SEE INSIDE: Make the effort to keep conditioning during drab months, page 8 . . . . Plenty of Plateau representation on all-league rosters, page 20 . . . . Gardeners, take time to give thanks, page 22
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Winds whip the Plateau By Dennis Box Editor
WEBSITE | Check the website for breaking news and weather updates. www.courierherald.com
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Hannah Simurdak and her EHS teammates competed at the state swim meet, page 4
Weather The forecast for today, Wednesday, calls for cloudy skies and high temperatures near 52 with light winds. Overnight lows may drop to 41. Thursday and Friday calls for a chance of rain with highs to 50 and lows to 40. Saturday and Sunday’s forecast calls for rain with highs to 50 and lows to 40.
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An eastern wind sailed down the west face of the Cascades Nov. 11, slamming into Enumclaw and the surrounding area while knocking down trees, power lines, fences and anything not nailed or weighted down. Enumclaw had sustained winds in the 40s with gusts hitting more than 60 mph, uprooting trees and sending roof shingles sailing. The National Weather Service logged wind gusts at SeaTac of 43 mph with sustained winds of 30 mph. At about 10 p.m. Nov. 11 a Douglas fir crashed down across state Route 169 between 400th Street and 424th Street. The tree took out power lines and telephone poles on both sides of the road.
SEE WINDS, PAGE 2 State Route 169 was particularly hard hit by last week’s winds. At left, a PSE worker restores power; below, flares warn motorists of fallen trees. Photos by Dennis Box
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Fire District is planning to cut $3 million By Ray Still Staff Writer
The special East Pierce Fire Commissioners meeting Thursday was a solemn affair as Plateau residents gathered at the Bonney Lake Fire Department to ask questions and express concerns about the East Pierce Fire and Rescue budget, which will be cut by $3 million in 2015. The meeting was standing room only, and residents who could not find a seat stood in the back and even out into the hall to listen to the fire commissioners and Fire Chief Jerry Thorson explain their budget options and their goals for the coming year. Although the East Pierce Fire and Rescue operations and maintenance levy received a simple majority of 56 percent yes votes during the Nov. 4 general election, state law required a supermajority, or 60 percent, for the levy to pass. By press deadline, the plan for the final East Pierce budget was to have it finished by Nov. 18. Many members of the public and even some of the commissioners expressed frustration regarding their present situation. “We are talking about things we’ve never had to talk about before,” Fire Commissioner Chair Dale Mitchell said. “In my 25 years as a fire commissioner, I’ve never had to do this.” The $3 million that was cut from East Pierce’s budget is equal to 14 percent of the department’s budget. Property taxes and the maintenance and operation levy provided East Pierce with nearly 83 percent of its total budget in 2013, according to the department’s 2013 annual report. The same report details nearly 85 percent of the budget went to personnel costs. Almost 11 percent went to supplies and special services, 4 percent to dispatch agency fees and other government agreements, and 1/2 percent to capital leases and debt. At the meeting, fire commissioners explained to the public without the $3 million from the levy, the 2015 East Pierce budget will not have funds to maintain current staffing levels or continue numerous public services.
Staffing Levels
One of the biggest concerns expressed by both the commissioners and the public was the smaller budget
SEE BUDGET, PAGE 2
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Page 2 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
WINDS FROM 1 Minutes after the tree fell, with temperatures hovering in the low 30s, residents stepped out and placed flares on road and helped drivers find alternate routes before police officers arrived. SR 169 was closed until Friday while Puget Sound Energy workers repaired the damaged lines and power poles. The wind continued the morning of Nov. 12 with gusts in the 40s and 50s, dropping more trees and creating problems for PSE workers trying to
make repairs. Black Diamond police officers closed 224th Avenue Southeast and hot power lines were down on Southeast 296th Street around noon. Officers had six calls for downed trees by 1 p.m. PSE reported crews restored power to 135,800 Wednesday morning with 60,000 more still out in South King County. Cliff Mass’ website, cliffmass.blogspot.com, stated Nov. 11 gusts on Crystal Mountain, “reached 91 mph, while maximum gusts reached 50-70 mph near Enumclaw…. Enumclaw and environs is downstream of a low area of the Cascades that allows the air to accelerate westward.” The wind continued until Friday, although by Thursday evening the speed dropped except for a few hard gusts. This week the weather is forecast to return to what is expected for November – many days of rain.
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BUDGET FROM 1 will result in East Pierce staff layoffs. In order to prevent layoffs, commissioners are leaning towards developing a “rolling brownout” schedule, which will be a rotating schedule of station closures in order to reduce daily staffing and overtime. The current plan is to decrease daily staff from 23 to 20 across East Pierce’s six career stations. This drops the number of staff at several stations from four responders to three. “Our staffing level reduction will save money, however it means that we will frequently have to close an engine or medic unit for the day. In some cases, an entire station will be closed for the day,” said Thorson. “It will definitely have an effect on our entire response plan and will result in slower response times for emergencies.” During the Nov. 11 windstorm,
East Pierce responded to at least 72 emergencies. “That’s more than triple our normal call volume of 24 to 25 calls per day,” said Thorson. While no serious injuries were reported, emergencies included downed trees and power lines, as well as other wind-related damage. Two homes in the Lake Tapps area and one in Edgewood were damaged by fallen trees. “We generally start the winter preparing for the worst, but it gets harder with fewer units on the road,” Thorson explained.
Public Services
While the overall impact to East Pierce’s public and education services is still being discussed, East Pierce spokeswoman Dina Sutherland said that there were some immediate effects on the department’s school assembly program, which were performed by the department’s safety clowns and their puppets. “It was a major school outreach
program,” Sutherland said. “And it came to a screeching halt.” The program planned a total of 20 assemblies that focused on topics like stranger safety, stop, drop, and roll and home escape plans. However, the program was only able to perform five assemblies before the it was stopped. Sutherland said the program was one of the best ways to teach children about safety, citing that tests given to kids before and after the assemblies showed students retained 85 percent of the knowledge they acquired at these assemblies. Additionally, Sutherland said six citizen CPR and first aid classes were cut from the 2015 budget, and CPR programs for middle and high schoolers were cut from a four-day process to a two-day process. Students will also no longer be able to receive American Heart Association CPR certification from these classes. “This is a big blow to education in school,” Sutherland said.
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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 3
Tragic consequences of today’s epidemic Geri Jeffery and I wait as the Facetime connection on her laptop once again reconnects. The sound and video of her friend on the other side of the screen, Patrick Sesay, is delayed by the more than 6,600 miles between Maple Valley and Makeni, Sierra Leone, as well as a tenuous satellite connection. Sesay’s bald head reappears, his smile and excitable response making Jeffery laugh. He is full of life, despite the somber subject at hand — the state of his country. I’m asking Sesay about the death of his friends and neighbors and optimism is decidedly scarce. The city’s confirmed deaths have risen to 547, the number of quarantines up 170 — 40 more than in September — and, yesterday, they ran out of chlorine, which is needed for both safety and continued education about necessary hygiene protocols. From an iPad mounted inside Makeni’s Bridge of Hope compound, Sesay says the people of Makeni are desperate. Even more so than usual. “We are getting help and we need more help,” Sesay says. “In normal cases people are struggling. We have nothing to start with. We desperately need help.” Even before the Ebola outbreak, which
is estimated to have killed nearly 5,000 of the more than 13,500 infected West Africans in eight countries, the people of Makeni, and much of Sierra Leone, lived in hardship. The country was beginning to recover from a nearly 11-year long civil war that ended in 2002. On the best of days, the West African nation of 6 million suffers from immense healthcare issues that include HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, Lassa fever and one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world. All of these issues still remain, which means while the people of Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia are currently just fighting to survive, there will be far reaching consequences to the Ebola epidemic beyond the final body count. “Our normal effort is to help rebuild up after the wars they went through,” says Jeffery, executive director of The Bridge of Hope, a nonprofit organization in Maple Valley that has been providing aid in Sierra Leone since 2006. “Now it’s become just an effort of relief, educate and feed.” The Bridge of Hope is among the many non-governmental agencies around the country attempting to provide aid to the region from afar. Volunteers from the Maple Valley organization, which started with mission work, typically make three trips per year to Sierra Leone. The volunteers have helped build schools, provided
micro-loans for businesses like bakeries and barber shops, have planted churches, and are building medical and dental programs. But, after the Ebola concerns mounted, the group cancelled its last scheduled trip in April. “We are not equipped to be there,” Jeffery says. “We’re kind of just trying to see what happens; we may send a couple of our leaders early next year. We are trying to be wise... We don’t want to bring anything back to the states. We need to do the best we can from here.” Despite the panic and concern, talking with “Mama Geri” seems to help Sesay, the accountant and a team lead for The Bridge of Hope in MaKeni. Even if just a little. He knows it’s too dangerous for Jeffery and the other volunteers with The Bridge of Hope to come and visit, but realizes they are still making plans for aid. Heck, she brought a newspaper reporter: maybe he can get the word out. “Life is not OK compared to what it
looked like before,” Sesay tells me over Facetime. “It’s really ravaging our country. Things have come to a halt.” “People in Makeni desperately need help, please,” he adds, pleading.
A spreading problem
While health and aid workers from around the globe work to stop the epidemic at the source, the United States response to the spread of Ebola has been decidedly fickle, with politicians and a public pressure pushing for mandatory quarantines of returning health care workers who are not showing any symptoms of the virus, while the President has spoken out against automatic quarantines and denounced the media for “stirring up panic.” Dr. Elizabeth Wheeler, Chief Medical Officer for Tacoma General and Allenmore Hospitals said clinically mandatory quarantines for aid workers are not warranted. “We know about the illness that we know
SEE EBOLA, PAGE 21
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Sports
Page 4 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
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EHS swimmers finish season at 3A state meet By Dennis Box Editor
The Enumclaw girls swim team competed at the state 3A meet last weekend at the King County Aquatic Center in Federal Way. The girls placed in a four of swim and dive. Senior Bailey Sexton finished 17th in the 50-yard freestyle in 25.97 seconds. She
swam 19th in the 100-yard backstroke 1:05.46 Junior Hanna Simurdak was took 23rd in the 100-yard butterfly in 1:02.50. The Hornets 200-yard freestyle relay team came in 20th in 1:50.31. The team was made up of Sexton, Emilie Weyer, Grace Munnell and Simurdak. In the diving event, freshman Abbie Carlson was 21st with a score 114.95 and Rhianna Paro was 22nd in 111.35.
Enumclaw High swimmers and divers headed to the King County Aquatic Center in Federal Way for the Class 3A state meet. In back, from left, are members of the 200 freestyle relay team that competed Friday: Emilie Weyer, Grace Munnell, Bailey Sexton and Hannah Simurdak. In front are Mackenzie Bull, Grace Rich and Lauren Pratt, who joined with Rhianna Paro to make up an EHS alternate relay team. Also competing at state were Paro and Abbie Jo Carlson, who earned state berths in diving. Photo by Kevin Hanson
Tough times for White River at state volleyball By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer
After climbing to the heights of the state volleyball circles – qualifying for the 16-team Class 2A state tournament – the White River High squad found the going rather tough. The Hornets dropped two matches Friday and were eliminated from further tourney play. The two-day 2A tournament was staged at
the Pierce College Fort Steilacoom campus in Lakewood. The Hornet girls opened tourney play by dropping a four-game battle to the Sehome Seahawks, a team that went on to claim fourth-place honors. White River took the opener 25-22, but the Seahawks bounced back to take the next three – 25-18, 25-14, 25-13 – and win the match. The Hornets were paced by Taylor Keating who
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had nine kills and Kelsey Williams, who finished with 18 digs and eight kills. The Friday morning loss put White River into an afternoon, loser out contest against the Ridgefield Spudders. The Hornets’ second match went even longer than the first. After dropping the opener 26-24, White River won the next two games by a 25-23 margin. Ridgefield wasn’t to be denied, however, and won the next two 25-16 and 15-8. The Hornets were led in game two by Williams, who had 32 digs, and Emily Kuntz, with 11 kills. The White River girls finished the regular season with an overall record of 10-5, which included a 10-4 mark in South Puget Sound League 2A play, good for third-place. The Hornets then went 3-1 in district play before being swept in their two state games.
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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 5
POLICE BLOTTER ENUMCLAW TREES AND ROADS: A second day of strong winds had police and city crews responding to numerous locations where trees had fallen across roads. Among the many incidents, there were downed trees on Griffin Avenue, at Watson and Bondgard, at Roosevelt Avenue and Florence Street and at Kibler Avenue and 244th Avenue Southeast. Additionally, police assisted the Washington State Patrol by putting out “road closed” signs at the intersection of state Route 169 and Southeast 416th Street. LINES DOWN: The windy conditions also created troubles with overhead power and cable transmission systems. A power pole went down on Fredricksen Street, a cable line was down on Rainier Avenue and a low-hanging cable line was reported on Stevenson Avenue. TREE AND CAR: An officer responded at 3:36 a.m. Nov. 12 to a Battersby Avenue location and the scene of a tree vs. car accident, also involving a pedestrian. The tree also damaged a fence. SEVERAL CHARGES: A traffic stop at 10:41 p.m. Nov. 12 resulted in a driver arrested for driving with a suspended license and driving without a required interlock device. The motorist also was wanted on an arrest warrant. HOME BURGLARY: A Porter Street resident told police Nov. 12 someone had damaged a door to gain entry to the home and then stolen a Nintendo unit valued at $100. The damage was estimated at $500. WIND WOES: Nov. 11 was a tough day due to high
winds that whipped through the region. Police responded to many calls, including traffic lights out; a stop sign down at Farman Street; a utility trailer blowing down Chinook Avenue; trees falling across roads throughout the area; a street light broken and dangling over Warner Avenue; large construction barrels blowing into traffic; power lines pulled down by trees and heavy limbs; a metal shed blowing down the road near Jensen Street and Kibler Avenue before attaching itself to a stop sign; and a brush fire near state Route 169. At a Cedar Drive home, an officer helped an elderly resident secure pieces of her patio roof so it wouldn’t blow away. NO-CONTACT VIOLATION: An officer responded the afternoon of Nov. 11 to a Cole Street location after hearing of a disturbance. The call resulted in a man being arrested and booked for violating a no-contact order. LEAVE THE AREA: An officer on patrol shortly after midnight Nov. 11 located a vehicle inside a barricaded area in the vicinity of 244th Avenue Southeast and Southeast 424th Street. The driver was not impaired, but was told to leave the area. ARREST WARRANT: A suspect was arrested and booked at 1:37 a.m. Nov. 11 due to a Bonney Lake arrest warrant for assault/domestic violence. ODD BEHAVIOR: Shortly before 2 a.m. Nov. 11, police heard of people running around a Charwila Lane neighborhood wearing Halloween masks. A caller said someone in the group threw something at a house. Police contacted the subjects, who said they were playing with a ball and it hit a home. There was no damage. INDECENT EXPOSURE: A report of indecent exposure had an officer responded at 4:53 p.m. Nov. 10 to the vicinity of Griffin Avenue and Semanski Street. One suspect was arrested and booked. WELFARE CHECK: Employees of a Garrett Street business called police at 10:30 p.m. Nov. 9, concerned
about a man who had been slumped over the steering wheel of a pickup for two hours with the engine running. Police contacted the man, found him to be intoxicated, then turned things over to a sober driver. THEFT INTERRUPTED: Officers responded at 9:35 p.m. Nov. 8 to a report of people stealing pallets from the rear of a city grocery store. The individuals were contacted, store management was notified and the pallets were returned. Management did not want to press charges. TAKEN TO HOSPITAL: An officer responded with emergency medical personnel at 1:49 a.m. Nov. 8 to an intoxicated person passed out in a vehicle parked on Harding Street. The subject was transported to St. Elizabeth Hospital. UNSAFE DRIVING: Police were told the morning of Nov. 7 of a vehicle that would not remain in its lane of travel. Police made a traffic stop and found an elderly driver; he was released to his wife. The officer was to notify the Department of Licensing.
occurred three consecutive mornings. Officers contacted the man and determined he was in possession of a dangerous weapon; he was arrested, cited, released and advised against returning to the property. FELONY ARREST: Officers contacted a man shortly before 11 p.m. Nov. 7 at a state Route 4 10 location. It was known the Tacoma man was wanted on an outstanding felony warrant. He was arrested and booked into the Fife jail without incident. JUST ARGUING: Officers were dispatched at 12:26 a.m. Nov. 7 to an address on state Route 410. They found a man and a woman arguing over a broken vehicle window. There were no physical assaults so police returned to normal service. VEHICLE PROWL: A Cottage Avenue victim told police Nov. 6 her vehicle had been entered and items had been stolen.
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WARRANTS: On Nov. 5, a Washington State Patrol trooper stopped a vehicle for no front license plate on state Route 410 near Mud Mountain Dam Road. The driver was cited for driving with a suspended license and booked into jail for three outstanding warrants. DRUNK DRIVER: A WSP trooper contacted the driver of a stopped vehicle Oct. 31 near 468th Avenue and 244th. The trooper observed the door open and vehicle blocking the road. The driver stated she was celebrating Halloween and was looking for her wedding ring. She was arrested for driving under the influence. ROLLOVER ACCIDENT: WSP investigated a onevehicle, rollover collision on SR 164 at Southeast 392nd. The 16-year-old driver stated he drove into the ditch to avoid a small animal. Neither the driver nor the passenger, 36, were injured.
COPPER HEIST: A man arrived at the police station Nov. 9, stating approximately $200 worth of scrap copper had been stolen from his residence. The report was forwarded for investigation. WOMAN ARRESTED: After hearing of a domestic dispute turned physical, police responded to a Hillside Drive address. Both a man and woman were interviewed and the woman was arrested for domestic violence. ARMED, ARRESTED: At 6 a.m. Nov. 7, police were dispatched to a Spiketon Road address and a complaint about an unwanted guest. Officers were advised a man had been knocking on an apartment door and peeping through windows; they were told the same thing had
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THANK YOU Our “grand ol’ flags” have served us well, but they were stained, dusty and had been donated to our building well over 25 years ago by other groups in town. Oh, and did we mention…one flag had 48 stars and the other 45?
So, thank you Enumclaw VFW Post 1949, for our new beautiful beacon of American freedom and for all that you do in our community, for our veterans. Seniors and staff of the Enumclaw Senior Center
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Letters
Looks like the Grand Old Party got its groove back. After this election, Republicans will hold a majority of seats in the state Senate for the first time since 2004 and boast their largest contingent in the state House in more than a decade. “It was a good year to be a Republican,” understated Rep. J.T. Wilcox, R-Yelm. The most stirring change is in the House, where the GOP is poised to pick up four seats and shrink Democrats’ numeric advantage to 51-47, its smallest margin since 2002. Republican challengers are toppling four incumbent Democrats this cycle, Jerry Cornfield three of whom are Columnist chairmen of House committees dealing with higher education and the funding of public schools and social services. Certainly, the party benefitted from the political wave which defined the midterms nationally. But success is also a product of an evolving political operation that’s helped the caucus add 10 seats since 2010 and move from the perch of irrelevance to the precipice of a majority. “We’re the only Republican House in the country to gain seats in the last four election cycles,” said House
When will some people realize that you cannot answer the moral objections many have to recreational marijuana with dollars and cents? It’s like asking for a background check on someone and instead receiving a list of their good deeds. Put as many numbers behind that dollar sign as you can conjure up and it
SEE PETRI DISH, PAGE 7
Volume 115 • Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • No. 10
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will be no more compelling an answer. The costs cannot be covered in currency. Destroying families and children’s futures and trying to justify it with job creation and tax revenue was and still is inadequate for nearly half of our state’s voters. Some people will indeed get jobs while others lose fathers or children to oblivion, to nothingness, or to accidents. As common sense foretold, like with any drug there will be devastating accidents and they are showing up in the headlines (perhaps previous letter writers should pay closer attention).
Numbers drove the campaign to legalize but some very unflattering numbers are beginning to take shape. The true costs are incalculable, so here is the only number likeness that matters to me: some. That’s how many healthy families will be adversely affected by the new law. And that’s enough to have made it wrong. Those families have names and in a town as small as ours some of those will be ones you recognize. There are better ways to create jobs and tax revenue than by selling out your neighbors. Brandy Garton Enumclaw
GOP victory may be temporary Republicans may find that their midterm election victory is only temporary. In two years it will be the Democrats’ time to come roaring back to victory in 2016 with the presidential contest. National elections may be in a pattern that could last the rest of the decade: Republicans win the midterms and the Democrats win the presidency. This analysis comes from Mark Sappenfield in an article from the Nov. 9, 2014, “Christian Science Monitor” article entitled, “Why the Republican Midterm Election Might be Less Impressive Than It Seems.” According to Sappenfield, Barack Obama won the election for presidency in 2008, followed by the Republicans winning control of the House in 2010. The president won re-election in 2012 despite being seen
In Focus Rich Elfers Columnist
as vulnerable and in spite of the millions of dollars spent by Republicans to beat him. The recent election continues the cycle with the Republicans taking control of the Senate as well as continuing to control the House. The pattern is a seesaw and here’s why. Voters are increasingly becoming more independent, favoring neither party as time passes. Meanwhile, the government has become hyper-
partisan. The reason for this is due to demographics. The Democratic base, being made up of the young and minorities, tends to be more personality centered rather than issues centered. Therefore they don’t get as excited about midterm elections and don’t show up at the polls as much as the Republicans do. Republicans, being fewer in number, but mainly blue collar, white and older, tend to turn out for midterms more consistently and win the midterms. Obama’s victory in the 2012 election with only 39 percent of the white vote shows this, when his demographic of voters turned out again. This current Republican demographic, The “Silent Generation”
SEE ELFERS, PAGE 7
Another crisis in Middle East Well friends, we have another crazy damned bunch of hellions stomping around in the Middle East. (This being a family newspaper, I’m not allowed to use more colorful and appropriate descriptive terms.) In fact, they’re not really crazy in the strict definition of that term because they have a firm grasp on reality. Every time they behead someone, every time they massacre a couple hundred innocent people, every time they heinously murder a small child, every time they rape captured women and every time a female is forced to undergo circumcision, ISIS knows exactly what it’s doing. Of course, such atrocities aren’t
Wally’s World Wally DuChateau Columnist
limited only to an extreme faction of the Muslim faith. Throughout history, followers of every religion – at least I’m not aware of any exceptions – have committed equally barbaric acts. And I’m not speaking solely of ancient times. Look back no further than World
War II. Japanese soldiers certainly weren’t devoutly religious but, if asked what faith they “practiced,” most would have said Buddhism. Yet, when they sacked Nanking – historically, it’s often called the “Rape of Nanking” – they beheaded captives, bayoneted Chinese babies and performed abominable acts of “exploratory” surgery on live prisoners of war, without anesthetic. And the German troops who slaughtered millions upon millions of Jews and Eastern Europeans in extermination camps would probably have called themselves Christians. A mere 40
SEE ELFERS, PAGE 7
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Republicans got their groove back
The Petri Dish
LAST WEEK: Is it irritating to see Christmas commercials on TV in late October?
