Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

12
BY BRENT BAKER [email protected] TONASKET - North Valley Hospital is proceeding with the replacement of its aging boiler system, a portion of which is inoperative and will leave the hospital inadequately heated this fall if the issue isn’t addressed immediately. Kelly Cariker, who doubles as the Facilities Director and Chief Information Officer, reported on the status of the boiler project at the Thursday, July 11, NVH Board of Commissioners meet- ing. The boiler system will be replaced by a geothermal sys- tem, he said, with the project to be taken on in phases. The first phase will deal with the portion of the system that is currently inoperative. The McKinstry Construction Corporation, which has taken on numerous health care facilities projects and is overseen by the state’s Department of Enterprise Services, presented the hospi- tal with a number of options, Cariker said. The options included: • replace the boilers with pro- pane boilers; • replace the boilers with the same type of fuel oil type boilers currently used; • replace the boilers with elec- tric boilers; • replace the boilers with a geothermal system, which can provide both heat and cooling at the same time. “Currently we have the fuel oil, basically using diesel to make Valley Life A3 Letters/Opinion A5 Community A6-7 Classifieds/Legals A8-9 Real Estate A9 Sports A10 Cops & Courts A11 Obituaries A12 OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE Volume 109 No. 29 CONTACT US Newsroom and Advertising (509) 476-3602 [email protected] INSIDE THIS EDITION Throughout Oroville, Friday evening and Saturday. See Page A2 for schedule. HERITAGE DAYS WWW.GAZETTE-TRIBUNE.COM | THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013 | 75 CENTS NEWSSTAND PRICE G AZETTE-TRIBUNE SERVING WASHINGTON’S OKANOGAN VALLEY SINCE 1905 LOCAL HISTORY ON DISPLAY AT DEPOT MUSEUM See Page A12 BY GARY A. DEVON MANAGING EDITOR OROVILLE - Oroville as a Unique Travel Destination was the topic of conversation in a presentation by Sandy Lorentzen at the Oroville Chamber of Commerce’s Thursday, July 11 meeting. Lorentzen lives in Seattle has been marketing the Pastime Bar & Grill for her friends Vickie and Brant Henzie, but describes her- self as an outsider who is a “509er at heart.” She said she has fallen in love with the Oroville area. “To be successful we don’t need to move diners from one restaurant to another, but be a catalyst for increasing the size of the diner pool and this means drawing more people to Oroville to eat and spend.” Lorentzen has been involved in tourism development in vari- ous capacities over the years, including helping to build inter- national audiences for the Pacific Northwest Wagner Festival in Seattle and the Brighton Festival in England. Currently she is the website content editor for a South and Central American tour operator. She has spoken to many travel associations and written about making communi- ties unique as travel destinations. “I hope you will take my remarks as they are intended, to stimulate a conversation about a common vision for making tour- ism a greater asset to Oroville BY BRENT BAKER [email protected] TONASKET - The long and ardu- ous process of making a new swimming pool in Tonasket officially moved into its next phase as the City Council voted to commit $17,980 to a study that will yield concrete options and cost estimates that can be put before the community for discussion. The motion, initiated by new coun- cil member Claire Jeffko, was approved unanimously, though council member Jill Vugteveen was absent. The council had been reluctant to move forward without other stakehold- ers in the pool project, as it will ultimate- ly need the support of much more than city residents to become a reality. But as two years of discussion in the commu- nity wasn’t able to provide focus or a plan to move forward, the council determined it would need to take the lead in moving onto the next phase. The city will pay Pool World of Spokane to produce cost estimates and visual renderings, based on the assump- tion that the new pool would be in the same place (Tonasket’s History Park) as the old one; that there won’t be problems with permitting or additional archaeo- logical surveys, and that the pool would be a season, outdoor pool. OPTIONS Three options will be provided: a simple, moderately-sized lap pool of about 32x75 feet; a similar pool with an additional wad- ing pool adja- cent to it; and a multi-purpose pool with “zero entry” water features (to aid in handicapped access) and the ability to incorporate a water slide. The work will take about two months to be completed, after which the coun- cil plans to arrange a forum for the Tonasket area (not just city) residents to discuss the avail- able options. There was some urgency to make a decision on whether to move forward or not. A major deadline for grant applica- tions is March, 2014; missing that deadline would delay access to that type of state funding for another two years. The money will be taken from what remains of a $50,000 capital improve- ment fund dedicated to the pool several years ago, half of which had been spent on the study that led to the original pool being condemned. “The idea is once we have that infor- mation, we hold a public meetings ... and see if there is a preferred option, or a combination of features,” said city planner Kurt Danison of Highlands Associates. “At that point we’d make a decision that this is the pool we want for the city of Tonasket. Then we’d know what it was going to cost ... and then be in Tonasket funds next phase of pool project Gary DeVon/staff photo Classic autos, old and new gathered at Gold Digger Park last Saturday for the cruise in, including this vintage red Jaguar from British Columbia. Most of Saturday’s participants came from Oroville, Tonasket and southern B.C. AN ABSOLUTE CLASSIC Boiler to be replaced NVH phasing in geothermal system, not ‘Band Aid’ “Because we have the one boiler that is down we’ll be unable to provide enough heat or hot water once the weather changes, which will probably be in October. That’s an emergency situation.” Kelly Cariker, NVH Facilities Director Oroville as center of Okanogan THE GAZETTE-TRIBUNE OROVILLE - The Tumbleweed Film Festival (TwFF), Washington’s most unique film fest, brings 40 short films to its fourth annual film festival in Oroville on Aug. 1, 2 and 3. Tumbleweed, www.tumble- weedfilmfest.com, highlights short films from around the world, as well as local wineries and breweries, which are turned into movie theaters for a night. Tumbleweed’s festival offers attendees the opportunity to watch seldom seen internation- al films, while sampling locally made wines and beers. “We’re very excited to expand our film festival in Oroville this fourth year and look forward to bringing a fun cultural event to the community, getting the word out on this beautiful part of Washington State and let- ting the world know about the Okanogan,” says TwFF co-found- er Mo Fine. This year’s festival includes four venues over three evening showings, which will take place at Veranda Beach, the Pastime Bar and Grill, Alpine Brewing and Esther Bricques Winery. Each night features different short films, ranging from com- edy and drama, to documentaries and animation. Forty short films will screen over the three-day festival, which includes an acad- emy award nominated short, as well as films from the US, Spain, England, South Korea, Russia, Australia, Egypt, Latvia, Ireland and Canada. Some films this year even include a star-studded cast like the British short “Walking the Dogs” with the actress Emma Thompson. There is even a little local talent involved with the short film “Shakey’s Coffee,” which was produced by Osoyoos Tumbleweed celebrates fourth year in Oroville Film festival to run Aug. 1-3 Gary DeVon/file photo Seattle filmmakers and Tumbleweed Film Festival co-founders Geoff Klein and Mo Fine prepare the Tumbleweed Film Festival screen for the Alpine Brewery venue. It is also used at Esther Bricques Winery and will also be used at the Pastime Bar & Grill this year. SEE FESTIVAL | PG A3 SEE BOILER | PG A2 Chamber presentation focuses on tourism development SEE CHAMBER | PG A4 SEE POOL | PG A4 “We get comments that we have to have a pool. But when it comes down to discussion, we never have any public show up “ Jean Ramsey, Tonasket City Council Member

description

July 18, 2013 edition of the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune

Transcript of Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

Page 1: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

BY BRENT [email protected]

TONASKET - North Valley Hospital is proceeding with the replacement of its aging boiler system, a portion of which is inoperative and will leave the hospital inadequately heated this fall if the issue isn’t addressed immediately.

Kelly Cariker, who doubles as the Facilities Director and Chief Information Officer, reported on the status of the boiler project at the Thursday, July 11, NVH Board of Commissioners meet-ing.

The boiler system will be replaced by a geothermal sys-

tem, he said, with the project to be taken on in phases. The first phase will deal with the portion of the system that is currently inoperative.

The McKinstry Construction Corporation, which has taken on numerous health care facilities projects and is overseen by the state’s Department of Enterprise Services, presented the hospi-tal with a number of options, Cariker said.

The options included:• replace the boilers with pro-

pane boilers;• replace the boilers with the

same type of fuel oil type boilers currently used;

• replace the boilers with elec-tric boilers;

• replace the boilers with a geothermal system, which can provide both heat and cooling at the same time.

“Currently we have the fuel oil, basically using diesel to make

Valley Life A3Letters/Opinion A5Community A6-7

Classifieds/Legals A8-9Real Estate A9Sports A10

Cops & Courts A11Obituaries A12

OKANOGAN VALLEYGAZETTE-TRIBUNE

Volume 109No. 29

CONTACT USNewsroom and Advertising

(509) [email protected]

INSIDE THIS EDITION

Throughout Oroville, Friday evening and Saturday.

See Page A2 for schedule.

HERITAGE DAYS

WWW.GAZETTE-TRIBUNE.COM | THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013 | 75 CENTS NEWSSTAND PRICE

GAZETTE-TRIBUNESERVING WASHINGTON’S OKANOGAN VALLEY SINCE 1905

LOCAL HISTORY ON DISPLAY

AT DEPOT MUSEUM

See Page A12

BY GARY A. DEVONMANAGING EDITOR

OROVILLE - Oroville as a Unique Travel Destination was the topic of conversation in a presentation by Sandy Lorentzen at the Oroville Chamber of Commerce’s Thursday, July 11 meeting.

Lorentzen lives in Seattle has been marketing the Pastime Bar & Grill for her friends Vickie and Brant Henzie, but describes her-self as an outsider who is a “509er at heart.” She said she has fallen in love with the Oroville area.

“To be successful we don’t need to move diners from one restaurant to another, but be a catalyst for increasing the size of the diner pool and this means drawing more people to Oroville to eat and spend.”

Lorentzen has been involved in tourism development in vari-ous capacities over the years, including helping to build inter-national audiences for the Pacific Northwest Wagner Festival in Seattle and the Brighton Festival in England. Currently she is the website content editor for a South and Central American tour operator. She has spoken to many travel associations and written about making communi-ties unique as travel destinations.

“I hope you will take my remarks as they are intended, to stimulate a conversation about a common vision for making tour-ism a greater asset to Oroville

BY BRENT [email protected]

TONASKET - The long and ardu-ous process of making a new swimming pool in Tonasket officially moved into its next phase as the City Council voted to commit $17,980 to a study that will yield concrete options and cost estimates that can be put before the community for discussion.

The motion, initiated by new coun-cil member Claire Jeffko, was approved unanimously, though council member Jill Vugteveen was absent.

The council had been reluctant to move forward without other stakehold-

ers in the pool project, as it will ultimate-ly need the support of much more than city residents to become a reality. But as two years of discussion in the commu-nity wasn’t able to provide focus or a plan to move forward, the council determined it would need to take the lead in moving onto the next phase.

The city will pay Pool World of Spokane to produce cost estimates and visual renderings, based on the assump-tion that the new pool would be in the same place (Tonasket’s History Park) as the old one; that there won’t be problems with permitting or additional archaeo-logical surveys, and that the pool would be a season, outdoor pool.

OPTIONSThree options will be provided: a

simple, moderately-sized lap pool of about 32x75 feet; a similar pool with an additional wad-ing pool adja-cent to it; and a multi-purpose pool with “zero entry” water features (to aid in handicapped access) and the ability to incorporate a water slide.

The work will take about two months

to be completed, after which the coun-cil plans to arrange a forum for the Tonasket area (not just city) residents to

discuss the avail-able options.

There was some urgency to make a decision on whether to move forward or not. A major deadline for grant applica-tions is March, 2014; missing that deadline would

delay access to that type of state funding for another two years.

The money will be taken from what remains of a $50,000 capital improve-ment fund dedicated to the pool several years ago, half of which had been spent on the study that led to the original pool being condemned.

“The idea is once we have that infor-mation, we hold a public meetings ... and see if there is a preferred option, or a combination of features,” said city planner Kurt Danison of Highlands Associates. “At that point we’d make a decision that this is the pool we want for the city of Tonasket. Then we’d know what it was going to cost ... and then be in

Tonasket funds next phase of pool project

Gary DeVon/staff photo

Classic autos, old and new gathered at Gold Digger Park last Saturday for the cruise in, including this vintage red Jaguar from British Columbia. Most of Saturday’s participants came from Oroville, Tonasket and southern B.C.

AN ABSOLUTE CLASSICBoiler to be replaced NVH phasing in geothermal system, not ‘Band Aid’

“Because we have the one boiler that is down we’ll be unable

to provide enough heat or hot water once the weather changes, which

will probably be in October. That’s an

emergency situation.”

Kelly Cariker, NVH Facilities Director

Oroville as center of Okanogan

THE GAZETTE-TRIBUNE

OROVILLE - The Tumbleweed Film Festival (TwFF), Washington’s most unique film fest, brings 40 short films to its fourth annual film festival in Oroville on Aug. 1, 2 and 3.

Tumbleweed, www.tumble-weedfilmfest.com, highlights short films from around the world, as well as local wineries and breweries, which are turned into movie theaters for a night. Tumbleweed’s festival offers attendees the opportunity to

watch seldom seen internation-al films, while sampling locally made wines and beers.

“We’re very excited to expand our film festival in Oroville this fourth year and look forward to bringing a fun cultural event to the community, getting the word out on this beautiful part of Washington State and let-ting the world know about the Okanogan,” says TwFF co-found-er Mo Fine.

This year’s festival includes four venues over three evening showings, which will take place at Veranda Beach, the Pastime Bar and Grill, Alpine Brewing and Esther Bricques Winery.

Each night features different short films, ranging from com-edy and drama, to documentaries and animation. Forty short films will screen over the three-day festival, which includes an acad-emy award nominated short, as well as films from the US, Spain, England, South Korea, Russia, Australia, Egypt, Latvia, Ireland and Canada. Some films this year even include a star-studded cast like the British short “Walking the Dogs” with the actress Emma Thompson. There is even a little local talent involved with the short film “Shakey’s Coffee,” which was produced by Osoyoos

Tumbleweed celebrates fourth year in OrovilleFilm festival to run Aug. 1-3

Gary DeVon/file photo

Seattle filmmakers and Tumbleweed Film Festival co-founders Geoff Klein and Mo Fine prepare the Tumbleweed Film Festival screen for the Alpine Brewery venue. It is also used at Esther Bricques Winery and will also be used at the Pastime Bar & Grill this year. SEE FESTIVAL | PG A3SEE BOILER | PG A2

Chamber presentation focuses on tourism development

SEE CHAMBER | PG A4

SEE POOL | PG A4

“We get comments that we have to have a pool. But when it comes down to discussion, we

never have any public show up “Jean Ramsey, Tonasket City Council Member

Page 2: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

Page a2 OkanOgan Valley gazette-tribune | July 18, 2013

OkanOgan Valley life

Friday6:00 p.m. Softball Tournament - Bud Clark � eld 7:00 p.m. “The Valley Band” with Chuck Oakes, Brock Hires and more! Held at Vicki’s Backdoor Club.

Saturday7am - 10am Breakfast served by the Boy Scouts @ Senior Center8 - 9 am Escorted talk of the Smilkameen Trail from Trailhead to Taber’s Vineyard9 am Softball Tournament restarts - Bud Clark Field Farmer’s Market Opens at Library Vintage Tractor Exhibit by Prince’s Warehouse Spinning - Betty Roberts at Depot Veranda Garden Club Sale at Veranda & Vendors in Madeline Wells Park10am - 12pm Gold panning demo - provided by Kinross at Madeline Wells Park11 a.m. Fresh pie by the Senior Citizens at Depot Veranda Fresh ice cream by Historical Society at Depot Veranda Popcorn made in 1940’s machine at Depot Veranda11am - 2 pm 1894 Log Cabin Open - 914 14th Ave1pm Photo talk with Edward Curtis/Herbert Gregg

Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Heritage Days Make This A

Historic Weekend!

Gary DeVon/staff photo

Tracy Bauhs (right) has taken over operations of Back to the Basics at 1419 Main St. The cafe and arcade has added a gift shop and will feature “good food, great gifts and lots of family fun in the arcade” promises Bauhs. She hopes her business continues to grow within the community. Back to the Basics is open Monday to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and can be reached at (509) 476-2196. Bauhs says bring in their ad for 10 percent off your bill.

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

ThE Gazette-tribune

OKANOGAN COUNTY - Two significant fires flared up last weekend in Okanogan County, including one that knocked out power to the Methow Valley for more than eight hours on Monday, July 15.

That fire, south of Okanogan, briefly closed Highway 20 between Okanogan and the Methhow Valley, burning about 2,000 acres of dry brush and one outbuilding.

As of Tuesday afternoon, the fire was 90 percent contained and no injuries had been reported.

Sun Mountain FireMeanwhile, Hotshot crews from

La Grande, Ore. and Entiat, Wash. arrived in the Methow Valley Saturday to catch helicopter flights

in to work on the Sun Mountain Fire. The fire is still estimated at about 35 acres and is burning in the steep terrain of the Lake Chelan Sawtooth Wilderness; in the south fork of War Creek drain-age, southwest of Winthrop.

Five helicopters are support-ing the fire, two for transport, two providing bucket drops and another providing aerial recon-naissance. With the calmer winds, there was less fire activity today. Firefighters worked along the left flank of the fire, using chainsaws, Pulaskis and shovels to establish a containment line.Some of the firefighters who have been work-ing on the fire since earlier in the week will return home tonight to refurbish their gear and get ready for other assignments.

An area closure is in place to provide for public and firefighter

safety. It begins at the confluence of War Creek and the South Fork War Creek and extends southwest following Black Ridge to Sun Mt, then following Chelan Crest from Sun Mt. to Battle Mt. continuing northeast along Snowshoe Ridge to the wilderness boundary, then north along the wilderness boundary back to the beginning.

Though the name may cause some confusion, Sun Mountain Lodge is not threatened by the fire, and is in fact separated from the fire by several miles of forest, rivers and ridgetops.

Sun Mountain Fire informa-tion is available online at http://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/3507 and updates are posted at www.twitter.com/OkaWenNF.

Information from by Shannon O’Brien, USFS Public Information, was used in this report.

Fire season begins in earnest

steam, then cooling the steam down to make hot water,” Cariker said. “It’s really inefficient. Because we have the one boiler that is down we’ll be unable to provide enough heat or hot water once the weather changes, which will probably be in October.

“That’s an emergency situa-tion.”

