Veterans Life The Voice for Kitsap’s Veterans and their Families
November 2014
Veterans Day 2014 ❚ This WWII soldier brought a unique skill to the Army: pages 2-3
❚ Remembering the debt we owe our veterans: page 4
❚ Veterans Day events in Kitsap, region: page 5
Published monthly by Sound Publishing Co. | Updated regularly online on KitsapVeteransLife.com
As a typewriter repairman, Robert Montgomery had a unique skill. And during the Second World War, the U.S. Army needed it
The Army type
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At age 93, World War II veteran Robert Montgomery of Bremerton continues to work as a typewriter repairman. During the war, he was trained as a fighting soldier, but his assignment changed when the Army learned of his skills repairing typewriters. Richard D. Oxley / Veterans Life
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I
t was the height of World War II. America asked a lot of its citizens. And in response, its citizens sent its sons, its money — and its typewriters. Robert Montgomery of Bremerton was drafted in October 1942. But he came to the Army with a particular skill — a skill that altered his course through the war, all the way to Frankfurt, Germany. Typewriter repair. “It was one of these, ‘You know how to fix one of these machines? How do you fix this part?,’ ” he said. Montgomery grew up fixing typewriters in his father’s Seattle-area typewriter shop. By the time
the Army came calling, he knew a thing or two about the essential machines. In fact, to this day, at 93, Montgomery is still at it, fixing typewriters five days a week at his downtown Bremerton repair shop. He is among a handful of repairmen in the region with the knowhow to keep typewriters up and running. But in 1942, Montgomery was planning on moving on from the family typewriter businesses. The Army, however, had other plans. “I started goofing around with these machines when I was in grade school. I had no intention of being a repairman,” Montgomery said. “I really didn’t get seriously involved with fixing typewriters as such
until I got out of the Army. I kept getting steered into it.”
Drafted
It was common for colleges to require young men to go through a form of basic training as the war was on. Montgomery was one such student who took part in a training. He could take a carbine apart and put it back together before he was drafted. Perhaps that was the reason no one noticed that he never actually went through basic training when he was sent to Camp Beale, Calif. after being drafted. “The whole thing is a comedy of errors,” Montgomery said. “There was a fluke somewhere, I don’t know. They lost my records indicating whether
or not I went through basic training. So I arrived in California as a fully qualified soldier with a gun. They sent me immediately to where I was needed,” he said. Montgomery wasn’t alone. “They looked around and found out that there were about nine other guys as well,” he said. The untrained soldiers were each handed a gun and went through a crash course in basic training at Camp Beale, though it wasn’t long before plans changed for Montgomery. “They said, ‘You fix typewriters don’t you?’ ” Montgomery said. “They literally grabbed me by the collar and said, ‘Here’s your repair shop.’ I was See ARMY TYPE, Page 3
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By RICHARD D. OXLEY
ON THE COVER: Members of the Suquamish Warriors honor guard fires a salute during the 2013 Veterans Day ceremony at the Suquamish Veterans Memorial. See page 5 for a list of 2014 Veterans Day events. Richard Walker / Veterans Life
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Army type
on hand for when he was needed. In the meantime, he was charged with purchasing supplies for the office in London. “I was sent out with a driver and a jeep in downtown London which had German planes flying overhead,” he said. In time, American forces gained more ground in Europe and were headed to Berlin. Montgomery was sent along with them — first to Versailles, France, where he repaired typewriters in some rather lavish horse stables; and then on until he found himself in a basement shop in Frankfurt. That was the last stop on Montgomery’s tour. The war had largely ended at that point. He was sent home.
Continued from page 2 immediately put to work fixing typewriters.” It was a sign of the times. The World War II was leaving little in America unaffected, and the typewriter industry was not spared. “When America entered World War II, production on all American typewriters stopped in order for factories to dedicate their output to essential war munitions,” the online typewriter store, www.mytypewriter.com, reports. “The American government requested that all spare typewriters be turned over to the military. Manufacturers, retailers, and even private citizens were urged to give up their typewriters.” Every Army field desk had a typewriter. Important documents were typed and duplicated using typewriters. With factories no longer producing the machines during the war, the typewriter became a valuable commodity. Montgomery said the U.S. government advertised for second-hand typewriters: “ ‘We need your old typewriters. If you don’t need it, send it to us, we’ll pay you.’ ” And out on the war front, keeping typewriters operating was a valuable skill.
