City`s first triathlon is on the way Shakespeare takes to the museum

Transcription

City`s first triathlon is on the way Shakespeare takes to the museum
T HE S E N T I N E L : 1 8 7 9
Goldendale, Washington
TO
FACEBOOK
WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 2012
AND
TWITTER
Vol. 133 No. 30 75 cents
County
forests
prime
targets
for bark
beetle
City’s first
triathlon is
on the way
LOU MARZELES
EDITOR
Goldendale is soon to hold
its first triathlon, and for
some very worthwhile causes.
The Golden Man Triathlon
will be held in Goldendale on
Sept. 15. The event will feature three different events: a
500-yard swim, a 14-mile bike
ride, and a 3.25 mile run. Participants will have the option
of competing individually or
as teams, and for those interested in only two of the
events, it will also allow for
what organizers are calling a
duathlon. There will even be a
kids’ event. Proceeds will go
to benefit the Central Klickitat County Parks and Recreation District and Backpacks
for Kids.
“A lot of people participating are looking into going in
as teams,” says Mike DeMott,
customer service supervisor
for the Klickitat PUD and one
of the event organizers, along
with Lori Anderson and Bill
Vanvelsor. “Jim Smith at the
PUD has kind of thrown out a
challenge to Klickitat Valley
Health to try to get people registered, and he is devising
some sort of a point system to
see who has the greatest participation.”
The organizers came together both to bring a
triathlon event to Goldendale
and support some worthy organizations. “The purpose behind it really was to bring a
triathlon to Goldendale, to
have a community event to
bring people from outside to
the area as well as give people
locally something fun to do,”
DeMott affirms. “A portion of
the proceeds will go to the
Parks and Rec and the Backpacks for Kids program, so
there is a fundraiser component to it. The overall objective is to raise some money
and give people something to
do.”
DeMott says it’s isn’t clear
yet how much of the proceeds
will go to each organization.
“We haven’t actually nailed
down those details yet,” he
says, “because quite honestly
with year one we don’t know
what that number is going to
look like. With sponsorships
and donations and a reasonable expectation of participants, we should have a decent enough profit to kick
off.”
An interest in biking and a
minor knee surgery sparked
DeMott’s participation in the
event. “And in Goldendale
there are not a lot of co-ed
sports and things like that,”
he points out, “and a lot of
people really don’t have an
outlet for being active other
than for that sake of being active, which is fine. But I find if
you tie it to an event to train
for, it helps you stay motivated. So for me it would be kind
of cool to come off of a minor
knee surgery and be able to
say in the same year I competed in my first race.”
The triathlon is considered
a sprint distance event, which
is actually the shortest
triathlon distance, making it
more accessible for many people. And the triathlon will follow official triathlon criteria.
“We actually have a professional company coming in to
handle all the timing,” DeMott says, “so it’s going to be
professionally run. It’s not
going to be myself out there
with a stop watch trying to
hopefully get everybody.”
The triathlon will feature
such events for younger kids
as a 25 yard swim, a quarter
mile bike ride, and a 300 yard
run. The longer distance for
young people are a 100 yard
swim, 2.5 mile bike, and a
half-mile run. Kids too will
have the option for a duathlon
in which the swimming is
dropped off. “We’re hoping to
get kids who would like to be
on a team, and that is not a
bad way to go,” DeMott con-
See Race, Page 2
DNR MAP
CONTRIBUTED: JEFF FIELDS
4-H KIDS TAKE MANHATTAN: A statue of George Washington bestows his blessing on the Centerville 4-H Capital Learning
Group, posing in downtown Manhattan. The 4-H students visited prominent sites in Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, Virginia, and
New York City. Organized by Centerville School’s Jeff Fields, the students were from both Centerville and Goldendale and
fundraised for two and half years for the trip. They included Zach Berskshire, Jacob Bischoff, Daniel Bischoff, Justin Fields, Jacob
Hiebert, Kate Hiebert, Reanna Holycross, Alma Ibarra, Robbie Johnson, Cassie Kayser, Cameron Mains, Alex Mains, Wyatt
Mercer, Sierra Plum, Tori Tallman, and Tanner Tallman. Adults accompanying the students included Cindy Berkshire, Araceli
Estrada, Jeff Fields, Karen Fields, Trevor Fields, Leslie Hiebert, Tammy Kayser, Janell Kegley, Art Mains, Nancy Mains, Shelly
Mersch, Debi Miller, Emmit Miller, Krista Rowland, Carren Tallman, and Carla Wilkins.
Who’s who on the ballot: a guide to candidates
The primary ballot is in
voters’ hands now. Following are summaries of candidate information from various sources, focusing on bestknown names in each race.
Races which the primary
will not impact, such as for
county commissioners, will
be covered near the general
election.
U.S. Senate
• Michael BaumgartnerRepublican, was born in
Pullman. His mother is a
kindergarten teacher and
his father was a professor of
Forestry and Natural Resource Sciences. After graduating from Pullman High
School, he earned a scholarship to attend Washington
State University’s Honors
College. There, he was
awarded a Thomas Foley
scholarship, and was named
a Stephenson scholar, an
award given to the top graduates from the Honors College. He graduated in 1999
with a degree in Economics
with minors in French and
Mathematics. In 2002, he
earned a Masters degree in
Public Administration from
Harvard University.
He taught classes at Harvard and gave social support to underprivileged
children and mentally ill
adults in Mozambique,
Africa. He volunteered as a
researcher on environmental science teams with the
U.S. Forest Service. During
the Iraq War, he served as
the Economics Officer in
the Office of Joint Strategic
Planning and Assessment
(JSPA) at the United States
Embassy in Baghdad, helping the Iraqi government as
part of the Baghdad Security Plan. In 2008, he spent
seven months working as a
civilian contractor in the
Helmand Province of
Afghanistan.
See Ballot, Page 6
CONTRIBUTED: BRITTANY ALLEN
TWELTH NIGHT ON A SATURDAY AFTERNOON: Members of Portland Actors Ensemble in a scene from Shakespeare’s Twelth
Night Saturday at Maryhill Museum.
Shakespeare takes to the museum
BRITTANY ALLEN
FOR THE SENTINEL
Kicking off their 43rd
consecutive summer of
Shakespeare in the Park,
Portland Actors Ensemble
(PAE) returned to Maryhill
Museum on Saturday, July
21, to perfor m Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night for
an eager audience varying
in age from entranced toddlers to life-long theatre enthusiasts.
The play was also performed by the Goldendale
High School Drama Club
last November.
In order to transport the
crowd from the sculpturefilled Washington garden to
the far-off land of Illyria,
PAE needed only a minimal
set of interchangeable furniture and props and the
ability to provoke imagination.
Within moments the
space could go from being a
ship in a storm to the Duke
Orsino’s chambers, to
Countess Olivia’s garden.
Twelfth Night is a tale of
misunderstandings beginning with two shipwrecked
siblings losing contact and
each believing the other to
be dead. The sister, Viola,
assumes the role of the
Duke Orsino’s messenger,
falls in love with the Duke,
and accidentally leads the
Countess Olivia to fall in
love with her—or rather her
male counterpart. The arrival of Viola’s brother later
in the play does nothing to
help the confusion. The
comedy ends happily for
everyone.
Anticipated for the summer of 2013’s performances
are The Merchant of Venice
and Cymbeline, which have
both been classified as some
of Shakespeare’s tragic
comedies.
PAE describes its mission in presenting the plays
as “to bring financially-accessible, classical theatre to
Portland area audiences in
a variety of environments.”
For more information or to
donate to PAE, visit
www.portlandactors.org.
BEETLES SEEKING BARK:
The brown areas on this map are
prime Ponderosa pines that are
easy targets for bark beetles,
especially in the county after last
year’s Monastery Complex fire.
Goldendale is in the lower middle of the map.
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
The forests of Klickitat
County have caught the eye of
the Department of Natural
Resources (DNR), not so
much for their beauty but because of their deteriorating
conditions. That’s the message State Forester Aaron
Everett delivered to an audience at the Klickitat PUD
meeting room in Goldendale,
Monday evening.
Everett presented findings
of the Forest Health Technical Advisory Committee,
which reports to Commissioner of Public Lands, Peter
Goldmark. Under Goldmark’s
direction, the committee is
holding public meetings to
present their findings and
elicit public feedback. The
committee identified insect
problems in forests of
Okanogan, Ferry, Yakima and
Klickitat counties sufficient
for possible declaration of
“forest health hazard warnings.”
State law authorizes the
Commissioner to issue declarations of health hazard
warnings and orders. Warnings direct DNR resources towards consultation and assistance that attempt to use cooperative, voluntary methods
to improve forest health in
the designated area. If the efforts fail to stop deterioration
of the forest, the Commissioner can issue a “forest
health hazard order,” which
could require landowners to
take remedial action under
the threat of potential liability for firefighting cost, should
a wildfire break out in untreated forests. The landowner is sheltered from liability if
the fire originates on public
land.
“We’re a long way off from
that,” says Everett. In fact, the
Klickitat-Yakima zone didn’t
meet all the criteria for declaration of a warning, but
Everett says Goldmark used
his discretion to make the
proposed declaration in an attempt to get ahead of the
problem. DNR has been meeting with county commissioners and other managers of
large tracts as they collect
more information on the decision.
The cause of the concern
in Klickitat and Yakima counties is the pine bark beetle infestation, primarily on Ponderosa pine trees. One of the
areas where there is great
concern is the area around
last year’s Monastery Complex Fire, north of Goldendale. Everett explained that
the damaged trees attract
bark beetles that pose a risk
to surrounding forests. The
recommended response is to
manage the forests to reduce
the amount of stress in the
trees and to make areas less
prone to spreading fires. “The
things that reduce bark beetle
damage are the same things
See Trees, Page 2
2 — JULY 25, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
Lyle School Board cuts budget 23 percent,
adds back .3 FTE for interim superintendent
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
The Lyle School Board
passed a budget that anticipates $777,237 less revenue
and $825,032 less spending for
the 2012-13 school year. The
23 percent cut in expenditures was described by Tim
Merlino as “a huge cut for a
small school district.” But it
is just the beginning of action that will hopefully right
the school’s sinking ship and
secure its future.
Merlino is the administrator assigned by ESD112 to advise the school on action that
would immediately balance
the budget and then work to
improve the overall situation
at the school. The cut in revenue and budget is predicated on an expected enrollment
of 220 students, a loss of 75
from the current year. Teaching staff will be reduced to
7.2 full-time equivalent (FTE)
at the middle and high
schools and 4 FTE at the elementary school. Secretarial
staff will be reduced by one
position which is accounted
for through retirement.
Last month it was reported that Superintendent Martin Huffman would leave
after taking a position at
Toledo High School. Huffman made that official with
his resignation at Thursday
night’s school board meeting.
The initial plan was to reduce administration to one
position, but the Board
backed off that a little, decid-
ing to fund a .3 FTE interim
administrator. Next spring
the board will revisit that position and perhaps make it
permanent. The Board also
concluded they could not find
a volunteer athletic director,
so they assigned a $5,000
stipend to that position. They
also created a $5,000 stipend
for a “lead teacher” to be a
person in charge at Dallesport School in the absence
of an administrator.
The reduction in revenues
comes mainly from loss of
state general purpose funds,
amounting to almost
$600,000. Those funds are
based on enrollment, which
is driving the budget reduction, along with the need to
correct a negative fund balance.
According to Merlino, the
state requirement is a minimum of 10.2 teaching FTE
for schools the size of Lyle.
That number was determined to be too low for the
natural flow of classes and
classroom management at
the two campuses, so the
Board settled on 11.2 FTE.
That is a cut in 5.5 FTE from
their certified, or teaching
employees. They also cut
four paraprofessionals, one
bus driver and some reduction in grounds and maintenance.
In other business, the levy
issue arose again. The Board
had authorized a replacement maintenance and operation levy asking of $427,000
then were advised it would be
an illegal election. They tried
to remove it from the ballot,
but missed the deadline and
ballots were already printed
and mailed to military voters. In Thursday’s meeting,
Tom Jellum moved and Jeff
Eiesland seconded a motion
to authorize legal action to
stop tabulation of the levy
election or stop collection of
dollars should it pass. The
topic drew much discussion
from the audience. Board
chair Penny McAnally said
“taxpayers are already calling OSPI (Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction) and complaining.”
McAnally expressed concern
that the school could be sued.
The Board’s general counsel,
Jeanie Tolcacher said that
the Attorney General and the
Supreme Court have determined that a third election
would be illegal. McAnally
called for a vote and all voted
yes with Tria Bullard abstaining.
The board was also presented notification that the
petition for redistricting the
Lyle School District with
three districts and two atlarge members was certified
by the Klickitat County Auditor. There were 384 valid signatures on the petition out of
a total of 431. The requirement to have the measure on
the fall ballot was 372 valid
signatures. ESD112 is currently working on the wording that will be submitted for
the ballot.
Current and next school year budget at Lyle
Certified Salaries
Classified Salaries
Employee benefits
Supplies/materials
Purchased services
Travel
TOTAL Budgeted
2011-12*
$1,144,262
640,765
688,587
251,031
1,160,179
11, 283
$3,896,107
2012-13
$819,074
435,971
474,221
223, 280
795,184
2,091
$2,749,821
*Projected actual expenditures for 2011-12 is $3,574,853.
TREES from Page 1
that reduce wildfire risk,” conduct an effective effort
due to the terrain and
says Everett, “so the two go
ownership of the
hand-in-hand.”
forests.
According to Everett,
Among
landowners in target area
the things
will soon be contacted by
that DNR is
DNR through mail and
proposing are
with legal notice in the
thinning stands,
newspapers. More outremoval of dying
reach will be made in
trees and clean
areas such as the
up of understory
Monastery Complex
and low-hanging
Fire area where rebranches
m e d i a l
inwork is alRON LONG that
SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY c r e a s e
ready in
ADULT MOUNTAIN PINE BEETLE spread of
progress.
wildfire.
“We are Greatly magnified
The legtrying to
get the best bang for the islature has set aside $4.3 milbuck,” says Everett. One rea- lion to deal with the problem,
son Klickitat and Yakima most of which will be spent
counties were chosen for the in the targeted areas of
Yakima,
emphasis is due to the poten- Klickitat,
tial for success. By contrast, Okanogan, and Ferry counEverett points to the Blewitt ties. About 50 percent of the
Pass area where spruce bud
worm has decimated forests.
The area is very difficult to
money will be spent on state
managed lands and 50 percent on private. The money
needs to be obligated prior to
June 30, 2013, although work
would be expected to continue through the workable season beyond that date. DNR is
also adding a staff person to
be located in Goldendale and
expect to fill that position
within a month, according to
Everett. DNR also has staff at
Husum with Larry Leach
working with state lands and
Jesse Caulkins in charge of
landowner assistance.
Landowners can request
consultations and recommendations for their property. The goal of the DNR is to
put together large blocks of
areas that can be contracted
for the work, thus reducing
the cost to any single individual. The target area covers
most of the western half of
Klickitat County, but work
isn’t confined to that area.
SR 14 preservation
work has begun
from Maryhill west
Years of heavy freight traffic and harsh weather have
taken their toll on State Route 14 in the Columbia River
Gorge. On Monday, July 23, crews kicked off a project that
preserves more than 30 miles of deteriorating pavement between Maryhill and Wood Creek, giving the highway a
much-needed facelift and providing drivers with a smoother
ride, according to the Washington Department of Transportation.
Crews with the WDOT’s contractor, Columbia Asphalt &
Gravel Inc., will do pavement repair to fix potholes and rutting and will lay a chip seal topcoat to preserve the road surface and extend the life of the highway. During construction, traffic will be reduced to a single lane and flaggers or
pilot cars will guide drivers through the work zone. Drivers
can expect up to 20-minute delays and a reduced speed limit
of 35 mph.
This $2.9 million preservation project is funded through
federal and state highway improvement dollars. Construction is expected to be complete in September. This section of
SR 14 carries an average of 1,800 daily drivers, according to
WDOT.
Bike, deer collide on SR14
The rider of a 2002 Harley Davidson motorcycle and
his passenger were injured on July 21 around 11:52 a.m.,
20 miles east of Bingen on SR14. According to the State
Patrol report, Marc R. Recker, 63, of Benton City was
westbound when he collided with a deer on the roadway.
Recker and his passenger, Elfa V. Recker, 56 were transported to Mid-Columbia Medical Center.
RACE from Page 1
tinues. “I know a 12-soon-tobe-13-year-old girl who I
would almost bet money
would finish it faster than
any adult.”
The cost to participate in
the triathlon is $65 dollars
for an individual full
triathlon, or $30 per person
for team participation. DeMott states the costs are reasonable compared to other
professional triathlon
events. For the duathlon portion, the cost is $55. Children
can participate for $10 for
the full triathlon or $8 for
the duathlon portion, and
there are scholarships funds
available for children wishing to join the event but
needing financial help.
Registration can be done
by visiting the Goldendale
pool and getting a registration form, or online at Goldendalepool.com, which has
a registration link on the
left side of the home page
that
links
to
SignMeUp.com, a professional secure registration
site.
Sponsors can also still
participate on three differ-
swimming
pool
• Check points
Races start and finish at
swimming pool.
ent levels of contribution.
“And we need volun-
teers,” DeMott says.
JULY 25, 2012 — 3
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
H OMETOWN
OBITUARIES
Max Nogle
Max Elton Nogle passed
away in Goldendale, July 21,
2012 at the age of 93.
He was born in Post Falls,
Idaho to Anona (Odell) and
David Nogle on May 7, 1919.
In 1942, Max was drafted
into the Army where he
served in the Amphibious
Engineers overseas for 42
months. He participated in
four major invasions
Africa, Sicily, Italy, and Normandy. He was awarded the
Croix De Guerre. Max returned home from World
War II in September 1945.
On January 12, 1946 he
married Annice Donnajean
Kayser. The couple lived
and worked at the St. Regis
Mill in Klickitat. In 1950 the
couple moved to Kent, Ore.,
where Max worked at the
Luther Davis Ranch. In 1964
they moved to Grass Valley,
Ore., where he leased the
Bob Schilling Wheat and
Cattle Ranch retiring in
1985.
Mr. Nogle loved fishing,
hunting, shooting pool and
the rodeo life.
Survivors include children Jill Fletcher of Centerville, Patric Nogle and wife
Sandy of Grass Valley, Kim
MacRae and her husband
Alan of Centerville, and
Toni Wilson and her husband Russell of Wasco, Ore.;
seven grandchildren, Bret
Maddox, Michelle Milton,
Whitney Nogle Cabral and
husband JC, Bailey Nogle,
Max Burn, Zane MacRae,
Chase MacRae and wife
Theresa and one great-granddaughter, Ava.
He was preceded in death
by his wife Annice, brothers
Gordon, Milan, Alan and
Bernie, and sisters Glenys,
Celeste, Zelma, Alice and
Norma.
There will be a visitation
at Columbia Hills Memorial
Chapel on Thursday, July 26
from 5-8 p.m. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m on
Friday, July 27 at New Life
Assembly of God church in
Goldendale with vault interment at the Centerville
Cemetery.
LOOKING BACK
25 Years Ago- July 23, 1987
• A new superintendent and a renovated school building will greet Centerville students when they start classes
this fall. Supt. Ralph Bennion began his new duties in
Centerville last month. Since his arrival in June, Bennion
and Centerville School Board members have presided
over extensive interior renovation of the building, which
houses kindergarten through 8th grade. According to
school board Chairman Tony Sarsfield, this work is being
accomplished at considerably less than the original cost
estimate.
50 Years Ago- July 19, 1962
• Announcement was made last week of purchase by
the state highway department of DeBois Lake, also
known as Roland Lake, four miles east of Bingen. The
purchase was made to secure the right of way for the new
alignment of Highway 8 in the county. According to statements of the department’s estimates, the cost of crossing
the lake with the new roadway will be at the rate of one
million dollars per mile. Mr. and Mrs. I.A. DeBois, owner
of the lake property, will retain possession of their home
there, and will have use of the resort and fishing lake
until May 1, next year.
75 Years Ago- July 29, 1937
• The Maurer Bros. Hudson-Terraplane movie show
which held Saturday evening at their Utopica Ball room
played to a capacity house, reports showed. The seats in
the hall were all taken and the patrons were standing. The
show consisted of a movie short and the showing of the
Hudson-Terraplane record-breaking feats on the Salt
Flats. The local dealers were pleased with the response of
the residents here. Several cars were used earlier in the afternoon in an advertising parade over local streets.
Compiled by Jean Allyn Smeltzer,
of the Klickitat County Historical Society
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Martha Westlund
Martha Westlund, age 92, a
resident of Klickitat, from
1949 until moving to Beaverton, Ore., in 1998, died in
Portland on July 19, 2012.
The daughter of Frank
and Katherine Huber, she
was born and raised on a
farm in Price County, Wisc.
She lived briefly in Chicago
and then Milwaukee where
she worked at a machine
shop.
In 1949, she married Clifford Westlund in Milwaukee
and they moved to Washington State. She was a homemaker and enjoyed raising
flowers, gardening and canning.
She is survived by her two
sons, Curtis of Beaverton,
Ore., and Mark of Vancouver; a brother, Antone Huber
of North Bend, Ore., and sister, Mildred Martin of Wisconsin Rapids, Wisc..
She was preceded in death
by her parents, husband and
brothers, George, Charles
and Frank Huber.
A funeral service will be at
1 p.m., Saturday, July 28, at
Adams Chapel in River View
Cemetery in Portland. Private burial will be at LyleBalch Cemetery in Lyle.
Services are under the direction of River View Cemetery Funeral Home, Portland.
