Haugen says bring troops home Cascade Creek Fire now 40

Transcription

Haugen says bring troops home Cascade Creek Fire now 40
T HE S ENTINEL : 1879
Goldendale, Washington
TO
F ACEBOOK & T WITTER
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
Vol. 133 No. 39 75 cents
County Commissioner candidates address Sentinel questions
LOU MARZELES
ON THE ISSUES: Jon Haugen,
candidate
for
the
3rd
Congressional District seat
against incumbent Rep. Jaime
Herrera
Beutler,
speaks
Thursday at the Greater
Goldendale
Chamber
of
Commerce business luncheon.
The Sentinel posed four questions to each of
the candidates running for Klickitat County
commissioner. The questions were:
1. Do you believe the citizens of Klickitat
County need someone to lead or someone to listen?
2. How do you feel you can best determine the
needs of all the citizens of the county? Do you
feel you can accurately represent all of the citizens?
3. What do you feel uniquely qualifies you to
be a commissioner for Klickitat County?
4. What would you most want to be remembered for after your service as a commissioner is
over?
Following are their responses.
Joe Sellers:
1. Leading is done by listening. “Of the people,
by the people, for the people.” A leader should be
one of the people, who listens to what the people
want and acts on their behalf.
2. Access to the leaders is essential. The bur-
den is on the people to make their needs known.
An active commissioner needs to be about his
district, looking and communicating.
3. Passion for this county, and a lifetime of
varied experience in the county. In a nutshell,
I’ve had basic law enforcement experience; medical training as an E.M. T.; done construction
work building roads and landfill cells; logging experience; and I’ve been self-employed. I know
See Candidates, Page 2
Town Hall meeting reports on progress
Haugen
says bring
troops
home
LOU MARZELES
EDITOR
Jon Haugen, candidate for
the 3rd Congressional District seat presently held by
Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler,
says when he was in the military, they never asked him if
he was a Republican or a Democrat.
“They just assigned you a
task, and you worked together
to solve that problem,” he
says. “That’s something that I
would bring to Congress as
well.”
The candidate spoke at the
Greater Goldendale Chamber
of Commerce business lunch
Thursday at Gee’s Restaurant.
Haugen served for 24 years,
including as a Navy pilot, and
he says his years of service
gave him unique insights into
priorities, task management,
and problem-solving.
“Right now we’ve had over
2,100 brave Americans die
over in Afghanistan” Haugen
said Thursday. “We’re spending $2 billion a week right
now in Afghanistan. My first
bill would be to end that war
within 90 days. The reason I
say that is because we’ve
spent too much blood and
treasure in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan is a country with
about a 15 percent literacy
rate. They’re not getting their
information from the newspaper, they’re not getting it
from television or radio. They
have their tribal elder, their
imam, who is telling them
about the world. When we
leave, it’s going to return to
what it was before. We can
stay engaged diplomatically.”
Haugen also said the U.S.
mission in Afghanistan has
already been completed.
“Right now we have ground
troops that are in harm’s way
in Afghanistan,” he told his
audience. “The people we
think are helping, on our side,
are basically turning the
weapons we give them on our
own soldiers over there. That
all, I think, goes back to the
education level of the people
of Afghanistan. They’re
being told that we are foreign
invaders in their land and
that they need to eradicate
our presence there. We went
to Afghanistan to do a job.
That was to eliminate Osama
Bin Laden and the Al Qaeda.
Thanks to our president,
Osama Bin Laden is dead.
Thanks to his use of drones,
which his opponent wouldn’t
have used—and his opponent
would not have gone into the
sovereign nation of Pakistan
to get Osama Bin Laden—
both of those threats to our
security have been eliminated. Afghanistan no longer
poses a threat to the United
States. They will not in the future because we have diplomacy in that country. We have
bases that are there, we can
leave a small force there
which would protect our interest. But let’s bring our
See Haugen, Page 2
LOU MARZELES
TAKING THE FLOOR:
Left,
Klickitat County Commissioner
Dave Sauter makes a point at
the Town Hall meeting Sept. 18
at
the
Grange. Above,
Goldendale Mayor Clint Baze
speaks at the meeting.
In its third Town Hall
meeting of the year, the
Greater Goldendale Chamber of Commerce brought together representatives of
county and city governments and one for an initiative to create a community
center. The meeting was at
the Goldendale Grange on
Sept. 18
One of the most ambitious projects addressed was
the community center, reported by Ray LaFond.
“Our team has met nine
times over the past months
on this,” LaFond said. “We
wanted to define what a community center would look
like. The consensus was that
it should be a true communi-
ty resource center and not
based on tourism or any
other kind of public-service
related facility.”
LaFond passed around a
handout detailing plans for
the center. The highly detailed document proposed a
21,400-square-foot building
that would cost $4.2 million.
Operations cost were pro-
jected at $9 per square foot.
LaFond said funds for the
center could be raised
through a $1 million Community Development Block
grant; $1 million from the
U.S. Economic Development
Administration; $300,000
from the Washington State
Military Department; about
$1 million through private
grant institutions; and another $1 million raised from
general obligation bonds.
The bonds would have a
$90,000 annual payment.
Plans for the building
show it divided into sections
for meetings and banquets; a
theater; classrooms; a pot-
See Town, Page 2
Cascade
Creek Fire
now 40
percent
contained
Firefighters Monday constructed two miles of contingency fire line at the southwest end of Stagman
Canyon to prevent the fire
that has been burning in the
north end of the Canyon
from leaving the steep,
forested canyon. The fire is
being pushed southward by
cold, terrain-driven winds
during the night that flow
down the western flank of
Mount Adams. The firefighters will continue to strengthen and secure fire lines
today.
Operations Section chief
CONTRIBUTED: DARLISA BLACK, WWW.STARLISA.NET
Mark Sigrist said firefighters will work Monday to tie FIRE UNDER THE STARS The Cascade Creek Fire, eight miles north of Mt. Adams, lights up the sky in this picture taken last week.
the fire line into Cascade
northern and northeastern
Creek and widen the fire line tions because of drier air direction and come from the out the area.
Command of the fire was perimeters of the fire are at
along a road corridor by aloft. “This weather pattern east. “Things will get a lot
falling trees and clearing the raises the relative humidity drier out there on Wednes- assumed at 6 a.m. Monday by the timberline of Mount
adjacent ground of fuels. during the morning and day and Thursday as temper- Larry Nickey, incident com- Adams where, at 6,200 feet,
Sigrist said several falling early afternoon so intro- atures increase and relative mander for the Washington there are few or no forest
bosses are providing essen- duced fire cannot consume humidity drops, allowing for Interagency Incident Man- fuels.
Firefighters have begun
tial direction and observing all of the fuels,” he ex- good, thorough burning,” he agement Team 4.
The fire lines along the to mop up along the south
said.
the tree falling and chipping plained.
More than 450 firefighters souther n and easter n perimeter. The highest pri“When the humidity
operations.
Taking advantage of a drops around 2 p.m., we get a are now fighting the 13,727- perimeter of the fire area ority continues to be, accordshort, three-hour burning brief chance to burn-out acre Cascade Creek Fire are now secure. Several ing to Nickey, keeping the
window, firefighters also fuels. The window of oppor- burning in heavy timber pockets of fuels continue to fire from moving east onto
burned out an area inside tunity closes around 5 p.m. along the west flank of smolder in the Aiken Lava the Yakama Nation, state
Mount Adams, eight miles Bed. Nearly 27 miles of fire and private lands or to conthe fire perimeter yesterday. as the sun sets.”
According to Warner, fire- north of Trout Lake. The hose have been lain through- tiguous forestlands northFire behavior specialist
Dean Warner said today the fighters will get more of a major hazards faced by the out the fire as firefighters east of the Mountain.
Most of the fire is burnmoist, marine air mass that chance later this week to firefighters, according to use water to mop up inside
pushes in from the Pacific complete critical burnout Sigrist, are the many dead established fire lines along
See Fire, Page 2
Ocean is kept at lower eleva- operations as winds change and burned snags through- the southern perimeter. The
2 —September 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CANDIDATES from Page 1
CANDIDATES ON QUESTIONS: Jim Sizemore (left) and Joe
Sellers.
how to keep a budget, and interest but “you can’t please
growing up on a farm pro- all of the people all of the
duced old-fashioned common time” and I would never say
that I could.
sense.
3. Klickitat County is my
In early years I learned
that the shortest distance be- home and has been for 35
tween two points is a straight years. My wife Nancy and I
line. I believe a straight line raised out two children here.
in government would be of Our son is part of our farm
and ranching operation and
great benefit.
4. That improvements to out daughter teaches in Wilson Creek. My wife
the quality of life in
is retired from
our county in variteaching 32 years in
ous ways were
the Centerville
made.
“Leading is
School. I have
Jim Sizemore:
done by
served on several
1. The Board of listening. ‘Of
committees and
County Commis- the people, by
boards in the past.
sioners is a shared the people, for
Such as 15 years on
leadership role.
the people.’”
the Central KlickiEach Commissiontat Conservation
er brings their par—Joe Sellers
District, eight years
ticular areas of exon the Board of
pertise and experiEqualization, two
ence to the Board to
years as president
help develop the
policy of the County and to of the Klickitat County Livesteer the County in the right stock Growers, past chair of
direction into the future. My the Land and Natural Reexperience in the past with sources Advisory Committee,
the Board of Commissioners, and two years as the state
as a citizen and as a represen- president of the Washington
Cattlemen’s Associtative of a group, is
ation. I have dealt
the Commissioners
with budgets, testigave me plenty of
“I believe I can
fied before the State
time to voice my
effectively
Le gislature, and
concerns on issues
represent the
conducted meetings
that affect ted me
County’s
at the state level. I
and the people I interest, but
believe this experirepresented. As a
‘you can’t
ence will help me to
commissioner I please all the
be strong and effecwould do the same.
people all the
tive county commis2. I believe my time.’”
sioner.
background in land
4. I hope to be reand natural re—Jim Sizemore
membered as a comsource issues and
missioner
who
my support of energy development, responsible worked hard for his county
growth, maintenance and im- determining the right thing
provement of county infra- to do and then doing it.
I would like to remind
structure, and the need of a
balanced budget will help me everyone that the voters’ pamdetermine a lot of the needs phlet is online at the County
of the citizens and citizen Auditor’s website and in the
input will make me aware of library in Goldendale and
others. I believe I can effec- White Salmon.
tively represent the County’s
FIRE from Page 1
ing in mixed forests types—
primarily in subalpine fir
with Douglas-fir, lodgepole
pine, Engelmann spruce, and
Pacific silver fir, many of
which are dead or dying from
spruce budworm, bark beetles, and other insect infestations. The forests contain
large, down and standing
fuels that are extremely dry
and burn with intensity. The
fire is 40 percent contained.
Today, operations personnel are scouting Forest Road
070 as a potential contingency
line along the west perimeter
of the fire. Here, firefighters
may begin burning out within two days.
Resource specialists from
the Yakama Nation, USDA
Forest Service and Washington Department of Natural
Resources assessed the work
done inside the fire are and
along the perimeter, and are
presently compiling their
findings and formulating recommendations for rehabilitation for Fire officials today.
Three engines will patrol and
monitor nighttime movement
of the fire tonight.
Sixteen ground crews, supported by engines and water
tenders, are focusing their efforts along the wester n
perimeter of the fire today,
burning out fuels, cutting
down dangerous snags and
mopping up hot spots.
The main objective of fire
suppression operations this
week, Sigrist said, is to contain the fire as safely and
quickly as possible before it
has a chance to escape fire
lines.
TOWN from Page 1
HAUGEN from Page 1
tery room and kiln; a
youth area; an office for
the Small Business Development
Center;
a
kitchen; and a general art
area.
No location has been
determined for the project as yet, though discussion centered primarily
on placing it near the
Goldendale pool.
Other speakers included Klickitat County Commissioner Dave Sauter,
Goldendale Mayor Clint
Baze, Goldendale City
Administrator Larry Bellamy, and Lori Anderson
from Parks and Rec.
Sauter discussed the
general health of the
county, which he reported to be generally good,
especially in comparison
to many other counties.
He was asked about
the impact of revaluations of wind farms by
the county assessor and
said it was something
they would have to watch.
“I’d rather see the windmills assessed on revenue,” he said. Presently
assessment is on a depreciation scale which could
place a greater burden on
certain tax districts.
Baze reported that the
city of Goldendale had a
successful Festival of
Wheels, with many participants saying they
found much to enjoy
about the city and the
surrounding area.
“Some went up to the
Observatory,” he said.
“Some found out about
the Huey Lewis concert
at Maryhill Winery and
had a great time there.”
Bellamy gave a brief
summary of some city
projects and pointed out
the process for setting the
city’s 2012 budget was
coming up soon with a series of meetings to set
preliminary and final
budgets.
Anderson addressed
some concerns in the
community over why the
pool doesn’t stay open
longer than it does.
“A lot of people wonder why we aren’t open in
the winter. ‘You’ve got
that dome, so what’s the
problem?’ It takes a lot of
money to heat the pool,”
she said. “And any time
it’s open, the law requires
us to have two lifeguards
at all times. We can’t always do that.”
Anderson reported
that the recent Golden
Man Triathlon had a very
successful first year, with
a good turnout and a lot
of enthusiasm.
“We’ve got the Polar
Plunge coming up, too,”
she said. “Get ready. It
starts right on time, and
it’s over very quickly, so
you want to get there as
early as you can.”
troops home.”
Questioned about health
care, Haugen said he supports Obamacare. “The Affordable Healthcare Act is
the technical name for Obamacare,” he said. “I do support it, for a number of reasons. It actually saves us
money. There are actually
people who are getting
checks back from their insurance company this year;
$2 billion are being sent
back to people who paid for
their health care. The reason why is because of that
law, the health care insurance companies have to
spent 85 cents of your premium of every dollar you
send them. Because of that
they’re not spending 85
cents, and they have to rebate you what they’re not
spending.”
While many of his
stands on the issues are
completely within the sanctioned platform of the Democratic Party, Haugen
himself has not been endorsed by the Party.
“That stems from my opposition to something that
you may not think affects
you which is the Columbia
River crossing, which is a
plan to build a new bridge
and light rail system over I5,” Haugen said. The project would cost close to $4
billion and would tear
down the two existing
bridges over the Columbia
River and build a new eightlane bridge that Haugen
said “would be a monstrosity.”
“The money we could
use to tear down those
bridges, we could use to upgrade the bridges” he said.
“This is one area my opponent and I disagree on.
She’s in favor of tolling; I
look at as a ‘freeway.’ The
reason it’s called a freeway
is because it’s free. She
thinks that that’s fine. I
look at it and say, “Let’s
save three billion dollars,
let’s not have a toll lane because we’ll have about 62
thousand cars go across I5
right now.
Haugen’s position on the
bridge issue put him
sharply at odds with the Democratic establishment,
which has yet to embrace
his candidacy. Asked if that
also reflected on the Party’s
assessment of his electability, Haugen responded, “No.
It really doesn’t have to do
with electability. It has to do
with [the fact that] I dared
to speak against [this
issue.] It was driven by Rep.
Jim Mohler, who spoke out
against me at the State Democratic meeting in June.
“So for those reasons I
broke with my party. Basically the Columbia River
Crossing is their baby, and I
said their baby is ugly.”
Quick arrests made in
case of stolen pick-up
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
A sharp eye by a local man
led to quick resolution of a
stolen vehicle complaint and
had the bonus of wrapping up
several other crimes. On Sept.
18 at 8 a.m., Goldendale Police
were called to Three Mountain Village apartments for a
reported stolen vehicle. A
blue Toyota pickup with
green canopy was stolen
sometime during the night
along with tools that were in
the back of the vehicle. That
afternoon, police received a
call about a stolen car dolly
that was seen being towed behind a vehicle heading south
on Pipeline Road. A local man
was pursuing the vehicle and
managed to stop it and another vehicle just south of the
Little Klickitat River. When
police arrived they recognized the second vehicle as
being the stolen Toyota, except the canopy was missing.
The lead vehicle was a pickup
with a load of tools in the
back. When the owner of the
pickup was called to identify
the vehicle, he also noticed
his tools in the back of the
other pickup. In addition to
his tools, police have been
able to identify several other
items from other burglaries.
Ar rests were made of
Michael Hall, 41 from Yakima
and Michael Newman, 35
from Wapato. Both men have
been charged with theft of a
motor vehicle.
The case highlights the
need for the public to be
aware that thieves are active
in the area. In the case of the
tools, police advise people to
have them engraved and take
pictures of your property to
help with recovery. Without
some identifying markings, it
becomes difficult to return
stolen property and even
more so when people fail to
report when their property is
stolen. All serial numbers
should also be kept and vehicles and buildings should always be kept locked, although
in this case, the thieves used a
filed down key to steal the
Toyota.
There have been seven burglaries reported within Goldendale during September as
well as theft of bicycles and
gasoline or diesel fuel. Diesel
has been particularly popular
among thieves lately and they
prefer vehicles with high
clearance which allows them
to get gas cans under the vehicle. In some cases, plastic
gas tanks have been punctured or gas lines cut. Vehicles in dark, unattended areas
are prime targets.
In another case last week,
police arrested Joshua Parks,
19, on felony theft of a
firearm, third degree theft
and vehicle prowl. A vehicle
was broken into on the 100
block of west Burgen on the
morning of Sept. 19, and a 40
caliber pistol, magazine and
camera were stolen. Police
were called when a man saw a
person matching Parks’ description drop something in
his yard. Police found the
magazine for the pistol in the
