A practical way to cut back on wasted water is to recycle the water from cooking vegetables. Just don’t salt the water and let it cool before using it to water houseplants, hanging baskets and container gardens. As a bonus the
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yellow and brown, get snippy all the way to ground level. Cut t ing back the canes now will allow the new growth Marianne Binetti coming up from Columnist below to take over. Don’t prune back the new fallnutrients that leach from the boiled veggies will bearing raspberries or help fertilize the potted everbearing raspberries plants. If you boil eggs, as you can still enjoy a this cooking water is an late harvest this fall. In excellent source of cal- general for all plants this cium for tomatoes and time of year, if the leaves blooming houseplants. are green, let them be, it Again, remember not to it‘s brown cut it down. I have bearded add salt to the cooking iris plants that water if you recycle it have grown ugly with onto your plants. My raspberries age and now have fewer have borne fruit blooms. I suspect I need and now the branches are to divide them. I have turning yellow. When do read you should do this I cut these back? C.C., in the fall. My question is what month is considOlympia This is a good ered the best for dividing time to cut back iris? M.K., email Dig in now as the canes of June-bearing late August and raspberries that have already given you a har- the entire month of vest. When you see that September are the perthe foliage has turned fect time to divide ear-
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The last week of August means the start of autumn maintenance and fall propagation in the garden. This is the time to cut back, take cuttings, dig and divide early-blooming perennials and start filling up the compost bin. Continue to harvest herbs, veggies and cut f lowers from the garden and keep all your beds weeded so the summer weeds don’t get a chance to f lower and go to seed. Watering is the most important task this week, especially if you want a landscape that will continue to look great all season. Remember to water slowly and deeply to train the roots of trees, shrubs and perennials to grow deep in search of moisture rather than stay at the surface of the soil. Drip lines, soaker hoses and improving your soil with compost and organic matter are all ways to cut back on the water bill.
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The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 6
Letters
At 6-foot tall, Joan Rupp is not necessarily a little woman. Back in her day, she played forward, even once patrolling the paint at Madison Square Garden. But even from the distance of the first row of seats at Key Arena to watch the ladies of the Seattle Storm battle Phoenix Mercury, it was obvious that today’s basketball players play a slightly more physical game than in Joan’s day. “Whoa, she’s a big sucker,” Joan said, reaching for her program to get the name of the woman playing what was her position for the Storm. “I’d have to play guard these days!” Brian Beckley And that’s high Staff Writer praise from a woman who shared the floor with Wilt Chamberlain and Meadowlark Lemon! In the week in–week out world of community journalism, stories come and stories go. Truth be told, after more than a decade of doing this, a lot of the stories tend to blur together when you look back on them: another council meeting, another police blotter, another photo op. While I take pride in the work I do and the stories themselves are actually important, news is a fleeting business and stories are usually only important for a few weeks. It’s on to the next cycle, the next issue, the next story.
It is amazing to me how many people around the Enumclaw and Bonney Lake area are hard-working, generous and kindhearted. I am especially proud of the Loyal Order of the Moose in Enumclaw. During the past couple of years it has certainly been difficult for families, small business and such to keep their heads above water financially. Nonprofit organizations such as the Moose have really struggled to keep their doors open and help many through their charitable events. They offer the community an inexpensive location to hold funerals, weddings, etc., as well as provide meals to elder-
See corner, Page 10
Volume 111 • Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • No. 50
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Proud of Moose; now is time to lend a hand
ly and veterans, all done with faithful volunteers. So it was a sad day when the shed/storage building was broken into and yard equipment and tools were stolen. The stealing has not stopped and now someone decided they needed the new heat pump which, of course, provides heat in winter and air conditioning in the hot summer months. If the perp wanted the heat pump for scrap metal I wish they would have done the Moose a favor and taken the broken down, old pump instead. Any help through donations or volunteering would be greatly appreciated so this wonderful organization can continue to assist Enumclaw and the surrounding areas. And to the scumbags who vandalize and steal, shame on you. Maggie Bolduc Enumclaw
Existence of U.S. is currently at grave risk I must confess to being somewhat at a loss to understand (“In Focus” columnist) Rich Elfers at The Courier-Herald. Mr. Elfers ostensibly seems to be an advocate of kumbaya and “Can’t we all just get along?” What I get from his musings is conflicting interests and moral confusion in dealing with contemporary political and historical forces. I also find his understanding of historical political history to be somewhat shallow at times. To wit: liberals in the 1950s believed in individual freedom, small government and low taxation, exactly the reverse of today’s “liberals” that have evolved into “progressives” who
See LETTERS, Page 7
Balance of power a tricky test Henry Kissinger’s book, “Diplomacy,” is a fascinating study of two different approaches to foreign policy in the West. These two competing worldviews have deeply affected, and are still shaping the history of, the modern world. Kissinger begins by describing President Teddy Roosevelt’s brilliant balance of power approach to foreign affairs, and then he contrasts it with President Woodrow Wilson’s more idealistic moral diplomacy. Oddly, Wilson’s perspective has come to dominate international affairs more than Teddy Roosevelt’s. Let’s examine these two opposing views to glean a deeper understanding of the world we live in.
In Focus Rich Elfers Columnist
Teddy Roosevelt is probably one of our best-educated presidents in his understanding of how nations interact. Being born into a wealthy New York family in the latter 19th century, he had an early opportunity to travel the world and meet the monarchs and leaders of Europe and Asia and America. He learned
100 Years on the Plateau!
several languages; was a prodigious writer of books on many subjects, like botany, biology, history and politics; and his attitudes and actions are probably most responsible for the United States being the great world power it is today. Roosevelt imbibed the early 20th century diplomatic culture of Europe and made it his own. The attitude at the time was based upon what has come to be known as balance of power. The goal of balance of power is to keep any one European nation from dominating the other major powers. According to this worldview, nations
See ELFERS, Page 7 This two-story, 1,200 square foot boarding house was built in 1918 and torn down in 1943. There were seven boarding rooms and outbuildings including a garage, shed, and root house. This building was owned by Pacific Coast Coal Company and the rooms were typically rented to single men who worked in the mines. Boarding houses and hotels would provide sleeping quarters, family style dining and a washroom where the miners could take baths at the end of a working day. Also lunches would be provided and clothes could be washed at the end of the week. King County Assessor photo dated November 28, 1939 of tax parcel #112106-9015-B
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reject the provisions of the Constitution. German Nazis were “right wing”? The historical record is blindingly clear; World War II Nazis were proudly “National Socialists.” That the policies of the communist Soviet Union “caused the collapse” of that country leaving out that the “collapse” cost of (conservatively) 260 million murders of men, woman and children in less than 70 years. He chides us to not name evil for what it is in the name of what exactly? His latest overt attempt to calm the political waters seems to attempt use blind moral equivalence between the two current contenders for president. Gov. Romney he lists as a businessman, as if that completes his human outline, and mentions Romney’s family, religious and moral life that no matter what you think of him is boringly clean. His loss of his fortune, his earning it back in the best capitalistic tradition and his giving of millions of personal dollars to charity every year is not covered. As to President Obama he covers his history at light speed and claims his world view is “shaped” by his birth in Hawaii, “being raised in Indonesia” (Obama’s handpicked Illinois publicist listed him as born in Indonesia until 2012 when it became media fodder, but never mind); won his state Senate elections by forcing his opponents out of the elections by forcing release of divorce records by getting court orders; skips over his being raised by a cabal of family Marxists-
communists and Trotskyite “community activists” and a disturbing lack of information how he got into Ivy League schools since his records (including state Senate) are all under lock and key reviewable by no one. Admitted (in his own book) he was an illegal drug abuser. That he began his fundraising political career in Chicago in the living room of an unrepentant, bomb-making terrorist apparently. Nor his threeyear career of destruction of the American economy (“leveling wealth”) and world standing; crony capitalism support of political money bundlers (iceberg tip Solyndra among 14 other “Green” companies bankrupt) taking $800 (+/-) billion of our money with them. The existence of the United States is currently at grave risk and attempting to ignore the stated intent of the forces at play, redefining them and attempting to hide them under the wool blanket of moral equivalence making them more palatable to your world view, is a nonideology that historically brought us WWII, the Cold War (Vietnam) and the sand box. Pick a side Mr, Elfers, the universe does not allow you to be neutral. Although I hear the dark side has cookies…. Craig Sarver Bonney Lake
Thanks to all for making Night Out a terrific event
Out in Enumclaw. I heard about NNO last year when Trip explained the program at a Rotary meeting. It was just the push I needed to host a block party for my neighborhood. The committee makes it really easy by advertising the program, supplying invitations and fliers and sending representatives from the police and fire departments. They also supplied emergency preparedness information packets for all the guests. We had 20 to 30 neighbors who came by to get to know each other, including State Rep. Cathy Dahlquist, who lives on our street. I think everyone who attended gained something. I heard carpools may have been created and new parents met a possible babysitter. Personally, I got to hear about the history of my house from neighbors who have lived here much longer than I have. I was also able to thank the neighbor three doors down who shared his lovely blue iris bulbs with me last spring. And I got an invitation to see what Toastmasters is all about. I’ve also noticed more smiling and waving since our barbecue. These are simple things but they’re important to me. So thank you to my neighbors, to the LINCCK committee and especially to Trip Hart for helping to create a more friendly community. Wendy Walker Enumclaw
ELFERS FROM 6 act according to their own self-interest to gain advantage for themselves at the expense of other nations, forming and breaking alliances as events change. “Its (balance of power) goal was not peace so much as stability and moderation” (P. 21). Foreign policy morality and the standards of private morality are distinct in this view. Where an individual would be expected to be honest a nd concerned about the welfare of others, national morality under balance of power diplomac y is tota l ly selfseek ing: The world is a jungle and only the st rong a nd cu nni ng survive. The key goal of this worldview is gaining and using power to serve nationalistic goals. Roosevelt strong ly believed America should and would become the dominant nation in the world. To do so, we needed to grow militarily and expand our reach through conquest and diplomacy. A second view came out of the brutality and destruction of World War I. Woodrow Wilson was the son of a Presbyterian pastor and a mother who was the daughter of a pastor. Wilson, being born in the South before the Civil War, saw the effects
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nations, like individuals, should talk out their differences rather than become violent. That’s why Wilson advocated the creation of the League of Nations after World War I, a precursor to the United Nations. Wilson’s more exalted views have become the standard of American foreign policy for every American president since, both Democrat and Republican. Unfortunately, this desire to balance power and principle has made America ambivalent in its foreign affairs. We tend to vacillate between Teddy Roosevelt’s balance of power approach and Wilson’s moral diplomacy. It explains the protests of the Vietnam War and the criticism of George W. Bush with his policy of a preemptive strike against Saddam Hussein. It also explains why America was horrified at the use of torture and humiliation at Abu Ghraib. Both Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson were great presidents. Both their views have prevailed in part, but paradoxically, it was the idealistic Wilson whose worldview dominates America and the world.
