enumclaw courier-herald, november 12, 2014

28
By Dennis Box Editor The dust and dirt from the 2014 general election is nearly settled with two incumbents and one newcomer from the 31st District heading to Olympia for the 2015 legislative session in January. Senate In the state Senate race, Sen. Pam Roach, R-Auburn, won a seventh term, which sets a record for women in the state Senate. She began her Olympia career in 1990, beating Mike Todd in a squeaker by 345 votes. This election she outpolled Cathy Dahlquist, R-Enumclaw, by about 2,700 votes as of Monday on the Secretary of State’s website. Roach received 20,185 votes, 54 percent, to 17,473, 46 percent for 20% OFF In-Store labor on Computer Repair Coupon must be present when dropping off computer. 1180663 What’s Inside Police reports..................Page 5 Views...................................Page 6 Church...............................Page 8 Obituaries.........................Page 9 Contact Us! Main Desk 360-825-2555 News ................................. ext. 3 Retail Ads ......................... ext. 2 Circulation ....................... ext. 1 Classifieds................. ext. 7050 Weather Holiday Treats The forecast for today, Wednesday, calls for mostly sunny with a high near 45 and winds of 5 mph. Rain is likely Thursday with a high near 46. Friday calls for a chance of rain. Saturday brings mostly sunny skies with a high near 50. And Sunday looks to be mostly sunny with a high of 51. Send us your holiday treat recipes to be featured in future editions of the Courier-Herald. Email reporter Sarah at: [email protected] WEBSITE | Check the website for breaking news and weather updates. www.courierherald.com Your hometown newspaper for more than 100 years! Wednesday, November 12, 2014 | 75 cents www.courierherald.com SEE INSIDE: Senate candidates write to constituents, page 6 . . . . New businesses open door on Plateau, page 11 . . . EHS, White River teams in postseason play, pages 12-13 . . . . Christmas tree season coming, page 19 hometown FIND US ON FACEBOOK We shall never forget By Ray Still Staff Writer “’For God’s sake, grab silk!’” Those are the words Plateau resi- dent Staff Sgt. Hiram P. Jameyson heard when his B-17 was shot down near Brunswick, Germany, on March 23, 1944. Although Jameyson died in 2002, records of his life during his 15 months of captivity in Germany exist in the form of letters to his wife Lorraine and a daily diary, which he kept hidden from his captors. His letters and a transcribed ver- sion of his journal are available at the Enumclaw Historical Museum. The Courier-Herald is present- ing his letters and journal entries as a tribute to Veterans Day. Shot Down Jameyson recalled his experi- ence in vivid detail to The Courier- Herald in March 1968. “It all began on our fourth mis- sion,” he recalled. “We were hit with flak on the way to our target and it knocked out one engine. They got us again over the target and we had to drop out of forma- tion. We began to lose altitude and then we saw them – the German FW-190s just waiting for stragglers like us. Next thing I knew we were on fire and the flames were starting to swell over the wing gas tanks. Then – on the intercom – the last words from our pilot. ‘For God’s sake, grab silk!’” Jameyson watched his B-17 bomber plane crash and burn while he was held aloft by his parachute. His landing was marginally better – Jameyson broke a leg, the bone protruding from his flesh as he was quickly captured by German soldiers. Letters and diary entries “Dearest angel Lorraine, I am alive and well. I have a bro- ken leg but am getting good treat- ment for it. Please don’t worry about me honey. Tell mother I am well. I can write 2 letters and 4 postcards a month. At present I have no return address. I was shot down over Germany and I will have to stay here until the war is over, so have courage and wait for my return.” Jameyson wrote this letter on March 28, 1944, five days after his plane was shot down. Jameyson wrote to his newly-wed and preg- nant wife as often as he could, optimistically sharing that he was healthy and doing well in Stalag III. His journal revealed his situation was not always as bright as he made it seem to his wife. “June 16 - ‘44 Rather cold today, nothing of importance, if Red Cross parcels don’t come soon, we will all die of star- vation. Wonder if Lorraine is thinking as much of me as I think o f her.” Food was a precious commod- ity in the camp. There were more than 1,200 American prisoners in the camp when Jameyson arrived, and the number increased by sev- eral thousand by the time the war was over. In July, more than 2400 prisoners were forced to evacuate Heidekrug to Stalag III. By Ray Still Staff Writer The East Pierce Fire and Rescue Maintenance and Operations Levy failed to reach the supermajority needed to pass in the Nov. 4 general election. As of Monday the Pierce County Auditor’s website had 14,129 voting to approve, 56.24 percent , 10,994, 43.76 percent voted no. This is the second time this year the levy received a majority of yes votes from the public, but not the 60 percent of yes votes necessary to renew the levy. According to East Pierce officials the fire department’s budget will shrink by about $3 million, or 14 per- cent of the overall budget with cuts affecting all of services including alarm response time to station staff- ing and public education programs. Fire levy defeated for a second time Election 2014 SEE JAMEYSON, PAGE 17 SEE LEVY, PAGE 3 SEE ELECTION, PAGE 15 Contest Rules on pg. 3 Hunt Turkeys the P.S. I don’t count! CONTEST

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November 12, 2014 edition of the Enumclaw Courier-Herald

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Page 1: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

By Dennis BoxEditor

The dust and dirt from the 2014 general election is nearly settled with two incumbents and one newcomer from the 31st District heading to Olympia for the 2015 legislative session in January.

SenateIn the state Senate race, Sen. Pam Roach, R-Auburn, won a

seventh term, which sets a record for women in the state Senate. She began her Olympia career in 1990, beating Mike Todd in a squeaker by 345 votes.

This election she outpolled Cathy Dahlquist, R-Enumclaw, by about 2,700 votes as of Monday on the Secretary of State’s website. Roach received 20,185 votes, 54 percent, to 17,473, 46 percent for

20% OFF In-Store labor on Computer Repair

Coupon must be present when dropping off computer.Coupon must be present when dropping off computer.

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What’s Inside Police reports..................Page 5Views...................................Page 6Church...............................Page 8Obituaries.........................Page 9

Contact Us! Main Desk

360-825-2555News .................................ext. 3Retail Ads .........................ext. 2Circulation .......................ext. 1Classifieds .................ext. 7050

Weather

Holiday Treats

The forecast for today, Wednesday, calls for mostly sunny with a high near 45 and winds of 5 mph. Rain is likely Thursday with a high near 46. Friday calls for a chance of rain. Saturday brings mostly sunny skies with a high near 50. And Sunday looks to be mostly sunny with a high of 51.

Send us your holiday treat recipes to be featured in future editions of the Courier-Herald.

Email reporter Sarah at:[email protected]

WEBSITE | Check the website for breaking news and weather updates. www.courierherald.com

Your hometown newspaper for more than 100 years!

Wednesday, November 12, 2014 | 75 cents www.courierherald.com

SEE INSIDE: Senate candidates write to constituents, page 6 . . . . New businesses open door on Plateau, page 11 . . . EHS, White River teams in postseason play, pages 12-13 . . . . Christmas tree season coming, page 19

hometown

FIND US ON FACEBOOK

We shall never forgetBy Ray Still

Staff Writer

“’For God’s sake, grab silk!’”Those are the words Plateau resi-

dent Staff Sgt. Hiram P. Jameyson heard when his B-17 was shot down near Brunswick, Germany, on March 23, 1944.

Although Jameyson died in 2002, records of his life during his 15 months of captivity in Germany exist in the form of letters to his wife Lorraine and a daily diary, which he kept hidden from his captors.

His letters and a transcribed ver-sion of his journal are available at the Enumclaw Historical Museum.

The Courier-Herald is present-ing his letters and journal entries as a tribute to Veterans Day.

Shot DownJameyson recalled his experi-

ence in vivid detail to The Courier-Herald in March 1968.

“It all began on our fourth mis-sion,” he recalled. “We were hit with flak on the way to our target

and it knocked out one engine. They got us again over the target and we had to drop out of forma-tion. We began to lose altitude and then we saw them – the German FW-190s just waiting for stragglers like us. Next thing I knew we were on fire and the flames were starting to swell over the wing gas tanks. Then – on the intercom – the last words from our pilot. ‘For God’s sake, grab silk!’”

Jameyson watched his B-17 bomber plane crash and burn while he was held aloft by his parachute. His landing was marginally better – Jameyson broke a leg, the bone protruding from his flesh as he was quickly captured by German soldiers.

Letters and diary entries“Dearest angel Lorraine,I am alive and well. I have a bro-

ken leg but am getting good treat-ment for it. Please don’t worry about me honey. Tell mother I am well. I can write 2 letters and 4 postcards a month. At present I have no return address. I was shot

down over Germany and I will have to stay here until the war is over, so have courage and wait for my return.”

Jameyson wrote this letter on March 28, 1944, five days after his plane was shot down. Jameyson wrote to his newly-wed and preg-nant wife as often as he could, optimistically sharing that he was healthy and doing well in Stalag III.

His journal revealed his situation was not always as bright as he made it seem to his wife.

“June 16 - ‘44Rather cold today, nothing of

importance, if Red Cross parcels don’t come soon, we will all die

of star-v a t i o n . Wonder if Lorraine is thinking as much of me as I think o f her.”

Food was a precious commod-ity in the camp. There were more than 1,200 American prisoners in the camp when Jameyson arrived, and the number increased by sev-eral thousand by the time the war was over. In July, more than 2400 prisoners were forced to evacuate Heidekrug to Stalag III.

By Ray StillStaff Writer

The East Pierce Fire and Rescue Maintenance and Operations Levy failed to reach the supermajority needed to pass in the Nov. 4 general election.

As of Monday the Pierce County Auditor’s website had 14,129 voting to approve, 56.24 percent , 10,994, 43.76 percent voted no.

This is the second time this year

the levy received a majority of yes votes from the public, but not the 60 percent of yes votes necessary to renew the levy.

According to East Pierce officials the fire department’s budget will shrink by about $3 million, or 14 per-cent of the overall budget with cuts affecting all of services including alarm response time to station staff-ing and public education programs.

Fire levy defeated for a second time

Election 2014SEE JAMEYSON, PAGE 17

SEE LEVY, PAGE 3SEE ELECTION, PAGE 15

Contest Rules on pg. 3

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Page 2: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 2 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

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www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 3

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Now Accepting Your…

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Mail or drop off your letter to Santa Claus. It will be sent off to the North Pole courtesy of The Courier-Herald. Our address is: Courier-Herald,1627 Cole St, Enumclaw, WA 98022. Attn: Dear Santa.

According to Fire and Rescue’s 2013 annual report, total 911 calls to the department have been on the rise since 2009. In 2009, East Pierce Fire and Rescue had more than 7,200 calls. In 2013, the department had more than 8,500. Most of those calls, 74 percent, were for medi-cal emergencies and motor vehicle crashes. Only 4 percent of calls in 2013 were fire related.

Recent levy historyDuring the August primaries,

the levy included funds to hire 12 new firefighters and it would have raised an average of $4.8 million per year between 2015 and 2018.

“The levy would have allowed the fire district to maintain the current level of fire, rescue and emergency medical services,” said East Pierce Fire Chief Jerry E. Thorson. “It also would have allowed the district to

increase staffing for improved fire-fighter safety and efficiency.”

Thorson said hiring 12 new firefighters would have let East Pierce Fire and Rescue maintain standards set by the National Fire Prevention Association code 1710, which lays out how quickly stations should respond to alarms, prepare for the emergency, and travel to the scene.

The levy failed in August with 55.8 percent yes votes and 44.2 no votes.

When the levy failed, Thorson said it was because the public didn’t support increasing staff and adding a new tax level.

For the November general elec-tion, East Pierce Fire and Rescue removed the funds for the 12 new firefighters from the levy. This effectively cut the levy back to the levels voters approved two years ago, meaning that if voters passed the levy during the general election, tax levels would not have increased.

The levy would have raised an average of $3.3 million a year for the next four years.

Fire and Rescue hoped that by taking out those funds and leaving the levy at the same level it has been at for several years, voters could justify renewing the levy.

“We thought it would pass because we didn’t add any cost to (the levy),” said Fire Commissioner chair Dale Mitchell. “We just changed it from a two-year levy to a four-year levy. But sometimes these things happen.”

What will get cut?The fire commissioners will

decide what will be cut from the Fire and Rescue budget by November 18.

Thorson said without the levy, the budget has been cut by more than $3 million dollars, or 14 per-cent of the budget.

Just under 85 percent of last year’s total budget went to person-

nel costs, according to East Pierce’s 2013 annual report. 11 percent of the budget was spent on supplies and public services, 4 percent on gov-ernmental agreements like dispatch agency fees, and about half a percent went to capital leases and debt.

At the same time, nearly 83 percent of Fire and Rescue’s rev-enue comes from property taxes and the levy, according the 2013 annual report. Just over 9 percent came from emergency aid fees, and almost 8 percent comes from grants and surplus sales.

With the department’s major revenue stream cut, and with most of the budget allotted to personnel, Mitchell said that the department has limited options for what pro-grams will be cut for next year’s budget.

“We are looking at bare essen-tials all the way through,” Mitchell said. The commissioners are look-ing at cutting public education pro-grams like CPR training and Life

and Safety Clowns program.Commissioners are also looking

at what the department calls “roll-ing brownouts,” which means that different fire stations will be closed on specific days, or only be open for part of the day, to reduce staffing and overtime.

“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.”

Finally, the commissioners have to look at personnel.

“The last thing we want to do is lay anyone off,” said Mitchell. Instead, he explained that several open positions, like the assistant chief position and even volunteer positions, will remain unfilled for the time being.

LEVY FROM 1

Page 4: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

By Kevin HansonSenior Writer

A program that brings much-needed services to Enumclaw women and their young children has apparently been saved.

A decreasing flow of dol-lars to the Women, Infants and Children program had prompted talk of closures throughout King County, but an effort to build politi-cal coalitions and secure nontraditional funding looks to have paid off.

The city of Enumclaw is part of the mix, agree-ing to contribute $10,000 during the next two years. Nothing is final until all the political entities involved pass their municipal bud-gets in December, but all appearances are that WIC is on solid footing at least through 2016.

A bit of historyBudget troubles prompt-

ed Public Health – Seattle and King County to announce the planned closure of several offices, including the Auburn

Health Clinic. Enumclaw’s WIC clinic is a satellite operation of the Auburn office and would have dis-appeared with the Auburn closure. That’s also true of a clinic maintained on the Muckleshoot Indian Reservation.

The proposed closures would have been effective with the end of 2014.

Opponents immediately began howling, bemoaning the prospect of life without WIC in their communities. The Auburn staff provides maternity services, nutri-tion programs and family planning services to 11,000 clients annually in Auburn, Enumclaw and on the res-ervation, 97 percent of whom live below the federal poverty line.

The numbers aren’t inconsequential, it was noted, as nearly half the children born in Enumclaw receive WIC services.

A plan is hatchedThe weeks of coalition

building, pleading and prodding paid off.

It was Nov. 5 when King

County Executive Dow Constantine traveled to Auburn for a press confer-ence and announced plans had come together to keep the Auburn WIC office open during 2015 and 2016. That meant somewhere in excess of $500,000 had been scraped together by a handful of willing partners.

At the time of the Nov. 5 announcement, the fund-ing plan looked like this:

• The City of Auburn: $220,000

• The Muckleshoot Indian Tribe: $150,000

• Group Health: $100,000• Orion Industries (an

Auburn-area metal manu-facturer for aerospace, defense and automotive industries): $40,000

• The City of Algona: $10,000

• The City of Pacific: $10,000

• The Valley Regional Fire Authority: $10,000

Enumclaw enters the picture

Just a day after the Auburn announcement,

the movement to save the area clinics took another positive turn as Enumclaw announced it would con-tribute $5,000 in 2015 and another $5,000 in 2016.

“The financial collabora-tion amongst so many com-munities speaks volumes as to the value the WIC pro-gram offers and I’m happy that Enumclaw is part of it,” Mayor Liz Reynolds said. “This goes to show that when we work together we can move mountains.”

Contributing to the WIC effort isn’t without some local sacrifice. City Administration and mem-bers of the Enumclaw City Council are plowing through a difficult budget season of their own, one in which property taxes and utility rates will be raised to help make financial ends meet.

The council historically funds a handful of chari-table organizations and this year kept a watchful eye on how much was to be handed out. The $5,000 contribution for the WIC office meant there was less to spread among some tra-ditionally-funded service groups.

Page 4 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

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Communities rally, save WICBy Ray Still

Staff Writer

The Green Door opened for business last week, giv-ing the city of Buckley two marijuana stores.

Mr. Bill’s is the other recreational marijuana business in Buckley.

Buckley remains the only city on the Plateau to zone for marijuana retail shops.

The Green Door had its soft opening Friday, letting customers who heard of the opening by word of mouth to check out their wares.

The first hour of profits made by the store were donated back to the city of Buckley, said owner Colleen Morehouse, because the city was so supportive in help-ing her open the store.

“The council welcomed me with open arms,” Morehouse said, “and everybody has been really sup-portive and I wanted to say thank you.”

Richard Lacriox, one of the store’s employees, said one of their goals is education about marijuana.

“We live in a very progressive time right now,” Lacroix said. “I believe that our purpose here, outside of being a retail store, is to educate the public.”

One of the ways The Green Door attempts to aid their customers is by making sure customers know exactly how much tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabi-diol (CBD) are in their products.

THC is the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, and is the ingredient which is typical for getting users high.

CBD is not psychoactive, and according to Lacriox, can help relieve pain and has more medical purposes than THC.

Second weed retailer opens

SEE GREEN DOOR, PAGE 14

Page 5: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

ENUMCLAWTO THE HOSPITAL: Officers were

told the afternoon of Nov. 6 of an assault that had just occurred at a Griffin Avenue location. The victim was transported to the hospital. A suspect was found in a vehicle, arrested and booked for assault/domestic violence and violation of a no-contact order.

CAN’T SELL: Police were told Nov. 6 of someone going door-to-door in the McHugh Avenue area, asking residents if they had received their newspaper. If no one answered the door, the person would walked around the house. Police made con-tact and determined it was a solici-tor attempting to sell newspaper subscriptions. He was told of a city ordinance prohibiting such activity agreed to halt his sales efforts.

DOMESTIC ASSAULT: Police responded the afternoon of Nov. 5 to a Cole Street address where a man was arrested for assault/domestic violence.

VEHICLE MOVED: Police took an anonymous complaint Nov. 5 of a vehicle parked illegally on Carbon Ridge Street. They found an old-er-model truck that had not been moved for a month; it had expired tabs and a flat tire and was parked on the wrong side of the street, partially on the sidewalk. It was impounded.

SEVERAL CHARGES: Police responded at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 30 to a Pioneer Street residence after hear-ing of a prowler in the home. They contacted a female suspect who

was taken into custody for theft, possession of stolen property and drug violations. She was taken to the police station for booking.

VEHICLE PROWLS: A cell phone was taken from a purse inside a vehicle parked at a Lafromboise Street address Oct. 30. On Oct. 31, items were taken from a vehicle parked at a state Route 410 location. Also on the 31st, an iPod was taken from a vehicle, on SR 410.

SMOKE IN HOME: Police offi-cers responded the afternoon of Oct. 30, along with firefighters, to a Porter Street residence. There was smoke in the home, which firefight-ers attributed to a malfunctioning furnace.

GUNSHOTS: Police checked the area around Sunrise Elementary School the afternoon of Oct. 29 after taking a report of gunshots heard in the vicinity. It was determined the shots came from property north of the school; it was outside city juris-diction, so King County authorities were notified.

SHOPLIFTING: A shoplifting incident at a city grocery store was reported the evening of Oct. 29. A vehicle was located and stopped. A suspect was taken into custody and booked for theft, the vehicle was impounded and the stolen items were returned to the store.

EXPLOSION HEARD: Police were told Oct. 28 of a single gunshot heard in the Mountain Meadows mobile home park. An officer responded and located a subject who admitted to setting off an explosion using dry ice. The individual agreed to halt the

explosive activity.COURT ARREST: A person

attending Enumclaw Municipal Court the afternoon of Oct. 28 was arrested due to an outstanding war-rant. The individual was turned over to Auburn authorities.

STOLEN VEHICLE: Police recov-ered a stolen vehicle Oct. 28 at a local impound lot. The vehicle had been impounded from Lake Tapps by Pierce County authorities; once at the Enumclaw location, it was found to have been stolen from Puyallup.

ONE ARRESTED: Police took a second-hand report Oct. 27 regard-ing a possible domestic incident. Officers responded to a Washington Avenue address and contacted both parties involved. It was determined no crime had been committed, but the man involved was taken into custody on an unrelated arrest war-rant. He was transported to the Kent city jail.

NO PROBLEM: Police were told Oct. 27 of two vehicles parked at a Semanski Street address, the scene of a fire than burned a structure earlier in the week. An officer made contact and determined it was sim-ply insurance adjusters at work.

BUCKLEYARREST WARRANTS: On Nov. 5,

Buckley officers were dispatched to Carbonado where three individuals were working on a vehicle. It was discovered two of the three were wanted on arrest warrants; they were arrested and booked into the county jail.

SURRENDER: An officer was sent Nov. 3 to a Division Street location, where a juvenile wished to surren-der to police due to an outstanding warrant for parole violation. The

juvenile was transported to Remann Hall in Tacoma for booing.

HANDGUN TAKEN: A Cottage Street resident notified police Nov. 1, stating a .38 caliber revolver had been taken from the center console of a truck parked in the alley behind his home. There were no signs of forced entry. The incident was for-ward for investigation.

TWO-CAR CRASH: Officers were dispatched the evening of Oct. 31 to a state Route 410 location and a reported three-car accident. It was determined that only two were involved and that a Buckley man had pulled out in front of an Enumclaw driver, causing the collision. Neither driver was impaired or injured, but both vehicles had to be towed from the scene. The Buckley driver was cited for failing to stop/yield at an intersection.