Cariker said that McKinstry, along with a team that included hospital senior leadership and board members Lael Duncan and Dick Larson, reviewed factors that included system cost, energy usage and efficiency, redundancy, versatility, maintenance, environ-mental impact, phasing flexibility, equipment life, system turndown, future expandability, reliability, complexity of control systems, fuel storage considerations and amount of space required.

The consensus, Cariker said, was that while a geothermal sys-tem would carry greater up front costs, for the long term it was the best solution for the hospital’s needs.

“It will be a hybrid system,” he said. “Phase I would be a smaller propane boiler to provide redun-dancy if the geothermal system ever went down. It also enables us to phase in, because the first phase is to replace the non-work-ing boiler right now and get us through the winter.

“Then we can look at the other phases, which would include put-ting in wells for the geothermal. But this gives us the time to get through the winter.”

With time of the essence, CEO Linda Michel individually polled the rest of the board members before authorizing McKinstry to proceed.

“We had to give them an answer or we won’t meet the Ocotber time frame for the first phase,” Michel said. “All of the board members voted ‘yes,’ so we did inform then they could go ahead with that first phase.”

Duncan, who participated in the meeting via phone, said she had great confidence in McKinstry.

“They are internationally rec-ognized as experts ... they know what they’re doing,” Duncan said. “They’ll be assisting us with

grant writing to help fund this. They have connections with the Department of Commerce...

“I’m hopeful we can really upgrade and sustain the system as a long term system instead of just a Band-Aid.”

The next step was for McKinstry to put together a guaranteed maximum bid for the project.

“The Department of Enterprise Services ... looks over everything McKinstry does so we can make sure we’re being as cost-effec-tive as we can,” Cariker said. “They guarantee the maximum amount. If they go over that, McKinstry pays for it. If they come in under that, we get the money back. So that’s kind of a win-win scenario.”

Cariker said that, with the state budget finalized, there may be some grant money available for the project that McKinstry has begun researching.

“There is ... $10 million for small communities,” he said. “They’re breaking that up into maximums of half a million. (McKinstry) is also looking to see if there are emergency monies available, and we’re pursuing that at the same time.”

Duncan reiterated her position from a previous meeting that ask-ing for legislative help would be appropriate, given the circum-stances.

“It’s time for us to get hold of Rep. Joel Kretz (R-Wauconda) and let him know that we need some sort of assistance with this project at the next session in January,” she said.

“We can get through Phase I with the propane boiler, but it’s completely appropriate to ask the state for additional assistance with funding this improvement.”

Medicare, Medicaid Still holding FundS

Patient Financial Services director Jana Symonds present-ed a synopsis compiled by her and chargemaster Patrick Plumb that illustrated where and why Medicare and Medicaid have been withholding funds, which has been a major factor in driv-ing the hospital district’s warrants

back up over $1.9 million.The funds are being withheld

in several different manners for different reasons, which include national-level software glitch-es and system and procedural changes.

The percentage of hospital payers in Medicare is 44 per-cent; those in Medicare managed care plans are 24 percent; and Medicaid recipients are 18 per-cent. So the effects have been drastic, Symonds said during her presentation, which expanded on information presented at the pre-vious Board of Commissioners meeting.

“Patrick is on a provider out-reach board,” she said. “He’s writ-ten extensive emails to CMS, Medicare, (Congressman) Doc Hastings, (Senators) Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, alerting all parties as to what’s happening with our warrants.

“We call it holding our money captive because it’s not at our dis-posal. We’ve been vocal on letting them know what’s happening and how it’s affecting us.”

In other business, Michel said that papers have been signed for the sale of the Oroville Clinic for more than $600,000.

Michel also said she was pleased that the laboratory received just one “finding” dur-ing a recent inspection.

“It was a documentation find-ing, so I applaud Noreen (Olma) and her staff,” she said. “I’ve never been any place that had only one finding. It’s the auditors’ job to come up with those.”

Also, Long Term Care director Linda Holden said that the nurs-ing home had received 42 new dressers and night stands thanks to the Hospital Foundation’s efforts.

“I just wanted to make a public thank you to the Foundation for gifting us those,” Holden said. “They’re beautiful and getting moved in now. I was wishing Linda Noon would have been here to thank her, so I may have to do this again.”

The Board of Commissioners next meets on Thursday, July 25.

The following meeting, for Aug. 8, will be canceled and rescheduled for Monday, Aug. 5.

boilER | FrOM a1

Page 3: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

JULY 18, 2013 | OkanOgan VaLLeY gazette-tribUne Page a3

Tonasket Comancheros

at the Tonasket Rodeo Grounds

Friday, July 19 Open PullFREE Admission on Friday Night!

Saturday, July 20th at 7 pm Truck and Tractor Pulls

Find us Tonasket Comancheroswww.tonasketrodeo.comwww.tonasketrodeo.com

Watch the locals and the professionals of the Moonlighter Pulling Team of Spokane and their modifi ed diesel trucks, smoker tractors and multi-engine tractors.

� ey are BIG! � ey are POWERFUL! � ey are LOUD!

And they pack the stands... Don’t miss the Excitement and Fun!!

at the Tonasket Rodeo GroundsSaturday, July 20th at 7 p.m.

Gates open at 5:30OPEN PULL - Friday, July 19 at 7:00 p.m.

Pre-sale Tickets Available at: • Superior Auto Parts • � e Junction • Paul’s Service

• II Sisters • Local Federated Auto Part Stores

Ticket Prices: Adults: $10 Kids 6 - 12: $7Children 5 and under get in for FREE!Gate Tickets: Adults $12 Kids 6 - 12 $9Children 5 and under get in for FREE!

Tonasket Comancheros Tonasket Comancheros 4th Annual

Brent Baker/staff photo

Steve Pollard gets into a groove during at Music in the Park on Friday, July 12, at Tonasket’s History Park. Ruby Rust, including Pollard, performed for about two hours for about 100 listeners. The next Music in the Park event will be on July 26.

LOVING THE MUSIC

native Sharon Roberts.“We look for short films that

provide great stories and this year we’ve found a great selection for every night. Audiences are going to find plenty of films to like each evening”, says Geoff Klein, the festival’s other founder. “We offer a highlight of each venue’s films on our website, so attendees can get a quick glimpse of the types of short films they’ll see at each event.”

This year’s festival kicks-off with two special events on Thursday, Aug. 1, which are both free to the public. At dusk, Veranda Beach Resort will host an outdoor family night of films, where attendees will enjoy a drive-in theater experience by watching the films outside, under the stars, beside Lake Osoyoos. And the Pastime Bar and Grill will offer a “Blast from the Past” special screening of audience favorites from previous Tumbleweed Film Festivals. This event is geared to a 21 and over crowd and takes place at 9:15 pm.

“We are very pleased to be a sponsor, as well as a venue, for this year’s festival,” said Victoria Hinze, owner of the Pastime Bar and Grill. “We want to help build

Tumbleweed into an important tourist attraction for our region and hope our free event at the Pastime will introduce the event to a wider audience. Who says a town needs a movie theater to have a great film festival?” adds Hinze.

On Friday, Aug. 2, TwFF turns the Alpine Brewing Co. into a movie theater for a night. Films include a brand new slate of adult oriented comedies, a little drama and some twist and turns. Attendees may sample the brew-ery’s hand-crafted beers, or drink wines from four local wineries.

Attendees will also have an opportunity to ask some ques-tions to filmmaker Sharon Roberts, an Osoyoos native, who produced “Shakey’s Coffee,” as well as to actor Fraser Corbett, who starred in this Canadian short. A barbecue featuring Uli’s “Wurst of the Fest” is available for purchase. Doors open at 5 p.m. and films start at 7 p.m. Tickets are $10 and all attendees must be 21 or older. Tickets may be purchased directly at the door or online at Tumbleweed’s website.

Saturday, Aug. 3 features a night of movies in the vineyards at the Esther Bricques Winery. Films include many award-winning

shorts from other film festivals. The event offers live music, light appetizers and features tastings of the winery’s vintages. Doors open at 5 p.m. and films start at 7 p.m. Tickets are $10 and may be purchased at the door or online at Tumbleweed’s website.

Attendees may also visit the Tumbleweed Film Festival’s Facebook page, www.facebook.com/TumbleweedFilmFestival, for more information on films, including trailers, and venues.

Festival founders Fine and Klein, both filmmakers in their own right, started the festival to combine their love of filmmaking with their love of Washington’s Okanogan Valley and hope to continue growing their festi-val throughout the Okanogan, including Tonasket, for many years to come.

This year’s primary festival sponsors include The Pastime Bar and Grill, Baines Title and Escrow, Veranda Beach Resort as well as Okanogan Estate and Vineyards. Other community sponsors include the Camaray Motel, Hometown Pizza, the Oroville Chamber of Commerce and the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune.

FESTIVAL | FrOM a1

By Gary a. DeVonManaging editOr

OROVILLE - Christopher Wald has opened Okanogan Patrol Services in Oroville, a full service private security and inves-tigative agency.

Okanogan Patrol Services pro-vides 24-hour alarm response, armed and unarmed mobile patrol, estate security, close pro-tection (body guarding), process service, private investigations and uniformed and non-uniformed services. It has office hours Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., at 1411 Main Street, Unit C, in Oroville.

“I am originally from Oregon, however I got married and spent the last six years in Canada where I formed Gryphon Protection Service, Corp.” Wald said. “I missed the U.S. so much, that I have moved back to the United States and formed Okanogan Patrol Services.

His company bridges the gap between current law enforce-ment roles and the communities in which they serve, according to Wald.

“We do not replace law enforce-ment,” he said. “Instead, we com-pliment these agencies by provid-ing services in three main areas of focus. These areas often challenge local law enforcement agencies resources, especially within rural areas.”

These areas of focus include: target deterrence patrols of resi-dential and private commer-cial property, alarm response to homeowners and business own-ers, and assistance with security patrols of civic buildings and properties.

“Effectively providing secu-rity solutions in these three areas is no small feat,” Wald said. “While it doesn’t require sworn law enforcement officers, it does

require specialized training and skills to successfully and safely deter those willing to take advan-tage of people, property, and our pursuit of happiness that we are all entitled to.”

“Okanogan Patrol Services has that training, knowledge and skill. We acknowledge that oper-ating in this realm requires offi-cers whose skills far exceed the industry standard. Our training doesn’t stop at state mandated minimums. We pay for additional third-party training by experts qualified to teach these higher advanced elevated skills. We supervise officers closely through a strict FTO (Field Training Officer) and FTX (Field Training Exercises) to ensure excellence skills in service and moral char-acter.”

The company also requires all its officers to participate in a 80 to 100 hour “Ride along” program before they are allowed to patrol on their own.

Okanogan Patrol Services’ goal is to stay small and remain community focused and will be attending local events and festi-vals throughout the Okanogan Valley.

“We wish to grow one com-munity at a time. We want our guards to be known by all those around us for who we serve. So that if the time comes, people know they can trust us with what matters most to them,” he said.

“Coming from a law enforce-ment family and background, especially in rural areas as I did,” he added. “I saw the problem forming that the smaller agen-cies don’t have the resources to respond to all calls with the high quality service and priority they would prefer, but just physically can’t achieve. This isn’t saying they won’t respond, however the purpose of police is to deal with criminal acts and community

safety once called on. However, the goal of Private Security is to deter said criminal acts before they reach the police. Also, through our mobile patrol and emergency response units we are able to respond to alarms (which 90 percent of the time are false alarms) well in advance of police response.

“This is a huge burden on Local Law Enforcement and we are able to assist them and then call them if criminal acts have or are being committed. Also, we can respond to resi-dential and commercial prop-erties and deal with almost 100 percent of the problems rang-ing from trespassers to angry individuals or groups. None of these issues require sworn law enforcement officers. This a long with a whole slew of other issues, private security is the right answer.

“Remember: we’re here to assist the police not replace them.”

Wald has owned other busi-nesses as well. He owned and operated a Mobile Treatment and Paramedic Company that served the oil and gas industries, later expanding into logging and min-ing operations.

“Before that, I was really good at roping and steer wres-tling (High School & Collegiate Rodeo) a buddy and collegiate rodeo team mate and I formed a training academy for 3-18-year olds teaching the future genera-tions of rodeo how to rope and wrestle. It wasn’t so much a busi-ness as a hobby, but we did file taxes.”

When not at work, Wald says he enjoys harvest season, camp-ing, hiking, skiing, rodeo, the color purple, mountain climbing, traveling and volunteering in the community.

You can reach Okanogan Patrol Services at (509) 557-2222.

New security business opens in Oroville

Page 4: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

PAGE A4 OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE | JULY 18, 2013

• Wenatchee Valley Medical Center

• Robert Pellegrini• Anonymous • Dr. Carlton F. Roos,

The Barkuloo Trust• Okanogan Family

Faire• MidWay Building

Supply• Paul & Rachel Lacey• Veranda Beach Resort• P.T. Works• Doug & Jacqueline

Sklar of Edward Jones• Esther Briques Winery

& Vineyard LLC• Pastime Bar and Grill• Thom Speidel• Scott & Montie Smith

• RDL Auto Service• Patti & George

Baumgardner• Fernne & Roger

Rosenblatt• Barbara Culp• Marija & Richard

Welton• Grant’s Market• Karen Schimpf• Lyman & Pamela

Skow• Red Apple Inn• Tom & Linda Black• Claire Jeffko• Tonasket Natural

Foods Co-Op• Janet & Trygve Culp• Kim & Jim Helleson• Maya Watershine Woods

• Peter Clitherow• US Bank• Bea & Leon Alden• Sharon & Ernie Bolz• Gary Bramer DDS• Beyers Market• OK Chevrolet• Susie & Troy Shaddox• Robin Stice• Victoria & Jerry Jones• Rose & Andre Corso• Lida & Rick Lind• Junction• Dr. Robert Nau• Okanogan Properties

LLC• Superior Auto Parts

Inc.

The Community Cultural Center would like to thank to all of this year’s

Tonasket Community Theater Sponsors. We had a fun and successful showing

of the “The Legend of Cat Ballou”, THANKS TO THESE FOLKS:

The CCC would also like to express our deep gratitude to Tonasket Community Theater Director, Sarah Kaiser, whose passion and persistence brings culture to

our town every year. Appreciation also goes out to the cast, crew and musicians who donated so much time and talent for the cause. Thank you!

smithRETAIN

VOTE by August 6

Senator

www.e l e c t s e n a to r s m i t h .co m

JohnSTATE SENATE DIST 7 GOPAs a farmer, business consultant and

community leader, Senator John Smith knows what it takes to be

a voice for Northeastern Washington.

Paid for by Friends of John Smith • P.O. Box 183 Colville, WA 99114 509-675-6488

a position to make a grant request for that amount of money. With a 50 percent grant we’d know what our match would need to be.

“We could still apply, if fed-eral money is still there, we could apply for a federal grant. If we got a state and federal, that could be a 90 percent match, but you still have to be able to walk in the door with the money for a 50 percent match, and then celebrate if you got both.”

Danison pointed out that get-ting into position to put together a solid grant proposal is likely the only way the project will come to fruition.

Even the least-expensive option - based on a similar project in Davenport - is likely to cost upwards of $1.2 million just for construction.

Danison went through the ins and outs of much of the details of getting the project on solid foot-ing, answering questions from both the council and from the family of Gordon Stangland, who last year bequeathed an unspec-ified amount of money to the project.

Many of the questions revolved around ways to cut costs, such as using the engineering and plans from previously complet-ed projects elsewhere (such as Davenport).

NO QUICK, EASY PATH“In order to get the grant

money, you have to jump through hoops,” he said. “Ask Linda Black what it costs to get a simple little slab with some water features on it to get it engineered and approved by the state. It costs thousands and thousands of dol-lars. It’s not that easy.

“It’s a municipality, there are public bidding laws, and you have to have the complete design approved. I can guarantee you that Pool World, that did the Davenport design, isn’t going to just give us the plans... As long as you don’t need anyone else’s money, you have more flexibility.

“I agree with the spirit of what you’re saying,” said council mem-ber Scott Olson. “That $18,000, just to get the concept, when they have the plans done ...”

“Not really,” Danison said. “Every site is different. We’re in the 100-year flood plain, there’s an existing pool. It’s not just like you can take their design and put it somewhere else.”

Olson, as he has on previous occasions, asked about the pos-sibility of pool that could be used for more than just three months out of the year.

“An indoor pool, unless there’s a bunch of millionaires around that have a bunch of money that they don’t need to hang onto, isn’t feasible,” Danison said.

KEEPING IT UPNot only is the cost of building

the pool substantially higher, but the cost of maintenance is expo-nentially greater than that of an outdoor seasonal pool.

“I still have the idea this is not just going to be a pool for the kids to play in the summer,” Olson said. “Swim lessons, but also rehabilitation (for patients) with the hospital. Adults didn’t seem to use the (old) pool. There must have been some reason. If we’re going to built something this expensive, it has to serve more needs.”

“In may ways I agree with Scott,” said council member Jean Ramsey. “I would like to see a pool. We get comments that we have to have a pool. But when it comes down to discussion, we never have any public show up or have support.

“We will have to maintain this year after year, and I haven’t wrapped my mind around how we’re going to do that. For 50 years. I’m not against the pool; I have kids. But I have to wrap my mind around being fiscally responsible about doing it.”

Mayor Patrick Plumb talked about even with a small tempo-rary pool in his back yard, which he got for free, has cost him hun-dreds of dollars to maintain.

“All of this is on an exponential scale as a city,” he said. “(What it amounts to is that) we are subsi-dizing kids to swim, and we’re not getting away from that. We are not going to charge $15 a day to swim in the pool, and even that probably wouldn’t do it (to cover maintenance costs). That’s where you have families taking the lead wanting to make sure there is a pool here. It’s not going to pay for itself.”

Danison and the council dis-cussed what it would take to form a pool or recreational district that could support maintenance of the pool through local taxes.

“The county commissioners have to allow the ability to form a junior taxing district,” Plumb said, noting it would probably cover the area of the Tonasket School District. “All that does is gives us the ability to put some-thing on the ballot. You still have to spend money to put it on the ballot.”

Furthermore, even if a taxing district is approved, voters would then have to approve the actual taxes.

“Would it be sales tax gener-ated or property tax generated?” asked Plumb. “They have to pass that. But the city can’t take the lead. The commissioners have to establish that taxing district.”

Danison added that will in itself entail a two-year process,

even if successful.

LONG WAIT NO MATTER WHATAt the earliest, a pool wouldn’t

be in use until 2016, and Danison said even that would require a miracle.

