bonney lake and sumner courier-herald, february 06, 2013

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Your hometown newspaper SEE INSIDE: Tapps lowered for transportation projects, Page 3 | Cramped East Pierce firefighters seek new station, Page 5 | Lady Spartans take 2nd in league, Page 8 hometown Wednesday, February 6, 2013 | 75 cents www.blscourierherald.com Front Page Advertising Guaranteed! Call 360-825-2555 or 253-862-7719 Put Your Business First! Joanne’s Barbershop 919 Kincaid Ave Sumner 253-826-1500 Tues. - Fri. 8:30a - 5p Sat. 8:30a - 2p $1 OFF HAIRCUT 1 coupon per hair cut 735029 What’s Inside News ......................... Pages 1-5 Views ............................... ..Page 6 Sports .............................. ..Page 8 Classifieds ...............Pages 14-18 Weather Clouds and light showers are likely today, Wednesday, with highs in the mid-40s and overnight lows dropping into the mid-30s. Precipitation is forecast at 68 percent. Skies are expected to clear by the weekend however, with mostly sunny skies and a high temperature in the mid-40s on Saturday. Updates at BLSCourierHerald.com Contact Us! Main Desk 360-825-2555 News ................................. ext. 3 Classifieds.......................... ext.1 Retail Ads ......................... ext. 4 Circulation ....................... ext. 2 • Breaking news • Columns from Don Brunell, Rich Elfers and others • Letters • Obituaries • Pierce County happenings What to do when your college graduate moves back home Family, Page 4 By Brian Beckley Staff Writer Construction is expected to begin this summer on the missing link of roadway that will lead to the Tehaleh development south of the Bonney Lake city limits. Plans have called for the exten- sion of 198th Avenue East from its current dead end between Bonney Lake High School and Mountain View Middle School to Rhodes Lake Road for nearly as long as the development, formerly known as Cascadia, was in planning. After Cascadia fell into bank- ruptcy the road project was put on hold. Cascadia was sold to Newland Homes and renamed Tehaleh. The project has started again and resi- dent begin to move in last year. According to Vice President and General Manager Scott Jones, Tehaleh is presently working with Pierce County to acquire the rights- of-way for the new roadway, as well as completing the engineering and permitting process, something they expect to be completed by late spring. “The plan is to begin construc- tion in the summer of this year,” Jones said, adding that they hope to finish the work by summer of 2014. Once completed, the new road- way will be the primary entrance to the 4,200-acre project. “It will be a direct route,” Jones said. “This would be the main route for several years.” The project is part of mitiga- tion efforts agreed upon by Pierce County and Cascadia in the early part of this century. Jones said the project was designed in conjunc- tion with the city of Bonney Lake and the state as well. Jones said the path through the dead end is generally clear, as the school district planned for the road to eventually go through, though he said there is one house that will have to be demolished at the corner Extending 198th Avenue link to begin By Daniel Nash Staff Writer Today, the citizens of Bonney Lake are preparing to vote for or against a Metro Parks District in spring; though Orton Junction has been frozen, the citizens of Sumner have kept a YMCA in their minds; and both cities’ children can sign up for a plethora of club sports, such as Valley Wolfpack, Rainier Rugby, or South Sound Titans swim club — if they’re inclined when the season comes. Much of this has been made pos- sible, according to Sumner School District athletic director Tim Thomsen, by Goodbye, Becky! After more than 20 years directing Parks and Recreation, Becky Giles will retire Feb. 28. the culture of athleticism and friendly competition fostered by Becky Giles. Giles has been the Director of the Bonney Lake/Sumner interlocal Parks and Recreation department since 1991. On Feb. 28, she will retire. She’s planned the departure since 2011, but that couldn’t stop her from holding back tears during her depart- ment report and farewell at a Jan. 16 school board meeting. “I’ve been planning it for two years,” she said in an interview Thursday. “My employees tease Becky Giles poses with coach and friend Paul Ortega at a basketball jamboree. Photo courtesy Becky Giles. SEE ROAD, PAGE 3 By Daniel Nash Staff Writer A man and a woman were sent to the hospital Sunday following a stabbing near South Prairie. East Pierce Fire and Rescue workers responded to a small housing development between South Prairie and Orting at 12:30 p.m. Sunday after the assault was called in to emergency services. A male victim was transported to a trauma center with potentially life-threat- ening injuries. A source said the man was not stabbed in the chest, as was originally reported in the media. A female victim who sustained non-life-threatening injuries was also transported to a hospital. After receiving an influx of concern, an East Pierce source added the attack was not a random act of violence, but could not elaborate further due to patient privacy concerns. The Pierce County Sheriff’s Department is investigating the case. A spokesman was not available at press time for comment on the case. South Prairie stabbing sends two to hospital SEE GILES, PAGE 5

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February 06, 2013 edition of the Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Your hometown newspaper

SEE INSIDE: Tapps lowered for transportation projects, Page 3 | Cramped East Pierce firefighters seek new station, Page 5 | Lady Spartans take 2nd in league, Page 8

hometown

Wednesday, February 6, 2013 | 75 cents www.blscourierherald.com

Front Page Advertising Guaranteed! Call 360-825-2555 or 253-862-7719

Put Your Business First! Joanne’s Barbershop919 Kincaid Ave

Sumner253-826-1500

Tues. - Fri. 8:30a - 5pSat. 8:30a - 2p

$1 OFF HAIRCUT1 coupon per hair cut

735029

What’s Inside News ......................... Pages 1-5Views ............................... ..Page 6Sports .............................. ..Page 8Classifieds ............... Pages 14-18

WeatherClouds and light showers are likely today, Wednesday, with highs in the mid-40s and overnight lows dropping into the mid-30s. Precipitation is forecast at 68 percent. Skies are expected to clear by the weekend however, with mostly sunny skies and a high temperature in the mid-40s on Saturday.

Updates atBLSCourierHerald.com

Contact Us! Main Desk

360-825-2555News .................................ext. 3Classifieds .......................... ext.1Retail Ads .........................ext. 4Circulation .......................ext. 2

• Breaking news• Columns from Don Brunell, Rich Elfers and others• Letters• Obituaries• Pierce County happenings

What to do when your college graduate moves back home

Family, Page 4

By Brian BeckleyStaff Writer

Construction is expected to begin this summer on the missing link of roadway that will lead to the Tehaleh development south of the Bonney Lake city limits.

Plans have called for the exten-sion of 198th Avenue East from its current dead end between Bonney Lake High School and Mountain View Middle School to Rhodes Lake Road for nearly as long as the

development, formerly known as Cascadia, was in planning.

After Cascadia fell into bank-ruptcy the road project was put on hold. Cascadia was sold to Newland Homes and renamed Tehaleh. The project has started again and resi-dent begin to move in last year.

According to Vice President and General Manager Scott Jones, Tehaleh is presently working with Pierce County to acquire the rights-of-way for the new roadway, as well as completing the engineering

and permitting process, something they expect to be completed by late spring.

“The plan is to begin construc-tion in the summer of this year,” Jones said, adding that they hope to finish the work by summer of 2014.

Once completed, the new road-way will be the primary entrance to the 4,200-acre project.

“It will be a direct route,” Jones said. “This would be the main route for several years.”

The project is part of mitiga-tion efforts agreed upon by Pierce County and Cascadia in the early part of this century. Jones said the project was designed in conjunc-tion with the city of Bonney Lake and the state as well.

Jones said the path through the dead end is generally clear, as the school district planned for the road to eventually go through, though he said there is one house that will have to be demolished at the corner

Extending 198th Avenue link to begin

By Daniel NashStaff Writer

Today, the citizens of Bonney Lake are preparing to vote for or against a Metro Parks District in spring; though Orton Junction has been frozen, the citizens of Sumner have kept a YMCA in their minds; and both cities’ children can sign up for a plethora of club sports, such as Valley Wolfpack, Rainier Rugby, or South Sound Titans swim club — if they’re inclined when the season comes. Much of this has been made pos-sible, according to Sumner School District athletic director Tim Thomsen, by

Goodbye, Becky!After more than 20

years directing Parks and Recreation,

Becky Giles will retire Feb. 28.

the culture of athleticism and friendly competition fostered by Becky Giles.

Giles has been the Director of the Bonney Lake/Sumner interlocal Parks and Recreation department since 1991. On Feb. 28, she will retire. She’s planned the departure since 2011, but that

couldn’t stop her from holding back tears during her depart-ment report and farewell at a Jan. 16 school board meeting.

“I’ve been planning it for two years,” she said in an interview Thursday. “My employees tease

Becky Giles poses with coach and friend Paul Ortega at a basketball jamboree. Photo courtesy Becky Giles.

See roAD, Page 3

By Daniel NashStaff Writer

A man and a woman were sent to the hospital Sunday following a stabbing near South Prairie.

East Pierce Fire and Rescue workers responded to a small housing development between South Prairie and Orting at 12:30 p.m. Sunday after the assault was called in to emergency services.

A male victim was transported to a trauma center with potentially life-threat-ening injuries. A source said the man was not stabbed in the chest, as was originally reported in the media. A female victim who sustained non-life-threatening injuries was also transported to a hospital.

After receiving an influx of concern, an East Pierce source added the attack was not a random act of violence, but could not elaborate further due to patient privacy concerns.

The Pierce County Sheriff ’s Department is investigating the case. A spokesman was not available at press time for comment on the case.

South Prairie stabbing sends two to hospital

See GIlES, Page 5

Page 2: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 2 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Wednesday, February 6, 2013 www.blscourierherald.com

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Page 3: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Page 373

5343

Stowe Construction, Inc., wishes to apologize to its neighbors, business partners and others who reside and work in the Sumner community because of conduct by the company’s president, Bryan Stowe, and another employee, which violated federal and state environmental laws during the company’s

development of the Rainier Park of Industry, a property adjacent to theWest Valley highway. The company’s president and the other employee

caused repetitive, unpermitted discharges of silt or other sediment into the White River resulting in harm to the local environment. Both of these indi-viduals have pled guilty to federal crimes. No other individuals associated

with the company were found to be involved in illegal activity.

Stowe Construction, Inc., is legally responsible for the criminal acts of its present and employee and has therefore also pled guilty to violating the Fed-eral Water Pollution Control Act. Because the company accepts full responsi-bility for the illegal acts of its president and employee it has agreed to pay a $350,000 fi ne, implement a storm water compliance plan, and be subject to

probation for no less than two years.

During the last year, Stowe Construction has fully cooperated with federal and state law enforcement offi cials during their investigation.

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By Brian BeckleyStaff Writer

If the already-drained Lake Tapps water level seems a bit lower this week, that’s because it is.

Beginning in January, Cascade Water Alliance, who owns the lake, began drawing the lake down to an additional 4.5 feet below what was projected to be the low water mark to allow for completion of a pair of transportation projects.

Cascade projected reach-ing the target elevation of approximately 534 by the

end of last week.While levels are lower

than normal, Cascade will work to repair posts on the Island 21 bridge and re-sta-bilize the bulkhead along the causeway in Bonney Lake to protect a water main that is in jeopardy.

Both projects have been approved and all necessary permitting is complete.

In the future, Cascade anticipates maximum win-ter drawdown will be to approximately 538 feet, absent the need for major dike maintenance or repairs.

Homeowners should not expect to have the lake drawn down below that level in the winter for indi-vidual dock or bulkhead repairs. Prior to beginning any repair or construc-tion activity, homeowners must have all the necessary permits and a license from Cascade.

According to an agree-ment with the Lake Tapps Community Council, Cascade will begin to re-fill the lake in mid- to late-Feb-ruary with plans to reach the recreational level of about 543 feet by April 15.

Tapps lowered for transportation projects

Cascade Water Alliance began drawing down the Lake Tapps water level to allow for completion of two trans-portation projects . Photo by Daniel Nash

daVId PaBSTDavis “Butch”

Pabst died Jan. 22, 2013, at the age of 59.

He was born Feb. 26, 1953, in Durand, Wis. In 1971 he joined the U.S. Army, where he was stationed in Korea and later at Fort Lewis. After he was dis-charged from the ser-vice he married Sandra Joslyn. He was

a master handyman, fixing things with whatever he had on hand, and enjoyed hunting

He is survived by wife Sandra Pabst of the home; son Joseph Pabst of Bonney Lake; daughters Hether Erickson of Battleground, Mo., and Amy Belsky of Bonney Lake; and four grandchildren.

An inurnment service took place Mon., Feb. 4, 2013 at Tahoma National Cemetery.

Arrangements were by Weeks’ Funeral Home in Buckley.

All may sign the online guest book at www.weeksfuneralhomes.com.

obituary

David Pabst

Piano contests seek players

Young pianists are invited to participate in talent con-tests sponsored by Arrow Lumber and Hardware.

Arrow is hosting con-tests at its Buckley, Orting and Eatonville locations on

Feb. 16, Feb. 9 and Feb. 23, respectively. All will run from 9 a.m. to noon.

The top performer in each of six age groups will receive $25.

The youngest group will be kids in preschool and kindergarten. Other groups will be for performers in

grades 1-3, 4-6, 7-8, 9-10 and 11-12.

Register online at arrowlumber.com or at the stores. Registration in Buckley will be taken from Feb. 6 through the 15th; in Orting, Feb. 13 through the 22nd; and in Eatonville, through Feb. 8.

of Rhodes Lake Road and 198th. According to Jones, however, the property own-ers planned for the con-struction by building a new home on the property and moving into that.

Following the comple-tion of this project, Jones said there was one more piece of the road to be completed, south of 120th

Street. According to Jones, that section of the roadway will need to be widened from two lanes to four, once all rights-of-way are purchased, expected to be completed by 2016.

Jones said the total road project, including rights-of-way, permits and construc-tion will cost approximately $6 million.

The completion of the roadway would help ease traffic on South Prairie Road out to the Tehaleh site

as well as complete what has been missing piece of infrastructure for Pierce County.

“This is a good example of a public/private partner-ship,” Jones said.

To comment on this story view it online at www.blscourierherald.com. Reach Brian Beckley at [email protected] or 360-825-2555, ext. 5058

Page 4: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 4 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Wednesday, February 6, 2013 www.blscourierherald.com

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To current college students or recent graduates, the prospect of moving back in with Mom and Dad is not likely to be met with open arms. Once kids taste the freedom of living on their own, their return home to reside under their parents’ roof can feel limit-ing.

Despite the difficulty of such a decision, statistics indicate that more and more young adults are returning to live with Mom and Dad. A 2011 report from the United States Census Bureau revealed that the number of men between the ages of 25 and 34 living with their parents had increased dramatically over the previous six years. By 2011, nearly 20 percent of men in that cat-egory lived with their parents, a six percent increase from just six years earlier. That increase was far less significant among women of the same age, but 10 percent of women between the ages of 25 and 34 lived at home.

The end of this trend is seem-ingly nowhere in sight. Statistics

from the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics indicate that as many as 50 percent of college graduates under the age of 25 are underutilized. This means they are unemployed, working only part-time or working jobs con-sidered to be outside the college labor market and don’t require a degree. Without an opportu-nity to gain valuable experience and advance in their fields, these young adults are essentially stuck in limbo and might be forced to live with Mom and Dad for even longer than they initially antici-pated.

