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Police Strike Team targets burglaries BY KIRK BOXLEITNER kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com
INSIDE: A complete
guide to Arlington’s Fourth of July, Fly-In and more.
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Officer Molly Ingram of the Marysville Police Strike Team inspects an antique boat motor that’s among the pieces of stolen property that the anti-burglary team has recovered since its formation nearly two months ago.
SPORTS: Volleyball camp serves summer fun. Page 8
MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Police Strike Team was formed on May 8 as part of a planned sixweek emphasis on burglary within the city, which had gone above the five-year averages for recent months. Nearly two months later, the Strike Team is a few weeks past its original end date, but with burglary numbers plunging well below the five-year averages for the month of June, the Marysville Police Department is doing what it can to keep the program going. “We’ve made 85 burglaryrelated arrests since the Strike Team was started,” Marysville Police Lt. Darin Rasmussen said. “Among the stolen property we’ve
recovered has been five handguns, four cars, a computer, 100 ounces of silver, $20,000 worth of jewelry that has a hold on it, and an antique boat motor from the 1930s.” Rasmussen acknowledged that the formation of the Strike Team was prompted by a dramatic spike in burglaries in the first quarter of 2012, which inspired Marysville Police Chief Rick Smith to make it a priority. Members of the existing Pro-Act Team were incorporated, as were three patrol officers and the K-9 unit, the latter as needed, but Rasmussen characterized the burglary emphasis as a group effort that, in a number of different ways, encompasses the entire department. SEE STRIKE , PAGE 2
Naval Station Everett fetes ‘Freedom Fest’ BY KIRK BOXLEITNER kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com
INDEX CLASSIFIED ADS 12-15 7 LEGAL NOTICES 4 OPINION 7 OBITUARY 8 SPORTS 11 WORSHIP
Vol. 120, No. 15 Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Petty Officer 2nd Class Justin Clark explains the inner workings of the computer-guided 5-inch 62-caliber gun near the forecastle of the USS Shoup on June 30.
EVERETT — While the weather on Saturday, June 30, made much of Naval Station Everett’s annual “Freedom Festival” a soggy affair, the day’s ship tours still filled up their allotments of 40 visitors for each of the larger ships every half hour, and 30 visitors for each of the smaller ships every half hour, drawing more than 1,500 visitors to the decks of the four ships in port, in spite of the rain and the absence of the USS Nimitz depressing those attendance numbers relative to the event’s sunnier years, when its carrier has been in port. Families from the local area and throughout the region made the USS Shoup the most popular destination of
the four ships offering tours that day, as crew members explained aspects of day-to-day operations on board ship with which many civilians were unfamiliar. Petty Officer 3rd Class Lavahita King explained the importance of not wearing rings, wristwatches or other jewelry while raising and lowering the ready boats that are used to recover torpedoes and men overboard. “If those items get caught in the line, they’ll rip your skin off,” King said. “That’d be a bad day for everyone.” Petty Officer 2nd Class Justin Clark explained the inner workings of the computer-guided 5-inch 62-caliber gun near the forecastle of the ship, which fires 20 rounds a minute at a distance of 13 miles. SEE FREEDOM, PAGE 2
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“The Strike Team is the tip of the spear,” said Rasmussen, who also credited the department’s crime analysis detective with sussing out patterns in the city’s burglaries from the dates, times and locations in which they’re reported. “We’re looking at the ‘hot spots’ for burglary in Marysville, and looking to change people’s ideas about when such burglaries tend to occur.” Contrary to most crime dramas, Rasmussen explained that most residential burglaries happen during the day, when homeowners and families are out of the house. “There’s a lot you can do to avoid becoming a burglary victim,” Rasmussen said. “Pick up your papers every day, or have someone do it for you if you’re going to be out of town. Pay attention to who belongs in your neighborhood, and call us if anything seems suspicious. We’ve gone through neighborhoods and talked to people who have said after burglaries, ‘Oh, well it didn’t seem quite right, but I didn’t want to bother you.’”
“We’re looking at the ‘hot spots’ for burglary in Marysville, and looking to change people’s ideas about when such burglaries tend to occur.” Lt. Darin Rasmussen Marysville Police Department Officer Molly Ingram, one of the Strike Team members, added that a number of local homeowners still leave their doors unlocked, which makes it needlessly easy for would-be burglars. “There’s not one typical caricature of a burglar,” Rasmussen said. “Narcotics are a common denominator, but they’re not always involved. What’s often true is that burglars tend to associate with other people who are involved in burglary, even if it’s just fencing those stolen goods. If we apprehend the right suspect, we can close a lot of other cases just by backtracking.” Although the 70 arrests that the Strike Team made within its first six weeks persuaded the department to extend its lease on life, Rasmussen conceded that this measure comes at a cost. “That’s three officers we’re taking out of patrol,”
Rasmussen said. “We’re backfilling them with overtime, but we have to think long and hard about what we’ll be doing next, since it’s all about maximizing our resources for the community’s benefit.” Like all her fellow Strike Team members, Ingram volunteered to serve on the team, and she praised her teammates for the skills they bring to the table, including each officer’s familiarity with the various names, faces and vehicles that have been involved in Marysville burglaries. “We can’t be everywhere, though, so the more calls we can get from the community, the safer we can help make them,” said Ingram, who takes the time to stop and talk with residents of various neighborhoods. “I want to thank them for being our eyes and ears, and I want to urge them to trust their instincts about what seems suspicious.”
FREEDOM FROM PAGE 1 “The computer accounts for the pitch and roll of the ship, the wind and even the temperature of the powder in adjusting its aim,” Clark said. “It’s smarter than we are.” While the Shoup’s “big gun” is capable of shooting down air targets, it’s mostly designed for surface-to-surface warfare. Clark acknowledged that “you can feel it” when it fires, and laughed when asked whether the Shoup would be firing its guns for the Fourth of July. “I wish,” Clark shook his head. Petty Officer 3rd Class Evens Previle warned civilians who moved up to the forecastle not to step over the anchor chains for safety reasons, as he noted that the anchor itself weighs roughly 9,000 pounds and the anchor chain runs about 1,100 feet. “We measure it in 12 shots, running 96 feet each,” Previle said. “We can release eight shots in 10 seconds. The last two shots are yellow and red. If you see yellow, you start to run, because if you see red, you’re dead.” Children and adults alike appreciated the view from the bridge, with youngsters such as 11-year-old Isaac Shust and 10-year-old Jesse Donk of Marysville taking turns posing for pictures in the captain’s chair, but no photos were allowed in the combat information center, due to its classified data systems. Senior Chief Petty Officer Jason DeGraaf explained that each member of the ship’s crew is assigned to a repair locker that has its
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
The USS Shoup received 40 visits every half-hour from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 30 as part of Naval Station Everett’s ‘Freedom Festival.’ own assigned tasks to protect and defend the ship, which led into Fireman Dawnell Franklin and Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon Clark covering the firefighting gear and procedures that each repair locker member takes on for such emergencies. “Your self-contained breathing apparatus contains 15-20 minutes of air,” Franklin said, even as Clark pointed out that shipboard firefighters can only fight fires for about five minutes each due to wearing as much as 50 pounds of gear and being hit with steam when they attempt to extinguish fires with their hoses, since the steam is even hotter than the fire itself. Jesse’s dad, Larry Donk, not only took his wife and two boys to Naval Station Everett on June 30, but also has a son in the Marines on
the other side of the country. “Right now, he’s giving this same spiel to folks over on the USS Wasp in Boston,” Larry Donk said of son Ryan, a 2011 graduate of Marysville-Pilchuck High School. Ryan Donk recently gave Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick a tour of the light armored vehicle on which Ryan himself is a gunner, which led Larry Donk to reflect on the importance of the service in general, especially with Independence Day approaching. “We take it for granted that these young men and women sacrifice their time and even their lives for the rest of us,” Larry Donk said. “I want to thank them for that, and to thank Naval Station Everett for giving us a closer look at how they operate.”
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Cities host free movies, concerts, theater in the park events,” said Sarah Lopez, Arlington Recreation Coordinator. “Quite a few people show up. It’s a good chance to get outside in the summer, in the community, and watch a good movie. Plus it’s free.” Marysville’s outdoor movie series, Popcorn in the Park, continues as well, with a showing of “Happy Feet 2,” on Friday, July 14, in Jennings Memorial Park. All summer Popcorn in the Park movies take place at the Jennings Park baseball field and begin at dusk. The Marysville Kiwanis Club provides free popcorn at each showing, though families are encouraged to bring blankets, lawn chairs and coolers. The film “Big Miracle” is set to show on Friday, July 20. “As a staff, we like to pick movies together that the general public will enjoy and that are fairly recent and family friendly,” said Burgess. “It will equate to a great time and great family fun.” For more entertainment, the city of Arlington is hosting Shakespeare in the Park, presented by Last Leaf Productions, on Saturday,
July 21, at 6 p.m. in Terrace Park. The group will perform Julius Ceasar as part of their Summer, Bloody Summer Tour 2012. Also scheduled this summer is Arlington’s Outdoor Theater for Kids on Aug. 25 at 4 p.m. in Terrace Park when the Blue Stilly Players present a production aimed
just for children. “It’s a new event and Blue Stilly Players is a new theater group,” said Lopez, who noted that the group would be performing Hansel and Gretel. “They are going to teach a new drama class too, which is only $10 per child.” For more information
on Arlington events visit www.alringtonwa.gov or contact Arlington Parks and Recreation at 360-4033448. For more information on Marysville events visit www.marysvillewa.gov or contact Marysville Parks and Recreation at 360-3638400.
Courtesy Photo
A crowd gathers for a showing during the city of Arlington’s Outdoor Movies and Karaoke event during the summer of 2011.
