Glenwood School sings songs in Spanish to Dallas, Texas

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T HE S ENTINEL
Goldendale, Washington
Union
petition
challenges
hospital
outsource
contract
IS ON
FACEBOOK & T WITTER
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 2011
Vol. 132 No. 11 75 cents
Chinese
company
looks at
plant
LOU MARZELES
EDITOR
LOU MARZELES
EDITOR
Despite a contract already
in place for ambulance outsourcing by Klickitat Valley
Health (KVH), opponents of
the move are distributing a
petition around Goldendale
and urging residents to show
up at the KVH commissioners
meeting tonight to register
disapproval.
The petition has been visible at area businesses and is
accompanied by a flyer entitled “Get the facts on subcontracting KVH emergency services.” The flyer has the logo
of Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
Healthcare on it. SEIU is the
medical workers’ union at
KVH.
Among other charges, the
flyer states there are no savings in subcontracting the
ambulance service. “The difference is $70,000,” the flyer
says, “which the hospital
could have saved if the manager had simply worked shifts
like all the other managers in
EMS had done.”
“That means that the manager of the service doesn’t go
out on calls,” says Chris Barton, secretary-treasurer of
SEIU number 1199 North
West, the union that represents workers at KVH. “Most
EMS [emergency medical service] managers do, but he
doesn’t. If he did, that would
have saved the $70,000 the hospital says it’s losing.”
Barton says the union
asked KVH administration
repeatedly for a specific dollar figure on how much the
hospital needed to save in its
consideration of outsourcing
the ambulance service, including at its last meeting
with the administration on
the matter. “They literally
gave us no response,” she
says.
The flyer also asserts that
there is a conflict of interest
in outsourcing the ambulance
service to Hadassah Management and that “there is no incentive to improve our emergency medical service when
your company is bidding to
take over that service.” It
claims, too, that outsourcing
allows no bargaining process
between the union and KVH,
that it negatively impacts the
economic impact to the community, and that it will result
in less money spent in shops
and for services.
KVH acting CEO Leslie
Hiebert confirms that the
contract is already executed.
“In fact, [Monday] was the
first day. They’ve already
made a couple of runs.”
KVH commissioner John
Quinn says the union had
ample opportunity to voice
their concerns at earlier
meetings. “We talked about
this at the February board
meeting,” Quinn says. It was
at the February meeting that
the vote on outsourcing was
made. “They [the union] were
pretty much a non-presence
there. And that was the time
to do it. There were some
community members there,
but no union presence. They
were very aware of the meeting and the agenda. I was actually surprised they weren’t
there.”
Barton says the union was
at the meeting. “We had a
staff person there,” she says,
“and there were some members there as well. The report
I heard was that there was little opportunity for community comment. We got word
about the meeting just days
before, and we hurriedly contacted people.”
The union’s flyer asserts
that its last bargaining session with the hospital lasted
See Union, Page A2
Glenwood School sings songs
in Spanish to Dallas, Texas
REBECCA GOURLEY
SINGING FOR SEUSS: Glenwood School students, wearing ponchos, sing an interactive song in Spanish for a class in Dallas,
Texas.
REBECCA GOURLEY
REPORTER
For the Glenwood
School, the past two weeks
have been all about reading, more so than usual. On
Thursday, March 10, the
Spanish class consisting of
kindergarteners, first
g raders, and second
graders sang an arrangement of songs for a school
in Texas over video communication—all in Spanish, of course.
As part of Dr. Seuss day,
March 2, Glenwood School
participated in many of
these video conferences
with other schools all over
the country throughout the
two weeks.
After the pre-kindergarten class from Sam
Houston
Elementary
School in Dallas, Texas,
performed their songs and
read an original story to
the eager K-2 class, the
Glenwood students performed their assortment of
songs, one of which they
also signed in American
Sign Language. After their
performance, they presented a slideshow of photos to
show the kids in Texas
what it’s like to live in the
Pacific Northwest.
“I thought they did a
great job,” said Spanish
teacher, and school counselor Bridget McLaughlin.
Initially, the kids got very
excited because they felt
like they were on TV. “But
once they have to perform,
they’re angels,” commented librarian Taunie Wilson.
When asked what their
favorite part about the
video conference was, most
of the kids considered
showing photos of their
town to the other school the
best activity. Their favorite
part about learning Spanish? To be able to say what
their favorite colors are in
a different language.
The schools were
matched up by “Read
Around The Planet” based
on age, and grade level.
“Read Around The Planet”
is part of the National Education Association’s (NEA)
Read Across America program and focuses on video
communications between
classrooms, exchanging
reading activities. The
Glenwood School has been
matched with schools from
all over Texas, as well as
one in Phoenix, N.Y., on
March 9.
The Glenwood School
has been celebrating Dr.
Seuss day for the past 10
years and doing video conferences for the past four
years. This is the first year,
however, the school has
been teaching Spanish to
all grade levels. “Their
minds are like sponges,”
said McLaughlin, referring
to her younger Spanish students.
As traditional Dr. Seuss
day suggests, students do
not have to read books for
the experience. However,
Glenwood students do not
always sing songs for the
schools they get matched
up with, either. One class
performed a play, “Jacky
and the Chili Stock,” while
See School, Page A2
Saturday
Market to
reopen as
Farmers
Market
Changes are in store for
the Goldendale Saturday
Market—beginning with
the name.
The Saturday Market is
about to become the Goldendale Farmer’s Market.
FILE
The market is striving to
MARKET VALUE: The Goldendale Saturday Market will become a Farmers Market for the 2011 seabecome a full-fledged
son. The Market will open the first Saturday in June.
farmer’s market, offering
fresh produce, plants,
was making the market a ket board determined the not easily available. The
herbs and grains during the pleasant site for shopping, most important factor in opening has been pushed
entire market season in ad- eating and visiting, and it building the market is to back to the first Saturday of
dition to crafts and was determined Ekone Park provide something local June, and the market will
processed food items. To do offers that. Organizers say people want. If they can continue through the first
this, the market is seeking signage will be a challenge, build a great market for Saturday in October, which
local vendors who want to as will coordination with Goldendale, the reasoning fits the fresh produce seashare their produce and re- other events in the park. goes, then other people vis- son better.
gional vendors willing to try The park offers bathroom iting will find it and join in,
A vendor meeting has
the Goldendale market.
facilities and electrical op- but the first priority is to been scheduled for ThursThe location of the mar- tions for food vendors.
day, March 31, at the comthe local area.
ket is also changing. Among
The season is changing munity room in the GoldenEkone Park is large
many sites proposed by ven- enough to allow the market slightly to accommodate the dale Library at 5:30 p.m.
dors and interested parties, to grow, organizers say. It is revised vision of the mar- Those interested in particiEkone Park was selected as close enough to the center of ket. In the past, the market pating in the new Farmer’s
the site that provides the town to encourage walking opened on Mother’s Day Market as a volunteer or a
most amenities with the and shopping by local resi- weekend. Although the past vendor or interested comleast amount of obstacles. dents.
openings have been well re- munity member are welOne of the biggest factors
The new Farmer’s Mar- ceived, produce in May is come to attend.
If all goes Klickitat County’s way, 150 new jobs could be
headed for the Goldendale
area in the next year or so,
courtesy of Shida Carbon
company based in China.
Eight visitors toured the
old aluminum plant last
Wednesday, assessing its potential. “It was a very positive
meeting,” says Mike Cannon,
the county’s director of economic development. “They
stayed two hours longer than
was planned.”
The Chinese guests visited
two other locations in the
state while here, one near
Seattle in what used to be a
nuclear facility. “It didn’t
have everything we have
here,” Canon says. “We’ve got
power, the railway, proximity
to barging docks.”
Shida Carbon is in Guanghan City in Sichuan province
in southern China. The company makes steel, but it has
some trouble completing the
entire process there. “They’d
use the plant to make anodes,” Canon says. “They’d
ship them here and have them
carbonized, which requires a
lot of heat and energy. Then
they’d be marketed in the U.S.
And they want a free-trade
zone.” A free trade zone has
long been an elusive goal for
the county, Canon says.
The visitors included three
executives from Shida and the
son and daughter of the chief
executive officer who are in
school in Vancouver, B.C.,
and served as translators.
Two other executives were
from a trading company in
Bellevue. “They’ll be spreading the word about Klickitat
County back in China,”
Canon says.
If the company chooses to
locate at the aluminum plant
site, it would be 2013 before
the operation were fully up
and running, though some
ramp-up would occur next
year. A total of about 150 jobs
would be created. A decision
is expected within the next
three to six months. There is
some pressure for a quicker
decision because the plant
owners have already contracted to dismantle all the cells at
the plant. Come August they
could all be gone. The Chinese
guests were made aware of
the timeline, and they likely
would need some of the existing buildings.
“It was a good, positive
visit,” Canon says. “After they
stayed the extra two hours,
they had a good lunch at the
Glass Onion. They were very
pleased.”
Livestock
Growers
Annual
Banquet
Saturday
The Klickitat County Livestock Growers
holds its annual banquest this Saturday at
the American Legion.
Social hour is at 5:30
p.m., followed by a
prime rib dinner at 7
p.m.
In addition to socializing and dinner,
the occasion features
music and dancing,
the association’s annual awards, and a
drawing for a Savage
22-250 rifle.
Tickets are available at KC Pharmacy,
Simcoe Insurance, Columbia Bank, and The
Pink Saddle.
Federal panel adopts options
for ocean salmon sport fisheries
A2 — MARCH 16, 2011
Anglers fishing along the
Washington coast will see a
lower catch quota for chinook salmon this year even
though the total number of
fish expected to return is
higher.
Three ocean salmon-fishing options approved today
by the Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC) establish a lower harvest range
for chinook to protect weak
salmon stocks – particularly
those returning to the lower
Columbia River. The PFMC
establishes fishing seasons
in ocean waters three to 200
miles off the Pacific coast.
Despite an expected increase in chinook abundance, the federal panel approved tighter restrictions to
protect wild salmon stocks
and meet conservation goals,
said Phil Anderson, director
of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW).
“Our first priority is to
meet crucial conservation
objectives for wild salmon,”
said Anderson, who represents WDFW on the management council. “The ocean options approved today are designed to meet or exceed
those goals.”
Anderson said two of the
options include recreational
UNION
mark-selective fisheries for
hatchery chinook that would
begin in early June. If implemented, mark-selective fisheries for hatchery chinook
would open ahead of the traditional recreational fishing
season for the second
straight year.
Mark-selective fisheries
allow anglers to catch and
keep abundant hatchery
salmon, which are marked
with a missing adipose fin,
but require that they release
wild salmon.
About 760,000 fall chinook
are expected to return to the
Columbia River this year,
nearly 108,000 more chinook
than last year’s forecast. A
significant portion of that
run – about 250,000 fish – is
expected to be lower river
hatchery chinook, which traditionally have been the
backbone of the recreational
ocean chinook fishery.
For coho salmon, the
ocean quota could be similar
to or slightly lower than last
year’s harvest guideline, said
Anderson. This year’s forecast of 362,500 Columbia
River coho, which account
for a significant portion of
the ocean catch, is similar to
the 2010 projection.
The PFMC is expected to
approve final harvest guide-
from Page A1
an hour and that KVH management left. Hiebert says
KVH went through a long
and involved dialog with the
union. “John Quinn and
Gwyn Miller [KVH’s former
human resources director]
met with the union several
times in the Seattle area”
over a period of a few
months, Hiebert says. “There
was a clear memo of understanding. We gave it an effort.”
Barton contends there
was never a constructive dialog about the finances involved with the ambulance
service. “They were not able
to answer our questions,”
she states.
“Essentially I’d characterize the whole thing as, ‘This
didn’t get enough air time,’”
Barton continues. The
union’s position is that sufficient community awareness
was never brought to the
issue on the part of the hospital.
Barton also says there is
an ethical issue at hand in
the awarding an outsource
contract to Hadassah Management and its manager,
Mark Bryan. Besides asserting that Bryan does not go
out on ambulance runs and
thereby costs KVH more
money, additionally she says
his son works for him, earning significant overtime pay.
“The hospital has a policy
that an employee can’t supervise a family member,” she
states. “They get around that
by saying he’s not an employee.”
Barton asserts Hadassah
can make money only one
way, and that’s by paying employees less money and offering fewer benefits. “The only
one who can benefit from
this is the owner,” she says.
Hiebert says the deal is not
one-sided. Eleven people applied for the newly outsourced service, including
some in Goldendale. “Our
contract with Mark stipulates that they give preferential treatment to present employees,” Hiebert says, “up to
a certain time. I can’t comment on what compensation
he’d provide to employees,
but I think he’d need to offer
competitive wages. Mark
grew up in this area; he lives
in Goldendale.”
There are other voices in
the community making clear
their opposition to ambulance outsourcing. Longtime KVH critic Delbert
Brown wrote a letter to The
Sentinel this week charging,
among other things, that
Miller was already working
at Klickitat PUD at the time
she was also representing
KVH at a recent meeting on
the ambulance matter and
calling it inappropriate. “I
find it very troubling that
she resigned at KVH as soon
tions, said Anderson.
“Our goal is to provide a
full season of fishing for chinook and coho,” Anderson
said. “But to accomplish that
we will likely need to use
management tools such as
restricting the number of
days open each week and adjusting daily bag limits.”
The co-managers will
complete the final 2011
salmon fisheries package in
conjunction with the PFMC
process during its April
meeting. The PFMC last year
adopted recreational ocean
fishing quotas of 61,000 chinook and 67,200 coho salmon.
Meanwhile, public meetings are scheduled in March
to discuss regional fisheries
issues. A public hearing on
the three options for ocean
salmon fisheries is scheduled for March 28, in Westport.
lines for this year’s recreational ocean fishery in midApril. The three options announced establish parameters for state and tribal fishery managers in designing
this year’s fishing seasons.
The recreational fishing options are:
Option 1 – 52,000 chinook
and 79,800 coho;
Option 2 – 42,000 chinook
and 67,200 coho; and
Option 3 – 32,000 chinook
and 54,600 coho.
Details on the three options can be found at
www.pcouncil.org.
Using these options as a
framework, fishery managers will work with stakeholders to develop a final
fishing package that provides opportunities on
healthy salmon runs while
meeting conservation goals
for weak salmon popula-
SCHOOL from Page A1
another played “Where in Washington are we?” In the latter,
kids shared clues about a city they were assigned to and
made the other class guess the name of it.
In this case, the students in the class from Dallas were
learning English as their second language (Spanish being
their first). For that reason, it was a special treat for them to
hear the Glenwood class sing in Spanish.
now has a paramedic and one
EMT, instead of only EMTs.”
A paramedic, she explains,
has more training and can
provide more medical treatment than an emergency
medical technician. Previously the second crew of the
ambulance service did not
have a paramedic on board.
“It’s an improvement in the
level of service, to have two
ALS [advanced life system]
teams rather than only BLS
[basic life team]. The county
had been pushing for that for
a long time. And we have better response time.”
“This was not a sudden decision,” Quinn says. “It took
about a year. I appreciate the
union’s input, but I’m disappointed that now that this is
done, they’re trying to undermine it.”
“’Undermine’ is a word I
wouldn’t use,” Barton says.
“We have questions about
how the board acted and how
the hospital acted. I take offense at their comment that
they tried to make this
work.” She maintains the
goal of urging people to attend tonight’s commissioners meeting is to get them to
reconsider the outsourcing
contract, and she says they
have the ability to do that.
The meeting is at 6 p.m. at
KVH.
as the ambulance was outsourced on Feb. 28,” Brown
wrote in his letter, “and she
should not be at KVH and
PUD at the same time.”
Brown also charged Miller
with being behind the firing
of a particular KVH employee who had recently won a
lawsuit against the hospital,
according to Brown, although he did not identify
the employee. “That is why
she went to work at the
PUD,” he wrote in his letter.
“Gwyn’s last official day
[at KVH] was Feb. 25,”
Hiebert says. “She’s been
working for us on a per diem
basis since then to help with
the transition. PUD is aware
of this. It’s not an unusual
situation, and Gwyn was gracious enough to help.”
Hiebert disputes the
union flyer’s charge that the
ambulance outsourcing results in a savings of only
$70,000. “That’s the cost in
contracted services,” she
says. “But it doesn’t take into
account the additional saving in FTEs,” referring to the
added costs involved in fulltime employment of personnel. Hiebert also challenges
the flyer’s assertion that the
ambulance service will suffer from outsourcing. “We’re
improving the service,” she
says. “Each crew going out
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CONTRIBUTED
DESIGNATED DRIVER’S NEEDED: Goldendale Police will be
focusing on impaired driving thanks to a grant from the
Washington Traffic Safety Commission. The grant will pay for
overtime allowing officers to make the special effort during the
week of St. Patrick’s Day. According to Lt. Reggie Bartkowski,
“the Goldendale Police Department has a zero tolerance policy
for impaired driving.” Above, officer Mike Smith makes a stop
during a previous emphasis.
Goldendale woman arrested
for possession of meth
A Goldendale resident wanted on a warrant for an original charge of methamphetamine possession was arrested in
Goldendale on March 10 around 9 p.m., adding an additional drug charge to her file. Christine Marshall, 34, was arrested after a Goldendale police officer stopped Marshall,
knowing that an outstanding warrant existed. During the
arrest, Marshall was searched and found to be in possession
of drug paraphernalia and a white residue later identified
as meth. Marshall was charged with possession of a controlled substance.
THIS WEEK’S MOST WANTED: Goldendale Police are looking for Jaeray Jackson. Jackson, 20, is wanted for obstructing
a law enforcement officer, minor in possession of alcohol, and
disorderly conduct. Jackson is 5-5, 135 pounds with brown
eyes and black hair.
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COMMUNITY BIRTHDAY
& ANNIVERSARY LIST
Australian Cattle Dog/
Blue Heeler
Foxy was found on the Hwy
and no one every came to
look for her. She is a great
little dog. She seems to be
housebroken and loves to
ride in the car. She is great
with the other dogs and I
have no idea how she is
with kids or cats. She
knows some of her basic
commands. Foxy’s adoption fee is $150.00. She will
be spayed and have all of
her shots before going
home. If you would like
more info on Foxy please
contact Lisa.
S T U D I O
G A L L E R Y
WANTED:
DEAD OR ALIVE
We buy your old cars, trucks, machinery,
scrap metal, farm equipment, etc.
Dogs
of the
Gorge
dogsofthegorge@
yahoo.com
Anna DiamondJohnson
March 29
Alison Chapple
Don & Laurie Wilhite
Michah Reimche-Vu
March 30
Pete Brokaw
Kahner Adams
Bill Panther
March 31
Hannah Reimche-Vu
April 1
Jim Allyn
Thomas Bruce
Anna & Carl Johnson
April 2
Margaret Bellamy
April 3
Mary Jo Hanson
Allen & Leslie Van
Horn
Sponsored by
North of Goldendale on Hwy. 97
Lamar, Inc.
March 17
Karie Ellis
March 19
Allison & Brad
Fahlenkamp
March 21
Bridget Hoctor
March 24
Jair Garcia
McKay Knowlton
Mike Kessinger
Harold & Arley Gray
March 25
Brittani Winters
Ron Moline
March 26
J.C. Cline
March 27
Humberto & Aida De
La Torre
March 28
Darby & Mary Jo
Hanson
April 4
Bob Mains
April 6
Mary Jane Mickelson
April 7
Becky Olsen
Ray & Janice
Mosbrucker
••The Goldendale Sentinel is taking over the duties
of producing the community calendar. The new
calendar will be out in 2012. Please contact us with
your birthdays and anniversaries, (509) 773-3777.
Lamar, Inc
773-3420
(541) 978-0079
VOLUNTEERS
ALWAYS WELCOME
&
912 West 6th Street, The Dalles, Oregon
541-296-2143
nicholsartglass.com
TO BE INCLUDED OR TO REMOVE A NAME PLEASE CALL:
THE GOLDENDALE SENTINEL @ (509) 773-3777
Auto Recyclers
MARCH 16, 2011 — A3
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
H OMETOWN
OBITUARIES
Frankie Anderson
Frankie Anderson died
March 9, 2011, at the Oregon
Veterans Home in The
Dalles, after suffering complications from a compound
leg fracture from a fall at
home.
She was born in
1933, in Memphis,
Tenn., to Dorothy
and Frank Sandra,
and g rew up in
Southern California. It was there
thanks to an uncle
who sold Indian
motorcycles she developed a love for
riding.
She met and married the
love of her life, Orrin Anderson, in 1952, and honeymooned on his Harley. Together they raised two sons,
Michael and Gary, while living the typical American
life. They enjoyed opportunities in both Utah and Oregon.
Frankie and Orrin retired to Goldendale where
they enjoyed the quiet country life and welcoming
friendships of its residents.
It was here she lost the love
of her life after
being married
56 years.
Frankie had
a warm sense of
humor. She enjoyed family vacations, and became a master
knitter. Her
final years were
spent battling
diabetes and its
side affects. She received a
lot of much needed aid and
loving care from the staff of
home Health at KVH.
She is survived by sons,
Michael and Gary, daughterin-law Kim, a grandson in
uniform, Joshua, and her
brother, Daniel.
Vay Godbey
Alvah A. Godbey, known
as Vay, died in Goldendale
on Feb. 18, 2011, at the age of
92.
He was born to Eunice
(Smith) and Claude S. Godbey in Mitchell, Neb,. on
July 20, 1918.
Growing up in Nebraska,
Vay enjoyed hunting, fishing and trapping on the
North Platte River. He was a
standout athlete, excelling
at all sports and attending
Chadron State College on a
sports scholarship. In the
early 1940s, he moved to
Seattle and worked in the
shipyards as a cement finisher. In the late 1940s Vay
relocated to the Okanogan
Valley and got into the aggregate and concrete business with RediMix in Brewster. On March 6, 1952 he
married Marian Eileen Nelson in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho
and in 1955, the couple settled in Goldendale where
Vay established Red Rock at
the Hinshaw Pit, then Goldendale Concrete and RediMix in the late 1950s. Vay traveled around the Northwest
working on various dam
projects. Vay eventually sold
his RediMix business to
Riley Brothers but continued to have a hand in the
Red Rock operation at
Blockhouse until the mid
1980s.
He always had a very
strong work ethic. Vay continued his outdoor hobbies
throughout his life and was
an avid fly fisherman and
bird hunter. After semi-retirement, Vay and Eileen enjoyed traveling South during the winter months, visiting Las Vegas, Arizona and
Mexico in their motor home.
Survivors include his
wife, Eileen Godbey, of Goldendale; son Ray Thayer and
his wife Carole of Goldendale; daughters Diane Barrett and her husband Ken of
Goldendale, and Roxene
Godbey of Gobles, Mich.;
four grandchildren, five
great-grandchildren and
one great-great grandchild.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; a sister,
Alma June Goble and brothers, Vivian B. Godbey and
Vaughn C. Godbey.
A funeral service was
held Feb. 25 at Columbia
Hills Memorial Chapel in
Goldendale with interment
at Mt. View Cemetery. In
lieu of flowers, the family
suggests memorial contributions to Klickitat County
Historical Society Presby
Museum in care of Columbia Hills Memorial Chapel,
PO Box 134, Goldendale, WA
98620.
Please sign the online
guestbook
at
www.columbiagorgefuneral
s.com.
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Ronald Bennett
Ronald R. Bennett, 79, died
March 5, 2011, surrounded by
his family.
Ron was born in Portland,
on Sept. 15, 1931 to Al and
Beryl Bennett.
Ron and his family moved
to White Salmon in the mid1930s. He joined the Army in
1952. After returning home,
he married Lucille Huskey of
Mosier, on Sept. 4, 1954.
Ron had two older brothers, Kirk and James “Bud,”
two younger brothers, Robert
and Russell; and one younger
sister, Joanne, all of whom
preceded Ron in death.
Ron worked for SDS Lumber Co. for many years as a
road grader operator. He
then worked for the Klickitat
County Road Department, retiring in 1994. He was known
by all as a fine “blade man.”
Ron loved helping others,
whether it was plowing someone’s driveway, helping with
the local food drive, or helping out at his local church or
senior center. He also enjoyed
gardening, spending time
with friends and family, and
dancing. He and his wife, Lucille, danced together for
more than 60 years.
Ron is survived by his
wife, Lucille Huskey Bennett,
of White Salmon; three
daughters, Rhonda and Bob
Hicks of Camas, Cindy and
Scott VanGelder of Vancouver, and Kathy and Larry
White of Car nation; 10
grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews.
Over the years, Ron and Lucille added two more daughters to the family – Becky and
Ed Powell of Trout Lake, and
Bridget and Ruel Suazon of
Toronto, Canada. They also
“adopted” many other children and grandchildren.
A memorial service will
be held at Grace Baptist
Church, 1280 West Jewett
Blvd., White Salmon, on Sunday, March 27, at 2 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Hospice
Southwest or The Ray Hickey
Hospice House; both of Vancouver.