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of modern warfare close up from a very young age. This experience had a deep effect upon the development of his worldview. Wilson was a Princeton University professor with a Ph.D. in history and political science who eventually became president of Princeton University, then governor of New Jersey and, finally, president of the United States in 1913. Wilson’s foreign policy views deeply reflected his Christian faith. He called his foreign policy stance “moral diplomacy.” In contradiction to Teddy Roosevelt’s perspective and strong denunciations, Wilson’s view was that national foreign affairs and personal morality should be one and the same values (P. 46). “Disdaining the balance of power, he insisted that America’s role was ‘not to prove…our selfishness, but our greatness’” (P. 47). According to Wilson’s view, America should be a beacon – a light on the hill. The United States has an obligation to spread its core beliefs: equality, Christianity and democracy to the world. Wilson’s goal was to keep the peace through “collective security rather than alliances” (P. 30). In other words,
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LETTERS FROM 6
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 7
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Are you ready for some football?
Friday night opener features renewal of Enumclaw-White River rivalry Senior Writer
If the White River High football team continues its upward spiral under coach Joe Sprouse, good things are in store for the coming season. Two years ago, the Hornets went 1-9 under the first-year coach, who was an all-state linebacker during his time in the maroon and gold. Last season brought a massive turnaround, as the Hornets improved to 6-1 in South Puget Sound League 2A play, shared the league title and earned home-field
GOOD LUCK
to make an impact on both sides of the ball. They should get most of the touches in Sprouse’s runfirst offense. When the ball is in the air, it will be veteran quarterback Zach McMillen doing the honors. The third-year starter has a handful of options at receiver, including Devin Liebel, Austin May, Dustin France and Sean Hayes. McMillen should have time to throw, and ball carriers should find decent holes to run through, as the Hornets have three returning starters on the offensive line. But it’s the defense that should really leave its mark on opponents, Sprouse said. “I expect our defense to play at a really high level,” he said, noting that eight starters return from last year’s defensive crew, which ranked second in the SPSL 2A.
See WHITE RIVER, Page 10
Editor
The Enumclaw High Hornets will hit the regular season gridiron Friday, hosting White River at 7 p.m. at the Pete’s Pool field. The team and fans have high hopes for the season. Enumclaw features a new coach, Mark Gunderson, who played cornerback for Pacific Lutheran University. Gunderson wrote in an email the team has “a talented group led by senior Bryson Grant, junior Chandler Streuli and junior Mauricio Portillo (captains). Taking snaps at quarterback will be junior Peter Nordby. The wideout corp will be Perry Rockwood, a senior who also plays defensive
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back, and Bryson Grant and Tyler Osborn, who will also play outside linebacker. The defense will feature senior Nathan Pigott at corner and defensive line,
• Peter Erickson, P.T., O.C.S. • Jon Erickson, P.T., CERT. M.D.T. • Kate Massie, P.T., M.S. • Dennis Eldridge, D.P.T.
and juniors Sam Fisher and Streuli at outside linebacker. Lining up at running
See ENUMCLAW, Page 9
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The EHS Hornets have been working hard at Pete’s Pool, getting ready for Friday’s opener against White River. Photo by Dennis Box
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advantage in the opening round of postseason play. The playoff excitement might have ended with a Week 1, 20-13 loss to the Interlake Saints, but a positive football vibe had returned to Buckley. “We’re going to take another step toward success,” Sprouse said after leading eight days of practice. “We lost some seniors, but we have some kids ready to step up and make this a trend.” Although the Hornets lost a large handful of seniors to graduation, Sprouse is pleased with the talent he sees up and down his roster. Players to watch, he said, include Keenan Fagan and Garrett Quiles, two-way players who are expected
661971
White River looks to take another step to success
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Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 9
Junior Hornets pick up three wins rushing TDs while Ben Pozun, Petey Erickson, Cody Williams and Nate Belcourt also added touchdown runs. Zack Jones threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Drew Krehbiel as the fifth graders evened their season record to 1-1. The sixth-grade Junior Hornets came out hot, jumping on the Tigers with multiple weapons. Five different players scored touchdowns during a onesided, 33-0 victory. QB Joe Flanigan threw a pair of touchdown passes, one a 70-yarder to Henry Henken and the other a 33-yard score to Brandon Howard. Nick Harberts and Jett VanHoof added rushing
touchdowns to round out the day. The seventh grade team faced a Tigers offense that featured two huge running backs. After falling behind 6-0 in the second quarter, the Junior Hornets responded with a solid drive, capped by a Mason Fend touchdown run and a successful extra point kick for the two-point addon, making it 8-6 Hornets at halftime. Coming out focused in the second half, the Junior Hornets shut down the Tigers offense and Michael Pedreira’s interception sparked two back-toback Junior Hornets touchdowns. Josh Heer blasted his way into the end zone for a 1-yard touchdown
and fullback Ben Holland added a 10-yard TD to close out any chances of a Tiger comeback. For the second week in a row, the eighth-grade Junior Hornets faced a tough opponent. This week it was the Raiders
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Then... Basketball Golf Soccer 1979-1983
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ENUMCLAW FROM 8 back will be Portillo, who will play outside linebacker as well. Enumclaw is coming off a tough 2011 season that saw the Hornets go 1-7 overall and 0-5 in South Puget Sound League 3A play.
GO Hornets !
912 Griffin Ave. • Enumclaw • 360-825-3141
Nelson is golden at Sr. Games Area resident Chuck Nelson earned four gold medals at the Washington State Senior Games, contested July 29 in Chehalis. Nelson, who swims daily at the Enumclaw pool, took first-place honors in the 25-yard butterfly, 100-yard butterfly, 200-yard individual medley and 100-yard individual medley. He competed in the division for athletes 70 to 74 years old. The Washington State Senior Games, now in its 16th year, is the largest Olympic-style, multisport event in Washington. Almost 2,000 participants took part in this year’s Senior Games, hosted at sites throughout the South Sound, and medalists qualified for the 2013 National Senior Games in Cleveland, Ohio.
from Parkland, which had multiple weapons on both sides of the ball. Refusing to allow his team to get too far behind, Taylor Beaird electrifying the crowd with a 70-yard kickoff return for a TD, keeping the Hornets within striking distance
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The Enumclaw Junior Hornets played another round of home games Saturday at Pete’s Pool, hosting the UTYA Tigers, plus two filler teams.. The fourth grade team faced a juggernaut Tacoma Panthers squad and had their hands full from the beginning, falling 38-6. On a final drive of the game, Tyler Feddema caught a 35-yard pass, taking the Hornets down to the 2-yard line, where second-grader Keanu LaFaele, ran it into the end zone for the Junior Hornets’ only score of the day. The fifth grade Junior Hornets had a field day against the Tigers, blowing them out 41-0. Max Favro was a beast on defense with five tackles for losses and three forced fumbles. Jackson McCann had two
at halftime. The Raiders came out the second half breathing fire and put the game out of reach with a solid passing attack and fast running backs. Junior Hornet wide receiver Jake Revell caught a touchdown pass from quarterback Kidder McKee to add a highlight for the Hornets, but the final score was 40-12 Raiders. -- article submitted by Scott Eilertson
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Page 10 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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CORNER FROM 6
Garrett Quiles, shown here picking up yardage against Washington High a season ago, will play a major role for White River on both sides of the ball. File photo by Kevin Hanson
WHITE RIVER FROM 8 Among those holding opponents in check will be Austin Ross, Mike O’Connor and Chris Skinner. The only dent in the Hornet armor comes in the form of an injury to tight end Scott Anderson, a three-year starter who Sprouse identifies as one of the best in the league. Anderson was hurt during camp
and will likely miss the first game or two. The Hornets open the season in exciting fashion, first renewing a rivalry with neighboring Enumclaw High and then returning – for one night only – to their traditional home at Sheets Field in downtown Buckley. The season opener against EHS comes Friday night and the Sheets Field game is Sept. 7, both beginning at 7 p.m. The Hornets haven’t played at Sheets since fall 2002.
