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NB teen’s electric project taking him places BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter Alexander Anderson is no head-in-the-clouds aca- demic. On paper, he may seem like one, having graduated high school, earned a bachelor of science degree, started classes for his master’s degree, accumulated a stack of research for his doctorate, surpassed a theoretical limita- tion on electricity production, and started a company, Odin Energy Works, all by the age of 18. Alexander, though, knows how to talk to people, and when to go easy on his non-scientific audience. “This is just math,” he tells me on a recent sunny day at his North Bend home. He clicks through slides of a presentation he’s giving at a science symposium Nov. 1 in Everett. The screen fills with mathematical equations, 10 or 12 characters long, not one of them a number. “More math, more math,” he continues, then finally, words. “First, you have the Betz limit,” he says. That’s the high- est level of efficiency you can expect from an open-rotor wind turbine, 59 percent. Anderson, with help from his parents, Alex, a mechanical engineer and aircraft and inspector, and Olga, a consultant, started trying to beat Betz “a long, long time ago,” he says, when he was 14. Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo The Andersons, Alexander, Olga (with an early prototype) and Alex, are developing electrical generating technology like this wind turbine that Alexander is fine-tuning at their North Bend home. High achiever SEE ACHIEVER, 23 V ALLEY R ECORD SNOQUALMIE INDEX OPINION 5 ON THE SCANNER 6 CALENDAR 22 OBITUARY 13 LEGAL NOTICES 14 CLASSIFIEDS 18-20 Vol. 101, No. 21 SCENE Break a leg: It’s a wild ‘Opening Night’ at Valley Center Stage Page 21 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014 n DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM n 75 CENTS YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE n NORTH BEND n FALL CITY n PRESTON n CARNATION 101 YEARS 101 YEARS HISTORY Remember the past: Record’s Then & Now history section Pages 9-16 1143914 610 E. North Bend Way North Bend 425.831.6300 www.lesschwab.com ✶ ✶ Grand Re-Opening October 17th & 18th ✶ ✶ Rebuild of Mount Si, room for 2,300, with elementary, goes to voters in Feb. BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter Voters will decide on a $246 million school bond in the Snoqualmie Valley School District in February. The district’s board of directors voted 4 to 1 on Oct. 9 to proceed with a bond, slightly revised from the proposal under discussion for the past year. A sixth elementary school, $20 million in repairs and updates to other district buildings, and a high school rebuild to bring freshmen back onto the main campus are all still com- ponents of the bond. Yet instead of either the staff-recommended 2,400-student high school, or the 2,100-student high school proposed by architects, the board has reached for something in between. Following several reports on enrollment pro- jections, board member Dan Popp said, “It struck me as though the 2,400-capacity school is an over- capacity question, based on enrollment projec- tions, and the 2,100 is…. obviously not big enough.” Board picks bigger high school, lower bond rate SEE SCHOOL BOND, 2 Courtesy photo Pat Cokewell, former owner of the Mar-T Cafe (now Twede’s) snapped this photo during film- ing of “Twin Peaks” in 1990. Pictured are actors Dana Ashbrook, Mädchen Amick and director David Lynch. Showtime is recreating the series 25 years after it ended. Deja vu? Happening again: ‘Twin Peaks’ television phenomenon returns to small screen in 2016 Worldwide, fans of the 1990-91 television show “Twin Peaks,” cele- brated last week when a long-await- ed season three was announced, to air on Showtime in 2016. Locally, they snapped up tickets to the Twin Peaks Festival, which are now sold out for the 22nd annual gathering of show-lovers and Lynch-followers, July 24 to 27 in and around North Bend. SEE TWIN PEAKS, 4
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Page 1: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

NB teen’s electric project taking him places BY CAROL LADWIG

Staff Reporter

Alexander Anderson is no head-in-the-clouds aca-demic.

On paper, he may seem like one, having graduated high school, earned a bachelor of science degree, started classes for his master’s degree, accumulated a stack of research for his doctorate, surpassed a theoretical limita-tion on electricity production, and started a company, Odin Energy Works, all by the age of 18. Alexander,

though, knows how to talk to people, and when to go easy on his non-scientific audience.

“This is just math,” he tells me on a recent sunny day at his North Bend home. He clicks through slides of a presentation he’s giving at a science symposium Nov. 1 in Everett. The screen fills with mathematical equations, 10 or 12 characters long, not one of them a number. “More math, more math,” he continues, then finally, words.

“First, you have the Betz limit,” he says. That’s the high-est level of efficiency you can expect from an open-rotor wind turbine, 59 percent. Anderson, with help from his parents, Alex, a mechanical engineer and aircraft and inspector, and Olga, a consultant, started trying to beat Betz “a long, long time ago,” he says, when he was 14.

Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo

The Andersons, Alexander, Olga (with an early prototype) and Alex, are developing electrical generating technology like this wind turbine that Alexander is fine-tuning at their North Bend home.

High achiever

SEE ACHIEVER, 23

Valley RecoRdSNOQUALMIE

INDEXOpiniOn 5On The Scanner 6 calendar 22 ObiTuary 13 legal nOTiceS 14claSSifiedS 18-20

Vol. 101, No. 21

SCEN

E Break a leg: It’s a wild ‘Opening Night’ at Valley Center Stage Page 21

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014 n DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM n75 CENTS

YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE nNORTH BEND n FALL CITY nPRESTON nCARNATION

101YEARS101YEARS

HIST

ORY Remember the

past: Record’s Then & Now history section Pages 9-16

1143

914

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914

610 E. North Bend Way • North Bend • 425.831.6300

www.lesschwab.com ✶ ✶ Grand Re-Opening October 17th & 18th ✶ ✶

Rebuild of Mount Si, room for 2,300, with elementary, goes to voters in Feb.

BY CAROL LADWIGStaff Reporter

Voters will decide on a $246 million school bond in the Snoqualmie Valley School District in February. The district’s board of directors voted

4 to 1 on Oct. 9 to proceed with a bond, slightly revised from the proposal under discussion for the past year.

A sixth elementary school, $20 million in repairs and updates to other district buildings, and a high school rebuild to bring freshmen back onto the main campus are all still com-ponents of the bond. Yet instead of either the staff-recommended 2,400-student high school, or the 2,100-student high school proposed by

architects, the board has reached for something in between.

Following several reports on enrollment pro-jections, board member Dan Popp said, “It struck me as though the 2,400-capacity school is an over-capacity question, based on enrollment projec-tions, and the 2,100 is…. obviously not big enough.”

Board picks bigger high school, lower bond rate

SEE SCHOOL BOND, 2

Courtesy photo

Pat Cokewell, former owner of the Mar-T Cafe (now Twede’s) snapped this photo during film-ing of “Twin Peaks” in 1990. Pictured are actors Dana Ashbrook, Mädchen Amick and director David Lynch. Showtime is recreating the series 25 years after it ended.

Deja vu?Happening again: ‘Twin Peaks’ television phenomenon returns

to small screen in 2016Worldwide, fans of the 1990-91

television show “Twin Peaks,” cele-brated last week when a long-await-ed season three was announced, to air on Showtime in 2016. Locally, they snapped up tickets to the Twin Peaks Festival, which are now sold out for the 22nd annual gathering of show-lovers and Lynch-followers, July 24 to 27 in and around North Bend.

SEE TWIN PEAKS, 4

Page 2: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

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“It wouldn’t be big enough virtually at the start,” said Popp, who wanted to know, “where’s the happy medium?”

This year started at roughly 6,160 full-time equivalent students (6,500 in headcount) in the district, 2,920 in ele-mentary school, 1,500 in middle school, 1,640 at Mount Si, and 105 at Two Rivers. Demographer Les Kendrick projected 7,400 students (by headcount) in the district by 2020, with FTE high school enrollment ranging from 1,900 at the low end to a high of 2,200 by 2022 when a new high school would be complete. At the middle school level, Kendrick’s projections indicate a new middle school would be needed by 2019, with FTE enrollment estimates of 1,600 to 1,800.

Popp suggested reducing the high school size slightly, to correspondingly reduce the bond cost, and Matt Rumbaugh, with NAC Architects, confirmed that a final capacity of 2,300 students would mean about $7 million less in costs.

The reduction wasn’t an entirely happy medium, how-ever. Board member Marci Busby, who voted against the bond, read a lengthy and emotional statement about her opposition to the elementary school, at $36 million, being “held hostage” to the other parts of the full bond proposal.

“I think we should move forward on a bond for a new elementary school in February. It is our greatest need,” Busby said. “I offer that option as a way to get a 5-0 vote tonight.”

Busby said she could not support the full bond, and was critical of board actions, including asking the wrong questions, not listening to the district’s own experts, such as rejecting last year’s demographer recommended medium-growth projections (which proved this year to be a little low), and for not answering many questions before that night’s vote. She called for more time, and suggested the district use its new Thoughtstream tool to gather feed-back from the community on the schools’ needs. She also repeated her suggestion that the district run the elemen-tary bond separately, but on the same ballot, as another

bond with the remaining components. After a lengthy discussion, and many public comments,

Board President Geoff Doy called for a motion on the bond. Tavish MacLean moved for the full bond, at the reduced capacity of 2,300 students, saying, “It’s OK to dis-agree…” but “We need to move. We need to build and we need to plan.” His own sons would be affected by the long high school construction, estimated to be done by the fall of 2022, and he reminded the audience that many board members also had children in the district.

Carolyn Simpson also addressed the audience, specifi-cally those who’d shared their worries about how to pay for such a large bond. “We’re not comparing zero to this bond,” she said, and she believed that each of the other options would end up being more expensive to the district in the long run. She added that she would lobby for the board to create a bond financial oversight committee, if the bond passes.

Popp said the vote “has been an eight-year odyssey,” and recounted many of the district’s activities in that time, especially the committee that originally recommended creating a separate freshman campus. Rebuilding the high school was, at that time, the committee’s second choice, he said, but times changed. He believed the freshman cam-pus had been and would continue to be successful, and called on the community to invest in the schools.

“We need another middle school. We need a new high school, and this bond accomplishes all of that… I couldn’t support it more.”

The total bond cost is estimated at $246 million, and the district will receive an estimated $22 million in state matching funds at the completion of the project. Finance Director Ryan Stokes that the rate per thousand for the bond would average out to about $1.20 per $1,000 of assessed valuation, but would vary with individual prop-erties. The reason for the dramatically reduced rate—the past rate calculations exceeded $2.25—is the rise in property values in the county. Stokes reported that prop-erty values in the district rose by a total of $1 billion, an increase of about 18 percent.

For a property valued at $300,000, the new bond would cost a tax payer about $360 more annually.

SCHOOL BOND FROM 1In-flight meal for Snoqualmie crowsThe crows in d o w n t o w n Snoqualmie showed off their smarts, and some aerial antics, over the past week. On Wednesday, Oct. 8, crows found walnuts from a tree near the Falls Avenue block, then dropped the nuts on quiet parking lots and inter-sections to get at the meal within each hard shell.

Seth Truscott/Staff Photos

Page 3: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 3

North Bend Les Schwab Tire to mark reopening

Last April, the huge explosion that wrecked several downtown buildings and forced

neighbors out of their homes also badly damaged the Les Schwab Tire Center in North Bend.

Now, nearly six months after the natural gas explosion on April 25, Les Schwab cel-ebrates the grand reopening of its remodeled North Bend store this weekend.

“We are so happy to be back in our new remodeled store, and want to thank the commu-nity and our customers for their support and patience while we were under construction,” said Kevin Schallhorn, manager of the North Bend store.