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sored by the Cottages at Marysville, and are held at Jennings Memorial Park’s natural amphitheater near the Lions Centennial Pavilion on 6915 Armar Rd. On Thursday, July 19, the Marysville Parks and Recreation department is presenting Shaggy Sweet. “Shaggy Sweet has a rock n’ roll sound with a reggae twist,” said Maryke Burgess, Parks and Recreation coordinator. “We try to have a new, fresh and varied lineup every year, while still catering to the audience that does attend.” The city of Arlington is hosting Outdoor Movies and Karaoke each Thursday evening at Terrace Park, 809 E. Fifth St. “Scooby Doo: Curse of the Lake Monster” is set to play on Thursday, July 12. Movies are preceded by karaoke at 7 p.m. with the showing beginning at dusk, approximately 9 p.m. The Arlington Kiwanis Club provides free popcorn and water. “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” is set to show on July 19 and “Cars 2” is set for July 26, both at Terrace Park. “They are really fun
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Local residents looking for a way to blend outdoor activities and entertainment in their hometown can find several events this summer, sponsored by the cities of Arlington and Marysville, starting this week. The city of Marysville is hosting a free summer concert and movie series, which continues on July 12, when Shameless Hussy, a rock n’ roll and blues band, is set to perform at 7 p.m. at Jennings Memorial Park. “Jennings Park is a wonderful setting to relax and enjoy some great music,” said Shameless Hussy drummer Dan Pakinas. “As a band it is what we enjoy the most about performing.” Based out of Northwest Washington, Shameless Hussy has been performing together for four years, playing songs with great horn sections and backup singers. “We are all dads and moms, and some of us are even grandparents,” Pakinas said. “It is a wonderful thing to be surrounded by such talented and professional people. Definitely a musthear band.” All city of Marysville summer concerts are spon-
THE PUBLIC FORUM
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The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
July 4, 2012
A Will and A Way
L
ately I have been meeting more and more families who are fighting a civil rights war that one might have thought had been won decisively four decades ago. It was in 1971 that a group of bold and innovative parents fighting rejection of their children by public schools in Seattle pushed HB 90, the Education for All Act, through the Washington State Legislature. This pivotal legislation requires all public schools in the state to provide equal educational opportunity to all children regardless of ability. The Education for All Handicapped Children Act, modeled after Washington State’s, became a federal law in 1975. Yet here is Deanna sitting in my office just a few weeks ago telling me the story of her son Dylan, a bright young man with Down syndrome and assorted other challenges, who was placed in isolation — essentially solitary confinement — by middle school administrators who misunderstood Dylan’s unique learning style and behaviors. Dylan quite understandably refused to go to school any more. So Deanna embarked on an odyssey that involved postponing her own education for a year, learning to cite chapter and verse from dozens of Washington State laws, assistance from a legal aide nonprofit, and endless hearings and negotiations with school district officials. After 18 months of doubts, tears, anger, the hugs and prayers of friends and family, and (above all) the steely determination of a mother, Deanna won her appeal. The school district was forced by legal settlement to move
GUEST OPINION
TOM EVERILL PRESIDENT & CEO OF NORTHWEST CENTER Dylan to another school, to provide him the support he needs to be successful, and to include him with the other students. Dylan is thriving now and was recently one of four students (the other three are “typical” learners) presented with an award for academic improvement by the principal in front of the entire student body. Or my friends in a nearby suburb who are suing their school district for not teaching their teenage daughter Brooke who has autism. Here is another bright young person separated from the other students, written off as unteachable, not assigned homework, not allowed even to write a junior thesis along with the other students. How bright is Brooke? Bright enough to write a junior thesis anyway — a reflection on what it feels like to be disrespected and isolated from the other students. Bright enough to bring copies for everyone at a recent Individual Education Plan assessment meeting involving her parents, teachers, and case manager. Bright enough to require everyone at the meeting to read it. Bright enough to go around the table and ask each person by name how it made them feel. Or the brave parents of another nearby suburb who are members of a Special Education PTSA devoted to the unique needs of their children with special needs, an organization SEE WILL, PAGE 5 THE MARYSVILLE
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Looking deeper than a sales spiel
I
t has been a whole year since I moved. Leaving my Marysville home of 49 years, I moved 4.2 miles southeasterly into a Lake Stevens zip code in a move toward full retirement and curtailed landscape labor. At one time or another, two real estate agents had been involved, each presenting homes that offered different benefits. Memory of their sales pitches popped up when I heard Mitt Romney saying, “This isn’t an election between two candidates!” How true. His statement echoed the difference that separated the two real estate agents’ comments about why this or that new home might be right for me. Picking a new home wasn’t a choice between real estate agents. It was based on finances, location, size, floor-plan, special features, nearness to family, neighbors, security, community services, shopping and more. Since a lot of this stuff lay outside both agents’ expertise it was up to me to figure the best balance. Like Romney indicated, it was more than a choice between two candidates. But the media doesn’t want it that way. Obama said, Romney said. Sound bites in or out of context, most short of identifying each party’s design, methods, history and promise. Today’s GOP may be a little like that of Reagan’s time but nothing at all like Eisenhower’s GOP. A party’s doings are reflections of who’s calling the shots at the moment, so evoked memories of past glories and defeats are meaningless. The manipulators who finance pet candidates’ elections have two distinct agendas. Number one is making pet-candidates electable so they can achieve number two: having government do their bidding. The first is akin to polishing
OPINION
BOB GRAEF
a home’s curb appeal, a superficial view that leaves a strong impression. The second is engineering laws and policies that direct the nation’s contracts, profits, resources and subsidies into their pockets. It’s all about money. Since neither party has clean hands, voters are left to decide which hands are less-dirty because in today’s political clashes, it’s impossible for either party to emerge totally clean. If one sleeps with dogs, he will rise up with fleas. In American politics, you make deals, and sometimes that means making deals with the devil. Republican architecture is tidy — everything in plumb, all pipes and wires running straight from central control to the troops. Call it government by corporate clout. It’s a disciplined top-down leadership that issues marching orders to senators, representatives and justices. It boasts well-defined goals and a machine fully capable of shaping national opinion. While admirable in efficiency, it falls short of government by the people. The Democratic Party is anything but tidy, harboring a fractious mix of small merchants and manufacturers, small and large labor groups, small ethnic populations, small environmental groups, small charities. And some big components like healers, educators and Hispanics. Unlike the GOP, all have a voice. Romney was so right. It isn’t a
contest between two candidates. It’s a war between two ideologies that diverged across 50 years from near-center positions to become polar opposites. When disinformation is such that hens are duped into voting for the fox, we need knowledge. Like home-buyers who avoid unwise purchases by hiring building inspectors, voters can learn from respected analysts that stand against pressure from either party. Don’t look to newscasters. They and networks prefer heated contests to truth. That’s the way it goes in an industry that lives or dies according to ratings and market share. Along with The Great Race and NASCAR, they cast politics as one more competitive sport. Who’s ahead or behind in polls or who’s raked in the most campaign cash now poses as news. Some political “building inspectors” do tell it like it is. These aren’t party office-holders or TV anchors with hundred dollar haircuts but thinkers committed to reporting what’s important. Norman Orstein works for the American Enterprise Institute, a staunchly conservative thinktank. Thomas Mann is with the Brookings Institute, a venerable centrist organization. In a Washington Post column, Orstein and Mann described the GOP as an insurgent outlier in American Politics because of the “party’s extremism, antagonism to facts and science, hatred of compromise, and complete opposition to the Democrats’ legitimacy.” Orstein is a Republican. Mann writes like an independent. Together, they inspected the Republican house and found seriSEE SPIEL, PAGE 5
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
WILL FROM PAGE 4 whose very existence speaks to the separation that characterizes our educational system and our society. This Special Education PTSA is petitioning the Washington State PTA to endorse a resolution opposing the routine segregation of children with unique learning styles and special needs. To end the routine segregation of children. So simple and yet so complex, this is an issue with a thousand interdependent threads. From our conditioning and fears and the assumptions we make about people, to our longstanding cultural pattern of competition that celebrates survival of the fittest, to the very real constraints of money and space and expertise faced by our public schools, to paradoxical questions of what inclusion versus segregation means for each individual child. How can we even begin to have this conversation? In the meantime, oppressed parents are forced to fight, finagle, plead, or negotiate every day for what their children are
SPIEL FROM PAGE 4 ous structural flaws. But instead of abandoning their parties, they press for redemptive change, recognizing that the nation needs a re-oriented Republican party even more than it needs a next Democratic victory. Orstein and Mann called
already legally entitled to and have been for 40 years. The pioneering activists of 1971 made the world a better place for everyone by speaking truth to power and mounting an audacious advocacy campaign that enshrined the right of all children to a public education. Changing the law was a monumental milestone, but as with so many social justice movements it was not enough. Four decades later, the challenge becomes influencing the consciousness of our community by creating opportunities for people of all abilities to engage each other in learning, work, and play and experience for themselves the extraordinary value that results. People simply need to experience each other and the unique way each of us brings value and evokes value in others. When the community wants to include Dylan and Brooke badly enough, solutions will be found. Where there is a will, there is a way. Tom Everill is President & CEO of Northwest Center. Contact him at inside@ nwcenter.org.
on journalists to stop trying to present “both sides” of issues, and instead to concentrate on truth and substance, to stop treating filibusters as routine and obstructionism as normal. They wrote that the only way for the GOP to regain its health, vitality and relevance is for voters to punish extremism. Mitt Romney hit the nail on the head. Candidates’
headline-making charges and countercharges are largely meaningless. Instead, voters should be thinking about government’s functional flaws, and that the upcoming election might restore decency to Congress and the Supreme Court.