Goldendale Grange 49 recently celebrated its 100 year
anniversary with an open
potluck meeting. Conducting
the event were Goldendale
Master MaryAnne Enyeart
and County Deputy Lucille
Bevis. About 60 community
members and guests attended
the event.
On March 4, 1911 George
Darland directed the organization of the Goldendale
Grange and its 25 charter
members. His granddaughter,
60 year member JoAnn Darland was recognized at the anniversary for her service.
Helen Hill, wife of Past State
Master Ray Hill, was recognized for her 75 years in the
Grange. Eleanor Dooley was
honored for her 82 years of
service. Introductions were
made of all members with
more than 40 years of active
membership.
Richard Lefever, grandson
of Dan Lefever (an original
charter member) gave a short
history of Goldendale
Grange. Great-g randson
Daniel Lefever, a fourth generation member is helping
carry on the family Grange
tradition.
Goldendale Grange history
actually dates back to 1874
when it was called Klickitat
City Grange 49, before Goldendale was incorporated and
Washington was still a territory. Goldendale hosted the
third annual Washington
State Grange Convention in
1891. J. McBee of Klickitat
County, No. 6 Grange 83 was
one of 16 delegates to attend
the first State Grange Convention in La Camas in 1889. By
1911, membership in the
grange had been declining so
the name was changed to
Goldendale Grange 49 and the
defunct granges of No.6
Grange 83, Columbus 88 (now
Maryhill), Burgen 84, and
Destiny
Theatres
Friday - Tuesday, Mar 18 - Mar 22.
Subject to change. Check times daily.
Columbia Cinemas
Base Rock
2727 W. 7th St., The Dalles - 296-8081
Bradley Cooper, Robert De Niro
LIMITLESS (PG-13)
Friday - Tuesday 1:50 4:20 7:00 9:20
MARS NEEDS MOMS (PG-13)
U Call
We Haul
Friday - Tuesday 2:00 6:40
Aaron Eckhart, Michelle Rodriguez
BATTLE: LOS ANGELES (PG-13)
Friday - Tuesday 1:30 4:00 6:40 9:10
Centerville Pit
(Rock Bottom Acres)
(541) 980-5808
Gary
Instock only
Available March 14 - March 19
Spring is Sunday, Mar. 20!
In the early years the
grange was a center of community activities, hosting
dances and card parties. The
Grange was also instrumental in securing public power
to rural areas and promoting
free rural mail delivery.
Goldendale and Klickitat
County also have the distinction of having the most active
Granges in the state with low
grange numbers; many below
100 – Goldendale 49, Centerville 81, Columbia 87, Glenwood 94, Mountain View 98
and Trout Lake 210. Today,
local grange numbers go up
to about 1170, but there are
only about 370 active granges
in the state. Klickitat County
will have to work to keep that
distinction alive.
Studio 818
Who’s been
living in your
RV this winter?
Hair Design
Sherri Niemela
In home salon or I’m
available to travel to you
10-6 p.m. Mon-Sat.
Evenings by
appointment
773-6049
(541) 980-3688
Get your RV ready for Spring!
State Fire Marshal
Certification
# 001242-08
Service & Repair. I come to you!
BRUCE HENDERSON
541-993-5982
L
&C
ICENSED
ERTIFIED
Friday - Tuesday 1:40 4:10 6:50 9:10
Matt Damon, Emily Blunt
ADJUSTMENT BUREAU (PG-13)
Friday - Tuesday 4:30 8:30
REIMCHE-VU
www.moviesinthedalles.com
Family Dentistry
Gentle Care For All Ages
773-CARE
773-5866
Klickitat PUD
Holds Annual
Customer Meetings
New Patients Welcome!
615 E. Collins Drive
If ever you’ve
thought about
adopting or
donating, the
need is urgent.
Ro sie
To sc a
Please help us
find forever
homes today!
A n t ho ny
C a f fe
Scavenger Hunt on now through March12th!
Happy St. Patrick’s Day
Thurs., March 17
Springcreek Grange 95 were
incorporated into the new
Goldendale Grange.
First Grange meetings
were held at the No. 4 school
house east of Goldendale and
dues were assessed at 10
cents a meeting or $1.20 per
year.
In 1913, the grange moved
to Enderby Hall in downtown
Goldendale. In 1924, the No. 2
school district south of town
consolidated with Goldendale. Goldendale Grange
bought the building and
moved it to town to make
their first Grange Hall. Today
that same building is Grange
member Lucille Lefever’s
Apartment building on the
corner of Broadway and
Chatfield.
RANGO (PG)
The shelter is overflowing with
pets looking for a loving home!
20% off
DATE-HUGHES TO WED: Rob Hughes and Rhea Date will
be married April 9, in San Diego, Calif. Date graduated from
Goldendale High School in 2001 and Eastern Washington
University in 2005. Date currently works as a microbiologist
for the Department of Veterans Affairs in Grand Junction,
Colo. She is the daughter of Becky Date of Yuma, Ariz., and
Rick and Cathy Date of Geary, Okla. Hughes graduated
from University of Southern California in 2007. Hughes currently works as a morning news anchor for KJCT in Grand
Junction, Colo. He is the son of Ed and Lauri Hughes of
Vista, Calif.
Grange celebrates 100 years of County history
Help! We need a home!
71025 N. Old Hwy 97 Loop, Wasco, OR.
(800) 824-7185
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
During the next few months,
Klickitat PUD staff and PUD
Commissioners will be attending
meetings of the various community and city
councils and other Community action groups
throughout Klickitat County.
Our goal is to reach out and interact with the
customers in each community and discuss
items of interest specific to each community in
relation to the electric, water, and wastewater
services provided by KPUD.
SCHEDULE:
March 28 – Lyle Community Action Council,
7:00pm, at the Lyle Lions Club
April 02 – Ponderosa Park Owners Assoc, 9:00am
at Klickitat PUD Meeting Rm, Goldendale
April 04 – Wishram Community Council, 5:00pm at
the School Community Building, Wishram
April 14 – Dallesport Town Council, 7:00pm at
the Community Center, Dallesport
April 19 – Glenwood Community Council, 7:00pm
at the Grange, Glenwood
We are collecting items needed at the shelter. Information
can be picked up at the shelter or call 541-296-5189.
(541) 296-5189
200 River Road,
The Dalles
Open Tues.-Fri .11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday 10-4 p.m..
www.ho me atlasths .org
Goldendale
1313 S. Columbus
509/773-5891
1-800-548-8357
White Salmon
110 NE Estes
509/493-2255
1-800-548-8358
A4 — March 16, 2011
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
O PINION
LOU MARZELES, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
KAREN HENSLEE, GENERAL MANAGER
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN, REPORTER/SPORTS
REBECCA GOURLEY, REPORTER
Don’t let insurance agents fly
away in the new health order
Proponents of the new health care law claim to have seen the future of American health care—and they say it’s a lot like air travel.
According to some, come January 2014 choosing a health insurance plan in the new exchanges will be as easy as shopping on Orbitz. By cutting insurance agents from the transaction and forcing
consumers and employers to buy policies direct, advocates claim
that the exchanges will trim costs.
But selecting a health insurance policy is a
tad more complicated than buying a plane ticket. Many consumers rely on agents and broGuest
kers to help them make informed insurance
Commentary
choices and take advantage of cost saving opJanet
portunities—and should be allowed to consult
Trautwein
with them if they so choose.
Most of the products that consumers buy online are simple commodities. When it comes to
health insurance, consumers are looking for more than just the
lowest price—they’re also searching for the best value. Some individuals and small businesses may have more specific needs.
Imagine if buying airline tickets were as complicated as picking
a health insurance policy. Travelers might not even know anything
about their future destination or journey toward it. They’d have to
select the thickness of their seat cushions. And tell the airline
whether they planned to use the bathroom during flight. And
whether they’d have chili or Indian food before boarding the plane.
And if you’re an employer, the number of workers could change
product offerings and cost. Each answer could change the price of
their seat—or perhaps bar them from traveling altogether.
Buying the wrong health insurance can jeopardize a person’s
health and financial security. And for small business owners that
provide health benefits to their workers, the risks are magnified
across many families and lives.
At least half of all small firms in the United States obtain their
health benefits through a broker or agent. A survey commissioned
by IBM found that three-quarters of small-business owners were
very satisfied with their agents’ work.
By empowering consumers with useful information, brokers
make the health care marketplace more—not less—efficient.
Janet Trautwein is CEO of the National Association of Health Underwriters.
Kids’ fun with blanket tents
It cracks me up how much fun furniture,” Maggie said. “We used
kids can have with indoor blanket to tear up the place when Mom and
Dad went out for the evening.”
tents.
First, they pushed the couch
Take Linda Sims, for example.
She was seven years old when she against the wall and tucked a large
and her sister made a world of fun blanket behind it. Next, the sibwith a blanket tent in their River- lings draped it to the other side
and secured it with pillows. Then,
side, Calif., bedroom.
“We’d open the drawer of the they grabbed their flashlights and
dresser, tuck the blanket inside climbed inside.
I made blanket tents, too, with
and close the drawer enough to
Grandma Wright’s
hold it in place,” she
homemade quilts
told me. “Then we’d
spread over a few
draped it down to
dining room chairs.
make a tent.”
Large phonebooks
In the world of
usually held them in
make-believe, the
place, if I didn’t wigtent created a perfect
gle around too much.
place to hide and
Inside, I munched on
share sisterly seDon’t Make Me raisins and chocolate
crets. “That was
chips, apple slices, or
fun,” Linda said. But
Turn This Car
white bread spread
even with all that exAround!
with butter and
citement, the girls
sprinkled
with
could never gather
Judy A. Halone
sugar—all the while
enough courage to
©2011
tuning in to watch fasleep underneath its
vorite kid shows
canopy. “We were too
such as Rusty Nails
afraid!” she said with
the Clown or Ramblin’ Rod.
a chuckle.
These stories remind me of the
My good friend, Maggie Galloway Dotson, was one of five kids thrill we felt in making our own inwho played inside the family’s door adventures. And I hope
small, square-shaped house in they’ll inspire you to think back
Alexandria, Ind. So without a and share a few of your own with
TV—this was the late 1950s, and someone special in your life, too.
the family had yet to purchase Because whether we were too
one—the kids used their own inge- afraid to sleep, turned on our flashnuity to make their own blanket lights or munched on snacks, one
thing’s a sure bet: we kids knew
tents.
“We used to drape blankets all how to have fun with indoor blanover the place—over all kinds of ket tents.
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)
SENTINELNEWS@GOLDENDALESENTINEL.COM; OR
(ADS, COMMUNITIES, HOMETOWN)
SENTINELADS@GOLDENDALESENTINEL.COM
THE GOLDENDALE SENTINEL STAFF
HEIDI MCCARTY, AD SALES & DESIGN
JUDYE REPENN, CIRCULATION
Deadlines:
News and Letters:
Noon Friday
Display Advertising:
5 p.m. Friday
Classified Advertising:
Noon Monday
Legal Notices:
5 p.m. Monday
LETTERS
FROM THE
Fire victims
auction coming
To the Editor:
One of the advantages of living
in the Goldendale area is that we
are able to have a direct connection
to other members of our community and can help each other in times
of need. The many volunteers of
our local fire and rescue depart-
COMMUNITY
ments frequently see people in
need, and due to our community’s
generosity, have a very useful tool
to help those people when they need
it most.
The fire victims fund has helped
many people in many different
ways since it was established. The
main source of money for the fund
is the annual auction. This year’s
auction will be held Saturday, May
7, at 10 a.m. at the Rural 7 main Fire
Hall located at 327 W. Brooks. We
are now accepting donations of any
kind of items to be auctioned off
for the fund. Bring your items to the
Rural 7 Main Hall or call Leo or
Dawn Spencer at 773-3047. Circle
the date on your calendar and plan
to attend.
Leo Spencer
Goldendale
St. Patrick, two-ring circus, and Roosevelts
March 16: 1802 – Congress approves establishment of West Point
Academy and young soldiers start
fading in. 1881 – Barnum and Bailey
Circus debuts but only has two
rings. 1992 – Ireland celebrated the
birthday of 48-year-old Bertha, reputedly the oldest cow in the world.
The next day Bertie is served as
corned beef along with cabbage.
Lips Appreciation Day.
March 17: 480 – Saint Patrick
dies so that others can celebrate his
birth by heavy intoxication. 1756 –
Crown & Thistle Tavern in New
York, St. Patrick’s Day first celebrated in the US. 1776 – British
forces evacuate Boston not because
Washington’s cannons overlooked
the city but due to riotous St.
Patrick’s Day Parade. 1995 – Astronomers discover cloud bigger
than the entire solar system 10,000
light years away that contains
about ten trillion liters of alcohol,
enough to make 400 trillion pints of
beer or 300,000 pints per person on
earth every day for a billion years.
Ireland begins the Guinness Project, a space exploration program.
March 18: 1766 – Stamp Act repealed. 1905 – Franklin Roosevelt
married Anna Eleanor Roosevelt
(nee Roosevelt), his sixth cousin.
1911 – Theodore Roosevelt,
Franklin Roosevelt’s fifth cousin,
opened the Roosevelt Dam, which
becomes Teddy’s 8th cousin twice
removed. 1961 – Poppin' Fresh, no
relation to the
Roosevelts, introduced as
the Pillsbury
This Week
D o u g h b o y.
in History
Awkward Moments Day.
Tim O’Neill
March 19:
1687 – After
singing “Frere
Jacque” one
too many times, French explorer
Robert Cavelier de La Salle murdered by his own men. 1863 – The
most powerful Confederate cruiser,
the CSS Georgiana, is destroyed on
maiden voyage. Its wreck, valued at
$50M, discovered exactly 102 years
later by a teen age diver. 1931 – Gambling is legalized in Nevada but
floor shows not legal till 1946.
March 20: 1616 – After 13 years
in the Tower of London, Sir Walter
Raleigh freed after jailers tired of
being asked if they still had him in
the can. 1942 – MacArthur declares,
“I came out of Bataan and I shall return.” That worked. 1969 – Nixon
proclaims he will end Vietnam War
in 1970. That didn’t work. He was reelected by a landslide anyway. Extraterrestrial Abductions Day.
March 21: 1800 –Pius VII
crowned Pope with a papal tiara
made of papier-mâché. Later he
would wear his paper hat in parttime job at Burger Bishop. 1963 – Alcatraz closes. 1970 – Vinko Bogataj,
Yugoslavian entrant at the Ski-flying World Championships, makes a
dramatic mistake immortalized by
the “agony of defeat” clip used at
the beginning of ABC Wide World of
Sports. American Diabetes Association Alert Day, which occurs during
American Chocolate Week.
March 22: 1638 – Psychic and
seer Rena Mandrake of Florence
fails history course. 1756 – Theologians determine that “The Book of
Heather” is not a lost book of the
Old Testament. 1879 –First Woolworth’s opens. 1939 – Fred Astaire
dances to less fascinating rhythm.
2011 – Disco still sucks. Born:
William Shatner. National Goof Off
Day.
Next Java Talk: Friday, March 18, 8 a.m., Hawaiian Luau
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.
LETTERS POLICY: The Goldendale Sentinel attempts to publish as many letters to the editor as
possible. Letters to the editor should be original and comment on an issue. There is a suggested
length limit of about 300 words. Unsigned letters, letters with fictitious signatures, or copies of letters
to public officials are generally not accepted. The Sentinel also limits letters on a particular subject
when we feel it has been thoroughly aired, to the point of becoming repetitive. Check your facts; any
that can be challenged 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 names, city of residence, and phone numbers for verification purposes.
MARCH 16, 2011 — A5
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
C OMMUNIT Y
Firemen’s
dinner
Saturday
at school
Jonathon and Shayne Rickman welcomed their youngest
daughter, Bailey Jane, into
the world on March 2. Bailey
weighed 6 pounds, 3 ounces
and was 19 inches long at
birth. Little Miss Rickman
joined her older sister, Riley
Jean at home. Ed and Terry
Arnold, and Claude and Chris
Rickman are the proud
grandparents.
It’s free-movie night at the
Pioneer
Memorial ComGlenwood m u n i t y
Church
News
on Frid a y ,
Glenwood
March
Homemakers
18. The
featured
movie
“Secretariat” will begin at 7
p.m. Popcorn will be provided, and the community is invited to enjoy this event.
Boy, oh boy, I can almost
taste the delicious Firemen’s
Turkey Dinner on Saturday,
March 19, at the Glenwood
School! The all-you-can-eatturkey dinner will be served
from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and
is just $10 for adults and $5 for
children 12 and under. See
you there!
The Mt. Adams Community 4-H Club would like to
thank everyone who supported their annual fruit sale earlier this month.
Be informed, take school
tour Thursday, Mar. 24
The first day of spring is almost here, this service and what it will mean to the employSunday, March 20. I have a feeling there will ees of the service. Heibert and Quinn will
be a lot of bugs and bee’s this year. It is mud also touch on the upcoming Health Fair in
May. Tuesday, March 22, Klickitat
season now, as they call it on the
A.M. will host guest Lori Andereast coast. And even though I
son with Central Klickitat Park
don’t like daylight savings time, I
and Rec.
see it is happening anyway. I
Hear’s
The Goldendale Chamber
would rather have one more hour
Goldendale
Forum Luncheon for Thursday,
of light in the mornings instead
March 17, at The Glass Onion
of the night.
Diana
Restaurant at noon, will be guest
The Goldendale Primary
Notestine
speakers Brian and Lynn Wanless,
School will have classroom group
talking about the ‘Back Pack Propictures taken Tuesday, March 22.
gram’ and the Methodist Church
I still have my classroom group
pictures from about 50 years ago, and I am so ‘Soup Kitchen.’
The Goldendale High School bond comglad I was able to be at school that day to get
mittee will have their next chili feed and
in the picture.
K.V.H. interim CEO Leslie Heibert and building tours on Thursday, March 24, at 6
board member John Quinn are guests on p.m.
The Goldendale Home and Garden Show
this coming Thursdays "Klickitat A.M." on
1400 KLCK at 9 a.m. You'll hear an update on is only one month away, so mark it on your
the search for the new CEO, which could be calendars for April 15-17.
Please send your article to hearsgoldencoming to an end soon. They will also talk
about the contracting out of the ambulance dale@live.com .
Auction to raise funds for music teacher
The Dallesport Elemen- beauty supplies, and lots of
tary School PTO will host a other goodies. All proceeds
silent auction the evenings will go to fund a music
of Friday, March 25 and Sat- teacher at the elementary
urday, March 26. The auc- school for the 2011-2012 school
tion will coincide with the year. To donate items please
elementary
contact Amber
school's play
Strain at (541) 993"Dear Edwina."
Lyle News 5251 or amberBidding will
strain@live.com.
begin at 6 p.m.
The community
Barbara Sexton
and conclude
is invited to attend
and
during
each
and discover what
Mildred Lykens
evening's intergrange can do for
mission. Winyou and your comner's names will
munity. Guest
be posted at the end of the speakers from Washington
play. Items include a Crafts- State Grange will be in attenman leaf blower, a load of dance to answer questions. It
gravel or top soil (deliv- will be held Saturday, March
ered), gift certificates from 26; potluck at noon, 120 Old
a wide range of businesses Highway 8.
and restaurants, health and
Tuesday, March 8: Six of
the Lady Sundowners met at
Montira's Thai Cuisine in
The Dalles for their monthly
luncheon. This was their time
to catch up on family news
over the past month.
Lyle Lion's Club held an appreciation dinner for the local
Arthur Daniel Enyeart
fire men and women. A fine
meal was served and recogniArthur Daniel Enyeart dale.
tion awards were given to varMaternal grandparents ious Lyle, Appleton and High
was born on Feb. 2, 2011, to
Karl and Sommer Enyeart at are Loren and Teresa Bogart Prairie dedicated volunteers.
Mid Columbia Medical Cen- of LaConner.
Our communities are so forArthur joins his parents tunate to have them.
ter in The Dalles. He weighed
and siblings Adelaide, Anna,
7 pounds, 2 ounces at birth.
Paternal grandparents are Anthony, Abraham, Aaron
MaryAnne and the late and Andrew at their home in
Rande Enyeart of Golden- Goldendale.
BIRTHS
Study Circle will meet
again Saturday, April 2, 10:30
a.m., at the Lyle Activity Center, after the Lion's Club
Breakfast.
Some history from a booklet titled "Columbia Grange
1889-1967"
“Columbia Grange 87 was
organized by Worthy State
Lecturer, James Nevins, in a
little county school-house on
Nov. 5, 1889 with 19 charter
members in attendance.
“As the number indicates,
Columbia Grange was the
87th Grange organized in the
territory that became the
state of Washington a few
days later. Of these 87
Granges, only 13 others are
still in existence, and two of
these are re-organized, so Columbia ranks as the 12th oldest Grange in the state.
“Brother J.O. Lyle was
elected the first Master. He
was a very dedicated and able
leader, as the records show.
He was master for 11 years.
The little town of Lyle was
also named for J. O. Lyle.
There are grandchildren and
great-grandchildren of his
now living in the Glenwood
Valley.”
Posies, Pearls and
Pretties spring tea
Saturday at church
Lois Clark Lauchlan turned 91 on March 11. She was born
on the Clark Ranch where the landfill is now, in 1920 to
George Clark and Viola Long. Her home has been in Swarthmore, Penn, for many years. Her husband passed away in
1995. She is a first cousin to Bill Clark of Cleveland.
Luann and Steve Buffam were up from California to the
ranch for a few days this past week.
Kit Naught Tallman will be a speaker at our next senior lunch on April 12,
East End
at noon. She will talk about those
News
handy alert necklaces that many folks
are using nowadays. She will describe
Ada Ruth
several varieties, costs and availability
Whitmore
of these devices in our area. Also, for
anyone interested, the second Tuesday
of the month at our senior meals we
plan on playing cards.
There was a large turnout for the Pancake Supper and
Bingo Game Friday evening in the Grange Hall. Thanks to
all who donated prizes and their attendance.
Howard and Crystal Alexander of Cowiche, were in Bickleton to visit their son Ben, and family. Ben and Jeanine and
daughters, live in Janet and Mac Mains’ old home.
Tabitha Marie was born in The Dalles on March 4, 2011, to
Cory Naught and Amber Sullivan. Clinton and Sally Naught
of Cleveland are grandparents and also Don and Shannon
Sullivan of Goldendale. Don and Dorothy Naught are greatgrandparents.
“Posies, Pearls and Pretties” is a tea being held at the
church fellowship hall on March 19. It will be 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. Babysitting is available. Everyone is welcome.
LOOKING BACK
20 Years Ago – Mar. 21, 1991
• Goldendale senior Greg Patzer was selected to the All
State- All Star Basketball games this summer. Patzer, who
scored 1,014 points in his three year varsity career, will be
one of ten Class A players to compete in the series being
held June 27 in Spokane at Gonzaga University and June
29 in Seattle.
40 Years Ago-Mar. 19, 1971
• Mike Short (son of Roger and Eula Short) of Goldendale Troop 551 received his Eagle rank, scouting’s highest,
at the Eagle Court of Honor Friday night at the high
school auditorium.
60 Years Ago- Mar. 22, 1951
• Two hundred Centerville area residents were finger
printed by the County Sheriff Ez Kaiser and his deputies
last week, according to the sheriff ’s office. The finger
printing is a part of a county wide finger printing campaign by the office in the interest of civil defense.
Compiled by Jean Allyn Smeltzer,
of the Klickitat County Historical Society.
SHIPPING INCLUDED
Saturday, March 19
LOST
STREAM
MAP
MUSIC, DANCING,
AWARDS, AUCTION,
DRAWING FOR A
SAVAGE 22-250 RIFLE
•
Tickets available at:
KC Pharmacy
Simcoe Insurance
Columbia Bank
The Pink Saddle
Prime Waterfront Commercial
Space Now Available
Prime space is now
available in the second
commercial phase of
development at Lone
Pine Village, the
innovative mix-used
neighborhood now
under development on
The Dalles waterfront.
Occupancy set for
fall 2011.
FOR COMPLETE
LEASING
INFORMATION,
CONTACT:
Keef Morgan, Windermere
Glenn Taylor Real Estate
541-300-0071
• Mention this ad
and receive 1/2 OFF
your first month!
WKO-High Cascade Mills
Buying Logs
& Timber
White Fir
Douglas Fir
lonepinevillage.com
Jeremy Beddingfield 541-399-3933
Norm Byars 541-490-2940
Mill: 509-427-8413
LONE PINE VILLAGE IS LOCATED IN THE DALLES, OREGON
Just west of Hwy. 197 (I-84 exit 87)
2022 Wind River Hwy • P.O. Box 8
Carson, WA 98610
The STREAM & LAKE MAP OF
WASHINGTON resembles another
map--known to Pennsylvania
anglers as the “Lost Stream Map.”
The “Stream Map of
Pennsylvania” was completed in
1965 after a 30 year effort by
Howard Higbee, a former
Penn State Professor.
Professor Higbee succeeded in
creating a map of the highest detail
possible...a map that shows every
stream and lake. He painstakingly
plotted by hand, the location of
45,000 miles of streams onto a
3 by 5 foot map.