While it’s easy to imagine this transition has been hard on young adults, it’s likely no easy task for their parents either. A struggling economy that has pro-duced a stagnant job marketplace has made it difficult to pinpoint just when, or if, young adults will move out for good, which can put a crimp in their parents’ retire-ment plans. For example, the 2011 TD Canada Trust Boomer Buyers Report revealed that 17 percent

of Baby Boomer parents who planned to downsize their homes, and save money as a result, are delaying those plans because they have adult children still living at home. The survey also revealed that a significant portion of those parents who don’t plan to down-size admit that their decision to stay put was made with the expec-tation that their adult children will still be living with them when they retire.

To some parents, having the kids back at home is a great experience that breathes new life into their empty nest. For others, relation-ships can quickly grow strained, creating a tense living situation that no one enjoys. To make the most of living with young adults

who have returned home, con-sider the following tips.

• Encourage children so they can get where they want to be. No matter how accommodating their parents may be, no young adult wants to live at home, especially if they have recently earned a degree they thought would springboard them into a life of independence. But parents can help their kids in ways that go beyond just giving them a place to live. For instance, encourage kids to pursue intern-ships even if they have already graduated and those internships are unpaid. Such opportunities, even if they don’t pay, can be a great chance for young adults to gain entry into their chosen fields. Since most parents don’t

charge their kids rent, the lack of pay shouldn’t be much of a prob-lem, and parents should explain to their children that they will support them so long as they are actively pursuing opportunities within their field.

• Emphasize that your home isn’t a dorm or college apartment. Just like kids don’t necessarily want to move back home after college, parents don’t want their homes to resemble a dorm or col-lege apartment should their kids move back in after graduation. When young adults move back in, parents must make it known that their sons or daughters are no longer kids and they will not be allowed to live in messy bed-rooms or leave dirty dishes and laundry for Mom and Dad to clean. Be firm and forward when letting young adults know that, while you’re happy to give them a place to live, your days tidying up after them are over.

• Eventually, consider charging rent. Most parents don’t want to charge their children rent. After all, young adults are moving home to save money, not spend it. But it can be very easy for young adults with no rent to pay to grow lazy in their job pursuit or to develop an attitude that rent-free living is for them, even if they do find a job that enables them to sup-port themselves. This can com-plicate matters down the road, so if young adults have been living at home a long time without paying a dime in rent, it’s time to start

Tricky business when kids move back with folks

The return of a child to their parents’ home after college can be a minefield without boundaries and support. File Photo

See family, Page 5

Page 5: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

me about it, about how I’m the only person who’s given two years notice on a job, but you have no idea how I’m a planner. I can’t really grasp the thought of not working like I have been, but I know it’s time.

“I’ve had 30 years (includ-ing time working in the city of Kent) of nights, full days, weekends and, basi-cally, living my job. It’s time to have some kind of life before I get ancient.”

In her time directing the department, Giles has become well-known and loved among colleagues and families for her warmth, hyper-competence and seemingly endless reserves of energy.

She’s needed all of those qualities for the job. Then-Superintendent Donald Eismann, with Thomsen,

envisioned Parks and Recreation as a sort of train-ing program for Sumner High School’s sports teams, which had lagged in com-petition throughout the ‘80s. But the undertaking was too expensive for any one city to take on; even with the eventual shared contribution of money and facilities by both cities and the school district, the bud-get was tight.

“Her budget is on a shoe-string,” Bonney Lake Mayor Neil Johnson said. “But Becky has always found a way to make it work.”

Giles began with a $42,000 annual budget, no staff, half an office and only a handful of programs. She borrowed $5,000 from the school district to print the department’s first newslet-ter, and 70-80 hour weeks were the norm during her first three years. Today, the program has a near-ly $82,000 budget, three

employees, an office out of Daffodil Valley Elementary and a robust roster of pro-grams that largely support themselves from activities fees.

“The support she provides our coaches and the kids is phenomenal,” Thomsen said. “In the ‘80s, local kids, if they were lucky, would be able to play little league for a few months, soccer for a few months, and that would be about it.

“(The interlocal parks and recreation) concept had never been tried before and, thanks to Becky, we’ve had an extraordinary out-come.”

Thomsen was the person who hired Giles away from her job as programming coordinator for Kent Parks and Recreation; he still jok-ingly tells her that she was his second-choice candi-date. The punchline is he’s never had to second-guess that final decision.

“I’ve asked around and many cities don’t have the partnership we have for Recreation,” Sumner City Administrator John Galle said. “It is a great part-nership, but it meant that Becky served not only the

Sumner School District but also the cities of Sumner and Bonney Lake. Anyone who serves three ‘bosses’ for as many years as Becky did deserves a medal. She has our greatest apprecia-tion and thanks.”

Dedicated doesn’t begin to describe Giles’ attitude for the job; every wall of her office is covered with photos of kids in her sports programs, her many dogs, her coaches, colleagues and friends. Many of the origi-nal athletes in her sports

programs have since had children of their own and enrolled them in Parks and Recreation programs. She welcomes every new person in the program and her life as if they were a member of her extended family.

“I’m friends of hers out-side of work,” Wells said. “She’s very laid back, very casual and, if she’s on your side, she’s 100 per-cent behind you. She’s a woman of her word. Those are qualities a lot of people don’t have anymore, but

Becky has them.”Mayor Johnson related

how Giles reached out immediately after his leu-kemia diagnosis, offering support and sharing her own experience with can-cer in the family.

“She gave me that con-fidence vote to hang in there,” he said.

Giles isn’t entirely sure what she’ll do in those first weeks after she’s left Parks and Recreation; it’s been so long since she’s done any-thing else. But she does plan to volunteer and spend more time enjoying the out-doors. A little further down the line, she plans to found a consulting company spe-cializing in developing and streamlining parks and rec-reation departments.

“Becky is a broad think-er,” Bonney Lake special project manager Gary Leaf said. “She’s able to think in broad strategic terms and solve those big problems. She’s been very creative in running the parks and recreation department and she’ll be hard to replace.”

The position will be filled by Parks and Rec employee Rich Hanson after Giles’ departure.

asking for money. Do this more to motivate young adults than to meet your own financial needs. In fact, when you start collecting rent, and if you don’t need the money, sim-ply put it aside and give it back when young adults decide they do want to move out of the house.

Nowadays, more and more young adults are moving back in with their parents. Though such living arrange-ments might not be ideal for parents or children, there are ways to make the best of the situation.

www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Page 5

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By Brian BeckleyStaff Writer

Over the past decade or so, East Pierce Fire and Rescue, through a series of annexations and mergers has grown to one of the larger regional fire districts in the area.

But even as their territo-ry and staff has continued to grow, the department’s headquarters station, located at the Bonney Lake Public Safety Building, has remained exactly the same size.

And it’s led to something

of a space crunch.“We’re currently using

every bit of space we have in this building,” said Assistant Chief John McDonald, adding that hallways and closets are even being used. “We need additional space.

“The building wasn’t designed to handle the number of folks who are in it today,” he said.

A Capital Facilities Evaluation conducted in 2011 to review the all of the department’s stations fol-lowing the merger with the Edgewood Fire Department

found that despite some-thing of a patchwork for-mation, the coverage throughout the district is good, primarily due to the near-perfect spacing of the department’s facilities.

“What we found was in spite of what we had assumed, the stations are really well-located,” said McDonald. “That’s a huge benefit.”

The department then undertook a study look-ing at the county’s 20-year planning data and once again was surprised with the results.

“Again, we found the sta-tions are in the right place,” he said.

And while that’s good overall, it meant that if the department wanted to move its headquarters sta-tion, it had to keep it within a six block radius or risk affecting the response times and coverage throughout the district due to what McDonald called a “domi-no effect.”

But with the department’s lease on the Public Safety Building set to expire at the end of next year, East Pierce began a search for a suitable

property.The department found

a new spot right down the block at the corner of Main Street and Veterans Memorial Drive East.

Known as the Greenwood Property, it is the only vacant piece of land in the intersection, located in the northwest corner, across from Veterans Memorial Drive, Thian Thai and across Main Street from the former Priced Right Print and Sign building.

According to an email sent out to the department by McDonald, the land was

selected for multiple rea-sons: the access to arterials in all directions, it was for sale by a single owner, is finished with all required frontage improvements (curb, gutter, etc.) and fits in with the city’s downtown plan that envisions a civic campus in the downtown core.

“We want to be close to where everyone is,” McDonald said.

In 2012, East Pierce pur-chased the three-plus acre parcel for $2.25 million,

Cramped Bl firefighters seek new station

See sTaTion, Page 12

Page 6: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Parting, said the bard, is such sweet sorrow.The time has come for me once again to part

with Bonney Lake and East Pierce County, an area that has become something of a second home to me over the past decade.

After many years covering the region for multiple papers, this will, once again, be my last issue with the Courier-Herald.

As of Monday I will be plying my trade at the

other end of state Route 167 as the assistant editor for the Renton Reporter, one of the other weekly papers owned by our parent company, Sound Publishing.

And while I am very excited about the promotion and the opportunity to cover larger city and beat, I certainly understand what Juliet was saying.

I began working in Bonney Lake back in 2003 with another local paper that no longer covers the city. At that time, during the height of the Bob Young era of massive growth in the city, there were three reporters at

Saying good-bye one more time

ViewsThe Bonney Lake & Sumner Courier-Herald • Page 6 Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • www.blscourierherald.com

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Our Corner

Brian BeckleyStaff Writer

The McCleary versus the state of Washington decision of Jan. 5, 2012, set the stage. According

to the state constitution, “It is the paramount duty of the State to make ample provision for the education of all students residing within its bor-ders.”

What will the state Legislature do? Will it obey the state Supreme Court’s decision to follow the state constitution’s declaration to support and uphold K-12 education as the paramount duty of Washington’s leg-islature, or will lawmakers avoid fol-lowing that prioritization from the McCleary decision?

Enumclaw School District Superintendent Mike Nelson was clearly pleased by the court’s decision to enforce compliance to the constitu-tion in his State of Education address recently. All school districts in the state echo his views. Doing so means the state will have to increase educa-tional funding by at least $1 billion for the 2013-15 biennium.

The court unanimously declared that the state’s paramount duty means “first and highest priority, before any other state programs or operations.”

Finally, someone has forced the law-makers to set priorities.

The state Legislature has allowed politics to get in the way of obeying the law. Not putting education as the paramount duty of the state has set a very bad example for Washingtonians. If the Legislature won’t keep the law, why should the citizens obey it? The state must change its ways.

As we have heard so often, no one is above the law, especially the state’s senators and representatives. If the Legislature wants to change the intent of the constitution, then they should move toward passing constitutional change. Since that option is not politi-cally viable, the only solution in this legislative session is to make funding education the No. 1 priority. Other programs must either be cut and/or

taxes raised to pay for them. State gov-ernment must become accountable.

The reason this decision is so dif-ficult to obey is that we citizens will also have to face reality. Constituents want more services without paying the cost of those increased services. This issue can no longer be kicked down the road for future lawmakers to decide on. Legislators must do what they have been elected and sworn to do: obey the constitution. They have a difficult task: figuring out how to fulfill this obligation and please their constituents at the same time.

Obeying the McCleary decision will force the Legislature to put other pri-orities in secondary positions. Cities in Washington desperately need help in funding repair of the infrastruc-ture: roads and bridges, sewers, and water. They’re in poor condition, and the longer we wait to fix them the more it will cost the taxpayers. Student costs for college have also soared. The McCleary decision does not cover these costs, yet the future generation of workers needs to be educated. Other priorities, such as

Court forces legislative action

Write to Us: Send letters to 1627 Cole St., Enumclaw, WA 98022, or fax to 360-825-0824, or email to [email protected].

Deadline is 5 p.m. Thursday.All letters should by typed, and must include a name and phone number for verification. Letters should not

exceed 500 words. The opinions of the authors do not necessarily ref lect those of the Courier-Herald.

1627 Cole Street, Enumclaw, WA 98022253-862-7719 • Fax: 360-825-0824

Volume 10 • Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • No. 13

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

Editor: Dennis [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5050Senior Reporter: Kevin Hanson: [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5052Reporters:Brian Beckley [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5058Daniel Nash [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 5060Advertising Sales:Martha Boston [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 3052Dottie Bergstresser [email protected] 360-825-2555 ext. 3054

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See OUR CORNER, Page 7

Politics in Focus

Rich ElfersColumnist

See ELFERS, Page 7

Page 7: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Page 7

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every council meeting: me, Rob from the Trib and Dennis Box of the Courier-Herald, a brand new paper dedicated to covering Bonney Lake.

In 2005, I parted ways with the other paper and made my way to Courier-Herald, working with Box to build the BLCH into the primary news source on the Plateau. In my first go-around with the city, I wrote mostly feature sto-ries, getting to know the people and events that help make this area so special.

In 2007, I said my first round of goodbyes to Bonney Lake as I headed down the hill to work for the newly created Sumner Reporter. I was there for a year and then said another round of goodbyes to East Pierce County as I moved to Kent to work for that paper.

I was in Kent for about 18

months and then, through a lucky fluke of timing, found myself back at the Courier-Herald in early 2010, this time as the main news writer.

Thomas Wolfe said “You can’t go home again,” but I have to say I think he may be wrong.

By that time, Dennis had also moved on to anoth-er paper – though he too would eventually find his way home again to the Plateau, this time as editor - but much of the other staff was still there and many of the same players in Bonney Lake were still in the game.

Both the staff at the paper and the city welcomed me back and soon enough, East Pierce began to once again feel like home. Together with Daniel Nash, who joined the CH during my time in Kent, we worked to give the region the best paper we could and in 2012 the Washington Newspaper Publisher’s Association rec-ognized our little paper

with a third-place General Excellence award.

As I begin the next phase of my career, I am thankful for the training ground that Bonney Lake has provided, both during the contentious political era and growth of the first part of the last decade, as well as the more collegial and functional recent part.

You are in good hands, Bonney Lake. The Bonney Lake city government operates like you’d hope a democracy would. They are very open and transparent and I have never felt that I am being given the run-around or that someone is trying to deceive me. Plus, the council actually dis-cusses and debates things in open meetings.

That’s highly unusual, you should know.

But the real secret to this region, like any, is not the government, but the people. It’s the people of Bonney Lake I will miss the most.

People like Joan Rupp, whom I have mentioned multiple times. Joan is the barnstorming basketball player from the 50s and 60s

whose grit, determination and self-described “ornery” nature inspires me every time I talk to her.

People like Connie Swarthout, the owner of CJ’s Carry-Out deli and a handful of other business-es in town. Not only does Connie make the best sand-wiches in town, but despite what has been a terrible run of years during which she lost her father, her son and (just recently) her brother, Connie remains decidedly upbeat and a genuinely nice and good person. I admire not only her business acu-men and dedication to her hometown, but also her ability to keep a good head on her shoulders, no matter what challenges and diffi-culties life throws at her.

People like Sue Hilberg, executive director of the senior center, who along with her staff works every-day to fill that little build-ing with the energy and excitement that makes it one of the best and most fun senior centers in the entire region. I will miss that place.

People like Leota

Musgrave, speaking of the senior center and all of the great regulars up there, who is just one of my favorite people around because of her welcoming smile, sharp sense of humor, unfiltered honesty and an energy that will outlast us all.

People like Lillian McGinness, the president of Beautify Bonney Lake, an annual cleanup event that began about 10 years ago and has grown into one of the great commu-nity service days in the region perhaps the state – drawing hundreds of volunteers out on what is usually a rainy Saturday morning to rake, shovel, sweep and plant all around the city.