What stands out are the people, especially the true characters. And small towns like those in East Pierce County are usually packed with them. Shoot, sometimes they run for office. Sometimes they even win. But my favorites are always the ones hidden in plain sight and, honestly, it’s often the seniors. I love the senior center because some of the stories you hear about the people there are the best around. Last October I had the opportunity to meet one of those characters and tell her story, highlighting a time and place that seems so foreign now that it may have been another country, not just 60 years ago. The woman, of course, is Joan Rupp and for those to whom her name does not ring any bells, she is the Bonney Lake woman who back in the 1950s was a part of an all-women’s barnstorming basketball team called Dempsey’s Texas Cowgirls. Rupp and her fellow cowgirls traveled around the country in a Mercury station wagon, taking on local mens teams and putting on shows à la the Harlem Globetrotters (with whom the Cowgirls also traveled and played, though the trotters still had to sit in the back of the bus and use different water fountains, something that baffles Joan to this day). Not only did Joan get to see the country, she made it to Europe to play as part of a USO tour. After six years, Joan called it a career though she admits they were the best six years of her life and she wishes she had
played longer. She got a real job and eventually moved to the Pacific Northwest, where she worked at Boeing until she retired. After retirement, the road called again and Joan climbed behind the wheel of an RV and went back out to see even more of the country. After the story was published, a copy made its way to the offices of the Seattle Storm, the WNBA team and this year, for their 30th anniversary celebration of Title IX, the team invited Joan to the Key Arena to watch the game and be part of the halftime celebration of female athletes. Now, Joan’s playing days were well before the passage of Title IX, the 1972 law that required schools to offer sports programs for girls as well as boys. But that makes her story even more impressive, really. She saw the Cowgirls play in her town, drove a state over for tryouts, and then didn’t make the team. But instead of letting it get her down, Joan practiced all year and when tryouts were held again, she made the squad. This year, the American women lead the way at the Olympics - including Sue Bird of the Seattle Storm, whom Joan was especially excited to see play - bringing home more medals (and more gold) than their male counterparts. Thanks to laws like Title IX, young girls all around the country can dream athletic dreams just like their male friends and we are a better, stronger nation for it. But before Title IX even, there was Joan Rupp and hundreds like her, blazing trails and storming barns and not taking no for an answer.
Fundraiser before Sheets game to boost Hornet football 7, prior to the Hornets’ football game at historic Sheets Field in downtown Buckley.
Doors will be open from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Firehouse Pub, 780 Main St., and 100 percent of the proceeds
Marjorie Grace Gorzelancyk (Ray Bews)
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Granddaughter of the Sumner Pioneer Dal Balcon family of 1890
Marjorie passed away peacefully surrounded by her family’s love on Aug. 23, 2012. She was 92 years old. She was born to Tom & Ada Gorzelancyk on Nov. 23, 1919 at her parent’s home on the West Valley Highway 3-miles north of Sumner. She attended Sumner schools until graduation. She later went to Business College in Tacoma. She married Harold Ray in 1942 and had 3 children, Tommy Ray (deceased), Darlene Medley, Buckley, WA, Dennis Ray, Virginia, stepdaughter, Connie Berry of Utah. They were married 34 years. She remarried again to Philip Bews and was married 17 years. Marjorie had a way of making people feel important and never lost here sense of humor or feisty spirit. Her greatest joy was family, traveling, crochet, making Afghans & gardening. She is part of the Linus Project at the Buckley Senior Center. Marjorie is preceded in death by her parents, Tom & Ada Gorzelancyk, brothers Donald and Tom; husbands Harold Ray & Philip Bews & son, Tommy Ray. She has 9 grandchildren; 7 great grandchildren & 1 step- grandchild. A visitation will be held, Tues., Aug. 28, 2012 from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. at Weeks’Funeral Home in Buckley with a memorial service Wed., Aug. 29, 2012 at 11:30 a.m. at Community Presbyterian Church in Buckley. Arrangements by Weeks’Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to The LINUS Project at the Buckley Senior Center or to Community Presbyterian Church of Buckley.
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from the fundraiser will help the school district meet its educational needs. First prize during the fundraiser is an iPad and second place is two tickets to a Sept. 21 concert by rapper Pitbull at the Puyallup Fair. Winners need not be present to claim their prize.
Tickets are now on sale in Buckley at Columbia Bank, Buckley Veterinary Hospital, Char’s Barber Shop and Rainier Natural Health. They also are available in Bonney Lake at Woodcreek Pediatrics. Tickets will be sold at The Firehouse Pub on the day of the event. Tickets also
can be purchased by calling 253-255-2835. The game, featuring the White River Hornets against Highline High, kicks off at 7 p.m. For more details about the event, call 253-255-2835 or 360-829-3857 or visit the White River Education Foundation on Facebook.
Randall John Carnes
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The White River Education Foundation will host a fundraising, pregame party and raffle Sept.
Randy passed away at home in Buckley, WA. He was born in Olympia, WA to parents Samuel Melford Carnes and Pauline Shirley Hitchcock Carnes. He had an older brother Marvin and a younger sister Melanie. The family moved to Des Moines, WA in the early sixties. Randy graduated from Mt. Rainier High School in 1970. He worked at the Crystal Mt. Ski Resort in many capacities for 15 years and built homes when there was no snow! He served as a Merchant Marine for in Alaska on a ship involved with oil exploration. Then he became a resident of Greenwater, near Crystal Mt., where he met his wife Dorothy Kreklow. They had two sons. He then worked at the Federation Forest State Park in Greenwater, for six years. Finally he transitioned back to the construction industry working for G.L.C. Inc. in Enumclaw, for 21 years. Randy loved nature, fishing, hiking, skiing, camping, mushroom hunting, birds, plant identification, dogs, animals and music. He played the piano, harmonica, the drums, sang and loved to whistle! He was a great story teller, communicated well with all kinds of people and had a kind, loving and generous soul. He will be missed by many! He was preceded in death by his Father, Mother and brother Marvin. He is survived by his sister Melanie Carnes (Allan) Solonsky of Bainbridge Island, WA. His sons Evan and Glen Carnes of Snohomish County, a niece Laska Carnes and great-niece & great-nephew Haley and Mason Sandefer of Casper, WY. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests that people may contribute to their choice of any Environmental Conservation Organization. Plans are tentative for a celebration of his life in Greenwater or Lake Ozette. Family will be placing his ashes on Harstine Island next to his brother Marvin at the same time as his Mother, who just passed on June 23rd.
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Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 11
NEWS BRIEFS Family events planned for Saturdays at Buckley library A wide variety of activities await families on “Second Saturdays,” which take place September through December at the Buckley library. Those attending will see family-friendly films, take part in holiday celebrations, enjoy musical and interactive puppet performances, learn how to grow orchids, discover the rich history of women quilters and buffalo soldiers and more.
The Buckley library schedule looks like this: • Saturday Morning at the Movies – Bring the entire family and watch a familyfriendly film at 11 a.m. Sept. 8 • Award-winning author Peg Kehret, a Buckley resident, will talk about her latest children’s book, “Animals Welcome,” at 11 a.m. Oct. 6. • Experience a dynamic array of amazing stunts, physical comedy and audience participation with juggler Alex Zerbe at 11 a.m. Oct. 13. • “First Harvest.” Ann Gibson, with Foothills Historical Museum, will share with families about Thanksgiving at 11 a.m. Nov. 10.
• “Puppets Please.” Colorful animal marionettes-in-the-round sing, dance and chat with children in a holiday story time. The program begins at noon Dec. 8. At 1 p.m. there will be a chance for kids to visit with Mr. and Mrs. Claus. Friends of the Buckley Library sponsors these free events. The Buckley branch of the Pierce County Library System is at 123 S. River Ave.
Trash, recycling collected but offices to close for holiday City of Enumclaw offices will be closed Monday in observance of the Labor Day holiday.
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Garbage and recycling services will not be affected and will follow the Monday schedule. Customers should have all receptacles available for pickup no later than 6 a.m. Monday. Anyone with questions can contact the city at 360-825-5541.
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Page 12 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 13
Gallery to display work of Enumclaw artist ing and ever-changing wildlife became emphasized in my mind. Artists that I had never really thought too much of before, such as Edward Hopper and Winslow Homer, were appealing to my sensibilities. “That said, this work is an effort to express that excitement. The towering power lines, the mangled fence, the distant houses, and the cut tree all speak to man’s wrestle with nature. Ideas of age, decay, new life, eventual loss, progression, and many others are brought to mind when we take some moments to view our environment in relation to time and the forces of mankind, nature, and God. My art is an attempt to help us reflect on ancient and lasting truths in a world where we are often too busy to think on such things.” Gallery 2012 is in the council chambers at Enumclaw City Hall, 1339 Griffin Ave. in Enumclaw. Exhibition hours are 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. For more information, call the Enumclaw Cultural Programs office at 360-802-0239.