yard and found another person who identified Parks as
being in the area at the time.
Police searched Parks’ home
and were unable to find any of
the items. Parks says he was
at home at the time people
claimed to have seen him.
THIS WEEK’S MOST WANTED: Goldendale Police are
looking for Joshua James Henry. Henry, 35, is wanted for
telephone harassment. Henry is 6-feet tall with green eyes
and red hair possibly with a shaved head.
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 — 3
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
H OMETOWN
OBITUARIES
Crystal McCulloch
Crystal Kay “Hill” McCulloch, 40, of Loyal Hannah,
Pa., died Sept. 21, 2012.
She was born Feb. 17, 1972.
Crystal graduated from Goldendale High School in 1992.
Survivors include her hus-
band, Charles McCulloch;
her mother, Carol Floyd; a
brother, Shawn Hill; a sister,
Nondy Street, and numerous
nieces, nephews and many
loved ones.
OBITUARY POLICY
Death notices are free and will be run one time in The Sentinel, but specific guidelines must be followed. The deceased's name, date of birth and death, arrangements
and service information will be published without charge.
Local obituaries are considered paid notices and are welcomed from families or funeral homes; costs run at set fees according to length/word guidelines. Your chosen funeral homes can be very helpful in determining which style and length is needed for any
particular obituary. Family members are welcome to contact The Sentinel office for the
same assistance. The Sentinel will not edit these submissions unless requested by the
family. A single half-column photo is offered free of charge. A fee will be assessed for a
second photo.
Obituaries and memorials requiring bordering, special type fonts and large or multiple photographs are designated as display advertising, handled by the advertising staff
of The Sentinel and not the editor. Please contact the advertising department of The
Sentinel or your funeral director for further information. All obituaries, regardless of
length, will be offered on-line at no additional charge shortly after publication. Please
refer to our on-line edition at: www.goldendalesentinel.com
LOOKING BACK
September 26, 2012
25 Years Ago – September 17, 1987
• The Klickitat County Building Department issued a
total of 33 building permits in the month of August for a
total to date of 225, according to information released recently. Total project valuation for the month was $551,225,
the 1987 total to date is $7,269,429.
50 Years Ago – September 20, 1962
• New home of Mayson Furniture Company opened
this week, on Columbus Avenue at the south city limit.
The 6,000 square foot building is of concrete block construction with wood-truss roof and features a glass wall
east front. It was built by Harold Blake Construction and
Goldendale Ready-Mix (Vay Godbey). [Today this building
serves as the Goldendale City Offices.]
75 Years Ago – September 30, 1937
• To George Kida, 22 year old American born Japanese
of White Salmon, goes the honor for being the first of his
country men ever to serve on a Klickitat County jury, for
the recent Superior Court term. It was believed here that
one or two Japanese may have been summoned for jury
duty, but that none were sworn to serve. Kida, one of the
more prominent Japanese located in the First District, is
the son of a truck gardener near White Salmon and is a
graduate of the Columbia Union High School.
Compiled by Jean Allyn Smeltzer,
of the Klickitat County Historical Society.
People helping
People offers
auto services to
single moms
“Single Moms Oil Change”
took place Sunday, Sept. 16,
and was a resounding success.
Seventeen single moms
had their car’s oil changed,
new oil and air filters added,
the interior cleaned, windows
washed, carpet vacuumed
and the exterior washed.
People Helping People, a
ministry of the Seventh-day
Adventist church, furnished
the manpower to do the cleaning, washing and provided
food and snacks for everyone.
The business community
in Goldendale has been very
supportive of this event. Carquest and Napa have furnished, free of charge, the oil
and air filters. Hometown
Pizza has furnished a free
pizza, and this year the Gen-
THANK YOU!: Jessica and Austin benefitted from the annual
Single Moms Oil Change service, offered by the Seventh-day
Adventists’ People Helping People ministry.
eral Store helped supply leave.
The women were very apsome of the little “goodies”
that are gift bagged and preciative of this free sergiven to the women as they vice.
Ogden to present slide show at library
Dr. James Ogden and mem- slideshow of their optometric at 7 p.m., at the Goldendale
bers of his optometric mis- mission trip to Cambodia and Community Library.
Slides will include scenery
sion team will present a photo Vietnam on Thursday, Oct. 4,
as well as images of the people and culture of Southeast
Asia. The show will feature
photographs depicting the
volunteers’ humanitarian aid
efforts, offering eye clinics at
the Khmer Christian Orphanage in Cambodia and Charity
Clinic Center, Tan Hiep, Vietnam.
Each year, Ogden travels
with a team of volunteers to
different places around the
world to provide eye care to
peoples in need. Members of
this year’s optometric mission included Dr. David Reimche-Vu, Betty Zesiger, John
Miller, Gabriel Wilson, Penny
OPTOMETRIC AND DENTAL MISSION: A contingent of
Goldendale folk spent time in Cambodia and Vietnam, where they
provided eye exams and dental
exams
Dyche, Nathan and Micah
Reimche-Vu, Luynh Tran, as
well as Ogden.
This program is free and
open to the public. For more
information, call the library,
773-4487.
4 — SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
O PINION
LOU MARZELES, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
KAREN HENSLEE, GENERAL MANAGER
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN, REPORTER/SPORTS
A community center? Just
wait a few minutes now
A 21,000-square-foot community center in Goldendale?
First reaction: cool. The myth that there’s nothing to do in Goldendale is dying quickly and deservedly in recent years, as a glance
at The Sentinel’s calendar of events will readily reveal. A community center with just about everything in it but a squash court—or
is that coming later?—would be the final
nail in the coffin of that lame lament.
But wait a minute. It’ll cost $4.2 million to
build? Let’s check our collective petty cash
Lou Marzeles,
drawer. Nope, can’t do it.
Editor
But wait another minute. Most of it
would come from public and private grants?
Other people’s money? Ah, that’s better.
But hold on just one more second there. A
million to come from general obligation
bonds? We like bonding, but this kind is really sticky when it carries $90,000 payments.
But wait again. Could it actually happen? We could be back to
cool if the funding actually makes sense and comes about.
LETTERS
Is same-sex marriage a civil right?
Where are the
trash cans?
Those trying to redefine marriage say it’s a civil rights issue. Lots of
people agree. And once someone believes it’s a civil rights issue, it’s hard
to oppose. After all, who opposes civil rights? We’re Americans.
But what do people actually mean when they say that same-sex marriage is a civil rights issue? Do they mean that people have the right to
marry anyone they want? Definitely not.
While there are a few genuinely crazy people in the world, virtually no
one believes siblings should be able to marry each other or adults should
be able to marry 14-year-olds. A few more people think you should be able
to marry multiple people, but that’s still a very small minority.
Therefore, as a general principle, we can agree that not every imaginable relationship should be called a marriage just because two people say
they love each other.
“But that’s different,” one might say. “There are actually good reasons
those people can’t get married.”
Maybe so. That’s obviously part of the conversation.
But once you have conceded that not every imaginable relationship should be called a marriage, you
are conceding that there is no civil right to marry
anyone you want.
Guest
To clarify, people do have a constitutional right to
Commentary
get married. But the idea that people have a constiJoseph
tutional right to declare any relationship they might
find themselves involved in a marriage is legally unBackholm,
supportable.
Executive
That isn’t to say that same-sex couples aren’t entiDirector,
tled to go to the legislature and make the case that
Family Policy
their relationships deserve to be included under the
definition of the term marriage. That is precisely
Institute
what they’ve done. But making the case as a matter
of policy is very different than claiming entitlement
as a civil right.
So now that we have clarified that this is not a civil rights issue, we have
to answer the real question addressed by Referendum 74. That is, whether
it makes sense to say that there is no difference between same-sex and opposite sex relationships.
This is a much more difficult case to make for those trying to redefine
marriage because there are obvious, unalterable differences.
Every kindergartener can tell you that those relationships are different
because kindergartners know the difference between men and women.
Furthermore, every adult can tell you that this difference is meaningful.
It’s impossible to be alive long without developing an awareness of the fact
that there are innate differences between the genders. That’s why there are
industries built around the fact that “Men are from Mars, women are from
Venus.” Not only do we spend significant time at cocktail parties joking
about those differences, we also recognize that those differences matter to
kids. Fathers can do their absolute best with the purest of motives, but they
can never be their child’s mother.
But to believe that a relationship involving people of the same sex is no
different than relationships of the opposite sex, you must believe that men
and women are interchangeable in every meaningful way.
The majority of those who say they support same-sex marriage don’t
agree with the logic of same-sex marriage. Most people haven’t really
thought through it because they’re still stuck on “it’s a civil right.” I am
convinced that the majority of those who support same-sex marriage do so
in an attempt to prove they don’t hate gay people.
Of course it’s a good thing not to hate gay people. We shouldn’t hate anyone.
But in the process of not hating gay people, we shouldn’t lose the intellectual capacity to recognize what is obvious: not every relationship is a
marriage just because people claim to love each other, and relationships
that provide a child a mother and father are uniquely valuable.
THE GOLDENDALE SENTINEL
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER FOR GOLDENDALE AND KLICKITAT COUNTY, WA
ESTABLISHED 1879 • PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY FROM OFFICES AT
117 W. MAIN • GOLDENDALE, WA 98620
TELEPHONE (509) 773-3777 • FAX (509) 773-4737
EMAIL: (NEWS, EDITORIAL, LETTERS)
[email protected]; OR
(ADS, COMMUNITIES, HOMETOWN)
[email protected]
THE GOLDENDALE SENTINEL STAFF
HEIDI MCCARTY, AD DESIGN
RACHEL OLP, AD SALES
FROM THE
To the Editor:
After enjoying my run at the
high school track, I noticed a lot of
bottles, mostly Mountain Dew.
There was some trash, too, from
popcorn and hotdogs. But what
bothers me is the trash cans and
how they are not brightly labeled. I
believe this would be a great project
for the children to figure out.
Hayley M. Cisneros
Centerville
They had help
To the Editor:
When Rep. Jamie Herrera Beutler speaks to groups, she asks if our
grandparents and parents provided
a better quality of life for the following generation. The crowd always answers yes. Then she asks
her listeners if they are going to be
able to do the same. Most say no.
[Goldendale Sentinel, Sept. 5, 2012.]
I would answer in the same way, but
I would question the implication
that our forebears did it all on their
own.
When we look at the history of
those who lived through the Great
Depression, we see that two and a
half million people were given a
helping hand by the Civilian Conservation Corps. Social Security
began (in the early years many people were helped by this without having yet paid much into the program); also Home Owner's Loan
Corporation, which prevented
many foreclosures; the Public
Works Administration, which built
infrastructure, reforested, and reduced flooding. A food stamps program and minimum wage were
begun. Many programs, for example, Rural Electrification and Federal Crop Insurance, were directed
to farmers whose earnings had
been gravely depressed since the
1920s.
World War II resulted in massive
industrial expansion and employment. A large debt was incurred
but paid off quickly during the ensuing prosperity. The G.I. Bill allowed many to attend college without incurring crippling debt. Thirty-year mortgages helped them to
buy homes. Labor unions improved
COMMUNITY
wages and safety.
Republicans Dwight Eisenhower
and Richard Nixon continued and
added to these policies. The interstate highway system is one. Our
air and water quality, food and drug
safety improved due to government
action. Medicare secured health
care for the elderly and handicapped.
This is not a complete list of the
government programs that were in
place during the Great Depression
and the following years. But it does
give us something to think about at
a time when the economy has been
going through the worst recession
since the 1930s. Would our parents,
grandparents, great-grandparents
have done as well if these programs
had not been in place? Is government really the enemy? Is our representative ignorant of this history
or just ignoring it?
Judy Thomas
Goldendale
Towers’ collapse
might have been
controlled
To the Editor:
Architects and Engineers for 9/11
Truth, recently in Hood River for
an excellent presentation during
the week of events commemorating
9/11, conclude that the Twin Towers and Building 7 had to be the result of a controlled demolition.
Their goal is to reopen investigation.
Common sense, in which seeing
a building pancake down and stay
on its footprint, would lead one to
believe that the buildings were
taken down by explosives. Images
of buildings being blown up are familiar, especially in action movies
and occasionally on TV news. Yet a
large population of the U.S. still believes the official version of the
9/11 tragedy.
A&E’s video 9/11: Explosive-Experts Speak Out presents a wealth of
new physical evidence, such as
rivers of molten iron spewing from
the towers, computer models of
building collapse, and most compelling, side-by-side images of the
Twin Towers’ nine- and 12-second
collapses with a verifiable controlled demolition.
It only makes sense to have a
wider audience relook at this important issue. Check out
AE911Truth.org. Watch their video.
Come to your own conclusion.
Linda Kanzinger
Timber Valley, Wash.
Give the baby a
chance
To the Editor:
Roz Luther’s letter regarding a
women’s right to choose was very
upsetting to me and one that I cannot pass commenting on.
As an adoptee, I am forever
grateful that my birth mother chose
to not have an abortion. She gave
me up for adoption to loving parents who longed for children. The
statement made regarding seven
billion people in the world and stating who would we miss: I believe
that I would be missed if not being
born, and my children would be
greatly missed as well.
Birth mothers who choose adoption give up nine months of their
lives to give their child a whole lifetime to live. What right do they
have to make that choice of life for
someone else? I believe it is the
baby’s right to choose, and since
that baby does not have a voice, we
need to give that baby his or her
right to live their life.
Roz Luther stated that “many
adopted children feel anguish the
public never knows.” What about
the anguish that a mother feels
when she has had an abortion? I, as
an adoptee have not felt anguish but
thankfulness to a mother who
thought more about someone else’s
life then her own.
There are many parents who
would like to fill their homes with
children. These children are wanted and will be loved. I was loved by
my birth mother, and I am loved by
my parents. Please don’t imply that
adopted children are not wanted,
because they are and they will be
loved and cared for. Over a million
babies are aborted every year in
America yet at the same time over a
million parents are waiting for a
child to love and raise as their own.
Lynn Parrish
Goldendale
Next Java Talk: Friday, Oct. 5, 8 a.m., Golden Coyote Coffee
GUIDELINES FOR LETTERS
Deadlines:
News and Letters:
Noon Friday
Display Advertising:
5 p.m. Friday
Classified Advertising:
Noon Monday
Legal Notices:
5 p.m. Monday
Subscriptions:
1 Year, 2 Years
Goldendale Carrier:
$26, $40
In Klickitat County:
$32, $52
Outside Klickitat County:
$42, $75
USPS 2213-6000 WEEKLY. Periodical postage paid at Goldendale Post
Office, Goldendale, Wash. 98620. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Goldendale Sentinel, 117 W. Main St. Goldendale, WA 98620-9526.
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.
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 — 5
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
C OMMUNIT Y
Lyle athletic boosters offer prime rib dinner Fun ride cancelled
It’s getting to be that time any time. Articles needed
again. Articles, event no- about upcoming events, uptices, etc are being compiled dates on your organization’s
for the next issue of Lyle’s doings, creative writing, poquarterly newsletter, To The etry, photographs, etc. would
Point which is due out Oct 1, be appreciated. Contribuand is distributed to the tions from students in the el“What’s Happening in Lyle” ementary, middle or high
school too. This is
e-mailing list. If
Lyle’s newsletter.
you are not getting
Glenda Lovejoy
weekly updates of
been essential
“What’s HappenLyle News has
in managing the
ing in Lyle,” then
layout and some
you are not on the
Mildred Lykens
editing. If any
list. If you would
edits are done to
like to be added,
your piece, she
you can send your
will send it back
request
to
[email protected]. to you for approval first.
To subsidize the high
Your email address will not
be shared with anyone else, school/middle school athletor be used for anything other ic program, the Lyle Cougars
than to inform you about Booster Club is hosting a
events or issues in our com- prime rib dinner on Thursmunity. You may request to day, Oct. 4, from 5 p.m. to 7
be removed from the list at p.m.. Dinner will be in the
multi-purpose room of the
Lyle School and tickets are
available through Tria
Bullard at (541) 980-2488. Confirm your alumni spirit by
supporting the sports and activities that expresses
Cougar Pride.
Are you a homesteader?
Interested in learning more
about homesteading? Just
looking for old-fashioned
family fun? This is the place!
Join the Northwest Homesteaders Fair on Saturday,
Sept. 29, for a full day of
workshops and fun family activities! Free admission! Free
kids activities! Free workshops! Also during this event
held at the activity center, the
Twin Bridges Museum, just a
block to the east is planning
on having a fundraiser of
snow-cones and their last
yard sale of the summer.
Election day is getting closer,
registration deadline Oct. 8
There was a lot of useful community center in town
information given to the with a conceptual layout and
possible financing
crowd at last
estimates.
week’s Towne Hall
City Adminismeeting that was
trator, Larry Belsponsored by the
Hear’s
talked of the
Greater GoldenGoldendale lamy
grant of $24,000 for
dale Area Champerforming a feasiber of Commerce.
Diana
bility study for the
Klickitat County
Notestine
community center.
C o m m i s s i o n e r,
Lori Anderson
Dave Sauter spoke
also updated us on
on the financial
condition of the county, the Central Klickitat Park
which is in pretty good shape. and Rec District’s present and
Mayor of Goldendale, Clint near future operations of the
Baze spoke of the potential of Goldendale pool and the trail.
Lastly, Chamber President,
tourism in Goldendale and
possible tours of the town, Tom Ireland gave the group
an update.
highlighting area wineries.
The grange ladies provided
