SEE INSIDE: One dead in crash on SR165, Page 4 . . . . Community Click!, Page 12 . . . Enumclaw swimmer breaks longstanding school record twice in two weeks, Page 9 . . . . Third time no charm for White River volleyball, Page 10
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012 | 75 cents
What’s Inside News.............................Pages 3-5 Views...................................Page 6 Sports.................................Page 9 Obituaries.........................Page 25 Classified.....................Page 19-24
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Need up, donations down at food banks By Brian Beckley & Kevin Hanson Staff Writers
Updates daily at
www.CourierHerald.com Check the website for breaking news and weather updates from around the Plateau.
Look inside... The Evergreen Arborist, Dennis Green, offers tips on picking the perfect live tree for your family this holiday season.
Entering into the busy season for food banks everywhere, the folks at Plateau Outreach Ministries and Enumclaw Kiwanis Food Bank have seen an increase in clients coming through their doors but, so far, not an increase in donations. That has left the cupboards a little bare for the moment. Today, Wednesday, is the scheduled Thanksgiving pick up for the POM food
bank, but as of last week there were still many empty crates in the storage room, crates usually filled with canned goods. According to executive director Britt Nelson, the food bank’s selection of staples, especially canned proteins like chicken or tuna, is very low. Nelson said Northwest Harvest, a statewide food bank distributor that works with than 350 food banks across the Evergreen State, provides food every week, but they
See Food, Page 3
Britt Nelson, executive director of Plateau Outreach Ministries, gathers canned goods from the food bank’s dwindling supply. Photo by Brian Beckley
A Hare raising Saturday
Pastor’s trial date moved By Dennis Box
Weather
Editor
Today, Wednesday should bring a 30 percent chance of showers and high temperatures around 50, falling into the low-30s overnight. The weekend should also bring a chance of showers or rain with highs near 50 and lows dropping into the mid-30s
The King County Superior Court trial for Malcolm Fraser, the assistant pastor of Enumclaw’s Sound Doctrine Church who has been charged with first-degree rape of a child, has been continued to Dec. 11. The trial was scheduled to begin
See Fraser, Page 4
31st goes to incumbents
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By Brian Beckley Staff Writer
Snowman the bunny gets a lot of attention from Amy Kovich, 8, of Woodinville, Kilene Kovich, 8 of Maple Valley, Esther Lanham, 10, Woodinville, Ashton Kovich, 4, Woodinville, during the Evergreen Rabbit Breeders Association show Saturday at the Enumclaw Expo Center. Photo by Dennis Box
Incumbents Christopher Hurst and Cathy Dahlquist are on their way back to Olympia to represent the 31st District for at least two more years. As of Sunday’s update from the
See Results, Page 3
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Page 2 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
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Christopher
HURST S t a t e R e p re s e n t a t i v e
Thank you!
Dear Friends & Neighbors, I am very appreciative and deeply moved by your overwhelming support in this last election and your decision to return me to the Washington State House of Representatives on your behalf. I will do my best to represent you and the 31st Legislative District. I am honored and humbled by this privilege. Thank you very much. Feel free to call me with any questions or issues in the next two years. I’m here to help! Olympia 360-786-7866
Home 360-663-2608
Enumclaw 360-825-4941
chrishurst2010@q.com • www.christopherhurst.org • 31 LD POS. 2 Independent Democrat Paid for by: Citizens for Christopher Hurst 62504 Indian Summer Way East, Enumclaw WA 98002 • 360-663-2608
Thank you Dear Friends & Neighbors, Thank you for your vote and your confidence. It has been my honor to serve you for the past two years in the State House. I am excited to continue to work on the issues that will move our state forward. I appreciate your support and good wishes. Olympia: 360.786.7846 | 31st LD: 253.653.3161 www.CathyDahlquist.com Paid for by: Committee to Elect Cathy Dahlquist 1348 Florence St., Enumclaw WA 98002
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Results FROM 1 Secretary of State, Dahlquist, a Republican, is beating her Democratic challenger Brian L. Gunn by a margin of 62.93 percent to 37.07 percent. Dahlquist earned 34,694 votes to Gunn’s 20,439. Independent Democrat Hurst also won his race by a large margin, beating Republican challenger Lisa Connors 55.26 percent to 44.74 percent. Hurst garnered 30,220 votes to 24,468 for Connors. According to the King County Elections site, voter’s in the King County part of the district mirrored the district as a whole, with Dahlquist earning 62.69 percent of the King County Vote. In his race, Hurst picked up 58.05 percent of King County. In the King County Sheriff’s race, challenger John Urquhart beat Sheriff Steve Strachan 56.74 percent to 42.86 percent. King County voters also approved with 59 percent a measure to a tax levy for automated fingerprint identification system. In other races, King County overwhelmingly went to Democrat Jay Inslee in the governor’s race as he outpaced Republican Rob McKenna 61.97 percent to 37.89 percent. In the hotly contested Attorney General’s race, which pit two King County Councilmen against each other, voters went with Democrat Bob Ferguson over Republican Reagan Dunn by a margin of 64.72 percent to 35.18 percent to help
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 3 Ferguson win the seat. King County voters also approved I-502, regarding the legalization of marijuana, by a margin of 63.27 percent to 36.73 percent and backed the right of same sex couples to marry with more than 66 percent of voters approving the measure. In the only local ballot measure, nearly 60 percent of voters in Black Diamond rejected a change of government measure and will keep a strong mayoral system in the small city. Statewide, the races were much closer, but both measures passed. King county voters, however, narrowly rejected I-1240, regarding the creation of charter schools, with 51.54 percent of King County voters casting their ballot in the negative. Statewide, however, the measure appears to have passed, but is still very close as ballots continue to be counted. In federal races, King County voters broke in large margin for Democrats Barack Obama and Joe Biden, who with 68.57 percent of the vote more than doubled the total received by Republican opponents Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, who collected 28.9 percent. Voters also re-elected Senator Maria Cantwell, who took 71.95 percent of the King County vote to beat Republican challenger Michael Baumgartner. Ballots are still being counted in the election, as results and mail-in ballots continue to trickle in, but numbers are not expected to change too much at this point. The election will be certified Nov. 27.
Food FROM 1 have been focused on fresh foods, not meat or milk. Northwest Harvest provides food at a rate of about $1.50 per pound to food banks, allowing them to fill many of the holes on their shelves, though not all. Nelson also said the large, seasonal numbers of people they usually see have started early this year. In the past two weeks alone, Nelson estimated Plateau Outreach Ministries has served nearly 100 families from all over the region. That’s up from around 50 or 60 in an average week in July. Not only are more people in need as the weather has turned cold, Nelson said the food bank’s overall numbers this year are also up from last year. According to the their records, Plateau Outreach Ministries gave out about 150,000 pounds of food in 2011. So far this year, they’ve already given out more than 100,000 pounds, and the food bank was closed in September. A couple of blocks south on Cole Street, Vicky Stratton paints the same bleak picture. As assistant director of the Enumclaw Kiwanis Food Bank, Stratton knows exactly how many folks look forward to a little help putting food on the table. During October, Stratton and others at the all-volunteer food bank passed out 14,520 pounds of food, helping 1,754 people. That number included 871 youngsters from birth to 18 years of age. “It’s trending upward all the time,” Stratton said the the need for assistance.
How to help:
The food banks are in need of the following items: • Peanut Butter • canned meats (tuna, chicken, etc...) • cereal • soup • chili • pasta • baby food • Canned vegetables Last month, there were 34 new families on the books looking for food. At the same time, donations of cash and food are down. “It’s been really low this year,” Stratton said, blaming a lingering recession for people’s inability to donate. Enumclaw Kiwanis Food Bank contracts with Food Lifeline for some of its supplies and, as part of that arrangement, can only help residents living within the Enumclaw School District boundaries. Supplies come from Food Lifeline, but Stratton also credits Safeway, QFC and Grocery Outlet for providing much-needed food. Enumclaw Kiwanis Food Bank is open to clients from 9 to 11:45 a.m. every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, except for an annual closure the last two weeks of the year.
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Page 4 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
NEWS BRIEFS Saturday fundraiser will benefit Wilkeson skate park Some cash is already on the books, a state grant looks promising and a Saturday event will generate additional funds for those hoping to see a skate park built in downtown Wilkeson. To help build the pot of money, boosters are organizing Saturday’s dinner-auction at the Wilkeson Eagles hall. A pork loin meal will be served from 4 to 6 p.m., to be followed by both silent and live auctions. The evening will be capped with a karaoke session. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for those younger than 10. Tickets will be sold at the door and are available in advance by contacting Trisha Summers at 253-2552439. Summers notes that debit and credit cards are generally not accepted at Wilkeson fundraisers, but will be taken Saturday. Volunteers from Mount Rainier Bank are making the technology available and will be helping with the event. The idea of a skate park in the small town originated with Wilkeson youngsters, who pitched the notion to members of the Town Council. Eventually, plans took hold and efforts are now in full swing. Approximately $2,000 is already on the books, thanks to private donations, the collection of aluminum cans and the money raised by kids who sold pop and goodies during the town’s Handcar Weekend festivities. Organizers are also hoping to land a grant. The skate park project is high on a state agency’s priority list, but nothing will be certain until the Legislature passes a budget and allocates funds during the early part of 2013.