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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 7
ELFERS FROM 6 tends to be more conservative than its now disappearing predecessor, “The Greatest Generation” – those who endured the Great Depression and World War II. Further, according to Sappenfield’s article, the divisions between liberals who vote Democratic, and conservatives who vote Republican, is more clearly delineated now than in the past when there was more crossover voting. So, rather than Republicans bringing about major change in this midterm election, they merely cemented the already
WALLY FROM 6 years ago, “Christian” soldiers coldly massacred more than a thousand Muslim men, women and children in Bosnia. How do you account for so-called civilized people committing such atrocities? Don’t ask me. I certainly can’t explain it. However, I can point out at least one key component that contributes to such despicable acts: the enemy must be reduced to subhuman evolutionary levels or become
existing patterns. In other words, frustrating gridlock will likely continue for the rest of the decade, according to Sappenfield. As the more conservative “Silent Generation” dies off, they will be replaced by Boomers who have tended to swing right or left, but mainly left. The decreasing numbers of Republicans and the increasing power of Latinos will mean fewer chances for Republicans to gain control of the government, unless they change their approach. If Republicans start to compromise with President Obama, more laws may get passed, but it won’t cause their base to be excited about turning out to vote,
because taking hard stands is what brings out the party faithful. Further, as time passes, the Republican midterm advantage may end, as more of the “Silents” die off. Clearly, the Republicans will have to open their doors to minorities or they will be in big trouble. When I was a teen and I broke my nose in P.E., the doctor I was taken to gave me a lesson in physics: “When an immovable object meets an irresistible force, something has got to give.” Republicans need to heed the message the doctor gave me, or they will cease to be a major party in the future and that will be a sad course of events.
the very embodiment of evil, the devil himself. Or both. And this is precisely how ISIS views the “infidel.” Anyone who doesn’t subscribe to their blasphemous and corrupt interpretation of the Muslim faith is deserving of extermination, like so many rats. Make no mistake, ISIS doesn’t believe in any religious, political or behavioral freedom and they have absolutely no tolerance for any beliefs other than their own. Of course, at this stage of the game, ISIS only has, at
most, a mere 50,000 members and only has standard military issue weapons. Really now, they can’t possibly win an all out war with the Western world. Though “God is great” fanatics might explode suicide bombs in rush-hour subways and national shrines, such shocking events don’t pose a serious threat to the stability and existence of America or any European nation. But God help us if they ever get an atomic bomb or several vials of bubonic plague.
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PETRI DISH FROM 6 Minority Leader Dan Kristiansen, R-Snohomish. The caucus has done it by embracing a more disciplined and decentralized approach to electioneering since Kristiansen became the leader in early 2013. As the year began, the political leadership of the House Republican Organizational Committee honed in on eight battleground races. Two involved defending Republican seats — the one in Snohomish County’s 44th District that Republican Mike Hope vacated and the other in the 26th District, where appointed Rep. Jesse Young, R-Gig Harbor, sought to win a full term. The other six were held by Democrats in districts where Republicans have won in the past. GOP leaders recruited candidates, committed resources to those campaigns and decided to not heavily fund Republicans in many other contests. In the past, the caucus spread its money into so many contests it wound up without enough resources to influence close ones late in an election. On Nov. 4, the GOP held two seats, won four of the six it targeted and came within a percentage point of getting a fifth. Women accounted for three of the victories. “I don’t think there was anything real
smart in this. We played big where we could play,” Wilcox said. Restructuring the political operation also contributed. While Kristiansen leads the caucus, he did not run HROC. Rather, in this cycle, Wilcox and two veteran members, Reps. Bruce Chandler of Granger and Cary Condotta of East Wenatchee, divided the duties and shared the decision-making while staying in constant contact with Kristiansen. And this go-round HROC did not exercise as much control in the way candidates ran campaigns. In the past, the caucus political operatives hired consultants to manage several campaigns. This year candidates in battleground races chose their own consultants, who in turn interacted with HROC as desired. Such changes increased trust among caucus members and with candidates and donors, Kristiansen said. Wilcox had high praise for Kristiansen’s role in the caucus’ good fortunes. “His biggest talent is he wants people to succeed,” Wilcox said. “We’re making progress. We are not the least bit satisfied being a close minority.” House Republicans are even thinking that in an election or two, they could hold a House majority again. They haven’t been grooving like that since 1998. Political reporter Jerry Cornfield’s blog, The Petri Dish, is at www.heraldnet.com.
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A little tougher to stay active in the winter Staying motivated to be physically active in the fall can be more challenging, with less daylight and unpredictable weather. We recommend having both an outdoor and indoor Jane Doe plan so you can select the best activity to keep you on track with your fitness goals and avoid the temptation to hibernate. For outdoor activities, consider a daylight and nightlight route for walking or running. Daylight routes can be more adventurous since they are not
limited to locations w it h street la mps. The Foothills, Orting and Sumner trails are vibrant with autumn foliage this month. The University of Washington Arboretum Jane Doe in Seattle, the Bellevue Botanical Gardens and the former Weyerhaeuser corporate campus in Federal Way are interesting locations to take the family out for an urban walk or hike. For nightlight routes, choose a neighborhood that is consistently well lit with
wide and even sidewalks. Some of the newer housing developments in Enumclaw and Bonney Lake have these features. The Lakeland Hills neighborhood is popular as it offers miles of lighted sidewalks with the option of hills. Parks with sports fields are often well lit and have nice paths to walk on as well. For indoor activities, consider following a video or online aerobic, Pilates or yoga workout. Goodwill and garage sales are productive sources for workout videos. There are several online exercise videos for free; these include fitnessblender. com, fitnessmagazine.com and womens-
day.com. Low-tech ideas of Twister and jump rope are fun ways to involve the family with indoor physical activity. Staying physically active in the fall can be challenging and fun. Good planning can help avoid the temptation to become less active with less daylight and unpredictable weather. Best wishes for your continued success! Stephanie Norton-Bredl is the associate executive director at the Auburn Valley YMCA and may be contacted at snortonbredl@seattleymca.org. Bruce deJong is a group exercise instructor at the Auburn Valley YMCA and may be contacted at bruce@bicyclebootcamp.com.
Season of sweets often difficult on diabetics Amid a season of sweets and special foods, it sometimes can be challenging for diabetics to maintain
their dietary discipline. But eating certain foods in moderation can help people with diabetes enjoy the fla-
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with a lot of fat or those that are high in carbohydrates also can be problematic. Such foods may not be so easy to avoid come the holiday season, but the following are a few tips to help men and women with diabetes maintain their health through the holidays. • Anticipate foods. Certain foods are staples of the holiday season. If you anticipate potentially
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sert table. If you bring a baked good, consider recipes with reduced sugar or ones that use a sugar substitute. • Control your portions. Fill up your dish with healthy foods, leaving only a small spot for something indulgent. • Test diligently. Now is the time to monitor your blood-sugar levels like a hawk. Monitor your levels more closely so you can see how holiday foods are affecting your levels and so you know if you need to make any adjustments. • Rebound quickly. Experts advise that if you go overboard on a particular day, get back on your feet the next. Exercise, revisit meal plans and cut portion sizes. Diabetics cannot stop monitoring their diets just because the holidays have arrived. With planning and diligence, it’s possible to enjoy the foods and flavors of the holidays without compromising your health.
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problematic foods, then you can develop a plan to avoid them or eat them in moderation in advance of arriving at a family gathering or holiday party. • Eat a healthy snack. Prior to going to a holiday party, eat something that will satisfy your hunger to avoid overeating once you are there. • Ask about foods. Don’t be shy to ask the host or hostess about what will be served. This will help you develop a strategy that will fit with your meal plan. • Limit alcohol consumption. Only drink in moderation and eat something beforehand to prevent low blood glucose levels later. Avoid drinks with high calorie mixers or ones packed with extra sugar. • Bring a dish. Make something that is diabeticfriendly and bring it to the party. Chances are someone else attending the party is diabetic and will appreciate having a healthy choice as well. • Opt for fruit. Choose fruit over sweets at the des-
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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 9
Psalms: “Come, now is the time to worship” Peter Little Community Presbyterian Church, Buckley
God invites us to come into his presence. Keep reading to find out why. First, the question of how. The word “worship” in Psalm 95 is a word that means “put your face on the ground.” Really? Literally? Maybe. Why not? When you come before the Lord your maker, come in reverence, wonder and awe, for the Lord is a great God in
whose hands are the depths of the earth and the heights of the mountains. And when you come, bow down and kneel — two verbs that demonstrate submission and vulnerability. In the world in which Psalm 95 was written, kneeling before someone exposed your neck to their sword. You were literally putting your life in the hands of the one before whom you knelt. Defenseless. Vulnerable. Laid bare. That’s what Psalm 95 is getting at. The key question of Psalm 95 is really, Why? Why does God invite us to
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text of this relationship, the Lord nourishes our minds with his truth, purifies our imagination with his beauty and softens our hearts with his love. So come, now is the time to put your face on the ground… and bow down… and kneel… in complete and utter vulnerability before the Lord. Come to the Lord, for the Lord in Jesus Christ has come to you. See you in worship Sunday!
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that really about failing to acknowledge God’s sovereignty and foolishly believing the Lord needs our help? But if the Lord doesn’t need our help, then why does he invite us to come? Does God invite us to come because he’s insecure and needs to hear us affirm him to feel good about himself? Of course not! But if not to bolster God’s own self-image, then why? God invites us to come into his presence because he wants to give us something. The Lord wants to give us a relationship with himself. And in the con-
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come? Does God call us to come because we’ve messed up and he wants to punish us? You’re thinking, “of course not!” Yet how many of us do not turn to God because we harbor a deep shame about who we are or what we’ve done? Isn’t that really about being afraid God will scold us? If the Lord doesn’t invite us to punish us, then why does he? Does the Lord call us to come because he’s exhausted and needs our help? Again, you’re thinking “of course not!” Yet how many of us frantically and frenetically “work for God?” Isn’t
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What is the point of worship? The Psalms are both the hymnal and the prayer book of the Bible, which has made them the go-to resource for the church’s worship. Psalm 95 might be considered THE worship Psalm in the Book of Psalms. There we are invited, “O come, let us sing to the LORD; let us make a joyful noise. Let us come into his presence with thanksgiving. O come, let us worship and bow down, let us kneel before the LORD, our Maker!” You see that repeated word “come?” The living
Page 10 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
OBITUARIES MARY STARK Enumclaw resident Mary Ruth Stark died peacefully Nov. 7, 2014. She was 67. She was born April 14, 1947, in Auburn, Wash., to Harold and Sylvia Belfield. She graduated in 1965 from Mary Stark Enumclaw High School and married Bruce Stark on March 12, 1965. She was an active Mary Kay consultant since 2009 and loved camping, fishing, shopping, gardening, travel-
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ing, getting her nails done and spending time with her grandchildren. She is survived by husband Bruce Stark of Enumclaw; daughters Kimberly Frazier (Mike) of Enumclaw and Kristina Stark of Puyallup; brother Lee Belfield (Marcie) of Enumclaw; sisters Marla Robbins (Mark) of Buckley and Connie Gowan of Lynnwood, Wash.; and seven grandchildren. A memorial gathering celebrating her life is planned for 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22, at Finn Hall, 10411 234th Ave., Buckley.
MICHAEL HOWELL Former area resident Michael Lee “Mike” Howell, 51, died Sept. 23, 2014. He died as a result of an automobile accident, where he was a passenger, west of Longview, Wash. He was born Feb. 16, 1963, in Michael Howell Lancaster, Calif., to Michael and Elaine (Schuller) Howell. As a young boy, his family moved to Washington, eventually settling in the Maple Valley/ Kent area. He married his high school sweetheart,
Stephanie Pope, on Dec. 22, 1984, and they had four children. They divorced on Dec. 23, 1999, and he married Rebecca O’Crotty on July 22, 2006. He spent most of his adult life in and around Enumclaw, until January of this year, when he and his wife moved to Cathlamet, Wash. He was naturally artistic and captured many of the things he loved in oil paintings and drawings. He also was musically talented, playing the guitar and writing his own music. He was a carpenter and a craftsman, enjoying woodworking of all kinds from home construction to cabinet making. He is survived by wife Rebecca Howell of Enumclaw; parents Michael Howell (Kim) of Cathlamet and Elaine Ornelaz (Sol) of Tacoma; daughters Nicolette Holland (Matthew) of Maple Valley and Madaline Howell and Emily Howell, both of Kent; son Samuel Howell of Kent; stepson Sean O’Crotty of Enumclaw; three grandchildren and five siblings. Cremation has taken place under the direction of Funeral and Cremation Care of Vancouver, Wash. A memorial gathering is planned for noon to 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 7, at the Green River Eagles No. 1490, 32618 Railroad Ave. in Black Diamond.
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Councilman won’t apologize for comment By Eric Mandel Reporter
Ron Taylor believes he took a stand against political correctness. Other Black Diamond City Council members and the mayor said Taylor made offensive remarks in an inappropriate fashion. Either way, despite assurances from the mayor saying otherwise, Taylor is not sorry. “I don’t regret it,” said Taylor, a Black Diamond councilman since 2012. On Oct. 16, the Black Diamond City Council approved a resolution to adopt a bill signed by Gov. Jay Inslee in March that allows public employees, including employees at public schools, institutions of higher education and state-funded workforce training programs, to make two unpaid religious holidays each year. The bill
can be utilized by individuals of any religion, but was most specifically aimed to provide flexibility to employees of faiths like Islam or Judaism whose holy days do not fall on federal holidays. The employee will be allowed to take the unpaid holidays on the selected days “unless the absence would unduly disrupt operations, impose an undue hardship or the employee is necessary to maintain public safety.” Despite strong bipartisan support, some reported concerns included typical workload and staffing concerns and potential for employee abuse. The bill took effect June 12 and has no fiscal impact to cities. Mayor Dave Gordon called Black Diamond’s adoption of the policy “pure housekeeping,” since the city is bound by law to accept it. Still, prior to casting his vote, Taylor publicly voiced
his opinion on the subject. “In my opinion, this is another step toward political correctness, which I do not support,” Taylor said at the meeting. “I mean, let’s face it, this nation was founded as a Christian nation. Tonight when we gave the pledge of allegiance, we said, ‘one nation under God.’ If one of us went to an Islamic country, do you think one of us could demand a holiday there. I don’t think that would go over very well. Anyway, I don’t support this.” Shortly after the council voted 3-1 in favor of the resolution, Enumclaw resident Cindy Proctor voiced her displeasure with Taylor’s statements during public comment, telling Taylor she was “so disappointed on your vote and your comments. Half of my office is Jewish and was out for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.” www.edwardjones.com Ron Taylor’s wife, Robbin Taylor, spoke immediately following Proctor in defense of her husband, calling the bill an “appeasement move.” www.edwardjones.com
Happy Thanksgiving
“I believe something like this wouldn’t have come up except that Islam is coming up more and more in our faces,” Robbin Taylor said. “The Jewish people have for millennium quietly gone about worshipping on their festival days, their holidays, all of that and have not demanded those. But now that we have – dare I say it – radical Islam that it is coming into our faces, we feel that we have the need to appease them by putting in laws and resolutions in their favor and maybe they’ll like us and then they’ll be nice. I believe this is a politically correct resolution because what difference is it if you put it in a resolution or law in the state that they get two unpaid holidays off of their choice than them just asking for a day off?” Councilwomen Erica Morgan and Tammy Deady stated they were offended. Morgan said Taylor’s comments were “totally off base” and that his premise is “wacko.” Morgan contended that other countries make religious concessions and that Taylor’s “narrowcentric” point of view plays in with his “overboard in the box, bigoted, Republican ideal.” “It’s a bigoted point of view and has no place in the public realm,” she said. Deady said she does not agree with Taylor’s stance and that everyone should be able to observe his or her own holiday. “I feel that it was a wrong comment,” she said. “I guess I would say that I was offended by it. It wasn’t a comment that ever should have been made.” Gordon stated that, while everyone is entitled to his or her personal opinion, Taylor crossed the line to offensive territory and abused his
Thanksgiving is a time to reflect on the things for which we’re truly grateful. At Edward Jones, we’re thankful to serve our clients and our community. During this holiday season and every day, we wish Thanksgiving is best. a time to reflect on the things for you all the very which we’re truly grateful. At Edward Jones, we’re Kory Keath, AAMS® Kenfinancial Borg advisors in the Enumclaw area. To find Call or visitour anyclients of our thankful to serve and community. Financial Advisor Financial our Advisor an Edward Jones office near you, visitwe www.edwardjones.com. During this holiday season and every day, wish 2820 Griffin Ave Suite 200 1731a Cole Street you all the best. Enumclaw, WAvery 98022 Enumclaw, WA 98022
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authority as an elected official. “When you voice your opinion and it hurts others, that’s wrong,” Gordon said. “And when an elected official does it and does it publicly, in a public forum, that just makes it that much more unforgivable. You just don’t do that.” Gordon also said he’d spoken to several people who, like him, were offended by the statement and that he apologized on Taylor’s behalf. “It’s not the city’s job to offend anyone,” Gordon said. “We really need to be sensitive of everyone. No one should get their feelings hurt while we conduct city business.” In an apparent attempt at damage control, Gordon also noted in a written statement that he “can assure everyone that I talked to Council Member Taylor about it and he regrets what was said. He just feels very strongly about it and had to speak his mind.” When asked about Gordon’s assurance, Taylor denied that assertion, saying he’d never made apologies about his statement to the mayor and was in fact quite comfortable with how everything transpired. Taylor said Gordon spoke to him after the comments and advised him how “he would handle it” but never told him to issue a public apology. Taylor said he never expressed to the mayor that he was apologetic. “I chose to take a stand,” Taylor said. Taylor said he has “friends and acquaintances from a wide diverse group of religions” and doesn’t “have anything against any particular group of people.” Taylor said his beef is with the law, which he says un-
Member SIPC
MRBILLSOFBUCKLEY.COM Ken Borg .
equalizes an already equal playing field of vacation time, showing favoritism to other religions – although he acknowledges the law is officially for all religions. When some choose to take these days, he said, productivity is lost and taxpayers lose money. “It shows more preference for some over others when everything is already equal,” Taylor said, calling the law reverse discrimination. Gordon said he was offended that Taylor used his position as a podium. Gordon said he’d have preferred if Taylor spoke about his stance during public comment. “I didn’t agree with his opinion, but I was offended that he would use his position as a council member to voice his personal opinion,” Gordon said. “It’s not the forum for Ron Taylor’s personal beliefs to have been aired.” Taylor said his remarks were said at the appropriate time, wanting to be transparent and clarify his ensuing “nay” vote for the law. Taylor said council members are not permitted to speak during public comment. When told that a fellow council member called his remark “bigoted,” Taylor didn’t hesitate. “OK,” he said. “That’s certainly their prerogative to see it that way. They’re entitled to their opinion, but then so am I.” Gordon also stated that elected officials are held to a higher standard and should always try to “never offend the public.” Taylor disagreed with that sentiment. “There is no way to be a public official without offending people,” he said. “You will never get by.”
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In Black Diamond, Taylor says vote was a stance against political correctness, not an attack on any particular religion
Page 12 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Hettick picked for leadership in accountant organization
www.courierherald.com
Rotary honors students
experience with her to the position as she has owned her accounting and tax practice, Hettick Accounting in Enumclaw, for the last 27 years. She is also an educator and provides continuing education to the tax profession and has spoken at the IRS Tax Forums for the last five years. She is an active member of several professional organizations including NSA and Washington Association of Accountants and has held numerous leadership positions at local, state and national levels, including WAA president. In 2007, Hettick was awarded the NSA Distinguished Service Award and has served as an NSA administrative chair for seven years. She holds the credentials of Enrolled Agent, Accredited Business Advisor , Accredited Tax Preparer. “I am excited to continue serving NSA in a leadership position; I am looking forward to working with fellow leaders and members to ensure a great future for NSA and the tax and accounting profession,” Hettick said. For more information about NSA, visit www.nsacct.org.
Kathy Hettick of Enumclaw was elected first vice president of the National Society of Accountants during the recent NSA 69th annual meeting in Baltimore, Md. She will serve in the position for one year. Hettick brings years of accounting
Today’s News...Today! All New at: www.courierherald.com
a member of the Members of the school’s leaderEnumclaw Rotary ship team, plays Club recognized a flute in the wind trio of young scholensemble, sings in ars as Students of the jazz band and the Month during is an FFA officer. their Nov. 13 meetOutside of school ing. Austin Schuver Autumn Kelley Brenna Liebel she participates Austin Schuver, in Young Life and son of Kristen and Bill Schuver of Enumclaw, was the recipient with the choir at the Summit Church. She from Enumclaw High School. A strong aca- hopes to attend Whitworth College next fall. Brenna Liebel, daughter of Dawn and demic student, he has a 3.95 cumulative gradepoint average, is an Advanced Placement schol- Gordon Liebel of Buckley, was a recipient from ar, a member of National Honor Society and White River High School. A strong academic is on the varsity tennis team. He is a Running student, she maintains a 4.0 GPA and will Start student and will also receive his associ- be the class valedictorian. She participates ate’s degree this spring. He plans to attend the on both the track and cross country teams, College of the Atlantic (Maine) next fall and is in the jazz band and serves on the leadership team. She plans to attend Central study human ecology. Autumn Kelley, daughter of Dan Kelley of Washington University next fall to study Fairfax, was a recipient from White River High geology and hopes to participate on the track School. An active student with a 3.3 GPA, she is and cross country teams.
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www.courierherald.com • www.blscourierherald.com
Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE COURIER-HERALD WINTER DISCOVER • Page 13
2014
inter
Community • Winter Fun • Shopping Supplement to The Courier Herald
No reason to be bored
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• Bonney Lake’s annual food drive will keep rolling through December. The city works with the Sumner School District, the food bank and other local businesses to conduct a citywide food drive, according to the city website. Weekdays from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m., food items can be dropped off in the lobby of the Public Safety Building, 18421 Veterans Memorial Dr. E. DM Disposal will also be conducting a food drive pick up on Thursday, Dec. 11. DM Disposal employees will pick up nonperishable donations from Bonney Lake residents. More information regarding the
food pick up will be sent by mail and via email. Food collected during the food drive is given to the food bank and the senior center. • Aside from food drives, the Bonney Lake Police Department is hosting its annual Giving Tree toy drive. New, unwrapped toys can be dropped off at the Public Safety Building. Another option is to pick a tag from the giving tree quilt in the lobby of the safety building and buy the specific gift listed on the tag.
? These are the BEST Prices of the year. G N I P HOP p to S E U STOV
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SEE TREE CUTTING, PAGE 16
Cutters Supply is a great place to shop for Wood, Gas or Pellet Stoves. Come in and let us help you with any questions you may have. We are a full service stove dealer. Providing materials and installation. Free estimates gladly provided.
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of Pierce, King, Snohomish, Skagit and Whatcom counties. Maps and information about cutting areas are provided where permits are sold at ranger stations and the public service centers. Permits are also sold at REI’s Alderwood Mall store daily and the Outdoor Recreation Information Center located inside the downtown Seattle REI store. Permits cost $10 each, one tree per permit, with a tree
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SEE CALENDAR, PAGE 15
Cut your Christmas tree Permits are available to cut Christmas trees in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest now through Dec. 24. Among the nine locations where permits are sold is the Enumclaw station at 450 Roosevelt Ave. E. Hours in Enumclaw are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The office also will be open from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. the weekends of Nov. 29-30, Dec. 6-7 and Dec. 13-14. Cutting areas are located within national forest lands in the eastern portions
55
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Page 14 • THE COURIER-HERALD WINTER DISCOVER • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
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www.courierherald.com • www.blscourierherald.com
Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE COURIER-HERALD WINTER DISCOVER • Page 15
2014 The police department is also participating in the “Shop with a Cop” program. This event allows children in need to purchase gifts for their families. The event highlights police officers shopping with the children at the Bonney Lake Target. Donations of money or Target gift cards are accepted from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays at the Bonney Lake Police Department. • Enumclaw High students present “Volume of Smoke” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 20, 21 and 22 in the school theater. • Ida Marge Guild of Buckley presents its annual holiday bazaar from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Nov. 21 in Buckley Hall. Available will be handcrafted items, Christmas decorations and more. There also will be a raffle. The Guild exists to support the children of Mary Bridge Hospital. • Local artists will display their work and demonstrate art techniques in participating local businesses during the Enumclaw Chamber Downtown Wine Walk from 5 to 9 p.m. on Nov. 22. • The season is celebrated Nov. 28 in Sumner with the annual bridge-lighting ceremony and fireworks show. For the 17th year, The Old Cannery will be dressing up the nearby bridge with more than 10,000 lights. The day will see a vendor village opening at 2 p.m.; cider, cocoa and roasting nuts at 4; speakers at 4:30; the bridge lighting and fireworks at 5; and caroling at 5:30. • Don’t be a Scrooge this holiday season – The ManeStage Theatre Company presents A Christmas Carol on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays from Nov. 29 to Dec. 20. ACT 1 Theatre Productions is also showing Christmas Pudding from Dec. 5 - 21. Christmas Pudding is a play that was created in 1995 to raise money for the homeless community. Theater-goers are encouraged to bring non-perishable food items to the show to be donated to the Sumner Food Bank.