Sam Harrison
Sam D. Har rison, 80,
passed away at his home near
Goldendale on July 6, 2012
after a valiant two year battle
with cancer.
He was born October 8,
1931 in Cedar Falls, Iowa to
Donald R. and Inez (Dewey)
Harrison.
After spending his early
life in Iowa, his family moved
to Colorado Springs, Colorado. He graduated from
Colorado College. His many
interests were reflected in the
varied jobs he had. These included: dance band manager
and trombonist, athletic
coach ranging from Little
League through high school,
Chamber of Commerce manager, hotel executive, and account executive for television
and radio stations. Sam said
he “got paid for having fun”.
He enjoyed a lifelong involvement in music and had a
keen interest in sports, history, and politics.
Sam is survived by Twyla
(Hoskins) Harrison, his wife
and best friend for 54 years;
son Morgan R. Harrison
(Joanna) of Carson City, Nev.;
daughter Kelly Sue Harrison
of Goldendale; and grandson
Donovan R. Harrison of Carson City.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
BURGESS-YOUNG ENGAGEMENT: Gary and Lila Burgess of
Goldendale, announce the engagement of their daughter Jessica
Burgess to Derek Young, son of Andrew and Tamie Young of
LaCenter. The Jessica is employed at Rodda Paints in Portland,
and Derek is part owner of Reign Audio in Ridgefield. The wedding
will be held on Sept. 15, in Ridgefield, at Three Brother's Winery.
The couple plans on making their home in the Vancouver area.
BIRTHS
Marshall Julian Blunt
OBITUARY POLICY
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Marshall Julian Blunt was
born in The Dalles, on June
28, 2012, to Melissa and Nick
Blunt . He weighed 7 pounds,
7.8 ounces, and measured 20
and 3/4 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mark and Barbara Marshall
of Goldendale.
Paternal grandparents are
Jody and Bernie Herrerah of
Lake Stevens, and Dennis
and Janet Blunt of Vancouver.
He joins his mother, father
and siblings Mark, Kyden
and Sierra in their home in
Goldendale.
4 — JULY 25, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
O PINION
LOU MARZELES, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
KAREN HENSLEE, GENERAL MANAGER
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN, REPORTER/SPORTS
The battle for clean energy
can get extremely dirty
Apparently, the battle for clean energy can be a very dirty business.
For years, the Sierra Club has been waging an all-out war to end
the use of coal. Dubbed “Beyond Coal,” the campaign includes a hit
list of coal projects the Sierra Club is targeting, including “green”
projects designed to reduce coal plant emissions to zero.
The Sierra Club is getting help in its war on coal from the Obama
administration. Not surprising, since candidate Obama famously
warned that, as president, he would endeavor to bankrupt the coal
industry.
As The New York Times reported in March, “The Obama administration’s proposed rule to control greenhouse gas emissions from
new power plants—the first ever—could go far toward closing out
the era of old-fashioned coal-burning power generation.” The result, say analysts, will be steeply higher electricity prices.
The Sierra Club has also been getting
help in its Beyond Coal campaign from
some in the natural gas industry.
Guest
According to The Washington Post, from
Commentary
2007-2010 the group received $26 million
from Chesapeake Energy and others in the
Don Brunell,
gas industry to fund its anti-coal campaign.
President,
Although news of the arrangement
Association of
caused controversy and embarrassment for
Washington
both parties, CEO Aubrey McClendon said
Businesses
he has no regrets about working with the
Sierra Club to go after the coal industry.
“We’re in a market-share struggle with
coal,” McClendon said.”As a result of that
campaign, 150 new coal plants were not built. That demand will go
to natural gas.”
Following a leadership shakeup, the Sierra Club ended its relationship with Chesapeake Energy but didn’t return any of the
money.
As part of its anti-coal campaign, the Sierra Club had said that
natural gas provides an affordable, cleaner alternative to coal. No
worries about ending coal use, they said. Natural gas is the perfect
bridge fuel as America transitions to renewable energy.
The Department of Energy reports that natural gas electric
plants produce 45 percent less carbon than older coal plants, although newer coal plants are much cleaner. Even the liberal Union
of Concerned Scientists admits that the lower emissions from
burning natural gas “translate into public health benefits.”
But now, the Sierra Club has done an about-face, announcing a
new campaign: “Beyond Natural Gas.”
After lobbying for years to convert retiring coal-powered plants
to natural gas, Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune now
says the group wants an end to all fossil fuels. “As we push to retire
coal plants, we’re going to work to make sure we’re not simultaneously switching to natural-gas infrastructure. We’re going to be preventing new gas plants from being built whenever we can.”
Why the head-spinning reversal?
It appears that natural gas is a victim of its own success. The
boom in natural gas production made possible by hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” has made the fuel far more economical than
the renewable energy sources favored by environmentalists.
Over the years, the powerful Sierra Club has successfully lobbied
to block nuclear energy, reduce domestic oil production and put
coal-fired power plants out of business. Now, in order to bolster uncompetitive wind, solar and biofuels, they are trying to restrict
availability of natural gas in order to drive up the price to the levels of alternative fuels.
So where does that leave the rest of us?
Higher energy prices may suit the Sierra Club’s political agenda,
but working to drive up energy costs does a disservice to millions of
American families and employers struggling to make ends meet in
today’s tough economy.
Frankly, it’s reminiscent of the famous quote attributed to 18th
century French Queen Marie Antoinette. Told that her subjects
were starving for lack of bread, she replied, “Let them eat cake.”
Next Java Talk: Friday, August 3, 8 a.m.
THE GOLDENDALE SENTINEL
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ESTABLISHED 1879 • PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY FROM OFFICES AT
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TELEPHONE (509) 773-3777 • FAX (509) 773-4737
EMAIL: (NEWS, EDITORIAL, LETTERS)
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(ADS, COMMUNITIES, HOMETOWN)
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THE GOLDENDALE SENTINEL STAFF
HEIDI MCCARTY, AD DESIGN
RACHEL OLP, AD SALES
Deadlines:
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Noon Friday
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LETTERS
FROM THE
Where would we
be without
bureacracies?
To the Editor:
Thank you for your article on the
goof by Washington Basic Health
management. Please continue to
keep us informed when your readers are being poorly served by government agencies. Whatever the
reason—staff incompetence, too
cumbersome re gulation, and
such—it deserves to be exposed so
it can be corrected. For example, if
you have evidence that state health
care money is going into a black
hole, let us hear about it.
But on the issue of bureaucracies: many people question the need
for bureaucracies, but most of them
must recognize that any large organization needs a system of organization. Religious institutions, the
military, private health insurance
providers, etc., all have bureaucracies. When you criticized “the bureaucracy” in last week’s editorial
on Washington Basic Health were
you saying that the state role in
health care should be eliminated altogether? Is the plan that some
good-hearted private company
(with no bureaucracy?) will see that
low-income people have access to
health care at a manageable cost?
Don Thomas
Goldendale
COMMUNITY
about the people running. I was told
by the Auditor’s office that they
weren't sending them out this time
because they were so big but there
was a website I could go to. When I
went to the website, it is unprintable, so back I went to the Auditor’s
office and was told that they copied
and pasted all the information
(which took about three hours to
do) and I could look at the copy in
their office. I asked if they could
make me a copy and was told that I
could go to the library.
The library lets you on the computer for an hour, and you have to
pay for the copies after the first 10.
Not an option. My mother-in-law is
disabled and has no computer, and
yet she votes every election. When I
told her all this, she said she just
wouldn't vote.
I guess what I am getting at is—
how are we supposed to be informed voters with no information?
I was told that we will get a booklet
for the general election, but how do
we put someone on that ballot without knowing who we put there? As a
taxpayer in the state of Washington, I feel that maybe some of the
money I pay should cover the cost of
an information pamphlet.
No wonder we have the elected
officials that we have. I guess I
should just close my eyes and vote
for whomever my pencil lands on.
Robbin Anderson
Goldendale
Know where you
Cost cutting costs are when hunting
us information
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
I got my ballot in the mail the
other day and saw that there was
only one name I recognized. I asked
around to see if anyone had a voters’ pamphlet with the information
This letter is to educate you on
the importance of knowing where
you are at all times. In October of
2011, my son and I were hunting in
the Box Canyon area. I made that
mistake of not reading the signs as
we drove by them. We had gone to
the area many other times in years
past, and I assumed that the land
was still an open area for hunting.
I know what it feels like when
you have an individual trespass on
your land, as we have had trespassers on our land. I am sorry for
what I did and have made an extra
effort for the coming year, purchasing newer maps and fine-tuning
this year’s hunt. I have checked
boundaries and land owners property lines to ensure that we do not
cross the line again.
Everyone who hunts, hikes, or
participates in other activities that
take you to open lands should always be aware of your surroundings and take care to respect people’s property. I hope my lesson can
be yours, too.
Rick Perez
Sunnyside
Jacket thief
should feel guilty
To the Editor:
I am an employee at Klickitat
Valley Hospital. I wear a black
hooded jacket with the brand name
“Cheetah.” I wore this jacket to Les
Schwab Tires in the early morning
and I wore it to my doctor’s appointment that morning at the
Family Practice Clinic. I got a ride
home from Mt. Adams Transportation Service. I went to work in the
afternoon and hung my jacket on a
rack by the Maintenance Shop door,
which was the last time I saw it. A
stranger took my jacket, and I hope
that he is reading this and feels
guilty for taking it.
Mark Stockwell
Goldendale
Cajuns, NASA, Rembrandt declares bankruptcy, World War I begins
July 28: 1755—Nova Scotia’s residents of French
July 25: 1860—Harvard and Yale compete in the
first U.S. intercollegiate billiard match. 1951—First ancestry, the Acadians, are deported by the British.
recorded instance of parents sticking their first-grad- Some go to Louisiana where “Acadian” evolves to
er’s artwork on a refrigerator. 1975—A Chorus Line be- “Cajun.” 1914—Austria-Hungary declares war on Sercomes one singular sensation when it debuts for the bia; World War I shortly follows. 1939—Judy Garland
first of its 6,137-show run. Died: Liza with a Z’s dad first records Somewhere Over the Rainbow. Born:
Vincente Minnelli. Smart Irrigation Month, Garlic Helen Beatrix Potter (1866.) National Milk Chocolate
Day.
Days, Thread the Needle Day.
July 29: 1958—President Ike Eisenhower signs the
July 26: 1656—While he is the master of the theNational Aeronautics and Space Act creatatrical employment of light and shadow, he
ing NASA. 3487—Child sends thank you
is not much at balancing his checkbook, so
Rembrandt declares he is bankrupt. 1948—
This Week note to grandparents without being reminded by his parents. Died: English abolitionist
President Truman integrates the armed serin History
William Wilberforce. National Lipstick Day.
vices. 1955—Ted Allen throws a record 72
July 30: 762—Caliph Al-Mansur founds
consecutive horseshoe ringers, and if Mrs.
Tim O’Neill
Baghdad. 1930—Soccer’s first World Cup Is
Allen has heard about it once, she has heard
awarded to Uruguay. Died: Otto von Bismarabout it a million times. Born: George
ck (1898.) Feast of the Throne (Morocco.)
Bernard Shaw (1856.) Died: Eva PeronJuly 31: 1703—After being convicted for seditious
Duarte (1952.) Single Working Woman’s Week.
July 27: 1789—The Department of Foreign Affairs libel, Daniel Defoe is put in a pillory but is only pelted
becomes the first U.S. government agency; it is now with flowers. He goes on to write Robinson Crusoe.
called the Department of State. Critics immediately 1912—Photos and movies of prize fights are prohibited
claim the federal government is bloated. 1953—The by the U.S. government. Born: J.K. Rowling (1965.)
U.S., China, North Korea, and South Korea enter into Died: Friedrich Franz, Hereditary Grand Duke of
an armistice agreement to end the Korean War. Born: Mecklenburg and heir apparent to the throne of MeckPeggy Fleming (1948.) Died: James Mason (1984.) All Or lenburg-Schwerin (2001). Jump for Jelly Beans Day.
Nothing Day.
LETTERS POLICY: The Goldendale Sentinel attempts to publish as many letters to the editor as possible. Letters to the editor should be original and comment on an issue. There is a suggested length limit of about 300
words. Unsigned letters, letters with fictitious signatures, or copies of letters to public officials are generally not accepted. The Sentinel also limits letters on a particular subject when we feel it has been thoroughly aired, to the
point of becoming repetitive. Check your facts; offhand “statistics” or “information” of questionable nature will not
be printed.
The Sentinel also reserves the right to edit or omit a letter if it contains potentially libelous material, an attack
on an individual, or is generally in bad taste. Writers must include name, city of residence, and phone number for
verification purposes.
JULY 25, 2012 — 5
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
C OMMUNIT Y
Museum looking for a few good greeters
There will be a free sports screening Please join them (and encourage your
on Thursday, Aug. 2, from 6 p.m. to 8 neighbor) on Monday, Aug. 13, to attend
p.m. at the Skyline Hospital Physical their regular meeting and then help
Therapy and Sports Medicine depart- clean the park from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.,
ment in White Salmon. This opportuni- at the Lyle Activity Center, corner of
ty is open to all students who will be 3rd and Klickitat streets.
Members of the Twin
participating in school sports
Bridges Museum will be
this year, thanks to the genopening its doors soon and
erosity of Skyline Hospital
seeking docent volunPhysical Therapy and Sports
Lyle News are
teers. If you can spare even
Medicine and NorthShore
just one Saturday from 10
Medical Group in White
Mildred Lykens
a.m. to 4 p.m., it would be
Salmon. Take advantage of
greatly appreciated. Perthis wonderful community
haps you can pair up with a
service available on a firstfriend? I am in charge of the
come, first-served basis. This
is a once a year opportunity to receive scheduling so please call 365-0060. The
your athlete’s mandatory sports physi- only requirements are to greet the pubcal free of charge. These screenings lic and guard the artifacts.
I would like to ask the person who
also keep your child’s records up-to“removed” the windsock that hung
date for two years.
The Lyle Park is maintained entirely from the flag pole in front of the Activby volunteers and is used every day by ity Center if they felt they were entitled
kids and families in our community. to its possession. I made it especially
for the community but if you really
need it more, then by all means, enjoy
it. I guess I should be grateful that you
left it there for the public to enjoy for
the past year and a half. I certainly
hope you appreciate it.
Early Friday evening, while relaxing
on the patio with out-of-state-company,
a buck deer showed my friend how an
animal could feel at home. The buck
treated us by walking west on Klickitat
Street, then turning north up 3rd. It did
not appear to be in a hurry or under
duress, “just passing through”. How
many big cities can brag about deer in
the middle of town?
Children of Dan and Frankie Roth
are inviting friends and family to join
in the celebration of their parents 50th
wedding anniversary, which will be
held on Saturday, July 28, from 1 p.m. to
3 p.m. at the Lyle Activity Center.
Cafe Drift, more than
just a coffee house
BRITTANY ALLEN
FOR THE SENTINEL
A quaint little spot for locals and not-so-local tourists
to sit, eat, and chat, Café Drift
is located just off Klickitat
Avenue at 202 Main St. in
Klickitat.
For most Washingtonians,
the sign outside promoting
BRITTANY ALLEN
Hear about Panama trip Sunday
Becca Hallenbeck and Bethany Putnam “Jersey Boys” at Keller Auditorium. The
recently spent two weeks on a mission to presentation was a story about Frankie Valli
and the Four Seasons’ rise to starPanama. The young ladies will
dom. The play was very interestshare stories about their trip at
the Glenwood Pioneer Memorial
Glenwood ing and the music “fantastic!”
The trip to Portland also called for
Community Church on Sunday,
News
dinner out on the town at Mother’s
July 29, at 6:30 p.m. A dessert
Bistro. The perfect end to a perpotluck is planned for that
Glenwood
fect day!
evening so there will be treats to
Homemakers
The PMCC youth group would
go along with the girls’ stories.
like to thank the community for
Everyone is invited to attend the
supporting their carwash and
potluck and the girls’ presentabake sale on July 21. Proceeds from the fund
tion.
Twenty-one ladies from our area travelled raiser will go towards Bible Camp next
to Portland on Saturday, July 21 to watch month.
Business networking opportunity
Thursday at the swimming pool
Senator Jim Honeyford photographs of Klickitat
will be speaking at Presby County history. The goal is
to have phoMuseum’s Social
tographs, as well
on Saturday, Aug.
as the many col11 for the 50 year
Hear’s
lectibles available
Anniversary BBQ
Goldendale on-line.
and picnic.
In last week’s
There will be a
Diana
column I meant to
bus tour of The
Notestine
say that The
Military Road on
Greater GoldenSaturday, Sept. 29,
dale Area Champresented by the
Klickitat County Historical ber of Commerce is holding
Society. You can call Presby a Business 2 Business at The
Museum to get on the list
now at 773-4303 or send an
email
to
[email protected]
as the seating will be limited.
The Military Road, built
in 1856, as the first wagon
road in Klickitat County as a
result of the murder of Indian Agent Andrew Bolon and
subsequent battles with the
Yakima Indians, connected
Fort Dalles, Oregon, with
Fort Simcoe, White Swan,
Wash. The 62 mile road,
under the volunteer leadership of Dick and Bev Wheelhouse, has been researched
and mapped. Permanent signage will be built in Warwick and Blockhouse to
memorialize the importance
of the road in the protection
of pioneer settlers and the
development of the stage
coach route to Ellensburg.
In case you havent heard,
The Klickitat County Historical Society has received a
$4000 Historical Preservation grant from Klickitat
County to scan, catalogue
and archive its over 2,000
Central Klickitat County
Park and Recreations Goldendale Pool on Thursday,
July 26, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. for its Chamber members. There will be a tour of
the future trails, the community gardens as well as the
pool. This is a perfect time
for networking. Bring your
swimsuit to use after the
meeting. This will be a cool
party.
Vendor space available
for Bickleton car show
The big Car Show in Bickleton is Sept. 1. All kinds of
cars may enter. Marilyn
Roberts is in charge of vendors and anyone can set up
their flea
market
wares by
East End
calling
News
her at
896-2113.
Ada Ruth
E a c h
Whitmore
vendor
needs to
be assigned a space.
I visited Don Miller at Hillcrest Manor in Sunnyside last
week. I also toured the new
additions, very nice.
The Williams family recently held their 65th family
reunion at Maryhill last
week. There were 40 in attendance. In the early days the
Williams family lived on The
Glade and had a service station across the road from
their house. That was about
half way for the Bickleton
folks on The Hill going to the
Yakima Valley.
Dorothy Naught is having problems finding
enough passengers to ride
the senior bus to The Dalles
or Goldendale. I think the
hot weather has something
to do with that. Please call
her if you need to go or
would like to ride along.
espresso is enough to draw
them in, but the owners, Scott
Macdonald and Rebecca
Bashara, seek to make one
want to stay for more. From
savory to sweet, their menu
ranges from a slice of Becca's
special quiche to one of
Scott's acclaimed scones. For
hot summer days, they offer
toddy floats to beat the heat,
which are a cold pressed coffee drink mixed with halfand-half served over chocolate ice cream.
From Portland via Iowa,
Rebecca is a natural jewelry
designer and metalsmith. Her
husband Scott, a designer and
sculptor, partners with her in
making and selling jewelry in
various galleries and in Café
Drift. Most of their creations
are made to reflect the connection of manmade materials and nature, consisting of
stones native to the Columbia
River Gorge and intricately
fused metal.
“We've had a vision of
bringing the community together,” Scott says, and according to Rebecca, they
“Love the area.” They hope to
revitalize the town of Klickitat and generate a creative
space for the community.
Café Drift is currently
open Friday to Sunday from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information about their jewelry
business,
visit
www.rbashara.com and like
Café Drift on Facebook.
6 — JULY 25, 2012
BALLOT from Page 1
Baumgartner makes these
statements on the issues:
“America’s overdependence on foreign oil hurts
our economy and endangers
our troops. It distorts our foreign policy and forces us to
do business with some of the
world’s worst tyrants. An
America with abundant and
diverse energy supplies will
both make the whole world
more secure and help good
jobs here at home.
“We must have a balanced
budget, now. America’s growing national debt threatens
our prosperity and unfairly
endangers the future freedoms of our children and
grandchildren. In the last 12
years, America’s national
debt has doubled to nearly 15
trillion dollars. Irresponsible
politicians in Washington,
D.C. have staggered from one
MICHAEL BAUMGARTNER
crisis to the next.
“Thomas Jefferson said
that the God who gave us life
gave us liberty. The Constitution does not grant us those
freedoms, which we are born
with, but it is meant to restrain gover nment from
trampling them. There is no
more important job for a U.S.
senator than ensuring those
promises made in the Constitution are kept in the Congress.
“Social Security and
Medicare are vital programs
to ensure every American
has a measure of comfort in
their retirement years. As we
reform these systems to secure their future for our children, we must ensure that we
do not betray the promises
made to our parents and
grandparents.”
• Maria Cantwell, Democrat, currently serves as a
United States Senator for the
State of Washington.
Cantwell says she has always
embraced the values she first
learned growing up in a
strong working-class family.
With the help of Pell Grants,
she was the first member of
her family to graduate college. Later, as a successful
businesswoman in Washington’s high-tech industry, she
helped build a company that
created hundreds of highpaying jobs from the ground
up.
Cantwell was elected to
the U.S. Senate in 2000 and
again in 2006. Cantwell supporters say she cut taxes for
the middle-class by ensuring
that Washington taxpayers
can deduct state and local
taxes from their federal returns. She is said to have protected jobs in Washington’s
aerospace industry by cracking down on foreign companies’ unfair trade practices
and worked to create still
more well-paying jobs
through effective investments in new technology and
valuable job training. She
successfully led the fight to
stop drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and
claims to lead efforts in the
Senate to make America
more energy independent.