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Thanks to the Kiwanis For those of you that were unable to weather the heavy mist on Sunday morning, you missed a fantastic pancake breakfast sponsored by the Kiwanis at Asbery Field Market in the Park for the closing day of Strawberry Festival. They provided an “all you can eat” breakfast of pancakes, scrambled eggs, hash browns, sausage, juice and coffee for a very modest price. We were happy to see the pancake breakfast return to the Strawberry Festival this year and do hope it continues in years to come. Thank you Kiwanis. Don and Teri McCann Marysville
Good Law or Bad Law? You Decide. In order to fully understand the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Affordable Health Care Act, one has to understand what the Supreme Court actually is authorized to do under the Constitution. It is only authorized to rule on the “constitutionality” of anything brought before it. Part of the way the Affordable Health Care Act was passed was by telling the people that it was absolutely not a tax, but a “mandate.” What the Supreme Court has said in its ruling and written opinion is that it is not a “mandate,” thus not falling under the “Commerce Clause” of the Constitution, but it is a tax. Many of us
were lied to about what it is! Congress has the right via the Constitution to tax, and it can basically tax anything it wants to. It is a tax in the same way that FICA is a tax withheld from a paycheck to pay that person’s portion of the Social Security tax. What Chief Justice Roberts preserved in the long run, frankly, is the position of the Court to not become an “activist court” by usurping its authority into “law making,” and that is a good thing, in my opinion. Law making is rightly reserved to Congress or the state’s legislature. What the Court and Justice Roberts did not do is tell Americans whether the Affordable Health Care Act is a good law or a poor law or how your politician (pick your side) told you what it might do in the future. Just because something is Constitutional does not inherently make it “good” or “bad” law — it can be either. The Court simply sent it back to Congress who is the law making arm of the federal government. Is it good law or bad law? Do some research and find out for yourself. Courts cannot be used endlessly to right the bad choices the “people” make and/or continue to make. At some point, the “people” must take the responsibility of learning and knowing enough to make wise decisions for themselves in electing the “law makers,” legislators or congresspeople who will make wise and “good” laws. Catherine Paxton Arlington
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July 4, 2012
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Poochapalooza returns July 14 Missing ATV rider
MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Dog Owners Group is inviting fellow dog owners and their pooches to the sixth annual Marysville Poochapalooza outdoor dog event from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, July 14, at the Strawberry Fields Athletic Park, located at 6100 152nd St. NE in Marysville, home of the Strawberry Fields for Rover Off-Leash Park. Poochapalooza aims to feature canines at their best and brightest, like a county fair for dogs. A $5 suggested donation to enter provides “wag bags” to the first 400 visitors, with all proceeds supporting the off-leash park maintained by M-DOG. “At Poochapalooza, it’s all about the dogs,” said Leslie Buell, M-DOG president and Poochapalooza founder. Poochapalooza this year will again go high fashion with the popular Fashions and Rescues Runway Show, mixing country charm with urban chic. The show will feature adoptable dogs modeling the latest eye-catching fashions live on the catwalk, rechristened the “dogwalk” for the occasion. Top Seattle
models will escort dogs from six rescue groups. At last year’s premier event, 16 dogs were adopted. The fashion show is free, but limited VIP tickets are available for $10 for special catwalk seating, which also includes a “swag bag,” cupcakes, cake, refreshments and other treats. But there’s more to Poochapalooza than fashion. Plenty of competitions, activities and interactive demonstrations will be staged to enable dogs to try their paws at something new, including dancing, Flyball, wacky pet contests, doggy pie-eating contests, Canine Good Citizen Testing, nail clipping, scent demonstrations and even just taking in live music. Additionally, more than four dozen petrelated vendors will be on site so that attendees can snoop for bargains. The crowd favorite Emerald City K-9 Freestyle Dancers and their talented dogs will return with their musical freestyle canine dancing, that blends obedience, costumed themes, music and dance in ways designed to be visually excit-
ing, and to demonstrate handler and dog teamwork. Seattle FlyDogs will exhibit their love of Flyball, an extreme sport that appeals to dogs that thrive on speed and action. FlyDogs members are certified teachers and trainers, who will provide demonstrations and free introductory evaluations to gauge whether dogs are Flyball naturals. Dogs with hidden talents can enter “Best in Show” contests including Best Kisser, Best Voice, Wackiest Pet Trick and Pooch PieEating Contests. The contest donation cost is $5 for one contest, or $10 for unlimited contests, excluding the Pooch Pie-Eating Contest, which is $10. Winning dogs will receive special ribbons and goodies. Visit the Poochapalooza website at http://poochapalooza.org for forms and the schedule. Catering to their meat and dessert-loving cravings, Poochapalooza is looking for canines with hearty appetites to compete in pie-eating contests scheduled at 12:30 p.m. and 2:45 p.m., with separate divisions for big and small dogs. The pie-eating
contests are sponsored and emceed by Dining Dog Café and Bakery of Edmonds and owner Dorothy Moore. Among the day’s other activities, Canine Good Citizens Testing will be offered to interested fairgoers and their pets, while K9 Nose Work and their dogs will be on site to provide scent demonstrations, showcasing their dogs’ amazing sense of smell. Food and refreshments will be available for purchase from the Marysville Kiwanis Club and other vendors. Parking is free. Rare Birds and Rosemary will provide live music from 4-5 p.m. Buell reiterated that money raised at Poochapalooza will go to support needs at the city’s off-leash park, Strawberry Fields for Rover. The three-acre park draws averages of 12,000 visitors and 17,000 dogs a year. For more information about Poochapalooza, contact Buell at 360-651-0633, email labuell@frontier.com, visit the website at http:// poochapalooza.org or “like” the event on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/ poochapalooza.
found on Tulalip
BY KIRK BOXLEITNER kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com
TULALIP — Firefighters, police officers and emergency aid crews from Marysville, Tulalip and Snohomish County converged on the woods of Tulalip on Tuesday, June 26, to search for and eventually recover a 20-yearold all-terrain vehicle rider whose family reported him missing after he failed to return from a trip the previous afternoon. Crews retrieved him from the bottom of a ravine in a wooded area about a mile north of the 9900 block of 12th Avenue NW, where he was pinned facedown underneath his four-wheel ATV, after Tulalip Tribal Police officers followed the ATV’s tracks off the trail. “It’s a common dirt-biking area,” said Aaron Reeder, one of the three volunteer firefighters from the Tulalip Bay Fire Department who took part in the rescue efforts. “He wasn’t able to make any noise, at least not enough that any of us would have been able to hear, so it’s a good thing they found his
riding trail.” Reeder described the slope as angled slightly downward from the road for about 70 yards, at which point it makes a steeper drop-off. He praised the team of more than a dozen workers who contributed to the man’s safe return, from the Marysville medics who were able to supply IVs on site to the personnel of Marysville Fire District Ladder 62 and Snohomish County Search and Rescue, who pulled him out of the ravine with high-angle equipment in a basket with a rope.
“Originally, we thought they were going to have to airlift the kid, but he was pretty tough,” Reeder said. “He was transported by ground to the Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett.” Although the missing man was conscious and is expected to make a full recovery, the fact that he spent 11 hours trapped under his ATV, outside and overnight, makes him very lucky to have made it out alive, according to Reeder.
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July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
PUZZLE ANSWERS From 06/27/12
DEATHS
(Through June 24, 2012) Raymond O. Trueblood, 70, Marysville, 9/8/1941-6/15/2012 Dorothy I. Carlson, 95, Arlington, 6/26/1916-6/16/2012 James M. Peterson, 69, Arlington, 6/9/42-6/16/2012 Sherylee J. Costantini, 68, Marysville, 9/17/1943-6/20/2012 Patricia J. McMahan, 84, Arlington, 3/28/1928-6/20/2012 Mildred M. Spoerhase, 93, Arlington, 8/14/1918-6/21/2012 Merle D. LeaQuee, 87, Arlington, 11/9/1924-6/21/2012 Jack L. Nicholls, 80, Arlington, 5/19/1932-6/14/2012 Cathrine (Catherine) J. Abea, 65, Marysville, 8/10/1946-6/21/2012 Robert N. Berg, 81, Arlington, 4/14/1931-6/23/2012 June K. Iverson, 96, Marysville, 6/11/1916-6/24/2012
Births
(Through June 18, 2012)
A girl was born to Tommy & Crystal Johnson of Arlington.
June 8, 2012
June 18, 2012
A boy was born to Curtis & Maria Dobson of Arlington.
A girl was born to Gregorio Lopez Flores & Ana Bernal of Arlington.
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Dorothy L.M. Madson July 25, 1917 — July 2, 2012
Dorothy was born July 25, 1917 in Silvana, WA to John B. and Ruth M. Knutson; she passed away July 2, 2012 in Stanwood. She is survived by her children Bob (Jan), Donna (Ken) and Jack (Kathy). A funeral will be held Tuesday, July 10, 2012, 11:00 am at Peace Lutheran Church in Silvana, followed
by a graveside ser vic e at Zion Lutheran Cemetery and a reception at Peace Lutheran church. In lieu of f lowers, remembrances may go to the Warm Beach Senior Community or to the Little White Church on the Hill. Arrangements are under the care of Gilbertson Funeral Home, Stanwood.