The map sold extremely well until it was lost several years later.
Incredibly, the printer entrusted with
the original drawing and printing
plates declared bankruptcy, then
carelessly hauled Higbee’s 30 years
of work to the landfill.
The few remaining dog-eared
copies became a prized fisherman’s
possession. Professor Higbee was
offered $400 for one of his last
maps. And state agencies were
forced to keep their copies under
lock and key.
The experts had always told
Professor Higbee that reprints were
impossible, because the maps were
printed in non-photographic blue.
Then, in 1991, at the age of 91,
Howard Higbee’s dream came true.
Computers made it possible to
reprint the map. Holding an updated
map, Howard said, “I never thought
I’d live to see this day.”
Then, by combining Professor
Higbee’s knowledge with computer
technology -- the STREAM & LAKE
MAP OF WASHINGTON was
created.
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RAVE REVIEWS
“It is in showing where to find
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—Joe Gordon,
TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT,
Johnstown, PA
“I have one of the original Higbee’s Stream
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desk. It’s the best thing available as far as
streams are concerned. I use it all the time
for reference. I don’t know of anything more
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—Dave Wolf, PA Fish and Boat Commission
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Name_______________________________________________________________________________
Address_____________________________________________________________________________
City_____________________________________________________State________ Zip_____________
The Goldendale Sentinel
117 W. Main St.
Goldendale, WA 98620
Mail To:
A6 — MARCH 16, 2011
Klickitat’s Pirate Carnival
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CONTRIBUTED
Pool top goes up
in Goldendale
SWIMMING AROUND THE CORNER: The spectacle of volunteers
putting up the swimming pool dome signifies that swimming is just
around the corner in Goldendale.
DALLAS HUSKEY
FOR THE SENTINEL
The Goldendale Swimming Pool’s dome was put up
last weekend for the Spring
Session starting April 1.
The dome raising began at
8 a.m., on Saturday, with
doughnuts and coffee awaiting all the volunteers upon
their arrival. Volunteers
showed up from Goldendale
High School’s football team,
morning lap swimmers, a
couple of teachers from the
school district, friends and
family of the lifeguards, and
many others. The total number of people was estimated
to be more than 30.
Lori Anderson, the swimming pool’s manager, said,
“We would like to thank all
the volunteers who helped
with the dome. We are really
fortunate to have so many
great people in the community, from our adult swimmers,
swim team parents, lifeguards, and parents of lifeguards, the football team,
and friends of the lifeguards.
It takes around 30 to 40 people to put the dome up and we
could not do it without
them.”
The weather cooperated
throughout the day, with a
light sprinkling of rain on
the workers. One of the volunteers, a regular morning
swimmer, said, “The hardest
Call for vendors
and volunteers
for H&G show
There are openings for exhibitors and vendors for the
Haystack Broadcasting Goldendale Home and Garden
Show. The event runs from
April 15 through April 17 at
the Klickitat County Fairgrounds, in Goldendale.
The show, now in its third
year, features a variety of exhibits on the home improvement and garden theme, plus
food vendors. It is held in the
indoor Joan Frey Arena and
on the grounds nearby. Past
years’ shows featured more
than 100 vendors, and this
year’s event is shaping up to
follow in those footsteps.
Previous shows attracted
about 2,000 persons, and organizers expect this year’s
show will live up to those expectations. Booths are rented
on a first-come, first-served
basis.
Volunteers also are needed
for virtually all aspects of
the show, from setup to
cleanup and in between. Information is available by
calling the Goldendale
Chamber of Commerce at
(509) 773-3400 or by checking
the
website
at
www.goldendalechamber.org
Adventist’s lend
Japan a hand
Adventist Development
and Relief Agency (ADRA) is
responding to the crisis in
Japan. The agency is coordinating efforts with the Japanese government and assessing the needs in the worst hit
areas in the northern region
of Japan. ADRA is also providing food and shelter for
train passengers that are
stranded in Tokyo at the Central Tokyo Seventh-day
Church.
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
PIRATE SPIRIT: A large group of kids and adults were into the pirate spirit with elaborate costumes at the fifth annual family fun day, held in the Klickitat school gym on
Saturday. The event was organized by the Klickitat PTO.
part was getting it [the dome]
up and over the slide. We’re
lucky to have such strong
young men.”
The dome was finished
and up around 4 p.m. Now
that the dome is up, the staff
will be getting the swimming
pool ready for the opening on
April 1.
“The pool will have special
spring break hours starting
April 1 and will be open for
the season through October
1. I hope to see everyone at
the pool real soon!” said Anderson.
G ORGE M EDICAL D IRECTORY
ACUPUNCTURE
CASCADE
ACUPUNCTURE
CENTER, LLC
The Dalles & Hood River
Carola Stepper, LAc, RN retired
& Associates
www.CascadeAcupuncture.org
•General Acupuncture
Practice with a focus on
pain management
•Chinese herbal pharmacy
•Accept and bill most
insurances, Worker's
Comp, PIP claims
•Sliding fee scale,
monthly payment plans,
VISA/MC
•No physician referral
needed
New Patients welcome
(541) 298-2378
CHIROPRACTIC
Goldendale
Chiropractic
AA DENTAL
in your own home
Details at
www.HighlandMidwife.com
509-250-2072
Would you
like to be
listed here?
Please call
Heidi
at
The
Goldendale
Sentinel
(509) 773-3777
Ads start
at just
$150 for 6
months
•Low-risk and high-risk
obstetrical care
Annual exams
Minimally invasive
surgery for uterine
disorders and pelvic
reconstruction
James Faherty,
MD., FACOG
David Mack (retired),
DO., FACOG
Analene Pentopoulos,
MD., FACOG
Brian MacArthur, MD
Jennifer Wilde, F.N.P.
216 W. Main St.
Goldendale, WA
(509) 773-5633
Lorri Carr,
Licensed Midwife
Birth safely
your own way
Fully certified in Obstetrics
and Gynecology
Office Hours
Mon.,Wed., Thur.
8:00 - 5:00
Tues. 8:00 - 7:00
Fri. 8:00 - 12:00
Dentists
OBSTETRICS &
GYNECOLOGY
Columbia River
Women’s Clinic, LLC
Dennis L. Carver,
D.C.
BIRTH SERVICES
Complete maternity
care from
conception to
lactation.
HOSPITALS/
MEDICAL CLINICS
1810 E. 19th Suite 209
The Dalles, OR 97058
541-296-5657
Fax: 541-298-5199
www.crwclinic.com
Dr. Simon
Specializing in Obstetrics
and Family Practice Care
Now accepting New
Obstetrics Patients:
Liette Witherrite, M.D.
Troy Witherrite, M.D.
Alicia Gimenez, M.D.
R. Allen LaBerge, M.D.
Ray J. FitzSimmons, M.D.
Cindy Horton, M.D.
Joseph Rinella, D.O.
Christopher Samuels, M.D.
Office Hours
Monday - Thursday
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
211 Skyline Drive
White Salmon, WA 98672
509-493-1101
509-493-2133 Clinic
www.skylinehospital.com
Robert H. Brewer, DDS
818 W 6th Street, Ste 3
The Dalles, OR 97058
541-296-9134
Office Hours:
Tuesday - Friday
8 am to 5 pm
Your teeth are our specialty
• Comprehensive eye care for
the entire family.
Eyewear, sunglasses (with
or without prescription,) and
contact lenses.
Laser Surgery (Treatment
for eye disease and clouded
posterior capsule.)
Medical and Surgical treatment of eye disease.
Visiting Retina Specialists.
Ophthalmology:
John D. Willer, D.O.
(Board Certified Ophthalmologist)
Mitch Martin, O.D.
Chris Barbour, O.D., Ph.D.
301 Cherry Heights Rd.
The Dalles, OR 97058
(541) 296-1101
2025 Cascade Ave. St. 101
Hood River, OR 97031
(541) 386-2402
or www.cascadeye.com
New Patients &
Emergencies Welcome
Extractions/Wisdom
Teeth
Sedation Available
Family Dentistry
Flexible Financing OAC
* New Patients Welcome
* Most Insurances Accepted
* Finance Plans Available
* Senior Discounts
Cascade Eye
Center
1-800-548-5487
1700 E. 12th St.
The Dalles
(541) 298-4403
Cosmetic, Restorative
& Family Dentistry
OPHTHALMOLOGY
Goldendale
Medical Clinic
Elsie G. Tupper,
M.D.
Office Hours:
Mon. - Fri. 9:00-5:00
Appointments
available after hours
by request
228 S. Columbus, Ste. 104
Goldendale, WA 98620
(509) 773-4014
OCCUPATIONAL
HEALTH
Gorge
Occupational
Health, LLC
706 S. Columbus
Goldendale
Drug Screen Collections
Employer & Private
Blood Drawing
Breath Alcohol Testing
Appt. needed
Plebotomy Classes
Scrubs
Call to set up an account
(509) 773-2103
Hours
Mon. - Fri. 7 to 5
Sat. 7 to noon
ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY
SPORTS MEDICINE
Cascade
Orthopedics & Sports
Medicine Center, PC
1715 E. 12th St.
The Dalles, OR 97058
(541) 296-2294
www.cosmc.org
Gregory M. Stanley, MD
Charles Petit, MD
Robert A. Staver, MD
Clara Deleon, PA-C
Erin Haines, PA-C
•Arthroscopic surgery of the
knee, shoulder, ankle, elbow, hip
•Shoulder Surgery
•Carpal tunnel release
(traditional and endoscopic)
•Foot & ankle surgery
•Fracture Care
Serving the Gorge for 35+ years
Physical Therapists
Rebecca Street
Physical Therapy
A Private TherapistOwned Practice
Specializing in Manual
Therapy
Rebecca Street, PT
Gema Sanchez, PT
Jason Sallee, DPT
Amanda Payne, PTA
Mon-Fri 8am-5pm
1210 Dry Hollow Rd., Ste 1
The Dalles, OR 97058
(541) 296-3368
MARCH 16, 2011 — A7
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
Willy
Wonka
offers up
sweet
music and
surprises
Workshop and seed swap
for Gorge area gardeners
Calling all Gorge area gardeners currently practicing or interested in learning about seed saving and seed sharing! Gorge
Grown Food Network is hosting their fourth Annual Seed
Swap and Workshop at Solstice Wood Fire Café in Bingen.
This two-part event, on Saturday, March 19, is free to all.
From 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., Sarah Kleeger and Andrew Still of
Adaptive Seeds of Sweet Home, Ore. are presenting an introductory seed saving workshop. Learn:
• Why save seeds?
• Seed sovereignty and food freedom in a changing world
• Open pollinated, heritage/heirloom, hybrid and GMO
• Strategies: planning a garden for seed saving
• Harvest, cleaning and storage
Then, from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m., there will be a seed swap.
The Seed Swap is a community event, open to beginning and
advanced gardeners alike, where participants have the opportunity to:
• Barter and exchange seeds (and bulbs, tubers, rhizomes,
etc.)
• Meet and talk to other growers and seed savers
• Browse seed catalogs and seed resource books
There will be plenty of time for sharing seeds and continuing to network and learn about how to save and store seeds
successfully. People are encouraged to network, gather information, and take away free seeds even if they don’t have any
seeds to swap.
All of this takes place at the Solstice Wood Fire Cafè in Bingen.
Barter and trade encouraged: commercial and locally-developed seeds are welcome.
Contact Gorge Grown for more infor mation at
info@gorgegrown.com, (541) 490-6420.
Local author to read
latest book at WS library
Local author Miralee Ferrell will be reading from her
new book, Love Finds You in
Tombstone, Arizona, on Friday, March 25, at 7 p.m. in the
White Salmon Valley Community
Library’s
Sprint/Baker Gallery. A book
signing will follow the reading. Copies of the book will
be available for purchase. Refreshments will be provided
by the Friends of the Library.
This is Ferrell’s fourth
novel and her third in the
‘Love Finds You’ series released Feb. 1 of this year. The
publisher’s synopsis set the
story up this way: “The one
woman who captures his interest recognizes him as a
stagecoach robber. Will
Christy turn Nevada in to the
authorities, or will the outlaws on his trail catch him
first?”
Best-selling author, Lauraine Snelling says of Ferrell’s latest book, “I fell in
love with [the story]. Engaging characters, good guys and
bad guys, sweet romance, and
pacing that kept me flipping
pages.”
All the stories in the ‘Love
Finds You’ series are standalone novels that take place
in real towns in America.
Ferrell’s first two are set in
1877 in Last Chance, Calif.,
and 1902 in Bridal Veil, Ore.
Ferrell serves as president
of the Portland, Ore. chapter
of American Christian Fiction Writers and belongs to a
number of writer’s groups.
She also speaks at women’s
groups, libraries and churches about her writing journey.
She lives with her husband of
36 years, Allen, on 11 acres in
the Columbia River Gorge
where they love to garden,
play with their dogs, take
walks and go sailing. Ferrell
also rides her horse on the
wooded trails near their
home with her daughter who
lives nearby.
For more information on
this and other library programs and services call the library, at (509) 493-1132.
CONTRIBUTED
WIND ENERGY BENEFITS EVERYONE: Centerville school students became aware of the wind
turbines and learned about their effect on their community, by participating in an essay and coloring contest, sponsored by Windy Flat Partners. Pictured are (front, left): Taylor Rising, Caitlyn
Jauken, (second row): Curtis Kayser, Holly Disch, Cassie Kayser, Wes Cuff, (back row): Keelie,
Windy Flat Partners Rep., David Aarness, Reanna Holycross, Hanna Hoffman, Danielle, Windy
Flat Partners Rep. Not Pictured: Larissa Tellian.
Centerville students share
the benefits of wind energy
Centerville School had an essay and
color contest sponsored by Windy Flat Partners. All students in grades Kindergarten
to eighth grade were challenged to write
about the wind turbines.
Kindergarteners were asked to write
about the wind turbines themselves.
First and second graders were asked to
write about what the wind turbines mean
to them and their families.
Third and fourth graders were asked to
write about what the wind turbines mean
to them, their families, and their community.
Students in fifth through eighth grade
were asked to write about what the wind
turbines mean to them, their families, their
community, and their world.
The coloring portion of the contest challenged students to make a line drawing of a
wind turbine. The top 15 drawings will be
chosen to be published in a promotional
coloring book for Windy Flat Partners.
Windy Flat Partners sponsored prizes.
The grade winner of K-second grade received a Leapster Learning Game System.
The third through eighth grade winner received an iPod Nano. There was also a
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Grand Prize winner that received an iPad!
Not only did Windy Flat Partners provide individual grade winners, they also
supported the school for two other important needs. Centerville School has brought
an Artist In Residence program artist from
the Columbia Gorge Arts In Education program to the school to work on line drawings
and narrative art. An additional $1000 for a
water color artist was provided by Windy
Flat Partners. Another $2500 was donated
for the purchase of a new clock system that
includes a 30 second clock for the school’s
athletics program and basketball teams.
Centerville teacher, Kristin Cameron,
said, “This activity was a great learning experience for the students in our area. We
greatly appreciate Windy Flat Partners and
all they have done for Centerville School.”
The grade winners are: Kindergarten Caitlyn Jauken; first grade - Larissa Tellian; second grade - Taylor Rising; third
grade - Curtis Kayser; fourth grade - Holly
Disch; fifth grade - Reanna Holycross; sixth
grade - Wes Cuff; seventh grade - Hanna
Hoffman; eighth grade - David Aarness.
Grand Prize winner is Cassie Kayser.
The Dalles Wahtonka
High School Drama Club presents Willy Wonka, a delicious musical adaptation of
Roald Dahl’s beloved classic,
Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory.
The story deals with the
world-famous candy man’s
quest to find an heir for his
candy factory. Willy Wonka
and his band of singing and
dancing Oompa Loompas
lead Charlie Bucket, the
spoiled-rotten Veruca Salt,
gluttonous Augustus Gloop,
gum-chomping Violet Beauregarde and the television
addict Mike Teavee through
a labyrinth of chocolate,
lemon drops, and life lessons
with laughs galore. Willy
Wonka features plenty of
surprises and memorable
songs from the 1971 film including, “Pure Imagination”
and “The Candy Man.”
Performances began last
week, and conclude this
weekend. The event will take
place at The Dalles Wahtonka High School Thursday
and Friday, March 17 and 18
at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday,
March 19, at 2 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. Tickets are for sale at
6:30 p.m. Doors open at 7 p.m.
Tickets are $6.50 for adults
and students, and $5 for senior citizens and children
under 12. No reserve seating.
Concessions will be served.
A8 — MARCH 16, 2011
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
Goldendale Home & Garden Show
April 15, 16 & 17, 2011
Call TODAY to reserve your spot in the
Home & Garden Show Program.
Advertising rates start at just $25.
Call Heidi or Karen at (509) 773-3777
MARCH 16, 2011 — B1
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
S PORTS
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
ON EDGE: Lyle-Wishram’s medley relay team was reflective about the upcoming challenge as they
staged for the first race of the first meet of 2011 at Eisenhower High School. Pictured from left are
Francisco Martinez, Steven McClusky, Chance Carpenter and Joakim Bennick.
Youngsters shine at Ike Jamboree
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
Part of the thrill of the
first track and field meet of
the year is getting a look at
the freshmen and things
were looking pretty good at
the Ike Jamboree, in Yakima
on Saturday. Lyle-Wishram’s
Kirstin Hylton and Trout
Lake-Glenwood’s Caitlin
Scott gave their coaches reason to be optimistic about the
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
GETTING A JUMP ON THE SEASON: Harvey Starr, of TLG was
fifth in the pole vault with a 9-6 jump, a good start on a cool day.
coming season.
Hylton, who is splitting
duty between softball and
field events, put together a
solid performance in discus
and shot put events at the
Jamboree. Hylton started the
day with a 10th place finish
out of 41 throwers in the discus. Her throw of 70-4 was respectable in a field of tough
competition from much larger schools with seniors
Christin Kirkwood, of Othello and Lexus Bogardus, of
Naches Valley the only
throwers to break the 100 foot
mark. Hylton was a notch
higher with a ninth place finish in the shot put at 26-1.75.
Scott was the sole freshman to brave the 2,000 meter
steeplechase where she finished third among girls with
her teammate Val Vogt winning the event in 8:35.9. Scott
followed up with a great run
in the 1,000 meters, edging Ellensburg sophomore, Amber
Nickerson down the stretch
for fifth place in 3:35.51.
Vogt’s win was the only
victory for TLG or LyleWishram, the only B schools
in the meet that was dominated by University High
School, of Spokane, Eisenhower, Ellensburg and East
Valley. But there were other
fine performances from the
locals. Krissy Yarnell, of
TLG, cleared 8-6 for third
place in pole vault and she
JOHN LONGFELLOW
was fourth in the shot put at
28-11.5.
Lyle-Wishram’s Steven
McClusky had a strong race
in the 300 meters, finishing
second in his heat and 10th
overall in 40.73. Teammates
Chance Carpenter, eighth in
the 600 meters and Joakim
Bennick, 18th in the 1,000
meters also had very strong
runs for the Cougars.
Other top 10 finishes: Harvey Starr (TLG), fifth in pole
vault; Karli Sowlinski (TLG)
10th in 55 hurdles; Alex King
(TLG) fifth in steeplechase;
TLG medley relay sixth
(Starr, King, Manuel Rascado, Ramiro Avila); LyleWishram medley relay seventh (Bennick, Carpenter,
McClusky, Francisco Martinez).
The Cougars and TLG will
be at the Mullen Leavitt Invite, Thursday at Wahtonka,
in The Dalles, and in Goldendale’s Simcoe-Thompson Invite on Saturday.
Hess gets the best of
Wolves at River View
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
HARD OUT: Catcher Johna Kartes collides with pitcher, Haley
Hoffman, who holds onto the ball for a pop-out against River View.
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
TOP ATTRACTION: The number one draw at the Jamboree was the steeplechase water hazard. Alex
King leaps from the hurdle as a competitor struggles out of the water, above. Below: King’s Trout LakeGlenwood teammate, Val Vogt wades through the water. Vogt finished in first place among the girls.
River View’s Haley Hess silenced Goldendale bats for a
13-1 win in game one and
came on late in game two to
open the season with a 2-0
record. It was a shaky start to
the season for Goldendale
who will see plenty of good
pitchers when league play begins, according to Manager,
Scott Conboy.
“I believe all of the SCAC
west is returning with last
year’s pitchers,” said Conboy.
And a number of those pitchers rival Hess as tough to hit.
Saturday’s double header
was originally scheduled to
be played in Goldendale, but
field conditions forced moving the games to Finley. The
Timberwolves had just two
days of practice on the wet
field prior to the season opener.
The Wolves’ only hits in
the opener came off the bats
of Sonja Grant, who doubled
and Brooke Graff. Taylor
Gaston scored the only Goldendale run in the first inning.
Hess had plenty of help from
hard hitting Jalissa Hutchins
who went 4-4, including a
More photos on Page B8
double and triple. Hutchins
would hit for the cycle over
the two games as she homered in game two to go along
with singles in both games.
Goldendale came out
stronger in game two against
Karissa Sallee, who had control problems with seven
walks in three innings. Crysta Counts served up just two
walks, but was tagged for 12
hits in a much better game
two for Goldendale. Haley
Hoffman had two RBI and
Counts scored three runs.
Hess struck out seven batters
in her four innings of work
and got the 8-6 win when the
Panthers got to Counts for
four runs in the sixth inning.
Hoffman and Taylor Swift
doubled while Gaston,
Counts and Johna Kartes
each had a single in the game.
The Wolves play at Burbank on Saturday. Conboy’s
team is fairly intact from last
year’s squad. Cutting down
errors was an emphasis last
year and Conboy hopes to
continue that progress and
get a few more bats going.
“This is a very good group of
girls to work with,” says Con-
See Wolves, Page B8
Cougar girls waiting on the rain
Opening day was put on
hold as Lyle-Wishram’s
Monday game at Stevenson was rained out. Next
up for the Cougars will be
old foe, White Swan, Saturday in Dallesport at 11 a.m.
The Lady Cougars join
the Columbia Gorge
league this year, playing
against Klickitat and Sunnyside Christian. Karlee
Roth and Deriyon Lacock
return as starting pitchers.
New practice field facilANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
ities have helped prepare BUNTING: Olivia Fox goes
the team. Nineteen players through bunting practice as the
are on the 2011 team.
Cougars wait for play to begin.
Twilight
basketball
League standings
W
Why Try
Average Joes
Bricklayers
Eliminators
Rush Hour
Last Minute
2
1
1
1
1
0
L
0
1
1
1
1
2
Scoring leaders
Brady Conway, Why Try - 26 pts.
Konrad Bomberger, Bricklayers - 24 pts.
Jay Thacker, Bricklayers - 20 pts.
Matt Loomis, Average Joes - 19.5 pts.
Callan Wilkins, Why Try - 19 pts.
Lance Den Boer, Average Joes - 19 pts.
Devon Casey, Rush Hour - 19 pts.
J.T. Watson, Why Try - 18.5 pts.
Brian Enstad, Rush Hour - 16.5 pts.
John Hatfield, Eliminators - 16 pts.
Scoreboard
Baseball
River View 11
Goldendale -Klickitat 8
Goldendale-Klickitat 17
River View 16
Lyle-Wishram at Stevenson ppd rain
Fastpitch Softball
River View 13
Goldendale 1
River View 8
Goldendale 6
Lyle-Wishram at Stevenson ppd rain
Twilight basketball
March 8
Why Try 75
Bricklayers 78
Eliminators 71
Last Minute 47
Average Joes 65
Rush Hour 68
Simcoe-Thompson
Invitational
Goldendale
March 19, 11 a.m.
B2 — MARCH 16, 2011
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
R ECORDS
WHAT’S HAPPENING
On-going Events
Every Monday
•Free mathematics lessons,
SAT, GED, fifth through 12th
grades. From 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
at Goldendale Seventh Day
Adventist Church, located on
Bickleton Hwy.
Every First Monday
•Avon Bingo Bash at The
Luau, located at 119 E. Main,
from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. No
fee to participate. For more
information, call Lin at (509)
261-0636.
Every Monday &
Wednesday
•Goldendale Wrestling Club,
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Goldendale High School gym. All
ages welcome. 773-0411.
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
Every Wednesday
•“One, Two, Buckle My
Shoe” program geared for babies, toddlers and their caregiver at the Goldendale Library at 11 a.m. Interactive
program incorporates music,
rhymes, fingerplays and
movement to teach young
children important development skills. 773-4487.
•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 Second Thursday
•Artist reception at the Golden Art Gallery. Featuring a
new art show, wine tasting,
live music and snacks. 7735100
•Klickitat County Meth Action Team meeting at Ayutla’s Restaurant from noon to
1 p.m.
•Goldendale Motorsports Association meeting at the
Goldendale Fire Hall at 7 p.m.
Every Third Thursday
•A.B.A.T.E. meets at Roadhouse 97. Social hour at 6
p.m., meeting at 7 p.m.