The (Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office) requires - park plan that shows the project a priority (which we have),” Danison said. “The application initially due in March, so we submit applica-tion, have it undergo a techni-cal review. Then they chew you apart, you rewrite it. So if we’re going to make the March dead-line - we have to have what it’s going to cost, what the design will look like.”

He said having the Pool World work in place will make that next step possible.

“Even then in order to be truly competitive we’d need to spend another $100-150,000 so that when we apply for the grant, we (other studies completed). If we apply for federal money there is an additional process there. I can’t explain why it works the way it does. Then if we get the grant .... funding wouldn’t be available til 2015. That’s if we had all the matching money, walked in with a killer application, and every-thing lined up in place.

“And if not, we’ll wait until 2016 and apply again.”

Olson said at a later point in the meeting that he regretted that with some people it has become a point of tension over whether or not to fund the pool or the Tonasket Water Ranch, when the reality is that the water ranch project completion would be beneficial to moving along the pool project.

“I fear that this could have been seed money heading into the pool,” he said of the water ranch. “The idea of, look what we’ve done as a community by ourselves (when filing a grant application)

“Now we’re asking for grant money for the next step. It’s been a hard issue, people saying they’re saving their money, or accusing the water ranch of stealing ‘their’ money.”

“People don’t have a good per-ception of the two,” Ramsey said. “Some seem to think that you have to drop one to support the other.”

But, as Ramsey added, the city’s commitment to the pool proj-ect became a lot more real with Tuesday’s vote.

“This is the city showing a commitment with a solid dollar,” she said. “The city is making that commitment with city money. Just us, the city, saying OK, we’ll commit to this.”

POOL | FROM A1

File photo

Tonasket’s city swimming pool is in the middle of its second summer of sitting empty. The Tonasket City Council last week approved nearly $18,000 to proceed with the next stage of a project to replace the obsolete pool.

as a generator of tax revenues, employment and economic development,” she said.

She added that she wanted to start talking about the commu-nity’s assets to attract more tour-ists and about what makes people travel and what makes the media talk up a place.

She spoke about why people travel - the need to experience something special and how things like convention centers are not the boon that people once thought they would be.

“It’s the vacationers who spends the most because that’s all he/she has to do with time spent at the destination,” she said. “For communities that are unlikely to ever be in the game of vying for conventions, they must look to the vacationer for their tourism dollars anyway, which is what makes image so important. The great thing about image is it’s something you create.”

About events: “There are events and there are events. Events that people can see at home or that happen in a number of differ-ent places close to home will be less appealing in motivating a person to travel than a unique events,” she said. “Some of the most successful festivals attract a specialized audience. You either like chamber music or you don’t.”

The most beneficial events are ones that give visitors reasons to stop and stay, turning day trips into hotel nights, according to Lorentzen.

She gave several examples of events that started small and have grown into big events, like the Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Ore. that started in 1935 as part of their Fourth of July celebration. Today it attracts 125,000 visitors a year, has an annual budget of $75 million and a total estimated economic impact of $168 million.

She also points to Seattle’s Wagner Festival. “You don’t have to love high German opera. You just have to love money, because not only were big spenders com-ing to the event, but the event was generating a lot of press,” Lorentzen said.

She says festival events that happen in the evening, or are multi-day events, are important because at least some segment of the audience doesn’t go home at night.

She said she was excited about the Tumbleweed Film Festival and thinks it has a good chance of growing into something big for Oroville and the surrounding communities. She described how the Toronto International Film Festival and the Banff Mountain Film Festival have grown into big successes.

“I would sell our Okanogan counterparts this way: Like Tumbleweed, the Napa Valley International Film Festival takes place in non-traditional venues and is intertwined with its wine and food industries,” she said. “Like Tumbleweed, it started in 2010. Its first year consisted of three evenings showing six films. Today, 125 wineries and 30 res-taurants participate and over 100 films are shown in 11 ven-ues spread among four towns. I think is potential the Canadian Okanagan travel industry will like.

“The most successful high-profile film festivals are treated like tourism assets and support-ed as such by their communi-ties. Those that struggle along unaided by the beneficiary busi-ness and local economic devel-opment agencies meet a com-mon end.”

Lorentzen said the festival’s founders have big ambitions and hope to build the event to an international stature that attracts nationwide audiences as well as establishing a filmmak-ing summer camp in Oroville for kids.

“How many of Oroville’s festi-vals hold regular events in Seattle to promote traveling to Oroville?”

she asked. “Tumbleweed hosts several promotional film screen-ings a year in Seattle for that purpose.”

She also said going after the “foodies” can be profitable.

Food and drink events make people travel and attract a high value, low impact guest.

She describes these guests as “Affluent adults who can afford and appreciate fine wine, world-class cuisine, great natural beauty and who respect community val-ues that have served to make the Napa Valley ‘legendary.’”

She also points to the Gilroy Garlic Festival, saying that it has grown into the “garlic capital of the world,” processing more gar-lic than anywhere else. However they feature only a couple types of garlic, while the Okanogan grows the most commercial varieties in the world.

“The Okanogan is the Napa Valley of garlic,” she said. “If ever there was a place that should have a huge, tourist attracting, media-generating garlic festival, it’s here. We have one in Tonasket and I applaud them for it, but its economic impact could be much, much greater.

“Maybe they would like to expand their concept geographi-cally to include Oroville or brain-storm how to attract more tour-ists, but if not, there are other ways for Oroville to attract food-ies,” she said.

Then there are the birders, the bicyclists, the motorcyclists and outdoor adventure enthusiasts.

“You’ve already got what they want. It’s just a matter of convinc-ing them to come here instead of going somewhere else. For the most part, like the foodies, these people are urban too and they have discretionary income for experiences,” she said.

Lorentzen said after several months of analyzing the sub-ject of attracting more tourists to Oroville, she has concluded Oroville is located in the wrong place - on the edge of the Cascade Loop Route but not in it, too far west and north of the Coulee Corridor and barely included in the Cascade Foothills Farmland Association’s map and cut off entirely on their website.

“Oroville needs to move to the middle,” she said, adding that Arnie Marchand had pointed out Oroville really is in the middle - between Wenatchee and the northern end of the Canadian Okanagan.

“You can get anywhere east, west, south or north in the Okanagan/Okanogan from Oroville. We know we’re in the middle, but everyone else thinks we’re on the edge. I think we can

change that,” she said, diagram-ming an oval on a map with Oroville at its center.

She also presented a chart that showed how many more winer-ies, golf courses, ski areas, wine festivals restaurants, cideries and distilleries there were when Oroville is at the center.

The chart showed the num-ber of such businesses located in Oroville, often with a zero, but how they increased when you added the Canadian Okanagan and how they increased even more by adding in the American Okanogan.

A second chart showed the distances from Vancouver to Osoyoos and from Seattle to Oroville, within about 25 miles of being equidistant.

“If Vancouver is a big market for Osoyoos, Seattle should be a big market for us,” she said, sug-gesting the two Okanogans work together.

She points to the efforts of the Thompson Okanogan Tourism Council to develop a ten-year plan to turn the area into as big an economic generator in the shoul-der and winter months as it is in the summer.

The major focus of this effort is to promote the uniqueness and build the reputation of its natural attractions and events.

One example is they plan to inventory and promote the regions agricultural products that fit into the slow food move-ment. All the sub-units of the Thompson Okanogan region are working at this same goal, according to Lorentzen.

“We want Canadians. Thompson Okanogan wants Americans. Unlike some commu-nities, we also want Americans to travel to Canada if they have to pass through Oroville to get there. The Okanogan/Okanagan is a win win,” she said.

When she began her hour-long talk, Lorentzen said she wanted to head up the chamber’s “Wacky Ideas Committee.”

“That’s where I’d like to serve because daydreaming is a good thing in tourism development,” she said. “Dreams put people in motion and most ideas, until proven, seem farfetched - like landing a man on the moon.”

She concluded by saying tour-ism development is not rocket science and that unique events and attractions make people trav-el...commonplace attractions and events don’t.

“It always takes time and small successes building on one anoth-er to get a community to embrace common vision for tourism development. I think we can do it.”

CHAMBER | FROM A1

Gary DeVon/staff photo

Sandy Lorentzen talks with Oroville Chamber of Commerce members at their Thursday, July 11 meeting about making Oroville a unique travel destination.

Page 5: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

While Sandy Lorentzen was talking to the Oroville Chamber of Commerce about using Oroville’s cultural assets to attract more tour-ists, Richmond, B.C. writer Patrick Robinson was writing a love letter to Oroville, Washington in the Huffington Post, Part of that publica-tion’s “anthology of reflections on American places.”

He writes about spending weekends and holidays in his family’s cabin he describes as sandwiched between Osoyoos and Oroville. He says Oroville never fails to impress and marches to the beat of its own drummer.

Robertson writes:“Oroville, you’re like no other small town. You just have a way of

bringing things together. Nestled against the border with Osoyoos, Canada, you graze the fingertips of the Sonora Desert, finishing their long reach from Mexico. Geographically you’re far from the middle, but culturally, right at the center of three countries.

“Oroville, you never fail to impress. Bringing three countries together is no easy feat, yet you do it without batting an eye. You charm them and then claim them as your own. Coming up on weekends and holidays, I’ve gotten to know your people a little, but mine a lot, at our little house by the lake. With no TV, no clock on every wall, and no mall to run off to, you bring us together. Whoever ‘us’ is on that particular day.”

Local historian Arnie Marchand, Colville Tribal member and promoter of the “Three Nation Vacation,” might argue that the three nations in play are that of the United States,

Canada and the Native Americans/First Peoples. We all know how much Canadians love Mexican food and flock to Trinos, Rancho Chico, La Ultima (see letter this week) and the taco wagons -- maybe Robinson would accept Oroville as bringing four nations together.

At the last Oroville Chamber meeting, Lorentzen suggested we embrace the cultural differences. Use them as a means to bring more people to visit, to stay and spend their money. She also puts Oroville in the middle - the middle of the Okanagan/Okanogan - and suggests Americans and Canadians work together to have visitors going north and south and share in what makes this area special.

After we shared the link with the Love Letter on Facebook and Twitter there were a lot of people asking what Robinson was talking about when he wrote that the new stoplight was big, albeit old news in the local paper (that’s us). Rather than describing Oroville itself, he was describing small towns in general, the “every small town.” That is unless he was talking about the stoplights at the border crossing, which we doubt.

The author isn’t the first to wax poetic about Oroville (or Tonasket, for that matter). Our communities have graced the occasional column in big dailies like the Seattle Times.

Robinson’s letter is a romanticized version of the town, something that perhaps not everyone sees. It may make you recall the wonder one might have felt growing up here, something we often take for granted. Seeing the town through his eyes can make you a little jealous of people like him who come here to get away from things like the big city. While we toil to earn our bread in “God’s Country” Robinson’s letter might just help a local reconnect with the reasons we live here in good times and bad.

To read Robinson’s full “Love Letter to Oroville,” see http://www.huffingtonpost.com/love-letters/love-letters-oroville-washington_b_3401729.html.

JULY 18, 2013 | OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE PAGE A5

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

“The only difference between death and taxes is death doesn’t get worse every time Congress meets.” - Will Rogers.

OPINION BY WILLIAM SLUSHER

It certainly seems that Democrat legisla-tors in both Washingtons have never met any working Americans who weren’t earn-ing too much money for their own good. In Olympia, legislative Republicans and two constitutionally salvageable rogue Democrats may have been able to hold the line on Democrats’ ever more ravenous addiction to other people’s money by virtue of a windfall from existing taxes. Still, as their remarks to the Seattle Times suggest, Democrat legislators are drooling in delirious tremens for want of new taxes. Oh what to do? So much targetable working people’s money out there to be confiscated, so little time to take it.

There is an inescapable dilemma with they who presume to decide what someone else’s “fair share” of taxes should be. Once such a figure is determined, it is but a nanosecond before the revelation strikes Democrat con-gresspersons that if taxing the workers this much is fair, then ... zounds! ... taxing them more must be even fairer!

And so the situation devolves to an entire political party of legislators who have such uber-arrogant contempt for taxpaying Washingtonians as to actually sue for the ‘right’ to pillage the worker yet more eas-ily with less accountability. These Democrat legislators actually stick their middle fin-ger in the voting public’s eye and squat all

over the latter’s clear initiative-expressed, heavy majority mandate that taxes only be increased with a two-thirds vote. “A simple majority should rule,” these taxation obsessed Democrats piously pontificate, blithely ignor-ing that a simple and huge majority of voters has already ruled by initiative for the two-thirds restriction.

Yes of course taxes are unavoidable, even desirable on anything approaching a rea-sonable scale. America needs infrastructure, security, and the opportunity to earn one’s way up the prosperity ladder in a business friendly nation. But there are four acidic prob-lems with our current taxation:

First, the taxpaying worker has lost all control over government’s power to extort his income. That famed 1% are blessed with so much money they can live well no matter how high taxes get. But those average work-ers crawling from check to check, writing those carnivorous due dates on bill envelopes, doing without, stretching each cent to the max, they live in constant fear that taxaholic legislators will choke the life out of their families. Recently revealed, rampant parti-san corruption in our Democrat-puppet IRS speaks ominously for itself.

Second, the working taxpayer has no con-trol over how his money is spent. Millions for weapons to Syrians who danced on 911, annual billions for wars that just succeed in getting our young volunteers killed, fed-eral funding for the mass Gosnellation of live human fetal infants, ad infinitum. It doesn’t matter your political party here. We all shake our heads daily at unimaginable extremes of tax dollars squandered on waste and schemes so egregious we agree across party lines that it’s lunacy.

The third problem is that abysmally too few citizens and corporations pay any income taxes at all. They criminally ride free on the

worker.The fourth toxic problem is the worst, for it

prohibits any solution to the first three. Once enacted simply to pay national bills, taxation has become a social engineering cattle prod for government to stick us with, to forcibly herd us into behaviors they decide for us that we must adhere to. ‘Sin’ taxes, incentive tax breaks, carbon taxes, energy taxes, electric car tax rebates, etc. The list is endless and growing daily. Are we a free people, or are those of us who pay taxes merely slaves on the hoof to be herded and milked to serve the powerati? If not, why the prod taxes?

Government tax guzzlers forget or, worse, don’t care that somebody had to work hard and long for every dime of those billions extorted from workers. Most workers des-perately need that money. But government ... just ... keeps ... mega-spending it on too many insane projects and too much negligent waste.

As of election 2012 working taxpayers have become the new persecuted minority in America. It’s time for some affirmative action to save him and her, for it is the sands of their lives through the hourglass spent earning the money so carelessly bled away by reckless taxation.

What’s called for here is a shift of some of that famed American compassion from such insanity as spending billions supporting foreigners who hate us to helping American workers who must surrender the bulk of their finite breaths dearly earning the money exact-ed in taxes with barely - maybe - enough left over to feed their families. These working, taxpaying Americans have profoundly earned some sadly overdue compassion from govern-ment and its avaricious taxation fetishists.

William “Bill” Slusher is a writer with a horse ranch on the Okanogan near Riverside. He may be complained to at [email protected].

Oroville gets a love letter

Working taxpayers the new persecuted minority

William Slusher

The People versus Okanogan County PUD

Dear Gary,Our PUD is in disarray, piling up mil-

lions in additional debt each year. The PUD debt is currently $38 million. Is the public aware? Where is our watch dog press? We and our utility are in over our heads, liter-ally drowning, and there are still plans to continue spending more than we are making. Any rancher, farmer, business or household can tell you that economic plan will fail. The PUD needs one-third more money from the ratepayers, scheduling three public meet-ings to let us know. I hope your readers saw the small PUD advertisement on page 2 in last week’s Gazette-Tribune. With no news release or article or community calendar announcement, a low public turnout will make a wrong decision by the PUD easier.

If the 33 percent increase over five years proposed by the PUD was enough to fix the problem and balance the books for good, I just might tighten my belt and help the utility cover real costs. Unfortunately, what they plan next, after the rate increases, really has me worried, Municipal Bonds!

Our Similkameen River, its scenic Similkameen Falls, its salmon and steel-head fishing, and the economic benefits of outdoor recreation and tourism will all be sacrificed for a failed business plan. Our utility wants so badly to be a hydro-electric producer, they would sell $64.2 million dol-lars in municipal bonds to the rich elites of Wall Street, as a fundraiser for their project. In truth, the flows of the Similkameen River are too low and seasonal for generation of affordable electricity at today’s construc-tion costs. An independent economic study, prepared by Rocky Mountain Econometrics,

using PUD estimates, shows a loss of $26/megawatt-hour generated, net loss to the PUD, $ I million/annually. We cannot afford this debt and damage to our natural resources. Stop the Spending! Attend the public meet-ing, Monday, July 22 at 6:30 p.m. in the Okanogan PUD Auditorium.

Joseph Enzensperger Oroville

La Ultima in Tonasket, it is the ‘ultimate’ find

Dear Editor,My husband and I are from the Canadian

Okonagan Valley. Over the past five years, we have come to love the American Okanogon and have passed through Tonasket regularly on our way to the Methow Valley. At the gar-lic festival a couple of years ago, we were wooed by the excellent tamales made by Michael and his family from La Ultima. We decided we had to try the restaurant the next time through and soon it became a necessary stop each time we ventured south.

When we decided to marry this year in Twisp this year, we thought our Canadian relatives would love a true tamale experience. We asked Michael if his family could prepare tamales for 60 and he smiled and said they would be honored. Our plan was to pick up the tamales the day before the wedding but Michael had one look at our small car and insisted he and his children do the delivery for us on the wedding day. He arrived at the hall right on time with tamales for all, extra rice, beans, salsa and chips.

La Ultima was a complete hit with the crowd and Michael refused to accept payment or mileage compensation for the 120 mile

return trip. What a wonderful family and what great food. Tonasket is fortunate to have “La Ultima” as part of its community!

Kerry BokenfohrVernon, B.C.

Nelson Mandela is no George Washington

Dear Editor,President Obama comparing Nelson

Mandela to George Washington reminded me of Herbert Matthews of the New York Times in the late 50’s comparing Fidel Castro to George Washington. Mandela was jailed for years because he admitted he planned sabo-tage to violently overthrow the South African government. He said “We communist party members are the most advanced revolutionar-ies in the world.”

