home improvement - newz group
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T H U R S D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 1 9 , 2 0 1 9 P O W E L L T R I B U N E • P A G E 1 3
TRUSS WORKER - TITAN TRUSS - Cody is looking for hardworking, energetic, and depend-able Truss Workers. Positions are full-time with benefits. Primary responsibilities include handling lumber and per-forming miscellaneous yard work, learning truss-plate inventory and truss-plate placement, and learning saw area timing and lumber clearing pro-cedures. Candidates must have a clean driving record, pass a drug and alcohol test, and have a willingness to work in a fast-paced environment. Apply at 2828 Chopper Lane in Cody or email an application and resume to [email protected]. Bloedorn Lumber Company is an Equal Opportunity, Aff irma-tive Action employer. All qualified applications will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, reli-gion, sex, national origin, disability, or protected Veteran status.__________(73-76CT)T R U C K D R I V E R NEEDED for beet harvest. Call 307-202-0079 or 307-754-5621.__________ (75-79PT) LOCAL CONSTRUC-TION COMPANY look-ing for carpenters and laborers. Wages DOE. 307-272-1283.__________ (73TFCT)
HARRIS TRUCKING & CONSTRUCTION has openings for Class A, Class B operators and laborers. Competitive wages and benefi ts. Please apply at 16 Road 2AB in Cody or contact v ia crysta latharr [email protected].__________(73-81CT)
Regional Truck DriverDick Jones Truck-ing is hiring for a regional OTR flat-bed driver. Home every weekend. Good pay. Paid
benefits. Call 307-754-4132 or email: dickjonestrucking@
gmail.com. _______________
BHB(71-77CT)
R E S I D E N T I A L CONSTRUCTION WORKER , great pay, great hours, local work. Wage based on experi-e n c e . 3 0 7 - 8 9 9 -1863. _______________BB(61TFCT)
KING’S INN, 777 E. 2nd Street, Powel l , WY 82435, 307-754-5117, Front Desk Clerk Position, Saturday and Sunday, 7 a.m. - 3 p.m. Please apply at the Front Desk._________ (43TFCT)
PIZZA ON THE RUN now taking applications for part time and delivery drivers. Apply at 215 E. First in Powell - call Cole 254-4105, or Apply at 1302 Sheridan Ave. in Cody - Call Brenda 202-3216.___________(02TFCT)
KING’S INN, Powell, WY, 307-
754-5117, apply at the front desk *** Position: House-
keeper *** ________________
BHB(32TFCT)
FRAMING CARPEN-TER WANTED - 307-272-1283.__________ (66TFCT)
For position details & to apply visit: www.to-engineers.com
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES:• Engineer In Training• Survey Crew Chief/LSIT• Municipal/Transportation Project Manager
Office AdministratorBig Horn Rural Electric Company located in Basin, Wyoming, is an elec-tric distribution cooperative seeking an individual for the position of Office Administrator. Candidate must have experience and quality skills relative to the functions/duties of supervising, human resources and accounting/finance. Candidate will participate in cost analyses and rate studies, long range finan-cial forecast and budgeting. Candidate will need to be efficient in use of Office products such as MS Word/MS Excel or equivalent. Candidate will also be responsible for coordinating with the Line Department in providing sup-port services. Candidate must have excellent interpersonal, oral and written communication skills. Must possess human relations skills generally asso-ciated with a management position to effectively supervise office personnel, work with other departments and provide information to board of directors. Candidate must also be able to interact and work effectively with other entities and agencies with whom Big Horn does business.
Preferred qualifications would be: a Bachelor’s degree in business adminis-tration, accounting or related field supplemented with related experience or any equivalent combination of training and experience which provides the required knowledge, skills and abilities.
Big Horn Rural Electric Company offers excellent benefits package with hour-ly rate commensurate with qualifications and experience. Resume and com-pleted employment application can be mailed or emailed to: Jeff Umphlett, Big Horn REA, PO Box 270, Basin, WY 82410. Email: [email protected]. Application is at www.bighornrea.com.
Applicant must be able to pass pre-employment drug screen (drug-free/alcohol free work-place), background check and physical exam. This position will remain open until filled.
1x3.5 = $42 per run
MIXER DRIVERS NEEDED in Powell
for Big Horn Redi Mix.
Class A or B with a clean MVR
Benefits include medical, dental, vision and life
insurance after 60 days.
Go to the Powell plants to pick up an application,
or call the main office in Thermopolis for more info. 307-864-3397.