Cantwell serves on the following Senate committees:
• Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science and
Transportation
• Chairman, Subcommittee on Aviation Operations,
Safety and Security
• Member, Subcommittee
on Competitiveness, Innovation and Export Promotion
• Member, Subcommittee
on Communications, Technology and the Internet
• Member, Subcommittee
on Surface Transportation
and Merchant Marine Infrastructure, Safety and Security
• Member, Subcommittee
on Science and Space
• Member, Subcommittee
on Oceans, Atmosphere,
Fisheries, and Coast Guard
• Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
• Chairman, Subcommittee on Energy
• Member, Subcommittee
on Water and Power
• Member, Subcommittee
on Public Lands and Forests
• Senate Committee on Fi-
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
nance
• Member, Subcommittee
on Energ y, Natural Resources and Infrastructure
• Member, Subcommittee
on Taxation and IRS Oversight
• Member, Subcommittee
on Health Care
Haugen visited a wind turbine manufacturing plant
built by Suzlon. Suzlon imports wind turbines from
India destined for the Columbia River Gorge. Haugen
says he’ll work to bring a
wind turbine manufacturing
plant to his District.
“Ms. Her rera Beutler
readily admits she has no foreign policy experience. Solution: vote for a candidate
with foreign policy experience. During his 24 year military career Haugen lived
overseas, worked with the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Japanese Self-Defense Forces.
“Medicare: we need a Representative in Congress who
will protect Medicare. Ms.
Herrera Beutler voted to end
Medicare.
MARIA CANTWELL
• Senate Committee on Indian Affairs
• Senate Committee on
Small Business and Entrepreneurship
U.S. Representatives
• Jon T. Haugen, Democrat,
is a military veteran who
served 24 years. He is a retired Navy pilot who graduated in the top third of his
class at the United States
Naval Academy.
Haugen and his wife of 26
years have three children
who all attended Clark College and graduated from
Western Washington (1) and
Washington State (2).
Haugen takes these stands
on the issues:
JON T. HAUGEN
“Social Security: Republicans have called Social Security a ‘Ponzi Scheme.’ Solution: Haugen would strengthen and protect Social Security by eliminating the current
cap for incomes above
$110,100.”
• Jaime Herrera Beutler,
Republican, was elected to
the 112th Congress in 2010 to
represent Southwest Wash-
JAIME HERRERA BEUTLER
ington’s 3rd District.
At 33 years old, Herrera
Beutler is the youngest
woman currently serving in
the U.S. Congress. She is the
first Hispanic in history to
represent Washington state
in the U.S. House of Representatives. She is vice chair
of the Congressional Caucus
for Women’s Issues. Her first
proposed bill would cut the
salaries of members of Congress, the president, and the
vice president by 10 percent.
Herrera Beutler attended
the University of Washington, earning her Bachelor of
Arts degree in Communications. During that time she
held temporary positions in
both the Washington State
Senate and in Washington,
D.C. at the White House Office of Political Affairs.
From 2005 to 2007, Herrera
Beutler worked as a Senior
Legislative Aide for Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Spokane). She
served as the Congresswoman’s lead advisor on
health care policy, education,
veterans’ and women’s issues. In 2007, she was appointed to serve as a State
Representative to Washington state’s 18th Legislative
District by Democrat and Republican County Commissioners from Clark and
Cowlitz Counties. She was
reelected by 60 percent of the
voters in 2008, and served in
that position until being
elected to Congress in 2010.
She and her husband
Daniel Beutler reside in
Camas.
Governor
• Rob McKenna, Republican, is serving his second
term as Washington’s 17th
Attorney General. As the
state’s chief legal officer, he
directs more than 500 attorneys and 700 professional
staff providing legal services
to state agencies, the governor and legislature.
McKenna launched Operation: Allied Against Meth
and passed a comprehensive
new statewide methamphetamine initiative in the Legislature. He presented his antimeth presentation to nearly
35,000 students in more than
60 schools across Washington. He has been commended
for combating mortgage and
foreclosure fraud. McKenna
has won all three of the cases
he has argued before the U.S.
Supreme Court, defending
voter-adopted laws on campaign finance reform, the
top-two primary election system and the state public
records law.
• Jay Inslee, Democrat, is
the former member of the
United States House of Representatives for Washington’s 1st congressional district, serving from 1999 until
his resignation on March 20
this year in order to focus on
his campaign for governor of
Washington.
Inslee practiced law for 10
years in Selah.
In 1992, Inslee ran for and
was elected to the United
States Congress representing
Washington’s 4th Congressional District. He lost his
bid for re-election in the Republican Revolution of 1994
in a rematch against his 1992
opponent, Doc Hastings. Inslee attributed his 1994 defeat
in large part to his vote for
the Assault Weapons Ban.
He ran again for Congress
in 1998, this time in the 1st
cong ressional
district
against two-term incumbent
Rick White. His campaign attracted national attention
when he became the first Democratic candidate to air
television ads attacking his
opponent and the Republican
congressional leadership for
the Lewinsky scandal. Inslee
was returned to the House
with more than 60 percent of
the vote in the next three
elections. In 2010 he won by a
15-point margin.
To be continued as the election year continues.
JULY 25, 2012 — 7
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
S PORTS
County youth participate
in National rodeo events
Nine members of the Goldendale Rodeo
Club competed in events over the past four
weeks in National high school and junior
high school rodeos. Logan Siebert, Lexi
Cameron and Tayler Jo Bradley qualified for
the National High School Rodeo Finals in
Rock Springs, Wy. by virtue of their top five
finishes during State competition. Siebert
qualified in bronc riding and cutting.
Cameron went in pole bending and Bradley
competed in break-away roping where she
finished 25th in the first day of the event.
Washington team members were eligible
this year for the first time in the NRA sponsored shooting competition. Siebert qualified in the trap shoot along with team member Tanner Bradley. Bradley finished 23rd in
the event. Also competing for the Goldendale
team was David Gunkel who had a strong
performance, finishing ninth in the .22 rifle
competition.
In addition to the Nationals in Wyoming,
Siebert also qualified for the Silver State International Rodeo in Winnemucca, Nev. with
teammate Jacob Bush in team roping. Joining Siebert at Winnemucca were Kacie
Chambers in pole bending and barrels, R.J.
Hicks in bull riding, and Charlie Thiele in
breakaway roping and team roping. Thiele
and her teammate Kelsey Streeter, of Palisades were the only girl-girl team to make
the finals and placed seventh overall out of
more than 125 teams.
Also competing for Goldendale was
Cheyanne Dove at the Wrangler Jr. Finals in
Gallup, N.M.
CONTRIBUTED:
SILVER STATE RODEO: Logan Siebert and teammate competed in team roping, left, and Kaci
Chambers competed in pole bending at the Silver State International Rodeo in Winnemucca, N.V.
New WDFW website details
salmon conservation efforts
Finding current information about the state’s salmon
runs and tracking ongoing
efforts to recover at-risk
stocks on the Washington
Department of Fish and
Wildlife’s (WDFW) website
has never been easier.
A new online tool called
the Salmon Conservation
Reporting Engine (SCoRE)
consolidates current information about state salmon
populations, hatchery production, conservation guidelines and other aspects of
salmon management in a
single website.
The SCoRE website, available
at
http://wdfw.wa.gov/score/,
outlines major recovery initiatives under way around
the state to restore salmon
habitat, restructure hatchery operations and redesign
fisheries to conserve wild
runs.
While focusing on
WDFW’s role in these efforts, the website also provides information about an
array of local and regional
organizations, tribal governments and volunteer groups
involved in the statewide effort. Readers can link directly to salmon recovery efforts
in their area, and to
statewide information such
as the annual State of the
Salmon Report.
This information provides a context for SCoRE’s
detailed status reports on all
biologically distinct salmon
and steelhead populations
around the state, describing
their history, spawning escapement and recovery
goals. This same information is also included for
coastal cutthroat and bull
trout populations, many of
which are also listed for protection under the federal Endangered Species Act.
“Our goal was to make
this information as easy to
access as possible,” said
Sara LaBorde, a special assistant to the director at
WDFW. “With SCoRE, people can switch from an
overview of statewide habitat-restoration efforts to
spawning data for a specific
salmon run with a few
mouse clicks.”
Various issues addressed
on the website include:
• Which salmon and steelhead populations are increasing, decreasing, or
showing no change?
• What are specific
salmon hatcheries doing to
support salmon recovery?
• Who is involved in the effort to restore wild salmon
and steelhead runs?
• What can individuals do
to get involved in salmon recovery?
LaBorde said WDFW designed the website for a variety of users, including policy makers, scientists, department employees and the
general public.
“Our state made a major
commitment to salmon recovery, and people have
right to know how that’s
going,” she said. “By providing a common base of information, we also hope this
website will encourage more
people to get involved in this
effort.”
Like salmon recovery itself, the new website is a
work in prog ress, said
LaBorde, noting that WDFW
will continue to add information to the SCoRE reporting system throughout the
recovery effort.
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
WHERE COWBOYS AND COWGIRLS LEARN THEIR TRADE:
The Klickitat County fairground
arena at Goldendale was the place
to be for aspiring cowboys and
cowgirls. The occasion was the
annual week long Goldendale
Rodeo Bible Camp. Senior camp
(ages 15-18) ran from July 22-25
and Junior camp is July 26-28. The
camps are presented by the
Klickitat Valley Chapter of
Fellowship of Christian Cowboys.
Campers select from a curriculum
of rodeo events including steer/bull
riding, bare back bronc riding,
poles, team roping, and more. New
this year is “traditional cowboy
skills,” which include horsemanship, handling and moving cattle,
sorting and cutting. Campers get to
test the skills they learn at a concluding rodeo. Mixed in with the
rodeo workshops are Bible teaching and Christian ministry sessions.
The camp is run by volunteers.
Camp director is Kristi Siebert.
Mary Knapp, of Toppenish practices roping, at right, while Dakota
Gray, of Lynnwood works on steer
wrestling technique, above.
8 — JULY 25, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
R ECORDS
WEATHER EAST DIST.
WHAT’S HAPPENING
On-going
Events
Every Monday
•Monday evening jam sessions in front of Dr. Ogden’s
office at 7 p.m. All musicians
and listeners welcome. 7734114.
•Ultimate Frisbee Mondays
at Sorosis Park baseball
fields in The Dalles at 6 p.m.
Everyone welcome, no experience or equipment necessary, geared toward teens and
adults. (541) 296-9533.
Every Monday and
Wednesday
•Goldendale Wrestling Club
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the
Goldendale High School
gym. All ages welcome.
Every Tuesday
•Take Off Pounds Sensibly
(T.O.P.S.) meets in the
Riverview Bank meeting
room at 9 a.m. For more information, contact Debbie at
773-5301.
•Klickitat Republicans meet
at 6 p.m. at the Dallesport
Community
Center.
www.klickitatrepublicans.org
.
Every First Tuesday
•Goldendale Photo Club
meets at 6 p.m. in the Goldendale Middle School faculty
room. Anyone with a passion for photography welcome. 772-2717.
•Goldendale Aglow meets at 7
p.m. at Father’s House Fellowship, located at 207 S.
Klickitat. 773-5870.
Every Second and Fourth
Tuesday
•Simcoe Chapter of Toastmasters bi-monthly meeting
from noon to 1 p.m. at Christ
the King Lutheran Church,
located at the corner of Sim-
coe and Columbus.
Every Tues., Wed., & Thurs.
•Family History Center, located at the corner of N.
Columbus and McKinley is
open Tues. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Wed. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Thurs. 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Ancestry.com
plus more. Appointments
available outside these
hours. Open to the public.
250-3095.
Every Tuesday and
Thursday
•KLCK Klickitat AM talk
show at 8:35 a.m. on 1400am
or klck1400.com.
Every Wednesday
•Kiwanis meets at 7 a.m. at
Golden Coyote Coffee, located on Main Street.
•”Hotline” on KLCK radio
from 8:35 a.m. to 9 a.m. on
1400am or online at
klck1400.com.
•Open Studio for Kids (ages
eight to 14) at Golden Art
Gallery from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
$10 per session. Student
artists can explore a wide variety of techniques and art
materials. Call in advance,
773-5100.
Every First Wednesday
•Kids’ Club at the Goldendale
Community Library from 3
p.m. to 4 p.m. Enjoy games,
reader theater and snacks.
Games provided or bring
your own to share. Fun for
kids ages eight to 12.
Every First and Third
Wednesday
•Goldendale Little League
meeting at Goldendale City
Fire Hall at 6 p.m.
Every Thursday
•Bingo at the Goldendale
American Legion Post 116 for
members and their guests at
6:30 p.m.
Thursdays & Fridays till
August 24
•Free sack lunch for kids
from noon to 1 p.m. at the
Goldendale
United
Methodist Church, located at
the corner of Broadway and
Columbus. Sponsored by
Back Packs for Kids program.
•Goldendale Community
Support Group for School
Food. Parents, teachers,
school staff members and
regular citizens interested in
the quality of food our public
school students get. Meet at
the Goldendale United
Methodist Church at 6:30
p.m.
Every Friday
•Yarn Benders, a knit, crochet and sewing group meets
from 10 a.m. to noon at Golden Coyote Coffee, located on
West Main in Goldendale.
Everyone is invited to bring
any type of needlework they
would like. 773-3163.
Every First and Third
Friday
•Java Talk at 8 a.m. at Golden
Coyote Coffee, located at 120
W. Main Street.
•Wishram Diabetic Education and Support group
meets in the Wishram Community Church at 3 p.m.
Everyone is welcome.
Every Saturday
•Pinochle at 7 p.m. promptly,
at the Odd Fellows Temple,
301 NW 2nd St., Goldendale.
Every Third Saturday
•Oriental art (Sumi brush
techniques) at the Golden
Art Gallery at 10 a.m. with
Margaret. 773-5100.
•Goldendale Senior Center
breakfast. Everyone is welcome. $3 per person.
Upcoming
Events
Thursday, July 26
•Goldendale Chamber business luncheon at Ayutla’s
Restaurant from noon to 1 p.m.
Chamber board director, Mike
DeMott will talk about ways
business can improve their
customer service.
•Goldendale Chamber Business 2 Business at 5:30 p.m. at
the Goldendale Pool.
•Accordion concert with Paul
Schneider and Jim Ogden at
the Presby Museum at 7 p.m.
Polkas, Scandinavian tunes
and selections of old country
music will be presented. Free
transportation is available
from Ogden’s Mopar Limo Service. Refreshments will be
served. No admission and no
collection will be taken. 7734114.
Thursday, August 2
•Goldendale Chamber Business Luncheon at the KVH
Cafe at noon. Soroptimists
president Sandra Choate and
District 3 secretary Barb
Robinson talk about who
Soroptimists are and what
they do.
Saturday, August 4
•Back to School Bash from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. on the courthouse lawn. Food, inflatables,
games and school supplies.
(541) 980-5347
Thursday, August 9
•Goldendale Chamber business luncheon at noon at the
KVH Cafe. Speakers are Relay
for Life.
Thursday, August 16
•Annual old fashioned ice
cream social and centennial
celebration on the lawn at the
Goldendale Library at 6:30 p.m.
Check out the full calendar on www.goldendalesentinel.com
Wednesday, July 25
Sunny, High 90, Low 54
Sunrise: 5:39 a.m.
Sunset: 8:40 p.m.
Thursday, July 26
Sunny, High 91, Low 55
Sunrise: 5:40 a.m.
Sunset: 8:39 p.m.
Friday, July 27
Sunny, High 88, Low 52
Sunrise: 5:41 a.m.
Sunset: 8:38 p.m.
Saturday, July 28
Sunny, High 85, Low 52
Sunrise: 5:42 a.m.
Sunset: 8:36 p.m.
Sunday, July 29
Sunny, High 85, Low 51
Sunrise: 5:44 a.m.
Sunset: 8:35 p.m.
Monday, July 30
Sunny, High 83, Low 51
Sunrise: 5:45 a.m.
Sunset: 8:34 p.m.
Tuesday, July 31
P Cloudy, High 83, Low 51
Sunrise: 5:46 a.m.
Sunset: 8:33 p.m.
Senior Meals
• July 26 @ noon
Goldendale Senior Center
Sloppy Joes
• July 31 @ noon
Goldendale
Senior Center & Lyle Lions
Community Center
SW Chicken
Call Mt. Adams
Transportation Service for
transportation
to meal sites:
Goldendale, 773-3060
White Salmon, 493-4662
COURT
July 10
•Allen Suisy Matai: Displaying Weapon (3/25/12); Guilty
plea, 364 days/362 susp.,
fines/fees $515.50, 24 months
bench probation.
•Linda Mae Pretlow: Assault 4
(3/5/12); Guilty plea, 364
days/354 susp., fines/fees
$653.25, 24 months bench probation.
•Charles Gordon Hicks: Assault 4 (7/29/11), Assault 4
(7/29/11); Count one amended
to Disorderly Conduct, guilty
plea to amended charge, count
two dismissed per plea agreement, 90 days/88 susp.,
fines/fees $1,605.50, 24 months
bench probation.
July 17
•Dennis Wayne Jussila: DWLS
2 (3/24/12); Guilty plea, 90
days/85 susp., 5 days jail credit, fines/fees $1,093.50
•Dennis Wayne Jussila: Marijuana Poss. Less/Equal 40
Grams (3/24/12), Use/Deliver
Drug Paraphernalia (3/24/12);
Dimissed.
•Dennis Wayne Jussila: Resisting Arrest (4/13/12); Guilty
plea, 90 days/85 susp., 5 days
jail credit, fines/fees $558.
•Dennis Wayne Jussila: Marijuana Poss. Less/Equal 40
Grams (4/25/12); Dismissed.
July 19
•Curtis Paul Dobson: Speeding
10 MPH Over Limit (6/13/12);
Deferred finding, $125.
•John William Flansberg, Jr.:
Op. Mot. Veh. Without Ins.
(6/11/12); Dismissed, MIC $25
•Charyl Grace Partlow: Speeding 17 MPH Over Limit
(6/22/12); Committed, fine
$110.
•Dustin Shayne Wells: Fl.
Renew Expired Reg. Less
Than Two Months (6/13/12);
Committed, fine $80.
N OTICES
KLICKITAT COUNTY
CITIZEN’S REVIEW
COMMITTEE
MEETING SCHEDULE
April 5, 2012 – August 2,
2012
The
Klickitat
County
Citizen’s Review Committee
(CRC) will support salmonid
recovery by identifying credible and fundable habitat
protection and enhancement
projects. This process will
support related programs
and activities that produce
sustainable and measurable
benefits for fish and fish
habitat. Therefore the CRC
meets during the spring and
summer months, with their
regularly schedule meeting
times on the first Thursday of
each month, unless otherwise noted. This year’s
meeting dates are as follows:
August 2, 2012
These meetings are open to
the public. Meetings will be
held in the Lyle Lions
Community Center, unless
otherwise noted, starting at
7:00 P.M.
If there are any questions,
please contact:
If there are any questions,
please contact:
John Foltz, Lead Entity
Coordinator
Klickitat County Natural
Resources Department
(509) 773-2353
(1114, 1208, 1302, 1701,
2201, 2601, 3001)
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE STATE OF OREGON
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF Wasco
Federal National Mortgage
Association, its successors
in interest and/or assigns,
Plaintiff,
v.
Alvin Fernandez; Elizabeth
Fernandez;
Riverview
Terrace Condominium; NCO
Financial Systems, Inc.; and
Occupants of the Premises,
Defendants.
Case No. 1100400CC
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
TO THE DEFENDANT: Alvin
Fernandez:
In the name of the State of
Oregon, you are hereby
required to appear and
answer the complaint filed
against you in the aboveentitled Court and cause on
or before the expiration of 30
days from the date of the
first publication of this summons. The date of first publication in this matter is July
4, 2012. If you fail timely to
appear and answer, Plaintiff
will apply to the above-enti-
tled court for the relief
prayed for in its complaint.
This is a judicial foreclosure
of a deed of trust in which
the Plaintiff requests that the
Plaintiff be allowed to foreclose your interest in the following described real property:
Unit No. NINE, Riverview
Terrace Condominium, more
fully described in the declaration of Unit Ownership for
Riverview
Terrace
Condominium recorded in
the records of Wasco
County, Oregon, Microfilm
No. 71-2041, together with
the general and limited common elements appertaining
to said unit as therein
described in the City of The
Dalles, County of Wasco and
State of Oregon, located on
the following described property: Beginning at the intersection of the South boundary of East 9th Street at the
West right of way boundary
of the Dry Hollow Road; said
point beginning being West
1139.4 feet from the
Northeast corner of the
Simms
Donation
Land
Claim; thence South 0° 06'
East along the West right of
way boundary of said Dry
Hollow Road a distance of
129.13 feet; thence North
89° 06' West 256.6 feet to
the center of channel of Dry
Hollow Creek; thence following the channel of said
Creek North 16° 32' East
132.52 feet to the South
boundary of East 9th Street;
thence East along said
boundary 225 feet to the
point of beginning. Excepting
the Northerly 25 feet thereof.
Commonly known as: 1622
East 9th Street, #9, The
Dalles, Oregon 97058.
NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS:
READ THESE PAPERS
CAREFULLY!
A lawsuit has been started
against you in the aboveentitled court by Plaintiff
Federal National Mortgage
Association, its successors
in interest and/or assigns.
Plaintiff’s claims are stated
in the written complaint, a
copy of which was filed with
the above-entitled Court.