He was repeatedly offered the chance to get out of jail if he would just renounce violence. He refused. Mandela led the African National Congress when it was listed as a terrorist group by the U.S. Congress. Mandela’s wife in the 80’s Winnie Mandela became notorious for encouraging the murder of blacks opposed to the ANC by placing gas filled tires around their necks and lighting them on fire.

Today , according to Dr Gregory Stanton , the head of Genocide Watch, the ANC is conducting an orchestrated genocidal cam-paign targeting white farmers having already murdered over 3000 or 10 percent of South Africa’s commercial farmers.

President Obama supports this terrorism by the ANC through foreign aid and the praise he gives to the former ANC leader and terrorist Nelson Mandela.

Steve DunhamSpokane

Page 6: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

Page a6 OkanOgan Valley gazette-tribune | July 18, 2013

OkanOgan Valley life

Reported by Edward Jones

FINANCIAL FOCUSSandra Rasmussen

This week, Major League Baseball’s All-Star game will be played at Citi Field in New York. If you’re a baseball fan, you’ll enjoy the annual gathering of the sport’s best players. And if you’re an investor, you may be able to take away some valuable lessons from the All-Stars — lessons that can prove valuable to you long after the game’s final out is recorded.

So, what can you learn from the All-Stars? Here are a few of their traits:

• Consistency — All-Star teams rarely include ballplayers who are having one great year amidst a mediocre career; typically, All-Star players perform well every season. As an investor, you also want to seek consistent performers — those investments that, year in and year out, are likely to meet their objectives, whether those are growth,

What Can All-Stars Teach Investors? income or a combination of both. Of course, in the financial world, there are no sure things, so just like the best ballplayers, any investment can have an “off year.” Still, by sticking with quality investment vehicles, you should be able to improve the overall performance consistency of your portfolio.

• Ability to avoid “errors” — All-Star players (apart from pitchers) are typically superior hitters, but many of them also have superior defensive skills — which means they make few errors in the field. And as an investor, you will definitely want to avoid as many errors as possible, because these mistakes can be costly. Some of the most common “errors” are chasing after “hot” stocks (they may have already cooled off by the time you hear about them), investing too aggressively and investing too conservatively.

• Durability — The Major League Baseball season is 162 games long, which means that, over the course of six months, ballplayers play almost every day. And since baseball is a physically demanding game, injuries are common — yet, many All-Stars seem to make it through the entire season without missing more than a few games. When you invest, you will need plenty of durability as well. Over the course of decades, you will see some bumps in the road — periods in which the financial

markets are struggling. During these times, you may be tempted to take a “time out” from investing. But if you do, you could miss out on the beginning of a market rally. The best investors stay invested, through “up” and “down” markets, following a long-term strategy and keeping their focus on their goals.

• Flexibility – Not surprisingly, most Major League Baseball players are big, strong men. However, in recent years, many ballplayers — like other professional athletes — have discovered that various types of training, including yoga, can greatly increase their flexibility, allowing them to reduce injuries and play more effectively. As an investor, you, too, need flexibility in the sense of being able to adjust your portfolio, as needed, in response to changes in your life or in your goals. As part of this flexibility, you need, among other things, enough liquidity in your accounts to take advantage of new investment opportunities as they arise.

In all likelihood, you won’t be swinging a bat or throwing a ball in front of a national audience — but by following the above suggestions, you may be able to become an “all-star investor.” This article was written by Edward Jones for use by your local Edward Jones Financial Advisor.

www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC

Financial Advisor

32 N Main St. Suite AOmak, WA 98841509-826-1638

Due to a glitch, somewhere along the way last week, part of this column didn’t get printed, so we’ll add it this week.

What a great 80th birth-day party was held at Mary Louise Loe’s home, honor-ing Wally on his birthday, the almost 60th Wedding Anniversary of Wally and Ruth and also near the 80th for Ruth.

The day was perfect for the outdoor occasion and the surrounding hillsides were lush and green from all the recent rains.

To have so lived your life that folks came from far and near to help celebrate with this couple is a great achievement in life, since most of their time has been spent elsewhere, but home, their Molson home, has always been an important

element to them. To get the families of Rises and Loe’s and a whole assortment of other folks makes for a good bunch

of people.Using the word bunch

brings to mind that Judy Bunch had an accident at the Chesaw rodeo, riding in a drill team, and the horse went one way and Judy’s foot went another. No broken bones, but enough pain to require the use of crutches.

What is that old German saying Judy, too soon old …..too late schmart?

A recent Sunday after-noon was spent visiting the elderly, the sick and the

deceased. First we visited the Extended Care Facility where we chatted with Bill Hilderbrand, Rita (Nigg) Birch and Kay (Sherling) Tracy and said “hi” to others.

Then, was on to see Ellen Roberts, who is now 103 and our most special aunt. Then, on our return home we stopped at the Ellisforde Cemetery. The Indian way is to have natural settings in their burial grounds and the walking isn’t easy, but if you’ve never seen an Indian cemetery, you should take the time to visit this one. The Pierre family has some very nice markers, with etched pictures of the sons and their sister.

On that same Sunday evening I wit-nessed the most gorgeous rainbow that I have ever seen, and I have seen quite a few. It was most spectacular, during a light rain and bright sunshine, causing brilliant colors. And to those of you who didn’t see it, I’m sorry. We all know who makes rainbows and He did a great job on this one… and don’t give me any of that scientific gobbled-goop, about the sun and the rain and shadows etc. because you won’t change my mind.

The hot month is about half finished… and still no ripe tomatoes. We finally made it to the Farmer’s Mkt. There was a nice turn out.

It’s good to report that Bud Gerken is home. Hopefully he’ll continue to improve and be out and able to visit with friends.

Steve Retasket had to be taken to Wenatchee hospital recently, due to infections.

Lotsa pro’s and con’s on the tree remov-al in front of the grade school. I think I’ll just stay out of that discussion.

A phone call from “Rinky” Fritz, Omak, announced the death of his cous-in, Gail Sanborne, July 9 after a lingering illness. Many will remember him from former high school days in Oroville.

Lloyd and Beverly Curtis have returned from a trip to Copenhagen, very tired after the long flight and travels, but had a most interesting trip.

The airwaves have certainly been doing overkill on the Zimmerman/Martin trial, or so it seems to me.

The cherry lines have been operating

two shifts, but the overall run will prob-ably be much shorter, due to so much damage to the fruit. Some didn’t even pick their crop. Would make one believe in insurance, as something is better than nothing.

Yeah! Twinkies are back on the shelf, so I heard.

Some flowers are so prolific…..holly-hocks just come back year after year and are so pretty and the hummingbird vine (trumpet vine I think) keep those little birds really busy as they bury their noses deep into the flowers.

Lots of memories were shared as the Rainsberry family gathered for a family reunion. I imagine there were at least five generations represented. It was nice to see and visit with Donna R. Forney and Virgil and feel privilege to be included when they have their gatherings.

Forneys and their daughter had lodg-ings at Veranda Beach. That place is still growing by leaps and bounds with vineyards all over the hill sides and it is a beautiful spot and very well kept. A nice place to visit.

Birthdays, anniversaries, reunions

THIS & THATJoyce Emry

SUBMITTED By SUzAnnE Dailey HowarDtOnasket Farmers’ market

While strolling through Tonasket Farmers’ Market this past Thursday, the song “L’Chaim” from Fiddler on the Roof came to mind. L’chaim is used as a Jewish toast and means “to life.” Life indeed is appar-ent and abundantly present at the market, from sweet fresh fruit to the smiling, berry-stained faces of children, life abounds.

Returning to the market is John DeLap from Malott, who sells rip-ened to perfection apricots, blue-berries and peaches from DeLap Orchard. I purchased apricots to give to friends from the Coast, and

had to sample them to make sure they were good. They were so good I had to sample a few more. Mary Capote, of Capote Orchards, is back as well with fresh cher-ries. There were three varieties to choose from: Rainier, Lapin, and Sweetheart, and the varieties will change with the season. Right now, life is truly a bowl of cher-ries, and it doesn’t get much better or sweeter than that.

Don’t want to heat up your kitchen with baking this summer? Life is good, here, too. Allow Laura Becker to do the baking for you. She returned to market last week with her famous por-

ridge bread, bumbleberry, dutch apple and rhubarb pies, plus white chocolate chip cookies baked by her young daughters. Ah, the sweet life.

Several young people repre-senting Range Riders 4H Club brought their lively wares to mar-ket. Dan and Katie Keane, aided by their mother, Emily, sold zesty salsa and jam. I couldn’t resist their craft offering, “refrigerator pockets,” jeans pockets decorated with buttons, appliquÈ and beads and having magnets on the back. Dan, quite the young entrepre-neur, made me a deal on three. All the proceeds support their 4H club and they learn valuable skills creating products and bringing them to market.

Sweeten up your life this week, shop at the market. You might just find yourself humming “L’Chaim.” See you at the mar-ket!

TOnaSkeT MaRkeT RePORT

Sweeten your life at the Market

SUBMITTED By Dolly engelBretson

Heritage Days are this Friday and Saturday, July 19-20. The Senior Center will be serving a wide variety of pies includ-ing rhubarb, apple, blueberry and custard and maybe some I haven’t mentioned.

Pies will be served by the piece, 1/6 slide for $3, or $8 for the whole pie. We will be stationed near the kitchen and next to Bob Seaman and his home made ice cream stand. A lot will be going on.

The Museum veranda. Betty Roberts will be demonstrating

her spinning techniques on her own professionally made spin-ning wheels. She makes each and they are so beautifully hand-crafted that they are actually a work of art. The Garden Club will be at the north end with their annual plant sale and will have some other items for sale as well. Meanwhile, back at the Senior Center, Walt Hart and Scout Troop #29 will be serving breakfast from 7-10 a.m. This is a fundraiser for the troop.

We received word this week that due to unforeseen circum-stances Jessica Russell will not be

available to tell us about her shop in July 18, but will be resched-uled for a date in August. Just a reminder to those who signed up for the Post Office tour on July 23. Please meet at the Senior Center no later than 9:15 a.m. I will be calling those who have indicated they were interested in the tour. We will have a standby list in case of a cancellation.

Pinochle scores for July 13: Wilma Colburn won the door prize two weeks in a row. Dolly Engelbretson had the high ladies score. WOW! A first. Evelyn Dull and Dolly had 1,000 aces. No wonder I ended with a high score. Evelyn had the most pinochles. Ed Craig had the high score for the men, again. He is pretty con-sistent.

More next time!

OROVille SeniOR neWS

Heritage Days this weekend

WeDDing BellS

Katie Glanzer and Todd Phillips are happy to announce their engagement and forthcoming marriage. Katie is the daughter of Tyrone and Janet Glanzer from Tonasket. She graduated with a Master’s degree in education from University of Washington. She is employed at East Omak Elementary School as a special education teacher. Todd is the son of Randy and Karla Phillips of Brewster, WA. He graduated from Whitworth University with a major in education. He is employed at Brewster Middle School as a math teacher. The wedding will be held in Chelan, WA on Aug. 13. After a honeymoon in Cancun, Mexico, the couple will reside in Brewster.

KATIE GlAnzER & ToDD PHIllIPS

AnDy GlAnzER & MCKEnzIE JEPPSon

A.J. BAKER & RoByn zEIDlER

Tyrone and Janet Glanzer of Tonasket are excited to announce the engagement and upcom-ing marriage of their son, Andy Glanzer, to McKenzie Jeppson. Andy is currently attending Brigham Young University Idaho studying nursing. McKenzie is the daughter of David and Tonya Jeppson from Eagle, ID. She is also attending Brigham Young University Idaho studying music. Their wedding will be held in Boise on July 26. After the sum-mer, the couple will reside in Rexburg, ID.

Brent and Kim Baker of Tonasket are excited to

announce the upcoming marriage of their son, A.J.

Baker, to Robyn Zeidler. A.J. recently graduated from

Seattle Pacific University with a degree in Educational

Ministries. Robyn is the daughter of Bob and Joanne

Zeidler of Plymouth, MN, and is a current SPU

student, studying Global Nutrition and Health. The

wedding will be in Plymouth on Sunday, Aug. 4. The

couple will reside in Seattle at least until Robyn’s gradua-

tion next spring.

Did you know?We use...

Soy Ink Recycled PaperExcess paper recycled for

gardens, fi re starter & more!

1420 Main St., Oroville, WA 98844 509-476-3602www.gazette-tribune.com

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Page 7: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

Metal and E-Cycle Collection

TONASKET - Green Okanogan will hold a metal and e-Cycle collection on Thursday, July 18 and the third Thursday of each month from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Corner of N. Western Ave. and Division St. in Tonasket. We will accept all metals and the following e-Cycle materials: TVs, computers, monitors, towers and laptops. For more information contact [email protected] or call (509) 556-2250.

Oroville Grange Flea Market

The flea maret will take place Saturday, July 20, from 10 a.m-2 p.m. Watch for the sign on Highway 97 south of town. A lot of new vendors and bargains. We rent tables to sell yours. Coffee anytime. For more information call (509) 476-3878.

Oroville Youth Soccer Fall Registration

OROVILLE - Registration for fall season is now open, with early registration closing Wednesday, July 31. Oroville Youth Soccer is a recreational soccer club open to all kids living in the Oroville and surrounding areas, and between the ages of 4 - 15. To register online go to www.ncwsoccer.com and follow the links under Oroville Youth Soccer. For more information go to Oroville (WA) Youth Soccer Club on Facebook, or contact Karrie Scott at 560-9037

British Soccer & TetraBrazil Soccer Camp Registration

OROVILLE – Oroville Youth Soccer is hosting two differ-ent styles of soccer camp this summer, August 12 – 16.British Soccer Camp returns for the fourth year with programs for players ages 3 – 12. Registration is now open for TetraBrazil Camp which returns for the third year to offer a more skill intensive camp for player 11 – 18. Register online at www.challengersports.com.For more information go to Oroville (WA) Youth Soccer Club on Facebook, or contact Karrie Scott at (509) 560-9037.

Tonasket Farmers’ Market

Tonasket Farmers’ Market is held on Thursdays, from 3 p.m. until 7 p.m. The next market is Thursday, July 18. Come join us for some of the best in local produce, crafts, personal care products, homegrown music and farmstead cheeses. Whether you make a quick spin to pick up sup-per ingredients or hang out for hours, you’re sure to get what you want. For more info call (509) 486-1199

NCRL Books on Stage

TONASKET - As part of the Summer Reading Program at the Tonasket Public Library various programs are put on. The North Central Regional Library Books on Stage is one these free pro-grams and will perform Thursday, July 18 at at 1 p.m. at the library located at 209 S. Whitcomb Ave. For more information call the library at (509) 486-2366.

Oroville Farmers’ Market

OROVILLE - The Oroville Farmers’ Market is Saturday, July 20, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Oroville Community Library located at 1276 Main St. Purchase art, crafts, plant starts, fresh baked goods and tamales plus the best produce on the planet. The Oroville Farmers’ Market continues each Saturday through October 26 and new vendors are welcome. Call (509) 476-2662 for more information.

Music at the Market

OROVILLE - The Oroville Public Library will host “Music at the Market” each Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. during the Farmers’

Market season. Musicians who would like to showcase (volun-teer) their acoustic talents are invited to call the Oroville Public Library to book a date. The next Music at the Market is Saturday, July 20, featuring The Oroville Neighborhood Band. For more information call Barbara at (509) 476-2662.

OHA PresentsOkanogan Highlands

Alliance presents, “Watershed Functioning, Plant Ecology & Stream Processes: Tying it All Together,” Saturday, July 20, 10:00 a.m. at the Chesaw Community Center. Gina McCoy, Stream Morphologist, will discuss how watershed functioning leads to characteristic patterns of stream-flow and sediment delivery, cre-ating the watershed “signature.” Tom McCoy, Plant Ecologist, will discuss how disturbance ecology shapes the upland and riparian plant communities, contributing significantly to the characteristic watershed “signature” and flu-vial processes. This is a two-part event. Everyone is welcome to attend the indoor presentation in Chesaw. For the field trip fol-lowing the presentation, space is limited, so pre-registration is required. Priority registration for the field trip is offered to OHA members, and remaining space will be available on a first come, first serve basis to the public. For more info visit http://okano-ganhighlands.org/education/hw online, or contact Julie Ashmore at [email protected], or (509)-433-7893.

NCRL Puppet Show

TONASKET - As part of the Summer Reading Program at the Tonasket Public Library various programs are put on. The North Central Regional Library Puppet Show is one these free programs and will perform on Thursday, July 25 at 1 p.m. at the library located at 209 S. Whitcomb Ave. For more information call the library at (509) 486-2366.

Stroke Support Group

This support group is for any-one who has had a stroke, no matter how long ago. We will be meeting Thursday, July 25, at 10:30 a.m. at the youth cen-ter located at 607 Central Ave., Oroville, adjacent to the Free Methodist Church. Discussion from those who have recovered from a stroke would also be very welcome.

Music in the ParkTONASKET - The Community

Cultural Center of Tonasket will be presenting Music in the Park on Friday, July 26, from 6-9 p.m. featuring the Hyde Family and Friends. The concert will be held in its usual spot at History Park in Tonasket. La Ultima will have food available for purchase, while the CCC will provide refresh-ments by donation. A tip jar will be passed around for the musi-cians.

Molson School Reunion

MOLSON - The Molson School Reunion picnic will be held at Lost Lake on Saturday, July 27 starting at around noon. The potluck lunch will be at 1 p.m. For more information call Mary Louise Loe at (509) 485-3292.

Vacation Bible School

VBS is set for Monday-Friday, Aug.5-9, 9:00-11:30 a.m. at the Loomis Community Church, on Main Street in Loomis. Ages are 3-12. The theme for VBS is, “Gone Fishing.” Stories, games,crafts and music will be included in the pro-gram. For information or rides call 509 223 3902. All kids are welcome, and it’s free!

Western and Native art show

OMAK - The Courtyard in Omak will be hosting the Western and Native Art Show, Thursday-Saturday, Aug. 8-10 from 10 a.m-7 p.m. and Sunday, Aug. 11 from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. There also will be a reception on Saturday from 2-5 p.m. and a live auction

at 3 p.m.

Quilt Show in Molson

MOLSON - The Second Annual Quilt Show in Molson will take place on Saturday, Aug. 31 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Quilters will be displaying patriotic quilts and military memorabilia from all branches of service. Many of the quilts were created from the proceeds of last years quilt show. Those that would like to like to donate a quilt should contact Vicky Didenhover. Quilts will be on display for peoples’ viewing pleasure, but there will also be a selection of quilts and other sew-ing related items for sale. Those with sewing related items that would like to have a table to sell items and/or would would like to display a quilt at the show contact Didenhover at (509) 485-3020.