People like Jim Snyder, whom I just met this year as I did a story about the adopt-a-street program (run these days by Christy McQuillen, whom I will also miss). Jim is one of those local characters that every town seems to have. He has the city’s first adopt-a-street contract for Locust Avenue and when I told him I wanted to get

a picture of him near his sign, Jim donned a tuxedo, ref lective vest and posed picking up his certifi-cate of recognition with a trash-picker. The rest of the interview was just as much fun as the photos.

And of course, there are the people that make up the city, from the mayor to the police and fire to the council to the city’s department heads and staff, all of them are fine folks who help give this town a great, home-y character and feel, despite it still being something of a bedroom community.

As I head up to Renton, where my new wife, Emily, and I live these days, I must admit looking forward to a shorter commute, though I will always have a spe-cial place in my heart for Bonney Lake.

Beginning this week, Daniel takes over the news beat and I think you are all in as good hands with him as he is with you. I wish him, and all of you, the absolute best.

Good luck, Bonney Lake. And thanks for everything.

dealing with costs of our criminal system, and with our social services must somehow be addressed with the reshifting of resources brought on by McCleary.

The only solution to this funding crisis is for Republicans and Democrats to work together for the good of the state. Any unwilling-ness to compromise will mean gridlock and stagna-tion. The time has come for the state Legislature to step up and act courageously. The McCleary decision could actually break the deadlock of partisanship in the government.

As a former K-12 teacher,

I believe that fully fund-ing education is a long-term solution not only for public schools, but also for other important priorities. It’s going to force us all to make decisions about the role of government. Perhaps that clearer focus will cause us to work together in the other areas of need in this state.

The constitution says it is “The paramount duty of the State to make ample provi-sion for the education of all students residing within its borders.” The only solu-tion is for our lawmakers to follow the direction of the state Supreme Court. My advice to our legislators: “Do the right thing.”

ElfErs FROM 6

OUr COrNEr FROM 6

Page 8: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

By Brian BeckleyStaff Writer

The Bonney Lake High girls finished fourth in the South Puget Sound League 3A and earned a spot in the upcoming subdistrict bas-ketball tournament.

Bonney Lake will

play Hazen at 12:45 p.m. Saturday at Auburn Mountainview High, locat-ed at 28900 124th Ave. SE, Auburn.

Bonney Lake finished the season fourth in the SPSL 3A with a 5-6 record and 12-9 overall.

The Panthers closed out

the regular season with two losses last week to the top teams, Enumclaw and Lakes.

Friday the girls fell 44-40 to league-leading Enumclaw in a game lead by the Panthers for most of the contest.

Bonney Lake was up 23-19 at the half, but in the fourth the Hornet defense and inside play handed the victory to Enumclaw.

Karissa Olson lead the scoring for Bonney Lake with 13 points followed by Mekensie Voeliger with seven.

On Jan. 29 the Lakes Lancers doubled up Bonney Lake in the first quarter then held on to beat the Panthers 60-51 on the strength of a 31-point game by Rodericka Ware.

Lakes went out to an 11-5 lead in the first period and 14-12 in the second to head to the half leading 25-17.

The Panthers rallied back, winning the third quarter 19-17, but Lakes held on, outscoring Bonney Lake 18-15 in the fourth for the win.

Voellger led the Panthers with 21 points.

SportsThe Bonney Lake & Sumner Courier-Herald • www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • Page 8

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Panther girls finish fourth, earn spot in subdistrictsBLHS Girls Basketball

By Daniel NashStaff Writer

The Sumner girls basketball team fin-ished second in the South Puget Sound League, 2A earning a spot in the subdis-trict playoffs that includes Seamount and SPSL teams.

The Sumner girls ended the regular sea-son with a 12-2 record.

The girls play Franklin Pierce at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at Foster High located at 4242 S. 144th St. Tukwila.

Franklin Pierce finished the season with an 8-6 SPSL 2A record in fourth.

The Spartans closed out the season last week with one loss and one win.

Friday at home Sumner fell to league-leading White River 54-36.

Jamie Lange lead the numbers for the Spartans with 10 followed by nine from Brenna Allsop and six from Anna Hurd.

White River scored 15 to Sumner’s 11 in the first quarter, 13-7 in the second led by the Hornets. The third White River out scored Sumner18-5 and the fourth the Spartans topped the Hornets 13-8.

Sumner defeated the Washington Patriots 48-30 Jan. 29.

The Spartans apparently decided to make a victory sandwich, beginning and ending the game with lackluster quarters and playing two fierce quarters in the middle. Quarterly scores were 10-11, 13-7, 15-2 and 10-10, respectively.

Lange was the high-scoring player of the night with 14 points. She was followed by Nicole Miller at 10.

Sumner takes second

Robi Long dribbles around White River’s Amanda Lance during the Friday night game at home. The Spartans lost the geme 54-36. Photo by Daniel Nash

Kayla Seger guards Enumclaw’s Katie Holland in the post Friday in the game against the Hornets. Photo by Dennis Box

Page 9: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Page 9

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By Dennis BoxEditor

Sumner’s boys basketball team finished in a fourth-place tie in the South Puget Sound League 2A and will play in the subdistrict play-offs with Seamount and SPSL teams competing.

The Spartans play Renton at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Foster High.

The Spartans finished the season with a 7-7 league record and 12-8 over all.

The boys closed the season with a two victo-ries, one over league-lead-ing White River and one against Washington.

The win over the Hornets forced White River in a tie for first with Clover Park. Both finished with 12-2 records.

Sumner beat White River on Friday at home 62-42.

Leading the scoring for Sumner was Keenan Jackson with 20, Riley Bruil at 19 and Jace Johnson add-ing nine.

The Spartans outscored the Hornets in the first three quarters hitting 12 in the first to eight for White River. Sumner scored eight in the second and White

River two.Sumner came out of the

half hot and hit for 22 to 11 for the Hornets. The fourth was 21 for White River and 20 for Sumner.

Sumner took Washington Jan. 29 on the road 57-39.

Jackson again led the way with 16. Bruil hit for nine and Austin Striplin also scored nine.

Sumner boys on to playoffs

Keenan Jackson pushes past White River’s Dustin France during Friday night’s game. Photo by Daniel Nash

By Daniel NashStaff Writer

Ten Bonney Lake wrestlers will go to South Puget Sound League 3A regionals, and five came out champions of the week-end’s subregional tournament at Auburn Mountainview.

First-place champions were 106-pound-er Carson Corballey, 126-pounder Colton Tracy, 145-pounder Matt Yuste, 160-pound-er Cayle Williams and 182-pounder Chili Sabin.

Caid Caveness, 138 pounds, took second place.

Beppe Sabin, 120 pounds, and Kasey Board, 220 pounds, both earned third place.

Jordan Cozzi, 113 pounds, and David

Smith, 285 pounds, both earned fourth place.

Tate Holmes and Raul Leos, both sec-ond alternates in the 106 pound and 195 pound classes respectively, earned sixth place spots.

Bonney Lake High School will host the regional tournament this Saturday at 10 a.m.

Bonney Lake to send ten

Colton Tracy takes Antonio Lucero from Decatur in the 126-pound class . Photo by Dennis Box

Page 10: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 10 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Wednesday, February 6, 2013 www.blscourierherald.com

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By Daniel NashStaff Writer

The Sumner Spartan boys wrestling team took third place at the South Puget Sound League 2A sub-regional tournament this weekend. The team racked up 242.5 team

points, two weight class champions, and 14 plac-ers.

AJ Atoigue, 152 pounds, and Zach Wooding, 160, both earned champion titles.

Second placers were Travis Filleau, 113; Jeremy Jackson, 138; and Jed

Schliesman, 145.Conner Wade, 106,

earned third place.Fourth placers were

Tucker Wooding, 113; Hunter Eberhart, 120; and Zach Summers, 195.

Tanner Sjoden, 170, earned fifth place.

Sixth placers were Victor

Padilla, 182; Justin Myers, 195; Josh Davidson, 120; and Jake harmon, 285.

All move on to the regional tournament, to be held at Tumwater High School beginning Friday and running through Saturday.

Two champions, 14 placers Bonney Lake Boys BasketballThe Panthers are officially out of contention for postseason play after its 71-53 loss to the Enumclaw Hornets Friday night. Derek Lund stepped up and shot 18 points over the night. Kaleb Zahnow shot 14 points.The Panthers finished sixth in South Puget Sound League 3A, and went 1-9 during the season.

Page 11: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

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Page 12: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

SumnerThe Bonney Lake & Sumner Courier-Herald • www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • Page 12

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By Daniel NashStaff Writer

Tuesday night, the Sumner City Council approved Colliers International to broker the sale of the Sumner Meadow Links golf course.

The City Council voted in October to put the course up for sale, nearly 20 years after the land’s original purchase. In seeking a real estate firm to handle the sale of the property,

city staff determined Colliers International “rose to the top of the list as the most qualified team and company to list the property,” according to a press release.

Sumner’s city government pur-chased the 292 acres that would become the links in 1993, believ-ing the popularity of golf would make a city-owned course a self-sustaining, revenue generating investment. This proved not to be the case; the enterprise was plagued by a lukewarm reception and ongoing expenses such as its bond debt and, later, hefty course management fees from its third-party operator.

After the October vote,

Mayor David Enslow and city staff released a call for propos-als from brokers. They met with five interested candidates and met a second time with the top two. Colliers was the winner, and staff brought their recommenda-tion to the council Tuesday.

Colliers will begin advertis-ing the golf course through the Real Capital Markets database and in internal databases in early February, Colliers Seattle Managing Director Bill Condon said. Offers are expected to be due sometime in March. If that holds true, the council will meet with potential buyers in April before making their decision.

Based on positive input from

Collier representatives Matthew McGregor and Condon, the city press release speculated the land would be attractive to buyers and, possibly, industrial devel-opers; 132 acres of the land are zoned for industrial use.

“The Puget Sound indus-trial property market is one of the healthiest in the country,” Condon said in an interview Friday. “Sumner has been as adaptive as any market in the country, and it’s a very desired area for development.

“It’s a great property when you look at it.”

The property will most likely sell as a whole, rather than in subdivided parcels, he said.

Council secures broker for sale of Sumner Meadows golf course

Colliers director expects strong interest from industrial developers

STaTion FROM 5

funded through the issu-ance of limited tax general obligation bonds, which do not need voter approval.

McDonald said when the district looks to build the building, he expects that bond to go to a vote.

But McDonald said while some people may question such a purchase at this time, with a down economy, it was actual “prudent long-term planning” because the price is low now and it suits all of their needs.

McDonald said the build-ing was still in the “very generic conceptual plans” phase and will depend on the economy, but he said he expects the department to move to a new building on the property within five years.

“It’s a perfect piece of property,” he said.

Page 13: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Page 13

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FREE Sonicare EasyClean. Value $84.95

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To place your ad in the Church Directory

call Jennifer:253-862-7719

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Seventh-day Adventist Church

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Our Redeemer Lutheran

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MAINTAININGFOCUS

More than a century ago, many subscribed to the “fo-cal infection theory,” the no-tion that an infection in one small area of the body could lead to subsequent infection and ill health elsewhere in the body. This theory was particularly popular in the � eld of oral medicine, as the connection between dental infection and disease led to the extraction of an extremely high number of teeth. As crude as the meth-odology may have been back then, the theory that oral infection can spread via the blood to other parts of the body has been upheld by modern scienti� c inves-tigation. Studies showing links between gum disease and heart disease, preterm births, and certain in� am-matory conditions are good reasons to seek treatment. P.S. Research indicates that periodontal disease may increase the risk of Alzheim-er’s disease. At LAKERIDGE DENTISTRY, PLLC, we ap-preciate the opportunity to provide you and your family with quality dental care. Our team is made up of well-trained profession-als who work together to provide the highest quality treatment in a warm, car-ing setting. We’re located at 8412 Myers Road E., Ste. 301. Bonney Lake. Please call 253.863.7005to schedule an appoint-ment. Ask us about our simple, painless, affordable 2-minute oral cancer exam using the Velscope. Ozone therapy and Reiki treatment are available. Visit us on fa-cebook.com/Lakeridgeden-tistry

All suspects in the police blotter are presumed inno-cent until proven guilty in a court of law.STUMBLING: At 11:42 p.m. Jan. 19, officers were dispatched to the 20800 block of state route 410 to check on the welfare of a reportedly intoxicated man staggering along the highway. An employee of the nearby Arco sta-tion had seen the man walk through a red-signal crosswalk, and called it in out of concern for the man’s safety. An officer searching for the man observed him staggering down the sidewalk near Papa John’s. He walked up to the front door and tried to open it; when he realized the door was locked, he shook the door several times. The officer

made contact, but the man was intoxicated to the point that he was un-able to communicate his home address. A records check revealed the man had a $10,000 misde-meanor warrant out of of Enumclaw for causing a public disturbance. enum-claw Jail was advised the man was in custody and agreed to take him in. The officer met with enumclaw police shortly after midnight at the state Route 410 weigh station to transfer custody.

CRYING WOLF: At 6:18 p.m. Jan. 23, officers were dispatched to a possible driver under the influ-ence traveling eastbound on state route 410 from Veterans memorial drive. Two drivers called in a

car swerving all over the roadway with its head-lights off, at one point nearly hitting another traveler. The first re-sponder found the vehicle parked three-quarters of the way into a park-ing stall in a lot near the intersection of sr 410 and 208th Avenue east. The officer contacted the driver and noted that she appeared disoriented and under the influence of something; her eyes were droopy and blood-shot, and her speech was slurred. She denied taking medication or alcohol, and said she was lost on her way to Kent station. she said she was diabetic, and the officer called east Pierce firefighters to the scene in case she was experiencing low blood sugar and required medi-cal attention during the stop. Later, when firefight-ers arrived and the officer

asked the driver to step out of her car, she asked why the emergency per-sonnel were present. The officer said it was in case she had a low blood sugar attack during the stop, and she responded that she did not have diabe-tes. Confused, the officer asked her why she told him she had the condi-tion, and she said she had self-diagnosed herself with pre-diabetes. At this point, the officer began to smell alcohol on her breath and said so. she changed her story and said she had one drink of vodka prior to driving. The driver agreed to the vol-untary field sobriety tests. she completed the eye Nystagmus test, which indicated some clues of intoxication, but the of-ficer did not have her per-form the walk-and-turn or one-leg stand due to already apparent difficulty

standing in place. The preliminary breath test registered a .195 BAC and the driver was arrested for DUI. Processing at the sta-tion confirmed the high BAC. The officer cited the driver for dui and she was booked into Puyallup Jail.

GUIDED BY THE LIGHT: At 7:13 a.m. Jan. 24, an of-ficer patrolling the 21400 block of state route 410 observed a truck with a very bright white light coming from the license plate area. The officer initiated a stop and discovered the driver’s license was suspended in the third degree and he had no insurance. The man also had a Bonney

Lake warrant for his ar-rest. The man was taken into custody and booked into enumclaw Jail on the warrant. he was issued a criminal citation for driv-ing while suspended and a notice of infraction for the defective license plate and lack of insurance.

WARRANT: At 4:30 a.m. Jan. 27, an officer was dispatched to meet a Pierce County deputy to take custody of a man in custody on two mis-demeanor warrants. The man was taken into BLPD custody and booked into enumclaw Jail.