• All are invited to a holiday tree lighting ceremony, presented by the city of Enumclaw. Festivities begin at 5 p.m. Nov. 29 on the lawn at City Hall, 1339 Griffin Ave. Kick off the holiday season with carolers, hot chocolate, candy canes and the lighting of the tree. Downtown businesses are being asked to remain open until 6 p.m. so visitors can shop and take in the sights of the storefront decorating contest. • All are invited to attend the 24th annual Holiday Fantasy gala dinner and auction. A fundraiser for the Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation, the event features a sit-down dinner, silent auction with more than 200 items and a live auction where guests can bid on exciting adventures, vacation packages and unique items. Holiday Fantasy gets rolling at 5:30 p.m. Dec. 5 at Emerald Downs in Auburn. • The Allegro Women’s Ensemble and The Plateau Women’s Chorale present “Heart of The Holidays, 2014”, a benefit concert for Neighbors Feeding Neighbors. NFN works to serve nutritious meals to home-bound and socially isolated seniors in the community. There is no admission fee and all donations collected at the concert will be provided to Neighbors Feeding Neighbors. The concert begins at 2:30 p.m. Dec. 6 in the Enumclaw High auditorium. For concert info, email: allegrowomensensemble@ gmail.com. • Downtown Enumclaw comes alive as the traditional holiday parade rolls along Cole Street, beginning at 6 p.m. Dec. 6. • Bonney Lake’s annual tree lighting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Dec. 6. The tree sits outside the Public Safety Building. The city and the Kiwanis Club are sponsoring this event. According to the city’s website, music, refreshments, photos with Santa and other activities are scheduled to happen before and after the tree lighting. Food donations can also be dropped off at the food bank. Also this year the Bonney Lake Arts Commission and
Kiwanis Club are hosting the city’s first Gingerbread House Contest. Children, teens and adults can enter alone or as a team. The gingerbread house contest will take place at the tree lighting ceremony. Visit the city of Bonney Lake’s website to download
an entry form. The deadline to enter is Dec. 6 from 3 to 5 p.m. • Sumner’s Hometown Santa Parade begins at 3:30 p.m. Dec. 6. The parade will start in the Sumner High parking lot and travel westbound along Main Street to Kincaid Avenue.
• Donida Farm Equestrian Center’s holiday bazaar takes place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 6 and 7. Artists and vendors will set up booths in the show barn. There will be opportunities for holiday shopping, snacks and beverages. The facility is at 16600 S.E.
376th St., Auburn. • Cascade Foothills Chorale presents its winter concert, “An OldFashioned Christmas.” The concert will be presented at 2:30 p.m. on both Dec. 13 and 14 at Trinity Lutheran
SEE CALENDAR, PAGE 17
Rainier Foothills Wellness Foundation (formerly Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation) presents:
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Holiday Fantasy supports these programs: • Care Van • Dental Van • Senior Hot Meal Delivery Program • Backpack Meal Program for Kids • Full Bellies
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hours. Plan to purchase a parking permit if the trip includes parking in a designated Sno-Park lot. Get a tree early before snow falls as most trees are reached by narrow, unplowed mountain roads. Highclearance vehicles are often required for forest roads along with tire chains and a shovel. Check ranger stations for road and weather information or go to www.fs.usda.gov/ goto/mbs/road-trails.
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Page 16 • THE COURIER-HERALD WINTER DISCOVER • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
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Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE COURIER-HERALD WINTER DISCOVER • Page 17
2014
Enjoy quiet time with season’s favorite movies Many families have their own unique holiday traditions, but some traditions transcend familial lines to become an integral part of many people’s holiday celebrations. One of the more popular traditions during this festive time of year is to watch a favorite holiday film with family and
friends. With that in mind, the following are some of the most beloved holiday movies ever to make it onto the big screen. • “It’s a Wonderful Life”: Perhaps no holiday film is more beloved than this 1946 Frank Capra-directed classic. Screen legend Jimmy Stewart plays a desperate busi-
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trial of Kris Kringle, who claims to be Santa Claus and must prove otherwise to avoid being institutionalized. Nominated for Best Picture at the 1948 Academy Awards, “Miracle on 34th Street” won three of the prestigious statuettes, including a Best Supporting Actor Oscar® for Edmund Gwenn, who played the jolly old man in the red suit. • “A Christmas Carol”: Those looking for a more traditional take on holiday films need look no further than this 1951 adaptation of the Charles Dickens novella, which tells the tale of bitter miser Ebenezer Scrooge as he is haunted by three ghosts on Christmas Eve.
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nessman contemplating suicide during the holiday season. But a guardian angel helps him realize all the good fortune in his life by showing him what life might have been like if he had never existed. • “White Christmas”: This 1954 songand-dance film stars Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye as a pair of longtime friends and ex-military men who fall in love with a sister act team that includes famous singer (and aunt to George Clooney) Rosemary Clooney. Crosby and Kaye join forces to save the failing Vermont inn of their beloved former commander. • “Miracle on 34th Street”: Natalie Wood stars in this 1947 classic that follows the
Annual Coat Drive
Church, 1535 Washington Ave. in Enumclaw. Admission is $10 and donations to local food banks will be accepted. For more information, contact www.cfchorale.org or call 360-825-4259. • Dec. 18 brings Enumclaw Middle School’s winter concert at 6:30 p.m. and Thunder Mountain Middle School’s holiday program at 7 p.m. • There are no classes for students in the Enumclaw, White River and Sumner school districts Dec. 22 through Jan. 2 due to winter break. Classes resume Jan. 5 in all three districts. • Jan. 19 is Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Schools and government offices are closed for the national holiday. • The annual “Slam the Stands” Special Olympics event takes place at 7 p.m. at Enumclaw High School. • The Last Five years will be performed at ACT 1 Theatre Productions in Sumner from Feb. 6 to Feb. 15. The musical chronicles the five-year life of a marriage, examining the relationship between a writer and an actress from both their points-of-view. Here’s the catch - watch the writers story move forward, while you see the actress’ story go in reverse! The ManeStage Theatre will also be showing a production of Seussical the Musical on weekends from Jan. 31 to Feb. 15. • The Enumclaw School District shuts down Feb. 16-20 for mid-winter break.
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Page 18 • THE COURIER-HERALD WINTER DISCOVER • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
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Snowshoe at Mowich Lake for a real winter experience
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Mowich Lake is a popular destination during the summer months. But when winter lays its frozen shroud across the lake, human visitation plummets. Energetic snowshoers and cross-country skiers however can visit the lake by following the snow covered access road from the Paul Peak picnic area just beyond the park boundary. When snow levels are high enough to permit vehicle access to the national park boundary you can continue the rest of the way by foot on a peaceful, exhilarating and avalanche-free route. Trailhead directions: From Buckley follow SR 165 south for 10.3 miles to junction just beyond the historic Fairfax Bridge spanning the Carbon River. Bear right and continue on SR 165 for another 11.0 (pavement ends at 1.6 miles) rough-at-times miles to the Mount Rainier National Park boundary. Proceed .7 mile farther to entrance station and Paul Peak. • Map: Green Trails Maps – Mount Rainier Wonderland no. 269S • Route is non-groomed and shared with skiers. • Dogs are prohibited. • SR 165 beyond Carbon River is unpaved and rough.
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Dear Santa, Could you come early this year? I’ve been really super good, but I don’t know if I can last much longer. − Jo, 6 Dear Santa, What should I leave for your reindeer to eat? Do they like cookies, too? My mom won’t let me bring hay into the living room. − Samantha, 8 Dear Santa, I need a new skateboard for Christmas. The one I got now crashes too much. Band-aids would be OK too. − Danny, 11 Dear Santa, I want you to leave a angry birds puzzle under the tree for me. And a toy for Marcie, my little sister. She wants a new barbie with the pink hair and dress. − Amanda, 8 Dear Santa, I lost my wish list for Christmas, so please send the stuff I didn’t get last year. Just one thing if you want, I don’t need too many things. Thanks Santa! − Jeremy, 7 Dear Santa, Would you rather I leave you cookies and milk or pizza? Dad says you’d probably like the pizza. Write back right away so I can have it ready! − Lisa, 10
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It’s that time of year again. Take a peek at some of these heartfelt, excited and funny letters to Santa Claus from children around the area.
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Page 20 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
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Plateau athletes receive all-league honors Editor’s note: All-league football selections, for both the SPSL 3A and 2A divisions, will be made this week. Local honorees will be noted in next week’s edition.
Enumclaw High Golf
Enumclaw’s Josh Erickson was honored as the South Puget Sound League 3A co-Player of the Year, heading the list of Hornet honorees. He was joined on the all-league first team by teammates Carson Erwin, Jared Beals and Bill Miller. Dylan Miller and Caleb Coulter were named to the second team. On the girls side of the ledger, Enumclaw’s Faith Hardersen, Kelsey Cunningham, Meagan Johnson and Lexi Dechon all received first-team honors. The EHS golfers were successful in the classroom as well. Hardersen, Johnson, Dylan Miller, Beals and Bill Miller were named to the SPSL allacademic team and the Hornet boys won the academic title with a cumulative team grade-point average of 3.5. For the EHS girls, Rylie McCann was an all-academic second-team selection. If success starts at the top, the EHS programs are on solid footing. The Hornets’ Bob Kilmer was named SPSL 3A Boys Coach of the Year and Steve Murphy was honored as the SPSL 3A’s Girls Coach of the Year.
White River golf
A trio of White River girls – Amanda Lance, Sydnee Scott and Maci Goethals – were first-team, all-league performers. Jordanne Fray and Georgia Lavinder were second-team picks and Sofia Lavinder and Dani Barbee received honorable mention. The White River boys also had three players – Cooper Franklin, Matt Walker and Bryce Dahl – named to the SPSL 2A first team. Drew Kacer was a second team selection and honorable mention went to Niko Dymarczyk and Trent Buchanan. Both Dahl and Buchanan made the Class 2A all-academic team. After guiding their teams to undefeated regular seasons and league championships, boys coach Mike Williams and girls coach Todd Miller were accorded SPSL 2A Coach of the Year honors.
Enumclaw soccer
Senior forward Katie Christensen was named to the SPSL 3A first-team, allleague soccer squad. A pair of teammates – senior defender Shey Thompson and junior midfielder Casey Ranft – earned second-team honors. And three more Hornets – junior defender Mariah Bone, senior forward Tayler VanDyke and senior midfielder Payton Hodgman – received honorable mention.
The Enumclaw High crew received the league’s sportsmanship award and Shawn Tobius shared Coach of the Year honors.
White River soccer
Hornet goalkeeper Sam Kelley was named Most Valuable Player in a vote of SPSL 2A coaches. Midfielder Mack Breeden and defender Maddie Morris received first-team honors and a pair of teammates – forward Annabelle Hall and defender Ariel Saylor – earned second-team recognition.
Enumclaw volleyball
Enumclaw High was represented by two players on the all-league first team. Chosen for top honors were Barbie Becker, an outside hitter, and Victoria Hernandez, libero. Both are juniors. Senior outside hitter Hayley Sorenson was named to the all-league second team.
White River volleyball
A pair of White River players, senior defender/setter Ashlea Mills and junior setter Mahealani Stone, earned firstteam honors. Named to the second squad were a pair of junior outside hitters, Taylor Keating and Kelsey Williams. Receiving honorable mention were Angela Tavete and Abbie Eppard.
Enumclaw tennis
Enumclaw’s Derek Thomsen, who maintains a perfect, 4.0 grade-point average, was named to the SPSL 3A allacademic team.
White River tennis
White River High’s Christian Armstrong, Tyler Meadows and Logan Geehan were named to the SPSL 2A all-league first team following the fall season. Teammates Marcus Berg and Hayden Grimm received honorable mention. Also, Armstrong and Meadows combined to place sixth at the West Central District tournament and, in the process, qualified to play in the Class 2A state tournament. Berg and Grimm placed eighth at district and are alternates to state play. The 2A state tournament is slated for May 29-30 at the Nordstrom Tennis Center in Seattle.
Enumclaw cross country
The Hornets’ top runner all season, Samantha Engebretsen, was rewarded with selection to the SPSL 3A all-league first team. Teammate Hunter Storm joined her as a first-team selection. Chayce Weiman was named to the second team.
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EBOLA FROM 3 it is not going to be spread unless someone is symptomatic,” Wheeler said. “Most people would say, ‘better safe than sorry’ and if I was a physician who went to Africa I probably would volunteer myself. But clinically, it’s not necessary.” Ebola is a provocative and, ultimately, terrifying disease with no known cure. While, from America, it may seem easy to consider cutting West Africa off from the rest of the world, Jeffery sees this is a worldwide problem, especially if the virus were to become endemic — e.g. like malaria that could always pop back up. Both Jeffery and Wheeler said the silver lining to the media onslaught and public fear is that it woke people up to the problem. “It’s too often that people look it at it is an African problem,” she said. “If we don’t stop it there, we will continue to risk here.” “Everyone is nervous, and rightfully so,” Wheeler said. “If the disease is not contained in West Africa, if it grows and spreads, we will probably see more cases here.”
Protocols set around King County
Ebola is not airborne and, therefore, extremely difficult to catch, especially in medically advanced countries like America. But, in the wake of the mishandling of an Ebola patient in Dallas, the Centers for Disease Control has recommended that every medical center in the country to update and prepare policies and procedures. Wheeler said she is confident about the new screening process, which involves three key questions related to a patient’s symptoms, travel history and whether he or she has been in contact with an Ebola patient – or contact with a person who has had contact with a patient. Two out of three affirmative automatically triggers a call to incident command and isolation of the patient. Wheeler said all front line staff — doctors, nurses and front desk staff —in every urgent care, emergency department and primary care office in the Multicare system have been or are being trained in the protocols, which have been directly modeled after Atlanta’s Emory Hospital
Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 21 infectious disease unit. Wheeler said everyone was able to learn from the mistakes at Texas Presbyterian. “Texas, unfortunately, it’s terrible that that happened,” she said. “A couple months ago that could have been any hospital in the United States, honestly.” Wheeler said drills are being prepared for physicians and ICU nurses.
Wheeler acknowledged that the Ebola craze is taking a lot of time, but, much like was the case during the HIV outbreak in the ‘80s, good standard protocols are being formed. “It’s a useful exercise even if we never have to utilize it,” she said. “We’re learning something. That’s good.” In early October, Harborview Medical
Center announced that it would voluntarily accept American Ebola patients who are airlifted from West Africa. Wheeler said Tacoma General is one of several hospitals across the state establishing a treatment center on site. Each clinic is to have identified an isolation room and is trained to use Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE). The county has identified specific EMS rigs that would transfer the patient to the Tacoma General campus. Wheeler said the governor’s long-term plan is to establish six to seven hospitals across the state that could care for a patient with this kind of infectious disease. East Pierce Fire and Rescue officials sent a press release saying they are pre-
pared on multiple fronts to ensure that the department can properly respond to potential Ebola-infected patients. “The complexity of dealing with Ebola, magnified by public fear, requires that we address the issue at the county and regional level,” said Assistant Chief Russ McCallion in the release.
SEE EBOLA, PAGE 29
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Page 22 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
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Area gardeners have reasons to be thankful It is the third week of November and if you have not cut back and protected tender plants like dahlias, cannas, bananas and glads then this is your last chance to save these summer bloomers before a deep freeze turns their roots to mush. There are also some plants not to cut back at this late date. Do not chop hardy fuchsias, sage or salvias, hebes, roses or any other rather tender plant material now. Pruning always stimulates growth and this is the month you want your plants to go fast asleep. The third week of November is also a time to give thanks. If you are lucky enough to live in Western Washington you probably realize we can grow a wide
The Compleat Home Gardener Marianne Binetti Columnist
range of plant material in our mild, moist climate. What you may not realize is that we have a wide range of nurseries in our zone as well. This week, consider what gardeners in other parts of the country must deal with and take a moment to bow down to Washington.
Be Thankful You Don’t Garden in Texas
Drought, dust storms and intense summer heat means you won’t find many fuchsias or ferns but you will find Texas rattle snakes and horny toads. Besides that, you’re expected to wear cowboy boots outdoors – not nearly as comfortable as the plastic garden clogs we get to slip on before weeding or watering. Y LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 13
ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 13
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Be Thankful You Don’t Garden in New York City
Prices are higher and people move more quickly but what would really drive a gardener mad is the price of any outdoor space in the Big Apple. The skyscrapers of any large city block sunlight from plant life and create wind tunnels that suck the life right out of tender flowering plants. The extra noise, crime and litter are signs that NYC could benefit from more gardens and less traffic but this big city is one place you won’t find a cheap source of Moo Doo – or even a moo.
Be Thankful You Don’t Garden in Los Angeles
Talk is cheap but water is expensive in Tinsel Town. Gardens may get plenty of sunshine but gardeners must use plenty of sun block and also invest in multiple pairs of sunglasses. If the heat doesn’t wilt your plants the spider mites will. The soil is sandy in L.A. and not naturally acidic so gardeners struggle to grow a decent
azalea, rhododendron or camellia. Yuccas grow great all over California – and yuccas come equipped with a pointy barb at the end of each leaf just waiting to inflict pain on unsuspecting gardeners.
Be Thankful You Don’t Garden in the South
The Deep South may be rich with the scent of gardenias but you won’t be welcoming spring with tulips and daffodils – unless you store these spring-blooming bulbs in the refrigerator for a few months. Gardeners also battle June Beetles, spider mites, cinch bugs and snails that make pathways crunchy after a rain storm.
Be Thankful you Do Garden in Western Washington
There is no place in the world that grows more beautiful rhododendrons, fuchsias, delphiniums, or ferns. We also enjoy fall color, winter wonderlands and spring flowering bulbs that will return year after year. Western
Washington also grows the best tasting blueberries, raspberries and blackberries, we can harvest several crops of lettuce and spinach in a single summer and Swiss chard will overwinter and act like a perennial. This week give thanks if you have a yard, balcony or windowsill and can enjoy the wonder of plants. • • • Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardensâ€? and several other books. For book requests or answers to gardening questions, write to her at: P.O. Box 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a selfaddressed, 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.
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Buckley area
$429,000. FOR RENT 360-893-3200 0500 ROW 253-845-3265 MONEY for single ladies age 50 N 2745 Warner Ave !! O T G NEWS Updates + , i n l a r g e, b e a u t f i u l Enumclaw TREES! Real email: Estate for ENCUUKƂ Rent Close to Shops cks 27 GFU"UQWPFRWDNKUJKPI EQO Bonney Lake Home. InCall 360-825-6146 ASHIN Daily! Laundry. DOES courierherald.com W King County and Hospital. $695 Per cludes full house access TDD 711 SPACE LEASE blscourierherald.com M and meals. No pets. No o n t h . CFOR a l l �LEASE e r e my : TOPSPACE $$$$FORFOR GROW Apartments for Rent 0500 REAL ESTATE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW smoking. $700 / month + DOWNTOWN s , Single Trees orENUMCLAW Acreage Apartments for Rent 206-422-1031 TON MONEY $100 towards utilities. King County G RAINIER VIEW I (253) 219-5952 N I ON TREES! (253) 219-5952 H FOR RENT Available December 1st. Now accepting Pierce County WAS 253-355-9020. DOES applications for QUOTES!! Buckley area 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath in WE PAY TOPQuiet $$$$ FOR 2 BEDROOM APTS Daily! Estateapar for tment. Rent NEWS UpdatesGROW Neighborhood. Off bedroom REAL ESTATE Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks 2Real Basic rentsor start at $685 Large Maple Trees , Single Trees Acreage courierherald.com N Streetor 30% W / S /King G i n cCounty luded. UpParking, Common O of adjusted T G FOR RENT stairs unit Services $700/month, blscourierherald.com IN ON TREES! Home Services Laundry. Close to Shops monthly income. Olym p i a Wa t e r f r o n t ! 1st, Home 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH WASH Tone Woods last, $500 deposit. Employment 3 BR RAMBLER Income Limits$695 Apply.Per and Hospital. Darling bungalow with with D o w n Painting FREE QUOTES!! house with large fenced Carpet Clean/Install stairs unit den and 2 car Warner out-buildings, fullgarage. remodgardenFOR area, shop nlock, WA o n2745 t h&. Instrument C a l l � eAve r e my : Real Estate for Rent WE PAY TOPyard, $$$$ CASH Buying Rough Cut FiguredMMaple Quiet family Enumclaw Blocks el 2013. Idealneighborgetaway $800/month, 1st, last, Apartments for Rent & d e t a c h e d g a r a g e . Also REAL ESTATE 206-422-1031 King County $500 deposit. (360)825hood of desirable Forest AK Painting In� 360.508.1313 2 BR PRIVATE APT Large Maple Trees , Single Treesdryer or Acreage Pierce County Call 360-825-6146 or rental. Fantastic kayWasher, hook-ups C O Z Y 1 B E D R O O M �osste�� �a��et downtown. All appli- $975 / month. You pay apartment TDD 711 aRidge! k l o c aNo t i opets n . C allowed. l o s e t o 7620 Exterior-Interior in quiet neighFOR RENT J&L Tone Woods FOR s Home Services LEE HOTEL, Clean WIDE HOME Buckley ancesarea including wash- utilities. Yard mainatence provid� ���o�ste�� town, freeway, and local SINGLE No smoking. No b o r h o o d . N ew c a r p e t High Quality Work Employment rooms at an affordable privateClean/Install property with er and dryer. Covered ed by owner. Rental is on FREE QUOTES!! businesses. Has its own and paint. Features gas cats. Dog on approval Carpet Winlock, WA ��eanin� 2 bedroom apartment. Fair Pricing NEWS Updates Daily! price. Includes utilities availablewell. now. $1,400 artisian Very very deck & garage. Includes parking. Nice Historic 1032688
AUBURN
Real Estate for Rent King County
BLACK DIAMOND, 98010.
Real Estate for Sale Thurston County
ON
k
1032688
ENUMCLAW, 98022.
AUBURN
additional fee. Also Buying RoughNo Cutpet. Figuredand Maplefor& Instrument Blocks W/S/G included. Upneighborhood. 1st, last & $400 deposit. th M u s t p a y u t i l i t i e s . #ARPET ü5PHOLSTERY ü stairs unit $700/month, �osste�� �a��et $1000. 360-825-4472. Available Nov. 20 . 360-ü 1st, last, $500 deposit. 829-1086. 26S ü!UTOS �253�350-0982 � ���o�ste�� laundry, includ- D o w n s t a i r s u n i t den and sewer 2 car garage. #ALLüFORü-OTHERü$AY akpainting�msn.com ��eanin� ed. Nice quietneighborcountry $800/month, 1st,Winlock, Quiet family Be a last, WA LAKE TAPPS, 98391.
sewer. unique! Priced to sell water per month with deposit. 1FREE B R& $ESTIMATES 6 0 0 . N$650. ICE n ceenst s.r eWa quick $259,000 Year lease. No smoking. RAepfea rr et m Call Kenq u itreer,d . 360-886-1545 360791-2222 Call Brian 253-350-1471 3appliances, garbage, BR RAMBLER with
THE MILLS NEED: ENUMCLAW 2 BR 1200SF Rambler
WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent
ENUMCLAW , 98022.