You must “appear” in this
case or the other side will
win automatically.
To
“appear” you must file with
the court a legal paper
called a “motion” or “answer.”
The “motion” or “answer”
must be given to the court
clerk or administrator within
30 days of the date of first
publication specified herein
along with the required filing
fee. It must be in proper
form and have proof of service on the Plaintiff’s attor-
THIS JUST IN:
• Meeting Schedule/Citizens Review Comm. - Klickitat
County Natural Resources
•Notice to Creditors/Mildred Fey - Ross Rakow
• Invitation to Bid/Bingen Point Business Park - Port of
Klickitat
Summons by Publication/Nutter & Co. vs. Phillips, Tonder - Routh, Crabtree & Olsen
• DNS/Vezina - Klickitat County Planning
• MDNS/Gorge Aviation Svcs & Mt. Meadows Dairy Klickitat County Planning
• Resolution No. 09612 - Klickitat County Public Works
• Notice to Contractors/Countywide Safety Improvements
- Klickitat County Public Works
ney or, if the Plaintiff does
not have an attorney, proof
of service on the Plaintiff.
If you have any questions,
you should see an attorney
immediately. If you need
help in finding an attorney,
you may contact the Oregon
State Bar’s Lawyer Referral
Service online at www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling
(503) 684-3763 (in the
Portland metropolitan area)
or toll-free elsewhere in
Oregon at (800) 452-7636.
This summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7.
ROUTH
CRABTREE
OLSEN, P.C.
By
Tony Kullen, OSB # 090218
Attorneys for Plaintiff
621 SW Alder St., Suite 800
Portland, OR 97205
(503) 459-0140; Fax (425)
623-1862
[email protected]
(2714, 2808, 2903, 3002)
NOTICE AND SUMMONS
BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO: WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN And TO:
MONA SPINO, Mother; and
anyone claiming a paternal
interest of Daneka Jim, dob
5/11/1998,
Dependency
Petition #12-7-00017-8 filed
5/30/12 (natural mother
Mona Spino);
SCOTT DANE, Alleged
Father and anyone claiming
a paternal interest of Tiffany
Jean Brock, dob 12/29/1997,
Dependency Petition #12-700003-8 filed 1/6/12 (natural
mother Shawna Kitchens);
UNKNOWN BIOLOGICAL
FATHER of Tiffany Jean
Brock, dob 12/29/1997,
Dependency Petition #12-700003-8 filed 1/6/12 (natural
mother Shawna Kitchens);
A Dependency Petition was
filed; A Fact Finding hearing
will be held on this matter
on: 8/14/12 at 10:00 a.m. at
Klickitat County Superior
Court, 205 South Columbus
Avenue,
Goldendale
Washington 98620. YOU
SHOULD BE PRESENT AT
THIS HEARING.
NOTICE: You have important legal rights and you
must take steps to protect
your interests. 1) You have
the right to a fact-finding
hearing
before
a
Judge/Court Commissioner.
2) You have the right to have
a lawyer represent you at the
hearing. If you cannot afford
a lawyer, the court will
appoint one to represent
you. 3) At the hearing, you
have the right to speak on
your own behalf, to introduce
evidence, to examine witnesses, and to receive a
decision based solely on the
evidence presented to the
Judge/Court Commissioner.
THE
HEARING
WILL
DETERMINE IF YOUR
CHILD IS DEPENDENT AS
DEFINED
IN
RCW
13.34.030(6). THIS BEGINS
A JUDICIAL PROCESS
WHICH COULD RESULT IN
PERMANENT LOSS OF
YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS.
IF YOU DO NOT APPEAR
AT THE HEARING THE
COURT MAY ENTER A
DEPENDENCY ORDER IN
YOUR ABSENCE.
To request a copy of the
Notice, Summons, and
Dependency, call DSHS at
(509) 773-7475.
DATED this 26 day of June,
2012.
Klickitat County Clerk
By: Connie McEwen
Deputy Clerk
(2813, 2905, 3003)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
July 10, 2012
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the Klickitat County
Board of Commissioners will
hold a public hearing on July
31, 2012 at 1:30p.m. in the
Klickitat County Courthouse,
Commissioners
Meeting
Room, 205 S. Columbus,
Room 101, Goldendale, WA.
THE PURPOSE of said
hearing is to hear all interested parties who wish to
testify for or against the following:
Project:
Close
out
$24,000.00 CDBG Planning
Grant
Community Development
Block Grant No. 10-64100038
Community
Center
Feasibility Plan
Applicant: Klickitat County
The
Board
of
Commissioners
may
approve, deny, table, or continue the matter to a set time
and place.
BY ORDER of the Klickitat
County
Board
of
Commissioners dated this
10th day of July, 2012.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Ray Thayer, Chairman
(2908, 3005)
REQUEST FOR
PROPOSALS
Architectural Services
Klickitat County Public
Works
Department
is
requesting proposals from
Architectural & Engineering
(A&E) firms interested in
providing professional services for five (5) projects at
various County owned facilities. Required services will
include preliminary design,
preparation of construction
documents, and feasibility
analysis. Public Works
intends to engage with a
A&E firm that have electrical,
mechanical, and cost estimating capabilities in one
firm, as needed, or is a lead
firm with sub-consultants
Sealed proposals will be
received by:
Jeff Hunter
Klickitat County Public
Works Department
228 West Main, MS-CH 19
Goldendale, WA 98620
Email:
[email protected]
Phone: (509) 773-2372
Fax: (509) 773-5713
until 3:00 p.m. on August
10th at which time proposals
will be opened and evaluated by the County.
Proposal documents may be
obtained from the Klickitat
County
Public
Works
Department at 115 South
Golden Street, Goldendale,
Washington or free of
charge access is provided to
Prime
Contractors,
Subcontractors,
Venders
and Consultants by going to
http://bxwa.com and clicking
on: Posted Projects; Good &
Services; Klickitat County;
and
Projects
Bidding.
Bidders are encouraged to
“Register” in order to receive
automatic email notification
of future addenda and to
place themselves on the self
registered “Bidders List.”
This on-line plan room provides Bidders with fully
usable on-line documents;
with the ability to: download,
print to your own printer,
order full / partial plan sets
from numerous reprographic
sources (on-line print order
form), and a free on-line digitizer / take-off tool. Contact
Builders
Exchange
of
Washington at 425-2581303 should you require
assistance.
(2912, 3006, 3101)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Superior
Court
of
Washington for Klickitat
County
In the Matter of the Estate of
Mildred Fey, Deceased
No. 12-4-00023-1
Notice to Creditors
The personal representative
named below has been
appointed and has qualified
as personal representative
of this estate. A person having a claim against the decedent must, before the claim
would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of
limitations, present the claim
in the manner as provided in
RCW 11.40.070 by serving
or mailing to the personal
representative or the attorney for the personal representative at the address
below stated a copy of the
claim and filing the original
of the claim in the court in
which the probate proceedings were commenced. The
claim must be presented
within the later of: (1) Thirty
days after the personal representative served or mailed
the notice to the creditor as
provided
in
RCW
11.40.020(1) (c); or four
months after the date of first
publication of the Notice. If
the claim is not presented
within this time frame, the
claim is forever barred,
except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and
11.40.06. This bar is effective as to claims against both
the decedent’s probate and
nonprobate assets.
Date of First Publication:
July 25, 2012
Date of Filing: July 17, 2012
Linda D. Kolesar, Personal
Representative
P.O. Box 1359
Goldendale, WA 98620
Ross R. Rakow
Attorney for Estate
117 E. Main St.
Goldendale, WA 98620
Tele: 509-773-4988
(3007, 3102, 3202)
See Notices, Page 9
JULY 25, 2012— 9
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
N OTICES
From Page 8
INVITATION TO BID
2012-09 - BP Infrastructure
Improvement Project
Areas north of Bingen Point
Business Park Lots 10 and
23
Sealed bids for the BP
Infrastructure Improvement
Project will be received by
the Executive Director of
Klickitat County Port District
No. 1, Bingen, Washington,
up to the hour of 2:00pm
PPT on August 13, 2012 and
publicly opened and read
aloud at 2:10pm PPT on
August 13, 2012 in the Port
of Klickitat Administrative
Offices located at 154 E
Bingen Point Way Ste. A;
Bingen, WA 98605 to:
Furnish all labor, materials,
tools, and equipment and
perform all work and related
activities
to
construct
approximately 1,550 lineal
feet of paved roadway;
installation
of
storm
drainage, sanitary sewage
and potable water infrastructure in East Marina Way and
East Bingen Point Way and
adjacent lot grading, including but not limited to: earthwork, aggregate, asphalt,
piping, structures, and other
appurtenant work to complete the Bingen Point
Infrastructure Improvement
Project in the Bingen Point
Business Park, Bingen,
Washington.
Bid documents and specifications for this project may
be examined on or after the
hour of 3:00pm PPT on July
27, 2012 at the Port of
Klickitat; 154 E Bingen Point
Way Ste. A; Bingen, WA
98605
and
Tenneson
Engineering Corp.; 3313 W
2nd St. Ste. 100; The Dalles,
OR 97058. Bid documents
obtained from the Port’s web
site or requested from the
Port via electronic mail (email) are free. A non-refundable fee in the amount of
Seventy-five
Dollars
($75.00) is required for each
set of printed bid documents
requested.
A mandatory pre-bid conference will be held at 11:00am
PPT on August 2, 2012 at
Port Office; 154 E Bingen
Point Way Ste. A; Bingen,
WA 98605.
All bids shall be addressed
to the attention of the
Executive Director, Port of
Klickitat, 154 E Bingen Point
Way Ste. A; Bingen, WA
98605, and placed in a
sealed envelope that clearly
identifies the project ID
and/or project title, the name
of the bidder, and the bid
opening date.
Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check,
cashier's check, or bid bond
in an amount equal to five
percent (5%) of the bid price.
No bidder may withdraw
his/her bid after the hour set
for the opening thereof
unless the award of contract
is delayed for a period
exceeding sixty (60) days.
Bidders must include a listing of all sub-contractors
performing equal to or in
excess of 10% of the bid
price in accordance with
RCW Section 39.30.060.
The Port of Klickitat reserves
the right to reject any and all
bids submitted, or to accept
the bid deemed to be in the
best interest of the Port, and
to waive any informalities or
irregularities in any bid. The
Port of Klickitat is an equal
opportunity and affirmative
action employer and encourages minority and women's
business enterprises to participate.
Marc Thornsbury, Executive
Director
(3008, 3103)
SUPERIOR COURT OF
WASHINGTON
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF Klickitat
James B. Nutter & Company,
its successors in interest
and/or assigns,
Plaintiff,
v.
Unknown
Heirs
and
Devisees of Irene M. Phillips;
James Tonder; Ponderosa
Park Owners' Association;
United States of America,
Secretary of Housing and
Urban
Development;
Washington
State
Department of Social and
Health Services; Occupants
of the Premises; and any
persons or parties claiming
to have any right, title,
estate, lien or interest in the
real property described in
the complaint,
Defendants.
No. 12-2-00088-9
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
TO THE DEFENDANTS
Unknown
Heirs
and
Devisees of Irene M. Phillips;
Occupants of the Premises;
and any persons or parties
claiming to have any right,
title, estate, lien or interest in
the real property described
in the complaint:
You are hereby summoned
to appear within sixty (60)
days after the date of the
first publication of this summons, and defend the real
property foreclosure action
in Klickitat County Superior
Court, and answer the complaint of James B. Nutter &
Company, (“Plaintiff”). You
are asked to serve a copy of
your answer or responsive
pleading upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff
at its office stated below. In
case of your failure to do so,
judgment will be rendered
against you according to the
demand of the complaint,
which has been filed with the
Clerk of said Court.
The purpose of this lawsuit
is to obtain a judgment, and
if not immediately paid, to be
satisfied through the foreclosure of real property located
in
Klickitat
County,
Washington, and legally
described as follows:
Lot 98 as shown in Plat 2 of
Ponderosa Park, recorded
August 29,1978, in Volume 4
of Plats, page 64 and 65.
Commonly known as: 132
East Ponderosa Drive,
Goldendale, WA 98620.
DATED this 19th day of July,
2012.
ROUTH
CRABTREE
OLSEN, P.S.
By
Janaya L. Carter, WSBA
#32715
Lauren
Davidson
Humphreys, WSBA #41694
Valerie I. Holder, WSBA
#42968
Gauri Shrotriya Locker,
WSBA #39022
Attorneys for Plaintiff
13555 SE 36th Street, Ste
300
Bellevue, WA 98006
(3009, 3104, 3203, 3301,
3401, 3501)
KLICKITAT COUNTY
DETERMINATION OF
NON-SIGNIFICANCE
Notice is hereby given that
Klickitat County issued a
Determination of Non-significance (DNS) on July 19,
2012, under SEPA Rules
(Chapter 197-11 WAC) and
the
Klickitat
County
Environmental Ordinance
Number 121084 for the following proposal:
SEP 2012-20 Applicant:
Merlin Vezina. Short Plat
Application: SPL2012-08. A
two lot short plat of 1.023
acres located within Section
23, T3N, R 10E, W.M.
Klickitat County, WA (White
Salmon Vicinity). Tax parcel
number: 03102363000100
After review of the completed environmental checklist
and other information on file
the
Klickitat
County
Responsible Official has
determined that this proposal will not have probable significant adverse impacts on
the environment. Copies of
the DNS are available at the
Klickitat County Planning
Department during normal
business hours. Comments
or appeals on the above
environmental review will be
accepted until 5:00 pm
August 10, 2012. Appeals
must be filed with the
Klickitat County Auditor’s
office. Appeals shall not be
deemed complete without
payment of the appeal fees
applicable to class A projects, payable to Klickitat
County
Planning
Department.
(3010)
KLICKITAT COUNTY
DETERMINATION OF
MITIGATED
NON-SIGNIFICANCE
Notice is hereby given that
Klickitat County issued a
Mitigated Determination of
Non-significance (MDNS) on
July 19, 2012, under SEPA
Rules (Chapter 197-11
WAC) and the Klickitat
County
Environmental
Ordinance Number 121084
for the following proposals:
SEP 2012-19
Applicants: Gorge Aviation
Services LLC. Proposal to
construct a 60’ by 80’ airplane hangar building. The
proposed site is located
within a portion of Sec 34,
T2N, R13E, W.M., Klickitat
County, WA (Dallesport
Vicinity).
SEP 2012-18: Applicants Mt
Meadows Dairy, LLC Robert
Schmid. Proposal to construct a 100’ by 250’ free stall
barn for dairy cattle. The proposed site is located within a
portion of Section 19, T6N,
R11E,
W.M.,
Klickitat
County, WA (Trout Lake
vicinity).
After review of the completed environmental checklist
and other information on file
the
Klickitat
County
Responsible Official has
determined that these proposals will not have probable
significant adverse impacts
on the environment. Copies
of the MDNS are available at
the Klickitat County Planning
Department during normal
business hours. Comments
or appeals on the above
environmental review will be
accepted until 5:00 pm
August 10, 2012 Appeals
must be filed with the
Klickitat County Auditor’s
office. Appeals shall not be
deemed complete without
payment of the appeal fees
applicable to class A projects, payable to Klickitat
County
Planning
Department.
(3011)
BEFORE THE BOARD OF
COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
IN THE MATTER OF THE
VACATION
)
OF UNIMPROVED COUNTY ROAD
)
RIGHT OF WAY KNOWN
AS
DAN F. THOMSON ROAD
Resolution No. 09612
WHEREAS, the Board of
County Commissioners has
received a petition to vacate
an unused portion of County
Road right of way known as
Dan F. Thomson that may be
of no further value to
Klickitat County described
as follows:
That road known as Dan F.
Thomson
Road
as
Petitioned
in
Commissioners’
Journal,
Volume 6, Page 15 and
Established
in
Commissioners’
Journal,
Volume 6, Page 31, that portion beginning at the
Northwest corner of Section
20, and running thence East
one half mile to the onequarter
section
corner
between Sections 17 and
20, all in Township 4 North,
Range 18 East W.M. and
there terminating, and that
the width of said road to be
30 feet, 20 feet on the north
side and 10 feet on the south
side of said section line.
THEREFORE,
BE
IT
RESOLVED that the County
Engineer is directed to make
an examination of said right
of way and file his report as
to whether said right of way
should be vacated, whether
the public will benefit by the
vacation of said right of way
and any other facts, matters
and things which will be of
importance to the Board.
FURTHER,
BE
IT
RESOLVED, that a public
hearing for said vacation of
described right of way will be
held in the Commissioners’
Chambers in the Klickitat
County
Courthouse,
Goldendale, Washington on
the 14th day of August, 2012
at the hour of 1:30 p.m. at
which time any objections
against or approval for said
proposed vacation will be
heard and the Board of
Commissioners
hereby
orders that due legal notice
of said hearing be given as
prescribed by statute.
Dated this 17th day of July
2012.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Ray Thayer
Chairman
David M. Sauter
Commissioner
ATTEST:
Crystal D. McEwen
Clerk of the Board
Klickitat County, Washington
(3012)
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed bids for Countywide
Safety
Improvements,
Phase I, CRP 312, will be
received by the Board of
County Commissioners at
the reception desk located in
the Klickitat County Public
Works Department, 115
South Golden, Goldendale
Washington.
Mailing
address 228 W. Main MSCh-19,
Goldendale
Washington 98620 until 1:15
p.m. on August 14, 2012 for
performing
the
work
described below. Sealed
bids received will be opened
at
the
Commissioner’s
Chambers and publicly read
aloud on Tuesday, August
14, 2012 at 1:30 p.m. or
shortly thereafter.
Bids
received after 1:15 p.m.
August 14, 2012 will not be
considered.
The county
reserves the right to reject
any and all bids, and to
waive informalities.
Bid envelopes shall be
appropriately marked on the
outside “Bid opening 1:30
p.m. August 14, 2012
Countywide
Safety
Improvements – Phase I,
CRP 312”.
This contract provides for
the replacement of warning
signs such as Horizontal
Alignment
signs
(W-1
through W1-5), Combination
H o r i z o n t a l
Alignment/Advisory Speed
Signs (W1-1a, W1-2a),
Chevron Alignment Signs
(W1-8) and Other Applicable
Warning signs, Installation of
Guideposts, Rumble Strips,
Recessed
Pavement
Markers, and other work, all
in accordance with the
Contract Provisions and the
Standard Specifications.
Bid proposals shall be
accompanied by a bid proposal deposit in cash, certified check, cashier’s check
or surety bond in the amount
equal to five percent (5%) in
the amount of the bid proposal. Should the successful bidder fail to enter into
such contract and furnish
satisfactory
performance
bond within the time stated
in the specifications, the bid
proposal deposit shall be forfeited to Klickitat County.
Approximate project cost is
estimated to be between
$250,000.00
and
$450,000.00.
The Klickitat County Public
Works Dept. in accordance
with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat.
252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to
2000d-4 and Title 49, Code
of Federal Regulations,
Department
of
Transportation, subtitle A,
Office of the Secretary, Part
21, nondiscrimination in federally assisted programs of
the
Department
of
Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby
notifies all bidders that it will
affirmatively insure that in
any contract entered into
pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids in response to
this invitation and will not be
discriminated against on the
grounds of race, color or
national origin in consideration for an award.
Obtaining Bid Documents:
Free of charge: Plans,
Specifications,
addenda,
bidders list, and plan holders
list for the project are available though the Klickitat
County’s on-line plan room.
Free of charge access is
provided
to
Prime
Contractors, Subcontractors
and Venders by going to
http://bxwa.com and clicking
on: Posted Projects; Public
Works; Klickitat County; and
Projects Bidding. Bidders
are encouraged to “Register”
in order to receive automatic
email notification of future
addenda and to place themselves on the self registered
“Bidders List.” This on-line
plan room provides Bidders
with fully usable on-line documents; with the ability to:
download, print to your own
printer, order full / partial
plan sets from numerous
reprographic sources (online print order form), and a
free on-line digitizer / takeoff tool. Contact Builders
Exchange of Washington at
425-258-1303 should you
require assistance.
Paper Copies are also available upon receipt of a nonrefundable deposit in the
amount of $25.00, payable
to the Klickitat County Public
Works Department, 228 W
Main,
MS-CH
19,
Goldendale, WA, 98620.
Bidders that obtain paper
copies are encouraged to
“Register”
online
at
bxwa.com, in order to
receive automatic addenda
notification by email and to
appear on the “Bidders List”
if they so desire.
DATED this 24th day of July
2012.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Ray Thayer, Chairman
David
M.
Sauter,
Commissioner
Rex
F.
Johnston,
Commissioner
ATTEST:
Clerk of the Board
Crystal D. McEwen
in and for the County of
Klickitat,
State of Washington
(3013, 3105, 3204)
CLASSIFIEDS
Annoucements
Happy Ads .......................2
Welcome To The World....4
Card of Thanks ................5
Notices...........................10
Events............................15
Personals .......................20
Support Groups .............25
Lost & Found .................30
Professional Services ....31
5 Card of Thanks
WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK
everyone for their
donations, prayers,
flowers, food and kind
words of support during
the
loss of our beloved Ray.
Your kindness was deeply
appreciated and touched
our hearts. A special thank
you to the Husum Church
of God for the wonderful
service. Words cannot
express how much we truly
appreciated your
generosity and kindness.
Thank you to Gardner's
Funeral Home for the care
of our loved one.
25 Support
Groups
25 Support
Groups
GOLDENDALE Pregnancy
Resource Center
Center Hours:
24 Hour Hot Line
Tues & Fri 11am-4:30pm.
1-800-999-9210
Thursday 1pm-4:30pm.