Trading in a gun for repair tools
After California, Montgomery was sent to a base in Alabama where he marched in an infantry for about three months. En route to his assignment, he stopped at a base in Arkansas that had a typewriter repair shop. “By this time, the war had really started to get heavy and we had German prisoners,” he said. “I
Robert Montgomery in his workshop, surrounded by some of the tools of his trade.
Richard D. Oxley / Veterans Life
walked into this typewriter repair shop and this guy, who had been a professional typewriter repairman similar to me, was running this shop with German prisoners. Some of them didn’t know what they were doing, but at those prices, who complains?” It wasn’t long until Montgomery shipped off to England. “I was supposed to stay with this group that was
a replacement for the 1st Division that was fighting the main German group,” he said. “It was no place to be. They had big guns. Those Germans were really good soldiers too.” But he didn’t go to the front. He’s not sure how it happened, but word of his repair skills somehow traveled overseas ahead of him. “This officer comes up to me and said, ‘Montgomery, turn in all your field equipment, put on a class S uniform and report to the transportation officer,’ ” Montgomery said. He found the transportation office. “This guy says, ‘Oh yeah we were expecting you,’ ” he said. Montgomery was there for about a day before his orders arrived. “It said I was supposed to go to S.H.A.E.F. Nobody knew what ‘S.H.A.E.F.’ was,” Montgomery said. “But one guy did. It was ‘Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force.’ He said, ‘That’s Eisenhower’s headquar-
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ters.’ It was the headquarters for the entire invasion force.” When Montgomery arrived at S.H.A.E.F., he discovered that it already had a typewriter repairman on duty. The plan was to keep Montgomery
After the war
While he hadn’t planned on entering the family business before the war, Montgomery wasn’t opposed to the idea after it. He noticed that Kitsap was absent a typewriter repairman, so he set up shop in Bremerton with his father. More than six decades
later, Montgomery still works there. Montgomery can look back over decades of experience, from the Underwood No. 5 — a model that is more than 100 years old — to the popular electric IBM Selectric, and he enjoys chatting about it. And he can recall his time in the war — a time he speaks of in a serious tone, yet also with a little humor about how plans can change. “It’s a miracle we actually defeated the Germans,” he said with a smirk. “They had an army that had actually been fully trained. They were a dangerous bunch of soldiers.” He has a theory of why America came out on top. “There’s something about the Americans in general, and the American Army,” he said. “We are a bunch of improvisers. At times the official orders weren’t always the greatest. We would look at them and say, ‘I don’t know what they are doing, let’s go around the other way.’ ”
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Life
WRITE TO US: Veterans Life welcomes letters from its readers. To make room for as many letters as possible, keep your letter to 350 words maximum. Include your name and daytime phone number for verification. Send to P.O. Box 278, Poulsbo, WA. 98370; fax to 360-779-8276; or email rwalker@soundpublishing.com.
OPINION
IN OUR OPINION
Remembering the debt we owe our nation’s veterans V
eterans Day is Nov. 11. Originally known as Armistice Day, the commemoration is observed every year on the 11th day of the 11th month in remembrance of the end of hostilities between the Allied nations and Germany in the Great War — Nov. 11, 1918, the end of “the war to end all wars.” As devastating as that war was — 16 million people died, 20 million were wounded — it did not end all wars. But in the ensuing years, Americans continued to step up and wear the uniform, in hopes that we would indeed see the end of all wars. And they paid the price. In World War II, 405,399 U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines died, 670,846 were wounded. In the Korean War, there were 36,516 U.S. military deaths and 92,134 wounded. In the Vietnam War, there were 58,209 U.S. military deaths and 153,303 wounded. In Afghanistan, 2,229 U.S. military personnel have died, 18,675 have been wounded. In Iraq, 4,488 died, 32,222 were wounded. Our living veterans are the reminders of that sacrifice, the witnesses of the despotism and dictatorship and tyranny that drove us to war. As of Sept. 30, the U.S. veteran population was 21,999,108 — 16.5 million wartime, 5.4 million peacetime. According to Wikipedia, citing information from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, 16.1 million Americans served in the Armed Forces during World War II; as of Sept. 30, the World War II veteran population is 1,017,314. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs estimated that 670 American World War II veterans died every day in 2011. According to Veterans Affairs, also alive today are 1.8 million Korean War veterans, 7.2 million Vietnam era veterans, 7 million Gulf War era veterans, and 11,213 pre-World War II veterans. Today, nearly 1.5 million individuals are serving in active duty in the U.S. Armed Forces. Another 850,000 are serving in the Reserve. Of those, some 160,000 are serving overseas. One-sixth are in combat zones: 24,050 in Afghanistan, 2,350 in Iraq. On Veterans Day, we remember the debt we owe our veterans, current and future. May their service steel our resolve to ensure a nation and world free of terror and tyranny — to see the day when all nations seek to use instruments of peace before they deploy instruments of war.