Check out the artists during downtown Wine Walk Downtown Enumclaw will be home to the third annual Winter Wine Walk, a Saturday evening event sponsored by the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce. A limited number of tickets are available for the Wine Walk, which will run from 5
to 9 p.m. The cost is $30, which includes a Riedel wine glass and 10 tasting tickets; a $5 discount is available by visiting one of the participating merchants. Find a list of merchants and purchase tickets by visiting the chamber website, www.enumclawchamber.com. In all, there will be 24 Washington wines in 24 Enumclaw businesses. In conjunction with the Wine Walk, the city will present 12 visual artists who will display their work in participating businesses. Artists have agreed to show their artwork and participate in a People’s Choice contest. Wine Walk participants will receive ballots at the chamber office that lists the participating artists and the stores in which they and their artworks are located. Ballot boxes will be available for drop-off at three locations: Park Center Hotel, Xpert PC Plus and Collectibles on Cole. Wine Walkers will find artists and their work inside the following stores: Nancy Clendaniel and Glory Cancro at Enumclaw Music; Mary Janosik and WyldBill McCorkle at Park Center Hotel; Carol and Bruce Smith at Xpert PC Plus; Shelly Cohen, Dr. David Bishop and Judy Prenovost at Collectibles on Cole; Lorrie Maras at Mountain Aire Mercantile; Randal Thomasson at The Sequel Used Books; and Earnest Thomas at Creekside of Enumclaw. Votes will be tallied and the first-place winner will be invited to have a personal exhibit of their artwork at City Hall’s Gallery 2013. Artwork will be for sale dung the Wine Walk but must stay in the display throughout the event. Artwork can be picked up at the conclusion of the evening.
Public invited to open house Dec. 1 at Enumclaw library The Enumclaw Library will host an open house from 2 to 4 p.m. Dec. 1. The event is an opportunity to patrons to learn about enhanced library services and building upgrades. Refreshments will be served and music is planned. The King County Library System (KCLS) assumed operations of the Enumclaw Library in June 2012. For more information visit www.kcls. org.
Animal Blessing
Sunday, Nov. 18 • 8:30am & 11:00am
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Black Diamond rejects change of government By Dennis Box Editor
The Black Diamond change of government Proposition No. 1 has been defeated by nearly 20 percent, according to results posted according to the King County Election website. The measure asked whether the city should change from a strong mayor form of government to a council-manager. The current tally has the no vote at 1,109, 59.46 percent and the yes at 756,
One dead in SR165 crash By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
A Wednesday night accident left one man dead and had another struggling through the night to eventually call for help. According to reports from the Pierce County Sheriff ’s Department, a truck occupied by two young men went over an
Thursday but has been delayed, King County Prosecutor’s Office spokesman Dan Donohoe reported through email. The 39-year-old pastor is accused of sexual misconduct with a girl less than 12 years old. The alleged crimes were
Call 360-825-2555 or 253-862-7719
said to have happened seven years ago while Fraser and his wife were living in the girl’s home. According to charging papers, Fraser is alleged to have had repeated sexual contacts with the girl during 2005 and 2006. Fraser entered a plea of not guilty on April 5, during a King County Superior Court arraignment hearing.
There was an identification issue with the front-page photo in the Nov. 7 edition of The Courier-Herald. Pictured was Elena Galbraith who, along with husband Jeremy, owns and operates Beaker’s Parrot Place in Wilkeson. Their last name was given incorrectly.
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Department spokesman Ed Troyer, emergency responders located the vehicle and found it unoccupied. That was initially good news, Troyer said, as searchers hoped the man was able to walk for help. Those hopes were soon dashed, as the search team followed a trail of blood and found the man deceased.
CORRECTION
Hope Lutheran Church Enumclaw • 825-2420
Put Your Business First!
embankment at approximately 10 p.m. The incident occurred in the 38900 block of state Route 165. A 21-year-old reportedly walked away from the crash and, after trekking for 13 to 14 hours, was able to call 911. He reported that his 23-year-old friend was hurt, possibly unconscious. According to Sheriff ’s
Fraser FROM 1
Everyone is welcome to bring their animals for the blessing service. Small animals like dogs, cats, and rabbits will be blessed during the service in the church sanctuary. Larger animals like horses, cattle, and sheep will be blessed outside following the service. Animals are an important part of our lives, and in the creation account in Genesis, God blessed the animals and said it was good. Animal blessing services are held at many churches in celebration of St. Francis preaching to the animals. For more information, contact Hope Lutheran Church or hopelutheran.churchoffice@gmail.com. We are accepting donations of pet food at both services to be taken to Plateau Outreach Ministries.
702715
40.54 percent. Tuesday night the no vote was leading by 59.25 percent to 40.75 for yes. Mayor Rebecca Olness said by phone Tuesday evening after the results were posted, “The city has been a strong mayor form since incorporation in the 1950s. I think the citizens of Black Diamond have affirmed this form of government has worked for 53 years and it is certainly what we need. I am thrilled. I really am and I am pleased the citizens have listened to reason.”
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(360) 825-3501 1209 Cole Street - Enumclaw, WA 98022
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 5
ENUMCLAW POLICE SHOTS HEARD: The sound of gunshots prompted a call to police at 6:25 a.m. Nov. 6 from a Larsen Avenue resident. Police responded and determined it may have come from duck hunters in the area, though none were spotted. VEHICLE PROWLS: The faceplate from an auto stereo was taken during a vehicle prowl that was reported the morning of Nov. 5. The incident occurred on Lowell Avenue. There was no damage to the vehicle and there were no suspects. The morning of Nov. 4, a Kibler Avenue resident saw a woman rip open the top of a neighbor’s Jeep and taken something off the dashboard. Aside from the damage to the vehicle, a cell phone was stolen. SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY: Police were asked Nov. 5 to provide extra patrol in a Schmid Street neighborhood due to suspected drug-related activity. A citizen reported a vehicle had pulled up to a nearby home, a woman walked out and handed over a plastic bag and the vehicle departed. BROKEN WINDOW: Police were told Nov. 5 of a window that had been broken at a Semanski Street address. Damage was estimated at $150. There were no immediate suspects. NO SALE: Police responded shortly before midnight Nov. 5 to a Roosevelt Avenue business following the report of a disturbance. An employee noted there had been an intoxicated customer who was attempting to buy items without any money. Nothing was stolen and the customer had departed. DISTURBANCE: An officer was called at 3:14 a.m. Nov. 4 to a Warner Avenue apartment following a report of a tenant causing a disturbance, yelling and screaming. Police responded and contacted the tenant’s brother. Staff at a crisis service also were contacted and they were going to intervene and attempt to resolve the situation. IN PROGRESS: Police responded at 3:23 a.m. Nov. 4 to a location on state Route 164, called to assist the King County Sheriff’s Office with a burglary in progress. A suspect had left the scene prior to officers’ arrival, but information was provided about a possible location of the suspect. The suspect was soon taken into custody by county authorities. ARREST WARRANT: A subject arrived in the police station lobby the afternoon of Nov. 4, intending to visit an inmate. It was determined the visitor was wanted on a Maple Valley warrant and he was arrested.
The Enumclaw High School commons will filled with more than 300 people Oct. 27, when Plateau Outreach Ministries hosted its Pasta with a Purpose fundraiser. Photo courtesy Plateau Outreach Ministries.
THANK YOU Plateau Outreach Ministries is so thankful to this community for their support and generosity! More than 300 people were in attendance and $30,000 was raised at our Pasta with a Purpose dinner and auction Oct. 27. This is the eighth year that High Point Village has sponsored the event and provided the meal. This is our first year at the Enumclaw High School commons, which was donated by the Enumclaw School District. This venue allowed us to grow from 20 tables last year to 40 tables this year.
Because of this sponsorship, all donations from the event go directly to support the services we provide assisting families here on the Plateau. Attendees really represented a cross section of the community with churches, businesses, service groups and elected officials all represented. Enumclaw Rotary members filled nearly a third of the tables. The auction committee, led by Kim McKeighen, transformed the commons into an amazing 1950s atmosphere. There were poodle skirts and lettermen’s jackets, a soda stand with Coke and Sprite in oldtime glass bottles, and 1950s decorations throughout. The silent auction provided a variety of baskets and items that were
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donated by churches and business throughout the community. The live auction desserts were a hit, with the mayor’s pie bringing in top dollars. Our gratitude to this community is really a pass-through from those families we serve. It is humbling to receive a tearful “thank you” from a senior citizen for a sack full of food on food bank day. I think for most of us, we have no idea how difficult it is to ask for help and how much it means to have a welcoming place to come. I wish that all of our generous donors could receive one of these tearful hugs. They would know instantly how much their support means to us and to those we serve. Britt Nelson, executive director Plateau Outreach Ministries
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1236 Griffin Ave Enumclaw WA 98022
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360-802-5504
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ON FIRE: Police assisted local firefighters at the scene of a vehicle fire at 1:30 p.m. Nov. 8. The incident occurred at Cole Street and Battersby Avenue. Police handled traffic control and assisted the owner in getting the vehicle towed. DOG BITES: Police dealt with two dog-bite incidents Nov. 8, one on Porter Street and another on Mountain View Drive. In each case a report was taken and information was forwarded to King County Animal Control. MARIJUANA: Three males smoking marijuana passed by a fast-food drive-through window the evening of Nov. 8. Police checked the area but did not locate the suspects. ACCIDENT: Police responded shortly after 1 p.m. Nov. 8 to a twocar, noninjury accident at Roosevelt Avenue and Griffin Avenue. One driver was given a criminal citation for driving with a suspended license. Officers could not determine who was at fault. MENTAL HEALTH: Police received a call for assistance the evening of Nov. 7 to deal with an individual who eventually agreed to a voluntary commitment. The person was transported to St. Elizabeth Hospital. About 30 minutes later, police responded with emergency medical personnel to a Chinook Avenue address and a report of a suicidal female. She agreed to a voluntary commitment and was taken to St. Elizabeth. A few hours later, police went to a Warner Avenue address after hearing of a disturbance. A female agreed to a voluntary commitment and was transported to St. Elizabeth. VEHICLE PURSUIT: Enumclaw officers responded just past noon Nov. 7 to the vicinity of Porter Street and McHugh Avenue, called to assist the Washington State Patrol and King County deputies with the pursuit of a vehicle. The vehicle was involved in an accident and aid was summoned. The scene was turned over to the State Patrol. JUVENILE TROUBLE: Police were alerted the afternoon of Nov. 7 to a motorcycle being driven recklessly in the vicinity of Initial Avenue and Lafromboise Street. The juvenile driver was contacted and given verbal counseling. INJURY ACCIDENT: Enumclaw police assisted with a two-car accident that resulted in injuries at 4:30 p.m. Nov. 6. The crash, just west of the bridge over the White River, was to be handled by Buckley police and the Washington State Patrol.