4Culture examines impact of design During September, Gallery4Culture, in tandem with the 2012 Seattle Design Festival, hosts a curated exhibition celebrating the role of design in public life. “FutureShack: The Next 50 Years of Residential Design” presents special projects by architects from 10 Seattle firms as well as select works from the
University of Washington’s Master’s in Architecture program. Their undertakings examine big questions: can architects and designers offer solutions to make our lives and our cities better? what can be learned from what other cities and countries have done? FutureShack illuminates emerging design
Paintings by Enumclaw artist Adam Kenney – like the one above – will be on display beginning Sept. 6 at Gallery 2012, found in council chambers of Enumclaw City Hall. Submitted photo.
thinking and experimentation while challenging mainstream assumptions of what housing looks like, how it performs and what it might cost. The gallery installation reimagines residential communities for decades to come. FutureShack participants push the boundaries of how humans – forced to accommodate changes in demographics, the environment and economy – could, over time, radically restructure how they live. The exhibition and accompanying text weave together themes of
Enumclaw Senior Activity Center, 1350 Cole Street
Fundraiser
Saturday, September 8th 8:00 am - 11:00 am
Cruise into the Center between 8 am-11 am for a breakfast of sausage, fluffy scramble eggs, logger size pancakes served with maple syrup, butter, coffee and juice all for…
$5 per plate
Enjoy music by “Original Recipe” starting at 9:00 am. After your hearty breakfast stroll through downtown Enumclaw and enjoy the fabulous vintage and classic cars on display. Benefits Senior Center and Youth Center “Generations United for a Stronger Community” 667330
This event is open to the public and put on by the Enumclaw Lion’s Club. Thank you for your support. For more information call 360.825-4741
economy, repurposing, size, adaptability and density. Gallery4Culture is on the first floor of the 4Culture offices at 101 Prefontaine
Place S., Seattle, at the corner of Third and Prefontaine. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. There is no
admission charge. For more information, visit the website http:// galleries.4culture.org/ or call 206-296-8674.
Joe Fantello Joe Fantello passed away August 22, 2012 at the age of 81 in his home surrounded by loved ones. Born July 26, 1931 on the 60 acre family farm. Joe lived in Krain all his life. “Joltin Joe” graduated from Enumclaw High School in 1949 as star full back. “JJ” served in the military and was honorable discharged from the Korean War in 1952. Joe started his own auto freight company in 1950 called, Dependable Truck Lines, serving his community for more than 50 years. Making deliveries on the Seattle waterfront, Joe met and then married the love of his life, Carol Ann English, on February 11, 1967 Together they built their home on the original family farm, where they raised their three sons. A devoted family man, Joe was known for a great smile, a loving personality and a zest for life that will truly be missed. He is survived by brother Tony Fantello, his wife Prudence, sister, Mary Scoccolo, sons; Steven, Paul and wife Patty, and Marc. Six grandchildren; Heather, Nicole, Jacqueline, Angelina, Garrett and Kalvin and a GreatGrandchild, Gracie, to whom they all called “Papa Joe” He is also survived by his companion, Cairn Terrier, “Missy”. Services are on September 1, 2012 at Sacred Heart Church, Enumclaw. 9:30 am Rosary followed by a memorial at 10am. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Children’s Hospital in Seattle.
667900
The city of Enumclaw’s Gallery 2012 presents the work of Enumclaw artist Adam Kenney. His paintings will be on display Sept. 6 through Oct. 2. “I have spent much of my life among the various locales surrounding Enumclaw, Maple Valley, and Ravensdale,” Kenney wrote in an artist’s statement. After leaving for Seattle Pacific University and being impressed by the big city, Kenney discovered his appreciation for the natural beauty of his home turf. “On the rare occasions when I would journey home, I began to appreciate the scenery much more than I had before,” he wrote. “I was finally able to really appreciate the beauty of the Plateau and the foothills.” Having spent time in the city and the university, Kenney also developed an interest in architecture and the relation of geometric shapes to organic shapes. “I began to appreciate man-made structures in ways that had not occurred to me before,” he wrote. “The contrast that an erected monument had against the flow-
Page 14 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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Immunize now
F R A N C I S C A N H E A LT H S y S T E M
663450
Health experts say every parent’s back-to-school list should include making sure children are up-todate with their immunizations, including the Tdap booster vaccine to protect against an ongoing whooping cough epidemic. The state’s current whooping cough epidemic is a stark reminder of the importance of immunization. There have been 560 confirmed cases of whooping cough in King County so far this year, compared to 98 cases in all of 2011. Parents who choose not to immunize their children must submit an exemption certificate, signed by a health care provider verifying the provider has shared information on immunization.
Train. Sell. Show. Tony Binion 253.439.0600
$4,000 12 months of
Corie Sandall, MD Franciscan Medical Clinic
Healthier living begins with a Franciscan Medical Clinic doctor. For years our patients have come to Enumclaw Medical Clinic because they know they’re in the good hands of our skilled doctors. And now we’ll continue to care for you under our new name—Franciscan Medical Clinic—to consistently reflect the connection between our primary care services and the entire Franciscan system of care. Franciscan Medical Clinic doctors focus on what matters to you, spending time to understand your needs, and providing the personal attention that makes a real difference. You deserve the care you want, the medical expertise you need.
To Enter Just Complete the Local Shopping Survey at:
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Franciscan Medical Clinic 3021 Griffin Ave., Enumclaw Phone: (360) 825-6511 Services include: Family Medicine Internal Medicine Pediatrics Cardiology Gastroenterology Gynecology Obstetrics Sleep Medicine Bonney Lake Opening 2013 To find the perfect doctor for you and your family, visit www.FranciscanDoctors.org or call 1 (888) 825-3227.
Next Big Event Olympic Bike Adventure September 23
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FOR ADVANCED MEDICINE AND TRUSTED CARE, CHOOSE A FRANCISCAN MEDICAL CLINIC.
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ENUMCLAW
www.enumclawcjd.com
All prices plus applicable tax, license and a negotiable dealer documentary fee up to $150 may be added to the sale price or capitalized cost. All vehicles are subject to prior sale and one at the sale price unless otherwise stated. One advertised sale vehicle per household. No dealer purchases allowed. Pictures are for illustration purposes. Dealer is not responsible for typographical errors. Advertised specials my not be combined with other offers. Subject to prior sale.Trade in figures subject to our appraisal. See dealer for details. +EPA hwy miles. All specials APR’s with approved credit. All 2010 or newer vehicles pre-owned. Ad expires 9/4/12. VIN#s POSTED AT DEALERSHIP. S
UB62042 Branch Manager ad_Enumclaw_Buckley_Layout 2 8/16/12 4:42 PM Page 1
Page 16 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
www.courierherald.com
HOSPITAL FROM 4 Avenue in Enumclaw is part of the expansive network. The nonbinding letter of intent is the first step in the partnership process. Leaders of Catholic Health Initiatives and PeaceHealth expect to form the new system before June 30, 2013.
The two organizations will be equal partners. Discussions were prompted by a rapidly changing health care environment that demands the ability to accept more financial risk in caring for defined populations, like Medicaid recipients. The partners will reduce costs by making infrastructure investments
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You have a dedicated financial partner in Buckley.
more efficiently as a single organization. The new organization will also include two CHI hospitals in Oregon, physician practices and related services, in addition to the Franciscan Health System’s facilities and services. PeaceHealth operates three hospitals in Washington – Bellingham, Longview and Vancouver – with another scheduled to open this fall in Friday Harbor. It also has one hospital in Alaska and four in Oregon.
DUCK RACE AND
GOLF
TOURNAMENT
We would like to introduce you to Rebecca Cresswell, our
Saturday September 8, 2012
Buckley branch manager. Rebecca is passionate about
Duck Race & Family Fun Golf Tournament Kids Welcome Enumclaw Golf Course
customer service and helping individuals and businesses meet their financial goals. She believes in the power of community and is committed to making a difference in
1:00 PM GOLF TOURNAMENT shotgun start - scramble
Buckley. Rebecca is an active volunteer with many local
3:30 PM DUCK RACE Open to Public
organizations, including Union Bank-supported
Prizes
organizations like the American Heart Association and Junior Achievement.
We invite you to stop by to meet Rebecca Cresswell at our Buckley branch:
For more information: www.enumclawrhf.org or 360.802.3206
112 South River Street, Buckley, WA, 360-829-1962
Sponsors:
1st: $1000 CASH 2nd: 2 Airline Tickets (Round trip on Alaska Air) 3rd: Boat Tour for 4 around Lake Washington 4th: $200 Eat-Shop-Play Local Gift Certificates 5th: Car Detail at Art Gamblin Motors 6th: Woven Leather Pandora Bracelet 7th: $100 Gift Certificate Rendezvous Wine & Brew
Platinum $2,500 Mutual of Enumclaw
Gold $1,000 Helac Corporation, Kitsap Ban, Plateau Anesthesia, TTX Co., Dr. Jim & Nancy Merrill
667326
unionbank.com
©2012 Union Bank, N.A. All rights reserved.
Silver $500 Advanced Classroom, Technologies, Art Gamblin Motors, Plateau Family Medicine, St. Elizabeth Hospital Bronze $250 American Heritage Corp., Babbitt Insurance Group LLC, Cal Hart CPA, Columbia Bank, Coulbourn Family, Dr. Jan Hourtz, Dr. Emi Hosoda & Dr. Michael Tepper, Dr. Stephen Harding DDS, Enumclaw School District, Farr Law Group, Fugate Ford-Mazda, High Point Village, Key Bank Enumclaw, Mt. Rainier Realty, Nether Industries, Plateau Rehab, Robin Malneritch, PS Inc, State Representative Christopher Hurst, Taco Time Enumclaw/Bonney Lake, White River Credit Union, Windermere Real Estate/Elizabeth Amos, Work Sports & Outdoors Golf Holes Airport Mechnical, Spearhead Books, Hardman Construction, Karen Arlt-JL Scott, Mt. Rainier Realty-Tami Dunn, Rainier View Construction, Stuart Jones Physical Therapy-Merit Rehab, Tom & Laurie Kittelman-Windermere Realty, Trip Hart
Ducks on Sale Now! Ducks are for sale at Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation, St. Elizabeth Hospital, Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce, and from ERH board members and Enumclaw Rotarians. Family fun event open to the public- do not need to participate in the duck tournament to enjoy other fun activities for the Duck Race. Open to all! Reserve you spot in the golf tournament today. only $35 per golfer.