The newly formed Community Center Committee’s us with ice cream sundaes
chair man, Ray LaFond, and also brownies from ‘Bake
brought the crowd up to date My Day’.
Voter registration deadline
on the progress of a possible
is Oct. 8 for online, mail-in
registrations and address
changes. Pamphlets will be
mailed out on Oct. 15 with the
ballots following on Oct. 19.
Election Day is Nov. 6, so just
be sure to vote.
The Senior Center’s
newsletter has a medication
tip of the month: Prescription
medications can interact with
one another, resulting in medication side effects and dangerous reactions. Make sure
that your doctor knows about
all prescription and over-thecounter drugs, herbal supplements, and even vitamins and
minerals that you take so that
he can point out any potential
interactions and change
drugs as needed.
Please send your articles to
[email protected].
A venue for local artists is
open with an Oct. 31 deadline
for applications. It’s the seventh annual Gorge Artists
Open Studios. This annual
juried event is an opportunity for artists living in the Columbia River Gorge to grow
their marketing by opening
their studios to the public
during the weekend of April
12, 13, and 14, 2013.
Applications are available
to download online at:
www.gorgeartists.org, contact: John Maher (541) 4780171.
Submit your news to: Mildred Lykens: 365-0060 –
[email protected].
Brown completes
basic training
Air Force Air man
Montana C. Brown graduated from basic military
training at Lackland Air
Force Base, San Antonio,
Texas.
The airman completed
an intensive, eight-week
program that included
training in military discipline and studies, Air
Force core values, physical fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills.
Airmen who complete
basic training earn four
credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air
Force.
Brown is the son of
Barbara Boushey of
Goldendale, and cousin of
Michael Stalcup of Richland.
He is a 2011 graduate of
Hanford High School,
Richland.
due to fire danger;
blood drive at
school Oct. 4
Lois Dechand and family would like to thank everyone for
making Harry’s 80th birthday party last Saturday such a nice
event! Many family members and friends gathered at the
Hood River Alliance Church to celebrate Harry’s special day.
It was a great chance to visit, share old stories and enjoy a
wonderful meal. Lois is also very appreciative of the moral
support she’s received from community members. We wish
you the best, Lois!
Please note a slight deviation in schedule for Bingo this month. It will be held
Friday, Sept. 28, rather than Oct. 5, at 7
Glenwood
p.m. at the Glenwood Grange.
News
The Tenth Annual Fun Prize Ride that
was scheduled for Sunday, Sept. 30 has
Glenwood
been cancelled this year. The woods have
Homemakers
been closed due to extreme fire danger –
so the ride was cancelled. Plans are to
schedule the next ride for the last Sunday
in September, 2013.
The Glenwood School has organized their annual Red Cross
blood drive for Thursday, Oct. 4, in the multi-purpose Room.
You may schedule your appointment from 1 p.m. through 5:45
p.m. by contacting Bridget McLaughlin at 364-3438. Please remember to take your photo identification; and to drink a lot of
water that day and the day before. Homemade soup, cookies
and coffee will be available after you donate blood!
It isn’t too late to buy your raffle tickets for a beautiful kingsize quilt. Glenwood Grange members will continue selling
raffle tickets until the end of the Glenwood Fall Bazaar. The
winning raffle ticket will be drawn at 3 p.m. on Oct. 13 as the
bazaar draws to a close. The person with the winning ticket
will win the beautiful quilt made and donated by Rhonda
Spies. Proceeds from the ticket sales will benefit the Glenwood
Grange’s improvement and repair fund.
Be sure to mark your calendar for Tuesday, Oct. 16. A candidates’ night will be held during the monthly Community
Council meeting beginning at 7 p.m. at the Glenwood Grange.
Several candidates have responded that they will be attending;
while others have sent a printed message to be shared. The
event format will include speeches by candidates – followed by
a question and answer period. Please contact Terry at 364-3371
for information.
Coming events:
Oct. 13: Third Annual Glenwood Fall Bazaar at the school
from 9 a.m. through 3 p.m.
Oct. 17: Candidates’ Night during the Glenwood Community Council meeting at the Grange at 7 p.m.
6 —September 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
Pig Bowl to benefit
Goldendale woman’s
fight against cancer
stride. Cody, 14, and Crysta,
12, help make my life so full of
Every year, someone in the joy,” she said. “I have parents
area who is struggling with who have put their life on
the burden of heavy medical pause to be there every mobills gets a helping hand from ment when I need them and I
a community tradition have so many more family
known as the Pig Bowl, and and friends who do the same.
Karen Warren, of Goldendale During this difficult time, I
has been announced as this am blessed to know that there
is also a community who
year’s recipient.
Warren, a mother of two cares. God is so good in my
children ages 12 and 14, is cur- life and I know He blesses and
rently being treated for Stage only has good in store.”
The type of journey War4 melanoma. All of the money
raised at the Pig Bowl, a foot- ren is going through is extremely
ball game behard on
tween Washington and “Cody, 14, and Crysta, 12, help the family
finances,
Oregon law make my life so full of joy.”
which is
enforcement
teams comKaren Warren why she
was choing up on
sen as the
Sept. 29, will
go to help her pay the costs as- recipient of the money raised
in this year’s Pig Bowl. Last
sociated with her treatment.
Warren’s journey started year’s event raised $19,454 for
when she noticed a lump be- the family of Gretchen
hind her collarbone in Febru- McCoy, who was diagnosed
ary. According to the message with an aggressive form of
she wrote for the Pig Bowl breast cancer while pregnant
website, she hoped it would go with the McCoys’ youngest.
This year’s event will be
away on its own, but as a
nurse she knew that after two Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. on the footweeks and growing discom- ball field at the Wahtonka
fort it was time to get the campus, with tickets going for
lump checked out. Doctors $3 a person or $10 a family. For
couldn’t get a clear diagnosis more information about the
from biopsies and Warren event or to make an advance
visitwww.pig
ended up having a racket-ball- donation
sized mass removed from her bowl.net.
shoulder and diagnosed as
melanoma.
The abdominal scan right
before her surgery revealed
another mass on her spine,
which quickly grew painful.
Soon doctors discovered several lesions on her brain, upgrading the melanoma diagnosis to Stage 4.
In her Pig Bowl message
she described all of the visits
required just to determine
what type of treatment will
work best in her situation — a
trip to radiation oncology to
decide between focal and general radiation and a trip to
medication oncology to decide on what medications she
should be taking, for example.
“These ‘meet and greets’
take all day trips to OHSU,
your family on hold, your
work on hold, day by day, moment by moment decisions. It
is overwhelming and tiring
and requires a lot of prayer
and strength from God,” she
wrote.
She has since gone through
radiation to her back and
brain and is now in the medication phase, although she
still may need surgery on her
back.
“I have two wonderful children who take each day in
Homesteading skills
taught at fair in Lyle
JADE MCDOWELL
GORGE NEWS REPORT
LORI HULL
SOME WILD HORSE: Dan McCarty, of Goldendale leads a
“wild” horse to a gate. McCarty was southbound about 10
miles south of Toppenish when he saw the horse eating along
the roadside. “I thought I would shoo her off,” said McCarty,
but she walked up to me. Another passerby, Lori Hull, gave
McCarty a rope to replace his belt that he was using to lead
the horse and he walked her through a gate safely away from
the highway. Moments later, according to McCarty, a stallion
came up and bred her.
Fund raising event coming
to the Klickitat Trail
The Lyle Activity Center
and Klickitat Youth Center
are joining forces on the
Klickitat Trail Nov. 3, to
benefit the youth of both
towns with a 5k run and
walk plus half marathon.
The event will be hosted by
the Columbia Gorge Running Club and is set to start
with assembly at 8:30 a.m.
at the Klickitat Community
Center. Participants will be
shuttled to two different
starting points with half
marathoners starting at the
trail head in Lyle and the 5k
runners and walkers starting from Pitt. Both groups
will begin the race at 10
a.m. Festivities will continue following the run with
awards and food in Klickitat. Entry fees are: $30 for
the half-marathon, $10 for
the 5k and $15 for an optional tee shirt. Children 12 and
under may participate at no
charge. Day of race registration will be charged an
added $5. Pre-registration
is due by Oct. 27. Registrations can be made by going
to lyleactivitycenter.com.
Lyle is the place to be this Saturday for the first Northwest
Homesteading Fair. The fair will be held at the Lyle Activity
Center and park on the north side of SR14 from morning to
night.
The Fair is a family event with workshops and vendors covering all aspects of a self-reliant lifestyle. There will be workshops on beekeeping, canning, soap making, cheese making,
solar and wind power, growing and using grains, integrating
large and small livestock into the farm, making rag rugs, hand
quilting, blacksmithing and spinning.
Admission to the event and workshops is free. Food and fun
will be part of the event, which organizers hope will become
an annual fair.
Go to nwhomesteadingfair.wordpress.com for workshop details.
Fires create border to
border air quality concern
From Okanogan to Goldendale, air quality presently in Central Washington is “unhealthy” for people of all ages, according to Washington Department of Ecology.
In Ellensburg, Yakima and Moses Lake air quality is unhealthy for sensitive groups and of moderate concern in Goldendale, White Swan, and Walla Walla County.
Residents are advised to take common sense health precautions, consider advisories and alerts from their local health departments and consult with their personal physicians. Schools
and athletic directors should consult with their local health
authorities or medical personnel to determine when to curtail
outdoor activities.
The biggest health threat comes from the fine particles in
smoke. These can cause burning eyes, runny nose, bronchitis
and other illnesses. Smoky air also can aggravate heart and
lung diseases, and even lead to death.
The Washington State Department of Health is providing
answers to frequently asked questions about wildfire smoke at
http://tinyurl.com/8behrqu.
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 - 7
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
S PORTS
TLG edges Bickleton in
five-set match decided
by a 15-13 finale
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
Sunnyside Christian and
TLG got by the first big league
tests for Greater Columbia
Gorge league teams with victories over Klickitat and Bickleton, last week. The Knights
were in Klickitat on Thursday and came away with a
three game sweep, 25-21, 25-18,
25-18. Both teams served well
in the match and their attacks
were coordinated, but Sunnyside Christian had a height
advantage and won the battle
at the net. Kate Newhouse
and Stormee VanBelle were
each credited with six kills.
Nicolle Oldfield led Klickitat
with seven kills.
At Trout Lake, Bickleton
and the Mustang-Eagles
swapped wins and went five
games with TLG coming
away with a narrow 15-13 victory in the final game. The Pirates came ready to play,
jumping on TLG for a 25-19
win. TLG made their statement in game two with a 25-14
win. Bickleton came right
back to take game three 25-22
and TLG forced the fifth game
after a 25-13 win.
Tamaira Huffsmith was
the big gun for TLG with 11
kills, but the attack was diverse with Chelsea Cox scoring on eight kills and Dakota
Jones knocking down seven.
Cox was credited with 25 assists while Jones led the team
See Volleyball, Page 16
High School Scoreboard
9/21
9/18
9/20
9/18
9/20
9/21
9/22
Football
Cle Elum-Roslyn 45 Goldendale 14
Soccer
Connell 14
Goldendale 1
Naches Valley 10 Goldendale 0
Volleyball
Goldendale 3 La Salle 0
Dufur at Lyle-Wishram - no report
TLG 3 Columbia Adventists 0
Goldendale 3 Mabton 0
Sunnyside Christian 3 Klickitat 0
TLG 3 Yakama Tribal 0
TLG 3 Bickleton 2
Klickitat 5-4 at So. Wasco tournament
This week’s games
and matches
9/28
9/29
9/25
9/27
9/29
10/2
9/25
9/27
9/28
9/29
10/2
9/27
9/28
9/29
Football
Columbia-Burbank at Goldendale
Gorge Youth League at Goldendale
Soccer
La Salle at Goldendale
Goldendale at Highland
Cle Elum-Roslyn at Goldendale
Granger at Goldendale
Volleyball
Zillah at Goldendale
Lyle-Wishram at Bickleton
TLG at Klickitat
Goldendale at Naches Valley
Lyle-Wishram at Sunnyside Christian
Klickitat at Bickleton
Cle Elum-Roslyn at Goldendale
Granger at Goldendale
Bickleton at Yakama Tribal
Klickitat at Lyle-Wishram
Cross Country
Goldendale at Royal City
Lyle-Wishram at Sorosis Park, TD
Bickleton at Big Cross, Pasco
Always check with the schools before travelling, as
schedules are subject to change.
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
TOUGH DIG: Klickitat’s Sarah Ingebo (left) and KeAndra Kessinger dive for a Sunnyside Christian serve. Sharp serves had both teams diving for balls and the Knights’ big hitters held an edge over the Vandals.
Warriors overun
Timberwolves in
convincing 45-14
win at North Bend
Goldendale got smoked
by Cle Elum-Roslyn 45-14 on
an unusual Saturday game.
The game was scheduled to
be played last Friday, but
smoke forced the game to be
moved. According to Coach
Don Strother, “the information we had was that the
[Yakima] valley and
Wahluke were not options,
so the game was moved to
North Bend.” Indeed, the
Naches Valley versus
Granger game and La Salle
at Highland were moved to
Monday and two other valley games were either
moved or indefinitely postponed. So, Goldendale took
the long trip to North Bend
to play at Mt. Si field and
had a long ride back, arriving in Goldendale around 2
a.m.
The high-powered Warriors took the early lead on a
73-yard bomb from Tyler
Kretschman to Jake Gall
and followed it up with a 1yard Gall run to lead 14-0 at
the end of the first quarter.
Two more running touchdowns finished the first half
with
a
28-0
score.
Kretschman would only
complete one other pass, a
seven yarder to Gall on a 2-4
day. The Warriors didn’t
need to put the ball in the air
as they ground out 381 yards
rushing for the game.
Goldendale, who was
missing starting running
back, Kyle Wilkins with an
arm injury, couldn’t get the
running game going and
were held to just 13 yards
rushing for the game. Lucas
Denney completed 12 of 22
passes, including a fourth
quarter pass to Tim
Bartkowski for a 6-yard
touchdown. Goldendale also
scored on a Bartkowski pass
to Devan McGraw for a 25yard touchdown in the third
quarter.
Goldendale takes on Columbia-Burbank in Goldendale this Friday. The Coyotes
lost to Connell 41-21 last
week and 33-28 in their only
SCAC west game against
Granger. Oct. 5 will be homecoming for the Timbewolves
See Wolves, Page 16
Goldendale undefeated
over long road stretch
Goldendale got by one of
their chief opponents on the
volleyball court with a 3-0 win
over La Salle on the Lightning’s home court last week.
They followed up with another 3-0 win on Thursday at
Mabton to complete a road
streak of 12-0 in league play.
The Lady Timberwolves
won the opener at La Salle 2519 and withstood a barrage of
kill shots narrowly averting
their first game loss of the
season in the second set in
which they trailed the Lightning 24-22. Sawyer Ross
stepped to the service line
and ran off four straight
points, the final coming on an
Allison Hutchins kill for a 2624 win. A demoralized La
Salle made the final set close,
but Goldendale finished the
sweep with a 25-21 win. Bree
Wanderscheid had 42 assists
while Madison Holbrook,
Hutchins and Ross each
scored on 10 kills. The Wolves
had 42 digs in the match, led
by Crysta Counts with 14 and
Ross with 13. Karissa Ihrig
and Wanderscheid combined
for a perfect 26-26 on serves.
Mabton was overpowered
by the Wolves, falling 25-8, 259, 25-9. Wanderscheid had 16
assists and Hutchins led with
eight kills and Jamie Beierle
had seven. Brooke Graff had
two blocks for points and
Sarah Henderson put 20
serves in play without a miss.
Wanderscheid was 27 of 28 on
serves with a team leading
eight aces.
Tuesday
Goldendale
played the other team, Zillah,
who Coach Jodi Bellamy expected to challenge the
Wolves in the home opener.
The Wolves play at Naches on
Thursday and host Cle ElumRoslyn on Saturday. They
complete the first half run
through the league with a
home match against Granger
on Tuesday.
8 — SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 — 9
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
R ECORDS
WHAT’S HAPPENING
On-going
Events
Every Third Monday
•Learn and Play at the Goldendale Primary School cafeteria from 3:15 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Learn and play is a time to
discover fun and learning before kindergarten. 773-3091.
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.
Every Tues., Wed.
& Thurs.
•Kid’s Camp after school program at Goldendale United
Methodist Church. Meets
Tuesdays and Thursdays from
2:50 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and
Wednesdays from 1:45 p.m. to 5
p.m. Contact the church for
more information, 773-4461.
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 Tuesday
•Klickitat Republicans meet
at 6 p.m. at the Dallesport
Community
Center.
www.klickitatrepublicans.org
Every Third Tuesday
•Klickitat County Fair Board
meeting from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
in the WSU building at the
fair grounds. Open to the
public.
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.
(509) 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.
•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 Second Wednesday
•Alzheimer's Association
Caregiver Support Group at
the Goldendale Senior Cen-
ter, located at 115 E. Main,
from 10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Every Thursday
•Goldendale Chamber business luncheon from noon to 1
p.m. Monthly list is available
at the Chamber, 773-3400.
Also available in Upcoming
Events.
•Bingo at the Goldendale
American Legion Post 116 for
members and their guests at
6:30 p.m.
Every First and Third
Thursday
•Goldendale
moms
group/play group from 9:30
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at Goldendale Community Grace
Brethren Church. For more
information, call Jennifer at
(503) 703-1330.
Every Second Thursday
•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.
•Artist reception beginning
at 4 p.m. at the Golden Art
Gallery. Featuring a new art
show, wine tasting, live
music and snacks. 773-5100.
•Klickitat County Meth Action Team meeting at City
Council Chambers from
noon to 1 p.m.
•Goldendale Motorsports Association meeting at Ayutla’s
Mexican Restaurant at 6 p.m.
for dinner, meeting starts at 7
p.m.
Every Third Thursday
•Oil pastels taught at the
Golden Art Gallery, from 10
a.m. to noon. 773-5100.
•A.B.A.T.E. meets at Roadhouse 97. Social hour at 6
p.m., meeting at 7 p.m.
Every Third Tuesday
•Klickitat County Fair Board
meeting at 7 p.m. in the WSU
building at the fair grounds.
Open to the public.
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 Second Saturday
•Pencil with Joan at the Golden Art Gallery at 10 a.m. 7735100.
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.
Every Fourth Saturday
•Handmade books class at the
Golden Art Gallery at 10 a.m.
773-5100.
Every Second Sunday
•Columbia Basin Goat Guild
meeting at 3 p.m. at Golden
Coyote Coffee, 120 W. Main in
Goldendale. Open to anyone
interested in goats or has
goats. (509) 225-0371
Every Third Sunday
•Breakfast at the Goldendale
American Legion Post 116 for
members and guests from 8
a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Upcoming