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The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 6
State measures will step on federal toes Is everyone ready to breathe out a collective sigh of relief after the election? Yeah? Good. As nice as it is to have everything done and over with (sort of, considering our state election isn’t certified for another two weeks), the stress we all went through is important. Democracy should be stressful; the stress proves the process matters. Otherwise, we’d be a nation of Yes Men and nodding, empty heads. Don’t kick back just yet, though: the state had two measures on the ballot with at least potential significance to the federal agenda: Referendum 74 and Initiative 502. Referendum 74, Daniel Nash affirming marriage Staff Writer rights to same sex couples, will probably be the lesser national issue despite its ideologically divided debate. Washington was one of three states to legalize gay marriage; meanwhile, voters in Minnesota defeated a ban on same-sex marriages. On Monday, the Washington Post reported that African-Americans and Latinos—two demographics that have historically opposed marriage equality legislation—showed majority support for gay unions in exit polls. This is just the way public opinion has shifted. A whole generation of young voters were barely ‘tweens when the
Our Corner
See CORNER, Page 7
Question of the Week
Given the territory’s 54 percent preference for statehood, should Puerto Rico be brought into the union? To vote in this week’s poll, see www.courierherald.com
LAST WEEK: Given the results of Tuesday’s election, will the nation will be better off four years from now??
Yes: 41.4% No: 58.6%
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • www.courierherald.com
Hungering for some cooperation Have you had enough of slanted political views, slander and stubborn, self-righteous partisanship? I have. I’m glad elections are done for at least a year. It seems what Americans are hungry for is cooperation and compromise between the political parties in the nation’s Congress and the state and local governments for the good of the nation. What most of us really would like to see is a sense of balance and moderation. King Solomon, king of ancient Israel in about 900 B.C., advised his readers in the book of Ecclesiastes to “avoid extremes.” Socrates, Confucius and Buddha all came to that conclusion at about the same
In Focus Rich Elfers Columnist
time in history in the 5th century B.C. This occurred even though Socrates lived in Greece, Buddha in India and Confucius in China. All three great thinkers came to the conclusion that there needed to be balance in human affairs. Socrates called it the Golden Mean,
Buddha called it the Middle Way and Confucius’ thoughts became known as Yin and Yang. They all have a common thread: humans should seek balance and moderation in all aspects of their lives. This is not an easy concept for us humans to practice because by nature we tend to go to extremes. The examples of this in history are ample. I will give two examples from our modern period: Post World War I Germany suffered runaway inflation where money became so inflated that it was cheaper to burn bundles of Deutschmarks than it was
See ELFERS, Page 15
Recalling some rare ambience This column is especially for Toby. He’s fond of the nostalgic stuff. From time to time, a number of my loyal readers have referred to me as a local “gin mill historian.” It’s a title I’ve accepted with some humility, but only after paying homage to Toby’s brother, Howie Larson. It was Howie, you see, who gave me most of my information on regional taverns – not only the cold facts, but the colorful atmospheres and humorous anecdotes that only his first-hand, drunken observations could have
Wally’s World Wally DuChateau Columnist
furnished – and with his death much of this valuable legacy is gone forever. (For that matter, he was a living testimony to Enumclaw’s history in
general, especially its seamy side.) Howie was always quick to point out that, during the past 40 years, our region lost some important and unique, tiny, isolated and rustic, rural watering holes. Despicable as many local residents felt these old venerable saloons were, prior to their demise such places had survived nearly 100 years and played a significant role in our past. Of course, this observation is in no
See WALLY, Page 7
Volume 112 • Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • No. 9
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One of the earliest settlers in the Lake Sawyer area was Carl M. Hanson, who emigrated from Sweden with two of his sons, Axel G. and Charles S. Hanson. Carl owned a sawmill in Sweden and came to the U.S. in 1883. Having learned of the vast timber resources in Washington he secured a contract to clear a tract of land in Seattle and spent a year at that task. He then filed a claim on 160 acres on northeast Lake Sawyer, cleared five acres, and proved up the claim. For a few years he worked at the coal mines in Black Diamond, but then built a sawmill on Lake Wilderness. In 1897, the Hanson family purchased the business of the White River Mill in Enumclaw and changed the name to the White River Lumber Company. The company grew and prospered. Shown here is Locomotive No. 7 of that company sometime in the 1940s. This photo was part of the collection of Augustus DeSpain and comes from the website of the Washington Rural Heritage project and courtesy of the Enumclaw Plateau Historical Society. Provided to The Courier-Herald by Bill Kombol.
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CORNER FROM 6 “metrosexual” fad swept America and every light-hearted movie had a “sassy gay friend” in the cast. And as offensively Mammy-esque as those character depictions are, they helped contribute to a culture of acceptance. More voters can probably say they had at least one openly gay friend or acquaintance in high school, humanizing the issue in their formative years and influencing their choices come election time. The odd thing about the past decade’s gay marriage debate is that it’s been— and continues to be—a war of words. Or rather the one word, “marriage.” National and Washington state debate swung in favor of “everythingbut-marriage” civil unions years ago, and the debate shifted to the religious distinction of marriage. “What people do in the privacy of their own home is their business, but a marriage is defined by the Bible as a covenant between a man and a woman. We don’t want to stop these people from being together, but they simply can’t have what we have. It’s not so bad: They’ll be separate but—wait for it—equal!” Ignoring for a moment that marriage existed in ancient cultures Before the Common Era, and ignoring that the marriage rite exists in Islam, Buddhism, Sikhism, etc… if the definition of “marriage” is religiously monopolized, why is it a matter of political debate at all? If the issue is truly religious, the easy solution would be for government to get out of the marriage business and instead recognize romantic unions of all stripes as “civil unions,” allowing couples to define their marriage through private
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 7 ceremony. Perhaps at its core, the argument against same sex marriage isn’t about marriage at all: it’s about strengthening fundamental Christian dominance in civic discourse. A person who believes one religion should have a more direct influence on the laws of the land, and says so directly, is going to meet equally direct opposition. Our Constitution is fairly clear cut when it comes to keeping government out of religion (For the protection of the people’s private religious beliefs. Some argue religion can still influence government, but the problem is that you quickly enter a chicken-and-egg question of influence). But if that same person can convince his opponents to concede that marriage—a legal partnership that governments already have a hand in—is a religious issue, he’s set a precedent and shifted the frame of debate. Far more interesting is how Initiative 502 will play into the Federal government’s stance on marijuana. Not to discount the significance of same sex marriage and equal rights to countless couples, but that’s a war of words crawling to a foreseeable conclusion; drug enforcement has a multi-billion dollar infrastructure on the line. Despite an early first-term promise by President Obama to respect state stances on medical marijuana, the past four years saw continued high-profile Drug Enforcement Administration raids on Washington cannabis dispensaries, as well as in the other medical pot states. And the state remained hands off because, well, its affirmative defense law is hands off. But 502 is a different animal entirely. Washington, as of Dec. 6, will have decriminalized marijuana for adult rec-
reational use. And, if the plan holds together, our state liquor control board will roll out a state agriculture and retail system for providing a legal supply. That puts us—as well as Colorado—in direct opposition to the Federal government. It’s an opposition that, no question about it in my mind, is going to come to legal blows in the near future. Will Washington be a spark that ignites a new national agenda, or a failed experiment. I can’t help but relate the issue to one of my favorite comedy bits. Sketch group The Whitest Kids U Know marked the final season of their television series by dedicating the second half of each episode to an ongoing saga titled “The Civil War on Drugs.” The story followed two antebellum Southern stoners who mistakenly believe the Civil War is being fought over the legal status of marijuana. They decide to wage a campaign to end the violence and save their favorite vice. Traveling across the country on foot, they encounter Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant, lead an incompetent platoon and unwittingly collect fame and fortune as renegade “soldiers.” At war’s end, President Abraham Lincoln himself bestows honors on the pair when they accidentally reveal they’ve conducted their campaign on a misunderstanding. Bewildered, the fictionalized Lincoln responds, “Of course marijuana is legal! It’s a plant that grows out of the ground. I don’t care what you do with it. What’s wrong with you?” It may be funny in that context, but this is going to be a real and serious legal debate in our near futures, so don’t get too comfortable in your post-election bliss. There’s still plenty of room for civic stress.
No trash collection scheduled for Thanksgiving Day City offices in Enumclaw and Buckley will be closed Nov. 22 and 23. In Enumclaw, there will be no garbage or yard waste collection on Nov. 22, Thanksgiving Day. Those with a normal Thursday pick-up will have service a day early, so trash and yard waste should be at the curb by 6 a.m. Nov. 21. Collections on Friday, Nov. 23, will not be disrupted. As usual, receptacles should be available for pick-up by 6
“Over 110 years of tradition”
a.m. Anyone with questions can call 360-825-5541. In the Buckley vicinity, trash/yard waste/recycling collections are handled by a private vendor that does not operate three days a year, with Thanksgiving being one of those. Customers with a Thursday pick-up will see collections delayed until the following day. Customers with questions should call 1-888-806-7048.