Life The Voice for Kitsap’s Veterans and their Families
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Nurse missed out on 3-year ‘vacation’ By THOM STODDERT, USA, RET. VETERANS VOICE
O
ne of the finest soldiers I had the pleasure to meet and work with was Spc. Lucy Hootenberry. Her real name I don’t remember, but this is close enough. Lucy was one of my students and a counselee in the Army’s enlisted nursing program. She held the highest respect among the cadre and students. She was an excellent nurse even before she graduated. All the instructors loved working with her; she was always positive. She had only one problem: a husband that never held a job and only wanted farm animals and lots of children. When I did the initial instructor–student intake counseling, I was impressed by her frankness, maturity and her composure. She had joined the Army while living in southern Indiana, her whole life
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working as a nurse’s aide, holding down two full-time positions. She was the only support the family had, while her hubby stayed home with the children, at least six of them, and the farm animals. Ten weeks before graduation, Lucy and her classmates learned they would be assigned to medical units in Germany. When I met with her, at that time, she acknowledged her gratitude to the Army for making her a nurse and paying her to go school, something she could never do in civilian life. Lucy had worked hard all her life and for once she was making progress and making a living. However, she was not too sure that her husband would like the idea of going overseas. She asked many questions about duty in Germany. She was obviously excited. The last time I met with her, I asked how things were going, in particular about the family going to Europe. She said her husband
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was accepting the idea and she was really looking forward to seeing the sights in Europe. Then she graduated and went on leave to her home town. Several weeks later, while doing noon phone watch at the school, I got a call from an angry person who worked at the overseas replacement center at the airport in St. Louis. The woman yelled, “Who the hell is Lucy Hootenberry?” I explained that Lucy was a former student, a very good one, headed for Germany, and was no longer a part of the command. The irate civilian then read me the letter her office had received from Lucy. “Dear Overseas Replacement Staff. I want to thank you and the U.S. Army for the opportunity to be stationed in Germany and to see all the wonderful things there. However, at this time I must respectfully decline the orders, as this would be impossible for us. Again, thank you for this chance to see Europe. Signed, Specialist Lucy Hootenberry.” I never did find out what happened to Spc. Hootenberry. Knowing the type of woman and soldier she was, a tour in Germany would have been a three-year paid vacation for her — if she could only have gotten the children to raise their father.
Veterans Day events scheduled in the region UW hosts events on Nov. 7 and 11 TACOMA — University of Washington hosts several events Veterans Day week to mark the annual commemoration. On Nov. 7, beginning at 12:30 p.m., staff members from the Tacoma Veterans Center will be available to assist veterans, in the Office of Veteran and Military Services, MAT206, UW Tacoma. This office is a new service, a welcome center where veterans can gather, staffed by a professional veterans service coordinator, a benefits adviser and a VetCorps “navigator” — a veteran helping veterans through transition as a peer. On Nov. 11, 11 a.m., a Veterans Day ceremony will be presented on the UW Seattle campus. The recipient of the 2014 UW Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award will be announced. The Husky Marching Band will present a salute to Armed Forces and uniformed personnel. Info: www.tacoma. uw.edu/news/veterans.
Fundraiser for homeless veterans BREMERTON — The Fraternal Order of Eagles’ annual President’s Charity Fundraiser is scheduled on Nov. 8, 3-11 p.m., at 205 6th St., Bremerton. Beneficiaries are ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease) treatment and research and homeless veterans. There will be raffle every hour, live local music, food and fun for everyone. A membership special will be offered during the event: Become a member for $25 (savings of 50 percent). Info: Odessa Kawai, email aerie192@gmail.com or 360-373-4944.
