SIUSLAW NEWS ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2015 9 A Florence Area Humane Society is looking to fill this year’s Christmas Store with items such as holiday dishes, toys, wreaths, ornaments, lights, warm shirts and caps and anything that will help cel- ebrate the approaching season. FAHS volunteers are asking the community to donate any yard-sale items that are not sold at summer yard sales by dropping them off at the FAHS Thrift Store. Indicate that they are for the Christmas Store annual fundraiser. All sales from the Christmas Store help provide needed shelter and food for lost or abandoned dogs and cats wait- ing a home. Support is needed and always appreciated. The FAHS Thrift Store is at 1193 Bay St. in Old Town Florence. The Florence Habitat for Humanity ReStore is expand- ing its hours beginning Sept. 7 and will be open six days a week. New ReStore hours will be Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and closed on Sundays. Volunteers are an invaluable and integral part of the Habitat for Humanity team and help make building houses possible. With the new ReStore hours, more volunteers are needed to PUD Kathleen and Nina’s Restaurant Breakfast & Lunch Specials Every Day Homestyle cooking at its best! from 1A “The main mission at Central Lincoln, and really any utility, is to keep the lights on,” he said. “This construc- tion will help the capacity for load and growth in Florence.” Lovelin also gave an update allow the store to be open longer. Volunteers take in donations, handle picking up donations and work in store sales. Anyone that enjoys tinkering with and fixing up appliances, clocks, electronics and light fixtures would be a perfect fit. Being a donor to Habitat’s ReStore helps provide reusable building materials for sale in the store, which is always inter- ested in receiving donations of new or used appliances, bath fixtures, bricks and blocks, cabinets, doors, electrical sup- plies, flooring, furniture, gar- den tools, hardware, light fix- tures, lumber and wood prod- ucts, paints and stains. ReStore even offers pick up for items that are too big or awkward to fit in your vehicle. Building supply retailers can donate surplus and discontin- ued inventory; contractors can donate surplus new building materials or reusable materials from remodels. Every purchase at the Habitat Restore provides finan- cial support to Florence Habitat for Humanity and its goal of building houses locally for deserving families. For more information, come by the Florence Habitat for Humanity ReStore at 2016 Highway 101, in the Grocery Outlet shopping center, or call 541-997-5834. on the new digital readers installed in Florence. Now, Central Lincoln does not have to send a meter reader to each customer once a month. “The interesting thing about the new meters is that they communicate back to the office through radio waves. It provides a lot of benefits,” Lovelin said. The digital readings help the PUD provide faster outage response, keep better track of power usage and deliver bills. It also allows customers to track their own monthly usage online. “If you have knowledge of what your energy consump- tion is, you can respond and understand. Once you under- stand, you can use less. Energy efficiency and energy conservation are a big part of our business,” Lovelin said. Central Lincoln Communi- cation Manager Chris Chandler also gave an update. “Each month we include an advertisement from a 501(c)3 nonprofit in our bill. This month we will feature an ad for Last Resort Players’ ‘Chicago,’” Chandler said. Central Lincoln PUD has 125 employees and serves a long stretch of the Oregon coast. “Florence is a big part of our service area,” Lovelin said. The PUD receives power through the Bonneville Power Administration, which utilizes the Bonneville Dam over the Columbia River to create renewable electricity. When utility districts receive the power, they con- vert the voltage to a usable rate using transformers. Usable power for most homes is within 120 to 240 volts. For more information on Central Lincoln’s construction projects, rates or to view the “MyMeter” program, go to www.clpud.org. __________ D.A.V. BINGO Play Bingo and Support Our Veterans! 