(74-81CT)
F A L L H O M E I M P R O V E M E N T
T H U R S D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 8 , 2 0 1 8 P O W E L L T R I B U N E • P A G E 9
BY TESSA BAKERTribune Features Editor
A tiny whimsical cottage on North Douglas Street looks like it belongs in a storybook — which is quite fit-ting, given its purpose.Within its brightly colored walls, the little home holds books, beckoning passersby to take one or share one.“We see a lot of foot traffic,” said Anna Hardy, “and I hope that the dog walkers, [Rocky Mountain] Manor residents, col-lege and Parkside students, and anyone else who strolls past our book house will find a book for their journey.”Hardy’s husband, Luke Rob-ertson, built the book house as
an anniversary gift for her.“I grew up in a family of read-ers and loved sharing my books with them, as well as hearing about what they were reading,” she said. “Sharing books with others might be my favorite thing about reading, now that I think about it!”The exchange of books comes naturally for Hardy, who worked as a librarian at West-side Elementary School.
After she talked about want-ing a free little library for her birthday, Robertson started looking at possible designs.“I found a picture online of a book house with a whimsical design with the roof that had the cedar shakes on it,” Robertson said.He didn’t have a blueprint, but just eyeballed it and came up with his own plans.“Initially, it started with me
just building the basic shape, and then I thought, ‘I want to do a little bit more,’” Robertson said. “So that’s when I started making siding and the little scal-lops.”His creativity and attention to detail paid off; Hardy loves the custom gingerbread house-like details that he hand-sculpted.“The book house seems like something out of ‘Alice in Won-derland’ or ‘A Series of Unfor-tunate Events’ (except with a cheerier paint scheme),” Hardy said.
While Robertson has under-taken numerous renovation projects at the family’s home, he had never built anything quite
Book houseFAMILY ENCOURAGES PASSERSBY TO TAKE A BOOK/LEAVE A BOOK‘... I hope that the dog walkers, [Rocky Mountain] Manor residents, college and Parkside students, and anyone else who strolls past our book house will find a book for their journey.’Anna Hardy
See Books, Page 12
A whimsical book house on North Douglas Street encourages readers of all ages to take a book or leave one. Luke Robertson built the free little library as a gift for his wife, Anna Hardy.
‘I’ve reached a point in my life where I don’t really need more stuff, so I requested food and house projects (built-in shelves, a shelf over the bathroom door, book house, etc.) hoping that
my crafty dad, brother or husband would make me something neat,’ Hardy said. Tribune photo by Carla Wensky
Luke Robertson built the cottage-style book house without a blueprint. It is one of the few little free libraries in Powell. The book house features unique elements, such as scallops and cedar shakes.Courtesy photos
Anna Hardy and her kids, Briar and Bruin, love books. The family enjoys sharing books with the community through their book house.Courtesy photo
Supplement to the Powell Tribune ■ Thursday, October 18, 2018
Copperleaf enters new chapter
SEE PAGE 5
Take a book, leave a book
SEE PAGE 9
Habitat searching for new director
SEE PAGE 14
BY MARK DAVIS
Tribune Staff Writer
The sounds of a Lyon
& Healy Centennial
harp being plucked
by the matron’s fingers
travel from room to
room in this 100-year-old
home like a melodic tour
through time.The heavenly music
resonates across every
surface; warm, honey-
colored maple floors,
crisp walls sparingly
covered with colorful
family-made art, through the bright kitchen and up the fresh hardwood stairs. The
precise notes carry you through a home with family-style elegance — a home meant to
be lived in, but quickly transformed into a showpiece. Every surface or appointment
was created, restored or improved over many years by patient hands, those of Kent and
Holly Kienlen.
While much of the home’s history is unknown, the
Kienlen’s history with it began when the couple went
looking for a family home and needed a deal. The aban-
doned brick house at 104 S. Edmonds St. was definitely
that.Sitting empty for three years, the interior was trashed.
Rebels had figured a way into the eyesore and lit fires in
the basement during clandestine parties.
But that was 27 years ago, when the young family was
still trying to scratch out a living. Kent, originally from
Worland, is an optometrist and now owns Big Horn Eye
Care on Bent Street. Holly, originally from New Jersey,
is a paraeducator at the Shoshone Learning Center. She
plays the harp at functions and special events. The two
met while attending classes at Brigham Young Univer-
sity in Salt Lake City.