J&L Tone Woods
1032688
TREES
Apartments for Rent King County
32688
ale
WILKESON, 98321.
AUBURN
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fireplace, washer and Real Estate for Rent +$ ' '%" *& '( - dr yer.King Sorr y, no dogs. 360.508.1313 courierherald.com County $700 per month. 360blscourierherald.com 825-4157. AUBURN
0100
Apartments for Rent
OCEAN SHORES, 98569.
2 bedroom upstairs apar tment. W/S/G included, updated insulated windows, full size fireplace. Laundr y facilities on site. $775/month, 1st, last, $500 deposit. (360)8253Apartments BR, 2 BA HOME FOR 7620 for Rent SALE BY OWNER. King County Ocean Front Home, with wide sweeping Ocean Buckley ENUMCLAW Investment Mother-in-law apartment Views!!!!!!!!!!! 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath in for rent. 2 bedroom, 1 potential or vacation/ live Quiet Neighborhood. Off bath, 1 car garage with here. 2 level home with t a l i a nParking, m a r bl eCommon f l o o r s, storage. Secure, clean, IStreet granite countertops, n ewe r a p a r t m e n t . N o slab Laundry. Close to Shops cedar ceilings, pets, no smoking. All vaulted and Hospital. $695 Per utilities paid. Close to Lopi fireplace, new carM o nand t h . designer C a l l ďż˝ e rpaint. e my : downtown. $1350 plus pet Photos/writeup 206-422-1031 d a m a g e d e p o s i t . $259,950 ( 3 6 0 ) 8 2 9 - 6 4 0 3 / NWMLS # 697327, or Call 360-581-94929. (253)861-3347.
and basic cable. 253951-6909. 1110 Griffin Enumclaw.
NEWS Updates Daily! courierherald.com blscourierherald.com SPACE FORfor LEASE Apartments Rent Pierce County DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW
(253) 219-5952
Buckley area
2 bedroom apartment. W/S/G included. Up-
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com
Home Services Painting
Home Services
House/Cleaning Service
AK Painting Inc
*** Bonney Lake Cleaning Service ***
FREE ESTIMATES Call Ken (253)350-0982
Commercial/Residential Weekly Accounts Available Now! References Available Call Sarah for a Free Estimate
Exterior-Interior High Quality Work Fair Pricing
akpainting@msn.com
Licensed, bonded, insured
TEZAK’S TREE ERSIZEDSERVICE (253)862-1700
tezakstreeservice.com Serving the area Over 30 Years FREE ESTIMATES Bonded~Insured
mes with Lic. # TEZAKTS0330C ERZONE ZONE WA Misc. Rentals ek. Rooms for Rent
e Courier-Herald, LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable Valley/Black price. Includes utilities r and Enumclaw and basic cable. 253-
Auctions/ Estate Sales
Home Services Lawn/Garden Service
Enumclaw
Estate Sale. Antiques, household, medical items, linens, etc. 43906 228th Ave SE, Friday & Saturday, 9AM4PM. South of Sales Pavillion.
Home Services Fencing & Decks
**Local Fence Co.** White Vinyl, Ranch, Horse Fencing Cedar, Chain Link, Repairs, Gates Call James
253-831-9906
T
ent
Downtown Buckley
Call 800-388-2527
NEWS Updates Daily! courierherald.com blscourierherald.com
"UCKLEYĂĽAREA
!!
Commercial Rentals Office/Commercial
Apartments LAKE CHELANfor 21Rent Acre King County Mountain property with with Reach 50,561 homes Lake View for $49,000! %.5-#,!7 a Southeast SUPERZONE ZONE Private, Stunning Views, ĂĽPackage "%$2//- ĂĽ "ATHĂĽ INĂĽĂĽ Borders USFS, Zoned each ĂĽweek. 1UIETĂĽ .EIGHBORHOOD ĂĽ /FFĂĽĂĽ Residential, Water and Your ad will run Power Available,#OMMONĂĽ 15 min-ĂĽ 3TREETĂĽ 0ARKING ĂĽ utes to Bonney town, appraised in the Lake Courier-Herald, ,AUNDRY ĂĽ #LOSEĂĽ TOĂĽ 3HOPSĂĽ ĂĽ $300. DESIRABLE for $147,000. First perCovington/Maple ANDĂĽ (OSPITAL ĂĽ ĂĽ Valley/Black 0ERĂĽĂĽ OFFICE SPACES son with kind disposition AVAILABLE NOW -Diamond O N $49,000 T H ĂĽ # AReporter L L ĂĽcash * E R Egets MY ĂĽĂĽ Enumclaw and and deed. Call Owner: 509Fully Updated Courier-Herald. 670-0321. No Agents starting at $300/ mo.
Apartments for Rent Real Estate for Sale Pierce County 0500 King County
WITHĂĽĂĽ AGE ĂĽĂĽ BOR ĂĽ ORESTĂĽĂĽ ge WED ĂĽĂĽ OVID ĂĽ ALĂĽ ISĂĽĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ocks OSIT ĂĽĂĽ KING ĂĽĂĽ
K&K Landscaping Lawn Maintenance
Trimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up Bark, Hauling All kinds of yard work!
253-862-4347 Bonded & Insured
Lic# KKLANKL897MK
Leaf & Storm Clean up
Miscellaneous
HANDY RANDY Property & Yard Care Trim*Prune*Hedges Cleanup & Hauling
Call Randy Now
253-350-1539 LICENSED & INSURED
Home Services Window Cleaning TOM’S WINDOW CLEANING Commercial, Residential Gutter cleaning, Gutter whitening, Moss control, Pressure washing, New construction Locally owned (360)802-8925 (253)740-3833
C O U N T RY G A R D E N BOUQUETS offers seasonal bouquets, wreaths & other handcrafted local items in “The Shop� (360)8253976 (253)332-9466
Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting Place for Loved Ones Pricing from $750 to $7000 36424 312th Ave SE Enumclaw
(206)280-4071
ü BEDROOMü APARTMENT üü 7 3 'ü INCLUDED ü 5P ü STAIRSü UNITü MONTH üü ST ü LAST ü ü DEPOSIT üü $ O W N S T A I R S ü U N I Tüü MONTH ü ST ü LAST üü Providing Quality üInspection DEPOSIT ü ü for: • Pre-purchase • Pre-listing
GTON
IN WASH
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
• Warranty • Structural Pest Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what ,!+%ü4!003 ü is done or left undone. Real Estate for Rent
953872
1032688
Houses ĂĽ "King 2 ĂĽ speak County to ĂĽ me... . ) # %ĂĽĂĽ and I listen. !PAR TMENTS ĂĽ 7ATER ĂĽĂĽ !5"52.ĂĽ Hometown Special! APPLIANCES ĂĽ GARBAGE ĂĽĂĽ $ FlatINCLUD ĂĽ Fee* 30000 LAUNDRY ĂĽ SEWERĂĽ Enumclaw Only* ED ĂĽ .ICEĂĽ QUIETĂĽ COUNTRYĂĽ ĂĽ Pest report included! BLERĂĽĂĽ SETTING ĂĽ PETS ĂĽ *Up to.OĂĽ 3,000 Sq. Ft. ĂĽ in Enumclaw ARN ĂĽĂĽ of every Inspection ERĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 10% in Enumclaw will be ANDĂĽĂĽ donated to Plateau WA Misc.Ministries. Rentals Outreach OĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ Locally NG ĂĽĂĽ Mobile Home Spaces OwnedWITHĂĽ & ĂĽ ĂĽ "2ĂĽ 2!-",%2ĂĽ NED ĂĽĂĽ %.5-#,!7 ĂĽ DENĂĽ ANDĂĽ CARĂĽOperated GARAGE ĂĽ ĂĽ (/-%ĂĽ )3ĂĽ ĂĽ7(%2%ĂĽ 4(%ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ Licensed 1UIETĂĽ FAMILYĂĽ ( % ! 24 ĂĽ ) 3 ĂĽ NEIGHBOR ĂĽ Bonded ĂĽ & 2 % %ĂĽĂĽ HOODĂĽ OFĂĽMOVEĂĽ DESIRABLEĂĽ &ORESTĂĽĂĽĂĽ -ONTHSĂĽ INĂĽInsured SPECIAL ĂĽ 2IDGE ĂĽYOURĂĽ .OĂĽSINGLEĂĽ PETSĂĽ ALLOWED ĂĽ "RINGĂĽ ORĂĽCall DOU ĂĽĂĽ 9ARDĂĽ MAINATENCEĂĽ PROVID ĂĽ BLEWIDEĂĽ HOMEĂĽ TOĂĽToday! BEAUTI ĂĽ Pierick EDĂĽ Tim BYĂĽ OWNER ĂĽ 6ILLAĂĽ 2ENTALĂĽ ISĂĽĂĽ FULĂĽ -OUNTAINĂĽ %S ĂĽ AVAILABLEĂĽ NOW ĂĽ ĂĽ 360/825-3640 TATES ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ %(/ ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ PERĂĽ MONTHĂĽ WITHĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽĂĽ PrecisionInspector.com DOL#416; SPI#70465 9EARĂĽ LEASE ĂĽ .OĂĽ SMOKING ĂĽĂĽ WWW CAL AM COM ale #ALLĂĽ"RIANĂĽ
Utilities pro-rated based on square feet
253-973-9735 206-769-0902
O F F I C E S PAC E AVAILABLE Downtown Enumclaw 232 to 273 sApartments q . f t o f f i c e for s p Rent aces. EachKing office equipped County with two phone lines and %.5-#,!7 two Ethernet ports for internet ready capability. ĂĽ "%$2//- ĂĽ ĂĽ "ATHĂĽ INĂĽĂĽ H i g h S p e e d I n t e r n/FFĂĽ e tĂĽ 1UIETĂĽ .EIGHBORHOOD ĂĽ available immediately. 3TREETĂĽ 0ARKING ĂĽ #OMMONĂĽ Garbage and cleaning ofĂĽ ,AUNDRY ĂĽ #LOSEĂĽ TOĂĽ 3HOPSĂĽĂĽ common area included. U t i l i(OSPITAL ĂĽ t i e s p r o ĂĽ r a t e 0ERĂĽ b yĂĽ ANDĂĽ s-qOuNaTrHe ĂĽ fo i c e ĂĽĂĽ # Ao LtL ĂĽo*fE oR Ef fMY s p a c e . C a l l To d a y. (360)802-8220.
NEWS Updates Daily! courierherald.com blscourierherald.com Apartments for Rent Money to Pierce County Loan/Borrow
"UCKLEYĂĽAREA
General Financial
Announcements
Are you receiving paym e n t s ? D o yo u n e e d cash? www.RossFinancialNotes. com, 1-86665-NOTES, vicki@ RossFinancialNotes.com FREE GOLD IRA KIT. With the demise of the dollar now is the time to invest in gold.  AAA Rated!  For free consultation: 1-866-683-5664 FREE Medicare Quotes! Get Covered and Save! Explore Top Medicare Supplement Insurance P l a n s F o r Fr e e ! I t ’s Open Enrollment, So Call Now! 877-243-4705 G E T C A S H N OW fo r your Annuity or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Ser vice!  877693-0934 (M-F 9:35am7pm ET) Guaranteed Income For Your Retirement. Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income in retirement! CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity. Quotes from A-Rated companies! 800-6695471 P RO B L E M S w i t h t h e I R S o r S t a t e Ta xe s ? Settle for a fraction of w h a t yo u owe ! Fr e e face to face consultations with offices in your area. Call 855-970-2032 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! W I N o r Pay N o t h i n g ! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800706-8742 to start your application today!
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L O C A L P R I VAT E I N ĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ APARTMENT ĂĽ VESTOR loans moneyĂĽ 7 3 'ĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ 5P ĂĽI on real estate equity. lSTAIRSĂĽ o a n oUNITĂĽ n h MONTH ĂĽ o u s e s, r awĂĽ land, commercial proper-ĂĽ ST ĂĽ LAST ĂĽ ĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽ ty and property developAnnouncements $ eO nWt N. SCT aAl Il R SEĂĽr i Uc N aI tTĂĽĂĽ m MONTH ĂĽ (425) 803-9061. ST ĂĽ LAST ĂĽĂĽ PROMOTE YOUR REwww.fossmortgage.com ĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽ ĂĽ GIONAL EVENT for only pennies. Reach 2.7 mil lion readers in newspapers statewide for $275 SPACE FOR LEASE classified or $1,350 dis,!+%ĂĽ4!003 ĂĽ DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW play ad. Call this news ĂĽ " 2 ĂĽ 219-5952 ĂĽ . ) # %ĂĽĂĽ paper or (206) 634-3838 (253) !PAR TMENTS ĂĽ 7ATER ĂĽĂĽ for details.
APPLIANCES ĂĽ GARBAGE ĂĽĂĽ LAUNDRY ĂĽ SEWERĂĽ INCLUD ĂĽ
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Found
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
DOG GONE IN BUCKLEY? The City of Buckley has a short term dog pound. If your dog is missing call (360)8293157.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING REGARDING AMENDMENTS TO THE BONNEY LAKE MUNICIPAL CODE RELATING TO SUBDIVISION DESIGN STANDARDS N OT I C E I S H E R E B Y GIVEN that the City of Bonney Lake Planning Commission will convene a Public Hearing at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, December 3, 2014, in the Justice and Municipal Center – Council Chambers, 9002 Main Street E., Bonney Lake, Washington to receive public testimony on potential changes to BLMC 17.20.090 to increase the width of the access for a “flag lot� or “pipesteam lot� from 15 feet to 20 feet in order to be consistent with the requirements of East Pierce Fire and Rescue. Proponent: City of Bonney Lake. Contact: Jason Sullivan, Senior Planner; phone (253) 447-4355; email address
FOR BIDS Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the City of Bonney Lake, 9002 Main Street E., Bonney Lake, Washington 98391, until December 2, 2014 at 1:00 p.m., for Phase 1 – S C A DA S y s t e m U p grades. Work to be performed includes: The City of Bonney Lake is requesting bids from qualified contractors for electr ical and control system installation services. The Work consists of the fabrication of two radio panels, one reservoir telemetry panel, and two lift station telemetry panels. This project also consists of the replacement of existing telemetry equipment at the City’s Ponderosa Reservoir, Lift Station No. 2, and Lift Station No. 21 with the fabricated panels along with installation of the radio panels and radio antenna hardware and cabling at the Ponderosa Reservoir site. Bid proposals will be received by the City Clerk at the City of Bonney Lake, 9002 Main Street E., Bonney Lake, Washington 98391 by December 2, 2014 at 1:00 p.m., at which time they will be opened and read publicly. Clearly identify project name on all submitted bid packages. Proposals received after the time fixed for opening will not be considered. Contract documents including plan drawings, specifications, addenda, and plan holders list for this project will be availa bl e fo r v i ew i n g a n d downloading on-line through Builders Exchange of Washington, Inc. (BXWA) at http://www.bxwa.com. To view the documents on BXWA’s website, select the following links: “ Po s t e d P r o j e c t s � ; “Public Works�; “City of Bonney Lake�; “Projects Bidding�. Bidders are encouraged to “Register as a Bidder� in order to receive automatic e-mail notification of future addenda and be placed on
the “Bidders List�. Contact the Builders Exchange of Washington at (425) 258-1303 should you require further assistance. For questions regarding this project, please contact the Project Manager, Douglas Budzynski, PE, at 19306 Bonney Lake Blvd., Bonney Lake, Washington 9 8 3 9 1 , a n d (253) 447-4342. The City of Bonney Lake hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively ensure that in any contract entered into, pursuant to this advertisement, minority and women’s business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to the invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award. Each bid proposal shall be accompanied by a bid proposal deposit in cash, cer tified check, cashier’s check, postal money order, or surety bond in an amount equal to at least 5 percent of the amount of such bid proposal. Checks shall be made payable to the C i t y o f Bo n n ey L a ke. Should the successful bidder fail to enter into such contract and furnish satisfactory perform a n c e a n d p ay m e n t bond within the time stated in the specifications, the bid proposal deposit shall be forfeited to the City of Bonney Lake. The City of Bonney Lake reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive irregularities in the bid or in the bidding. No bidder may withdraw his proposal after the hours set for the opening thereof, or before award of contract, unless said award is delayed for a period exceeding sixty (60) calendar days. Engineers Estimate Range: $210,000 -
Legal Notices
CITY OF BONNEY LAKE - NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY OF PRELIMINARY BUDGET AND SCHEDULED PUBLIC HEARING ON THE 2015-2016 BIENNIAL BUDGET The City of Bonney Lake announces that the preliminary budget for 20152016 has been filed with the City Clerk and provided to the City Council on October 31, 2014. The budget is available on the City website at www.citybonneylake.org/finance and upon request to any taxpayer who contacts the C i t y C l e r k ’s o f f i c e a t (253) 862-8602. The City Council will hold a public hear ing during the regular Council Meeting of November 25, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, to accept testimony regarding the 2015-2016 Biennial Budget. The City Council meets at Bonney Lake Justice & Municipal Center located at 9002 Main St E, Bonney Lake, WA 98391. All members of the public may provide t e s t i m o ny d u r i n g t h e public hearing or they may submit written comments prior to the public hearing to the City Clerk at P.O. Box 7380, Bonney Lake, WA 98391. For citizens with disabilities who are requesting translators or adaptive equipment for communication purposes, the City requests notification as soon as possible as to the type of ser vice or equipment needed. # 599641 11/12/14, 11/19/14 PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE King Co. Fire Distr ict #28 is holding a Special M e e t i n g fo r a P u bl i c Hearing regarding the 2015 Budget, on Monday, November 24, 2014 at 3:30PM in the Enumclaw City Council Chambers. All interested parties are invited to attend. Dated: November 14, 2014 B y : D a v i d H a n n i t y, Chairman, Board of Commissioners # 600814 11/19/14
Enumclaw’s Premiere 55+ Community
New Skyline Homes
• HardiePlank Lap Siding, 30 year architectural composition roof, 2x6 walls, stainless steel appliances • Skyline Manufacturer Homeowners’s warranty • Move-in ready - decked, carport, 8x10 shed, landscaped • MLS# 586243, 28x48, 2 bed, 2 bath with den • MLS# 586575, 24x58, 2 bed, 2 bath
Lot rent fixed for 5 years! Other homes available as well! 1158985
LAKE CHELAN, 98831
TE
Home Services Landscape Services
SUPERSIZED
Real Estate for Sale Chelan County
ON
For the young and young at heart.
Karen (360)802-9314
Bonded & Insured 951-6909. 1110 GrifLic# allamal921p7 fin Enumclaw. 9ĂĽ,!+%ĂĽ ĂĽ35-.%2ĂĽ#/52)%2 (%2!,$ ĂĽ0AGEĂĽ ĂĽ
8-2527
PIANO LESSONS
253-921-2203
KPAINPC957CB
Home Services Tree/Shrub Care /52)%2 (%2!,$ ĂĽ0AGEĂĽ ĂĽ
Professional Services Music Lessons
Wednesday, November 19, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 23
Homes available for showing 9-5 daily, M-F Weekends by appointment.
Call or stop in today! 360-825-1536 2370 Farman St. N., Enumclaw
sullivanj@ci.bonney-lake.wa.us.
THE PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD ON THIS PROPOSAL E N D S AT T H E C O N CLUSION OF THE PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING ON DECEMBER 3, 2014. # 600678 11/19/14, 11/26/14 Town of Carbonado Ordinance No. 420 AN ORDINANCE OF THE TOWN OF CARBONADO, PIERCE C O U N T Y, S TAT E O F W A S H I N G T O N AMENDING ORDIN A N C E N O. 3 7 4 E S TABLISHING PROCEDURES FOR ISSUING W AT E R S E R V I C E CONNECTIONS Copies of the full ordinance are available at the Clerk’s Office. /s/Michelle Chabot Clerk-Treasurer # 600672 11/19/14, 11/26/14 CITY OF BONNEY LAKE PHASE 1 – SCADA SYSTEM UPGRADES ADVERTISEMENT
Early
Continued on next page...
Due to Thanksgiving, Deadlines for the November 26th issue are:
Display Ad Deadline: Wednesday, Nov. 19th, 4:00 pm +TI[[QĂ…ML 4QVM )L[ ,MILTQVM" Friday, Nov. 21st, Noon December 3rd issue:
Display Ad Deadline: Tuesday, Nov. 25th, 4:00 pm +TI[[QĂ…ML 4QVM )L[ ,MILTQVM" Monday, Dec. 1st, Noon
1164837
DRAFT copy of the Environmental Conservation Element and more information on the 2015 Periodic Update can be found on the following website: www.citybonneylake.org/planning/compplanupdates. If individual or agency would like to be added to the interested parties list for the 2015 Comprehensive Plan Period Update to receive futures notices please provide your contact information to the Jason Sullivan. Contact: Jason Sullivan, Senior Planner; phone Home Services (253) 447-4355; email address
call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 Legal Notices
CASH FOR TREES
THE MILLS NEED: CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY YOUR BILLS IF YOU OWN LAND, CALL US FIRST!!