Bonney Lake Police

Page 14: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 14 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, February 06, 2013 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

7319

75

Early

Due to Presidents Day deadlines for the

Feb. 20th issue of the Courier-Herald are:

Display Ad Deadline Wednesday, Feb. 13th

4:00 pmDeadline- Classified

Display AdsThursday, Feb. 14th

Noon

Real Estate for SaleOther Areas

COLFAX RIVERFRONT. 9 acres was $75,000 now only $39,500. Lend- er Repo sale. Beautiful valley views, quiet coun- try road with electric. Ex- cellent financing provid- ed. Call UTR 1-888-326- 9048.

Real Estate for RentKing County

ENUMCLAW2 BEDROOM remod- e l e d i n fo u r p l ex . Washer, dryer, f i re- place. Water, sewer and garbage paid. No pets. $840 per month. Lawn maintenance in- cluded. Call 425-432- 6556.

ENUMCLAW3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH home. All new paint, car- pet and linoleum. Full unf in ished basement. Large yard. Pet nego- tiable. $1,150. Call 253- 709-7008.ENUMCLAW

3 BR, 1 BA RAMBLER. Washer, dr yer, smal l garage included. Locat- ed on beautiful acreage! Water, sewer, garbage included. No pets/ smok- ing. No lease required. $1,100 per month. 206- 300-4021.

Real Estate for RentKing County

EnumclawPrivate 1 bdrm , 1 bath studio in quiet neighbor- hood. Off street parking, common laundry. Close to shops & hosp i ta l . $440 per month. Cal l Jeremy 206-422-1031

Real Estate for RentPierce County

3-4 bedroom house in W i l keson . La rge l o t . Close to school. Pellet stove, gas furnace & hot wa te r. Ve r y c l ean & cozy. Pets negotiable. First & security deposit. $1000/mo. (360)829- 2583.Bonney Lake1 BEDROOM, 1 bath mobile home, 2 car gar- age w i th shop. $700 month, first, last, $700 deposit. Credit report re- quired. No smoking or pets. Close to Hwy 410. (253)862-0372

Bonney Lake/Buckley1 BEDROOM cottage on 2 acres with Highway f ron tage. Per fec t fo r parking equipment or home based business. $1,000 month. First & last + $500 deposit. $35 criminal history check. 253-255-6841 or [email protected]

Real Estate for RentPierce County

BUCKLEY

STUDIO HOME. QUIET res ident ia l ne ighbor - hood. Recent remodel. No smoking. No pets. $450 month plus utilities. First, last, deposit. Lo- cated at 745 Jefferson Ave. 360-893-0195.

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SOUTH HILL Home. 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath, 2 car garage, fenced back- yard. Close to schools. $1050 month, deposit. 360-985-0602

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ENUMCLAW1 & 2 BEDROOM apart- men t s i n Enumc law. Washer, dryer in unit. Covered parking. Small p e t s o k . $ 7 2 5 - $ 8 5 0 month. (360)825-0707

ENUMCLAW2 BEDROOM. Spacious apartment in four plex. Move- in d iscount fo r c leaning and repairs. F i rep lace inc l . $750, $500 damage deposit, first, last. Section 8 wel- come. 206-369-5304.

FEDERAL WAY #701. FIRST MONTH FREE ON APPROVAL. Pr ivate, clean 1 BR, 1BA with NO STAIRS. Quiet single-story com- munity. On-Site laundry, close to Wal-Mart, Res- tau ran ts , s to res and Trans i t center. $675, WATER, SEWER, GAR- B A G E I N C L U D E D . $500/dep. Call Carol or Art for a tour: 253-941- 1464. The address is 31010 18th Ave S Fed- eral Way, WA. 98003 **STEAL OF A DEAL!**

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

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Apartments for Rent King County

Rent your new home today at Apsen Glade A p a r t m e n t s w h e r e apartment living feels like country living with our beautiful landscap- i n g a n d m o u n t a i n views! (360) 825-1168

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

BUCKLEY

2 BEDROOM apartment on West Mason in Buck- ley. Furnished or unfur- n ished. Cozy rad iant f l o o r h e a t , s t a ck i n g washer & dr yer, p lus garage. $950 month . Call 360-825-4157.

BuckleyBIG 1 BEDROOM apart- ment. $700 month. $700 deposit. No smoking. No pets. Sewer, water & garbage paid. 360-829- 4276

WA Misc. RentalsDuplexes/Multiplexes

Enumclaw2 bedroom, 1 bath du- plex. Living room has vaulted ceiling and gas fireplace. Utility room, of- fice space, spacious gar- age, carpeted bedroom and living room, fenced backyard. Space in back f o r m o t o r h o m e . $1075/month includes W/S/G and lawn service. Call Sunday- Friday until 5PM. (253)579-3137

WA Misc. RentalsGeneral Rentals

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All rental and real estate for sale adver tising in this newspaper is sub- ject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it ille- gal to advertise any pref- erence, limitation or dis- cr iminat ion based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limita- tion or discrimination Fa- mi l ia l status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, preg- nant women and people securing custody of chil- dren under 18. This n e w s p a p e r w i l l n o t knowingly accept any advertising for the rental or sale of real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertising in t h i s n ew s p a p e r a r e available on an equal oppor tuni ty basis. To complain of discrimina- t i o n c a l l H U D a t (206)220-5170.

www.wes th i l l pm .com R E N TA L S Ava i l a b l e Now. Zaran Sayre & As- sociates, Property Man- agement Spec ia l is ts. F i n d i n g a n d r e n t i n g homes since 1981! Call (253)941-4012 and ask about our available units for rent or speak to an exper ienced, l icensed Property Manager about the potential of renting out your own home. See www.zaran.com for in- formation. We now have live chat available on- line!

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253- 617-8622 1110 Griffin Enumclaw.

The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no additional cost.

Commercial RentalsIndustrial/Warehouse

ENUMCLAW2000 SF INDUSTRIAL Space, New Bui lding, 480 Vo l t Power, Gas Heat. $1200 per month. 253-569-7560

Commercial RentalsOffice/Commercial

Auburn4 L A R G E r o o m s fo r lease in a commercial building on 632 W. Main Street in Auburn. Short or long term lease. Call for detai ls. (253)670- 0295

ENUMCLAW1 2 0 0 S F O F F I C E , Mountain View. Great work space. $1200 per month. 253-569-7560

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

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CASH NOW for Good Notes, Top Dollar from Pr ivate investor. Yes, Bajill ions Available for quality Contracts, Mort- gages, Annuities, Inheri- tance. Receiving Pay- ments? Call Skip Foss 1-800-637-3677

LOCAL PRIVATE IN- VESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I loan on houses, raw land, commercial prop- erty and property devel- opment . Ca l l E r i c a t (800) 563-3005www.fossmortgage.com

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

General Financial

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ADOPT ~ Ar t , music, laughter, Nurturing edu- c a t e d s e c u r e fa m i l y awaits 1st precious ba- by. Expenses paid. Kar- en [email protected]

ADOPTION- A loving al- ternative to unplanned pregnancy. You chose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of wait ing/approved cou- ples. Living expense as- s is tance. 1 -866-236- 7638

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in up to 12 mil- lion households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 815 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Ave- nue at 888-486-2466 or go to www.classifiedave- nue.net

PHONE IN YOUR ADS!1-800-388-2527

CLASSIFIED DEADLINE 12 PM, NOON!

GUARANTEED DELIVERY

RUN AD PRE-PAY1 Time $132 Times ($10 Ea.Time) $203 Times ($8 Ea.Time) $244-6 Times (Best Buy) $30For 20 words or less. Additional words

are 25¢ per word. Mail checks to: PO Box 157, Enumclaw, WA 98022

Classi� ed ads will be accepted until 12:00 PM MONDAYS for the current week’s issue of the newspaper. They cannot be taken for the cur-rent issue after that time. Please arrange to have your classi� ed ads into our of� ce BEFORE 12:00 PM MONDAY, after which time we will be happy accept them for the following week.

Guaranteed delivery may be purchased at an annual rate of $15 in our King and Pierce County delivery areas. Those wishing to purchase guaranteed delivery should mail their check to: Courier-Herald, Circulation Dept. PO box 157, Enumclaw, WA, 98022.

0000

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PROOFINGDEADLINES

Display Ads Due: 10am MondayClassi�ed Ads Due: 5pm FridayAny proof NOT RETURNED by these deadlines will be considered correct AS IS. Financial reimbursement will not be made for corrections not meeting this deadline.

CLASSIFIED CATEGORIESReal Estate100Rentals500Financial2000Announcements 3000Legals3030Employment4000Services5000Misc.6000Pets7000Garage Sales8100Transportation9000

REAL ESTATEFOR SALE

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REAL ESTATEFOR RENT

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FINANCE

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

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PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

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

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ENUMCLAW1 & 2 BEDROOM apart- men t s i n Enumc law. Washer, dryer in unit. Covered parking. Small p e t s o k . $ 7 2 5 - $ 8 5 0 month. (360)825-0707

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The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

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for Feb 20 Edition

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Page 15: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Wednesday, February 06, 2013, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 15 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

7276

49

6286

94

Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic

Dr. Nathan Spencer

The Joy of Great Health!

Dr. Nathan Spencer is a naturopathic doctor with an of� ce in the Lake

Tapps / Bonney Lake area. A graduate of Bastyr University in Seattle, Dr.

Spencer offers whole family holistic care, with a special focus on children’s

health. As a naturopath, Dr. Spencer treats his patients primarily through

natural means such as herbs, supplements, and nutrition. At the same

time, his role as a licensed, primary-care physician allows Dr. Spencer to

use prescriptive drugs when necessary.

His of� ce, Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic, is a beautiful, relaxing location

where patients can receive careful, personalized care for all their concerns.

At Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic, patients can be seen for anything from

allergies, acne, and asthma, to physicals, well-child visits, and weight loss.

Dr. Spencer believes that involved patients are motivated patients,

and takes the time to make sure all questions are answered. Dr. Spencer

explains every aspect of a patient’s treatment plan, and makes sure they

receive the safe, effective, professional care they deserve.

Dr. Nathan Spencer

His of� ce, Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic, is a beautiful, relaxing location

where patients can receive careful, personalized care for all their concerns.

At Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic, patients can be seen for anything from

allergies, acne, and asthma, to physicals, well-child visits, and weight loss.

Dr. Spencer believes that involved patients are motivated patients,

and takes the time to make sure all questions are answered. Dr. Spencer

explains every aspect of a patient’s treatment plan, and makes sure they

explains every aspect of a patient’s treatment plan, and makes sure they

receive the safe, effective, professional care they deserve.

receive the safe, effective, professional care they deserve.

Between Buckley and Sumner, we are your locally owned and operated rental

store. 410 Rentals is a general tool and equipment store, carrying items for hom-

eowners and contractors. Check our web site for information on our large inven-

tory. 410 Rentals is a member of the American Rental Association and the Rental

Equipment Association of Western Washington. If we

don’t have an item, we’ll help you � nd it!

Pictured left to right: Robert Blest, Melanie Lowther,

Gail Bohnas, Victor Proulx, and Daniel Nussbaum

6286

80

410 Rentals

25018 Hwy 410 E, Buckley

6286

94

The Joy of Great Health!

YOUR2013BUSINESSNEIGHBORS

Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic

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Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic

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Lakeside Naturopathic Clinic

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Also includesour new

GREENEDITION

24/7 online visibility

The Annual Guide to Retail, Service, Business and Churches serving the Plateau and surrounding areas. Reach over 35,000 readers 14,000 printed and delivered to:

- All households in Enumclaw, Black Diamond and Buckley - Area Chambers of Commerce and Businesses

ADVERTISING DEADLINES: Deadline: February 7, 2013Published on February 27, 2013

Reserve your space TODAY!Martha ..................................360-802-8218Dottie .....................................360-802-8219Jennifer Tribbett ......360-825-2555 x2050

Announcements

DEAR B.P./ THUNDER- BOLT, You are missed and we all want you to come home. Michaela and your loving Hum- mingbird need you to come home <3 My life would not be the same without you and Pak and Tangie, our Shepards. If anyone sees my love, please let him know he is missed.YOU or a loved one have an addiction? Over 500 alcohol and drug re- hab facilities nationwide. Very private/Very Confi- dential. Inpatient care. Insurance needed. Call for immediate help! 1- 800-297-6815

Found

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

Legal Notices

Every 6 years the City must update its compre- hensive water system plan (CWSP) and water use e f f ic iency goa ls. Customers and the pub- lic are invited to partici- pate in the CWSP up- date and efficiency goal setting process by sub- mitting comments in writ- ing or at a public hearing to be held at the regular City Council meeting on March 11, 2013. See c i t y o f e n u m c l a w. n e t (search ‘efficiency goal’) for more info or contact Scott Woodbury at 360- 615-5728.# 4543172/6/13, 2/13/13

KING COUNTY FIRE DIST. # 28

SMALL WORKS ROSTER NOTICE

King County Fire District #28 maintains a Small Works Roster for gener- al and specialty licensed contractors for the re- pair, maintenance, and construction of buildings and other structures as p r o v i d e d b y R C W 39.04.155. All interested parties who wish to have their names placed on the list should submit to the District their name, address, phone number, l icense or registration number, and a resume describing the type of work performed. Small Works Roster forms may be obtained f rom the King. Co. Fire Dist. #28 off ice,1330 Wells St. , Enumclaw, WA. 98022, Mon.-Fri., 7 a.m.- 4 p.m., or cal l 360-825-5544. Under the In te r loca l Cooperation Act, other municipal corporations in King County, Washing- ton may use the roster.King County Fire District #281330 Wells ST.Enumclaw, WA. 98022Phone (360) 825-5544Fax (360) 825-9442# 4556982/6/13

City of Bonney LakeFennel Creek Trail and

192nd Avenue Sidewalks Project –

Phase 2ADVERTISEMENT FOR

BIDSNotice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the City of Bonney Lake, 19306 Bonney Lake Boulevard, P.O. Box 7380, Bonney L a k e , W a s h i n g t o n 98391, until 10 A.M. on February 27, 2013, for the Bonney Lake Fennel Creek Trail and 192nd Avenue Sidewalks Pro- ject – Phase 2.Work to be performed in- cludes:Construction of approxi- mately 3,530 linear feet

Legal Notices

of ten-foot wide porous asphalt trail; Construc- t ion of approximately 495 linear feet of eight- foot wide pile-supported trail; Construction of ap- proximately 695 linear feet of six-foot wide en- gineered wood fiber trail with 6 rest stops and 51 precast concrete land- scape steps (9 single, 42 double); Construction of 45-foot long pedestrian bridge and railing over Fennel Creek including conc re te abu tmen ts ; Construction of approxi- mately 402 linear feet of six-foot high chain link fence, two 12-foot wide double swing chain link gates, and one maze gate; Construct ion of 668 linear feet of wood rail fence; Construction of six trail benches; Con- struction of permanent signage including mis- cellaneous informational and regulatory signage; Construction of four re- movable bollards; Seed- i n g , fe r t i l i z i n g , a n d mulching; and Modifica- tions to existing irrigation system.Bid proposals will be re- ceived only by the City Clerk at the City of Bon- ney Lake, 19306 Bonney Lake Boulevard, P.O. Box 7380, Bonney Lake, Washington 98391 by 10 A.M. on February 27th, 2013, at which time they will be opened and read publicly. Clearly identify project name on all sub- mi t ted b id packages. Proposals received after the time fixed for open- ing will not be consid- ered.T h e C i t y o f B o n n ey Lake, in accordance with T i t l e V I o f t he C i v i l Rights Act of 1964, 78 S ta t . 252 , 42 U.S.C. 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subti- tle A, Office of the Sec- retary, Part 21, Nondis- crimination in Federally- assisted programs of the Department of Transpor- tation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will af- firmatively ensure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this adver- tisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 23 will be afforded full oppor tuni ty to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, col- or, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award.Contract documents in- cluding plan drawings, specifications, addenda, and plan holders list for this project will be avail- able fo r v iewing and down load ing on - l i ne through Bui lders Ex- change of Washington, I n c ( B X W A ) a t ht tp: / /www.bxwa.com. To view the documents on BXWA’s website, se- lect the following links: “ P o s t e d P r o j e c t s ” ; “Public Works”; “City of Bonney Lake”; “Projects Bidding”. Bidders are en- couraged to “Register as a Bidder” in order to re- ceive automatic e-mail notification of future ad- denda and be placed on the “Bidders List”. Con- tact the Bui lders Ex- change of Washington at (425) 258-1303 should you require further assis- tance.For questions regarding this project, please con- tact the Project Manager Art Larson at the Public Wo r k s D e p a r t m e n t , 8720 Main Street East, Bonney Lake, Washing- t o n 9 8 3 9 1 , (253) 447-4343.