LEGAL NOTICES
CALL FOR BIDS
change of Washington at 425-258-1303 should you require further assistance.) Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check, cashier’s check or bid bond (with an authorized surety company as surety) made payable to the City of Marysville in an amount not less than five percent (5%) of the bid amount. The City of Marysville reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive irregularities in the bid or in the bidding. No bidder may withdraw their bid after the hour set for the opening thereof or before award of contract, unless said award is delayed for a period of sixty (60) days. April O’Brien, Deputy City Clerk City of Marysville First publication: Marysville Globe, Daily Journal of Commerce on (June 27, 2012) Second publication: M a r y s v i l l e Globe, Daily Journal of Commerce on (July 4, 2012) Published: June 27, July 4, 2012. #641964
SUMMARY OF ORDINANCE NO. 2624 of the City of Marysville, Washington. On April 24, 2006 the City of Marysville, Washington, approved Ordinance No. 2624 which may be summarized as follows: AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF MARYSVILLE, WASHINGTON, VACATING A PORTION OF UNIMPROVED RIGHT-OF-WAY EAST OF 83RD AVENUE NE AND NORTH OF ASSESSOR’S TAX PARCEL NUMBER 30052500200500. The full text of this ordinance will be provided upon request. Dated this 2nd day of July, 2012. April O’Brien, Deputy City Clerk Published: July 4, 2012 #674848
NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that the City of Marysville, being the lead
agency for the following project, expects to issue a DNS for this proposal utilizing the Optional DNS process outlined in WAC 197-11-355: File Number: PA12022 Applicant: City of Marysville Community Development Department Project Contact: Angela Gemmer, Associate Planner (360) 363-8240 or agemmer@marysvillewa.gov Project Description: A d o p t i o n of a new chapter, 22G.120, Site Plan Review, to MMC Title 22G, Administration and Procedures. The new chapter would provide application submittal requirements, and outline the review process and method of approval for commercial and multi-family site plans not reviewed through Chapters 22G.090, Planned Residential Development, or 22G.100, Binding Site Plan. Date of Completeness: June 28, 2012 This may be the only opportunity to comment on the environmental impacts of this proposal. The proposal may include mitigation measures under applicable codes, and the project review process may incorporate or require mitigation measures regardless of whether an EIS is prepared. A copy of the subsequent threshold determination for this proposal may be obtained upon request. The application and complete case file is available for review at the City of Marysville Community Development Department, 80 Columbia Avenue, Marysville, WA 98270. SEPA Contact: Angela Gemmer, Associate Planner 360.363.8240 or agemmer@marysvillewa.gov Written comments on the aforementioned application are solicited and should be forwarded to the City of Marysville Community Development Department, 80 Columbia Avenue, Marysville, WA 98270, no later than July 16, 2012. Published: July 4, 2012 #645390 SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
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NOTICE OF PLANNED FINAL ACTION ON CONDEMNATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Marysville City Council has scheduled on its agenda consideration of final action upon the following proposed ordinance: AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF MARYSVILLE, WASHINGTON, AUTHORIZING THE CONDEMNATION, APPROPRIATION, TAKING AND DAMAGING OF LAND AND OTHER PROPERTY FOR PURPOSES OF CONSTRUCTING UTILITIES ADJACENT TO SOPER HILL ROAD BETWEEN 87TH AVENUE N.E. AND 83RD AVENUE N.E. Date/Time of planned final action: 7:00 p.m. July 9, 2012 Location of planned final action: City Council Chambers Marysville City Hall 1049 State Avenue Marysville, WA 98270 Property affected: Permanent utility easement and temporary construction easement affecting a portion of the following property: Tract 317, Sunnyside Five Acre Tracts, Vol 7, p 19, Snohomish County, Washington. Snohomish County Tax Parcel: Ptn of 005907-000-317-00 Commonly known as: 8609 Soper Hill Road, Marysville, WA The full legal description of the property proposed for condemnation can be obtained from the Marysville Public Works Department, 80 Columbia, Marysville, Washington 98270 (360-3638100). At the above-stated date, time and location of final action, condemnation of the above-described properties will be considered, and the Marysville City Council will decide whether or not to authorize the condemnation. Published: June 27, July 4, 2012. #641825
Whiskey Ridge Sewer Extension & Soper Hill Rd Water Main Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the City Clerk at Marysville City Hall, 1049 State Avenue, Marysville, WA 98270 until 10:00 a.m., local time, on Tuesday, July 10, 2012 at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. The City will not consider proposals received after this time. Bidders shall submit the original bid proposal in a sealed envelope labeled with the bidder’s name and “BID for the WHISKEY RIDGE SEWER EXTENSION & SOPER HILL RD WATER MAIN PROJECT”. The first schedule of this contract includes the construction of 1,580 lf of 12-inch gravity PVC sewer pipe within Soper Hill Rd and in utility easements from approximately 83rd Ave NE to 87th Ave NE. The second schedule of this contract includes the construction of 2,200 lf of 12-inch DI water main within Soper Hill Rd and in utility easements from the Marysville/Lake Stevens city limit west of 83rd Ave NE to 87th Ave NE. The work also includes the installation of a pressure reducing station, paving, property restoration and other work as specified and shown in the contract documents. The project cost is estimated to cost $781,167.40. Please address any comments and questions you may have to the Project Engineer, Jeff Laycock, PE; at (360) 363-8274. Plans, specifications, addenda and plan holders list for this project are available online through Builder’s Exchange of Washington, Inc., at http://www.bxwa.com; 2607 Wetmore Avenue, Everett, WA 98201-2929, (425) 258-1303, Fax (425) 259-3832. Click on “bxwa.com”; “Posted Projects”, “Public Works”, “City of Marysville”, and “Project Bid Date”. (Note: Bidders are encouraged to “Register as a Bidder”, in order to receive automatic email notification of future addenda and to be placed on the “Bidders List” This service is provided free of charge to Prime Bidders, Subcontractors, & Vendors bidding this project. Contact Builders Ex-
8
THE SPORTS PAGE The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
July 4, 2012
Parks offers Wacky World of Sports BY LAUREN SALCEDO lsalcedo@arlingtontimes.com
MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Parks and Recreation Department has no shortage of sports activities scheduled this summer and that includes their daytime summer camps. The Parks and Recreation day camp recently held a Wacky World of Sports week, to kick off the beginning of the summer season. For five days, campers received an introduction to a variety of sports, both common and rare. Campers were able to compete in relay races, hockey, Frisbee competition, basketball, bowling and more. “It’s fun to exercise and have competition,” said camper Crystal Hagen, 10. “I’d have to say that my favorite sport we played was dodgeball.” Fellow camper Taylor Maak also felt that the Wacky World of Sports camp was fun. “When I’m at home, I don’t have anything to do,” said Maak, who went bowling for the first time during the camp’s field trip to Strawberry Lanes. “I love it. I’ve never been bowling before and I’ve never been to any camps before,” said Maak. “I just like it.”
The Wacky World of Sports culminated in the All-Camp Olympics on Friday, June 29, when campers divided into three teams and competed in a number of events with overall team scores determining the winner, much like the upcoming Olympics. “We played kickball, putt-putt golf, bowling — our field trip to Strawberry Lanes was popular,” said Chelsea Sowards, camp leader. “I think it’s fun to play basketball and soccer, but it’s also fun to teach them new skills.” Fellow camp leader Rob Christiansen agreed. “Kids always seem to respond well to getting outside and having fun,” he said. “And everybody seemed to love Strawberry Lanes.” William Brown, a 10-year-old camper, definitely had a great time learning to bowl. “Normally I have to use bumpers, but this time I didn’t,” said Brown, who also said he really enjoyed the summer day camp. “It’s really fun. I really loved the sprout ball and bowling. It was really, really awesome.” Although the first week of day camp is over, spaces are still available for campers who wish to attend other weeks. “We are always looking for new campers,” said Christiansen.
Lauren Salcedo/Staff Photo
Taylor Maak throws a frisbee during the Marysville Parks and Recreation Wacky World of Sports All-Camp Olympics on Friday, June 29. Parks and Recreation is hosting six more weeks of themed day camps including Outrageous
Outdoors, Wild Wacky Water Week and Blast from the Past, which includes a trip to the skating rink.
To sign up for the summer camp visit www.marysvillewa.gov or call 360-363-8400.
Volleyball camp serves summer fun BY LAUREN SALCEDO lsalcedo@arlingtontimes.com
Lauren Salcedo/Staff Photo
Volleyball camper Mikeyla Chambers, 7, is coached by Lakewood High School senior Danielle Small during the Marysville Parks and Recreation Ultimate Volleyball Summer Camp on June 27.
LAKEWOOD — The Lakewood High School Girls Volleyball team is doing more than practice this summer, they are helping to coach younger players as well. The Marysville Parks and Recreation Department held a volleyball camp for girls from 7 to 12 years old, at the Lakewood High School gym from June 25-28. “We really stress the fundamentals,” said LHS Head Coach Tasha Kryger, also a camp coach. “It’s very cool to see how they improve from the beginning of the camp to the end.” The elementary and middle school girls were paired almost one-to-one with volunteer LHS volleyball players to help with individual learning. And the young girls weren’t the only ones who benefited from the learning process — the high schoolers gained experience from the coaching process.
“It is really great for our girls because it makes them look like role models,” said Kryger. “We just finished our summer camp, so this is a chance for them to reinforce what they learned and use it in practice.” The Parks and Recreation Ultimate Volleyball camp is a fundraiser for the Lakewood team, and those funds go straight to their Gold Medal Squared Elite Volleyball Training Camp where college coaches and players train the girls in a four-day, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., intense training session. “It’s very intense volleyball,” said Kryger. “And we have it here to keep costs low and so more of our players can attend.” This year 27 LHS players made it to the Gold Medal Squared camp. Between 23 and 26 girls enrolled in the Parks and Recreation Ultimate Volleyball camp, so there was no shortage of coaches from whom they could seek help. Brooke Forsell has been playing volleyball for three
years and this is her first year participating in the ultimate volleyball summer camp. “I really like it,” she said. “I signed up because I want to make it to the eighth grade team and I want to keep getting better so I can make it in high school.” Forsell first gained interest in the sport when one of her friends who played told her how fun it was. “I’ve been playing at the Boys & Girls Club for years now,” she said. She has felt that the camp has helped her get better, and also been a fun way to kick off the summer. “I like the camp, I like the games we play,” said Forsell. “They are fun games and not always volleyball related. But I also like the serving games.” For those interested in playing volleyball at Lakewood High School next year, the team is holding open gyms throughout July on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at Lakewood High School.