Kitsap celebration at the fairgrounds BREMER TON — Kitsap residents will salute our nation’s veterans at the annual Veterans Day Celebration on Nov. 11 at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds Pavilion. The doors will open at 9 a.m., the ceremony will begin at 10:30 a.m. More than 40 veterans
groups will participate in the event. Two dozen booths will line the walls, displaying vintage military vehicles, uniforms and other historic items. The ceremonies will include the Bremerton High School Marching Band, a bagpiper, colors presentation, bell-ringing, POW/MIA flag ceremony, Armed Forces medley, rifle salute and the playing of Taps. Co-hosts this year are Rear Adm. Jeffrey Ruth, commander, Navy Region Northwest; and Guy Stitt, Bremerton-Olympic Peninsula Navy League ambassador. First Sgt. Doug R. Pfeffer, USA, (Ret), is the scheduled guest speaker. Pfeffer served a 24-year career with a military occupation specialty of forward observer (13F). He deployed in support of Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom. Pfeffer is chief operating officer of RallyPoint/6, a non-profit that helps veterans in the South Puget Sound. RallyPoint/6 is where the service member, veteran or family member can get connected with community organizations that will assist in transition and reintegration into the civilian community. No service member, veteran or family member is charged for the support and services they receive at RallyPoint/6.
Free admission at Museum of Flight SEATTLE — The Museum of Flight is offering free admission to veterans on Veterans Day. The museum’s Veterans Day ceremony begins at 10:30 a.m. with an hour of patriotic music by the Boeing Employees’ Concert Band. At 11:45 a.m., the keynote speaker will be Mike Washington, a veteran and member of Team Rubicon, an organization that unites the skills and experiences of military veterans with first responders to rapidly deploy emergency response teams. Washington will explain how Team Rubicon (www. teamr ubiconusa.org) helped local rescuers after the deadly Oso landslide in March.
The Museum of Flight is located at 9404 E. Marginal Way S., Seattle, exit 158 off Interstate 5 on Boeing Field, half-way between downtown Seattle and SeaTac Airport. Info: 206-764-5720 or www.museumofflight.org.
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Ceremony at USCG Port Angeles PORT ANGELES — Coast Guard Air Station/ Sector Field Office Port Angeles will host its annual Veterans Day ceremony on Nov. 11 at 10:30 a.m. The ceremony is sponsored by the Clallam County Veterans Association. It is open to the public; enter the facility from the front gate at 1 Ediz Hook, starting at 9 a.m. All guests are required to present valid photo identification in order to gain access to the base. Air Station/SFO Port Angeles has been designated as a regional Veterans Day observance site for the 18th straight year by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. This year, the unit has also been designated a Vietnam War 50th Anniversary Commemorative Partner.
Join the all new
Gathering, potluck for SEALS film POULSBO — The PBS documentary, “The Untold Story of the Navy SEALS,” will be shown at The Slippery Pig on Nov. 11 at 9 p.m. The Slippery Pig (www. slipperypigbrewery.com) is located at 18801 Front St. NE, downtown Poulsbo. “Arrive anytime after 1700,” said Cmdr. Jack B. James, USN, ret. “We have coordinated with the Slippery Pig for this event and they are offering the space at no charge. Bring friends and your favorite potluck dish. [We’ll have] raffle prizes after the show.” RSVP: 360-509-2985, jackaljames15@gmail.com.
Free haircuts, meals for veterans BREMERTON — Great Clips will give veterans a free haircut from Veterans Day through Dec. 31. In Kitsap County, Great Clips is located at
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The Board of Director’s and Staff of United Way of Kitsap County are proud to salute our Active Duty Military, Armed Forces Veterans and their Families for their service and sacrifice keeping our Nation free and safe!
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Veterans’ resources in Kitsap County American Legion Post 109, Silverdale Address: 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Info: alpost109cmdr@ gmail.com, or Facebook. Meets on the third Monday of the month, 7 p.m., at All Star Lanes. American Legion Post 149, Bremerton Address: 4922 Kitsap Way, Bremerton. 360-3738983. Info: www.legion149wa. org American Legion Post 172, Bainbridge Island Address: 7880 NE Bucklin Hill Road, Bainbridge Island. 206-842-5000. Info: www.bainbridgeislandpost172.org. Meets on the first and third Friday of the month, 7:30 p.m.