WASHINGTON STATE PATROL

TWO CHARGES: The violator was stopped Oct. 31 for traveling 78 mph in a 50 mph zone on state Route 164 at mile post 8. A check through Department of Licensing showed the driver had a suspended license and an outstanding warrant from the city of Kent. He was cited for speeding and driving with a sus-pended license and was booked at the Kent jail.

DUI, POSSESSION: A motor-ist was seen weaving on road and speeding on SR 410 near the Enumclaw Golf Course Oct. 30. Five young occupants, including the driver, were detained after a trooper recognized a strong smell of mari-juana. The 18-year-old driver was arrested for driving under the influ-ence and possession of marijuana by

a person under the age of 21. The other four occupants were released at the scene or to their parents.

CRASH ON 169: A trooper responded the morning of Oct. 29 to a crash on SR 169 at Southeast 416th. The driver responsible for the accident was cited for speed-ing and stated he was reaching for his energy drink before the colli-sion. The victim was transported to St. Elizabeth Hospital; she was

cited for driving with a suspended license and told of a warrant that she was unaware of. The damaged and undrivable car was pushed to the shoulder to open the road before the tow truck arrived.

CITED THREE TIMES: A woman was stopped for failure to yield while turning on SR 169 at Kibler Street Oct. 29. She received three citations: driv-ing with a suspended license, no child restraint and no insurance.

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 5

POLICE BLOTTER

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Tuesday, Nov. 25th, 4:00 pmClassified Line Ads Deadline:

Monday, Dec. 1st, Noon

Program Rate Points Fees % Down APR

Lenders, to participate in this feature caLL Bankrate.com @ 800-509-4636

Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 11/3/14. © 2014 Bankrate, Inc. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). “Call for Rates” means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $435,000. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. Bankrate, Inc. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, Inc. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $417,000, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms – ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To appear in This Table, call 800-509-4636. To reporT any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. • http://heraldnet.interest.com

WA, South King County

Bankrate Mortgage Guide

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Here’s what the monthly loan payment would be on a home mortgage loan using the following

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1 yr ARM5/1 ARM15 yr fixed30 yr fixed

3.11%3.17%3.27%4.10%

$705.47$710.87

$1,161.01$797.28

Monthly PaymentRateLoan Program$165,000 loan amount

30 yr jumbo 4.11% $2,104.44Monthly PaymentRateLoan Program

$435,000 loan amount

Source: Bankrate.com 2014

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Page 6: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

My hero made an Ebola presentation in front of a group of military veterans the other evening. I sat in the crowd and watched in awe at her poise and expertise. She continually surprises and amazes me. One of the attend-ees seemed to read my mind, also calling her “a hero.” I couldn’t agree more.

After an hour or so of Q&A, I watched wordlessly as the vets gave my hero praise and I carried her purse and the “Certificate of Thanks” to our car. It occurred to me that

I’m among the dot-ing husband-to-be’s in today’s America. And that I couldn’t be prouder of that fact.

I’m not exactly Eric the Riveter, as I’ve never been one who felt the need to prove

my manhood, in large part because I so often fail in the old fashion principles — being the breadwinner (Ha, I’m a journalist), the smart one (see first parenthetical) or the athletic one (she finished a Ragnar race; I can finish a Digiorno by myself). Sometimes she kills the spiders.

But I have some positive attributes – I can reach the crock pot from the top cupboard in the kitchen, I wear the backpack during hikes, I drive on all our road trips and I am always there to support her in her career choices and

Our Corner

Eric MandelReporter

I have to agree, the woman’s a hero

ViewsThe Enumclaw Courier-Herald • Page 6 Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • www.courierherald.com

Question of the WeekIs it irritating to see Christmas commercials on TV in late October?To vote in this week’s poll, see www.courierherald.com

LAST WEEK: Do you support “death

with dignity,” as it played out in Oregon

over the weekend?

Yes: 78.3% No: 21.7%

There were only a few surprises in last week’s elec-tions. The out-come turned out to be pretty much what I expected: the Republicans took control of the Senate, the state Republicans became the majority in the Senate leg-islature, Dave Reichert got re-elected to the House of Representatives, and the state voter turnout hovered near 40 percent, about average for mid-

term elections.There were a

few surprises: Pam Roach’s re-elec-tion, the passage of gun background Initiative 594 and the uncertain fate of reducing class size Initiative 1351.

It was a given that the election between Pam Roach and Cathy Dahlquist was going to be bloody. But most of the blood was shed by Sen. Roach just before the primaries when her opponents

alleged she had taken advantage of her expense vouchers and had to pay back several thousand dollars to the state for mileage to her Auburn post office box which she used for both private and political mail.

That event may have helped Cathy Dahlquist in the primary vote, but the kickback card was not played again for the general election. That was a surprise. Either it indicates many voters have very short memo-ries or they didn’t care, or many of the voters may never have been

Election brought few surprisesIn Focus

Rich ElfersColumnist

SEE ELFERS, PAGE 10

SEE CORNER, PAGE 27

1627 Cole Street, Enumclaw, WA 98022360-825-2555 • Fax: 360-825-0824

Volume 115 • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • No. 9

E-mail: [email protected] Web site: www.courierherald.com

Editor: Dennis [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5050

Senior Reporter: Kevin Hanson [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5052

Reporters:Sarah Wehmann [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5060Ray [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5058

Advertising Sales:Martha Boston [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 3052Dottie Bergstresser [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 3054

Production Staff: Kathy McCauley, 360-825-2555 ext. 4050Brandy Pickering 360-825-2555 ext. [email protected]

Classified Advertising and Office Coordinator:Jennifer Tribbett [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 2050

Advertising Sales Manager: Scott [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 1050

By Bill ShawRegional publisher, Sound Publishing

A recent Issaquah¬≠-Sammamish Reporter’s “police blotter” noted that the Issaquah police responded to a report of a vehicle being driven erratically. An officer quickly found the car parked in a Safeway parking lot. The driver was fast asleep. When woken up and interviewed, the driver said he had been working almost 72 hours straight before he got behind the wheel of his car to go home.

While in line at the bank one day, I heard a conversation between a customer and a bank teller. The

customer told of his recent extreme sports bike trip in the Cascades. He then casually said he had been up for more than 24 hours before he drove back over the pass to his home in Bellevue. The somewhat macho tone of the biker was as if driving while tired was also part of his extreme sport.

And the teller was impressed.A coworker works a second job

in addition to her “day job.” She mentioned that many times each week she gets only four hours of sleep each night. When she drives home from her “moonlighting” job at 2 or 3 in the morning, she is usu-ally very tired. But she said “it is a straight line on the freeway” and

she knows the way home – even when exhausted.

In 2006, our then 17-year-old daughter Mora nearly died from multiple fractures and traumatic brain injury injuries caused by a driver who fell asleep at the wheel of a car. Several months after the a–ccident, Mora was still in recovery and rehabilitation. During that time, we talked with the nurses and caregivers about what caused Mora’s injuries. A few of the nurses said they regularly work double shif ts each week and drive home exhausted after being up nearly 24 hours. Even

Keep fighting drowsy driving

SEE DROWSY, PAGE 7

Thanks for another term in SenateFirst, I want to thank the voters for sending me

back to Olympia with a 2,200 vote lead. That is tremendous! I am honored and pledge continued hard work.

This election came down to successfully appeal-ing to a broad spectrum of voters and having a strong record of working with people in the district.

My campaign was supported by all groups: busi-ness, labor, farmers, law enforcement, fishers, nurs-es, tribes, teachers, local elected officials, and more.

Rated “Most Effective” by the Sunlight Foundation, I campaigned on effectiveness, and to be effective you must work well with others. This study and my supporters debunked the assertions of my two opponents, Cathy Dahlquist (R) and Chris Hurst (D), that I somehow do not get along with others. That is untrue!

The odd couple pooled their funds to outspend me. They attacked me, disparaged me, and lied about me. But, they could not make their case which was that their personal friendship should mean more than voting records and community service.

I am glad we agree otherwise.Pam Roach

Candidates have final sayIt was an honor to serve the district

It has been an honor to serve the people of the 31st Legislative District for the last four years as your state rep-resentative.

I arrived in Olympia in January of 2011, eager to make improvements in education policy and funding. I am proud to have been at the negotiation table that agreed to invest-ing more than $1 billion in our schools without new taxes. I was bestowed the title of “Legislator of the Year” by Law Enforcement for legislation I sponsored that protected those that protect us. I kept services intact that assist the most vulnerable among us. I had the highest voting record with AWB to help businesses succeed. Most of all, I was privileged to work with some amazing colleagues and staff members.

Folks, you are in good hands, there are a lot of smart and caring people in Olympia. I also realized that my ideas are not always the best ideas, both Republicans and Democrats have wonderful ideas and brilliant solutions for our state!

This year I made the decision to offer the voters an expe-rienced and qualified choice for the Senate. I have conceded the election to my opponent, Pam Roach. She ran a tough campaign and I have congratulated her.

It has been a real honor to serve you and I thank you for giving me the opportunity to do something I have truly loved!

Cathy Dahlquist

Page 7: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Night of food, fun to benefit Buckley cancer survivor

The public is invited to a benefit for Buckley resident Heather Milligan, a can-cer survivor and mother of three who is attempting to pay her medical bills.

The event is planned for Saturday, Nov. 15, at the Buckley Eagles. Doors will open at 4, dinner begins at 5 and a live auction gets rolling at 7 p.m. There also will be live music and raffles.

Tickets are $10 each or $20 for a family of four and include a dinner buffet, pasta bar and dessert buffet.

Contributions also can be made to a “fund me” account at: gofundme.com/heathermilligan.

The Eagles hall is at 29021 state Route 410 in Buckley.

You may have seen him around town. I mean, he tends to stand out from the crowd, perhaps not as much as some other eccentrics like, say, the Wizard, but he’s definitely a unique presence.

For one thing, he has long, unruly, wiry eye-brows that look like they’ve been zapped by an electric current. He’s as bald as I am, but doesn’t shave his head because he simply doesn’t have time to pursue such vain grooming practices. His clothing is also a bit unusual; that is, he prefers loose, cotton attire and has never felt comfort-able in jeans, especially fashionably tight, faded jeans. He didn’t even wear jeans in high school or during his undergraduate days at Washington State University, where I first met him.

His name is Ron Jorgensen and he’s one of the oldest friends I have. After we graduated from Cougarville, I went in the

Army but Ron continued his studies at Harvard, where he met some fas-cinating professors who had a profound inf luence on him. Still, he aban-doned the peaceful, hal-lowed, Ivy League air for the rebellion festering in the polluted streets of New York’s Greenwich Village. After that, one thing led to another and he ended up in India, where he spent eight years on a Pondicherry ash-ram studying the works and disciplines of Sri Aurobinda’s yoga.

Ron might well be the most gifted linguist I’ve ever met. His command of the English language, whether scripted or ver-bal, simply blows me away.

That being the case, it’s not surprising to learn that he writes poetry. Though I don’t think Ron is nearly as good as Pound, Eliot or Ginsberg – nor is he, respectively, as savage, as depressing, or as stoned – I still suspect he’s a really fine poet.

For approximately 45 years, Ron has taught tai chi and yoga and his classes have proven popu-lar enough to earn him a decent living – and any time you earn a liv-ing doing what you love, half the battle is won. He promotes tai chi to relieve stress and culti-vate a “cosmic harmony” and yoga to integrate all aspects of your being and achieve your “full poten-tial, beyond being just human.” (Sounds like good stuff, huh?)

He teaches the “Jorgensen” style of tai chi, which is not, in the least, meant to be sarcas-tic. His condensed routine has fewer moves and dif-

ferent moves than other styles and yet it accom-plishes much more. He’s recently innovated certain back-bending forms that

eventually – once they become a bit more popu-lar – might revolutionize the entire field.

If you’re like to take

one of his classes or learn more about the subject, contact him at [email protected] or phone him at 360-825-3413.

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 7

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in front of our daughter, they freely said they did not want any increased drowsy driving penalties, because they said care-givers were often the worst offenders.

Experts say that after 24 hours without sleep, a driver is as impaired as if he or she were over the legal limit for alcohol. Not only every driver in our state, but our legisla-tors and our judges need to understand the wide-spread seriousness of drowsy driving and how many people are injured and killed by this pan-demic each year. Their attitudes about drowsy driving need to change.

But like attitudes about drunk driving 30 years ago, like texting while

driving and distracted driving today, the only thing to really change mindsets and habits toward getting behind the wheel of a car when you have not slept for 20 or more hours is swift and sure penalties.

We urge our legislators to put aside bickering of partisan politics and to beef up Washington’s reckless driving penal-ties if a driver injures or kills someone after delib-erately getting behind the wheel of a car after being awake more than 20 hours. Or, like New Jersey’s “Maggie’s Law,” to find the vision and the guts to pass a spe-cific drowsy driving law in Washington state.

Yes, in some cases, an accident caused by a driv-er who fell asleep at the

wheel may be harder to prove than drunk driving. But drowsy driving kills, injures and shatters lives just the same. Just ask the survivors. Ask the fam-ily and friends of those lost or injured last month or last year. Just ask our daughter.

Washington state’s Drowsy Driving Pre-vention Week was Nov. 2-9. We urge all drivers to be aware of their level of fatigue or alertness before they get behind the wheel of a car, during the coming busy holiday season and throughout the year.

The author is publish-er of Sound Publishing newspapers in Bellevue, I s sa qu a h- S amm ami sh , Mercer Island and Snoqualmie.

DROWSY FROM 6

Turning out poetry and promoting tai chiWally’s World

Wally DuChateauColumnist

All New at:Today’s News...Today & Every Day!

www.courierherald.com

Page 8: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

A few months ago I suggested we have access to a spiritual treasure chest. I was referring to gifts we find because of our faith. At the time, we looked inside and found resilience.

This time we find a new treasure: strength and energy. Looking at most of our hectic schedules and commitments, who couldn’t use more energy? A good diet and a fit-ness routine help our bodies to function

well physically. We also need inner strength to function well. A mean-ingful relationship with God can give us a dif-ferent kind of energy and staying power: spiritual strength.

There is a special power that only God can provide. To find that, we need to study the Scriptures, pray regularly and be still before God. Spiritual energy comes from this kind of “workout.” Another important part of this “workout” is letting go. We can-not claim this energy simply by willing it;

we have to be receptive to what God has to give. It is a matter of trust.

There is a vastness to this mystery we call God. It is an inexhaust-ible source of energy that goes beyond any kind of reserves we may possess. There is a paradox in this.

We can tap into this energy, but only by acknowledging our personal weakness. We cannot receive a gift without opening our arms to grasp it. Likewise, we cannot receive a portion of God’s energy without being willing to ask for it and to perse-

vere in the “workout” that is required to strengthen our connection to God.

This kind of energy is a byproduct of faith. When you tap into faith, faith gives you a new perspective. Life cannot be dull, ordinary or otherwise devoid of meaning if you develop faith.

Faith makes everything better. It gives us a new appreciation for our work, our rela-tionships and our immediate surround-ings. We go beyond just facing the day to anticipation of the good things that life can bring. And when things seem to be falling apart, faith gets us through with a much better attitude. It is the staying power of God who chooses to sustain us.

Another look into the spiritual treasure chestChurch Corner

Cindy EhlkeCalvary Presbyterian Church

Page 8 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

1164708

CHURCH OF C H R I S T

at Kibler Avenue

Sunday Bible Classes 9:45 a.m.

Sunday Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.

Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m.

Wednesday Bible Classes 7:00 p.m.

Ministers: Jim Miller Anthony Wilson

2627 Kibler Avenue Enumclaw, WA 98022

(360) 825-5903 www.kiblerchurchofchrist.org

Speaking the Truth in Love

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FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST(Christian Science)

1752 Wells Street, Enumclaw(360) 825-5300

Sunday Service ............10:00amSunday School ............10:00amWednesday Meeting .........7:30 pm

READING ROOM 1752 Wells Street, Enumclaw

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Sacred Heart Catholic Church

sacredheartenumclaw.org1614 Farrelly Street, Enumclaw

360-825-3759

Rev. Anthony K. A. DavisSaturday Mass - 5:00 pm

Sunday Masses8:00 am & 10:00 am

1:00 pm Misa en Español

“Come find a place in His heart.”

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Enumclaw Church of ChristNow Meeting at 26007 SE 425th, Enumclaw WA 98022

SUNDAY WORSHIP:

WEDNESDAY WORSHIP:

Morning Bible Classes .............9:30 a.m.Morning Worship ....................10:30 a.m.Evening Worship .......................6:30 p.m.Evening Bible Classes ..............7:00p.m.

Come be our welcome guest! (360) 825-2182

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Saturday Contemporary Worship ~ 7pm Sunday Traditional Worship ~ 9am

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Calvary Presbyterian Church “A Joyful Family Centered in Christ”

1725 Porter St., Enumclaw 360-825-3820

www.calvarypreschurch.org

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“Come find a place in His heart.”

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Our D� � a� … Always O� n

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Sunday ServicesBible Classes for all ages ......................................................................................9:30 amMorning & EveningWorship ............................................................11:00 am & 6 pm Children’s Church ...............................................................................................11:00 am

Wednesday ServicesBible Studies ......................................................................................................... 6:30 pm

3466 Porter • (360)825-1111 • www.firstbaptistch1.qwestoffice.netemail:[email protected]

First Baptist ChurchEnumclaw

The Friendliest Church in Town!Celebrate the Lord with US!

Pastor: James Dunn, Ph.D.Worship Leader: Jenny Hammond

Minister of Education: Sharon GoodspendChildren’s Church Director: Monica Ryan

First Baptist Church

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HERBERT WARDHerbert Frederick Ward died

Nov. 3, 2014, at the age of 91.He was born Sept. 18, 1923, in

Port Angeles Wash., to Francis H. and Helen Ward. His youth was spent in Forks, Dungeness, Port Angeles and Friday Harbor, Wash. He served in the Army Air Corp during World War II, was educated

at the University of Washington as an electrical engineer and worked for the General Services Administration, HEW, and Sparling and Associates of Seattle. He enjoyed restoring his 1935 Ford pickup, reading, hav-ing breakfast at The Kitchen, play-ing cribbage, working crossword puzzles, taking naps and visiting

Ireland. He is survived by sons Mark (Jill)

of Gaston, Ore., and David (Kelley) of Enumclaw, and by friend Marilyn Van Wieringen of Enumclaw. He was preceded in death by his wife of 48 years, Cynthia, and their son Douglas.

In lieu of f lowers, memorials may be made to The Millionaire Club Charity, 2515 Western Ave., Seattle, 98121; the Enumclaw Food Bank; or to a charity of the donor’s choice.

A memorial reception will

take place in the near future and announced in The Courier-Herald.

EDITH EVANSEnumclaw resi-

dent Edith Evans died Nov. 2, 2014, at the age of 92. She had lived in this area 28 years.

She was born Jan. 18, 1922, in Egan, S.D., to

OBITUARIES

Herbert Ward

SEE OBITUARIES, PAGE 9

Edith Evans

Page 9: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Elinor Zezelia (Martinson) and William Carl White. On Dec. 18, 1948, she mar-

ried Ronald D. Evans in Rapid City, S.D. She graduated from Asbury University in Wilmore, Ken., and received a mas-ter of arts in communications from the University of South Dakota in Vermillion, S.D. She taught at Agar High School, Onida High School and Sully Buttes High School, all in South Dakota. While teaching school she was a homemaker and lived on a farm in rural Sully County. She and her husband moved to Washington state in 1985 and to Enumclaw in 1986. She was an active mem-ber of Hope Lutheran Church.

She is survived by husband Ronald D. Evans of Enumclaw; sons Randal Evans (Harriet) of Enumclaw, Monte Evans of Mill Creek, Wash., Thomas Evans (Sue) of Buffalo, Mo., Mark Evans (Dolores) of Kent, Wash., and Russel Evans of Silverdale, Wash; eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by daughter Meredith Reinhardt in August 2012.

A memorial service will begin at 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22, at Hope Lutheran Church in Enumclaw.

Remembrances may be made to Hope Lutheran Church, 1316 Garfield St., Enumclaw, 98022.

Arrangements are by Weeks’ Enumclaw Funeral Home. All may sign the online guest book at www.weeksfuneralhomes.com.

MARILYN FAYMarilyn Ruth Fay died

Nov. 3, 2014, in Buckley. She was 83.

She was born Nov. 18, 1938, in Modesto, Calif., to the late William and Bernice Beare. She Graduated from Ashland High school in 1948 and went on to graduate from Emanuel School of Nursing in Portland, Ore. She married Arnold Fay on March 19, 1955, in Portland and they had three children together. After 25 years working as a registered nurse at Auburn General Hospital, she retired to take time to love and raise her grandchildren. She enjoyed traveling and spending time with her fam-ily.

She is survived by her husband of 59 years, Arnold Fay; daughter Monna Connell and husband Thomas of Buckley; sons William Fay and wife Nancy of Fox Island, Wash., and Edward Fay and wife Pamela of Buckley; brother John Beare of Kiezer, Ore.; sisters Alice Lee of Kiezer and Carol Moberly of Coos Bay, Ore.; three grandchildren and four great-grandchil-dren.

She was preceded in death by brothers Edward and James Beare,

Visitation was from 5 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 8, at Weeks’ Funeral Home in Buckley. A funeral service took place at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9, at Living Hope Community Church in Bonney Lake. Burial was at 11:15 a.m. Monday, Nov. 10, at Tahoma National Cemetery.

Memorials may be made to Living Hope Community Church Mission Fund, 7410 Myers Rd. E., Bonney Lake, 98391.