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Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 17
Computer classes on the way Learn the basics of Excel, Publisher, PowerPoint and Word, plus other computer skills, at free Pierce County Library System computer classes during September and October. Receive free assistance creating résumés, searching for jobs, using email, searching the Web and downloading free e-books to an e-reader, including Kindle. Acquire knowledge about how to make the most of the apps on your mobile phone, use the Internet to assess the
value of your collectibles, explore your family tree using library databases, and discover the fundamentals of financial bookkeeping and QuickBooks software. Find out how to use cloud computing, plan your next trip, get plugged into social networking and discover how to save money and have fun with a library card. Register for classes at the Buckley library or sign up at www.piercecountylibrary.org/calendar. The following is the
schedule for Buckley. All classes begin at 11 a.m. and last 90 minutes. • Computers for Beginners, Sept. 13; • Resumé 101, Sept. 20; • Drop-In Help, Sept. 27; • Computers for Beginners, Oct. 4;
• Word 2007/2010 for Beginners, Oct. 11; and • Navigating the Net, Oct. 18. The Buckley library is at 123 S. River Ave. The library can be reached at 253-548-3310 or 360-8290300.
DEADLINES Letters to the editor should by typed (preferably e-mailed), must include the author’s name and phone number for verification. Unsigned letters will not be printed. Deadline is 5 p.m. Thursday. Letters should not exceed 500 words. Information for free obituaries is due by 10 a.m. Monday. Our address is P.O. Box 157, Enumclaw, 98022. Our e-mail address is news@courierherald.com and our fax number is 360-825-1092. For more information call 360-825-2555.
FRANCISCAN MEDICAL GROUP
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Sept. 8, 2012 4-7 pm Downtown Sumner
“I’m a passionate advocate for children.”
Register before Sept. 1st & save! Tickets: $15 Register online at www.sumnerdowntown.com
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The best care for your child is right here. Paweena Thoophom, MD, FAAP, provides patient-centered care for children up to age 19 at Franciscan Medical Clinic’s Enumclaw location. As a pediatrician and a mother, Dr. Thoophom is a passionate advocate for the well-being of all children. She believes strongly in her role of supporting parents in making decisions about their children’s health care. Dr. Thoophom is a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics and has interests in asthma/allergy care, obesity prevention and behavioral medicine. She is currently accepting new patients. Franciscan Medical Clinic–Enumclaw 3021 Griffin Ave., Enumclaw, WA 98022 Hours: Monday–Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sat., 8 – 11:30 a.m. www.franciscandoctors.org To schedule an appointment call 360-825-6511.
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Franciscan primary care clinics are located through the South Sound: Auburn and Bonney Lake (opening 2013) • DuPont • Enumclaw • Federal Way • Gig Harbor • Lakewood • Milton • Port Orchard • Puyallup • Spanaway • Tacoma • University Place
Paweena Thoophom, MD, FAAP Pediatrics Franciscan Medical Clinic– Enumclaw
Franciscan Medical Clinic– Enumclaw offers the following services: + Family medicine + Internal medicine + Obstetrics and newborn care + On-site lab and X-ray + Pediatrics + Preventive care + Saturday walk-in clinic Affiliated with St. Elizabeth Hospital
Page 18 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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Africa: rich in spirit despite life of poverty There are some events in life that are life-changing. My recent mission trip to Africa was one of those events. The scripture that comes to mind as I process all that I have seen and done comes from Luke 6:38: “Give and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap; for the measure you give will be the measure you get back.” Our group travelled to Kabanana, Zambia, where we spent nearly two weeks working with the people there. Our efforts were concentrated on improving conditions at the Healing Place School. The school has two rooms to house all the children from
preschool through seventh grade. There is no electricity in the school and the children sit on the floor, learning lessons that Cindy Ehlke are written on the Calvary Presbyterian Church blackboard. Many of the children, and sometimes even the teachers, come to school without having eaten a meal. However, many good things have happened at Healing Place School. Within the last year, through the efforts of a nonprofit group, Village Steps, this community has a well. During the time we worked there, an improved outdoor toilet for the school was nearly completed. A foundation for a second school room was started. All of us had
Church Corner
hoped to provide the school with benches for the children to sit on while in school. Because of the generosity of a woman who visited the site and saw the work being done, benches were donated and arrived while we were there. As a measure of gratitude for all that had happened, the teachers and the school children spontaneously broke into song and danced with joy, praising God for all of the good gifts they had received. These people are so grateful for everything they receive. They smile and give hugs. They sing and dance every day. I came away feeling like they had given so much of themselves to us despite poverty. I could not help compare what I take for granted with what they consider blessings. These people may live in poverty, but they are not poor. They are rich in spirit. They
have a faith in God that shows up in their everyday activities. I came away with a renewed sense of the need to be of service to those who have so much less than I do. Poverty is all around us in any neighborhood. One does not have too far to look to find people who are hungry, homeless and without basic resources. The needs are so great, it would be easy to get frozen and not know how to make a dent in the problems. At least that has been my attitude before I made this trip. Now I am aware that changes take place on step at a time, one charitable act at a time. I have been blessed by spending time with these people. The challenge for all of us is to trust in God, asking him to make us people of blessing that overflows to others.
CARD OF THANKS
THANK YOU
ST. ELIZABETH BIRTHS
Our family would like to sincerely thank all who were so kind during the loss of our wife, mother and grandmother Shirley Amburgey. The flowers, cards, food, phone calls, visits and donations made in her honor meant so much to us all. She was a great lady who will be missed. Rex Amburgey and family
The Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce and Visitor Center would like to thank the following businesses for donating their resources to our Visitor Center rejuvenation project. Mutual of Enumclaw; Helac Corporation; Allen’s Furniture; Gateway True Value; Crystal Mountain Resort; Book Brew Coffee; and Sweet Necessities. And of course a big thank you to our wonderful volunteers for helping promote tourism our community.
A boy, Michael Allen Darden Jr., born Aug. 9, 2012, to Julie and Michael Darden of Enumclaw. A girl, Izabella Rose Eileen Wetzel, born Aug. 15, 2012, to Alaura Garl and Scott Wetzel of Enumclaw. A girl, Addisen Mae
We Invite You to Come Worship With Us!
Our Redeemer Lutheran Sunday School 9am • Family Worship Sunday 10am
253-862-0715
12407 214th Ave. E. • Bonney Lake OurRedeemerLutheran@hotmail.com
654668
Pre-K and Kindergarten Now Enrolling! 253-229-6782
12407 214th Ave. E. • Bonney Lake www.ConcordiaBonneyLake.com
Enumclaw Seventh-day Adventist Church Saturday Morning Worship 9:30 and 11:00 am 3333 Griffin Ave. 825-4155
654678
Pastor: Dan Martin
“A Joyful Family Centered in Christ”
❖
192 Cedar St. Buckley, WA
152 S. Cottage St., Buckley, WA
Real - we value authenticity. Loving - we honor God and each other. Growing - we submit to His process in us.
Worship Service 10:30 am
(360)829-1222 www.cpcbuckley.org
Share your place of worship schedules with the community. Place your ad in the...
Church Directory
www.cedarcommunitychurch.org
654680
First Baptist Church Enumclaw
The Friendliest Church in Town!
Celebrate the Lord with US!
Sunday Services
Senior Pastor James D. Dunn
Bible Classes for all ages..................................................................................9:30am Morning Worship............................................................................................11:00am Sunday Evening Bible Classes.............................................................5:30-7:00pm
Wednesday Services
Prayer/Bible Study ............................................................................................6:30pm Worship Teams ..................................................................................................7:30pm 3466 Porter • (360)825-1111 • www.firstbaptistch1.qwestoffice.net
654681
the
Sunday - 10:40 am Easy atmosphere Casual style The coffee’s on!
Christ our center Love and service our purpose
654679
Experience Joy!
Community Presbyterian Church
Murphy, born Aug. 20, 2012, to Ashley and Thomas Murphy of Buckley. A girl, Lily Suzanne, born Aug. 21, 2012, to Kamien Sheppard and Blair Miller. A girl, Summer Dexter, born Aug. 22, 2012, to Lisa and Phil Dexter of Enumclaw.
email:firstbaptistch1@qwestoffice.net
654683
Saturday Night Worship 7 pm Sunday Morning Worship 9:30 am Assoc. Pastor: Cindy Ehlke Youth Dir.: Ben Auger 1725 Porter St., Enumclaw 360-825-3820 www.calvarypreschurch.org
654684 654660
www.courierherald.com
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 19
JOSEPH GOULART Buckley resident Joseph Charles Goulart, 62, died Aug. 12 at his parents’ home in Little Compton, R.I. He was an active member of St. Andrew Catholic Church in Sumner, where he served as both lector and 4th Degree Knight of Columbus. He also was a gifted musician Joseph Goulart and longtime Harley Davidson enthusiast.