Residents and customers are welcome at a two-day party on Friday and Saturday, Oct. 17 and 18. The grand reopening celebration features giveaways, food, discounts and activities.

“We’re looking forward to showing our neighbors the new showroom, and thanking them for sticking with us while we worked out of our temporary quarters,” Schallhorn said.

Throughout the weekend, Les Schwab will have drawings for movie tickets and store memorabilia, while supplies last. Free hot dogs and cake will be available.

Radio station KISS-FM will broadcast from the store from 3 to 5 p.m. on Friday, and KLCK-FM will broadcast on Saturday from noon to 2 p.m. There will be activities for fami-

lies, including a fast pitch machine and Les Schwab’s custom wheels trailer.

The store location remains the same, 610 E North Bend Way.

“Our customers seem as excited about our newly remodeled location as we are,” said Schallhorn. He and his staff are “proud of our store and our community.”

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Construction still on at Hansen Community ParkMany Snoqualmie residents have asked why the city of Snoqualmie had a grand opening celebration for Jeanne Hansen Community Park back in September, before the park officially opened. The park was anticipated to open on August 1, and by choosing September 6 for the event, the possibility of a few days’ delay would not interrupt the schedule.But, by the time city staff learned that park construction would still be underway on September 6, the event was almost finalized. The company who supplied the tents, bouncy houses, and other equipment was already committed and unable to reschedule until later in the fall, when there is a much higher chance of rain.Another challenge was that the dignitaries and speakers who were invited for the ceremony had already made adjust-ments to their schedules so they could be at the event to honor former Mayor Jeanne Hansen and recognize the near-completion of the Snoqualmie Ridge development. The contractor hired to construct the park has encountered issues that need to be addressed and completed before city staff and engineers will accept the park into city operations. All park features—a long checklist —must be fully addressed before the city takes full ownership. Accepting the park without completion would put the city at risk for inadequate construction and the public at risk for injury. So, it is important for residents to not go beyond the construction fencing.Construction of several park features is still underway. Not all asphalt has been laid. Some sidewalks throughout the park have cracked. They are being replaced. Along the north side of the lower synthetic field, there are slide slope issues that could cause tens of thousands of dollars in damage to the field.The growth on the sod field is not complete. Although the city prefers to wait for 100 percent completion, there is a possibility of accepting the two synthetic fields and the playground prior to the third field completion.The rain garden is not complete. The developer had to excavate dirt in excess of nine feet to ensure the performance requirement for rain garden standards are met.According to the city, administrators and staff are working very hard to have the contractor expedite completion. With luck, Jeanne Hansen Community Park will open in mid-November, although no specific date can be guaranteed at this time.

File Photo/Valley Record

Children play Sept. 6 during the dedi-cation of Hansen Park, which awaits construction efforts to finally open.

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Showtime announced the nine-episode season on Monday, Oct. 6, and the original show’s executive producers David Lynch and Mark Frost simul-Tweeted it that same day.

Few specifics have been confirmed, but Frost and Lynch will co-write each episode and Lynch is billed as directing the show, which picks up the story of the off-beat town of Twin Peaks 25 years after the events of the cult television series and follow-up movie “Fire Walk with Me” in 1992.

Many Valley locations, including the Salish Lodge, Twede’s Cafe, and Fall City Roadhouse were featured in the television show, parts of which were filmed in the

Valley in 1989. Producer Frost said in a recent interview that the new show will be set in Twin Peaks. He offered few specifics, but said they knew the fans wanted to see some a few familiar characters return.

The show will go into production next year, for release in 2016. Prior to the series start, Showtime will re-run the original two seasons of “Twin Peaks.”

Twin Peaks Fest organizers are eager for the show’s return, and planning a special 25th anniversary Fest for next summer.

TWIN PEAKS FROM 1 Twin Peaks Fest returnsFor three days each summer, fans of the show gather in the Valley for a full-immersion experience of visiting film sites, meeting some of the actors, and sharing their passion with other fans.

“The premise is you’re in Twin Peaks, for the three days of the festival,” said festival organizer Rob Lindley. Twin Peaks Fest 2015, July 24 to 27, is sold out, and plans are under way for the 2016 event.

Page 5: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 5

Metrobus changes postponed, what now?Even as a rare bus rider, I was pleased

to see King County put the brakes on the second round of cuts to Metro bus

service in February. We already had plenty of cuts last month.

Following the defeat of Proposition 1 in April of this year, the County Executive had asked the County Council to approve legislation that would reduce Metro bus service by 550,000 hours between September 2014 and September 2015.

Part of those cuts came on September 27, and they included some big ones to Valley bus systems. Route 208, North Bend to Issaquah via Snoqualmie, was altered—peak trips were added, but fre-quency was reduced from 60 to 120 min-utes. Route 209, a route from North Bend to Issaquah, was eliminated. So was Route 215, a route from North Bend to Seattle via Issaquah.

According to Metro, these are low-perform-ing peak routes. But they matter to the locals who depend on them. Halving frequency can be hard to swallow when you rely on this bus to get to work, vital appointments or just live your life. The flip side of this, though, is that it’s hard to justify tax dollars going to empty buses.

But maybe Valley buses shouldn’t be judged by the same standard as a Seattle bus. In September, Snoqualmie’s city council approved a resolution asking for a change in how Metro calculates productivity of its routes. The city’s view is that Metro’s current method is unfair for cities outside the metro area, so locals get an unfair level of cuts. The message has been sent; now, we’ll see whether Metro reacts.

Meanwhile, the discussion on cuts continues at the county level, but any future changes will wait until completion of the county’s 2015-2016 budget.

Buses obviously depend on a lot of factors, but riders are a big one. Under Metro’s meth-odology, we get what we get; at least we’ve still got some buses running on Valley streets.

But I can’t help but wonder if we’re at equi-librium: The right level of service for the riders we do have.

It’s important to note that Metro partners with the local shuttle system. Shuttles are great, but the world doesn’t end at Fall City. We need working connections to the urban area.

Local bus riders can augment the city’s mes-sage to Metro, even as the county considers next steps. Connect with the agency at http://info.kingcounty.gov/about/contact/default.aspx, or with your county councilwoman, Kathy Lambert (http://www.kingcounty.gov/Lambert.aspx), and be clear about what would work best for you as a Valley transit user.

Following Snoqualmie’s lead, if we’re going to get a better bus system, we had better ask for it.

“Personal protection isn’t at a level over there (in Africa) versus here. If ebola comes here, I’ve got my personal protec-tion here. I feel safe.”

Tim HuberSnoqualmie

Are you concerned about the spread of the Ebola virus?

Thursday, Oct. 12, 1989• Four years ago, North Bend residents sounded off against a plan to develop Mountain Meadows Farm. The county solved the problem by buying “develop-ment rights” to 185 acres. The Open Space Bond Issue going before county voters in November would do the same for 700 acres across the Valley. • On Monday, five members of the Snoqualmie City Council voted unani-mously to proceed with the 1,344-acre Snoqualmie Ridge annexation, proposed by Weyerhaeuser. It nearly doubles the size of the city.

Thursday, Oct. 15, 1964• Mount Si High School is now offi-cially classified as a Class AA school, Superintendent Gordon McIntyre told the school board. The population rose from 575 last year to 611 on October 1, the date the classification is made. Class AA schools are 600 stu-dents or bigger.

This week in Valley history:

PASTOUT

“No, I think our health care system is good. With the medicine...sewage and plumbing... the way we treat patients here, it’s a lot harder to spread.”

Noelle EllisSnoqualmie

ValleyRecoRd

SNOQUALMIE

Publisher William Shaw [email protected]

Editor Seth Truscott [email protected] Reporter Carol Ladwig [email protected]

Creative Design Wendy Fried [email protected]

Advertising David Hamilton Account [email protected] Executive

Circulation/ Patricia Hase Distribution [email protected]

Mail PO Box 300, Snoqualmie, WA 98065

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The Snoqualmie Valley Record is the legal newspaper for the cities of Snoqualmie,

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Written permission from the publisher is required for reproduction of any part of this

publication. Letters, columns and guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views

of the Snoqualmie Record.

SETH TRUSCOTT Valley Record EditorVa

lley

View

s

of the

“There’s no way to stop people from coming into the country who have come into contact with it. Didn’t that one man lie about it? Scary!”

Sue GregorySnoqualmie

“No. I’m more worried about getting the flu. More people will die this year from the flu than (ebola).”

Ken KnowlesWorks in Snoqualmie

Page 6: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM6 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Snoqualmie Police Dept.WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8

DROVE INTO BUILDING: At 12:47 p.m., police were called to the 500 block of East North Bend Way, North Bend, for a vehicle accident. A witness reported that a Jeep Wrangler drove into the front of a gas station. The driver had a warrant from Shoreline, so police arrested the subject and booked him into jail, also charging him with negligent driving.BUSHWHACKING: At 1:05 p.m., a caller reported that a man and woman were thrashing through some brush in the area of Pickett Avenue North-east and Northeast Eighth Street, and that at one point, the man was not wearing any pants. The man left to put pants on and the woman continued to hack at the brush with a machete. Police con-tacted the couple and found out they were searching the bushes for his lost wallet.

THURSDAY, OCT. 9

WHAT’S COOKING?: At 1:37 p.m., a caller asked police to check on a large yellow van in the Snoqualmie YMCA parking lot. The van had smoke coming from it, from a barbecue. Police contacted the owner, who’d been in the Y taking a shower. He said he had a custom wood stove inside the camper, and was cooking ham hocks on it.

Snoqualmie Fire Dept.

THURSDAY, OCT. 2

OVEN ALARM: At 12:22 p.m., Snoqualmie firefighters were dispatched to the Sal-ish Lodge & Spa for an auto-

matic fire alarm. After inves-tigation, it was determined that it was a false alarm set off by an oven hood in the kitchen that malfunctioned.MONOXIDE ALARM: At 4:22 p.m., Snoqualmie firefight-ers responded to the Sno-qualmie Ridge area for a res-idential carbon monoxide alarm. After investigation, it was determined that the alarm was sounding due to a malfunctioning detector.

FRIDAY, OCT. 3

CAR IN A CULVERT: At 11:42 a.m., Snoqualmie Fire-fighters responded with Eastside Fire & Rescue for a reported one car-one semi‐truck motor vehicle accident on SR 18 near the Raging River. Upon arrival,

crews found two patients, one out of the car and the other still in the car, on its roof in a drainage culvert. The vehicle reportedly tried to do a U‐turn in front of the semi‐truck. The pa-tients had minor injuries and were transported to the hospital for evaluation.

SATURDAY, OCT. 4

SMOKE OR FIRE: At 5:32 p.m., Snoqualmie firefighters re-sponded to the area of west-bound I‐90 near milepost 24 for a report of smoke in the area. Upon arrival, no smoke was found, just a general haze through the area.

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Young Life banquet planned at Salish Lodge

Valley Young Life’s Fundraising Banquet is 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19, at Salish Lodge in Snoqualmie.

The evening includes a dinner, inspiring stories from Young Life and plans and goals for the coming year.

Young Life is a faith orga-nization that helps young people develop the skills, assets and attitudes to reach their full God-given poten-tial.

Locally, Young Life sup-ports Wyldlife Club for middle school-age youth. It is held at Mount Si monthly, the next club meets at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 14. A high school Young Life Club is in the planning stages.

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WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 7

Hiker, two dogs saved by copter

A Snohomish County Sheriff ’s Office helicopter crew located and rescued a for-merly lost 21-year-old Seattle woman, Paula Reuter, after she spent three unexpected nights in the Kulla Kulla Basin near the Pratt River.