Thursday, September 27
•Goldendale Chamber luncheon at Gee’s Restaurant.
Speaker is Mark Heid, superintendent of Goldendale schools.
Saturday, September 29
•Goldendale Soroptimist plant
sale from 9 a.m. to noon in
front of Dr. Ogden’s office.
•Missions fundraiser from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. at 124 West Allyn.
Cash only, no early sales.
•First annual Northwest
Homesteading Fair in Lyle.
Hands-on blacksmithing, canning, beehives, sauerkraut
crocks, cheese and yogurt
making, grain mills, plants
and more. Free admission, free
kids’
activities,
free
workshops.
•Pig Bowl (Oregon law enforcement against Washington law
enforcement) at 7 p.m. at The
Dalles Wahtonka football field.
Fundraiser for Karen Warren
as she battles melanoma. Single admission $3, family $10.
For more information or to donate visit www.pigbowl.net.
Every Tuesday
through Oct. 2
•Harmony of the Gorge guest
nights. Women are invited to
learn about singing acappella
four-part harmony at Valley
Christian Church, located at
975 Indian Creek Road in Hood
River from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
You don’t need to read music.
www.harmonyofthegorge.com
or call Judy at (509) 493-2006.
Wednesday, October 3
•Learn and play at the Goldendale Primary School at 3:15
p.m.
•Klickitat Chapter of Trout
Unlimited meeting at the Goldendale Library at 6:30 p.m.
Open to the public. 773-3380.
Thursday, October 4
•Goldendale Chamber business luncheon at Ayutla’s
Restaurant at noon. Speaker is
Jim Sizemore, candidate for
county commissioner.
•Photo slide show presented by
Dr. Ogden and members of his
optometric mission team of
their mission trip to Cambodia
and Vietnam at 7 p.m. at the
Goldendale Library. Free and
open to the public. 773-4487.
Sat. & Sun., Oct. 6 & 7
•Maryhill Loops Hill Climb
and Car Show. Open car show
on Saturday at the Maryhill
Museum of Art from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., dinner from 4 p.m. to 6
p.m., hillclimb race on Sunday
at Maryhill Loops Road from
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. 773-3677.
Wed. & Thurs., Oct. 17 & 18
•Free focus acupuncture treatments at Cascade Acupuncture in The Dalles and Hood
River, in support of Accupuncture and Oriental Medicine
Day. Available to those who
have not tried acupuncture before. Call to schedule an appointment, (541) 298-2378.
WEATHER EAST DISTRICT COURT
Wednesday, September 26
Sunny, High 78, Low 41
Sunrise: 6:56 a.m.
Sunset: 6:52 p.m.
Thursday, September 27
Sunny, High 82, Low 42
Sunrise: 6:57 a.m.
Sunset: 6:50 p.m.
Friday, September 28
Sunny, High 79, Low 47
Sunrise: 6:59 a.m.
Sunset: 6:48 p.m.
Saturday, September 29
Sunny, High 77, Low 44
Sunrise: 7:00 a.m.
Sunset: 6:46 p.m.
Sunday, September 30
Sunny, High 79, Low 44
Sunrise: 7:01 a.m.
Sunset: 6:44 p.m.
Monday, October 1
Sunny, High 74, Low 44
Sunrise: 7:02 a.m.
Sunset: 6:42 p.m.
Tuesday, October 2
P. Cloudy, High 70, Low 39
Sunrise: 7:04 a.m.
Sunset: 6:40 p.m.
Senior Meals
• September 27 @ noon
Goldendale Senior Center
Hamburger
• October 2 @ noon
Goldendale Senior Center
& Lyle Lions Community
Center
Chicken a la King
Call Mt. Adams Transportation Service for
transportation to meal
sites:
Goldendale, 773-3060
White Salmon, 493-4662
Check out the full
calendar at
www.goldendale
sentinel.com
September 11
•Jim Christopher Smith: Trip
Permit Violation (6/20/12);
Dismissed per state motion.
•Charles Eugene Stalcup:
DWLS 1 (4/16/12); Guilty plea,
364 days/354 susp., fines/fees
$1,025, 24 month bench probation.
•Adrian Elias Wahchumwah:
Criminal Trespass 2 (11/5/11);
Dismissed per state motion.
September 13
•Jorge James Torres: Speeding 20 MPH Over Limit
(4/30/12), Pass in a No Passing
Zone (4/30/12); Committed,
count one charge $175, count
two charge $124.
•Linda A. Hodges: Fl. Renew
Expired Reg. Greater Than
Two Months (8/6/12); Committed, fine $125.
•Richard Lynn Hugg: Op. Mot.
Veh. Without Ins. (8/7/12);
Committed, fine $350.
•Deborah Kay Sullivan: Fail to
Wear Safety Belt (8/19/12);
Committed, fine $100.
September 17
•Scott Alan Hall: Hit and Run
Attended Vehicle (3/1/11),
Negigent Driving 1 (3/1/11);
Count one previously found
guilty, 364 days/363 susp.,
count two previously found
guilty, 90 days/90 susp.,
fines/feese $1,795, 24 month
bench probation.
•Joseph R. Sheridan: DUI
(7/23/09); Deferred prosecution revoked, 364 days/244
susp., 150 days E.H.M. converted to 10 days jail,
fines/fees $3,321, 60 months
probation.
September 18
•Brittnie Chanel Aponte: Assault 4 (1/9/12); Amended to
Disorderly Conduct, 12 month
stipulated order of continuance to amended charge, fees
$215.
•Anthony Royce Dobson:
Minor Poss. and/or Consumption (6/9/12); 12 month stipulated order of continuance,
fees $397.
•Steven Douglas Henslee: Disorderly Conduct (7/30/11);
Dismissed per stipulated
order of continuance.
•Harley Roderick Huff: DWLS
3 (2/29/12); Guilty plea, 90
days/80 susp., fines/fees
$1,025, 24 month bench probation.
•Darren Alexander Scott: Disorderly Conduct (9/25/11); 12
month stipulated order of
continuance, fees $265.
•Tylor Daniel Watson: Indecent Exposure (4/13/12),
Comm. with Minor - Immoral
Purposes (4/13/12); Count one
amended to Disorderly Conduct, guilty plea to amended
charge, count two dismissed
per plea agreement, 90
days/80 susp. with ten days
converted to community service, fines/fees $468, 12 month
bench probation.
•Tylor Daniel Watson: Indecent Exposure (2/9/12),
Comm. with Minor - Immoral
Purposes (2/9/12); Both
counts dismissed per plea
agreement.
September 20
•William Trude: Illegal Parking (8/19/12); Committed, fine
$100.
•Cristobal Guillen: Speeing 18
MPH Over Limit (8/10/12);
Committed, fine $175.
GOLDENDALE SCHOOL LUNCH MENU
Thursday, September 27
Primary/Middle School
B - Biscuit, sausage, fruit, milk
L - Pizza, corn, veggies, fruit, milk
High School
B - Breakfast pizza, fruit, milk.
L - Chicken burger or lasagna
Friday, September 28
Primary/Middle School
B - Oatmeal, toast, juice, milk
L - Hamburger, salad, fruit, cookie, milk
High School
B - Breakfast sandwich, fruit, juice, milk
L - Beef dippers or taco casserole
Monday, October 1
Primary/Middle School
B - Pancakes, syrup, fruit, milk
L - Chili or mac & cheese, green beans,
fruit, veggies, milk
High School
B - Breakfast sandwich, fruit, juice, milk.
L - Enchilada or chicken stir fry
Tuesday, October 2
Primary/Middle School
B - Cold cereal, toast, fruit, milk.
L - Corndog, fries, beans, veggies, fruit,
milk
High School
B - Breakfast burrito, fruit, milk
L - Taco or burrito
Wednesday, October 3
Primary/Middle School
B - Cold cereal, toast, fruit, milk
L - Taco, green beans, veggies, fruit, milk
High School
B - French toast, fruit, milk, syrup.
L - Chickenburger or spanish casserole
10 — SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
N OTICES
NOTICE OF STATE’S
INTENT TO NEGOTIATE
LEASE
The Department of Natural
Resources (DNR) intends to
negotiate a 10 year lease for
a tract of land containing 1.9
acres, more or less,
described as a Portion of
Section 21, Township 6
North, Range 10 East, W.M.,
Klickitat County.
Annual
Rent will be negotiated.
For details contact the
Southeast Region office at
(509) 925-8510.
PETER
GOLDMARK,
Commissioner of Public
Lands
(3901)
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF WASHINGTON FOR
KLICKITA COUNTY No. 12 4
00033 9 PROBATE NOTICE
TO CREDITORS RCW
11.40.030
In the Matter of the Estates
of Lloyd R. Mortenson, and
Marjorie J. Mortenson, both
deceased.
The Personal representative
named below has been
appointed and has qualified
as personal representative
of this estate. Any 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 provide in RCW
11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four
months after the date of the
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: September 19, 2012.
DATE
OF
FILING:
September 10, 2012.
Personal Representative:
Erving Mortenson, P. R.
Ross R. Rakow
Attorney for Estate. #4879
117 East Main St.
Goldendale, WA 98620
Tele-509-773-4988
(3805, 3902, 4001)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
TO AMEND THE 2012-2017
SIX YEAR TIP
In accordance with Chapter
36.81.121 of the Revised
Code of Washington, the
Board of County commissioners are to hold a public
hearing prior to the amendment of the Six Year Road
Construction Program for
Klickitat County.
A public hearing will be held
on Tuesday, October 2, 2012
at 1:30 p.m. in the
Commissioners’ room in the
Klickitat County Courthouse,
Goldendale, Washington at
which time any person may
appear and be heard for or
against
the
proposed
amendment to be made to
the Klickitat County Six Year
Transportation Improvement
Program for 2012-2017.
Dated this 18th day of
September 2012.
Ray Thayer, Chairman
Board
of
County
Commissioners
(3808, 3903)
NOTICE OF ADOPTION
Notice is hereby given that
the
Board
of
Commissioners,
Klickitat
County, Washington, adopted Ordinance No. O091812,
effective September 18,
2012.
The Ordinance adopts regulations providing
for
Accessory Dwelling Units
(ADU) in zoning districts that
otherwise limit the number of
dwellings to one per lot. The
amendments apply only to
those parcels that are within
the White Salmon/Bingen
Urban Area of the CRGNSA,
the “Pilot Area”. The Pilot
Area is defined as the area
that meets the following criteria: (1) outside the city limit
of the City of White Salmon
(2) is zoned Suburban
Residential (SR) and (3) are
located within Sections 23
and 24, Township 3 North,
Range 10, in Klickitat
County, WA.
Contact the Klickitat County
Planning Department, 228
West Main Street MS-CH-
17, Goldendale 98620 or call
(509)773-5703 for copies of
the Ordinance, which can be
mailed upon request.
(3904)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that a
General Election will be held
in
Klickitat
County,
Washington, November 6,
2012, in all precincts within
Klickitat County. The election
will be conducted by mail
ballot.
The last day to register to
vote online, through the mail,
transfer or update an existing registration is October 8,
2012. The last day to register
to vote in person is October
29, 2012 in the County
Auditor’s Office, 205 S.
Columbus Ave. Room 203,
Goldendale, WA. The registration books will remain
closed until November 27,
2012.
On October 19, 2012, the
Auditor will mail each qualified voter within the county a
mail ballot. First class
postage is required for
returning a voted ballot by
mail and must be postmarked by November 6,
2012. Ballots must be
returned to our office or
dropped into a designated
drop box by 8:00 P.M. on
November
6,
2012.
Replacement ballots may be
obtained in the Auditor’s
Office
or
by
visiting
myvote.wa.gov.
An Accessible Voting Unit is
available in the Auditor’s
Office beginning October 17,
2012, through November 5,
2012, from 9:00 A.M. to 5:00
P.M. with extended hours on
November 6, 2012, from
9:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M.
Special accommodations
will be made upon request.
The Logic and Accuracy Test
will be held October 18,
2012. The public is invited to
observe this test at 11:00
A.M. in the Auditor’s Office.
The canvassing board, pursuant to 29A.60 RCW, will
hold a public meeting at 9:00
A.M., November 20, 2012, to
examine returns and at 9:00
A.M., November 27, 2012, in
the Auditor’s Office to certify
the cumulative results,
precinct results and a reconciliation report of the votes
cast.
Additional information may
be obtained by phone (509)
773-4001 or (800) 583-8050
and at vote.wa.gov/klickitat.
Dated this 18th day of
September, 2012.
Brenda Sorensen, Klickitat
County Auditor and ExOfficio
Supervisor
of
Elections
(3905)
PUBLIC NOTICE
BEFORE THE BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
IN THE MATTER OF TEMPORARY CLOSURE OF
RANDALL ROAD
COUNTY ROAD NO. 21860
Resolution No. 11712
WHEREAS, RCW 47.48.020
authorizes road closures
when continued use will be
dangerous to traffic; and
WHEREAS, Klickitat County
has received a request to
close Randall Road from
Mile Post 2.61 to Mile Post
4.16 for a 24 hour crosscountry event scheduled for
October 27 and 28, 2012;
and
WHEREAS, the sponsor of
the event must notify all the
local emergency responders
of the closure and allow
access in case of an emergency.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED, that Randall
Road from Mile Post 2.61 to
Mile Post 4.16 be closed
between 9:00 p.m. October
27 and 12:01 p.m. October
29, 2012 with the costs of
posting, advertising and
signing the responsibility of
the event sponsor.
Dated this 18th day of
September 2012.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Ray Thayer, Chairman
David
M.
Sauter,
Commissioner
Rex
F.
Johnston,
Commissioner
ATTEST:
Crystal D. McEwen
Clerk of the Board
Klickitat County, Washington
(3906, 4002)
PUBLIC NOTICE
BEFORE THE BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
IN THE MATTER OF THE
VACATION OF PORTIONS
OF HALE ROAD,
COUNTY ROAD NO. 46140
Resolution No. 11812
WHEREAS, the Board of
County Commissioners is of
This Just In....
• Notice of State’s Intent to Negotiate Leases - WA DNR
• Notice of Adoption - ADU White Salmon/Bingen Klickitat County Planning
• Notice of Election - General Election Nov. 6 - Klickitat
County Auditor
• Notice of Closure - Randall Road - Klickitat County Public Works
• Hale Road Vacation Request - Klickitat County Public
Works
• Public Meeting Notice - 2013 Klickitat County STOP
Grant App. - Klickitat County Prosecuting Attorney
• Trustees Sale - AgStar-Guindon - Duggon, Schlotfeldt &
Welch
• Summary of Ordinance 1417 - City of Goldendale
• Summary of Ordinance 1418 - City of Goldendale
• Public Hearing/Kitchen VAR 12-01 - City of Goldendale
• DNS/Kitchen VAR 12-01 - City of Goldendale
• Sealed Bids - 1994 Ford F350 - Roosevelt Fire Dist 9
• Sheriff ’s Sale-Kushlan/Rimrock Estates - Bradley Timmons
• Water Right-Notice of App. G4-01256P@1 - Klickitat
County Water Conservancy Board
• Notice of Additional Information re MDNS 2012-04 - Columbia Gorge Regional Airport Runway - Klickitat County Planning
• MDNS - Columbia Gorge Secure Storage/Gardner Funeral Home - Klickitat County Planning
the opinion that certain portions of old alignments of
county roads are of no further value to Klickitat
County; described as follows:
HALE ROAD
Hale Road, County Road
No. 46149 lying outside of
the newly constructed alignment. Said portions are
located in the N1/2NW1/4 of
Section
24;
the
NWNEnortheast quarter of
the northwest quarter and
the northwest quarter of
Section 23; the NENWthe
northwest quarter of Section
24; the northeast quarter of
the northwest quarter, the
southeast of the southwest
quarter of Section 22; the
S1/2SW1/4
and
the
NW1/4SW1/4southeast
quarter of the southwest
quarter, the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter
and the northwest quarter of
the southwest quarter of
Section 15; the N1/2NE1/4
and the NE1/4NW1/4 of
Section 17; the W1/2SE1/4,
the E1/2SW1/4northwest
quarter of the northwest
quarter of Section 16; the
northeast quarter of the
northeast quarter and the
NW1/4SW1/4nor thwest
quarter of the northeast
quarter of Section 17; the
southwest quarter of the
southeast quarter and the
southeast of the southwest
quarter of Section 8; the
NE1/4, the N1/2NW1/4 and
the NE1/4SE1/4southwest
quarter of the northeast
quarter, the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter
and the southeast quarter of
the northwest quarter of
Section 7, all in Township 5
North, Range 21 East W.M
as shown on the Right of
Way Plans for CRP 309 on
file in the office of the County
Engineer,
115
South
Golden,
Goldendale,
Washington and bearing the
date of July 13 2, 2010.
Also all that portion of the
previously designed centerline alignment from County
Road Project 113 on file in
the office of the County
Engineer at Goldendale and
bearing the date of May 15,
1995. All of which can be
found detailed on the
Warranty Deed filed under
Auditor’s
File
Number
247523, volume 322, page
813,
Klickitat
County
Records.
THEREFORE,
BE
IT
RESOLVED that the County
Engineer is directed to make
an examination of said rights
of way and file his report as
to whether said rights of way
should be vacated, whether
the public will benefit by the
vacation of said rights of way
and any other facts, matters
and things which will be of
importance to the Board.
THEREFORE, BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that a
public hearing for said vacation of described rights of
way will be held in the
Commissioners’ Chambers
in the Klickitat County
Courthouse, Goldendale,
Washington on the 30th day
of October, 2012 at the hour
of 1:30 p.m. at which time
any objections against or
approval for said proposed
vacations 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 18th day of
September 2012.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Ray Thayer, Chairman
David
M.
Sauter,
Commissioner
Rex
F.
Johnston,
Commissioner
ATTEST:
Crystal D. McEwen
Clerk of the Board
Klickitat County, Washington
(3907, 4003)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
MEETING
A public meeting shall be
held to consider the 2013
Klickitat
County
STOP
Formula Grant Application.
The meeting shall be held on
Tuesday, October 9, 2012, at
10:30 a.m., in the Superior
Court Jury Room, located at
205 S. Columbus Avenue,
Room 106, Goldendale,
Washington.
The purpose of the meeting
is to receive and consider
public comments on the
Application for the Klickitat
County STOP Formula
Grant. These funds are allocated to the states through
Title IV of the Federal Violent
Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act of 1994,
and the Office on Violence
Against
Women
and
Department
of
Justice
Reauthorization Act of 2005
(VAWA 2005).
The Stop Formula Grant is
awarded to support coordinated responses to adult or
teen victims of sexual
assault, domestic violence,
dating violence and stalking
crimes. STOP funds can
also be used to assist law
enforcement, prosecution
courts and victim services
providers in responding to
adult or teen victim of of
human trafficking who have
been subjected to sexual
violence.
This Grant provides funds to
law enforcement; prosecution and victim services to
each county encourage collaboration and teamwork at
the local level. The STOP
Formula Grant recognizes
that victims are best served
when all systems are working together toward the common goals of supporting victims and holding offenders
accountable. Written comments may also be directed
to Lori L. Hoctor, Klickitat
County Prosecutor, 205 S.
Columbus Ave., MS-CH-18,
Room 106, Goldendale, WA
98620, or by fax 509-7736696.
*Services-Training
–Officers-Prosecutors
(3908, 4004)
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE
Pursuant to RCW 61.24, et
seq., and 62A.9A-604(a)(2),
et seq.
Recorded July 2, 2012,
Klickitat County, WA, File No.
.1098454
I.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the undersigned Trustee
will on October 26, 2012, at
10:00 A.M., on the front
steps of the Klickitat County
Courthouse,
205
S.
Columbus
Avenue,
Goldendale,
Washington
98620, sell at public auction
to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of
sale, the following described
real property, situated in the
County of Klickitat, State of
Washington, to-wit:
In county of Klickitat, State of
Washington. The North Half
of the Southeast Quarter of
the Southeast Quarter of
Section 13, Township 3
North Range 13 East, W.M.
EXCEPT County Road No.
21690.
Commonly known as 105
Schilling
Road,
Lyle,
Washington 98635, being
Klickitat County Tax Parcel
No. 03-13-1300-0023/00
which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated
December 20, 2006, record-
ed December 20, 2006,
under Auditor’s File No.
1067224, records of Klickitat
County, Washington, from
David D. Guindon, as
Grantor, to First American
Title Insurance Company
(formerly known as Pacific
Northwest Title Insurance
Company, Inc.), as Trustee,
to secure an obligation in
favor of American Farm
Mortgage Company, Inc., as
Beneficiary. Shawn A. Elpel,
Esq., of Duggan Schlotfeldt
& Welch PLLC, was appointed as the successor trustee
under an Appointment of
Successor Trustee recorded
with the Klickitat County
Auditor on June 19, 2012,
Auditor’s File No. 1098285.
II.
No action commenced by
the Beneficiary of the Deed