Legal Notices

Each bid proposal shall be accompanied by a bid proposal deposit in cash, cer t i f ied check, cashier’s check, postal money order, or surety bond in an amount equal to at least 5 percent of the amount of such bid proposal. Checks shall be made payable to the Ci ty of Bonney Lake. Should the successful bidder fail to enter into such contract and fur- nish satisfactory perfor- mance and paymen t bond wi th in the t ime stated in the specifica- tions, the bid proposal deposit shall be forfeited to the City of Bonney Lake.The City of Bonney Lake reserves the right to re- ject any or all bids and to waive irregularities in the bid or in the bidding.No bidder may withdraw his proposal after the hours set for the opening thereof, or before award of contract, unless said award is delayed for a period exceeding sixty (60) calendar days.Eng inee r ’s Es t ima te Range: $817,000–$938,000# 4548812/6/13, 2/13/13

KING COUNTY FIRE DIST. #28

VENDOR LIST NOTICEKing Co. Fire Dist. #28 has established a ven- dor list for the purchase of equipment, supplies, materials, and services with a dollar amount es- t i m a t e d b e t w e e n $10,000 and $50,000 as p r o v i d e d b y R C W 52.14.110. All interested parties who wish to be placed on the list should submit to the Distr ict their business name, ad- dress, phone number, business descr ipt ion, and business l icense number. Vendor L is t forms may be obtained from the King Co. Fire D i s t r i c t o f f i ce , 1330 Wel ls St . , Enumclaw, WA., 98022, Mon.-Fri., 7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., or cal l 360-825-5544. Under the In te r loca l Cooperation Act, the list may be used by other municipal corporations in King County, Washing- ton.King County Fire Dist. #281330 Wells ST.Enumclaw, WA. 98022Phone: (360)825-5544Fax: (360)825-9442# 4557052/6/13

CITY OF BONNEY LAKE

NOTICE OF APPLICA- TION FOR, TYPE III

SITE PLAN, SHORE- LINE SUBSTANTIAL

DEVELOPMENT PER- MIT WITH VARIANCE, SEPA ENVIRONMEN- TAL THRESHOLD DE- TERMINATION, AND PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE IS HEREBY G I V E N , t h a t I s o l a Homes submitted an ap- plication to the City of Bonney Lake on January 7, 2013 for a Type III S i t e P l a n R e v i e w , Shorel ine Substant ial Deve lopmen t Pe r m i t (SSDP) with Variance, and a State Environmen- tal Pol icy Act (SEPA) Environmental Review.NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, pursuant Bon- n ey L a ke M u n i c i p a l Code 14.70.070, the City of Bonney Lake Hearing Examiner will convene a Public Hearing at 9:00 A.M. on Friday, April 5, 2013, wi th in the Ci ty Council Chambers at the C i ty o f Bonney Lake Just ice Center, 9002 Ma in S t . E . , Bonney Lake, Washington. The hear ing is to receive

Legal Notices

public testimony on the Park Place Apartments Shorel ine Substant ial Deve lopmen t Pe r m i t (SSDP) with Variance.Pro jec t Name: Par k P l a c e A p a r t m e n t s F i l e N u m b e r s : P L N 2 0 1 3 - 0 1 5 9 0 t o P L N 2013-01594Description of propo- sal: The applicant in- tends to develop a 92- unit apartment complex on 4.82 acres within the shoreline environment of Lake Tapps. The propo- sal also includes con- struct ion of a pr ivate dock with multiple boat slips for the residents of Park Place. The subject site is zoned High Den- si ty Resident ial (R-3) and is located within the jurisdiction of the City of Bonney Lake Shoreline Master Plan.Applicant/Owner: Isola Homes, Colt Boehme, 555 South Renton Vil- lage Place, Suite 570, Renton, WA 98507.Authorized agent: Pac- West Engineering, LLC, Brandon Smith, 10209 B r i dgepor t Way SW, Suite C-1, Lakewood, WA 98499.Site Location: The pro- ject is located at 7001 West Tapps H ighway within the SE 1/4 Sec- t ion 28, Township 20 Nor th, Range 5 East, Wi l lamet te Mer id ian , Pierce County, Washing- ton. The Pierce County Assessor Parcel Num- bers identifying these p r o p e r t i e s a r e : 0 5 2 0 2 7 2 0 0 7 , 0 5 2 0 2 8 1 0 1 3 , 0 5 2 0 2 8 1 0 1 5 , 3 0 3 7 0 0 0 2 2 1 , 0 5 2 0 2 5 1 0 2 8 , 0 5 2 0 2 8 1 0 3 1 , a n d 0520381032.Lead Agency: City of Bonney LakeEnvironmental Deter- mination: The City of Bonney Lake has re- v iewed the proposed project for probable ad- verse environmental im- pacts and expects to is- sue a determination of nonsignificance (DNS) for this project. The op- tional DNS process in WAC 197-11-355 is be- ing used. This may be your only opportunity to

Legal Notices

comment on the environ- mental impacts of the proposed project.Public Comment: Pub- lic Comment on the DNS will be accepted through February 20, 2013. The appeal per iod wi l l be designated on the DNS. Comments on the SSDP with Variance will be ac- cepted through March 12, 2013. The applica- tion and any related doc- uments are available for public review during nor- mal business hours at the City of Bonney Lake Communi ty Deve lop- ment Depar tment , a t 8720 Main Street East, Bonney Lake, WA. After March 12, 2013, the ap- p l ica t ion and re la ted documents will be locat- ed at 9002 Main St E, Bonney Lake, WA.Staf f Contact : Ryan Har r iman , Assoc ia te Planner, City of Bonney Lake Community Devel- o p m e n t D e p a r t m e n t Phone: (253) 447-4350, Email: [email protected] ney-lake.wa.us For Citizens with Disabil- ities who are requesting translators or adaptive equipment for communi- cation purposes, the City is asking to be notified as soon as possible of the type of service or equipment needed for the hearing.# 4550752/6/13, 2/13/13

CITY OF BUCKLEY, WASHINGTON

RESOLUTION NO. 13-01

Section 1.A RESOLU- T I O N O F T H E C I T Y COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF BUCKLEY, WASH- INGTON, DECLARING AN INTENT TO SELL THE CITY OF BUCK- L E Y N AT U R A L G A S UTILITY AND ISSUING A REQUEST FOR PRO- P O S A L S F O R T H E PURCHASE OF THE UTILIY.

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

CITY OF BUCKLEYSALE OF NATURAL

GAS UTILITYSealed proposals will be received by the under- s igned at the Ci ty of B u c k l e y 9 3 3 M a i n Street, P.O. Box 1960,

Legal Notices

Buck ley, Wash ing ton 98321, up to 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, June 13, 2013 for purchase of the City’s Natural Gas Utility in accordance with RCW 35.94, Sale or Lease of Municipal Utilities. Bid- ders shall be a Public or Private Natural Gas Util- ity Companies, regulated by the Washington State Utilities and Trade Com- miss ion (WUTC) who are currently in full com- pliance with State and Federal regulations.The Proposals wil l be considered by the City Council for a period of time following the due date. All proposals must include requested infor- mation and comply with the specifications and requirements of the RFP Document. All Propo- sals must be accompa- nied by a certified check, cashier’s check, money order, or bid bond pay- able to the “City of Buck- ley” and in an amount of not less than five per- cent (5%) of the total amount bid. Pursuant to RCW 35.94.020, each bid shall state that the bidder agrees that if his or her bid is accepted and he or she fails to comply therewith within t he t ime he re ina f t e r specified, the check or deposit shall be forfeited to the city.Potential Bidders may obtain a copy of the RFP D o c u m e n t , f r e e o f charge, in electronic for- mat from the City Clerk of the City of Buckley ( 360 ) 829 -1921 , ex t 7801. In obtaining the RFP Document, Bidders must register with com- pany name, physical ad- dress, phone and fax numbers, and email ad- dress. Registration is required to obtain Ad- denda.The City of Buckley ex- p ress ly reser ves the right to reject any or all Proposals and to waive minor irregularities or in- formalities and to Accept the Proposal to the re- sponsive, responsible bidder as it serves the interest of the City, in ac- cordance with the pro-

Legal Notices

cess set form in RCW 35.94. JOANNE STARR, DEP- UTY CITY CLERK# 4503471 / 1 6 / 1 3 , 1 / 2 3 / 1 3 , 1/30/13, 2/6/13

Shawn Roehr, 28280 State Route 410 E Buck- ley, WA 98321, is seek- ing coverage under the Washington State De- par tment of Ecology’s Construction Stormwater N P D E S a n d S t a t e Waste Discharge Gener- al Permit.The proposed project, Arrow Lumber & Hard- ware, LLC is located at 28280 State Route 410 E in Buckley in Pierce County.Th is pro ject invo lves ±0.92 acres of soil dis- turbance for commercial construction activities. Stormwater will be dis- charged to Printz Basin.Any persons desiring to present their views to the Washington State Department of Ecology regarding this applica- t ion, or in terested in Ecology’s action on this application, may notify Ecology in writing no lat- er than 30 days of the last date of publication of this notice. Ecology re- views public comments and considers whether discharges from this pro- ject would cause a mea- surable change in re- ceiv ing water qual i ty, and, if so, whether the project is necessary and in the overriding public interest according to Tier I I ant idegradat ion re- quirements under WAC 173-201A-320.Comments can be sub- mitted to:Department of EcologyAttn: Water Quality Pro- g r a m , C o n s t r u c t i o n StormwaterP.O. Box 47696, Olym- pia, WA 98504-7696# 4542492/6/13

NOTICE OF DEVELOPMENT APPLICATION

And Public Hearing

Pyroland Fireworks; (File #CU-2013-01)

To:Interested Agencies and

Legal Notices

PublicSubject:Pyroland Fireworks con- ditional use permit and hearing noticeProject Description:To obtain a conditional use permit for a Type 2 Home Occupation at. to place up to four semi- truck trailers on a 120 x 100 foo t a rea in the west, center portion of the lot. The trailers will be filled with fireworks in t he sp r i ng and then transported to other are- as for retail sales in June and July.Proponent:Joel CowartContact:Joel CowartLocation:28303 112th St. EParcel Number:0619047004Date of Application:January 27, 2013Determined Complete:January 31, 2013SEPA Determination:ExemptPublic Hearing:The Cond i t iona l Use Permit public hearing will be 6 p.m. February 28, 2013, at the Buckley Multipurpose Building lo- c a t e d a t 8 1 1 M a i n Street, Buckley.The purpose of the hear- ing is to obtain public comment on a proposal to warehouse and store fireworks (1.4 consumer fireworks) inside semi- truck trailers.Not ice of Complete Status:The application is com- plete.Completed application materials and supporting documentation used in evaluating the proposed project referred to as the Pyroland Fireworks Con- ditional Use Permit and is available at Buckley Planning Depar tment, P. O. B ox 1 9 6 0 , 8 1 1 Main Street, Buckley, Washington 98321.It is the right of any per- son to review and com- ment on the application, receive not ice of and participate in any hear- ings, request a copy of decis ions once made

Continued on next page...

Page 16: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 16 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, February 06, 2013 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

877-818-0783

AIRLINES ARE HIRING

Call 800-488-0386www.CenturaOnline.com

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINEFROM HOME

Legal Notices

and exercise any rights of appeal. Written com- ments should be deliv- ered to Buckley City Hall no later than 5:30 p.m. February 20, 2013. Final decision on the applica- tion shall be made within the time Periods estab- lished under BMC 20.01.The City of Buckley does not discriminate on the basis of disabilities. If you need special accom- modation, please con- tact City Hall within three business days before the publ ic hear ing at ( 360 ) 829 - 1921 ex t . 7801.Staff Contact:C i t y P l a n n e r K a t hy James, (306) 829-1921 ext. 7812# 4550512/6/13

SUPERIOR COURT OFWASHINGTON FOR

KING COUNTYThe Estate of

CHARLES NORMAN WILSON,

Deceased.Case No.

13-4-00420-5KNTPROBATE NOTICE TO

CREDITORS(RCW 11.40.030)

CAROLYN L. GABRIEL- SON and MARK L. GA- BRIELSON have been appointed as Co-Execu- tors/ Personal Repre- sentatives of this estate. Any person hav ing a claim against the dece- dent that arose before the decedent ’s death must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise appli- cable statute of limita- tions, present the claim in the manner as provid- ed in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to one o f t he Persona l Representatives or the Personal Representa- t ive’s attorneys at the address stated below a copy of the claim and fil- ing the original of the claim with the Court in which the probate pro- ceed ings were com- menced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Rep-

Legal Notices

resentat ive served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided un- der RCW 11.40.020(1) (c); or (2) four months after the date of f i rst publication of the notice. If the claim is not pre- sented within this time frame, the claim is forev- er barred, except as oth- erwise provided in RCW 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 a n d 11.40.060. This bar is ef- fec t i ve as t o c l a ims against both the dece- dent’s probate and non- probate assets.Date of Filing Copy of Notice to Creditors:January 29, 2013.Date of First Publication: February 5, 2013.FA R R L AW G RO U P, PLLCB y : J e s s i c a Au r e l i a Brown, WSBA #43439P.O. Box 890Enumclaw, WA 98022Attorneys for Co-Execu- tors/ Personal Repre- sentatives/s/ Carolyn L. GabrielsonCo-Executor/Personal Representative/s/ Mark L. GabrielsonCo-Executor/Personal Representative# 4555022/6/13, 2/13/13, 2/20/13

SUPERIOR COURT OFWASHINGTON FOR

KING COUNTYThe Estate of

ELEANOR F. MCCOY,Deceased.Case No.