Just before 3 p.m. on Thursday, October 9, the heli-copter crew, part of a com-bined search effort with King County Search and Rescue, spotted a lone hiker and believed they found Reuter. They lowered crew members to the hiker, but the helicopter was running low on fuel and had to resupply. When the

helicopter, Snohawk, returned, the crew was able to hoist Reuter and her two dogs to safety.

The helicopter touched down at Bandera Airfield where Reuter was reunited with her parents and some awaiting friends. Reuter had travelled about six miles from

her car, which was parked at the Ira Springs trailhead. She reported that she was trying to hike to Mt. Defiance when she became disoriented on the trails and couldn’t find her way back.

The hiker was transported to an area hospital where she was examined for precautionary measures. She had scratches all over her arms and legs from apparently bushwhacking or off-trail hiking. Reuter said that she ate wild mushrooms and

built a small fire while in the wilderness. She said that she fed her dogs some beef jerky that she had taken with her.

Her parents were relieved to

see their daughter and grateful for the deputies and the search and rescue volunteers who searched for their daughter, a sheriff’s spokesperson stated.

Posted: October 10, 2014Published: October 15, 2014 in Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1156722LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF NORTH BENDKing County, Washington

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Notice is hereby given that the North Bend City Council will hold a public hearing to receive comments on the 2015/2016 Preliminary Budget. The hearing will take place during the Regu- lar City Council Meeting on Tuesday, November 4, 2014, 7:00 P.M., at the Mt Si Senior Center, 411 Main Avenue South, North Bend, WA. Comments may be submitted in writing to the City Clerk’s Office at City Hall, 211 Main Avenue N. (P.O. Box 896) North Bend, WA 98045, up to the close of business, (4:30 P.M.) Monday, November 3, 2014 or verbally during the public hearing. The Preliminary Budget is available for review at City Hall, 211 Main Ave. N., and on the City’s website at http://north- bendwa.gov.Further information is available by contacting City Hall at (425) 888-1211.Posted: October 8, 2014Published: October 8, 2014 and October 15, 2014 in Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1156728LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF NORTH BENDKing County, Washington

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Notice is hereby given that the North Bend City Council will hold a public hearing to receive comments on setting the Property Tax Levy for 2015. The hearing will take place during the Regu- lar City Council Meeting on Tuesday November 4, 2014, 7:00 P.M., at the Mt Si Senior Center, 411 Main Avenue South, North Bend, WA. Comments may be submitted in writing to the City Clerk’s Office at City Hall, 211 Main Avenue N. (P.O. Box 896) North Bend, WA 98045, up to the close of business, (4:30 P.M.) Monday, November 3, 2014 or verbally during the public hearing. Further information is available by contacting Assistant City Administrator/Finance Director Dawn Masko at (425) 888-7630.Posted: October 8, 2014Published: October 8, 2014 and October 15, 2014 in the Snoqual- mie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1156733LEGAL NOTICENORTH BEND

TRANSPORTATION BENEFIT DISTRICT NO 1

North Bend, WashingtonNOTICE OF

PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the North Bend Transportation Bene- fit District No 1 (TBD) will hold a public hearing to receive com- ments on the 2015 Preliminary Budget. The hearing will take place during a Special Transpor- tation Benefit District No 1 Meeting on Tuesday, November 4, 2014, at approximately 7:05 P.M., at the Mt Si Senior Center, 411 Main Avenue South, North Bend, WA. Comments may be submitted in writing to the TBD Board of Directors, c/o City of North Bend, 211 Main Avenue N. (P.O. Box 896) North Bend, WA 98045, up to the close of business, (4:30 P.M.) Monday, November 3, 2014 or verbally during the public hearing. The Preliminary Budget is available for review at the North Bend City Hall, 211 Main Ave. N., and on the City’s website at http://northbendwa.gov. Further information is available by contacting City Hall at (425) 888-1211.Posted: October 8, 2014Published: October 8, 2014 and October 15, 2014 in Snoquamie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1156741CITY OF CARNATION

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

CUP14-0001 and DR14-0002Application: Verizon Wireless has made application for a Con- ditional Use Permit and for mi- nor Design Review to install a wireless communication facility at 4621 Tolt Avenue, Carnation consisting of twelve (12) panel antennas to be placed on the roof within a screened fenced area of approximately 18 feet by 18 feet, and ancillary equipment, includ- ing cabinets, to be placed on the ground within a fenced area of approximately 10 feet x 26 feet. At the applicant’s election, these applications have been consoli- dated for processing purposes in accordance with CMC 15.09. 040. Cables from the cabinets to the antenna on the roof will be routed underground via conduit and along a constructed chase mounted to the side of the build- ing. In addition an emergency generator will be located adja- cent to the existing generator.

Location: Carnation City Hall 4621 Tolt Avenue Carnation, WA PIN 865830-2200Proponent: Verizon WirelessPublic Hearing: A Public Hear- ing will be held before the City of Carnation Hearing Examiner on October 20, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. or soon thereafter in the City Hall Council Chambers, 4621 Tolt Avenue, Carnation.Public Comment: The hearing is open to the public. All persons wishing to comment on the proposed Conditional Use Permit and minor Design Review may appear and provide oral or writ- ten comment at the scheduled public hearing. Please refer to File No. CUP14-0001 and/or DR14-0002 and include your name and address. A staff report will be available for public review 10 calendar days prior to the hearing date, in accordance with CMC 15.10.020(C). For more information: Informa- tion on this proposal is contained in the official file available at City Hall, (425) 333-4192. This notice is published pursuant to CMC 15.10.030 Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record on October 8, 2014 and October 15, 2014.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1159103LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF CARNATION-NOTICE OF

PUBLIC HEARING- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Carnation Planning Board will hold a public hearing to receive public comment regarding a proposed ordinance amending Chapter 15.08 CMC Basic Definitions and Interpreta- tions and Chapter 15.16 CMC Subdivision; establishing new provisions authorizing and governing model homes and associated facilities within an approved preliminary plat. The Planning Board will also discuss and potentially adopt findings and conclusions in sup- port of the proposed ordinance. The hearing will be conducted at the regular meeting of the Carna- tion Planning Board on October 28, 2014, at 7:00 PM or soon thereafter, in the Council Cham- bers at Carnation City Hall located at 4621 Tolt Avenue in Carnation. The hearing may be continued to subsequent Planning Board meetings. The hearing is open to the public. All persons wishing to comment on the proposed ordi- nance may submit comment in writing or verbally at the sched-

uled public hearing. The full text of the proposed ordinance will be available for public review during normal business hours af- ter Thursday, October 23, 2014, from the city clerk at Carnation City Hall. It is possible that sub- stantial changes in the proposed amendments may be made following the public hearing. There will be an additional pub- lic hearing on this subject before the City Council prior to final adoption. This notice is published pursuant to CMC 1.14.010 & 15.100. 040(B).

CITY OF CARNATIONMary Madole, City Clerk

Publish in the Snoqualmie Valley Recordon October 15, 2014 and October 22, 2014.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1159225LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF NORTH BENDKing County, Washington

NOTICE OFINVITATION TO BID

The City of North Bend is accepting bids for the City’s “Official Newspaper” for the year 2015. The successful bidder will receive legal notices and no- tices to bid, as required by law, for publication. Bidders must meet the qualifications set forth in RCW 65.16.020, as well as have the ability to provide the City with an Affidavit of Publi- cation within two weeks of the publication date. A qualified bid will consist of a Statement of Qualifications and Publication Rate per column inch. Qualified Sealed Bids should be delivered to the attention of City of North Bend, City Clerk, clear- ly marked “Official Newspaper Bid” on the outside of the enve- lope, and addressed to P.O. Box 896, 211 Main Ave. N, North Bend, WA 98045. Bids will be accepted until 10:00 A.M. November 7, 2014, at which time the City Clerk will open the bids. All bidders will be notified of the results.Posted: October 10, 2014Published: October 15, 2014 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1159553LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF NORTH BENDKing County, Washington

Notice is hereby given that the North Bend City Council at its October 7, 2014 City Council Meeting adopted the following Ordinances. The summary titles are as follows:

Ordinance No. 1535AN ORDINANCE OF THE

CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, ADOPTING AMENDMENTS TO NORTH BEND MUNICIPAL CODE SECTION 15.02.500, WORK EXEMPT FROM A PERMIT, PROVIDING FOR SEVER- ABILITY, AND ESTABLISH- ING AN EFFECTIVE DATEOrdinance No. 1536AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, ADOPTING A NEW SECTION 9.205.020 OF THE NORTH BEND MU- NICIPAL CODE TO DEFINE “OPEN SPACE” SOLELY FOR PURPOSES OF EN- FORCEMENT OF CRIMI- NAL TRESPASS LAWS, EX- PANDING THE PARK HOURS OF OPERATION TO OPEN SPACE; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; AND ESTABLISHING AN EFFEC- TIVE DATEOrdinance No. 1537AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, ORDERING REASSESSMENTS FOR CERTAIN PROPERTIES IN UTILITY LOCAL IMPROVE- MENT DISTRICT NO. 6 PURSUANT TO A WASH- INGTON STATE COURT OF APPEALS ORDER; AND PROVIDING THAT PAY- MENT OF THE COSTS OF THE IMPROVEMENTS BE MADE BY SPECIAL AS- SESSMENTS UPON THESE CERTAIN PROPERTIES IN THE DISTRICTOrdinance No. 1538AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, ADOPTING THE SCHOOL DISTRICT’S CAPITAL FACILITIES PLAN BY REFERENCE AND AMENDING THE STAND- ALONE TAXES, RATES AND FEES SCHEDULE RELATING TO SCHOOL IMPACT FEES

The full text of the above Ordinances may be viewed on the web at http://northbend- wa.gov, at the North Bend City Hall, 211 Main Ave., N. or to request a copy by mail please contact the City Clerk at (425) 888-7627. Published in the Snoquamie Val- ley Record on October 15, 2014.

PUBLIC NOTICE #1159884Legal Notice

City Of SnoqualmieKing County,

Washington 98065 Notice Is Hereby Given That the Snoqualmie City Council, on the

13th day of October 2014 passed the Following Ordinances:

Ordinance No. 1140 Renewing a six month moratori- um on the acceptance, processing and approval of applications for wireless communications facilities under Chapter 17.77 of the Snoqualmie Municipal Code.

Ordinance No. 1141 Declaring an emergency and re- newing a six-month moratorium within the City of Snoqualmie on the establishment, location, oper- ation, licensing, maintenance or continuation of marijuana pro- ducers, processors, retailers dis- pensaries and/or collective gar- dens as regulated or proposed to be regulated pursuant to Wash- ington State Initiative 502 and/or chapters 69.50 and/or 69.51a of the Revised Code of Washington Copies of these Ordinances in complete text are available at the City Hall located at 38624 SE River Street between 9 AM and 5 PM, Monday through Friday, on the city website www.ci.snoqual- mie.wa.us, or by calling the City Clerk at 425-888-1555 x 1118.ATTEST: Jodi Warren, MMC City ClerkPublish/Post: 10/15/2014Effective Date: Immediately on Adoption Published in Snoqualmie Valley Record on October 15, 2014

PUBLIC NOTICE #1159548LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF NORTH BENDKing County, Washington

NOTICE OFINVITATION TO BID

The City of North Bend is accepting bids for the City’s “Official Newspaper” for the year 2015. The successful bidder will receive legal notices and no- tices to bid, as required by law, for publication. Bidders must meet the qualifications set forth in RCW 65.16.020, as well as have the ability to provide the City with an Affidavit of Publi- cation within two weeks of the publication date. A qualified bid will consist of a Statement of Qualifications and Publication Rate per column inch. Qualified Sealed Bids should be delivered to the attention of City of North Bend, City Clerk, clear- ly marked “Official Newspaper Bid” on the outside of the enve- lope, and addressed to P.O. Box 896, 211 Main Ave. N, North Bend, WA 98045. Bids will be accepted until 10:00 A.M. November 7, 2014, at which time the City Clerk will open the bids. All bidders will be notified of the results.