Food BanksTONASKET - The Tonasket

food bank operates every Thursday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. at Sarge’s Burger Bunker, 101 Hwy. 97 N. For more informa-tion contact Jack Gavin at (509) 486-2480. OROVILLE - The Oroville food bank operates every Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., excluding holidays, in the basement of the Seventh Day Adventist Church. For more information, call Jeff Austin at (509) 476-3978 or Sarah Umana at (509) 476-2386.

Editor’s Note: Our Community Bulletin Board generally allows listing your event for up two weeks prior to the day it occurs. If space allows it may be included prior to the two week limit. However, our online calendar at www.gazette-tribune.com allows the event to be listed for much longer periods. You may place an event on the online calendar by going to our website and clicking on the “Add an Event” button on the homepage. Once your request is submitted, it can take up to 48 hours for the event to appear on the calendar. Online submissions don’t always go into the hardcopy edition, so it helps if they are also submitted to us at [email protected] or at Gazette-Tribune, P.O. Box 250, Oroville, WA. 98844. G.A.D.

JULY 18, 2013 | OkanOgan VaLLeY gazette-tribUne Page a7

OkanOgan Valley life

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OMAK AND MIRAGE THEATERS ARE NOW DIGITAL

MONSTERS UNIVERSITYSAT. - SUN. - MON. - TUES.- WED.- THURS.- FRI.JULY 13, 14, 15,16, 17,18,19SHOWS:7&9PM MATINEE SAT. JULY 20: 2PMWORLD WAR Z - SAT.SUN, MON, TUES. JULY 20,21,22,23. SHOWTIMES:7&9:15PMTHIS IS THE END - WED-THURS-FRI. SHOWTIMES:7&9:10 PM NIGHTLY.

DESPICABLE ME 2 SAT.-SUN.-MON.-TUES.- WED.-THURS.-FRI. JULY 27-28-29-30-31, AUG. 1-2

RED 2 ACTION/COMEDY/CRIME STARRING BRUCE WILLIS, JOHN MALKOVICH, ANTHONY HOPKINS. CATHERINE ZETA-JONES, Fri: 6:45, 9:45. Sat:*3:45,6:45, 9:45 Sun:*3:45, 6:45, 9:45. Wkdys: 6:45, 9:45

PACIFIC RIM ACTION/ADVENTURE/SCI-FI STARRING CHARLINE HUNNAM, RINKO KIKUCHI, RON PERLMAN, CHARLIE DAY.Fri: 6:45, 9:45. Sat:*3:30,6:45, 9:45 Sun:*3:30, 6:45, 9:45. Wkdys: 6:45, 9:45

DESPICABLE ME 2 ANIMATION/COMEDY STARRING STEVE CARELL, KRISTEN WIIG, MIRANDA COSGROVE, KEN JEONG Fri. 6:45 & 9:30 Sat.*4:30, 6:45 & 9:30. Sun. *4:30, 6:45, 9:30. WKDAYS: 6:45, 9:30

98 min PG

TURBO STARTS FRIDAY. ACTION STARRING RYAN REYNOLDS, PAUL GIAMATTI, MAYA RUDOLPH, MICHELLE RODRIGUEZ. Fri: 7:00, 9:30 Sat: *3:45,7:00, 9:30 Sun:*3:45, ,7:00, 9:30. Wkdys: ,7:00, 9:30 PG

116min

96min

PG13

PG13131min

SuBMiTTEd by LyLe AndersonThe weather has been fantastic

for us and I hope that all have been saying cool this week as the temperatures rise. Dues renew-al has been going great and we would like to thank all those that have been getting in and updating their membership status.

This Friday, Bingo is at 7 p.m. and you can come and test your dauber skills. The kitchen will be open at 5:30 p.m. so you can enjoy one of our great hamburg-ers while waiting to win the jack-pot Bingo. Saturday the 20th the

band Bad Habits will be play-ing here at 9 p.m. Make sure to get your good dancing shoes out and come enjoy some great music with us. Don’t forget to come and enjoy a nice afternoon on Sunday at 1 p.m and play pinochle.

Our annual Eagles Picnic will be held on Aug. 3 up by Bonaparte Lake Resort. It is a potluck pic-nic so make your favorite dish and spend a day with your fellow Brothers and Sisters. Later that evening of the picnic, Merv will be doing karaoke at the picnic

site by donation. It is a great time and we invite all to attend, and save a dollar or two to donate to Merv for providing some great entertainment.

Just a reminder that the Eagles will be closed Aug. 3-4 due to the picnic event.

Our pinochle scores from last Sunday are as follows.

Dale Byers too first place and Ken Cook ran off with second. Low score was Cindy Byers and the last pinochle of the day was taken by Penny Smith and Ken Cook. We wish those who may be ill a speedy recovery to good health. God bless all.

The Biggest Little Eagles in the State.

TOnaSkeT eagleS

Annual picnic to be on Aug. 3

MOLSON - Over 400 peo-ple visited the Molson School Museum on July 4th and through the weekend. They came from all parts of Washington and British Columbia, as well as New York, Oregon, California, Alaska, Arizona, France and Alberta,

Canada. Visitors continue to visit the

Old Molson Museum and the School Museum.

Since the Molson Schoolhouse will be 100 years old in 2014, a

calendar has been put togeth-er showing old school pictures, some history of the building and transforming it into a museum. They are now available for sale at the School Museum for $14.

The Molson School Reunion picnic will be held at Lost Lake on Saturday, July 27 starting at around noon. The potluck lunch will be at 1 p.m.

MOlSOn MUSeUM

Reunion July 27

COMMUniTy BUlleTin BOard

1420 Main St., P.O. Box 250Oroville, WA 98844

509-476-3602 or 1-888-838-3000

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Okanogan ValleyGAZETTE-TRIBUNE

Page 8: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

Page a8 OkanOgan Valley gazette-tribune | July 18, 2013OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE • July 18, 20138

Crosswords

ANSWERS Across

1. Easy open �ip top (2 wds)

7. Spanish sparkling wine

11. Branch

14. “Seinfeld” gal

15. Eastern ties

16. Compete

17. Bring up

18. Taps (2 wds)

20. French vineyard

21. “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice ___ Agin)” (#1 hit of 1970)

22. Intuitive feeling

23. Tendencies

27. Abnormal respiratory sound

28. Discouraging words

29. Growls

32. Bad day for Caesar

33. Schuss, e.g.

34. XC

36. Bit of a draft

37. Ancient Grecian district NW of Athens

39. “___ we having fun yet?”

40. Mountain range section

42. ___ King Cole

43. Hip bones

44. African antelope

45. Nod, maybe

46. Plundered

47. Tail of a dressed fowl (2 wds, pl.)

50. Go o� script (hyphenated)

53. Director’s cry

54. Amazon, e.g.

55. Person to whom money is owed

57. Calmer

60. Embrace

61. Cobblers’ tools

62. Overlay

63. “I” problem

64. Bank deposit

65. Dimethyl sulfate and others

Down

1. Porcino

2. ___ king

3. Sudden onset of sleep

4. Third canonical hour (pl.)

5. Cancel

6. “Wanna ___?”

7. Path leading to impact (2 wds)

8. To the rear

9. Strength

10. Debility

11. Shakespeare, the Bard of ___

12. Reduced instruction set computer (acronym)

13. Speed

19. ___ International Film Festival in Korea

21. Arouse

23. Geometrical solid

24. Unit of angular measure

25. To such an extent

26. Catches �re

30. Land (2 wds)

31. Bitter con�ict

35. “The Second Coming” poet

37. Using both lips

38. Jeer

41. Flavorful

43. Writer who uses sarcastic humor

48. Bawl out

49. Scru�s

50. Advil target

51. Dope

52. Child’s plastic construction brick (trademark)

56. Quip, part 3

57. Bauxite, e.g.

58. Anderson’s “High ___”

59. “Star Trek” rank: Abbr.

WorkSourceOkanogan County

Updated list of employment at

126 S. Main St., Omak509-826-7310

WorkSource Okanogan County is an equal opportunity employer and provider of employment and training services.Auxiliary aids and services are available upon request to persons with disabilities.

Space donated by the Gazette-Tribune.

www.go2worksource.com509-476-4057

St. Charles Place Apartments

207 Main St., Oroville, WA

Now accepting applicationsfor Low Income Housing.

Equal Housing Opportunity

ATTENTION:

– Family & Singles –

“A place to call home”

email: [email protected]

LOW INCOME HOUSING“PAY ONLY 1/3 OF YOUR

INCOME FOR RENT”

9 7 2

2 8 4 6

7 4 1

5 8 2 3

7 5

4 5 9 1

7 1 3

2 9 7 5

1 6 9

Puzzle 29 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.40)

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen

Easy, di� culty rating 0.40

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers.The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, eachcolumn and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once.

ANSWERS

Puzzle 25 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.35)

814653972526794381397182654258961437941327568673548129139275846785416293462839715

Puzzle 26 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.30)

926435871315897246784261359271354968843916725569728413457683192632149587198572634

Puzzle 27 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.44)

625941738439872516187365294712459683564283179398716425953124867276598341841637952

Puzzle 28 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.35)

637914852524387169918652347475836291863129574192745683286491735359278416741563928

Puzzle 29 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.40)

346915872917328465582674931691587243278463159435291786754132698829756314163849527

Puzzle 30 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.42)

657942318148673529923851476312769854794285631865314792281437965576198243439526187

Puzzle 31 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.37)

721389456469157283358624791534978162976241835812536974645892317283715649197463528

Puzzle 32 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.37)

345278196972641358681593247213789465468325971759416832826937514594162783137854629

Puzzle 33 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.38)

495638127267195843813427956152846739974351268638279514586714392349582671721963485

Puzzle 34 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.44)

154826937396475128827391465961258374548637219273149586715963842682514793439782651

Puzzle 35 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.33)

386549712521768349947312586219456837834197265675823491498675123763281954152934678

Puzzle 36 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.44)

278513694413629857596487321869152473152734968734968512981376245627845139345291786

Sudoku

Sponsored by

509-476-3602

PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate ad- vertising in this newspaper is sub- ject to the Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any pref- erence, limitation or dis- crimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handi- cap, familial status or na- tional origin, or an intention to make any such prefer- ence, limitation or discrimi- nation”. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate that is in violation of the law. To complain of discrimina- tion call HUD at 1-800-669- 9777. The number for hear- ing impaired is 1-800-927- 9275

For Rent

For Rent3 BR Home $795;

3 BR/2 BAw/2XGarage by River $1100;

2 BR on River $720; 2 BR/2BA $875;

3 BR/2 BA Waterfront APT $575;

1 BR Apt $475; 1 BR Condo $695.

Call Sun Lakes Realty (509)476-2121

AmericanLegion Housing

1105 Appleway, Oroville

Now Accepting Applications

for 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts

Subsidized for Income Qualified Households

* Great Oroville Location* Picnic Areas* Spacious Floor Plans* On-Site Laundry* Park-Like Setting

Call for information and application

509-476-2808TTY 425-562-4002

Oroville: 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. W/D hookup. Good parking. No pets. No smoking. $525/ mo + $400 dep. 509-223-3064 509-899- 2046.

FOR RENT: One bedroom house with carport, 5 miles north of Tonasket. No smok- ing and no cats. First, last & deposit required. $450 per month. Also, references and rental agreement required! Call 509-486-4320 leave message.

Oroville. Large, Nice 1 bed- room apartment. upstairs. No pets or smoking $400 + Utilities. 509-476-3145

TONASKET2 Bedroom apartment with garage. Close to town. $485/mo. Call 509-476-2234 or 509-322-0347

LONG TERM SUBSTITUTE – Oroville, Omak, Tonasket to provide child education, health and social services. Position includes teaching and home visiting for both the Head Start and Early Head Start programs. AA degree in ECE preferred, must have or enroll in CDA program, GED/High School required. May be provisionally hired to complete requirements. Salary 11.80 – 16.22 hr. DOE. 40 hrs per wk. Bilingual/Spanish strongly en- couraged to apply.

Pick up applications at 101 4th Ave. W.

Omak, WA 98841. Equal Opportunity Employer.

Certified MedicalAssistant

needed for a full-time, day shift position in Omak Clinic’s Walk In Clinic. Must be able to work indepen- dently. Spanish speaking a plus but not necessary.

Visit us atwww.wvmedical.com

for more info and to apply.

Clinic Operations Manager, Family Health Centers,

Tonasket, WA

Are you tired of sitting in traf- fic while your life passes you by? Do you desire wide open spaces and the beauty of na- ture at your door? Do you want to be part of a beautiful rural community with four true seasons? If you are an ener- getic team player with the de- sire to make a difference, we are looking for YOU! Family Health Centers is a growing, comprehensive health care system incorporating State services (WIC) with first rate medical and dental care to fa- cilitate a healthy community. We operate three medical clinics and three dental clin- ics, providing ambulatory medical care with a family practice focus in a rural com- munity.

Full time salaried exempt po- sition. Duties include day to day clinic operations, pro- gram planning & evaluations, quality improvement & regu- latory compliance & supervi- sion & development of staff. REQ’s: Knowledge & training in the healthcare field typical- ly required through a formal Associates degree or trade school program in nursing OR high level of skill, exper- tise and basic clinical knowl- edge to manage the medical clinic; may also have been acquired in not less than five years of managing a medical clinic. See

www.myfamilyhealth.org for job description &

application. Send resume to [email protected]

or HR, PO Box 1340, Okanogan, WA

LPN or MA Certified, Family Health Centers, Tonasket,

WA

1 full time and several Per Diem positions at our Tonas- ket clinic. We’re seeking an energetic team player who has a desire to make a differ- ence. FHC is a not for profit Community Health Center dedicated to providing quality health care regardless of ability to pay. Take vital signs, review history with pa- tient, administer medications, perform EKG’s, performs, prepares for and assists with procedures in accordance with clinical protocols, coordi- nates and processes refill re- quests with Provider, docu- ments information to EHR and other duties as assigned.WA State license/certification required. See

www.myfamilyhealth.org for job description &

application. Send resume to [email protected]

or HR, PO Box 1340, Okanogan, WA

Clinic Nursing Supervisor, Family Health Centers,

Tonasket, WA

Full time at our Tonasket clin- ic. FHC is a not for profit Community Health Center dedicated to providing quality health care regardless of ability to pay. Position man- ages clinic workflow; works with the E HR Core Team and clinic medical team to ensure quality, comprehen- sive, efficient care is deliv- ered to FHC patients. Re- sponsible for supervision of nursing support staff. WA State RN or LPN license/cer- tification required. See

www.myfamilyhealth.org for job description &

application. Send resume to [email protected]

or HR, PO Box 1340, Okanogan, WA Open until filled

NAC Licensed NAC needed to provide in-home care to pa- tient in Riverside/Tonasket area. Experience preferred but not required. Duties in- clude heavy patient care. Must have NAC license from WA State

1-800-637-9998 [email protected]

EOE

WANTED TO RENT: Ski Boat, at a Reasonable Price. July 29th and 30th. Respon- sible, Experienced Boaters. Skis and PFDs Required. Call 403-813-3086

Looking for 1950 to 1960 Volkswagon Van / Bus. Rusty OK. Please call Kevin, 403- 690-7646

AnnouncementsSay it in the classifieds!

*Special deal**HAPPY BIRTHDAY

*HAPPY ANNIVERSARY*CONGRATULATIONS!!*WILL YOU MARRY ME?

MUST BE PREPAID$6.00 for the first 15 words

additional words $1.00each. Bold words, special

font or borders extra.Add a picture

for only $1.50 more.Call to place ad

Okanogan ValleyGazette-Tribune509-476-3602

FoundDID YOU FIND AN ITEM

AND WANT TO FINDTHE OWNER?

Found items can be placedin the newspaper for oneweek for FREE. Limit 15

words, or prepay for wordsover the 15 word limit. Call509-476-3602 before noon

on Tuesdays.

Yard andGarden

RIDING MOWER: 1 year old Craftsman. $900. Call (509)560-0036

WantedBuying Silver, Gold Coins,

Collections, Jewelry, Sterling, Flatware, Guns.

Paying fair Prices.Call Spence (509) 429-4722

Garage &Yard Sale

ANTIQUE & Garage Sale. Saturday, July 20th, 9am to 4pm at the Flower Mill in Ha- villah. 12’ Aluminum Boat & Trailer, Cast Iron Heating Stove, Glassware, Pictures, Furniture and Lots of ‘Stuff’. Come and enjoy our new Gallery and Tea Room!

StatewidesSTATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS WEEK OF JULY 15, 2013

This newspaper participates in a statewide classified ad program sponsored by the Washington News- paper Publishers Association, a statewide association of weekly newspapers. The program allows classified advertisers to submit ads for publication in participating week- lies throughout the state in compli- ance with the following rules. You may submit an ad for the statewide program through this newspaper or in person to the WNPA office. The rate is $255 for up to 25 words, plus $10 per word over 25 words. WNPA reserves the right to edit all ad copy submitted and to refuse to accept any ad submitted for the statewide program. WNPA, therefore, does not guarantee that every ad will be run in every newspaper. WNPA will, on re- quest, for a fee of $40, provide infor- mation on which newspapers run a particular ad within a 30 day period. Substantive typographical error (wrong address, telephone number, name or price) will result in a “make good”, in which a corrected ad will be run the following week. WNPA incurs no other liability for errors in publica- tion.

ADOPTION

WARM, FUN Professional couple eager to provide your child love and happiness forever. Expenses paid. Ann and Peter. Call 1-800-593-1730. [email protected] or go to www.annandpeter.info

EVENTS-FESTIVALS

ANNOUNCE your festival for only pennies. Four weeks to 2.7 million readers statewide for about $1,200. Call this newspaper or 1 (206) 634- 3838 for more details.