GLORIA CAWLEYGloria Fern Wooden Cawley, 87, died

Nov. 4, 2014.She was born Nov. 25, 1926, in Portland,

Ore., was raised in Challis, Idaho, and moved to Vancouver, Wash., in 1940. She met future husband Glen Cawley in 1940 while in eighth grade and graduated in 1945 from Battleground High School. She worked in the Vancouver ship yard during World War II. She and her husband moved to Buckley in 1965 to start the Cawley South Prairie Airport. She began her career in banking in 1975 and retired in 1996. She loved to cook and entertain.

Survivors include husband Glen Cawley of Buckley; son Jay M. Cawley of Livingston, Idaho; daughter Jody M. Cawley and part-ner Reggie Lamb of Buckley; daughters-in-law Carol Cawley and Cheri Cawley; eight grandchildren and four great-grandchil-dren.

She was preceded in death by sons John P. Cawley and James R. Cawley.

A memorial service is planned for Saturday, Nov. at Cedar Community Church in Buckley.

Memorials are suggested to the Puget Sound Antique Aircraft Club, Jim Cawley Memorial young pilot scholarship, P.O. Box 731369, Puyallup, Wash. 98373.

TWILA GALLATINTwila Jeanne Gallatin

died peacefully on Sept. 21, 2014, in Lordstown, Ohio. She was 89.

She was born May 16, 1925, in Hobart, Indiana. She was a homemaker who had a passion for traveling with her hus-band and spending win-ters in Florida. She enjoyed camping, cook-ing, baking and decorating for the holidays. She was a member of Lordstown Christian Church where she served as treasurer and held Sunday School class dinners. She was a Blue Star Mother, a Girl Scout leader and the Boy Scouts committee chairwoman.

She is survived by husband Roy R. Gallatin whom she married on July 18, 1945; children Christie (the late Tom) Russell of Salem, Ohio, Randy (Delaura) Gallatin of Enumclaw, Cliff (Loree) Gallatin of Columbus, Ohio, Curt (Patricia) Gallatin of Lake Placid, Fla., and Corey (Sylvie) Gallatin of Clarksfield, Ohio; 21 grandchil-dren and 11 great- grandchildren.

JACK WARRENJack Edward Warren

died peacefully on Nov. 8, 2014.

He was born Nov. 13, 1931, to the late Fred and Mamie Warren. He was raised in Spokane, Wash., and graduated from John R. Rogers High School in 1948. After gradua-tion he joined the U.S. Marines Reserve and received an honorable discharge from the USMCR. Wanting to see the world, he joined the Navy on Dec. 7, 1948. He served on the USS Mt. McKinley for a short time but most of his duty was spent on the USS Cavalier APA-37. His most memorable experience while in the Navy was hav-ing contact with Gen. MacArthur during the Korean Conflict. After his honorable discharge in 1952, he met and married Lorraine Pulling and went to work for Kaiser Aluminum in Spokane. In 1958, he was hired as a safety supervisor for The

Boeing Company. This prompted a fam-ily move to Enumclaw. He moved to Tally Corporation in 1969 and later went to work for Jayhawks, a general merchandise retail-er in Enumclaw, where he was executive vice president. Upon retirement he opened a sporting goods specialty retail store, Lock, Stock and Barrel, also in Enumclaw.

Due to health concerns, he sold the busi-ness and concentrated on military involve-ment with the local VFW Post 1949 and the local Marine Corp League Detachment. He was instrumental in developing both the Enumclaw Veterans Memorial Park and the annual effort to honor the 32 Marines who died in a plane crash on Mount Rainier in 1946. He loved to hunt and fish and was a good shooter and sportsman. He was a proud member of the VFW community.

He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Lorraine; sons Neil and wife Kathleen and Alan and wife Debbie; daughters Tracy Bench and Sandra Warren; sister Kaye Cady; brothers-in-law Lyle Pulling and Bill Zwetzig; nine grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by brother Fred, sister Marilyn and son in-law Gary Bench.

A funeral service is planned for 9 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 13, at Calvary Presbyterian Church, 1725 Porter St. in Enumclaw. A graveside service will take place at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 13, at Tahoma National Cemetery, 18600 240th in Kent, Wash.

A celebration of his life will be at a later date.

Remembrances can be made to the Providence Hospice of Seattle Foundation, 425 Pontius Ave. N. No. 300 or www.hospiceofseattle.org; Enumclaw Veterans

Memorial Park through VFW Post 1949, 44426 244th S.E., Enumclaw, Wash. 98022; or Wounded Warriors at www.wounded-warriorproject.org/donate.

Services are by Weeks Funeral Home and all are welcome to sign the online guest book at www.weeksfuneralhomes.com.

CHRIS McKERNChris Allen McKern

died Nov. 5, 2014, follow-ing a battle with brain cancer.

He was born July 16, 1953, in Catskill, N.Y., and lived in New York, New Jersey and Florida until he joined the Air Force in 1971 and was stationed at McChord AFB. He married Eileen on June 23, 1973. They moved to Bonney Lake in 1975 to live and raise their fam-ily. He was a member of the Bonney Lake Fire Department as a volunteer for many years. He worked in lumber mills until being hired by Boeing. He loved to travel and family vacations and cruises were his joy.

He is survived by wife Eileen of Bonney Lake; brother Tim (Sheri) McKern of Shelton, Wash.; son David (Lisa) McKern of Bonney Lake; daughter Heather (Christopher) Roetting of Shelton; five grandchildren and three great-grandchil-dren.

Services are planned for 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 14, at Powers Funeral Home in Sumner. Graveside services will follow. There will be a gathering following the services at the family home, 18712 80th St. E. in Bonney Lake.

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 9

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Page 10: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 10 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

032309 (10-2014)

Call toll free 855-339-5207 (TTY: 711) 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. for more information about our Medicare Advantage plans or to register for an Event.**

*You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium.**Reservations are recommended but not required.A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 855-339-5207 (TTY: 711). Plans are available in King, Pierce, Snohomish, Spokane and Thurston counties. Premera Blue Cross is an HMO and HMO-POS plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Premera Blue Cross depends on contract renewal.Other providers also participate in our network.

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aware of the allegations in the first place. None of these options is very pleasant to think about, nor does it say much in favor of our demo-cratic electoral system.

Cathy Dahlquist knew this would be a campaign battle but softened her approach after the primary. The chief campaign strategy she used was her bipartisan alliance with Independent Democrat Rep. Chris Hurst.

Pam Roach ran a better campaign. She very effec-tively used negative ads and, at the same time, pointed out all her accomplishments during the past 20 years. She got endorsements from fellow Republican Dave Reichert, several local may-ors and, surprisingly, the unions. Pam Roach is seen as more liberal than Cathy Dahlquist.

Pam Roach’s comments of the link between state testing and teacher evaluations in The Courier-Herald newspa-per debate were a lot closer to the Washington Education Association’s than were Cathy Dahlquist’s.

The passage of Initiative 594 that closed the loophole on gun sales by requiring background checks of all purchases including those at gun shows, was a great victory for reality and rea-son. With the help of wealthy donors like Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Michael Hanauer and Michael Bloomberg, the NRA was thwarted in its attempts to push its agenda over the will of most Americans. The NRA’s death grip on the U.S. Congress has at least been loosened in a state initiative election.

I’ve always been amazed at the reaction of people when a school shooting occurs, rushing out to buy a gun because they’re afraid the “President will take their

guns from us” because of the shooting. What these people do not realize is that neither the president nor Congress has any constitutional power to do this because the right to bear arms is guaranteed by the Second Amendment. Additionally, the NRA lobby is so strong in Congress that even Democrats do not dare to challenge them lest money from the NRA be used to defeat them in the next pri-mary.

Initiative 1351 looks like it may fail, though at this writing the outcome is still in doubt. Its backers desire to ensure better education through smaller class sizes in K-12 is well-meant, but research shows that smaller class sizes are only effective in the lower grades and not so much in the higher levels.

If it passes, this initia-tive will require the hiring of 7,000 additional teachers, More classrooms will have to be constructed to house the smaller class sizes. It is projected that it will cost the State an additional $2 bil-lion/year.

The State Legislature is already struggling to fund the McCleary court decision. Passage of this Initiative will only make it more difficult to find the money, especially with a large percentage of the public demanding, “No new taxes.”

Elections always bring surprises, but this one had few. The few surprises we did see came either as a result of good political strategy and voter apathy or ignorance, the support of a wealthy few acting for the good of the majority, or hopefully, enough understanding on the part of the majority of voters to turn down an expensive and unproductive attempt to improve educa-tion. As Charles Dickens noted 155 years ago, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”

ELFERS FROM 6

By Kevin HansonSenior Writer

Businesses in downtown Enumclaw are encouraged to show off their “holiday jingle” spirit by decorating their storefronts and competing against fellow merchants.

Judges will select first-, second- and third-place winners, choosing those that best carry out the “jingle” theme. Winners will be announced

at the start of the annual Christmas parade on Dec. 6 and will receive an official “holiday jingle” trophy.

Participating businesses are encouraged to make Nov. 29 a “spar-kly” Small Business Saturday by having their storefronts decorated and remaining open until 6 p.m. so residents can shop and admire the festive decorations.

At 5 p.m. on the 29th, there will be a tree-lighting event on the front

lawn of Enumclaw City Hall, 1339 Griffin Ave. There will be holiday carolers, hot chocolate and candy canes.

Businesses have until Nov. 17 to enter the decorating contest. Entry forms have been distrib-uted and extra forms are available at The Enumclaw Courier-Herald. Completed forms should be deliv-ered to The Courier-Herald office, 1627 Cole St.

‘Jingle’ spirit is encouraged Carbonado school honoredOutstanding improvement in reading and math sus-

tained over a five-year period is the reason that 101 schools in Washington state – including Carbonado Historical School – received the 2014 School of Distinction award.

The award winners include 54 elementary schools, 22 middle/junior high schools, 17 high schools, and eight alternative schools.

The small Carbonado school was chosen for the second time in six years.

“For our school it is especially gratifying because we have high test scores and small numbers being tested each year,” Superintendent Scott Hubbard wrote in an email. “To sustain and improve for five years is a tremendous accomplishment.

“This award reinforces to our school community that we have dedicated staff members that want to ensure that all students are making steady student growth.”

The Carbonado Historical School serves kindergarten through eighth-grade students who then feed into the White River district. Presently, the school is home to 183 students being served by 12 teachers, including specialists.

Page 11: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Costco Holiday Saving at Gamblin’s

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2015 Chevy Silverado 3/4 Ton, Crew Cab

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Chevy Silverado, Tahoe, Traverse, Suburban, Equinox, Volt, Buick Enclave or Encore*Must be a Costco member to qualify. Price excludes sales tax & license, a $150 Documentary may be added to the sale price or capitalized cost.

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My Life. My Right.Crucial Considerations Before Choosing To Carry A Handgun.

23417 SE 436th, HWY 164 • Enumclaw360-802-2021

Monday, November 17th • 6:30pm-8:30pmPrepay $25 or $30 paid at the door

Situational Awareness • Avoiding Confrontations • Developing a proper mindsetEducation about self-defense law • � e importance of � rearm training

Women’s only training opportunities

A woman’s decision to carry a handgun comes with great responsibilities.Men are welcome to attend as well, but please keep in mind that the presesentation style of this seminar is geared

speci� cally for women. Contact Amy Bozell with questions: 253-332-1232.

WOMEN’S HANDGUN CLINIC

Business The Enumclaw Courier-Herald • www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • Page 11

NEW BUSINESSES ON THE PLATEAUNew shop offers appliance sales and service

American Appliance opened for business early this month, offering both sales and repair work.

Among his inventory, owner Doug Reynolds has twin mattresses starting at $99, queen sets from $399 and king sets from $499. When it comes to making repairs, the business offers a $49 in-shop diagnostic test on a customer’s appliance.

Address: 746 state Route 410, Enumclaw

Phone: 360-625-8094Website: americanappliance.orgEmail: [email protected]: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday; closed

Sunday.

Washington’s minimum wage will increase 15 cents to $9.47 an hour begin-ning Jan. 1, 2015, the Department of Labor and Industries has announced.

L&I calculates the state’s minimum wage each year at this time as required under Initiative 688, which Washington voters approved in 1998. The change reflects a 1.59 percent increase in the federal Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) over a 12-month period ending Aug. 31. The federal Bureau of Labor Statistics announced the change in the CPI in October.

The change will affect more than 67,000 workers, according to the Washington State Employment Security Department. The per hour increase will total $312 per year.

The minimum wage applies to work-ers in all industries, including agriculture, although 14- and 15-year-olds can be paid 85 percent of the adult minimum wage, or $8.05 an hour.

Washington has the highest state mini-mum wage in the nation, followed by Oregon, where the minimum wage will

increase to $9.25 – an increase of 15 cents – in 2015.

Washington and Oregon are among at least 10 states that adjust the minimum wage based on inflation and the CPI. Others include Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Ohio and Vermont.

L&I enforces the state’s wage-and-hour laws. The agency investigates all the wage-payment complaints it receives, as required by state law. Workers can file a wage com-plaint online at www.lni.wa.gov/workplac-erights/, or by calling 1-866-219-7321.

More information on Washington’s min-imum wage is available at Wages.lni.wa.gov. Employers and workers also may call 360-902-5316 or 1-866-219-7321.

Minimum wage will jump to $9.47 beginning Jan. 1

All New at:

Now You Can GetToday’s News...Today & Every Day!

www.courierherald.comFamily-owned venture evolves into Big Daddy’s

Kevin and Gina Shields were involved in barbe-cue competitions for seven years, an adventure that evolved into a catering busi-ness. Now, they have taken things to the next level and opened Big Daddy’s Family BBQ.

The family-owned-and-operated business was launched Oct. 3, offer-ing Memphis-style, wood-smoked barbecue, along with homemade side dishes. On the menu are brisket, tri-tip, ribs, chicken and pulled pork. Friday nights feature a smoked prime rib meal.

Address: 1324 Roosevelt Ave. E.Phone: 360-226-3481Website: bigdaddysfamilybbq.netEmail: [email protected]: noon to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday; noon to 7 p.m. Sunday.

For more from the local business scene, see page 14

Page 12: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

By Dennis BoxEditor

The Enumclaw girls cross country team came in 12th at the state 3A meet at Sun Willows Golf Course in Pasco.

The top runner for the Hornets was junior Samantha Engebretsen came in 20th in 19 min-

utes, 16 seconds.Coach Tod Witzel said in

a email following the meet, “The girls team ran strong, finishing 12th overall in the competition, one spot up from last year. This is particularly notable consid-ering the large number of seniors the girls team grad-

uated last year and the fact that several young members of our varsity squad have never ran in a

state-level competi-tion before.”

On the boys side junior Eric Hamel ran 72nd in 16:55.

Girls Results20. 11 Samantha Engebretsen 19:16 71. 9 Hunter Storm 20:23 74. 11 Aleea Gwerder 20:26 80. 11 Chayce Weiman 20:33 129. 12 Amanda Stenslie 21:50 139. 9 Alex Puzen 22:54 141. 10 Bryn Zeman-Witzel 23:04

Boys Results72. 11 Eric Hamel

16:55

Page 12 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

Sports

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1040 STEVENSON AVE. ENUMCLAW, WA 98022

360-825-7411

Men (and the women who care about them) are invited to an evening of food, fun, a poker run, and even a craft beer brewed and labeled just for Movember on the Plateau, courtesy of The Mint and Cole Street Brewery. Come see who’s mastered the mustache in support of men’s health!

Grow It. Show It. Support Men’s Health.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014 • 6 p.m.St. Elizabeth Hospital, Main Lobby1455 Battersby Avenue, Enumclaw

Sponsored by St. Elizabeth Hospital

Thanks to our community sponsors:

Attendees receive

a free souvenir

pint glass!

To attend: Purchase tickets online at chifranciscan.org/Health-Care-Services/Cancer-Care/Movember-on-the-Plateau or call 1 (888) 825-3227. Attendees must be 21 years of age or older. The price of $10 per ticket in advance ($15 at the door) will support funding for men’s cancer education materials and programs.

To participate in the Movember contest: Men are invited to Grow the Mo! beginning Saturday, November 1. Submit your pictures by email to [email protected] by end of day November 13. Men interested in growing a mustache for this local Movember event will find entry forms, rules and more at chifranciscan.org/Health-Care-Services/ Cancer-Care/Movember-on-the-Plateau. Prizes will be awarded for Best Mustache.

For more information, call Volunteer Services at (360) 802-8650 (Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.).

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Hornets make run at state

CROSSCOUNTRY

By Dennis BoxEditor

The Enumclaw Hornets girls soccer team came to play Saturday and battled Bonney Lake at Highline Stadium Saturday, los-ing 3-1, in the 3A district tournament.

The girls ended the season at the district tour-nament, one game from state. The game was a loser out, winner to state.

The Hornets ended the season in fourth in the South Puget Sound League 3A with a 7-7 record and 8-10 overall.

The Hornets started slowly, losing four of three of the first four, but began finding the win-ning formula after beat-ing Bonney Lake 1-0 Sept.

23.Enumclaw lost the

next game to Auburn

Mountainview, then went on to win three of the next four.

Enumclaw girls soccer ends season at the 3A district tournament

Katie Christensen, Enumclaw senior forward, heads the ball Saturday at Highline Stadium against Bonney Lake. Photo by Dennis Box

Engebretsen leads team to 12th-place

finish at 3A state meet in Pasco

Page 13: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

By Kevin HansonSenior Writer

The White River High girls claimed 12th-place honors Saturday, lining up against the state’s best dur-ing the Class 2A state cross country championships.

The 5-kilometer race was at the traditional site, Sun Willows Golf Course in Pasco, and brought togeth-er the most talented prep runners – individuals and teams – from all corners of the state.

The White River girls had qualified as a team by placing second the week before at the West Central District meet.

In Pasco, the Hornets were led by junior Maddie Moser, who placed 60th in the field of 141 with a clocking of 20 min-utes, 35.04 seconds. Rounding out the team were senor Brenna Liebel, 73rd, 20:47.37; sopho-more Courtney Gelmini, 86th, 21:01.67; Camryn Berryhill, 94th, 21:09.15;

senior Jenna Guenthner, 108th, 21:40.17; senior Kacy Coyle, 118th, 21:57.96; and freshman Hannah Swettenam, 119th, 22:00.85.

By Kevin HansonSenior Writer

Only 16 teams remain in the hunt for the Class 2A state volleyball champion-ship and the White River Hornets find themselves in the elite field.

Under the direction of first-year coach Lina Randall, the Hornets earned their state trip

by winning three of four matches during last week-end’s district tournament.

The 2A tourney takes place Friday and Saturday at Pierce College’s Fort Steilacoom campus in Lakewood.

White River plays one of the tournament’s opening matches, taking the court at 8 a.m. Friday against the Sehome Mariners. The

winner will rest until 6:45 that evening and take on the winner of an open-ing round contest between Ridgefield and Fife; the loser of the morning bat-tle will play again at 3:15 Friday afternoon against the Ridgefield/Fife loser.

Two losses sends a team home for the season.

The Hornets’ district experience began last Friday with a 3-1 victory over the Sequim Wolves. That moved White River into a tussle with Liberty

High; the tough crew from Issaquah beat White River 3-0 on the way to a second-place district finish.

Faced with elimina-tion, the Hornets won two matches on Saturday to punch their ticket to state.

The first step was a 3-1 vic-tory over the Washington Patriots, followed by a 3-1 win over Olympic High.

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 13

Say Goodbye to Thanksgiving Leftovers!

Big Green Egg DemoJohnsons Home & Garden

November 15thFrom 10 to 4

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Take a trip back to the sixties with Ralph Woodson’s “Purple Haze,” a tribute to Jimi Hendrix. Listen to the electric sounds of his guitar and experience the psychedelic rhythm of this authentic performance in Club Galaxy, where admission is always free with your Players Club card!Entertainment subject to change without notice. Must be a Players Club member to participate. Membership is free! Management reserves all rights.

NOVEMBER 21 AT 7PM

White River off to state volleyball tourney

WR girls run to 12th at state cross country meet

By Kevin HansonSenior Writer

The 2014 campaign closed on a high note for the White River High football program, as the Hornets scored a touch-down in every quarter of Friday night’s game.

The result of the bal-anced scoring was a rous-ing 28-6 victory over Chief Sealth of the Metro League, played on the Seahawks’ home turf in Seattle.

With the Week 10 vic-tory, White River finished its 2014 campaign with an overall mark of 3-7. Along the way came a 1-6 mark in

South Puget Sound League 2A play. Highlights of the season were a league tri-umph over Clover Park and a nonleague win against Lindbergh, along with Friday’s season finale.

Justin Tidwell had a hand In three of the Hornets’ four TDs. He caught a 14-yard scoring pass from Trevor Johnson in the second quarter, ran three yards for a touchdown in the third period and tossed a touchdown pass to Ethan Clay in the final frame. The Hornets had first jumped on the board in the first quarter, when Ryan Richey scored on a 7-yard run.

WR football finishes with lopsided victory

Hornets one of just 16 still alive after winning three of four in district play

Page 14: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 14 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

Holiday Fantasy

Friday, December 5, 2014

at

Emerald Downs5:30 p.m.

Dinner & Auction

FantasDinner & Auction Gala

Please consider donating a new item to the auction! For your convenience, donations and

ticket purchases can be made online TODAY! www.enumclawrhf.org

or by calling the Foundation office at 360-802-3206.

BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW!

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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Rainier Foothills Wellness Foundation(formerly Enumclaw Regional Healthcare Foundation)

presents:

ACCEPTINGSILENT AUCTIONITEMS

Corporate Sponsors:

Molen offices give kids cash for candyThe Molen Orthodontics offices in Enumclaw, Sumner

and Auburn conducted their annual candy buy-back Nov. 3, giving kids cash in exchange for their Halloween good-ies.