3611 Highway 101 541-997-7004 Join Us Sundays at 4:30 p.m. Let me Showcase your property. (doors open at 3:30 pm) Last Sunday of every month we have potluck. Bring your favorite dish! Follow Chantelle on Twitter @SNews_Chantelle. Email her at cmeyer@thesiuslawnews.com. Disabled American Veterans #23 Desiree Johnson Principal Broker 541 999-5223 1715 21st St. • Florence Quakers 14 Sea Watch Ct – River frontage and views on a cul-de-sac in Sea Watch Estates. Built in 1998 this 2098 sqft, 3 bdrm, 2 bath home also has 2 ad- ditional half baths. Fireplace, vaulted ceilings, and decks on both upper and middle levels. $280,000. #2484-15210836 1749 Highway 101 • 541-997-1200 2066 Highway 101, Florence 541-997-0343 Woody Woodbury Independent Owner/Operator Florence Grocery Outlet 1SPEVDFt%BJSZ%FMJ )FBMUI#FBVUZ 'SP[FO'PPETt'SFTI.FBU )PVTFXBSFTt#FFS8JOF 0SHBOJD/BUVSBM'PPET BOENVDINPSF We have ample RV parking! Experience gracious retirement living in the heart of Oregon’s wine country. from 1A persecution in the 1600s. But it followed them. “The first woman hung in Boston Commons was a Quaker named Mary Dyer,” Edson said. “The Puritans hanged her in 1659. Quakers were seen as different because of their way of worship. They were considered heretical. “It was because of that that William Penn converted to the Quaker faith and founded Philadelphia,” she added. More currently, Quakers refused to serve in World War I, World War II and all the United States conflicts since. In addition, they protested the internment of Japanese- American citizens during WWII. “There is a spot in Eugene where the Quakers made a garden that has a stone that says, ‘Quakers remember,’” Quaker Jeanne Kimball said. “That is the spot where the Japanese were put onto trains to be taken to internment camps. The Japanese commu- nity in Eugene remembers the Quakers bringing them coffee and donuts as they were being taken onto the trains.” According to Edson, the Quaker faith is based upon six Testimonies; integrity, sim- plicity, equality, community, peace and stewardship. “There are a lot of Quakers who use the Bible, but there are a lot who don’t,” Edson said. “We also have a book called ‘Faith and Practice.’ It tells about the history of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers and it tells about the Testimonies.” The group meets two Sundays a month at homes in Florence. The other two Sundays they travel to meet with the Coos Bay Quakers. “If there is a fifth Sunday in the month, we meet in Deadwood, where there is another group we get together with,” Kimball said. “Up to six people meet in the Florence area, nine meet in Coos Bay and up to 15 in Deadwood, because some come over from Eugene. “We have potlucks in Coos Bay and Deadwood and that might be the hook. We’ve always said that Quakers hook you with their potlucks,” she added. For more information, con- tact Jeanne Kimball at 541- 997-4237 or Sakre Edson at 541-902-9511. __________ Follow Jack on Twitter @SNews_Jack. Email him at jack@thesiuslawnews.com. ...need a friend? Meet D ARYL “Living at Hillside is like living on a cruise ship without all the water. Fine dining, housekeeping, maintenance and concierge services...and they mow the lawn. What’s not to love about that? Active, independent living at its best for this season of life. Works for us.” –Gordon and Katherine Gilbert, Hillside residents since September, 2013 Situated on 57 picturesque acres in McMinnville, the heart of Oregon wine country, you’ll find Hillside, a premier continuing care retirement community. Enjoy an enriched lifestyle complete with walking paths, exercise areas, two spacious dining rooms and luxurious apartments and garden cottages. You’re also close to medical, retail and entertainment options in McMinnville. Located 45 minutes from the coast and one hour from Portland, we’ve got blue skies, clean air and beautiful surroundings. It’s retirement living the way nature intended. Find out what Hillside’s rich, rewarding lifestyle can mean for you y or a loved one. Call 1-800-275-2384 to schedule your personal visit. Athletic, strong and full of love, This handsome fellow would make a great addition to an active family. Daryl is still very much a puppy at heart and will benefi t greatly from some basic obedience training and socialization skills. He loves to play but is just too rough for cats and other small pets at this point. Daryl would be a great running, walking or hiking partner! If you would like to meet Daryl or any of his friends, please visit us at: FLORENCE HUMANE SOCIETY 2840 Rhododendron Drive • Florence • 541-997-4277 www.fl orencehumane.org This message brought to you by: Siuslaw News + Hillside Independent Living | Assisted Living Alzheimer’s & Dementia Care | Rehabilitation & Skilled Nursing 300 NW Hillside Park Way | McMinnville, Oregon 97128 24591-P1-0215-ROP-LB brookdale.com BROOKDALE ® and ALL THE PLACES LIFE CAN GO TM are trademarks of Brookdale Senior Living Inc., Nashville, TN, USA. www.shoppelocal.biz CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK FAHS seeks donation Habitat ReStore expands hours, days of operation of yard-sale items