American Legion Post 200, Belfair Info: Tom Welch, email xtw@aol.com. Meets on the first Thursday of the month at 6 p.m. American Legion Post 245 Veterans Service Office, Poulsbo Address: 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A, downtown Poulsbo. 360-779-5456. Open every Thursday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Disabled American Veterans n 2315 Burwell St., Bremerton. 360-373-2397. n 4475 Birch Ave W., Port Orchard. Chapter meetings: Potluck noon, meeting 1 p.m., second Saturday of each month n Adjutant/Service Office: North Mason Resources, 140 NE State Route 300, Belfair. 360-552-2303.
Veterans Day
Veterans who visit Great Clips on Nov. 11 will receive a free haircut that day or a free haircut card to redeem by Dec. 31. After Nov. 11, veterans must have a free haircut card to get the free haircut. Present evidence of military service to receive a card. Golden Corral will serve free dinner buffets with beverage from 5-9 p.m. on Nov. 17 to any person who is serving or has served
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Winslow Village, 275 High School Road NE, No. C-4, Bainbridge Island, 206780-5359; Fred Meyer Center, 5050 Highway 303, Bremerton, 360-478-0958; and 9853 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale, 360-6924948. For other locations, go to www.greatclips.com or call 800-473-2825.
Your premier Northwest escape at water’s edge EVERYTHING IS BETTER AT THE BEACH! The Beachfront Martini Lounge Daily Happy Hour from 3-6pm
Monday: Military Appreciation Happy Hour all day for active, retired and reservists with military I.D. Wednesday: Trivia Time Live with Drink Specials and our infamous "Mystery Shot" Specials 7-9pm Thursday: Joey James Dean 6-9pm Fri and Sat: Live Entertainment Sunday: FOOTBALL!!!
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Bremerton. 360-377-6739. Meets on the second Tuesday of the month, 7 p.m. VFW Post No. 1694, Shelton Address: Memorial Hall, Second and Franklin streets, Shelton. 360-4264546. Meets on the second and fourth Thursdays of each month, 7 p.m. Beverages and snacks are served at 6 p.m. by the Ladies Auxiliary. WorkSource Kitsap County Address: 1300 Sylvan Way, second floor, Bremerton. 360-337-4767. Info: Michael Robinson, disabled veterans outreach, 360-337-4727, mrobinson@ esd.wa.gov. Or jmckenna@ esd.wa.gov. — To be included in this list of Veterans Resources, email rwalker@soundpublishing.com
Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Thursday or by appointment. Kitsap County Veterans Assistance Program Address: Kitsap County Department of Human Services, 614 Division St., MS-23, Port Orchard. Info: Tom Vialpando, program coordinator, 360-3374811; www.kitsapgov.com/ hs/veterans/VA.htm. Marine Corps League Olympic Peninsula Detachment 531 Address: 2315 Burwell St., Bremerton. 360-265-7492. Meets on the first Wednesday of the month at 6 p.m. Suquamish Tribe Veterans Resource Office Info: LaVada Anderson, 360-394-8515, landerson@ suquamish.nsn.us. VFW Post 239, Bremerton Address: 190 Dora Ave.,
in a U.S. military branch, including the National Guard and Reserves. Golden Corral is located at 1065 State St., Marysville, 360-659-4035. For location of other Golden Corrals, go to www.goldencorral.com/ locator. State and local DAV representatives will be on site at all Golden Corral locations coordinating the collection of donations from customers, to benefit veterans programs. “While only current and
former military qualify for the free meal, everyone is encouraged to come out and show support for our veterans,” the restaurant reported.
Discounts for active duty, vets MOUNT RAINIER — Several Mount Rainier-area businesses are discounting their services for active duty, retired and disabled veterans on Veterans Day and throughout the year.
Indigo Fountain Massage THANK YOU Veteran’s for your service!
CHATTER Veterans Advisory UW Tacoma offers Board meets Nov. 12 programs for vets SILVERDALE — The Kitsap County Veterans Advisory Board will meet on Nov. 12, 5:30 p.m., in the Silverdale Community Center Evergreen Room.