of Trust is now pending to
seek satisfaction of the
obligation in any Court by
reason of the Borrower’s or
Grantor’s default on the
obligation secured by the
Deed of Trust.
III.
The default for which this
foreclosure is made is as follows: Failure to pay when
due the following amounts
which are now in arrears:
$200,396.54 plus interest
accruing on and after
February 7, 2012 at the per
annum rate of 7.70% (current per diem is $40.82).
IV.
The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of
Trust
is:
Principal
$182,674.66, together with
interest as provided in the
note or other instrument
secured from the 20th day of
December, 2006, and such
other costs and fees as are
due under the note or other
instrument secured, and as
are provided by statute.
V.
The above-described real
property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and
the obligation secured by the
Deed of Trust as provided by
statute. The sale will be
made without warranty,
express or implied, regarding title, possession, or
encumbrances
on
October 26, 2012.
The
default referred to in paragraph III must be cured by
October 15, 2012 (11 days
before the sale date), to
cause a discontinuance of
the sale. The sale will be
discontinued and terminated
if at any time on or before
October 15, 2012 (11 days
before the sale date), the
default as set forth in paragraph III is cured and the
Trustee’s fees and costs are
paid. The sale may be terminated any time after October
15, 2012 (11 days before the
sale date), and before the
sale by the Borrower,
Grantor, any Guarantor, or
the holder of any recorded
junior lien or encumbrance
paying the entire principal
and interest secured by the
Deed of Trust, plus costs,
fees, and advances, if any,
made pursuant to the terms
of the obligation and/or Deed
of Trust, and curing all other
defaults.
VI.
A written notice of default
was transmitted by the
Beneficiary or Trustee to the
Borrower and Grantor at the
following addresses:
David D. Guindon
2002 SE Talton Ave.
Vancouver, WA 98683-6546
by both first-class and certified mail on the 23rd day of
February, 2012, proof of
which is in the possession of
the Trustee; and the
Borrower and Grantor were
personally served on the
14th day of April, 2012, with
said written notice of default
or the written notice of
default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real
property described in paragraph I above, and the
Trustee has possession of
proof of such service or
posting.
VII.
The Trustee whose name
and address are set forth
below will provide in writing
to anyone requesting it, a
statement of all costs and
fees due at any time prior to
the sale.
VIII.
The effect of the sale will be
to deprive the Grantor and
all those who hold by,
through or under the Grantor
of all their interest in the
above-described property.
IX.
Anyone having any objection
to the sale on any grounds
whatsoever will be afforded
an opportunity to be heard
as to those objections if they
bring a lawsuit to restrain the
sale pursuant to RCW
61.24.130. Failure to bring
such a lawsuit may result in
a waiver of any proper
grounds for invalidating the
Trustee’s sale.
X.
NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS
OR TENANTS. The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale
is entitled to possession of
the property on the 20’” day
following the sale, as against
the Grantor under the Deed
of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior
to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not
tenants. After the 20th day
following the sale, the purchaser has the right to evict
occupants who are not tenants by summary proceeding under Chapter 59.12
RCW. For tenant-occupied
property, the purchaser shall
provide a tenant with written
notice in accordance with
RCW 61.24.060.
Dated: June 29, 2012
/s/
Shawn
A.
Elpel,
Trustee,WSB # 21898
Duggan Schlotfeldt & Welch
PLLC
900 Washington Street,
Suite 1020
Vancouver, WA 98660-0570
Telephone: 360-699-1201
Fax: 360-693-2911
(3909, 4201)
CITY OF GOLDENDALE
SUMMARY
OF
ORDINANCE NO. 1417
On September 17, 2012 the
City Council of the City of
Goldendale,
Washington
passed Ordinance No. 1417.
A summary of the content of
said ordinance provides as
follows:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF GOLDENDALE,
WASHINGTON, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING
THE MAYOR TO EXECUTE
AND DELIVER ON BEHALF
OF THE CITY A CONSTRUCTION
LOAN
AGREEMENT, LOAN NUMBER
DM-12-952-090,
BETWEEN THE WASHINGTON
STATE
PUBLIC
WORKS BOARD AND THE
CITY FOR WATER SYSTEM
IMPROVEMENTS,
AND
AUTHORIZING AND RATIFYING CERTAIN ACTIONS.
The full text of this ordinance
is on file at City Hall and the
full text of the ordinance will
be mailed up request.
Dated: September 17, 2012
Connie
Byers,
ClerkTreasurer
(3910)
CITY OF GOLDENDALE
SUMMARY
OF
ORDINANCE NO. 1418
On September 17, 2012 the
City Council of the City of
Goldendale,
Washington
passed Ordinance No. 1418.
A summary of the content of
said ordinance provides as
follows:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF GOLDENDALE,
WASHINGTON, AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING
THE MAYOR TO EXECUTE
AND DELIVER ON BEHALF
OF THE CITY A CONSTRUCTION
LOAN
AGREEMENT, LOAN NUMBER
PC13-961-030,
BETWEEN THE WASHINGTON
STATE
PUBLIC
WORKS BOARD AND THE
CITY FOR SEWER COLLECTION
SYSTEM
IMPROVEMENTS,
AND
AUTHORIZING AND RATIFYING CERTAIN ACTIONS.
The full text of this ordinance
is on file at City Hall and the
full text of the ordinance will
be mailed up request.
Dated: September 17, 2012
Connie
Byers,
ClerkTreasurer
(3911)
CITY OF GOLDENDALE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the Goldendale Board of
Adjustment will conduct a
Public Hearing in the Council
Chambers at City Hall, 1103
S. Columbus, Goldendale,
Washington 98620 at 6:00
PM on October 11th, 2012.
THE PURPOSE of said
hearing is to hear all interested parties who wish to
testify for or against the following proposal:
VAR
12-01
Applicant:
Michael Kitchen. Proposal:
To request a Conditional
Use/ Variance to allow temporary occupancy of a 5th
wheel while converting the
warehouse into an apartment. Said proposal is in the
following described property:
LOTS 9, 10 LESS S2 2ND
ST ADJ TO; BLK 2; ORIGINAL TO GOLDENDALE
NENE 20-4-16
Commonly known as 312 N
Grant
Parcel #04162056020900
The Goldendale Board of
Adjustment may take action
on this matter to approve,
Continued Page 11
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012— 11
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
N OTICES
From page 10
deny, approve with conditions, table or continue these
issues to set time and place.
Goldendale
Board
of
Adjustment
/s/ Darrell Watson, Chairman
(3912)
CITY OF GOLDENDALE
DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE
Notice is hereby given that
the City of Goldendale
issued a Determination of
Non-significance (DNS) on
_September 21, 2012_
under SEPA Rules (Chapter
197-11 WAC) and the City of
Goldendale Environmental
Ordinance Number 1261 for
the following proposal:
Variance Application 12-01
Applicant: Michael Kitchen to
request a Conditional Use/
Variance to allow temporary
occupancy of a 5th wheel
while converting the warehouse into an apartment.
After review of the completed environmental checklist
and other information on file
the City of Goldendale
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
City of Goldendale during
normal business hours.
Comments or appeals on
the above environmental
review will be accepted until
5:00 p.m. October 10, 2012.
Comments shall be submitted
to
the
City
of
Goldendale, 1103 South
Columbus, Goldendale, WA
98620; appeals must be filed
with the City of Goldendale
with an appeal fee of
$100.00.
(3913
BID ANNOUNCEMENT
For sale by sealed bid
1994 Ford F350
4x4 – 5 speed – diesel
RUNS - AS IS – WHERE IS
-NO WARRANTY
Declared surplus, up for auction
Sealed bids sent to KCFPD
#9
PO Box 147
Roosevelt, WA 99356
509-384-5192
Bids will be opened at the
regular October meeting.
ALL BIDS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY 5 PM on
10/18/2012
Vehicle must be paid for in
full
and
removed
by
12/15/2012
(3914, 4005, 4103)
to take place: TIME: 10:00
A.M. DATE: NOVEMBER 2,
2012
PLACE: Klickitat
County Courthouse. The
Judgment Debtor can avoid
the sale by paying the judgment
amount
of
$167,052.38, together with
interest, costs and fees,
before the sale date. For the
exact amount, contact the
Sheriff’s office at the
address stated below. RICK
MCCOMAS,
KLICKITAT
COUNTY SHERIFF, 205 S
Columbus,
MS-CH-7,
Goldendale, WA 98620, 509773-4455.
(3915, 4006, 4104, 4202)
SHERIFF’S PUBLIC SALE
ON REAL PROPERTY
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF KLICKITAT.
SHERIFF’S
PUBLIC
NOTICE OF SALE ON
REAL PROPERTY. MidColumbia
Economic
Development
District,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
Kushlan
Products, Inc., a Washington
Corporation,
Gene
M.
Kushlan, an individual, and
Susan K. Kushlan, an individual Defendants. No. 12-200043-9
TO: Kushlan Products, Inc.,
Gene M. Kushlan and Susan
K. Kushlan, 12010 Dairy
Ashford
Rd,
#160,
Sugarland, TX 77478. The
Superior Court of Klickitat
County has directed the
undersigned
Sheriff
of
Klickitat County to sell the
property legally described as
follows to satisfy a judgment
in the above entitled action:
Lot 6, Block 3, REPLAT OF
RIMROCK ESTATES, as
recorded in Volume 4 of
Plats, page 16. Assessor’s
Tax Parcel Number: 04-161258-0306/00;
physical
address of 56 Adams Loop
Road,
Goldendale,
Washington. The sale of the
above described property is
BEFORE THE KLICKITAT
COUNTY WATER
CONSERVANCY BOARD
Klickitat County ,
WASHINGTON
Notice of Application to add
points of withdrawal/diversion under water right number G4-01256P@1.
TAKE NOTICE: That on
September 11, 2012, Scott
Andrews
of
Prosser,
Washington filed on behalf
of Robert L. and Louise V
Andrews, also of Prosser,
Washington,
application
number KLIC-12-02 with the
Klickitat
County
Water
Conservancy Board (the
Board) to add points of withdrawal/diversion under water
right
number
G401256P@1.
That said right, under priority
date of January 17, 1972,
authorizes the withdrawal of
12,000 gallons per minute,
7767.47 acre feet per year
for irrigation of 3082.13
acres from February 1 to
December 1. The existing
points of withdrawal/diversion are all within the NE1/4
of SE1/4 of sec. 22, NW1/4
of the NE1/4 of sec. 24, SE
¼ of NE1/4 of sec. 15,
SW1/4 of SE1/4 of section
11, NW1/4 of SE1/4 of section 11 and the SE1/4 of section 15 all within T.6N, R.23
EWM (note: as actually
located per gps; different
from as stated on permit).
The existing place of use is
all within: S1/2 section 2,
NW1/4 section 2, NW1/4
section11, S1/2 section14,
and all sections 3, 4, 12,
13,15, 22, 23, 24, all within
T.6N, R.23 EWM (and
detailed description as provided for on said permit).
The requested change is to
add points of diversion/withdrawal all within the SE1/4
section 22, NE1/4 section10,
NW1/4 section 10 and the
NW1/4 section 3 all within
the T.6N., R.23 EWM. There
is no change to place of use,
purpose of use, period of
use, or allowed acre-ft. or
cubic feet per second quantities of use. All existing and
proposed points of withdrawal and places of use are
located in Klickitat County,
Washington,
Water
Resource Inventory Area 31.
TAKE NOTICE: per WAC
173-153-080 administrative
rule for public notice information, interested parties
are hereby advised to
request the actual application documentation, and the
detailed legal descriptions
therein, from the Board, at
509-773-2481.
Any protests or objections to
the approval of this application may be filed with the
Department of Ecology and
must include a detailed
statement of the basis for
objections; protests must be
accompanied by a fifty dollar
($50) recording fee and filed
with the Department of
Ecology Cashiering Unit,
P.O. Box 47611, Olympia,
WA 98504-7611 within thirty
(30) days from October 3,
2012.
Any interested party may
submit comments, objections, and other information
to the Board regarding this
application. The comments
and information may be submitted in writing or verbally
at any public meeting of the
Board held to discuss or
decide on the application.
This application will be on
the Board’s agenda during
its regular meetings to be
held on the second Tuesday
of each month at 7:00 P.M. in
Room 101 of the Klickitat
County
Courthouse
in
Goldendale,
Washington
until a decision on the application is made. NOTE: this
notice does not constitute
notice of a meeting for the
purposes of the Open Public
Meetings Act, chapter 42.30
RCW.
Additionally, the
Board will receive written
comments or information
through November 9, 2012
at its offices located at 127
West Court Street, MS-CH26, Goldendale, Washington
98620.
(3916, 4007)
NOTICE OF ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION RE MDNS
2012-04
Additional
environmental
review information is available on Columbia Gorge
Regional Airport runway
rehabilitation and safety
improvements, as identified
in the SEPA Addendum to
MDNS 2012-04 (improvements include raising the
South end of the runway
about five feet to correct a
“line-of-site” deficiency).
Please contact the Klickitat
County
Planning
Department, 228 W. Main
Street, Goldendale, WA
98620, for further information.
(3917)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Klickitat
County
Determination of Mitigated
Non-Significance
Notice is hereby given that
Klickitat County issued a
Mitigated Determination of
Non-significance (MDNS) on
September 24, 2012, under
SEPA Rules (Chapter 19711 WAC) and the Klickitat
County
Environmental
Ordinance Number 121084
for the following proposals:
SEP 2012-25:
Applicants: Columbia Gorge
Secure
Storage
LLC.
Proposal to rezone approximately 1 acre from General
Commercial and Suburban
Residential to General
Commercial. The proposed
project is located within a
portion of Section 34, T2N,
R13E,
W.M.,
Klickitat
County, WA (Dallesport
vicinity).
SEP 2012-26: Applicants:
Gardner Funeral Home.
Proposal to rezone approximately 3 acres from
Suburban Residential to
General Commercial. The
proposed project location is
within
a
portion
of
Section19, T3N, R10E and
Section 19, T3N, R11E,
W.M., Klickitat County, WA
(White Salmon, 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
October 19, 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.
(3918)
CLASSIFIEDS
Annoucements
10 Notices
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
City of Mosier
10 Notices
Breezeway Boutique will no
longer be accepting clothing. Cosigners may pick up
clothing and money until
October 1, 2012 after that
date it will be donated to
charity.
FREE
Classified!
Gorge
Wide
$500 &
Under
Some
Restrictions
Apply
Call for more
information
773-3777
25 Support
Groups
25 Support
Groups
AA Woman’s meeting, 7 Family Alzheimer’s/Dementia
Request For Bids
Support Group
pm every Tuesday at Solid
Rock Church, 2308 E 12th, Family
members
and
The City of Mosier is re- The Dalles.
friends caring for individuquesting bids for crack
als with Alzheimer’s dissealing of asphalt pave- AL-ANON Meeting
ease or a related dementia
ment roadways within the 6:30 pm, Thursdays
are invited to participate in
City limits. The crack sealGoldendale
Methodist our Dementia Support
ing will be performed on apChurch
Group. Come and gain
proximately 12 City blocks. Questions?
support and insight from
A table listing the roadways Call Rosie, 773-6420 or
others who are going thru
to be crack sealed is avail- Greta, 773-3343.
or have gone thru this jourable from the City Clerk;
ney. Join us monthly in a
contact Jean Hadley at
ALCOHOLICS
caring environment to dis541.478.3505.
Normal
ANONYMOUS
cuss your challenges and
working hours are Monday,
24 Hour Hot Line
questions. Meeting held the
Wednesday, and Friday
1-800-999-9210
third Wednesday, every
from 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM.
Mid Columbia Mtg. Info
month, at 3:00 pm at FlagBids are informal and must
www.://district14aa.org
Stone Senior Living at 3325
be submitted to the City at
Columbia View Drive. For
City Hall, PO Box 456, Mosier, OR 97040 or hand de- ALCOHOLICS Anon. Gold- more information about our
livered to 208 Washington endale meetings at the group, contact Karen DeStreet, no later than Sep- United Methodist Church; swert at 541-298-5656. All
tember 28th at 10:00 AM. Mon., 8 p.m.; Wed., 8 p.m.; Welcome!
There will be no pre-bid Fri., 8 p.m., 109 E. Broadway. 1-800-344-2666.
GOLDENDALE Pregnancy
meeting and no bid openResource Center
ing. Contractors must sign
DO YOU HAVE
Center Hours:
a letter stating they have
HURTS,
Tues & Fri 11am-4:30pm.
toured the roadways, are habits, hang-ups? Attend
Thursday 1pm-4:30pm.
familiar with the work to be Celebrate Recovery a faith509-773-5501
performed, and are qualibased 12 step program,
Pregnancy Counseling and
fied to perform the work.
every Tuesday night at
Hood River Alliance
services, free pregnancy
Church at 2650 W.
The City reserves the right
self-tests.
Montello
(off
Rand
Rd).
to reject any or all bids and
GRIEF and Loss Group
Dinner
provided
at
6:15
pm
to determine which bid is, in
the judgment of the City, and large group meeting at meets monthly at Klickitat
7:00 pm. Childcare is
Valley Hospital. Come and
the lowest responsible bid,
provided.
learn ways to heal and help
and which bid, if any,
For more info. call
others heal from loss.
should be accepted in the
541-308-5339
Sponsored by Klickitat Valbest interests of the City.
ley Hospice. Call 773-0380
The City also reserves the
for further information.
right to waive any informalities or irregularities in
NA
Meetings
every
any proposal and to correct
Wednesday, 6:30-7:30 at
mathematical or ministerial
the
Casa
Guadalupe
errors. The City may reHouse, 1603 Belmont,
quest statements of qualHood River, OR.
ifications at its discretion.
Classified
Deadline:
Noon-Monday
25 Support
Groups
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.
T.O.P.S. (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly). Tuesdays 9 a.m.
at Riverview Comm. Bank.
773-4766.
T.O.P.S. (Take off Pounds
Sensibly), Thursdays, 6
p.m. at Riverview Comm.
Bank, 773-5411.
30 Lost & Found
INSTRUCTION &
CHILD CARE
Preschool/Daycare
Facilities .........................35
Child Care Providers .....37
Schools Training ............40
Tutoring ..........................45
Instruction ......................50
Training & Opportunity...51
Health & Fitness ............55
Ask Us
How!
773-3777
EXPERIENCED Carpenters wanted. E-mail work
history & references to
Gorgecontractor@hotmail
.com. Pay DOE.
Help Wanted General ....75
Help Wanted Domestic/
In Home .........................76
Help Wanted Medical/
Health
77
Help Wanted Office/
Clerical...........................78
37 Child Care
Help Wanted Sales/Customer Service
79
Providers
Positions Wanted ...........80
Volunteers......................82
DAYCARE
PROVIDER Work from Home
HAS
OPENING
ALL Employment...................83
SHIFTS ALL AGES WEL- Job Opportunities ..........85
COME USDA MEALS
PROVIDED WILL TRANSPORT TO AND FROM
SCHOOL
INCLUDING
PRESCHOOL REASONABLE RATES FENCED
YARD AND PLAY AREA
541-705-5189
LOOKING
for a new
BUSINESS/
FINANCIAL
Business Opportunities .60
SKATEBOARD FOUND at Investments & Loans .....65
the skate park in Hood Riv- Insurance .......................70
er. Call to identify, 541-806- Mortgages & Contracts..72
4403.
FREE
ADS?
EMPLOYMENT
60 Business
Opportunities
Business Opportunity
Best Friend?
Check out #295
Pets & Supplies!
75 Help Wanted
General
Bob Stone
Freeway Autocenter
Immediate opening in
the Sales Department
selling the #1 vehicles in
The Gorge.
We are looking for exceptional
applicants
who want a job with terrific earning potential,
who believe selling
should be done with
honesty, integrity and
no games.
Professional sales training. Applicants should
have professional appearance & valid driver’s license. Former military and individuals
with previous auto sales
experience are encouraged to apply.
Contact Ariel Sanchez
in The Dalles at
541-296-2166
ALL
GORGE CLASSIFIEDS
placed through
The Sentinel
For Sale:
Auto Oil, Lube & Repair
Center. 2 Lube bays &
Shop. Downtown The
Dalles. 541-980-5143 or
541-980-4191
will appear on
The Sentinel’s website
www.goldendalesentinel.com