253.227.1708
ĂĽĂĽĂĽ
ĂĽĂĽĂĽ
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NOTICE OF PUBLIC %XPERIENCE HEARING RELATED &2%%ü%34)-!4%3 TO THE ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION ELEMENT OF THE üTEZAKSTREESERVICE COM BONNEY LAKE ,ICENSED^"ONDED^)NSURED COMPREHENSIVE ,IC ü ü4%:!+4 # PLAN N OT I C E I S H E R E B Y GIVEN that the City of Bonney Lake Planning Commission will convene a Public Hearing at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, December 3, 2014, in the Justice and Municipal Center – Council Chambers, 9002 Main Street E., Bonney Lake, Washington to receive public testimony regarding the DRAFT Environm e n t a l C o n s e r va t i o n Element of the Bonney L a ke C o m p r e h e n s i ve Plan addressing the protection of environmental critical areas and other natural resources. A
THE PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD ON THIS PROPOSAL %XTERIOR )NTERIOR E N D(IGHĂĽ1UALITYĂĽ7ORK S AT T H E C O N CLUSION OF THE &AIRĂĽ0RICING PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEAR&2%%ĂĽ%34)-!4%3 ING ON#ALLĂĽ+EN DECEMBER 3, 2014. # 600683 11/19/14, 11/26/14 AKPAINTING MSN COM
!+ĂĽ0AINTINGĂĽ)NC
,ICENSED ĂĽBONDED ĂĽINSURED NOTICE OF WATER
SERVICE +0!).0# #" CONNECTION LOTTERY TOWN OF C Home Services ARBONADO N OT I C E I SCleaning HEREBY Window GIVEN that the Town of Carbonado water utility 4/- 3ĂĽ7).$/7 has capacity for eight (8) #,%!.).' additional single family #OMMERCIAL ĂĽ2ESIDENTIAL residential, or equivalent, 'UTTERĂĽCLEANING
water service connections within the Town 'UTTERĂĽWHITENING
limits. The connections -OSSĂĽCONTROL
shall be allocated by lott e r y0RESSUREĂĽWASHING
a t 6 : 0 0 p. m . o n M o n.EWĂĽCONSTRUCTION d a y, D e c e m b e r 15th, 2014, at Carbona,OCALLYĂĽOWNED do Town Hall, 818 8th Ave, Carbonado, WA, pursuant to the provisions of Town of Carbonado Ordinance No. 374 as amended Services by OrdiProfessional nance No. 420. Priority Lessons shallMusic be given to existing buildable lots without a well or Town water service. Applications for inclusion in the lottery must be rec e i v e d b y t h e To w n Clerk/Treasurer at 818 8 t h Ave, P O B ox 9 1 , &ORĂĽTHEĂĽYOUNGĂĽANDĂĽĂĽ Carbonado, WA 98323, by 5:00 pm on Thursday, YOUNGĂĽATĂĽHEART December 11th, 2014. Lottery applications shall +ARENĂĽĂĽ be submitted in forms provided by the Town, and must be signed by the property owner, inNEWSa Updates Daily! clude description of thecourierherald.com lot for which the water service connection blscourierherald.com would be provided, and such other information a s t h e Tow n m ay r e quire. Only one lottery application may be subHome Services mitted per lot. Landscapefor Services Application ms and copies of Town of Carbonado Ordinance No. 374, as amended by Ordinance No. 420, are available at Town Hall. QUESTIONS may be di,AWNĂĽ-AINTENANCE rected to Michelle Cha4RIMMING ĂĽ0RUNING ĂĽĂĽ b o t , C l e r k / Tr e a s u r e r, To w7EEDING ĂĽ#LEAN UPĂĽĂĽ n o f C a r b o n a d o, "ARK ĂĽ(AULING 360-829-0125. MICHELLE CHABOT !LLĂĽKINDSĂĽOFĂĽYARDĂĽWORK CLERK/TREASURER TOWN OF CARBONADO "ONDEDĂĽ ĂĽ)NSURED # 600673 ,IC ĂĽ++,!.+, -+ 11/19/14, 11/26/14
PIANO LESSONS
+ĂĽ ĂĽ+ĂĽ ,ANDSCAPING
SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON COUNTY OF KING IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF RUTH LYDA RUNLAND, Deceased NO. 14-4-06360-9KNT NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has been appointed and has qualified as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the
General
email: ENCUUKĆ‚ GFU"UQWPFRWDNKUJKPI EQO
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Town of Carbonado Notice of Public Hearing 2015 Revenue and Property Tax Hearing The Town Council for the Town of Carbonado has called for a Public Hearing to be held on Monday, November 24, 2014 at 6:30 p.m. in the Carbonado Town Hall Council Chambers located at 818 8th Avenue. ($ELIVERĂĽONCEĂĽPERĂĽWK The purpose of the Public(%ARNĂĽ HearingĂĽ ĂĽAĂĽMONTHĂĽ is to review revenue sources for the INĂĽAĂĽ ĂĽWEEKĂĽMONTH 2015 budget including (0APERSĂĽAREĂĽDELIVEREDĂĽĂĽ consideration of possible TOĂĽYOURĂĽDOOR increases in rates and fees.(.OĂĽ ĂĽCOLLECTION Property tax revenues will be discussed. (7ALKINGĂĽROUTE ĂĽNOĂĽĂĽ Residents are encouraged to attend or submit written comments to the Clerk no later than noon on the above date. /s/ Michelle Chabot CARĂĽNEEDED Clerk-Treasurer ((ĂĽ'REATĂĽlRSTĂĽJOBĂĽ(( # 600827 ĂĽX 11/19/14, 11/26/14
"EĂĽAĂĽ .%730!0%2ĂĽĂĽ #!22)%2 INĂĽ%NUMCLAW ĂĽ
Employment General
SPACE FOR Practice LEASE Busy Medical with PT clerical position, DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW 6-8 hours/ week. Friendly,(253) positive219-5952 working environment. Must have valid driver’s license and social security number. Fax resume and cover letter to (360)825-0568.
CARRIER ROUTES AVAILABLE
The Courier-Herald Reaches Far IN YOUR * Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles AREA Call Today +81.4% over direct 1-253-872-6610 mail +54.2% over Val Pak
Community Support Specialist
Puget Sound Regional S e r v i c e s o f fe r s a r e warding opportunity for individuals to provide residential and community suppor t to adults with developmental disabilities. Generous Benefits! $10.50/hr. FT/PT available. in Seattle, Federal Way, Renton andServices Kent areas. Home To apply: Carpet Clean/Install Call 206-772-5700x121 cmartin@gopsrs.org or visit us 149 Park Ave N., Renton 98057
'OSSTEKKĂĽ#ARPET ĂĽ ĂĽ5PHOLSTERYĂĽ #LEANING
LOCAL LANDSCAPE Co. In Buckley WA isĂĽ #ARPET ĂĽ5PHOLSTERY ĂĽ seeking to hire qualified 26S ĂĽ!UTOS individuals to provide a high quality service to #ALLĂĽFORĂĽ-OTHERĂĽ$AY our clients in Seattle and 3PECIALS surrounding areas. Applicants must possess hard working skills, de pendable, follow instructions, consistent, works well independently, able to lift 30-80 lbs, extensive walking, can handle physicality of the job and /VERĂĽ ĂĽYRS ĂĽ can work in all weather %XPERIENCE c o n d i t i o n s. A p p l i c a n t m u s t#ARPETĂĽ#LEANING p o s s e s s a WA State Drivers License 5PHOLSTERYĂĽ#LEANING with a#ARPETĂĽ2EPAIR clean abstract. One year landscape 2ESTRETCHINGĂĽ#ARPETS maintenance experience 0ETĂĽ/DORĂĽ2EMOVAL preferred but not mandatory, will train. Must be 3QUEAKYĂĽ&LOORĂĽ2EPAIR able to pass drug test. WWW WRIGHTSSERVICES COM Please mail resume with &REEĂĽ%STIMATE current driving abstract %XCELLENTĂĽ3ERVICE to PO Box 501, S. Prairie, WA 98385. or email #OMPETITIVEĂĽ0RICES colorscape@comcast.net an application can be mailed to you upon request, Call 253-2553020
7RIGHTSĂĽ3ERVICES
WA Misc. Rentals
Now Hiring Weekend Rooms for Rent & Fill In Relief Manage for a Bonney Lake Facility. ,%%ĂĽStorage (/4%, ĂĽ ĂĽ #LEANĂĽĂĽ PleaseATĂĽ Bring Resume ĂĽ ROOMSĂĽ ANĂĽ AFFORDABLEĂĽ in Person PRICE ĂĽ )NCLUDESĂĽ UTILITIESĂĽ Monday thru Friday to ĂĽ ANDĂĽ BASICĂĽ CABLE ĂĽ ĂĽ 9902 216th Ave E, Bonney Lake 'RIF ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ Please No Phone Calls lNĂĽ%NUMCLAW about this position REPORTER Miscellaneous
The Grays Harbor Publishing Group on
Grays Harbor, '!2$%.ü Wash., ü #/5.429ü has an opening a "/515%43ü OFFERSüforSEA ü full-time reporter with SONALü ü BOUQUETS ü an emphasis on local ü WREATHSü ü OTHERüWe’re HAND ü sports writing. looking for someone CRAFTEDü LOCALü ITEMSü toINüü produce clear, ü brightly h4HEü 3HOPvü written high school ü prep spor ts stories relevant to real people reading us in print, on our website and in social media. Ability to take photos is neces!ü"EAUTIFULü2ESTINGüü sary, as is familiarity w0LACEüFORü,OVEDü/NES ith social media. Grays 0RICINGüFROMü Harbor is on the Washington Coast, an üTOü hour from the Olympic ü THü!VEü3% Rain Forest and two h o u r s %NUMCLAW f r o m S e a t t l e. Benefits include, but are not limited to paid vacation, sick and holidays, medical, dental and life insurance, and a 401(K) plan with company match. Send a cover letter, resume and writing samples to: hr@soundpublishing.com All qualified applicants will be considered for employment. Qualified applicants selected for inter view will be required to complete an application.
-OUNTAINĂĽ#RESTĂĽ -EMORIALĂĽ0ARKĂĽ
The CourierHerald is Local We’ve been serving Daily World theTheplateau comis an equal opportunity employer. munity for over 110 years and our staff belong to the Ro-
General
DIALYSIS RN 8 Hour Evening Shift (3:00pm-1130pm) Enumclaw Kidney Center Must have current WA State RN license & at least 1 year experience as an RN, preferably in Dialysis. Benefit packa g e a n d c o m p e t i t i ve pay, based on experience. Visit nwkidney.org to fill out our application
MONEY The Valley Regional DOES Fire Authority is establishing an GROW Entry Level ON TREES! Firefighter/EMT Eligibility List in 2015. WE PAY TOP $$$$ FOR
Large Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage
For more detailed information please visit
Business Opportunities
FREE QUOTES!! or 1101 D Street NE, AVON- Ear n extra inAuburn, WA 98002 www.vrfa.org
Also Buying Rough Cut Figuredcome Maplewith & Instrument Blocks a new career!
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Call for free inPlease come in today to formation Aviation Instifor Saleor tute of Maintenance 1fillReal out Estate an application Real Estate for Sale www.FixKing you may fill County out an online 877-818-0783 Lots/Acreage Jets.com application at www.rainierview Professional Services rooter.com Attorney, Legal Services 9417 160th St E Notice to Contractors Puyallup, WA 98375 Washington State Law Employment (RCW 18.27.100) Transportation/Drivers requires that all adverCDL Driver Needed tisements for construcLocal Puget Sound area. tion related services inProviding Quality Flatbed exper ience a clude the contractor’s must. Inspection Full time, for: Monday- current depar tment ofü X ü CABINü WITHü PORCH ü Friday. Good pay with L ü a b o rTREEDü a n d ACRES ü I n d u s t rOUT ü ies advancement oppor tu- registration number in DOORü SHOWERü ANDü ü MIN üü nities. Vacation and Holi- the advertisement. Houses are living things, they Failure TOü 3POKANE ü ü 3ECLUDEDü day pay. Call: to obtain a certifi-ü (253)261-4678 of registration will prosper or suffer by what cate #OUNTYü ROAD ü HASüfrom WA ü L&I is done or–leftNo undone. T E R or P Oshow W E R the P H OregistraN E ü I N üü DRIVERS Experi- tion number in all adverHouses speakortoLOTS me... of tising ence? Some "EAUTIFULü will VIEWü resultWESTü in a OVERü fineü experience? Let’s Talk! up and I listen. 3POKANEü 2IVERü 6ALLEY ü to $5000 against theü No matter what stage in unregistered contractor. BUILDINGü SITEü CLEARED üü your career, its time, call For moreü *EFFü infor mation, ü ü C$ e n t r a l 00 R e fFlat r i g eFee* r a t e d call Labor and Industries Home. (888) 793-6503 Specialty üORü Compliance Enumclaw Only* www.CentralTr uckDr i- Services #ALLüFORüADDITIONALüPHOTOS Division at Pest report included! vingJobs.com 1-800-647-0982 *Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft. check L&Is internet Long Haul Truck Driver or /2#!3ü)3,!.$ in Enumclaw P o10% s i t of i oevery n AInspection v a i l a b l e : site 7!4at%www.lni.wa.gov 2 & 2 / . 4 ü , /4 üü Comp:1000.00 WEEKLY BANK ü 7ATERü MEM ü Enumclaw will beClass LOWü Professional Services Mustin have 2 years LegalSEWERü Services BERSHIP ü ü ELEC ü donated to Plateau A Driving Experience, No Recent Moving ARE TRICITY üYOU 5SEü OFü COMMUNITYü OutreachMajor Ministries. HURT ANDü Violations, West Coast DO YOU NEED LAWTENNISü COURT ü BOATüADOCKü üü Locally R u n s, H o m e We e k l y, YER? Let the exper iBOATü LAUNCH ü üü & ence Medical, Profit Owned Sharing of James, Vernon 3 AWeeks L E ü Bwork Y ü O for W Nyou. E R üü Plan and Fuel Operated & Safety & Incentives, Paid Vaca- We accept Personal Intion, Drop and Licensed Pick-Up jury, Motor Vehicle ColliPay, Email: s i o n , Au t o I n s u ra n c e Bonded Estate C o d y @ wa t e r s jInsured ay. c o m CReal la i ms, M ed ifor ca l Sale Ma l Manufactured Homes Fax:(425)259-4756 Con- practice, and Worker’s tact Dispatch (425)259C o m p c a s e s . C ALL Call 4702 23%6%2!,ü(/-%3üü 06) 269-1100 or Today! ((888) 667-0683 for inTim Pierick Teams and Solo’s: Mid&/2ü3!,% west and West Coast fo r m a t i o n o r a F R E E James, Ver ü ü ü"EDROOM runs, Late Model Equip- onsultation. n & W e e k s , P. A . , ment, scheduled home n o ü#OMMUNITYüIN PrecisionInspector.com 2505 Second Avenue, time,DOL#416; Excellent Miles, SPI#70465 610, Seattle, WA -OUNTAINü6IEWü Paid Practical Miles, Di- Suite %.5-#,!7 ü rect Deposit, Paid Vaca- 98121 Helping %STATES People Problems? tion. Call Now! 800-645 ü -/.4(3ü &2%%ü -OVEüü Solve 0!4).!ü2%!,49 $155. $175 3748 INü SPECIAL ü ü ü "2 üü DIVORCE with children. /RTINGNo court ü "!ü SINGLEü WIDEü HOMEü ü Health Care Employment appearances. Complete ISü READYüGeneral TOü MOVEü IN ü !LLüü p r e pü a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s APPLIANCESü ANDüEvening BUILTü INüü custody, support, propCNA - Full time. er ty division bills. Estate and for Sale HUTCH ü %(/ ü $ESIRABLEü and night shifts. Enum- ü BReal B B m e m b e r . Waterfront claw and Reha ü ü Health -OUNTAINü6ILLAü %S ü (503) 772-5295. bilitation Center Please www.paralegalalter naTATESü ü apply within; 2323 Jen- tives.com #,%!2ü,!+% ü%!4/.6),,% WWW CAL AM COM sen. Or call: (360)825- legalalt@msn.com 2541
J&L Tone Woods
0100
GTON
IN WASH
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
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E ĂĽ NU M C ĂĽ L AW"!ĂĽ H E#53 ĂĽ A LT H "2ĂĽ and Rehabilitation Cen4/-ĂĽ "5),4ĂĽ (/-% ĂĽ ĂĽ ter. Experienced RN to 4ILEĂĽour ROOF ĂĽ HEATĂĽ PUMP ĂĽ join dynamic group.ĂĽ WA license ĂĽrequired. For FIREPLACEĂĽ ĂĽ CARĂĽ GAR ĂĽ more pleaseĂĽ AGE ĂĽinformation 0OSSIBLYĂĽ IN LAWĂĽ call Mark Censis at: 360APARTMENT ĂĽ -USTĂĽ SEE ĂĽĂĽ 825-2541
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7 3 'ü INCLUDED ü 5P ü Custom Upholstery By Van’s of Enumclaw. STAIRSü UNITü MONTH üü Free pickup, delivery ü "2üand 2!-",%2ü WITHüü ST ü LAST ü ü DEPOSIT üü estimates. N S TConstruction A I R S ü U N I Tüü DENü Monday ANDü ü CARü GARAGE üü $ O WHome - Friday & Remodeling 1UIETü8am FAMILYü NEIGHBOR ü MONTH ü ST ü LAST üü to 5pm. SE 440th, HOODü23929 OFü DESIRABLEü &ORESTüü ü DEPOSIT ü ü Enumclaw owner 2IDGE ü .Oü PETSü ALLOWED üü (360)825-5775 9ARDü MAINATENCEü PROVID ü t /FX $POTU t ,JUDIFOT
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t 3FNPEFMJOH
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sullivanj@ci.bonney-lake.wa.us.
decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days Employment after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided und e r R C W 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication o f t h e n o t i c e. I f t h e claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. ($ELIVERüONCEüPERüWK Date of filing copy of No(%ARNü ü üAüMONTHü tice to Creditors: November 5, 2014 INüAü üWEEKüMONTH Date of first publication: (0APERSüAREüDELIVEREDüü November 12, 2014. TOüYOURüDOOR MICHAEL CHARLES (.Oü üCOLLECTION RUNLAND (7ALKINGüROUTE üNOüü Personal Representative TRIP HART WSBA # 8913 Attor ney for Personal Representative Address for Mailing or Service:CARüNEEDED 1224 Griffin Avenue ((ü'REATülRSTüJOBü(( E n üX umclaw, WA 98022-3012 (360) 825-5581 # 599633 11/12/14, 11/19/14, 11/26/14
General
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com Health Care Employment
931674
$250,000. Posted: Justice & Municipal Center Post Office B o n n ey L a ke L i b r a r y City Website # 600676 11/19/14, 11/26/14 CITY OF BUCKLEY, WASHINGTON ORDINANCE NO. 10-14 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BUCKLEY, PIERCE COUNTY, WASHINGTON, CERTIFYING THE 2015 R E G U L A R A D VA L O REM TAX LEVY UPON REAL PROPERTY. ORDINANCE NO. 11-14 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BUCKLEY, PIERCE COUNTY, WASHINGTON, CERTIFYING THE 2015 EMERGENCY MEDIC A L S E RV I C E A D VALOREM TAX LEVY UPON REAL PROPERTY. ORDINANCE NO. 12-14 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BUCKLEY, PIERCE COUNTY, WA S H I N G TO N , D E TERMINING AND FIXING THE AMOUNT OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED BY REGULAR PROPERTY TAXES FOR THE YEAR 2015 FOR THE 2010 UNLIMITED TAX GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS USED TO CONSTRUCT A NEW FIRE STATION. ORDINANCE NO. 13-14 AN ORDINANCE OF Lic. Bond. Ins. OF THE CITY COUNCIL THE CITY OF BUCKLEY, PIERCE COUNTY, WA S H I N G TO N , ADOPTING AN A M E N D M E N T TO A Home Services SIX-MONTH INTERIM O RFencing D I N A N C& E Decks E S TA B LISHING A 5,000 FOOT S E PA R AT I O N R E QUIREMENT FOR RECREATIONAL MARI**Local J UA N A EFence S TA BCo.** LISHMENTS IN ORDER TO White Vinyl, Ranch, LIMIT THE ORDIHorse Fencing NANCE TO RECREATION AL M A R ILink, J UA N A Cedar, Chain RETAIL SALES ESTABRepairs, Gates LISHMENTS. ORDINANCE NO. 14-14 Call James A N O253-831-9906 RDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF Bonded Insured THE CITY &OF BUCKLEY, PIERCE COUNTY, Lic# allamal921p7 WASHINGTON, amending Chapter 3.20 BMC c o n c e r n i n g I N V E S TMENT OF CITY FUNDS; HomeforServices providing severability; and establishing an efTree/Shrub Care fective date. For the complete text of these ordinances, please contact the City of Buckley at (360) 8291921, ext. 7801, or stop by City Hall at 933 Main Street. # 600684 11/19/14!LLĂĽ!SPECTS
Legal Notices
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Page 24 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 19, 2014 Call Employment Employment ...Continued from 800-388-2527
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Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.
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ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ APART ĂĽ M E N T S ĂĽ I N ĂĽ % NU M C L AW ĂĽĂĽ #LOSEĂĽ TOĂĽ DOWNTOWNĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ SHOPPING ĂĽ #OIN OPĂĽ ,AUN ĂĽ Local Family Owned DRYĂĽ ĂĽand OFFĂĽOperated. STREETĂĽ PARKING ĂĽĂĽ 360-825-5607 ĂĽ FORĂĽ MOREĂĽĂĽ DETAILS 253-261-4014
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Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com Home Services Home Services Home Services General Contractors
Hauling & Cleanup
CONTRACTOR’S *EZ-Haulers NOTICE Junk Removal Adver tising placed by contractor’s must conWe Haul Anything! tain the contractor’s true HOME, GARAGE and name, address and curYARD CLEANUP 9ü,!+%ü ü35-.%2ü#/52)%2 (%2!,$ ü0AGEü ü rent registration number Lowest Rates! according to Washington (253)310-3265 State Law 18.27,100. Violations could be subject to a civil penalty of Home Services up to $1000 per viola- Heating/Air Conditioning tion. To see if this law applies to you and for information on other provis i o n s o f t h e l aw c a l l Contractors Registration in Olympia. (360)902Reach 50,561 homes with 5226.
527
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email: ENCUUKĆ‚ GFU"UQWPFRWDNKUJKPI EQO Property & Yard Care SUPERSIZED
CallAppliances 800-388-2527Cemetery Plots
Wednesday, November 19, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 25
HANDY RANDY Trim*Prune*Hedges Cleanup & Hauling
TEZAK’S TREE SERVICE (253)862-1700
253-350-1539 LICENSED & INSURED
Credit Dept. 206-244-6966
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ĂĽCommercial/Residential BEDROOMĂĽ APARTMENT ĂĽĂĽ Weekly Accounts ,%%ĂĽ (/4%, ĂĽ ĂĽ #LEANĂĽĂĽ 7 3 'ĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ Available Now! 5P ĂĽ ROOMSĂĽ ATĂĽ ANĂĽ AFFORDABLEĂĽĂĽĂĽ References Available STAIRSĂĽ UNITĂĽ MONTH ĂĽ PRICE ĂĽ )NCLUDESĂĽ UTILITIESĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ Call Sarah a ST ĂĽ LAST ĂĽ ĂĽfor DEPOSIT ĂĽ Free $ANDĂĽ O W253-921-2203 NBASICĂĽ S TEstimate A CABLE ĂĽ I R S ĂĽ U ĂĽ N I TĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ MONTH ĂĽ ST ĂĽ 'RIF ĂĽ LAST ĂĽĂĽ lNĂĽ%NUMCLAW ĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽ ĂĽ Home Services Landscape Services A-1 SHEER GARDENING & Miscellaneous LANDSCAPING ,!+%ĂĽ4!003 ĂĽ
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10% of every Inspection Senior Discounts inFree Enumclaw will be Estimates donated to Work Plateau Expert Outreach Ministries.
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Locally Owned & Operated
American Gen. Contractor Better Business Bureau Lic #AMERIGC923B8
Home Services Licensed Septic Service
Bonded Insured
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ISü READYü TOü MOVEü IN ü !LLüü Real Estate Inspections APPLIANCESü ANDü BUILTü INüü HUTCH ü %(/ ü $ESIRABLEüü Serving South King & Pierce ü ü -OUNTAINü6ILLAü %S ü TATESü ü Home Services Tree/Shrub Care WWW CAL AM COM Danny’s 7),+%3/. Landscape & Tree üExpert "2ü ü "!ü #53 ü pruning. 25+ yrs 4/-ü (/-% ü exper."5),4ü Fruit trees, orna- ü mentals, all trees/shrubs, 4ILEü ROOF ü HEATü PUMP üü removal, all yard work, FIREPLACEü ü CARü GAR ü gutters, roof ümoss control. AGE ü 0OSSIBLYü IN LAWüü Senior Discount APARTMENT ü -USTü SEE üü Danny: 253-391-3919 ü &3"/ü ü
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FOR RENT
Involved in Community Service Available to Babysit Evenings & Weekends (Days During School Holidays). CPR & First Aid Certified, Real Estate for Sale Reasonable Rates, Lots/Acreage References Available. Call, Text or Email Kiersten for Appt. to Meet (253)740-9844
real estate for sale
kierybiery@hotmail.com
* Under Warranty! *
FOR RENT
Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.
