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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2008 7:44 am
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October 6. 2008 (8 photos)
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WEEK IN REVIEW
Saturday


Businesses eagerly await sailors' return
Preservation effort divides Everett's oldest ne...
Happy memories comfort family of injured Everet...
Friday


Life on the strike line
Arlington boatbuilder shutting down; hundreds t...
Boeing, Machinists likely to resume talks this ...
Thursday


Few answers in fatal Snohomish fire
Boeing, Machinists union agree to talks
Horizon's request is no worry to Allegiant
Wednesday


10 victims of plane crash honored a year after ...
Your questions, their answers: What the candida...
State budget: Governor wants $240 million in sa...
Tuesday


Arlington fashion statement helps fight cancer
Does Countrywide owe you mortgage help?
Dog wakes man, saving both from fire in travel ...
Monday


Green thumbs in Marysville
Snohomish County schools that aren't up to stan...
Richard Larsen, longtime public servant, dies a...
Sunday


Recycling a house: Everett home goes to make ne...
A year after plane crash, pain still fresh for ...
The flight of the great pumpkin
 

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CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, July 4, 2008

Camano library sale an emotional, financial success

There was a successful book sale Saturday. Camano Island Friends raised more than $1,000 to support the year-old Camano Island Library.

It was emotional.

Becky Wietzke, the group's president, says two college students were there buying children's books for their upcoming student teaching experiences in the fall.

"An older man provided payment for their books without their knowing about it until they came to pay," Wietzke says. "All of us who are teachers shed a few tears of gratitude over his kindness and his support of our profession."

Again and again, workers saw how putting books into the hands of young and old is a delightful and touching experience.

"Someone else found the favorite book of a child who had died. It had been searched for to no avail, as it was out of print, and there it was, right on the top of a box. A young man appeared at the sale, having lost his way from Anacortes to Seattle while returning to Utah following the deaths of his mother and aunt."

The lost young man picked up a copy of Emily Dickinson's poetry, Wietzke says, and opened to "Hope is the Thing with Feathers."

He cried and told one of the volunteers that he had never read poetry before and that this poem was just what he needed at this time of great sadness in his life.

Nobody knew his name. The first time psychologist Patricia Bloom saw him was at a Fourth of July picnic on a Canadian beach.

"It was late afternoon, we were all hungry, waiting for our various fathers to finish grilling the dogs and steaks," said the Camano Island woman. "Firecrackers were already going off and people were running after a black and white dog who had streams of sausages hanging from his mouth."

The canine thief, with large, soft eyes that melted hearts and had a personality to beat the band, continued to steal picnic hot dogs, she says.

Eventually, Black and White was hit by a car.

Neighbors appealed to the old town vet to treat the homeless dog.

"He was a cranky, crabby old man, given to such a sense of self-importance that he blandly disregarded any of our local laws," bloom said. "He speeded recklessly, went under the gates that announced the passage of our local train and ignored patiently waiting lines while he cut rudely in front."

The vet said to bring in the mutt -- and plenty of cash.

Word quickly spread and donations poured in from a 50-mile radius.

"Black and White got around," Bloom said. "It seemed everyone knew and loved him."

The dog died of his injuries. The vet died a few months later, killed when he attempted to beat another train to a crossing.

" 'Well,' we all said, 'it was just a matter of time.' "

Melissa Shipp, who works at Virginia's Feminine Boutique in Smokey Point, remembers Fourth of July parties when she was a girl.

"My sisters and I, along with friends from our neighborhood would bring out our boom box and play music while we lit off smoke bombs and lightening flashers at the same time," Shipp said. "We would pretend we were in a dance club with a strobe light and fog machine and would dance in the street to our favorite songs."

Fun Fact: Valerie Smith of Darrington, a high school secretary, will enjoy Fourth of July events today in Darrington.

She said if all goes as planned, Roscoe Howard will be in town, serving a treat he makes most every year using an old-fashioned ice cream maker he hauls on a trailer.

Small town fun at it finest, that is for sure, Smith said.

Columnist Kristi O'Harran: 425-339-3451, oharran@heraldnet.com

1. Happy memories comfort family of injured Everett woman
2. Boeing Machinists earn their $150 weekly strike check keeping the line fed, fired up
3. Businesses eagerly await sailors' return
4. Marysville-Pilchuck blitzes Lake Stevens
5. Preservation effort divides Everett's oldest neighborhood
6. Boeing Machinists: Welcome to McNerneyville
7. Will Frye start for Seahawks?
8. Washington prep football scores for Oct. 10
9. Granite Falls police catch suspect in car thefts, burglary
10. Beach shows Silvertips why they missed him
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Jackson prevails in overtime thriller
Meadowdale's Moore-Taylor runs wild
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