PUBLIC NOTICES

Mount Si Lutheran Church

411 NE 8th St., North BendPastor Mark Grif� th • 425 888-1322

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WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM8 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 9

PUBLISHED AS A SUPPLEMENT TO THE SNOQUALMIE VALLEY RECORD

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Tradition continues at Carmichael’sThe Reinig family founded Snoqualmie’s hardware store more than 100 years ago. Carmichael’s has its legacies... and its ghosts.

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Go behind the scenes and learn about what regional museums will never show you, at FC Historical Society annual meeting

BY SETH TRUSCOTTEditor

The wool uniform is surprisingly heavy, and in fine condition, consid-ering it’s a century old.

Now cared for by Ruth Pickering, the suit’s original owner was Jesse Kelley of Fall City.

Jesse donned the heavy shirt and laced on the puttees after he was drafted into the Great War in 1917. He probably wore it during his 1918 service on the Western Front in a balloon company, just before World War I came to a close.

Secretshistory

of Fall City Years later, he passed it on to his son, the late Jack Kelley, com-plete with campaign hat. Today, it’s part of the small collection of Fall City Historical Society, stored with other valued relics in an upstairs room at Fall City Methodist Church.

As museums go, Fall City’s is small, and technically off limits to the public. But once a year, the society invites the community for an annual meeting, sharing the last discoveries from the past.

Without a real display room, Fall City’s physical collection is necessarily limited. But there are still a few treasures, and some stranger finds, preserved here.

Symbols and secretsNot long ago, Historical Society President Ruth Pickering was

poring over a digital photo the museum recently obtained from the Washington State Historical Society.

She was zoomed in, perusing the shelves of the Fall City confec-tionary shop owned by Scott and Nettie Magee, as they looked in 1930s. Eyeing the tins and boxes, she got a shock.

“I was semi-astonished” to see “Swas-Tika Sodas” soda crack-ers, she said. Most Americans know the swastika as the symbol of Nazi Germany and white supremacist groups. It wasn’t always so.

Seth Truscott/Staff Photo

Above, Ruth Pickering, Fall City Historical Society President, hoists the WWI-era wool uniform and campaign hat worn to war by Jesse Kelley, now in the museum collection at Fall City United Methodist Church. Fall City Historical Society discusses the unseen side of museum collections at its annual community meeting, this Sunday.

SEE SECRETS, 11

Page 10: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM10 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 11

But the swastika was a symbol of luck, peace and prosperity long before the Nazi party appropriated it. Many American brands embraced it prior to World War II.

“I remember being surprised to see it in a brand name,” Pickering said. “I didn’t realize it was so widely used.”

That confectioner’s shop vanished more than 50 years ago.“We lost most of our original buildings along River Street,

because they widened that road.” Of all the old wooden buildings, only a handful were moved back, and survived. “That happens to a lot of small towns,” Pickering said.

A counterclockwise swastika also appears on a souvenir medal from the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, in the shape of an arrowhead. The medal belonged to Jesse Kelley, passed to his son Jack, then donated to the Fall City society.

Survivals like these, odd relics of history, are the topic for the historical society’s special speaker at this weekend’s annual meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19, at the Fall City Masonic Lodge.

Speaker Harriet Baskas wrote the book, “Hidden Treasures: What Museums Can’t or Won’t Show You.” She discusses the secret side of historic collections when she comes to Fall City this weekend. It’s a fast-paced, photo-filled and sometimes offbeat tour of Washington museums and episodes in state history, told through the stories of museum artifacts that are rarely or never shown to the public.

Examples include Bing Crosby’s toupees in Spokane, a quilt made of Ku Klux Klan robes in Yakima and Native American spirit boards in Tacoma.

In Fall City, Baskas will explore how those objects came to be in the local collections and who makes decisions about what is displayed or kept from view.

Another example from the Yakima Valley Museum, only occa-sionally displayed, is a quilt emblazoned with swastikas. It was made years before Hitler’s rise to power.

“That quilt was made when that symbol meant good luck and

good fortune and hospitality,” Baskas says. For millennia, swastikas were used by cultures across the globe as motifs of good luck, prosperity, peace and fortune, turning up in art, architecture and as logos for products and businesses in the United States as late as the pre-war era. Then, the German Nazi party adopted the symbol, and it has been besmirched ever since.

Fabric and woodWith no real display space, Fall City

Historical Society is in the process of putting its collection online.

“Most of it is photos and documents,” Pickering said. “We really don’t have storage space for big things.”

Yet some treasures, normal or unusu-al, do remain, kept in the Methodist church’s collections room.

Besides Jesse Kelley’s army uniform, Fall City preserves other relics of his day and age. One collector’s item is his rare Fall City community band uniform. A group of townsfolk, mostly young men, formed the band circa 1914. They gath-ered and played music on occasion. The gray wool uniform with black piping, made by the DeMoulin company of Greenville, Ill., gave the group a more ornate look than their Sunday best. It broke up when the men went off to war in 1917.

In an interesting coincidence, it was fate that brought the uniform into the care of the historical society intern, Julie Coulter. She went to school and got married in Greenville, where the uni-form was originally made all those years ago.

Another legacy of the Kelly families is the rocking chair that came west with Jack Kelley’s grandmother. She was a small woman, so it’s a very small chair.

“It would be difficult for us to accept big stuff,” Pickering said. But one keeper is a china cabinet that belonged to Fall City’s historic Bush family.

“We’re hoping to find a spot for it some day,” Pickering said.

Meeting infoAll are welcome at the annual meet-

ing, and refreshments will be served. The event is a chance for residents and local history buffs to learn more about events, programs and future plans of the historical society.

The speaker, Harriet Baskas, writes

about airports, museums and a wide variety of other topics for msnbc.com, USATODAY.com, AAA Journey and other out-lets. She also maintains two blogs, StuckatTheAirport.com and MuseumMysteries.com. She produced a radio series on hidden museum artifacts that aired on National Public Radio, with Smithsonian-based historians as advisers. Baskas is the author of six books, including Washington Curiosities and Washington Icons.

Her presentation is sponsored by Humanities Washington, an independent nonprofit dedicated to sparking conversation and critical thinking. They use storytelling as a catalyst to stimulate and engage communities in this state, providing cultural programs, exhibits and experiences to Washingtonians. This year marks their 40th anniversary serving the state. Learn more at www.humanities.org to learn more.

Fall City Historical Society is also supported by King County Heritage 4Culture, which funds arts, heritage, and education in local communities.

Courtesy photo

Above, a color photo of the pumpkin display at Fall City Farms, two years ago. It’s immortalized in Fall City Historical Society’s first full-color calendar, out this fall.

What does the Fall City Historical Society do?Fall City Historical Society explores the history, memories and artifacts of the community’s past, preserving it for future generations.This mission involves a number of community activities. Volunteers conduct an annual Fall City Cemetery tour for elementary students. Each year, a teacher at Fall City Elementary runs a local history unit for second graders. At the end of the unit, teachers bring students to the cemetery, showing them the gravestones of the Fall City pioneers and the original tribal residents.The Society puts on booths and displays at Fall City Days and the Holiday Market in December.They have loaned a Hops Craze tabletop display to the Fall City Roadhouse, where diners can explore local history.They are also beginning new small-scale historic signs project to show off local sights. Using a grant, the society will place small, letter-sized signs with QR codes, to draw interest and direct vis-itors online. Two prime contenders for signs are Fall City’s historic Masonic hall and the Neighbor-Bennet townhouse across the street. Both are about a century old, and on the historic register.Another place that deserves some signage is the community’s historic Hop Shed at Fall City Park.They sell a collector’s glass showing a local historic site every year, and are publishing the ninth annual Fall City Calendar, this year in color for the first time.The society is also engaged in its annual fundraising drive, and has launched a new website, http://fallcityhistorical.org. They continue to be a presence on Facebook.

RARE FINDS FROM FALL CITY’S PAST

Top, an image of the Fall City Community Band, taken in 1916, just before the U.S. entry into World War I. Above, Ruth Pickering holds one of the uniforms bought for the band, owned by Jesse Kelley, now in the Fall City collection. Left, Kelley once owned a souvenir medal from the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Expo, marked with a swas-tika.

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Page 12: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM12 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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Page 13: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 13

Tokul Creek Trestle still draws travelers from

near and far BY CAROL LADWIG

Staff Reporter

Everyone stops on the Tokul Creek bridge.

It’s not that they need to; the Snoqualmie Valley Trail rises very gently up the Valley, and the bridge is about a mile along it from Tokul Road. Whether they’re on two wheels or two feet, though, the peo-ple who explore the trail as far as the 100-year-old Milwaukee Railroad trestle bridge seem compelled to pause there, and take in the view.

At nearly 100 feet high, the bridge offers a sweep-ing look across the Valley, and dizzying glimpses of the namesake creek flow-ing underneath. It’s also an impressive sight itself, stretching 400 feet over the plunging terrain of the creek canyon, and the 180-degree turn of the trail.

The Tokul Creek Trestle is, according to a King County Parks report on its historical significance, “the highest and one of the lon-gest and largest of the tres-tles on the former Everett branch of the (Milwaukee) Railroad, and the only one that is fit into a tightly curving contour in a steep drainage.”

It’s a jewel, and for plenty of reasons, says Snoqualmie historian Dave Battey.

Tokul Creek is one of few remaining natural creeks in the county, since the land wasn’t logged all the way down to the waterway. The bridge over it is a rare survivor of the railroad era in the Valley.

Built in 1911 by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad, Milwaukee for short, the enormous bridge served freight trains for six decades, and daily passenger trains from 1913 to 1930. It was rehabilitated in 1949 with all new tim-ber stringers supporting the bridge deck, abandoned in 1973 (the Milwaukee filed for bank-ruptcy in 1977), and converted to today’s c on c re te -deck sur-face in 1989. Long before then, t h o u g h , many other

railroad bridges had been demolished, primarily for safety reasons.

“Puget Power did that...” Battey said, “so people wouldn’t try to walk the rails.”

He remembers one of his first train rides, not on the Milwaukee line but on com-petitor Northern Pacific’s.

“It was the Casey Jones Special,” he said, “...and soon after, some of those incredible trestles between Fall City and the falls, were blasted.”

The Tokul Creek Trestle was safely off the power company’s land, and so preserved. Now it’s part of the county’s protected 31.5 mile trail from Rattlesnake Lake to Duvall, and a favorite stop for hikers and bikers.

Fall City historian Jack Kelley wrote in an article for the Fall City Historical Society that construction of the spur from Moncton to Everett, including the Tokul Creek Trestle, began in 1910.

“The track-laying crew arrived on the hill to the north of Fall City in 1911, and during the following year they reached Everett. Freight and mail services were extended to Fall City

and a r o a d p a s t Ruther-f o r d S l ou g h w o u n d up the hill to the Fall C i t y siding.

“The siding was gone by the late 1930s and the trains no longer stopped in Fall City.”