12 —September 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
BUSINESS SERVICES
SPECIALIST I
Energy Assistance
Intake Worker
Mid-Columbia Center
for Living
Is seeking a FT Business
Services Specialist for our
office in Hood River. Must
be a person who enjoys
public contact and is able
to handle multiple tasks, including heavy phones, reception, scheduling, and
data entry. Requires HS Diploma or GED supplemented by secretarial or office procedures training.
Must have at least 2 yrs
secretarial or office experience. Must be computer literate. Bilingual (Spanish/
English) is preferred. Salary $2,284/mo + benefits.
For application materials,
go to www.mccfl.org or
contact Courtney at 541296-5452 ext 7660. Open
until filled. Drugfree Workplace/EOE.
Mid Columbia Community
Action has an opening for
temporary intake worker.
Full time in The Dalles office. Job requires determining eligibility, filling out
applications,
computer
skills, working with utilities.
Bilingual skills desired. Salary range $10 - $12 per
hour. Closing date October
4, 2012. Send resume to
PO Box 1969 The Dalles,
OR 97058 or applications
can be picked up at 312 E.
4th St - The Dalles 541298-5131. MCCAC is an
EOE.
MCCC builds better
communities, one person
at a time. Serving over 500
children in Oregon/
Washington, MCCC is
recruiting for a Family
Health Advocate and
Teacher Assistant at our
Goldendale site.
For job requirements, start
date, site location and
application, please review
job posting at
www.mcccheadstart.org.
To apply, mail/fax
application, transcripts and
cover letter to MidColumbia Children’s
council, Inc., 1100 E.
Marina Way, Suite 215,
Hood River, OR 97031 or
email
emilymcdonald@mccchea
dstart.org. EOE.
75 Help Wanted
General
C.H. Urness Motors
We are looking for energetic and customer focused employees to join
our team. We have openings for:
TELLERS
At our Cherry Heights location. If you are interested
in applying for this position
or to check out other careers
go
to
www.columbiabank.com
Columbia Bank is proud to
be an EOE
CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
Wanted: Woodburn Based
Heavy Civil Contractor
looking for skilled operators, laborers, and pipelayers for winter project in
Hood River. Starts immediately. email resumes to
[email protected] or
fax to 971 216-0079
COOKS WANTED
Linda’s Restaurant in Biggs
Is now hiring an entry level Oregon is looking for exposition for a Lube/Oil tech- perienced cooks. Please
nician. Part-time position apply in person & ask for
that could turn into full-time. Greg.
Will train the right person.
Cousins Restaurant
Good customer service
skills a must. Apply in PerIs currently hiring friendly,
son at 505 Cherry Heights outgoing, fun and personRoad, The Dalles.
able individuals to fill host/
cashier positions. Individuals must be team players
who enjoy working in a fast
paced environment while
having fun. Great pay and
Experienced
benefits. Come join our
Pay DOE
winning team and family.
Email work history and
references to gorgecontractor Apply in person at 2114 W.
6th St. The Dalles OR.
@hotmail.com
CARPENTERS
WANTED
CUSTODIAN
P/T Instructor
P/T Instructor to teach
Welding Practices one
night a week at HRVHS lab
for Fall, Winter and Spring
terms 2012-13 beginning
September 24, 2012. This
is an evening course that
meets Mondays from 6:009:50pm. For an application
& details, please visit the
CGCC website: http://
www.cgcc.cc.or.us/PresidentsOffice/InstrucJob.cfm
or contact Jensi, (541)5066034 or jsmith
@cgcc.cc.or.us.
White Salmon
School District
Swing-shift custodian for
Henkle Middle School,
year-round position, 8-hour
day, 2:30-11:00 p.m., perform routine custodial
tasks, must be able to lift
and move 50 pounds.
Complete job description is
available at the school district office. Closes at 3:00
p.m. on Friday, September
28, 2012. EOE.
Applications are available online at www.wsvsd.org or at
the White Salmon Valley
School District Office, 171 NW
Washington Street, P.O. Box
157, White Salmon, WA 98672,
509-493-1500.
Delivery driver/Counter
Auto paint/parts. Vehicle
provided. F/T W/bene. 18+
DMV abstract required
1802 W. 2nd St. Dalles OR
Delivery driver needed.
Class B CDL & Hazmat required. Full time with
benefits. 541-298-2111
Groundskeeper
Columbia Gorge Community College is looking for a
Groundskeeper. Supports
the College by maintaining
the buildings and grounds
of College property by performing work that includes
mowing, trimming, pruning,
weeding, planting and removing shrubs and trees,
installing and maintaining
irrigation systems, painting,
trash removal, and snow
removal. Work includes the
use of cement, masonry,
and wood products. Two
years experience or any
combination of education,
training and experience
that provides the required
knowledge and abilities to
perform the essential job
functions required. High
School Diploma or equivalent, ability to read, write
and interpret instructions
written in English, and basic math skills in order to
calculate square feet, fuel/
oil mixtures, fertilizer/seed
coverage and other related
products required. Starting
wage is $11.64 per hour
plus benefits. Deadline to
apply is Thurs., Sept. 27th
at 5 p.m. cgcc.cc.or.us or
contact Sara Rinearson at
541-506-6151 for more
info.
COACHING
Asst Girl’s Basketball Coach/
Head Freshman Coach at TDW
; $4192 to $4527 DOE;
Pre-Employment Drug testing. Requirements and
Classified applications are
online
at
www.nwasco.k12.or.us or
pick up at 3632 W. 10th,
TD Closes: Until Filled
EOEE
DENTAL ASSISTANTS (EFDA)
Needed in Hood River &
The Dalles. Join our great
team as we grow! For
details and to apply visit us
at www.lcdcfh.org.
DRIVER WANTED
Hattenhauer Transportation is accepting applications for full-time Driver.
Must have two years verifiable driving experience,
clean driving record, Class
A license with Hazmat and
tanker endorsements. Apply in person at 201 W. 1st
St., The Dalles, OR. Hattenhauer Transportation is
an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Driver: Airgas, The Dalles,
Delivers gas & liquid cylinders to customers. Class A
CDL with Hazmat and
clean driving record required. Mon-Fri, day shift,
competitive wages & benefits. Apply online at
www.airgas.com EEO/AA/
M/F/V/D
EXPERIENCED CARPENTERS
wanted. Respond to:
[email protected]
m with work history and
references. Pay DOE.
MT. HOOD RAILROAD
is now hiring the following
positions: CLERICAL-FT,
starting at $12/hr... RESGOLDENDALE School
ERVATIONIST-FT,
seaDistrict
sonal, $9/hr... Both positions must be well orgaSpecial Education
nized, able to multi-task,
Paraeducator
good people skills & be a
Application & job
team player. Computer &
information available at
www.goldendaleschools.o office skills a must... POrg or at the Administration LAR EXPRESS-$8.80/hr,
Office, 604 Easat Brooks, seasonal, nights & weekends, must be good with
Goldendale Wa 98620,
people (kids). Must be able
509-773-5177. Closes
to walk on moving train.
October 1, 2012 or until
“CHEF”-serve hot chocofilled. EOE.
late, cookies, sing xmas
GRAIN ACCOUNTANT/ carols & light janitorial...
GIFT SHOP ATTENDANTBUYER WANTED
cash handling experience
& well organized, light janiMid Columbia Producers, torial... “ELVES”-happy &
Inc. is seeking applicants singing xmas carols, helpfor the full time position of ing Santa... Apply IN PERGrain Accountant/Buyer. SON at Depot (across from
Hours vary depending on Pietros Pizza) at 110 Railseason and grain market road Ave, Hood RIver. Ofconditions.
Accounting fice is open from 8amand/or grain buying expe- 4:30pm. No calls please.
rience preferred but not required. Salary negotiable National Market Research
Participants
based upon qualifications. Company:
Competitive benefits pack- Wanted, Evaluate service
Dalles,
OR.
age. Send resume and in The
or
cover letter to P.O. Box www.bestmark.com
344 Moro, Oregon 97039 800-969-8477
no later than October 5,
Operations Assistant
2012. Mid Columbia Pro(temporary)
ducers, Inc. is an equal op- Google Data Center in The
portunity employer.
Dalles in need of temporary
assistance related to data
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT/
center operations. Qualified
TRUCK
MECHANIC,
candidate will have a strong
Equipment Mechanic wantwork ethic and good physical
ed at Crestline Construc- dexterity, ability to complete
tion in The Dalles. Me- repetitive tasks, and basic
chanic needed to service computer hardware
and repair trucks and con- knowledge. EOE. Please substruction eqpt. Min 3 yrs mit resumes via
Exp., EOE, Drug free work- http://www.google.com/jobs
place. Apply in person at
OREGON DEPARTMENT OF
3500 Crates Way.
TRANSPORTATION
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
Seasonal Winter Highway
OPERATORS WANTED
Maintenance Specialist
Crestline needs Const. (Transportation Maintenance
Equipment Operators, dozSpecialist)
er, excavator, loader, etc.
Min. 3 yrs Exp. Wage DOE, Do you like SNOW? Then
EOE, Drug-free workplace. we have the job for you!
Apply in person @ 3500 Warm Springs Highway
Crates Way, The Dalles or Maintenance Crew curprint
app
@ rently has an opening for a
www.crestlineconstruction Winter Seasonal. This po.com
sition requires a Class A
CDL and 2 years of expeHOUSEKEEPER
rience. Highway mainte40 unit motel, Biggs OR, 20 to nance crews operate light
30 hours weekly, includes and heavy equipment, perweekends, start at $9.25 hour- form manual labor and help
ly, experience preferred but maintain, remove snow, renot required. Call (541) 739- pair and reconstruct road2501 for more information. ways, highways, freeways,
Fax (541) 739-2091 or e-mail bridges, signs, and [email protected]
scape. Salary is $2624$3783/month+ excellent
benefits. For details please
Infant/Toddler
visit www.odotjobs.com or
Teacher
call 866-ODOT-JOB (TTY
503-986-3854 for the hearNeeded in Parkdale/
ing impaired) for AnnounceOdell for a short term
ment #ODOT12-0528OC and
assignment w/ Oregon
application. Opportunity
Child Development Cocloses 11:59 PM, 10/01/
alition. Please visit our
2012. ODOT is an AA/EEO
website
at
Employer, committed to
www.ocdc.net for job
building workforce diversity.
specifics. Apply online
or mail resume/apply in
PAROLE/PROBATION
person to: OCDC, HuCOUNSELOR/SUPERVISOR:
man Resources, 1300
Hood River County.
West 9th St, The Dalles,
Candidates must possess
OR 97058
DPSST Advanced Parole &
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
Special Education
REAL ESTATE
BROKER
Washington licensed,
ample floortime, sell
beach/vacation homes,
energetic/sense of humor. Call DH at
360-244-0206
REAL PROPERTY
APPRAISER
I, II or Commercial Appraiser
Klickitat County Assessor,
Goldendale, F/T, $14.92$15.82/hour, Commercial
Appraiser wage TBD. Closing date: October 3, 2012
or OPEN UNTIL FILLED.
Visit www.klickitatcounty.org
for details and application or
call the Personnel Department, 509-773-7171.
RELIABLE CAREGIVERS
to assist adults w/developmental disabilities. Training
provided. Growth opportunity. 503-594-1250 x13
RENEW CONSULTING INC.
Renew is hiring caring people to work with individuals
with
disabilities.$9.50hr
Free training offered. 541298-0354 for information.
www.renewconsulting.com
SENIOR LIBRARY
ASSISTANT
Bilingual (Fluent Spanish/
English)
Bi-cultural (Hispanic/Latino
and English)
24 hours per week
The White Salmon Valley
Community Library has a
current opening for a Senior Library Assistant to assist in providing library services to patrons of all ages,
including those who are
members of the Spanishspeaking community. The
successful candidate will
perform a variety of specialized and clerical duties
related to library programming, information and circulation services and outreach for both Spanishspeaking and Englishspeaking audiences.
This position requires a bilingual speaker, fluent in
Spanish and English both
oral and written; must possess a valid Washington
driver’s license and safe
driving record and willing to
work a schedule that meets
the needs of the library including
evenings
and
weekends. Experience and
education include three
years clerical and/or technical library experience, experience working with children; extensive experience
with the Hispanic/Latino
community; completion of
twelfth grade; college level
course work in library science highly desirable.
$13.82 per hour, 24 hours
per week; excellent benefit
package. Position open until filled.
To apply go to the FVRL website at www.fvrl.org and click
on `about us’ for a complete
job description, requirements
and information about the
White Salmon Valley Community Library and the Fort Vancouver Regional Library District, and a printable copy of
the FVRL application form.
Submit a library application
form to the White Salmon Valley Community Library or mail
to HR Department, Fort Vancouver Regional Library, 1007
E. Mill Plain Blvd, Vancouver,
WA 98663
SERVER/HOST: Friendly,
quick, over 21 helpful.
Apply at Baldwin Saloon.
205 Court St, TD.
(3) Special Education Asst
positions open in the Structured Learning Center at TDW
and TDMS; 3.75 hrs/day;
$11.88 per hr +differential;
NCLB requirements apply;
Pre-Employment Drug testing. Requirements and
Classified applications are
online
at
www.nwasco.k12.or.us or
pick up at 3632 W. 10th,
TD Closes: Oct 2nd, 2012
at 4 pm EOEE
• Physicians
• Nursing
The Fruit Company
(www.thefruitcompany.com)
is hiring a Fruit Buyer responsible for the following:
manage daily fruit buying,
ensure fruit quality, utilize
planning reports and historical data for purchases,
complete receiving documentation, pickup and coordination of purchases.
Ideal candidate will be selfdirected with strong problem solving and communication skills. Candidate
must work well in fastpaced, ever changing environment, particularly during peak seasons. Submit
resume to
resume@thefruitcompany
.com
CERTIFIED
NURSING
ASSISTANTS
CERTIFIED
MEDICATION
AIDES
Contact JULIE @ 541296-2156 ext. 3238
1015 Webber St.
The Dalles, OR 97058
COOK
Full time Cook position,
flexible hours and willing
to train. Please Contact
Kathy @ 541-296-2156
ext. 3225. 1015 Webber
St. The Dalles, OR.
WE TEST FOR DRUGS
EOE
Full Time Physical and Occupational Therapist, Consonus
Healthcare is seeking a passionate PT or OT for The
Dalles area. If interested
please send your resume to
[email protected]
or call (971)-206-5167
HOME CARE
Chesterfield Services
Is hiring home care aids in
Klickitat County. Fax resumes 509-427-4021 or call
877-509-6847.
Child Care Wanted ........95
Diaper Services ...........100
Adult & Elderly Care ....105
Travel &
Transportation
To view all current
career opportunities
and to apply online go
to
www.mcmc.net
Car Pools .....................110
Tickets .........................115
Travel ...........................120
Free-To-All ...................122
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
Needed in The Dalles. Effective customer service,
cashing-handling,
and
computer skills needed. Bilingual
English/Spanish
REQUIRED. Professional
& adaptive team member.
Full time position. Details at
www.lcdcfh.org.
Medical
Transcriptionist
CARE FACILITY
LICENSED NURSE
CASA VOLUNTEER TRAINING
Help abused & neglected
children while learning new
skills. Become a Court
Appointed Special
Advocate (CASA)
volunteer. Training begins
on Oct. 16. For more info
call 541-993-9506 or
www.gorgecasa.org.
• Support Staff
Daily part-time medical
transcriptionist needed for
a busy established physical
therapy clinic in The Dalles.
Salary commensurate with
WANTED: Landscape Profes- abilities.
sional. Experience required.
Rate of pay based on experi- Send cover letter and reence. Ref’s required.
sume to Rebecca Street
Call 541-296-1424.
Physical Therapy, 115 W
4th St., The Dalles, OR
WEED TECH I
97058. No phone calls
Seasonal Assistance
Klickitat County Weed please.
Control,
Goldendale,
Residential Associate 1
$11.15/hour, casual, ap- ColumbiaCare Services is
proximately 6-8 weeks.
looking for a Residential
Closing date 10/5/12 or
Associate 1. This person
open until filled.
Visit www.klickitatcounty.org will need to be flexible with
for details and application or their work schedule; there
contact Personnel Depart- is plenty of work; just no set
schedule. You must be
ment, 509-773-7171.
able to qualify as a QMHA
(bachelors degree in psych
77 Help Wanted or a related field, and/or at
least 36 months working in
Medical
the mental health field.
Please visit our website:
columbiacare.org, to apply.
CBCF
Choose the Creekside poCOLUMBIA BASIN
sition.
Our Mission is to
Improve the Lives of
Those We Serve
Community-owned
Not-for-Profit,
Skilled Nursing Facility.
Position available:
82 Volunteers
• Clinical Staff
FRUIT BUYER
COMPREHENSIVE,
An innovative behavioral
health care and service
SALES & SERVICE
Hood River Les Schwab Tires provider, is currently reThis position requires ex- cruiting for a Psychiatrist or
cellent customer service an ARNP to provide serskills and the ability to work vices to our Goldendale
Probation certificate and in a rapid pace environ- and White Salmon, WA faEqual Opportunity
Education
two years recent work ex- ment. Contact Mark or Kian cilities.
Employer
Supervisor
perience responsible for at 541-386-1123. See full Responsibilities
include
personnel
Supervision. job description on-line at psychiatric
evaluations,
Salary
range
$3751
to
OCDC in The Dalles area
medication management,
Information Services
lesschwab.com
$5022/mo. with exceptional
is looking for an Education
educating staff and staffing
Systems Analyst
SERVICIO DE LIMPIEZA
benefit package. AppliSupervisor with at least 2
cases with other profes(Programer)
cants must complete HRC Esta aceptando aplica- sional staff.
years experience in superciones,
PT
y
FT
todo
ano
application and questionvision and program manComprehensive is comagement for our Hood Riv- Wasco County is seeking naire. Obtain job packet Texto o dejar un mensaje
mitted to building strong
Stacy
541-490-4384
er and The Dalles Centers. to fill the position of Infor- from HR County Adminiscommunities through the
The position supervises mation Services Systems tration, 601 State Street,
efforts of its staff, clients,
Hood
River,
OR.
97031.
Education
Coordinators Analyst.. Duties include but
and through collaborative
Your ad should be here! partnerships.
with the goal of administer- are not limited to: Web de- Fax #(541)386-9392. Aping education , mental velopment including inte- plication deadline 4:00 p.m.
If you are interested in joinCall The Sentinel today
health & disability pro- grating MS SQL data, October 5, 2012. Bilingual
a fun, team-oriented
to place your ad in print ing
grams that OCDC delivers. HTML, JavaScript,etc. MS Spanish/English applicants
work environment, please
Oregon Child Development SQL database manage- are encouraged to apply.
apply
online at http://
and online. 509-773Coalition is the largest Mi- ment and maintenance.
Hood River County is an
cwcmh.appone.com/ or call
3777.
grant Head Start in OreEOE.
509-575-3894 to request
gon, serving 4,000 children Starting pay $3830.85 to
an application packet.
and their families annually.
www.cwcmg.org,
Equal
$4024.30. Open till filled.
This is a full time, year
Opportunity Employer/ADA
Applications available at
round job with competetive
Wasco County CourtDENTAL ASSISTANTS (EFDA)
pay and excellent benefits.
Needed in Hood River &
View a complete job de- house, 511 Washington
St.,
Rm
207
The
Dalles,
The Dalles. Join our great
scription and apply online
OR.
team as we grow! For deat www.ocdc.net/joblistings.
tails, and to apply, visit us
Please
see
full
job
deat www.lcdcfh.org.
Equal Opportunity Employer
scription and qualifications
DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
at: http://co.wasco.or.us/
We are seeking a team
county/jobs_main.cfm
player with excellent computer and people skills.
Job Openings
Understanding of dental
procedures and insurance
MCCC builds better comknowledge is a must. Communities, one person at a
pensation based on expetime. Serving over 500 chilrience. 4 day work week.
dren in Oregon/WashingPlease send resume by fax,
ton MCCC is recruiting for
541-386-6647,
or
email,
the upcoming program
[email protected], mail or
year. Position currently
drop off to Pat Freeman Denopen include an Early Head
tal, 1216 12th Street, Hood
Start Associate Teacher.
River, OR, 97031.