MARION McINTYRE Enumclaw resident Marion Jones McIntyre died Aug. 19, 2012, in Auburn. She was 85. She was born Oct. 18, 1926, in Troy, N.Y., and worked as both a secretary and homemaker. She was valedictorian of her high school class and graduated from Russell Sage College in 1948. Marion McIntyre While attending college, she met John “Jack” McIntyre on a blind date. They were wed in 1950 and remained married until his death in 1989. She belonged to the Danish Sisterhood and was a former member of St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church. She is survived by sons Donald McIntyre and wife Teresa of Raleigh, N.C., and Erik McIntyre and wife Joyce of Vancouver, Wash.; daughters Kirstine Keys and husband Roger of Brewerton, N.Y., and Nancy Stangland and husband Gerald of
Our Doo rs are Always Open
GEORGE PECHEOS Longtime area resident and former Buckley police chief George T. Pecheos died Aug. 12, 2012, following a fiveyear battle with cancer. He was born May 15, 1931, in Outlook, Wash., George Pecheos and lived there until joining the U.S. Army in 1949. He served in the Korean War and received the Purple Heart, Bronze Star, Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal and Korean Service Medal. His military career was cut short because of war injuries. He owned and operated a gas station, worked for Boeing and the King County Sheriff’s Department, was police chief in both Pacific and Buckley, and also worked for the prison system in Monroe and Tacoma. For a time he was the judge in Carbonado before retiring in 1999. He was a member of Buckley Eagles, American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He lived more than 30 years in Buckley. After retiring, he and wife Pat moved to Hayden, Idaho, where they remained until 2010 when they returned to Tacoma. He is survived by his wife of 31 years Avis
654630
CHRIST at Kibler Avenue
Speaking the Truth in Love Sunday Bible Classes 9:45 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Bible Classes 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Worship at 9:30 am Children’s Sunday School, Adult Education & Youth Class at 11:00 am
Worship Service 10:45am • Sunday School 9:30am www.hillside-communitychurch.org
Ministers:
654635
(Located between Auburn & Enumclaw)
18325 SE 384th St. 253.939.1330
On Hwy 410 across from Mazatlan Restaurant
400th
Hwy. 169
212th
825-5437 654638
Loving Jesus
384th
654643
Church
MOPS meets here!
9:30 am Service 11:00 am Bible Study
Hwy. 164 Griffin Ave.
To list your church in this directory call Jen T. at: 360 825-2555
Enumclaw Church of Christ
654640
Morning Worship....................10:30 a.m. Evening Worship.......................6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY WORSHIP: Evening Bible Classes..............7:00p.m.
Come be our welcome guest! (360) 825-2182
654652
Now Meeting at 26007 SE 425th, Enumclaw WA 98022 SUNDAY WORSHIP: Morning Bible Classes .............9:30 a.m.
Jim Miller Anthony Wilson
2627 Kibler Avenue Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-5903
www.kiblerchurchofchrist.org
www.wabashpres.com
Enumclaw Community
DOROTHY ALLISON Longtime Carbonado resident Dorothy Verena Allison died Aug. 18, 2012. She was born July 1, 1915, in Dubuque, Iowa. She enjoyed sewing, fishing and cooking. She was preceded in death by husband Peter Allison and brothers Robert Strub and Donald Stub. A graveside service took place Wednesday, Aug. 22, at the Carbonado cemetery. Remembrances may be made to the Carbonado Community Church Building Fund.
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CHURCH OF
Wabash Church
(Pat) Pecheos; children Randy Pecheos and wife Sharon of Yelm, Wash., Greg (Susan) Pecheos and wife Susan of Lake Tapps, Cindi Albers of Bonney Lake, and Kim Pecheos and wife Tina of Spanaway, Wash.; stepchildren Gary Wood of Spokane, Wash., Jason White of Tacoma and David Montgomery and wife Terri of Graham, Wash.; sister Bettie Holden and husband Tom of Albany Ore.; brother Paul Pecheos of Moses Lake, Wash.; 23 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren. A memorial service is planned for 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 9, at The Summit Church in Enumclaw with the Rev. Ross Holtz officiating.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
(Christian Science) 1752 Wells Street, Enumclaw (360) 825-5300 Sunday Service............10:00am Sunday School ............10:00am Wednesday Meeting .........7:30 pm READING ROOM 1752 Wells Street, Enumclaw (360) 825-5300 Mon. & Tues. 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Everyone Welcome!
(ECLA)
10:00am Worship Service Pastor Dan Wilson www.hopelutheranchurch.org Lutheran Counseling (253)839-1697 ext. 3 1316 Garfield St. Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-2420
654649
Penny Friend Bathum died Aug. 19, 2012, in Friendsville, Md., while visiting family. She graduated from Frostburg State University and earned a master’s degree in social work from the University of Washington. She served as director of the Muckleshoot Indian Child Welfare Department. She loved animals, big and small, Penny Bathum along with gardening and being with her family. She is survived by husband Rick Bathum and sons Willis and Jon Roy. A celebration of her life is scheduled for 1 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Calvary Presbyterian Church in Enumclaw.
654647
PENNY BATHUM
Enumclaw; seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. A memorial service is planned for 11 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Danish Hall in Enumclaw. Donations are suggested to Plateau Outreach Ministries and Friends of the Enumclaw Danish Hall.
654645
OBITUARIES
He is survived by his wife Linda (Weston) Goulart and stepdaughter Tracy Lloyd, both of Buckley; sons Adam Goulart and Joshua Goulart and wife Jennifer, all of Rhode Island; parents John and June Goulart; sisters Juanita Goulart, Jennifer Goulart, Karen Marks, Judy Rosa and husband Frank and Kathy Brennan and husband Gary; brother John Goulart and wife Bernadette; and one grandson. A Mass of Christian burial was celebrated Aug. 14 at St. Catherine of Sienna Church in Little Compton. Donations in his memory may be made to the American Cancer Society.
655456
360.802.2722
www.theserenespa.com Enumclaw Next to Sears
26311 Hwy 410 W • Buckley
Your Next Rental! (maximum discount $25)
One coupon per customer. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Expires 9/30/12
SERVICES
OPEN EVERY DAY 25018 Hwy 410 Hwy 410 E, Buckley www.410rentals.com • (253) 826-7671
New & Used Vehicles at:
253-332-3499
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
Vote for
Auto Repair _________________________________________ Bank/Credit Union ____________________________________ Fitness Center________________________________________ Florist _____________________________________________ Hair Salon/Barbershop _________________________________ Landscaping ________________________________________ Non Profit __________________________________________ Nail Salon __________________________________________ Painting ___________________________________________ Pet Boarding ________________________________________ Physical Therapy _____________________________________ Pharmacy __________________________________________ Plumber ___________________________________________ R.V. Services _________________________________________ Rentals Farm/Landscape Equip. __________________________ Senior Living Center ___________________________________ Tanning Salon _______________________________________
SCHOOLS Driving School _______________________________________ Preschool/Daycare ____________________________________ Public School ________________________________________ Dance/Gymnastic _____________________________________
SHOPPING Antique Shop ________________________________________ Auto Supply _________________________________________ Book Store __________________________________________ Clothing/Apparel _____________________________________ Consignment/Thrift ___________________________________ Farm/Feed & Pet (Location)______________________________ Furniture/Decor ______________________________________ Gift/Specialty Store ____________________________________ Grocery ____________________________________________ Hardware___________________________________________ Jewelry ____________________________________________ Nursery ____________________________________________ Office/Stationery/Craft _________________________________ Produce Stand _______________________________________
655452
Dan Davis
Sr. Loan Officer MLO#92136
360.825.0296
A Division of Pinnacle Capital Mortgage Corp. WA CL-81395
DanDavisLoans.com
PLACES / ENTERTAINMENT Community Event ______________________________________ Dog Walks ___________________________________________ Family Fun __________________________________________ Fishing _____________________________________________ Gallery/Public Art ______________________________________ Golf Course __________________________________________ Hike _______________________________________________ Local Band/Musicians ___________________________________ Lodging _____________________________________________ Public Park __________________________________________ Romantic Spot ________________________________________ Scenic View __________________________________________ Swimming Hole _______________________________________ Worship (Location) _____________________________________
Isabelle Dalton, PhD, LMP
CranioSacral Therapy Rainier Natural Health Clinic 700 Main St., Buckley 253-221-7374 isabelledaltonCST@comcast.net www.iahp.com/IsabelleDalton
655461
655465
Ducky Savings!
Asian ______________________________________________ Bakery/Sweets _______________________________________ BBQ ______________________________________________ Breakfast ___________________________________________ Burger _____________________________________________ Coffee _____________________________________________ Family Restaurant ____________________________________ Lunch _____________________________________________ Mexican ___________________________________________ Pizza/Italian ________________________________________ Steak ______________________________________________
We’ve Been Serving Enumclaw for 30 Years!