Mid Columbia Mtg. Info
509-773-5501
www.://district14aa.org
Pregnancy Counseling and
ALCOHOLICS Anon. Gold- services, free pregnancy
endale meetings at the self-tests.
United Methodist Church; GRIEF and Loss Group
Mon., 8 p.m.; Wed., 8 p.m.; meets monthly at Klickitat
Fri., 8 p.m., 109 E. BroadValley Hospital. Come and
way. 1-800-344-2666.
learn ways to heal and help
others heal from loss.
DO YOU HAVE
Sponsored by Klickitat ValHURTS,
habits, hang-ups? Attend ley Hospice. Call 773-0380
for further information.
Celebrate Recovery a faithbased 12 step program,
NA
Meetings
every
every Tuesday night at
Wednesday, 6:30-7:30 at
Hood River Alliance
the
Casa
Guadalupe
Church at 2650 W.
House, 1603 Belmont,
Montello (off Rand Rd).
Hood River, OR.
Dinner provided at 6:15
ALCOHOLICS
ANONYMOUS
pm
and large group meeting at
7:00 pm. Childcare is
provided.
For more info. call
541-308-5339
Family Alzheimer's/Dementia
Support Group
Family
members
and
friends caring for individuThe Families of Kayo Rhodes als with Alzheimer's dis& Wayne Barton
ease or a related dementia
are invited to participate in
our Dementia Support
25 Support
Group. Come and gain
support and insight from
Groups
others who are going thru
AA Woman's meeting, 7 or have gone thru this journey. Join us monthly in a
pm every Tuesday at Solid
caring environment to disRock Church, 2308 E 12th, cuss your challenges and
The Dalles.
questions. Meeting held the
third Wednesday, every
AL-ANON Meeting
month, at 3:00 pm at Flag6:30 pm, Thursdays
Stone Senior Living at 3325
Goldendale
Methodist
Columbia View Drive. For
Church
more information about our
Questions?
group, contact Karen DeCall Rosie, 773-6420 or swert at 541-298-5656. All
Greta, 773-3343.
Welcome!
NA MEETINGS
Goldendale
Father's House Fellowship
207 S. Klickitat
Monday: 12-1 p.m.
Wednesday: 12-1 p.m.
Friday: 12-1 p.m.
Open to non-addicts.
For more info,
call Kathy S.@ 360-8508832 or
Matt S. @ 360-850-8840.
PARKINSON'S SUPPORT
GROUP: First Wednesday
of every month at 2 p.m.
Water's Edge, 551 Lone
Pine Blvd, 2nd floor
For information, please
contact
Chad
at
541.478.9338.
30 Lost & Found
FOUND: 1 iPod, etc. Call
541-386-2940 to describe. REGISTERED DAYCARE
PROVIDER HAS OPENON ALL SHIFTS ALL
INSTRUCTION & INGS
AGES
USDA
MEALS
PROVIDED
FENCED
CHILD CARE
YARD
CLOSE
TO
SCHOOLS REASONABLE
Preschool/Daycare
RATES STATE PAY EXFacilities .........................35 CEPTED PART TIME
Child Care Providers .....37 CARE AVIABLE CALL 541Schools Training ............40 705-5189
Tutoring ..........................45
Instruction ......................50
50 Instruction
Training & Opportunity...51
Health & Fitness ............55 New music studio in The
Dalles now enrolling for
summer and fall lessons.
35 Preschools/
We have experienced
in piano, guitar,
Daycare Facilities teachers
drums, brass instruments
and voice for any age and
skill level. Call 541-370RISHELL'S
4254 today to enroll!
PRESCHOOL
Focusing on music and
the arts. Also offering toddler playgroup and afterschool homework club for
elementary age children.
Located in White Salmon, one block from
Whitson Elementary.
For information call
509-310-9012
[email protected]
START SMART Pre-school
has open enrollment for
Fall 2012. We are happy
to announce we now have
2 rooms, small class size
and more space. Class is
now 3« hrs per day, MonT.O.P.S. (Take Off Pounds day-Wednesday & optional
Sensibly). Tuesdays 9 a.m. Thursday class. For more
at Riverview Comm. Bank. information please call
773-4766.
541-993-4488.
T.O.P.S. (Take off Pounds
Sensibly), Thursdays, 6
p.m. at Riverview Comm.
Bank, 773-5411.
37 Child Care
Providers
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General ....75
Help Wanted Domestic/
In Home .........................76
Help Wanted Medical/
Health
77
Help Wanted Office/
Clerical...........................78
Help Wanted Sales/Customer Service
79
Positions Wanted ...........80
Volunteers......................82
Work from Home
Employment...................83
Job Opportunities ..........85
75 Help Wanted
General
2012-13
MID-Columbia
Children's Council Job
Openings
MCCC builds better communities, one person at a
time. Serving over 500 children in Oregon/WashingBUSINESS/
ton MCCC is recruiting for
the upcoming program
FINANCIAL
year. Positions include Bus
Monitor at our Goldendale
Business Opportunities .60
site.
Investments & Loans .....65
For job requirements, start
Insurance .......................70
date, site location and apMortgages & Contracts..72
plication, please review job
posting
at
60 Business
www.mcccheadstart.org.
To apply mail/fax applicaOpportunities
tion, transcripts and cover
letter to Mid-Columbia ChilBusiness Opportunity dren's Council, Inc., 1100
For Sale:
E. Marina Way, Suite 215,
Auto Oil, Lube & Repair Hood River, OR 97031 or
Center. 2 Lube bays & e
m
a
i
l
Shop. Downtown The emilymcdonald@mccchea
Dalles. 541-980-5143 or dstart.org. EOE
541-980-4191
Your Gorge Classified ad
is placed online, too!
goldendalesentinel.com
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
2012-13 MID-COLUMBIA
CHILDREN'S COUNCIL
JOB OPENINGS
BEST WESTERN
PLUS
MCCC builds better communities, one person at a
time. Serving over 500 children in Oregon/Washington MCCC is recruiting for
the upcoming program
year. We are adding services in Klickitat and White
Salmon. Positions available
include:
Assistant Teacher
HR Assistant
Head Teacher
For job requirements, start
date, site location and application, please review job
posting
at
www.mcccheadstart.org.
Positions close 7/19/2012.
To apply mail/fax application, transcripts and cover
letter to Mid-Columbia Children's Council, Inc., 1100
E. Marina Way, Suite 215,
Hood River, OR. 97031 or
e
m
a
i
l
emilymcdonald@mccchea
dstart.org. EOE.
AUTO TECH-SALES &
SERVICE
OIL CAN HENRYS
Hood River is hiring
technicians. Customer
service exp. & auto
skills req. $8.80+ /hr. to
start + benefits & bonuses.
Apply:
WWW.HENRYSJOBS.
COM
Bartender wanted at The
Dalles Eagles. 4 Days/
week. Reliable transportation and drug free. Application @ 2007 w. 6th St.
Hood River Inn
is seeking qualified
applicants for the
Front Office staff.
Applicants must possess
strong customer service
skills, incredible attention
to
detail, the ability to multitask in a fast paced work
environment and have an
outgoing and friendly
personality. Previous
customer service
experience is desired.
Please apply in person
at 1108 E Marina Way,
Hood River, OR.
BUS DRIVERS
NEEDED
White Salmon Valley School
District
You must be able to pass
the driver's physical and
obtain or already possess
a Commercial Driver's License. Previous experience is helpful but not necessary. Job description and
applications are available at
the District Office, 171 NW
Washington Street/Park Center, White Salmon, WA 98672,
509-493-1500, and at http://
www.whitesalmonschools.or
g/classified Closing for this
position is 3:00 p.m. on Friday, August 3, 2012. EOE
WEEKLY
Classified
Deadline
is
Monday
at noon
10 — JULY 25, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
CARE COORDINATOR
School-Based
Intensive Treatment Services
CORRECTION
OFFICER and
COMMUNICATION
OFFICER
Mid-Columbia Center for
Living is seeking a F/T care
coordinator to provide onsite skills training; care coordination duties; and inhome parent services to
clients and families enrolled
in the School- Based Intensive Treatment Services
in The Dalles. Requires a
Bachelor's degree in social
work, psychology or related human services field
and 2 yrs exp in human
services; or high school diploma and 5 yrs of equivalent training and work exp.
Experience working with
families and children with
severe emotional disturbances is preferred. Salary
is $3,454/mo. + benefit
package. For application
and job description go to
www.mccfl.org or contact
Courtney at 541-296-5452.
Closes 8/7/12. Drugfree
workplace/EOE.
Klickitat County Civil Service will be testing for an eligibility list for Correction Officer to work for the Klickitat
County Sheriff's Office.
Salary $15-65-$19.22/hour
plus excellent benefits. To
apply call 509-773-2483 or
email at [email protected]
a.us closing date is 5:00 pm
on August 9, 2012. Exams will
be held on August 11, 2012 in
Goldendale WA. A $20 exam
fee is required.
Klickitat County Civil Service will be testing for the
position of Communication
Officer to work for the Klickitat County Sheriff's Office.
Salary $15-25-$18.69/hour
plus excellent benefits. To
apply call 509-773-2483 or
email at [email protected]
a.us closing date is 5:00 p.m.
on August 9, 2012. Exams will
be held on August 11, 2012 in
CDL & FOOD SERVICE, Goldendale WA. A $20 exam
Stewart's Firefighter Food fee is required.
Catering, Inc., NOW HIR- EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,
ING for the following posi- The Dalles Area Chamber
tions: CDL DRIVERS & of Commerce is seeking an
FOOD SERVICE. Help Executive Director. Refeed the wildland firefight- sponsible for day to day foers. If you enjoy camping cus and direction of Chamand work hard, please ap- ber functions with an emply
online
at phasis on community,
www.stewartsffc.com or membership and finance.
call 541-923-6936 to re- Ideal candidates will have
quest an application.
excellent communication
CFO, Results-oriented in- skills and positive attitude.
dividual wanting to make a College degree and 5 yrs
difference; integrity, and exp. in senior executive pobroad experience in finan- sition preferred. Salary
cial, operational, and stra- DOE starting at $57,500 +
tegic mgmt to join N. Was- health, dental, vacation and
reimbursement
co County PUD (electrical mileage
utility). Plan, administer and benefits. Please email redirect functions of the Ac- sume with references by 7/
counting and Finance Dept. 27/12 to Pamela Jensen,
President
at
BS in Acctg, Finance or Board
Bus Admin or closely-re- pam@crestlineconstructio
lated field and/or equivalent n.com or drop off at Chamexperience; CPA license & ber Office at 404 W 2nd
5 years experience in Street in The Dalles. Learn
supervisory role with an more about The Dalles
electric utility preferred. Area Chamber of Comat
Proficient in Microsoft Of- merce
fice Suite. Some evening www.thedalleschamber.co
meetings and travel. Pay m The Sun - The Gorge DOE; excellent benefits. The Dalles
Application/Resume/Cvr Expanding Rock Crushing
Ltr with CFO in subject line: Company, seeking career
HR
Answers minded persons for all [email protected] Fax: sitions. Demanding physi503.885.8614; Closes Aug. cal labor w/ long hours.
23; EEO Employer. See Willing to travel throughout
NWCPUD website for ap- the Northwest. Competitive
plication
and
info: slry & benefits pkg includwww.nwasco.com
ing: medical/dental/vision,
401K/retirement plan, pd
CITY OF GOLDENDALE
holidays/vacation. AppliJob Announcement
available
at
Utility Maintenance Worker cations
www.deatleycrushing.com.
I
City of Goldendale is ac- Send resumes to PO Box
cepting applications for a 759 Lewiston, ID 83501 or
Utility Maintenance Worker fax to (208) 743-6474. EOE
I. This technical position
performs regular and reoccurring installation, repair, and maintenance
work in the streets, water
supply and distribution,
sewer collection and parks
divisions. Operates a variety of hand tools, power
tools, technical equipment
and various vehicles and
equipment to accomplish
work. Equipment operations will include, but not be
limited to, backhoes, air
compressor-jackhammer,
street sweepers, dump
trucks, snow plows, boring
machines, paving equipment and mowers. Requires one (1) year experience in Public Works or related field, high school diploma or GED, Washington
Drivers License and ability
to obtain basic water or
wastewater certifications.
Additional water/wastewater or DOT certification will
be considered. Residency
within 20 minutes response
time to City Shop.
Starting Salary $15.95$19.44 per hour, DOQ.
Application packets are
available by contacting
Connie Byers at the City of
Goldendale, 1103 S. Columbus, Goldendale, WA
98620; 509-773-3771.
Open Until Filled.
The City of Goldendale is
an Equal Opportunity Employer.
FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
Hood River & Wasco
Counties. The adventure of
working with teens! We
train & support. $1200/
month tax free per teen.
Call Heidi 541-436-0303
Fuel/Oil Lube Mechanic,
Crestline Const. needs a
Fuel/Oil Lube Mechanic.
MUST have CDL w/ HazMat and min. 2 yrs exp.
Driver will fuel eqpt and
perform maintenance onsite and in shop. Please
apply in person at 3500
Crates Way. Drug-free,
EOE, $DOE
FULL TIME COOK Thirsty
Woman Pub in Mosier is
looking for an addition to
our kitchen team. Willing to
train. 541-478-0199
Assistant Administrator
Full-Time Assistant Administrator for mental
health facility in The Dalles
needed
immediately.
Please visit our website to
view job description and
apply at columbiacare.org.
GUIDANCE
COUNSELOR
75 Help Wanted
General
FRONT DESK CLERK
We are currently seeking a
highly motivated individual
with experience in all phases of Hotel Front Desk.
Strong customer service
skills with attention to guest
satisfaction are a must. Applicants must possess the
ability to multi-task in a fast
paced work environment
and have an outgoing and
friendly personality.
HOUSEKEEPER
We are currently seeking
an experienced Housekeeper with great attention
to detail and the positive
energy to match. Must be
willing to work weekends.
Friendly workplace atmosphere. Family owned and
operated.
Please apply in person:
102 Oak St., Hood River, OR.
HUMAN RESOURCES
ADMINISTRATOR
WANTED
Mid Columbia Producers,
Inc. is seeking applicants
for the part time position of
Human Resources Administrator. At least one year of
human resources experience required. Base pay
negotiable based upon
qualifications. Applicants
could expect to start at 24
hours per week. Hours
may be adjusted if deemed
necessary. Send resume
and cover letter to P.O.
Box 344 Moro, Oregon
97039 no later than August
3, 2012. Mid Columbia Producers, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer.
LINE COOK
for Everybody's Brewing.
Seeking a hardworking and
skilled line cook. Inquire
Monday- Friday 11:30- 4pm.
LOOKING FOR a fast, fun,
and friendly person to join
our River Tap team in The
Dalles. Apply in person,
Taco Del Mar, 702 E 2nd
St, TD. Ask for Allisa.
MANAGER,
ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
LOCATION: PORT OF
CASCADE LOCKS, OR.
Oen Until Filled
COMPENSATION:
Starting salary range is
from $3,750 to $5,400 per
month. This position is eligible for full benefits
including health, dental, vision, retirement, paid time
off and other excellent benefits.
DUTIES:
The Manager, Economic
Development will take the
lead in encouraging, promoting, and coordinating
economic development efforts and strategies for the
Port of Cascade Locks.
The primary emphasis will
be to identify, contact and
recruit business firms to locate within the Port District
and to work with
existing businesses to assist in their growth and development. The position will
serve as a liaison with
Federal, State and local
governments and agencies
working on economic development in the region.
This position works directly
under the Port Manager
with general guidelines and
a wide degree of
latitude for the exercise of
initiative and judgment.
CREDENTIALS:
Education or experience
equivalent to a four year
college education in business, public administration,
planning or a closely related field. Advanced degree
is preferred. Four years
minimum experience in
economic
development,
community service or community development. Experience with Public Ports
is
preferred.
Residency within the Port
District is preferred and encouraged.
Pre-employment
drug
screening required.
APPLICATIONS:
Contact Melissa Warren at
the Port of Cascade Locks
by
e-mail
at
mwarren@portofcascadel
ocks.org or
phone 541 374-2403 to request full job description
and application form. In addition to application form
applicant must submit letter
of interest, resume and
three relevant references.
The Port of Cascade Locks
is an equal opportunity employer.
COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL
White Salmon Valley Schools
White Salmon, Wash.
Guidance Counselor beginning 2012-2013: Master's Degree and valid
Washington State Educational Staff Associate Certificate with a school counCOACHING
selor endorsement or outPOSITIONS
of-state equivalent transTROUT LAKE
ferrable to Washington
SCHOOL DISTRICT #400
State.
Trout Lake School District
Additional requirement infor#400 is seeking qualified
mation and applications are
applicants for the following
available on-line at http://
positions for the 2012-2013
www.whitesalmonschools.or
school year:
g/certified or at the White Salmon Valley School District ofMiddle School Girls
fice, 171 NW Washington
Volleyball Coach
Street, PO Box 157, White Salmon, WA 98672, 509-493-1500.
High School Boys
This position is open until
Marketing and
Varsity Soccer Coach
3:00 p.m., Friday, August
Development Manager
10, 2012 or until filled. EOE
High School Girls
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT/
Varsity Volleyball Coach
TRUCK MECHANIC, Me- The Port of The Dalles is
All applicants must have or chanic needed at Crestline seeking a candidate for the
be able to obtain a current Construction, Full or Part- Marketing and DevelopFirst Aid and CPR card. All Time, Minimum 3 Yrs Exp. ment Manager position.
applicants will be expected on Heavy Const. Equip- The successful candidate
to work toward professional ment, Drug-free, EOE, will be responsible for idencoaching certification per Wage DOE, Apply at 3500 tifying and recruiting new
Crates Way, The Dalles or businesses to the Port Disthe WIAA standards.
appl.
at trict and assisting with Port
Contact Mike Wood at Trout print
Lake School, 509-395-2571, for www.crestlineconstruction development projects. As a
member of a small team,
a job description, salary .com
the position requires a high
schedule, or any additional inHOOD RIVER COUNTY
degree of cooperation with
formation.
Trout
Lake
SCHOOL DISTRICT
other members of the staff
School District is an EOE.
is seeking to hire
and ability to work indeThis posting is open until
Applicants
Director of Human Resources. pendently.
filled.
should have significant exTo apply, go to:
perience in Marketing, Ecwww.hoodriver.k12.or.us,
COOK
onomic or Community Dethen Employment Tab.
Part-time, 30 hours week,
velopment, Project ManApplication deadline:
Friday-Sunday,
criminal
agement or a related field.
8/3/12
background check & drug
Salary Range: $35,000 @ 4PM. EOE
screen required. Apply in
$45,000 DOE plus benefits.
person
at
Parkhurst
HOOD RIVER COUNTY
House, 2450 May St, Hood
SCHOOL
A detailed job description
River, OR.
is seeking to hire a
and application are availK/1st
Grade
Teacher
COOK, 30 hrs/wk, w/potenable
at
at
Cascade
Locks
School.
tial for FT w/benefits;
www.portofthedalles.com
To
apply,
go
to:
or
at
the
Port
offices,
3636
SKILLS TRAINER, 25-30 hrs/
www.hoodriver.k12.or.us.
Klindt Drive, The Dalles,
wk. Both $10-$12/hr.View
EOE
OR 97058.
at: www.nextdoorinc.org
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
PLANT
NEEDED: someone to
MAINTENANCE
mow/bale 1.5 acres fenced
ELECTRICIAN
field, has 12 ft. access
Diamond Fruit Growers
gate. 509-772-2680,
has an opening for a full
Goldendale.
time Electrician at our Diamond Central facility in
NORCOR
Odell Or. Diamond Fruit is
a fruit packing facility speJuvenile Detention Facility is cializing in fresh pack
accepting applications for pears and cherries with fathe positions of Program cilities located throughout
Group Life Coordinator and the Hood River Valley.
Detention Officer. Job duties The Electrical Dept perand requirements vary by forms troubleshooting/repositions. Applications are pairs, preventative maintefor anticipated job open- nance activities and exeings. NORCOR reserves cuting major and minor
maintenance tasks on
the right to hire for actual
electrical systems and
openings only. Applications equipment in the buildings,
and job descriptions are cold storage facilities, on
available at NORCOR the grounds and on proJuvenile Detention, 211 duction equipment in the
Webber Road, The Dalles, plant. The electricians will
OR 97058. Applications work with the Mechanics
may also be found on-line and Refrigeration operators
at www.norcor.co. Appli- in performing repairs to
cation deadline is July 31, equipment to maintain operations/production.
2012, at 5:00 pm.
This is a 40+ hours per
week position generally
NORCOR
working day shift MondayFriday, except during peak
NORCOR Corrections
harvest which would be
released today a Request Monday-Saturday, howevfor Proposals for an agen- er this individual must be
cy or individual to perform available for on call work
one FTE work at the Cor- including weekends.
rections Center in The Diamond Fruit is a Drug
Dalles, Oregon. It is antici- Free Company and this popated that this person will sition will require a pre-employment drug screen for
work 25% of their week
company compliance with
with Adults, 25% with Juveoperation of forklifts and
niles in a Detention setting high-lift equipment.
and 50% of the week with
an intensive Residential
Position Requirements
Rehabilitation Program for à Oregon LME, Manufaceligible youth.
turing plant or General
Journeyman License
The nature of the work will à Electrical troubleshooting
be assessment of mental skills of industrial control
health and Substance systems
abuse, treatment and co- Ã Ability to troubleshoot
computer and PLC control
ordination of program and
and monitoring systems
medications. Position will à High school diploma or
work with youth and the GED
adult population.