Every Second Saturday
•Fellowship of Christian
Cowboys Cowboy Church at
7 p.m. at the Goldendale
Grange.
•Oil pastels taught at the
Golden Art Gallery, from 10
a.m. to noon. 773-5100.
Every Third Saturday
•Oriental art (Sumi brush
techniques) at the Golden
Art Gallery at 10 a.m. 7735100.
•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.
Through Wed. April 6
•Free simple tax preparation
for senior and low-income citizens. Call 2-1-1, the regional referral center to schedule appointment through April 11.
Wednesday, March 16
•Song Circle at the Goldendale
Library. Enjoy folk music in a
relaxed atmosphere with
friends from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
773-4487
Thursday, March 17
•KLCK Radio talk show at 9
a.m. featuring Klickitat Valley
Health update on ambulance
decisions with Leslie Heibert
and John Quinn.
•Goldendale Chamber of Commerce Community Forum
Luncheon at noon at the Glass
Onion Restaurant. Brian Wanless will be talking about the
Back Pack for Kids program.
Friday, March 18
•Centerville Grange Pinochle
Party at 7 p.m.
•Silpada Jewelry fundraiser
for the Goldendale Pregnancy
Resource Center at Columbus
Avenue Baptist Church, located at 815 N. Columbus, from
5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
www.mysilpada.com/jeneane.
herrera.
Saturday, March 19
•Klickitat County Livestock
Growers annual banquet at
the Goldendale American Legion. Social hour at 5:30 p.m.,
prime rib dinner at 7 p.m.
There will be music, dancing,
awards, auction, and a drawing for a Savage 22-250 rifle.
Tickets are available at KC
Pharmacy. Simcoe Insurance,
Columbia Bank and The Pink
Saddle.
Mon./Tues. Mar 21 & 22
•AARP Driver Safety Program
at the Goldendale Methodist
Church from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
each day. Both sessions required., $14 non-members, $12
AARP members, bring your
membership card. Pre-registration is required, (509) 7736691.
Tuesday, March 22
•KLCK Radio talk show at 9
a.m. featuring Lori Anderson
with Central Klickitat Parks
and Rec.
Wednesday, March 23
•Goldendale Community
Blood Drive at Goldendale
High School from 1 p.m. to 6
p.m. To schedule your appointment or for more information,
call Nadine Huxley at (509) 2500026.
Thursday, March 24
•KLCK Radio talk show at 9
a.m. featuring Mark Heid, superintendant of Goldendale
Schools.
Saturday, March 26
•Columbia Grange, in Lyle,
open house and revitalization
meeting. Community is invited, there will be guest speakers
from Washington State
Grange.
Tuesday, March 29
•KLCK Radio talk show at 9
a.m. featuring Goldendale
Mayor Arleta Parton.
WEATHER EAST DISTRICT COURT
Wednesday, March 16
Showers, High 51, Low 30
Sunrise: 7:14 a.m.
Sunset: 7:10 p.m.
Thursday, March 17
P. Cloudy, High 49, Low 30
Sunrise: 7:12 a.m.
Sunset: 7:12 p.m.
Friday, March 18
Showers, High 49, Low 30
Sunrise: 7:11 a.m.
Sunset: 7:13 p.m.
Saturday, March 19
Showers, High 50, Low 30
Sunrise: 7:09 a.m.
Sunset: 7:14 p.m.
Sunday, March 20
P. Cloudy, High 53, Low 31
Sunrise: 7:07 a.m.
Sunset: 7:16 p.m.
Monday, March 21
Cloudy, High 53, Low 34
Sunrise: 7:05 a.m.
Sunset: 7:17 p.m.
Tuesday, March 22
Showers, High 53, Low 34
Sunrise: 7:03 a.m.
Sunset: 7:18 p.m.
Senior
Meals
•March 17
@ noon
Goldendale Senior Center
Irish Stew
•March 22
@ noon
Goldendale Senior Center
Lyle Lions
Community Center
Salisbury Steak
Visit our new
website
www.goldendalesentinel.com
The Goldendale
Sentinel is on
Facebook and
Twitter.
REMINDER
Include your
events in the
community calendar.
Email events to
Heidi at
hmccarty@
goldendalesentinel.com
by noon on Mondays.
N OTICES
NOTICE OF TRUSTEES
SALE
Pursuant to R.C.W. Chapter
61.24, et seq. and 62A. 9A604(a)(2) et seq. Trustees
Sale No: 01-FMB-100867 I
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that
the
undersigned
Trustee,
REGIONAL
TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION, will on March
25, 2011, at the hour of
10:00 AM, at FRONT
STEPS OF THE KLICKITAT
COUNTY COURTHOUSE,
205 WEST COLUMBUS
AVENUE, GOLDENDALE,
WA, sell at public auction to
the highest and best bidder,
payable at the time of sale,
the following described real
and personal property (hereafter referred to collectively
as the "Property"), situated
in the County of KLICKITAT,
State of Washington: LOT 2,
BLOCK
C,
WESTERN
ADDITION TO THE TOWN
OF BINGEN, AS RECORDED IN VOLUME 3 OF
PLATS, PAGE 27. IN THE
COUNTY OF KLICKITAT,
STATE OF WASHINGTON.
Tax Parcel No: 03-11-30550302/00, commonly known
as 506 WEST JEFFERSON
STREET, BINGEN, WA. The
Property is subject to that
certain Deed of Trust dated
9/22/2000,
recorded
9/27/2000
under
Auditor's/Recorder's
No.
1019847, records of KLICKITAT County, Washington,
from GRACIELA PLASCEN-
CIA,
AN
UNMARRIED
WOMAN AND MAURO
PEREZ, AN UNMARRIED
MAN, as Grantor, to
COLUMBIA TITLE COMPANY, as Trustee, in favor of CPAC MORTGAGE, A WASHINGTON CORPORATION,
as Beneficiary, the beneficial
interest in which is presently
held by ONEWEST BANK,
FSB. 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(s) for which this foreclosure is/are made are as
follows: FAILURE TO PAY
THE MONTHLY PAYMENT
WHICH BECAME DUE ON
6/1/2010, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS,
PLUS
LATE
CHARGES AND OTHER
COSTS AND FEES AS SET
FORTH. Failure to pay when
due the following amounts
which are now in arrears:
Amount due as of December
24,
2010
Delinquent
Payments from June 01,
2010
7
payments
at
$1,043.27 each $7,302.89
(06-01-10 through 12-24-10)
Late Charges: $777.64
Beneficiary
Advances:
$101.00 Suspense Credit:
$0.00 TOTAL: $8,181.53 The
sum owing on the obligation
secured by the Deed of Trust
is: Principal $86,192.22,
together with interest as provided in the note or other
instrument secured, 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
expenses 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 March 25, 2011.
The default(s) referred to in
paragraph III must be cured
by March 14, 2011 (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
March 14, 2011, (11 days
before the sale date) the
default(s) as set forth in
paragraph III is/are cured
and the Trustee's fees and
costs are paid. The sale may
be terminated at any time
after March 14, 2011, (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
See Notices, Page B3
February 24
•James Lee Waugh: Failed to
Use Chains When Required
(1/9/11); Committed, fine
$200.
•Matthew A. Willett: Speeding 30 MPH Over Limit
(2/11/11); Committed, fine
$150.
February 28
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Physical Control (4/19/10),
No. Valid Oper. License Without ID (4/19/10); Count one
dismissed with prejudice;
Count two amended to infraction NVOL with ID, committed, fine $250.
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Minor Poss. and/or Consumption (3/17/10); 12 month
S.O.C., pay $150 fees, review
in 12 months for compliance.
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Minor Poss. and/or Consumption (4/30/10); Change
of plea to guilty, fine/fees
$193, 90 days/89 susp., credit
one day served.
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Minor Poss. and/or Consumption (5/21/10); Change
of plea to guilty, fine/fees
$293, 90 days/62 susp., credit
28 days served.
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Assault 4 (8/6/10); Dismissed
with prejudice per city motion pursuant to plea agreement.
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Minor Poss. and/or Consumption (9/21/10); Dismissed with prejudice per
city motion pursuant to plea
agreement.
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Minor Poss. and/or Consumption (12/3/10); Dismissed with prejudice per
city motion pursuant to plea
agreement.
GOLDENDALE
SCHOOL LUNCH MENU
Thursday, March 17
Primary School
Breakfast -Biscuit, sausage, fruit, milk
Lunch
Turkey gravy on mashed potatoes, corn,
veggies, breadstick, fruit, milk
Middle School
Breakfast - Breakfast sandwich, fruit, milk
Lunch - Chicken nuggets, fries, veggies,
bread, applesauce, milk
Breakfast - Breakfast pizza or muffin
Lunch - Deli sandwich or burrito
Friday, March 18
Primary School
Breakfast - Oatmeal, fruit,
milk
Lunch - Spaghetti,
salad, green beans,
breadstick, fruit, milk
Middle School
Breakfast - Oatmeal, toast, juice, milk
Lunch - Beef dippers, fries, veggies,
bread, brownie, fruit, milk
High School
Breakfast - Breakfast sandwich or muffin
Lunch - Chickenburger or taco
Monday, March 21
Primary School
Breakfast - Pancakes, fruit, milk
Lunch - Mac & cheese, corn, salad,
bread, fruit, milk
Middle School
Breakfast - Pancakes, fruit, milk
Lunch - Spaghetti, toast, salad, green
beans, pudding, fruit, milk
High School
Breakfast - Breakfast sandwich or muffin
Lunch - Chickenburger or beef dippers
Tuesday, March 22
Primary School
Breakfast - Cold cereal, toast, fruit, milk
Lunch - Soup, sandwich, veggies, cobbler, fruit, milk
Middle School
Breakfast - Cold cereal, toast, fruit, milk
Lunch
Turkey gravy on mashed potatoes, corn, hot roll, fruit, milk
High School
Breakfast - Breakfast burrito
or muffin
Lunch - Taco casserole, or
baked potato bar
Wednesday, March 23
Primary School
Breakfast - Cold cereal, toast, fruit, milk
Lunch - Pizza, green beans, veggies,
fruit, milk
Middle School
Breakfast - Oatmeal, toast, fruit, milk
Lunch - Soup, sandwich, veggies, fruit,
milk
High School
Breakfast - Breakfast sandwich or muffin
Lunch - Pizza or spanish casserole
•Nicholas Charles Chandler:
Theft 3 (10/2/10), Minor Poss.
and/or
Consumption
(10/2/10); Count one change
of plea to guilty, fine/fees
$1463, restitution $17, 365
days/358 susp., credit seven
days served, active probation
until complete alcohol treatment; Count two dismissed
with prejudice per city motion/plea agreement.
•Lola Lorraine Liddell: Theft
3 (11/25/08); Guilty plea withdrawn and dismissed with
prejudice pursuant to compliance with conditions of deferred sentence.
•Jamie Nicole Roberts: Malicious Mischief 3 Harm Less
Than $50 (5/25/09); Guilty
plea withdrawn and dismissed with prejudice pursuant to compliance with conditions of deferred sentence.
•Vanessa Renee Spencer: No
Valid Oper. License Without
ID (3/8/08); Dismissed with
prejudice per city motion pursuant to plea agreement.
•Vanessa Renee Spencer:
DWLS 3 (4/18/09); Change of
plea to guilty, fine/fees $555,
90 days jail susp.
•Thomas Robert Arndt: DUI
(8/2/09); Admission to PV
count, found committed, no
sanctions at the time as recommended.
•Tyler Scott Jussila: Minor
Poss. and/or Consumption
(1/22/10); Guilty plea withdrawn and dismissed with
prejudice pursuant to compliance with conditions of deferred sentence.
•Susan Lee Steede: No Valid
Oper. License Without ID
(2/10/10), Minor Poss. and/or
Consumption (2/10/10); Def.
FTA, $1000 combined warrant.
Dissolutions
February 2011
•Elizabeth Goetz vs.
Michael Goetz
•Traci Hibbard vs. Mathew
Hibbard
•Angela M. Slusher vs.
Brian J. Slusher
Church Directory
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
New Life Assembly of God
1602 S. Columbus, Goldendale. Pastor Kevin
Gerchak. 773-4650. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Morning Worship Service 10:30 a.m., Evening
Service at 6 p.m., Family Night on Wed. night, 7
p.m. includes Youth, God’s Flower Garden, Royal
Rangers and Bible Study.
BAPTIST
Columbus Avenue Baptist, S.B.C.
815 N. Columbus, Goldendale. 773-4471. Pastor
Michael Block, Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Morning
Worship 11 a.m., Sunday Evening Study and
Worship, 6 p.m., Wednesday Evening Bible Study
and Prayer, 7 p.m.
Bible Baptist Church of Goldendale
340 East Collins St. Goldendale, WA. 773-4929. L.
Parish Plumlee, Pastor. Sunday: Sunday School 10
a.m., Morning Worship Service 11 a.m., Sunday
Evening Service 6 p.m., Wednesday Service 7 p.m.
Nursery Service Provided. “Families Walking In
The Old Paths.” Jer. 6:16
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Goldendale Church of Christ
230 E. Court, Goldendale, 773-4689. Sunday classes
10:00 a.m., Service 11:00 a.m., Wednesday classes
6:00 p.m.
Centerville Community Church
The Dalles Mountain Road in Centerville, Pastor
Ken Akins. Sunday Schedule: Children’s Sunday
School at 10 a.m. Adult Sunday school at 10:20
a.m. Morning Worship Service at 11:00 a.m. “A
place where you can feel comfortable.”
CATHOLIC
Holy Trinity Catholic
307 Schuster, Goldendale. Father William Byron,
773-4516. Sat. Eve. Mass 5:30 p.m.; Sunday Mass
9 a.m.; Spanish Mass Sat. evening 6:30 p.m. Eve of
Holy Days 7:00 p.m.; Holy Days 7:30 a.m. and
Daily Mass Mon. - Fri. 7:30 a.m. CCD Classes,
Wednesday afternoons 2:15 to 3:30 p.m.
Kindergarten through 6th grade. Wed. Evenings
7:30 to 8:30, 7th through 12th grade. Confessions
before Mass Saturdays at noon - 1 p.m.
GRACE BRETHREN
Community Grace Brethren
1180 S. Roosevelt. Gregory M. Howell, pastor.
773-3388. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Worship 11 a.m.; Saturday Night Connection 6:00
p.m. Wednesday AWANA at 2:30 p.m. for children
four years to sixth grade. Wednesday night youth at
6:30 p.m. for grades seven through 12 “The Bible,
the Whole Bible, and Nothing but the Bible.”
LDS
Goldendale Ward
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints
N. Columbus and McKinley; Bishop Mike Canon.
773-3824 or 773-5202, Missionaries: (509) 2619263. Worship Services start at 10 a.m. on Sunday.
Youth meetings (12-18 years) Wednesdays 7-8:30
p.m., Family History Library open from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., Tuesday - Thursday. Empty Nesters (all ages) at
6 p.m. 4th Monday of the Month - potluck at the
church.
LUTHERAN
Christ the King Lutheran
S. Columbus and Simcoe Dr., Goldendale, 7735750. Sunday school, 9 a.m., worship services 10
a.m. Everyone welcome.
METHODIST
United Methodist
Columbus and Broadway, Pastor Pat Beeman, 7734461 or 773-4462. Worship 8 a.m. & 10:30 a.m.,
Sunday School 9:15 a.m., Nursery Available 10:30
a.m. Call the church for regularly scheduled events.
NAZARENE
Church of the Nazarene
124 W. Allyn, Goldendale. 773-4216. Pastor
Thomas Fender. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.,
Worship at 10:45 a.m. Please call the church office
for weekly bible studies being offered. “Come Just
As You Are”.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST
1/2 mile East on Bickleton Hwy. Sabbath School,
Saturday, 9:30 a.m.; Worship Service 11 a.m. Tim
Gray, Pastor. 773-4381
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST
Room for different beliefs -- Yours
First and third Sundays in Goldendale
773-7815 • http://uugoldendale.org
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
FATHER’S HOUSE FELLOWSHIP
207 S. Klickitat Ave., 773-4719. Basic Bible
Fellowship, 9:30 a.m., Worship at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Prayer at 7 p.m. “Following the
Father’s Heart”.
GOLDEN GATE HEALING ROOMS
125 W. Main St., Goldendale. Open Thursday
nights, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. A fresh wind is blowing.
WOODLAND PRAISE BARN
627 Woodland Road, Goldendale. Woody Lovelace,
Pastor. Worship services; Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday at 7:00. 773-9119. thebarn@gorge.net.
MARCH 16, 2011 — B3
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
N OTICES
From Page B2
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:
GRACIELA PLASCENCIA,
506 WEST JEFFERSON
STREET, BINGEN, WA,
98605 GRACIELA PLASCENCIA, PO BOX 754, BINGEN, WA, 98605 MAURO
PEREZ, 506 WEST JEFFERSON STREET, BINGEN, WA, 98605 MAURO
PEREZ, PO BOX 754, BINGEN, WA, 98605 SPOUSE
OF GRACIELA PLASCENCIA, PO BOX 754, BINGEN,
WA, 98605 SPOUSE OF
GRACIELA PLASCENCIA,
506 WEST JEFFERSON
STREET, BINGEN, WA,
98605
SPOUSE
OF
MAURO PEREZ, PO BOX
754, BINGEN, WA, 98605
SPOUSE
OF
MAURO
PEREZ, 506 WEST JEFFERSON STREET, BINGEN, WA, 98605 by both
first class and certified mail
on 11/18/2010, proof of
which is in the possession of
the
Trustee;
and
on
11/18/2010, the Borrower
and Grantor were personally
served 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's Sale will be held in
accordance with Ch. 61.24
RCW and anyone wishing to
bid at the sale will be
required to have in his/her
possession at the time the
bidding commences, cash,
cashier's check, or certified
check in the amount of at
least one dollar over the
Beneficiary's opening bid. In
addition, the successful bidder will be required to pay
the full amount of his/her bid
in cash, cashier's check, or
certified check within one
hour of the making of the
bid. 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 of
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
same 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 20th 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 tenantoccupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant
with written notice in accordance with section 2 of this
act. DATED: 12/20/2010
REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION By
KAREN JAMES, AUTHORIZED AGENT Address:
616 1st Avenue, Suite 500
Seattle, WA 98104 Phone:
(206)
340-2550
Sale
I n f o r m a t i o n :
www.rtrustee.com ASAP#
FNMA3857867 02/23/2011,
03/16/2011
(813, 1101)
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF KLICKITAT.
SHERIFF’S
PUBLIC
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL
PROPERTY.
Northwest
Farm Credit Services, FLCA,
Plaintiff vs. Jon David
VanNote, same person as
Jon D. VanNote, and Brenda
Lee VanNote, same person
as Brenda L. VanNote, husband and wife; and
Columbia
River
Bank,
Defendants,
No.
10-200207-9. TO: Jon David
VanNote, same person as
Jon D. VanNote, and Brenda
Lee VanNote, same person
as Brenda L. VanNote, husband and wife; and
Columbia River Bank. 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 3, Short Plat No. SP2005-12,
recorded
November 22, 2005 as
Auditor’s No 1058383, being
a portion of the Southwest
Quarter of Section 30,
Township 4 North, Range 16
East, W.M., Klickitat County,
Washington. Together with a
de-titled
Manufactured
Home, described as a 1997
Fleetwood 56’ x 25’, Vehicle
Identification
Number
C K F LV 4 8 A 5 1 5 9 3 H H 1 3 .
Property address is 16
Princehouse Road (also
known as Princehouse
Place),Goldendale,
Washington.
Assessor’s
Parcel No. 04-16-30560003-00.
The sale of the above
described property is to take
place: TIME: 10:00 A.M.
DATE: April 1, 2011 PLACE:
Klickitat County Courthouse.
The Judgment Debtor can
avoid the sale by paying the
judgment
amount
of
$125,705.88, together with
interest, costs and fees,
before the sale date. For the
exact amount, contact the
Sheriff’s office at the
address
stated
below.
KLICKITAT COUNTY SHERIFF, 205 S Columbus, MSCH-7, Goldendale, WA
98620, 509-773-4455.
(809, 903, 1001, 1102)
PROBATE NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
Superior
Court
of
Washington for Klickitat
County
Estate of Kenneth D.
Sheridan, Deceased.
No. 11-4-00008-0
Probate Notice to Creditors
RCW 11.40.030
The
Personal
Representative
named
below has been appointed
as Personal Representative
of this estate. Any person
having a claim against the
decedent must, before the
time the claim would be
barred by any otherwise
applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in
the manner as provided in
RCW 11.40.070 by serving
on or mailing to the Personal
Representative
or
the
Personal Representative’s
attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim
and filing the original of the
claim with the court. The
claim must be presented
within the later of: (1) Thirty
days after the Personal
Representative served or
mailed the notice to the
creditor as provided under
RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2)
four months after the date of
first publication of the notice.
If the claim is not presented
within this time frame, the
claim is forever barred,
except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and
11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both
the decedent’s probate and
nonprobate assets.
Date of First Publication:
March 2, 2011.
Personal Representative:
Frieda R. Sheridan
Attorney for the Personal
Representative: Charles K.
Toole
Address for Mailing or
Service: 112 West 4th
Street, The Dalles, OR
97058
(911, 1003, 1103)
REQUEST FOR
QUALIFICATIONS
Staffing Study 2011-1
Klickitat County seeks a
qualified person or company
to review the staffing levels
and operational effectiveness of various departments. In preparation of the
2012 Budget, the County
Commissioners want to
determine if staffing levels of
the County are in line with
other comparable counties
and to identify areas for
improving operations for
greater
efficiencies.
Interested parties must
deliver a proposal no later
than Noon, March 22.
Proposals shall comply with
RFQ specifications as posted
on
www.klickitatcounty.org.
Check the website for further
project details. Questions
about this RFQ or requests
for a copy of proposal
requirements may be directed to Glen Chipman,
Administrative
Services
Director, and (509) 7732331.
(1006, 1104)
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed bids for the “Replace
Courthouse Blinds Project
N10004, Federal Contract
F10-52110-034”, will be
received by the Board of
County Commissioners at
the reception desk located in
the Klickitat County Public
Works Department, 115
South Golden, Goldendale
THIS JUST IN:
• Notice of Special Meeting & Community Workshop Rural 7 Fire District
• Notice to Creditors re: Franklin R. Clements - Flower &
Andreotti
• Public Hearing Notice - Board of Adjustment/Verizon Klickitat County Planning
• Public Hearing Notice re: Title 2/Klickitat County Code
- Klickitat County Planning
• Request for Qualifications-Community/Youth Center
Feasibility Study - Klickitat School District
• Notice to Contractors/Sand Shed - Klickitat County Public Works
Washington.
Mailing
address 228 W. Main MSCh-19,
Goldendale
Washington 98620 until 1:15
p.m. on March 29, 2011 for
performing
the
work
described below. Sealed
bids received will be opened
at
the
Commissioner’s
Chambers and publicly read
aloud on Tuesday, March 29,
2011 at 1:30 p.m. or shortly
thereafter. Bids received
after 1:15 p.m. March 29,
2011 will not be considered.
The county reserves the
right to reject any and all
bids, and to waive informalities that are not, in the opinion
of
the
County
Commissioners, material.
Bid envelopes shall be
appropriately marked on the
outside “Bid opening 1:30
p.m. March 29, 2011
Replace Courthouse Blinds,
N10004, Federal Contract
F10-52110-034”.
This contract provides for
the Replacement of 77
Blinds at the Klickitat County
Courthouse, all in accordance with the Contract
Plans, Contract Provisions,
and
the
Standard
Specifications.
Bid proposals shall be
accompanied by a bid proposal deposit in cash, certified check, cashier’s check
or surety bond in the amount
equal to five percent (5%) in
the amount of the bid proposal. Should the successful bidder fail to enter into
such contract and furnish
satisfactory
performance
bond within the time stated
in the specifications, the bid
proposal deposit shall be forfeited to Klickitat County.
Approximate project cost is
estimated to be between
$10,000 to $15,000.
The Klickitat County Public
Works Dept. in accordance
with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat.
252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to
2000d-4 and Title 49, Code
of Federal Regulations,
Department
of
Transportation, subtitle A,
Office of the Secretary, Part
21, nondiscrimination in federally assisted programs of
the
Department
of
Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby
notifies all bidders that it will
affirmatively insure that in
any contract entered into
pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids in response to
this invitation and will not be
discriminated against on the
grounds of race, color or
national origin in consideration for an award.
Obtaining Bid Documents:
1. Free of charge: Plans,
Specifications,
addenda,
bidders list, and plan holders
list for the project are available though the Klickitat
County’s on-line plan room.