VA Health town hall meeting Dec. 4 BREMERTON — A VA Health Town Hall meeting is scheduled for Dec. 4, time to be announced, at Jackson Park Community Chapel, 90 Olding Road, Bremerton. VA Health has been sponsoring town hall meetings around the state to stimulate conversations about how to make the system better. For town hall time, go to www.kitsapgov.com/hs/ veterans/VA.htm
n Mount Rainier Scenic Railroad, Elbe, 54124 Mountain Highway E., Elbe, 360-492-5588, www. mrsr.com. n Nor thwest Trek Wildlife Park, 11610 Trek Drive East, Eatonville, 360832-6117, www.nwtrek.org. n Mount Rainier National Park and all other U.S. national parks offer free entry on Veterans Day. Active duty service members and their dependents can receive free annual passes. 360-569-2211, www. nps.gov/mora. n Altimeter Cabin, an historic log cabin located five
TACOMA — University of Washington Tacoma offers several programs for veterans. n A campus chapter of the national Student Veterans of America encourages camaraderie and support among veterans and their families. n Degree programs, including an all-online bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and a master’s degree in cybersecurity and leadership. n Veterans Incubator for Better Entrepreneurship, helps veterans refine their business concepts, develop practical skills, pursue capital, and cultivate relationships to maximize their chance of a successful business startup. Info: www.tacoma. uw.edu/news/veterans.
minutes from the Mount Rainier National Park entrance. 34509 State Route 706 E., Ashford, 1-866-2676814, www.AltimeterCabin. com. n Cornerstone Cabin, 38209 State Route 706 E., Ashford, 253-232-2436, www.thecornerstonecabin. com. n Cr ystal Mountain Resort skiing and lodging, on Military Appreciation Days Jan. 4, Feb. 5, and Apr. 12. 360-663-3055, www. cr ystalmountainresor t. com/Tickets-and-Passes/ Military.
We salute our veterans. Thank you.
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PNW MarketPlace! print & online 24/7 Office Hours: 8-5pm Monday to Friday
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Employment General
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Carriers The North Kitsap Herald & Bainbridge Island Review has openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Thursday nights/Friday mornings. If interested call Brandon Giddens, 360-779-4464
SPACE FOR RENT Twelve Trees Business Park
Varying sizes and configurations available. North Poulsbo area. Call Mark, Crista or Christine at: 360-779-7266
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2014 ART IN THE WOODS. November 7th, 8th and 9th from 10am to 5pm. A Self Guided Tour of 20 North Kitsap Artists’ Studios Featuring Over 60 Local Arti s t s . G o t o www.cafnw.org for map & information.
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Carriers The North Kitsap Herald & Bainbridge Island Review have openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Thursay nights/Friday mornings. If interested call Brandon Giddens, 360-779-4464
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The Bainbridge Island Review newspaper seeking quality motor route carriers. Thursday night delivery. No collections. Must be at least 18 years of age. Reliable people with reliable vehicle please call Brandon Giddens, 360-779-4464
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VETERANS LIFE
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2014
domestic services Domestic Services
Home/Convalescent Care
CHRISTMAS HOUSESITTER Going away the week of Dec 22-26? Mature, responsible former Bainbridge Island resident will housesit, take good care of your home, pets, plants.
206-353-3813 The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. Recycle this paper.
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Notice to Contractors Washington State Law (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all advertisements for construction related services include the contractor’s current depar tment of Labor and Industries registration number in the advertisement. Failure to obtain a certificate of registration from L&I or show the registration number in all advertising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor. For more infor mation, call Labor and Industries Specialty Compliance Services Division at 1-800-647-0982 or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov
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Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
Bazaars/Craft Fairs
NOTICE Washington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (receipt) that shows the s e l l e r ’s a n d b u y e r ’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quantity upon which the price is based. There should be a statement on the type and quality of the wood. When you buy firewood write the seller’s phone number and the license plate number of the delivery vehicle. The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a c o r d by v i s u a l i z i n g a four-foot by eight-foot space filled with wood to a height of four feet. Most long bed pickup trucks have beds that are close to the four-foot by 8-foot dimension. To m a k e a f i r e w o o d complaint, call 360-9021857. agr.wa.gov/inspection/ WeightsMeasures/Fire woodinformation.aspx agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx
CRAFT BAZAAR - Saturday, November 8th, 9am-5pm and Sunday, November 9th, 11am4pm. Brownsville Elementar y, 8795 Illahee Rd NE, Bremerton. Silent auction! Entertainment! Unique Gifts! Santa will be there! $1 donation requested at entry.