Besides being a survi-vor, the bridge also distin-guishes itself structurally. It’s supported on timber sills instead of driven piles, “unlike many of the small-er trestles on the route,” according to the King County report.

A 75-foot steel girder supports the center of the span, with 16- and 15-foot trestles arrayed on either side of it.

Battey never rode a train across the Tokul Creek Trestle, but many people, both local and distant, did.

The line extended to Everett, so, “if you had rela-tives in Everett, you’d look up the dollars and cents — and the fun, because railroads were fun to ride — and you’d go visit your relatives in Everett.”

Carol Ladwig/Staff Photos

Above: One of the trestle-built bridge’s distinguishing fea-tures is its curved construction, 400 feet across the Tokul Creek canyon. Right: Today, the Tokul Creek Trestle is part of the Snoqualmie Valley Trail, and a favorite stop for bicyclists and hikers. The 100 year-old bridge was used by freight trains into the early 70s, before the Milwaukee Railroad abandoned the line. Bottom, right: Construction of the Tokul Creek Trestle for the Milwaukee Railroad spur from Moncton to Everett was complete in 1911, when this photo was taken. Below: Take a look under the bridge and you’ll see more rare features, including its construction with heavy timber “bents” and sill construction instead of driven piles. Inset: On the way to the bridge from Tokul Road, you’ll pass this giant culvert. It replaced “the killer bridge” years ago, after the wife and children of a local game warden were killed after sliding off the bridge in icy weather.

Courtesy Photo

Historic jewel

Page 14: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM14 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record11

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Page 15: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 15

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For Wendy Thomas, running Carmichael’s True Value Hardware Store is never boring.Every day, someone walks in with a new challenge to fix. Visitors pace the wooden boards of the

store, discovering something useful, humorous, sometimes timeless.“I feel like I’m preserving an ancient tradition,” she says. In a sense, she is. Thomas and her husband, Bryan Woolsey, have run this store, both a source of

needed hardware and tools, and a home-gifts-and-goods stop for tourists, for 12 years. Theirs is the oldest continuous business in the Valley, having been founded in 1902 as the Reinig Brothers Store.

Brothers Otto and Dio Reinig grew up on Snoqualmie’s huge hop farm, and founded their gener-al store on the site of today’s shop. It burned, as wooden buildings often did in yesteryear’s America, in 1907, but was quickly rebuilt. It’s been remodeled and changed over the century, the latest update being a new coat of paint last month.

Reinig familyAccording to local historian Dave Battey, the Reinig family were immigrants who brought a lot

of entrepreneurial spirit to the Valley.Leonard Reinig came to Portland, Ore., from Germany, in 1862, then moved to Seattle. He had a

thriving bread, cake and candy shop, but, after rebuilding following Seattle’s first big fire, had enough of the city and wanted to move to the country, to raise his and wife Margarethe’s sons Otto, Dio and Edward.

He linked up with former Seattle neighbor, Captain George W. Gove, a partner in the Snoqualmie Hop Ranch, and moved to Snoqualmie in 1890.

The Reinig family bought 120 acres at what is now Reinig Road. Their original house, now much altered, is 39254 Park Street in Snoqualmie.

Otto married Minnie Owens of Issaquah and settled in a Snoqualmie home where the Union 76 station now stands. He and his brother Dio built the Reinig Brothers Store in 1902. He

Otto and Minnie planted the stately magnolia tree in front of the 76 station.

Ghost storiesSigns and photos still exist from the Reinig days. The images show a shop filled with goods.

Sometime after the Reinigs, the store was a Red and White grocery store for about 30 years, said Woolsey. The former walk-in refrigerator is now the paint-mixing room.

It’s a bit of a challenge keeping up a century-old store. Drifts of snow sometimes make their way under the eaves. When it warms, that means a bucket—or several—have to be deployed to catch the melt.

There may also be a ghost around.“Every once in a while, somebody sees or hears something,” says Woolsey, that they can’t explain.He’s got his own tale.“Early on, when we first bought the store, I was doing ordering in the back corner, about 5

o’clock in the morning,” said Woolsey, an early riser. “I heard footsteps through the store, in fact, right about where we’re standing,” by the store’s kitchen. “They were very loud—clomp, clomp, clomp, like somebody walk-ing into work.”

He thought it was one of his employees, arriving extra early. But the person never said hello.

“So I sat there and worked for 20 minutes, and he never said anything. I came out here, and there was nobody here. The door was locked. The lights were out. It wasn’t any-body sneaking around.”

The mystery has never been explained.

Still goingThe historic nature of this modern general store

defines Carmichael’s True Value.“We base what we order on how things sit with the feel

of the building,” Woolsey said. “You can’t put out a lot of really super-modern stuff. It doesn’t fit.”

There aren’t many places like Carmichael’s left, cus-tomers tell Thomas.

While hardware will always be around—tools are always a seller, because “something is always breaking,” Thomas says—“a small, independently owned business is an endangered species.” With any luck, though, Carmichael’s brand of useful, quirky, historic and fun will keep customers coming in.

Modern general storeMore than a century of life continues for Carmichael’s True Value Hardware

Top, the Reinig store in its earli-est days, circa 1902. Above, Carmichael’s True Value Hardware staff Kris Newcomb, Bryan Woolsey, Wendy Thomas.

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Page 16: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM16 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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Winter RatesOctober 26th 2014 to March 15th 2015

Normal Winter & Food & Toy drive rates below

Monday - Friday18 holes - $26 (w/ food or toy - $23)

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November 1, 2014 thru March 15, 2015Mount Si Golf Course will continue the tradition of the holiday food & toy drive. This program gives you a discount on golf if you donate food or toys when you play. Food donations will be given to the Mt Si Helping Hand Food Bank Toys will be given to children in need.

Holiday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveHoliday Food and Toy DriveRestaurant:(425) 888-2150 Email: [email protected]

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Page 17: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 17

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Anna McCreadie hits new kill recordMount Si’s Anna McCreadie now shares the school record for most kills in a volleyball match.

Against Bothell on Tuesday, Oct. 7, McCreadie tied the single match kill record of 37 set by Lindsay Carr in 2012 Sea-King Districts at Chief Sealth, vs. Eastside Catholic. Carr had set the prior record of 35 that September at home versus Lake Washington. The prior record holder, Sarah McDonald, set it with 33 in 2011.At press time, Mount Si remains undefeated, 8-0. The junior varsity team is also undefeated.Against Bothell, Mount Si won in five sets. McCreadie, in addition to her kills, had 21 digs and four ages. Liz Larson had 12 kills, Courteney Carr had 49 assists and three aces, Jenn Rogers had 27 digs and three

assists, and Sara Brevick had two aces, four digs and an assist.Mount Si beat Inglemoor in five sets on Oct. 9 McCreadie had 31 kills; Carr had 45 assists; Cameron Kendall had 24 digs; Liz Larson had 11 kills; Rogers had 18 digs; Katie Larson had five aces. The girls play at Newport Thursday, Oct. 16.

Cedarcrest girls, boys dominate at homeCedarcrest High School's cross country squad hosted its only home meet of the season Thursday, Oct. 9, at Carnation's Blue Heron Golf Course.In spite of the fact that some athletes didn't run to heal from injury, the meet was the Red Wolves' most complete of the season, said coach Bruce McClellan."From top to bottom, most everyone was running their fastest times of the season," he said.The girls raced first and finished first in the team scores. Sophomore Madi Shinn finished in third place with a personal record of 20:33.31. Her time puts her tied for sixth in Cedarcrest's top 10 list for the Blue Heron course. Ruby Farias, Kiana Ward (with a PR), Alicia Krivanek and MaryCate Babcock were the remaining four scorers. The boys also finished first in the team race. Sophomore Ian Fay finished in second place with a personal record of 16:54.46. Sophomore Cameron Hammontree followed in third place. Fay's time puts him fourth on the Cedarcrest top 10 list for the course. Isaac Harper, Vincent Dams and Gunnar Schultz were the remaining scorers.Athletes of the meet were Fay, Lars Candland, Shinn, Stephanie Busch, Noelle Viger and Chloe Cairns. Grady Lehto, Duncan Zuvich and Greta Klaiber also ran well."A big thanks to Blue Heron for allowing us to use their course as our home course," said McClellan. "We get compliments every year from the other schools about run-ning at the golf course, and this year was no different. Thanks also to all the Cedarcrest parents for their help with everything that went on today."

SPOR

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Rec B-ball skills sessions

begin soon at Si View

Youth recreational basket-ball skill sessions begin in

November the Valley, orga-nized by Si View Metro Park.Skill sessions allow coaches to see

the skill level of players, while youth can display their abilities before

the basketball season begins. They let players meet some of the

coaches that could work with them throughout the upcoming season. Sessions begin Nov. 1 for youth in grades K-2, and continue over the next few weeks for older players.

Cost is free. A winter rec league for elementary, middle and high school players follows. Learn more at http://

www.siviewpark.org/recreational-basketball.phtml

Courtesy photo

Cascade’s B96 Premier soccer team wins 2014 Crossfire Redapt cupThe Cascade FC B-96 Boys Premier Soccer Team recently won the U-19 Championship at the 2014 Crossfire Premier Redapt Cup, which was held at the 60 Acres Complex in Redmond. This tournament, hosted by Crossfire, one of Washingtons largest soccer clubs, featured more than 200 teams. During the-tournament, Cascade Premier went 5-0, with 16 goals scored for and only two goals scored against them.In the U-19 championship game, with the temperature approaching the mid 80’s on the pitch, Cascade faced off against a strong Crossfire team. Eventually, the game was decided on a header by Jake Turpin, and assisted by the Cascade goalkeeper, Bruce Coorie. Pictured are, from left, Colton Ord, Jonah Kingery, Mason McRae, Zeke Kingery, Bryan Bodnar, and Hayden Malberg; second row, head coach Dan Paczosa, Cameron Heimbigner, Jake Turpin, Max Adamson, Bruce Corrie, Kyle Walsh, Austin Santamaria and Evan Betz. Not pictured: Jesus Espinoza.

Bright time for Junior WildcatsCourtesy Photo

Members of the Mount Si Sophomore White Junior Football team take the field as the sun rises over Mount Si at the Mount Si High School stadium Saturday, Oct. 4. According to head coach Brian Finney, Junior Wildcat football is off to a strong start this year, with most teams heading into the playoffs. Sophomore White is made up of local sixth and seventh grade players. They faced the Richmond Bulldogs of Seattle that day, and won 34-7. The team has a 5-1 record, and enters the playoffs next week. Learn more about Junior Wildcat football at www.wcjfa.org/home.php.

ANNA McCREADIE

Page 18: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

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SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

jobsEmployment

General

CARRIER ROUTES

AVAILABLE

IN YOUR AREA

Call Today1-253-872-6610Now Hiring Class A and B drivers!!