Free of charge access is
provided
to
Prime
Contractors, Subcontractors
and Venders by going to
http://bxwa.com and clicking
on: Posted Projects; Public
Works; Klickitat County; and
Projects Bidding. Bidders
are encouraged to “Register”
in order to receive automatic
email notification of future
addenda and to place themselves on the self registered
“Bidders List.” This on-line
plan room provides Bidders
with fully usable on-line documents; with the ability to:
download, print to your own
printer, order full / partial
plan sets from numerous
reprographic sources (online print order form), and a
free on-line digitizer / takeoff tool. Contact Builders
Exchange of Washington at
425-258-1303 should you
require assistance.
Paper Copies are also available upon receipt of a nonrefundable deposit in the
amount of $25.00, payable
to the Klickitat County Public
Works Department, 228 W
Main,
MS-CH
19,
Goldendale, WA, 98620.
Bidders that obtain paper
copies are encouraged to
“Register”
online
at
bxwa.com, in order to
receive automatic addenda
notification by email and to
appear on the “Bidders List”
if they so desire.
Dated this 1st Day of March,
2011.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Rex F. Johnston, Chairman
Ray Thayer, Vice Chairman
David M. Sauter, Member
ATTEST:
Crystal D. McEwen, Clerk of
the Board
Klickitat County, Washington
(1007, 1105)
EXTENSION HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a
Transportation Vehicle Fund
Budget Extension Hearing
for the 2010-2011 school
year of Lyle School District
No. 406,
Klickitat County, Lyle, WA,
will be held in the Board
Room
at Lyle Middle School on
Thursday, March 24, at 6:45
PM.
Any person may appear at
said hearing and be heard
for or against such
budget extension.
The
Board will meet immediately
following the hearing
at a regular meeting to consider approval of the budget
extension.
Martin Huffman
Secretary to the Board of
Directors
Lyle School District No. 406
(1008, 1106)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Klickitat County Rural 7 Fire
& Rescue
Special Meeting
Commissioners Workshop
Klickitat County Rural 7 Fire
& Rescue Commissioners
will hold a special meeting
for the purpose of Rural 7
Commissioners and Klickitat
County Fire District 5
Commissioners workshop to
discuss a working relationship between the two districts.
The meeting will take place
Monday, March 21, 2011 at
5:00 pm., in the Rural 7
meeting room, 327 W.
Brooks, Goldendale, WA
98620.
(1107)
Columbus, Goldendale, WA.
THE PURPOSE of said
hearing is to hear all interested parties who wish to
testify for or against the following proposal:
CUP2011-02 - Applicant:
Rod Michaelis for Verizon
Wireless
requesting
a
Conditional Use Permit to reactive CUP2009-05 for the
purpose of constructing and
operating a wireless communications facility. The proposed site is located within a
portion of Section 18, T2N,
R15E,
W.M.,
Klickitat
County, WA (9286 Hwy 14,
Wishram, WA).
The Board of Adjustment
may approve, deny, approve
with conditions, table, or
continue the matter to a set
time and place.
The application is available
for review at the Klickitat
County
Planning
Department, 228 W. Main
St., Goldendale, WA.
BY ORDER of the Klickitat
County Board of Adjustment
dated this 7th day of March
2011.
/s/ Curt Dreyer, Planning
Director
(1109)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the Klickitat County
Board of Commissioners will
hold a public hearing on
March 29, 2011 at 1:30 p.m.
in the Klickitat County
Courthouse, Commissioners
Meeting Room, 205 S.
Columbus, Goldendale, WA.
THE PURPOSE of said
hearing is to hear all interested parties who wish to
testify for or against the following proposal:
Adoption of amendments/revisions to Title 2 of
the Klickitat County Code,
relating to land development
and appeal fees.
The
Board
of
Commissioners
may
approve, deny, table, or continue the matter to a set time
and place.
The proposed amendments
are available for review at
the Klickitat County Planning
Department, 228 W. Main
St., Goldendale, WA or
online at:
klickitatcounty.org/planning
BY ORDER of the Klickitat
County
Board
of
Commissioners dated this
8th day of March
2011.
/s/ Rex Johnston, Chairman
(1110)
PUBLIC NOTICE
KLICKITAT SCHOOL
DISTRICT #402
REQUEST FOR
QUALIFICATIONS
COMMUNITY/YOUTH
CENTER FEASIBILITY
PUBLIC NOTICE
STUDY
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Klickitat School District #402
OF THE STATE OF
seeks a qualified and experiWASHINGTON
enced consultant to deterIN AND FOR YAKIMA
mine and report on the feasiCOUNTY
bility of developing a comIN THE MATTER OF THE munity/youth center that
ESTATE OF: FRANKLIN R. includes a museum and food
CLEMENTS, Deceased.
bank in a district owned facilNOTICE TO CREDITORS, ity with surrounding property.
NO. 11-4-00140-3
This study is funded by a U.
The
Personal S. Department of Housing
Representative
named and Urban Development
below has been appointed Community Development
as Personal Representative Block Grant (CDBG) and
of this Estate. Any person must comply with CDBG
having a claim against the guidelines, rules, and reguDeceased must, before the lations.
time the claim would be Parties
interested
in
barred by any otherwise responding to this Request
applicable statute of limita- For Qualifications (RFQ)
tions, present the claim in must submit a written prothe manner as provided in posal to the Office of the
RCW 11.40.070 by serving Superintendent,
Klickitat
on or mailing to the Personal School District #402, PO
Representative
or
the Box 37 Klickitat, Washington
Personal Representative's 98628, located at 98 School
attorney at the address stat- Drive, phone 509-369-4145,
ed below a copy of the claim on or before 2:00 P. M. April
and filing the original of the 11, 2011. At least one onclaim with the Court. The site interview is required durclaim must be presented ing the consultant selection.
within the later of: (1) thirty Responders must send
days after the Personal questions by email to Jerry
Representative served or Lynch,
Superintendent,
mailed the Notice to the jlynch@esd112.wednet.edu,
creditor as provided by RCW and/or
Tammie
Huwe,
11.40.020(3); or (2) four Business
Manager,
months after the date of first thuwe@esd112.wednet.edu
publication of the Notice. If . Questions and answers will
the claim is not presented be made available to anyone
within these times, the claim who submits a request to be
is forever “barred”, except as notified and their email.
otherwise provided in RCW Tours of the subject property
11.40.051 and 11.40.060, can be arranged.
against both the Decedent's Specific instructions for
probate and non-probate responding to this RFQ are
assets.
contained in the Scope of
Date of filing with Court: Work
and
Supporting
March 10, 2011.
Information document found
Date of first publication: at www.klickitat.wednet.edu
March 16, 2011.
along with pictures of the
/s/ STANLEY VAN HORN, subject property and other
Personal Representative.
related information. The
Attorneys for Estate:
Scope
of
Work
and
FLOWER & ANDREOTTI
Supporting Information writ303 East "D" Street, Suite 1 ten document is also availYakima, WA 98901
able by contacting the superTelephone: 509-248-9084
intendent or business man(1108, 1202, 1303)
ager at the above address
and phone number.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
Faxed, electronic or late subHEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN mission will not be considthat the Klickitat County ered.
(1111, 1203)
Board of Adjustment will
hold a public hearing on
NOTICE TO
April 4, 2011 at 7:00 p.m. in
CONTRACTORS
the
Klickitat
County Sealed
bids Klickitat County
Courthouse, Commissioners Goldendale Sand Shed
Meeting Room, 205 S.
Building, will be received by
the Board of County
Commissioners at the reception desk located in the
Klickitat County Public
Works Department, 115
South Golden, Goldendale
Washington.
Mailing
address 228 W. Main MSCH-19,
Goldendale
Washington 98620 until 1:15
p.m. on April 5, 2011 for performing the work described
below. Sealed bids received
will be opened at the
Commissioner’s Chambers
and publicly read aloud on
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at
1:30 p.m. or shortly thereafter. Bids received after
1:15 p.m. April 5, 2011 will
not be considered. The
county reserves the right to
reject any and all bids, and
to waive informalities that
are not, in the opinion of the
county
Commissioners,
material.
Bid envelopes shall be
appropriately marked on the
outside:
“Bid opening 1:30 p.m. April
5, 2011_Goldendale Sand
Shed Purchase
WP-47”
This contract provides for
the purchase of a 50 ft x 100
ft Steel building delivered to
1181
West
Broadway
Goldendale WA, in accordance with specifications
provided by Klickitat County
Public Works.
There will be no Bid Bond
Required for the purchase of
Sand Shed.
In replacement of a bid bond
the Contractor shall honor
the bid price through the
award process regardless of
materials or shipping cost
increase during the award
process for a time period of
45 days from bid opening
date of April 5, 2011.
Approximate project cost is
estimated to be between
$35,000 and $50,000.
The Klickitat County Public
Works Dept. in accordance
with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat.
252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to
2000d-4 and Title 49, Code
of Federal Regulations,
Department
of
Transportation, subtitle A,
Office of the Secretary, Part
21, nondiscrimination in federally assisted programs of
the
Department
of
Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby
notifies all bidders that it will
affirmatively insure that in
any contract entered into
pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids in response to
this invitation and will not be
discriminated against on the
grounds of race, color or
national origin in consideration for an award.
Obtaining Bid Documents:
Free of charge: Plans,
Specifications,
addenda,
bidders list, and plan holders
list for the project are available though the Klickitat
County’s on-line plan room.
Free of charge access is
provided
to
Prime
Contractors, Subcontractors
and Venders by going to
http://bxwa.com and clicking
on: Posted Projects; Public
Works; Klickitat County; and
Projects Bidding. Bidders
are encouraged to “Register”
in order to receive automatic
email notification of future
addenda and to place themselves on the self registered
“Bidders List.” This on-line
plan room provides Bidders
with fully usable on-line documents; with the ability to:
download, print to your own
printer, order full / partial
plan sets from numerous
reprographic sources (online print order form), and a
free on-line digitizer / takeoff tool. Contact Builders
Exchange of Washington at
425-258-1303 should you
require assistance.
Paper Copies are also available upon receipt of a nonrefundable deposit in the
amount of $25.00, payable
to the Klickitat County Public
Works Department, 228 W
Main,
MS-CH
19,
Goldendale, WA, 98620.
Bidders that obtain paper
copies are encouraged to
“Register”
online
at
bxwa.com, in order to
receive automatic addenda
notification by email and to
appear on the “Bidders List”
if they so desire.
Dated this 15 day of March,
2011.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Klickitat County, Washington
Rex F. Johnston, Chairman
Ray Thayer, Vice Chairman
David M. Sauter, Member
ATTEST:
Clerk of the Board
Crystal D. McEwen
Klickitat County, Washington
(1112, 1204, 1304)
B4 — MARCH 16, 2011
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
Annoucements
Happy Ads .......................2
Welcome To The World....4
Card of Thanks ................5
Notices...........................10
Events............................15
Personals .......................20
Support Groups .............25
Lost & Found .................30
Professional Services ....31
BUSINESS/
FINANCIAL
Business Opportunities .60
Investments & Loans .....65
Insurance .......................70
Mortgages & Contracts..72
72 Mortgages
& Contracts
10 Notices
Brides Register @
Canon Packer!
541-296-3038
1006 E. 2nd Street
The Dalles, OR 97058
20 Personals
We Buy Mortgages for
cash! Fast & simple.
We do all the work and
you get all the Cash $$!
Call Ginger today @
541-296-9503.
cgcashflowsolutions.com
ABORTION? WHY?
CONSIDER ADOPTION
Warm, secure, loving home
EMPLOYMENT
available for newborn baby.
Please call 1-800-6064411, A-1141.
Help Wanted General ....75
GOLDENDALE Pregnancy Help Wanted Domestic/
In Home .........................76
Resource Center
Help Wanted Medical/
509-773-5501
77
Pregnancy Counseling and Health
services, free pregnancy Help Wanted Office/
self-tests, education on Clerical...........................78
Help Wanted Sales/Cusabortion and alternatives.
tomer Service
79
Positions Wanted ...........80
25 Support
Volunteers......................82
Work from Home
Groups
Employment...................83
AA Woman's meeting, 7 Job Opportunities ..........85
pm every Tuesday at Solid
Rock Church, 2308 E 12th,
75 Help Wanted
The Dalles.
AL-ANON Meeting
6:30 pm, Thursdays
Goldendale
Methodist
Church
Questions?
Call Rosie, 773-6420 or
Greta, 773-3343.
ALCOHOLICS Anon. Goldendale meetings at the
United Methodist Church;
Mon., 8 p.m.; Wed., 8 p.m.;
Fri., 8 p.m., 109 E. Broadway. 1-800-344-2666.
DO YOU HAVE HURTS,
habits, and/or hang-ups?
Attend Celebrate Recovery
every Wednesday night at
Hood
River
Alliance
Church at 2650 W. Montello (off Rand Rd). Dinner
provided at 6:15 pm
(optional) and meetings are
from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
Childcare is provided.
For more info. call
541-308-5339
Family Alzheimer's/Dementia
Support Group
Family
members
and
friends caring for individuals with Alzheimer's disease or a related dementia
are invited to participate in
our Dementia Support
Group. Come and gain
support and insight from
others who are going thru
or have gone thru this journey. Join us monthly in a
caring environment to discuss your challenges and
questions. Meeting held the
third Wednesday, every
month, at 3:00 pm at FlagStone Senior Living at 3325
Columbia View Drive. For
more information about our
group, contact Bryan or
Jim at 541-298-5656. All
Welcome!
General
AUDITOR/MANAGER:
FINANCE &
ACCOUNTING
Skamania County PUD is
seeking qualified applicants
for the position of Auditor/
Manager of Finance & Accounting (F&A). Please see
job
description
at
www.skamaniapud.com
Salary is negotiable depending on experience and
qualifications. This application period will be open
until the position is filled.
Skamania PUD is an equal
opportunity employer and
will be evaluating all resources available to meet
its need.
Applicants should forward
resume with references
and salary history to: Bob
Wittenberg, Mgr., ATTN:
Auditor/Mgr F&A, Skamania PUD, PO Box 500, Carson, WA 98610.
BEST WESTERN PLUS
COLUMBIA RIVER INN
Applications being accepted for opportunities in Front
Desk and Housekeeping
departments. 735 WaNaPa
St., Cascade Locks, OR
BILINGUAL ENGLISH/
SPANISH RESIDENT
MANAGER
Seeking F/T Resident Mgr.
for Hood River Crossing.
Tax Credit or Section 8 experience. Must live on site,
rent free unit, $9.50/hr.
Pass background check,
DMV, & drug screen. Email
jobs@cascade-management.com or fax 1-888788-3594.
GRIEF and Loss Group Buy or Sell Avon
meets monthly at Klickitat 541-739-2111 or
Valley Hospital. Come and 541-993-2735
learn ways to heal and help
others heal from loss.
Sponsored by Klickitat Valley Hospice. Call 773-0380
for further information.
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
LOST: Black & white lab
mix, spayed female. Missing since 2/27 near Hwy 35
& Dethman Ridge Rd.
Hood River. REWARD!
Please Call 541-380-1836
INSTRUCTION &
CHILD CARE
Preschool/Daycare
Facilities .........................35
Child Care Providers .....37
Schools Training ............40
Tutoring ..........................45
Instruction ......................50
Training & Opportunity...51
Health & Fitness ............55
Renewable Energy
Technology Program
Advisor:
Responsible for the overall
marketing, recruitment and
retention efforts for the Renewable Energy Technology Program. Bachelor's
Degree required and two
years of community college
experience and/or experience working with adults or
high school students in an
academic setting preferred.
Full time position with a
starting salary of $37,699
plus benefits. This is a
grant funded position with a
funding end date of 3/31/
12. Position closes Thursday, March 17th at Noon.
cgcc.cc.or.us or contact
Sara Rinearson at 541506-6151 for more info.
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
75 Help Wanted
General
COACH AMERICA
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
Imperial River Company
in Maupin, OR is seeking
applicants for these positions: Assistant Manager,
Operations Manager, Marketing Assistant, Bartender. Please email rob@
deschutesriver.com
for
complete job descriptions.
Deadline to apply: 3/22/11
LIGHT MANUFACTURING
PT to FT seasonal position
with local sporting goods
manufacturer. Light Manufacturing,
packaging,
shipping & general factory
work, $9.15 per hour, reliable work refs. req. NSI,
PO Box 1574, Hood River
or email: ogo@gorge.net
PRINCIPAL PLANNER
Columbia River Gorge
Commission is seeking experienced leader to serve
as Principal Planner for the
National
Scenic
Area
(NSA) with experience in
leading land use planning
staff. This full-time regional
position is instrumental in
long-term policy planning
for the NSA. Masters or
PhD preferred; five years'
supervisory experience.
Deadline is COB April 4,
2011. Position description
at
http://
www.gorgecommission.or
g/jobopenings.crm.
$54,504-$71,496. PO Box
730, White Salmon, WA
98672; 509-493-3323.
AA/EOE.
SURVEY/ENGINEERING
TECHNICIAN
EIL is seeking a survey/engineering tech for Hood
River office. Position reqs:
survey experience (total
stations, data collectors
and GPS). Work also includes concrete and material testing, soil sampling
and testing, and construction inspection work. See
more
details
at
www.EILLLC.com.
is seeking drivers in the
Wishram area. If you have
a love for the open road
and passionate for quality
customer service this could
be your next stop. We offer
a decent benefit package,
paid training, a company
401k plan. Our services include local or over the road
transportation of Railroad
employees. Must have a
clean driving record and be
able to pass a DOT physical. Call 360-695-3022 for
details. Coach America is a
drug free work place and
EOE.
CONSTRUCTION
INSPECTOR
BergerABAM seeks a
well-qualified individual
as the resident project
representative (RPR)
for the City of Hood River's Water Transmission Main Phase 2 Project. The RPR is responsible for on-site
project inspection, assisting the project engineer and project manager in providing more
extensive observation
of the project work, and
maintaining BergerABAM company standards and quality. Duration of assignment is
approximately 2 years,
beginning March - April
2011. Please visit our
website
@
w w w. a b a m . c o m / c a reers to learn more and
complete the entire application process.
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Hood River Dairy Queen is
taking applications for P/T
customer service positions
with potential for F/T. Apply
in person at 2525 Cascade,
Hood River. NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE.
DV/SA Advocate:
Join the team of advocates
providing coordinated, direct services to victims and
survivors. Prefer: bilingual
with 2 years experience,
excellent communications
skill. Will train for right person. Car; some travel w/
reimb. 20+ hours wk/salary
dep on exp.
Financial Co-facilitator:
Assist ED with facilitation of
Financial Empowerment
curricular to survivors of
DV/SA.
See HAVENthedalles.org
for full job description or
send resume to: HAVEN,
Executive Director, PO Box
576, The Dalles, OR 97058
ELECTRONICS TECH,
Entry-level position, no
experience required. Go to
http://
sagetechcorp.iapplicants.
com/ViewJob-131977.html
Mid-Columbia Center for
Living (MCCFL),
is seeking to fill the
following positions:
Clinical Supervisor
Responsible for oversight
of adult & children's mental
health services in Wasco &
Sherman counties.
Provides clinical
supervision to assigned
staff and performs direct
services. Knowledge and
experience working in an
outpatient community
behavioral health setting
required. Exp. in a dual
diagnosis is preferred.
Requires a Master's
degree in social work,
psychology or related field,
and 3 yrs post graduate
exp. in mental health with
at least 1 yr of supervision
of clinical professionals.
Must have the ability to
provide guidance and
leadership to staff. Salary
range $4,841-$5,663/mo.
Clinical Services Manager
Responsible for the
administration of child and
adult mental health
services in Wasco,
Sherman, and Hood River
Counties. Responsible for
compliance of programs;
establish an effective
service delivery system;
budgeting, and supervision
of professional clinical
staff.
Requires a Master's
degree in psychology,
social work, or related field
and 5 yrs post Master's
experience in behavioral
health which includes at
least 3 yrs of clinical
supervision of
professionals including
program supervisors. Exp.
in the administration of
public mental health
programs in Oregon is a
strong preference.
Knowledge of outpatient,
case management and
recovery services required.
Exp. in dual diagnosis is
preferred. Requires travel
within tri-county area. Must
have excellent
communication skills and
ability to work with all
stakeholders. Salary range
$5,719 -$6,690/mo.
Both positions: Must have
Oregon State licensure as
an LCSW or LPC, or ability
to obtain license w/in six
mos. of hire. Full-time w/
benefits. Contact Courtney
at 541-296-5452 or
download our application
at
www.mccfl.org. Close 3/24/
11. EOE/Drugfree
workplace.
The Best Western Hood
River Inn is now taking resumes for qualified, F/T
front desk staff. Must be
available
for
evening,
weekend, and morning
shifts. Candidates should
have prior customer service experience, be personable, professional, motivated, and enjoy working
with the public. Typing and
computer skills are required, as well as the ability
to multi-task and problem
solve. Please apply in person
at 1108 E. Marina Way, Hood
River. No phone calls or walkin interviews please.
HOUSEKEEPER, 40 unit motel, Biggs OR, 20 to 30 hours
weekly, includes some weekend work, starts at $9 hourly,
potential increase for experience/performance, experience
preferred but not required,
Call (541) 739-2501 for more
info, Fax (541) 739-2091
37 Child Care
Providers
OBDULIA'S CHILD CARE:
Has openings for children 6
wks.-11 yrs. Our main objective is to provide a clean,
safe and learning environment for the children. I
speak spanish only, but will
have a translator working
with me. Call for more information 509-395-2724.
45 Tutoring
Does your child need a tutor? I can help your elementary school student "fill
in" their educational gaps in
reading and math. I tutor in
your home so you don't
have to travel. Call 509369-3674 or find me on the
web at www.
teenytech.com/tutoring
JANITORIAL:
Full time-Nights
$10/Hour. Criminal background and drug test required. Send resume to:
Box A, c/o The Dalles
Chronicle, PO Box 1910,
The Dalles, OR 97058
JOB OPENINGS
Northern Wasco County
Parks and Recreation District is taking applications
for 2 Recreation Assistants
for the 2011 Summer Season. Duties include Outdoor Education day camps,
field trips and Kayak Shack
rentals. Must be available
weekends, May thru late
August. $10/hr
Lifeguards and Swim Instructors needed for the
2011 Season. Dates: June
1st through Labor Day.
There will be a mandatory
in-service training prior to
opening. Positions are
open for the whole season
or part of the season. Applicants must have current
Life Guard, CPR and first
aid certifications or able to
obtain prior to employment.
Wage DOE Closes 4/30/
11.
Park Aide needed for 2011
Season, May-September,
not to exceed 20 hours
weekly. Must have valid
driver's license. $12/hr.
Applications and full job descriptions available at District office at 414 Washington Street Suite 1D, The
Dalles
or
online
at
www.nwprd.org
F/T FRONT DESK
STAFF
ELECTRONICS/COMPOSITE
TECHNICIANS
Needed for a WS engineering firm for debug and
repair of unmanned aerial
vehicle components as well
as fiberglass skin painting
and repair. No experience
required. Must be responsible, motivated and willing/
able to work in a fast paced
and dynamic environment.
$12/hr, Holidays, PTO,
Medical, 401K. Apply at:
www.sagetechcorp.iapplic Foster Parents Wanted!
Make a difference in
ants.com
the life of a child. Become a
ELEMENTARY
foster parent with Maple
TEACHERS
Star Oregon. We offer
Trout Lake School District competitive compensation,
is accepting applications in depth trainings, and 24
for 2 elementary teachers, hour support. For more ingrade 1 and grades 4/5 formation contact Krista at
combined.
503-290-1892
Washington certification is
FULL SAIL BREWING
required. For more inforCOMPANY IS HIRING!
mation contact Doug Dearden at Trout Lake School Full Sail is hiring for
1-500-395-2571 or wesite: the following positions:
www.troutlake.k12.wa.us Receptionist, Maintenance
Application deadline is Assistant, Tour Guide,
April 11, 2011, or until Cooks & Hosts. Please visit our website for more infilled.
f o r m a t i o n
Trout Lake School District
www.fullsailbrewing.com.
is an Equal Opportunity
Employer.
HOOD RIVER CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE MEMBERSHIP
COORDINATOR
Sets up and maintains
memberships, utilizes databases and web technologies for the job, helps manage membership events,
updates member information on all computer-based
sites, fast-paced with deadlines. Send resume and
cover letter to vc@
hoodriver.org
Get more
eyes on
your ad,
place it in the
Gorge
Classifieds!
IS SUPPORT SPECIALIST
or Network Administrator -Klickitat County Administrative Services, .9 FTE/36
hrs per week at $14.92 or
$17.78. Closing Date 3/15/
11 first review or Open Until Filled. See website below
for detailed job description.
Application packets at
Klickitat County Personnel
Department,
509-7737171, 205 S. Columbus
Ave., MS-CH 15, Goldendale, WA 98620, an EOE.
E
m
a
i
l
:
applications@co.klickitat.
wa.us
or
www.klickitatcounty.org for
info.
MECHANIC
Klickitat PUD is now accepting applications for a
highly qualified full-time
mechanic. This position
performs skilled mechanical tasks in the diagnosis of
malfunctions, preventive
maintenance, repair, modifications, and overhaul of
diesel and gasoline-powered PUD vehicles and
equipment.