206-244-6966 Real Estate for Rent King County
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206-244-6966
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!PAR TMENTS ü 7ATER üü APPLIANCES ü SPACE FORGARBAGE ü LEASEü STACK LAUNDRY LAUNDRY ü SEWERü INCLUD ü DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW Deluxe front loading %.5-#,!7 ED ü .ICEü219-5952 QUIETü COUNTRYüü washer & dryer.2AMBLERü Energy ü (253) ü "2ü 3&ü SETTING ü .Oü PETS ü ü efficient, 8 cycles. ONüLike ü ACRESü WITHü BARN üü new condition Get a complete Satellite 'ASü HEATü ANDü WASHERü * Under Warranty * üü System installed at NO Over $1,200 new, now DRYER ü .EWü CARPETü ANDüü COST! FREE HD/DVR only $578 or make pay- üü U pWA g r aMisc. d e . A Rentals s low as PAINT ü #OVEREDü PATIOü ments of $25 per month $19.99/mo. CallSpaces for deCARPORT ü .Oü SMOKING üü Mobile Home 877-388-8575 %206-244-6966 % ü tails 0ETSü TOü BEü DETERMINED ü %.5-#,!7 ü The)3üBig Deal from ü ü MO ü ü Get (/-%ü 7(%2%ü 4(%üü Auctions/ D irecTV! Act Now Estate Sales ( % ! 24 ü ) 3 ü & e2 %3%ü-ü $ 1 9 . 9 9 / m o . Für e -ONTHSü MOVEü INü SPECIAL ü of HBO, starz,ü %.5-#,!7 ü NO MINIMUMS – NO Months H OW T I MSINGLEü E & ORü C I DOU ü NE"RINGü YOURü RESERVES Public Auc- S A X . FHOMEü R E E TOüGBEAUTI ü ENIE tion 9AM - Wed & Thur, M BLEWIDEü Upgrade! 2014 Nov. 19-20. Preview 8-5, HD/DVR FULü -OUNTAINü 6ILLAü %S ü Nov. 17-18. Contents of NFL Sunday Ticket InTATES ü ü üSelect %(/ üPack ü cluded with S a fe D e p o s i t B oxe s . New Customers 18226 68th Ave NE, ages. IV Suppor t HoldKenmore, WA. Picasso Only WWW CAL AM COM ings LLC- An authorized
Bonney Lake Montessori is now enrolling children 30 months to five years for X üpreschool CABINü WITHü andPORCH üü childcare ü TREEDüprograms. ACRES ü OUT ü are aANDü State DOORü We SHOWERü ü MIN üü licensed facility, TOü 3POKANE ü ü 3ECLUDEDü ü specializing in #OUNTYü ROAD ü HASü WA ü kindergarten T E R P O readiness. W E R P H O N E ü I N üü Call toVIEWü schedule "EAUTIFULü WESTü OVERüü a classroom tour and 3POKANEü 2IVERü 6ALLEY üü meet our teachers! BUILDINGü SITEü CLEARED üü S k e t c h b o o k ; S i l v e r ; (253)862-8599 ü ü *EFFü ü Gold; Coins; Proof Sets; NOTICE TO READERS C u r r e n c y ; P o c k e t üORü People providing child W a t c h e s ; J e w e l r y ; #ALLüFORüADDITIONALüPHOTOS care in their home are Gems; Antiques; Comrequired to have a state ics; Sports Memorabilia; l/2#!3ü)3,!.$ i c e n s e. C o m p l e t e l i - Much More. Bid Live or censing andü B i d O n l i n e . Te r m s : 7!4 % 2information & 2 / . 4 ü , /4 ü daycare provider verifi- Cash, Cashier’s Check,ü LOWü BANK ü 7ATERü MEM ü 2//--!4%ü .%%$%$ü cation is available from MC/Visa Cards ONLY. BERSHIP ü ü ELEC ü Persons TOü SHAREü MYü BEAUTIFULü üü the state SEWERü at 1-800-446Under 12 not TRICITY ü 5SEü OFü COMMUNITYüü A" d2mü Hi tOt eMdE ü Nüü 1114. . I 9O l l u Us Rt rü aOW ted TENNISü COURT ü BOATü DOCKü üü BSEPARATEü r o c h u r "!ü e . JW ü am e s G .ü SEPARATEü phy Co., 425-486Domestic BOATü LAUNCH üServices üü Mur PARTIALLYü FINISHEDü LIVINGüü www.murphyauc3Preschool A L E ü B Y üOpenings O W N E R üü 1246, ROOMü TOO ü 'ARDENü AREAüü tion.com
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Deluxe 30� Glasstop Range self clean, auto clock & timer ExtraLarge oven & storage *UNDER WARRANTY* Over $800. new. Pay off balance of $193 or make payments of $14 per month. Credit Dept.
beautiful, sold out Prayer Section, Lot 257, Real Estate for Space Rent 6 . C a s h o r C a s h i e r ’s Pierce Check only. County Call Doris at 206-819-7637. 7ILKESON
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ĂĽ ĂĽ B A TinHĂĽĂĽ 2 desirable Sunset HOUSE ĂĽ .ICEĂĽ YARD ĂĽMemoCLOSEĂĽĂĽ rial Park, located in theĂĽ TOĂĽ SCHOOL ĂĽ MONTH ĂĽ Garden of Rest. Side by !VAILABLEĂĽ BEGINNINGĂĽ OFĂĽĂĽ side, spaces 3 and 4, lot *UNE ĂĽ #ONTACTĂĽ .OELĂĽ ATĂĽĂĽ 57. Great views to reflect upon memories. Asking $6500 each or best offer. Seller will pay fee. Apartments for Rent Call Bill at 425-679-6364 King County
BEAUTIFUL LOCATION 1 Plot for sale. APART ĂĽ Value ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ $5000. M E N T S ĂĽ asking I N ĂĽ % NU $3,000. M C L AW ĂĽĂĽ Mature floral landscape #LOSEĂĽ TOĂĽ DOWNTOWNĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ with fountain. Peaceful SHOPPING ĂĽin#OIN OPĂĽ ,AUN ĂĽ location “Garden of Flowersâ€?. Bon-ĂĽ DRYĂĽ ĂĽ OFFĂĽDesirable STREETĂĽ PARKING ĂĽ ney Watson, Sea Tac,ĂĽ ĂĽ FORĂĽ MOREĂĽ near Airpor t. Please DETAILS leave message, I will return your call 206-734%.5-#,!7 9079. ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ "%$2//-ĂĽ APART ĂĽ
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
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‘13 KUBOTA TRACTOR L4600/DTF. 10 hrs total time $29,000. Front end loader with turf tires and sunshade. 7’ Landpride SPACE B r u s h HFOR o g aLEASE nd an ADOWNTOWN M / F M ra d ENUMCLAW i o. A l way s covered and well main(253) 219-5952 tained. Call before this great deal is gone John 713-515-0034. Located WAJuan. Misc. Rentals San (manufacture Rooms for Rent photo is pictured).
People Read ,%%ĂĽ (/4%, ĂĽ ĂĽ #LEANĂĽĂĽ ROOMSĂĽ ATĂĽCourierANĂĽ AFFORDABLEĂĽĂĽ The PRICE ĂĽ )NCLUDESĂĽ UTILITIESĂĽĂĽ Herald ANDĂĽ BASICĂĽ CABLE ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 'RIF ĂĽ 26,400 households lNĂĽ%NUMCLAW
receive the paper each week. There 2 Oare O M 2ü Treaders O ü R E N T ü Iper N ü MYüü B E A U T I F U L ü % N U M C L A Wüü household. That’s Aüü HOME ü 2OOMü INCLUDESü 52,800 SMALLü FRIDGE üimpresMICROWAVE üü sions. This TOASTERü ANDü ISü does FULLYü FUR ü NISHEDü INCLUDINGüour Aü 46 üü not include #LOSEü TOü ALLü STORESü ANDüü website.
BUSĂĽ STOP ĂĽ ĂĽ MONTHĂĽĂĽ 206-244-6966 ĂĽ /&ĂĽ 7!4%2&2/.4ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ "2 ĂĽ ĂĽ "!ĂĽ PRICEDĂĽ FORĂĽĂĽ M E N T S ĂĽ I N ĂĽ % NU M C L AW ĂĽĂĽ INCLUDESĂĽ UTILITIESĂĽ ANDĂĽ IN ĂĽ QUICKĂĽ SALEĂĽ ATĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 7ASHER ĂĽ DRYERĂĽ INĂĽ UNIT ĂĽĂĽ TERNET ĂĽ -USTĂĽ HAVEĂĽ GOODĂĽĂĽ
Mail Order
Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. Medical Guardian - Toprated medical alarm and 24/7 medical alert monitoring. For a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no commitment, a 2nd waterproof alert button for free and more - only $29.95 per month. 800-6172809 V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S USERS! 50 Pills SPECIAL - $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 855409-4132 VIAGRA - Pfizer brand! Lowest Price from USA Pharmacies. No doctor visit needed!  Discreet H o m e D e l i ve r y.  C a l l 855-684-5241 Medical Equipment
agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx
Flea Market
$100 ELLIPTICAL Trainer / Bicycle Combo by Image 2 in 1. Brand n e w ! DV D + e x t r a s . Great Chr istmas gift! Wilkeson 360-829-7761. FREE ADS FOR FREE STUFF! Now you can clean up and clear out your item for FREE w h e n yo u ’r e g i v i n g i t away fo r f r e e. O f fe r good for a one week ad, up to 20 words, private party merchandise ad. No business, service or commercial ads qualify for the free offer. Call (360)825-2555 ext. 202 to place your free ad in the Recycler. Holley Carb: 650 Cfm double pumper, spread bore, $100. 253-5377932.
REFRIGERATOR, side by side, excellent condiDirecTV Dealer. Some tion, Almond color, $100. exclusions - Call D o g c r a t e , l a r g e , WA Misc.apply Rentals for details 1-800-897Parking/RV Spaces 27�x33�x19� wide, $40. 4169 (5) - 55 gallon steel barrels, $2 each. 253-8452/9 Farm Fencing 3755 or 253-307-9727
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(253)350-0982 a Southeast SUPERZONE ZONE Home Gutter cleaning, Heating & s Services akpainting@msn.com Employment Gutter whitening, Home Services Air Conditioning FREE QUOTES!! Package each week. Licensed, bonded, insured Carpet Clean/Install Moss control, Drywall/Plaster KPAINPC957CB t "OOVBM 5VOF VQT Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks Your ad will run Pressure washing, t 'VSOBDFT t )FBU 1VNQT New construction NC PUGET in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Home Services 'OSSTEKKĂĽ#ARPET SOUND t 3FQBJS t " $ t 8BUFS )FBUFST Locally owned Plumbing t *OTQFDUJPOT t 3FQMBDFNFOU Covington/Maple Valley/Black (360)802-8925 ĂĽ ĂĽ5PHOLSTERYĂĽ DRYWALL CO. K Furnace (253)740-3833 $ #LEANING Diamond and Enumclaw “WhereReporter Quality Winlock, WA 79i Tune-up is the Difference.â€? Courier-Herald. Pump or Domestic Services %3 $ +$ ' '%" *& '( - 360.508.1313 New Construction, A/C Tune-up ĂĽ 89 Heat Child Care Offered #ARPET ĂĽ5PHOLSTERY ĂĽ Basement, Remodels Call 800-388-2527 253. 255-5682 26S ĂĽ!UTOS 0100 Lic.#SERENAI920L6 No Job Too Small! #ALLĂĽFORĂĽ-OTHERĂĽ$AY All work owner ďŹ nished OM "EĂĽAĂĽ URED CODE3PECIALS MECHANICAL (253) 862-7533 Heating & pugetsounddrywallco.com .%730!0%2ĂĽĂĽ A+ Rating Air Conditioning BONDED •INSURED Residential/ #!22)%2 PUGETSD178B4 Babysitter Commercial Jim Wetton’s TON Experienced, s G N Honest, I INĂĽ"UCKLEY ĂĽ Sales & Service H S A Apartments for Rent Home Services Reliable, High School 0500 Buckley (253)377-2787 W ng ($ELIVERĂĽONCEĂĽPERĂĽWK PLUMBING Fencing & Decks Student Heavily
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Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft. freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain, interior light
*UNDER WARRANTY* tezakstreeservice.com 0500 Make $15 monthly payMONEY Serving the area ments or pay off balance Over 30 Years of $293. FREE ESTIMATES DOES GROW KENMOREG REPO TON AK Painting Inc N I ON TREES! Heavy duty washer & H Exterior-Interior S WA deluxe, large cap. dryer, High Quality Work w/normal, perm-press & Fair Pricing WE PAY TOP $$$$ FOR TOM’S WINDOW gentle cycles. FREE ESTIMATES REAL ESTATE
Call Randy Now
Mountain Crest Memorial Park
KENMORE FREEZER
Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
Food & Farmer’s Market
ORDER NOW FOR HOLIDAYS SMOKE HOUSE & MORE The Best in the Northwest Smoked Turkeys, Smoked Ham, Smoked Prime Rib and Smoked Salmon Available. Custom Smoking Services Also Available 32721 Railroad Ave. Black Diamond (360)886-9293
JAZZY ELITE Mobility W h e e l c h a i r by P r i d e. Retails for $3,500. Only used a few times. Can be used indoors or outdoors. Batter y range: 8.95 miles. Top speed: 4 MPH. Weight capacity: 300 lbs. Asking price: $1,000. 253-891-1189 leave message. Miscellaneous
Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited t i m e - $ 2 5 0 O f f Yo u r Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for F R E E DV D a n d b r o chure. KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odorless, Non-Staining. Effective results begin after spray dries. Ava i l a bl e : T h e H o m e Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware P r o t e c t Yo u r H o m e ADT Authorized Dealer: B u r g l a r y, F i r e , a n d Emergency Aler ts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, INS TA L L E D T O M O R ROW! 888-858-9457 (MF 9am-9pm ET) Birds
M A C AW, b e a u t i f u l blue/gold, 10 year old male. Recent check up with nail clip. Recent job change forces sale. Includes very large collapsible cage with 2 perches, 3 food/water dishes, also travel cage, food. Home Furnishings $1,200 firm to good home. Large vocabuFORMAL DINING Table, lary! (425)772-2012 6 chairs, Cherry wood, Awesome Christmas Gift $295. Armoire, 2 drawers, Cherry wood, $250. Cats (2) high-end antique Victorian matching chairs P I X I E B O B S - T I C A and foot stool, Mauve Registration possible. color, excellent condi- P l a y f u l , l o t s o f f u n ! t i o n , $ 1 2 5 . 2 5 3 - 8 4 5 - Hypo-allergenic, shor t hair, some with extra big 3755 or 253-307-9727 feet, short tails, very lovFo r S a l e : O a k d i n i n g i n g a n d l o y a l . B o x room table, 40�x60� with trained. Excellent mark4 c h a i r s a n d 1 l e a f, i n g s . A l l s h o t s a n d $ 1 0 0 ; C h i n a c a b i n e t , wor med. Guaranteed! c h e r r y w o o d , $ 2 0 0 ; $150 to $1,500. Also, 1 L o v e s e a t , c h o c o l a t e FREE adult cat! Call for brown, $60 OBO. Call or appointment: 425-235text (253)569-9559 3193 (Renton)
click:
SUPERSIZED
in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, a Southeast SUPERZONE ZONE Valley/Black Package each week. Covington/Maple Page 26 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 19, 2014 Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Your ad will run Courier-Herald. Cats Dogs Dogs Dogs Dogs in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black RAGDOLL Maine Coon Call 800-388-2527 mix kittens (6), homes will be with Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Reach 50,561 huge, docile, dog like. Courier-Herald. a Southeast SUPERZONE ZONE Raised under foot never caged. Raised dogs Package eachwith week. and great with kids. 8 Call 800-388-2527 Your ad will run Blueweeks. Sealpoints, points, tabby, black & in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, F-1 LABRADOODLE AKC GOLDEN Doodle black & white. Shots, Puppies born 10/2. All of Covington/Maple Retriever Puppies. Non 0500 wo r m e d , g a ra u n t eValley/Black ed. Apartments for Rent our puppies are home shedding males & fe$300 no checks please. Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw MONEY raised andCounty socialized King Weekend delivery pos- AKC ENGLISH Mastiff males. Highly intelligent, with children of all ages. %.5-#,!7 sCourier-Herald. i bl e . S o r r y n o p i c s . Healthy Fawn pups, with cute and wonderful with
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DOES AKC WEST HIGHLAND Puppies will be ready to ĂĽ "%$2//- ĂĽ ĂĽ "ATHĂĽ INĂĽĂĽ be placed in new homes White Terr iers. Apartments for These Rent 1UIETĂĽ 0500 o v. .EIGHBORHOOD ĂĽ 22, 2014. De wĂĽ /FFĂĽ puppies are beyond cute N MONEY GROW l a w s 0ARKING ĂĽ r e m o v #OMMONĂĽ e d , v e tĂĽ King N cchecked, and full of County “Westitudeâ€?. 3TREETĂĽ O T G shots & wormThey areHhealthy, lively ,AUNDRY ĂĽ #LOSEĂĽ TOĂĽ 3HOPSĂĽĂĽ DOES ON TREES! ASfromINsweet, puppies lov- ing are all up to date. W ĂĽ "%$2//- ĂĽ ĂĽ "ATHĂĽ INĂĽĂĽ ANDĂĽ (OSPITAL ĂĽ ĂĽnow. 0ERĂĽĂĽ deposits ing parents. We are ex- Accepting 1UIETĂĽ .EIGHBORHOOD ĂĽ /FFĂĽĂĽ $1300. - O N T H ĂĽCall # A Lnow, L ĂĽ * E before R E MY ĂĽĂĽ WE PAY TOP $$$$ FOR N perienced GROW breeders with gone 425-327-8360 REAL ESTATE 3TREETĂĽ 0ARKING ĂĽ #OMMONĂĽĂĽ their + years experience. Large Maple Trees , Single Trees or GTO 35 Ready to #LOSEĂĽ go to TOĂĽ their newĂĽ tnrranch@wavecable.com INAcreage ON TREES! ,AUNDRY ĂĽ 3HOPSĂĽ H S www.tnrranch.com FOR RENT A homes Dec. 7 for the W 0500 ANDĂĽ (OSPITAL ĂĽ ĂĽ 0ERĂĽĂĽ i s c r i m i n a t i n g bu ye r. FREE - O N T Heach. ĂĽ # A L L ĂĽRochester. * E R E MY ĂĽĂĽ NEWS Updates Daily! WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORQUOTES!! d$1200 Call 800-388-2527
Available Bengal Main- large bone, English cor- c h i l d r e n . P a r e n t s & coon Mix. 425-350-0734. rect confirmation, and grand parents on site. genetically sound. Su- Wor med & shots. Not perior breeding! Family just a pet, but one of the r a i s e d . Ve t c h e c k e d . family! $1,000. Call Chris Dogs Current on shots and 360-652-7148. worming. Both parents (6) MIN PIN PUPPIES. 3 on site. Old foundation Black & Tan males, 1 lines, set the standard in Red female, 1 Red male which Mastiff ’s should Services Apartments for Rent Huge, yet gentle and AKC Labrador pups for and Home a Chocolate & Tan be. b e h ave d. $1200 sale. Bor n on 9/12/ County male. 6 weeks old. Tails w e l l King Carpet Clean/Install a n d u p. G u a r a n t e ed. have 1 chocodocked, ears natural. %.5-#,!7 Also Buying Rough Cut Figured2014. MapleWe & Instrument Blocks $200 each. Can deliver. Pictures and information late & 1 black females @ ü "%$2//- ü ü "ATHü INüü 550.00 each & 2 choco509-738-6330. Call Hazel at 360-808- call 4728, leave name and 1UIETü .EIGHBORHOOD ü /FFüü late & 2 black males @ phone number in mes- GERMAN 3TREETü 0ARKING ü #OMMONüü 5 0 0 . 0 0 e a c h . S u p e r Sheppard/lab, & great with sage. Real for Rent WAEstate female pup.ü adorable Also Buying Rough Cut Figuredlong Maplehaired & Instrument Blocks ,AUNDRY ü #LOSEü TOüWinlock, 3HOPSü kids. King BothCounty parents on Her are up. Great ANDü ears (OSPITAL ü ü 0ERüü site. +$ ' '%" *& '( - 360.508.1313 The mother is yelund other dogs, #ARPET ü5PHOLSTERY üü ac-hrOoi cke ow & the father is N T H ün s. # A L BL ü o*rEnR EJu MYl y üü l!5"52.ü GERMAN SHEPHERD 23rd. 26S ü!UTOS 1st shots, wormed, c h o c o l a t e . T h e p u p s PUPPIES 2 Females, have been wormed. Our Winlock, WA(206)280-7952 $200 #ALLüFORü-OTHERü$AY black and tan, 1st shots, vet said both parents & +$ ' '%" *& '( - wormed.3PECIALS Very loving and 360.508.1313 pups are healthy. Photos playful. $425. 2 year old upon request. Hurry & NEWS Updates Daily! male German get yours today. Call Lita Real Estate Shepherd, for Rent black King & tanCounty $300. 360courierherald.com o r M i k e @ 4 2 5 - 3 9 8 4 9 6 - 1 3 9 0 . 3 6 0 - 4 9 6 - blscourierherald.com 0655 or E-mail @labra1394, dor3@frontier.com. !5"52.üRandle, WA
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Purebred mini Australian S h e p p a r d p u p p y ’s , family raised. Aussie are sweet, smart, loving. 1st shots, wor med, dew claws & tails removed. M a ny c o l o r s. Pa r e n t s are our family dogs and on site. $450 & up. 360-261-3354
FOOTHILLS AUTO GLASS
courierherald.com blscourierherald.com