Domino’s Pizza is ex- panding and looking for drivers that have deliv- ery and customer ser- vice experience. If you are interested in working for a great company with excellent pay, full medi- cal, dental, vision, paid holidays, and vacation.Contact:

[email protected]

[email protected]

Or Apply at:www.careers.dominos.com

www.careers.dominos.com

Seasonal WarehouseWork available Septem- ber through December. Day & Swing shifts. Contact 425.497.7914

[email protected]

[email protected]

EmploymentSocial Services

We are looking for cur- rent tobacco smokers h e a l t hy p a r t i c i p a n t s aged 52-82 y/o for a re- search study on lifestyle factors and risk of dis- eases. Your participation in the study will consist in attending one visit of one hour in the morning ( s k i pp i ng b reak fas t ) where you will answer a questionnaire and do- nate a blood sample, at one of these two loca- tions of your choice: 1) the Bastyr Center for Natural Health at 3670 Stone Way North, Seat- tle, or 2) the Bastyr Uni- versity campus at 14500 Juanita Drive NE, Ken- more, WA. Compensa- tion will be $30 in cash at the completion of the visit. Please call 425- 602-3316

EmploymentTransportation/Drivers

D R I V E R S – S TA RT WITH OUR TRAINING or continue your solid career, You Have Op- tions! Company Drivers, Lease Purchase or Own- er Operators Needed (888) 793-6503.www.centraltruckdriving- jobs.com

EmploymentTransportation/Drivers

GORDON TRUCKING, INC. Solo & Team Posi- t ions, CDL-A Dr iv ing Jobs for: • OTR-Region- a l -Dedicated • Home Weekend Opportunities • Big Sign-on Bonus & Pay! Cal l 7 days/wk! EOE. 866 -220 -9175 , GordonTrucking.com

Teams and Solo’s: Mid- west and West Coast runs, Late Model Equip- ment, scheduled home t ime, Excel lent Miles, Paid Practical Miles, Di- rect Deposit, Paid Vaca- tion. Call Now! 800-645- 3748

Health Care EmploymentCaregivers

MAINTENANCEPart time, flexible hours. M u s t e n j oy c r e a t i ve problem solving.

425-888-7108

Business Opportunities

AVON- Earn extra in- come with a new career! Sell from home, work,, online. $15 startup. For information cal l : 888- 423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat 9-1 Central)

Real- Estate Careers

Earn your real estate license

before the market goes back up.

Evening classes. We Take Payments

Live Instructed.Blue Emerald Real

Estate SchoolKing Co:

(253)250-0402blueemerardrealestate.com

Schools & Training

A I R L I N E C A R E E R S Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certi- f ied Technic ian f ix ing je ts . F inanc ia l a id i f qualified. Call for free in- formation Aviation Insti- tute of Maintenance 1- 877-818-0783 www.Fix- Jets.com

Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the Classifieds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com

SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

stuff

Cemetery Plots

2 PLOTS $4999 NEGOT Rest your loved ones side by side (plots 3 & 4). Monuments are okay. D e s i r a b l e , s o l d o u t Heather Section located in Renton’s Greenwood Memorial Park. Seller pays transfer fees. Val- ued at $12,000 each. Private seller willing to entertain all offers. Call Andrew, 206-373-1988.

(2) SxS PLOTS $18,000 a t Bel levue`s Sunset Hills Memorial Park in the SOLD OUT Garden of Devotion. Section 31b Lots 9 and 10. Peaceful Setting. Owner willing to negotiate lower price. If available, would retail at $44,000. Call Bob 425- 454-5996.

(2) SxS PLOTS in the d e s i r a b l e S e a t a c ’ s Washington Memor ial Park. Beautiful Garden of Communion location at 15-91-C, #1 & #2. Asking $3,750 for both. Owner pays transfer fee. All site care maintained by the Park. Cal l J im 360-561-8939.

$7500 PLOT; Pretigous Sunset Memorial Park in Bel levue. View of the mountains!! ! Sold out space in the desirable “Garden of Prayer” sec- tion. Lot # 210, space # 5. Owner pays transfer fee & endowment care fee. If available would retail at $22,000. Private owner. 503-412-8424.

Cemetery Niche for 1 or 2 urns - Bonney-Watson Sea Tac Garden of Me- diation. Indoor,with glass front, holds one or two urns plus room for pic- tures or other memora- b i l ia . Bonney Watson value - $9,300. Will sell for $5,000 OBO. judy. cu r ran@comcas t . ne t (206) 714-1920

Electronics

DirectTV - 2 Year Sav- ings Event! Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Only DirecTV gives you 2 YEARS of savings and a FREE Ge- nie upgrade! Call 1-800- 279-3018

DIRECTV s tar t ing a t $ 2 4 . 9 5 / m o . F r e e 3-Months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINE- MAX. FRE RECEIVER U p g ra d e ! 2 0 1 4 N F L Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800- 897-4169

Page 19: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM www.nw-ads.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 19

Washington #TOWNCPF099LT 800-824-9552Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a � at, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of � ll, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B”, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 11/7/14.

20,846,041SQUARE FEET

19,557BUILDINGS BUILT

As of 9/15/2014

11

41

68

3

ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE:

Hundreds of Designs Available!

• 2” Fiberglass Vapor Barrier Roof Insulation• 18 Sidewall & Trim Colors (Denim Series Excluded)

With Limited Lifetime Warranty• Free In-Home Consultation

• Plans • Engineering• Permit Service • Erection

• Guaranteed Craftsmanship • Engineered For 85 MPHWind Exposure B & 25# Snow Load* *If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures

or snow loads, building prices will be affected.

10’ x 10’ Metal framed split sliding door w/cam-latch closers, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steellockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent.

MODIFIED GRID BARN 30’ x 30 ‘ x 10’

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent.

2 CAR GARAGE & HOBBY SHOP 22’ x 32’ x 9’

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, (2) 9’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight along one eave, (2) 12”x12” gable vents (not shown).

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 8’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 12’x12”gable vents.

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, (2) 10’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent (not shown).

$19,463$21,312 $280/mo. $11,448$12,536 $165/mo. $22,665$24,705 $326/mo.

$15,467$17,787 $222/mo.

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, 16’x8’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 4’x3’ double glazed crosshatch vinyl windows w/screens, 3’ steel wainscoting, 18” eave and gable overhangs, (2) 18” octagon gable vents.

PERMABILT.COM facebook.com/PermaBilt

ConcreteIncluded!

ConcreteIncluded!

2” Fiberglass vapor barrier roof insulation, 18 sidewall & trim colors w/ limited lifetime warranty.

$12,586$13,908 $181/mo.

HAY COVER 30’ x 36’ x 12’

(2) 10’x12’ Permastalls w/split opening wood Dutch doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 18’ eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent.

$16,498$18,148 $237/mo.

2 STALL HORSE BARN 24’ x 30’ x 9’

$24,276$26,461 $349/mo.

LARGE GARAGE & SHOP 24’ x 24’ x 9’ w/16’ x 36’ x 14’

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 12’x12’ raised panel steel overhead door & (1) 9’x8’’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door w/stainless steel lockset & self-closing hinges, 3’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent.

ConcreteIncluded!

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, (1) 10’x12’ and (1) 9’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’6”x3’9” PermaBilt awning w/enclosed sof� t, 5/12 pitch roof, cofer truss, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent.

RV GARAGE 32’ x 36’ x 12’

$23,525$25,642 $338/mo.

$16,967$18,664 $244/mo.

L-SHAPED 2 CAR GARAGE & SHOP20’ x 40’ x 8’ w/20’ x 20’ x 8’

4” Concrete � oor w/� bermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, (2) 8’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 10’ continuous � ow ridge vent.

$24,998$27,373 $359/mo. $12,497$13,899 $180/mo.

ConcreteIncluded!

DELUXE WAINSCOTED 2 CAR GARAGE 20’ x 24’ x 9’

ConcreteIncluded!

ConcreteIncluded!

2 CAR GARAGE 20’ x 22’ x 8’ DUTCH GAMBREL 24’ x 36’ x 16DAYLIGHT GARAGE 24’ x 36’ x 9’

ConcreteIncluded!

For a money saving coupon ... Go to Facebook.com/Permabilt

ConcreteIncluded!

Electronics

DISH TV Retailer. Start- ing at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed I n t e r n e t s t a r t i n g a t $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Instal- lation! CALL Now! 800- 278-1401

Get a complete Satellite System installed at NO COST! FREE HD/DVR U p gra d e . A s l ow a s $19.99/mo. Call for de- tails 877-388-8575

My Computer Works. Computer problems? Vi- ruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad inter- net connections - FIX IT N OW ! P r o fe s s i o n a l , U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-800- 681-3250

Firearms &Ammunition

GUN FANCIER Wants to buy p is to ls, r i f les, shotguns. Old or new! Phone quotes g ladly. Cash of course. Call 206-526-8081. Thanks

Firewood, Fuel& Stoves

NOTICEWashington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (re- ceipt) that shows the s e l l e r ’s a n d bu ye r ’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quan- tity upon which the price is based. There should be a statement on the type and quality of the wood.When you buy firewood write the seller’s phone number and the license plate number of the de- livery vehicle.The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a cord by v isual iz ing a four-foot by eight-foot space filled with wood to a height of four feet . Most long bed pickup trucks have beds that are close to the four-foot by 8-foot dimension.To make a f i r ewood complaint, call 360-902- 1857.

agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx

agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx

flea marketMail Order

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications.Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescr ipt ion and f ree shipping.

Medical Guardian - Top- rated medical alarm and 24/7 medical alert moni- toring. For a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no com- mitment, a 2nd water- proof alert button for free and more - only $29.95 per month . 800-617- 2809

VIAGRA and C IAL IS USERS! 50 Pills SPE- CIAL - $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaran- teed. CALL NOW! 855- 409-4132

Page 20: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

20 • October 15, 2014 • Snoqualmie Valley Record www.nw-ads.comWWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM

Easy as ABC…

Selling? Buying?

Call:800-388-2527

E-mail:classified@

soundpublishing.comor Go Online

24 hours a day:www.nw-ads.comto place an ad inthe Classifieds.

Be the icing on their cake...Advertise in the

Service Directoryin The Classifieds.

Call: (800) 388-2527e-mail:

[email protected] go online: www.nw-ads.com

to get your business in the

Mail Order

VIAGRA - Pfizer brand! - Lowest Price from USA Pharmacies. No doctor visit needed! Discreet Home Del iver y. Cal l 855-684-5241

Miscellaneous

K I L L B E D B U G S & THEIR EGGS! Buy Har- ris Bed Bug Killer Com- p le te Treatment Pro- gram or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.comKILL ROACHES! Buy Harr is Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs- Guaran- teed. No Mess, Odor- l e s s , L o n g L a s t i n g . Available at Ace Hard- ware & The Home De- pot.

Miscellaneous

KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odor- less, Non-Staining. Ef- fective results begin af- t e r s p r a y d r i e s . Ava i lable : The Home Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware

Pro tec t Your Home - ADT Authorized Dealer: B u r g l a r y, F i r e , a n d Emergency Aler ts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, IN- S TA L L E D T O M O R - ROW! 888-858-9457 (M- F 9am-9pm ET)

Wanted/Trade

TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920’s th ru 1980 ’s . G ibson , Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mos- rite, Rickenbacker, Prai- r ie State, D’Angel ico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandol ins /Banjos. 1- 800-401-0440

pets/animals

Cats

TICA BENGAL Kittens Silver & Browns starting at $800. We are a small in home cat ter y. Our Benga l ’s a re accus - tomed to kids & very so- ciable. They love to curl up with you during nap- time’s, and play all day when awake! Call Kim 360 -709-9225 o r fo r more information visitwww.katwijkcatsbengals.webs.com

Dogs

2 GREAT DANE Pups. Purebred. Ready to go t o n ew h o m e s ! O n e black female. One Blue Mer le Male. Shots & wor med . $800 each . 253-761-6067.AKC Papillon Pups. Vet ckd,shots,wrmgs. Gor- geous,friendly,outgoing. Ready now. $700-800 www.clearbrook-kennels.com 360-224- 0903AKC SM. F. GERMAN SHEPHERD. Jet black in color. Super compan- ion, great family dog, just adorable! All around loveable dog. 4 year old. Never welped. $600 best offer. Orting. Call 253- 761-6067.