We Know What Birds Like
WALLY FROM 6 way meant to demean our current bars and lounges. Like you, I enjoy the Firehouse, Rendezvous, Crystal, Yella Beak and a host of other bars scattered hither and yon across the Plateau. However, many of these familiar places are similar, just variations of typical suburban bars you find all over the U.S. But, as Howie maintained, this wasn’t true of the old Kangley Tavern. Unlike any other saloon that exists around here today, the Kangley Saloon and the Kangley general store were both housed in one building, separated only by an open doorway. The only similar dual occupancy I ever ran across anywhere in America was in the bayous of Louisiana. Tightly clutching their pennies, children would anxiously await an ice cream cone at the grocery counter while peeking rather apprehensively into the dark shadows and dusty amber lights of the adjoining room, eavesdropping on the boisterous laughter. The Kangley burned down long ago. For some uncanny reason, during its last few years the place earned a reputation for Halloween parties. Indeed, at one such brawl, I ran across a dude who was so elegantly and convincingly dressed in female attire he would have been envied in the finest transvestite circles. How do you account for something like this in a conservative, rural area more than 35 miles from Seattle’s gay clubs? Around the Palmer area there used to be a delightful little dump called The Dirty Shame. I’ve never been sure what boundaries outline Palmer and perhaps the “community” – what there was of it – was defined mostly by the tavern. The Shame burned down in early 1984 and the scandalous stories about drunken coal miners, tender-hearted whores and various infidelities were incinerated with it. And believe me when I say this place was a dump. Its sorry condition must have escaped the state’s Health Department owing to some kind of grandfather clause. Both these places had a rare and wonderful ambiance that set them apart. Today, there are very few such saloons left anywhere around here, though the Wagon Wheel in South Prairie and the City Hall Saloon in Cumberland have a touch of this ancient atmosphere. Just a touch. But the best existing example of such a historic tavern is the Carbonado Saloon in – surprisingly – Carbonado. So, if you think you’d enjoy a brew in a first-class anachronism from coal mining days, you might want to check it out. But do so in the immediate future because God only knows how much longer this place will last before it also burns down or goes through a major renovation.
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 8
Give thought before picking a holiday tree
Pondering plastic: just a few facts Use of plastic is prevalent. It is the storage method of choice, be it bins or bags. But there’s more to plastic than just water bottles and electronics casings. Find out how much you know about plastic. 1. True or False: Plastic can be found in carpeting and clothing. True. Plastic goes beyond the traditional uses for this material. Plastic fibers are even used in clothing and carpeting, plus the dyes used to color these items. Therefore, recycling clothing and carpeting is just as important as putting your used plastic canisters in the recycling bin. 2. If you had to choose a type of “safe” plastic that does not transmit harmful chemicals into foods or beverages, what would it be: polycarbonate, polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride? Polyethylene products marked #4 or #2 have not been found to leach unhealthy chemicals into your foods and beverages. 3. True or False: All plas-
tic resins can be recycled. False. The number stamped on the bottom of the product tells you the type of resin, but unfortunately not all plastic can be recycled. Often municipal recycling programs will collect all plastics and then sort them at the recycling facility. Those that can’t be recycled are discarded with the rest of the trash. 4. From what material is plastic made: petroleum, coal, or wood? Petroleum. Plastics are largely made from the byproducts of petroleum refining. 5. True or False: There’s now an all-natural plastic that can be grown. True. Products can be made from polyactic acid, a material made from a variety of plants, such as sugar cane, corn and potatoes. The dextrose in these plants
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Yes, it is a bit early to think about Christmas. The pumpkin season just ended, Thanksgiving is lurking around the corner and plastic trees are already being displayed in stores. But America’s Christmas tree farmers are just beginning to get warmed up. They produce a true “real green” product that will create jobs, is grown on plantations in the USA and is recyclable. Puget Sound Christmas tree farmers and local retail lots will be offering a wide variety of species. To help select your favorite tree, the characteristics of the more popular species are listed below. Douglas fir: This tree is generally available as a sheared tree and is the most common species found on tree lots. It has a nice fragrance and a medium-to-good shelf life. Because of the thick, bushy crowns, they do not lend themselves to large or heavy decorations. This species is the easiest to grow because it is relatively problem-free. It requires seven to eight years to mature as a Christmas tree. Noble fir: This species is considered the Cadillac of Christmas trees. It grows in a more open pattern, has stout branches, luxurious green needles, a long shelf life and has a nice fragrance. It is popular with families that have large or heavy ornaments. It is the most expensive tree because it takes eight to 10 years to mature and is the most difficult species to grow.
is separated, fermented, dehydrated and then crystallized to form polymers similar to plastic. 6. How long is it estimated to take plastic to decompose? Experts surmise it can take 1,000 years or more for plastic to begin to decompose, but no one knows for certain. Plastic bags can take 10 to 20 years if exposed to adequate sunshine and air. 7. Americans use 2.5 million plastic bottles every: minute, hour, or day? Hour. It’s important to recycle those bottles because they may be able to be turned into things like trash cans, park benches, playground equipment,
See PLASTIC, Page 17
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Grand fir: This sheared tree is the most fragrant of the native species. It has an attractive needle that makes it a popular choice as a flocked tree. Grand fir trees require eight to nine years to grow and have a medium shelf life. Fraser fir: This North Carolina native has strong branches that will hold heavier ornaments. The needles have a pleasant fragrance and a long shelf life comparable to a noble fir. Fraser fir trees are difficult to grow because of the many pests that threaten them. They require eight to 10 years before they are ready for harvest. Norway and blue spruce trees: These are generally available only at chooseand-cut farms. They will hold heavy decorations. Some consumers think they are “child and pet proof ” because of the stiff, prickly needles. Spruces require eight to nine years to mature as Christmas trees and have a medium shelf life.
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Sports
The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • www.courierherald.com
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • Page 9
Enumclaw water polo team takes seventh By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
Bouncing back to take a Saturday afternoon victory over Puyallup, the Enumclaw High boys garnered a seventh-place team trophy at the state water polo championships. The state tournament’s final games were played at Curtis High. Having lost a pair of games Friday, the Hornets slid into Saturday’s battle for seventh and eighth place against the
Vikings, a team the Hornets had defeated twice earlier in the season. The outcome was much the same as before, with Enumclaw on the winning end of a 10-6 score. It was a quartet of seniors who led the way in the tourney finale, with leading scorer Bennon VanHoof slamming home four goals. Thomas Petersen contributed three goals, Mason Culp had two and Carson Lanphere added one. Saturday night, Bellevue High showed last year’s state championship was no
Hornet swimmers tackle state’s best Davenport breaks school record in breaststroke for second time in two weeks By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
Divers Maria Blad and Nikki Wilson picked up team points for Enumclaw High, as did
Bella Davenport in the 100-yard breaststroke, during last weekend’s Class 3A state swim and dive championships. The state meet was staged Friday a nd Saturday at the King
County Aquatics Center in Federal Way. Enumclaw was represented in eight events during the two-day meet, eventually totaling 14 points and tying for
fluke, adding a 2012 title to its impressive resume. Friday’s state tournament action hadn’t gone nearly as well for Enumclaw High, which lost to Auburn Mountainview 8-5 not long after getting swamped by Newport 16-2. Newport went on to claim third-place honors and Mountainview wound up sixth. Tournament play began Nov. 7 and saw Enumclaw High open with a 12-11 victory over Lakes, followed by a 20-4 loss to the tough Bellevue bunch. 24th place among the 35 teams. Both Blad and Wilson survived the preliminary diving rounds and made their way to the finals, placing ninth and 15th, respectively. Davenport was the only swimmer to make the finals, but she made the most of the opportunity. She clocked a time of 1 minute, 9.89 seconds to establish a school record in the breaststroke, eclipsing the
Against Lakes, Petersen led the Hornet scoring with 5 goals, VanHoof added four and Will Cooper, Culp and Brandon Butler chipped in with one each. Against Bellevue, VanHoof had two goals and Shay Larsen and Mitchell Petellin added one apiece. This marked the third consecutive appearance in the state tournament for Enumclaw High, which took home a third-place trophy in 2010. After going 11-3 in league play this season, the team finished 19-11-1.
school-record time she had posted a week earlier during the West Central District meet. Davenport also had qualified for state in the 200-yard individual medley, but her preliminary-heat time of 2:21.64 wasn’t quite enough to get her into the finals. Katie Larrea had qualified for the state meet in two events as well, producing preliminary times of 58.09 in the 100 freestyle and 26.31 in the
50 freestyle. Also representing EHS at the state meet were three relay teams. The 200 freestyle relay team consisted of Allie Larrea, Hannah Simurdak, Jamie R itzdorf and Carlie Cairnes. Making up the 400 freestyle relay were Allie Larrea, Katie Larrea, Bailey Sexton and Davenport. Swimming the 200 medley relay were Sexton, Davenport, Simurdak and Katie Larrea.
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Page 10 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
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Third time is no charm for White River volleyball By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
A third straight appearance in the Class 2A state volleyball tournament didn’t go nearly as well as the White River High girls had hoped. The Hornets lost their first two matches Friday and made a hasty exit from the state field of 16 teams. The Hornets, guided by coach Strydar Argo and counting just three seniors on the roster, suffered a pair of 3-0 losses. The tournament opener provided a
mighty challenge for White River, which was paired against a Selah team that advanced to the Final Four and eventually went home with a third-place trophy. The Vikings from the Yakima Valley sent White River into the loser’s bracket with a 25-14, 25-12, 25-10 win. In a loser-out match later Friday, White River was bounced by Sehome High’s Mariners 25-15, 26-24, 25-18. White River had entered the state tournament as the No. 5 seed from the West Central District.
EHS soccer girls fall in 3A tourney opener By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
A talented foe awaited the Enumclaw High girls in the opening round of the Class 3A state soccer tournament – an opponent that hadn’t lost a game all season. The record remained
unblemished for the Mount Spokane Wildcats, who knocked off the Enumclaw Hornets 2-1 in the tourney opener. The loss ended the season for EHS. The game was played Nov. 6 on the campus of Spokane Falls Community College. On paper, Enumclaw
entered the fray as a decided underdog. The Hornets took a 13-5 record to Spokane and had earned the sixth and final seed from the previous week’s bi-district tournament. Mount Spokane had claimed a Greater Spokane League championship, then earned district and regional titles, on the way to an 18-0 record and a No. 2 statewide ranking. Still, the hard-fought contest was just inches shy
See SOCCER, Page 11
White River’s Alisha Bidwell goes high for a kill, following a set by teammate Cassidy Kunst, during the Hornets’ state tournament loss to Selah. Photo by Daniel Nash.
