A6 Business wallowa.com November 18, 2015 Wallowa County Chieftain Exhale Day Spa ready A Hot Time to primp and pamper in the Olde Additional weekend employees possible in the future Town this week(end) The spa also offers the Farm House Fresh bath and body care products as well as ([KDOH'D\6SDLQ-RVHSK Eminence organic skin care offers a list of amenities you products. Co-owner Anna Butter- just can’t find anywhere else in the county — massages, field hopes to add an outdoor body scrubs, facials, ped- saltwater soaking pool in the icures and other foot care, future. “I think it would be very as well an infra-red sauna. By Steve Tool Wallowa County Chieftain Catch the Bus! • Intercity Transportation to La Grande Monday and Thursday Weekly ~ Cost $5.00 each way. Free access for veterans medical appointments in La Grande. • Mealsite Bus ~ providing transportation to Senior Center for lunch ~ Cost $1.00 round trip. • Tuesday & Thursday Shopping Bus provides transportation for shopping and errands throughout Wallowa County ~ Cost $3.00 from Wallowa/Joseph, $2.00 Enterprise only. C OMMUNITY C ONNECTION OF W ALLOWA C OUNTY Steve Tool/Chieftain Anna Butterfield, left, and Rachelle Winterton are co- owners of Exhale Day Spa in Joseph. The business opened in July. popular in both the winter and summer,” Butterfield said. Butterfield has lived in the area for over 30 years. “I’ve always wanted to have a space like this,” she said. “I feel like our town QHHGVDTXLHWGD\VSDHQYL- ronment.” She said she had wanted T HE B OOKLOFT AND S KYLIGHT G ALLERY Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com ACROSS DOWN 1. Powder mineral 5. Ten million (in India) 10. Culture medium and a gelling agent 14. Cain and __ 15. Bullfighting maneuvers 16. Baseball's Ruth 17. Venice beach 18. Infirm due to old age 19. Attentiveness 20. Mortify 22. Whale (Norwegian) 23. Family Bufonidae 24. "A Passage to India" author 27. Ocean 30. Dad's partner 31. Owned 32. Swiss river 35. Female golf star Gibson 37. Base 38. A way to summons 39. Acquit 40. Male parent 41. Brendan Francis __, author 42. Rattan 43. Aromatic hot beverage 44. Inflorescence 45. Former CIA 46. Make lace 47. Airborne (abbr.) 48. Thieving bird 49. H. Potter's creator 52. Frequency 55. Nothing 56. More lucid 60. Riding mount 61. Deducted container weight 63. Molten rock 64. In this place 65. Ancient upright stone slab bearing markings 66. Rumanian Mures River city 67. Mentioned before 68. An heir (civil law) 69. Without (French) 1. W. Samoan monetary unit 2. Baby's feeding apparel 3. Queen of Sparta 4. Shut 5. Certified public accountant 6. Payment for release 7. Red twig dogwood 8. Basked in 9. Midway between E and SE 10. A way to detest 11. Mother of Cronus 12. In bed 13. Bolsheviks 21. Farro wheat 23. CNN's Turner 25. Farmers of America 26. Small amount 27. __ and Venzetti 28. Hers in Spanish 29. Belongs to sun god 32. Expressed pleasure 33. Small terrestrial lizard 34. Regenerate 36. Own (Scottish) 37. The cry made by sheep 38. Chest muscle (slang) 40. Explode 41. Notice 43. Pitch 44. Run due to the batter 46. Fight referee declares 47. Alternate forms of a gene 49. Shifted in sailing 50. One who cables 51. Elaborate celebrations 52. Expresses pleasure 53. Carbamide 54. Persian in Afghanistan 57. 1st capital of Japan 58. Welsh for John 59. Radioactivity units 61. Tanzanian shilling 62. Hyrax to wait for her last child to graduate before going into business, but Exhale, locat- ed at 601 B N. Main St. in Joseph, was too good an op- portunity to pass up. Co-owner Rachelle Win- terton of La Grande is proud of the new business that she shares with Anna Butter- field. Both are cosmetology school graduates. Winterton graduated from massage school in La Grande and worked as a massage therapist in the area for several years before relo- cating to Joseph in July. The two women met when Winterton began dat- ing Butterfield’s son. Almost immediately they began to discuss opening a spa. The project took well over a year from planning to fruition. ([KDOH 'D\ 6SD LV RSHQ by appointment only, in or- der to serve customer needs, particularly in the realm of privacy and personalized care. “When I’m with some- one, that’s my person,” Win- terton said. “I can’t be step- ping away from them to deal with everyone who comes through the door.” Winterton did almost all the interior work herself, from refinishing furniture to painting the walls. A spa- cious shower to rinse