Applicants with a combination of twelve (12) years of
education and experience,
which demonstrates the
ability to perform the essential functions of this position, are strongly preferred.
Applications and a detailed
job description are available
online
at
www.klickpud.com and at
the Goldendale Klickitat
PUD office.
Please submit your written
application to Klickitat PUD,
c/o Human Resources,
1313 S. Columbus, Goldendale, WA 98620, or by
fax at 509-773-4969.
Deadline for submitting applications is Wednesday,
March 30, 2011. EOE
LIBRARY DIRECTOR
The newly formed Hood
River County Library District seeks a dynamic, highly qualified individual as Library Director to champion
the reopening and successful operation of our
county library. The Director
provides direct leadership
in planning, direction and
oversight of library services. The Director supervises personnel, communicates with the public, and
supervises maintenance of
library facilities, collection,
and equipment. The Director will prepare the budget,
monitor and approve expenditures and work directly with the elected Library Board. Salary range
of $58,843-$63,694 with
benefits. For complete job
description and application
www.hoodriverlibrary.org.
LITIGATION
PARALEGAL
Wyers Haskell Davies & Dunn,
PC is seeking an experienced paralegal to support
a fast-paced regional litigation practice.
BA/BS or equivalent years
of legal experience preferred. Candidates must
possess proficiency in Microsoft Office software.
Position requires exemplary organizational and
case management skills,
legal writing and verbal
communication skills, and
the ability to handle
multiple assignments under
deadline.
Primary responsibilities include drafting correspondence and pleadings; producing and responding to
discovery requests; coordinating and
tracking litigation cases;
general administrative support for attorneys; calendaring; court filings; and
communications with clients, court clerks and
opposing counsel. Additional duties may be assigned in accordance with
need and ability.
Qualified applicants should
submit their resume with a
cover letter and salary requirements
to:
gorgelaw@gorge.net
MECHANIC
Klickitat PUD is now accepting applications for a
highly qualified full-time
mechanic. This position
performs skilled mechanical tasks in the diagnosis of
malfunctions, preventive
maintenance, repair, modifications, and overhaul of
diesel and gasoline-powered PUD vehicles and
equipment.
Applicants with a combination of twelve (12) years of
education and experience,
which demonstrates the
ability to perform the essential functions of this position, are strongly preferred.
Applications and a detailed
job description are available
online
at
www.klickpud.com and at
the Goldendale Klickitat
PUD Office.
Please submit your written
application to Klickitat PUD,
c/o Human Resources,
1313 S. Columbus, Goldendale, Wa 98620, or by
fax at 509-773-4969.
The deadline for submitting
applications is Wednesday,
march 30, 2011. E.O.E.
PROVIDENCE SENIOR LIVING
FACILITIES
Looking for beauticians and
nail technicians interested
in renting beauty shop
space. Must like working
with clients in their golden
years. Able to see private
clients and walk-ins on flexible schedule. If interested
please call Jean Sheppard
at (541) 387-6386.
QUALITY
ASSURANCE ASSIST.
2 Full time, permanent positions at Hood River Juice
C o m p a n y .
www.ryansjuice.com
Degree in Food Science,
Biology or Chemistry preferred. Must have the ability to learn HPLC analysis.
Job requires a flexible work
schedule to accommodate
production. Send resume
to QA Manager at laurie.brown@hrjco.com or
fax 541-386-6114. No
phone calls please
RADIO ADVERTISING
SALES
Do you consider yourself
professional, determined
and persuasive? Bicoastal
Media wants to talk with
you about a career selling
for our five station group.
We offer above average
earning potential and benefits. Send a cover letter
and resume to Sales Manager, PO Box 1517, The
Dalles 97058. Bicoastal
Media is an EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
Minorities and women are
encouraged to apply.
We're Hiring:
Experienced Activities
Director/Bus Driver for
Cherry
Heights
Retirement. Please fax
resume: 541-296-7077 or
email:cherryheights@
frontiermgmt.com
77 Help Wanted
Medical
CBCF
COLUMBIA BASIN
CARE FACILITY
Our Mission is to
Improve the Lives of
Those We Serve
Community-owned
Not-for-Profit,
Skilled Nursing Facility.
Position available:
Cert. Medication Aide or
LPN to pass medications:
Fast-paced, must be
detail oriented. Hire on
Bonus if licensed for 1
year or more. Contact
Monica @ 541-2962156 ext. 223.
Drug test & background
check required. Ask for
application at Front
Desk.
1015 Webber St.,
The Dalles, OR
EOE
DENTAL HYGIENIST
HR practice seeking
experienced PT hygienist.
Send cover letter, resume
& references to
jj@gorgedental.com
Experienced Optician
Needed
Must possess excellent
customer service skills with
willingness to help others.
Bilingual a plus. Contact
Melissa Mead: mmead@
cascadeeye.com
logo
RELIABLE CAREGIVERS
to assist adults w/developCaregivers Wanted:
mental disabilities. Training
provided. Growth opportu- Experience preferred. We
offer: competitive wages
Gorge Networks is seeking a nity. 503-594-1250 x13
and benefits. Apply in perNetwork Administrator to
son at FlagStone Senior
help with day-to-day operSALES:
Living, 3325 Columbia
ations. Qualified candiThe Goldendale SentiView Dr., The Dalles, OR
dates will have the follownel is looking for a highing experience/knowledge:
ly motivated, self-starter
logo
to join our sales team.
* Advanced networking routing, switching, IP subMust have go-getter
netting, Cisco IOS.
attitude!
Some travel required.
* Advanced server operatIf you think you have
Part-time Cook/Dietary
ing systems/applications
what it takes, stop by
Aide Wanted:
(MS Server, Windows XP/
The Sentinel office at
Experience preferred. We
7, Exchange, SQL, Active
offer: competitive wages
117 W. Main Street, in
Directory,
IIS,
DNS,
and benefits. Apply in perDHCP).
Goldendale.
son at FlagStone Senior
For more information,
Living, 3325 Columbia
* Unix operating system
call Karen, at 509-773View Dr., The Dalles, OR
administration
3777.
HAWKS RIDGE ASSISTED
Additional experience in the
LIVING
SERVERS & DISHWASHER
following areas is a plus:
Apr-Sept, 20-30 hrs/week. is seeking an experienced
RN to oversee the resident
* Internet technologies: Wages DOE. Pacific Crest care program in Hood RivDSL, wireless, T1, ATM, Pub, Cascade Locks. 541- er, OR. Responsibilities in374-9310 or 503-901-1178.
IMA, Ethernet, EFM
clude staff recruitment,
SUPERMARKET
training, implementation of
* Telephony: VoIP, POTS, MEAT MANAGER
services, documentation &
Harvest Market in White regulatory
PRI, PBX
compliance.
Salmon, WA has an imme- ALF/RCF experience w/
Position requires the flex- diate opening for an expe- nurse delegation a plus.
ibility to occasionally work rienced butcher with man- Strong management skills
during off hour periods for agement background. Abil- a must. We offer a suppormaintenance and on-call ity to work with and man- tive environment along with
age a department with up
duties.
an excellent compensation
to 4 individuals. Competitive pay, including health package. If you are interGorge Networks is a growcare benefits and matching ested, please send cover
ing telephone / internet 401k. Please apply in per- letter & resume w/salary
company with a dominant son at 77 NE Wauna, req to: Executive Director,
presence in the Columbia White Salmon, WA. or call 1795 8th St., Hood River,
River Gorge. Compensa- 971-409-3699 to schedule OR 97031. Fax 541-387tion includes profit sharing an interview.
2841
and health benefits. Please
send
resumes
to
jobs@gorge.net with the
subject line "Network Administrator"
NETWORK
ADMINISTRATOR
NWCI is a Field Svc. Co.
Looking for a local Field
Contractor to take pictures/
deliver letters for our various clients. Pays $20/50
per delivery. Contact Denise at 253-265-5122 or
denise@nwchaser.com
Puget Sound Energy is accepting applications for
future Pathway to Apprentice openings at locations
throughout the Puget Sound area! These are safety
sensitive positions, subject to random DOT drug
and/or alcohol testing, and IBEW Represented.
Applicants must be at least 18 years old, have a high
school diploma or GED and 1 year of high school level
algebra with a grade of C or better. Applications must
be submitted by 5/6/2011.
PSE offers a highly competitive compensation and benefits package. PSE is an Equal Opportunity employer. We encourage persons of diverse backgrounds to apply. Read more about these
opportunities and apply online to ad #950 at PSE.com/careers.
Promotor/a
Bilingual
Span/Eng.
Travels within Hood
River
and
Wasco
counties doing public
outreach to migrant
families. Complete job
description and requirements
at
www.ocdc.net. Apply
online or mail resume
to: Oregon Child Development Coalition, Human
Resources, 1300 West
9th St, The Dalles, OR
97058. EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
USDA field enumerator:
Work in Klick. Co. Take
farm surveys as assigned.
Contact farmers, fill out
forms, turn in work. Pd.
training. Perm PT. Starts
April 2011 w/ wheat survey.
Req: driving abstr, proof of
ins. Self starter. info Judy
(509) 965-0156
Crossword Solution 3/16/11
Chief Executive Officer
(full time)
Director of Nursing Services
(full time)
Laboratory Director
(full time)
Medical Tech/Medical Lab Tech
(full time – 1 position)
Home Health & Hospice Director
(full time)
MARCH 16, 2011 — B5
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
77 Help Wanted
Medical
77 Help Wanted
Medical
Health Promoter
Women's Health
Help us grow our family
practice and develop our
patient centered, teambased care in The Dalles.
Join us now as we build
and prepare to move into
our new, larger, facility in
2012. Provide community
outreach and education to
low income clients regarding importance of yearly
mammograms. Assist clients with appointments
a
n
d
transportation. Develop educational and promotional
materials, attend health
fairs, home visits, fund raising events. For details visit
us at www.lcdcfh.org.
LPN/Medical Assistant
Needed
Help us grow our family
practice and develop our
patient centered, teambased care in The Dalles.
Join us now as we build
and prepare to move into
our new, larger, facility in
2012.
Provide
direct
p a t i e n t
care and support to assigned care team and patient panel. Two yrs exp, bilingual (English/Spanish).
FT; M-F (varied). For additional information visit us at
www.lcdcfh.org.
77 Help Wanted
Medical
78 Help Wanted
Office
Sales Distributor Needed, Patented Medical USA. Publicly
Held Company. New to area.
Commission Based. Jim,
888-668-3458
SECRETARY/
BOOKKEEPER
Position available: working
knowledge of QB, Excel,
Word desirable; approximately 40 hours per
m
o
n
t
h
;
applicant should be able to
take dictation at evening
meeting and familiar with
payroll tax reports; call
509-365-0039 for job description; send resume to
KCFPD #4, PO Box 63,
Lyle, WA 98635 by March
31st.
The Dalles Health
& Rehabilitation
Center
• Physicians
• Nursing
Has the following
positions available:
• Clinical Staff
Cook/Tray Aide
• Support Staff
To view all current
career opportunities
and to apply online go
to
www.mcmc.net
MEDICAL ASSISTANT,
LPN, or WA state certified
Health Care Assistant
sought for family practice
clinic. Send resume to
Coby Wright, RN, MCFHC,
PO Box 1519, White Salmon, WA 98672 or email to
resume@mcfhc.com
ORTHODONTIC
ASSISTANT
Orthodontics office looking
for a self-motivated individual, able to work with a
team. No experience necessary. F/T availability.
Must be able to commute
to both of our offices.
Please send resume to
1002 10th St., Suite 2,
Hood River, OR 97031
Think paper routes are just for
kids? Think again...
If you are interested in
joining a team with a
focus on providing a
home-like atmosphere,
please apply in person
at 1023 W. 25th Street.
100% Employee
Owned
79 Help Wanted
Sales/Service
ACCOUNT
EXECUTIVE
78 Help Wanted
Office
BOOKKEEPER
Needed for White Salmon
Manufacturing Firm, Expert
in Quickbooks REQUIRED;
Accounting or related degree a strong plus. Must
know full process payroll,
how to prepare Tax and Insurance related info. Apply
a
t
www.sagetechcorp.iapplic
ants.com
CUSTOMER SERVICE
PT to FT seasonal position
with local sporting goods
distributor. Answer phones,
customer service and order
entry. M-F, Wage DOE.
North Sports, 1 North
Shore Dr. SE, White Salmon
or
briang@northsports.com
Hagadone Directories is
expanding and needs determined, energetic and
motivated individuals who
want to make money! We
need Account Executives
with impeccable honesty
with themselves and the
customer, above average
will power, determination,
ambition and desire to succeed. 100% acceptance of
responsibility for results.
The work is challenging but
the rewards are great!
Compensation includes liberal commissions, company paid vacations. Health
insurance, dental coverage, Flex plan, & 401K
available. Please reply to
this posting with a copy of
your resume in Word.doc
or PDF to kgoodwillie@
blackphonebook.com or
509-637-0424.
One Call
Does it All!
509-773-3777
The Goldendale Sentinel has
a motor route available. Call
Judye for more information
773-3777
79 Help Wanted
Sales/Service
MARKETPLACE
Hood River
Auctions .......................125
HR VALLEY ADULT CENTER
THRIFT STORE
Collectibles, Clothing
Furniture, Household
Shoes & more!
*Donations gladly accepted
*Support your senior
community*
Tues & Thurs, 9 to 12
Wed & Sat, 9 to 2
2010 Sterling Place, HR
RETAIL/SALES MGMT Hood River...................126
POSITION
The Dalles ...................127
for new HR store. Sales experience, compuer skills
and self motivation required. Send resume to:
Mgmt. 1406 12th St. Ste
102, Hood River, OR
97031
80 Positions
Wanted
NEED work done? Give
m
e
a call! Home/Office/Business cleaning; also outside
work. Matt, 773-0456.
Child Care Wanted ........95
Diaper Services ...........100
Adult & Elderly Care ....105
105 Adult &
Elderly Care
NEED a care giver? I am
looking for a job in Goldendale. References available.
$12/hr. 509-773-0456.
Travel &
Transportation
Car Pools .....................110
Tickets .........................115
Travel ...........................120
Free-To-All ...................122
Free
Ads
Call for
information.
773-3777
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
HRVCC Thrift Shop
Every Wed, 9:00-3:00
Every Sat, 9:00-1:00
Clothing, $5 per bag.
975 Indian Creek Rd., HR
The Dalles
ESTATE SALE: Part 3 of 4.
Fri. 3/18, 8-3, Sat. 3/19,
8-1, 500 W. 11th St., TD.
Antique sewing machine,
trunks, lots of quality
useable misc., some old
some new, bit of everything
Ruth Beecher Estate Sales
The Dalles MULTI FAMILY
SALE 3/19 Saturday Only
9-3 1825 E 16th St/ corner
of 16th & Quinton Clothing,
Games/Toys,
Military
Clothing, household items
Hanging Flower Baskets
and much more!
Yard Sale
Friday, March 18th &
Saturday, March 19th
9am-3pm
617 West 12th Street
The Dalles, OR
Other Oregon
Cities
MOVING SALE: Thu., Fri.,
& Sat., 3/17 - 3/19, 9a-4p,
309 S. Mary B. Road,
Wamic, Oregon. Baseball
cards & other collectibles,
Furniture,
Kitchenware,
Small fridge, & more.
140 Antiques &
Collectibles
COFFEE TABLE, circa
1940's art deco style. Extra
thick, green tint, 48" solid
glass top sits on a scrolled
wrought iron base. $75.
503-349-2800 Camas
FOR SALE: Toy soldier collection. Many plastic collector figures + playsets.
Wargaming figures & accessories. Will sell in parts
or as a whole set. Many
historical periods covered.
If interested please call
Ken, 541-296-3479
150 Apparel/
Jewelry
Broke up before engaged!
Awesome New 2+ ct. diamond ring. 3 Stone trilogy
=
1 Ct. + 1.08 ct bridge style.
PGL appraisal when gold
was $1,243/oz. = $4265!!!
Will sell for $1800. Call
541-395-2282 for info.
155 Furniture
Best 2nd Hand
Mattresses in the
Gorge!
Twin matts from $40
Full matts from $50
Queen matts from $75
King matts from $150
*Rebuilt mattresses
also available!
Gorge Bedquarters
224 Terminal Ave.
The Dalles, OR
541-296-4341
160 Appliances
PROFESSIONAL sharpening in the Gorge: Highquality kitchen knives,
hunting knives, household
scissors,
paper-cutter
blades, garden tools, and
more! 509-261-0161.
The Goldendale Sentinel Business Directory • The Goldendale Sentinel Business Directory
Accounting
Carpet Cleaning
Alpacas
M
Taxes Done?
Don’t Stress!
Let me help
Tina Krause
Professional
Tax Preparer
Indiv./Business
and Estate
“Quality is Our Priority”
Construction
Construction
ountaindale
aintenance
BREEDING THE FINEST
www.goldenpinealpacas.com
•
(509) 773-6184
•
Visitors Welcome
509-951-2159
Call for Appt.
Carpet
Cleaning
Call for your free estimate
(509)637-5134
Wa. Lic. # PARSOBL923J1
CCB #185808
(509) 773-4113
Jim Cronin
Discover the
Alpaca Lifestyle
Cell: (509) 261-1504
J &J B U I L D I N G & R E M O D E L I N G
“Complete Construction Services”
Site Preparation
Driveways & Roads
Septic Systems
Excavation & Dump Trucking
Foundations & Flatwork
Concrete Sawing & Breaking
773-4007
“WE DO IT ALL!”
CALL FOR YOUR
FREE ESTIMATE
Certified Manufactured
Home Installers
Jimmy Giese (509) 250-0184
Jennifer Giese (509) 250-2718
PACIFIC EXCAVATION LLC
Construction
Construction
Custom Kitchens & Baths
Custom Homes & Designs
Garages & Pole Buildings
Steel Buildings
Demolition
Framing & Roofing
Cert. Manu. Home Installer
CCB # WAJJBUIJB921LL
CRAFTON ROAD ROCK QUARRY
509-773-0448
All your development needs - Garages • Pole Buildings Concrete Remodeling Road Gr ading
Road Building Dr iveways Base Rock Pit Run Cr ushed Rock Red Sand Site Prep
Septic Systems Utility Ditches Land Clear ing Ponds and MORE!
Road Grader Dozer Track Hoe Lowboy Heavy Haul Back Hoe
Dump Trucks Belly Dumps Loaders
Randy & Penny Dyche •Goldendale, Washington • WA LIC.PACIFEL 942JD
KK-C
Pharmacy
& K-C Corral
Engine Repair/Storage
Construction
Alexander’s Repair
All Phases of Interior & Exterior
Professional Remodeling & Home Repairs
Framing • Counter Tops • Drywall • Vinyl & Laminated Flooring
Cabinets • Additions • Painting • Kitchens • Siding & Decks
Bathrooms • Windows • Tile Work • Doors
34 Years Of Experience
33
Building Custom Homes,
Additions & Remodeling
Randy L. Hoskinson
509-250-2267 • 509-773-5708
WA LIC# RANDYHS936K3
“A FAMILY TRADE FOR FOUR GENERATIONS”
Home Improvement
Motorcycle Repair
Rain Gutter Systems
D
A
V
I
D
Gutter installation, repair & cleaning
Free estimates • Leaf Guard
Over 26 colors available
H
839 Hanna Rd. • Goldendale, WA 98620
A
N
N
A
(509) 773-3597
Licensed, Bonded & Insured
K
R
I
S
T
Y
H
A
N
N
A
WA License #RAINGGS968PD
GOLDENDALE, WA
Service
Performance
Collision Repair
(509) 261-0701
(888) 259-3537
Factory Trained Harley Tech
downtown Goldendale
Lawnmower, small engine,
generator sales and service
and outboard motor repair
Store Hours:
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays
Call now for spring tune-ups
(509) 773-7010 (509) 261-1431
104 W. Main, Goldendale
773-4344
3122 S. Columbus, Goldendale
Open M-F, 9 am to 6 pm/Sat 10 am to 2 pm
pm
Columbia Homes
Manufactured Homes
Serving Goldendale & Klickitat County with quality homes,
competitive pricing and great service.
Land/Home Packages
www.columbiamfghomes.com
2 sales centers to serve you
columbiamfghomes.com
The Dalles, Oregon
1-877-856-4663
1361 W. Second
Featuring:
Golden West
Union Gap, Washington
1-877-446-0917
8 E. Columbus
(across from Jean’s Cottage Inn)
Featuring:
Marlette
Photo Services
Golden Photo Services
117-A West Main, Goldendale
Portraits - On Locaton
* Passport Photos
Digital Prints * Enlargements
Photo Repair * Photo Cards
Scan photo/slide to CD*VCR to DVD
www.goldenphotoservices.com
Tel: (509) 772-2717
Health Care
You Are Here
Health Care
Reimche-Vu
Family
Dentistry
New Patients
Welcome
Call
(509) 773-CARE
Pet Services
Gail’s Pooch
Parlor
Professional
Dog
Groomer
All Breeds
For only $8 per week
Call us today at
773-3777
Love your pet
but hate the shedding?
We now offer FURminator
shed-less treatment!
Call Gail for an Appointment
773-4494 or 261-1537
806 N. Glover Ave.
Tree Removal
Let us help You
Build a
better business!
Call
T he Sentinel
today!
509-773-3777
OAK MOUNTAIN
ENVIRONMENTAL
(509) 773-4828
Wood cutting,
splitting, stacking,
stump removal, tree
limbing/removal
& MUCH MORE!
Over 50 years of
forestry experience
oakmountainfirewise.com
License • Bonded • Insured
#OAKMOME900C2
B6 — MARCH 16, 2011
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
195 Sporting
Goods
ELAN Phase Snowboard,
161, Near new cond.,
Comes w/ bindings, Burton
carrying bag & binding tool.
Used one time; board is still
waxed. Great for beginning
boarder. $200 OBO. 541490-6947 for info.
FOR Sale Winchester
92AE XTR 30-30 in like
new condition would
consider trades also, I
am willing to buy guns
at a FAIR Price. Call
541-379-0976
GOLF cart, 1994, Yamaha,
4-cycle, gas, full enclosure
top, very good condition.
509-493-2993.
MARTIN Leopard compound bow and case, All
new. Bow is 45-60# draw
w/ 80% letoff. There are extras. $400 FIRM. 541-5060016, after 6pm.
Oregon's largest gun &
knife show
Portland Expo Center
March 19th & 20th, 2011
Saturday 9a-6p & Sunday
9a-4p; Admission $9.
For information call 503363-9564 or online at
wesknodelgunshows.com
SET of bar bells. $20.
509-773-0456.
215 Musical
Instruments
MARSHALL S Wendell Piano, Made in Albany, New
York. Unknown on how old
piano is but company was
established in 1853. Good
shape except for casters,
Needs tune up, $1000.
For more information call
541-993-4712, David or
541-395-2209, Bill.
230 Hand &
Power Tools
FOR SALE: 10" Bench table saw, $65; Parts washer
(never used) $75; 10"
Compound Ryobi Miter
Saw w/ stand $150.
541-298-7948
260 Books
INGLES sin Barreras,
Curso para aprender Ingles. Como nuevo.
$1200. 541-370-5100
275 Misc. for Sale
POOL table, tavern size,
new felt, with ball return,
regulation ping pong table
cover, many cues, excellent condition, $1000. 971998-4989.
280 Misc. Wanted
Standard Poodle puppies,
parents on site. dewclaws
removed, docked tails, 1st
shots/dewormed.
$400.
360-513-6820.
WANTED:
GOLD AND SILVER
COINS
Local buyer
541-490-8411
WE BUY
SCRAP GOLD
10K to 18K
Dental Gold-Platinum
Artisan's Jewelry
and Gallery
137 East Jewett
White Salmon
509-493-1333
282 Free/Give
Away
GUINEA pigs, (3) 1 adult
female, 1 young male & 1
young female. Free to good
home. 541-400-8487
286 $500 or Less
"BUTTONS"
Gorgeous
flame point Siamese cat,
female, adult, rescued, affectionate, spayed. indoors
only. Call Elizabeth, 541386-5099.
1/2" UPHOLSTERY foam
roll of over 11 yards, $35.
541-965-1199
12 GAUGE 2 3/4" Western
field pump, $175.
541-296-2587
2 yr old colt, gentle & ready
to train. 509-773-7676 or
541-993-2324.
STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS
WEEK OF MARCH 14, 2011
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
286 $500 or Less
286 $500 or Less
286 $500 or Less
3 PC. suitcase set, Med.
blue hard case, Purchased
in 1977, Used 6 times, $10.
541-296-6739, Nancy, after 5pm.
DOUBLE BED, $50, Single
bed, $40, 8 bottle countertop wine cooler, $25. 541806-6383 David
ORIGINAL water color
painting signed Barbara
Weldon. Birds & flowers.