13-4-00678-0KNTPROBATE NOTICE TO

CREDITORS(RCW 11.40.030)

CHRISTOPHER WEB- BER has been appoint- ed as Executor/ Person- al Representative of this estate. Any person hav- ing a claim against the decedent that arose be- fo r e t h e d e c e d e n t ’s death must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limi- t a t i ons , p re se n t t h e claim in the manner as p r o v i d e d i n R C W 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Person- al Representative or the Personal Representa- tive’s attorney at the ad- dress stated below a copy of the claim and fil- ing the original of the

Legal Notices

claim with the Court in which the probate pro- ceed ings were com- menced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Rep- resentat ive served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided un- der RCW 11.40.020(1) (c); or (2) four months after the date of f i rst publication of the notice. If the claim is not pre- sented within this time frame, the claim is forev- er barred, except as oth- erwise provided in RCW 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 a n d 11.40.060. This bar is ef- fec t i ve as t o c l a ims against both the dece- dent’s probate and non- probate assets.Date of Filing Copy of Notice to Creditors:January 29, 2013.Date of First Publication: February 5, 2013.FA R R L AW G RO U P, PLLCB y : J e s s i c a Au r e l i a Brown, WSBA #43439P.O. Box 890Enumclaw, WA 98022Attorneys for Executor/ Personal Representative/s/ Christopher WebberExecutor/Personal Rep- resentative# 4555012/6/13, 2/13/13, 2/20/13

SUPERIOR COURT OFWASHINGTON FOR PIERCE COUNTY

The Estate of MARILYN A. CARKIN,

Deceased.Case No.

13-4-00092-2PROBATE NOTICE TO

CREDITORS(RCW 11.40.030)

BRADLEY A. CARKIN has been appointed as Executor/ Personal Rep- resentative of this es- tate. Any person having a claim against the de- cedent that arose before the decedent ’s death must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise appli- cable statute of limita- tions, present the claim in the manner as provid- ed in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Represen- tative or the Personal Representative’s attor- ney at the address stat-

Legal Notices

ed below a copy of the claim and filing the origi- nal of the claim with the Court in which the pro- bate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented with- in the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided u n d e r R C W 11.40.020(1) (c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication o f the not ice. I f the claim is not presented within this time frame, t he c l a im i s fo reve r barred, except as other- wise provided in RCW 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 a n d 11.40.060. This bar is ef- fec t i ve as t o c l a ims against both the dece- dent’s probate and non- probate assets.Date of Filing Copy of Notice to Creditors:January 22, 2013.Date of First Publication: January 28, 2013.FA R R L AW G RO U P, PLLCBy: M. Owen Gabr iel- son, WSBA #34214P.O. Box 890Enumclaw, WA 98022Attorneys for Executor/ Personal Representative/s/ Bradley A. CarkinExecutor/Personal Rep- resentative# 4531671/30/13, 2/6/13, 2/13/13

WHITE RIVER SCHOOL DISTRICT

240 NORTH A STREETBUCKLEY, WA 98321

360-829-3393CALL FOR BIDS

Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received at the Business Office of the White River Schoo l D i s t r i c t , 240 North A Street, Buckley WA 98321, unti l Mon- day, February 25, 2013 at 2:00 P.M. for the re- moval of the exist ing freezer/cooler located at Glacier Middle School and installation of a new p r e fa b r i c a t e d f r e e z - er/cooler unit. This pro- ject involves three sep- arate bids.BID NO. 100 Prefabri- cated freezer/cooler unitBID NO. 101 Electrical BID NO. 102 Architectu- ral (Concrete and Gen- eral Construction)B i d d o c u m e n t s a n d specif ications may be obtained through the of- fice of Harthorne Hagen Architects, 1725 8th Av- enue N , Sea t t l e WA 98109, (206) 285-3555 or from the White River

Legal Notices

School District, Business O f f i ce , 240 No r th A S t r e e t , B u ck l ey WA 98321. The Board of Directors reserves the right to ac- cept or reject any or all bids and to waive infor- malities. No bidder may withdraw his bid after the time set for the opening.Note: All bids should be clearly marked on the outside of the envelope identifying the type of bid and the date o f b id opening Monday, Feb- ruary 25, 2013 2:00 P.M.BY ORDER OF:Keith Banks,Director of Human and Administrative SvsWhite River School Dis- trict #416# 4528211/30/13, 2/6/13

EmploymentAesthetics

Hair Stylists: Trendz Hair Design has stations for lease. $430/ m o n t h . 1 / 2 o f f f i r s t month. Cal l Shana or Sheena (360)802-9786

EmploymentGeneral

Puget Sound Energy is accepting applications for future Pathway to Apprentice #27358 openings at locations throughout the Puget

Sound area! Applicants must be at least 18 years of age, have a high school diploma

or GED and 1 full year of high school level

algebra with a grade of “C” or better or college equivalent. Applications

must be submitted by 3/4/2013. PSE is an Equal Opportunity

employer. We encourage persons of diverse

backgrounds to apply.

Visit http://www.pse.com/careers

to apply.

BUSY BUT FUN medical office seeks par t t ime MA. One day weekly, rare Saturday. Fax cover let ter and resume to: (360)825-0568. Sense of humor required.

EmploymentGeneral

CARRIER ROUTES

AVAILABLE

IN YOUR AREA

Call Today1-253-872-6610

Enthusiastic, hardwork- i n g s a l e s a s s o c i a t e needed for local feed store. Need to be able to lift 50 lbs and can work evenings and weekends. Must have cash register exper ience, computer skills and animal knowl- edge. This is a part-time position but could lead to more hours as spr ing and summer approach. Please fax resume to: (360)802-3863.EQUAL EMPLOYMENT

OPPORTUNITYAll employment adver- tisements in this news- paper are sub jec t to Federal and State laws which make it illegal to adver t ise any prefer- ence, limitation or dis- cr iminat ion based on age, sex, marital status, race, creed, color, na- tional origin or the pres- ence of any sensory, m e n t a l o r p h y s i c a l handicap, unless based upon a bona fide occu- pat ional qual i f icat ion. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any adver tisement for em- ployment which is in vio- lation of the law. It is the advertisers responsibility to be aware of federal, state and local laws and regulations pertaining to employment. I t is this newspaper’s right to re- fuse all advertisements which do not comply with regulations.

EVENT HELPMarch 18th - 25th. Renton area. Van driv- ers, janitorial, custom- er service. E-Ver i fy. Agrucultural co-op.

Call: 425-656-0224

Now hir ing: Par t-t ime, experienced Sushi wait- ress. Call (253)266-7020

WAREHOUSE/ASSEMBLY

SEASONAL WORKUNTIL JUNE

Renton area. Agricul- tural co-op. $9.20 per hour. We E-Verify.

Call: 425-656-0224

EmploymentGeneral

NOTICE TO READERS This newspaper makes every effor t to ensure you are responding to a legitimate job opportu- nity. Most employers do not ask for money as par t of the application process. Do not send money, especially out of state, give any credit card information or call a 900# in order to respond to an employment ad. The majority of our job opportunity ads are for wage based positions; however; some are com- mission based, as well as, multi-level marketing, self-employment and in- dependent contract op- portunities, in some cas- es, a small investment may be required and you may be asked to work from your home. Read- ers may want to obtain a repor t by the Be t te r Business Bureau, Wash- ington Attorney Gener- al’s office or the Federal Trade Commission.

VETERINARY assistant, c leaning kennels and floors. Tuesday - Friday, 3pm-6pm and Saturday 9 a m - 1 p m . C a n g e t school credits for work. Apply in person. Moun- ta in V iew Pet C l in ic, 18215 9 th S t ree t E . Ste#106, Lake Tapps, WA 98391

VETERINARYASSISTANT

needed at Country Ani- mal Hospital in Enum- claw. We are a busy, 4 doctor practice looking for someone to cover Tuesday - Thursday af- ternoons, Friday & Sat- urday al l day. Exper i- e n c e i s p r e f e r r e d . Please drop off cover let ter and resume at: 24407 SE 440th Street, Enumclaw

EmploymentMedia

REPORTERReporter sought for staff opening with the Penin- sula Daily News, a six- d a y n e w s p a p e r o n Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula that includes the cities of Por t Angeles, Sequim, Po r t To w n s e n d a n d Forks (yes, the “Twilight” Forks, but no vampires or werewolves). Br ing your experience from a weekly or small daily -- from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already ac- quired while sharpening your talent with the help o f veteran newsroom leaders. This is a gener- al assignment reporting position in our Port An- geles office in which be- ing a self-starter must be demonstrated through professional experience. Port Angeles-based Pe- ninsula Daily News, cir- culation 16,000 daily and 15,000 Sunday (plus a websi te gett ing up to o n e m i l l i o n h i t s a month), publishes separ- ate editions for Clallam and Jefferson counties. Check out the PDN at www.pen insu lada i l y - news.com and the beau- ty and recreational op- p o r t u n i t i e s a t http://www.peninsuladai- l y n e w s . c o m / s e c - tion/pdntabs#vizguide. In-person visit and tryout are required, so Wash- ington/Northwest appli- cants given preference. Send cover letter, re- sume and five best writ- ing and photography c l ips to Leah Leach, managing editor/news, P.O. Box 1330, 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 , o r ema i l leah.leach@peninsula- dailynews.com.

EmploymentSales & Retail

Wanted:Energetic

self starter!Long term. Great

benefits. Fun place to work. Will train

right person.Gamblin Motors,

Enumclaw.Ask for Rick Josie

or Tom Rebek. (360)825-3567

EmploymentTransportation/Drivers

Diesel Mechanic:Tacoma, WA.

Great Pay / Benefits. $17-20/hr.

253-475-0334 or APPLYdurhamschoolservices.com

or stop by:3212 S Sprague Ave.

www.durhamschoolservices.com

DRIVER --Qual i fy for any por t ion o f $0.03 quarterly bonus: $0.01 Safety, $0.01 Produc- tion, $0.01 MPG. Two raises in first years. 3 months recent experi- e n c e . 8 0 0 - 4 1 4 - 9 5 6 9 www.driveknight.com

GORDON TRUCKING I n c . C D L - A D r i v e r s Needed. Dedicated & OTR Positions Available! Consistent Miles, Bene- fits, 401k & EOE. Sign On Bonus! Recruiters ava i lable 7 days /wk ! Call: 866-725-9669

START THENEW YEAR

WITH A NEWOPPORTUNITY!

WA/OR/CA OwnerOperators wanted!Paid weekly IN FULL

on ALL miles.$.92 per mile on ourauthority and plates / $.94 on your authority

and plates.100% “pass through”

Fuel SurchargeLumpers paid in advance.

Fuel card program.All detention paid.

Late model dry trailers with no fees.

GET MILES, GET

HOME, GET PAID!!

Call Doug at: 209-321-1747

or Craig at:253-954-6885

TIRED of Being Gone? We get you home! Call Haney Truck Line one of the best NW heavy haul car r ie rs. Great pay/ benefits package. 1-888- 414-4467.www.gohaney.com

Health Care EmploymentCaregivers

CAREGIVER JOBS AVAILABLEPierce County

Benefits included. Flexible hours.

Call: 253-535-4202Send resume to:

[email protected]

* CNA’s *Brand New

Dimentia Care Neighborhood

Opening soon in Buckley

Positions available for all shifts. Friendly, caring attitude a must. Come join our dynamic team!

Apply in person Heritage House Assisted Living & Memory Care:

28833 Hwy 410 E,Buckley WA 98321.

...Continued from previous page

Page 17: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Wednesday, February 06, 2013, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 17 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.comHealth Care Employment

General

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

CNA wanted at assisted l i v i n g c o m mu n i t y i n E n u m c l a w . C a l l (360)825-7780

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

LPN wanted ful l- t ime, benefits at High Point Village Assisted Living. (360)825-7780.

Business Opportunities

Make Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready Drink-Snack Vending Machines. Mini- mum $4K to $40K+ In- vestment Required. Lo- cations Available. BBB Accred i ted Bus iness. (800) 962-9189

EmploymentPublications

ATTRACT MONEY and Success Like a Magnet! To get your free “Money M a k i n g S e c r e t s Revealed” CD, please call! (425) 296-4459

Schools & Training

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for hands on Avia- t ion Maintenance Ca- reer. FAA approved pro- gram. Financial aid i f q u a l i f i e d - H o u s i n g available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783

AT T E N D C O L L E G E ONLINE f rom Home. *Med ica l , *Bus iness, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Fi- nancial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 800-488-0386www.CenturaOnline.com

Professional ServicesLegal Services

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparat ion. Inc ludes custody, support, prop- erty division & bills. BBB m e m b e r. ( 5 0 3 ) 7 7 2 - 5295. www.paralegalal- ternatives.com [email protected]

Professional ServicesMusic Lessons

PIANOLESSONS For the young and

young at heart.Karen (360)802-9314

Professional ServicesProfessional

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

and estimates.Monday - Friday

8am to 5pm.23929 SE 440th,

Enumclaw(360)825-5775

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

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no additional cost.

Home ServicesAppliance Repair

B&RREFRIGERATION

829-1710Raymond Stine

owner

Major Household Appliances

Repair All Makes & Models

GAS & ELECTRICFURNACES

COMMERCIALREFRIGERATION

Serving South King & Pierce

Area Since 1973

578386

Home ServicesBackhoe/Dozing/Tractor

BACKHOEBulldozing, Dump Truck,

Clearing, Logging,Foundations,

Ecology Block Walls

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

#hillijc232qz

Home ServicesCarpet Clean/Install

Gosstekk Carpet & Upholstery

Special

4 ROOMS &HALLWAY $100

360-829-4121253-389-1698

Wrights ServicesOver 40 yrs. Experience

Carpet CleaningUpholstery Cleaning

Carpet RepairRestretching Carpets

Pet Odor RemovalSqueaky Floor Repairwww.wrightsservices.com

Free EstimateExcellent Service

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

Home ServicesConcrete Contractors

Dennis Gustafson360-825-7983

360-239-2203 cell

5779

66

Licensed,

Lic#

The Courier-Herald Reaches

Far Beyond Other Advertis-

ing Vehicles+81.4% over

direct mail

+54.2% over Val Pak

+94.1% over Red Plum

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

Home ServicesConcrete Contractors

Lic#JRDCO**044DK

JRDConstruction

360-897-2573

Larry Biller Over 30 Yrs. ExperienceCommercial - Residential

Kubota Service:

All Small Jobs Welcome

License # JRDCO**044DK

7350

56

Home ServicesGeneral Contractors

577955

General Contractor

Lic# GLCCOSC904KF

360-825-1132ENUMCLAW, WA

5779

81

Chris Eggersowner

360-825-1443Cont# EGGERHC940LM

Home Construction & Remodeling

CONTRACTOR’SNOTICE

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

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

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

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

Home ServicesDrywall/Plaster

PUGET SOUND DRYWALL CO.

“Where Quality is the Difference.”

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

(253) 862-7533

BONDED •INSUREDPUGETSD178B4

577964

pugetsounddrywallco.com

Home ServicesFencing & Decks

ALL AMERICAN Fenc- ing. Farm Fencing: Ce- dar, Chain Link, Vinyl R a i l . Fe n c e R e p a i r , Gates. Free Estimates. Cal l James, 253-831- 9906. Bonded/Insured. allamal921p7

Home ServicesGutter Services

Gutter:ir

FREE Estimates

Enumclaw Rain Gutters

7260

07

253-230-5884

Home ServicesHandyperson

578389

A PROFESSIONALHANDYMAN

360/893-2429or cell 253/691-1324www.rboydproservices.com

Roo�ng

Remodel &

ALL Home Repair

SMALL JOBS OUR SPECIALITY

30 Years Experience!

Bonney LakeHandyman

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

Any Size Jobs!Ofice253.863.4243Cell 206.979.1302bonneylakehandyman

.comBONNELH953P8

The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no additional cost.

Home ServicesHandyperson

SCOTT SCHOFIELD

HOME REPAIRS

Free consultationsJust give me a call

[email protected]

Licensed~ BondedSCOTTSH897CQ

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

Best Rates!

Free quotes!

We remove everything!!