off scrubs or sauna perspiration also is available. “This is really a perfect space for an exclusive day spa,” Winterton said. Because the two owners provide all the services of- fered, neither feels the need to add employees, although a manicurist station or a weekend pedicurist are fu- ture possibilities. “We’re pretty happy with the way things are now, but we’re open to expanding if demand calls for it,” Winter- ton said. To make an appointment, call 541-910-0012. Gift cards also are available. By Kathleen Ellyn Wallowa County Chieftain T wo openings and a handful of moves are on my list to mention this week, and you’re in luck because most of them are having special events in the coming days. First up is the Nov. 19 RI¿FLDORSHQLQJRI'DQGHOLRQ Wines at 112 W. Main Street in Enterprise. I teased you last week with a mention of BIZ this business BUZZ and now you can stop in Kathleen and take in Ellyn the marvel of the long, skinny (10x110 feet) shop adjacent to Wild Carrot Herbals for yourself. There will be wine tastings, snacks, live music by Janis Carper and, I’m betting, socializing with a lot of your neighbors. The next opening has been keenly anticipated since The Local Loaf closed its doors late last summer. Our ¿UVWTXHVWLRQRUPRDQZDV ‘where, oh where were we JRLQJWRJHWRXUZRRG¿UHG pizza!’ :HOOWKDWTXHVWLRQKDV been answered and Silver Lake Bistro has announced they are opening their doors at 19 South Main St. in Joseph on Nov. 21. Hours will be 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and, yes, WKHUHZLOOEHZRRG¿UHG pizza, dinner specials, drinks (including wine) and more. Silver Lake Bistro has been featuring a few pizza experiments on their Facebook page and, boy, do they look good. There has been some VKXIÀLQJRIDGGUHVVHVRQ Joseph’s Main Street, and you can check out the moves the same day you’re checking out Silver Lake Bistro because a number of Joseph businesses will be having open houses Saturday. Missy’s Uptown Art is one. A Joseph Main Street standard, “Missy’s Uptown Art,” has moved. After 10 years in its old location at 18 S. Main St. next to Valley Bronze Gallery, Missy has moved across the street and downsized to her new 13 S. Main St. gallery space. 'RZQVL]HPLJKWEHWKH wrong word — maybe I should say “cozied,” since Missy Marshall will continue to offer exactly the same merchandise she had in the other shop — including framing services. “The shop is bigger than it looks,” Marshall said. As usual, she will continue WRIHDWXUH5REHUW'DZVRQ Mary Edwards and many more local artists. Her regular winter hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, or you can make a celebration of it and check out her new digs during her Open House Celebration Nov. 21 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Valley Bronze Gallery is expanding into the space vacated by Missy. “We took the carpet and ceilings out and we’re going to remodel it so it matches the other side,” said Nancy Parmenter, director. “We’re very excited. We’ll have new and exciting stuff and we’ll be open seven days a week in the gallery and offer tours of the foundry daily as well.” Valley Bronze, like Missy’s, will be holding an open house celebration Nov. 21 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. You won’t be able to see the new expansion yet, but you will be able to peruse the new art in the gallery, sample some snacks and put your name in for door prizes. “We just want to get some local people in,” Parmenter said. For more information, visit www.valleybronzegallery. com. $QG¿QDOO\DEHODWHG mention of the opening of Terri Malec’s “Edge of the Wilderness” gallery, which has been open for nearly a year at 11 S. Main St. in Joseph. “I always liked being in a gallery,” Malec said. “I had my own gallery from 1987 to 1994 and I’d been in Kelly Wick’s ‘Kelly’s Gallery’ and I had a lot of work I wanted to show, so I decided to jump in and do it again.” Malec’s gallery, though tiny, manages to mix numerous media, from bronzes to paints and prints, to pottery, to gift cards to goat- milk soap — all displayed on DQWLTXHIXUQLVKLQJVWKDWDOVR are for sale. Malec is working limited hours right now — just 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Christmas. After that it will be just Saturdays. To learn more, visit the gallery’s site at www. PDU\V¿HOGVWXGLRFRPRU its Facebook page at http:// WLQ\XUOFRPTJRF]K Please send your Biz Buzz news tips to Kathleen Ellyn at kellyn@wallowa.com.