This time around, the Molen staff offered youngsters $2 for each pound of candy they turned in. Kids received a bonus for wearing a Halloween costume or providing canned food for local food banks. The collected candy will be turned over to charitable organizations.

The Molen Orthodontics offices collected 2,332 pounds of candy from 622 people and paid out $5,806. In addition, 878 cans of food were taken in.

Children get early start on educationSolid Foundations Learning Center made its debut Nov.

3, offering local youngsters an early start in their education experience.

Owned and managed by Kaleb and Shannon Uhde, the center provides a focus on letters, letter sounds, counting, hands-on science, social development and fun.

There are both morning and afternoon classes for pre-schoolers (to age 3 ), as well as half- and full-day classes for prekindergarten students (ages 4 and 5).

Address: 1258 Harding St., Enumclaw.Phone: 253-569-7315Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.

PLATEAU BUSINESS

According to Lacriox, full labeling of marijuana products, especially food products, is important because marijuana-infused food products are not regu-lated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), and it is up to growers and pro-ducers to accurately mea-sure and label their prod-ucts.

“The higher the TCH levels in the brownie, the more psychotropic effect you’d receive,” Lacriox said. “The higher the CBDs in the brownie, the more of a pain relieving effect you’d receive.”

Along with the tradition-al dried marijuana buds and marijuana brownies, The Green Door has several unique products.

One is a spoon covered in TCH-infused chocolate. Lacriox explained that the spoon is used to mix a cup of hot chocolate or coffee, and the TCH-infused choc-olate on the spoon melts into the drink.

Another interesting product are TCH-infused syrups for making drinks, or, Lacriox said, glazes and sauces.

As for security features, The Green Door cut no cor-ners. The entrance to the store leads to a small wait-ing room where IDs are checked. If the ID is good, the customer is then buzzed through to the main store.

Both inside and outside of the store, The Green Door has a multitude of security cameras to ensure product isn’t consumed on site, stolen, or mishandled.

Finally, the store walls around the store are metal-lined to prevent any break-ins.

GREEN DOOR FROM 4

By Dennis BoxEditor

The Hornet volley-ball team closed the season Saturday with a 3-1 loss to Auburn Mountainview at the 3A District Tournament at Auburn Mountainview High.

The girls opened the tournament Friday with a 3-1 win over Central Kitsap. The Hornets lost to

3-1 to Columbia River.Enumclaw came back to

beat Sumner 3-1 before los-ing to the Lions in a winner to state, loser out match.

Coach Jackie Carel wrote in an email Sunday, “The girls worked hard on Friday and Saturday, winning the tournament opener to Central Kitsap 3-1. We fell in the second round in a crazy match against

Columbia River, 1-3. On Saturday we were up against our South Puget Sound League foes, Sumner and Auburn-Mountainview. We beat Sumner 3-1, but lost to Mountainview 1-3. It was a great run and the athletes played very well.”

Enumclaw ended the sea-son with a Enumclaw 11-3 SPSL record, second place, and 13-5 overall 13-5.

EHS bumped from district play

By Kevin HansonSenior Writer

A handful of Enumclaw High Hornets will be in the water this weekend, com-peting against an elite field at the state Class 3A swim and dive championships.

The EHS contingent qualified for state during last weekend’s West Central District meet. The EHS team placed sixth at the district meet.

Earning a state berth were:• Bailey Sexton in the 50 freestyle and

100 backstroke.• Hannah Simurdak in the 100 but-

terfly.• the 200 free relay team of Sexton,

Emilie Weyer, Grace Munnell and Simurdak.

• Rhianna Paro and Abbie Jo Carlson in diving.

The state meet runs Friday and Saturday at the King County Aquatics Center in Federal Way.

Six Hornets head to state swim and dive competition

You Can Now Get Today’s News...Today & Every Day!All

New at: www.courierherald.com

Page 15: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 15

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To Advertise on this page call: Martha Boston 360-802-8218 • Dottie Bergstresser 360-802-8219

Jennifer Tribbett 360-825-2555 x2050

/EnumclawWineWalk/EnumclawChamber

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Win a FREE AD in The Courier Herald!Did you WIN the Business Links QuickPoll FREE AD in the Courier Herald? It’s easy and open to all Chamber of Commerce members!

1. Read our weekly eNewsletter, “Business Links” ---> get information that affects your business 2. Answer our Quick Poll question of the week in the eNewsletter---> voice your position on a local topic 3. Quick Poll participation = automatic entry into our monthly drawing for a FREE AD, on this page, in the Courier Herald

Get informed. Get involved. Get rewarded.The Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce is a 501(c)(6) nonpro� t organization committed

the support of local businesses and economic growth in Enumclaw.

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We just got a huge shipment

of Kala Ukuleles!Ukuleles from $43.99-$299.99

Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10a-7p

Sat. 10a-4p.

Pre-Holiday Ukulele Sale

Enumclaw Music & Instruments, Inc.1515 Cole Street, Enumclaw • 360-825-1191

[email protected]

www.facebook.com/EnumclawMusic

(limited to stock on hand) O� er valid 11/12-30/2014

10% o� posted price of any in stock Kala or Makala Ukulele

Contact Amy Hardebeck, Executive Director at [email protected] or call 360-825-7666 to learn how you or your

business can get involved with our events right now.

It’s a great time to become part of the Chamber!Membership instantly connects you to a network of other businesses and opportunities for mar-keting, education, and the support of a nonpro� t organization dedicated to the success of your business. Pick up an application at the Chamber of Commerce or at: www.EnumclawChamber.com.

This month’s FREE AD was won by Enumclaw Music by participating

in our QuickPoll in September!

Did you know? Chamber of Commerce members are informed, involved and rewarded! Last month, members learned how to enhance their business by attending our Monthly Membership Meeting which featured speaker, Kirk Davis of GRCC, en-joyed hundreds of patrons in their stores during the downtown Trick or Treat-ing, learned about upcoming free opportunities for professional development and received weekly Business Links, our eNewsletter chock full of relevant in-

formation to help their businesses grow and succeed.

Welcome new member Knok Studio, a local nonprofi t providing media services to nonprofi ts!

CONGRATULATIONS TO KRAINICK DAIRY who won the King County Executive’s Small Business Award in the Rural Business division! Chamber Executive Director, Amy Hardebeck, was a judge for the minority category and also attended the awards ceremony to celebrate Enumclaw businesses’ nominations and awards.

Chamber Partnerships to Help Your Business Grow!

Destination University is coming! Bi-weekly 30-minute “classes” offer free professional development for you and your business! Watch for details about our � rst class coming soon!

Monthly Membership Meetings3rd Tuesday of each month at 8am, Park Center Hotel Banquet Room.

Light breakfast provided by Lift EspressoNext Meeting - November 18, 2014

FREE for members! $5 for non-membersNovember’s interactive meeting will include our service members show-

ing off their businesses! You don’t want to miss this... See you there!

Fall Wine WalkNovember 22 - Downtown Enumclaw

Enjoy a stroll through downtown Enumclaw while tasting world-class wines at our local shops! 21 locations plus art and music entertain-

ment. Tickets on sale at www.enumclawchamber.com or at the Cham-ber offi ce through the day of the event.

Christmas ParadeDecember 6 - Downtown Enumclaw

Caroling contest at 5pm, parade at 6pm! Come downtown to enjoy music, hot cocoa and this incredible parade in it’s 49th year!

What’s Going On at the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce? 

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

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Dahlquist.The senator won in both

Pierce and King counties, taking 51 percent in King and 55 in Pierce.

In the August primary election, Dahlquist came out on top in King County with 42 percent to 40 per-cent for Roach. Lynda Messner took 18 percent.

Roach took Pierce County in August with 41 percent to 38 for Dahlquist.

The senator stated her ability to connect with a wide array of voters and groups accounted for her re-election success.

“This election came down to successfully appealing to a broad spec-trum of voters and having a strong record of working with people in the district,” Roach wrote in her re-elec-tion statement. “My cam-paign was supported by all groups: business, labor, farmers, law enforcement, fishers, nurses, tribes, teachers, local elected offi-cials and more.”

The last time Roach receive a stiff challenge was 2006 against Democrat Yvonne Ward. In King and Pierce counties Roach won 53 to 47 percent.

In 2010 Roach eas-ily beat Republican Matt Richardson 67 to 33 per-cent.

Position No. 1Drew Stokesbary,

R-Auburn, won the state House Position No. 1 seat over Mike Sando, D-Enumclaw.

Stokesbary took 23,003, 61 percent, to 14,723, 39 percent, for Sando.

Stokesbary is an attor-ney and works as a policy aide with the King County Council.

The seat was vacant because Dahlquist decided to challenge Roach after serving two terms in the House.

Stokesbary wrote in a release, “This was my first campaign for public office, and I’m very lucky to have received so much support from our community.”

Stokesbary campaigned on funding eduction and he has bills planned for the upcoming session.

“The biggest issue fac-ing the Legislature will be crafting a budget that satis-fies our state constitution and the McCleary deci-sion,” Stokesbary wrote. “I will advocate for a plan that fully-funds education, doesn’t raise taxes and pro-tects the most vulnerable. I

ELECTION FROM 1

SEE ELECTION, PAGE 17

Page 16: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 16 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

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Page 17: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 17

www.PrestigeCare.com

Prestige Senior Living

Prestige Senior Living along with the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America holds these National Memory Screening Days to stress the importance of proper detection and treatment and to help raise awareness of Alzheimer’s disease and related illnesses on a national scale. We encourage anyone who is concerned about memory problems or who is interested in memory care to take a free, five-to-ten minute screening. Each screening consists of a series of simple questions and tasks, administered by a qualified healthcare professional.

Who should be tested? What are the warning signs of dementia? According to AFA if you answer “yes” to any of the following questions, a memory screening might be beneficial to you.

• Am I becoming more forgetful?• Do I have trouble concentrating?

familiar tasks?

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“July 18 - ‘44My crew is with them

– maybe – I haven’t seen them as yet. So many men were machine gunned and they ran them the three miles from the station. The slow, the maimed and the sick or weak were bayonetted and left to die along the road.”

Over the months, the number of prisoners grew and the challenge of feed-ing them all became nearly impossible. The German guards devised a gruesome solution to their problems – they started holding machine gun practices by firing into the POW camp.

“Anyone who happened to be in the way had bet-ter run for cover quickly,” Jameyson described. “The more of us they killed off, the less to feed.”

Fuel and heat were also invaluable resources not just to the prisoners, but other unwitting members of the camp as well.

“Oct 23 - ‘44The weather is extremely

cold and wet, about as mis-erable as I am. Last night a mouse got into my bunk and crawled around my neck and down my legs. It bothered me so much I got up and slept on the table. The cold weather is driv-ing them into the barracks in great numbers.”

It was not always cold and glum, though. According to Jameyson, the prisoners formed their own society in the camp. They held elec-tions, had judges and juries, even performed in shows and organized ball games to keep their heads high and spirits free.

“June 17 - ‘44Finally got our Red

Cross Parcels today, every-body is happy. One prison-er went across the trip wire after a ball and the guard in the tower shot at him, kicking up dirt two feet behind him. They really mean business here.”

“April 25 - ‘45Another warm day. We

had a boxing match in our compound today very interesting and some very good boxers. Our garden is looking very good but must put some water on it, if it don’t rain soon. We had lights for one hour again last night. War news is scare these last few days.”

But not everyone was civil, especially after half a year of being exposed to harsh weather, starvation and the constant fear of German bullets. To say the men were on edge would be an understatement – Jameyson described in his journal how quickly fel-low prisoners can turn on each other. At one time, Jameyson was accused of being a “Kraut lover” and was cornered and beaten by other prisoners.

“October 29 - ‘44Being shut in with the

group of men for so long is beginning to tell a lot of us. One must be care-ful what he says or there will be a dozen men at his throat. I hope to every-one’s sake it will not last the winter through.”

If there was one thought that kept Jameyson going, though, it was of his soon-to-be-born son. Shortly after Jameyson was deployed, he received news that Lorraine was pregnant, and the baby would be due in July 1944. In many of his letters to Lorraine, Jameyson expressed his hopes that his son Tommy was doing well, although Jameyson had not received news of his wife or son for several months after he was shot down.

“October 31 - ‘44Oh happy days, today

I received my first mail since being shot down. Five letters from my dear-est wife, informing me I was the proud father of a baby boy born July 7. That is the best new up here I ever heard. I hope I get a cigar parcel soon. I was so excited I could hardly eat my supper.”

The journal was the one place where Jameyson would share his thoughts and emotions, but the fear of being discovered with his journal was intense.

“They did find it on me – three different times and each time I (imagined feel-ing) the hot metal pierce my skin and see myself in the dirt covered with blood,” Jameyson recalled years later. “I had witnessed sights like that before only now I was concerned it would be my face that oth-ers would see. They always opened the book from the back and here I recorded addresses of the men in my barracks. I would tell them it was just an address book and they would hand it back. It was just lucky I

guess.”News of the war was

scarce, and rumors were spread in whispers for fear of the German guards discovering the small cel-ebrations the prisoners held when good news was avail-able.

“June 26 - 44Today we started a pool

in our room, there are 16 men, each pay $10 and set a date for the end of the war – nearest man wins, my date is July 28.”

Although Jameyson didn’t win his bet, he cel-ebrated none-the-less when the Russian army liberated Stalag III on May 1, 1945.

“May 1 - ‘45Tuesday morning we are

free men. The Germans left at 10:30 p.m. and we had our own men in the guard towers at 12 midnight. I can’t hardly

believe it. I have been wait-ing a year and two months for this wonderful day. We are eating all we can hold and feel wonderful. It is now 10:15 in the evening and we are listening to the Hit Parade direct from New York. We have never heard any of the songs before. Everyone is going wild and dancing and jit-terbugging in the hall.”

Jameyson was freed in May, but he wasn’t able to get back home to his wife and son until June.

“June 27 - ‘45Finally arrived home

and am too excited to do anything, but will official-ly end this book with my dear wife’s signature.”

Jameyson lived in Enumclaw with his wife for the remainder of his life. He is buried at the Tahoma National Cemetery.

JAMEYSON FROM 1

All New at:Today’s News...Today & Every Day!

www.courierherald.com

have already begun developing a few bills to introduce next session and I am reaching out to legislators on both sides of the aisle to solicit their input and support.”

Position No. 2Incumbent Chris Hurst, D-Enumclaw, won over

Auburn Republican Phil Fortunato.Hurst polled 52 percent with 19,683 votes, to 18,339,

48 percent, for Fortunato.Hurst underlined funding education and jobs as top

line issues facing the district and state.“I couldn’t be more thankful for the strong support

from the citizens of the 31st Legislative District who have returned me to the House of Representatives,” Hurst wrote. “It is an honor and privilege to serve in our legislature in Olympia. I look forward to working on the issues of fully funding education, creating jobs and keeping our communities safe.”

ELECTION FROM 15

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Page 18: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

November is the start of the winter season and time to put the garden to bed. Cut back, chop up, haul off and in general clean up any perennials or annu-als that are yellow

and frost-bitten.This is a good time to

start a compost pile in a hidden corner of the land-scape. Just layer brown material (brown leaves, bark chips, soil) with green material (grass clippings, green leaves, green weeds)

and let it all rot. You can hurry the decomposing by chopping the material into small pieces, covering the pile to keep it warm and by adding air to the process either by turning the con-tents or giving it all a good poke with a sharp stick.

Some gardeners crank up the heat of their compost pile by using hollow metal pipes stuck into the center of the pile to add air. Every few weeks they wiggle the pipes or remove and then poke them back into the pile in a different spot.

Anytime you add a channel of air to your compost pile it helps to turn the garden garbage into garden gold.

Q I grow vegetables in raised beds.

Must I uproot all the old tomatoes, bean and squash plants now or can I wait until spring to clean up? B.L., Puyallup

A You can always imitate Mother

Nature and let your sum-mer bounty rot back into the earth with the winter rains. The advantage of a fall clean-up is that you will be removing any plants with disease or insect prob-lems that could overwinter.

November is prime time to tear down gardenThe Compleat Home GardenerMarianne BinettiColumnist

Page 18 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

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Members of the Buckley Kiwanis Club have named Kristin Sturdivan their “Student of the Month” for October.

A senior at White River High School, Sturdivan is involved in multiple, varied activities. She is a stand-out on the school basketball team and is a member of both FFA and the National Honor Society. She volun-teers at Heritage House, volunteers at the middle school in the special needs program and has helped at the Elk Ridge summer learning program.

The Kiwanis Club noted it was Sturdivan’s high academic achievements, combined with community service and assistance to others, that resulted in her being honored.

Sturdivan honored by Buckley Kiwanis

SEE BINETTI, PAGE 26

Page 19: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

It seems merchants are trying to move up the Christmas sea-son each year. With Thanksgiving lurk-ing around the cor-ner, plastic trees are already being dis-played in stores.

However, America’s Christmas tree farm-ers are planning for the “real” Christmas season. They produce a true green prod-uct that will create local jobs, is grown on plantations in the U.S. and is recyclable.

Real Trees Are a Great BargainOne interesting way to determine how

far a dollar will go is to look at the cost of a tree and how long it can be enjoyed by a family compared to other activities.

For example, if you pay $30 for a Douglas fir or $60 for a noble, they will bring joy and good smells to your home for two to three weeks. If you spend $30 to feed a family of four at a fast-food establishment or $60 to attend a movie and eat popcorn, the enjoyment may last from one to four hours.

When viewed in that perspective, real

trees are a terrific bar-gain for the time that they bring joy to mil-lions of families.

Years of Hard Work

A tree farmer invests many dollars and hard work for six

to 10 years before earning any return. However, some will die while others may be unsalable because of damage by insects or diseases before they reach harvest size.

For example, out of 1,000 trees planted, 900 to 950 Douglas firs may be salable. But, only 700 to 800 nobles may be mar-ketable because of losses to the above fac-tors. Therefore, a grower needs to receive more money for nobles than Douglas firs to make them profitable to grow.

Puget Sound Christmas tree farmers and local retail lots will be offering a wide variety of species. To help select your favorite tree, the characteristics of the more popular species are listed below.

Douglas fir: This tree is generally available as a sheared tree and is the most

common species found on tree lots. It has a nice fragrance and a medium-

to-good shelf life. Because of the thick, bushy crowns, they do not lend them-selves to large or heavy decorations.

This species is the easiest to grow because it is relatively problem free. It requires seven to eight years to mature as a Christmas tree.

Noble fir: this species is considered the Cadillac of Christmas trees. It grows in a more open pattern, has stout branches, luxurious green needles, a long shelf life and has a nice fragrance. It is popular with families that have large or heavy ornaments.

It is the most expensive tree because it takes eight to 10 years to mature and is the most difficult species to grow.

Grand fir: this sheared tree is the most fragrant of the native species. It has an attractive needle that makes it a popular choice as a f locked tree.

Grand fir trees require eight to nine years to grow and have a medium shelf life.

Fraser fir: This North Carolina native has strong branches that will hold heavi-er ornaments. The needles have a pleas-ant fragrance and a long shelf life compa-rable to a noble fir.

Fraser fir trees are difficult to grow because of the many pests that threaten them. They require eight to 10 years

before they are ready for harvest.Nordman fir: this imported species is

gaining popularity with local growers. It very closely resembles noble fir, but is easier to grow. It has all the desirable attributes of nobles and requires eight to 10 years to reach the popular 6- to 7-foot height.

Where to Find TreesTo enjoy a fun experience with the

family, visit a local choose-and-cut farm. Locations and tree information can be found on the Puget Sound Christmas Tree Association website, www.pscta.com. Many nurseries, stores and charity groups will also offer trees at retail lots.

Proper Tree Care Once home, cut one-quarter inch off

the butt and place the tree in a water stand. The stand should be large enough to hold at least one gallon of water after the tree is placed in it. Check the water level daily. A typical six-foot tall tree can drink one gallon of water each day and remain fresh for two to three weeks.

Dennis Tompkins is a certified arbor-ist and hazard tree risk assessor from the Bonney Lake-Sumner area. He is also a consultant to the Christmas tree industry. Contact him at 253 863-7469 or email at [email protected]. Website: evergreen-arbor-ist.com.

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 19

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Page 2 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, April 3, 2014 www.courierherald.com

Trees are a bargainThe Evergreen Arborist

Dennis TompkinsColumnist

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Page 20: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 20 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

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Enumclaw’s Premiere 55+ CommunityNew Skyline Homes

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Due to Thanksgiving, Deadlines for the November 26th issue are:

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Real Estate for SaleChelan County

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LAKE CHELAN 21 Acre Mountain property with Lake View for $49,000! Private, Stunning Views, Borders USFS, Zoned Residential, Water and Power Available, 15 min- utes to town, appraised for $147,000. First per- son with kind disposition and $49,000 cash gets deed. Call Owner: 509- 670-0321. No Agents

Real Estate for SaleGrays Harbor County

OCEAN SHORES, 98569.

3 BR, 2 BA HOME FOR S A L E B Y O W N E R . Ocean Front Home, with wide sweeping Ocean Views!!!!!!!!!!! Investment potential or vacation/ live here. 2 level home with I ta l ian marble f loors, slab granite countertops, vaulted cedar ceilings, Lopi fireplace, new car- pet and designer paint. $259,950 Photos/writeup NWMLS # 697327, or Call 360-581-94929.