FINANCIAL

LOCAL PRIVATE INVESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I loan on houses, raw land, commercial property and property development. Call Eric at (425) 803-9061. www.fossmortgage.com

HEALTH/MEDICAL

PELVIC/TRANSVAGINAL MESH? Did you undergo transvaginal place- ment of mesh for pelvic organ pro- lapse or stress urinary incontinence between 2005 and the present? If the mesh caused complications, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Charles H. Johnson Law and speak with female staff members 1- 800-535-5727

HELP WANTED -- DRIVERS

GORDON TRUCKING, Inc. CDL-A Drivers Needed Dedicated & OTR Positions Available! Consistent Miles, Benefits, 401k & EOE. Sign On Bonus! Recruiters available 7 days/wk! Call: 866-725-9669

DRIVERS -- We value our drivers as our most Important Asset!You make us successful! Top Pay/Benefits Package! CDL-A Required. Join our team! Call Now 1-888-414-4467, www.gohaney.com

LEGAL SERVICES

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparation. Includes custody, sup- port, property division and bills. BBB member. (503) 772-5295. www.para- [email protected]

PublicNotices

NOTICEThe Tonasket School District will be holding the Budget Hearing on Mon- day, July 29, at 7:00 p.m. in the dis- trict office board room.Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 11, 18, 2013#495025

Tonasket residents can drop off information for the Gazette-Tribune at Highlandia Jewelry on 312 S. Whitcomb

GAZETTE - TRIBUNEGAZETTE - TRIBUNEOKANOGAN VALLEY

Classifieds

continued on next page

1420 Main St., P.O. Box 250Oroville, WA 98844

509-476-3602 or [email protected]

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HelpWanted

HelpWanted

HelpWanted

Boats &Trailers

Automobiles

Edward C. Allstot On attaining a Master of Science

in Nursing degree with a specialization in education.

- Love Mom, Dad, & Sister

Page 9: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

JULY 18, 2013 | OkanOgan VaLLeY gazette-tribUne Page a9

Installed Insulation&

Garage Doors Installed Fiberglass Insulation Blown & Batt Residential & Commercial Green Guard Indoor Air Quality Certifi ed Experienced Professional Service

Offi ce: 509-486-2624Cell: 509-429-0417

ALL VALLEY INSULATION, LLC

Got Water?

Pump InstallationDomestic Hook upsPump RepairLawn Sprinkler SystemsAll Supplies Available

Over 25 Yearsexperience!

509-486-4320LIC. & BONDED #COOKSCE931CL

Cook’sCutting Edge, Inc.

— Fred Cook —

EdwardsRefrigeration Refrigeration Heat Pumps Air Conditioning

Heating Commercial Residential

- 24 Hour Service -

Rick Edwards

Licensed & Bonded

P.O. Box 1758Tonasket, WA 98855

509-486-2692

Colville Spokane Republic

Water Well Drilling Pump Systems Water Treatment Full Service Store Free On-Site Estimates

Lic. #FOGLEPS095L4

“The Water Professionals”509-782-5071

Free Water Analysis Zimmatic Pivots Hydrofracturing Geothermal Heat Loop Systems

www.foglepump.com

Chelan & Kittitas County

800-845-3500Ferry & Okanogan

CountyServing all of

Eastern Washington... Since 1981Water Well DrillingPump Systems

509-782-5071

Free Water Analysis Zimmatic Pivots

Kittitas 800-845-3500

Ferry

Eastern Washington...

Fogle Pump & Supply,

Inc.

GUNN LAWOFFICES

RYAN W. GUNNAttorney at Law

CivilCriminal

7 North Main Street, Omak, WA 98841

Phone: 509.826.3200Fax: 509.826.1620

Email:[email protected]

STORAGEBoat, RV & More!

Located at:124 Chesaw Rd., Oroville

[email protected]

Lakeside

Weatherization with lease Rent unit for project Contractors store tools / product Additional Business space available

132 Clarkson Mill Rd., Tonasket509-486-2888

33086 Hwy 97, Oroville509-476-3149

Midway Building Sup ply

Oroville BuildingSup ply

Quality SuppliesSince 1957

Plywood Windows Doors Insulation

Plumbing Electrical Roofi ng Lumber

Air Conditioning Attorney Building Supplies

OSOYOOSREADI-MIX

Suppliers of:Quality Readi-Mix Concrete & Aggregates

11648 115th St., Osoyoosat the Buena Vista Industrial Park

Business: 250-495-6688Toll Free: 1-866-495-6688

We Work Saturdays!

Serving Oroville, Tonasket and area!

Concrete Insulation

Pumps Storage Storage Well Drilling

BustedKnuckle

All of your Automotive& Upholstery needs

Seats Headliners Door PanelsConvertible tops / Vinyl roof covers

HOURS:Mon. - Sat., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

— Auto & Small Engine Service — We Do Tire Repair & Balance!

124 Chesaw Rd, Oroville 509-476-2611

Auto & Upholstery

BustedKnuckle

Auto / Upholstery

Septic Pumping Septic Installation Portable Toilets

Cell: (509) 322-4777MORGASE983JS

509-422-3621

Excavation and Septic Service

Thank you for yourcontinued support!

Septic Service

OROVILLE

Units 5x10 to 10x30 Power / Fenced Covered RV & Boat Parking Video Monitored

509-560-0166

140 Oroville Chesaw Rd., Oroville

509-560-0367www.orovilleministorage.com

MINI STORAGE

Jan Asmussen, Broker - Owner 509-486-2138www.hilltoprealtyllc.com l 158 Airport Rd - To nas ket, WA. 98855

WANTED• 2-3 bdrm Home in town. Tonasket. One level. Up to $160,000

• Alfalfa fi eld or fi eld that can be planted. Need Irrigation Rights. Oroville to Riverside. Home not necessary. Price open.

h i l lt o p r e a lt y

PLAY LIKE YOU MEAN IT In Sandalia Beach Homes. Hi-Quality New Construction Directly on

Lake Osoyoos Beach. Spacious 3 Bdm/2.5 Baths, Private Garages Right on The Beach, Clubhouse & Pool in Gated Community on 18 Acres.

Competitive Pricing. PICK YOUR INTERIOR!

$549,000 & $639,000.

One 2280 SF Home Available for $325,000.

BEST VALUE ON LAKE OSOYOOS!

Beautiful smaller home just steps from the waterfront, 500

Ft. of Sandy Beach in Oro Beach Resort. Dock, Boat Moorage,

Launch & includes 2nd Lot for Garage/RV. Heat Pump,

Upgrades $225,900

Stan & Tamara Porter & Joan Cool

1411 Main St., P.O. Box 547 Oroville, WA 509-476-2121

Come get your map of all the Lakefront properties!

SUNLAKESREALTY

1510 Main St., Oroville 509-476-4444LAKE AND COUNTRY Call Cindy or Rocky DeVon

www.orovillelakeandcountry.net

Spectacle Lake Home, with over 200 ft of water front! There is approx 2900 sq ft of living space including a fi nished daylight bsmt. 4 bd / 3 ba 1950’s era home, all in fantastic shape. This home is warm and inviting, has a large living room, nice big picture windows to take advantage of the view! Beautiful lake view, mature shade trees, gorgeous setting. Spectacle Lake is a full water sport lake, and great for fi shing. MLS#469954 $333,000

Sandy Peterson & Ron Peterson, Mary Curtis, Dan Coursey & Doug KeeWindermere Real Estate / Oroville

509/476-3378www.windermere.comThe coffee is always on!

www.windermere.com

2034 Highway 7.- Are you looking for Rustic farm house on acreage this might be just what your looking for, located on the outskirts of Oroville yet conveniently on the way to Blue Lake, and just a few miles from Lake Osoyoos. This property is Similkameen River front and offers won-derful wildlife areas. There is room to grow, room to improve, and a Great Big Shop with 2 over sized doors, heavy duty cabinets and work benches. NWML#503934 $176,550

HOMEIf you are buying or selling a home, you want someone

you can rely on with years of experience to represent you. Call one of our local Real Estate agents today to

find the home of your dreams or to list your home!

OKANOGAN VALLEYGAZETTE-TRIBUNE

www.gazette-tribune.com

Find The Right

1422 Main St., Oroville, WA. 98844509-476-3602 888-838-3000

July 18, 2013 • OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE 9

PublicNotices

City of TonasketPublic Forum

The City Council of the City of To- nasket will be holding a public forum on the changes made to the Land Use Designation Map for the Com- prehensive Plan, as requested by the Tonasket City Council. The for- um will be held during the regular Council meeting on Tuesday, July 23, 2013. This meeting begins at 7:00 pm. The location is the Tonas- ket City Council Room, 209 S. Whit- comb Ave, Tonasket, WA. For addi- tional information please contact Alice Attwood, 509-486-2132. Any- one is invited to attend the meeting and those with special language, hearing or access needs should con- tact city hall, 509-486-2132, 24 hours prior to the meeting.Alice J. AttwoodClerk-TreasurerPublished in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 11, 18, 2013.#495648

City of TonasketWater Use Efficiency Goals Public

ForumThe City Council of the City of To- nasket will be holding a public forum to set goals for the City’s water sys- tem. The forum will be held during the regular Council meeting on Tues- day, July 23, 2013. This meeting be- gins at 7:00 pm. The location is the Tonasket City Council Room, 209 S. Whitcomb Ave, Tonasket, WA. This

PublicNotices

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

IN AND FOR OKANOGAN COUNTY

In Re the Adoption of:G.T. S.,a person under theage of eighteen.No. 13-5-00028-1SUMMONSTO APPEAR FOR HEARING(AMENDED)TO: EDWARD W. ARBUCKLEA Petition for Termination of Parenti- Child Relationship has been filed in the above-referenced cause of ac- tion, a copy of which is served upon you with this summons.You are hereby summoned to ap- pear on the 5th day of August, 2013, at 1:30 p.m. and respond to the petition. If you fail to appear and respond, an Order of Termination will be entered.If you wish to seek the advice of an attorney in this matter, you should do so promptly.DATED this 21st day of June, 2013CALLAWAY & DETRO PLLC/s/ Robert R. ColbertRobert R. Colbert; WSBA #45494Attorney for PetitionersKeith R. Corine and Kimberle A. Cor- nie.Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 4, 11, 18, 2013.#494012

PUBLIC NOTICEORDINANCE NO. 827

An ordinance of the City of Oroville, Washington adopting amendments to Chapter 18.02, Interim Critical Areas Ordinance as permanent regulations of the City per RCW

PublicNotices

OROVILLE-TONASKET IRRIGATION DISTRICT

SMALL WORKS ROSTERThe Oroville-Tonasket Irrigation Dis- trict maintains a Small Works Roster to the completion of public works projects in accordance with District’s Resolution No. 2010-02, and RCW 39.04.155 provisions. The maximum cost for any project cannot exceed $300,000.00 which included the costs of labor, material, equipment and sales and/or use taxes as appli- cable. All interested contractors not currently on the Small Works Roster are encouraged to submit an appli- cation at this time.Small Works Roster application can be obtained and submitted to the Oroville-Tonasket Irrigation District, PO Box 1729; Oroville, WA 98844. Inquiries and requests for applica- tions may be directed to the manag- er at 509-476-3696.Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 18, 2013.#497877

Public HearingSix Year Transportation Improvement Program

City of TonasketThe Tonasket City Council will hold a public hearing during the regular Council meeting on Tuesday, July 23, 2013 in the City Hall, 209 S. Whitcomb Ave. Tonasket, WA. The regular meeting commences at 7:00 pm.The purpose of the hearing is to re- view and possibly adopt the Six Year Transportation Improvement Pro- gram for the years 2014 - 2019.Interested persons are invited to at- tend. Persons with special language, hearing or access needs should con- tact City Hall at 509-486-2132, 24 hours prior to the hearing.Alice J. AttwoodCity Clerk-Treasurer

SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGET HEARING

Notice is hereby given that the Board of Directors of Oroville School Dis- trict No. 410 will hold a public hearing on July 29, 2013, at 6:30 p.m. to adopt the 2013-2014 school year budgets. The

PublicNotices

hearing will be held in the boardroom at 816 Juniper Street. The public is invited to attend, and comments will be heard for or against any part of the budget. Steve Quick - Superintendent of SchoolsPublished in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 11, 18, 2013.#496305

SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON

FOR LINCOLN COUNTYEstate ofSTANLEY H. SPEILER.,Deceased.NO. 13-4 00036-7 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDI- TORS(RCW 11.40.030)PLEASE TAKE NOTICEThe above Court has appointed me Personal Representative of Dece- dent’s estate. Any person having a claim against Decedent must present the claim: Before the time when the claim would be barred by any appli- cable statute of limitations, and In the manner provided in RCW 11.40.070: By filing with the forego- ing Court the original of the signed Creditor’s Claim, and By serving upon or mailing by first class mail to us at the address provided below a copy of the signed Creditor’s Claim. The Creditor’s Claim must be pre- sented by the later to occur of: Thirty (30) days after we served or mailed this Notice to you as provided in RCW 11.40.020(3), orFour (4) months after the date of first publication of this Notice. If the Cred- itor’s Claim is not presented within the foregoing time period, the claim will be forever barred except as pro- vided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective for claims against both the Decedent’s

PublicNotices

SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON

FOR OKANOGAN COUNTYGUY T. DREW, an individual,Plaintiff,vs.PONTIAC RIDGE SPORTSMEN, a Joint Venture; ANY UNKNOWN HEIRS of the members of Pontiac Ridge Sportsmen,a·Joint Venture; DALE E.COVEY; MARY JEAN LEW- IS flkla MARY JEAN COVEY; and ALSO ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL ES- TATE DESCRIBED IN THE COM- PLAINT HEREIN;Defendants.NO. 132003360CIVIL SUMMONS BY PUBLICA- TIONTHE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO THE FOLLOWING PERSONS AND PARTIES:1. PONTIAC RIDGE SPORTSMEN, a JoInt Venture2. ANY UNKNOWN HEIRS of the members of Pontiac Ridge Sports- men, a Joint Venture;3. DALE E.COVEY;4. MARY JEAN LEWIS f/k/a MARY JEAN COVEY; and5. ALSO ALL OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIM- ING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE REAL ESTATE DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN.YOU AND EACH OF YOU are here- by summoned to appear within sixty calendar days after the date of first publication of this “Civil Summons by Publication”, to wit, within sixty days after the 27th day ofJune, 2013, and defend the above-entitled action in the above-entitled Court by (1) filing your “Answer” to the Plaintiffs “Com- plaint for Quiet Title” with the CountyClerk of Okanogan County and (2). serving a copy of your Answer upon

PublicNotices

Section 13, Township 39 North, Range 30 East, W.M. Situate in the County of Okanogan, State of Wash- ington.Current Assessor’s. Parcel Number: 3930134002Additionally, the Complaint seeks to recognize the satisfaction and fulfill- ment of (1) the Real Estate Contract between Defendant PONTIAC RIDGE SPORTSMEN, A JOINT VENTURE and Defendants DALE E. COVEY and MARY JEAN LEWIS (f/k/a MARY JEAN COVEY), record- ed on or around June 27, 1978. un- der Okanogan County Auditor’s File No. 646427, and (2) the Real Estate Contract between Defendants DALE E. COVEY and MARY JEAN LEWIS (f/k/a MARY JEAN COVEY) and Plaintiff, recorded on or around De- cember 24, 1980 under Okanogan County Auditor’s FileNo. 674503.If you wish to seek the advice of an attorney in this matter,you should do so promptly to avoid any impairment of your legal rights. This “Civil Sum- mons by Publication” is issued pur- suant to CR 4 and RCW 4.28.110.LARSONBERG &PERKlNS PLLCAttorneys for Plaintiffs/s/ Jon W. ScottJon W. Scott (WSBA#45290) for:Paul M. Larson (WSBA#06010)File your written Answer with:Okanogan County Clerk’s Office149 N.3rd Ave.P.O. Box 72Okanogan,WA98840Phone: (509) 422-7275Serve a copy of your Answer up- on:Paul M. LarsonLarson Berg & Perkins;PLLC105 North Third StreetYakima, WA.98901Phone: (509)457-1515Published in the Oakanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on June 27, July 4, 11, 18, 25, August 1, 8, 2013#491451

continued from previous page

AUCTION NOTICEThere will be a public auction at Bud- get Towing, 32156 Hwy. 97, Tonas- ket, WA, 509-560-1056, on Friday, August 2, 2013. Viewing time starts at 11:00 AM with the auction at 12:00 PM. Up for auction will be:1992 CHEVY BLAZERWA 590WST1GNDT13W9N21962321997 PONTIAC GRAND AMWA-AKA-78281G2NE52M8VC8671301996 BUICK CENTURY102XHO4H29J6H100624Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 18, 2013.#498164

meeting is also considered as an in- formational meeting for water system consumers. For additional informa- tion regarding the proposed goals please contact Alice Attwood, 509- 486-2132. Anyone is invited to at- tend the meeting and those with spe- cial language, hearing or access needs should contact city hall, 509- 486-2132, 24 hours prior to the meeting.Alice J. AttwoodClerk-TreasurerPublished in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 11, 18, 2013.#495652

36.70A.130; and establishing an ef- fective date.The above summary is of an ordi- nance adopted by the Oroville City Council during the July 2, 2013 regu- lar meeting. Entire copies of the or- dinance may be obtained at the Oro- ville City Hall, 1308 Ironwood, during normal working hours (Monday - Fri- day, 8:00 - 4:00).Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 18, 2013.#498159

Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 11, 18, 2013.#495654

probate and non-probate assets. Date of First Publication of this No- tice: July 4, 2013Signed: TONI L. ORAVEZ, Personal Representative Address for Mailing of Service: C / O Joshua F. Grant, P.S. Attorney at LawP.O. Box 619Wilbur, WA 99185Published in the Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune on July 4, 11, 18, 2013. #492667

the Plaintiffs undersigned attorneys at their office location provided be- low. If you fail to properly file and serve your Answer by the above deadline,ajudgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of Plaintiffs Complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of the above-entitled court. The “Complaint for Quiet Title” in the above-entitled action seeks to quiet title in favor the above Plaintiff, GUY T. DREW, with respect to the following real property:Legal Description: The Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of

Page 10: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

PAGE A10 OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE | JULY 18, 2013

SPORTS & OUTDOORS

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* Thursday *Steak Night

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*To be paid at the time of the physical - Insurance will not be billed.

Sports physicals will be done by physician volunteers.All proceeds will be donated to Tonasket Athletic Booster Club.

For Tonasket High School and Middle School Students!

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Tues., July 30Tues., Aug. 13Tues., Aug. 20

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$15.00*

Submitted photo

Hunter DeVon was the lone Oroville Boy Scout to attend Camp Bonaparte this year. Pictured is the all camp race, in which his unit took second place. He was at camp with a Chelan, Entiat and Oroville combined Troop. He earned five merit badges while at camp: canoeing, soil and water conservation, Indian Lore, orienteering and swimming. He also completed his Camping merit badge from going to camp. Hunter is a First Class Scout. Camp will also earn him the requirements for the Rank of Star. Hunter is also a Patrol Leader for his Troop and a mem-ber of the Brotherhood of the “Order of the Arrow”.