Dogs

AKC, BLACK LAB pups E n g l i s h w i t h b l o ck y heads. Great hunters or companions. Playful and loyal. Family raised & well socialized, OFA’s lineage, first shots, de- w o r m e d a n d v e t checked. Paren ts on site. $550 & $600. 425- 422-2428.

AKC CHOCOLATE Labs Puppies. 3 males, 5 fe- ma les. Da te o f b i r th 8/24. English style with blocky heads. Mother’s s ide ; NFC/AFC. S i re side; pointing lab with multiple master hunter b a ck g r o u n d . G r e a t hunters, fami ly mem- bers. Great tempera- ment and love of water. References with more pics available. $1,200sassygirlkennels.com 2nd litter; 9 chocolates, 4 yellows. $850 females, $800 [email protected] 360-827-2928

AKC POMERANIANS G o r g e o u s b a b i e s t o choose from. Variety of colors. Up to date on shots. Health guarantee. Wil l be ready for new homes soon! Now taking deposits. Prices: Males, $450. Females, $550. Also 1 year to 7 year olds available. Call for pr ices. 253-223-3506, 253-223-8382www.gonetothedogskennel.com

Dogs

AKC PUG PUPPIES! First shots and wormed. We have adorable male & female Fawns. Well socialized with animals. Ready for great homes soon. Mom and Dad on site. Available at $750 ea. 360-929-7860 ort c t r i m m e r @ m s n . c o m Oak Harbor, Whidbey Is- land.AKC SHELTIE puppies Designer colors. Ready for loving homes. Shots & worming up to date. Both parents on s i te. Nice agility prospects. House training began. $500 or best offer. Bre- merton. 360-801-6919.www.washingtonshelties.com

CHIHUAHUA Puppies, call for pricing. Financing Available. Adult Adop- t ions also. Reputable Oregon Kennel. Unique colors, Long and Short Haired. Health Guaran- teed. UTD Vaccinations/ wo r m ings , l i t t e r box t r a i n e d , s o c i a l i z e d . Video, pictures, informa- tion/ virtual tour:

www.chi-pup.netReferences happily sup- plied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-459- 5951

ENGLISH SETTER 2 young reg is tered & well bred females. 1 black & wh i te & 1- o ra n g e a n d w h i t e . $500 each. Very well socialized, great hunt- ing lines. Please call Jim @ 425.941.5328

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES born 9/1/14. 5 Males & 5 Females with first shots and wormed. Both parents on s i te. C a n s e n d p i c t u r e s . Beautiful pups with good dispositions. $425 each. 360-496-1390. 360-496- 1394

Dogs

C O C K E R S PA N I E L Puppies. AKC parents. Champion grandparents. Show / field lines. Beau- tiful with nice coats! Tails & toes in tact. 2 lg litters. B lacks, buf fs, roans, tr is/par t is; tan points. De-wormed & first shots. One year genetic health guarantee. Ready Oct. 7th. $700 ea. Arlington. 360-652-8742.

MINI Aussie Purebred Pupppys, family raised, sweet, smart, loving. 1st sho ts , wo r med , dew claws & tails removed. Many colors. Parents are our family dogs and on site. $550 & up. 360-261-3354

Newfoundland’s Purebred with

champion bloodlines. Very Healthy & quick learners, beautiful. These are a large breed. Starting at

$1,000.Both Parents on

premises 425.239.6331

PUREBRED BERNESE Mountain Dog Puppies, ready for new homes Nov. 5th. Parents on site. Cal l 360-856-4422 or 360-708-9711 for more info. Puppies will be sold to approved homes only $1,500 ea. Visit us atwww.ValleyviewBernese.com

Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the Classifieds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com

Dogs

RARE AKC NORWICH PUPS up on all shots and wor ming , house ra i sed . G rea t fam i l y dogs. Come wi th ve t hea l th check. $2500. [email protected]

ServicesAnimals

Vacation Pet Sitter& Dog Walker

Extraordinaire!

I pamper your pooches!Going on a trip?

I’ll care for your house, too!

Ref’s On Request

Catering to the Eastside:Snoqualmie, Sammamish,

Issaquah, Fall City

Nancy Feinerman425-427-6459nancyfeinerman

@yahoo.com

garage sales - WA

Garage/Moving SalesKing County

ISSAQUAH

H U G E C H I L D R E N ’ S Sale! Find all you need for your growing family a t the Jus t Be tween Fr iends Issaquah Fall Sale Event! Clothing, cribs, swings, strollers, toys, highchairs, movies, bouncers, books, mater- nity/ nursing items and much more. The Picker- ing Barn across from Cos tco i n I ssaquah , 1730 10th Ave NW, Is- saquah, 98027. Thurs- day, October 16th 12pm - 7pm. Admission $2 or free with this ad. Friday, October 17th, 10am - 7pm. Saturday, October 18th, 9am - 4pm, 25% off Day. Saturday, Octo- ber 18th, 5pm - 6pm, ½ Pr ice. Presale Admis- sion $2 or free with this ad . Sunday, Oc tober 19th, 8am - 1pm, Admis- sion Free. All items with- out a star on tag are 25% Off Saturday and Half Price on Sunday!www.JBFSale.com

Garage/Moving SalesKing County

RENTON

KING OF KINGS Luther- an Church Fal l Rum- mage Sale. Friday, Oc- tober 17th from 10am - 5pm. Saturday, October 18th from 10am - 3pm. Located at 18207 108th Ave SE, 98055

wheelsMarine

Miscellaneous

SUNSTREAM FLOAT- LIFT FL10014. This boat l i f t can ho ld a boa t we igh ing 10,600 lbs. For additional specifica- t ions v is i t Sunstream website. Original owner, purchased new. Excel- l en t cond . ! $12 ,500 . Bainbridge Island. Call 206-719-8565.

Vans & Mini VansChevrolet

1991 G20, trailer hitch, removable back seat, ta- ble, cur tains. Seats 6. Per fec t fo r camp ing . Great condi t ion, me- chanically in very good shape. 175,000 mi les $ 1 , 9 9 9 . 9 9 / O B O . (425)746-9168

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Cash JUNK CARS &

TRUCKS

Free Pick up

253-335-3932

Campers/Canopies

1996 NORTHLAND 11’ Overhead camper. In ex- cellent condition. Has air conditioner and comes w i t h Po la r Package. Great starter camper for family or hunter. $4950 or best offer. 253-223- 3506 or 253-223-8382

Vehicles Wanted

CARS/TRUCKS WANT- ED! Top $$$$$ PAID! R u n n i n g o r N o t , A l l Makes! . Free Towing! W e ’ r e L o c a l ! 7 Days/Week. Call 1-800- 959-8518

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

Professional ServicesAttorney, Legal Services

Notice to ContractorsWashington State Law

(RCW 18.27.100)requires that all adver- tisements for construc- tion related services in- clude the contractor’s current depar tment of Labor and Indust r ies registration number in the advertisement.Failure to obtain a certifi- cate of registration from L&I or show the registra- tion number in all adver- tising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor.For more information, call Labor and Industries Special ty Compliance Services Division at

1-800-647-0982or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov

Professional ServicesLegal Services

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparat ion. Inc ludes custody, support, prop- er ty division and bills. BBB member. (503)772- 5295. www.paralegalal- [email protected]

Professional ServicesLegal Services

ARE YOU HURT AND DO YOU NEED A LAW- YER? Let the exper i- ence of James, Vernon & Weeks work for you. We accept Personal In- jury, Motor Vehicle Colli- s ion, Auto Insurance Cla ims, Medical Mal- practice, and Worker’s C o m p c a s e s . C A L L ( 2 0 6 ) 2 6 9 - 1 1 0 0 o r (888) 667-0683 for in- formation or a FREE consu l ta t ion . James, Vernon & Weeks, P.A., 2505 Second Avenue, Suite 610, Seattle, WA 98121 Helping People Solve Problems?

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

A+ HAULINGWe remove/recycle: Junk/wood/yard/etc.

Fast Service - 25 yrs Experience, Reasonable rates

Call Reliable Michael 425.455.0154

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

Home ServicesProperty Maintenance

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Water- p r o o f i n g , F i n i s h i n g , Structural Repairs, Hu- midity and Mold Control F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-800-998-5574

Home ServicesLandscape Services

A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING

* Cleanup * Trim * Weed* Prune * Sod * Seed

* Bark * Rockery* Backhoe * Patios

425-226-3911 206-722-2043

Lic# A1SHEGL034JM

DICK’S CHIPPINGSERVICE

Brush chipping and stump grinding

Insured - DICKSC044LF

425-743-9640

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

Home ServicesPole Builder/Storage

TED’S SHEDSMy Prices are Reasonable

I Build Custom, Storage Sheds, Garden Sheds,

Small Barns Horse StallsPlease call Tim for a

Free Estimate425-486-5046

Lic#602-314-149

teds-sheds.com

Home ServicesRoofing/Siding

ROOFING &REMODELINGSenior DiscountsFree Estimates

Expert Work253-850-5405

American Gen. Contractor Better Business BureauLic #AMERIGC923B8

Think Inside the BoxAdvertise in yourlocal communitynewspaper and onthe web with justone phone call.Call 800-388-2527for more information.

Page 21: Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 15, 2014

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • October 15, 2014 • 21

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Left, Craig Ewing, and Mary Hould, right, appear in Valley Center Stage’s comedy “Opening Night,” opening this week, running through Oct. 25.

Don’t miss ‘Opening Night’Valley Center Stage presents “Opening Night,” a Norm

Foster comedy about opening night mayhem at a second-rate Canadian theater, for three weekends.

The show, billed as “the story of an unusual evening at the theatre,” follows Jack and Ruth Tisdale as they celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary with an evening at the theatre.

It’s a dream come true for Ruth; Jack would rather be home watching the seventh game of the World Series. Throw in a cynical director, his needy girlfriend, some actors with “issues”, fast-paced dialogue and a local cast for a comedy in which nobody escapes unchanged.

Opening Night has a cast of Valley Center Stage veterans from some of its most successful productions, including Becky Rappin, Jim Snyder, Greg Lucas, Robin Walbeck-Forrest, Mary Hould, Craig Ewing, Dylan Cook and Brenden Elwood. Peter Cook makes his debut as director.

Show times are 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, Oct. 16 to 18, Oct. 23 to 25 and Oct. 30 to Nov. 1. One matinee performance will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 25.

Tickets are on sale now. Visit www.valley-centerstage.org for more information.

Get a costume, Mount Si Lions

fundraiser coming soon

Mount Si Lions Club’s fourth annual pre-Halloween dinner,

silent auction and fundraiser is Sunday, Oct. 26, at Boxley’s Jazz

Club in North Bend.The silent auction preview begins at 5 p.m., dinner follows at 6 p.m. Tickets are $60 per person. Learn

more at www.mountsilionsclub.org.