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

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Real Estate for SaleKing County

Auburn West Hill Ram- bler 1200 sqf t 3bdrm 2 b a t h + G a r a g e $140,000. FHA 203K Eli- gible. 206-650-3908 Re- alty West 800-599-7741Bonney Lake Bonanza 4bdrm 2.5bath 2 story 3180sqft + 3 Car Gar- age . $302 ,955 . FHA Terms. 206-650-3908 Realty West 800-599- 7741

Real Estate for SalePacific County

G r a h a m Tr i L e v e l Quality 3bdrm 2.5bath w i th Rec room, Gas Heat , 2 Car Garage, F e n c e d B a c k y a r d $239,750. FHA Terms. 425-766-7370 Real ty West 800-599-7741G r a h a m Tr i L e v e l Quality 3bdrm 2.5bath w i th Rec room, Gas Heat , 2 Car Garage, F e n c e d B a c k y a r d $239,750. FHA Terms. 425-766-7370 Real ty West 800-599-7741Tacoma Splendid Re- model 3bdrm 1.75bath w /De tached Garage. $154,950 FHA Terms. 425-766-7370 Real ty West 800-599-7741

Real Estate for SalePierce County

Bonney Lake Wow! Split 3bdrm 2 bath + 2 Car Garage 2007 Construc- t i on . $159 ,500 FHA- Ter ms 206-650-3908 Realty West 425-766- 7370

Real Estate for SalePierce County

Bonney Lake Wow! Split 3bdrm 2 bath + 2 Car Garage 2007 Construc- t i on . $159 ,500 FHA- Ter ms 206-650-3908 Realty West 425-766- 7370Call now for Free List! H U D - o w n e d P i e r c e C o u n t y, 2 2 H o m e s $65,375 to $302,955. Many wi th Low Down payment FHA Financing. 800-599-7741; 206-650- 3908; REALTY WEST, t h e H U D E x p e r t s ! www.realtywest.comSumner Like New 3bdrm 2 bath Ranch with De- tached Garage On ly $204,750. FHA Terms 206-650-3908 Real ty West 800-599-7741

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Real Estate for RentKing County

BLACK DIAMOND, 98010.

SINGLE WIDE HOME on private property with deck & garage. Includes water & sewer. $650. References requi red. 360-886-1545

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ENUMCLAW, 98022.2 BR PRIVATE APT downtown. All appli- ances including wash- er and dryer. Covered parking. Nice Historic neighborhood. No pet. M u s t p ay u t i l i t i e s . $1000. 360-825-4472.

ENUMCLAWLARGE 1 bedroom apt. in classic old home in town. Includes all appli- ances, washer/ dryer, comple te ly fur n ished with custom pool table and foosball table in par- ty room. $850/mo. in- cludes all utilities, 900 cable channels and wi-fi. First, Last, $300 deposit. P r e f e r n o p e t s . (360)825-2298.

Real Estate for RentPierce County

WILKESON, 98321.1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH house with large fenced yard, garden area, shop & d e t a c h e d g a ra g e . Washer, dryer hook-ups $975 / month. You pay utilities. No smoking. No cats. Dog on approval and for additional fee. 1st, last & $400 deposit. Available Nov. 20th. 360- 829-1086.

Apartments for Rent King County

ENUMCLAW1 BEDROOM downstairs apartment in Enumclaw. Washer, dryer in unit. Covered park ing . No pets or smoking. We pay water, sewer & garbage. (360)825-0707

Apartments for Rent King County

ELDERLY HOUSINGAccepting applications

Rainier View II 1 Bedroom Apts

Basic Rents start at $625 or 30% adjusted monthly in- come. Must be 62 years or o l d e r , h a n d i c a p p e d o r disabled, regardless of age. Income limits apply. We are located at:

2745 Warner AveEnumclaw

Call 360-825-6146TDD 711

ENUMCLAW1 BEDROOM downstairs apartment in Enumclaw. Washer, dryer in unit. Covered park ing . No pets or smoking. We pay water, sewer & garbage. (360)825-0707

ENUMCLAW , 98022.C O Z Y 1 B E D RO O M apartment in quiet neigh- borhood. New car pet and paint. Features gas f i replace, washer and dryer. Sorry, no dogs. $700 per month. 360- 825-4157.

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

9538

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Apartments for Rent King County

RAINIER VIEW I Now acceptingapplications for

2 BEDROOM APTSBasic rents start at $685

or 30% of adjustedmonthly income.

Income Limits Apply.2745 Warner Ave

EnumclawCall 360-825-6146

TDD 711

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

Buckley area2 b e d r o o m u p s t a i r s apar tment. W/S/G in- cluded, furnished, fire- place. Laundry facilities on site. $775/month, 1st, l a s t , $ 5 0 0 d e p o s i t . (360)825-7620

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 951-6909. 1110 Grif- fin Enumclaw.

Commercial RentalsOffice/Commercial

Downtown Buckley

$300. DESIRABLEOFFICE SPACES AVAILABLE NOW

Fully Updatedstarting at $300/ mo.

Utilities pro-rated based on square feet

253-973-9735206-769-0902

O F F I C E S P A C E AVAILABLE Downtown Enumclaw 232 to 273 sq . f t o f f i ce spaces. Each of f ice equipped with two phone lines and two Ethernet ports for in- ternet ready capability. H igh Speed In te r ne t available immediately. Garbage and cleaning of common area included. U t i l i t i e s p r o r a t e b y square foot o f o f f ice s p a c e . C a l l To d a y. (360)802-8220.

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

AK Painting IncExterior-Interior

High Quality WorkFair Pricing

FREE ESTIMATESCall Ken

(253)[email protected]

Licensed, bonded, insuredKPAINPC957CB

*** Bonney LakeCleaning Service ***

Commercial/ResidentialWeekly Accounts

Available Now!References Available

Call Sarah for aFree Estimate253-921-2203

C O U N T RY G A R D E N BOUQUETS offers sea- s o n a l b o u q u e t s , wreaths & other hand- crafted local i tems in “The Shop” (360)825- 3976 (253)332-9466

Leaf & Storm Clean upHANDY RANDYProperty & Yard Care

Trim*Prune*HedgesCleanup & HaulingCall Randy Now253-350-1539LICENSED & INSURED

K & K Landscaping

Lawn MaintenanceTrimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up

Bark, HaulingAll kinds of yard work!

253-862-4347Bonded & InsuredLic# KKLANKL897MK

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 951-6909. 1110 Grif- fin Enumclaw.

**Local Fence Co.**

White Vinyl, Ranch,Horse Fencing

Cedar, Chain Link,Repairs, Gates

Call James253-831-9906

Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting

Place for Loved OnesPricing from

$750 to $700036424 312th Ave SE

Enumclaw(206)280-4071

PIANOLESSONS For the young and

young at heart.Karen (360)802-9314

TEZAK’STREE

SERVICE(253)862-1700

tezakstreeservice.comServing the area

Over 30 YearsFREE ESTIMATES

Bonded~InsuredLic. # TEZAKTS0330C

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

TOM’S WINDOWCLEANING

Commercial, ResidentialGutter cleaning,Gutter whitening,

Moss control,Pressure washing,New construction

Locally owned(360)802-8925(253)740-3833

Home ServicesPainting

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

Home ServicesHouse/Cleaning Service

Miscellaneous

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Page 21: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Wednesday, November 12, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 21 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

Money to Loan/Borrow

LOCAL PRIVATE IN- VESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I loan on houses, raw land, commercial proper- ty and property develop- m e n t . C a l l E r i c a t (425) 803-9061.www.fossmortgage.com

General Financial

FREE GOLD IRA KIT. With the demise of the dollar now is the time to invest in gold. AAA Rat- ed! For free consulta- tion: 1-866-683-5664

FREE Medicare Quotes! Get Covered and Save! Explore Top Medicare Supplement Insurance P l ans Fo r Free ! I t ’s Open Enro l lment , So Call Now! 877-243-4705

GET CASH NOW for your Annuity or Struc- tured Sett lement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! 877- 693-0934 (M-F 9:35am- 7pm ET)

Guaranteed Income For Your Retirement. Avoid market risk & get guar- anteed income in retire- ment! CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MON- EY GUIDE Plus Annuity. Quotes f rom A-Rated companies! 800-669- 5471

PROBLEMS wi th the IRS or S ta te Taxes? Settle for a fraction of what you owe! Free face to face consulta- tions with offices in your area. Call 855-970-2032

S O C I A L S E C U R I T Y DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Noth ing! Contact Bill Gordon & Assoc iates at 1-800- 706-8742 to star t your application today!

Announcements

ADOPTION – A Loving Choice for an Unplanned Pregnancy. Call Andrea a t 1 - 8 6 6 - 2 3 6 - 7 6 3 8 (24/7) for adoption infor- mation/profiles, or view our loving couples at W W W . A N A A d o p - tions.com. Financial As- sistance Provided

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 mil- lion households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Ave- nue at 888-486-2466

PROMOTE YOUR RE- GIONAL EVENT for only pennies. Reach 2.7 mil- lion readers in newspa- pers statewide for $275 classified or $1,350 dis- play ad. Call this news- paper or (206) 634-3838 for details.

Found

DOG GONE IN BUCK- LEY? The City of Buck- ley has a short term dog pound. I f your dog is missing call (360)829- 3157.

Lost

Lost/ Stolen Maple Val- ley Goodwill area. Fe- male pitbull mix. White with brown and black on one ear, spotted on the o t h e r . R E W A R D (360)829-2615

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

3030

LEGALS

Legal Notices

BUCKLEYTRANSPORTATION

BENEFIT DISTRICT

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

2015 PROPOSED TBD BUDGET

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Buckley Transpor tation Benefit District will hold a Public Hear ing shor t ly a f ter 6:00 PM at a Special Meet ing on Tuesday, November 25, 2014, at the Buckley Mult ipur- pose Building, at 811 Main Street , Buckley. The purpose of the Public Hearing is to so- l ic i t publ ic input and comment from interested individuals or groups on t h e p r o p o s e d 2 0 1 5 Transpor tation Benefit District Budget.Buckley does not dis- criminate on the basis of disabilities. If you need spec ia l accommoda- t ions, p lease contact City Hal l within three business days prior to the Publ ic Hear ing at (360) 829-1921, ex t . 7801.Comments may be pre- sented orally at the Pub- lic Hearing or submitted in wr i t i ng to Joanne Starr, Secretary of the Board, P. O. Box 1960, Buckley, WA 98321, or by e-mail to: j s t a r r @ c i t y o f b u c k - ley.com, pr ior to 5:00 PM on Monday, Novem- ber 24, 2014. Questions may be answered by contacting City staff at (360) 829-1921, ex t . 7801.DATED this 16th day of October, 2014.Posted: November 6, 2014Publ ished: November 12, 2014# 59537511/12/14

LEGAL NOTICETo Geoffrey Odell Pri- har: notice of Petition for Name Change for Minor Child hear ing to alter Colbie Kay Prihar to le- gal name of Colbie Kay Didericksen, which is in the best interest of the child to avoid confusion. The hearing is set for 8:59 a.m. on 12/4/14 in Grant County Distr ict Court.# 59965211/12/14

CITY OF BONNEY LAKE - NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE OF AVAIL-

ABILITY OF PRELIMI- NARY

BUDGET AND SCHEDULED PUBLIC

HEARING ON THE 2015-2016 BIENNIAL

BUDGETThe City of Bonney Lake announces that the pre- l i m i n a r y b u d g e t fo r 2015-2016 has been filed with the City Clerk and provided to the City Council on October 31, 2014 . The budge t i s avai lable on the Ci ty website at www.citybon- neylake.org/finance and upon request to any tax- payer who contacts the Ci ty Clerk ’s of f ice at (253) 862-8602.The Ci ty Counci l wi l l hold a publ ic hear ing during the regular Coun- cil Meeting of November 25, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, to accept testimony regard-

Legal Notices

ing the 2015-2016 Bien- nial Budget. The City Council meets at Bonney Lake Justice & Municipal Center lo- cated at 9002 Main St E, B o n n e y L a k e , W A 98391. All members of the public may provide tes t imony dur ing the public hearing or they may submit written com- ments prior to the public hearing to the City Clerk at P.O. Box 7380, Bon- ney Lake, WA 98391. For citizens with disabil- ities who are requesting translators or adaptive equipment for communi- cation purposes, the City requests notification as soon as possible as to the type of service or equipment needed.# 59964111/12/14, 11/19/14

NOTICE OF CANCELLED MEETING

TRANSPORTATION BENEFIT DISTRICT

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014

ALSONOTICE OF SPECIAL

MEETINGTRANSPORTATION BENEFIT DISTRICT

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2014

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Buckley Transpor tation Benefit Distr ict wil l cancel i ts r e g u l a r m e e t i n g o n Tuesday, November 11, 2 0 1 4 d u e t o t h e Veteran’s Day Holiday.NOTICE IS ALSO GIV- EN tha t the Buck ley Transpor tation Benefit District will hold a Spe- cial Meeting on Tues- d a y, N o v e m b e r 2 5 , 2014, at 6:00 PM at the Buckley Mult ipurpose Center. The primary top- ic of this Special Meeting wil l be to discuss the p r o p o s e d 2 0 1 5 T B D budget.DATED this 16th day of October, 2014Posted: November 6, 2014Publ ished: November 12, 2014# 59537411/12/14

CITY OF BONNY LAKESR 410/PEDESTRIAN

IMPROVEMENTS MP 13.91

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the City of Bonney Lake, 9002 Main Street East Suite 125, P.O. Box 7380, Bonney L a k e , W a s h i n g t o n 98391, until 11:00 am November 19, 2014, for SR 410/PEDESTRIAN IM- P R O V E M E N T S M P 13.91.Work to be performed:This Contract completes t h e p e d e s t r i a n p a t h along SR 410 between MP 13.78 – 14.19, in the Ci ty of Bonney Lake, Washington. The project will include reconstruct- ing the exist ing west- bound outside shoulder to a 5-foot shoulder with a curb gutter, sidewalk and concrete traffic bar- rier. Work elements in- clude; clearing and grub- bing, partial bridge dem- ol i t ion, miscel laneous t ra f f i c i tem remova l , roadway excavation in- cluding haul, planing, grading, geofoam em- bankment, sanitary sew- er structures and con- veyance system, boring or jacking casing, storm drainage catchment and co nveya n ce sys te m, curb and gutter, side- walk, concrete barrier, meta l b r idge ra i l i ng , c o m p o s i t e s i d ew a l k deck ing , i l l umina t ion s y s t e m c o n d u i t a n d foundations, paving, pavement markings, per-

Legal Notices

manent signing, traffic staging, erosion control, traffic control, and other work, all in accordance with the attached Con- tract Plans, these Con- tract Provisions, and the Standard Specifications.Bid proposals will be re- ceived only by the City Clerk at the City of Bon- ney Lake, 9002 Main Street East, Suite 125, Bonney Lake, Washing- ton 98391 by 11:00 am on November 19, 2014 at which time they will be opened and read public- ly. Clearly identify pro- ject name on all submit- ted bid packages. Pro- posals received after the time fixed for opening will not be con- sidered.Contract documents in- cluding plan drawings, specifications, addenda, and plan holders list for this project will be avail- able fo r v iewing and down load ing on - l i ne through Bui lders Ex- change of Washington, Inc. ( B X W A ) a t ht tp: / /www.bxwa.com. To view the documents on BXWA’s website, se- lect the following links: “ P o s t e d P r o j e c t s ” ; “Public Works”; “City of Bonney Lake”; “Projects Bidding”. Bidders are re- quired to “Register as a Bidder” in order to re- ceive automatic e-mail notification of future ad- denda and be placed on the “Bidders List”. Con- tact the Bui lders Ex- change of Washington at (425) 258-1303 should you require further assis- tance.For questions regarding this project, please con- tact Dan Ireland, PE, at SCJ Alliance, 8730 Tal- lon Lane NE, Sui te 200 Lacey, WA 9 8 5 1 6 a n d (360) 352-1465.The City of Bonney Lake hereby notifies all bid- ders that it will affirma- tively ensure that in any contract entered into, pursuant to this adver- tisement, minority and women’s business enter- prises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to the invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, col- or, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award.Each bid proposal shall be accompanied by a bid proposal deposit in cash, cer t i f ied 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 Ci ty of Bonney Lake. Should the successful bidder fail to enter into such contract and fur- nish satisfactory perfor- mance and paymen t bond wi th in the t ime stated in the specifica- tions, the bid proposal deposit shall be forfeited to the City of Bonney Lake.The City of Bonney Lake reserves the right to re- ject 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.# 5966691 0 / 2 9 / 1 4 , 1 1 / 5 / 1 4 , 11/12/14

PUBLIC NOTICE OF APPLICATION AND

STATE ENVIRONMENTAL

POLICY ACT (SEPA)

Legal Notices

DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE

(DNS) FORTHE ENUMCLAW AMI POLE INSTALLATION

PROJECT(OPTIONAL DNS

PROCESS)Permit Application Num- ber: SEPA Environmen- tal Checklist File #14352Applicant: City of Enum- claw, Gas DepartmentDescription of Proposal: Install one (1) 100ft util- ity pole. The utility pole is for the City of Enum- claw Automated Meter Reading System (AMR). The pole wi l l have a 58”H X24”WX28”D Base station mounted 5ft from grade. At the top of the pole which will be ap- proximately 85ft f rom grade will be a 2.6 inch diameter by 11.167 foot tall antenna. Locat ion of Proposal: 39957 278th Way SE, Enumclaw, WA 98022 (APN 0620079060) Other Permits Required: Conditional Use, Build- ing and Electrical per- mits. Dates: This application was submitted: Septem- ber 30, 2014This app l ica t ion was deemed complete on: October 28, 2014This not ice was pub- lished on: November 12, 2014Lead Agency: Ci ty of Enumclaw, 1309 Myrtle Avenue, Enumclaw, WA 98022Determination of Non- Significance: The lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a prob- able significant adverse impact on the environ- ment. An environmental impact statement (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of a com- p le ted env i ronmenta l checklist and other infor- mation on file with the lead agency. This infor- mation is available to the public on request.Public Hearing: On De- cember 11, at 5:30 p.m., the Hearings Examiner will hold a public hearing on this proposal at the City Hall Council Cham- bers located at 1339 Griffin Avenue. Comment Per iod: The lead agency will not act on this proposal for four- teen (14) days from the publication date identi- fied above. This may be the only opportunity to comment on the environ- mental impacts of the proposal. Written com- ments must be received by 4:30 pm, November 26, 2014. Contact the Communi ty Deve lop- ment Depar tment for copies of the SEPA file.Commen t Pe r i od fo r Other Agencies: This DNS is issued under WAC 197-11-355. Com- menting agencies should submit any comments within the above-stated per iod. Upon request, the City will reconsider its lead agency status, t he i ssuance o f th i s DNS, or any mitigating measures.Administrator of Devel- opment Regulations and Responsible SEPA Offi- cialErika Shook, Community Development Director

1309 Myrtle AvenueEnumclaw, WA 98022Phone 360-825-3593 FAX 360-825-7232# 59964811/12/14SUPERIOR COURT OF

WASHINGTONCOUNTY OF KINGIN THE MATTER OF

THE ESTATEOF

Legal Notices

RUTH LYDA RUNLAND,

DeceasedNO. 14-4-06360-9KNT

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

RCW 11.40.030The personal represen- tative named below has been appointed and has qual i f ied as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person hav- ing a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any other- wise applicable statute of l imitations, present the claim in the manner as p rov ided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the person- al representative or the personal representa- tive’s attorney at the ad- dress stated below a copy of the claim and fil- ing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate pro- ceed ings were com- menced . The c l a im must be presented with- in the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided un- d e r R C W 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication o f the not ice. I f the claim is not presented within this time frame, t he c l a im i s fo reve r barred, except as other- wise provided in RCW 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 a n d 11.40.060. This bar is effect ive as to claims against both the dece- dent’s probate and non- probate assets.Date of filing copy of No- tice to Creditors:November 5, 2014Date of first publication: November 12, 2014.M ICHAEL CHARLES RUNLANDPersonal RepresentativeTRIP HARTWSBA # 8913Attorney for Personal RepresentativeAddress for Mailing or Service:1224 Griffin AvenueE n u m c l a w , W A 98022-3012(360) 825-5581 # 5996331 1 / 1 2 / 1 4 , 1 1 / 1 9 / 1 4 , 11/26/14

TOWN OF SOUTH PRAIRIE

ORDINANCE NO. 544An Ord inance o f the Town of South Prairie, Pierce County, Washing- ton adopting a Budget for Fiscal Year ending December 31, 2015.RESOLUTION NO. 330A Reso lu t i on o f t he Town of South Prairie, Pierce County, Washing- ton, adopting the Regu- lar Property Tax Levy for collection in 2015RESOLUTION NO. 331A Reso lu t i on o f t he Town of South Prairie, Pierce County, Washing- ton, adopting the Regu- lar Property Tax Levy for col lect ion in 2015 for S o u t h P r a i r i e E M S (Emergency Med ica l Services)RESOLUTION NO. 332A Reso lu t i on o f t he Town of South Prairie, Pierce County, Washing- ton, authorizing the May- or to enter into a Con- tract with Bias Software for Computer and Infor- mation Technology Sup- port Services RESOLUTION NO. 333A Reso lu t i on o f t he Town of South Prairie, Pierce County, Washing- ton, authorizing the May- or to apply for, sign, and enter into a nonexclusive Franchise Agreement with Pierce County to construct, operate, and maintain a Water Sys- tem in, along, and under

Legal Notices

cer tain Pierce County rights-of-wayOrdinance 544, Resolu- tion 330, Resolution 331, Resolution 332 and Res- olution 333 were adopt- ed by the South Prairie Town Council at its Reg- ular Council Meeting on N o v e m b e r 4 , 2 0 1 4 . Complete copies of the entire text of the adopted Ordinance and Resolu- tions may be obtained at the South Prairie Town H a l l o r b y c a l l i n g (360) 897-8878. # 59966511/12/14

EmploymentGeneral

Busy Medical Practice with PT clerical position, 6-8 hours/ week. Friend- ly, positive working envi- ronment. Must have val- id driver’s license and social security number. Fax resume and cover letter to (360)825-0568.