253-293-4946

Free Scrap Metal Pick-up

Appliances, car parts, junk car removal, old car batteries, fencing, pipes. Anything metal hauled

away for FREE! (253)397-9100

Home ServicesHeating/Air Conditioning

CODE MECHANICALHeating &

Air ConditioningResidential/Commercial

Sales & ServiceBuckley (253)377-2787

CODEMI*932KQ

Home ServicesHouse/Cleaning Service

GREEN CLEAN! Top to bottom, A to Z, Call Julie! Affordable house & office cleaning. Li- censed 253-561-1469

I CLEAN, YOU RELAX!! Leave everything to me including supplies! Very reasonable rates! Hon- est and reliable. Suzie’s Cleaning Service; 253- 590-3119.

Home ServicesLandscape Services

A-1 QUICK LANDSCAPING

25% OFF!All kinds of yardwork:

sod, seed, tree pruning mowing and fencing.

Senior DiscountWe accept all credit cards!

253-228-9101206-229-5632

Lic# quickl*984cr *Bonded/Insured

A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING

* Cleanup * Trimming* Weeding * Pruning

* Sod * Seed* Bark * Rockery

*Complete Yard Work 425-226-3911 206-722-2043

Lic# A1SHEGL034JM

ALL AMERICAN Land- scaping. Hedging, Prun- i ng , Ya rd C lean Up, Mowing Service, Gutter & Roof Cleaning. Free Estimates. Call James, 2 5 3 - 8 3 1 - 9 9 0 6 . a l l a - mal921p7

Danny’s Landscape& Tree Service

Winter Clean Up:Expert Pruning, Ornamen-

tal, Fruit Trees, Haul,Gutters, Roof Moss Con- trol, Pressure Washing

25+ Yrs Experience15% Senior Discount

253-353-9948

FRONTIER Landscape: Don’t have time for your lawn? We offer the best $ in town! Complete care services available; mow- ing, pruning, thatching, aerating, etc. Call today 360-829-6408.

Home ServicesLandscape Services

K & K Landscaping

Lawn MaintenanceTrimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up

Bark, HaulingAll kinds of yard work!253-862-4347253-230-1235

Bonded & InsuredLic# KKLANKL897MK

Home ServicesLawn/Garden Service

K & K Landscaping

Lawn MaintenanceTrimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up

Bark, HaulingAll kinds of yard work!253-862-4347253-230-1235

Bonded & InsuredLic# KKLANKL897MK

Home ServicesPainting

687860

End Time On Time

Guaranteed!

3rd Generation Residential Expert

Call for a Free Estimate

253-862-4400

OtisHunterOwner

INTERIOR SALE$150 or 15% off

any 3 rooms or more

InteriorsExteriorsRepaints

LICENSED BONDED INSURED360-825-9472

5779

69 Free EstimatesHandyman

Services Available

AK Painting and

Construction, IncInterior to Exterior

Painting,Remodels, Gutter Cleaning, Drywall,

Roof Cleaning, Roofing, Pressure Washing, Commercial Offices

Day or NightJobs Big or Small

22 Years ExperienceCall Ken

(253)[email protected], bonded, insured

KPAINPC957CB

Home ServicesPlumbing

JOE’SPLUMBINGRepair, Remodel,

Water Heaters,Hose Bibbs. Low Rates.

Free Estimates(253)381-4525

Lic# joesp183tq

Home ServicesPlumbing

Jim Wetton’s PLUMBING

360 825-7720CONTR#JIMWEP#137PB

Residential & Commercial Service

& Repairs

Fast, Friendly ServiceWe’re Your Service Specialists

Call “RABBIT”

5783

80

577983

DOUGLASPLUMBING

253/447-8754360/825-1493

DOUGLP*045B9

JT’s Plumbing Repair est 1987

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

*Plumbing Repairs*Drain Cleaning

*Fixture InstallationsJTSPLR*110JP

Home ServicesPressure Washing

HOME SERVICESPressure WashingWindow WashingGutter Cleaning

Commercial, ResidentialFree Estimates!

Competitive Prices!

(253) 205-4390Lic# LUMINCS885NS

Home ServicesRoofing/Siding

ROOFING &REMODELINGSenior DiscountsFree Estimates

Expert Work253-850-5405

American Gen. Contractor Better Business BureauLic #AMERIGC923B8

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

ALL TREE REMOVAL

Orting, WADedicated to safety

Priced to please 30 yrs residential exp. Professional logger &

Certifined arboriston staff!

(360)893-8225ALLTRTR933N1

KNOLL TREE SERVICE

“The Tree People” Tree Removal/Thinning,

Stump Grinding,Brush Hauling, Etc!FREE ESTIMATES

253-380-1481www.knolltreeservice.comLICENSED, BONDED, INSURED

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

J&J TREE SERVICE

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

Removals,Topping, Pruning

LIC# JJTOPJP921JJ

Home ServicesWindow Cleaning

TOM’S WINDOWCLEANING

Commercial, ResidentialGutter cleaning,Gutter whitening,

Moss control,Pressure washing,New construction

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

Domestic ServicesChild Care Offered

Bonney Lake Montessori

is now enrolling children 30 months to

five years for preschool and

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

Call to schedule a classroom tour and meet our teachers!

(253)862-8599

Daycare home in Melody Park, Enumclaw. Days, nights or weekends. 23 years experience. 360- 802-9514 or 253-951- 1298. Lic.#5116.

Forever FriendsChildcare & Early

Learningin Bonney Lake

is accepting applica- tions for full-time chil- dren ages 2 and older.

Call for appt. (253)862-9670

Lic#131263

KELLY LAKEMONTESSORI

has 3 full time openings in the Toddler Program 12 -30 months. There is also 1 space available in the preschool/kindergart- en program. Please give us a call to arrange for a school tour.

253-447-4445

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

The Courier-Herald is

Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while

our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no ad-ditional cost.

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

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

Page 18: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 18 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, February 06, 2013 www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

Domestic ServicesPreschool Openings

TRINITY LUTHERAN

PRESCHOOLMinistry of

Trinity Lutheran Church

Since 1978

Taking enrollment for 2013/2014

school year.Half day classes for

3-5 year-olds. Activities included: Learning Centers; Blocks, Sensory, Puzzles, Creative

Art, Science & Discovery, Reading, Writing, Loft Quiet Area, Music & Wor-ship, Large Muscle Play (indoor & out), Large Fenced Play

Area, Field Trips (o� & on-site), Special Family

Events & More.West Campus of Trinity Lutheran

ChurchCall

360-825-6522 for information

& tour.7357

22

Appliances

Appliance of Enumclaw

Sales, service, repair and parts.

Home of the lowest prices.

Drive a little save a lot!

All makes all models. In home service.

Reconditioned applianc- es, new freight, dam- aged, new and used

parts, washers, dryers, stoves. Starting at

$79.99. Refrigerators, freezer

starting at $99.99. Delivery is available.

1125 Roosevelt Ave. EEnumclaw, Wa

360-825-2722

Cemetery Plots

1 CEMETERY PLOT for sale at Sunset Hills Me- morial Park in the “Gar- den of Rest” lot #44, place #9. $22 ,500. Sell- er to pay transfer fees. Contact Mike or Vicki: 425-255-13812 BEAUTIFUL Adjacent Lots. In the Immaculate Rock of Ages Garden of Washington Memor ial Park in Seatac. $4,800 each or both for $7,750. 253-631-3734ABBEY VIEW Cemetery in Briar. Single plot in Cascade View, Lot #39, Space #13. Can accom- modate up to 2. Valued at $3100. Asking $1500 or best offer. Call Marcy, 206-240-9209

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

Cemetery Plots

3 SIDE-BY-SIDE Burial Plots for Sale at Sunset Hills Memorial Park in Bellevue. Highly sought- a f te r l oca t ion in the “Garden of Prayer”, Lot 119: P lo ts 2 , 3 & 4 (these plots have been sel l ing for as high as $22,000 each in this gar- den). The seller is ask- ing for $17,000 for each plot or $32,000 for two plots and $46,000 for all three. If you are interest- ed in viewing the plots, please go to the Memori- al Park during business hours and ask for a fami- ly counselor.4 CEMETARY PLOTS in the Her i tage Garden next to the Jewish Es- tates at Sunset Hills Me- m o r i a l i n B e l l ev u e . Beautiful, serene resting place. These are one of a kind and can only be purchased from individu- als. Valued at $22,000 each. Price negotiable. Will sell separately or as a group. Call: (206)568- 3227

ACACIA Memorial Park, “Birch Garden”, (2) adja- cent cemetery plots, #3 & #4. Se l l ing $4,000 each or $7,500 both. Lo- cated in Shoreline / N. Seatt le. Cal l or email Emmons Johnson, 206- 7 9 4 - 2 1 9 9 , [email protected] SETTING overlooking Seattle at Sunset Hil ls Memorial Cemetery in Bellevue. Olympic View Urn Gar- den, Lot 2026, Space #18. Includes: Plot, Mar- ble Marker and Installa- tion for only $5,000. Val- u e d a t $ 6 , 0 4 7 p e r Cemetery. Call 425-888- 1930 or email janetsli- [email protected]$ 6 , 5 0 0 * C E M E T E RY Plots; hurry, only 2 left! Beautiful, quiet, peaceful space in the Garden of Devotion. Perfect for a fami ly a rea, ensures side by side burial. Lo- cated in Sunset Hills Ce- metery, lot 74A, near the f l a g . O r i g i n a l l y $10,000...Selling for only $6,500 (*when purchase of 2 spaces or more). Please call Don today at 425-746-6994.SUNSET HILLS Memori- al Cemetery in Bellevue. 1 plot available in the sold out Garden of Lin- coln. Space 328, Block A, Lot 11. Similar plots offered by Cemetery at $22 ,000 . Se l l i ng fo r $12,000 or best offer. Call 360-387-8265SUNSET HILLS Memori- al Cemetery in Bellevue. 2 s ide by s ide p lo ts available in the Sold Out Garden of Devotion, 9B, S p a c e 9 a n d 1 0 . $20 ,000 each nego - t i a b l e . A l s o , 1 p l o t available in Garden of Devotion, 10B, space 5, $12,500 negotiable. Call 503-709-3068 or e-mail [email protected]

Electronics

Dish Network lowest na- tionwide price $19.99 a m o n t h . F R E E H B O / Cinemax/Starz FREE Blockbuster. FREE HD- DVR and instal l . Next day install 1-800-375- 0784DISH Network. Starting at $19.99/month PLUS 3 0 P r e m i u m M o v i e Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Instal- lation! CALL - 877-992- 1237

Electronics

Promotional prices start at $19.99 a month for DISH for 12 months. Call Today 800 -291-4921 and ask about Next Day Installation.

*REDUCE YOUR cable bill! * Get a 4-Room All- Digital Satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting at $ 1 9 . 9 9 / m o . F R E E HD/DVR upgrade fo r new callers, SO CALL NOW. 1-800-699-7159

SAVE on Cable TV-In- te r net -D ig i ta l Phone. P a c k a g e s s t a r t a t $ 8 9 . 9 9 / m o ( f o r 1 2 months.) Options from ALL major service pro- viders. Call Acceller to- day to learn more! CALL 1-877-736-7087

Firewood, Fuel& Stoves

FIREWOOD , dry sea- soned, fu l l measured cords. $200 plus deliv- ery. (360)886-2386 be- fore 8pm.

Flea Market

COMPUTER DESK in honey oak f inish. Two she lves, s l id ing key- board shel f and CPU s t o rage . S tu rdy and movable (on wheels). Excellent condition. $25. 253-252-2300.

FIREPLACE INSERT! C o m p l e t e g a s u n i t . Works well!!! $100 obo. Ke n t . C a l l 2 5 3 - 8 2 0 - 2124.

FREE ADS FOR FREE STUFF! Now you can clean up and clear out yo u r i t e m fo r F R E E when you’re g iv ing i t away for f ree. Of fer good for a one week ad, up to 20 words, private party merchandise ad. No business, service or commercial ads qualify for the free offer. Call (360)825-2555 ext. 202 to place your free ad in the Recycler.

M ICROWAVE, wh i te , Ha ier 0 .7 cu . f t . , 700 watts, l ike brand new, only used a few times. $50 OBO. Federal Way. 253-874-8987

Food &Farmer’s Market

100% Guaranteed Oma- ha Steaks - SAVE 69% on The Grilling Collec- t i o n . N O W O N LY $49.99 P lus 2 FREE GIFTS & r ight- to-the- door del ivery in a re- usable cooler, ORDER Today. 1- 888-697-3965 Use Code:45102ETA or w w w . O m a h a S - teaks.com/offergc05

Heavy Equipment

1985 JOHN DEERE 750 Dozer with brush rake, & winch. Excel lent ma- chine for clearing land. On l y $14 ,900 . Good condition, easy to oper- ate, second owner. On Decatur Is land. Cal l Gordon 509-301-3813, cell, or email for more in- formation, gordonlovell- [email protected]

Home Furnishings

Modern Oak dining set w/ 6 chairs. Solid wood, excellent shape. $500, i n c l u d e s 2 c a p t a i n chairs. (360)825-1128

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

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no additional cost.

Home Furnishings

Must Sell! New NASA Memory foam matt. set. Full $375, Qn $400, King $500. New. 20 yr warr. Del. avail. 253-539-1600---------------------------------Brand New Orthopedic matt. & box spring. Still in plastic. With warranty! Twin $175, Full $200, Queen $230, King $350. Call 253-537-3056---------------------------------Factory Closeout BR se t . Inc l : bed, n ight - stand, dresser, mirror. Full/ Queen, $395. King, $495. 253-539-1600---------------------------------NEW Microfiber Sec- tional. Scotch Guarded, pet & kid friendly. Only $499. 253-537-3056---------------------------------New Adjustable Bed w/ memory foam mattress. List: $2800. Sacr if ice, $950. 253-537-3056

Mail Order

Attention Joint & Muscle Pain Sufferers: Clinically proven all-natural sup- plement helps reduce pain and enhance mo- bility. Call 888-474-8936 to try Hydraflexin RISK- FREE for 90 days.

AT T E N T I O N S L E E P APNEA SUFFERERS w i t h M e d i c a r e . G e t FREE CPAP Replace- ment Suppl ies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, pre- vent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 866-993-5043

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Ca l l Today 888-459- 9961 for $25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping

VIAGRA 68 x (100 mg) P I L L S f o r O N L Y $159.00. NO Prescrip- t i o n N e e d e d ! O t h e r meds available. Credit or Deb i t Requ i red . Ca l l NOW: 616 -433 -1152 Satisfaction Guaranteed!

Miscellaneous

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

ProFlowers - Enjoy 60 percent off Tender Hugs and Kisses with Choco- lates for your valentine! Site price: $49.99, you pay just $19.99. Plus take 20 percent off other g i f ts over $29! Go to www.Proflowers.com/Dazzle or call 1-888-729-3176

Musical Instruments

MUSIC TO YOUR EARS K awa i G ra n d P i a n o. Gorgeous ins t rument (model KG-1A). Black Satin Ebony finish. Well loved since purchased in 1994! Only one owner! Absolutely pristine con- d i t ion ! Master Tuned every time and recently. 6 8 ” l o n g . I n c l u d e s bench. $6,500. Mercer Is land. Cal l 206-230- 9887, Phyllis 206-799- 8873 , Wim 206-799- 4446.

The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no additional cost.