&INDĂĽIT ĂĽ"UYĂĽIT ĂĽ3ELLĂĽIT NW ADS COM First Lutheran Church HOLIDAY BAZAAR. Frid a y, N o v e m b e r 7 t h , 9am-5pm. Saturday, November 8th, 9am-4pm. Over 40 vendors of Handcrafted Items. Free Admission. Downtown Poulsbo, 4th and Hostmark.
&INDüITüFASTüANDüEASY WWW NW ADS COM JULESALG - Norwegian Christmas Sale. Saturday, Nov. 8th, 10am 8pm. Our Saviour’s Lutheran, 11th & Veneta, Bremer ton. Hosted by Sons of Norway Bremerton Oslo Lodge 2-35. Scandanavian Bake Sale - Time Honored Recipes. Cookies & Lefse. Needle & Handwork. Rosemaling. Garden Shop. Christmas Crafts. Much, Much More! Enjoy our Homemade Soup Lunch and Great Coffee!
Bazaars/Craft Fairs
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LAVELLE ALLEN MEMORIAL BAZAAR. Friday & Saturday, Novemer 7th & 8th from 10am 5pm. Parkwood Community Club, 3045 SE Madrona, Port Orchard. Admission: FREE! (accepting non-perishable items for South Kitsap Helpline). Gifts for all occasions!
WHITE ELEPHANT Extravaganza! Mar tha & Mary Health Center, November 21 & 22, 9am5pm. 19160 Front Street NE, Poulsbo. White Elephant Treasures, Raffles, Bake Sale, Food.
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Quality Metal RV Cover COLBY UMC BAZAAR! Kitsap’s Destination Bazaar! November 7th and 8 t h . Fr i d ay, 9 : 3 0 a m 4pm; Saturday, 9:30am 2pm. Colby United Methodist Church, corner of Southworth Drive and Har vey Street. A ve r i t a bl e b o u t i q u e o f handmade items by our womens group. No vendors. Kitchen items, orn a m e n t s , g i f t s , b a ke sale, needlework, decor. Hot lunch served both days from 11:00am to 1:30pm. Proceeds Benefit Missions. 360-8713365. THE HANSVILLE Art & Craft Guild Presents: Holiday Fair 2014. At the Greater Hansville Community Center at Buck Lake County Park Friday & Saturday, November 7th & 8th, 10am to 4pm. Raffle, Cafe’, Free Parking & Admission.
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Transitioning Out of the Military? The Port of Seattle Can Help! Veterans Fellowship Program The Port of Seattle’s Veterans Fellowship Program assists veterans in transition from active duty to the civilian work environment. The program supports you through exposure and experience in the civilian workplace while refining skills and abilities necessary for successful integration into civilian organizations. Through career guidance from the Port of Seattle, backed by the dedication and work ethic reflective of your service in the armed forces, you will have the opportunity to successfully transfer your military experience into the civilian workplace in a six-month fellowship. WHAT AWAITS YOU AT THE PORT OF SEATTLE While gaining invaluable on-the-job experience and training during your fellowship with the Port of Seattle, you receive individualized career assistance through: • Exposure to the civilian work environment and to corporate business practices • Identification of your transferable skills • Resume writing guidance and interviewing practice • Planned and informal networking opportunities with other organizations and civilian employees As a fellow you receive appropriate compensation for your work. Basic health care benefits are provided for you and your dependents. Our program is recognized as a best practice by Hire America’s Heroes, a Seattle-based consortium dedicated to helping men and women leaving active duty to refine their skills and focus on the abilities necessary for the current business environment.
For more info or to apply today visit https://www.portseattle.org/jobs
You Served Our Country, Now Let Us Serve You. NOVEMBER, 2014
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‘Vietnam: The American Experience’ Nov. 8 and 22 By LUCIANO MARANO
lmarano@soundpublishing.com
C
ertain events cast long shadows over modern American culture, reaching up from out of the past to educate, remind and sometimes even warn us. Perhaps, no lessons from our recent past are more applicable to our society today than those learned in Vietnam. The Vietnam War,
America’s most controversial conflict except for possibly the current one, is the subject of a lecture, “Vietnam: The American Experience,” by retired U.S. diplomat Larry Kerr. The three-part lecture series started on Nov. 1 and continues on Nov. 8 and 22, 10 a.m., at the Bainbridge Island Library. The war in Vietnam was a long, costly armed conflict that pitted the
communist regime of North Vietnam and its southern allies, known as the Viet Cong, against South Vietnam and its principal ally, the United States. American promises and commitments made to the people and government of South Vietnam to keep communist forces from overtaking them reach back through at least five presidents, beginning with the Truman Larry Kerr, a retired U.S. diplomat and teacher who now lives on Bainbridge Island, presents “Vietnam: The American Experience,” on Nov. 8 and 22 at the Bainbridge Public Library. Bainbridge Public Library
A great time to buy for low monthly payments. Buying is easy. Visit any of our branches, Apply online at kitsapcu.org, Get a same day KCU auto loan at one of our dealer partners.