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
Marysville Rotary hands out awards his fellow Tribal Board members and the past leaders of the Tulalip Tribes, whom he credited with laying the groundwork for him. “I see all you leaders out there,” he told the audience, “and we have the common cause of making this community better for our children and our children’s children.” Marysville School District Superintendent Dr. Larry Nyland surprised Jodi Runyon, executive assistant to the superintendent, with her own Paul Harris Fellowship Award, which left her barely able to speak “because you know how passionate I get about my work.” Nyland praised Runyon for building bridges with community organizations such as the Rotary Club of Marysville to stage events such as the school district’s first “Opportunity Expo” job fair this spring. “That was a smashing success,” Nyland said. “It worked so much better than it would have if you’d simply given us money. When we develop those community partnerships, through internships and networking between businesses and the schools,
BY KIRK BOXLEITNER kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com
her own contributions to the Opportunity Expo, but also for her longstanding support of Marysville-Pilchuck High School athletics and the Marysville Family YMCA. Marysville Municipal Court Judge Fred Gillings was unable to attend the evening’s ceremonies, but former Marysville Mayor Dennis Kendall presented him with a Paul Harris Fellowship Award in absentia anyway, noting his yearly participation in the “Tip a Cop” fundraiser, as well as his proactive efforts to support victims of domestic violence. Larry Trivett received his “plus one” Paul Harris Fellowship Award, while incoming Program Director Tom Thetford and incoming President Kelly Peterson became “plus two” awardees. Outgoing President Chris Nation, in turn, presented special awards to Terry Earnhardt for taking the lead on this year’s Rotary cleanup of the graffiti on the Fourth Street/I-5 overpass, as well as to incoming President-Elect Daryn Bundy for filling in on other posts and continuing to labor tirelessly in the Rotary pumpkin patch.
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
From left, Eric Spencer, Jodi Runyon, Debbie Barger Smith, Toni Mathews and Mel Sheldon Jr. received Paul Harris Fellowship Awards from the Rotary Club of Marysville on June 27.
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MARYSVILLE — The Rotary Club of Marysville not only installed its new officers for the year on June 27, but also honored several community members with the Rotary’s highest recognition, the Paul Harris Fellowship Awards. The awards are named for the founder of Rotary International and are intended to honor those who exemplify the Rotary motto of “service above self.” Former Rotary District 5050 Governor Larry Jubie presented Tulalip Tribal Chair Mel Sheldon Jr. with a plaque and a pin for his leadership within the community, as well as for the partnerships that he’s helped foster between the Tulalip Tribes and the cities of Marysville, Arlington and Everett, as well as the Marysville School District. “He’s encouraged education and boosted the economy of the entire region,” Jubie said. “I can’t accept this as an individual,” said Sheldon, who accepted on behalf of
we reach more students, and Jodi deserves to be recognized for her work in putting that event together.” Outgoing Public Relations Director Gary Baker gave incoming Secretary Eric Spencer his own pin and plaque for his positive attitude, dedication to duty and skill at delegating tasks, which Spencer put to use as the outgoing Education Foundation director, while incoming Public Relations Director Mike Leighan gave a Paul Harris Fellowship Award to Toni Mathews for volunteering with the Strawberry Festival’s Royalty and Market in the Park, as well as the MarysvilleTulalip Relay For Life and “Bark For Life.” “It sounds like a lot, but it doesn’t feel like I’m doing a lot,” said Mathews, who also helped organize the Opportunity Expo and the school field trips to the “Pumpkins for Literacy” patch at the Smokey Point Plant Farm. Debbie Barger Smith was sworn in for another year as Vocational Service director, and Loren Van Loo pinned and plaqued her not only for
9
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July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
MFD receives SAFER grant Quil Ceda, Tulalip schools runners-up for Hord Award the needs of the community and the SAFER grant helps to fill that need. At the end of the day, the safety and well-being of our residents and firefighters will always be our top priority.” This marks the first time the Marysville Fire District has applied for the federal staffing funding. Highest consideration is given to departments that have lost employees due to layoffs and attrition. “Keeping our communities safe must be our top priority, especially in tough
economic times, and that’s why we worked so hard to seek the resources needed to get the job done,” Corn said. The three firefighters will begin working Aug. 1 as part of the timeline established through the grant award process. The Marysville Fire District will receive monies to fund these firefighters for two years, the length of the grant period. Unlike other FEMA grant programs, there will be no matching funds required to hire these firefighters.
MARYSVILLE — The Quil Ceda and Tulalip elementary schools were recently named runners-up for the prestigious Shirley Hord Award, were featured in the Learning Forward’s national staff development magazine, and will be recognized at their National Conference in July. Fourteen teams from schools across the United States submitted nominations to Learning Forward, formerly the National Staff Development Council, and each school submitted a video and documentation as evidence of their collaborative professional learning work. A team of 14 reviewers — which included Learning Forward Scholar Laureate
Shirley Hord herself, as well as other Learning Forward members — reviewed the submissions using Learning Forward’s Learning School Innovation Configuration Map. Three awards were given out, one to the winner and two to the runners-up. “I would like to congratulate our members and leaders in our Marysville schools,” said Ellen Holmes, National Board certified teacher and senior policy analyst for the National Education Association Priority Schools. “The NEA is extremely proud of your work and commitment to each of your students.” Learning Forward is an international association of
“I would like to congratulate our members and leaders in our Marysville schools.” Ellen Holmes NEA learning educators focused on increasing student achievement through more effective professional development. Their stated purpose is to ensure that every educator engages in effective professional learning every day, so that all can students achieve. To learn more, log onto www. learningforward.org.
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MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Fire District will receive $560,000 in a FEMA Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response (SAFER) grant. “Thanks to the hard work of the Board of Directors, administrative staff and firefighters, we have been able to secure a federal SAFER grant that will allow us to rehire the three firefighter positions that were laid off in April of 2011,” Marysville Fire Chief Corn said. “We have been searching for alternative funding to meet
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July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
Crime Stoppers, MPD search for burglary suspect
MARYSVILLE — Crime Stoppers of Puget Sound and the Marysville Police Department are asking for the public’s assistance in identifying a suspect in two armed robberies in June. On Monday, June 11, at approximately 3:20 a.m., the Shell Station at
116th Street and State Avenue was robbed at gunpoint. On Wednesday, June 13, at approximately 11:20 p.m., the Smoke Plus store in the 9200 block of State Avenue was also robbed at gunpoint. In both robberies, the suspect
was described as having an average height and slim build, and wielding a silver semi-automatic handgun. The suspect in the June 11 robbery wore black pants, a black coat and a black hat, with sunglasses and a black-and-white skull-type bandanna mask.
ChurCh
of
The suspect in the June 13 robbery wore a black-and-white checked jacket with a gray hood, gloves, sunglasses and a bandannatype mask. Police believe the two robberies are likely related based on their times, locations and descriptions.
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If you have any information about these robberies or suspect, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. All calls are confidential. Crime Stoppers will pay a cash reward of up to $1,000 for any information leading to the arrest and charging of this armed robber.
Methodist
Worship Directory
Marysville Free Methodist Church “Family Oriented — Bible Centered”
615916
6715 Grove St., Marysville • 360-659-7117 Hillside Christian Preschool 360-659-8957
Classic Worship Celebration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8:15a.m. Kidz’ Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00a.m. Casual Worship Celebration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00a.m. Student Ministries (Jr . High-Wednesday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 p.m. Student Ministries (Sr . High-Thursday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 p.m. Hillside Christian Preschool NOW Enrolling for the 2012-13 School Year Groups for Children, Youth, College/Career, Young Marrieds, Families and Seniors marysvillefmc.org
Join us Sunday evenings at 5 pm for Don Patton’s video 626497_MSVLFreeMeth0704.indd presentation on the scientific evidence that supports the Biblical account of creation and the flood. Don presents the other side of the story concerning the fossil record and the theory of evolution. This series is a real faith builder as you see the hard evidence that supports the claims of the Bible. We will be presenting this video series on Sunday evenings through March. 360-939-2080
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6/26/12 3:00:30 PM
615953
The Smokey Point Church Of Christ
Baptist
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615951
615944
8526 – 35th Ave. NE, Arlington, WA, 98223 (7/10 mile north of Smokey Point off of Smokey Pt. Blvd.) Sunday morning classes for all ages .......... 9:30 a.m. Sunday morning worship ........................... 10:30 a.m. Sunday evening worship ............................. 5:00 p.m. Wednesday night classes for all ages ......... 7:00 p.m. other
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Bible teaching, upbeat music, friendly and casual atmosphere 600661
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To be included in this Directory call 360-659-1300
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Sunday Worship - 8:30 and 10:15 am Weekly Bible Studies Youth Ministry
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Pastor Rick Long & Pastor Luke Long
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
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Apartments for Rent Snohomish County
HUD HOMES!!!
Very nice split entry home on a large almost 1/4 acre lot. This home features 3 bedrooms and 1 & 3/4 baths, a living room w/ fireplace, and a nice size kitchen with an island and tile back splash. Deck off the dining room. Downstairs is a family room and 3/4 bath. The large fully fenced back yard has a separate entrance for RV parking and storage shed.
$112,000
Spacious 4 bedroom 2.5 bath home. This home features an open floor plan, with a formal living and dining room and family room with gas fireplace. Kitchen is good size. The master bedroom has a walk-in closet and master bath. With a little TLC this home will shine!
Wendy Smith 425-319-5036 or 360-435-4003
2 & 3 BEDROOM apartments in town. All appliances including washer & d r y e r. Fr o m $ 8 7 5 month plus deposit. 360435-3171, 360-435-9294
601367
$205,200
ARLINGTON
To be included in this Directory call 360-659-1300
Vacation/Getaways Rental 559964
12
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY JULY 14TH OP TH 10am-4pm • BBQ 11am-2pm
BIRCH BAY
1 BEDROOM (sleeps 4) at The Sandcastle in Birch Bay. Right across from beach! Timeshare rental; August 18th- 25th. $500. 360-730-1522. Money to Loan/Borrow
L O C A L P R I VAT E I N VESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I l o a n o n h o u s e s, r aw land, commercial property and property development. Call Eric at (800) 563-3005 www.fossmortgage.com
Employment General
CIRCULATION MANAGER Sound Publishing, Inc. is currently accepting applications for a Circulation Manager at the Marysville Globe/Arlington Times and north end Little Nickel publications. The primar y duty of a Circulation Manager (CM) is to manage a geographic district. The CM will be accountable for the assigned newspaper as follows: Recruiting, contracting and training independent contractors to meet delivery deadlines, insuring delivery standards are being met and quality customer service. Position requires the ability to operate a motor vehicle in a safe manner; to occasionally lift and/or transport bundles weighing up to 25 pounds from ground level to a height o f 3 fe e t ; t o d e l i v e r newspaper routes, including ability to negotiate stairs and to deliver an average of 75 newspapers per hour for up to 8 consecutive hours; to communicate with carriers and the public by telephone and in person; to operate a personal computer. Must possess reliable, insured, motor vehicle and a valid Washington State driver’s license. Based in Poulsbo and Bellevue, Wash., Sound Publishing, Inc., owns and operates 38 community newspapers and 14 Little Nickel publications in the greater Puget Sound a r e a . S o u n d P u bl i s h i n g ’s b r o a d household distribution blankets the greater Puget Sound region, extending northward from Seattle to Canada, south to Salem, Ore., and westward to the Pacific Ocean. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer and offers a competitive benefits package including health insurance, 401K, paid vacation, holidays and a great work environment. We recognize that the key to our success lies in the abilities, diversity and vision of our employees. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply. If interested in joining our team, please email resume and cover letter to: hreast@soundpublishing.com
OR mail to: Sound Publishing, Inc. 19426 68th Avenue S, Kent, WA 98032 ATTN: HRCM
Announcements
PLANS STARTING AT $39.00/SQ. FT.