Crossword puzzle

Across1. Contents of some urns6. No angel10. Not a substitute13. Bad situations16. Medieval weapon17. Preclude (2 wds)18. “The Lord of the Rings” figure19. Refined21. “Dilbert” cartoonist Scott Adams has one: Abbr.22. Column crossers24. Solitaire essentials25. Egyptian fertility goddess26. Foul moods28. “Fantasy Island” prop29. Basic unit of money in Norway30. Heir’s concern32. Wages34. ___ tide36. Emulated Pinocchio37. Sticker showing cost (2 wds)41. Young, unmarried woman45. Indy entrant46. Congratulations, of a sort

48. Old World variety of sorghum49. Ancient greetings50. Reef material52. Aim53. End54. Something that is difficult to deal with56. “Don’t ___!”57. Gives power to59. Outstanding61. Expire62. Nonexistent place63. Clark of the Daily Planet64. Deep olive green

Down1. Bad-mouth2. Plant runners3. Feeble-minded person4. “... ___ he drove out of sight”5. Alone6. Melancholy7. Brook8. “Act your ___!”9. Elihu ___, co-founder of General Electric Company11. Board member, for short12. Kidney-related13. Relating to land

(var. spelling)14. Long, cylindrical conduit15. Stagnation of normal body fluid flow (pl.)20. Certain surgeon’s “patient”23. Positions25. Atomic no. 7727. Animal in a roundup29. Work, as dough31. “Dig in!”33. Backboard attach-ment35. Native American infant37. Ran on38. Gorge39. Cool sac used to reduce swelling (2 wds)40. Vestments, e.g.42. Causing fear43. Kind of mark44. Sturdy buff cotton cloth47. Claw50. Colgate rival51. Rotating to the left, shortened54. Agenda55. Cry like a baby58. Drone, e.g.60. Density symbol

See answers, page 22Sudoku

5 4 3 1 6 8 9 7 26 9 1 7 2 4 8 3 52 7 8 9 5 3 4 1 69 1 4 5 7 2 6 8 33 6 7 8 1 9 5 2 48 2 5 3 4 6 7 9 17 5 6 2 8 1 3 4 91 8 9 4 3 5 2 6 74 3 2 6 9 7 1 5 8

Difficulty level: Easy

NORTH BEND THEATRE

SHOWTIMESWEDNESDAY, OCT. 15

• ALEXANDER & THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD, VERY BAD DAY, (PG), 11 A.M. & 6 P.M.

THURSDAY, OCT. 16• ALEXANDER & THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE ... DAY, (PG), 6 P.M.

FRIDAY, OCT. 17• ALEXANDER ..., 3, 5:30 & 8 P.M.

SATURDAY, OCT. 18• ALEXANDER ..., 3, 5:30 & 8 P.M.

SUNDAY, OCT. 19• ALEXANDER..., 1 P.M. • MT. FILM FESTIVAL DOUBLE FEATURE, ‘HIGHER,’ 5 P.M., & ‘ALMOST ABLAZE’, APPROX. 7 P.M., DOORS OPEN AT 4 P.M.

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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 15

REPUBLICAN WOMEN: Cas-cade Republican Women meet, 11:30 a.m. at the TPC Snoqualmie Ridge. The club hosts monthly speakers. Meeting fee is $5, and includes a raffle ticket. Guest speaker is U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert. Reserve a space by calling (425) 922-0049.

LIBRARY BOOSTERS: Friends of the Fall City Library meet at 4 p.m. at the library, downtown Fall City. Learn ways you can support the commu-nity through fundrais-ing, sponsorships, and increasing awareness of the library.

LIFE AFTER HIGH SCHOOL: So You Can’t Take Your Mom or Your BFF to Your Job Interview: Now What?” Presentation is 7 p.m. at Carnation Library, 4804 Tolt Ave., by Allan Hay, career development con-sultant. Learn five simple and effective things you can do to make a strong impression when you interview.

STORY TIME: Toddler Story Time is 10 a.m. at the Snoqualmie Library, for newborns through age 3 with an adult.

STORY TIME: Preschool Story Time is 11 a.m. at Snoqualmie Library, for children ages 3 to 6 with an adult.

STORY TIME: Toddler Story Time is 10:30 a.m. at Car-nation Library, for ages 1

to 3 with an adult.STORY TIME: Infant Story

Time is 11:30 a.m. at the Carnation Library, for babies and pre-walkers with an adult.

WORKSHOP: Free workshop on home fragrance alter-natives with Kathy Bou-langer, 6:30 p.m. at Park Street Healing Arts, 318 E. Park Street, North Bend. RSVP at (425) 888-4170.

THURSDAY, OCT. 16

HEALTHY VALLEY: The Sno-qualmie Valley Healthy Community Coalition meets at 8 a.m., at Sno-qualmie Valley Alliance Church, 36017 S.E. Fish Hatchery Rd., Fall City. Dis-cuss the coalition’s shared purpose for 2014-15.

WRITING GROUP: Duvall writing group meets at 7 p.m. at the Duvall Library. Drop in critique writers group; all genres welcome.

LIVE THEATER: Opening Night is 7:30 p.m. at Val-ley Center Stage, North Bend. This comedy is about opening night mayhem at a second-rate Canadian theater. Visit www.valleycenterstage.org for ticket information.

FRIDAY, OCT. 17

ELECTION FORUM: Chamber panel discussion with

candidates for Washing-ton State Legislature, at TPC Snoqualmie Ridge. Pre-register at www.snovalley.org.

FAMILY HISTORY: Sno-qualmie Valley Genealogy Group meets at 10 a.m., at the Snoqualmie Li-brary. Informal gathering to share resources and experience in researching family history. Begin-ners welcome. To learn more, send e-mail to [email protected].

CAMP KOREY FEST: Fall Fes-tival is 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., through Sunday at Camp Korey, Carnation. Bring the family for hay rides and ‘smores, pumpkin picking.

LIVE THEATER: ‘Opening Night’ is 7:30 p.m. at Valley

Center Stage, North Bend; www.valleycenterstage.org.

LES SCHWAB REOPENS: Re-opening celebration for North Bend’s Les Schwab Tire is 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

CONTRA DANCE: Live danc-ing is 7 p.m. at Sallal Grange,12912 432nd Ave. S.E., North Bend. Soup dinner is served. $5 dona-tion; www.sallalgrange.org

LIVE MUSIC: Lindee Ho-shikawa plays 6 to 9 p.m. at Sigillo Cellars tasting room, downtown Sno-qualmie. Free admission.

SATURDAY, OCT. 18

LIVE THEATER: ‘Opening

Night’ is 7:30 p.m. at Valley Center Stage, North Bend. A comedy about opening night mayhem. Visit www.valleycenterstage.org.

HARVEST CARNIVAL: Put on a costume and come to Si View for harvest season fun, 1 to 4 p.m. at the Si View Community Center. Carnival games, refresh-ments and a G-rated haunted house. Co-spon-sored by Encompass and Si View Metro Parks.

BENEFIT AUCTION: Annual benefit auction for Sno-Valley Senior Center 4610 Stephens Ave. Carnation. SnoValleySenior.org.

AGING DISCUSSION: Aging Well Learning Commu-nity discusses “Shock of Gray: The Aging of the

World’s Population” by Ted C. Fishman,10:15 a.m. at Snoqualmie Library. Come for a discussion of the book and a conversa-tion on aging well with consciousness, courage and contribution.

LES SCHWAB REOPENS: Grand reopening celebration for North Bend’s Les Schwab Tire is 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

SUNDAY, OCT. 19

YOUNG LIFE BANQUET: Ben-efit event is 6 p.m. at Sal-ish Lodge in Snoqualmie. The evening includes a dinner, stories from Young Life and plans for the coming year; www.svyl.younglife.org.

5 4 3 1 6 8 9 7 26 9 1 7 2 4 8 3 52 7 8 9 5 3 4 1 69 1 4 5 7 2 6 8 33 6 7 8 1 9 5 2 48 2 5 3 4 6 7 9 17 5 6 2 8 1 3 4 91 8 9 4 3 5 2 6 74 3 2 6 9 7 1 5 8

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www.siviewpark.org / 425-831-1900

Why? “When you’re inventing, you’re struck with a notion,” says Alexander. “You think ‘what if?’ You think about it and think about it, and get this visual picture. And then, you need to go test that!”

Experiments were always part of Alexander’s home-schooling, explains Olga, but by then, the family was enrolled together in college; at 14, Alexander was too young to attend alone. They all gradu-ated from St. Martin’s University last spring. Building and testing the prototype wind turbines was “something for us to do as a family,” she said.

Alexander decided the turbine needed an augmenter—a sort of flared opening added to the narrow end of the cone-shaped turbine—and calculated the formula that could reliably indicate the turbine’s output. “That was Alexander’s accomplishment,” says Olga. Augmenters had been done before, added Alexander, “but the reason you don’t see them everywhere is that it was impossible”—Olga interjects “nearly impossible”—“nearly impossible to predict what they would generate.”

Test flightTo test Alexander’s augmenter calcula-

tions, they built small-scale versions using a 3-D printer, and tested it, variously by running a computer fan over it and by holding it out the window of the car as they drove. Eventually, they attached the full-size version to two blimps, running test flights of their patent-pending proto-type, A-Pegasus, at Olallie State Park, and at Puget Sound Energy’s Wild Horse Wind Farm. See the video at www.youtube.com/channel/UCFd7gTRIdOH-L2Cjbn4NwjQ.

The flights were successful and

Alexander is now working toward certi-fication for A-Pegasus. It’s a complicated process, requiring at least six months of accumulated data, which he’s collecting this winter with a ground-mounted version of the turbine.

A balloon mounted wind turbine has some practical limitations: “You can fly in rain, but not in snow,” says Alexander, because the weight of the snow accumu-lates on the blimps, pulling them down; the turbine has to be grounded in very strong winds; and helium for the blimps is expen-sive, so he switched to hydrogen, because he can make his own. It has one big advan-tage, though, in that it’s small.

“The idea is you have lots of places that have good wind, but not much grid con-nection,” says Alexander, like in Papua, Guinea. There, people can use A-Pegasus to charge a battery bank (four 12-volt batter-ies charge in about an hour), and then use the batteries to power whatever they need.

Inspired by the success of A-Pegasus, the family, as Odin Energy Works, visualizes a small hydropower turbine project some day. They talk wistfully about X Prizes (cash awards for major scientific achieve-ments, www.xprize.org), and often, about another unbreakable limit, calculated by Peter Jamieson. He found the efficiency limit, 88 percent of an augmented wind turbine.

“When people say ‘it can’t be done,’ we tell them to talk to Jamieson!” says Olga. She’s moved by the spirit of invention, and wants more people to be, too. “Our spon-sor said the inventing and engineering motive is just asleep in many people,” she said. “I’m sure there’s many people like us with engineering educations… I think it’s important that people don’t just watch TV, but do things!”

Olga is now pursuing her doctor-ate, Alex continues his career at Boeing

and Alexander is in Washington State University’s online electrical engineering management program. He presents his

research on A-Pegasus at the Innovation @ the Edge conference, Nov. 1 at Future of Flight in Everett.

ACHIEVER FROM 1

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Whatever the road throws at you, from potholes to nails–any road hazard, our FREE GUARANTEE protects you

We would like to thank the community for all your support. We invite you to come by and see our new building with plenty of improvements to serve you better.

Stop in during our grand reopening celebration October 17 & 18 so we can thank you in person and you can experience our continuing World Class Service.

Kevin Schallhorn, Manager

NORTH BEND610 E NORTH BEND WAY

425-831-6300

Peace of Mind Tire ProtectionLifetime Tire & Mileage Care

TIRES • BRAKES • SHOCKS • ALIGNMENTS • WHEELS • SUSPENSIONS • BATTERIES

GRAND REOPENING

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT DURING CONSTRUCTION!

OCTOBER 17 & 18FUN • PRIZES • FREE CAKE, HOT DOGS & SODA FAST PITCH TRAILER • CUSTOM WHEEL TRAILER

LIVE RADIO REMOTES WITH GIVEAWAYS

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