*APR refers to the minimum Annual Percentage Rate. This APR is a Limited Time Offer for models 2012 and newer with a max term of 48 months. Payment example: Payments on $20,000 loan at 1.99% APR with 48 month term would be $434. All loans are subject to credit approval. The rate for which the borrower qualifies will depend on the borrower’s credit score, term of the loan, down payment, and past credit performance. On new, untitled automobiles, Kitsap Credit Union will finance up to 130% of the purchase price plus tax, license, and warranty not to exceed $3,000 ($3,500 for 4x4 vehicle). Rate not available during first year of existing Kitsap Credit Union loans.
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administration. Dwight D. Eisenhower placed military advisers and CIA operatives in Vietnam, John F. Kennedy sent in American soldiers. Lyndon B. Johnson ordered the first real combat by American troops, and Richard M. Nixon concluded the war. It was an especially divisive and controversial war, increasingly unpopular at home. More than 2 million people, including 58,000 Americans, were killed in the conflict. The session on Nov. 8 will cover the escalation of America’s air and ground campaigns, the perception of the war in America’s living rooms, protest efforts, and the conflict’s increasing cost of life. The final session will discuss the Tet Offensive, the My Lai Massacre and the crisis of conscience, the fall
of Johnson, and the war’s brutal end game. This is Kerr’s third historical lecture series hosted by the library. He first taught “The Great War: End of a Civilization” in 2012 and then “Korea: The Forgotten War” last year. Kerr said it is his desire to educate a younger audience about the results that came from events during Vietnam which still affect our country, as well as to create a dialogue within those old enough to have lived through the war and see if things really were as they remember them. “My object here is to look at the war as a war,” Kerr said. “I don’t do battles and bloodshed very much, but how the decisions were made, the politics of the war.” Kerr served as an Army officer from 1964 to 1974.
Then, after a short stint as a stockbroker, he joined the U.S. State Department; his postings included Mexico, Chile, Guatemala and the Republic of Georgia. His teaching experience includes two stints as diplomat in residence at the University of the Americas in Puebla, Mexico; three years as associate professor of history at the National Defense University; and a distinguished lectureship at the Inter-American Defense College. In retirement, Kerr taught American government and economics at Northwest Yeshiva High School in 2007, and history at West Sound Academy from 2009-12. To register, email BainbridgeLibraryU@gmail. com, call 206-842-4162 or visit the library’s information desk.
Vietnam Veterans Memorial looking for photos of Kitsap men on The Wall The Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., is seeking photos of each person listed on “The Wall” — all 58,300. The goal is to put a face with every name. The photos will be put on permanent display at the education center to be built near the memorial. Photos are still being sought for 12 fallen military personnel from Kitsap County: ■ Hobart Axsom Jr., 1928-1969, of Bremerton. ■ Steven L. Cannon, 1947-1967, of Olalla. ■ George H. Daniels II ,
1948-1969, of Manchester. ■ Jimmie A. Dolen, 19471968, of Bremerton. ■ Donald D. Hawkins, 1947-1968, of Port Orchard. ■ James F. Hollis, 19371972, of Bremerton. ■ Robert A. Jackson, 1946-1968, of Port Orchard. ■ Robert G. Kerr, 19241967, of Bremerton. ■ James R. McClintock, 1943-1968, of Port Orchard. ■ Jeffery C. Niles, 19491968, of Bremerton. ■ Joseph R. Riebli, 19461967, of Port Orchard.
■ Richard F. Salazar, 1938-1969, of Kingston. Photos can be sent to neverforgotten2014@ gmail.com. More information about the memorial is available at www.vvmf.org/ thewall.
In the December edition of Veterans Life ■ Bremerton Mayor Patty Lent on converting Harrison Bremerton into a local VA health care site. ■ After Army service in World War II Europe, Burt Boyd finally got to be a sailor.