$108,900
STICKBUILT ON YOUR LOT Reverse Orientation
LEXAR 2270 ™
Featured Home starts at
4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2270 Sq.Ft.
at 489 Andis Road, Burlington, WA.
�Tour our model home �Watch videos of homes in construction �Find Out About Turn-Key Features �Receive $2500 or more in Upgrades for New Home Purchases This charming home appears much larger than its 2270 square footage. Its open design allows for a large functional kitchen with generous counter tops and plenty of cabinet space.
489 Andis Road • Burlington, WA 98233
360-707- 2112 www.LexarHomes.com LEXARHB*905RF
COME VISIT OUR SHOWROOM IN BURLINGTON!
_ ADOPT _ Adoring married, creative professionals, celebrations, loving home awaits 1st miracle baby. Expenses paid. 1-800-243-1658 ANNOUNCE your festiva l fo r o n l y p e n n i e s. Four weeks to 2.7 million readers statewide for about $1,200. Call this newspaper or 1 (206) 634-3838 for more details.
LAKEWOOD JR. High Reunion. Classes 1970 1 9 7 4 , S a t u r d ay, Ju l y 14th, 2012!! Wenberg C o u n t y Pa r k , 1 5 4 3 0 East Lake Goodwin Road, Stanwood, Washington 98292, 11am – 7pm. POTLUCK!! 360895-5180, 360-6292604, 425-327-6473 terri4469@yahoo.com
Program Specialist – Police Provides complex, specialized administrative and technical support to t h e 2 4 h r s / 7 d ay w k Records Division. *(Shift work required.) Salary: $3685 - $4679 per mth + benefits. Requirements: High School diploma or GED, 2 yrs customer service exp. 1 yr exp working with police records preferred. M u s t p a s s ex t e n s i ve background check and polygraph. Apply online at http://marysvillewa.gov by 5:00 p.m., Mon. 7/9/12. EOE/AA.
Looking for your dream house? Go to pnwHomeFinder.com to find the perfect home for sale or rent.
Employment General
CREATIVE ARTIST The North Kitsap Herald, a weekly community newspaper located on the Kitsap Peninsula in Poulsbo, WA, has an immediate opening for a full-time Creative Artist. Duties include performing ad and spec design, designing promotional materials, providing excellent customer service to the sales staff and clients. Requires excellent communication skills, and the ability to work in a fast paced deadlineor iented environment. Experience in Adobe Creative Suite 2: InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator and Acrobat is also required. Newspaper or other media experience is preferred. Must be able to work independently as well as part of a team. Requires f l ex i b i l i t y. We o f fe r a great work environment, health benefits, 401k, paid holidays, vacation a n d s i ck t i m e. E O E . Please e-mail your resume, cover letter, and a few s a m p l e s o f yo u r work to: hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: CANKH/HR Sound Publishing, Inc. 19351 8th Ave NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370 DELIVER THE MARYSVILLE GLOBE OR ARLINGTON TIMES Earn extra income working only one day per week delivering the Marsyville Globe or Arlington Times. Call 1-888-8383000 or email circulation@marysvilleglobe.com if interested. Please include your name, telephone number, address and best time to call. These are independent contract delivery routes for Sound Publishing, Inc. PUBLISHER Sound Publishing is seeking a proven leader with the entrepreneurial skills to build on the solid growth of its twice weekly community newspapers and its 24/7 online presence on the beautiful Whidbey Island. Ideally, the candidate will have a good understanding of all facets of newspaper operations with emphasis on sales, marketing, and financial management. The publisher will help develop strategy for the newspapers as they continue to serve a rapidly expanding and diverse suburban marketplace. Sound Publishing Inc. is Washington’s largest private, independent newsp a p e r c o m p a n y. I t s broad household distribution blankets the entire Greater Puget Sound region, extending nor th from Seattle to Canada, south to Portland, Oregon, and west to the Pacific Ocean. If you have the ability to think outside the box, a r e c u s t o m e r - d r i ve n , success-or iented and want to live in one of the most beautiful and livable areas in Washington State, then we want to hear from you. Please submit your resume, cover letter with salary requirements to: tbullock@soundpublishing.com
or: Sound Publishing Inc., Human Resources/ Publisher, 19351 8th Ave NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370.
Employment General
REPORTER The Bainbridge Island Review, a weekly community newspaper located in western Washington state, is accepting applications for a parttime general assignment Reporter. The ideal candidate will have solid reporting and writing skills, have up-to-date knowledge of the AP Stylebook, be able to shoot photos and video, be able to use InDesign, and contribute to staff blogs and Web updates. We offer vacation and sick leave, and paid holidays. If you have a passion for community news reporting and a desire to work in an ambitious, dyn a m i c n ew s r o o m , we want to hear from you. E.O.E. Email your resume, cover letter and up to 5 non-returnable writing, photo and video samples to hr@soundpublishing.com Or mail to BIRREP/HR Dept., Sound Publishing, 19351 8th Ave. NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370. Janitorial Employment
LOCAL CLEANING COMPANY
has part time and fill in positions covering Camano Island to Marysville area. Auto, auto insurance and valid d r i ve r ’s l i c e n s e r e quired. Call (360)629-2470
You’ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: nw-ads.com. Employment Media
REPORTER Reporter sought for staff opening with the Peninsula Daily News, a sixday newspaper on Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula that includes the cities of Por t Angeles, Sequim, P o r t To w n s e n d a n d Forks (yes, the “Twilight” Forks, but no vampires or werewolves). Bring your experience from a weekly or small daily -from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already acquired while sharpening your talent with the help o f ve t e ra n n ew s r o o m leaders. This is a general assignment reporting position in our Port Angeles office in which being a self-starter must be demonstrated through professional experience. Port Angeles-based Peninsula Daily News, circulation 16,000 daily and 15,000 Sunday (plus a website getting up to one million hits a month), publishes separate editions for Clallam and Jefferson counties. Check out the PDN at w w w. p e n i n s u l a d a i l y news.com and the beauty and recreational oppor tunities at http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/section/pdntabs#vizguide. In-person visit and tryout are required, so Washington/Northwest applicants given preference. Send cover letter, resume and five best writi n g a n d p h o t o g r a p hy clips to Leah Leach, managing editor/news, P.O. Box 1330, 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 9 8 3 6 2 , o r e m a i l leah.leach@peninsuladailynews.com.
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
has an immediate opening for a cook. PT Hourly 20-30 hours week. Includes weekdays and we e ke n d s t o p r e p a r e meals. Experience preferred, but will train the right person. Call Scott Tues-Fri for pre-screen phone inter view at (360)652-7575 ext 2270. Star ting pay $10 $10.30 DOE. Applicants must agree with our Christian ministry statem e n t . Wa r m B e a c h Camp is committed to a drug free workplace. Employment Transportation/Drivers
DRIVERS --Choose your hometime from Weekly, 7/ON-7/OFF, 14/ON-7 /OFF, Full or Part-time. Daily Pay! Top Equipment! Requires 3 months recent experience. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com
COURIER DRIVER Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for a Part-Time Courier Driver to deliver interoffice mail and small commercial jobs as needed. Position is 2-3 days per week and route is 150 or more miles per day. Must possess and maintain a valid WA St. D r i ve r ’s L i c e n s e a n d good driving record, be able to lift 50 lbs and load/unload deliveries. Must have knowledge of the Puget Sound area. M u s t p r ov i d e c u r r e n t copy of driving abstract a t t i m e o f i n t e r v i e w. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer and offers a competitive benefits package including paid vacation, h o l i d ay s a n d a gr e a t work environment. We recognize that the key to our success lies in the abilities, diversity and vision of our employees. Please email your resume and cover letter to
DRIVERS -- Inexper ienced/Experienced. Unbeatable career Opport u n i t i e s . Tr a i n e e . Company Driver. Lease Operator. Lease Trainers. Ask about our New Pay Scale! (877) 3697 1 0 5 w w w. c e n t ra l d r i vingjobs.net
Advertise your upcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area. Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com
PNWHomeFinder.com is an online real estate community that exposes your proďŹ le and listings to two million readers from hreast@soundpublishing.com our many publications or mail to Sound Publishing, Inc., in the PaciďŹ c Northwest. 19426 68th Ave S, Log on to join our Kent, WA 90832 network today. ATTN: HR/CD
Health Care Employment
General
INTERNATIONAL CULTURAL Exchange Representative: Earn supplemental income placing and supervising high school exchange students. Volunteer host families also needed. Promote world peace! www.afice.org/reps
Skagit Regional Health is currently seeking experienced Registered Nurses to join our team in our Cascade-Skagit Health Alliance ambulatory clinic, located in Arlington.
Walk-in Clinic/ Medical Practice For Sale.