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 11
Williams honored by state coaches By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
Longtime White River High coach Mike Williams will be among the honorees during a Saturday evening ceremony hosted by the Washington State Baseball Coaches Association. The organization sponsors its annual Hall of Fame banquet in conjunction with the Seattle Mariners with a luncheon at Safeco Field. Williams will be receiving the Don Freeman Award. According to a
WSBCA press release, the award “goes to a coach who is doing good things, is a member of the association and carries himself in a fashion that emulates the career of former Prairie (High School) coach and 1996 inductee Don Freeman.” Keeping things in baseball terms, Williams said news of the Freeman Award “totally came out of left field for me. “I am so shocked that other coaches across the state know what we have been trying to accomplish
here. I feel like it is some validation for all the time spent coaching.” Williams is a White River alum, having graduated in 1984 before heading off to play baseball at Big Bend Community College and Central Washington University. He returned home and coached the White River Middle School team to a championship in 1988 and headed the White River High program in 1989. He then made stops in Yelm and Enumclaw before taking over the White River program for good in 1997.
During his 17 years as a head coach Williams had built a record of 199-169 and led his teams to 13 playoff appearances. Along the way, there have been four league championships and one appearance in the state tournament; that came in 2002, when the Hornets placed fifth. He has earned league Coach of the Year
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of being deadlocked in the late going. With three minutes to play, Enumclaw’s Jessica Snoen broke loose and fired a shot that caromed off the crossbar. Mount Spokane’s two goals came during a three-minute span in the first half. Enumclaw’s lone goal came shortly before intermission on a shot by Katie Christensen.
accolades five times and, following last spring’s campaign, was honored by the WSBCA as the state’s Class 2A coach of the year. Williams describes himself as “the luckiest guy in the world” to be teaching and coaching in the White River School District. In other developments
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Community Click
The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • www.courierherald.com
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • Page 12
Class of 1947
Members of the Enumclaw High School graduating class of 1947 gathered for their 65-year reunion Aug. 11 at the Park Center Hotel. Attending were: in front, from left, Elois Osin Fredrickson, Eileen Kelly Zumek, Jim Anderson, Shirley Kruse Hansen, Don Wickwire, Mabel Willson Lazara, Dolores Orehek Wilkening and Doris Nielsen Nordyke; middle row, Pat Hannus Darby, Agnes Festin Wicknick, Carole Rogers Scannell, Virginia Dukowitz Wilson, Wayne Johansen, Duane Radliff, Margie Williams Park, Ellen Hanus Peltier, Richard Jamieson, Patsy Boysen Baker, Bill Wright, Dorothy Larsen Nelson, John Staudt and Jeannette Folkens Lilly; in back, Evan Richey, Monti Callero, Dick Welling and Art Grip. Photo by Harper Photography
Class of 1962 Members of the Enumclaw High School graduating class of 1962 gathered for their 50-year reunion Aug. 3-5. Attending were: in front, from left, Rose Erickson Wolfe, Kathy Nichols Gross, Mike McNeeley, Brenda Sargent Jeter, Kristine Hansen, Clair Pitcher Mick, Linda Sevellis Boyce, Marian Link Franck and Christy Pedersen Thayer; second row, Rick Johnson, Pat Christensen Garrett, Janice Goldsberry Ranton, Judy Jensen Long, Joan Carnino Broughton, Dave Ruppert, Penny Parmenter Koyama, Pam Parmenter Abott, Evelyn Karlson Miller, Kathy Darby Cato, Arlene Guidetti Hendrickson and Jane Grafton Gallagher; third row, Ernie Richardson, Frank Mihelich, Janet Craig Schenk, Howie Sonneson, Tom Jameyson, Phyllis Gill Johnson, Bob Corlett, Janet Ulman, Shirley Shoemaker Carmichael, Carol Whitley Larson, Georgene Potochnik Murphy, Marilyn Bush Walsh, Jayne Hartjoy Noeske, Sharon Anderson Sawhill and Frank Kladnick; back row, Theron Morgan, Dale Ehler, Gary Strom, Skip Johnson, Dennis Capponi, Bill Hartill, Jim Dibley, Allen Thorsett, Gene Coryell, Bill Sherwood, Johnny Sanuy, John Rengstorff, Gary Damiano, Edd Johnson and Monte Mitchell. Attending the reunion but not in the photo were Joel Allen, Steve Mariotti and Mike Walton. Photo by Nick Stopsack Photography
Help from Knights of Columbus Members of Buckley Council 9637 Knights of Columbus collected handed out free Tootsie Rolls to customers shopping at Grocery Outlet stores in Enumclaw and Bonney Lake, accepting donations to support the needs of the disabled in our area. Funds have been assigned to the Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation’s Care Van. The van is equipped with a hydraulic lift and can seat eight passengers plus two wheelchairs. The Care Van serves Enumclaw, Bonney Lake, Buckley, Burnett, Carbonado, Cumberland, South Prairie and Wilkeson. A check for $300 was recently presented to the Care Van effort. Pictured, from left, are Jon Calder of Fransican Health System; René Popke, Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation; Bill and Marieta Rumpza, financial secretaries for Buckley Council 9637; and Joe Schamer, past district deputy of Knights of Columbus. Photo courtesy Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation
Keep Them Coming
To submit a photo for Community Click, e-mail it to communityclick@courierherald.com or call 360-802-8205.
Candy Buy-back Molen Orthdontics sponsored its sixth annual Candy Buy Back event this year, collecting 2,200 pounds of candy and 1,000 nonperishable food items from more than 600 kids. The candy will be donated to local charitable organizations, food banks and military charities. They use the candy for put together Christmas stockings for soldiers serving overseas and families in our community that are in need. At left, Dr. Rick Molen and Macy Campbell, 6, trade candy for cash. Photo courtesy Molen Orthodontic
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 13
Gateway Band offers winter concert twice
THANK YOU Enumclaw Special Olympics wants to thank the Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation for its generous grant. With the help from this grant we were able to buy adaptive bowling equipment to help our athletes participate in our Special Olympics bowling season. By using this equipment athletes are able to actively join their friends and family at the lanes. Thank you from all of our athletes and families, you have made a difference in their lives. Bonnie Kennedy Enumclaw Special Olympics coordinator
The Gateway Concert Band will present its winter concerts, entitled “Yuletide Celebration,” at 2 p.m. Dec. 2 at the White River High School auditorium and at 7:15 p.m. Dec. 3 at the Enumclaw High School auditorium. The concerts are an eclectic mixture of Christmas, Hanukkah and other seasonal music. Director Jack Prindle will be featured, playing Ernst Sasche’s “Concertino in E-Flat”
on the soprano cornet. There is no admission charge, but a $10 donation is recommended. The Gateway Concert Band is a community band based in Enumclaw. Formed in March of 1996, it has presented more than 185 performances in its 16-year history. The band is open to any interested adult and competent high school instrumentalists, without audition. Rehearsals are from 7 to 9 p.m. Mondays at Enumclaw Middle School. For more information or directions call 360825-5369 or visit www.gatewayconcertband. org.
6 Reasons to Advertise with The Courier-Herald 1 People Read The Courier-Herald. 26,400 households receive the paper each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions. This does not include our website.
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F R A N C I S C A N O R T H O P E D I C A S S O C I AT E S
• • • I wanted to thank all the downtown Enumclaw merchants for helping my family kick off our Halloween festivities with so much fun and good energy. I always look forward to our jaunt downtown for trick or treating so I can see old friends and make new ones. Thank you for your commitment to this wonderful tradition for our kids! Monica Robbins Enumclaw
David Bishop, MD Orthopedic Surgery Franciscan Orthopedic Associates 2820 Griffin Ave, Suite 210 Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-7500
IN THE MILITARY You don’t have to move mountains to access expert orthopedic care.
Michael G. Miller, MD Orthopedic Surgery Franciscan Medical Clinic 3021 Griffin Ave. Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-6511
Franciscan Medical Group welcomes orthopedic surgeons David Bishop, MD and Michael Miller, MD. Dr. Bishop is a highly respected orthopedic surgeon who has been serving the plateau community for over 20 years. He joins Franciscan Medical Group under a new clinic name—Franciscan Orthopedic Associates. Dr. Miller is an experienced orthopedic surgeon who has relocated to Enumclaw after serving as a flight and orthopedic surgeon in the U.S. Air Force for 21 years. He has joined Franciscan Medical Clinic. As part of the family of Franciscan services, they perform both inpatient and day surgery at St. Elizabeth Hospital and offer seamless access to Franciscan Health System’s comprehensive network of care. From fracture care to total joint replacement, their goal is to get you back to the life you love—strong, mobile and pain-free. To schedule an appointment with Dr. Bishop, call (360) 825-7500. For Dr. Miller, call (360) 825-6511. www.FranciscanDoctors.org www.FranciscanDoctors.org
703820
Navy Seaman David W. Buckingham, son of Karee A. Devoir of Pasco, Wash., and Mark G. Buckingham of Enumclaw, recently completed U.S. Navy basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Ill. During the eight-week program, Buckingham completed a variety of training which included classroom study and practical instruction on naval customs, first aid, firefighting, water safety and survival, and shipboard and aircraft safety. An emphasis was also placed on physical fitness. The capstone event of boot camp is “Battle Stations,” an exercise designed to galvanize the basic attributes of sacrifice, dedication, teamwork and endurance. Buckingham is a 2006 graduate of Enumclaw High School.