CARRIER ROUTES

AVAILABLE

IN YOUR AREA

Call Today1-253-872-6610

LOCAL LANDSCAPE Co. In Buckley WA is seeking to hire qualified individuals to provide a high quality service to our clients in Seattle and surrounding areas. Ap- plicants must possess hard working skills, de- pendable, follow instruc- tions, consistent, works well independently, able to lift 30-80 lbs, exten- sive walking, can handle physicality of the job and can work in all weather cond i t ions. Appl icant mus t possess a WA State Dr ivers License with a clean abstract. One yea r l andscape maintenance experience preferred but not manda- tory, will train. Must be able to pass drug test. Please mail resume with current driving abstract to PO Box 501, S. Prai- rie, WA 98385. or [email protected] an application can be mailed to you upon re- quest , Ca l l 253-255- 3020

Now Hiring Weekend & Fill In Relief Manage for

a Bonney Lake Storage Facility.

Please Bring Resume in Person

Monday thru Friday to 9902 216th Ave E,

Bonney LakePlease No Phone Calls

about this position

Veterinary Receptionist/ Assistant

7am - 12 noon, Tuesday through Friday. Saturday

9am - 1pm. Apply in person Mountain View Pet

Clinic, 18215 9th Street E. Ste#106, North Lake

Tapps, WA 98391

People Read The Courier-

Herald26,400 households receive the paper each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s

52,800 impres-sions. This does not include our

website.

EmploymentGeneral

REPORTERT h e G r ay s H a r b o r Publishing Group on Grays Harbor, Wash., has an opening for a full-time reporter with an emphasis on local sports writing. We’re looking for someone to produce clear, brightly wr i t ten h igh school prep spor ts s tor ies relevant to real people reading us in print, on our website and in so- cial media. Ability to take photos is neces- sary, as is familiarity w i t h s o c i a l m e d i a . Grays Harbor is on the Washington Coast, an hour from the Olympic Rain Forest and two hours f rom Seat t le. Benefits include, but are not limited to paid vacation, sick and holi- days, medical, dental and life insurance, and a 401(K) p lan w i th company match. Send a cover letter, resume and writ ing samples to: [email protected] qualified applicants will be considered for employment. Qualified applicants selected for interview wil l be re- quired to complete an application.

The Daily World is an equal opportunity

employer.

The YWCA of Seattle-King County-Snohomish County

seeks a

CAREER NAVIGATORThe Career Navigator will prepare low income adu l ts for careers in Business Informat ion Technology (office/tech- nology) fields. The Navi- gator will partner with lo- cal community colleges to increase the number of Seattle residents who access post-secondary education to attain a cer- tif icate and help them obtain living wage jobs related to their training. The Navigator will also recruit students for se- lect cohor t programs within the local Commu- nity Colleges including South Seattle Commu- nity College and help students successful ly nav iga te t he “dance steps” of college enroll- ment, admissions, finan- cial aid, and registration. Fu l l t ime, 40 hrs /wk. Rate $16.35/hr or DOE.

Respond to [email protected]

Details atwww.ywcaworks.org

EmploymentTransportation/Drivers

CDL Driver NeededLocal Puget Sound area. Flatbed exper ience a must. Full time, Monday- Fr iday. Good pay with advancement oppor tu- nities. Vacation and Holi- day pay. Call:

(253)261-4678Long Haul Truck Driver Po s i t i o n A v a i l a b l e : Comp:1000.00 WEEKLY Must have 2 years Class A Driving Experience, No Recent Major Moving Violations, West Coast Runs, Home Week ly, Medical, Profit Sharing Plan and Fuel & Safety Incentives, Paid Vaca- tion, Drop and Pick-Up Pay, Email: Cody@waters jay.com Fax:(425)259-4756 Con- tact Dispatch (425)259- 4702Teams and Solo’s: Mid- west and West Coast runs, Late Model Equip- ment, scheduled home t ime, Excel lent Miles, Paid Practical Miles, Di- rect Deposit, Paid Vaca- tion. Call Now! 800-645- 3748

Page 22: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 22 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

www.soundpublishing.com

Current Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com

For a list of our most current job openings and to learn more about us visit our website:

Feat

ure

d P

osi

tio

n MULTI-MEDIA ADVERTISING CONSULTANT – SEATTLEBe a part of the largest community news organization in Washington!

∙ Do you have a proven track record of success in sales and enjoy managing your own territory?· Are you competitive and thrive in an energetic environment?· Do you desire to work in an environment which o� ers uncapped earning opportunities?· Are you interested in a fast paced, creative atmosphere where you can use your sales expertise to provide

consultative print and digital solutions?

If you answered YES to the above, then we are looking for you! Seattle Weekly, one of Seattle’s most respected publications and a division of Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for self-motivated, results-driven people interested in a multi-media sales career. This position will be responsible for print and digital advertising sales to an eclectic and exciting group of clients.

As part of our sales team you are expected to maintain and grow existing client relationships, as well as develop new client relationships. The successful candidate will also be goal oriented, have organizational skills that enable you to manage multiple deadlines, provide great consultative sales and excellent customer service.This position receives a base salary plus commission; and a bene� ts package including health insurance, paid time o� , and 401K. Position requires use of your personal cell phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of active vehicle insurance. Sales experience necessary; Media experience is a de� nite asset. Must be computer-pro� cient. If you have these skills, and enjoy playing a pro-active part in impacting your local businesses’ � nancial success with advertising solutions, please email your resume and cover letter to: [email protected], ATTN: SEA.

Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employee (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. We o� er a great work environment with opportunity for advancement along with a competitive bene� ts package including health insurance, paid time o� (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401k.

Accepting resumes at:[email protected] by mail to:19426 68th Avenue S, Kent, WA 98032ATTN: HRPlease state which position and geographic area you are applying for.

We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations:

• King County• Kitsap County• Clallam County• Jeff erson County• Okanogan County• Pierce County• Island County• San Juan County• Snohomish County• Whatcom County• Grays Harbor County

Sales Positions• Multi Media Advertising Sales Consultants - Redmond - Whidbey - Seattle - Eastside - Issaquah - Everett - South King County - Grays Harbor Co.

Reporters & Editorial• Reporters - Sequim - Aberdeen - Port Angeles - Bothell/Kenmore• Editor - Montesano

Production/Labor• General Worker - Everett

Health Care EmploymentCaregivers

Narrows Glen, Tacoma’sP r e m i e r R e t i r e m e n t Community is seeking an experienced short or- der cook. We offer full restaurant service to our residents. Our residents enjoy quality food with a home-style flair. Must be able to work weekends and holidays. We offer ful l benefits, uniforms and a free meal on every shift. If you enjoy making great meals for seniors, en joy work ing wi th a company who truly be- lieves in making a differ- ence, this is the job for you. Must be able to pass a cr iminal back- ground and drug test. E m a i l : n a r r o w s - [email protected] Susan Nocella Narrows Glen 8201-6th Ave Tacoma, WA 9 8 4 0 6 2 5 3 - 5 6 4 - 4770

Health Care EmploymentGeneral

CNA - Full time. Evening and night shifts. Enum- claw Health and Reha- bilitation Center Please apply within; 2323 Jen- sen. Or call: (360)825- 2541

DIALYSIS RN8 Hour Evening Shift

(3:00pm-1130pm)Enumclaw Kidney

CenterMust have current WA State RN license & at least 1 year experience as an RN, preferably in Dialysis. Benefit pack- age and compet i t i ve pay, based on experi- ence. Visit

nwkidney.orgto fill out our application

ENUMCLAW HEALTH and Rehabilitation Cen- ter. Experienced RN to join our dynamic group. WA license required. For more information please call Mark Censis at: 360- 825-2541

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Business Opportunities

AVON- Earn extra in- come with a new career! Sell from home, work,, online. $15 startup. For information cal l : 888- 423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat 9-1 Central)

Partners needed! Soon gove r nmen t l aw w i l l mandate every bar pro- v i de a b rea tha l yze r. Learn how to be the first in your area to cash in. Ca l l 1 -800-287-3157 b rea tha l yze r i neve r y - bar.com

Ret i red Home Heal th Coor idantor seeks in home geriactric care po- s i t ion. Live- in or par t t i m e . P h o n e S a n d y (253)217-0703

Schools & Training

A I R L I N E C A R E E R S Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certi- f ied Technic ian f ix ing je ts . F inanc ia l a id i f qualified. Call for free in- formation Aviation Insti- tute of Maintenance 1- 877-818-0783 www.Fix- Jets.com

Professional ServicesAttorney, Legal Services

Notice to ContractorsWashington State Law

(RCW 18.27.100)requires that all adver- tisements for construc- tion related services in- clude the contractor’s current depar tment of Labor and Indust r ies registration number in the advertisement.Failure to obtain a certifi- cate of registration from L&I or show the registra- tion number in all adver- tising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor.For more information, call Labor and Industries Special ty Compliance Services Division at

1-800-647-0982or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

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homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

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That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

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Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

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0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

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Locally Owned & Operated

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38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

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WASHINGTON

0500

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WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

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WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

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253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

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Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Professional ServicesLegal Services

ARE YOU HURT AND DO YOU NEED A LAW- YER? Let the exper i- ence of James, Vernon & Weeks work for you. We accept Personal In- jury, Motor Vehicle Colli- s ion, Auto Insurance Cla ims, Medical Mal- practice, and Worker’s C o m p c a s e s . C A L L ( 2 0 6 ) 2 6 9 - 1 1 0 0 o r (888) 667-0683 for in- format ion or a FREE onsultation. James, Ver- n o n & We e k s , P. A . , 2505 Second Avenue, Suite 610, Seattle, WA 98121 Helping People Solve Problems?

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparat ion. Inc ludes custody, support, prop- er ty division and bills. B B B m e m b e r . (503) 772-5295.www.paralegalalterna- [email protected]

EZ DocumentsFamily Law Document

Preparation& Attorney Led Criminal Rep.

823 Main St Ste GSumner, WA 98390

253-326-5523www.ezdocuments.net

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

PIANOLESSONS For the young and

young at heart.Karen (360)802-9314

Professional ServicesProfessional

Custom UpholsteryBy Van’s of Enumclaw. Free pickup, delivery

and estimates.Monday - Friday

8am to 5pm.23929 SE 440th,

Enumclaw(360)825-5775

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Home ServicesAppliance Repair

B&RREFRIGERATION

829-1710Raymond Stine

owner

Major Household Appliances

Repair Most Makes & Models

GAS & ELECTRICFURNACES

COMMERCIALREFRIGERATION

Serving South King & Pierce

Area Since 1973

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Home ServicesBackhoe/Dozing/Tractor

BACKHOEBulldozing, Dump Truck,

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Ecology Block Walls

(253)355-1743 or (253)862-6484

#hillijc232qz

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Wrights ServicesOver 40 yrs. Experience

Carpet CleaningUpholstery Cleaning

Carpet RepairRestretching Carpets

Pet Odor RemovalSqueaky Floor Repairwww.wrightsservices.com

Free EstimateExcellent Service

Competitive Prices(360)825-7877(253)939-4399

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Home ServicesChimney Cleaning

WDCCHIMNEY SWEEP

Local Family Owned and Operated.360-825-5607253-261-4014

www.wdcbuild.comLic#WALTHDC980JH

Home ServicesConcrete Contractors

Dennis Gustafson360-825-7983

360-239-2203 cell

5779

66

Licensed,

Lic#

Home ServicesGeneral Contractors

5779

81

Chris Eggersowner

360-825-1443Cont# EGGERHC940LM

Home Construction & Remodeling

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Home ServicesGeneral Contractors

1140929

Remodels & Additions

Kitchen & Baths

Deck Construction & Rebuilding

All Kinds of home repairs

Windows anddoor replacements

Person’sCONSTRUCTIONS E R V I C E S

PC

(253)880-6654

thepersonfamily@msnPERSOCS867BP

577955

General Contractor

Lic# GLCCOSC904KF

360-825-1132ENUMCLAW, WA

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Home ServicesGeneral Contractors

CONTRACTOR’SNOTICE

Adver t ising placed by contractor’s must con- tain the contractor’s true name, address and cur- rent registration number according to Washington State Law 18.27,100. Violations could be sub- ject to a civil penalty of up to $1000 per viola- tion. To see if this law applies to you and for in- formation on other provi- s ions of the law ca l l Contractors Registration in Olympia. (360)902- 5226.

Home ServicesDrywall/Plaster

PUGET SOUND DRYWALL CO.

“Where Quality is the Difference.”

New Construction, Basement, RemodelsNo Job Too Small!All work owner finished

(253) 862-7533

BONDED •INSUREDPUGETSD178B4

577964

pugetsounddrywallco.com

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

**Local Fence Co.**

White Vinyl, Ranch,Horse Fencing

Cedar, Chain Link,Repairs, Gates

Call James253-831-9906

Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

Home ServicesHandyperson

Bonney LakeHandyman

- Remodel - Kitchens- Repair - Baths- Maintenance - Windows- Roof - Gutters- Storm DamageRepair

Any Size Jobs!Ofice253.863.4243Cell 206.979.1302

Home ServicesHandyperson

578389

A PROFESSIONALHANDYMAN

www.rboydproservices.comLicensed • BondedRICHABP014L4

Roo�ng Painting

Gutter CleaningPressure Washing

PlumbingElectrical

Remodel & New ConstructionALL Home Repair

30 Years Experience!

253/691-1324

SMALL JOBS OUR SPECIALITY

PUGET SOUND CONSTRUCTION

Interior / Exterior Painting and

Home RepairsBuild Wood Decks

and FencesDry Rot

2 5 3 - 3 5 0 - 3 2 3 1#PUGETSC038KA

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

*EZ-HaulersJunk Removal

We Haul Anything!HOME, GARAGE and

YARD CLEANUPLowest Rates!(253)310-3265

Home ServicesHeating/Air Conditioning

CODE MECHANICALHeating &

Air ConditioningResidential/Commercial

Sales & ServiceBuckley (253)377-2787

CODEMI*932KQ

Page 23: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Wednesday, November 12, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 23 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

28’x36’x10’

$21,425$307/mo.

$23,46024’x36’x10’

$19,896$285/mo.

$21,78624’x34’x10’

$19,278$277/mo.

$21,109Daylight Garage

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip-strip 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.

30’x36’x16’

$34,100$489/mo.

$37,16928’x36’x16’

$31,744$455/mo.

$34,60024’x36’x16’

$29,976$430/mo.

$32,674

32’x48’x14’

$28,750$412/mo.

$31,48130’x48’x14’

$27,885$400/mo.

$30,53428’x48’x14’

$26,089$374/mo.

$28,568

24’x24’x9’

$13,873$199/mo.

$15,26022’x24’x9’

$13,352$211/mo.

$14,68724’x28’x9’

$14,999$237/mo.

$16,493

24’x36’x8’

$10,636$153/mo.

$11,75230’x36’x12’

$12,385$178/mo.

$13,68528’x36’x10’

$11,253$161/mo.

$12,435

Monitor Barn(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/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ Continuous � ow ridge vent.

36’x36’x9/16’

$27,384$393/mo.

$29,84930’x36’x9/16’

$24,989$359/mo.

$27,23830’x30’x9/16’

$23,999$345/mo.

$26,159

2 Car Garage4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix 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 � ow ridge vent.

20’x28’x8’

$12,230$176/mo.

$13,51420’x24’x8’

$11,460$164/mo.

$12,66320’x20’x8’

$10,924$157/mo.

$12,071

*If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.AllAllAll BUILDINGS INCLUDE:

Concrete Included

Concrete Included

Concrete Included

Concrete Included

Concrete Included

Washington #TOWNCPF099LT 800-824-9552Financing 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 � at, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of � ll, 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.

20,862,593SQUARE FEET

19,575BUILDINGS BUILT

As of 10/15/2014

1161538

Toy Box4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix 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 � ow ridge vent.

Deluxe Garage w/Loft4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix 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 � ow ridge vent.

Equipment Storage2” Fiberglass vapor barrier roof insulation,8 sidewall & trim colors w/25 year warranty.

For a money saving coupon ... Go to Facebook.com/Permabilt

RV Garage/Storage4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix 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 � ow ridge vent.

30’x36’x12’

$21,931$315/mo.

$24,12430’x28’x12’

$18,970$273/mo.

$20,86730’x42’x12’

$23,727$340/mo.

$26,099Concrete Included

Deluxe 2 Car Garage/Shop4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix 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.

PERMABILT.com facebook.com/PermaBilt

Home ServicesHeating/Air Conditioning

6093

31

253.255-5682Lic.#SERENAI920L6

Heating & Air Conditioning

$79i$89

Furnace Tune-upHeat Pump orA/C Tune-up

1140

935

LLOYD’SHEATING & SHEET METAL

Sales and Service of Gas, Oil & Electric Forced Air,

Quality Air Filters Custom Metal

Fabrication

- Free -ESTIMATES410 Roosevelt East

Just off Hwy 410

PHONE360-825-2241

LOYDH810MT

Home ServicesProperty Maintenance

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Water- p r o o f i n g , F i n i s h i n g , Structural Repairs, Hu- midity and Mold Control F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-800-998-5574

Home ServicesHouse/Cleaning Service

*** Bonney LakeCleaning Service ***

Commercial/ResidentialWeekly Accounts

Available Now!References Available

Call Sarah for aFree Estimate253-921-2203

Home ServicesLandscape Services

A-1 QUICK LANDSCAPING

25% OFF!All kinds of yard work:

sod, seed, tree pruning mowing and fencing.

Senior DiscountCALL FOR FALL SPECIAL

253-228-9101206-229-5632

Lic# quickl*984cr *Bonded/Insured

A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING

* Cleanup * Trim * Weed* Prune * Sod * Seed

* Bark * Rockery* Backhoe * Patios

425-226-3911 206-722-2043

Lic# A1SHEGL034JM

K & K Landscaping

Lawn MaintenanceTrimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up

Bark, HaulingAll kinds of yard work!

253-862-4347Bonded & InsuredLic# KKLANKL897MK

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Page 24: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 24 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

Built to Last into Legend

877-844-8637

Prices To Fit Your Budget!• Garages • Shops • Barns • Arenas • Guest Houses

• RV & Boat Storage • Custom Designs & Much More!

FREE Estimates Call Today!

“Snohomish County’sPost & Stick Frame Buildings Experts!”

Lic# ARKCUB1991J1

~ MARYSVILLE, WA ~

www.ArkBuildings.com

1163

102 The Courier-Herald Reaches Far

Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

Home ServicesLawn/Garden Service

Leaf & Storm Clean upHANDY RANDYProperty & Yard Care

Trim*Prune*HedgesCleanup & HaulingCall Randy Now253-350-1539LICENSED & INSURED

Home ServicesPainting

AK Painting IncExterior-Interior

High Quality WorkFair Pricing

FREE ESTIMATESCall Ken

(253)[email protected]

Licensed, bonded, insuredKPAINPC957CB

Home ServicesPlumbing

Jim Wetton’s PLUMBING

CONTR#JIMWEP#137PB

Residential & Commercial Service

& RepairsWater Heaters Remodeling

Drain CleaningNew Construction

Your Fast, Friendly, Service

Specialists since 1987Call “RABBIT”

1165

628

A+ Rating

360 825-7720

JT’s Plumbing Repair est 1987

John Long(360)825-3007(253)334-9698

*Plumbing Repairs*Drain Cleaning

*Fixture InstallationsJTSPLR*110JP

Home ServicesRoofing/Siding

ROOFING &REMODELINGSenior DiscountsFree Estimates

Expert Work253-850-5405

American Gen. Contractor Better Business BureauLic #AMERIGC923B8

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Home ServicesSeptic Service

9092

9290

9292

9092

92

Service, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCService, LLCEnumclaw

360.825.5580Bonney Lake253.862.1227

Plumbing Repair

Septic Service

Pumping & Repair

Drain Cleaning

O&M Inspections

Real Estate Inspections

Frontierseptic@qwestof� ce.net

Serving South King & Pierce

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

J&J TREE SERVICE

Free EstimatesInsured & Bonded253-854-6049425-417-2444

Removals,Topping, Pruning

LIC# JJTOPJP921JJ

TEZAK’STREE

SERVICE(253)862-1700

tezakstreeservice.comServing the area

Over 30 YearsFREE ESTIMATES

Bonded~InsuredLic. # TEZAKTS0330C

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

TOM’S WINDOWCLEANING

Commercial, ResidentialGutter cleaning,Gutter whitening,

Moss control,Pressure washing,New construction

Locally owned(360)802-8925(253)740-3833

Domestic ServicesChild Care Offered

BabysitterExperienced, Honest, Reliable, High School

Student Heavily Involved in Community

Service Available to Babysit Evenings &

Weekends (Days Dur- ing School Holidays).

CPR & First Aid Certified,

Reasonable Rates,References Available.

Call, Text or Email Kiersten for Appt.

to Meet(253)740-9844

[email protected]

Domestic ServicesChild Care Offered

Bonney Lake Montessori

is now enrolling children 30 months to

five years for preschool and

childcare programs. We are a State licensed facility, specializing in kindergarten readiness.

Call to schedule a classroom tour and meet our teachers!

(253)862-8599

NOTICE TO READERS People providing child care in their home are required to have a state l i cense. Complete l i - censing information and daycare provider verifi- cation is available from the state at 1-800-446- 1114.

Domestic ServicesPreschool Openings

Now Open!Enrolling for

Preschool & Pre-KAges 3-5

(253)569-7315

1258 Harding St. Enumclaw11

8068

0

Appliances

AMANA RANGEDeluxe 30” Glasstop

Range self clean, auto clock & timer Extra-

Large oven & storage *UNDER WARRANTY*Over $800. new. Pay off balance of $193 or make

payments of $14 per month. Credit Dept.