We are seeking nurses for:
• • •
Business Opportunities
Turnkey business with huge potential for growth for one or more providers. Call 360-679-0380 and leave your contact number for further information, or email: officemanager@ isolainternalmedicine.com
Clinical Supervisor (RN) Consult & Triage RN - Urgent Care Consult & Triage RN - Internal Medicine
For more information about these positions, please visit the careers section of our website at:
THE RENTERS GUIDE To be included in this directory, contact 360.659.1300 to speak to a sales rep.
ASK US ABOUT STATE AVENUE PLAZA.
Large 1 BR Apartment above Whidbey Island Bank, Marysville. All appliances including full size Washer/Dryer. Water, Sewer, Garbage paid.
Windermere/RMI: Call for appointment:
360-653-4865 or 360-653-8065
614015
WARM BEACH CHRISTIAN CAMPS AND CONFERENCE CENTER
Employment Transportation/Drivers
559967
Employment Transportation/Drivers
Employment Restaurant
Schools & Training
ATTEND COLLEGE online from home. *Medical *Business *Criminal Justice. *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV cer tified. Call 8 6 6 - 4 8 3 - 4 4 2 9 . www.CenturaOnline.com
www.skagitvalleyhospital.org
Please apply online through our website, or email your resume to: careers@ skagitvalleyhospital.org
Find some sweet deals...
Whether your looking for cars, pets or anything in between, the sweetest place to find them is in the Classifieds.
Go online to nw-ads.com to find what you need.
CHILD CARE & SCHOOL DIRECTORY To be included in this directory call: 360-659-1300
Bethlehem Christian School
PRESCHOOL AND KINDERGARTEN
Name: Cheeto Animal ID: 16583096 Breed: Dom. Short Hair Calico Age: 11 years Gender: Female Color: Orange/White/Black Spayed/Neutered: Yes
TEACHING CHILDREN FOR 38 YEARS
NOW ENROLLING FOR 2012-2013 CERTIFIED TEACHERS . NEW FACILITIES Indoor/Outdoor play area
This is Cheeto. She came into the shelter because she doesn't get along with other cats and needs to be the only cat in her home! She loves to have her carpeted post! Mostly she just wants a comfortable place to sleep and relax. Do you think Cheeto is right for you?
615012
Kelly Stadum, Director . 360-653-2882 www.bethlehemlutheran.com
A Christian atmosphere with a positive influence on children’s growth
Chief, is a sweet guy, but he barks, so make sure he isn't close to neighbors to bug them! This guy is going to need a home with a fenced yard because he's active. Sheperds are confident, bold dogs, full of personality. They need exercise & leadership & are house dogs that need to be kept inside w/the family, as a Shepherd left alone, particularly if left alone outside, will suffer mentally & emotionally. They are sensitive to their owners-form strong bonds & are very loyal.
All animals adopted from EAS are neutered, microchipped, vaccinated, wormed and treated for fleas. All cats are tested for FIV/FeLV.
360-654-9819
NOW ENROLLING FOR 2012-13
See us and other pets at the
637152
601330
AM & PM Classes Available
www.smokeypointlutheranchurch.org email - preschool@SmokeyPointLutheranChurch.org
333 Smith Island Rd • Everett, WA 98205
425-257-6000
559952
NOTE: If the particular featured pet is not available, we have many great animals to choose from and you are sure to find the perfect pet for you.
601316
DO YOU HAVE A FIRST AID KIT FOR YOUR DOG? A well-stocked first aid kit for dogs includes:
601324
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A Stable Beginning Preschool
Sponsored By:
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559959
601306
601322
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590797
1424 172nd NE • Arlington
Name: Chief Animal ID: 16417019 Breed: German Shepherd/Mix Age: 6 Years Gender: Male Color: Dark Brown/Tan/Brown Spayed/Neutered: Yes
MARYSVILLE t 1340 State Avenue t 360-658-7817
13
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
Professional Services Legal Services
DIVORCE $135. $165 with children. No court appearances. Complete p r e p a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s custody, support, proper ty division and bills. B B B m e m b e r . (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalter natives.com divorce@usa.com
PNWHomeFinder.com is an online real estate community that exposes your profile and listings to two million readers from our many publications in the Pacific Northwest. Log on to join our network today.
Home Services Hauling & Cleanup
Home Services
House/Cleaning Service
FREE
Let Our Attention To Detail Make Your Life Easier 20% Senior Discount Respected & Trusted Local Ref. Avail!!
DROP-OFF & Pick-Up’s: Appliances, Scrap Farm Equipment, ALL Kinds of Metal 425-314-9417 Think Inside the Box Advertise in your local community newspaper and on the web with just one phone call. Call 800-388-2527 for more information.
206.683.6064
Gladly Serving Snohomish County TLC Home Cleaning Services Home Services Landscape Services
Fine Gardening and Landscape Design With Gil Schieber, Plantsman Borealis Landscape
& Design
borealislandscapedesign.com
206-679-6576
Auctions/ Estate Sales
Home Services Lawn/Garden Service
Cemetery Plots
RECEIVER’S AUCTION Case#09-2-00438-9 www.PotholesGolfAuction.com 7/27/12 Selling to Highest Bidder; 255ac PUD w/permits; Othello, WA (near Moses Lake) Coast/Sperry Van Ness, local contact Dave Smith 206-276-2169
(2) ADJACENT Cemetary Plots sold individually or separately, located in Historic Washington Memorial Park, SeaTac. “Garden of Light” with Mountain Views, Airport Views, also near Veterans Memorial site. Immaculate Grounds. Perpetual Endowment Care Cemetery Plots and Transfer Fee includCEDAR LAWNS Memo- e d . $ 3 , 1 0 0 e a c h o r rial Park in Redmond. 1 $6,000 for both. 425plot available. Choice lo- 358-0155 cation in the Garden of Resurrection, near the EVERGREEN - WASHf r o n t g a t e. Va l u e d a t ELLI Cemetery, on Auro$5,000. Asking: $3,000. ra Avenue in Seattle. 2 p l o t s a va i l a b l e , w i t h (360)678-6764 head stones, in the sold Need to sell some out Pacific Lutheran furniture? Call Section 5. $5,000 each or best offer. 206-248800-388-2527 to 2330 place your ad today.
Gaona’s Lawncare Experienced with Tree Pruning, All Phases of Yard Work & Clean Up!
360-421-4371 425-238-5377 Home Services Moving Services
PRO MOVERS
“We Are The Best” Call Today! Free Estimates No Extra Charge For Long Walks & Stairs
360-659-8022 425-533-6095
Cemetery Plots
614263
L
Take 5 Special
H
A N D S C A P I N G
Commercial/Residential Licensed/Bonded/Insured
Lic. # JDKLA**983LEV
G&D
SPRING CLEANUP
SOD, RESEED, WEEDING, MOWING, PRUNING, HEDGE TRIM, BARK, THATCHING, ROTOTILLING, RETAINING WALL, PAVER INSTALLATION, SIDEWALKS, DRIVEWAYS, FENCES, PRESSURE WASHING & GUTTER CLEANING
FREE ESTIMATES
FAMILY OWNED 21+ YEARS
360-659-4727 425-346-6413 Lic. #GDLANC927MG
Advertise your Vehicle, Boat, RV, Camper or Motorcycle
A W D U S T
Landscaping
Licensed • Bonded • Insured
Runs in ALL the Sound Classified papers
S
614257
L
and all other landscaping needs 1-Time or Year Round Service
Please Call 360-659-6735 425-232-2662
614259
Check Us Out!
Free Estimates Mowing • Sod • Edge Fertilizing • Pruning Trimming • Weeding Aeration • Thatching Bark • Seed • Haul Retaining Walls
t5 Lines t5 Weeks
& S
H A V I N G S
To be included in this directory, contact 360.659.1300 to speak to a sales rep.
Call us today at
800-388-2527 email:
classified@ soundpublishing.com 559957
✔ Us Out!!
A N D Y M A N
614241
614248
A N D S C A P I N G
A N D S C A P I N G
G E T H S E M A N E CATHOLIC Cemetery in Federal Way: One Double grave with all services. Includes 1 double depth lawn crypt box, 2 inter nments, granite headstone with final inscriptions. An ideal buria l s i t e fo r t wo fa m i l y members. Valued services, care, upkeep, headstone, inscription and sites priced by Gethsemane at $8,766. Will sell for $3,900 (less than half price). Call or e-mail Rodney at 206-6795111, dreams@seanet.com
614230
A N D Y M A N
O O F I N G
L
Sell it for FREE in the Super Flea! Call 866-825-9001 or email the Super Flea at theflea@ soundpublishing.com.
H
R
Cemetery Plots
ACACIA MEMORIAL Park and Funeral Home, 14951 Bothell Way NE, Seattle, 98155. Tandem C r y p t ( Tw o c a s k e t s lengthwise or two urns). Cr ypt located in Lake View Mausoleum. Current retail price is $12,698. For sale for $7,695. Will consider offers. Phone 206-364- ACACIA Memorial Park, 6769. Email: crypt@w- “Birch Garden”, (2) adjacent cemetery plots, #3 link.net & #4. Selling $4,000 SUNSET HILLS Memori- each or $7,500 both. Loal Park in Bellevue. 2 cated in Shoreline / N. C h o i c e S i d e by S i d e Seattle. Call or email Plots in The Garden of Emmons Johnson, 206Rest, Lot 83, Spaces 11 7 9 4 - 2 1 9 9 , and 12. $10,500 each. eaj3000@msn.com Contract Possible - Lets C E M E T E RY P L O T Ta l k ! C o n t a c t m e a t : Prestigious Greenwood hauser.kip@gmail.com Memorial Park in Renor 425-890-7780 ton. One plot available in beautiful Rhododendron section. Purchased in 1966 among Renton families and veterans. This section is filled, lock in price now! $3000. No fee for transfer. For more details, call Alice: 425-277-0855
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
614233
14
or on the web at:
www.nw-ads.com
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe Cemetery Plots
WASHINGTON MEMORIAL Park in Seatac. 1 plot in Section 20, Row K-3. Year round maintenance. Nice, peaceful s e t t i n g n e a r r o a d fo r easy access. Pr ice if purchased from Cemetery: $3,795. Asking $2,800. Call: 206-3269706 Free Items Recycler
FREE! Wood pallets for firewood or ? (Does not include 48x40 size)
Call Today!