à Mechanical ability and/or
aptitude
This position may be filled à Good reading, writing
n
d
by an agency or Individual a
eligible for contract, or in verbal skills
the alternative an individual à Ability to read and speak
English for communication
as employee.
and safety
A complete RFP is avail- Ã Maintenance positions
r
e
able on NORCOR'S webquire ability to read and
site at: www.norcor.co
understand drawings and
Oregonian Carrier needed. blueprints
Must have valid drivers li- Ã Ability to work individuall
y
cense, insurance, fuel effiand as a team
cient car, approx $1600/ Ã Strong work ethic
mo. 541-296-3600.
à Tools required
Paralegal
Seeking an experienced
paralegal to support a fastpaced regional litigation
practice. Must possess
proficiency in Microsoft Office software. Position requires exemplary organizational case management
skills, legal writing and the
ability to handle multiple
a
s
signment deadlines. Salary
range $16 to $21 per hour
depending on experience.
Benefits include retirement
and medical insurance.
Qualified applicants should
submit their resume with a
cover letter to Box B, c/o
The Dalles Chronicle, PO
Box 1910, The Dalles, OR
97058.
Get more
eyes
on your ad,
place it in
the
Gorge
Classifieds!
Compensation
$22.20 hr plus benefits
Submit resume via email,
mail or fax to, or request
application from:
Randy O'Dell, Maintenance
Superintendent
Diamond Fruit Growers
Inc, PO Box 185, Odell, OR
97044
541-354-5317
[email protected]
Regional Technology
Specialist
Columbia Gorge ESD is
seeking a F/T Regional Technology Specialist. Required:
Background check, valid
driver's license, two years
experience with workstation related support and effective
communication
skills.
$20.84-$22.54/hr
DOE plus benefits including medical, dental, vision
& life insurance. Download
job description and application
form
at
www.cgesd.k12.or.us or
call 541-506-2240. Applications must be received
by 4:00 p.m. August 2,
2012. E.O.E.
RELIABLE CAREGIVERS
to assist adults w/developmental disabilities. Training
provided. Growth opportunity. 503-594-1250 x13
TEACHER
Local pvt school seeks
exp. teacher. Teaching LIC
or degree in ed req.
info@newvisionschoolhr.
com. 541-490-0352
TEMPORARY
LABOR/ENGINEER
Klickitat County Public Works
Goldendale, WA
$11.82/hour, casual position. Closing date 8/1/12 or
open until filled. Visit
www.klickitatcounty.org for
details and application or contact: Personnel Department,
509-773-7171.
75 Help Wanted
General
Truck Driver, Bulk Commodity
hauling company located in
Wasco, OR. Must have Class
A CDL w/doubles endorsement. Must have at least two
years recent verifiable driving
experience. Job does require
overnight travel. Benefits. 541442-5300
WORK FOR HOOD RIVER
LIBRARIES!
Hood River County Library
District seeks a Children's
Services Assistant to help
provide children's programming. Good customer
service skills and experience with children are required. Fluency in Spanish
is highly preferred. Applications are due August 10
by 5.00p. Visit http://hoodriverlibrary.org/about-us/
employment.html, call 541387-7062,
or
email
[email protected]
for more info.
77 Help Wanted
Medical
CBCF
COLUMBIA BASIN
CARE FACILITY
Our Mission is to
Improve the Lives of
Those We Serve
Community-owned
Not-for-Profit,
Skilled Nursing Facility.
Position available:
77 Help Wanted
Medical
SECRETARY/CHIEF
EXAMINER
• Physicians
• Nursing
• Clinical Staff
• Support Staff
To view all current
career opportunities
and to apply online go
to
www.mcmc.net
MEDICAL ASSISTANT,
MUST be experienced.
Send resume to: Columbia
Gorge Family Medicine
1750 12th St
Hood River,OR 97031
Attn: Personnel
Medical Recept-TD, Temp
FT position starting 8-112,Experience req,send resume to COSMC 1715 E
12th TD 97058. NO CALLS
RESIDENT CARE MANAGERRN
Hood River Care Center, part
of the Prestige Care family
Is currently seeking exp.
Full-time Night position
Resident Care Manager in
Fax resume to
Hood River, Oregon. The
855-232-8839
RCM will provide direct
Attn. Julee V.
nursing care to residents
and supervise nursing asDietary Aide
sistants. RCM evaluates
residents, assesses their
Or pick up application
needs and develops a plan
@ 1015 Webber St.,
of care. RCM coordinates
The Dalles, OR 97058
EOE.
all services for the resident
and continuously monitors
and reevaluates the resiDIRECTOR OF
dents care.
NURSING
Ideal candidate will have a
Hood River Care Center,
part of the Prestige Care Inc. current RN license and
family,
have LTC, Rehab, or geriis currently looking for a atric nursing exp. Strongly
dedicated and compas- prefer min.6 mos. exp as a
sionate Director of Nursing RCM in skilled nursing.
in Hood River, Oregon.
This is a perfect position for
a creative nurse with a flair Prestige offers competitive
for management, organ- salary, benefits, including
ization, teaching, and com- medical, dental and 401K.
munication. DNS is re- To apply visit:
sponsible for managing the
operation of the nursing dewww.prestigecare.com
partment. Problem solving,
EEO/AA
systems analysis, and
planning for improvement
are critical success factors.
Ideal candidate will be liPrestige Care logo
censed as a RN and preferably two years exp as a
DNS in a skilled facility.
RN/LPN
Residential Apartment
We offer competitive salaManager
ry, benefits, including medical, dental and 401K. To 15 hours per week, this
apply please visit our web- is a 15 unit supportive
site:
housing apartment complex in The Dalles. You will
www.prestigecare.com
work with individuals afEEO/AA
fected by a mental illness.
For more information and
to apply visit out website
Prestige Care Logo
columbiacare.org.
SURGICAL TECH
Facility Administrator
Community Counseling Solutions has an opening for a
full time Facility Administrator. The facility will be located in John Day, Oregon
and will be an 9 bed acute
care treatment facility
working with mentally ill
adults who are in an acute
phase of their illness. This
individual will be responsible for the on-site development of the facility, as
well as the day to day operation of the facility once
construction has been
completed. In the first year
of employment, the Administrator will work with
the public, contractor, State
of Oregon, and other community and state agencies
to facilitate community coordination and development. Nearing project completion and on an ongoing
basis, the administrator will
be responsible for hiring of
facility staff, training, and
day to day operations. The
administrator will assist the
Executive Director in meeting the needs of the community, and will report directly to the Executive Director. Applicants should
have experience in human
resources, staff recruitment and retention, working with the mentally ill,
ability to supervise 20+ individuals with varying levels of education, ability to
assist the Executive Director in managing a large and
complex budget, facility
and program development
and community relations. A
bachelors degree in psychology, sociology or other
human services field is preferred. This individual will
be required to participate in
an on call rotation. The salary range for the successful candidate will be between $51,200 - $76,800
per year. Excellent benefits. Please contact Nina
Bisson at 541-676-9161 for
questions/application.
HOME CARE AIDE
The area's premier
home care agency is
seeking individuals with
hearts of gold to assist
seniors in our communities. Applicants must
be warm, honest, energetic and enjoy helping
the
elderly. CNAs,
hours may count toward
employment requirement for State certification. Please call 800604-9564 for more information. Hearts of
Gold Caregivers
78 Help Wanted
Office
Columbia Gorge Surgery
Center is looking for a per
diem Scrub Tech. Candidates must have 2 years
OR experience required.
Certificate or equivalent
training required. Prefer
ability to scrub all types of
cases. Submit resume to
mistyd@orionmedicalservi
ces.com
or
fax
to
541.431.3288.
78 Help Wanted
Office
PATIENT SERVICES
OFFICE MANAGER
Skyline Hospital
White Salmon, WA
Currently has an opening
for a F/T patient services
office manger. Must have
strong bookkeeping and
leadership skills and be
able to demonstrate an indepth understanding of
Medicare/Medicaid billing.
Maintains office services
by organizing office staff
operations and procedures. Oversees collections, insurance billing, and
patient registration. We offer a competitive wage and
excellent benefits package.
Applications available on our
website www.skylinehospital.
com or through our front desk
receptionist or P.O. Box 99,
211 Skyline Drive, White Salmon, WA 98672, PHONE: 509637-2923, FAX: 509-493-5114,
jessieramos@skylinehospital.
org.
The Bingen-White Salmon
Civil Service Commission is
advertising for the position
of Secretary/Chief Examiner. The pay is $50 per
month. Applications may
be found on the city web
site www.white-salmon.net
along with a full job description. Applications can
be submitted to City Hall at
100 N. Main Street or PO Box
2139, White Salmon, WA
98672. Closing date is until
the position is filled.
Child Care Wanted ........95
Diaper Services ...........100
Adult & Elderly Care ....105
Travel &
Transportation
Car Pools .....................110
Tickets .........................115
Travel ...........................120
Free-To-All ...................122
MARKETPLACE
Auctions .......................125
Hood River...................126
The Dalles ...................127
White Salmon/Bingen ..128
Odell ............................129
Garage/Yard Sales.......130
Other Oregon Cities ....131
Parkdale/Mt. Hood .......132
Cook/Underwood .........133
Other Washington Cities
134
Estate Sales ................135
Camas .........................136
Washougal...................137
Vancouver....................138
Bazaars/Flea Markets..139
Antiques & Collectibles140
Antiques/Collectibles
Wanted
142
Apparel/Jewelry ...........150
Furniture ......................155
Appliances ...................160
Home Electronics ........165
Carpeting .....................166
Wireless Communication
167
Computers ...................170
Satellites ......................175
Cameras & Photo Supplies
180
Cleaning ......................182
Firewood & Stoves.......185
Hot Tubs, Spas, Swimming
Pool
190
Sporting Goods ...........195
Exercise Equipment.....200
Sailboard & Accessories
205
Arts & Leisure..............210
Musical Instruments.....215
Lawn, Garden, Equipment
220
Building Materials ........225
Timber Buy/Sell ...........226
Hand & Power Tools ....230
Misc. Equipment ..........235
Health Care Equipment
236
Arts, Crafts, & Hobbies240
Baby Items...................250
Hair Care & Beauty Aids
255
Books...........................260
Office Equipment .........265
Restaurant Equipment.270
Misc. for Sale ...............275
Misc. Wanted ...............280
Free/Give Away............282
Swaps & Trades...........285
Hood River
HR VALLEY ADULT CENTER
THRIFT STORE
Collectibles, Clothing
Furniture, Household
Shoes & more!
*Donations gladly accepted
24 hours a day
*Support Your LOCAL
Community
Tues & Thurs, 9 to 12
Wed & Sat, 9 to 2
50% off sale-Last Sat of month
2010 Sterling Place, HR
HRVCC THRIFT SHOP
Every Wed., 9:00-3:00
Every Sat., 9:00-1:00
$5 bag for clothing
50% off all other
merchandise for month
of July
Come see us!
DONATIONS WELCOME!
975 Indian Creek Rd., HR
The Dalles
MOVING SALE
Merchandise moved to my
garage. Fri. 7/27, 8a-4p
Sat. 7/28, 8a-1p
500 W 11th St. TD
Governor Winthrop desk,
roll top desk, antique
chairs, Sterling flatware,
art, and other antiques.
Ruth Beecher Estate Sales
541-296-6893 or 541-980-3200
The Dalles Garage Sale
Saturday July 28th, 9:00
AM - 3:00 PM 1304 E. 18th
St. Baby/Kid Items, Small
Desks, Nice Futon Bed,
Gas Grill, Few Tools,
Glassware, Movies, Books,
Antique Nautical Coffee
Tables, Etc. Misc. Galore.
Your Treasure Awaits!
JULY 25, 2012— 11
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
White Salmon/
Bingen
155 Furniture
150 Apparel/
Jewelry
MARTIN Leopard compound bow and case, All
new. Bow is 45-60# draw
w/ 80% letoff. There are extras. $400 FIRM. 541-5060016, after 6pm.
RANDALL
ESTATE SALE
+ ADDITIONAL FAMILY
GARAGE SALE
Friday, 8/3, 8 to 7
Saturday, 8/4, 8 to 7
Sunday, 8/5, 9 to 4
6 miles up Snowden Rd, WS
FOLLOW SIGNS
Tools,
mens
clothes
(38x30, XL), furniture,
snow blower and
MUCH MUCH MORE
135 Goldendale
NEIGHBORHOOD
Yard
Sale, Friday, July 27, 8-2;
869, 870, 875 Maple Drive.
Furniture,
housewares,
odds & ends.
YARD SALE, Fri & Sat, 9-2.
Cleaning out old farm
house, multi-family sale!
1010 Post Street, Goldendale.
Yard Sale Saturday, July
28, 8am-4pm Great items
for sale! 24 Westwind Way,
2 miles north on Columbus.
Look for signs on the drive.
140 Antiques &
Collectibles
FOR SALE: Very large WWII
15mm Wargame miniatures collection. Western
front American, British, &
German figures based for
battlefront Wargame rules.
550 nicely painted figures +
over 100 vehicles and
guns. Rulebook + some
battlefield accessories also
included. Prefer to sale entire collection as one large
set, but may sell in parts.
SERIOUS OFFERS ONLY. For
prices & more info call Ken
at 541-296-3479
OLD spurs & bits, beaded
knife sheaths and medicine
bags, silver jewelry, & trade
bead necklaces. Can be
seen at 511 W. Stubin,
Bingen, Washington
ALPACA
ANNEX
at MEADOWROCK
Is THE Place to
Shop for ALPACA!
Beautifully designed china
cabinet with glass front and
sides. 3 drawers. Carved
detail. Dark wood with
Cherry finish. 14"D/64"L/
73"H. $450 OBO. 1-541705-5663
or
[email protected]
BEDFRAME, nice wood,
full/double size, $50.
DESK, large old wood, w/
laminate top. $25.
U-haul, cash only.
509-773-4627.
Over 2,000 Items
More than just
a pair of SOCKS!
It's an ADVENTURE
Treat yourself like
ROYALTY
100% Alpaca Accessories
100% Alpaca Yarn/Roving
PICNIC TABLES
AVAILABLE
Weekend Tours 2 pm
insert alpaca artwork
right facing
WORTH
THE DRIVE!
Jim or Barb Hansen
80 Mt. Adams Road
Trout Lake, WA 98650
509-395-2266
meadowrockalpacas.com
GORGE CLASSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS
195 Sporting
Goods
Now at New Location!
1800 W. 10th St.
Come see us!
Like-New Twin Mattresses
starting at $40!!!
Gorge Bedquarters
The Dalles, OR
541-296-4341
**A Percentage of our
Monthly profit goes to
St. Vincent de Paul's
HOPE emergency
shelter in The Dalles.
160 Appliances
WASHERS & DRYERS,
Refrigerators & Ranges,
For sale, All brands, Prices
vary from $125 & up. Will
do service calls. Call for
more information.
541-296-8970
185 Firewood &
Stoves
1.25 CORDS of hardwood,
Delivery avail in TD. $150.
541-296-3036
195 Sporting
Goods
ELAN Phase Snowboard, 161, w/ bindings
& carrying bag, $150
FIRM. Call or text 541490-6947, TD.
250 Baby Items
Disney Baby Einstein Jumperoo. Clean, from non
smoking home. Collapsible
for easy storage. $50. Call/
text 541-490-6947
282 Free/Give
Away
509-493-1333
286 $500 or Less
FOOD PROCESSOR HB
Chef Prep compact, model
70150, brand new, with
box, $40. More info: 541354-2208
CELL PHONE. US Cellular,
HTC Hero S w/charger &
black case. Perfect condition, $150. 541-806-1271
GEM TOP canopy for full
size pickup. $200. 509773-5949.
PALI Dawn Crib & changing table set. Some
scratches on crib. w/ MatMOUNTAIN
SHADOWS GUNS & tress. Dark wood. Good haul. 541-386-4970.
cond., Made in Italy, $300.
MORE
541-490-6947
FREE: Box It & Bag It math
We Buy, Sell & Trade
Guns, Militaria. Top Dollar SAFETY 1st Travel System teacher guides and materials for grades K through
Paid. Gun Repair &
incl stroller, rear facing car 2, perfect for private
Cleaning Available in
seat, 2 car bases, Exc. school/home
schooling.
Store.
cond. Non smoking family.
Located 1115 Hull Street, No accidents. Black & 509-395-2587.
Hood River, Oregon. Call
green fabric. $125. Call or FREEZER, free, 5 cubic
541-490-4483.
foot, runs but no cold, like
text 541-490-6947
new, in original box, you
SEA KAYAK, Spectrum by
and repair, 509-493Perception, foot peddles for
275 Misc. for Sale haul
1617.
rutter, storage hatch. Read
the reviews on-line. Good BARRELS, burn and storcondition, stored inside, age, 55-gallon, with lids,
286 $500 or Less
$850. 541-490-5353.
$20. Call 503-855-3888
(home) or 503-453-7109 1 NEW 6ft aluminum step
ladder & 1 decent used 24
(cell); ask for Ray.
215 Musical
ft. ext. $60/boh.
FREE-RANGE, grain-fed 541-442-8598
Instruments
eggs $2/dozen. Can deliver
2 new tires DEXTE720
Modulus Flea Bass, 2003 to Goldendale.
DC808 size 195/65R15 fits
model, 5 String bass guitar. 509-773-3682.
toy corolla $75 The Dalles
Light blue specked flake
body, Pearl pick guard.
280 Misc. Wanted 360-910-5545
Rarely used, Graphite
BBQ, Ducane, Good cond.,
Neck, Active pickups, nev- WANTED: Medical lift $50. 541-296-2743
er gigged, used for light chair, in good condition.
casual play. Bought NEW Call 541-296-4743 leave BEAR season Aug. 1!
Remington Model 700 rifle
$2500. Asking $1500 OBO. message.
with scope, 35 Whellen calIncluded Modulus Hardshell case. This is a must WANTED: Please help us ibar, plus extras. $400 firm.
have for the serious bass find a Golden Retriever; 509-773-3916.
player; amazing tone and ours died. Large acreage. BED and box springs, Pilexcellent sound. Call or 509-773-5929.
low Top, king size, $125.
text for any further ques541-490-8305.
tions or photos. 541-490BED, Nikken Magnetic,
6947
queen size, includes frame,
box springs and Nikken
235 Misc.
Magnetic bed pad, $275.
10K to 18K
541-490-8305.
Equipment
Dental Gold-Platinum
BIKE. Girls, 13.5 specialArtisan's Jewelry
HAIR salon equip. for sale.
ized Hot Rock. Excellent
Styling station, 43x49 mircondition, $275. 503-998and Gallery
ror; styling chair, plus mat,
0260
137 East Jewett
shampoo sink w/ all plumbWhite Salmon
BLUETOOTH car speaing, reclining chair, standkerphone, new. Don't risk a
ing hair dryer; all black
ticket! Paid $120. Can bring
tones in very good used
to Hood River, $55, 541cond. $400 obo. Golden354-1505.
dale. 509-773-5543.
ON A GENERATOR 4kw YARD WORK: mowing, BOATING BOOKS, Timesingle phase 110, elec. trimming, pruning. $10/ Life library of Boating, 12
start, 10 gal. free mounted hour, 5 hours/week. Mt. hard cover books with ingas tank, low hours. $350. Hood/Parkdale area. 541- dex, $25 obo. 541-3862628
352-7363
obo 509-314-0303
WE BUY
SCRAP GOLD
286 $500 or Less
CANOPY. Pick-up, 1992
Dodge Dakota long bed. InConcrete chunks and dirt cludes rubber bed mat,
for landfill, About 3 Cu. $80. 541-354-1399
yards in TD. FREE, You CAR
SEAT,
Comfort
haul. Call Brenda at 575- Touch. For baby to 5T size,
626-6286
would also work as a
FREE construction sand, booster, $30. 541-386about 1 yard. You load & 1371
CERAMIC TILE, 12", light
beige w/warm swirls. 8
Boxes for $75. originally
$3.39/tile. 360-601-8308
Hood River area.
COBRA CB radio, 40 channel, Scans, Weather alert,
New, Never hooked up,
$40. 541-490-6947
GARDEN
CART/wheelbarrow, Little Tykes, red,
good, sturdy condition,
$15. 541-387-4752
GPS. TomTom ONE 130.
Portable car, pre-loaded
maps, USB & Car charger,
3.5 Inch touch screen. $60.
541-980-4614 TD
GRAPE crusher, hand
crank model, like new condition, $155. 509-395-2332.
HITCH. Easy lift w/ sway
control, $275. 541-354COUCH, White leather, 6 1584
Ft., 3 Cushion, Sharp lines, HITOP square table w/ four
Not overstuffed, $150 padded chairs. Dark wood.
OBO. 541-296-3440
used but nice condition.
CRAFTSMAN Pedestal 15- $100 993-1161
inch, 12-speed drill press. HOME
theater
sound
Like new. $175. 541-300- system, Yamaha AV-1 w/
0683.
sub woofer & remote. Call
CRAFTSMAN 12V lithium for pics. $164. 971-6785027.
drill, New, w/ Nylon
tool case, $35/OBO.
HONDA harmony lawn
541-980-4741.
mower, self propelled, rear
CRAFTSMAN utility trailer, bag, runs perfect. $190.
2.5 ft. W x 4 Ft. L, $30. The Dalles 541-993-5547
541-993-5731
IRRIGATION pump, 1.5
DISHWASHERS, (2), built- hp, $150, 541-386-5991.
in with stainless steel door; Kayak, '99 Dagger Bayou
portable with wooden coun- with paddle, seat. Recreater top, $50 each. 509-369- tional type. $225. 541-9651021.