206-244-6966

KENMORE FREEZER Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft.

freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain,

interior light *UNDER WARRANTY*Make $15 monthly pay-

ments or pay off balance of $293.

Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

KENMORE REPOHeavy duty washer &

dryer, deluxe, large cap. w/normal, perm-press &

gentle cycles.* Under Warranty! *

Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.

206-244-6966

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Appliances

NEW APPLIANCESUP TO 70% OFF

All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches

and Factory Imperfec- tions

*Under Warranty*For Inquiries, Call or Visit

Appliance Distributors @14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.

206-244-6966

REPO REFRIGERATOR

Custom deluxe 22 cu. ft. side-by-side, ice & water

disp., color panels available

UNDER WARRANTY! was over $1200 new, now only payoff bal. of $473 or make pmts of

only $15 per mo.Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

STACK LAUNDRYDeluxe front loading

washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles.

Like new condition* Under Warranty *Over $1,200 new, now only $578 or make pay- ments of $25 per month

%206-244-6966%

Cemetery Plots

1 PLOT - $23,000 at Bellevue’s Sunset Hills Memorial Park. In the beautiful, sold out Prayer Section, Lot 257, Space 6 . Cash or Cashier ’s Check only. Call Doris at 206-819-7637.

2 CEMETERY PLOTS s i d e by s i d e i n t h e de i s rab le Garden o f Light! Asking just $3,750 eac or best offer. Locat- ed in The Washington Memorial Park, at 16445 Internat ional Blvd, in SeaTac. Private seller 206-715-0765.

2 RESTING PLACES in desirable Sunset Memo- rial Park, located in the Garden of Rest. Side by side, spaces 3 and 4, lot 57. Great views to reflect upon memories. Asking $6500 each or best of- fer. Seller will pay fee. Call Bill at 425-679-6364

4 CHOICE LOTS IN the prest igious, desirable Rhododendron Garden. Nestelled side by side, with a nice level walk up for visitors. Mature flow- er ing landscape. Well ma in ta ined g rounds. Easy to locate. Available now at The Greenwood Cemeter y in Renton, 9 8 0 5 6 . O w n e r p ay s t ra n s fe r fe e . A s k i n g $9000 ea / OBO. Please call 206-307-5609.

ACACIA Memorial Park, “Birch Garden”, (2) adja- cent cemetery plots, #3 & #4. Se l l ing $4,000 each or $7,500 both. They wi l l charge you $5,000 each. Located in Shoreline / N. Seattle. Call or email Emmons Johnson, 206-794-2199, [email protected]

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Cemetery Plots

BEAUTIFUL LOCATION 1 Plot for sale. Value $5000. asking $3,000. Mature floral landscape with fountain. Peaceful location in “Garden of Flowers”. Desirable Bon- ney Watson, Sea Tac, near A i r por t . P lease leave message, I will re- turn your call 206-734- 9079.

Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting

Place for Loved OnesPricing from

$750 to $700036424 312th Ave SE

Enumclaw(206)280-4071

SINGLE PLOT in the s o l d o u t G a r d e n o f Memor ies, located in Sunset Hil ls Memorial Cemetery in Bellevue. L o t 1 1 3 0 , S p a c e 1 . Beautiful view, tranquil setting. Will entertain all of fers! Cal l : 406-251- 3452

Electronics

DirectTV - 2 Year Sav- ings Event! Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Only DirecTV gives you 2 YEARS of savings and a FREE Ge- nie upgrade! Call 1-800- 279-3018

DISH TV Retailer. Start- ing at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed I n t e r n e t s t a r t i n g a t $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Instal- lation! CALL Now! 800- 278-1401

Get a complete Satellite System installed at NO COST! FREE HD/DVR U p gra d e . A s l ow a s $19.99/mo. Call for de- tails 877-388-8575

Get The Big Deal from D i r e c T V ! A c t N o w - $ 1 9 . 9 9 / m o. Fr e e 3 - Months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINE- M A X . F R E E G E N I E HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket In- cluded with Select Pack- ages. New Customers Only IV Support Hold- ings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer Some exclusions apply - Call for detai ls 1-800-897- 4169

Pro tec t Your Home - 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, IN- S TA L L E D T O M O R - ROW! 888-858-9457 (M- F 9am-9pm ET)

Exercise Equipment

$100 ELLIPTICAL Train- er / Bicycle Combo by Image 2 in 1 . Brand n ew ! DV D + ex t ra s . Great Chr istmas gi f t ! Wilkeson 360-829-7761.

Farm Fencing& Equipment

‘13 KUBOTA TRACTOR L4600/DTF. 10 hrs total time $29,000. Front end loader with turf tires and sunshade. 7’ Landpride B r u s h H o g a n d a n AM/FM radio. A lways covered and well main- tained. Call before this great deal is gone John 713-515-0034. Located San Juan. (manufacture photo is pictured).

Firewood, Fuel& Stoves

NOTICEWashington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (re- ceipt) that shows the s e l l e r ’s a n d bu ye r ’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quan- tity 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 de- livery vehicle.The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a cord by v isual iz ing 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 make a f i r ewood complaint, call 360-902- 1857.

agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx

agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx

Flea Market

FREE ADS FOR FREE STUFF! Now you can clean up and clear out yo u r i t e m fo r F R E E when you’re g iv ing i t away for f ree. Of fer 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. 253-537- 7932.

Food &Farmer’s Market

ORDER NOWFOR 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

Home Furnishings

LA Z BOY. Tan. Excel- len t cond i t ion . $225. (253)335-5507.

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 prescr ipt ion and f ree shipping.

Medical Guardian - Top- rated medical alarm and 24/7 medical alert moni- toring. For a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no com- mitment, a 2nd water- proof alert button for free and more - only $29.95 per month . 800-617- 2809

VIAGRA and C IAL IS USERS! 50 Pills SPE- CIAL - $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaran- teed. CALL NOW! 855- 409-4132

VIAGRA - Pfizer brand! - Lowest Price from USA Pharmacies. No doctor visit needed! Discreet Home Del iver y. Cal l 855-684-5241

Medical Equipment

Acorn Stairlifts. The AF- FORDABLE solution to your stai rs! **Limited t ime -$250 O f f You r Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for FREE DVD and b ro - chure.

JAZZY ELITE Mobil ity Wheelchai r by Pr ide. Retails for $3,500. Only used a few times. Can be used indoors or out- doors. Battery range: 8.95 miles. Top speed: 4 MPH. Weight capacity: 300 lbs. Asking pr ice: $1,000. 253-891-1189 leave message.

Miscellaneous

KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odor- less, Non-Staining. Ef- fective results begin af- t e r s p r a y d r i e s . Ava i lable : The Home Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware

Wanted/Trade

TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920’s th r u 1980 ’s . G ibson , Martin, Fender, Gretsch,Epiphone, Guild, Mos- rite, Rickenbacker, Prai- r ie State, D’Angel ico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos.1-800-401-0440

Cats

PIX IE BOBS - T ICA Registrat ion possible. P lay fu l , l o ts o f fun ! . Hypo-allergenic, shor t hair, some with extra big feet, short tails, very lov- i n g a n d l o y a l . B o x trained. Excellent mark- i n g s . A l l s h o t s a n d wormed. Guaranteed! Cal l for appointment: 425-235-3193 (Renton)

RAGDOLL Maine Coon mix kittens (6), will be huge, docile, dog like. Raised under foot never caged. Raised with dogs and great with kids. 8 weeks. Sealpoints, Blue- points, tabby, black & black & white. Shots, wormed, garaunteed. $300 no checks please. Weekend delivery pos- s ib le. Sor r y no p ics. Available Bengal Main- coon Mix. 425-350-0734.

Dogs

2 YORKIES, registered females. Playful com- panions, ready for loving homes. Very small, are mature at 3 to 5 lbs. Up t o d a t e o n s h o t s . 7 weeks old with health guarantee. $1,000 each. 253-306-1936.

(6) MIN PIN PUPPIES. 3 Black & Tan males, 1 Red female, 1 Red male and a Chocolate & Tan male. 6 weeks old. Tails docked, ears natural . $200 each. Can deliver. Call Hazel at 360-808- 4728, leave name and phone number in mes- sage.

AKC GOLDEN Doodle Retriever Puppies. Non shedding males & fe- males. Highly intelligent, cute and wonderful with c h i l d r e n . Pa r e n t s & grand parents on site. Wormed & shots. Not just a pet, but one of the family! $1,000. Call Chris 360-652-7148.

B O S T O N T E R R I E R Puppies. Adorable male and 3 fema les. F i rs t shots, dew claws done and worming up to date. Black / Whites and Seal colors. Born September 9th. $600 - $700. Roy, WA . Se r i ous ca l l e r s please 253-691-9142.

CHIHUAHUA Puppies, call for pricing. Financing Available. Adult Adop- t ions also. Reputable Oregon Kennel. Unique colors, Long and Short Haired. Health Guaran- teed. UTD Vaccinations/ wo r m ings , l i t t e r box t r a i n e d , s o c i a l i z e d . Video, pictures, informa- tion/ virtual tour:

www.chi-pup.netReferences happily sup- plied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-459- 5951

F - 1 L A B R A D O O D L E Puppies born 10/2. All of our puppies are home raised and social ized with children of all ages. Puppies will be ready to be placed in new homes N ov. 2 2 , 2 0 1 4 . D ew c l aw s r e m ove d , ve t checked, shots & worm- ing are all up to date. Accepting deposits now. $1300. Call now, before their gone [email protected]

GERMAN Sheppard/lab, long haired female pup. Her ears are up. Great a r o u n d o t h e r d o g s , ch ickens. Bor n Ju ly 23rd. 1st shots, wormed, $200 (206)280-7952

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent King County

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

**Local Fence Co.**White Vinyl, Ranch,

Horse FencingCedar, Chain Link,

Repairs, GatesCall James

253-831-9906Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

PIANOLESSONS

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Page 25: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 25

Paid Adver tisement

More than half a million people in Western Washington go hungry every year. That’s why, for more than a decade, QFC and YOU - our customers- have put more than 4 million meals on the tables of hungry families in the northwest through the Bringing Hope to the Table campaign that takes place in all QFC stores in November and December each year. Food Lifeline, Oregon Food Bank and QFC team up during the holidays to give the community more opportunities to fill food bank shelves. Here’s how you can help:

• Purchase a pre-made $10 bag with nutritious, protein packed, food bank approved product at any local QFC. Product contents include peanut butter, steel oats, and more!

• Make a $1 or $5 cash donation when you checkout

• Drop your change in the coin boxes located at the checkstand

• Look for special tags throughout the store marking food bank recommended items to donate in the drop bins at the front of the store

• Purchase participating Kendall Jackson wines and $6 will be donated for every case of product sold during the promotion

• Purchase any Full Sail product and $1 will be donated for every case sold during the promotion

Join us in achieving our goal of bringing 300,000 meals to hungry families this year. For more details, visit www.qfc.com. Thanks for all you do to help the fight against hunger during the holiday season and beyond.

Bringing HELP and HOPE to the Table

6Rea

sons

CLAS

S2x4

6 Reasons to Advertise with The Courier-Herald

People Read The Courier-Herald. 26,400 households receive the paper each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions. This does not include our website.

The Courier-Herald is Local. We’ve been serving the plateau community for over 110 years. The Courier-Herald is Involved in the Community. Our sta� belong to the Rotary, Chambers and volunteer in other local organizations.

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles. +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

The Courier-Herald is Creative. Our artists produce award winning creative work that will showcase your business at no additional cost.

The Courier-Herald is Fearless. The Courier-Heralds award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story.

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

6

5

4

3

2

1

6Rea

sons

CLAS

S2x4

Dogs

Newfoundland’s Purebred with

champion bloodlines. Very Healthy & quick learners, beautiful. These are a large breed. Starting at

$1,100.Both Parents on

premises 425.239.6331

Purebred mini Australian S h e p p a r d p u p py ’s , family raised. Aussie are sweet, smart, loving. 1st sho ts , wo r med , dew claws & tails removed. Many colors. Parents are our family dogs and on site. $450 & up. 360-261-3354

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Dogs

YORKSHIRE Terr iers, A K C p u p p y ’ s . S i r e championship lineage. Ready fo r t he i r new homes Nov. 10th. Par- ents on site, should be no bigger than 4-5 LBS. A l l s h o t s , w o r m e d , health verified. Females starting at $1,500. Males starting at $1,000 425- 530-0452 (Marysville)

Garage/Moving SalesPierce County

BUCKLEY, 98321GARAGE SALE! Friday 11/14, 8 am to 6 pm and Saturday 11/15, 8 am to 4 pm. Antiques galore, antique pictures, couch, tools, household, garden and more. 23716 Sum- ner Buck ley Highway East. Rain or shine!

Bazaars/Craft Fairs

AUBURN, 98002.ANNUAL FALL BAZAAR Sat Nov 15th, 9 a - 4 p. 20 + vendors se l l ing handcraf ted i tems as well as new purchased m e r c h a n d i s e ! C o m e complete you Christmas shopping. Lunch served 11am Chili & cornbread just $3. Join us at 1225 29th St SE, at Auburn Church of the Nazarene.

We��e��ay, Ju�e 4, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, �a�e 13 www.�ou�ie��e�al�.�om o� www.�l��ou�ie��e�al�.�om

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

953872

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

ENUMCLAW, 98022.2 MONTHS FREE Move in special. $6,995 2 BR, 1 BA single wide home is ready to move in. All appliances and built in hutch. EHO. Desirable 55 + Mountain Villa Es- tates 360-825-3733 www.cal-am.com

WILKESON5 BR 2.75 BA CUS- TOM BUILT HOME� Tile roof, heat pump, fireplace & 3 car gar- age. Possibly in- law apartment. Must see! $367,000. FSBO 360- 829-0732.

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

26x16 cabin with porch, 19.8 treed acres, out- door shower and 40 min. to Spokane. Secluded County road., has wa- t e r / p o w e r / p h o n e i n . Beautiful view west over Spokane River Valley, bui ld ing s i te c leared. $94,000. Jeff (360)201- 2390 or (360)366-5011Call for additional photos

ORCAS ISLANDWAT E R F RO N T L OT, low bank. Water mem- bership, sewer & elec- tricity. Use of community tennis court, boat dock & boat launch. $395,000. S a l e b y o w n e r . 360.317.8895

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

SE�ERAL HOMES �OR SALE

2 & 3 Be��oom55� Commu�ity i�

�ATINA REALTYO�ti��

3�0-893-3200

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

CLEAR LAKE, EATONVILLE

80’ OF WATERFRONT 3 BR, 1.5 BA priced for quick sale at $369,000 obo. Located at 12506 Clear Lake North Road E . No agents. FSBO 360-832-6678.

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

AUBURN

3 BR RAMBLER wi th den and 2 car garage. �uiet family neighbor- hood of desirable Forest Ridge! No pets allowed. Yard mainatence provid- ed by owner. Rental is avai lable now. $1,400 per month with deposit. Year lease. No smoking. Call Brian 253-350-1471

ENUMCLAW2 BR 1200SF Rambler on 2 acres with barn. Gas heat and washer / dryer. New carpet and paint. Covered patio & carport. No smoking. Pets to be determined. $1,600 / mo. 360-825- 6445.

ENUMCLAW, 98022.

ROOMMATE NEEDED to share my beautiful 3 B R h o m e. Yo u r ow n separate BA w/ separate partially finished living room too. Garden area is avail. Mature, respon- sible adult preferred. All utilities, TV service and full house access incl. Cats okay. $750 mo. 360-825-2859.

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Wilkeson3 b e d r o o m , 1 b a t h house. Nice yard, close to school. $1100/month. Available beginning of June. Contact Noel at (253)508-2385

Apartments for Rent King County

1 & 2 bedroom apar t- men t s i n Enumc law. Close to downtown & shopping. Coin-op Laun- dry & off street parking. (253)740-1685 for more details.ENUMCLAW1 & 2 BEDROOM apart- men t s i n Enumc law. Washer, dryer in unit. Covered parking. Small pets ok. We pay water, s e w e r & g a r b a g e . (360)825-0707

Apartments for Rent King County

ENUMCLAW2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath in �uiet Neighborhood. Off Street Parking, Common Laundry. Close to Shops and Hospital. $695 Per Mon th . Ca l l Je remy : 206-422-1031

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

Buckley area2 bedroom apar tment. W/S/G inc luded. Up- stairs unit $700/month, 1st, last, $500 deposit. D o w n s t a i r s u n i t $800/month, 1st, last, $500 deposit. (360)825- 7620

LAKE TA��S, 98391.1 B R � � 0 0 . N I C E Apar tments. Water, appliances, garbage, laundry, sewer includ- ed. Nice quiet country setting. No pets. 253- 891-9128.

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

ENUMCLAW, 98022.HOME IS WHERE THE H E A RT I S ! 2 F R E E Months move in special. Bring your single or dou- blewide home to beauti- ful Mountain Vil la Es- tates. 55 +. EHO. 360- 825-3733.www.cal-am.com

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

ROY

� R� S�ACES ��390/Mo

1/2 off 1st monthIncls: Water, Septic, Garbage, Cable &

Playground. Located in Clean Mobile / RV

Park in Roy

253-�77-5874

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 951-6909. 1110 Grif- �n Enumclaw.

Room to ren t i n my b e a u t i f u l E n u m c l aw home. Room includes a small fridge, microwave, toaster and is fully fur- nished including a TV. Close to all stores and bus stop. $500/ month includes utilities and in- ternet. Must have good re ferences and c lear background check. No p e t s . C a l l R o b i n a t (360)441-1282.

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

AK �ai�ti�� I��Exterior-Interior

High �uality WorkFair Pricing

�REE ESTIMATESCall Ke�

�253�[email protected]

Licensed, bonded, insuredKPAINPC957CB

COUNTRY GARDEN BOU�UETS offers sea- sonal bouquets, wreaths & other hand- crafted local items in �The Shop� (360)825- 3976 (253)332-9466

3�0-829-4121253-389-1�98

Be a NEWSPAPER

CARRIERin Buckley!

Deliver once per wk.Earn @ $39 a month (in a 4 week month)

Papers are delivered to your door

No $$$ collectionWalking route- no

car needed Great �rst job

(360)825-2555 x6050

Be a NEWSPAPER

CARRIERin Enumclaw! Deliver once per wk.Earn @ $32 a month (in a 4 week month)

Papers are delivered to your door

No $$$ collectionWalking route- no

car needed Great �rst job

(360)825-2555 x6050

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 951-6909. 1110 Grif- �n Enumclaw.

K & K La����api��

Lawn MaintenanceTrimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up

Bark, HaulingAll kinds of yard work!

253-8�2-4347Bonded & InsuredLic# KKLANKL897MK

**Local Fence Co.**

White Vinyl, Ranch,Horse Fencing

Cedar, Chain Link,Repairs, Gates

Call James253-831-9906

Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting

Place for Loved OnesPricing from

$750 to $700036424 312th Ave SE

Enumclaw(206)280-4071

PIANOLESSONS For the young and

young at heart.Karen (360)802-9314

TEZAK’STREE

SERVICEAll Aspects

Over 30 YearsExperience

FREE ESTIMATES

(253)862-1700 tezakstreeservice.comLicensed�Bonded�Insured

Lic. # TEZAKT50330C

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

TOM’S WINDOWCLEANING

Commercial, ResidentialGutter cleaning,Gutter whitening,

Moss control,Pressure washing,New construction

Locally owned(360)802-8925(253)740-3833

Wrights ServicesOver 40 yrs. Experience

Carpet CleaningUpholstery Cleaning

Carpet RepairRestretching Carpets

Pet Odor RemovalSqueaky Floor Repairwww.wrightsservices.com

Free EstimateExcellent Service

Competitive Prices(360)825-7877(253)939-4399

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

We��e��ay, Ju�e 4, 2014, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, �a�e 13 www.�ou�ie��e�al�.�om o� www.�l��ou�ie��e�al�.�om

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:

click: NW-Ads.com

LittleNickel.com

Reach 50,561 homes with a Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

SUPERSIZED

homes with ZONE

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw

Call 800-388-2527

That Work!Reach 50,561 homes with a

Southeast SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad will run

in the Bonney Lake Courier-Herald, Covington/Maple Valley/Black

Diamond Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Call 800-388-2527

MONEYDOESGROW

ON TREES!

FREE QUOTES!!

J&L Tone WoodsWinlock, WA

WE PAY TOP $$$$ FORLarge Maple Trees , Single Trees or Acreage

360.508.1313

Also Buying Rough Cut Figured Maple & Instrument Blocks

1032

688

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

WASHINGTON

0100

Real Estate for SaleKing County

360/825-3640PrecisionInspector.com

Tim Pierick

Locally Owned & Operated

Call Today!

95

38

72

10% of every Inspection in Enumclaw will be donated to Plateau Outreach Ministries.

Providing Quality Inspection for:

Flat Fee*$30000

Pest report included!*Up to 3,000 Sq. Ft.

in Enumclaw

LicensedBondedInsured

Hometown Special!

DOL#416; SPI#70465

Houses are living things, they will prosper or suffer by what

is done or left undone. Houses speak to me...

and I listen.

Enumclaw Only*

ENUMCLAW, 98022.2 MONTHS FREE Move in special. $6,995 2 BR, 1 BA single wide home is ready to move in. All appliances and built in hutch. EHO. Desirable 55 + Mountain Villa Es- tates 360-825-3733 www.cal-am.com

WILKESON5 BR 2.75 BA CUS- TOM BUILT HOME� Tile roof, heat pump, fireplace & 3 car gar- age. Possibly in- law apartment. Must see! $367,000. FSBO 360- 829-0732.