For job requirements, start
date, site location and application, please review job
posting
at
www.mcccheadstart.org.
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.
77 Help Wanted
Medical
The Dalles Health
& Rehabilitation
Center
Has the following
position available:
CNA - Day & Evening
Shifts Available
If you are interested in
joining our team of
owners, please apply in
person at 1023 W. 25th
Street
100% Employee
Owned
78 Help Wanted
Office
LEGAL SECRETARY NEEDED
for HR lawfirm. Legal office
experience & familiarity
with court procedures preferred.
Email:
[email protected]
or mail resume to JSSFO,
PO Box 457, Hood River,
OR 97031. No phone calls
please.
79 Help Wanted
Sales/Service
F/T SALES SUPPORT
North Sports
A growing watersports
manufacturer/distributor is
looking for a self-motivated
person who enjoys working
with people. This F/T position will work closely with
our customers and team
members providing sales
support. Successful applicant will have excellent
communication skills, positive attitude and experience with MS Excel and
Word. Salary DOE including medical benefits, paid
holidays and personal time.
Send
resume
to
[email protected]
80 Positions
Wanted
I AM looking for house OR
business cleaning jobs and
have very good references.
Goldendale area. 509-7730456.
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
125 Auctions
Northwestern Livestock
Hermiston, OR
When it’s time to market
your catte, you DO have a
choice.
Northwestern Livestock is
now representing Western
Video in addition to our
weekly livestock sale.
For more info:
Gary Miller - Owner
541-567-6649
541-561-8499
Pat Beard - Field Rep
541-571-9599
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
Come see us!
DONATIONS WELCOME!
975 Indian Creek Rd., HR
135 Goldendale
BIG TWO family yard sale,
47 Shilow Way, 5 miles up
97 north of town. Sept
28 & 29, 8am-5pm. Tractor,
4-wheeler, fishing supplies
and misc.
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012— 13
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
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
150 Apparel/
Jewelry
155 Furniture
STORE CLOSING
ALPACA
ANNEX
at MEADOWROCK
Is THE Place to
Gorge Bedquarters
1800 W. 10th St.
The Dalles, OR 97058
Like new mattress at
affordable prices. Store
closing at the end of the
month and everything must
go! 541-296-4341
Shop for ALPACA!
160 Appliances
BE WARM!
195 Sporting
Goods
280 Misc. Wanted
286 $500 or Less
MOUNTAIN
SHADOWS GUNS &
MORE
WE BUY
SCRAP GOLD
Acoustic guitar for sale,
$75: Includes canvas zip
case, pick, extra strings, instructional VHS tape &
booklet. Call 803-209-0216
We Buy, Sell & Trade
Guns, Militaria. Top Dollar
Paid. Gun Repair &
Cleaning Available in
Store.
Located 1115 Hull Street,
Hood River, Oregon. Call
541-490-4483.
225 Building
Materials
• HATS • SCARVES •
WASHER/DRYER. Maytag
2” x 30 alum. irrigation pipe
circa 1985. Works well,
450 LF. $300. 541-298$50 for set. 541-386-1234,
8025
Kirby.
STEEL Beams for sale: 4
WASHERS & DRYERS, ea HP 14x100lbx30’ @
Refrigerators & Ranges, $600/ea.
6
ea
HP
For sale, All brands, Prices 12x53lbx30’ to 40’ @ $.25/
vary from $125 & up. Will lb. 8 ea I 15x50lbx24’ @
do service calls. Call for $240/ea. Misc. steel @
$.20lb. 541-298-8025
more information.
• GLOVES • VESTS •
541-296-8970
All Sizes!
Many Colors!
Huge Variety!
ALPACA
FOR EVERYONE!
• YARN • ROVINGS •
MANY 100%
ALPACA ITEMS!
PICNIC AREA
185 Firewood &
Stoves
235 Misc.
Equipment
PILE Driving hammer,
4000 lb. Drop hammer plus
MIXED wood, $160/Cord, leads. 10k - 40k Lbs. 10” 12” plies $2000. 541-298Delivered locally.
8025
541-467-2764
AVAILABLE
250 Baby Items
Weekend Tours 2 pm
insert alpaca artwork
right facing
RED FIR
FIREWOOD
WELL SEASONED
$180/CORD
DELIVERY AVAILABLE
509-281-1660
WORTH
THE DRIVE!
Jim or Barb Hansen
80 Mt. Adams Road
Trout Lake, WA 98650
509-395-2266
meadowrockalpacas.com
195 Sporting
Goods
CUSTOM Bianchi CLX
road bike, full Ultegr group
carbon Bontrager wheels,
$1300. 541-806-1762
PALI Dawn Crib & changing table set. Some
scratches on crib. w/ Mattress. Dark wood. Good
cond., Made in Italy, $300
OBO. 541-490-6947
SAFETY 1st Travel System
incl stroller, rear facing car
seat, 2 car bases, Exc.
cond. Non smoking family.
No accidents. Black &
green fabric. $125 OBO.
Call or text 541-490-6947
280 Misc. Wanted
10K to 18K
Dental Gold-Platinum
Artisan’s Jewelry
and Gallery
137 East Jewett
White Salmon
509-493-1333
282 Free/Give
Away
AIR CONDITIONER, Frigidaire, great for apartments
& houses, works great,
$60. 509-774-8341
Aisics
Norm
Glove
New.
0419
#T1F6N Wh/Bl Sz6
$60. Merrell Pace
Blk Sz6 Norm $80.
$50/both 541-980-
Alfred Hitchcock Mysterys
Books Youth Series 1-43
Complete. Hard & softbacks Exc. cond. $200
OBO 541-300-9015 eve
ANTIQUE
WALNUT
HEADBOARD, footboard & ANTIQUE buck saw, One
side rails. FREE. Needs re- 6’ Handle, Good shape,
$75. 541-993-8886
pair. 541-490-5101
FREE windows, assorted
aluminum
w/attached
storm windows. (1) 16 light,
wooden sash window w/
storm window, 4’x 8’. Call
541-386-5313.
286 $500 or Less
ANTIQUE Victorian Couch,
honey oak trim with silk
brocade fabric. Primarily
cream color, $500 obo.
503-421-4269
ARTLEY
CLARINET,
American made, $150/
OBO. Call or text
541-993-0876.
$275 Authentic vintage
Dresser 1974 Fire Hydrant ATV rear paddle tires and
Anniston, AL. Plumbed with wheels, ITP Sandstar, on
garden hose spigots. Pat- polished wheels, 20 x 11-9,
fits Honda & others, brand
rick ph 541-298-2687
new, $200, 509-281-0281.
1000 lbs engine stand,
AWNING, commercial enpro quality. $150.
trance, 8’x 4’, with brack541-993-1090
ets, $150, 509-427-4307 or
1930’s buffet. Fair to good 503-816-5966.
shape. Made in Portland
Oregon according to stick- BATTERY, Les Schwab
er on back. $75 541-705- 24F-50, auto/light truck/
5490
van, brand new, paid $60,
1978 1/2 ton Chevy truck sell $45 firm. 509-774parts. 3 sp. transmission 8490.
on column, & other parts BEAM,
glue
lam,
available. $150. 509-314- 21”x8”x55’, $450 OBO.
5099.
509-493-2161.
1984 6.9 Diesel motor, w/
Beautiful
Mahogany Crib
extra parts, Was running
with mathress. $200
when parked, $500/OBO.
541-980-1052
541-739-2900.
BEEMAN
Air Rifles: S-1
2.2 liter V-tec 1998
Honda Accord engine, $250; R-7 $200; Norica
$450/OBO. 541-300-0455 Model 61 $30. 509-7733015.
or 541-769-0148.
WANTED: Used lawn
mowers & rototillers, run- 45 - 50”X 16’ LONG steel Beige microfiber couch and
ning or not; for free or wire panel $20 each.
recliner. $30 for both. 541cheap! Call 541-980-7760. 541-980-9494
980-3640
286 $500 or Less
286 $500 or Less
CAMCORDER, Sony digi- DROP ceiling, 600 sq. ft.
tal mini handy cam, AC complete w/ 2 x 2 tiles,
power adapter, charger, Excellent shape, All for
connecting cables, Excel. $275. 541-296-1271.
cond. $100. 541-374-9391
DRYER, good used MayCAR
SEAT,
Comfort tag Neptune, 220 volt. Nice
Touch, for baby to 5T size. looking, no dents or dings.
Would also work as a Clean & works as it should,
booster, $30. 541-386- $250. 541-386-1567
1371
DRYER, Kirkland by WhirlCENTREX by Pioneer 8 pool, white, excellent contrack recorder & player, dition, $50. 541-354-1989
turn table, 2 stand up
DRYER. Whirlpool, heavy
speakers and a lot of 33
duty, super capacity, $55.
records. $50. Dan
541-399-3899
509-250-0678
EDGER, Craftsman, 3.5
CHAINSAW, McCullough;
hp, $85, 541-354-1584.
Strong engine, 24” bar,
good cond. $100.
ENTERTAINMENT center
509-250-3665.
(solid construction) with 20”
Magnavox TV, both in good
CHAIR,
ottoman
and
condition, $75. 509-538matching
hide-a-bed
2184. (Cook).
couch. Blue toned cloth,
$225 OBO. 541-806-6283
FIELD trainer collar, w/
transmitter, charger, tester
CHAIRS and table, antique,
and operating guide. Vari$95. 541-386-2588, 1301
able modes. $50 obo. 509Nix Drive, HR.
772-2612.
CHILD’S riding car, Little
FORD ranger wheels, 4
Tikes Foot to Floor, Cozy
Alum. w/ Tires . $100. 541Coupe, red and yellow,
993-3029
$25, 541-387-4752.
FREEZER, heavy duty, 5
COAT, genuine leather,
cubic feet, good condition,
size medium, like new, $45
$100 firm, 541-386-4544.
or make offer, 541-3865005.
GO CART frame great
project for father & son
COFFEE MAKER, Cuisi$50. OBO or trade.
nart, grinds an brews all in
509-250-1538
one, with manual, $35.
509-493-2315
HOMELITE chain saw, 2.0
Cubic Inch, 16” bar, excelCOMPUTER, Dell, 80 GB
lent condition w/case,
HD, P4, Older/works per$100. 541-296-2861
fect. Extra games, $100.
541-296-3440
KITCHEN cabinets, complete kitchen, uppers and
CONVERT
TO
BED
lowers, $400, 541-400SEATS from center of Win0088.
nebego Rialta camper,
$500 obo. 541-399-6530
Little Tykes playhouse.
Never been outside, great
DESK. Oak replica Secrecondition. $200 firm
tary with drop front,
541-980-1052
44”x32”19”. $125 OBO.
541-352-5550
MATTRESS topper, twin
size, down filled, excellent
DINING CERTIFICATES,
condition, includes down
$50 value each, all meals
pillow, $40. 509-493-3695.
Columbia Portage Grill at
Shilo Inn. Sell (2) for $45. MEDELA double breast
509-493-1617.
pump, Older model, Exc.
working condition, Needs
DINING TABLE, Mahogany
new tubing and shields,
Duncan Phife, triple ped$100 OBO. 541-490-6947
estals, 3 leaves + 2 drop
leaves. 91” x 42” to 33” x MESSAGING phone, LG
42”. $200 cash. 509-637- Cosmos II, brand new-still
3685
in box, $50. 509-493-2981.
ALL GORGE
CLASSIFIEDS
placed through The Sentinel
will appear on
The Sentinel’s
website
goldendalesentinel.com
A/C and Heating
Attorneys
Engine Repair
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
14 — SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
286 $500 or Less
286 $500 or Less
295 Pets &
METAL DETECTOR
Supplies
TIRES. Studded snow tires
w/case, white, Quantum II, (4) on 5 hole, GMC Jimmy
$80. 541-993-1288
rims. Cooper Discoverer,
MICROWAVE, Frigidaire, LT235/75R/15, $375. 5091100 watt, 1.2 cu ft, stain- 395-3633
less steel, new in box.
TOOLS, Misc. $25 for all.
$150. 541-980-8857.
541-298-1509
MOTOR for 1996 Acura Integra, 4 cyl. not V-Tech, TREADMILL, Sports Craft
139K miles, AT, $450. 541- TX50 RC, like new, turns
380-1166
on, clicks off, needs switch,
CHESTER
Call me Chester,
MOTORCYCLE
wind- $25, 541-386-7477, leave
just don’t call me late
shield/windscreen, Spirit, message.
for dinner!
Universal fit w/ brackets,
TREK Alpha 4000 bicycle,
Likes: kids, dogs, cats,
Off Honda, $75/OBO in
18 Spd., $85. 541-340car rides, wet food,
great cond. 541-980-2963
running free, laps,
0714 or 541-298-8080
MUFFIN pan. Pampered
cuddles, and sunshine.
Chef Silicone Floral pan, 12 TUB, 7 jet, Whirlpool KohDislikes: crates. Really,
cup. Dishwasher safe, ler, excellent condition,
that’s it!
rarely used. $39 new, sell- $200, 541-380-0588.
ing for $10. 541-354-2446
Adopt A Dog
TV CABINET: on casters,
541-354-1083
NEW portable sewing ma- heavy oak w/extension
chine w/ carrying case, shelf. 29.5x19x31. $50
Orig $150, Sell for $100.
obo. 509-365-9527. Can
541-399-1555
email photo.
ORCHARD LADDER, 14 ft,
$75. 541-296-5610 leave TV or microwave cabinet
on casters. Heavy oak w/
message.
extension shelf. 29 1/2”w x
OVER CAB canopy, insu19”d x 31”h. Can email
“MAYLA”
lated, wire 110, excellent
photo. $50. 509-365-9527
Little tabby, 2 years old,
cond, fits full size pickup.
female, spay, shots, Luk
$350/OBO. 541-968-0927. TWIN BED:Firm Sealy
check, indoor/adults only.
includes
PALI Dawn Crib & chang- Posturepedic,
lCall Bonnie
ing table set, w/ mattress. boxsprings,frame & headSome scratches on crib, board $150. 530-708-2699.
Good cond., Made in Italy,
BE MINE
UTILITY TRAILER,
$300 OBO. 541-490-6947
2 wheel, 5’ x 6’ x 1.5’, $300.
CAT ADOPTION
PHOTO PRINTER w/new 541-354-1748
bemine.petfinder.com
ink. Print pro photos for
County Fair or documents WATER PUMP, Sta-Rite 1
to 8.5” x 14”. Only $40 1/2 HP, runs great, $75.
cash. 541-352-3523
541-386-3984.
PING pong table, Stiga, full WESTERN 15” saddle,
ADORABLE
size, new, $200, 541-387KITTENS
tooled w/silver, exc. cond.
4711.
FOR ADOPTION
$400. 509-896-2082.
14 weeks old, males and
PING/Air Hockey table &
females, grey/white, black/
Fold up ping pong table WILD BLUE satellite dish,
white, spayed and neunever used. $150 OBO
$100/both. 541-993-2027
tered, shots, indoors only.
509-773-5680
PLAYSTATION
3,
6
FREE MICROCHIP!
months old, $150. No WINCHESTER 94 CenCall Elizabeth
games. Like new. Randy at tennial 30/30 Musket, in
541-769-0121
box, $500. 541-806-1762
PLYWOOD, partical board, WINDOWS (9), single
PURRFECT FIT
8’x10’x3/8”, HD industial
CAT ADOPTIONS
pane 35x77. $10 ea. 509strength, 10 sheets, $15/
purrfect-fit.petfinder.com
773-4980.
sheet. 509-493-3173.
Portable table saw $50.00 WINDSURFING board, Tabou 67L DaCurve, excel- FREE 10 yr old saddlebred
541-370-2942
lent condition, $500. 509- mare. very nice horse 509POWER JUICER by Jack
493-4038.
439-0957 Lyle
LaLanne, good condition,
$75 firm. 541-490-4689
WOOD Dining table with 4
Susan
chairs and extra leafs,
POWER SURGE PRO- $200. 541-298-1008.
TECTOR, Monster brand,
6-weeks old, 2 blacks left,
X-BOX, complete. $40.
for home theater system.
no papers, very smart,
541-965-2636.
Works great. $225. 541ready to go, $100.
386-6755 Hood River
541-386-3776
541-386-5099
LAB PUPS
PRINTER INK. Canon,
BCI-10, 11, 15, 21, 24. Color & black, quantity, 29.
$75/all 541-354-1505.
ANIMALS &
AGRICULTURE
RIFLE: Herter 308 cal,
made in England. Variable
3x9 scope. $350.
541-980-9896.
Livestock & Supplies ...290
Pets & Supplies ...........295
Pasture Rentals ...........300
Stables & Kennels .......305
Hay, Feed, & Produce..310
Lawn & Garden Equip. 311
Food, Meat, & Produce315
Plants & Nursery Stock
320
Farm & Orchard
Equipment ...................325
ROW BOAT. 9-feet long, 5
feet wide, 20” high. Built in
wheel for moving, oars and
a swivel seat, $200. 541386-1913
RV
REFRIGERATOR,
Astral, 3 way, 42” x 22”,
$400, 509-748-0400.
290 Livestock
SAFETY 1st Travel System
incl stroller, rear facing car
& Supplies
seat, 2 car bases, Exc.
cond. Non smoking family,
5 SADDLES (off Read
$125 OBO. 541-490-6947
Ranch in Roosevelt).
SCHWINN 26” bicycle, 10
•Saddle King of Texas;
speed, light weight, excel•Hamley;
lent condition. $85.
•Bonney;
541-395-2676, Maupin.
•Baker;
SEA KAYAK. 15’6” Scimitar •1963 Trophy Saddle.
Aqua Terra. Rudder, pad- Best offer! 509-896-2020.
dle, spray skirt, roof racks,
pump. $500 or trade for
Advanced Hoofcare
SUP. 509-493-4303
and Horseshoeing
SERTA Perfect Sleeper
twin mattress. 2 years old,
good condition, $50. 503- Three Decades of Quality
Service. Journeyman farri312-9335
er. Will Travel. Call or text
SET OF 4 tires 305/45R/20 Sam @ 509-310-9073 or
$500. like new.
509-250-3425
509-250-6299
SMOKER, Luhr Jensen, BANTY laying hens &
new, in box, $25. 541-298- babies for sale $2.50 for
hens $1.25 for babies.
2971.
Game roosters free.
SNOW Chains fits tire size 509-314-5099
P225/75R/15, P235/75R/
15, P215/75R/14 LT. New. GOAT (wethered), white,
$55. 509-637-4044.
male, $150, 541-905-6666.
Solid wood desk with re- HORSES: (1) Half-musmoveable hutch.$100
tang mare; (1) Half-Quarter
541-980-1052.
mare. Both rideable. $500
SONY 32” TV, good
for both. Goldendale area.
condition, $75.
360-936-3556.
541-980-4154.
SONY play station 2 slim,
4 memory cards, 13
games. $125.
541-296-4416
STRING trimmer, Black &
Decker, cordless, $5.00.
509-493-3054.
TIRES & WHEELS, off
Jeep Wrangler. Safari MSR
LT235/75R15 tires on
5 hole aluminum Jeep
wheels, $300. 541-4904391
JUSTIN HILL
HORSESHOEING
509-261-1508.
gorgefarrier.com
NEED help loading
your
horse in a trailer? Want
help with ground work?
Call Heidi
509-261-2730.
509-493-3993
315 Food, Meat,
& Produce
BEEF for sale.
Quarter, side or whole,
$2.65 per lb. hanging
weight.
509-773-3432.
APPLES, PEACHES,
PEARS, & CHERRIES
325 Farm &
Orchard Equip.
330 Business
Rentals
360 Duplexes,
Four-Plexes/WA
The Dalles
2003 ORCHARDRITE frost
fan, 457 V8, propane, auto 1040 sq ft, $950/mo.
start, 260 hours, factory 825 sq ft, $650/mo.
maintained. $18,000. 541- Col Ct Mall, 107 E 2nd St
Inc. utils, 541-298-8903
352-6298 Parkdale.
GOLDENDALE: 319 W.
Darland,
2 bd., 1 ba. duplex. W/D
hookups.
Fenced back, great
location. All appliances,
TRACTOR, 1976 diesel, 7 Office complex, $750/mo.
cat/dog ok. Section 8 OK!
255 Leyland, low hours,
Rent: $495/mo. Call Keno,
bucket loader, new rear Storage:400 sq ft.$125/Mo 541-993-0992.
tires, $2500, 541-400THE DALLES, Large shop GOLDENDALE: 516 W.
0088.
for rent, Excellent location, Court
Office & bathroom, Call for 3 bd., 1 ba. duplex, lower
appointment.
$850/Mo. level. W/D hookups, newly
RENTALS
redec. Lg. fenced yard,
541-296-1424
Business Rentals.........330 The Dalles, Office space, storage, great location. All
Apartment Rentals/OR 335 4000 SQ feet. All on one appl. Cat/dog OK;
Section 8 OK!
Apartment Rentals/WA 340 level, 18 parking spaces on
Rent: $575/mo. Call Keno,
Condo Rentals/OR ......350 lot, new high efficiency heat 541-993-0992.
Condo Rentals/WA ......352 pumps, 3 bathrooms two
Duplexes, Four-Plexes/OR handicapped, new roof, in355 side remodeled. Call 541365 House
Duplexes, Four-Plexes/WA 993-4407
Rentals/OR
360
House Rentals/OR.......365
**ROOMY riverside condo
335 Apartment
House Rentals/WA ......370
with garage and covered
Senior Housing ............372
Rentals/OR.
deck. Incl. W/S/G.
Mobile Homes/Oregon.375
Mobile Homes/Washington PARKDALE. Large 3 bdrm, **Panoramic Mt. Views
380 2 bath, $800, includes all from this 3 bdrm, 1 Ba
Mobile Home Spaces ..382 utilities. 541-400-8071.
home on a corner lot with
RV Space.....................384
lots of storage space.
Rentals Wanted ...........385 PARKDALE. 2 bdrm apt.,
Rentals to Share..........390 $670/mo. + $670 deposit, **Enjoy the sound of Mill
Room Rentals..............395 541-400-8071.
Creek from this stunning 3
RV Site Rentals ...........397 THE DALLES, 1 Bdrm, W/ bdrm, 2.5 Ba town home
Vacation Rentals..........400 S/G paid, $550/Mo. + $500 with garage.
Bed & Breakfast...........405 dep. No pets allowed.
Ask about our other availStorage Space.............410 541-298-7015
able listings. 541-296-1152
Misc. Rentals ...............415
THE DALLES, 1 Bdrm,
CASCADE LOCKS. Clean,
non-refundable $200 Move 2 bdrm, 1 bath, W/D hookin fee, $475/Mo. W/S/G ups, quiet street, close to
330 Business
paid, 541-296-1348.
school and store. $750/mo.
Rentals
+ $1000 deposit. Available
THE DALLES: 1 bdrm
daylight basement apt. All now, references required.
GOLDENDALE: 125 Main
Call 541-354-1122 for apStorefront office w/bath- utilities paid, $500 + de- plication.
room. Approx. 140 sq. ft., posit. No pets/smoking.
541-296-3447.
CASCADE LOCKS, 2
$125 mo.
bdrm, 1 ba, heat pump,
Also: Commercial Office/
newly remodeled bathretail space - Approx. 600
340
Apartment
room. lg yard. $900 mo.
sq. ft., bathroom & com1st/last/ $300 dep. No pets/
Rentals/WA.
mon area. $350/mo. Call
smoking. Ready to move
Keno 541-993-0992.
in. Full basement storage.
BINGEN. Studio, 1 bdrm, 2
541-806-1479 or email:
HAVE A HOME FOR SALE?
bdrm, monthly, $400-$600,
Get results fast by placing utils includ. 1st+dep. 509- rentalhouse205@yahoo
.com
your ad in the Gorge Clas- 493-1803 9 am-7 pm.
sifieds, your ad will appear
CASCADE LOCKS 2 bdrm,
in every paper in the gorge GOLDENDALE Village 1.5 ba. house, large lot,
area,
reaching
over - 3 & 4 bdrm. apts. for end of cul de sac, garage &
115,000 readers each
large yard. $825/mo. 1st/
immediate move-in.
week. Call us at the Goldlast & $300 dep. required.
801 S. Schuster,
endale Sentinel, 773-3777
Available immediately. Pets
509-773-6002.
or toll-free at 1-888-287ok w/$200 dep. Call 541386-3024
3777.
HOOD RIVER
200 sq. ft. office, $230
300 sq. ft. office, $230.
400 sq. ft. office, $350
300 sq. ft. office, rr, $350
500 sq. ft. office, $475
715 sq. ft. office, $600.
1068 sq. ft. office, $885.
1800 sq. ft. retail, $1300.
Various dry storage units
Chuck Beardsley, 541-3865555, Hershner & Bell Realty
New 800 sq ft shop with office, restroom, large over
head door plus 120 sq ft
storage shed. Off street
parking. Downtown The
Dalles. $725/per month
lease. 541-993-1000 or
541-993-9930.
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, religFRESHLY picked Bartlett ion, sex, handicap, familial
Pears. $10 for 30 lb box or status or national origin, or
.75 cents per lb. Bring your an intention, to make any
own boxes. 541-296-5724. such preference, limitation
or discrimination.” Familial
status includes children
HONEY CRISP
under the age of 18 living