LABRADOR RETRIEVEApartments R P U P S , for B lRent ack! Pierce9/11, County Whelped READY FOR TRAINING! Only 4 remain, large and social! "UCKLEYĂĽAREA A C , 5 - S t eAPARTMENT ĂĽ p S h o t s ,ĂĽ ĂĽKBEDROOMĂĽ Dews, & ID-Chip. 7 3 'ĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ 5P ĂĽ Chocolate Sire & Yellow STAIRSĂĽ UNITĂĽ MONTH ĂĽ Damon site; excellent,ĂĽ h a r dLAST ĂĽ - wo r k ĂĽ i n g hDEPOSIT ĂĽ u n t e r sĂĽ ST ĂĽ (upland $OWNS& T A waterfowl). I R S ĂĽ U N I TĂĽĂĽ Puyallup. $800. Committ MONTH ĂĽ e d b u y e r s ST ĂĽ o nLAST ĂĽ l y !ĂĽ ĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽafter ĂĽ 509.823.7756 5:00. Pics & Info@www.AvalancheLabradors. Tu m b l r. c o m o r e m a i l RyanCRNA@UW.edu
Estate Sale. Antiques, household, medical items, linens, etc. 43906 228th Ave SE, Friday & Saturday, 9AM4PM. South of Sales Pavillion. 1996 HONDA ACCORD Burgandy. 5 speed. Custom Sony CD stereo! Bazaars/Craft Fairs 198,000 mi. Zero miles on new timing belt, balance belt, water pump & Holiday Bazaar valve set. AC, CC, powIda Marge Guild er mirrors and doors. An Multicare excellent interior. Very Mary Bridge Children’s good cond. $3500. 360Hospital & Healthcare 893-8018. Fundraiser Auto Service/Parts/ Nov 21st, 9AM-5PM Accessories Buckley Hall Holiday Decor & Crafts Free Cookies & Coffee Raffle Old Fashioned White River Christmas Mobile Service Snowman, Sled, Tree for Your Schedule Decoration & $400 Cash Quality Tickets $1, Drawing same day Windshields
YORKSHIRE Terr iers, A K C p u p py ’s. S i r e championship lineage. R e a d y fo r t h e i r n e w homes Nov. 10th. Parents on site, should be no bigger than 4-5 LBS. All shots, wormed, health verified. Females starting at $1,150. Males star ting at $875 425530-0452 (Marysville)
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Ask About Automobiles (253) ĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ APARTMENT ĂĽ DENĂĽ ANDĂĽ 219-5952 ĂĽ CARĂĽ GARAGE ĂĽĂĽ NO COST Classics & Collectibles 7 3 'ĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ 5P ĂĽ 1UIETĂĽ FAMILYĂĽ NEIGHBOR ĂĽ Chip Repair STAIRSĂĽ UNITĂĽ MONTH ĂĽ HOODĂĽ OFĂĽ DESIRABLEĂĽ &ORESTĂĽĂĽ Latest Technology LAST ĂĽ 2IDGE ĂĽ .OĂĽ ĂĽ PETSĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽ ALLOWED ĂĽĂĽ 7RIGHTSĂĽ3ERVICES Apartments for Rent ĂĽ "2ĂĽ 2!-",%2ĂĽ WITHĂĽĂĽ ST ĂĽ O WMAINATENCEĂĽ N S T A I R S ĂĽ PROVID ĂĽ U N I TĂĽĂĽ DENĂĽ real ANDĂĽ ĂĽestate CARĂĽ GARAGE ĂĽĂĽ $ 9ARDĂĽ Pierce County /VERĂĽ ĂĽYRS ĂĽ All Types of Auto, LAST ĂĽ 1UIETĂĽ FAMILYĂĽ NEIGHBOR ĂĽ MONTH ĂĽ EDĂĽ BYĂĽ OWNER ĂĽ ST ĂĽ 2ENTALĂĽ ISĂĽĂĽ %XPERIENCE Truck (foreign & DEPOSIT ĂĽ ĂĽ sale &ORESTĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ "UCKLEYĂĽAREA HOODĂĽ OFĂĽfor DESIRABLEĂĽ AVAILABLEĂĽ NOW ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ,!+%ĂĽ4!003 ĂĽ #ARPETĂĽ#LEANING domestic) Glass, Horses ĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ APARTMENT ĂĽĂĽ 2IDGE ĂĽ .OĂĽ PETSĂĽ ALLOWED ĂĽĂĽ PERĂĽ MONTHĂĽ WITHĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ " 2 ĂĽ ĂĽ . ) # %ĂĽĂĽ 5PHOLSTERYĂĽ#LEANING Side, Back Mirrors 7 3 'ĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ 5P ĂĽ 9ARDĂĽ MAINATENCEĂĽ PROVID ĂĽ 9EARĂĽ LEASE ĂĽ .OĂĽ SMOKING ĂĽĂĽ !PAR TMENTS ĂĽ 7ATER ĂĽĂĽ Real Estate for Sale real estate #ARPETĂĽ2EPAIR & Back Glass Real Estate for Sale UNITĂĽ County MONTH ĂĽĂĽ EDĂĽ BYĂĽ OWNER ĂĽ 2ENTALĂĽ ISĂĽĂĽ #ALLĂĽ"RIANĂĽ APPLIANCES ĂĽ GARBAGE ĂĽĂĽ 2ESTRETCHINGĂĽ#ARPETS STAIRSĂĽKing Lots/Acreage for ĂĽ saleDEPOSIT ĂĽĂĽ AVAILABLEĂĽ NOW ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ,!+%ĂĽ4!003 ĂĽ LAUNDRY ĂĽ SEWERĂĽ INCLUD ĂĽ ĂĽ "2ĂĽ 2!-",%2ĂĽ WITHĂĽĂĽ ST ĂĽ LAST ĂĽ 0ETĂĽ/DORĂĽ2EMOVAL Saturday by 1973 MUSTANG! A nice ĂĽ " 2 ĂĽ ĂĽ . ) # %ĂĽĂĽ ED ĂĽ .ICEĂĽ QUIETĂĽ COUNTRYĂĽĂĽ DENĂĽ ANDĂĽ ĂĽ CARĂĽ GARAGE ĂĽĂĽ $ O W N S T A I R S ĂĽ U N I TĂĽĂĽ PERĂĽ MONTHĂĽ WITHĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽĂĽ %.5-#,!7 3QUEAKYĂĽ&LOORĂĽ2EPAIR Appointment Robins Egg Blue with ĂĽ "2ĂĽ 3&ĂĽ 2AMBLERĂĽ ĂĽ Real Estate for Sale MONTH ĂĽ ST ĂĽ LAST ĂĽĂĽ 9EARĂĽ LEASE ĂĽ .OĂĽ SMOKING ĂĽĂĽ CHIHUAHUA !PAR TMENTS ĂĽPuppies, 7ATER ĂĽĂĽ SETTING ĂĽ .OĂĽ PETS ĂĽ ĂĽ 1UIETĂĽ FAMILYĂĽ NEIGHBOR ĂĽ WWW WRIGHTSSERVICES COM d a r k bl u e v y n i l t o p. Real Estate for Sale ONĂĽfor ĂĽ ACRESĂĽ BARN ĂĽĂĽĂĽ pricing.WITHĂĽ Financing Newfoundland’s County&ORESTĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ DEPOSIT ĂĽ ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ"RIANĂĽ call APPLIANCES ĂĽ GARBAGE ĂĽ HOODĂĽKing OFĂĽ DESIRABLEĂĽ Great condition. 2 door &REEĂĽ%STIMATE Lots/Acreage Available. Adult AdopPurebred with 'ASĂĽ HEATĂĽ ANDĂĽ WASHERĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ coupe with 351 (2) barrel 253/261-6066 LAUNDRY ĂĽ SEWERĂĽ INCLUD ĂĽ 2IDGE ĂĽ .OĂĽ PETSĂĽ ALLOWED ĂĽĂĽ %XCELLENTĂĽ3ERVICE tions also. 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DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW done ~orMARYSVILLE, left undone.OUT ĂĽ ACRES ĂĽ “Snohomish County’s WA T~E R P O W E R P H O N E ĂĽ I N ĂĽĂĽ Mary Kasser, 541-459'ASĂĽ HEATĂĽ ANDĂĽ WASHERĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽis TREEDĂĽ ROOMSĂĽ ATĂĽ ANĂĽ AFFORDABLEĂĽ -ONTHSĂĽ MOVEĂĽ INĂĽ SPECIAL ĂĽĂĽ TATES ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ %(/ ĂĽ ĂĽ Coupeville. 253-335-3932 (253) 219-5952 (253) 219-5952 Houses speak to me... SHOWERĂĽ ANDĂĽ ĂĽ MIN ĂĽĂĽ %.5-#,!7 ĂĽ Post & Stick Frame Buildings Experts!â€? "EAUTIFULĂĽ VIEWĂĽ WESTĂĽ OVERĂĽĂĽ 5951 DRYER ĂĽ .EWĂĽ CARPETĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ DOORĂĽ PRICE ĂĽ )NCLUDESĂĽ UTILITIESĂĽ "RINGĂĽ YOURĂĽ SINGLEĂĽ ORĂĽ DOU ĂĽ and I listen. WA Misc. Rentals HousesBASICĂĽ are living things, they ĂĽĂĽ TOĂĽ 3POKANE ĂĽ ĂĽ 3ECLUDEDĂĽĂĽ 3POKANEĂĽ 2IVERĂĽ 6ALLEY ĂĽĂĽ BLEWIDEĂĽ HOMEĂĽ TOĂĽ BEAUTI ĂĽ WWW CAL AM COM PAINT ĂĽ #OVEREDĂĽ PATIOĂĽ ANDĂĽ CABLE ĂĽ ĂĽ Mobile HomeSpecial! Spaces will prosper.OĂĽ orĂĽsuffer by what ROAD ĂĽ HASĂĽ WA ĂĽ BUILDINGĂĽ SITEĂĽ CLEARED ĂĽĂĽ FULĂĽ -OUNTAINĂĽ 6ILLAĂĽ %S ĂĽ CARPORT ĂĽ SMOKING ĂĽ Hometown ĂĽ ĂĽ 'RIF ĂĽĂĽ #OUNTYĂĽ Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com is done or left undone. ĂĽ T E$R P O W E00 R P H O N E ĂĽ I N ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ *EFFĂĽCurrent ĂĽ TATES ĂĽ 0ETSĂĽ TOĂĽ BEĂĽ DETERMINED ĂĽ lNĂĽ%NUMCLAW ĂĽ ĂĽ %(/ ĂĽ ĂĽ WA Misc. Rentals %.5-#,!7 ĂĽ Flat Fee* 300 VIEWĂĽ WESTĂĽ Houses ĂĽspeak to me... "EAUTIFULĂĽ OVERĂĽĂĽ ĂĽORĂĽ ĂĽ MO ĂĽ ĂĽ Parking/RV Spaces (/-%ĂĽ )3ĂĽ 7(%2%ĂĽ Enumclaw Only* 4(%ĂĽĂĽ and I listen. WWW CAL AM COM %newspapers ! 24report ĂĽ ) 2IVERĂĽ 3 included! ĂĽin ĂĽ 6ALLEY ĂĽ & 2 %Sales %ĂĽĂĽĂĽ #ALLĂĽFORĂĽADDITIONALĂĽPHOTOS Pest We are community & daily(3POKANEĂĽ Positions BUILDINGĂĽ SITEĂĽSq.CLEARED ĂĽ Hometown Special! -ONTHSĂĽ *Up MOVEĂĽ to 3,000 INĂĽ Ft. SPECIAL ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ /2#!3ĂĽ)3,!.$ 2/9 Miscellaneous %.5-#,!7 ĂĽ Locations: ĂĽ ĂĽ *EFFĂĽ ĂĽ in Enumclaw • Multi Media Advertising $these Western 00 FlatWashington "RINGĂĽ YOURĂĽ SINGLEĂĽ ORĂĽ DOU ĂĽ Fee* 300 7!4 % 2 & 2 / . 4 ĂĽ , /4 ĂĽĂĽ WA Misc. Rentals 10% of every Inspection ĂĽORĂĽ ^ĂĽ26ĂĽ30!#%3ĂĽ^ SalesLOWĂĽ Consultants Parking/RV Spaces Be a part of the largest community news organization in Washington! BLEWIDEĂĽ HOMEĂĽ TOĂĽ • KingEnumclaw CountyOnly* BANK ĂĽ 7ATERĂĽ MEM ĂĽ 2//--!4%ĂĽ .%%$%$ĂĽ ĂĽ in Enumclaw will BEAUTI ĂĽ be #ALLĂĽFORĂĽADDITIONALĂĽPHOTOS #/5.429ĂĽ '!2$%.ĂĽĂĽ FULĂĽ -O -OUNTAINĂĽ 6ILLAĂĽ %S ĂĽ BERSHIP ĂĽ Pest report included! Whidbey SEWERĂĽ ĂĽ ELEC ĂĽ TOĂĽ SHAREĂĽ MYĂĽ BEAUTIFULĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ donated to Plateau • Kitsap County "/515%43ĂĽ ∙ Do you have a proven track record of success in sales and enjoy managing your own territory? *Up to 3,000OFFERSĂĽ Sq. Ft. SEA ĂĽ TATES ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ %(/ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽOFFĂĽ STĂĽMONTH 2/9 /2#!3ĂĽ)3,!.$ TRICITY ĂĽ 5SEĂĽ OFĂĽ COMMUNITYĂĽĂĽ " 2 ĂĽ H O M E ĂĽ 9O U R ĂĽ OW NĂĽĂĽ Outreach Ministries. in Enumclaw SONALĂĽ ĂĽ County BOUQUETS ĂĽĂĽ - Seattle • Clallam )NCLS ĂĽ7ATER ĂĽ3EPTIC ĂĽĂĽ ¡ Are you competitive and thrive in an energetic environment? 7!4 % 2 & 2 / . 4Locally ĂĽ , /4 ĂĽĂĽ TENNISĂĽ COURT ĂĽ BOATĂĽ DOCKĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ SEPARATEĂĽ "!ĂĽ W ĂĽ SEPARATEĂĽĂĽ 10% of every Inspection ^ĂĽ26ĂĽ30!#%3ĂĽ^ WREATHSĂĽ ĂĽ OTHERĂĽ HAND ĂĽ WWW CAL AM COM 'ARBAGE ĂĽ#ABLEĂĽ • Jeff erson County Eastside LOWĂĽ BANK ĂĽ 7ATERĂĽ MEM ĂĽ BOATĂĽ LAUNCH ĂĽ ĂĽ 2//--!4%ĂĽ .%%$%$ĂĽ ĂĽ PARTIALLYĂĽ FINISHEDĂĽ LIVINGĂĽ ĂĽ in Enumclaw will be ¡ Do you desire to work in an environment which offers uncapped earning opportunities? Owned & CRAFTEDĂĽ LOCALĂĽ ITEMSĂĽ INĂĽĂĽ -O • Okanogan County SEWERĂĽOperated ĂĽ ELEC ĂĽ TOĂĽ 3 -ASHAREĂĽ L E ĂĽ BMYĂĽ Y ĂĽ BEAUTIFULĂĽ O W N E R ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ROOMĂĽ TOO ĂĽ Issaquah donated to Plateau 'ARDENĂĽ AREAĂĽ ĂĽ 0LAYGROUND ĂĽ,OCATEDĂĽĂĽ h4HEĂĽ 3HOPvĂĽ ĂĽ BERSHIP ĂĽ ¡ Are you interested in a fast paced, creative atmosphere where you can use your sales expertise to provide ĂĽOFFĂĽ STĂĽMONTH WA 5SEĂĽ Misc. TRICITY ĂĽ OFĂĽRentals COMMUNITYĂĽĂĽ " Ministries. 2 ĂĽ H O M E ĂĽ 9O U R ĂĽ OW NĂĽĂĽ ISĂĽ AVAIL ĂĽ -ATURE ĂĽ RESPON ĂĽ INĂĽ#LEANĂĽ-OBILEĂĽ ĂĽ26ĂĽĂĽ • Outreach Pierce County ĂĽ - Everett )NCLS ĂĽ7ATER ĂĽ3EPTIC ĂĽĂĽ 0ARKĂĽINĂĽ2OY Licensed Parking/RV Spaces consultative print and digital solutions? DOCKĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ SEPARATEĂĽ "!ĂĽ W ĂĽ SEPARATEĂĽĂĽ SIBLEĂĽ ADULTĂĽ PREFERRED ĂĽ !LLĂĽĂĽ • Island CountyLocally TENNISĂĽ COURT ĂĽ BOATĂĽBonded 'ARBAGE ĂĽ#ABLEĂĽ South King County BOATĂĽ LAUNCH ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ PARTIALLYĂĽ FINISHEDĂĽ LIVINGĂĽ ĂĽ UTILITIES ĂĽ46ĂĽ SERVICEĂĽ ANDĂĽ ĂĽ Real Estate for Sale Owned & • San Juan County If you answered YES to the above, then we are looking for you! Seattle Weekly, one of Seattle’s most respected publications -OUNTAINĂĽ#RESTĂĽ A L E ĂĽ B Y ĂĽ OInsured W N E R ĂĽĂĽ ROOMĂĽ TOO ĂĽ 'ARDENĂĽ AREAĂĽĂĽ FULLĂĽ0LAYGROUND ĂĽ,OCATEDĂĽĂĽ - Grays Harbor Co.Homes HOUSEĂĽ ACCESSĂĽ INCL ĂĽĂĽ Manufactured Operated 32/9 INĂĽ#LEANĂĽ-OBILEĂĽ ĂĽ26ĂĽĂĽ •-EMORIALĂĽ0ARKĂĽ Snohomish County and a division of Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for self-motivated, results-driven people interested in a multi-media sales ĂĽ MO ĂĽ ĂĽ Call ISĂĽ AVAIL ĂĽ -ATURE ĂĽ RESPON ĂĽ #ATSĂĽ OKAY ĂĽ ^ĂĽ26ĂĽ30!#%3ĂĽ^ 0ARKĂĽINĂĽ2OY Licensed Reporters &PREFERRED ĂĽ !LLĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ • !ĂĽ"EAUTIFULĂĽ2ESTINGĂĽĂĽ Whatcom County SIBLEĂĽ ADULTĂĽ 2//--!4%ĂĽ .%%$%$ĂĽ ĂĽ 3%6%2!,ĂĽ(/-%3ĂĽĂĽ Today! career. This position will be responsible for print and digital advertising sales to an eclectic and exciting group of clients. SPACE FOR LEASE Bonded Tim -O Pierick UTILITIES ĂĽ46ĂĽ SERVICEĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ TOü•0LACEĂĽFORĂĽ,OVEDĂĽ/NES SHAREĂĽ MYĂĽ BEAUTIFULĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ Real Estate for SaleEditorial Grays Harbor County &/2ĂĽ3!,% DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW ĂĽOFFĂĽ STĂĽMONTH Rent As partfor of our sales team you are expected to maintain and grow existing client relationships, as well as develop new FULLĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ"EDROOM HOUSEĂĽ ACCESSĂĽ INCL ĂĽĂĽ Real Estate " 2 ĂĽ H O0RICINGĂĽFROMĂĽ M E ĂĽ 9O Insured U R ĂĽ OW NĂĽĂĽ Manufactured Homes • Reporters (253) 219-5952 )NCLS ĂĽ7ATER ĂĽ3EPTIC ĂĽĂĽ Pierce County Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity #ATSĂĽ OKAY ĂĽ ĂĽ MO ĂĽĂĽ SEPARATEĂĽ "!ĂĽ W ĂĽ SEPARATEĂĽ ĂĽ Call ĂĽTOĂĽ client relationships. The successful candidate will also be goal oriented, have organizational skills that enable you to PrecisionInspector.com 'ARBAGE ĂĽ#ABLEĂĽ - ĂĽ#OMMUNITYĂĽIN Sequim ĂĽ Employer (EOE)Today! and strongly supports PARTIALLYĂĽ FINISHEDĂĽ LIVINGĂĽ ĂĽ 3%6%2!,ĂĽ(/-%3ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ THĂĽ!VEĂĽ3% 7ILKESON SPACE FOR LEASE DOL#416; SPI#70465 0LAYGROUND ĂĽ,OCATEDĂĽĂĽ manage multiple deadlines, provide great consultative sales and excellent customer service.This position receives a base Tim Pierick -OUNTAINĂĽ6IEWĂĽ ROOMĂĽ TOO ĂĽ 'ARDENĂĽ AREAĂĽĂĽ We off&/2ĂĽ3!,% - Aberdeen diversity in the workplace. er a great %NUMCLAW DOWNTOWN ĂĽ B E D R O O MENUMCLAW
ü ü B A T Hüü WA Misc. Rentals %.5-#,!7 ü INü#LEANü-OBILEü ü26üü Real Estate for Rent %STATES salary plus commission; and a ts package including health insurance, paid time off, and 401K. Position requires use ISü AVAIL ü -ATURE ü RESPON ü Roomsbenefi for Rent HOUSE ü YARD ü CLOSEüü work environment with opportunity for&2%%ü -OVEüü - Port ü ü ü"EDROOM Angeles (253).ICEü 219-5952 ü -/.4(3ü 0ARKüINü2OY Pierce County 0!4).!ü2%!,49 SIBLEü ADULTü PREFERRED ü !LLü ü TOü SCHOOL ü MONTH ü ü of your personal cell phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of active vehicle insurance. advancement along with aINücompetitive PrecisionInspector.com ü#OMMUNITYüIN SPECIAL ü ü ü "2 üü - Bainbridge Island UTILITIES ü46ü SERVICEü ANDüü health 7ILKESON /RTING !VAILABLEü BEGINNINGü OFü ü ,%%ü (/4%, ü ü #LEANü ü is a definite asset. Must be computer-proficient. If you have these skills, DOL#416; SPI#70465including benefi ts package ü "!ü SINGLEü WIDEü HOMEü ü Sales experience necessary; Media experience -OUNTAINü6IEWü FULLü HOUSEü ACCESSü INCL üü WA Misc. Rentals ü- Bremerton Bü E D R O O M ü ü B A T Hüü *UNE ü #ONTACTü .OELü ATüü ROOMSü ATü ANü AFFORDABLEüü %.5-#,!7 ü ISü READYü TOü MOVEü IN ü !LLü ü insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, %STATES and enjoy playing a pro-active part in impacting #ATSü OKAY ü ü MO üü Rooms for Rent PRICE ü )NCLUDESü UTILITIESüü your local businesses’ financial success with advertising solutions, please Editor ü -/.4(3ü &2%%ü ANDü BUILTü•INü ü HOUSE ü .ICEü YARD ü CLOSEüü and holidays), and-OVEü 401k.ü APPLIANCESü 0!4).!ü2%!,49 ü TOü SCHOOL ü MONTH ü ü email your resume and letter to: hreast@soundpublishing.com, ATTN: SEA. ANDücover BASICü CABLE ü ü SPACE%(/ ü FOR$ESIRABLEü LEASE ü Real INü SPECIAL ü ü ü "2 üü HUTCH ü Estate for Sale - Montesano /RTING !VAILABLEü BEGINNINGü OFüü Apartments Rentü ü ü ü 'RIF ü ,%%ü (/4%, üfor ü #LEANü üReal "!ü SINGLEü WIDEü HOMEü ü Waterfront ü ü -OUNTAINü6ILLAü %S ü Accepting resumes at: DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW Estate for Rent Sound Publishingü is an Equal Opportunity Employee (EOE) and strongly supports *UNE ü #ONTACTü .OELü ATüü ROOMSü King County ü ATü ANü AFFORDABLEü lNü%NUMCLAW ISü READYü TOü County MOVEü IN ü !LLüü TATESü ü (253) 219-5952Production/Labor Pierce hreast@soundpublishing.com #,%!2ü,!+% ü%!4/.6),,% PRICE ü )NCLUDESü UTILITIESü ü diversity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! APPLIANCESü üANDü ü üBASICü BEDROOMü • General Worker or by mailANDü to: BUILTü INüü WWW CAL AM COM 7ILKESON CABLE üAPART ü ü HUTCH ü %(/ ü $ESIRABLEüü Real Estate for Sale www.soundpublishing.com E N T S ü I N ü ü% ü NU M C'RIF ü L AW üü 2 O O M ü T O ü R E N T ü I N ü MYüü WAWA Misc. - Press Apartments for Rent M ü S,ü Kent, 98032Rentals ü ü B ü19426 E-OUNTAINü6ILLAü D R O O68th M ü Avenue ü B A%S ü T Hü 7),+%3/. Waterfront #LOSEü TOü DOWNTOWNü üü B E A U T I F U L ü % N U M C L A Wüü Rooms for Rent King County HOUSE ü .ICEü YARD ü CLOSEü ü lNü%NUMCLAW ü "2ü ü "!ü #53 ü ATTN: HR Everett TATESü ü SHOPPING ü #OIN OPü ,AUN ü HOME ü 2OOMü INCLUDESü Aüü TOü SCHOOL ü MONTH ü ü #,%!2ü,!+% ü%!4/.6),,% 4/-ü WWW CAL AM COM Please state which position and"5),4ü (/-% üü ü ü ü BEDROOMü APART ü DRYü OFFüofSTREETü PARKING ü ü job openings and to For ü a list our most current !VAILABLEü BEGINNINGü OFüü ,%%ü 4ILEü ROOF ü HEATüü #LEANü PUMP üü M E N T S ü I N ü % NU M C L AW üü ü FORü MOREü SMALLü FRIDGE ü MICROWAVE üü (/4%, ü 2 O O M ü T O ü R E N T ü I N ü MYü ü TOASTERü ANDü ISü FULLYü FUR ü geographic area you are applying for. learn more about us visit our website: We’ve been serving *UNE ü #ONTACTü .OELü ATüü ROOMSü 7),+%3/. FIREPLACEü ü üAFFORDABLEü CARü GAR üü #LOSEü TOü DOWNTOWNü üü DETAILS ATü ANü B E A U T I F U L ü % N U M C L A Wüü NISHEDü INCLUDINGü Aü 46 üü üthe "2üplateau ü "!ücom#53 ü PRICE ü AGE ü 0OSSIBLYü IN LAWüü SHOPPING ü #OIN OPü ,AUN ü )NCLUDESü UTILITIESü HOME ü 2OOMü INCLUDESü Aüü #LOSEü TOü ALLü STORESü ANDüü 4/-ü "5),4ü (/-% ü APARTMENT ü -USTü ü SEE üü DRYü ü OFFü STREETü PARKING üü %.5-#,!7 BASICü CABLE ü munity for over 110 ü ANDü SMALLü FRIDGE ü MICROWAVE üü
GTON N I H S WA
953872
$AY
0100
953872
ocks
FOR RENT
1163102
ERY ĂĽĂĽ !! 2ĂĽĂĽ
1032688
1032688
Large Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage FOR RENT 'OSSTEKKĂĽ#ARPET s J&L Tone Woods ĂĽ ĂĽ5PHOLSTERYĂĽ N tall FREE OQUOTES!! T G N I #LEANING ASH PET W Tone Woods YĂĽ REALJ&L ESTATE 0100 ge
%.5-#,!7
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com Dogs
ĂĽĂĽĂĽ
www.soundpublishing.com
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
FUGATE COUPON
FALL
WIPER
SPECIAL
3off
$
Wednesday, November 19, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 27
S K E E W 2 LEFT!!y! a d o T l l a C
For a money saving coupon ... Go to Facebook.com/Permabilt
Wiper Blades
Deluxe Garage w/Loft
Concrete Included
4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1)10’x14’ & (2) 10’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (4) 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl windows w/screens, 24’x12’ or 28’x12’ or 30’x12’ 50# loft w/L-shaped staircase, 3’ steel wainscoting, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.