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

real estatefor sale

Real Estate for SaleLots/Acreage

26x16 cabin with porch, 19.8 treed acres, out- door shower and 40 min. to Spokane. Secluded County road., has wa- t e r / p o w e r / p h o n e i n . Beautiful view west over Spokane River Valley, bui ld ing s i te c leared. $94,000. Jeff (360)201- 2390 or (360)366-5011Call for additional photos

ORCAS ISLANDWAT E R F RO N T L OT, low bank. Water mem- bership, sewer & elec- tricity. Use of community tennis court, boat dock & boat launch. $395,000. S a l e b y o w n e r . 360.317.8895

Real Estate for SaleManufactured Homes

SE�ERAL HOMES �OR SALE

2 & 3 Be��oom55� Commu�ity i�

�ATINA REALTYO�ti��

3�0-893-3200

Real Estate for SaleWaterfront

CLEAR LAKE, EATONVILLE

80’ OF WATERFRONT 3 BR, 1.5 BA priced for quick sale at $369,000 obo. Located at 12506 Clear Lake North Road E . No agents. FSBO 360-832-6678.

REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

WASHINGTON

0500

Real Estate for RentKing County

AUBURN

3 BR RAMBLER wi th den and 2 car garage. �uiet family neighbor- hood of desirable Forest Ridge! No pets allowed. Yard mainatence provid- ed by owner. Rental is avai lable now. $1,400 per month with deposit. Year lease. No smoking. Call Brian 253-350-1471

ENUMCLAW2 BR 1200SF Rambler on 2 acres with barn. Gas heat and washer / dryer. New carpet and paint. Covered patio & carport. No smoking. Pets to be determined. $1,600 / mo. 360-825- 6445.

ENUMCLAW, 98022.

ROOMMATE NEEDED to share my beautiful 3 B R h o m e. Yo u r ow n separate BA w/ separate partially finished living room too. Garden area is avail. Mature, respon- sible adult preferred. All utilities, TV service and full house access incl. Cats okay. $750 mo. 360-825-2859.

Real Estate for RentPierce County

Wilkeson3 b e d r o o m , 1 b a t h house. Nice yard, close to school. $1100/month. Available beginning of June. Contact Noel at (253)508-2385

Apartments for Rent King County

1 & 2 bedroom apar t- men t s i n Enumc law. Close to downtown & shopping. Coin-op Laun- dry & off street parking. (253)740-1685 for more details.ENUMCLAW1 & 2 BEDROOM apart- men t s i n Enumc law. Washer, dryer in unit. Covered parking. Small pets ok. We pay water, s e w e r & g a r b a g e . (360)825-0707

Apartments for Rent King County

ENUMCLAW2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath in �uiet Neighborhood. Off Street Parking, Common Laundry. Close to Shops and Hospital. $695 Per Mon th . Ca l l Je remy : 206-422-1031

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

Buckley area2 bedroom apar tment. W/S/G inc luded. Up- stairs unit $700/month, 1st, last, $500 deposit. D o w n s t a i r s u n i t $800/month, 1st, last, $500 deposit. (360)825- 7620

LAKE TA��S, 98391.1 B R � � 0 0 . N I C E Apar tments. Water, appliances, garbage, laundry, sewer includ- ed. Nice quiet country setting. No pets. 253- 891-9128.

WA Misc. RentalsMobile Home Spaces

ENUMCLAW, 98022.HOME IS WHERE THE H E A RT I S ! 2 F R E E Months move in special. Bring your single or dou- blewide home to beauti- ful Mountain Vil la Es- tates. 55 +. EHO. 360- 825-3733.www.cal-am.com

WA Misc. RentalsParking/RV Spaces

ROY

� R� S�ACES ��390/Mo

1/2 off 1st monthIncls: Water, Septic, Garbage, Cable &

Playground. Located in Clean Mobile / RV

Park in Roy

253-�77-5874

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 951-6909. 1110 Grif- �n Enumclaw.

Room to ren t i n my b e a u t i f u l E n u m c l aw home. Room includes a small fridge, microwave, toaster and is fully fur- nished including a TV. Close to all stores and bus stop. $500/ month includes utilities and in- ternet. Must have good re ferences and c lear background check. No p e t s . C a l l R o b i n a t (360)441-1282.

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!CASHFOR

TREESTHE MILLS NEED:

CASH-IN YOUR TREES AND PAY

YOUR BILLSIF YOU OWN LAND,

CALL US FIRST!!

253.227.1708Lic. Bond. Ins.

AK �ai�ti�� I��Exterior-Interior

High �uality WorkFair Pricing

�REE ESTIMATESCall Ke�

�253�[email protected]

Licensed, bonded, insuredKPAINPC957CB

COUNTRY GARDEN BOU�UETS offers sea- sonal bouquets, wreaths & other hand- crafted local items in �The Shop� (360)825- 3976 (253)332-9466

3�0-829-4121253-389-1�98

Be a NEWSPAPER

CARRIERin Buckley!

Deliver once per wk.Earn @ $39 a month (in a 4 week month)

Papers are delivered to your door

No $$$ collectionWalking route- no

car needed Great �rst job

(360)825-2555 x6050

Be a NEWSPAPER

CARRIERin Enumclaw! Deliver once per wk.Earn @ $32 a month (in a 4 week month)

Papers are delivered to your door

No $$$ collectionWalking route- no

car needed Great �rst job

(360)825-2555 x6050

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 951-6909. 1110 Grif- �n Enumclaw.

K & K La����api��

Lawn MaintenanceTrimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up

Bark, HaulingAll kinds of yard work!

253-8�2-4347Bonded & InsuredLic# KKLANKL897MK

**Local Fence Co.**

White Vinyl, Ranch,Horse Fencing

Cedar, Chain Link,Repairs, Gates

Call James253-831-9906

Bonded & Insured

Lic# allamal921p7

Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting

Place for Loved OnesPricing from

$750 to $700036424 312th Ave SE

Enumclaw(206)280-4071

PIANOLESSONS For the young and

young at heart.Karen (360)802-9314

TEZAK’STREE

SERVICEAll Aspects

Over 30 YearsExperience

FREE ESTIMATES

(253)862-1700 tezakstreeservice.comLicensed�Bonded�Insured

Lic. # TEZAKT50330C

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

TOM’S WINDOWCLEANING

Commercial, ResidentialGutter cleaning,Gutter whitening,

Moss control,Pressure washing,New construction

Locally owned(360)802-8925(253)740-3833

Wrights ServicesOver 40 yrs. Experience

Carpet CleaningUpholstery Cleaning

Carpet RepairRestretching Carpets

Pet Odor RemovalSqueaky Floor Repairwww.wrightsservices.com

Free EstimateExcellent Service

Competitive Prices(360)825-7877(253)939-4399

courierherald.comblscourierherald.com

NEWS Updates Daily!

Home ServicesPainting

Miscellaneous

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Employment

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

The Courier-Herald Reaches Far Beyond Other Advertising Vehicles +81.4% over direct mail +54.2% over Val Pak +94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is

LocalWe’ve been serving

the plateau com-munity for over 110 years and our sta� belong to the Ro-

tary, Chambers and volunteer in other

local organizations.

Bazaars/Craft Fairs

MAPLE VALLEY, 98038.ANNUAL CHEROKEE Bay Communi ty Club Hol iday Bazaar, Sat. , Nov 15th at 9 am - 4 pm. Get a head start on your holiday gift l ist! We’re celebrat ing upcoming holidays! We invite you to come see the ar ts/ crafts created by our tal- ented community mem- bers. The festivities will be he ld a t the Club- house, 21700 SE 265th Way. See you here!

SUMNER HOLIDAYBAZAAR

Sat 11/15 10am-4pmOver 30 Vendors

w/unique quality gifts. Hosted by Swinging Squares Dance Club

See you at 1705Willow St., 98390.

AutomobilesClassics & Collectibles

1973 MUSTANG! A nice Robins Egg Blue with d a r k b l u e v y n i l t o p. Great condition. 2 door coupe with 351 (2) barrel Cleveland V8 engine! Second owner. Automat- ic, power steering and low miles, just 116,000. Asking $15,000 OBO. Own your dream car!! Call Mark now for all the details, 206-824-1713.

AutomobilesHonda

1996 HONDA ACCORD Burgandy. 5 speed. Cus- tom Sony CD stereo! 198,000 mi. Zero miles on new timing belt, bal- ance belt, water pump & valve set. AC, CC, pow- er mirrors and doors. An excellent interior. Very good cond. $3500. 360- 893-8018.

AutomobilesPontiac

1967 Pontiac GTO 400. CID #’s match. $28000. Hugh (808)341-6558

Pickup TrucksFord

1990 FORD F150 XLT Lariat. Great deal at just $3800. Or iginal miles 44,890. Brand new tires and brakes. 302 engine. AT. Excel- len t cond i t ion . Ca l l Dave 253-228-7770.

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Cash JUNK CARS &

TRUCKS

Free Pick up

253-335-3932

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW(253) 219-5952

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Quality Windshields

Certi�ed Technician

All Insurance Welcome

Ask About NO COST

Chip Repair Latest Technology

All Types of Auto, Truck (foreign & domestic) Glass,

Side, Back Mirrors & Back Glass

Saturday by Appointment

1165

638

FOOTHILLS AUTO GLASS

Mobile Service for Your Schedule

253/261-6066360/829-9915

The Courier-Herald Reaches

Far Beyond Other Advertis-

ing Vehicles+81.4% over

direct mail

+54.2% over Val Pak

+94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

FUGATE

ENUMCLAW

FUGATE COUPON

526 RooseveltEnumclaw

360 825-7731800 539-7595

1164806

Offer valid with coupon at Fugate Ford, Inc. Not valid with other offers

through 11-30-14

Wiper Blades

FALL WIPERSPECIAL

$3off

&FREE

Installation

FALL FALL WIPERWIPERSPECIALSPECIAL

Tents & Travel Trailers

2009 HARDTOP TENT TRAILER ALiner Sport. Excellent cond! Furnace, sink, 3 way fridge, stove. Ex t ra p ropane tank , brakes, deep cycle bat- tery $9500 Frank in Lake Stevens [email protected]

Vehicles Wanted

CARS/Trucks Wanted! Top $$$$$ PAID! Run- ning or Not, All Makes!. Free Towing! We’re Lo- cal! 7 Days/Week. Call 1-800-959-8518

Vehicles Wanted

CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k TO DAY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1- 888-545-8647

Page 26: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 26 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

Quintessence

Open HouseNovember 15th - 16th

20% off all Quintessence

Gift & Christmas Items*Snacks, cookies, popcorn and coffee too!

*Regular priced items only

Quintessencethe gift shop located inside Johnsons Home & Garden

26625 Maple Valley - Black Diamond Rd425.432.3384

1166769

STIHLdealers.com

JOIN US.Indicates products that are built in the United States from domestic and foreign parts and components.

Check out these reviews and others on the product pages at STIHLdealers.com

STIHL THE OFFICIAL HANDHELD OUTDOOR POWER TOOLS OF THE

WITH PURCHASE OF SELECT STIHL CHAIN SAWS

WOODSMAN CARRYING CASE MATCHING LOOP OF CHAIN

TEAM STIHL HAT

Up to a $77.30 SNW-SRP. Offer valid 9/15/14-11/30/14 with purchase of

MS 211 C-BE, MS 251, MS 251 C-BE, MS 271 or MS 291 chain saw at

participating dealers while supplies last. See dealer for details.

FREE WOODSMAN

CARRYING CASE KIT

$29995

“The STIHL 211 C-BE is the greatest little saw I have ever owned.” – user Jackie52

MS 211 C-BE CHAIN SAW

16” bar†

$37995

18” bar†

MS 251 C-BE CHAIN SAW

“It starts easy, is light enough to use for long periods of time.” – user HFred

All prices are SNW-SRP. Available at participating dealers while supplies last. †The actual listed guide bar length can vary from the effective cutting length based on which powerhead it is installed on. © 2014 STIHL SNW14-1122-116095-11

EnumclawCutter’s Supply Inc. | 235 Roosevelt Ave.360-825-1648 | CuttersSupply.us

PuyallupSumner Lawn ‘N Saw | 9318 State Route 162 East253-435-9284 | SumnerLawn.net

However, the advantage of a more laid back approach to garden clean-up is that

you are not disturbing the tiny little soil critters or organisms that add tilth to your soil. Some gardeners combine the two methods and layer compost right on top of old plants. If you have a weed problem in your vegetable bed then fall is the time to pull and remove those sum-mer weeds, roots and all.

Q Will a compost pile attract rats?

Anonymous

A No, a properly made compost

pile heats up quickly and does not supply food for rats and mice. You must be sure to never add meat, bones, grease or other difficult to break down kitchen debris to a com-post pile.

Q Can I make my own raised beds

by piling up grass clippings and leaves into mounds? Do I need to add soil as well or will my garden clippings and fall foliage turn into soil? S., Email

A You can eas-ily create your

own raised beds with plant material that com-posts over the winter but to make these piles most favorable to grow-ing vegetables use equal

amounts of soil and aged manure to help break down the plant material. Remember that mounds of composting material will shrink after just one win-ter. Your original 4-foot tall raised beds can end up as a mound of soil less than one foot high. Put the most coarse or woody material down first, layer green grass clippings, then brown leaves and cap it all off with at least a six-inch layer of aged manure and garden soil.

• • •

Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardens” and several other books. For book requests or answers to gardening questions, write to her at: P.O. Box 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply.

For more gardening information, she can be reached at her Web site, www.binettigarden.com.

Copyright for this column owned by Marianne Binetti.

You Can Now Get Today’s News...Today & Every Day!All

New at: www.courierherald.com

BINETTI FROM 18

Page 27: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

www.courierherald.com Wednesday, November 12, 2014 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Page 27

*Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. **Special Holiday Sales Event Pricing. †Instant Rebate offer of $50 off any new Honda Generator up to and including 3,000 watts and $200 off any new Honda Generator above 3,000 watts purchased Nov. 1 through Dec. 1, 2014. No rain checks. At participating dealers only. ††Special Financing Available at participating dealers only. Please read the owner’s manual before operating your Honda Power Equipment and never use in an enclosed or partially enclosed area where you could be exposed to odorless, poisonous

carbon monoxide. Connection of a generator to house power requires a transfer device to avoid possible injury to power company personnel. Consult a qualifi ed electrician. ©2014 American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

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† † † † †

††††

*Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. **Special Holiday Sales Event Pricing. †Instant Rebate offer of $50 off any new Honda Generator up to and including 3,000 watts and $200 off any new Honda Generator above 3,000 watts purchased Nov. 1 through Dec. 1, 2014. No rain checks. At participating dealers only. ††Special Financing Available at participating dealers only. Please read the owner’s manual before operating your Honda Power Equipment and never use in an enclosed or partially enclosed area where you could be exposed to odorless, poisonous

carbon monoxide. Connection of a generator to house power requires a transfer device to avoid possible injury to power company personnel. Consult a qualifi ed electrician. ©2014 American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

Get up to $200 Instant Rebate on a Honda Generator!

Ask about our full line of Honda Accessories!

EB4000 $2,109.95

$1,899.00

–$200.00

$1,699.00

REGULAR PRICE*

SPECIAL PRICE**

INSTANT REBATE†

YOUR PRICE!

EU3000is $2,329.95

$1,999.00

–$50.00

$1,949.00

REGULAR PRICE*

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INSTANT REBATE†

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EM4000 $2,249.95

$1,999.00

–$200.00

$1,799.00

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EU3000i Handi $2,599.95

$2,299.00

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$2,249.00

REGULAR PRICE*

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EU2000i $1,149.95

$999.00

–$50.00

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EG4000 $1,699.95

$1,499.00

–$200.00

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EU2000i Camo $1,299.95

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† † † † †

††††

*Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. **Special Holiday Sales Event Pricing. †Instant Rebate offer of $50 off any new Honda Generator up to and including 3,000 watts and $200 off any new Honda Generator above 3,000 watts purchased Nov. 1 through Dec. 1, 2014. No rain checks. At participating dealers only. ††Special Financing Available at participating dealers only. Please read the owner’s manual before operating your Honda Power Equipment and never use in an enclosed or partially enclosed area where you could be exposed to odorless, poisonous

carbon monoxide. Connection of a generator to house power requires a transfer device to avoid possible injury to power company personnel. Consult a qualifi ed electrician. ©2014 American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

Get up to $200 Instant Rebate on a Honda Generator!

Ask about our full line of Honda Accessories!

EB4000 $2,109.95

$1,899.00

–$200.00

$1,699.00

REGULAR PRICE*

SPECIAL PRICE**

INSTANT REBATE†

YOUR PRICE!

EU3000is $2,329.95

$1,999.00

–$50.00

$1,949.00

REGULAR PRICE*

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INSTANT REBATE†

YOUR PRICE!

EM4000 $2,249.95

$1,999.00

–$200.00

$1,799.00

REGULAR PRICE*

SPECIAL PRICE**

INSTANT REBATE†

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EU3000i Handi $2,599.95

$2,299.00

–$50.00

$2,249.00

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SPECIAL PRICE**

INSTANT REBATE†

YOUR PRICE!

EU2000i $1,149.95

$999.00

–$50.00

$949.00

REGULAR PRICE*

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INSTANT REBATE†

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EG4000 $1,699.95

$1,499.00

–$200.00

$1,299.00

REGULAR PRICE*

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EU2000i Camo $1,299.95

$1,149.00

–$50.00

$1,099.00

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EU7000is $4,499.95

$3,999.00

–$200.00

$3,799.00

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EU2000i Companion $1,279.95

$1,099.00

–$50.00

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† † † † †

††††

*Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price. **Special Holiday Sales Event Pricing. †Instant Rebate offer of $50 off any new Honda Generator up to and including 3,000 watts and $200 off any new Honda Generator above 3,000 watts purchased Nov. 1 through Dec. 1, 2014. No rain checks. At participating dealers only. ††Special Financing Available at participating dealers only. Please read the owner’s manual before operating your Honda Power Equipment and never use in an enclosed or partially enclosed area where you could be exposed to odorless, poisonous carbon

monoxide. Connection of a generator to house power requires a transfer device to avoid possible injury to power company personnel. Consult a qualified electrician. ©2014 American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

Ask about our full line of Honda Accessories!

Sumner Lawn N Saw(253) 435-9284 | 1-800-675-0002 | Fax: (253) 435-9286

9318 SR 162 E • Puyallup, WA 98372 | www.sumnerlawn.com

4000

EB5000$2,279.95$2,149.00

$1,949.00

1180

674

talk her through the difficult decisions.Maybe it’s weird to compliment myself

for things like this, but I’d like to think I’m playing the supporting role many important people — often women — have played for centuries.

I deal with her travel schedule and she copes with my midnight story inspira-tions. It’s a give and take. It’s what mar-riage in the 21st century is all about. And for us, it’s really never felt that difficult, even when the situations have been hard.

My hero is a member of the Centers for Disease Control and is active duty with United States Public Health Service. She’s spent time in Sierra Leone assisting with the Ebola epidemic.

My writing career has generally been held on the sidelines — working at small-to-midsize newspapers that cover com-munity events and happenings, profiling individuals on a fairly modest scale — while my hero has been handling the big picture, for everybody. She’s undertaken

a mission for public health and panic dif-fusion; armed with a bottle of chlorine mix, muck boots and Excel spreadsheets. She’s the angel of contact investigation.

While she’s been providing proficiency for a world health problem, I’m sitting at home, working my way to Carpal tunnel.

I’ve lived by proxy through my hero’s experiences, which have helped shift my personal and professional perspective. Because, the truth is, I haven’t always truly appreciated the military. In fact, through the years, I tended to roll my eyes at the hero worship over enlistees to military service.

I’d talked to too many people who signed up for the armed forces because it was an easy choice, or his or her only way out. The military members I know gener-ally don’t see themselves as saving the world and tend toward embarrassment at the notion — feeling like a fraud when they’re saluted for being stationed in the middle of nowhere USA, biding time with chewing tobacco and cigarettes.

As a prospective military spouse, I’ve also felt guilty about utilizing any of the benefits associated with the service –

going to the USO at airports, free health care and certain discounts. What have I done to deserve any of these things?

Perhaps through karma, my world, and all of those thoughts, changed in August when my hero left for Africa.

Somehow, though I never left the U.S., it was one of the most mentally challeng-ing three weeks of my life. I feared doing anything enjoyable — laughing, smil-ing — concerned that the moment I lost focus on my hero I’d receive a terrifying call. Luckily, I only suffered one of those: A false alarm.

It seems that, somewhat selfishly, beyond my renewed appreciation for mil-itary service, I have learned to empathize my new fellow sideline dwellers — the parents and family members of military personnel who sit at home waiting for bad news. No matter the assignment, armed or unarmed, there’s always an extra risk for those in duty and a feeling of helplessness for those who wait back at the ranch.

After 12-plus hours a day, without weekends, witnessing death and incom-prehensible anguish, it’s remarkable that

the current slew of health care workers volunteer at all, let alone volunteer mul-tiple times.

These people have obvious dedication to public health and ethics — meaning you’d better have a damn good rea-son and some plush accommodations to institute a 21-day mandatory quarantine for those other heroes who aren’t show-ing any symptoms.

Thus, when my hero returned, I gladly re-grabbed the reigns I’m most comfort-able with.

While driving us home from the Ebola presentation, I noticed the car rolling oddly. I found the tire had somehow deflated while we’d been parked.

So, while my hero watched in her military uniform, I sat in the rain and a puddle, jacking up the car and replacing the f lat.

What a man, right? Admittedly, I felt quite good for taking care of my loved one during a time of need.

In fact, replacing the tire only took about an hour and I only had to ask one stranger for help.

My hero was so proud.

CORNER FROM 6

Page 28: Enumclaw Courier-Herald, November 12, 2014

Page 28 • THE ENUMCLAW COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, November 12, 2014 www.courierherald.com

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