Apples, Pears, Peaches
with parents or legal cusU-Pick Pumpkins
todians, pregnant women
Variety of Fall decor
and people securing cus*********
tody of children under 18.
Rasmussen Farms
This newspaper will not
3020 Thomsen Road
knowingly accept any ad541-386-4622
vertising for real estate
WIC & Farm Direct
which is in violation of the
Checks accepted
law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellSandoz Farm
ings advertised in this
5755 Mill Creek Rd
newspaper are available on
Wed.-Sat. 11-6, Sun. 11-4.
Pears, apples, vegetables, an equal opportunity basis.
To complain of discriminabeef and pork.
tion call HUD toll-free at 1800-669-9777. The toll-free
telephone number for the
320 Plants &
hearing impaired is 1-800Nursery Stock
927-9275.
Veggies on sale now! Check
out our low prices!
U-Pick / We Pick
Mt. View Orchard Fruit Stand
6670 Trout Crk Ridge Rd.
Parkdale
541-352-6554
7 days/week, 9-5
SWEETWOOD NURSERY
Trees and shrubs
Monday - Fri, 1-5
Saturday, 8-5
Closed Sunday
1284 Hwy 141
White Salmon, WA
509-493-1907
370 House
Rentals/WA
420 Acreage
& Lots
CLEVELAND,
WA:
4
bdrm., 2 ba. MH, $850/mo.
plus deposit. Call Sally
Naught, Get Real Estate
LLC, 509-896-5500.
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.
GOLDENDALE: 2/3 bdrm.,
2 ba., garage/shop, $700/
mo. + dep. W/S/G pd., no
pets. 509-773-5342.
GOLDENDALE: 2 bdrm., 1
ba., 5 mi. from town. $450/
mo. plus dep. 541-9806703.
John L. Scott Prpty Mgmt
www.JLSRentals.com
541-298-4736
3 Bd House Lyle $900
3 Bd House Klickitat $975
4 Bd House Stvnsn $1,000
4 Bd House Trt Lake $900
3 Bd Stevenson $1,800
3 Bd House NB $1,000
2 Bd House Carson $650
3bd Townhouse NB $975
2 Bd Apt Stevenson $700
Comm Prop Bingen $750
NORTH BONNEVILLE. 3
bdrm, 3 bath, with garage,
new paint, new carpets,
$900 + first/last. We accept
HUD. Denise 360-5139995.
WISHRAM: 2 bdrm., 1 ba.
house, 314 Bunn Canyon.
$550/mo. 1st/last, $300
dep. 5099-773-4900.
380 Mobile Homes/
Washington
2006 Marlette single-wide,
16x60, 2 bdrm., washer,
dryer plus central AC. Must
move. $23,500. 509-8962496.
GOLDENDALE: 507 W.
Burgen
1 bd., 1 ba., park model
mobile home. Fenced yard,
storage. Furnished - newly
redecorated, great location!
All appliances, pet friendly.
Rent: $375/mo. Call Keno
541-993-0992.
THE DALLES mobile home
or RV space available.
541-980-4995
HOOD RIVER 3 bedroom/
2 bath in Rockford area.
390 Rentals
Master bath has 2 person
jacuzzi tub. $1450. per
to Share
GOLDENDALE: 2 bdrm. month includes water and
electricity.
541-400-0177
apartment 123 NW High
Lady in Lyle would like a
Street. $575 per month HOOD RIVER small 1 bed- nice person to share my
plus deposit
room, 1 bath single house, home and expenses.
503-201-7797
W/D hook-up. $550/mo 509-365-6894
509-773-3816
plus utilities, along with
move-in fee of $1000
WORKING or retired in
MURDOCK, 2 bdrm, 1 Ba,
deposit. No smoking or
views, clean, move right in! pets. looking for long term Goldendake, Biggs Junc$650/Mo. + 1st/Last se- renter. Call 541-386-6819 tion or Moro? Taking applications for qualified person
curity dep. W/S/G pd. Coin for an application.
to share my home near
op laundry, No pets. For
Biggs Junction. Credit/crim.
John L. Scott Prpty Mgmt
info call 541-490-9721
www.JLSRentals.com
check; 1st/last. Call to see
THREE Mountain Village
541-298-4736
if this fits. 541-965-2636,
Located at 613 W. Collins
1 Bd Apt $550
Bernie.
in Goldendale, now ac4 Bd House TD $1,100
cepting applications for 1, 2
Studio Apt TD $410
& 3 bdrm. apartments.
2 Bd Apt TD $500
395 Room Rentals
HUD Section 8 Restrictions
2 Bd House $900
apply. Call 509-773-3344
3 Bd Duplex TD $800
The Dalles, Room mate
or TTY dial 711 for appli2 Bd House Rufus $800
wanted to share 3 bedroom
cations.
3 bath house. $ 550.00 per
Comm Prop TD $3000
month. You get your own
MOSIER, 308 Wash. 3 bathroom, living area and
bdrm, 2 Ba, Storage shed, bedroom. Price includes
River view, Central heat/
utilities, with wireless interair, Appliances incl. W/S/G
net, and DirecTV is availPaid,
$900/Mo.
+
$1000
355 Duplexes,
Dep. Pets ok w/ deposit. able. located Columbia
Four-Plexes/OR Avail 11/1. For application View Hts 541.993.4109
please call 541-478-3133
THE DALLES, 2+ Bedroom THE DALLES, 220 W. 14th
410 Storage Space
duplex, 905 W 10th St. St. 3 bdrm, 1.5 Ba, W/S
SINGLE LEVEL, 1000 sf, incl. Carport. $975/Mo. +
SPACE
quiet neighbors, clean, well 1st/Last + Dep. No smok- STORAGE
28’x36’x12’, alley eat of Oil
maintained. Off-St parking, ing/pets. 541-806-8977.
Can Henry’s on West 6th
A/C, laundry room & yard
care included. $750/mo + THE DALLES, Beautiful 4 St, The Dalles. $400/ per
$850 deposit, utils. not in- Bdrm, 2 Ba, in nice housing month. 541-980-8620.
cluded. No smoking,dogs, development, 955 Home
St. large fenced backyard
cats. 541-399-2331
w/ storage shed, $1000/
REAL ESTATE
Mo. + Security dep. Could
be partly furnished. For info
Acreage & Lots ............420
buy it!
call 541-399-1555
Commercial/Investment
THE DALLES, 2 Bdrm, 2 Property
sell it!
425
Ba manufactured home. Orchards, Farms, Ranches
Country setting w/ garden
find it!
430
area. Avail. 10/1/12. $935/
Real Estate/OR............435
Mo. incl. W/S. Located at
in the
5250 McDonald Way. 541- Real Estate/WA ...........437
Gorge
Real Estate Wanted.....440
298-8873
Classifieds
Manufactured Homes/OR
Wasco, single-wide mobile
445
home, HUD approved two Manufactured Homes/WA
bedroom mobile home, with
447
shady, private deck and
Condos/OR ..................450
exterior shed. Borders on
creek and next to commu- Condos/WA..................452
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
DESIRABLE
WESTSIDE FSBO
Gorgeous 3-2.5
remodel on 2 acres.
Gourmet Kitchen, Prograde appliances,
Granite counters,
hardwoods, custom
cabinets, all newer
windows, Open floor
plan for entertaining,
Southwest facing deck
and patio. Great
property for your
dreams... organic
garden? Horses?
Llamas? Chickens?
4415 Riordan Hill Dr.
@ Country Club Rd.
Hood River
PICS at: www.gorgeusphoto.com/
4415riordanhilldrive
hoodriver
$459,000.
Contact Seller:
541-490-6384.
3% to buyer agent.
PARKDALE
4bd/2ba, immaculate
downtown craftsman
home, $269,900
3bd/2ba home on 5+ ac.
Year-round creek.
$329,000
Call Joyce at
Mt. Hood Realty Company.
541-352-7789
WASCO, 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba,
Updated 1982 Manufactured home. On 80 ft x 90 ft
lot. Fenced yard, carport w/
shed. Deck & patio. Owner
will carry contract. $96,000.
541-296-5255
Your Dream Home: Remodeled 5 Bdrm, 3 Ba
1939 Craftsman. 2772 SF.
Living rm, Family rm, Dining rm, Utility/office, Fireplace, Oak/tiled floors, AC/
Gas, 2 Patios. Near downtown. Zoned B&B or multi
$279K. 541-300-0853.
columbiagorgefsbo.com
List your
Real
Estate
in the
Gorge
Classifieds
nity garden.$300 deposit.
Owner pays water and
sewer. $475 per month.
503-884-6788
325 Farm &
Orchard Equip.
Classified
Deadline
is Monday
at noon
‘48 INTERNATIONAL Harvester Farmall H with original loader. Very good
shape. $4,000. 509-7736150.
Statewide Classifieds
STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS
WEEK OF SEPT. 24, 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.
ADOPTION
EDUCATION/CAREER TRAINING
FOR SALE -- MISC
HELP WANTED
ADOPT: A truly Loving Family,
Audrey & Fred, wish to cherish
miracle baby with love & financial security. Expenses paid. 1800-775-4013
Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified.
Call
866-483-4429.
www.CenturaOnline.com
www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1800-578-1363 Ext 300N
985-646-1700 DEPT WA-5990
Peoples Lifestyle
FINANCIAL
HELP WANTED -- DRIVERS
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
DRIVERS
-Inexperienced/Experienced.
Unbeatable
career
Opportunities.
Trainee,
Company
Driver,
Lease
Operator, Lease Trainers. (877)
369-7105
www.centraldrivingjobs.com
ADOPT -- Caring, married couple wishes to give love, affection
& security to your baby.
Expenses paid. Confidential.
Call Debbie & Frank anytime 1888-988-5499
EDUCATION/CAREER TRAINING
ATTEND COLLEGE online from
home. *Medical *Business
*Criminal Justice. *Hospitality.
Job placement assistance.
Computer available. Financial
EVENTS-FESTIVALS
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.
FOR SALE -- MISC
HELP WANTED
SAWMILLS from only $3997.00
-- Make/Save Money with your
own bandmill. Cut lumber any
dimension. In stock ready to
ship. Free info/DVD:
NOW HIRING: Easy Work,
Excellent Pay, Assemble
Products From Home. No
Selling, $500 Weekly Potential.
Start immediately. Info Call 1-
LOOKING for Job Security?
Haney Truck Line, seeks CDL-A,
hazmat/doubles required. Offer
Paid Dock bumps, Benefits,
Bonus Program, Paid vacation!
Call now 1-888-414-4667 or
HELP WANTED -- DRIVERS
www.gohaney.com
DRIVER --$0.01 increase per
mile after 6 months. Quarterly
Bonuses. Annual Salary $45K to
$60K. CDL-A, 3 months current
OTR
exp.
800-414-9569
www.driveknight.com
LEGAL SERVICES
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]
Get More
Exposure
for your money!
Advertise
state-wide.
Call The Sentinel
509-773-3777
SEPTEMBER 26, 2012— 15
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
437 Real
Estate/WA
460 RVs &
Travel Trailers
GOLDENDALE: Custom 4
bdrm., 3 ba. home on 45
ACRES, 3-1/2 mi. from
GD.
Nice features include wood
pellet stove, 24x36 shop,
lots of trees. Great
mountain view! $319,500.
509-773-4173.
Full information at
www.goldendalehome.com.
PRICE
REDUCED
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. $127,500.
509-261-0017.
RIVER view lots for sale.
$10,000 cash to $22,500
OWC in Roosevelt, WA.
Call Sally Naught, Get Real
Estate LLC, 509-896-5500.
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
1995 35 Ft ALFA 5th
wheel. Living & dining +
bedroom slide outs. Garden tub & shower, plumbed
for washer & dryer. Back
door to kitchen + side room
to living room. Large TV, 8
ft front closet & much more.
$9500. 541-965-0753
2003 WINNEBEGO Brave,
32 Ft., 2 slides, 29k Miles,
$36,000. 541-993-4065
ARCTIC Fox 5th wheel,
2006, 30 ft, Silver Fox edition, 2 slide outs, 5 new
tires, excellent cond. *GMC
3/4 ton, ‘07, 4WD, extended cab, 36K miles, loaded,
new tires, 6.6 turbo, Duramax diesel, Allison trans.,
$43,500 for both. 541-4902006. Will sell separately.
Hank’s Auto Sales
Buy-Sell-Consign
RV’s/Utility
Vehicles
www.hanksautosales.net
541-296-5854 or
541-993-0109
TRAILER, enclosed, 7’x
14’, tandem axle, with ramp
and side door, new condition, Pace Cargo Sport,
$4000, 509-427-4307 or
503-816-5966.
465 Canopies &
Campers
**PASTIME** 2000 camper
off long bed Toyota Tacoma, 11 ft, 2 burner stove,
hood w/light & fan, sleeps
4, heater. Good condition.
$1200 OBO. 541-296-9613.
2005 PICKUP Camper, Fits
smaller
pickups,
new
cond., Sink, Stove, &
fridge, No bathroom or AC,
$4000 OBO. 541-296-3211
490 Motorcycles,
ATCs & ATVs
insert Harley-Davidson
logo here
ANNIVERSARY
EDITION
2003, always garaged, low
mileage, way too many extras to list, excellent condition, $12,000 OBO.
509-767-4205
525 Sport Utility
Vehicles
JEEP CJ5, ‘80, 6 cylinder,
4 speed, soft top, runs
great. $3500 OBO, 541400-8383.
530 Pickups
& Trucks
1977 FORD F-150 X.L.T
460 V8 Automatic, AC, CC,
New tires, Starts, Looks/
runs good. Best offer. 509261-0692
530 Pickups
& Trucks
2006 Chevy Colorado Ext
cab pickup. Great condition
w/low miles, 40.5K. Red w/
grey cloth & carpet—LS
trim, seats 5, rear jump
seats, under seat storage.
2.8 L, 4 cyl. engine, auto
trans, A/C, tilt, cruise, AM/
FM CD MP3, bed liner, 2
mounted snow tires & new
chains. Good economy
$11,000. Call John, 541806-3008
Chevrolet C-10 Pickup
1974, Wife died and need
to pay expenses. 1/2 ton
short bed pickup, 250 6cylinder, nearly new front
tires, new seat, 4-speed
manual
transmission,
equalizer hitch and wiring
harness ready for towing.
Tired but runs good. $900
541-296-3792
CHEVY 2500 HD 4 x 4
pickup with canopy, 2001,
white, auto, A/C, 174,000
miles, runs well. $4,500
OBO. Clean title. Maintenance records included.
Call Ben 541-296-9177
540 Automobiles
GREMLIN! 1978, 258 cu.
in. Straight 6, 5 sp. manual.
Good body, 178k miles,
$500.
1991 LINCOLN Towncar
OHC 5-8, 130K miles. Was
involved in accident - part
out or fix up. $400.
Both cars run and drive.
509-773-3015.
RED T-Bird LX, 1996, body
136K/70K engine. Interior
like new, uses no oil, tires
good, good air, $2500. 541296-3440 or 541-993-3418.
Home Elegance, LLC is offering our existing clients,
and all new ones a 15% labor discount on all awarded
projects for the remainder
Ford E250 1994, Extended of 2012 to show our apvan. Good condition - only preciation for their patron3 owners. This is a con- age. Call us for a free estitractor style van - not a mate. CCB#190173 (541)
passenger van; just 2 seats 980-0726
in cab. Small built-in tool
cabinet. 187000 miles. 300
Cleaning
cu/in straight 6 cyl. Automatic. $2100. Call Mark at
541-980-4961
COLUMBIA HOME
MAINTENANCE
Great fishing boat! 16 Ft.
Tri-Hull. 25 HP Johnson w/
good compression. Recent
$900 overhaul. Will guarantee. Good trailer. Depth
finder. Landing net, incl.
fishing pole & reel $1800
OBO. Call 541-980-7157.
‘86 LINCOLN Towncar.
302 V8, runs good, looks
good, license expires Oct.
2014. 2 snow tires on rims
included, $2500, 541-3541374.
OR#60590
540 Automobiles
SUBARU Outback Limited,
‘2008. 2.5i engine, AWD, 4
spd. with sport shift, like
new condition, always garaged. No smoking, children
or pets, LOADED! Leather,
heated seats, 32,000 mile
warranty, dealer certified.
$19,950. 541-390-3284
W HAT H APPENS
when you don’t advertise?
Absolutely Nothing!
Tree Services
Windows
GUINN’S
FOREST
MANAGEMENT
PRO WINDOW
Harvesting Timber
to Enhance Future Forests
30-YEARS
EXPERIENCE
insert artwork
REFERENCES AVAILABLE
Specialty log markets,
marking and flagging, permitting, road building,
thinning, land clearing,
brush piling, replanting,
danger trees, storm damage plus blowdown.
Tamera Woodruff
NO JOB
360-241-3537
or TOO BIG!
TOO SMALL
Building &
Remodeling
Cleaning - Painting
and Windows
FREE ESTIMATES
2002 FORD RANGER Extra Cab, 4 x 4, white, manual, A/C, 210,000 miles,
runs well. $2,500 OBO.
‘84 HONDA Goldwing. 92K Clean title. Maintenance
miles, asking $1500 obo. records included. Call Ben
541-490-4731
541-296-9177
2005 HONDA Silverwing
Scooter. A scooter that 2003 CHEVY LS TAHOE,
drives like a motorcycle but E-85 engine, 4x4, 45K
gets the gas mileage of a miles, one owner, tow
scooter. 600CC. 6K miles, package, third row seats,
$4250. 541-993-7684
excellent condition inside &
garaged.
always
4-WHEELER: 2005 NST out,
250, 2 wheel drive, low $14,000. Call 541-386miles. $1500. 541-993- 2051. See at: 1910 B St.,
Hood River.
2114.
Basic and Deep
+ Spring
Cleaning
Windows
ABSOLUTE
SUNSHINE LLC
538 Antique &
Classic Autos
490 Motorcycles,
ATCs & ATVs
PROFESSIONAL
HOUSE
CLEANING
SERVICES
FREE
ESTIMATES
480 Boats, Motors,
& Supplies
1997 FORD RANGER, Ext.
Cab, 4 x 4, Dark Green, P/
W, P/Locks, Auto, 200K, w/
Rebuilt engine, $3500.
541-980-7717 The Dalles
Cleaning
541-352-6001
MT. HOOD CLEANING
The Best Cleaning You Will
Ever See
Maria De Leon Bibian
House Cleaner
541-993-4831
Call Anytime
FREE
ADS?
Ask Us
How!
773-3777
ONE TREE
TO 200 ACRES
Landscape
Maintenance
CLT Certified landscape
tech. Irrigation maintenance, turn-overs, repairs
& winterize. Lawn maintenance, design and install.
Residential/Commercial.
541-705-5528.
Dennis’ Lawn Maintenance
Lawn mowing, Hedge Trimming, Pruning, Rototilling,
Hauling, Bark Dust, Brick
Walls, River Rock & snow
removal. Call today!
541-993-0090
541-296-1850
Bonded & Insured
(Hudson Insurance)
Free Consultation
insert artwork
CHRIS GUINN, Owner
23 Years Experience
Licensed and Insured
360-957-5662
GUTTER & CHIMNEY
CLEANING
“AFFORDABLE”
1-800-918-0739
Covering the Entire Gorge!
HOLIDAYS
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
White Salmon, WA
[email protected]
YARD CARE
Rototilling, thatching,
mowing, pruning,
fertilizing, trimming &
edging, spraying, bark
chips, debris hauling,
compost and clean-up.
541-490-0786
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.
Call us!
509-773-3777
Get more eyes on your
ad,
place it in the
Gorge
Classifieds!
16 — SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
Vintage cars to race on
Loops this weekend
The Maryhill Loops hill
climb and car show will be
held Oct. 6 and Oct. 7. The
car show will be on the
grounds of the Maryhill
Museum of Art from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Expect to see
a large number of modern
to classic old cars at this
annual event. The show is
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
ROUGH RANGE: The Naches
Valley Rangers ran roughshod
over the Timberwolves on
Thursday, winning the match 100. At left, Delaney Romero
makes a run on goal over goalie,
Tessa Enwards, with Britni
Bischoff in tow. Delaney scored
five goals for Naches Valley.
Above, another Ranger, surrounded by Randi Johnson (left)
and Joplynn Escene, battles
Nicholle Seward (10) for the ball.
Play at times got a little brutal
with a Ranger, at right planting
an elbow on Johnson. Also pictured are Goldendale’s Eileen
Kelsey (left) and Dana McKune.
Top 10 for Clinton at Prosser
Peter Clinton ran with the Troy Roberts, 22nd place and Andrew Gannon, Josh Cummings, Joseph Cummings
top runners from Ellensburg, Kane Lowe 38th.
Also competing for the Pi- and Kenny Allenton.
East Valley and Prosser to
place eighth with a run of rates were Joey Cardenas,
19:42, last Thursday.
Bickleton tagged onto a
CWAC league event at Prosser and showed their talent
with three runners in the top
40 of the field of 74. Bickleton’s other top runners were
VOLLEYBALL
from Page 7
with nine digs. TLG scored 27
aces, led by Cox with seven
and Huffsmith and Abbie
Vermiere each serving up
six. Bickleton had seven kills
from Jamie Venema with
Lindsay Brown scoring three
blocks. The setting tandem of
Amanda McBride and Haley
Goodnight were each credited with three assists. Annie
Lindsley served up three aces
for the Pirates.
In other action, TLG defeated Yakama Tribal 25-18,
25-8, 25-10. Vermiere had six
kills and nine aces to lead
TLG. Beyyine Ozkan had six
assists while Cox had five assists and matched Vermiere
with nine aces.
WOLVES
from Page 7
against La Salle.
Goldendale
0 – 0 – 7 – 7 14
Cle Elum-Roslyn 14 – 14 – 10 – 7 45
Rushing: Goldendale – Isaac Messenger 5-15,
Bartkowski 6-3, B.J. Walter 1-3, Denney 18-(-8).
Warriors – Millsap 10-152, Gall 5-105, Burchak
7-78, Parish 3-17, Kretschman 3-9, Anderson 37, Powell 1-8, Sienia 1-5.
Passing: Goldendale Denney 12-22-137-1int1TD, Bartkowski 1-1-25-0int-1TD.
Warriors – Kretschman 2-4-80-0int-1TD.
Receiving: Goldendale – Bartkowski 5-59,
Chris Trunkey 3-39, McGraw 1-25, Dean Enstad
2-24, Messenger 2-15. Warriors – Gall 2-80.
presented by Goldendale
Motorsports Association.
A dinner will be held at
the site from 4 p.m. to 6
p.m.
On Sunday, Oct. 7, the
single car race on Maryhill Loops runs from 8:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. Vintage cars
make timed runs, one car
at a time on the course.
The overlook off SR97 affords the broadest view of
the race. The event is
sponsored by the Society
of Vintage Racing Enthusiasts (SOVREN).
There is no charge for
the car show or viewing
Sunday’s event.

Similar documents

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

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

More information

City meeting focuses on surplus timber logging issue

City meeting focuses on surplus timber logging issue and then went back to work. Boardman, who has lived in Goldendale for 18 years, left the Washington State Patrol (WSP), where he’d worked since 1985, on June 21 this year, exactly 28 years to the d...

More information

City council votes on, seats replacement council member

City council votes on, seats replacement council member worked lockstep with Ron Ihrig, Klickitat County PUD Director of Operations and Generation, and John Grim, engineer with John Grim and Associates of Lyle, along with local and state officials in a ...

More information

Another School Playcomes to Lyle

Another School Playcomes to Lyle safety and law enforcement hazards. Some controversy is anticipated by another primary action by the city council Monday, which was the first reading of a new animal control ordinance. Among other ...

More information