25x28 framed, 18x20 painting. $125. 503-724-7716
35 GALLON Bow front
aquarium, Pine stand,
$175. 509-250-2457
4 STUDDED tires w/o rims
205/55R16 Nokian. Used 2
winters. $175. Call 541490-0046
DRAFTING table, White
top, Black steel frame,
Quick tilt/lock lever, $50.
541-506-9106
ELAN Phase Snowboard,
161, Near new cond.,
Comes w/ bindings, Burton
carrying bag & binding tool.
$200 OBO. 541-490-6947
8-1/2 ft. South American
blow-gun & darts; silent Elliptical stair climber $75.,
hunter. $85. 509-773-5929. All in one weight set, resisABDOMINAL EXERCIS- tance bar (like a bowflex)
ER, "Red" with instruction- $75.00, o.b.o on both.
a
l 541-980-9670
DVD. Like new, $25. 541- EMERSON
microwave,
354-9966 Mid Valley
Needs a good scrubbing
ALASKAN Husky, Free, but works, $20.
541-296-7995
509-773-5660.
Amana Refrigerator 25 cf. ENTERTAINMENT Center,
Side by side, water and ice large, oak, with TV, $500,
dispenser on front runs and 541-354-2726.
looks good, almond color FENDER acoustic w/ pick
$200. 541-993-8699
up, Self tuner, case, $150.
AMERICAN Civil War War 541-980-8219
Gaming miniature collec- FIRE place insert, Glass
tion, $500 OBO. For more doors, Exc. cond., $275.
info call 541-296-3479, 541-993-9090
Ken. Leave message.
FIREWOOD, Mixed fir &
ANTIQUE oak armoire/ pine, Split, $180/cord.
wardrove w/ mirror & draw- 541-490-9320
er. Late 1800s to early
1900s. $265 OBO. For info FLINTLOCK rifle, 45 cal.
Thompson center hawken,
call 541-296-5255
New, Never fired, $295.
ANTIQUE Victorian Morris 541-300-6269
chair with retracing foot
FOOTBALL & baseball colrest. $250. 509-365-3942.
lector's cards - 1,363 total.
BALL Python, 2 1/2 year $50 OBO. 509-773-3962
old, Female, Amazing
markings, Serious inquiries Free bunny to good home,
B&W female, friendly to
only, $100. 541-340-0281
kids, cats. Need $40 for
Barbie Collector Carol Burcage, new, 36" L,27"
nette Show "Went With The
H,24"W. 541-769-0399
Wind" Doll $40.00 call
M
a
r
k FRONT shocks, Monroe
@ 541-506-2951 or lv msg. HD (2), new in box, fits '78
Doll is in org box.
Ford F-250 4x4 with std.
front axle--other years?
BARRETT table, square,
Both for $20. 541-354-1680
approx. 32" x 32" high,
ebony, Minimalist style, in GLEN BECK DVDs and vcr
box, never used, $150. Lo- tapes $1. 541 296-4772
cal delivery poss. 509-493GOLDENDALE: For Kit3403.
ty,quality,
homemade
BATHROOM
medicine scratching post w/padded
cabinet, mirrored with rest. $50. 509-773-4063
shelves, new in box, $25.
GOLF Clubs, Left handed
509-493-1963.
Pin Seekers, Like new,
BEAUTIFUL treadle sew- $300 OBO. 541-296-3424
ing machine, w/ Ruffler,
Zipper attachments, 7 draw HAIR SHEEP - 4 grown
Rams. FREE!
wooden cabinet, $150.
509-773-3916
541-478-3878
BIKE Carrier. Yakima.
Hitch Style. Swings open. 3
Bike capacity. $250 OBO.
541-806-0006.
HOUSE PAINT Exterior best
quality
100%
Acrylic,
Enough for 2 full coats, 50
Gals. $350. 541-296-3233
BLACK mesh accessory KENMORE 70 series gas
fireplace screen, never dryer, few scratches but
runs great. $50. 509-774used, $20. 541-298-8713
4826
BLACK, white and brown
couch in good condition. KITCHEN table, 2 folding
leaves,
36"-diameter.
$50. 541-386-5991
Blonde hard maple w/ 2
BOAT trailer, EZ Loader, chairs. Like new. $110.
galvanized, towed less 541-387-2135
than 500 miles, in near new
condition. $500. 541-399- LAB pup for sale, Shots,
Declawed,
Avail
now,
2927
$350. 503-551-8299
CAGE, large parrot w/
LADIES 3/4 length beautistand on top; $200.
f
u
l
509-774-8574
and warm white goose
CHAINSAW, Homelite Pro, down coat w/ faux fur
46CC, 20" bar, excellent trimmed hood. Sz M, Eddie
condition, barely used, Bauer, hardly worn, $75.
$120, 541-490-1115.
541-436-2836
CHOCOLATE lab, female,
LADY SCHWINN 'LaTour'
3 years old, AKC regisbike, $75. 541-980-4154.
tered, very sweet and
friendly, all shots and LARGE kennel for dog.
wormed, $300. 509-493- $25. 509-773-0456.
1871 or 541-806-3590.
LAWN MOWER, 21 inch
COCKATIEL, w/ Cage, Briggs & Stratton, Great
toys, & food, Talks some, cond., $100 OBO.
$50. 541-384-6862 or
541-980-1828
541-980-4163, ask for BarLAWN MOWER, $75. 541bara.
980-7760
COCKERALS, Sad to see
LEXMARK printer, copier,
go. Must sell! $5.
& scanner, $45.
541-980-8212
541-296-4416
COFFEE TABLE, circa
1940's art deco style. Extra LI'L ROCK'R, 15K 5th
thick, green tint, 48" solid wheel hitch, Exc. cond.,
glass top sits on a scrolled $295. 541-300-0700
wrought iron base. $75. LIVING room furniture set,
503-349-2800 Camas
large three-piece, upholCOMPAQ laptop, White, 3 stered fabric, $200. 509Years old, Very fast at 493-4266 or 509-281-0276.
loading, $300.
MICROWAVE hood com541-965-1535
bination, white, Whirlpool, 2
COMPUTER desk with years old, many features,
raised platform for printer, $100 OBO, 541-490-5067.
wood and metal, $10, 541- MISSION style coffee table
980-9955 Cascade Locks. and two end tables, ExcelCOMPUTER, Dell PC,
Pentium 4, 40 GB HD, XP
Home, Word 2007, Games,
$80. 541-296-3440
lent condition, $250.
541-296-3873
MITER saw, Ryobi. 10",
excellent condition, I need
CRAFTSMAN floor model a bigger saw, $45. Call
6" bench grinder. Used 30 Dan, 509-493-8285.
min. $86. 509-773-5929.
NAVAJO Indian rug. $200.
CRAFTSMAN 10 Inch ra- Call for information, 541354-3980
dial arm saw, $200.
541-296-1956
OLD baby crib, 73 years
DOG HOUSE or cat house, old, Good cond., $75
541-483-2253 or
small. $10/OBO.
541-805-5068
541-298-8558.
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.
MISC FOR SALE
SAWMILLS- Band/Chainsaw Cut lumber any dimension, anytime. Build everything from furniture to homes. In Stock, ready to
ship.
From
$4090.00.
www.NorwoodSawmills.com/30
0N 1-800-661-7747
PAIR of mirror extensions
for pickups, like new $25.
541-296-9596
PECAN wood & glass 5
shelf open curio cabinet.
72"x30"x16". Very Nice.
$90. 541-298-3701
REFRIGERATOR, Maytag,
white, side-by-side, water/
ice on door, very clean,
runs well. $300, 541-3545844.
REPTILE terrarium, 20-gallon, 30"x12"x12.5", includes Zilla digital thermometer, reptile vine with
suction hooks, water dish,
food dish, climbing branch
with suction hooks, Exoterra compact terrarium top
with fluorescent light, porcelain clamp lamp with red
heat bulb, mesh screen lid,
like new condition, paid
over $200, sell for $150.
425-308-9582.
RIDING lawn mower, John
Deere, rear bags, snow
blade, chains, $400, 541490-2390.
ROOSTERS, Bantam, 9
months old, friendly, Cochin, $5.00 each. 509-3952788.
SHOCKS, 4 brand new Bilstein, heavy duty. Fits '99
and above Chevy truck,
$150. Call after 6pm, 541399-6519
Shotshells 3.5inch Magnum Turkey loads 8 FederalPremium #5shot 7 WinchesterSupreme #4shot &
2 #6shot. $25 541-2967032
SKI poles, bamboo antique
with leather grips, 50" tall.
$50. 541-386-6755
STEEL tubing for RV canopy or pole barn. 6 pieces,
20' x 6" dia. $275.
509-773-5648.
TIRES, 4 Toyo Eclipse,
P195-70R14, 16k Miles on
them, $40 OBO. 541-5060045
TOOL Box, Truk
brand, Silver, $110.
541-296-9359
Box
TOYO Eclipse 225/55R17,
(4) fit Subaru Outback.
Only 2K mi, new; $170 ea.,
sell for $250/all. 541-8067838
290 Livestock
& Supplies
TOP QUALITY LIMOUSIN
BULLS available now. Black
or red. Wilde Ranches 541454-2995
Leave message
WCA BULL TEST
SALE
March 23rd, Eltopia, WA
90 Angus, 20 Polled &
Horned Hereford, 7 Red
Angus, 6 Simmental, 8
Slm
Angus, 7 Chi Angus
For Catalogs:
Kendall Cattle Sales
208-858-2163
Email:
Kendall@potlatch.com
295 Pets &
Supplies
ANIMALS &
AGRICULTURE
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
290 Livestock
& Supplies
EMTMAN/Black Pine Angus
Joint Production
Sale
12:30 p.m., March 27th
Stockland Livestock Ex.
Davenport, WA
75 Angus Bulls
20 Reg. Heifers.
For Catalogs:
Kendall Cattle Sales
208-858-2163, email:
kendall@potlatch.com
BURN Barrels are
Illegal
in Washington.
Learn Before You Burn:
www.ecy.wa.gov.
Smoke Complaints:
1-866-211-6284.
WANT TO BUY a Bale
Conveyor. Please call 360835-5329
RENTALS
Business Rentals.........330
Apartment Rentals/OR 335
Apartment Rentals/WA 340
Condo Rentals/OR ......350
Condo Rentals/WA ......352
Duplexes, Four-Plexes/OR
355
"BUTTONS"
Duplexes, Four-Plexes/WA
Gorgeous flame point Sia360
mese cat, female, adult,
House Rentals/OR.......365
rescued,
affectionate,
House Rentals/WA ......370
spayed, indoors only.
Senior Housing ............372
Call Elizabeth
Mobile Homes/Oregon.375
541-386-5099
Mobile Homes/Washington
PURRFECT FIT
380
CAT ADOPTION
Mobile Home Spaces ..382
purrfect-fit.petfinder.com
RV Space.....................384
Rentals Wanted ...........385
Rentals to Share..........390
AKC GERMAN shepherd Room Rentals..............395
puppies, black and tan, 2 RV Site Rentals ...........397
females, born Nov. 1st, Vacation Rentals..........400
current shots and wormed, Bed & Breakfast...........405
$500. 509-637-5655 or Storage Space.............410
509-538-2693.
Misc. Rentals ...............415
AQUARIUM, reptile, 20gallon, 30"x12"x12.5", in330 Business
cludes Zilla digital therRentals
mometer, reptile vine with
suction hooks, water dish,
food dish, climbing branch HAVE A HOME FOR SALE?
with suction hooks, Exo- Get results fast by placing
terra compact terrarium top your ad in the Gorge Claswith fluorescent light, por- sifieds, your ad will appear
celain clamp lamp with red in every paper in the gorge
heat bulb, mesh screen lid, area,
reaching
over
like new condition, paid 115,000 readers each
over $200, sell for $150. week. Call us at the Gold425-308-9582.
endale Sentinel, 773-3777
CHOCOLATE lab, female, or toll-free at 1-888-2873 years old, AKC regis- 3777.
tered, very sweet and
friendly, all shots and
wormed, $300. 509-4931871 or 541-806-3590.
310 Hay, Feed,
TRAILER: LIGHT WEIGHT
4 X 8 WITH 2 FOOT SIDEStraw
BOARD $150 PHONE
541-980-0124
Alfalfa grass & green hay,
TREADMILL, great shape, price range $75-$100 a ton, or
$3 & $4/per bale. Lyle, WA
$100. 541-370-4209.
541-993-0845.
UTILITY trailer 4x8 side
ALFALFA/alfalfa grass and
racks, lights, stands, spare hay bet barley, large &
tire $325. 541-544-2234 small bales. 509-773-4283
wamic
or 509-250-1729.
XO LAPTOP, new, featured in Cool Stuff 2.0
book. Built in wi-fi & webcam, 22 hours of battery,
withstands extreme heat,
has swiveling screen, and
is dirt and moisture proof.
$100 firm. 509-281-0737
BE the Difference:
Breathe the Difference
Learn Before you Burn:
www.ecy.wa.gov.
Ecology's Burn Hotline:
1-866-211-6284.
138 Head
Jack Russell Terrier Puppies Short legged Pudden
Jacks, Tri colored, smooth
and broken coat, Great
TOYOTA 4 Runner spare Mousers! $300.00 541328-6377
tire w/ rim, $25.
541-980-9799
WHIRLPOOL
stacked
washer & dryer, Greaet
shape, Only ran a few
times a week, $400.
541-993-5500
325 Farm &
Orchard Equip.
GRASS HAY, $100 & $130
per ton. 75 Pound bales,
The Dalles. 541-993-3162
& 541-298-1222
HOOD RIVER
190 sq. ft. office, $210.
250 sq. ft. retail mall, $410.
300 sq. ft. office, $210.
400 sq. ft. office, $375.
600 sq. ft. retail mall, $675.
750 sq. ft. retail mall, $750.
870 sq. ft. retail mall, $800.
1068 sq. ft. office, $885.
1450 sq. ft. retail, $1100.
Various dry storage units
Chuck Beardsley, 541-3865555, Hershner & Bell Realty
HOOD RIVER. Rare commercial space, 900 sq. ft
with DRIVE THRU, on/off
street parking, on Heights.
Suited for food service, retail, or office. Reasonable
lease negotiable. 541-8064244.
HOOD RIVER Professional
Office Space for Lease
2500 sq ft of ground floor
space in the Marketplace
Bldg next to the HR Bridge.
Energy efficient, ample free
parking, in space restroom.
Incentives for long term
leases. $1950 per mo. Call
Chuck @ 541-386-8907.
ORCHARD grass hay, irrigated, 2nd cutting, very
soft. Also, oat hay available. All in the barn. Trout
Lake. 509-395-2985.
HOOD RIVER Professional
Office Space for Lease
square foot of office
315 Food, Meat, 1600
space in the Marketplace
& Produce
Building next to the Hood
River Bridge. 1100 sq ft is
ground level with a 500
CHOOSE
square foot mezzanine.
NOT TO BURN
Energy efficient, ample free
COMPOST INSTEAD
parking, in space restroom.
LEARN MORE:
Incentives for long term
www.ecy.wa.gov
leases. $950 per month.
Smoke complaints
Call Chuck @ 541-3861-866-211-6284
8907
Columbia River Beef: Natural, grass-raised, grain- HOOD RIVER. 2400 sq. ft.,
finished, 1/4, 1/2, or whole 12th & Belmont, includes
beef $1.99 hanging wt + parking lot, 541-386-2001.
cost of butcher. Also have
25 lb variety boxes for
$110. Taking orders until
April 1. Dan or Mary Lee.
509-773-4688.
320 Plants &
Nursery Stock
WANTED:
Red worms for composting
541-965-2701
The Dalles, OR
325 Farm &
Orchard Equip.
List
your
Real
Estate
in
The
Gorge
Classifieds!
Statewide Classifieds
JUSTIN HILL
HORSESHOEING
509-261-1508.
gorgefarrier.com
EDUCATION-INSTRUCTION
FINANCIAL
ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE
from
home.
*Medical,
*Business,
*Paralegal,
*Accounting, *Criminal Justice.
Job placement assistance.
Computer available. Financial
aid if qualified. Call 866-4834429; www.CenturaOnline.com
property development. Call Eric
at
(800)
563-3005.
www.fossmortgage.com
EVENTS-FESTIVALS
ANNOUNCE your festival for
only pennies. Four weeks to 2.7
million readers statewide for
about $1,000. Call this newspaper or 1 (206) 634-3838 for
more details.
HELPWANTED
CALIFORNIA BOUND! Play in
Vegas, Hang in L.A., Jet to New
York. Hiring 18-24 girls/guys.
$400-$800 wkly. Paid expenses.
Are you energetic and fun? Call
1-877-259-6983
WARM, CARING HOST FAMILIES needed for high school
exchange students. Volunteer
today! Call 1 (866) GO-AFICE or
visit afice.org.
FINANCIAL
LOCAL PRIVATE INVESTOR
loans money on real estate
equity. I loan on houses, raw
land, commercial property and
BE THE DIFFERENCE
BREATHE THE DIFFERENCE
LEARN BEFORE
YOU BURN
www.ecy.wa.gov
Ecology's Burn Hotline:
1-866-406-5322
HELPWANTED -TRUCK DRIVERS
Drivers for Regional and OTR
Lanes. Solos, O/OP’s and
Teams. Top Pay, Great
Equipment.
888-801-5614.
www.systemtrans.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
divorce@usa.com
LIVESTOCK
HELPWANTED -TRUCK DRIVERS
DRIVERS: New Pay Package.
Hiring Class-A CDL Flatbed
Make $20,000 - $30,000. Join
our breeding program EASY
FUN. All equipment FREE. Work
3 hrs/week. 4 ft. work space
LIVESTOCK
needed. Live anywhere. Call: 1
(509) 720-4389.
REAL ESTATE
OWN 20 Acres -- only $129/mo.
$295/down near growing El
Paso, Texas. (America’s safest
city!) No credit checks. Owner
financing. Free Map/Pictures
8 0 0 - 3 4 3 - 9 4 4 4 .
www.20acreranches.com
330 Business
Rentals
335 Apartment
Rentals/OR.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising
i
n
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.
The Dalles, Apt. in the
country, 1 bdrm 1 bth, all
util pd, need 4wd, Daylight
basement
apt,$500/mo,
$500 deposit,No smoking,
pets by approval Call 541993-1210
STORE front space for
lease & Office space!
541-298-7015
GOLDENDALE Village Newly redecorated
2 & 3 bdrm. apts. for
immediate move-in.
801 S. Schuster,
509-773-6002.
The Dalles 850 sq ft,
$750/mo. Inc. utils,
Columbia Court Mall,
107 E 2nd. 541-298-8903
4 Office complex, $500/
Mo., 541-298-8903
Storage:Ã 400 Sq. Ft.,
$150/Mo. 541-298-8903
335 Apartment
Rentals/OR.
$555/2 BR-ARENDS PLACE II
HOOD RIVER
Available immediately, 2
bdrm apartments. Income
limits apply. Rent starts at
$555/mo. or higher
depending on income.
Legacy Management
Group, LLC is commited to
"Equal Housing
Opportunity." This institution
is an equal opportunity
provider. For information,
please call 541-386-6788
or drop by 955
Sieverkropp
Dr., Hood River, OR
97031.
Equal Housing Logo &
Handicapped Logo
AFFORDABLE APARTMENT
HOME FOR SENIOR,
DISABLED LOW-INCOME
HOUSEHOLDS
Clean, comfortable living.
Pets welcome.
1 & 2 bedrooms
Actual rent is based on
income
COME SEE US TODAY!
Indian Creek Village
Apartments
1585 9th St.
Hood River, OR. 97031
541-386-6607
TDD: 1/800-735-2900
Professionally managed by
Guardian
Management,LLC
USA Rural Development is
an Equal Opportunity
Lender, Provider &
Employer.
Complaints of
discrimination should be
sent to:
USDA, Director, Office of
Civil Rights, Washington,
DC. 20250-9410
This institution is an equal
opportunity provider
AFFORDABLE APARTMENT
HOME FOR SENIOR,
DISABLED LOW-INCOME
HOUSEHOLDS
Clean, comfortable living.
Pets welcome
1,2,3 Bedrooms
Actual rent is based on
income
COME SEE US TODAY!
Indian Creek Court
Apartments
1615 9th Court
Hood River, OR. 97031
541-386-6607
TDD: 1-800-735-2900
Professionally Managed by
Guardian Management,
LLC.
This institution ia an equal
opportunity provider
The Dalles, 1 Bdrm studio
basement apt., W/S/G pd.,
East to heat, Cool in the
Summer, No pets/smoking.
$425/Mo. plus deposit.
541-354-1283 or
541-965-0791
340 Apartment
Rentals/WA.
BINGEN. Studio, 1 bdrm, 2
bdrm, monthly, $400-$600,
utils includ. 1st+dep. 509493-1803 9 am-7 pm.
GOLDENDALE: 317 W Allyn #6. 2 br/ 1 bath cottage.
W/D hookups. Newly redecorated. Great location.
All appl. incl. Pet friendly.
Sec. 8 OK! $475/mo. Call
Dale: 1-503-473-4956, Hotline: 1-503-783-0444 or Office:
1-503-612-6628.
www.resourcesnorthwest.
com
MURDOCK, 2 Bdrm, W/S/
G Pd., No pets, $650/Mo.,
541-993-1342
THREE Mountain Village
Located at 613 W. Collins
in Goldendale, now accepting applications for 1, 2
& 3 bdrm. apartments.
HUD Section 8 Restrictions
apply. Call 509-773-3344
or TTY dial 711 for applications.
355 Duplexes,
Four-Plexes/OR
HOOD RIVER. Taking applications for 2 bdrm duplex
near hospital. Garage, no
smoking/pets, $900 mo +
first/last/cleaning, 1 yr.
lease, references required,
541-386-1845.
TD, 304 E. 8th Place; 2Bd,
1Ba, Lower level Duplex
$650/mo. Month to Month
Agreement NoSmoking, W/
D Hookups Some pets ok
w/additional fees W/S/G
pd. Good Location w/small
yd/garden, gas heat $800
dep + $650 1st mo. rent
Call Marcus (541) 9936799
THE DALLES. Eastside, 2
bdrm, 1 bath, no smoking,
no pets, yard, nice view, off
street parking, storage,
$645/mo, 1 year lease.
541-806-5137.
THE DALLES, 2 Bdrm, 1
Ba, W/D hookups, 1821 E.
12th St. $700/Mo. + First/
Last Dep. 503-474-4518
THE DALLES, Triplex, River view, 2 Bdrm, 1 Ba, W/S/
G paid. No pets/smoking.
Off street parking, $750/mo
+ $950 dep. One year
lease. 541-993-2972 or
e
m
a
i
l
unclebuck@gorge.net
THE DALLES. 2 bedroom,
1 bath duplex. Nice, clean,
good location. New paint,
new carpet. $750/month
rent includes W/S/G. No
smoking.
Refundable
cleaning deposit $750.
(541) 980-9569. Available
now.
365 House
Rentals/OR
**TD**, *listen to the creek
from the deck of this 2
bdrm/1.5 bath townhome.
Lots of extras! *Newly constructed 3 bdrm/2 bath
home with garage & more!
*3 bdrm/2 bath home on
oversized lot. 541-2961152
HOOD RIVER 2 bdrm suite
on golf course, private
bathroom, living area &
kitchen, furnished, no
smoking/pets. $895/mo. +
dep. Utilities included.
541-399-4790.
CASCADE Locks. 1 bdrm,
carport, fireplace, laundry
room, fenced back yard,
$550/mo. First and last req.
$30
non-refundable
screening fee. 541-3748755.
HOOD RIVER. Large 2
bedroom, 1.5 bath apartment, W/D & DW. Balcony
with beautiful mountain
view, no smoking/pets,
$900/mo. 541-806-1771 or
asmith@gorge.net
HOOD RIVER. Small, 2
bdrm, 1 bath, on the
heights, no yard, wood
heat, no smoking/pets,
$750/mo. + first/last/dep.
1 year lease. Available
April 1st. 541-490-5523.
Get More
Exposure
for your money!
Advertise state-wide.
Call
The Sentinel
509-773-3777
MARCH 16, 2011 — B7
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
CLASSIFIEDS
385 Rentals
Wanted
365 House
Rentals/OR
John L. Scott Prpty Mgmt
www.JLSRentals.com
541-298-4736
2 Bd House TD $775
3 Bd Apt TD $800
2 Bd Apt TD $625
3 Bd Duplex TD $800
3 Bd House Wasco $850
3 Bd House Maupin $750
THE DALLES 2 bed/1 bath
house with full basement
for rent TD. Huge front
porch, fireplace, jetted tub,
off-street parking, private
backyard.
$950/mo
(541)490-1437
THE DALLES: 3 bdrm, 1
bath, Bluff home close to
downtown,
panoramic
view, 1 acre, Profesional
landscape, carport, circular
driveway, small shop, office, dining area, AC/Heat
pump, 1700 sq ft, 1 year
lease. $995/Mo.
541-400-0330.
370 House
Rentals/WA
GOLDENDALE: Newer 3
bd., 2 ba. ranch style
home; landscaped.