Franciscan Medical Group offers a variety of specialty services close to home: cardiology • endocrinology • gynecology • obstetrics • orthopedics • podiatry • primary care • rheumatology • urogynecology • weight loss surgery
Services offered: + Access to leading-edge surgical suites and day surgery at St. Elizabeth Hospital + Adult orthopedics + Arthroscopic surgery + Hand and foot surgery + Knee, hip and shoulder surgery + Sports medicine + Total joint replacement Affiliated with St. Elizabeth Hospital
6Reasons2x4
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Page 14 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
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Out with the old and moldy, in with the bulbs The second week of November is my favorite week to plant bulbs. By now there is no use putting up with the water-logged geraniums, frost-bitten petunias and other dying annuals in your beds and pots, so it’s out with the old and moldy and in with beautiful bulbs. If you’re a lazy gardener like me, you can do things the easy way with these five bulb-planting tips: Use a big shovel, dig a wide hole. I don’t bother with a hand trowel or bulb planter because I like my tulips, daffodils and hyacinths to bloom in big happy families, crowed close together for broad sweeps of spring
1.
color. This look is easiest to achieve with a shovel. Pull up the annuals, then dig into the soft soil creating holes at least 1 foot by 1 foot wide and 6 to 7 inches deep. The general rule of green thumb is to plant your bulbs three times as deep as their width, so setting daffodils and tulips 6 inches underground is deep enough. Go ahead and cram 15 or 20 bulbs into the same hole. Make a blooming lasagna with layers of bulbs and soil. I run out of vacant spots to add my bulbs even after pulling up the annu-
2.
Today’s News...Today & Every Day!
All New at: www.courierherald.com
The Compleat Home Gardener Marianne Binetti Columnist
als. This is when I add a layer of soil on top of the large bulbs and then pile in smaller bulbs like crocus, anemone and snowdrops. These smaller bulbs go into the same planting hole as the deeper-planted tulips, daffodils and hyacinths. This way you get bulbs that bloom in shifts. Treat your tulips like annuals. My life became so easy once I accepted that tulips do not want to come back year after year in my garden. Blame the voles, my soil, too much summer
3.
water or the overcrowding in the planting hole, but once you accept that tulips will be beautiful the first spring after planting and ugly or nonexistent after that, then adding tulip bulbs to your landscape every fall becomes a lovely way to celebrate the change of seasons. A few tulip bulbs cost less than a latté and right now springblooming bulbs are on sale. Just grow for it. Many happy returns with loyal little dwarfs. I have more than seven varieties of dwarf bulbs in my garden and they all return year after snow white year. The secret is to put these small bulbs in well-drained soil away from a sprinkler system that would keep the soil moist all summer. Bulbs need to dry out and go dormant to
4.
return or naturalize. Têteà-tête and February Gold dwarf daffodils, all types of crocus, snowdrops and wind flowers are some of the short but dependable spring bloomers that flower even in the cool and shady parts of my garden. They really put on a show if I remember to bait for slugs. Fill your pots with leftover bulbs. There’s no need to have sad-looking patio pots and window boxes in March and April. Yank out the annuals and replant with bulbs now. Deeper pots can handle the larger bulbs that like at least 6 inches of soil on top of their heads. Window boxes and small pots can accommodate the small or minor bulbs that will bloom when planted just 2 inches deep. Remember that a bulb is a prepackaged flower
5.
already formed. You don’t need to fertilize after you plant, water them or even offer fertile soil. Just bury these treasures and you’ll enjoy spring jewels. • • • Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardens” and several other books. For book requests or answers to gardening questions, write to her at: P.O. Box 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply. For more gardening information, she can be reached at her Web site, www.binettigarden.com. Copyright for this column owned by Marianne Binetti.
Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation presents:
Tickets: $65 per person Available online at: www.enumclawrhf.org or call 360-802-3206
Friday, November 30 • 5:30pm Emerald Downs
703275
Thank you to our major sponsors!
Silent auction items welcome. Complimentary transportation service available.
www.courierherald.com
ELFERS FROM 6 to use it to buy coal. Just a few years later the Great Depression hit not only Germany, but the whole world. Money was extremely hard to find; in the 1930s one could buy a complete dinner for 50 cents in America. Another example of the swinging of the pendulum of human nature was when U.S. citizens were strongly isolationist after the horror of World War I in the 1920s and 1930s in spite of German, Italian and
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 15 Japanese conquests. That attitude abruptly changed to anger and interventionism after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941. Wisdom comes from seeking balance in all areas of our lives, both public and private. To do that requires that we face the reality that extremism on either side of the spectrum does not bring us safety and freedom from fear; it only brings us more grief. The election is over and the time has arrived where members of Congress must sit down with their oppo-
SEND LETTERS Letters to the editor should by typed (preferably emailed), must include the author’s name and must
include a phone number for verification. Unsigned letters will not be printed. Deadline is 5 p.m. Thursday.
nents for the good of the nation. We cannot continue to be so polarized and let the major problems of immigration, climate change, unemployment, energy and the national deficit be ignored any longer. It’s time to let go of our fears. It’s time for people on both sides of the political spectrum to start listening to perspectives of the other side. We all need to realize those who disagree with our views do so out of sincerity. Our goals should be to hear that sincerity, and begin to listen for areas of agreement. Focusing on our dif-
BASEBALL FROM 11
ferences will not give us the nation or society either side really wants. The ancient sages of the past knew the wisdom of seeking balance. It’s time America returned to its roots found in the Constitution. Checks and balances, two houses of Congress, are examples of an attempt to balance opposing views. It’s time for the national and the state elected officials to give their constituents what they really want: balance and moderation.
within the White River baseball program: • Tanner Williams, now a senior at White River, was a second-team all-state selection in the 2A ranks following the spring 2012 season. The numbers show why he was selected: a 392 batting average with 20 runs batted in, nine doubles, two triples and only four strikeouts; that resulted in a .510 on-base percentage. Defensively, he made only four errors in 26 games at shortstop. • the Hornets’ Cole Johnson, a pitcher/first baseman who was recruited as a position player, will be signing a national letter-of-intent to play baseball for Washington State University. The ceremony is planned for Thursday at White River High.
Coastal
Letters should not exceed 500 words. Our address is P.O. Box 157, Enumclaw, 98022. Our e-mail address is news@ courierherald.com and our fax number is 360-8250824. For more information call 360-825-2555.
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Page 16 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
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Creekside puts emphasis on ‘resort retail’ By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
Looking around the expansive space she has turned into Creekside of Enumclaw, owner Penny Larsen says she was attempting to create “a real resort-y, Aspen kind of feel.” The 7,000 square feet that formerly housed Suburban Soul is now home to every-
thing from jewelry to backpacks, makeup to hiking boots. Larsen’s goals were to provide a “resort retail” atmosphere while also carrying lines of merchandise that weren’t solely for those with expensive tastes. The end result, she said, is a selection that is “very woodsy, outdoorsy” in nature. It’s an approach, she
said, that should appeal to both locals and visitors to Enumclaw. Her clothing selection includes evening apparel, coats, fleeces, parkas and everyday wear. The active type can find hiking poles, tents, snowshoes and goggles. Upstairs, there are fresh pastries and a coffee bar, and a wine bar will be
included as soon as all the hoops are cleared with the state of Washington. Larsen, who took a break from the corporate world to launch Creekside of
Enumclaw, will operate her store from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. An exception will be made during the holiday season,
when she will be open on Sundays. The store at 1335 Cole St. can be reached at 360-8255026. A website, Larsen said, is on the way.
Top honors earned for salmon Daniel Nash Staff Writer
Buckley food entrepreneur Steve Shindle, founder of Steve’s “Hot” Smoked Cheese & Salmon, won the title for “Best Smoked Salmon in the Pacific Northwest” at a state competition. Shindle won in the professional division of the Salmon Tales celebration’s Smoked Salmon Contest in Westport. “Winning that honor was worth going
down there,” Shindle said. “And I can use it for my business and advertising.” He attributed the win to his use of killfresh salmon, a pre-smoke dry rub, and a refusal to brine or use liquid smoke. Shindle has smoked cheese and salmon for five decades, but he made it a full-time business in the past decade. He has five contractors working with him. He can be reached at 253-632-5537 or oldsmokey05@msn.com.
Penny Larsen offers everything from ski goggles to evening wear in her effort to create a “resort retail” atmosphere at the store she opened Nov. 1 in downtown Enumclaw. Photo by Kevin Hanson
1
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trees FROM 8 Where to Find Trees To enjoy a fun experience with the family, visit a local choose and cut farm. Locations and tree information can be found on the Puget Sound Christmas Tree Association website, www.pscta.com. Many nurseries, stores and charity groups will offer trees at retail lots. Proper Tree Care Once home, cut onequarter inch off the butt and place the tree in a water stand. The stand should be large enough to hold at least one gallon of water after the tree is placed in it. Check the water level daily. A typical 6-foot tree can drink one gallon of water each day and remain fresh for two to three weeks. Years of Hard Work A tree farmer invests many dollars and hard work for six to 10 years
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 17 before earning any return. Not all trees will be salable. Some will die while others may be damaged by insects or diseases before they reach harvest size. For example, of 1,000 trees planted, 900 to 950 Douglas firs may be salable. However, only 700 to 800 nobles may be marketable because of losses to the above factors. Therefore, a grower needs to receive more money for nobles than Douglas firs to make them profitable to grow. Do Trees Really Cost So Much? One interesting way to view prices is to look at how much a tree costs and how long it can be enjoyed by a family compared to other activities. For example, if you pay $30 for a Douglas fir or $60 for a noble, they will bring joy and good smells to your home for two or more weeks. If you spend $30 to feed a family of four
Thank You We appreciate your kind words, love and support during this difficult time. You’ve laughed with us and cried with us as we celebrated the life and legacy of Clayton Bloomer. We will always be grateful for the prayers, love and support that have comforted us during this loss.
at a fast food establishment or $60 to attend a movie and eat popcorn, the enjoyment may last from one to four hours. When viewed in that perspective, trees are a pretty good bargain for the time that they bring enjoyment to millions of families. Dennis Tompkins is a certified arborist and hazard tree risk assessor from the Bonney Lake-Sumner area. He is also a nationally recognized expert and consultant to the Christmas tree industry. Contact him at 253-863-7469 or email at dlt@blarg.net. Website: evergreen-arborist.com.
plastic FROM 8 decks and kayaks. 8. Plastic film or wraps are used in abundance. One could shrink wrap what state with the amount of plastic film made in one year? Texas, the second largest state in the
country. 9. True or False: Polystyrene foam (commonly known as Styrofoam) is recyclable. True. Polystyrene foam is not biodegradable, but it is recyclable. If you lined up all the polystyrene foam cups made in just one day, they would circle the earth.