SCOUT CAMP

WDFW RELEASE

OLYMPIA - Hunters have until Aug. 14 at midnight to apply for an opportunity to hunt deer this fall on the 6,000-acre Charles and Mary Eder unit of the Scotch Creek Wildlife Area in northeast-ern Okanogan County.

Hunters can submit an appli-cation for the “limited-entry” deer hunt on the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) website at http://wdfw.wa.gov/hunting/permits/scotchcreek or by contacting the WDFW north central region office at (509) 754-4624 or head-quarters at (360) 902-2515.

Eighteen applicants will be chosen during a random draw-ing scheduled Aug. 15. Winners of the drawing will receive access permits to the Charles and Mary Eder Unit of the Scotch Creek

Wildlife Area near Oroville.“This is part of our effort to

provide quality hunting opportu-nities in Washington,” said Matt Monda, WDFW Northcentral Regional Wildlife Manager.

“This drawing is open to the general public without any addi-tional fees beyond the cost of a hunting license and the standard tags.”

Of the 18 access permits avail-able this year, six will be reserved for bowhunters, six for muzzle-loaders and six for hunters using

modern firearms. Hunters are allowed to take only one deer, and must follow general hunting rules in effect for this area.

Deer-hunting seasons for the area are Sept. 1-27 for bow hunt-ers, Sept. 28-Oct. 6 for muzzle-loaders, and Oct. 12-20 for hunt-ers using modern firearms.

The results of the drawing will be available on WDFWís website the last week of August. Hunters who are drawn will receive an access permit and a boundary map in the mail.

Okanogan County limited-entry deer hunt applications due Aug. 14

Submitted photo

Oroville’s girls took first place at the Camp Classic Tournament in Liberty Lake last week. Pictured are (front row, l-r) assistant coach Phil Willingham, Sydney Egerton, Mikayla Scott, Pie Todd, head coach Mike Bourn, (back) Katie Egerton, Lily Hilderbrand, Kaitlyn Grunst, Kali Peters, Meagan Moralez, Hannah Hilderbrand and Marissa Garcia. Not pictured is Kendal Miller.

SUBMITTED BY CORI HILDERBRAND

LIBERTY LAKE - The Oroville Girls summer league basketball coached by Mike Bourn and his buddy Phil Willingham played in the Camp Classic tournament in

Liberty Lake Washington. Last year they took 2nd place,

but this year they won the championship. The girls played hard every game. They played a teams from Alberta, Idaho, and Washington. The Oroville

girls were a mix of next season’s seniors all the way down to some eighth graders.

Thanks to the Oroville Booster Club and Jack and Mary Hughes; without them it wouldn’t be pos-sible.

Oroville girls win summer hoops title

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OKANOGAN VALLEYGAZETTE-TRIBUNE

509-476-3602888-838-3000

Subject to change

FOOTBALL

TONASKETS6 at Bridgeport 7pS13 Kettle Falls 7pS20 at Brewster 7pS27 at Okanogan 7pO4 at Cashmere 7pO11 at Cascade 7pO18 Quincy 7pO25 at Omak 7pN1 Chelan 7pN8-9 X-over/playo�

OROVILLES6 at Brewster 7pS13 Mary Walker 7pS20 ByeS27 at Kittitas 7pO4 Manson 7pO11 at Liberty Bell 7pO18 at Lk Roosevelt 7pO25 White Swan 7pN1 at Bridgeport 7pN9 Chief Leschi 3p

GIRLS SOCCER

TONASKETS7 at Okan. Jamboree 10aS12 at Liberty Bell 5pS17 Okanogan 4:30pS21 at Quincy 1:30pS24 at Omak 4:30pS28 at Cascade 1:30pO1 Brewster 4:30pO3 at Chelan 4:30p

O8 at Cashmere 4:30pO10 Chelan 4:30pO15 at Okanogan 4:30pO17 Oroville 4:30pO19 Quincy 4:30pO22 Omak 4:30pO26 Cascade 4:30pO29 at Brewster 4:30pN2 Cashmere 4:30pN5 Playo� s (if qual)

OROVILLES17 Liberty Bell 5pS19 at Bridgeport 5pS24 at Manson 5pS26 Entiat 5pO3 Bridgeport 5pO8 Manson 5pO10 at Entiat 7pO15 at Bridgeport 5pO17 at Tonasket 5pO22 at Liberty Bell 5pO24 Entiat 4pO26 at Manson 11aO31 Bridgeport 4p

VOLLEYBALL

TONASKETS10 Oroville 6:30pS12 at Liberty Bell TBAS17 Okanogan 6:30pS21 at Quincy 2:30pS24 at Omak 6:30pS28 at Cascade 6:30pO1 Brewster 6:30pO3 Chelan 6:30pO8 at Cashmere 6:30pO10 at Chelan 6:30p

O15 at Okanogan 6:30pO19 Quincy 6:30pO22 Omak 6:30pO26 Cascade 6:30pO29 at Brewster 6:30pN2 Cashmere 6:30p

OROVILLES10 at Tonasket 5pS12 Republic 5pS26 Lk Roosevelt 5pS28 Mans� eld 11aO1 at Liberty Bell 5pO5 Pateros 5pO10 Manson 5pO12 at Entiat 11aO15 at Lk Roosevelt 5pO17 Liberty Bell 5pO22 at Waterville 5pO24 Bridgeport 5pO29 at Manson 5p

CROSS COUNTRY

TONASKETS7 Tonasket Invite 10aS14 at Moses Lake Invite 10aS21 at Wenatchee Invite 11aS28 at Spokane Runner’s Soul

Inv. 11aO3 at Chelan Invite 3:30pO5 at Colville Invite 11aO8 at Omak Invite 3:30pO12 at Lk Roosevelt Invite TBAO19 at Oroville Invite 12pO24 CTL Championship (home)

TBA

OROVILLEO19 Oroville Invite rest of schedule not yet released

BY BRENT [email protected]

TONASKET - When Austin Booker stood on the podium after taking second place at the state 1A wrestling championships in February, he wasn’t how much of a future he had in the sport.

But the recently-graduated Tonasket senior will be depart-ing the area at the end of July for Bacone College in Muskogee, Okla., where he’ll start practicing with his new teammates on the Warriors’ wrestling squad.

“I had no idea wrestling in college was even a possibility,” he said.

“But after state, I was hop-ing something would come up because I knew I wasn’t done. I wanted to keep on wrestling.”

Bacone is a four-year college that competes in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), which com-petitively is equivalent to NCAA Division II in most sports.

Booker said the coaching staff made a positive impression on him.

“When I went and visited, the coaches were really personable,” he said. “(They) had a good rela-tionship with the wrestlers, so it reminded me of how me and my

(Tonasket) coaches are.”Booker, who intends to get a

criminal justice degree and hopes to become a Border Patrol agent, will start off with a 40 percent scholarship.

“That’s really good,” he said. “They (usually) only offer 25 per-cent to freshmen and 50 percent to national qualifiers.

“They say they expect big things from me.”

Booker heading to Oklahoma college on wrestling scholarship

Brent Baker/staff photo

Tonasket’s Austin Booker will have a big chunk of his college education paid for as he heads to Bacone College in Oklahoma to wrestle and study criminal justice.

FALL VARSITY SPORTS SCHEDULES

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JULY 18, 2013 | OKANOGAN VALLEY GAZETTE-TRIBUNE PAGE A11

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GAZETTE - TRIBUNEOKANOGAN VALLEY

U.S. armed Forces Legacy Park Book may be purchased from Terry Mills, $7060 for 46 high quality pages

of dedication ceremony, ground breaking and work in progress at the Legacy Park.

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COPS & COURTSCOMPILED BY ZACHARY VAN BRUNT

SUPERIOR COURTCRIMINALVanessa Marie Bejar, 28, Tonasket,

pleaded guilty July 8 to unlawful issuance of a bank check. Bejar was sentenced to 364 days in jail with 364 days suspended. From April to June 2010, Bejar issued four checks from a closed account totaling $594.21. All restitution has been paid.

Greggory Michael Jessee, 36, Omak, pleaded guilty July 11 to possession of a stolen motor vehicle, DUI, reckless driving and resisting arrest. Jessee was sentenced to six months in jail for the � rst count, 364 days in jail with 184 days suspended on the second, 364 days in jail with 184 sus-pended for the third and 90 days in jail for the fourth. The court dismissed a charge of no valid operator’s license. He was � ned $623. The crimes occurred Dec. 23, 2012.

Robert James Long, 27, Oroville, pleaded guilty July 11 to residential burglary and third-degree theft. He was sentenced to 22 months in prison for the � rst count, 364 days in jail for the second, and � ned $500. The crimes occurred March 21.

Geo� rey Christopher Mazalin, 40, British Columbia, pleaded guilty to possession of a con-trolled substance (marijuana) with intent to manufacture or deliver. The crime occurred June 26 at the Oroville Port of Entry. Mazalin was sentenced to 30 days in jail and � ned $2,110.50.

JUVENILEA 17-year-old Oroville boy pleaded

guilty July 3 to third-degree theft. He was sentenced to six months community supervi-sion, two days in detention, and � ned $100. The crime occurred Nov. 10, 2012.

A 14-year-old Omak boy pleaded guilty to July 3 to third-de-gree theft. He was sentenced to six months community supervision, � ve days in de-tention with credit for � ve days served, and � ned $100. The crime occurred June 25.

A 15-year-old Omak girl pleaded guilty July 10 to third-degree theft and minor in posses-sion of intoxicants. She was sentenced to six months community supervision, four days in juvenile on the � rst charge, another four for the second, and � ned $100. The crimes occurred Jan. 27.

A 13-year-old Omak girl pleaded guilty July 10 to minor in pos-session of intoxicants and ob-struction a law enforcement o� cer. She was sentenced to six months community su-pervision, one day in juvenile on the � rst charge, and one day for the second. Time in juvenile hall is to run concur-rently. She was also ordered to pay a $100 � ne. The crimes occurred Dec. 31, 2012.

A 17-year-old Oroville girl pleaded guilty July 10 to two counts of fourth-degree assault. She was sentenced to six months community supervision, four days in juvenile on the � rst charge, another four for the second, and � ned $100. The crimes occurred June 18.

A 13-year-old Okanogan boy pleaded guilty July 12 to minor in possession of intoxicants and obstructing a law enforcement o� cer. He was sentenced to � ve days in juvenile for the � rst count, 10 days in juvenile for the second, and � ned $100. The crimes occurred June 29.

DISTRICT COURT

Billy Dale Anderson, 45, Okanogan, pleaded guilty to third-degree DWLS. Anderson was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 days suspended and � ned $618.

Eugene Troy Anhalt, 45, Oroville, pleaded guilty to third-de-gree theft and third-degree possession of stolen prop-erty. Anhalt was sentenced to 364 days in jail with 358 days suspended, and � ned $1,058.

Eugenia Earline Camelin, 39, Okanogan, pleaded guilty to third-degree DWLS. Camelin was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 days suspended and � ned $618.

Curtis Michael Cargile Jr., 41, Omak, pleaded guilty to third-degree malicious mischief. He was sentenced to 364 days in jail with 359 days suspended and � ned $1,038. Cargile also had a fourth-degree assault charge dismissed.

Ashley Ann Carpenter, 29, Omak, had a third-degree DWLS

charge dismissed.Malcolm David Carlson, 33, Omak,

pleaded guilty to third-degree theft. Carlson was sentenced to 364 days in jail with 334 days suspended, and � ned $508.

Daggon D. Chaska, 21, Tonasket, pleaded guilty to obstruct-ing a law enforcement o� cer and possession of a dangerous weapon. Chaska was sentenced to 180 days in jail with 170 suspended and � ned $1,058. He also had a resisting arrest charge dismissed.

Louis Mark Clark, 21, Omak, plead-ed guilty to fourth-degree assault. Clark was sentenced to 364 days in jail with 362 suspended and � ned $1,033.

Karilyn Ann Cline, 23, Omak, plead-ed guilty to use or possession of drug paraphernalia. Cline was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 89 days suspended and � ned $608. She also had a third-degree DWLS charge dismissed.

Maria Asusena Contreras, 57, Oro-ville, pleaded guilty to third-degree DWLS. Contreras was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 76 days suspended and � ned $858.

Zaida Elena Contreras, 24, Okano-gan, pleaded guilty to third-degree DWLS. Contreras was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 89 days suspended and � ned $658.

Ronnie Nigle Davis, 20, Oroville, had a third-degree DWLS charge dismissed.

Gustavo Diego Garcia, 33, Omak, pleaded guilty to third-degree DWLS. Garcia was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 80 days suspended and � ned $658.

Alysha K.M. George, 24, Oroville, pleaded guilty to third-degree malicious mischief and fourth-degree assault. George was sentenced to 364 days in jail for each count, with 354 suspended on the � rst and 334 suspended on the second. She was � ned $2,316 and had a violation of a no-contact order charge dismissed.

Isaiah Aaron George, 27, Omak, pleaded guilty to third-degree DWLS. George was sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 days suspended and � ned $468. He also had a � rearm possession charge dismissed.

Steven Wallace George, 25, Omak, pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct. George was sen-tenced to 90 days in jail with 90 days suspended, and � ned $568.

911 CALLS AND JAIL BOOKINGS

Monday, July 8, 2013Theft on South Fifth Ave. in Okano-

gan. Diesel fuel reported missing.

Theft at the Okanogan County Fair-grounds. Cashbox reported missing.

Civil issue on Rehmke Rd. near Tonasket.

Threats on North Third Ave. in Okanogan.

Threats on North Main St. in Riv-erside.

One-vehicle crash on Old Hwy. 97 near Okanogan. No injuries reported.

Assault near Cougar Creek near Wauconda.

Trespassing on South Kirkpatrick Rd. near Omak.

Fireworks complaint on Robinson Canyon Rd. near Omak.

Assault on West Third Ave. in Omak.Firearms o� ense on J.H. Green Rd.

in Riverside.Illegal burning on B&O Rd. near

Okanogan.Two-vehicle crash on West Apple

Rd. No injuries reported.Custodial interference on Gar� eld

St. in Omak.Harassment on North Juniper St. in

Omak.Civil dispute on Oak St. in Omak.Harassment on North Juniper St. in

Omak.Assault on West Third Ave. in Omak.Theft on Main St. in Oroville.Unsecured premises on Golden St.

in Oroville.Automobile theft at Veteran Memo-

rial Park in Oroville.Theft on Ironwood St. in Oroville.Fire reported on South Whitcomb

Ave. in Tonasket. No � re found.

Trespassing on South Railroad Ave. in Tonasket.

Jesus Martinez-Diaz, 22, booked for fourth-degree assault and a Border Patrol hold.

James Carl Walker, 45, booked on an OCSO FTA warrant for DUI and an Everett Municipal FTA warrant for fourth-degree assault (DV).

Brian Wayne Go� , 27, booked on an Okanogan County FTA war-rant for possession of a con-trolled substance with intent to deliver and an Okanogan County warrant for unlawful possession of a � rearm.

Jesus Renteria Hernandez, 19, booked for second-degree tra� cking of stolen property, second-degree tra� cking and second-degree theft.

Ocias Gordillo-Velazquez, 46, booked for violation of a no-contact order.

Sarina Lynn Andrews, 26, booked on State Patrol FTA warrant for third-degree DWLS.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013Trespassing on South Railroad Ave.

in Tonasket.Theft on the north end of Tonasket.

A revolver reported missing.Assault on Hwy. 155 in Omak.Theft on Hwy. 7 in Oroville. Two

iPods and watches reported missing and later found.

Two-vehicle crash on Pine Street Rd. near Tonasket. No injuries reported.

Missing person on Toroda Creek Rd. near Wauconda. Seven-year-old girl reported missing and later found.

DWLS on North First Ave. in Okano-gan.

Malicious mischief on West Apple Rd. in Omak.

Automobile theft on Pine St. in Okanogan.

Alcohol o� ense on Sout Main St. in Omak.

Theft on Engh Rd. in Omak.Assault on West Cherry Ave. in

Omak.Warrant arrest on South Main St. in

Omak.Alcohol o� ense on Main St. in

Oroville.Jose Rosario Lopez, 63, booked for

second-degree criminal tres-passing and resisting arrest.

Douglas Edward Moomaw, 54, booked for DUI.

Jacob Henry Bessette, 24, booked on three OCSO FTA warrants: obstruction, DUI and second-degree DWLS.

Jennifer Lynn Valdez, 20, booked on an Omak Police Depart-ment FTA warrant for criminal trespassing.

David Ross McHenry, 50, booked for third-degree malicious mis-chief and interference with a health care provider.

Susan Anne Michels, 34, booked for fourth-degree assault (DV) and third-degree malicious mischief.

Josephine Michelle Valdez, 21, booked for an Omak Police Department FTA warrant for possession of a controlled substance (marijuana) less than 40 grams, and a Spokane Tribal FTA warrant for minor in possession of intoxicants.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013Theft on Spring Coulee Rd. near

Okanogan. Video games reported missing.

Missing person on South Second Ave. in Okanogan.

Violation of a no-contact order on North Second Ave. in Okanogan.

Weapons o� ense on Westlund Dr. near Oroville.

Threats on Jasmine St. in Omak.Motorcycle crash on Pine Creek

Rd. near Tonasket. Injuries reported.

Custodial interference on Gar� eld St. in Omak.

Threats on Cobey Trail Rd. near Tonasket.

Vehicle prowl on South Main St. in Omak.

Theft on Ironwood St. in Omak. Cash, a cell phone and jew-elry were reported missing.

Automobile theft on West Bartlett Ave. in Omak.

Two-vehicle crash at Hwy. 97 and Riverside Dr. in Omak. No injuries reported.

Burglary on Engh Rd. in Omak.Public intoxication on NorthMain

St. in Omak.Theft on East Apple Ave. in Omak.Assault on Omak Ave. in Omak.Burglary on Golden St. in Oroville.Attempted kidnapping on Main St.

in Oroville.Burglary on North Whitcomb Ave.

in Tonasket.Harassment on South Whitcomb

Ave. in Tonasket.Warren William Louie, 47, booked

for � rst-degree robbery.Tina M. Lounsberry, 51, booked for

� rst-degree robbery.