They married and started a family, raising three
daughters and a son. The large family needed an appropriately-sized domicile. The
older five-bedroom house was exactly what they needed. But making a home of the
structure was going to be a challenge.
“We didn’t even have toilet seats when we moved in,” Kent said.
100 years into the history
of their home, Powell
family continuing to love
every nook and cranny
‘We put it back to
what we thought it
would’ve been like
originally, but new.
It’s a love/hate
relationship. The
hate is the part I
can’t get done.’
Kent KienlenHomeowner
See Century, Page 2
Kent and Holly Kienlen look out on the day from their covered porch while Pepper moves into position for some family time. Tribune photos by Mark Davis
Holly Kienlen’s Lyon & Healy pedal harp is the centerpiece of the family living room.
A bright blue accent wall and bay windows brighten the remodeled kitchen in the Kienlen family abode.
The Powell Tribune will publish its Fall Home
Improvement Edition Thursday, October 17.Advertising deadline October 7.
Make plans now to be in
the 2019 Powell Tribune
Fall Home Improvement
Edition!
Home ImprovementHome Improvement
307-754-2221www.powelltribune.com
[email protected] | [email protected]
Toby Bonner
Ashley Stratton Lauritzen
PUBLIC NOTICES“BECAUSE THE PEOPLE MUST KNOW”
Foreclosure notice __________
FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICEWHEREAS, on May 19, 2015, Steven Nielson
and Kyle Ninker (collectively, “Borrowers”), as mortgagors, executed and delivered to First Bank, Division of Glacier Bank (f/k/a First Bank of Wyoming, Division of Glacier Bank) (“Lender”), as mortgagee, a mortgage on certain real property described in the Mortgage as security for payment of a promissory note in the principal amount of $76,117.00, which was executed by Borrowers in favor of Lender on the same date. The mortgage was duly recorded at the office of the County Clerk in and for Park County, Wyoming on May 21, 2015, as Document
No. 2015-2475; andWHEREAS, there have been material breaches
of the promissory note and mortgage, and Borrowers are thus in default; and
WHEREAS, the mortgage contains a right of foreclosure provision which, by reason of the above-stated defaults, Lender, as the owner and holder of the mortgage, declares to have become operative; and
WHEREAS, as of September 4, 2019, the total amount due and owing to Lender is $66,867.34, which represents the unpaid principal balance of $64,551.13, plus accrued but unpaid interest in the amount of $913.71 (with interest continuing to accrue at the rate of $12.10 per diem after September 4, 2019), plus additional charges in the amount of $1,402.50. The total amount due will also increase in an amount equal to any additional late charges, attorney’s fees and other charges, fees and/or costs which accrue pursuant to the terms of the promissory note and the mortgage; and
WHEREAS, the property being foreclosed upon may be subject to other liens and encumbrances that
will not be extinguished at the sale. Any prospective purchaser should research the status of title before submitting a bid.
NOW, THEREFORE, Lender will have the mort-gage foreclosed as provided by law by causing the mortgaged property to be sold at public venue by the Sheriff or Deputy Sheriff in and for Park County, Wyoming, to the highest bidder for cash at 10:00 a.m. on October 9, 2019, at the front door of the Park County Courthouse located at 1002 Sheridan Avenue, Cody, Park County, Wyoming, for applica-tion on the above-described amounts secured by the mortgage, said mortgaged property having an address of 162 N. Clark Street, Powell, Wyoming 82435 and being more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
Lots 3 & 4, Block 47, Original Townsite (now city) of Powell, according to the plat recorded in Book “C” of Plats, page 28, Park County, Wyoming.
DATED this 4th day of September, 2019.FIRST BANK, Division of Glacier Bank(f/k/a First Bank of Wyoming, Division of Glacier
Bank)
By:Nicholas M. Crandall, WSB #7-5144Bradley D. Bonner, WSB #5-2983Bonner Law Firm, P.C.1102 Beck AvenueCody, Wyoming 82414(307) [email protected] [email protected] Publ., Thurs., Sept. 5, 2019Final Publ., Thurs., Sept. 26, 2019
Meeting notice _______________
The Powell Hospital District Board and the Powell Valley Healthcare Board will meet Monday, Sept. 23, 2019, in the Conference Room at the hospital. The District Board meets at 5 p.m. and the Powell Valley Healthcare Board meets once the District is adjourned.
First Publ., Tues., Sept. 17, 2019Second Publ., Thurs., Sept. 19, 2019