The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles* +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum
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Please join Expressions at Enumclaw for a memorable event
Candles of Care
Sincerely,
The Bloomer Family Don’t get caught in the dark!
BE PREPARED SPECIAL
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The Plateau Ministerial Association invites you to our
702709
Community Thanksgiving Service Wednesday, November 21 at 7:00 pm at Mt. Rainier Christian Center
43801 244th Ave. SE • Enumclaw
All are welcome!
Childcare available during the service
The Alzheimer’s Foundation of America coordinates a nationwide candle lighting event every November to honor and remember Americans who have been or will be affected by Alzheimer’s disease or related illnesses. Expressions at Enumclaw is pleased to announce that we will be participating in this event by hosting a Commemorative Candle Lighting Ceremony “Candles of Care” on Sunday, November 18th. For more information please call (360) 825-4565 www.PrestigeCare.com
Sunday, November 18th Event starts at 6:00 pm Dessert & Beverages provided Expressions at Enumclaw 2454 Cole Street Enumclaw, WA 98022
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Expressions at Enumclaw is committed to creating a supportive community that is caring and respectful of guests and families alike. We provide the care so that you can focus on the more positive aspects of your relationship with your loved one.
Prestige Senior Living
Page 18 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
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Happiness is maintaining attitude of gratitude is always full of accounts of God Church working in the Corner midst of some problem. These stories of hardship and calamity gripped Ron Oldenkamp my attention and Calvary Presbyterian I was amazed at how people always a tragedy or disaster was seemed to call out described, and Guideposts to God for help in their
Praise! Rejoice!
Enumclaw Community
Enumclaw Seventh-day Adventist Church
9:30 am Service 11:00 am Bible Study
825-5437 On Hwy 410 across from Mazatlan Restaurant
when is it so hard to give God thanks and the credit when those prayers are answered? I know I struggle with having an attitude of gratitude. It seems to be so easy to ask God for help, but once we have received that help, we have a tendency to turn
See CHURCH, Page 25 697700
Saturday Morning Worship 9:30 and 11:00 am 3333 Griffin Ave. 825-4155
697704
Loving Jesus
that terror usually gets me praying, too! Many of the other answers also involved being in need. It is all too obvious that one of the primary reasons we lift our prayers to God is for help in a time of crisis. But why is it so easy to lift our prayers of supplication and intercession to God, asking help for ourselves or for others,
697709
Church
times of need. One of my small group Bible studies, a number of years ago, explored this matter in a discussion on the topic of prayer. A question in our study guide was “What are some things that encourage you to pray?” I remember the first answer that was shared was “Terror!” I have to admit
Community Presbyterian Church
Christ our center Love and service our purpose ❖
152 S. Cottage St., Buckley, WA Sunday School 9:30 am Worship Service 11:00 am
(360)829-1222
697711
When I was growing up, stories always had titles like “Ordeal on Killington Peak” or “Flight 132.” As a little boy, whenever the Guideposts or Reader’s Digest magazines came in the mail, these were the stories I would read first. The Reader’s Digest had a monthly section called “Drama in Real Life,” where
www.cpcbuckley.org
Our Redeemer Lutheran
First Baptist Church
Sunday School 9am • Family Worship Sunday 10am
The Friendliest Church in Town!
Enumclaw
Celebrate the Lord with US!
Pastor: Dan Martin
253-862-0715
Sunday Services
12407 214th Ave. E. • Bonney Lake OurRedeemerLutheran@hotmail.com
Bible Classes for all ages..................................................................................9:30am Morning Worship............................................................................................11:00am Sunday Evening Bible Classes.............................................................5:30-7:00pm
Pre-K and Kindergarten Now Enrolling!
SUNDAY WORSHIP: Morning Bible Classes .............9:30 a.m.
697717
Morning Worship....................10:30 a.m. Evening Worship.......................6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY WORSHIP: Evening Bible Classes..............7:00p.m.
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.
Come be our welcome guest! (360) 825-2182
“A Joyful Family Centered in Christ”
697723 697725
697719
Interim Pastor: Ron Oldenkamp Assoc. Pastor: Cindy Ehlke Youth Dir.: Ben Auger 1725 Porter St., Enumclaw 360-825-3820 www.calvarypreschurch.org
Ministers:
Jim Miller Anthony Wilson
2627 Kibler Avenue Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-5903
www.kiblerchurchofchrist.org
697726
Saturday Night Worship 7 pm Sunday Morning Worship 9:30 am
email:firstbaptistch1@qwestoffice.net
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
(ECLA) 8:30am Contemporary Worship
(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!
9:45am Education Hour & Sunday School 11:00am Traditional Worship Pastor Dan Wilson www.hopelutheranchurch.org Lutheran Counseling (253)839-1697 ext. 3
1316 Garfield St. Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-2420
697721
Enumclaw Church of Christ
Now Meeting at 26007 SE 425th, Enumclaw WA 98022
CHURCH OF
Prayer/Bible Study ............................................................................................6:30pm Worship Teams ..................................................................................................7:30pm 3466 Porter • (360)825-1111 • www.firstbaptistch1.qwestoffice.net
697716
Worship Service 10:45am • Sunday School 9:30am www.hillside-communitychurch.org
697720
12407 214th Ave. E. • Bonney Lake www.ConcordiaBonneyLake.com
Wednesday Services 697706
697712
253-229-6782
Senior Pastor James D. Dunn
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com
Page 24 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 14, 2012 Horses
Bazaars/Craft Fairs
9000
Vans & Minivans GMC
Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
FOOTHILLS AUTO GLASS
HORSE TACK SALE
Large old show trunk, lots of blankets, cutback saddles, bridles, boots, car ts/harness and show clothing. Call for details: (360)825-5617 Services Animals
PROFESSIONAL PET & FARM SITTING Licensed and insured. Serving Orting, Buckley Bonney Lake, Enumclaw 360-870-8209 www.petandfarm.org
3rd Annual Santa’s Dash Holiday Bazaar
8100
Nov 17th ~ 10am-6pm Buckley Hall 127 North River Ave
Proceeds Benefit The Mom & Me Mobile Clinic Enumclaw/Black Diamond
Black Bear OutPost
HOLIDAY OPENING
GARAGE SALES
Thur 11/15-Sat 11/17 10AM-5PM The barn is packed full of antiques, secondhand decor, furniture, jewelry, crafts, holiday gifts/decor and other interesting items!
Garage/Moving Sales Pierce County
Christmas Sale! Saturday, Nov. 17th 10AM-6PM Enter to win a $25 Gift Certificate! Layaway Available. Dealer Discounts & Antiques Galore!
38124 EnumclawFranklin Road
Off of HWY 169, Between Enumclaw/Black Diamond
VENDORS NEEDED
Old Buckley Mercantile
Christmas Bazaar
29393 Hwy 410, Buckley (next to Rose’s IGA)
Sat, Dec 1st, 9am-4pm Church On The Hill 11715 214th Ave E Bonney Lake cothadmin@juno.com
(360)829-6644
TRANSPORTATION Marine Power
RARE 1991 BOSTON Whaler 16SL. Dual console, 90 HP: 2 stroke Mercury, 8 HP Mercury Kicker, EZ Steer, dual down riggers, water-ski pylon, depth finder, canvas cover, anchor with rode, anchor buddy, & EZ Loader Trailer. Safety equipment including fire extinguisher, throw cushion & more. One owner! Professionally maintained! Located in La Connor. $8,500. 206726-1535. People Read The Courier-Herald 26,400 households receive the paper each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions. This does not include our website.
Automobiles Honda
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UPHOLSTERY
Years in Business!
DICK SHUMWAY BUS. 825-6761 427 B Roosevelt Ave.
The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles* +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum *Source- Pulse Reports
526 Roosevelt Enumclaw 360 825-7731 800 539-7595 The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative
&
& Health
Our award winning editorial staff is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative staff will showcase your business at no additional cost.
Community Service
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22’ 2007 JAYCO, JAY Flight Travel Trailer. Fully self contained. Sleeps 6 people. Interior shelving and storage through out. Sunny and bright with lots of windows. Outside shower and gas grill. Excellent condition! Original owners. 4,165 lbs towing, 2 propane tanks, luggage rack with ladder. Asking $12,800. Bonney Lake. 253-8917168.
JUNK CARS & TRUCKS
Free Pick up 253-335-1232 1-800-577-2885 The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative
26,400 households receive the paper each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions. This does not include our website.
Dave O Transport
Cash 4 Cars Call or Text 253-330-1367 UNWANTED TRUCKS & CARS? Getting Cash For Auto’s Has Never Been Easier! We provide Friendly Respectful service to all customers & pay CASH on the spot for your car running or not We Also Transport; RV, Trailer, 5th Wheel’s Puget Sound Region Top Dollar Paid Licensed & Insured
www.cash4cars seattle.com
www.cash4carssettle.com
The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles* +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum *Source- Pulse Reports
Vehicles Wanted
C A R D O N AT I O N S WANTED! Help Support Cancer Research. Free Next-Day Towing. NonRunners OK. Tax Deductible. Free Cruise/ Hotel/Air Voucher. Live Operators 7 days/week. Breast Cancer Society #800-728-0801. The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative Our award winning editorial staff is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative staff will showcase your business at no additional cost.