302 E. Broadway.
$925/mo. Call Ron at
Coldwell Banker United
Brokers, 360-606-9565.
John L. Scott Prpty Mgmt
www.JLSRentals.com
541-298-4736
2 Bd House WS $850
3 Bd House Klickitat $850
2 Bd House Carson $750
2 Bd Duplex WS $750
3 Bd Apt Lyle $575
3 Bd House Gdale $950
2 Bd Apt Bingen $650
Senior Housing
Flora Thompson
1220 W 8th
The Dalles
Now accepting applications
for 1 and 2 bedroom units
for federally-funded 62
years of age or older,
disabled regardless of age
housing.
Telephone: 541-298-1715
TDD: 800-735-2900
This institution is an equal
opportunity provider.
Professionally managed
by
The Neel Management
Team, Inc.
375 Mobile Homes/
Oregon
THE DALLES, Large
mobile home space for rent
in local mobile home park,
For info please call
541-298-5609 or
541-296-9292
Free
Ads?
Call for information.
773-3777
420 Acreage
& Lots
8.12 ACRES, well, power,
paved road, septic/standard. 131 Old Mt. Rd.,
Goldendale. $29,950.
USDA, Natural Resources 509-365-2097.
Conservation
Service
(NRCS) is interested in ap- PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
proximately 7115 rentable All real estate advertising in
of office space for a USDA this newspaper is subject
Service Center in the The to the Fair Housing Act
which makes it illegal to adDalles, OR area.
vertise "any preference,
The rentable space shall limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religyield a minimum of 6776
ion, sex, handicap, familial
and a maximum of 7115
status or national origin, or
useable square feet of ofan intention, to make any
fice area available for use
such preference, limitation
by tenant for personnel, or discrimination." Familial
furnishings and equipment. status includes children
under the age of 18 living
Secure Reserved parking with parents or legal cusfor 9 government vehicles todians, pregnant women
plus storage for 2 ATV's and people securing cusand 1 ATV trailer. In addi- tody of children under 18.
tion, 30 parking spaces This newspaper will not
arerequired within the im- knowingly accept any admediate vicinity of the fa- vertising for real estate
cility for visitors and em- which is in violation of the
ployees.
law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellThe property must be lo- ings advertised in this
cated within the geographic newspaper are available on
area formed by the follow- an equal opportunity basis.
ing boundaries: The Dalles/ To complain of discriminaChenowith city limits and tion call HUD toll-free at 1the Port of The Dalles are- 800-669-9777. The toll-free
as with adequate producer telephone number for the
access. Property must not hearing impaired is 1-800be in any flood plain area. 927-9275.
All services, including janitorial, supplies, utilities and
447 Manufactured
required tenant alteration
Homes/WA
are to be provided as part
of the rental consideration.
GOLDENDALE: 513 W
The Government requires Burgen. 2 br/1 bth Mf
the space to be available Home. W/D hookups. Newon or before June 1, 2011. ly redecorated in great loLease term is five (5) cation. All appl incl. Pet
years, with a single five (5) friendly. Sec 8 OK! $475/
mo! Call Dale: 1-503-473year renewal option.
4956, Hotline: 1-503-783A solicitation for offers will 0444 or Office: 1-503-6126
2
8
.
be available at 2325 River 6
Road, #3, The Dalles, OR. www.resourcesnorthwest.
If interested, please con- com
tact Mary Beth Smith at GOLDENDALE: 515 W
(541) 298-8559, Ext. 111 or Burgen. 2 br/ 1 ba mf
Terry Mitchell at (503) 414- home. W/D hookups. New3212.
ly redecorated in great loSenior lady looking for cation. All appl incl. Pet
apartment/house in The friendly. Sec 8 OK! $475/
Dalles. I'm a non smoker/ mo! Call Dale: 1-503-473drinker and have not pets. 4956, Hotline: 1-503-783Looking for something with 0444 or Office: 1-503-6126
2
8
.
off street parking and quiet. 6
www.resourcesnorthwest.
Call 541-993-5860.
com
WANTED TO RENT:
3-4 bdrm. house,
AUTOMOTIVE
Goldendale area.
Responsible family moving Aviation ........................455
very soon! Ref. available. RV's & Travel Trailers ...460
Doug, 951-378-5168.
Canopies & Campers ..465
RV Rentals...................470
RV Parts & Supplies ....475
390 Rentals
Boats, Motors, Supplies
to Share
480
Personal Watercraft .....481
PARKDALE recently wid- Snowmobiles ...............485
owed woman in her 50's, Motorcycles, ATC's &
non smoker, looking for ATV's
490
same to share rent + half Utility Trailers ...............495
utils., full use of kitchen,
Heavy Equipment ........500
W/D & Sat. dish. Must like Misc. Auto ....................505
dogs but not have any Auto Parts & Supplies .510
pets. Call for details & inter- Autos Wanted ..............515
view. Leave msg. & contact Sport Utility Vehicles....525
Pickups & Trucks .........530
info. 541-352-3583
Vans & Utility Vehicles .535
410 Storage Space Antique & Classic Autos
538
Automobile...................540
PARKDALE storage shed
for rent, 10x20, $75. 541460 RVs &
400-8071.
OFFICE SPACE
WANTED
REAL ESTATE
Travel Trailers
1990 NOMAD Weekender,
Acreage & Lots ............420 19', fully self contained,
Commercial/Investment dual axel, very nice shape,
Property
425 ready to go. $3500 or best
Orchards, Farms, Ranches offer. Call 541-490-6186.
430
Hank's Auto Sales
Real Estate/OR............435
Real Estate/WA ...........437 Buy-Sell-Trade
Real Estate Wanted.....440 Consign
Manufactured Homes/OR www.hanksautosales.net
445 541-296-5854
Manufactured Homes/WA SPORTSMASTER
Ex447 treme Lite RV, 2007, 24',
Condos/OR ..................450 sleeps 4-6. Call for details.
Condos/WA..................452 303-250-1825 Hood River
THEME: GARDENING
ACROSS
1. *"_____ from the garden"
6. Civil rights advocate Wells
9. *Garden ear
13. Sri _____
14. African migrator
15. System of numbering
pages
16. Not silently
17. Argonaut's propeller
18. Lower part of abdomen
19. *Glass protector
21. "I am sorry," e.g.
23. Youngster
24. *It cuts a furrow
25. A man concerned with his
dress
28. Type of wrestler
30. "Cease and ______"
35. Male version of Emily
37. Forsaken or desolate
39. Celebrity chef DiSpirito
40. Basic unit of money in
Western Samoa
41. Native American emblem
43. Quantity of paper
44. Wads of tobacco, e.g.
46. The Three Tenors, e.g.
47. *Tulip's beginning, e.g.
48. Hindquarters
50. Obama to Harvard Law
School, e.g.
52. Ballet step
53. ____ Roman Empire
55. St. Louis football player
57. *Vines' support
61. *One-season plants
65. 43,560 square feet, pl.
66. Type of hairs in mammal's
coat
68. "Round up the _____ suspects!"
480 Boats, Motors,
& Supplies
18 ft Grumman Aluminum
Canoe, 2 hp Johnson O/B
trolling motor w/canoe motor mount, 3 paddles & anchor $600. 509-773-5771
2005 Bayliner 195 open
bow cruiser, 19 foot 3.0
Mercruiser I/O. Bow cover/
Bimini camper cover, Lowrance depth/fish finder. Removable rod holders, Anchor with tackle. Trailer single axle greaseable bearings swing away tow arm.
$9000 OBO (509)4934320
CLACKACRAFT 16', 2009,
Salmon/steelhead guide
model. Includes cover &
trailer, $6500. 541-3527527.
485 Snowmobiles
2000 ARCTIC CAT snowmobile, limited edition,
black, low mileage, runs
great, $3500.
509-637-3814.
490 Motorcycles,
ATCs & ATVs
2002 8x12 enclosed trailer
with electric brakes, like
new. $3500/OBO. 541993-3928.
2006 YAMAHA V-Star
1100 Silverado "Classic."
Sweet! Two tone sand/tan
and sliver w/matching custom painted hand-side
s
a
d
dle
bags,
custom
"Mustang" seats w/driver
and passenger backrest.
Much
much
more.
$6000.00. 541-400-8468
swagstar@gmail.com
2009 HONDA CRF230 on/
off road motorcycle. Less
than 400 miles! Still under
manufactures warranty.
$3000. 541-980-0146.
495 Utility Trailers
ROADMASTER Vetro car
dahle, All electric brakes
and lights. Never been
used, Tow up to 4380 Lbs.
$1600 OBO. Call Ron @
541-296-9370
510 Auto Parts
& Supplies
YAKIMA Q Towers for gutterless cars like Toyota,
etc. Used two seasons,
then sat for two. $300 new,
sell for $100. Take ski rack
for free if you want it. Well
cared for. Steve 541-8067838
525 Sport Utility
Vehicles
DODGE Durango '00, silver w/ blk leather interior.
V-8, tow pkg., 4WD. Good
condition. KBB
value
$4900, asking $3995. Pics
avail. 541-490-7988
FORD Explorer Sport, '03.
2 door, good condition,
good rubber, 4WD, trailer
and light hookup, AC,
cruise. Loaded with accessories, private owner,
$6500 OBO, 541-4904175.
JEEP Grand Cherokee
Limited, '95. AT, 4x4, all
power, leather, runs great,
needs work. $2500 obo.
Good parts car? 541-9931521
JEEP Willys CJ5, '61. Soft
top, lots of extras! $2500.
541-352-7527
530 Pickups
& Trucks
540 Automobiles
2001 HONDA Accord,
Silver, 4 cyl, 193K, V-Tech,
'94 Ford Extra-Cab 4x4. cassette/CD player for 6,
Power steering, brakes, sunroof, leather seats,
windows & locks. $4000 auto, clean in & out, runs
good, license until 2012,
OBO. 509-439-1992.
$3800. OBO 541-806-3970
1955 Chevy stepside pickup, Chopped top. Mild 454, CHEVY Cavalier, 2004,
Turbo 400. Nova clip, 9" grey ext/int, automatic,
Ford rear, PS, PBD , Lots good-excellent condition, 4
of custom work done, Blue, door, AC/CD, 86K, clean,
reliable, regularly serviced,
Nice truck. $18500.
$4200 OBO. Accepting
541-298-2910
phone calls no earlier than
1974 CHEVY 4x4 1/2 Ton, March 18th. MUST SELL.
needs shocks, Otherwise Includes used studs and
good condition. $3900. car cover. 509-774-8610.
541-298-1508
GOLDENDALE: 1990 Jag1988 GMC Heavy half ton, uar Sedan. All original ex4 x 4 w/ AC. Long bed, Ext. cept custom wheels & tires.
cab. $1495 w/ matching New Cameo white leather
canopy. $1250 PU only.
interior. Runs & looks
541-300-0700, See at 900 good! $6000 OBO. 509E. 3rd St; The Dalles.
773-4766
1992 CHEV. 1/2 ton 2WD HONDA Accord LX, '96, 4
club cab, Auto, All power, dr, red with grey interior,
A/C, Bed liner, Canopy, 1 AT, cold air for summer, alOwner,
New
license, loys, sharp in & out, regular
$2500. 541-296-4535
maintenance, by dealer,
1999 Toyota SR5 ex. cab 4
x 4. 2.7 4 Cyl. Auto Overdrive. 132,500 miles. Polished ULTRA mags. Red.
Nice truck in exc. cond.,
Never off road. $10,500
OBO. 541-298-2910
drives excellent, 207K easy
miles. KBB retail; $4070,
Asking $3450 obo. 541490-2236. Beautiful,
reliable car!
NISSAN Sentra XE, '87.
5 speed, PS, PB, AC, AM/
Dodge
Dakota
2006, FM/CD, new brakes, nice
Clean, white,club cab ST interior, 160K, $895 obo.
4x4,
Automatic,
4.7 541-806-0272.
v8,61,000 miles 2in. body
lift,oversized almost new
Cleaning
studded tires, diamond
plate tool box, new brakes,
struts, and spark plugs,
COLUMBIA HOME
$12,900 541-993-9905
MAINTENANCE
Cleaning - Painting
and Windows
538 Antique &
FREE ESTIMATES
Classic Autos
"LOCAL" Classic muscle
car, 1969 Ford Ranchero
GT. Bought NEW at Ray
Schultens Ford. Low production number. Only 767
made w/ bucket seats.
95% Restored. 351 Windsor "M" code red with CStripes. A/T, P/S, P/B.
BEAUTIFUL, STRONG!.
$15,000. See at:
Devin's
Alignment
&
Brakes; 2724 W. 2nd St.,
The Dalles, OR. 97058.
541-296-3506
FOR SALE:
1968 Montego M-X
Convertible, Project
car,
$3500. 541-298-7948
540 Automobiles
1996 Ford Thudnerbird,
128k miles, V6, Auto, Runs
and drives good, $1850.
541-490-5744
1997 Mercury Cougar, V8,
75,000 actual miles, Sunroof, Fully loaded, Leather,
Dual pwr seats, Good tires,
$3500. 541-980-2721
OR#60590
HERMAN'S
CLEANING
SERVICE LLC (WA 603081-696). Licensed, bonded and insured. We specialize in small businesses,
private residents and post
construction cleaning. Contact us for prices and specials. Call Leslie at 5094 9 3 - 2 2 5 8
hermanscleaning@yahoo.
com
Olympic Cleaning &
Restoration/ Professional
Janitorial Services.
Residential/Commercial.
509-773-4627
Construction
Gorge Construction
Services
All aspects carpentry,
handyman, decks and
fencing. Plus drywall &
painting. 541-490-4319
OR # 67870
WA# GORGECS095R4
Landscape
Maintenance
Lawn & Yard Care
Thatching, fertilizing,
pruning. Preparing
sprinkle systems for
optimal performance.
Serving the Gorge.
702-279-7557.
Solorio's Lawn
Maintenance
541-993-0914, 509-7670640 Gorge Area- Cleanup, barkdust, mowing,
trimming, pruning, rototilling, hauling, snow removal
69. Rainbow-producing device
70. Popular white fish
71. Fashion of the past
72. Labor Day month
73. Attention grabber
74. Wear away
DOWN
1. Fatty tissue
2. Respiratory rattling
3. Organic compound
4. Lie in wait
5. Pilgrims to Mecca
6. Hunch-backed assistant
7. Double helix
8. Pertaining to the ear
9. Rapper LL ____ J
10. A dish of stewed meat of
different kinds
11. Cash's is on fire
12. Snoopy
15. *Reproductive structure
20. Rated "R" for _____ content
22. *Pea or bean house
24. Represent in a painting,
e.g.
25. Dog command
26. Nebraska's largest city
27. Rice cooked in well-seasoned broth
29. ____ point
31. Acid gritty-textured fruit
32. Frost over
33. La _____, opera house in
Milan
34. Graves
36. *Grassy area
38. Young or Simon, e.g.
42. Grieve
45. Religious split
49. Ad ___
51. *Used as fertilizer
54. Permeate or penetrate
HOLIDAYS
YARD CARE
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
Rototilling, thatching,
mowing, pruning,
fertilizing, trimming &
edging, spraying, bark
chips, debris hauling,
compost and clean-up.
541-490-0786
Painting &
Papering
LOG
CEDAR HOME
REFINISHING
Complete interior/exterior
painting and STAINING
service. Most homes look
better than new when
completed!
Over 20 Years
Experience
OR #60641
WA #gaigep*969kq
Call 509-637-2858
or 503-341-1912,
Mark
COVERING YOUR ASSETS
ONE COAT AT A TIME
Pets
PET sitting, mucking stalls,
walking dogs, petting cats
or feeding fish. Give us a
call if you need help while
out of town. Located in
Hood River. Call for more
information, 509-774-4826
One
Man’s
Junk
Special
Services
541-352-6001
Classic Cars Wanted!
Wanted: Your classic or
muscle car or truck, please
no junk or restorations! We
are a licensed, bonded brokerage in the greater Portland, Oregon area with 30+
years experience, who purchases, consigns and sells
primarily classic & muscle
cars & trucks all over the
world. Our satisfied customer base is our best advertisement. We also handle estate sale vehicles.
Please call us at 503-8554345, 24 hours; 888-5976719 10am-5pm Tues Sat.,
or
email
fabulous50scars@aol.com
or visit us on the web at
www.fabulous50.com and
see videos of our inventory
on YouTube at http://
w w w. y o u t u b e . c o m / r e sults?search_query=fabul
ous50scars&aq=f
Cleaning
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.
=
Another
Man’s
Treasure
buy it!
sell it! 773-3777
find it!
The Gorge
Classifieds
is the place
to go!
in the
Gorge
Classifieds
773-4687
800-799-4687
www.byersrealty.com
Daniel R. Byers,
Broker
Come See Us!
“Buy land, they ain’t making any
more of it” - Will Rogers
419 DOUGLAS FIR: Must see to
appreciate the comfort and efficiency
in this 3 bed/2 bath post & beam home
on 5 acres just 5 miles north of town. 4
heat sources makes this a comfortable home all year.
Updated, modern kitchen. Semi-fenced front yard with
inground sprinklers. Motivated sellers, all offers considered. $239,950
MCLS # 26393
918 NE 2ND ST: 4 Bed, 2.5
bath, 2536 sq ft. 40'x 60'
shop, This sits on a whole city
block, commercially zoned.
Great location for a business, excellent exposure, right off
east Broadway. $300,000
MCLS # 26400
501 E COLLINS: 4 bed/2 bath, 1672
sq. ft. Comfortable "Family Home" on
a large lot. Fully Fenced. 2 car unattached garage. Manicured yard. RV
parking. Close to schools, parks, hospital and grocery
stores. Pride of ownership. $189,900
MCLS # 26397
950 BICKLETON HWY: Great
location, year round access. 3 bd, 2
bth, 1056 sq. ft. One owner. Fruit
Trees, enriched garden area, chicken
coop. $185,000
MCLS # 26399
358 ORCHARD HEIGHTS RD: 110
acres, 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom , 1064
sq. ft. house. Trees, ponds, 5 acre
subdividable, fronts on a paved road.
$400,000.00
MCLS # 26396
LAND LISTINGS
•20 acres, Palmer Lane, mtn view, REDUCED, $79,000
MCLS # 26341
20 acres, Chisholm Rd., trees, fenced, $110,000
2 Lots(100'x145') NE High St., water & sewer assessments paid, sewer line in, $24,900 each
16.13 acres, Badger Gulch, pond, pwr, $49,900
MCLS # 26309
15 acres, well/5ac divide/power/fronts timberlands,
$150,000, MCLS # 26329
5 acres, Hornet Lane Cabin/storage bldg MCLS # 26388
$69,500
5 ACRES Bernard Rd, cabin/storage bldg, $59,500
MCLS # 26388
5 acres, Turkey Run Rd, cabin/storage bldg,
MCLS # 26373 $89,900
gradually
56. Reflective thinker
57. There and back to Michael
Phelps, pl.
58. One of #65 Across
59. Journey
60. Challenge
61. Rooney or Warhol, e.g.
62. A grand theft
63. Hog fat
64. Wild plum
67. Intense mournfulness
Goldendale Les Schwab Tire
773-5000 • 555 E. Broadway
FEATURED PROPERTY
49 FOREST HILL
LANE:
80 picturesque acres at the end
of the road. Mountains in the background. Two
creeks traverse thru this property, one is year round.
Wildlife galore. A little piece of paradise in the hills.
The unique house is approximately 1920 sq ft, 2 levels. Majestic views. The 80 acres is fully fenced and
cross fenced. Numerous outbuildings. There is a
guest house. Also a 26' x 36' barn/pole building.
Year round access but very secluded. $650,000.00
MCLS # 26398
Panthers trip up Wolves who
settle for split in opener
B8 — MARCH 16, 2011
GOLDENDALE, WASHINGTON
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
REPORTER
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
LOOSENING UP: The Goldendale Timberwolf baseball team was a pretty loose group on the eve of
the season opener at River View. Goldendale is expected to contend for the league title in 2011.
Nor mally you expect
pitching to be ahead of hitting early in the season. That
was not the case last Saturday as the Goldendale-Klickitat Timberwolves split their
opening double header
against River View in a 32 hit
slugfest. The Panthers won
the opener 11-8 and Goldendale held on to win the nightcap 17-16.
You might be able to chalk
this one up to the weather. Indeed, the games were supposed to be played in Goldendale, but the field wasn’t
playable. It has been that
kind of a March with most of
the practice time on grass.
Saturday was the first opportunity for Goldendale-Klicki-
tat pitchers to pitch from a
mound.
The two teams combined
for 10 errors and the Wolves
walked nine batters in the
opener. Lucas Denney had a
double and seven other players hit singles in the losing
effort.
The Panthers jumped on
top 9-2 after three innings in
game two before GoldendaleKlickitat got their bats going.
Jose Briseno hit a pair of
doubles and drove in four
runs. He also put together
three good innings on the
mound to earn the win. J.D.
Moss struck out the last batter with the tying and goahead runs in scoring position to get the save.
Nolin Bare and Reed Lindhe each drove in two runs
and had a pair of hits along
with Denney who was 2-3 and
was hit by a pitch two times
in each game. Anthony Dob-
son led off for Goldendale in
game two logging six walks
in seven trips to the plate.
The Timberwolves lost
four players to graduation
...four All-League players.
But the team was so deep,
they are expected to challenge Naches Valley again
and hope to make another
trip to State. The Wolves play
at Burbank on Saturday and
will host Stevenson for a single game on March 24 before
opening the season against
Granger on March 26 in Goldendale.
Goldendale-Klickitat 3 0 1 0 0 1 1
8-8-4
River View
4 0 3 2 2 0 x 11-5-6
Goldendale-Klickitat - Lindhe, Trunkey (2),
Milliren (5) and Denney. River View - Tracy and
Lane. 2b - Denney.
Goldendale-Klickitat 2 0 0 8 6 1 0 17-10-3
River View
5 2 2 1 3 0 3 16- 9-3
Goldendale - Cronin, Bare (2), Briseno (4),
Moss (7) and Denney, Gaston (5), Lesko (6),
Bare (7). River View - Weatherby, Coe (4),
McComas (5) and Lane.
2b - Briseno (2).
WOLVES from Page B1
boy.” Now all they need is a
little weather cooperation
to get some playing time on
something other than a gym
floor.
Goldendale 1 0 0 0 0 1 - 2- 6
River View 2 4 0 7 0 x 13 -10 - 2
Goldendale - Hoffman (2k, 8bb) and Kartes
ANDREW CHRISTIANSEN
GREAT
PERFORMANCES:
Area athletes came through with
great, early season performances against tough competition at the Ike Jamboree.
Clockwise from left: Kirstin
Hylton, 10th in discus; Caitlin
Scott edges Ellensburg runner
for fifth in the 1,000; Krissy
Yarnell takes fourth in shot put;
Steven McClusky digs out of the
blocks for 10th in the 300.
TAX
TIPS
From
Angela Hoffman, CPA
Tax Savings
For Sharing
Did you donate to charity last
year? If so, you may save
income tax by deducting it on
your 2010 return. Here are a
few tips to remember:
•Charitable
contributions
must be made to qualified
organizations
to
be
deductible. Ask the charity if
they qualify or check the list
in IRS Publication 78.
•Charitable contributions are
deductible only if you itemize
deductions using Form
1040, Schedule A.
•You generally can deduct
contributions paid during the
year by cash, check, or credit card. You may also be
able to deduct the value of
goods donated, subject to
special valuation and reporting rules.
•If you receive merchandise,
goods, or services in return
for your contribution, you can
deduct only the amount paid
in excess of value you
received.
•Keep good records of all
contributions you make. For
donations of $250 or more, a
detailed written receipt from
the charity is also required.
Consult your tax advisor for
more information on these
and other tax benefits available before filing.
Hoffman & Co., CPA, LLC
773-5793
1530 S Roosevelt,
Goldendale WA 98620
Paid advertisement
Let’s Keep it Going!
PIE & COFFEE ** $1.50 **
Breakfast Special
buy any breakfast item and get
another of equal or lesser for half price!
Available Thursday through Sunday 8:00am to 12:00pm
2471 Hwy. 97
Goldendale, Wa.
509-773-4434
KC PHARMACY
104 E. Main
Goldendale
773-4344
Happy St. Patrick’s Day
Thurs., March 17
St. Patrick’s Day Cards
Candies
Fine Jewelry
Wind Chimes
Sun Catchers
Angels
New Coasters
New Cutting Boards
River View - Hess (5k, 0bb) and McGill
2b - Grant (G); 3b - Hutchins (RV), Gier (RV),
Hamlin (RV.
Goldendale 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 6 - 5 - 3
RIver View 1 0 3 0 0 4 x 8 - 12 - 1
Goldendale - Counts (1k, 2bb) and Kartes
River View - Sallee (0k, 7bb), Hess (4) (7k,
0bb) and Hamlin. 2b - Hoffman (G), Swift (G),
Hutchins (RV), McGill (RV), Hull (RV); HR Hutchins (RV), McGill (RV).
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