Jim’s Pharmacy 2820 Griffin Ave. Suite 102 Enumclaw
360-825-6523 Plateau Community Pharmacy
3021 Griffin Ave. • Enumclaw 655421
655444
Residential & Contractor Equipment
FOOD / RESTAURANTS
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
Stop by… coffee is always on Locally owned & operated
655454
Fill out the ballot below and you will be entered
Attorney/Firm _______________________________________ Auto Sales Rep _______________________________________ Chiropractor ________________________________________ Dentist/Orthodontist ___________________________________ Doctor _____________________________________________ Firefighter __________________________________________ Financial Planner _____________________________________ Handyman __________________________________________ Insurance Agent ______________________________________ Massage Therapist ____________________________________ Optometrist _________________________________________ Pet Groomer/Shop ____________________________________ Photographer ________________________________________ Police Officer ________________________________________ Realtor ____________________________________________ Teacher ____________________________________________ Veterinarian _________________________________________
The #1 selling brand of handheld power equipment in America. Stihl Elite Dealership • Gold Certified Technicians • Independently Owned
FUGATE FORD of Enumclaw
Mon.-Sat. 10-7 • Sun 12-4
AND WIN!! for a chance to win a $100 gift certificate.
PEOPLE
Store Hours: Monday - Friday 8:00-6:00 Saturday 8:00-5:00
Fugate Ford Sales Professional
(360) 825-4666 www.thecountryplayhouse.com
360/825-3991
BEST OF THE PLATEAU? VOTE TODAY
235 Roosevelt Ave., Hwy. 410 Enumclaw (360) 825-1648
Aaron Mayer
www.mikeswesternsuppliers.com
Who do you think is the… t t mus Ballo 0% be 5 e to let comp nted. u o c be
The Price Slayer
1602 Cole St. Enumclaw 360 825-1912
Preschool Child Care School-Age Care
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
CUTTERS SUPPLY, INC.
25off%
360-761-9063
28801 HWY 410 E Buckley 360.829.1515 www.BuckleyVet.com
22929 SE 436th, Aub/Enumclaw Hwy, Enumclaw
655466
“We treat all of our customers like a family friend.” ~ Mike & Amy Pedreira
Gifts and Home Decor!
655440
Farm Fresh Products & Services
BUCKLEY VETERINARY HOSPITAL 655460
655442
Massage, Facials, Waxing, Body Wraps, Packages, Spa Parties, Gift Cards & more!
www.courierherald.com
655447
Page 26 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Conveniently Located in the Enumclaw Medical Center
360-825-2442
Open 7 Days
EMAIL __________________________________________________________________________ NAME ___________________________________________ PHONE__________________________________ ADDRESS _________________________________________ CITY _____________________ZIP_________
10221 214th Ave. • Bonney Lake
253-862-0663
KRAIN CORNER RESTAURANT
King County's newly designated Historical Landmark!
655470
Please mail or bring your completed entry to: Courier-Herald, 1627 Cole Street, Enumclaw, WA, 98022. Attn: Best Of. One entry per person. Employees of participating sponsors are not eligible to win. Voting ends Monday, September 3, 2012 at 4 p.m. Name, address and phone number must be supplied to be eligible for drawing and to be counted. No copies of ballots permitted. Ballot must be 50% complete to be counted. Nominee must be a licensed business in Enumclaw and/or Bonney Lake.
Vote for Us! Best driver education experience at the best price, guaranteed.
655432
12-BestOfBallot
360-802-0484
2 miles North of Enumclaw on HWY 169 at SE 400th St.
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
655463
VOTE ONLINE at… www.courierherald.com/survey or www.blscourierherald.com/survey MAIL or DROP-OFF at… Courier-Herald, 1627 Cole St, Enumclaw, WA 98022
Gateway to Washington’s Wine Country
STUART JONES PHYSICAL THERAPY
tracysroadsideproduce.com
3 Puyallup area locations: Bonney Lake 253-299-6730 North Meridian 253-848-1874 Puyallup 253-875-7412
Great food, wine, beer & spirits Live music every Friday and Saturday night! 2884 GRIFFIN AVE SUITE A ENUMCLAW 360.825.6686 www.MeritRehab.com
655474
360-825-1250
We’re Just Off 164 Aub/Enum Hwy.
General Dentistry Cosmetic Dentistry Orthodontics Oral Surgery Periodontics Endodontics
1118 Myrtle Ave. Enumclaw
360.825.9463
Specialty Beers On Tap! Light Menu Wines by the Glass 1528 Cole Street, Enumclaw 661303
www.WhiteRiverCU.com
655418
23110 SE, 436 ST, Enumclaw
n n n n n n
655449
• Fresh Local Produce • Specialty Foods • Unique Gift Baskets
655458
655423
Complete Dentistry
360-825-1695
www.sipcitywines.com
•
copycenter@skynetbb.com
655657
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
BEST OF THE PLATEAU? VOTE TODAY
Memory Care Open Fall 2012!
Heritage House Assisted Living includes a variety of services.
PEOPLE
360-829-5292 Call for a FREE quote! • Auto • Home • Life • Business
Jennifer M Ferrell Agency 21230 SE 410 East, Suite 130 Bonney Lake, WA 98391 jferrell@amfam.com (253) 299-6463
SERVICES
Ears, Nose & Throat Allergy Therapy Facial Plastic Surgery
658278
360.825.4466 1427 Jefferson Ste.101 Enumclaw, WA 98022
drnancybecker.com
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
655655
Company and its Subsidaries American Family Insurance Company Home Office — Madison, WI 53783
6:30am-6pm Mon-Fri Potty Trained thru 8 All Meals provided & on site. Field trips to visit our various farm animals & gardens.
Auto Repair _________________________________________ Bank/Credit Union ____________________________________ Fitness Center________________________________________ Florist _____________________________________________ Hair Salon/Barbershop _________________________________ Landscaping ________________________________________ Non Profit __________________________________________ Nail Salon __________________________________________ Painting ___________________________________________ Pet Boarding ________________________________________ Physical Therapy _____________________________________ Pharmacy __________________________________________ Plumber ___________________________________________ R.V. Services _________________________________________ Rentals Farm/Landscape Equip. __________________________ Senior Living Center ___________________________________ Tanning Salon _______________________________________
SCHOOLS Driving School _______________________________________ Preschool/Daycare ____________________________________ Public School ________________________________________ Dance/Gymnastic _____________________________________
FOOD / RESTAURANTS Asian ______________________________________________ Bakery/Sweets _______________________________________ BBQ ______________________________________________ Breakfast ___________________________________________ Burger _____________________________________________ Coffee _____________________________________________ Family Restaurant ____________________________________ Lunch _____________________________________________ Mexican ___________________________________________ Pizza/Italian ________________________________________ Steak ______________________________________________
SHOPPING Antique Shop ________________________________________ Auto Supply _________________________________________ Book Store __________________________________________ Clothing/Apparel _____________________________________ Consignment/Thrift ___________________________________ Farm/Feed & Pet (Location)______________________________ Furniture/Decor ______________________________________ Gift/Specialty Store ____________________________________ Grocery ____________________________________________ Hardware___________________________________________ Jewelry ____________________________________________ Nursery ____________________________________________ Office/Stationery/Craft _________________________________ Produce Stand _______________________________________
(360) 825-8886
www.acountrygardenmontessori.com
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
Attorney/Firm _______________________________________ Auto Sales Rep _______________________________________ Chiropractor ________________________________________ Dentist/Orthodontist ___________________________________ Doctor _____________________________________________ Firefighter __________________________________________ Financial Planner _____________________________________ Handyman __________________________________________ Insurance Agent ______________________________________ Massage Therapist ____________________________________ Optometrist _________________________________________ Pet Groomer/Shop ____________________________________ Photographer ________________________________________ Police Officer ________________________________________ Realtor ____________________________________________ Teacher ____________________________________________ Veterinarian _________________________________________
28833 Hwy. 410 E, Buckley www.acaringplace.net
for Fall 2012
Fill out the ballot below and you will be entered
AND WIN!! for a chance to win a $100 gift certificate.
Camino ElFamily Mexican Restaurant
Authentic Mexican Food Full Bar
655670
ing Comon! So
Preschool Childcare is
NOW ENROLLING
PLACES / ENTERTAINMENT Community Event ______________________________________ Dog Walks ___________________________________________ Family Fun __________________________________________ Fishing _____________________________________________ Gallery/Public Art ______________________________________ Golf Course __________________________________________ Hike _______________________________________________ Local Band/Musicians ___________________________________ Lodging _____________________________________________ Public Park __________________________________________ Romantic Spot ________________________________________ Scenic View __________________________________________ Swimming Hole _______________________________________ Worship (Location) _____________________________________
MARK of EXCELLENCE
Antique & Consignment Shop Open 7 days a week
000000
360.284.2312
655651
29393 SR 410 East, Buckley
froots.com
EN OP 65 /7/3 24
655648
Follow Us! frootssmoothies
and TANNING
Eat Delicious and Smile Buckley
(in Subway Complex)
360 829-5156
655666
655649 655418
655661
Open 7 Days
250 Roosevelt Ave. Enumclaw
Owners Brenda Evenson & Ed Konschuh (Next to Rose’s IGA)
• Movie Rental/Sales • BluRay • Games • DVDs • 3-D • TVs
••••••
Vintage, Antiques, Primitives & Furniture Something for all! 360-625-8357 1522 COLE ST. ENUMCLAW
••••••
658279
Mon-Sat 10am-6pm Sunday 11am-5pm We Buy and Sell (360) 829-6644
✁ CLIP OR CLICK
2884 Griffin Ave. Ste. C Enumclaw 360-825-3315
& TRADING CO.