&
FREE
2� Fiberglass vapor barrier roof insulation, 8 sidewall & trim colors w/25 year warranty.
MUST SELL. 31’, 1993 Flair Motorhome. 7.4L, C h ev. 4 S P a u t o, n ew brakes, new refrigerator, b a n k s p o w e r. $ 7 5 0 0 OBO. Cash. (360)8257009
Concrete Included
$37,169
29,976
$
430/mo.
$
24’x36’x8’
$11,752
10,636
$
4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 10’x12’ and (1) 8’x9’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 5/12 pitch roof w/scissor truss, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.
All Concrete Included
BUILDINGS INCLUDE:
$14,687
13,352
$
211/mo.
$
30’x28’x12’
$20,867
18,970
$
273/mo.
$
489/mo.
30’x36’x12’
28’x36’x10’
$12,435
11,253
$
$13,685
12,385
$
178/mo.
161/mo.
$
$
24’x24’x9’
24’x28’x9’
$15,260
13,873
$
199/mo.
$
$24,124
21,931
$
$16,493
14,999
$
237/mo.
$
30’x36’x12’
30’x42’x12’
$
$26,099
23,727 340/mo.
315/mo.
$
$
Toy Box 4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 12’x13’ metal framed sliding door w/ cam-latch closers, (2) 10’x12’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (1) 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 10’ Continuous flow ridge vent.
Daylight Garage 4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zipstrip crack control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight, (2) 12�x12� gable vents.
2 Car Garage 4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x7’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.
28’x48’x14’
$28,568
26,089
$
374/mo.
$
30’x30’x9/16’
$26,159
23,999
$
345/mo.
$
24’x34’x10’
$21,109
19,278
$
277/mo.
$
30’x48’x14’
32’x48’x14’
$30,534
$31,481
27,885
$
$
400/mo.
30’x36’x9/16’
$27,238
24,989
$
359/mo.
$
19,896
$
285/mo.
$
$12,663
11,460
$
PERMABILT.com facebook.com/PermaBilt
7 Days * 24 Hours Licensed + Insured
Washington #TOWNCPF099LT
157/mo.
$29,849
27,384
$
393/mo.
$
$23,460
20’x24’x8’
10,924
36’x36’x9/16’
$21,786
$12,071
$
412/mo.
$
28’x36’x10’
20’x20’x8’
$
28,750
$
24’x36’x10’
$ TOP CASH $ PAID FOR UNWANTED CARS & TRUCKS $100 TO $1000
164/mo.
$
21,425
$
307/mo.
$
20’x28’x8’
$13,514
12,230
$
176/mo.
$
BUILDINGS BUILT
19,575
SQUARE FEET
20,862,593
As of 10/15/2014
ALL STAR TOWING
425-870-2899
34,100
$
*If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.
(1) 10’x8’ & (1) 5’x4’ Metal framed split sliding doors w/cam-latch closers, (3) 4’x8’ split opening unpainted wood Dutch doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/selfclosing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 10’ Continuous flow ridge vent.
Concrete Included
455/mo.
$
$
ŕ Ž š -PILYNSHZZ =HWVY )HYYPLY 9VVM 0UZ\SH[PVU ŕ Ž :PKL^HSS ;YPT *VSVYZ ^ 3PTP[LK 3PML[PTL >HYYHU[` +LUPT :LYPLZ ,_JS\KLK ŕ Ž -YLL 0U /VTL *VUZ\S[H[PVU ŕ Ž 7SHUZ ŕ Ž ,UNPULLYPUN ŕ Ž 7LYTP[ :LY]PJL ŕ Ž ,YLJ[PVU ŕ Ž .\HYHU[LLK *YHM[ZTHUZOPW ŕ Ž ,UNPULLYLK -VY 47/ >PUK ,_WVZ\YL ) :UV^ 3VHK
Monitor Barn
Concrete Included
31,744
$
22’x24’x9’
RV Garage/Storage
Concrete Included
2009 HARDTOP TENT TRAILER ALiner Sport. Excellent cond! Furnace, sink, 3 way fridge, stove. Extra propane tank, brakes, deep cycle battery $9500 Frank in Lake Stevens 425-238-0726 grps14@yahoo.com
CARS/Tr ucks wanted! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Makes!. Free Towing! We’re Local! 7 Days/ Week. Call 1-800-959-8518 CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. 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
$34,600
Deluxe 2 Car Garage/Shop 4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x8’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight.
Tents & Travel Trailers
Vehicles Wanted
$32,674
153/mo.
1164806
Motorhomes
30’x36’x16’
$
FUGATE ENUMCLAW 526 Roosevelt Enumclaw 360 825-7731 800 539-7595
28’x36’x16’
Equipment Storage
Installation Offer valid with coupon at Fugate Ford, Inc. Not valid with other offers through 11-30-14
24’x36’x16’
1166411
800-824-9552
Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B�, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 12/9/14.
The opportunity to make a Recycle this newspaper. difference is right in front of you.
Page 28 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 19, 2014
www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com
For information please call:
Place your Business Ad Here
40 MO.
360-825-2555
ONLY $
x2050
1182625
Are Your
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Ready for Winter?
• Kitchens & Bathrooms • Remodels & Additions • Custom Home Construction • Green Upgrades & Finishes
Let our trained professionals get your yard ready for winter.
360-802-9339
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1182612
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www.hci-nw.com
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89
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Heat Pump or A/C Tune-up
Water Heaters Remodeling Drain Cleaning New Construction
1182620
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We Do Storm Cleanup
Serving South King & Pierce!
* Plumbing Repair * Septic Service * Pumping & Repair * Drain Cleaning * O&M Inspections * Real Estate Inspections
Prompt, Professional, Reliable & Local Residential/Commercial Topping • Trimming • Takedowns Timber Cutting Stump • Grinding • Storm Damage
www.tezakstreeservice.com
253-862-1700
Enumclaw • 360.825.5580 Bonney Lake • 253.862.1227
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Licensed, Bonded & Insured #TEZAKTS033OC
• Great Service at Reasonable Prices • Specials for First Time Customers
1182622
ABLEAAL946MC
1182615
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360 825-7720
360-802-2253
www.ableairheating.com
Other services offered: *Pruning*Irrigation Systems & Water Features *Storm Cleanup *Lawn & Yard Maintenance * Installations: plants, lawns, retaining walls
1182619
1182614
1182616
Your Fast, Friendly Service Specialists Since 1987 jimwettonsplumbing.com
“Where Quality is the Difference” New Construction, Basement, Remodels No Job Too Small!
Doug Tezak owner/operator • Over 40 Years Experience!
1182608
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PUGET SOUND DRYWALL CO.
Jim Wetton’s PLUMBING Residential & Commercial Service & Repairs
Call “RABBIT”
with purchase of Karastan carpet STORE NAME FINANCING AVAILABLEADDRESS
253-445-1122 • 708 East Main, Puyallup www.abbeycp.com
Lic.#SERENAI920L6
CONTR#JIMWEP#137PB
Available on Select Styles Sale Ends on September 10, 2013
WEBSITE
253.255-5682
A+ Rating
PAD UPGRADE!
———Residential / Commercial———
360-239-7953
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40
$
For As Little As...
1117442
• Annual Tune-ups • Furnaces • Heat Pumps • Repair • A/C • Water Heaters • Inspections • Replacement
79
INSTANT REBATE $3 / SQ. YD.
Furnace Tune-up
1182623
$
1182613
Heating & Air Conditioning
/mo.
For Information Call
360-825-2555 x 2050
www.courierherald.com
Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 29
EBOLA FROM 21 But McCallion warns people against fearing Ebola in the US. He recommends that the public take precautions to protect themselves from the more common threat of the seasonal flu. “So far, one person in the U.S. has died of Ebola, while flu-related complications kill thousands of Americans every season,” he said.
Emotional Cost
It’s difficult for Jeffery to keep from crying when discussing the rising death toll related to those she knows and cares for. If Sesay and the others were truly her kids, she would want someone else to care.
“They’re living through hell right now,” she said. “It wasn’t good to begin with.” Jeffery speaks with her African team over Facetime a couple times each month and almost daily via email. Makeni, which has a population of 112,000, making it one of Sierra Leone’s largest cities, is a sparsely educated area that was quickly decimated in a fashion becoming common in the region. According to a New York Times article, Bombali, the district that includes Makeni, went from one confirmed case on Aug. 15 to more than 190 by Oct. 1. Sesay said sick individuals from neighboring cities of Kenema and Kailahun brought the disease. With a culture based on eating off one plate, sharing spoons and cups, the virus quickly
and quietly wipes out families and circulates through the city. Officials banned public gatherings and closed the marketplaces. The city is isolated, with food coming in, but nobody going out. Those with infected family members are quarantined to their house. When released, these people have nothing left to eat and no place to work. Livelihood is secondary to survival. Sesay said another of Makeni’s health care workers became infected with Ebola over the weekend. Four have already died. He couldn’t say how many doctors and nurses were in the city, but said medical teams from England are helping contain the situation. On top of the dire health needs, border closures and travel bans have stifled trade possi-
bilities and investors in West Africa, with major potential hits to the country’s agriculture and mining operations. Besides an impending food crisis for its residents, cocoa production is another major area of concern, as 70 percent of the world’s global cocoa supply comes from West Africa — 60 percent from Ghana and The Ivory Coast, which could be threatened if the virus continues to spread. The International Monetary Fund has reduced growth projections for the region. The World Bank has estimated that the outbreak has already cost each of the three countries upwards of $100 million and could cost the West African economy between $1.6 and $32 billion in 2015, depending on how successfully the virus is contained.
Plateau Homes
NEW LISTING ENUMCLAW
$277, 950
To advertise on this page call 360-825-2555
A home loan isn’t just about rates and ratios…
Advertisement for:
99
$
*
1182677
As Low As
Emily Bort
ebort@opesadvisors.com
Mortgage Advisor WA MLO 505790 | NMLS 505790
for two publications
253. 315. 4570
opesadvisors.com Opes Advisors is licensed by the CA Department of Business Oversight 4150089, CA Bureau of Real Estate 01458652, Oregon ML-4902, Washington CL-1178435 and NMLS 235584. Equal Opportunity Lender. Opes
Call Brian McIntosh
253-709-9400
Opes Advisors, Inc. All rights reserved.
BUCKLEY
Call Elizabeth Amos
They don’t build ‘em like this anymore! Solid mid-century rambler in sought after core neighborhood. Gorgeous, thick cedar siding wraps this 1630 square foot home. Generous lot size with mature landscaping and covered patio in back yard offer outdoor living year round. Original hardwoods under the carpet, recent remodeled bath, updated thermal windows, easy floor plan with plenty of built in storage. Parks, schools and shopping are only minutes away. Come visit your new home. MLS# 712898
1182675
253-709-7008
BONNEY LAKE $
Spectacular one of a kind home in Takoba! 4 bdrm 2.5 bath +bonus rm custom craftsman with a detached shop on a large .55 acre lot! The detached shop features radiant floor heat, tons of storage & more. Designer touches thru-out include beautiful Brazilian Ipe hardwood front porch deck, interior fir trim and door package, cherry cabinets & custom staircase. Luxurious master on main level with 2 walk in closets & 5 pc bath. Enjoy the views & mature landscape from the screened back porch. MLS#642218 Call Tom & Laurie Kittelman
253-350-2686 253-350-9180
379,000
1182681
Rare in-town 3460 sf hm has amazing privacy & 40+ yr owners. Bright living/dining areas, kit w/adjoining brkfst nk, spacious fam rm & main flr bdrm w/.75 bth. Vaulted sun/music rm opens to entertainment-size deck, patio & fpl. Upstairs mstr suite w/.75 bth, 2 add’l bdrms, full hall bth, util/sewing/craft rm & hall desk/study cntr. Possibilities for pristine/unfin bsmt ltd only by your imagination. Lrg 2-car gar w/shop & garden-tour landscaping w/water feature & gazebo. Walk to school, shops, etc. MLS# 687070
TAKOBA
549,900
$
1182680
1182773
$495,000
Large living room with original hardwood floors and wood burning Fireplace. Three bedroom one with built in storage. Nice size Kitchen has darling cozy nook that over looks big back yard. Full unfinished basement: Fruit room, laundry area, storage or make your very own rec room. Back yard is large and has room for shop or additional buildings. Additional tax lot to the north #6018500066 is included in the price. Call Linda
Call Elizabeth Amos
253-217-6718 NEW PRICE
Angelena Bowen
$229,000
1182774
1182678
1182679
$224,950
253-217-6718
253-677-8667
MANY OPTIONS WITH HOME
ENUMCLAW
$345,000
Recent construction offers open concept living area, 3 full bath/3 bedroom (2 on main) bonus room, lofted master with beautiful bath, large garage with storage, Hardie planked siding with cedar trim, fully fenced yard, Mt. Rainier view, quiet dead-end street with open fields off back yard. See this one today. Call Elizabeth for your showing. MLS# 716756
Opportunity awaits! New carpet and a little paint will personalize and add instant equity to this lovely home on desireable Wynalda Dr. Big beautiful windows. Enjoy serenity and relaxation in your spacious master with 5-piece bath, two sinks and large walk-in closet. Open floor-plan bring the kitchen together with a breakfast bar between. Sunny nook off kitchen overlooks secluded back yard. The large yard and patio are perfect for entertaining or simply relaxing. 3-car garage. MLS# 713069
At the end of a quiet street, stands proud this like-new-2 story home. A flowing open plan w/ lg rooms & lg closets, arched doorways, crown moldings, tons of storage, quality hdwd & tile floors. Air cond, sprinkler system. Orig a model hm, everything breathes quality! Gourmet kitchen w/ a bounty of cabinets, huge island, slab granite counters & pantry. Den on main & 4 bdrms up including a true master suite. Large bonus w/ Mt Rainier as backdrop. 3 car garage. Serene yrd backs to open space! MLS# 679810 Call Tom & Laurie Kittelman
253-350-2686 253-350-9180
Page 30 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
www.courierherald.com Paid Advertisement
November 2014
CONNECTION Serving Enumclaw and Black Diamond
2929 McDougall Avenue, Enumclaw
•
360-802-7100
Superintendent’s Message
•
Fax 360-802-7140
•
www.enumclaw.wednet.edu
Calendar of Events: November/December When
Dear Friends, Last year we had two-thirds of our shed turned into a “loom room.” It was during the first year of our marriage, we didn’t even have our home fully furnished when we purchased a 5’ x 5’ x 5’ Swedish loom. Britt had spent her first year of college in Norway and learned how to do many of the arts known to that area from knitting to woodcarving to jewelry making to weaving. Purchasing this beautiful loom was a deal that we could not turn down. For years, we had the loom set-up in our home and Britt created many beautiful blankets, wall hangings, placemats, table runners and rugs (and a big toy for our young kids!). As Hans and Anna grew older, we wanted to create a space for the “teenage years” in our home. It was at that time that the loom came down and was stored in our shed. Four years ago, we became empty nesters and began to think about where we might set up this beautiful piece of furniture again. After 28 years of marriage, our home is now full of furniture so the perfect spot for the loom wasn’t easily identified. Something would have to leave and that “something” didn’t naturally emerge! On a sunny fall Saturday last year, our mission was to take everything out of the shed and create three piles … dump, give away and keep. When we moved things we were going to keep back into the shed, we discovered we had quite a bit of extra room! We began to wonder….could this be the spot for the loom? Would we use this spot if we transformed it? With the help of a friend, we began some serious brainstorming about how the space might look. He took our joint ideas and began making the transformation. The room was completed just before Christmas last year. It has not only become a “loom room” for Britt, but a writing room for me. It has become my spot for writing most of my columns for this newsletter. We both feel like it is an oasis on our own piece of property. My spot is a chair that I share with Duncan, our dog!
November 20-25 November 20-22 November 23 November 24 November 26 November 27-28 December 1 December 2 December 8 December 11 December 13 December 15 December 16&17 December 18 December 18 Dec. 22-Jan 2
What
Half-Days for parent/teacher conferences High School Drama performances @7pm Black Diamond C. Thanksgiving Dinner Distribution of Thanksgiving Baskets at EHS Early Release for Thanksgiving Schools/Offices closed for Thanksgiving Board work study @ Black Diamond Elementary, 6:30pm Magic Strings Concert - Auditorium, @7pm High School Winter Band/Orchestra Concert, Auditorium @7pm Black Diamond Elementary 5th Grade Concert, 6pm Black Diamond PTA Bazaar Board meeting - District Board room @6:30pm High School Winter Choir Concert, 7pm Enumclaw Middle School Winter Concert, 6:30pm Thunder Mt. Middle School Holiday Program, 7pm Winter Break
Make-A-Wish
As I sit here writing this message to you, from a room in which I do much reflection, I have paused many times to think about the Marysville school community. I am sure many of you have also spent time reflecting about this great tragedy. I have learned that we have Enumclaw School District community members that have friends and family who are students, staff or community members in Marysville. In my case, I have known the superintendent in Marysville for the last 15 years, serving on the Washington State Association of Curriculum Development board with her. The reality of knowing individuals in this situation has impacted me, and I am sure many of you, in a new way. Within minutes of hearing about the tragedy, I sent my superintendent colleague and friend, Becky, an email. I needed her to know that our school district is surrounding her with much love and support. She wrote a short message of appreciation the next morning. As a school district, we stand committed to creating the safest learning environment possible for our students and staff. We continue to streamline procedures as we work in partnership with law enforcement agencies. We made significant changes after the tragedy at Sandy Hook and will continue to seek additional avenues to make positive and proactive changes as we learn from this tragic incident. Safety was a major factor for our Board of Directors completing the recent study and survey of all our buildings this past summer in preparation for the April bond.
In Partnership with YOU!
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Mike
The Enumclaw High School cheerleaders and the Enumclaw Fire Department partnered with the Make-a-Wish Foundation to give their fellow student, Gilbert John, his wish: a parade with sirens, cheerleaders and a ton of classic cars! To top that off, Gilbert received Seahawk tickets to an upcoming game! Amazing! Our thanks to the high school cheer team and the fire department for making Gilbert’s wish come true.
www.courierherald.com
Wednesday, November 19, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 31 – paid advertisement –
EMS Leadership
EHS Marching Band
20 Enumclaw Middle School students volunteered to help at the Enumclaw Special Olympics carnival recently. The Special Olympics director emailed Mr. Karkainen to say, “Thank you and your leadership team for a great night. Your leaders make it go so easy.” The Enumclaw Middle School students represented their school and the district very well. We are grateful for their willingness to serve.
Parent/Teacher Conference Tips The Enumclaw High School Marching Band proudly displays their 4th place trophy at the prestigious Grants Pass “Pride of the NW” Competition. The picture was taken in front of Multnomah Falls. Congratulations to band teacher, Lynda Alley, and her talented stuWhat could you talk to the teacher about? dents. We are very proud of them and their achievement! • Progress. Find out how your child is doing by asking questions like: Is Parent Teacher Conferences will be held November 20-25. These tips are from the Harvard Family Research Project.
• • • •
my child performing at grade level? How are they doing compared to the rest of the class? What do you see as their strengths? How could they improve? Assignments and assessments. Ask to see examples of your child’s work. Ask how the teacher gives grades. Your thoughts about your child. Be sure to share your thoughts and feelings about your child. Tell the teacher what you think your child is good at. Explain what they need more help with. Support learning at home. Ask what you can do at home to help your child learn. Ask if the teacher knows of other programs or services in the community that could also help your child. Support learning at school. Find out what services are available at the school to help your child. Ask how the teacher will both challenge your child and support your child when they need it.
New Southwood Pathway When is the last time you went on a quest? For many students at Southwood Elementary, it is part of their regular school day. Southwood Elementary, home of the Magic Strings program, has added a new Pathway to their school known as Quest. In the Quest Pathway, students are able to explore learning through the arts (visual, theater, and dance) and technology. Quest students meet twice a week as a collaborative community rotating through different “quests” over the school year.
The mission of Quest is to provide a forum for inquiry, exploration, and collaboration in an environment of enrichment through the arts How you could follow up? • Make a plan. Write down the things that you and the teacher will each and technology, nurturing curiosity and creating a mindset of lifelong do to support your child. You can do this during the conference or after. learning. Write down what you will do, when, and how often. Make plans to check in with the teacher in the coming months. • Schedule another time to talk. Communication should go both ways. Ask how you can contact the teacher. And don’t forget to ask how the teacher will contact you too. There are many ways to communicate—in person, by phone, notes, email. Make a plan that works for both of you. Be sure to schedule at least one more time to talk in the next few months. • Talk to your child. The parent–teacher conference is all about your child, so don’t forget to include them. Share with your child what you learned. Show them how you will help with learning at home. Ask for their suggestions.
“BE HEARD”
Keep these principles in mind for a great parent–teacher conference: Best intentions assumed Emphasis on learning Home–school collaboration Examples and evidence Active listening Respect for all Dedication to follow-up 1183292
Page 32 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 19, 2014
www.courierherald.com
November CHRISTKINDLMARKT 28th-30th
December
Improving Washington State One Home At a Time
CHRISTMAS LIGHTING FESTIVAL 6th-7th, 13th-14th and 20th-21st
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GRAND PRIZE
WINNER!
Mike Minor (right) of Enumclaw, beside Alan Gamblin (left), receiving his GRAND PRIZE of 2
SEAHAWKS TICKETS.
2nd & 3rd Winners!
THANKS to EVERYONE who participated in the Gamblin Football Picks Game and to GAMBLIN MOTORS for sponsoring this event!! 205 Roosevelt (HWY 410), Enumclaw • 1-888-956-6416 • www.gamblinmotors.com
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Martha Boston of the Courier Herald awards the 2nd and 3rd place winners. Kevin Myers (right) of Enumclaw shows off his 2nd place prize Seahawks jersey, Sarah Jackson (middle) of Auburn holds her 3rd place prize, a high school jersey!