CASH FOR CARS! Any M a ke, M o d e l o r Ye a r. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k T O D AY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647 D O N AT E YO U R C A R . RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPONS. FAST, FREE TOWING24hr Response. UNITED BREAST CANCER F O U N DAT I O N . Fr e e Mammograms & Breast Cancer Info www.ubcf.info 888-444-7514
People Read The Courier-Herald 26,400 households receive the paper each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions. This does not include our website.
This directory will include: human services providers, doctor profiles, emergency preparedness plans, health issues and what to do, How to stay safe: and much more!
Health & Wellness Directories Printed
31,000 distributed in the Enumclaw and Bonney Lake/Sumner Courier-Herald newspapers. 3,000 distributed to local hospitals, clinics, human service providers, Chamber of Commerce and more!
Contact Your Sales Representative Deadline: January 8, 2013 Publishes: January 23, 2013 000000
Tents & Travel Trailers
People Read The Courier-Herald
Saturday by Appointment
D&J AUTO
43
Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
Our award winning editorial staff is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative staff will showcase your business at no additional cost.
All Insurance Welcome
Accident?
Body Shop & Collision Center We repair ALL makes and models
FUGATE ENUMCLAW
Certified Technician
Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
Automobiles Mercury
2006 MURCURY Grand Marquee LS. Sage green, new tires, 57,000 miles. Strong engine. Good gas mileage. Original owner, well taken care of. A beautiful c a r. $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 O B O. (425)746-8454
Quality Windshields
1992 GMC Moving van 24’. Just serviced. Offer & will trade for economy car. (360)825-1591
697139
First United Methodist Church 100 “N” Street SE, Auburn Saturday, November 17, 2012 9AM-3:30PM Lunch Served 11AM-2PM
HORSE Boarding. Full care. 12’x12’ stalls. Daily turnout. Covered arena. Wash rack. $325/month (360)829-0771
577959
2012 Annual Holiday Bazaar
Mobile Service for Your Schedule
697115
BORDING/LESSONS War m stalls, indoor arena, lessons/all seats. Horses provided. Homeschool class/ Januar y. Gift cer tificates. 360-825-5617.
Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
Jennifer A. ....... 360 802-8212 Scott ................ 360 825-2555 x1050 Martha ............ 360 802-8218 Dottie.............. 360 802-8219 Jennifer T. ....... 360 825-2555 x2050
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OBITUARIES LYDA POLESKI For resident Lyda Poleski died Nov. 1, 2012, in Las Vegas, Nev., where she had lived since 1976. She was 69. She was born Jan. 7, 1043, in Yakima, Wash., to Roy and Mary Anderson. She was raised in Burnett and married Stan Poleski of Black Diamond on Aug. 3, 1968. Prior to moving to Nevada they had lived at Lake Sawyer for several years. She is survived by husband Stan of Las Vegas; daughter Donett; son Robbie Barnes and wife Alice; sisterin-law Darlene Foulk of Enumclaw; and three grandchildren. She was
Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 25 preceded in death by her parents, sisters Elsie and Sylvia and brother Roy Anderson Jr.
LOUIS ALCORN Louis “Bud” Alcorn died Nov. 9, 2012. He was born June 14, 1929, in Auburn, Wash., and raised in the Newaukum area where he attended and graduated from Enumclaw High School. He was a truck driver for the Valley Supply Louis Alcorn Co-op, which became Cenex, for 27 years. He was a trustee for the Wabash Presbyterian Church
that he and his family attended for many years. He also loved giving his time as a volunteer for the local fire department and then as a commissioner. He and his wife raised their family on a 10-acre farm in the Wabash area, where they lived for 55 years. He is survived by his wife, Ilene; children James Alcorn and wife Ruth, Denise Artz and husband Ben, Pam Jewett and husband Jeff and John Alcorn and wife Bobbie; 10 grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren. A celebration of his life is planned for 3 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13, at Wabash Presbyterian Church, 18325 S.E. 384th St., Auburn.
SUNNE RUSSELL Bonney Lake resident Sunne Rae
Check out our Green Edition online at www.courierherald.com
Russell, 64, died Nov. 2, 2012. She was born Nov. 20, 1947, in Seattle. She enjoyed buying gifts for her family. She is survived by her husband of almost 40 years, Joel Russell of Bonney Lake; Sunne Russell daughter Kerry Horn and husband Todd of Easton, Wash.; and one grandchild. A memorial service is planned for 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18, at Weeks’ Funeral Home in Buckley. All may sign the online guest book at www.weeksfuneralhomes. com.
just click here!
CHURCH FROM 18 it around as though it were our own actions or even some law of nature which got us out of the jam or solved our problem. When thanksgiving is lacking in our lives, we don’t allow God to be God, but rather we take God’s place. Giving thanks is inversely related to pride and selfrighteousness – if we have a high degree of pride and view God’s blessings to us as my gifts, my belongings, my talents, my abilities, then we will be hindered in being able to be thankful. But if we have a humble spirit, recognizing that all we are and all we have, and our very life itself are the gifts of God, then we are prepared to have an attitude of gratitude, and thanksgiving will be as much a part of our lives and prayers as our cries to God for help. So, may all of our lives – not just this special season of Thanksgiving – be filled with an attitude of gratitude. And may we all allow that perspective to spill out from ourselves to all those around us as well
A Special Thanks From
PLATEAU OUTREACH MINISTRIES
We extend our gratitude to sponsors and donors for their generous support at our 8th Annual Pasta with a Purpose Dinner & Auction Over $30,000 was raised to support local families in need.
703308
4 Sun Sports Aaby Photography Aaron Brenner Bakery Aaron Eide Active Life Chiropractic AJ Home Repair Allen’s Furniture Almost Necessities Amburgey Carpet Care Amy Birchell - Mary Kay Ben & Ruth Ann Smith Bistro Thyme Bridget’s Boutique Brittney West Photography Cathy Dormaier Chandler Reach Vineyards Charlie’s Café CJ’s Bakery Clean Line Painting Community Presbyterian Church Country Farm & Feed Country Garden Bouquet Creation Festival Cub Scout Pack 500 Cutters Supply Inc Dance It Up Danielle’s Hair Design Donna Christianson Dr. Bob Campbell, DVM Dr. Harding
Drs. Walker & Kraus Edward Jones Financial, Kory Keath Enumclaw Community Church Enumclaw Del’s Farm & Feed Enumclaw Family Optometry Enumclaw Vision Four Seasons Frankie’s Pizza Gamblin Motors Gramma’s Garden Grocery Outlet Hair Etc. Happily Hair After High Point Village Hillside Community Church Hinman Photography Studio Hope Lutheran Church Howells Chiropractic Jenny Serven JR Design Keeter Family Kimberly Derting Krain Corner Les Schwab Tires Lisa Wilhelm
Little Caesar’s Pizza Luanne’s Music Studio Lynne Balderson Maple Valley Electric McDonalds Mike’s Auto Clinic Mike’s Western Supply Mission Creek Coffee Molen Orthodontics Moments Cupcakes Monticello More Pennies From Heaven Mountain Aire Mercantile New Life Foursquare Church Northwest Bible Church NW Safe Oshio Teriyaki Pizza Hut Plateau Espresso QFC Quiznos Rainier Bar & Grill Rendezvous Wine and Brew Robin Grennan Rocking Bar H Ranch Rocky Poulin Ryning & McGonegle Sacred Heart Salon La Bell Scott Rubin
Sears Shannon Poulin Sheryl Swanbeck Sip City Wines Skynet Broadband Spa Beeutiful Stensen Family Sweet Necessities Tae Kwon Do Connection Teriyaki House The Ballet Workshop The Kettle The Kitchen The Lee Hotel The Parlor Room The Pie Goddess Thomasson Family Farm Tom Poe Diamonds Tracy’s Roadside Produce Trip Hart True Value VanDam Family Wabash Presbyterian Church Weeks Family Work Sports & Outdoors Young’s Enumclaw Flowers & Gifts
A Special Recognition to our Major Sponsors
If you would like additional information regarding Plateau Outreach Ministries, our food bank, thrift store or emergency assistance program, please contact us at 360-825-8961 or email our new director Britt Nelson at britt@plateauoutreach.org. Thank you for your continued support as we assist our neighbors in need.
Page 26 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
www.courierherald.com
!
G N I EW
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 27
Enumclaw
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CHRYSLER
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36 MONTH LEASE, 10,000 MILES PER YEAR. DOES NOT INCLUDE TAX, TITLE, OR LICENSING.
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12 RAM 1500 TRADESMAN
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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 11/28/12.
Page 28 • The ENUMCLAW Courier-Herald • Wednesday, November 14, 2012
You’re Invited to Fugate Ford
www.courierherald.com
See the New 2013 Fusion!
Enter to win a 2 year lease! Participate, and Fugate Ford will make a donation to our local food bank.2
For more information visit us on or FugateFord.com
701419
$21,700
FUGATE FORD
800-640-5457 • www.fugateford.com Hwy 410 • Enumclaw
16 9
Roosevelt Ave.
1
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NORTH Gr iffi nA ve .
FUGATE FORD
410 Blake St.
No purchase necessary. Must be legal resident of the 50 U.S. States/DC, 18 years of age or older with valid driver’s license. Void where prohibited. Promotion ends 11/15/12. For complete entry, eligibility, prize details and odds disclosure, see Official Rules at www.randomactsoffusion.com/finalact. American Idol: /© 19 TV Ltd. and FremantleMedia North America. 2013 All Rights Reserved. www. americanidol.com. 2Ford will contribute $10 per registered guest, up to a maximum of $500, to a Ford-approved charity. Charitable donations are the sole responsibility of Ford, not American Idol® or related parties. 3EPA-estimated 47 city/47hwy/47 combined mpg. Actual mileage will vary. Class is Midsize Hybrid Sedans vs. 2012/2013 competitors.
ENUMCLAW
➤
Visit us on Ford night Thursday 3pm-7pm. Refreshments served!