Annette Louise Squetimkin, 32, booked on a Department of Corrections detainer.

Casey Peone, no middle name listed, 20, booked on a Department of Corrections warrant.

Joseph Ronald Wise, 44, booked on an OCSO FTA warrant for fourth-degree assault (DV).

Sebastian Joseph Martinez, 22, booked on three OCSO FTA warrants: third-degree malicious mischief, minor in possession of intoxicants, and obstruction; and an Omak Police Department FTA war-rant for minor intoxicated in a public place.

Violet Jean Yellowhorse, 47, booked on an OCSA FTA warrant for third-degree DWLS.

Thursday, July 11, 2013DWLS on West Oak. St and North

Third Ave. in Okanogan.Malicious mischief on Grove St.

in Riverside. Spray paint reported on hay bales.

Threats on South First Ave. in Okanogan.

Threats on Wannacut Lake Rd. near Oroville.

Theft on Sunrise Heights in Okano-gan. Silver and clock reported missing.

Theft on Aeneas Valley Rd. near Tonasket.

Fraud on Elmway in Okanogan. A counterfeit bill was passed.

Weapons o� ense on South First Ave. in Okanogan.

Assault on Greenacres Rd. near Riverside.

Assault on South Ash St. in Omak.DWLS on Rodeo Trail Rd. near

Omak.Trespassing on Rodeo Trail Rd. near

Okanogan.Malicious mischief on West Apple

Ave. in Omak.Vehicle prowl on East Grape Ave. in

Omak. Keys, backpack, pistol and binoculars reported missing.

Violation of a no-contact order on West Jonathan Ave. in Omak.

Malicious mischief on Oak St. in Omak.

Assault on West Apple Ave. in Omak.

Theft on Omache Dr. in Omak. Tablet computer reported missing.

Theft on Engh Rd. in Omak.Theft on Ironwood St. in Oroville.

Tattoo gun reported missing.Assault on Golden St. in Oroville.DWLS on Hwy. 97 in Tonasket.Theft on South Tonasket Ave. in

Tonasket.Harassment on South Tonasket Ave.

in Tonasket.Miguel Amparo, 21, booked for

� rst-degree DWLS.Robert Charles Swan, 74, booked

for possession of a controlled substance (methamphet-amine).

Stephen Kuykendall, no middle name listed, 43, booked for second-degree child molesta-tion.

Gary Lee Day II, 22, booked on an OCSO FTA warrant: four counts of harassment (threats to kill).

Shawna Mae Barber, 34, booked on � rst-degree arson, felony harassment, telephone ha-rassment and stalking.

Mark Alan Stanger, 35, booked on an order of production, and for FTA for fourth-degree assault (DV) and FTA for inter-ference with reporting (DV).

Rebecca Lynn Cabrera, 52, booked for two counts of forgery, third degree theft and pos-session of a controlled sub-stance (methamphetamine).

Garret Victor James Elsberg, 24, booked on � ve OCSO FTA warrants: possession of a controlled substance (meth-amphetamine), second-de-gree unlawful possession of a � rearm, obstruction, resisting arrest, and DUI; a State Patrol FTA warrant for use/delivery of drug paraphernalia, and a Montana FTA warrant for obstruction.

Phillip Cody Ruiz, 23, booked for second-degree robbery.

Kurtis Camron Pugsly Bishop, 26, booked under a Department of Corrections hold.

Friday, July 12, 2013DUI on Hwy. 97 near Tonasket.Trespassing on Highland Dr. near

Okanogan.Two-vehicle crash on North Birch St.

No injuries reported.Theft on Riverside Dr. in Omak. Beer

reported missing.

Assault on South Birch St. in Omak.Theft on Golden Rd. in Oroville.

Camera reported missing.Fraud on South Second Ave. in

Okanogan.Sexual o� ense on South Second

Ave. in Okanogan. Male say-ing inappropriate things to 15-year-old female.

Custodial interference on DeMer-chant Rd. near Oroville.

Found property on Cooper St. in Riverside. Lockbox located.

Illegal burning on Eastlake Rd. near Oroville.

Theft on Holmes Rd. in Tonasket. Jacket reported missing.

Trespassing on Second Ave. in Okanogan.

DWLS on Apple Way Rd. near Okanogan.

Brush � re on Hwy. 97 in Omak.Burglary on East Dewberry Ave. in

Omak. Laptop and cable box reported missing.

Trespassing on South Birch St. in Omak.

Illegal burning on Ironwood St. in Oroville.

Assault on Ironwood St. in Oroville.Sheila Denise Taber, 50, booked for

DUI and third-degree DWLS.Richard D.A. Poitras, 32, committed

by district court for third-degree DWLS.

Melissa M. Holcomb, 24, booked for second-degree burglary, � rst-degree tra� cking of stolen property, and third-degree theft.

Kevin Earl Devine, 41, booked for second-degree burglary, � rst-degree tra� cking of stolen property, and third-degree theft.

Norman Edward Whited, 62, booked for DUI.

Rachel Cinda Rawley, 36, booked for drug violation.

Tracy Lynne Smith, 26, booked for fourth-degree assault (DV).

Saturday, July 13, 2013One-vehicle roll-over crash on

Loomis-Oroville Rd. near Oroville.

Vehicle crash on Hwy. 97 and Wards Rd. near Oroville.

Motorcycle crash on Hwy. 20 near Okanogan. Injuries reported.

Assault on Duck Lake Rd. near Omak.

Vehicle-vs.-deer crash on Hwy. 20 near Okanogan.

Brush � re on Airport Rd. near Oroville.

Theft on North Third Ave. in Okano-gan.

Theft on Spring Coulee Rd. near Okanogan. Tools reported missing.

Threats on North Third Ave. in Okanogan.

Fraud on Warren Rd. in Tonasket.DUI on North Second Ave. in

Okanogan.Harassment on Hagood Cuto� Rd.

near Tonasket.Theft on Omache Dr. in Omak.

Gasoline reported missing.Keifer Todd Scrimsher, 22, booked

for fourth-degree assault

(DV).Andrea Candice Allen, 38, booked

on an Oroville Police Depart-ment warrant for third-de-gree theft.

Carlos Castro-Balderrama, 22, booked on possession of a controlled substance (meth-amphetamine) and a Border Patrol hold.

Sunday, July 14, 2013Warrant arrest on South Second

Ave. in Okanogan.Illegal burning on Hwy. 7 near

Oroville.Trespassing on Hart Rd. near

Oroville.Theft on South Fifth Ave. in Okano-

gan.Assault on Hwy. 97 near Tonasket.One-vehicle crash at Loomis-Oro-

ville Rd. and Enloe Dam Rd. near Oroville.

Assault on Riverside Dr. in Omak.DUI on Hwy. 7 near Tonasket.Illegal burning on South Ash St. in

Omak.Trespassing on South Main St. in

Omak.Assault on North Pine St. in Omak.Assault on Ellisforde Bridge Rd. in

Ellisforde.Hilario Victorino-Leyva, 27, booked

for DUI and a Border Patrol hold.

Timothy Michael Husted, 54, booked for DUI.

Wayne Bert Symmonds, 50, booked for violation of an anti-harassment order, communi-cation with a minor immoral purposes, violation of a no-contact order, second-degree criminal trespassing, and a Grant County FTA warrant for DUI.

Guillermo Mendez-Sanabria, 33, booked for fourth-degree assault (DV).

Salvador Vega Porras, 40, booked for DUI and a Border Patrol hold.

Jesus Antonio Renteria Hernan-dez, 18, booked for reckless driving and three counts of reckless endangerment.

Ivan Lee Firecrow, 48, booked for fourth-degree assault (DV).

KEY:DUI – Driving Under the In� uenceDWLS/R – Driving While License

Suspended/RevokedPOSC – Possession of a Controlled

SubstanceMIP/C – Minor in Possession/Con-

sumptionTMVWOP – Taking a Motor Vehicle

without Owner’s PermissionDV – Domestic ViolenceFTA – Failure to Appear (on a war-

rant)FTPF – Failure to Pay FineRP - Reporting PartyOCSO – Okanogan County Sheri� ’s

O� cerUSBP – U.S. Border PatrolCBP – U.S. Customs and Border

ProtectionICE – Immigration and Customs

Enforcement

SATURDAY July 20, 2013

Fun for the whole family!

WaucondaCommunity HallThe Car Show Starts

at Noon and theSock Hop runs

from 6 to 11 p.m.Food & Refreshments

Noon to 8 p.m.

Come as youare or dresslike the 50’s. Bring yoursteady guyor gal!

Music by Tee & Eddie ProductionsFeaturing Theresa Edwards! With Sean Owsley of the Q-6 News Team.Singer Teri Dawley. Special Appearance by Bernie Odegard

Wauconda Community Hall is 1 mile N. of Hwy 20 on Toroda Creek Rd. in Wauconda, WACall 509-486-0709 www.waucondahall.org/sockhop

July 20, 2013

Fun for the whole family!or gal!

Music by Tee & Eddie Productions

Page 12: Okanogan Valley Gazette-Tribune, July 18, 2013

By Gary a. DeVonManaging Editor

OROVILLE – While enjoy-ing all that Heritage Days has to offer, the Okanogan Borderlands Historical Society invites every-one to stop by the Depot Museum to have a look at this year’s fea-tured displays featuring family-owned businesses from Oroville’s past, including Prince’s stores, Zosel Lumber and the Peerless Hotel.

Heritage Days starts on Friday, July 19, with a softball tourna-ment at Bud Clark ballfields start-ing at 7 p.m. Later that evening The Valley Band, with Chuck Oakes, Brock Hires and more, playing at Vicki’s Backdoor Club.

On Saturday, starting at 7 a.m. and going to 10 a.m. there is a breakfast served by the local Boy Scout Troop at the Oroville Senior Center. From 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. there is an escorted tour of the Similkameen Trail starting from the trailhead in Oroville on Kernan Road and going to

Taber’s Vineyard at the old rail-road bridge.

The softball tournament con-tinues at Bud Clark Ballfields beginning at 9 a.m. Also at 9 a.m. the Farmers’ Market will also be open at the library and the Vintage Tractor Show will be going by Prince’s Warehouse on Ironwood St.

Then there are several events taking place starting at 10 a.m. including a gold panning dem-onstration provided by Kinross Gold Company at Madeline Wells Park from 10 a.m. to noon. Many of the events will be taking place on the veranda at the Old Oroville Depot, these include a spinning demonstration by Betty Roberts, who handcrafts her own spin-ning wheels. The Oroville Garden Club will have their annual sale starting at 10 a.m. as well. Still on the veranda, and starting at 11 a.m., the Senior Citizens are serving fresh pie and the histori-cal society is serving homemade ice cream. There is also fresh popcorn from a 1940s popcorn

machine.The 1884 Customs Cabin will

be open from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Then at noon, a historical walk/talk will feature Curtis/Greg pho-tos of the local area from the early 1916-1918. It will start at the public library.

PagE a12 okanogan VallEy gazEttE-tribunE | July 18, 2013

Do you have a

Special Event

or

Special Person

you want to honor

at your church?

Holy Rosary Parish1st & Whitcomb Ave., Tonasket

10:30 a.m. English Mass 1st Sunday of the MonthOther Sundays at 8:30 a.m.

1:00 p.m. Spanish Mass every other Sun.Rev. David Kuttner • 476-2110

Immanuel Lutheran Church1608 Havillah Rd., Tonasket • 509-485-3342

Sun. Worship 9 a.m. • Bible Study & Sun. School 10:15“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God--not by works,

so that no one can boast.” -Eph. 2:8-9“To every generation.” Celebrating 100 years 1905-2005

Crossroads Meeting Place Tonasket Foursquare Church415-A S. Whitcomb Ave. • Pastor George Conkle

Sunday: 10 a.m.(509) 486-2000 • cell: (509) 429-1663

Tonasket Community UCC 24 E. 4th, Tonasket • 486-2181

“A biblically based, thoughtful group of Christian People”Sunday Worship at 11 a.m.

Call for program/activity information Leon L. Alden, Pastor

Whitestone Church of the Brethren577 Loomis-Oroville Rd., Tonasket. 846-4278

9:15am Praise Singing. 9:30am Worship Service10:45am Sunday school for all ages

Ellisforde Church of the Brethren32116 Hwy. 97, Tonasket. 846-4278

10am Sunday School. 11am Worship Service “Continuing the work of Jesus...simply, peacefully, together”

Pastor Jim Yaussy Albright. [email protected]

Oroville Community Bible FellowshipSunday Service, 10:00 a.m.

923 Main St. • [email protected] Fast, Pastor

www.BrotherOfTheSon.com

Faith Lutheran Church11th & Ironwood, Oroville • 476-2426

Sunday Worship 9:00 a.m. “O taste and see that the Lord is good!”

Pastor Dan Kunkel • Deacon Dave Wildermuth

Immaculate Conception Parish1715 Main Street Oroville

8:30 a.m. English Mass 1st Sunday of the MonthOther Sundays at 10:30 a.m.

1:00 p.m. Spanish Mass every other Sun.Rev. David Kuttner • 476-2110

PC of G Bible Faith Family Church476-3063 • 1012 Fir Street, Oroville

SUNDAY: 7 am Men’s Meeting • 9:45 Sunday School10:45 Worship Service • Children’s Church (3-8 yrs)

WEDNESDAY: 7 p.m. Pastor Claude Roberts

Come Worship with Project 3:16

Oroville Unit ed Methodist908 Fir, Oroville • 476-2681

Sunday Worship: 9 a.m. Rev. Leon Alden

Valley Christian FellowshipPastor Randy McAllister

142 East Oroville Rd. • 476-2028• Sunday School (Adult & Teens) 10:00 a.m.

Morning Worship 11 a.m.• Sun. Evening Worship 6 p.m.Sunday School & Children’s Church K-6

9:45 to 1:00 p.m. Open to Community! Located at Kid City 142 East Oroville

• Wednesday Evening Worship 7 p.m.

Trinity Episcopal602 Central Ave., Oroville

Sunday School & Services 10:00 a.m.Holy Eucharist: 1st, 3rd, & 5th • Morning Prayer: 2nd & 4th

Healing Service: 1st SundayThe Reverend Marilyn Wilder 476-3629

Warden • 476-2022

Church of ChristIronwood & 12th, Oroville • 476-3926

Sunday School 10 a.m. • Sunday Worship 11 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study: 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist10th & Main, Oroville - 509-476-2552

Bible Study: Sat. 9:30 a.m. • Worship: Sat. 11 a.m.Skip Johnson • 509-826-0266

Oroville Free Methodist1516 Fir Street • Pastor Rod Brown • 476.2311

Sun. School 9:15 am • Worship Service 10:15amYouth Activity Center • 607 Central Ave.

Monday 7:00 pm • After School M-W-F 3-5pm offi [email protected]

OROVILLE CHESAWChesaw Community Bible Church

Nondenominational • Everyone WelcomeEvery Sunday 10:30 a.m. to Noon

Pastor Duane Scheidemantle • 485-3826

TONASKET

MOLSON

Riverside Lighthouse - Assembly of God102 Tower Street

Sunday Bible Study 10:00amSunday Worship 11:00am & 6:30pm

Wednesday- family Night 6:30pmPastor Vern & Anita Weaver

Ph. 509-826-4082

Community Christian FellowshipMolson Grange, Molson

Sunday 10 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.Wednesday 6:30pm, Bible Study

“For by grace are ye saved through faith...” Eph. 2:8-9“...lovest thou me...Feed my lambs...John 21:1-17

LOOMISLoomis Community Church

Main Street in Loomis9:45 a.m. Sunday School11 a.m. Worship Service

Interim Visiting PastorsInformation: 509-223-3542

RIVERSIDE

To placeinformation in

the Church Guidecall Charlene

476-3602

Okanogan Valley Okanogan Valley Okanogan Valley CHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDECHURCH GUIDE

CEMETERYMARKERS

See Us First for Greater SavingsBUILD A LASTING TRIBUTE

TO YOUR LOVED ONE

~ 62 years of serving you ~Where pride in cra� smanship

still exist today!

Sales Representative Joy Lawson

1-509-476-2279

INLAND MONUMENT

CO.

OUR LOVED ONES LIVE AS LONG AS THEY ARE REMEMBERED

Monuments & Bronze

ObituaryKatharine

LesLie

Katharine Leslie, 96, of Tonasket, Washington died July 13, 2013. She was born February 24, 1917 to Joshua and Viola Rowton in Sand Springs, Montana.

As a young girl Katharine, along with her parents, sis-ter Claire, and brother Erwin left Sand Springs, Mont. They trailed over one hundred head of horses. Many miles later they reached Molson, Chesaw area where they found helpful people and enough straw to winter the horses. Katharine went to school at the Lone Star, Myncaster, BC and Chesaw schools before graduating from Molson High School. She attended

Washington State College. Katharine married George Leslie in 1939. They lived on the Henning Place on the Buckley Ranch until George’s death in 1946. Katharine moved to Oroville where she taught piano to students in the Oroville, Molson, Chesaw, Tonasket and Loomis areas. She worked at the Oroville Gazette for some-time before moving in 1963 to Winona Lake, Indiana.

She worked for the Free Methodist Church until she retired at age 65. She then went to work for the World Missionary Press and retired again at the age of 80. She moved back to the Molson Highlands and lived with her sister Claire for several years before moving to Long Term Care in Tonasket, Wash.

She is survived by her son

John (Janet) Leslie, her sister Claire Rise and many nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her husband George, her parents and brother Erwin Rowton. 

She was a life long member of the Free Methodist Church.

Services will be held Friday, July 19, 2013 at 11 a.m. at the Oroville Free Methodist Church with Pastor Rod Brown officiat-ing. Interment will follow at the Oroville Riverview Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Molson Grange, the Molson Museum or the charity of your choice.

Please share your memories of Katharine by signing her online guestbook at www.berghfuner-alservice.com.

Bergh Funeral Service of Oroville/Tonasket in care of arrangements.

OkanOgan Valley liFe

see what Oroville’s Depot Museum offers

Above, A typical turn of the pre-vious century bedroom, albeit with much abbreviated bed for space’s sake, is featured among the Peerless Hotel displays. Left, Here, this handcrafted wooden pulley drive wheel was used to transfer power from a steam engine to run box making equipment at the Zosel Lumber Company.Below, A view of just part of the Prince’s display, which features a look the various stores the family has owned over the years – some selling groceries, some selling dry goods and some selling both.

Gary Devon - staff photos

TAKE A LOOK BACK