425-355-0717 ext. 1560
Dogs
Dogs
AKC GOLDEN Retriever puppies. DOB 5/2/12. 6 males, 3 females. Range in colors & coat lengths. Pad trained. Love snuggling and the outdoors! Raised with young children. Both parents on s i t e. T h e s e p u p s w i l l make a great companion and/ or member of the family! Looking for loving families! $300. Buckley. 253-732-4265.
Newfoundland Puppies, 4 Females, 5 males, pare n t s o n s i t e . Ve r y H e a l t hy. P r i c e N e g o tiable. Call for Details (425)512-8029 or biscuitcity newfs.webs.com Tack, Feed & Supplies
AKC TINY YORKIE Pup- Fir Island Trucking Company p i e s b o r n M ay 1 5 th. E Shavings E Sawdust Wormed, docked tails & E Hog fuel dew claws removed. E Playground Chips Photos of parents viewed here. Only 3 1 Deliveries from 1 p u p p i e s l e f t ! O n e fe 45yds-125yds male. Two males. Born 360-659-6223 in a loving family home Fax (360)659-4383 C a l l fo r a p p o i n t m e n t . 425-238-7540 or 253- Sell it for FREE in the 380-4232. Super Flea! Call
866-825-9001 or email the Super Flea at theflea@ soundpublishing.com.
Ask for Karen Avis Home Furnishings
DOWNSIZING! All in excellent condition. 3 year old Kenmore side x side almond color refrig with ice/water in door. 6x9 all wool, hand knotted rug, blue back ground. 2 wo o d t r i m m e d u p h o l stered chairs with ottoman. Some accessories to match. By appointment. Priced to sell. Call ( 2 5 3 ) 8 7 4 - 7 4 0 7 Tw i n Lakes area.
Garage/Moving Sales Snohomish County Arlington
H U G E M U LT I Fa m i l y Sale! July 6th, 7th, 8th from 9am- 5pm. No early birds! Lots of “guy” stuff. Cleaning out shop and barn. Big variety. Childrens things, some collectibles, old bottles. 1/3 mile east of Bryant, 59th Ave N E . Fo l l o w bl u e signs.
Automobiles Lexus
2010 LEXUS RX450 AW D H y b r i d . 8 , 6 0 0 Miles. Price Reduced! $41,950. Original Owner! Automatic! Every Option Available! AC/Climate Control, ABS, Dual Side Air Bags, Cruise Control, Sunroof, Overhead Luggage Rack, Xfiniti Stereo Sound Syst e m w i t h 6 D i s c C D, Navigation System, Dual Back-Up Cameras, Anti Theft. Aluminum/Alloy Wheels, Remote Keyless Entry, Dual Control Heated Seats, Power : Windows, Doors, Locks. Garage Kept and Smoke Fr e e. 2 5 3 - 2 3 5 - 5 4 7 8 Federal Way
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Attention Advertisers
COMING SOON Fall Special Sections
Automobiles Mitsubishi
1993 MITSUBISHI Expo 5 speed, 7 Passenger, 1 Owner. 101,000 miles. Air conditioned. Good Condition. $2,700 OBO. 425-374-3203 (Everett) Automobiles Nissan
2 0 0 5 N i s s a n A LT I M A 3.5 SE. 5speed A/T w/Gated Shifter. 250HP 6-cylinder Engine. Only 9435 miles as of this posting! I am the original owner of this car. No dents, dings or chipped glass. This car is like new. After market leather interior, Chrome rims, tinted glass, K&N air filt e r, R ave l c o s e c u r i t y system. This car is not junk! If you want a perfect, low mile, good-looking reliable car, this is the one. Asking $18,500. (425)432-3618
BEAUTIFUL AKC English Cream Golden Retriever Puppies. Have had 1st shots and health c h e ck u p. T h ey h ave been raised in the beautiful country, are well socialized, and are good with little children. Parents temperaments are Vans & Mini Vans calm, loving, and smart. Ford Miscellaneous Marine Price $800. For more inPower formation: 360-520-9196 SAWMILLS from only $3997.00 -- Make Mon- or www.mountainsprings e y / S a v e M o n e y w i t h kennel.weebly.com your own bandmill -- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to shift. FREE info/DVD: 2010 FORD TRANSIT ABSOLUTELY Beautiful C o n n e c t X LT Wa g o n . w w w. N o r t h w o o d S a w 1978 Tollycraft 30’ Fly Perfect for familes and/ mill.com 1-800-578-1363 Bridge Sedan. Moored o r l a r g e h o u s e h o l d s, Ext 300N u n d e r c o ve r i n L a k e s e a t s u p t o 7 ! O n l y Wa s h i n g t o n a l m o s t 28,000 miles, power Wanted/Trade since new. Professional- everything, DVD player ly maintained. Recent & G P S w i t h b a ck u p WANTED: RADIO Tu b e s , H a m R a d i o , B I C H O N F R I S E p u p - Carpet and upholstery. camera. Dealership serPhone Equipment, Large pies. AKC Registered. Wonderful family boat. viced with records! Also, Speakers. Cash Paid! Ta k i n g d e p o s i t s . Fo r Twin Mercruiser 350’s. under warranty! $22,990 companion only! Will be Excellent electronics and obo. Visit www.thing.im 503-999-2157 vet checked and have s a fe t y s y s t e m s . N ew for more pictures & inforfirst shots and be de- 1200w Inverter. Includes mation. Call Alina 425Dogs wormed. Call for infor- 8 f t L i v i n g s t o n d i n g hy 443-5209. Sammamish. mation: 360-874-7771, with 3 HP electric motor. 2 360-621-8096 or go to P r e t t i e s t 3 0 ’ To l l y Auto Service/Parts/ w e b s i t e t o s e e o u r around. Additional phoAccessories adorable puppies! tos and maintenance www.bichonfrise 1964 ½ - 1973 records available. Only puppies4sale.com $29,500. Bellevue, MeyMUSTANG PARTS d e n b a u e r B a y Ya c h t Large Inventory G E R M A N S H E PA R D Club. Call Bob at 425Guaranteed Lowest Price P U P P I E S ! A K C S t a n - Puppies, only 5 left! Par- 746-9988. dard Poodle & F1b Gold- ents on premises. Bred RICK’S endoodle! Gorgeous Ap- for Family and ProtecPONY PARTS tion. Bor n on Mothers ricot/ Creme male 6 month old Standard Poo- D ay, R e a d y Ju l y 1 s t . 360-435-9323 dle pup: docile, intelli- F i r s t s h o t s i n c l u d e d . gent, cat-friendly. Will be 4 2 5 - 9 2 3 - 8 2 3 0 Ta k i n g Motorcycles 60 pounds, has all shots Reservations Now. Lo- ULTRA PRISTINE 2003 (4 year health guaran- cated at Arlington Dog- 56’ Meridian 580 Pilot- 2005 HARLEY DAVIDtee). Also, Black male gie Day Care. house Motoryacht. Me- S O N D e l u x e . B l a c k F1b Goldendoodle: has dogsplay@arlingtondog- t i c u l o u s l y m a i n t a i n e d C h e r r y c o l o r, l o t s o f giedaycare.info classic teddy bear head, and moored in freshwa- chrome. 8,000 original will be 60-70 pounds, ter since new! Only 723 m i l e s . M u s t s e l l ! GREAT DANE and will have Vet check h o u r s ; t w i n 6 3 5 H P $11,000. (206)972-8814 with first shots & Cummins. Includes 1800 wormed. Both are allerGPD, watermaker, furMotorhomes gy-fr iendly, low shednace, 14’ Avon dinghy ding! $975 ea. with 50 HP Yamaha, full 31’ FOUR WINDS 5000, www.vashonisland electronics! Too many goldendoodles.shutter o p t i o n s t o l i s t ! O n l y 1993. 68,000 or iginal fly.com/ $598,000. Mercer Island. miles. Fully self contained. New brakes, new allison@dancingleaves. Call Dale 503-519-4235. t i r e s, n ew c a r p e t i n g . com A K C G R E AT D A N E $10,000. 253-862-4824 Automobiles AKC GOLDEN Retriever Puppies. Now offering Chrysler Take 5 special puppies! (2) light golden Full-Euro’s, Half-Euro’s color. (4) medium golden & S t a n d a r d G r e a t 2008 CHRYSLER Se5 Lines color. Males $650. Fe- D a n e s . M a l e s & f e - bring Touring Hardtop 5 Weeks males $700. Pedigree males. Every color but Convertible. Black, 6 cyl- Advertise your vehicle, p r ov i d e d . Pa r e n t s o n F a w n s , $ 5 0 0 & u p . inder, Automatic Transboat, RV, camper or site. Born April 23rd. Ab- Health guarantee. Li- mission, Air Conditionmotorcycle in the solutely adorable! Great c e n s e d s i n c e 2 0 0 2 . ing, Power Equipment, Classifieds for children and hunting! Dreyersdanes is Oregon AM/FM/XM/CD. 25,000 Shots & dewormed. Call state’s largest breeder of miles. Excellent CondiCall 800-388-2527 to tion. Includes MainteW i l l i a m o r Ta t i a n a a t Great Danes. Also; sellspeak with your 360-642-1198, 901-438- ing Standard Poodles. nance Contract. Always customer representative Garaged. $15,500. Call: 4051 or 901-485-2478. www.dreyersdanes.com or go online to 253-237-5018 Long Beach, WA. Call 503-556-4190. www.nw-ads.com 24 hours a day.
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www.bichonfrisepuppies4sale.com
vashonislandgoldendoodles.shutterfly.com/
allison@dancingleaves.com/
Seasonal Posters 11x17
July 4, 2012
The Arlington Times • The Marysville Globe
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