••••••••••
• Farm • Life • Bonds
••••••••••
• Auto • Home • Business
www.gamblinmotors.com
The Old Buckley Mercantile
EMAIL __________________________________________________________________________ NAME ___________________________________________ PHONE__________________________________ ADDRESS _________________________________________ CITY _____________________ZIP_________
PORTER ANTIQUES
AWARD WINNER
205 Hwy. 410 • Enumclaw
Please mail or bring your completed entry to: Courier-Herald, 1627 Cole Street, Enumclaw, WA, 98022. Attn: Best Of. One entry per person. Employees of participating sponsors are not eligible to win. Voting ends Monday, September 3, 2012 at 4 p.m. Name, address and phone number must be supplied to be eligible for drawing and to be counted. No copies of ballots permitted. Ballot must be 50% complete to be counted. Nominee must be a licensed business in Enumclaw and/or Bonney Lake.
12-BestOfBallot
360-825-5999
Fleet Sales Manager 253-261-6972 360-825-3567
VOTE ONLINE at… www.courierherald.com/survey or www.blscourierherald.com/survey MAIL or DROP-OFF at… Courier-Herald, 1627 Cole St, Enumclaw, WA 98022 Rochelle Plaster Financial Advisor 21110 SR 410 E., Bonney Lake 253-862-7934 rochelle.plaster@edwardjones.com
1225 Griffin Ave, Enumclaw
Rick Kranz
655662
Heritage House
526 Roosevelt • Enumclaw 825-7731 • 800 539-7595
360
A Country Garden Montessori
Who do you think is the… t t mus Ballo 0% 5 be lete to comp nted. u be co
See participating dealership for vehicle applications and rebate details. Purchase by 8/31/12.
655672
737 Main St., Buckley
Gift, Arts Supplies & More!
1708 Cole St. 360.825.5529
REBATE on select tires
REBATE See participating dealership for vehicle exclusions and rebate details.
655643
360-829-4102
$
655646
•
50- 80
4000
Complete Office Supply Store! 655675
(253) 862-2575
www.bonneylaketherapy.com
© 2011 Union Bank, N.A.
655658
20910 SR 410 E, Bonney Lake, WA
unionbank.com unionbank.com
665644
• Lunch • Dinner Fresh Baked Goods! Now Serving Beer & Wine!
Helping restore function.
Buckley Branch 112 River Avenue, Buckley, WA 98321 360-829-1962
Motorcraft® The Big Complete Tire Event Brake Service $ $
&
Family Owned & Operated!
post surgical orthopedic rehabilitation. Certified Hand Therapist.
Buckley Branch 112 River Avenue, Buckley, WA 98321 360-829-1962
FUGATE
Village Bakery & Eatery
Special Services: Work/sports/auto injuries;
Proud totosupport the of Proud be a part Buckley Log Show. the community
655652
Wednesday, August 29, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 27
360-284-2333 1444 Cole St. • enumclaw Mountainairemercantile.com
1009 Monroe Ave, Ste C Enumclaw 360-825-8400
655695
www.courierherald.com
Page 28 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Wednesday, August 29, 2012
www.courierherald.com
Lowest Prices of the Year Plus
Hurry, ends Sept. 4th! If you don’t see it, we can get it!
e ou se ice y ou pay r p e Th price y is the
5 4 7 $12, r
after
2013 2013 2013
Chevy Chevy Chevy
s, s
rebate
Spark LS Spark LS Spark LT
ck fo ee ba
lete comp
MSRP $12,995 $13,920 $15,420
Over 100 New Cars & Trucks
ls
detai
2013 Spark
Price $12,995 $13,920 $15,420
Cruze 15 in stock
Cash allow Sale Price 250 = SOLD $12,745 250 = $13,670 250 = SOLD $15,170
2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Sonic 2012 2012 2012
Chevy Chevy Chevy
Sonic Sonic LT Sonic LTZ
MSRP $16,950 $18,010 $19,710
Price $16,621 $17,585 $19,049
Save Hundreds on Sales Tax Prices Clearly Marked
Cash allow Sale Price 250 = SOLD $16,371 250 = $17,335 250 = $18,799
Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy
Cruze LS Cruze 2LT Cruze 2LT Cruze 2Lt Cruze Eco Cruze Eco Cruze 2Lt Cruze 2LT Cruze 2LT Cruze 2Lt Cruze 2Lt Cruze 2LT
MSRP $18,740 $21,040 $21,225 $21,725 $21,900 $21,900 $22,420 $23,360 $23,805 $24,260 $24,455 $25,385
Cash allow 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500
Price $18,364 $20,478 $20,643 $21,087 $21,307 $21,307 $21,704 $22,717 $23,112 $23,517 $23,690 $24,516
= = = = = = = = = = = =
Malibu & Impala
Sale Price $17,864 $19,978 $20,143 $20,587 SOLD $20,807 $20,807 $21,204 $22,217 $22,612 $23,017 $23,190 $24,016
2012 2012 2012
Chevy Chevy Chevy
Malibu LS Malibu LT Impala LTZ
MSRP $23,255 $24,790 $32,105
Price $22,615 $23,663 $31,247
Cash allow 500 500 500
Incentive 2,250 2,250 3,750
= = =
Sale Price $19,865 $20,913 $26,997
Volt 2012 2012 2012
Chevy Chevy Chevy
VOLT VOLT VOLT
MSRP $41,285 $45,630 $45,665
Price $40,188 $44,048 $44,314
Cash allow Sale Price 500 = $32,188 500 = SOLD $36,048 = $36,814
Tax Refund 7,500 7,500 7,500
Equinox, Traverse, & Tahoe 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy
Equinox AWD LS Equinox AWD LS Equinox AWD LS Equinox AWD LS Equinox AWD LT
MSRP $26,105 $26,105 $26,405 $26,405 $28,125
Price $25,279 $25,279 $25,545 $25,545 $27,184
Cash allow 500 500 500 500 500
Sale Price = SOLD $24,779 = $24,779 = $25,045 = $25,045 = $26,684
Over 20 in stock 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Chevy Traverse AWD Chevy Traverse AWD Chevy Tahoe 4X4 Chevy Tahoe 4X4 Chevy Tahoe 4X4
MSRP $45,725 $48,175 $50,650 $51,240 $59,485
Price $43,619 $44,180 $47,694 $48,218 $56,028
Cash Sale Incentive allow Price 1,500 500 = $41,619 1,500 = $42,680 1,250 500 = $45,944 1,250 500 = $46,468 1,250 500 $54,278
2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Buick Buick Buick Buick Buick Buick Buick Buick
50+ Silverados in stock
664969
2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy
Silverado 1/2 ton Silverado 1/2 ton Silverado 1/2 ton Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Sivlerado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4Ext Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab
MSRP $23,580 $25,390 $27,335 $32,185 $36,320 $37,150 $37,575 $38,405 $40,042 $38,380 $38,575 $39,185 $39,185
Price $22,994 $24,701 $26,468 $30,994 $34,257 $35,075 $35,345 $36,099 $37,655 $36,231 $36,382 $36,946 $36,946
Rebate 1,500 1,500 2,500 2,500 4,500 4,500 4,500 4,500 4,500 3,000 3,000 3,000 3,000
Trade-In $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000
Cash Allow 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500
Sale Price = $19,994 = $21,701 = SOLD $22,468 = $26,994 = $28,257 = SOLD $29,075 = $29,345 = $30,099 = $31,655 = $31,731 = $31,882 = $32,446 = $32,446
2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy Chevy
Verano Regal GS Lacrosse Lacrosse AWD Lacrosse AWD Enclave AWD Enclave AWD Enclave AWD
MSRP $28,545 $38,485 $37,015 $36,970 $42,890 $48,645 $50,005 $52,875
MSRP $41,977 $44,179 $40,375 $40,495 $41,365 $43,616 $41,980 $42,170 $47,275 $48,360 $47,080 $54,209 $58,110
Price $39,649 $41,746 $38,015 $38,098 $38,883 $38,523 $39,429 $39,767 $44,470 $45,434 $44,459 $50,494 $54,307
Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1 ton Cab n Chass Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Ext Cab Silveraod 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 1/2 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 3/4 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Silverado 3/4 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Diesel Silverado 1 ton 4X4 Crew Cab Diesel
Price $28,187 $37,698 $36,197 $36,584 $41,672 $47,681 $48,961 $51,683
Rebate 3,000 3,000 2,000 3,000 3,000 2,500 2,500 2,500 2,500 2,500 2,000 2,000 2,000
Conquest 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000
Trade-In $1,000 $1,000 $2,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $2,000 $2,000
Cash allow 500 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 2,000 2,000 2,000
Cash Allow 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 500
= = = = = = = =
Sale Price $26,687 $35,698 $34,197 $34,584 $39,672 $44,681 $45,961 $48,683
Sale Price = $35,149 = $37,246 = $33,515 = $33,598 = $34,383 = $34,523 = $35,429 = $35,767 = $40,470 = $41,434 = $41,959 = SOLD $45,994 = $49,807
www.gamblinmotors.com
888-956-6416 1047 Highway 410 • Enumclaw Vin #’s posted at dealership. Vehicles are subject to prior sale. Prices exclude taxes, licenses & a negotiable Documentary Service fee up to $150 may be added to sale price. $500 cash allowance is in lieu of Love it or Return it Guarantee, up to $7,500 Federal Tax incentive is shown on Volt and the Silverado Trade-in Rebate requires a 1999 or newer vehicle being traded-in on purchase. Many rebates are in lieu of any low APR factory financing, which is on approval of credit. Buick Conquest $1,000 requires ownership of a 1999 or newer non-GM vehicle. See dealership for details. Sale ends 9/4/12.