2701.
Disney Baby Einstein Jum- Kenmore washer (80 seperoo. Clean, from non ries-super capacity, top
smoking home. Collapsible load) and dryer (1yr old)
for easy storage. $50. Call/ set, works excellent $500
text 541-490-6947
Call Diane 541-705-5380
Double Baby Stroller This
is a Graco Duo-Glider
Used but almost like new,
with manual and full cover
$75. 541-993-8699
KINGSFORD large kettle
BBQ, Cart style w/ wheels.
One big shelf w/ 1 small
one. Briquette use, $45.
541-296-4327.
ELAN Phase Snowboard,
161, w/ bindings & carrying
bag, $150 FIRM. Call or
text 541-490-6947, TD.
Kingsize cherry sleighbed
with Spring Air Comfort
Flex pillowtop mattress and
box springs w/ bedding
$400 541-298-3768
ELECTRIC cement mixer,
$100. 541-298-2474
LADDER rack, fit a van,
$40. 760-920-7689.
Folboat (cross between a
canoe and a Kayak) 18' LARGE mirror in wood
has sail attachments. $100. frame, $25/OBO.
Call 541-604-6093
541-298-8558
ALL GORGE
CLASSIFIEDS
placed through The Sentinel
will appear on
The Sentinel’s
website
goldendalesentinel.com
A/C and Heating
Engine Repair
Attorneys
Construction
Carpet Cleaning
Construction
The Goldendale Sentinel
Business Directory
is a great way to get your
name out there!
Just $8, $16, $24 or $32
per week!
Call us today at
773-3777
Construction
Home Improvement
Manufactured Homes
The Goldendale Sentinel
Business Directory
is a great way to get your
name out there!
Just $8, $16, $24 or $32
per week!
Call us today at
773-3777
Health Care
Plumbers
12 — JULY 25, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
286 $500 or Less
286 $500 or Less
LEATHER couch, Dark
brown, Good cond., Paid
$550. Sell for $400 OBO.
541-980-9399
TV Sony 36" Trinitron flat
screen with stand.Older
model, great picture.$85
For picture or more info call
LG Air conditioner w/ re- 541-980-2173.
mote. Wall/window mount, TV. Sanyo 21" w/ remote.
18K BTU, 230V, Cools Excellent condition, $40.
1000 Sq. ft. $200 OBO.
541-386-6697
541-296-6730
LOCAL artist - one of a WEBER BBQ w/ briquette
kind, hand-crafted bench. racks, Incl. chimney startUnique! $79. 509-773- er, $50. 509-637-4044
5929.
WOODEN bench, childs,
MARQUIS SPA, 6 to 8 per- white, three hearts cutout
son, good cond. 110 volt in back, solid wood, measplug in power. Good clean ures 24" tall x 25.5" wide,
$25 CASH. 509-637-3684.
fun! $250. 541-769-0158.
MATTRESS, Beautyrest,
queen size pillow top, like
new, $325. 541-296-4036
Hood River.
ANIMALS &
AGRICULTURE
MEDELA double breast
pump, Older model, Exc.
working condition, Needs
new tubing and shields,
$100 OBO. 541-490-6947
Livestock & Supplies ...290
Pets & Supplies ...........295
Pasture Rentals ...........300
Stables & Kennels .......305
Hay, Feed, & Produce..310
MINI-TILLER, electric; runs Lawn & Garden Equip. 311
great, only 1 year old. Food, Meat, & Produce315
120V, 6.5 amps. Does a Plants & Nursery Stock
320
nice job. $150. 509-7733536.
Farm & Orchard
Equipment ...................325
MOTOR for 1996 Acura Integra, 4 cyl. not V-Tech,
139K miles, AT, $450. 541290 Livestock
380-1166
OAK computer desk w/
credenza,
Very
good
cond., 60 x 36 x 66. Paid
over $700, Sell $250. 541980-4961, Mark.
Oak deacons bench, Lt. in
color, with a storage area in
seat. $50 OBO. Call 541506-1562 to see.
ONE pair of boat oars, $50.
Like new. 541-296-2587
& Supplies
Advanced Hoofcare
and Horseshoeing
PATIO FURNITURE, hardwood, 2 chairs, ottoman,
table, pads included, $125.
541-490-5353
PATIO table with 4 chairs,
glass top, rectangular
shape, includes umbrella,
$100. 509-395-2332.
POWERMATIC 719 mortiser w/ tooling, $500. 541490-0733
Razor PowerWing Caster
Scooter (Black), brand new
still in box. $45 541-9800369
RECLINING La-Z-Boy sofa
and rocking love seat, Light
tan and dark print, $225.
541-298-4035
509-261-1508.
gorgefarrier.com
MEADOWROCK
ALPACAS
insert alpaca artwork
right facing
LIVESTOCK
Quality BLOODLINES
Gorgeous FLEECE
Perfect CONFIRMATION
RICOH AFICIO MODEL
2027
COPIER;
NEW
DRUM; EXTRA TONER
CARTRIDGE; $300 541993-7855
WORTH
THE DRIVE!
ROTOTILLER,
8
HP,
Briggs & Stratton, front
wheel drive, counter rotating tines, runs great, $400
obo. 541-399-6188.
Jim or Barb Hansen
80 Mt. Adams Road
Trout Lake, WA 98650
ROW BOAT. 9-feet long, 5
feet wide, 20" high. Built in
wheel for moving, oars and
a swivel seat, $200. 541386-1913
SAFETY 1st Travel System
incl stroller, rear facing car
seat, 2 car bases, Exc.
cond. Non smoking family,
$125. 541-490-6947
SOFA sleeper, 7-foot, olive
green tweed upholstery,
excellent condition, $100.
503-314-6271.
"JASMIN"
Sweet and lovely, grey and
white cat, young adult, female, loving, spayed, vaccinated, indoors only,
quiet adult home.
FREE MICROCHIP!
Call Elizabeth
541-386-5099
PURRFECT FIT
CAT ADOPTIONS
meadowrockalpacas.com
NEED help loading
your
horse in a trailer? Want
help with ground work?
Call Heidi
509-261-2730.
365 House
Rentals/OR
THE DALLES downtown
office or retail space. All
utilities paid by owner
395 +/- sq.ft. to 2850 +/- sq.
ft and any size in between.
Excellent street exposure.
541-387-3913 or 503-260-6016
John L. Scott Prpty Mgmt
www.JLSRentals.com
541-298-4736
3 Bd House TD $1,050
3 BD House TD $795
3 Bd Duplex TD $800
2 Bd House Rufus $1,000
THE DALLES, Large shop
for rent, Excellent location,
Office & bathroom, Call for
appointment.
$850/Mo.
541-296-1424
MOSIER Cute 2 bdrm, 1 ba
victorian downtown, $950
mo. 1st/last/dep. Pets negotiable. Please call 541352-7547
THE DALLES contractors
office. New building with
CASE 3440 round baler,
4ft. bales, $2500. 541-806- bathroom, kitchen and storage. West 2nd Street.
6273
$350/Mo. 541-298-8873
JOHN DEERE 265 Rotary
disc hay mower, $4500.
335 Apartment
541-806-6273
PARKDALE. 4 bdrm, 2 ba.,
no pets or smoking. First,
last and deposit. $875/mo.
541-352-6836
SWEETWOOD NURSERY
Trees and shrubs
Monday - Fri, 1-5
Saturday, 8-5
Closed Sunday
1284 Hwy 141
White Salmon, WA
509-493-1907
325 Farm &
Orchard Equip.
RENTALS
AKC Aussie pups; 3 tri-colored males avail. Excellent
health history, beautiful
markings, and UTD on
worming & shots. Parents
onsite to greet you. $325$375. See at
prairieviewaussies.com;
[email protected]
503-348-4032.
BULL Mastiff pup, male, 3
mo. old. 509-773-5660.
PUPPIES! (4) 9 week old
female 1/2 pug 1/2 shih-zu,
100.00. for more info text or
call 541-993-2011
Business Rentals.........330
Apartment Rentals/OR 335
Apartment Rentals/WA 340
Condo Rentals/OR ......350
Condo Rentals/WA ......352
Duplexes, Four-Plexes/OR
355
Duplexes, Four-Plexes/WA
360
House Rentals/OR.......365
House Rentals/WA ......370
Senior Housing ............372
Mobile Homes/Oregon.375
Mobile Homes/Washington
380
Mobile Home Spaces ..382
RV Space.....................384
Rentals Wanted ...........385
Rentals to Share..........390
Room Rentals..............395
RV Site Rentals ...........397
Vacation Rentals..........400
Bed & Breakfast...........405
Storage Space.............410
Misc. Rentals ...............415
330 Business
Rentals
Rentals/OR.
THE DALLES, 220 W. 14th
St. 3 bdrm, 1.5 Ba, W/S
incl. $950/Mo. + 1st/Last +
Dep. No smoking/pets,
Carport, 541-806-8977.
The Dalles, 3BR/1Bath
house, excellent condition,
basement, fenced yard,
garage, appliances included. Available 8-1-12, $900
per month - shown by appt
The Dalles, Oregon, Fully only. Near TD Middle
Furnished one bedroom School on 13th Street.
Phone evenings: 541-296apartment. All utilities paid.
4413
Quiet area. Off street Parking. No smoking. No pets. The Dalles, 2 BR/2 bath, lg
$700 per month. First and family room plus living
last month plus $500 de- room. All appliances inc.
posit in advance. Phone DW and AC. Very nice,
clean, bigger than it looks
(541) 993-5190
from outside. New walls,
THE
DALLES. Studio carpet,
bath
fixtures.
apartment for rent, 605 E. $950.00 plus utilities first/
4th St., $500/mo., $400 de- last $100 dep. No Pets/
posit. Call 541-490-8713
Smoking. 541-769-0075.
HOOD RIVER. 2 bdrm, 2
bath, no smoking/pets,
available now, $850/mo. +
$1000 deposit. Call 541386-9000.
WEST PARK PLACE
1750 W 10th Street The
Dalles. Affordable 3 BDR $622-$655. Comm Room,
Rec
area,
Dishwshr,
Washer & Dryer. Convenience location. Water, Sewer & Garbage Incl.
THE DALLES: Small 2 bedroom, 1 bath house. No
pets. $650/first/last. Available 8/1/12. 541-298-5789.
370 House
Rentals/WA
Call Now! 541-296-5388
GOLDENDALE: 2/3 bdrm.,
TTY - 1-800-545-1833
2 ba., garage/shop, $700/
Income Limits Apply. Equal mo. + dep. W/S/G pd., no
RED PALM chihuahua, FOR LEASE: 900 Sq. Ft. (4 Housing Opportunity.
pets. 509-773-5342.
male, shots, wormed, divided rooms). Ideal office
space or rental. 2718 E.
$200. adoption fee
GOLDENDALE: 3 bdrm., 2
2nd St. Call 541-298-1936
340 Apartment
509-773-5660
ba. newer home on 5
GOLDENDALE: 125 Main
acres. $1100/mo. 1st mo. &
Rentals/WA.
Storefront Office/wBR, apdep. req'd. Avail. Sept. 1.
300 Pasture
prox. 140 sq. ft., $125/mo.
509-261-1021.
Office Space, Approx. 600
Rentals
GOLDENDALE: 2 bdrm., 1
sq. ft., BR & CA, $350/mo.,
Beth-El Shalom
bth. house, 3-car garage, 5
*SMALL 1 to 2 acre pasture or both $450/mo. Call
Senior Citizens Center
mi. from town. $750/mo.
James, 541-963-2398.
w/water & covered area for
Ref. req. 541-980-6703.
NOW ACCEPTING
horse or other livestock on HAVE A HOME FOR SALE?
APPLICATIONS
John L. Scott Prpty Mgmt
Eastside of Dufur; $150/ Get results fast by placing
FOR 1 & 2 BEDROOMS
www.JLSRentals.com
your ad in the Gorge Clasmo. 541-993-7372.
570 NE Tohomish St.
541-298-4736
sifieds, your ad will appear
White Salmon, WA
3bd Townhouse NB $1,075
in every paper in the gorge
2 Bd Apt Stevenson $700
310 Hay, Feed,
509-493-1098
area,
reaching
over
4 Bd House Dallsprt $1050
Office Hours M-F, 10-3
115,000 readers each
Straw
week. Call us at the Goldendale Sentinel, 773-3777
ALFALFA Hay, 1st Cutting,
or toll-free at 1-888-287$225/Ton. 541-993-7371
3777.
HAY for sale. 541-980HOOD RIVER
7439
200 sq. ft. office, $210
315 Food, Meat,
& Produce
Apricots U-Pick: Tree
ripened at Annie's Apricots.
2 miles east of Mosier at
8264 on Highway 30. Several varieties. Bring Containers. 541-478-3502.
CHERRIES, $1.50 lb
509-395-2266
330 Business
Rentals
320 Plants &
Nursery Stock
purrfect-fit.petfinder.com
FREE kitten. 1 gray,
stripped female, litter box
trained, 13 weeks. 541Three Decades of Quality 806-0969
Service. Journeyman farrier. Will Travel. Call or text PIGMY/NIGERIAN kids.
Sam @ 509-310-9073 or Come meet the new kids in
509-250-3425
Lyle! 4 doelling, 2 wethers
BRING your saddle, ride & more due soon! $175/
him home! Well-trained 5- pair. 509-365-2165 or 253year old gelding. Good 846-9145.
ORIENTAL RUG, Karastan. Turkoman design, 7'
x 10', $175. 541-386-5775. ranch horse. $525. If interested, call 509-773-7676.
PAINT: 3 quarts, Benjamin Will do everything!
Moore eggshell interior
JUSTIN HILL
paint & primer, Hawthorne
yellow. $35. 541-490-9600
HORSESHOEING
PALI Dawn Crib & changing table set, w/ mattress.
Some scratches on crib,
Good cond., Made in Italy,
$300. 541-490-6947
295 Pets &
Supplies
& up! Berries & Apricots.
Mt. View Orchard Fruit Stand
6670 Trout Crk Ridge Rd.
Parkdale
541-352-6554
7 days/week, 9-5
Oregon Trail Card, WIC &
Senior accepted.
PIE CHERRIES
Are ready now!
O'Dell Bros Farm
2362 Tucker Rd., Hood River,
OR 97031. 541-386-3544.
Call ahead for orders of 20
lbs. or more
NIGERIAN DWARF goats
STOVE PIPE, new, (4) for sale. Does $100.
pieces, 8" diameter. triple Doelings $50. Buckling &
Sandoz Farm
wall. (3) 8" diameter, single Weatherlings $50/ea.
Potatoes, onions, peppers,
wall, $338/all or will sell 541-296-2722.
zucchini, beets, the tomaseparate. 541-399-6104
PAINT MARE, well trained, toes are getting started.
STOVE,
ceramic
top,
rides good. Been on trail Natural raised beef and
white, auto oven cleaner,
rides; gentle. $475. 509- pork. Streaks, ground beef,
$100. 509-369-1021.
ground pork, sausage,
773-7676.
roasts, chops & more.
SWIMMING POOL, 4,000
gallons, 42" high, oval
Many kinds of jams and jel295
Pets
&
shape with metal frame.
lies. 5755 Mill Creek Rd.
includes ladder & filter
Wed.-Sat. 11-6, Sun. 11-4.
Supplies
pump. $50. 541-993-9937
TAKING ORDERS:
TIRES & WHEELS, off
Sept./Oct delivery. Locally
Jeep Wrangler. Safari MSR
grown Natural Grass fatLT235/75R15 tires on
tened (or grain finished on
5 hole aluminum Jeep
request)Angus/Angus
wheels, $300. 541-490Cross beef. No hormones
4391
or antibiotics, $2.25 lb.
TOSHIBA PROJECTION
hanging weight.
"KATIE"
HD TV 59" W/ STAND
541
352-1053
e-mail
Sweet, friendly, tortoise
AND SURROUND SOUND
[email protected] or
shell calico cat, 2 years
NEEDS NEW BULB $200.
Google Mt. Hood Natural Beef
old, F, spay, shots, Luk
541-993-1468
check, indoor, adults only.
U-PICK BLUBERRIES
TOTAL GYM Platinum, like
Call Bonnie
U-PICK FLOWERS
new, $150, 541-645-0363.
HOOD RIVER CHERRIES
TREADMILL, Rebok V8.9,
The Gorge
great condition, with manBE MINE
White House
ual, $400. 541-806-0218
CAT ADOPTION
2265 Hwy 35, Hood River
bemine.petfinder.com
TREK 220 12 sp. Girls 24"
541-386-2828
"Mountain Trek" bicycle w/
www.gorgewhitehouse.com
rack. $150. 541-980-7717
Find us on Facebok
541-386-3776
Equal Opportunity
Provider
Comm Prop Bingen $750
WHITE SALMON. 3 bedroom duplex with attached
single-car garage. Dishwasher. No pets. $875/
month plus first and de200 sq. ft. office, $217
posit. Discount for seniors.
BINGEN. Studio, 1 bdrm, 2
240 sq. ft. ofice, $240
503-936-2819.
bdrm, monthly, $400-$600,
300 sq. ft. office, $230.
utils includ. 1st+dep. 509- WISHRAM, 2 Bdrm, River
300 sq. ft. office, rr, $350
view, Spacious fenced
493-1803 9 am-7 pm.
500 sq. ft. office, $475
yard, $525/Mo. + First/Last
715 sq. ft. office, $600.
GOLDENDALE:
123
NW
+ Dep. 206-824-5231
1068 sq. ft. office, $885.
High
Street.
Unfurnished
21800 sq. ft. retail, $1300.
bedroom
apartments.
WaVarious dry storage units
ter and garbage paid. $525/ 375 Mobile Homes/
Chuck Beardsley, 541-386Oregon
5555, Hershner & Bell Realty mo. 509-773-3816, 503201-7833, 509-773-4840.
HOOD RIVER HEIGHTS
GOLDENDALE: 400 W Arlington OR, 1st Mo Rent
3700 sq. ft. or
Free! Beautiful Family MoBroadway. 1 & 2-bedroom
(2)-1850 sq. ft. spaces.
bile Home Park, Lg inupstairs apartments. Water
New building next to
ground swimming pool,
and
garbage
paid.
$475Pine Street Bakery. $1/sq.
next to golf course /w ac$525/mo.
509-773-3816.
ft. + 3 net. 1103 12th
cess from park,
503-201-7833,
509-773Street. 541-380-0558 Billy
1 mile from river, on-site
4840.
laundry/showers. RV SpacPUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in MURDOCK, 2 bdrm, 1 Ba, es $350/mo, Mobiles $450/
this newspaper is subject views, clean, move right in! mo Call James 541-965to the Fair Housing Act $650/Mo. + 1st/Last se- 2398
which makes it illegal to ad- curity dep. W/S/G pd. Coin
vertise "any preference, op laundry, No pets. For 380 Mobile Homes/
limitation or discrimination info call 541-490-9721
Washington
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial THREE Mountain Village
status or national origin, or Located at 613 W. Collins CARSON, 2 or 3 bedroom
an intention, to make any in Goldendale, now ac- mobile home for rent in
such preference, limitation cepting applications for 1, 2 quiet country park. No
or discrimination." Familial & 3 bdrm. apartments. pets. 509-427-8758.
status includes children HUD Section 8 Restrictions DALLESPORT, 3 Bdrm, 2
under the age of 18 living apply. Call 509-773-3344 Ba, Kitchen appl. & laundry
with parents or legal cus- or TTY dial 711 for appli- appl. incl., $950/Mo. +
todians, pregnant women cations.
First/last & cleaning dep.
and people securing cus541-993-0543
tody of children under 18.
This newspaper will not
395 Room Rentals
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate
The Dalles, Roommate
which is in violation of the
Wanted to rent downstairs
355 Duplexes,
law. Our readers are hereof larger non-smoking
by informed that all dwellFour-Plexes/OR
home. Avail 8/15. We are
ings advertised in this
looking for a Responsible
newspaper are available on
an equal opportunity basis. THE DALLES, River view, person that enjoys a
To complain of discrimina- Large 2 bdrm, 1 Ba. Off peaceful household. $ 550/
tion call HUD toll-free at 1- street parking. Storage mo includes utilities. 541800-669-9777. The toll-free room. W/S/G paid. No pets/ 406-0230
telephone number for the smoking. $700/Mo. + $950
hearing impaired is 1-800- dep. 1 year lease. 541-993397 RV Site
2972 or unclebuck
927-9275.
Rentals
@gorge.net
The Dalles
1040 sq ft, $950/mo.
The Dalles, Large duplex AFFORD RV & Mobile
825 sq ft, $650/mo.
apartment available July Home Park in Arlington,
450 sq ft. $350/mo
1st. Located at 409 West OR. Swimming pool, river
Col Ct Mall, 107 E 2nd St
7th. $800 a month plus util- close, next to golf course;
Inc. utils, 541-298-8903
ities. First and last plus pet friendly. RV spaces:
$400 deposit to move in. $350/mo. Mobile Homes
7 Office complex, $750/mo. Applications at address. starting $415/mo. 1/2 mo.
Call Rick with questions at free for limited time. Call
Storage:400 sq ft.$100/Mo 541-980-7727.
James, 541-965-2398.
410 Storage Space
PARKDALE storage units,
(2) available, 10x10, $55
month. 541-400-8071.
REAL ESTATE
Acreage & Lots ............420
Commercial/Investment
Property
425
Orchards, Farms, Ranches
430
Real Estate/OR............435
Real Estate/WA ...........437
Real Estate Wanted.....440
Manufactured Homes/OR
445
Manufactured Homes/WA
447
Condos/OR ..................450
Condos/WA..................452
420 Acreage
& Lots
437 Real
Estate/WA
509-493-1333 Mt. Hood
Pic
WHITE SALMON
1 Acre View Lot
Excellent private neighborhood, 2 miles from
town, water meter in, utilities available, paved road.