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

*

*Source- Pulse Reports

Sporting Goods

SLEEK STYLE; 9’ POOL Table. Desirable Bruns- w ick b rand, Newpor t model table with 1 3/4” slate. New green felt and cushions. Incl cue sticks, rack, chalk and brushes. Brand new set of Bruns- wick balls. Solid wood, pretty med brown Little used. Mfg 1950’s- 1960’s, includes booklet. Great deal $1,250. Arlington. 360-474-1694.

Dogs

BEAUTIFUL American/ English Cream Golden Retriever Puppies! So- cialized with children & cats. Var ious person- alities; 5 adorable bun- d les to choose f rom! Both pure bred parents on s i t e . F i r s t sho t s . Heal th guaranteed. 1 male, 4 females. $1,000- $1,550 each. View pic- tures at: http://4hg.us 509-994-8988. Located just outside of Spokane.

BICHON FRISE pup- pies. AKC Registered. Tak ing depos i t s . For companion only! Will be vet checked and have first shots and be de- wormed. Call for infor- mation: 360-874-7771, 360-471-8621 or go to w e b s i t e t o s e e o u r adorable puppies!

www.bichonfrisepuppies4sale.com

www.bichonfrisepuppies4sale.com

B O N N E Y L A K E D o g Board ing. $15 a day, any size dog. No Pits. Over 15 years experi- ence. State and County Licensed. Visit our web- site to see our facilities: www.caviarshelties.com360-897-9888

G E R M A N W I R E H A I R E D Po i n t e r s . 5 puppies left! All males, born September 9th. Up to date on shots, vet checked. Paren ts on s i t e . Dad i s Smoo th Coat. Very loving, great t e m p e r a m e n t . $ 5 0 0 each. Call 425-754-1843GREAT DANE

A K C G R E AT D A N E Pups Health guarantee! M a l e s / F e m a l e s . Dreyrsdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Grea t Danes and l i - censed since 2002. Su- per sweet, intel l igent, lovable, gentle giants. Now offering Full-Euro’s, Half-Euro’s & Standard Great Danes. $500 & up (every color but Fawn). Also available, Standard Po o d l e s . C a l l To d ay 503-556-4190. www.dreyersdanes.com

Puppies: 1/2 German S h e p h e r d , 1 / 2 L a b. Ready to go. Fami ly raised. Great l ines. 3 males, 3 females. Black w i th wh i te on ches t . Must see. $200. Cal l (360)226-3075 or [email protected]

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

People Read The Courier-Herald26,400 households receive the paper

each week. There are 2 readers per household. That’s 52,800 impressions.

This does not include our website.

Dogs

OUR BEAUTIFUL AKC Golden Retriever pup- pies are ready to go to their new homes. They have been raised around young children and are well socialized. Both par- e n t s h ave ex c e l l e n t health, and the puppies have had their first well- ness vet check-ups and shots. The mother is a Light Golden and the fa- t h e r i s f u l l E n g l i s h Cream Golden. $800 each. For more pictures and information about the pupp ies and our home/ kennel please vis- it us at: www.mountain- s p r i n g s k e n n e l . w e e - bly.com or call Verity at 360-520-9196SMALL MIXED Breed puppies. Males & Fe- males. Born November 14th. Ready for Forever Homes! $100 each. Ex- cellent companion dogs. 206-723-1271

Horses

HORSE Boarding. Full care. 12’x12’ stalls. Daily turnout. Covered arena. Wash rack. $350/month (360)829-0771

HORSE KEEPING AT HOME - Adult Class.

Stables, feeds,handling. Lots more.Inside barn. Great

horses. Starts soon. (360)825-5617

ServicesAnimals

PROFESSIONAL PET& FARM SITTINGLicensed and insured. Serving Orting, Buckley Bonney Lake, Enumclaw360-870-8209www.petandfarm.org

Garage/Moving SalesPierce County

SUMNERLIONS 4 Kids Rum- mage Sale! To sup- port The Prom Pro- ject! Sat, Feb 16th, 8 a m - 5 p m . G e n t l y used dresses of a l l styles. Prom and casu- al ! Jewelr y, purses, 1 0 0 p a i r s o f g o o d quality shoes. Lots of other clothing for men and women, all sizes! Household items, tons of toys. tools galore and more! Located at Sumner Family Church on Silver St, 98390. Donations accepted, we will be collecting p rom re la ted i tems that we can use in our pro ject . Need s izes from 10 to 5X. Tax re- ce ip ts issued. 253- 447-3844.

Estate Sales

Enumclaw

Estate SaleFr iday & Sa tu rday, Feb 8th & 9th, 9AM- 2PM. Furniture, W/D set, plenty of house- wa r e s . 2 6 3 2 5 S E 400th Street

AutomobilesClassics & Collectibles

NICE 1965 MUSTANG FOR SALE! 1965 Ford Mustang. 6 cylinder, 3 speed with original mo- tor and interior. Clean car, a lways garaged! $6,000 or best offer, mo- tivated seller. Serious in- quires and cash only! Call for more information at 253-266-2464 - leave message with name and contact number if no an- swer.

AutomobilesLexus

1998 LEXUS SC400 Sport Coupe. Automatic transmission, V-8, de- luxe interior, all options, factory wheels, 117,000 m i l e s . C r i m s o n w i t h beige interior. 2nd own- er. $10,950. 425-827- 7536

Vans & Mini VansChevrolet

526 RooseveltEnumclaw

360 825-7731800 539-7595

FUGATE

ENUMCLAW

FUGATE

732950

Hurry In!Offer Expires 2/28/13

Open Saturdays

for Repair!

Repairs over $250*Not valid for extended warranty or insurance deductibles. Not to be

combined with other offers.

10%off

*

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Quality Windshields

Certi�ed Technician

All Insurance Welcome

Ask About NO COST

Chip Repair Latest Technology

All Types of Auto, Truck (foreign & domestic) Glass,

Side, Back Mirrors & Back Glass

Saturday by Appointment

7350

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FOOTHILLS AUTO GLASS

Mobile Service for Your Schedule

253/261-6066360/829-9915

The Courier-Herald is Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no additional cost.

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Accident?

360-825-3567 Gamblin Motors1047 Hwy. 410

Enumclaw

We repair ALL makes and models

Body Shop & Collision Center

Demand the best:

43 Years in

Business!

7350

83

Cash JUNK CARS &

TRUCKS

Free Pick up 253-335-1232

1-800-577-2885

Vehicles Wanted

C A R D O N AT I O N S WANTED! Help Support Cancer Research. Free Next-Day Towing. Non- Runners OK. Tax De- ductible. Free Cruise/ Hotel/Air Voucher. Live Operators 7 days/week. Breast Cancer Society #800-728-0801.

CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k TO DAY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647

DONATE YOUR CAR. RECEIVE $1000 GRO- C E R Y C O U P O N S . FAST, FREE TOWING- 24hr Response. UNITED B R E A S T C A N C E R FOUNDATION. Free Mammograms & Breast C a n c e r I n f o www.ubcf.info 888-444- 7514

The Courier-Herald is

Fearless & Creative

Our award winning editorial sta� is not afraid to tackle the tough story while

our award winning creative sta� will showcase your

business at no ad-ditional cost.

Page 19: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

www.blscourierherald.com Wednesday, February 6, 2013 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Page 19

RED TAG

SALE!

25%

OFFOFFLOWEST MARKED

CLEARANCE PRICE

SALE!SALE!

25%%%%25%25TAKE AN ADDITIONAL

7351

54

840 Roosevelt Ave. Enumclaw, WA 360-825-5533

Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-8pm, Sat 8am-7pm, Sun 9am - 6pm

Columbia® Omni HeatSlippers

Sherpa Lined HoodedFlannel Shirts

Mossy Oak 2-pack Thermal Socks

Ladies Soft ShellHoodies

ColumbiaSportswear

Wolverine® WaterproofInsulated Boots

You Pay You Pay You Pay You Pay

Save 25% OFFalready marked Red Tag itemsYou Pay

$29.99 $14.99 $5.99 $37.49 $67.49

Flannel LinedDenim Jeans

You Pay$14.99

Regular $39.99Sale $19.99 Less 25%

Dickies 5 pocketDenim Jeans

You Pay$11.24

Regular $24.99Sale $14.99 Less 25%

Buffalo PlaidMicro Fleece

Mens MicroFleecePajama Pants

You Pay You Pay$14.99 $7.49

Regular $29.99Sale $19.99 Less 25%

Regular $12.99Sale $9.99 Less 25%

Regular $54.99Sale $39.99 Less 25%

Regular $29.99Sale $19.99 Less 25%

Regular $12.99Sale $7.99 Less 25%

Regular $79.99Sale $49.99 Less 25%

Regular $99.99Sale $89.99 Less 25%

Diawa VIP Salmon/Steelhead Rods

Intex 12VTrolling Motors

Nike Athletic Shoes

Itaska RidgeAthletic Shoes

ChookaScuff Slippers

You Pay You Pay You Pay You Pay You Pay$56.24 $74.99 $29.99 $22.49 $14.99

Regular $149.99Sale $74.99 Less 25%

Regular $169.99Sale $99.99 Less 25%

Regular $49.99Sale $39.99 Less 25%

Regular $39.99Sale $29.99 Less 25%

Regular $59.99Sale $19.99 Less 25%

Don’t miss our

RED TAG SALE!

Take an additional

25% off last marked clearance price!Check out some of these “once in a lifetime” savings!

Winter Coats, Gloves, Hats, Mens, Womens, Children Clothing, Slippers, Shoes, Sporting Goods, etc.

Limited to stock on hand!

6 DAYS ONLY!Tuesday, February 5 thru Sunday, February 10, 2013

Thousands of

items to

choose from!

Hurry, while

supplies last!

Page 20: Bonney Lake and Sumner Courier-Herald, February 06, 2013

Page 20 • The BONNeY LAKe & sumNer COurier-herALd • Wednesday, February 6, 2013 www.blscourierherald.com

SAVE NOW! SAVE NOW! SAVE NOW!

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7351

55

9902 216th Ave. EBonney Lake

OpenM-Sat 8:30-6

Sun 12-4

Select Units

UPTO50% OFF

New move-in clients only. Valid on select units through 2/28/13 with this ad.

HWY 410

214T

H A

VE

SA

FEW

AY

MAZATLAN

RITE AID

Stor-it Here

NORTH

➤(253)862-2622

Valentine Special!

7350

70

BEEF •PORK •POULTRYITEMS #CUTS AVG. WT.T-Bone Steak 4 4 lb.Rib Steak 4 4 lb.Sirloin Steak 2 1 lb.Sirloin Tip Steak 2 1 lb.Hanging Tenderloin Steak 2 4 lb.Fillets 4 2 lb.Tri-Tip Marinated 1 2 lb.Boneless Chuck Roast 1 4 lb.Bnls Turkey Thighs Marinated 1 4 lb.

$24800

ITEMS #CUTS AVG. WT.Smoked Pork Chops 4 2 lb.Lean Ground Beef 10 10 lb.Country Sausage 4 4 lb.Bnls. Chicken Breast 4 4 lb.Hawaiian Pork Roast 1 4 lb. or Italian PorkettaRetail $362.00SAVE $114

Total Price

Natural Fed Beefis Grass and Pasture Fed Beef, “Naturally

Grazing Daily” Their diet is supplemented with grains, vegetable, and corn silage which intensi� es the marble effect in the meat for maximum � avor and tenderness.

No Antibiotics or Added Hormones!“JUST HAPPY CATTLE”

We offer natural fed beef, pork, lamb and a full line of buffalo. Our steaks, roast and ground meat are cut fresh daily at our old fashioned meat counter. We offer several varieties of meat packs from 20 lb. up to 100 lb. We also offer beef and pork sides or quarters, and whole lambs.

Order Now… Pay Later! Order now, we will select and age your beef in our aging cooler. We will then custom process according to your instructions. You pay when you pick

it up. (up to 30 days from ordering)

FILL YOUR FREEZER WITH QUALITY, NATURAL & GRASS FED PRODUCTS.

Good thru 2/28/13

30 lbs. SPLIT - 1/2 HOG PACK

EBT

7350

70

from ordering)

360-825-3340We Are A Full Service Old Fashioned Butcher Shop! Mobile Farm Slaughter! Custom Processing! Send Us Your Livestock!

(Located 5 miles west of Enumclaw on Hwy. 164)

OUR BEST!50 lb Economy Pack

Regular Price $12900

YOU SAVE $5000

Total Price

$7900

Our BESTBEEF SIDES

$2.89/lbPORK (half or whole)

$1.99/lb

20104 SE 436th, Enumclaw All major credit cards acceptedOLSON’S MEATS & SMOKEHOUSE

OUR BEST BEEF • PORK • POULTRY 2013 STOCK UP SALE

7359

89

360-825-3340

20104 SE 436th • Enumclaw (Located 5 miles west of Enumclaw on Hwy. 164)

7359

89

New York SteakRib Eye Steak, Filet Mignon

4 oz. Lobsters, 8-10 oz. LobsterLobster Claws

EBTAll major credit cards accepted Hours: Mon: 8am-5pm, Tue-Fri:

8am-6pm, Sat 8am-5pm, Closed SundayThrough 2/28/13

Call to reserve your order today!

For Your4 oz. Lobsters, 8-10 oz. LobsterNew York Steak 4 oz. Lobsters, 8-10 oz. Lobster

NEWRib Eye Steak, Filet Mignon

Through 2/28/13

Call to reserve your order today!

Lobster LobsterFor Your

Valentine

$109

per oz.4-5 oz.

avg.

per oz.12 oz. avg.OLSON’S MEATS & SMOKEHOUSE

We Are A Full Service Old Fashioned Butcher Shop! Mobile Farm Slaughter! Custom Processing! Send Us Your Livestock!

Tails Claws99¢ 79¢

20829 SR 410 E Bonney LakeBy Regal Cinemas in Tall Firs Shopping Center

253 447-8500Open 7 Days A Week! Sun-Thur 11am-9:30pm, Fri & Sat 10:30am-10pm

7351

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ValentineSpecials

1/2offBuy one entrée at regular price & receive the 2nd of

equal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages

or appetizer.

Vietnamese Cuisine & TeriyakiVietnamese Cuisine & Teriyaki

*LUNCH SPECIALS*PHO

*TERIYAKI*CHINESE FOOD

offoffequal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages equal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages equal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages with purchase of 2 beverages equal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages equal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages equal or lesser value 1/2 OFF with purchase of 2 beverages with purchase of 2 beverages

With valid coupon only. Not to be combined with any other offer.

BUCKLEY VETERINARY HOSPITAL28801 HWY 410 E | Buckley | 360.829.1515

www.BUCKLEYVET.com

WORLD SPAY DAYTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26th, 2013

$35-$60 OFF SPAYS/NEUTERSNEW CLIENTS WELCOMED!

LIMITED AVAILABILITY Helping you, as a pet owner,

provide a longer, healthier and happier life for your best friend!

SCHEDULE TODAY!

“Love Your Friends”

7351

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IRON DRAGONIRON DRAGONMongolian Grill

CelebrateValentine’s Day!

Or call ahead and we will put one of our special takeout recipes

together for quick pick-up!

19920 South Prairie Rd EBonney Lake (Across from Lowes)

253-862-2002Hours: Sun. - Thurs. 11:30-8:00

Fri. & Sat. 11:30 - 9:00www.iron-d.com

ALL YOU CAN EAT!Lunch (before 4pm) $9.99Dinner (after 4pm) $11.99

You choose, we cook it fresh!

7351

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7351

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