$159,000
Call Annette
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject
to the Fair Housing Act
which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial
status or national origin, or
an intention, to make any
such preference, limitation
or discrimination." Familial
status includes children
under the age of 18 living
with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women
and people securing custody of children under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on
an equal opportunity basis.
To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1800-669-9777. The toll-free
telephone number for the
hearing impaired is 1-800927-9275.
425 Commercial
Investment Prop.
ZONED B & B/multi-family,
Executive rental? Remodeled 5 bdrm, 3 Ba 1939
Craftsman. 2772 Sq. Ft. living rm, Family rm, Dining
rm, Utility/office, Fireplace,
Oak/tiled floors, AC/Gas, 2
Patios. Close to downtown.
$279,000. 541-300-0853.
columbiagorgefsbo.com
435 Real
Estate/OR
MUST SELL
Cascade Locks, 1/2 acre
MH approved, lovely
trees, lg. fountain,
mature garden, next to
new home development
project. Includes 24' x
48' foundation, power,
water & 1000 gallon
septic.
820 Mt. View Lane.
$88,500. Call 541-490-0402
Newly remodeled
3 BDRM, 2 BA Boathouse,
approximately 1000 sq. ft.
This floating home has new
everything, logs, beams,
floors & completely
remodeled interior. Well
insulated interior & exterior
walls and ceiling. Heating
and Air Conditioned. New
cedar decks. Includes
appliances and furnishings.
Excellent vacation home!
541-340-0516
THE DALLES, 1993 Goldenwest mfg. home, 3 bdrm,
2 Ba. 1848 Sq. Ft. 1 1/2
Lots. Open floor plan. Cathedral ceilings. Plantation
shutters. Huge master
suite w/ walk-in closet.
Bath has garden tub w/
Walk-in Shower. Dbl. vanities w/ sinks. Bonus! Family Room. Deck w/ awning.
$129,900. Move in ready!
541-296-4125 or 541-9934125.
ColumbiaGorgeFSBO.com
509-493-1333
509-427-7988
FSBO STEVENSON
CONDO
1527 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2.5
ba, built in 2008.
Kitchen, dining room &
office.
Great views from both
levels. Must see to
appreciate. $219,500.
541-490-2720
GOLDENDALE: 3 bd., 2
ba., garage, RV parking,
fenced yard, covered deck,
new carpet, paint, windows. Close to hospital,
schools, grocery. 310
Sanders Way. $172,000.
Call for appt. 509-2612730.
447 Manufactured
Homes/WA
THE DALLES, 2 bdrm, 1
Ba, 960 Sq. Ft., Expanded
living room, Great view of
River and Mt. Hood. Located in View Point Trailer
Court. Must see to appreciate. $16,000. Space rent
$385/Mo. 503-949-9044
AUTOMOTIVE
Aviation ........................455
RV's & Travel Trailers ...460
Canopies & Campers ..465
RV Rentals...................470
RV Parts & Supplies ....475
Boats, Motors, Supplies
480
Personal Watercraft .....481
Snowmobiles ...............485
Motorcycles, ATC's &
ATV's
490
Utility Trailers ...............495
Heavy Equipment ........500
Misc. Auto ....................505
Auto Parts & Supplies .510
Autos Wanted ..............515
Sport Utility Vehicles....525
Pickups & Trucks .........530
Vans & Utility Vehicles .535
Antique & Classic Autos
538
Automobile...................540
460 RVs &
Travel Trailers
1986 FORD Coachman
RV. Good condition, no
leaks, $1500 obo. 541-3862188
2006 PANTHER 6-1/2 ft.
truck camper w/2 burner
stove and sink. Sleeps one
person. Perfect for single
person camping. No license required. $2300
OBO. 509-773-3916 or
509-250-2178.
ALL
GORGE CLASSIFIEDS
placed through
The Sentinel
will appear on
The Sentinel’s website
www.goldendalesentinel.com
Statewide Classifieds
STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS
WEEK OF JULY 23, 2012
This newspaper participates in a
statewide classified ad program
sponsored by the Washington
Newspaper
Publishers
Association, a statewide association of weekly newspapers.
The program allows classified
advertisers to submit ads for
publication in participating
weeklies throughout the state in
compliance with the following
rules. You may submit an ad for
the statewide program through
this newspaper or in person to
the WNPA office. The rate is
$255 for up to 25 words, plus
$10 per word over 25 words.
WNPA reserves the right to edit
all ad copy submitted and to
refuse to accept any ad submitted for the statewide program.
WNPA, therefore, does not
guarantee that every ad will be
run in every newspaper. WNPA
will, on request, for a fee of $40,
provide information on which
newspapers run a particular ad
within a 30 day period.
Substantive typographical error
(wrong address, telephone
number, name or price) will
result in a "make good", in which
a corrected ad will be run the following week. WNPA incurs no
other liability for errors in publication.
AUCTION
EVENTS-FESTIVALS
FOR SALE -- LAND
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED -- DRIVERS
LEGAL SERVICES
RECEIVER’S
AUCTION
Case#09-2-00438-9
www.PotholesGolfAuction.com
7/27/12 Selling to Highest
Bidder; 255ac PUD w/permits;
Othello, WA (near Moses Lake)
Coast/Sperry Van Ness, local
contact Dave Smith 206-2762169
ANNOUNCE your festival for
only pennies. Four weeks to 2.7
million readers statewide for
about $1,200. Call this newspaper or 1 (206) 634-3838 for
more details.
LENDER SACRIFICE sale 9
acres, Colfax. Was $75,000,
now only $42,500. Beautiful valley views, quiet country road
with electric. 41 acres, Moses
Lake, was $53,900, now only
$24,900. Great horse country,
abundant wildlife. Call UTR LLC
1-888-326-9048
NOW HIRING: Companies
Desperately Need Workers to
Assemble Products From Your
Location. No Selling, Any Hours.
$500/Wk Potential. Info 985646-1700 Dept WA-5990
Peoples Lifestyle.
HANEY TRUCK LINE pays all
miles! Paid dock bumps, 401k
(with match), bonus programs,
paid vacation! CDL-A, hazmat,
doubles required. Call now 18 8 8 - 4 1 4 - 4 4 6 7 .
www.GOHANEY.com
DIVORCE $135. $165 with children. No court appearances.
Complete preparation. Includes
custody, support, property division and bills. BBB member.
(503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com
[email protected]
INTERNATIONAL CULTURAL
Exchange Representative: Earn
supplemental income placing
and supervising high school
exchange students. Volunteer
host families also needed.
Promote
world
peace!
www.afice.org/reps
DRIVERS --New Freight lines in
your area. Annual salary $45K
to $60K. Flexible hometime.
Modern Trucks. Great benefits.
CDL-A, 3 months recent experience. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com
CAREER TRAINING
ATTEND COLLEGE online from
home. *Medical *Business
*Criminal Justice. *Hospitality.
Job placement assistance.
Computer available. Financial
Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified.
Call
866-483-4429.
www.CenturaOnline.com
FINANCIAL
LOCAL PRIVATE INVESTOR
loans money on real estate
equity. I loan on houses, raw
land, commercial property and
property development. Call Eric
at (800) 563-3005. www.fossmortgage.com
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS
SAWMILLS from only $3997.00
-- Make Money/Save Money
with your own bandmill -- Cut
lumber any dimension. In stock
ready to shift. FREE info/DVD:
www.NorthwoodSawmill.com 1800-578-1363 Ext 300N
JULY 25, 2012— 13
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
460 RVs &
Travel Trailers
2007 FLEETWOOD
Expedition 38' Class A
motorhome, diesel pusher
300HP CAT, only 9,554
miles. 7.5 Onan diesel
generator, 3 slides, double
pane windows,
combination W/D, auto
awning, auto leveling, 4 dr.
refridge/freezer w/ice
maker. Too much to list!
Like new cond. $129,900.
509-261-0017.
505 Misc. Auto
FIVE 16.5 inch tires 90%
tred on 8 whole rims
$50.-$100. 509-773-3854
TRAIL BLAZER deer alert
i
t
whistles while it works for
info and price
509-773-4645
510 Auto Parts
& Supplies
25 FT TRAVEL TRAILER,
1995, good condition with
EZ lift trailer hitch. $5000/
OBO. 509-637-5207.
1987 460 ENG. &
transmission 80k miles.
$500. obo
360-980-0142
5TH Wheel Trailer, 1996,
27' Sunnybrook, excellent
condition. $6,000. 509-7735227.
525 Sport Utility
Vehicles
EAGLE
CAP
TRUCK
CAMPER 2003. 11.5-foot,
slide out, electric jacks, air,
microwave, AM/FM/CD, full
bath, new Memory Foam
queen, Sunbrella cover,
great condition, $11,400.
541-354-1989
2005 CHEVROLET Uplander, 74K Miles, FW, Silver, Auto, Power windows
& doors, AC, 3rd row seating, DVD player & rear
monitor. $7950.
541-980-7157
Buy-Sell-Consign
RV's/Utility
Vehicles
www.hanksautosales.net
541-296-5854 or
541-993-0109
GMC SUBURBAN 1500,
'89. 2WD, 350 V8 AT, AC,
bucket seats, 8 passenger,
interior clean, straight
body, 95% tread on tires,
new brakes, E-Z lift hitch.
$1000 obo. 509-427-4584
465 Canopies &
Campers
530 Pickups
& Trucks
Hank's Auto Sales
535 Vans & Utility
Vehicles
538 Antique &
Classic Autos
HOUSE
CLEANING
SERVICES
77 CHEV Nova, Black &
red interior, Orig. onr.
119,000
miles.
Rally
wheels, well maint. w/
records. $5000 OBO. 541478-3490, Mosier, OR.
Basic and Deep
+ Spring
Cleaning
Windows
DODGE Ram 2500 PU,
540 Automobiles
'97. Extended cab, V10,
AT, low mileage, excellent 1978 BUICK Regal, Colcondition, $4600. 541-354- lector car, 2 Dr, V8, Auto,
1229.
AC, Extra clean, Always
9.9 hp Suzuki motor, 4
garaged. $3995. 541-296stroke, like new. $1100. FORD F-150, '98, Ext. cab; 3611 or 541-296-2587
new tires, custom rims.
509-773-9144.
$5300. Call for details. 509- 1991 BMW 325IX, Engine
shot, Not running, Great
490 Motorcycles, 540-0647.
parts car, $500. 509-365FORD F250, 2002. Great 5288, Lyle, WA.
ATCs & ATVs
4x4 truck, V10, 49K miles,
AT, gas engine. Can pull 1993 JEEP Grand Chero1980 YAMAHA XS 1100LG anything you need it to pull. kee Laredo, 4.0L, V-6.
Runs good. 245,934 mi.
Midnight Special. CollectIn very good shape. Estate Lots of new replacement
able. Loaded; windshield,
vehicle so needs to be parts 1 yr. ago. $2900.
cruise, saddle bags &
sold. Get it now for 509-261-9189. No calls afmore. Excellent cond.
$12,000. Call Shelly at 509- ter 8 pm please.
$2250. 509-772-2990.
637-4051.
1993 Lincoln, Mark 8,
2005 HONDA Silverwing
125k Mi., Loaded,
Scooter. A scooter that
535
Vans
&
Utility
w/ 4 mounted snow tires,
drives like a motorcycle but
$2,500. 541-298-8903
gets the gas mileage of a
Vehicles
scooter. 600CC. 6K miles,
2000 CHEVROLET Ca$4250. 541-993-7684
1973
VOLKSWAGEN maro, 78k Mi., V6, 5 Spd.,
camper van. Rebuilt engine $4500. 541-296-6792
17 ft boat, with rebuilt 135
hp Johnson motor with EZ
loader trailer. $3300.
509-773-9144.
2008 KIKKER Bobber, 110cc,
low rider, Burnt Orange, low
usuage, great condition, 4
speed, suicide clutch. $1600.
FIRM!! 541-965-2420
with 8K miles, 8-ply tiers,
factory cover, studded nonmounted snow tires, new
spare tire, new brakes 20/
10. Recent oil change and
tune-up, and extras. $3500
firm. 509-493-1708 or 541490-4319.
1994 FORD Contractor
van w/ tool boxes and ladder racks & cage, $3500.
541-980-7760
Landscape
Maintenance
TOYOTA Corolla, 2004; 5
2000 ford Expedition Eddie sp., A/C, dependable. 36
Bauer Edition 4D 2WD with MPG, 240,000 mi. $3500 CLT Certified landscape
172,xxx miles. Leather, CD obo. 509-250-3916.
tech. Irrigation mainteplayer, 5.4 L V-8, Cruise, Tilt VOLVO XC70 2004, auto- nance, turn-overs, repairs
wheel, A/C,3rd row seat, Pri- matic. Excellent condition. & winterize. Lawn maintevacy glass, power adjustable
1 owner with no children or nance, design and install.
pedals,Roof Rack. BlueBook
is $5400.00. Letting it go for pets. 145k miles with regu- Residential/Commercial.
lar maintenance and new 541-705-5528.
$3200.00 541-565-3020
tires. Great ride, $7000.
Dennis' Lawn Maintenance
2004 CHEVY Tahoe, 4x4, 541-980-3106
White, 3rd row seating, Tan
Lawn mowing, Hedge Trimleather seats, Air, Power
ming, Pruning, Rototilling,
Cleaning
steering, Tinted windows,
Hauling, Bark Dust, Brick
CC, Stereo, DVD, On-Star,
Walls, River Rock & snow
Moonroof, Towing packremoval. Call today!
COLUMBIA HOME
age, New tags. $12,000
541-993-0090
OBO. 541-296-2039
MAINTENANCE
541-296-1850
Cleaning
Painting
FORD Explorer XLT 2004,
Bonded & Insured
and
Windows
Vehicle WARRANTY! Wild
(Hudson Insurance)
FREE ESTIMATES
Country ALL-Season Tires
541-352-6001
w/less than 9k miles. New
Hectcor's Lawn Maintenance
OR#60590
Pioneer
stereo,
new
brakes, 20k mi on transPruning, lawn mowing,
mission, 68k mi on engine,
clean-up & bark dust.
3rd row seat, roof rack/towing, privacy glass, the
Call 541-980-7969
works! $9995. 541-9805831.
PROFESSIONAL
AMC 1977 Pacer Wagon,
in primer, minor body work,
6 cylinder 258 cu in, header, autotrans, good interior,
NORTHLAND 12' cab-over 1986 FORD Ranger, 2.9L, mag wheels, good rubber.
camper, 1997, fully self Exc. motor, Needs other Under 100K miles. $1500/
contained, $2750. 541- work, $500. 541-544-2355 OBO. 541-993-1939 or
806-6273
541-298-2110.
DODGE 1966 Pickup for
Army issue. $500. Elroy's 1965 Impala, Ex480 Boats, Motors, sale,
Must see to appreciate. cellent condition! $20,000.
541-296-2152
& Supplies
541-296-4372.
2007 YAMAHA FZ6,
with security system,
8124 miles,
in great condition, red.
$3900. 541-490-4391
540 Automobiles
Chrysler PT Cruiser 2003,
Touring model, leather,
second owner, $2,700. call
541-604-6093
SUBARU
OUTBACK LTD.
2001, wagon, $5400.
509-493-2161, Bev
Get more
eyes on your
ad,
place it in
the
Gorge
Classifieds!
30-YEARS
EXPERIENCE
Special
Services
Lazy-Y-Salvage Hulk Hauling
Will pick up Junk cars,
Pickups with titles or
Sheriff papers.
Scrap metal of all kinds.
Appliances - Alum.
Copper - Brass. 541980-2235.
Tree Services
GUINN'S
FOREST
MANAGEMENT
Harvesting Timber
to Enhance Future Forests
ABSOLUTE
SUNSHINE LLC
Tamera and Laura
360-241-3537
Rototilling, thatching,
mowing, pruning,
fertilizing, trimming &
edging, spraying, bark
chips, debris hauling,
compost and clean-up.
541-490-0786
Plumbing &
Drainage
LEFT COAST
PLUMBING
Specialty log markets,
marking and flagging, permitting, road building,
thinning, land clearing,
brush piling, replanting,
danger trees, storm damage plus blowdown.
NO JOB
TOO SMALL
or TOO BIG!
Residential & Commercial
Janitorial Service
Para Espanol
541-399-7446
Fransisco
For English
541-399-7491
Jairo
Free Consultation
insert artwork
NEW
CONSTRUCTION
***
*****
MUNOZ HOME MAINTENANCE
List your
Real Estate
in
The
Gorge
Classifieds!
insert artwork
ONE TREE
TO 200 ACRES
COMMERCIAL
Construction
Bazaars, Arts, Crafts ...802
Holiday Services..........804
Holiday Vacations ........806
Holiday Entertainment .808
Trees & Trim.................810
Gifts For Family ...........812
Gifts For Him ...............814
Gifts For Her ................816
Gifts For Kids...............818
Gifts of Food ................820
Gifts For Home ............822
Gifts of Pets .................824
Gifts of Music...............826
Gifts of Life ..................828
Religious Gifts .............830
Unusual Gifts ...............832
Fun Gifts ......................834
Corporate Gift Services
836
Shopping Service ........838
Gifts For Parents..........840
Wrapping & Mail Service
842
YARD CARE
REFERENCES AVAILABLE
FREE
ESTIMATES
HOLIDAYS
REMODELS
***
REPAIRS
LICENSED
BONDED & INSURED
541-386-8309
CHRIS GUINN, Owner
23 Years Experience
Licensed and Insured
360-957-5662
White Salmon, WA
[email protected]
Yard & Garden
NEED your tall
grass cut? Call
509-250-2279.
$500 OR LESS
GUIDELINES
• Private Party Only • No Food or
Produce • No Fuel or Firewood •
No Hay or Straw • No Livestock or
Poultry or Horses • No Garage or
Yard Sales • No Automobiles
• Pets – Pet ads will no
longer be accepted in
the $500 or Less category.
Free Pets – Run one week free
in the Pets Category. Can renew
each week.
Individual Pets offered at $500
or less – Will be included in the
PETS category at the $5 per
week rate.
Litters or more expensive pets –
Run in the PETS category at the
Marketplace Rate of $20 for 4
weeks.
14 — JULY 25, 2012
Public invited
to Back to
School Bash
The Back to School Bash is
back. The annual event will
be on Saturday, Aug. 4, from
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the courthouse lawn. This is the sixth
year for the Bash, sponsored
by the Goldendale Church of
the Nazarene with the help of
generous community partners.
Last year’s Bash was a hit
with 500 bags of school supplies given out. As always
there will be a drawing for
free backpacks filled with
school supplies for kindergarten through high school.
There will be one boy and one
girl from each lower grade
that will receive a backpack
and one boy and one girl from
the high school as well. Students must register by 12:30
p.m. and must be present to
win. The prize drawing will
be at 1 p.m.
The Klickitat County Sheriffs Office and Goldendale Police Department will be at the
Bash along with KVH hospital representatives who will
be giving out free bicycle helmets. The General Store is
donating the backpacks..
The American Legion will
be cooking hot dogs and there
will be snow cones and cotton
candy at no cost. All are welcome to join in the fun and
games and pick up some
school supplies.
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
Town House offers
another dining
option in Goldendale
JOANN GROGAN
FOR THE SENTINEL
There is a new place in
town to eat, drink, and be
merry.
It’s the Town House
restaurant, located directly
across from the Court House
on W. Allyn Street and
owned by Jeff and Debbie
Teal.
The Town House began as
a thought of having a place
for ladies to drink tea and
enjoy little cucumber sandwiches and cookies, the
Teals say. Now it is a restaurant serving breakfast Monday through Friday from 7
a.m. to 11 a.m., lunch from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday
through Saturday, and dinner Fridays and Saturdays
from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m throughout the remainder of July.
Fresh local food is served
as much as possible for
every dish. “We are still
working on our menus,” Jeff
Teal says. “We hope to have a
variety that people can
choose from; all kinds of
things. We have several
chefs who cooked in Italian
restaurants, so we will be
featuring a lot of pasta dishes and more Italian dishes.”
While keeping their food
healthy, the restaurant is indulging desires for favorites
such as fresh biscuits and
gravy for breakfast.
“Actually we just kind of
wanted to have a place for
people to eat good food and
keep it the least expensive as
we can make it,” Debbie Teal
states. “Basically we just
want to do home-style cooking and not so much out of
packages and use fresh ingredients, and we want a
place where people can just
relax and visit and enjoy
themselves.
“We appreciate the community patience and understanding and support. It’s
been great to have people
come in, and it’s fun for
them to offer their suggestions and letting me try different crazy options. What I
like about here is, somebody
comes in their work clothes
and jeans and that’s great,
or if someone wants to
dress up, that’s good too. We
like it all.”
The Teals own the building adjacent to their restau-
LOU MARZELES
A MERRY PLACE TO DINE: As their sign proclaims, the Town House in Goldendale is a merry place
for food and drink. Recently opened, the Town House is located south of the Courthouse at 114 W.
Allyn Street.
rant, which they presently
use, primarily for parking.
But they’re thinking of
some ideas for a complimentary business for the Town
House. “We might even use
that to bake our own breads
and pastries,” Jeff Teal says.
“The restaurant seems to
be well received from the
community and we appreciate that,” he continues.
“We just want a good
place for people to come eat,
drink, and be merry,” Debbie confirms, “just like our
sign says.”

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