Valley Record SNOQUALMIE
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SCHOOLS
High schoolers try on ‘beer goggles,’ texting while driving Page 2
SPORTS
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MVP, end of the year awards for Mount Si boys soccer team Page 7
Index Opinion 4 5 Letters 9 Puzzles Classifieds 10-14 On The Scanner 15 Calendar 16
Vol. 100, No. 1
More buses on the way
Moment of honor Carnation Post puts spotlight on Vietnam-era veterans Sunday Veterans are the focus, but everyone, especially families with children, are invited to an old-fashioned community celebration of military men and women this Sunday. The tribute, complete with food and drink, displays of old military weapons and vehicles, and flag ceremonies, runs from 2 to 5:30 p.m., Sunday, June 2 at Carnation’s American Legion Hall. “We want to honor those who served between 1955 and 1974,” said event organizer and Post 199 first vice-commander Marty Schencke, adding that those years “correspond to the Vietnam era… the next group is post-Vietnam, Cold War, up to about ‘95 and Desert Storm.” Schencke and the post have, over thepasttwoyears,heldperiodicevents to honor veterans of a specific era.
Balancing act, changes coming to Valley’s transit service By Carol Ladwig Staff Reporter
Metro is revamping bus service in the Snoqualmie Valley again, and regular riders have braced themselves for more bad news, more routes to be cut due to low ridership. They can relax, says Amy Biggs, future executive director of Snoqualmie Valley Transportation, because this round of changes will actually bring more service to most of the Valley. Metro Transit “listened to every single rider on Amy Biggs the buses Snoqualmie Valley here… and they actually Transportation doubled the number of routes!” Biggs said. “What they’re doing is amazing, and I think everybody should know about it!” It’s true that the biggest change is a cut, but it’s a cut with a replacement service. The Route 224 bus makes its last run between Snoqualmie and Duvall on Sept. 27, but the next day, when Metro’s five-year plan for alternative services in the Snoqualmie Valley starts, the little white SVT buses will be on the 224 route. See BUSES, 6
See VETeranS, 3
Seth Truscott/Staff Photo
Holding a big 35-mm reel from the theater archives, Cindy Walker has known for years that the day of digital movies was coming. Today, Walker, owner of North Bend Theatre, is ready to take a fateful step. The theater is going digital with help from a crowdfunding drive this summer.
Saving the theater With help from the crowd, North Bend Theater is going digital By Seth Truscott Editor
Cindy Walker refers to it as “the fun stuff.” It’s the prom date requests on the
marquee. It’s the weeklong ski film festivals, student film nights, the benefits for everyone from Relay for Life to the Mount Si wrestling team. There are countless ways for a small movie house to make a difference, and “I get to choose” what to do, says Walker. See SAVING, 8
William Shaw/Staff Photo
Marty Schencke, leading the color guard in the Carnation 4th of July parade, is organizing a celebration of Vietnam-era veterans on June 2.
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Cereal vendor climbing Mount Si
Youthful plea
Hikers on Mount Si may come home Saturday with a snack they didn’t pack. On June 1, the Grape-Nuts cereal company is sending a hiker up Mount Si with a load of Grape-Nuts Fit. James Kurseman of Seattle will distribute the cereal to other hikers on the mountain; Kurseman is a northwest outdoor enthusiast and blogs at hikingnorthwest.com. His climb is part of a promotion by Grape-Nuts to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Sir Edmund Hillary’s 1953 summit of Mount Everest. Hillary packed the cereal on his trek.
Carol Ladwig/Staff Photos
Highway patrolman J.P. McAuliffe cringes as Hank VanLiew crushes traffic cones while driving under the influence of vision-impairing goggles for a Think and Drive assembly at Mount Si High School.
Lessons in impaired driving By Carol Ladwig Staff Reporter
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It’s not just about you. That message, delivered as part of “Think and Drive” week at Mount Si High School was clear, even through the comedy of an impaired driver demonstration on the football field. Students in the bleachers laughed as their classmates and a teacher tried to drive a golf cart through a cone-marked course on the field while texting on their phones or wearing vision-impairing goggles Thursday, May 16. They also couldn’t help noticing another group of students lined up on the field, and quietly sitting down, one for each cone the drivers hit during their trials. “We’re the victims,” explained Payton Schmidt, number four in the lineup. Before the event started, she expected she’d be sitting early and often, “because there’s a lot of cones and (they’re) going to be wearing drunk goggles.” At the far end of the line, at about numbers 39 and 40, William Richards and Charles Dixon were more optimistic about their chances. “We are good to go,” said Richards, and Dixon added, “I think there are actually more of us than cones!” Seniors Hank VanLiew and Amanda Smith were selected to drive the course as part of the annual Think and Drive assembly presented by the Washington State Patrol, Snoqualmie Police Department and Mount Si High School Associated Student Body (ASB). Each of them drove the 45-second course once with no
Every Mount Si High School senior has been personally asked, by letter, to celebrate the end of high school safely. The letters, by fifth grade students throughout the district, asked the older students to not drink and drive, and to not ride with anyone who’d been drinking. It’s an annual tradition at Mount Si, and one that has enthusiastic support from the ASB members. This year a group of about 10 students read through more than 500 letters to choose the best one from each school for a special end-of-year honor, a day of limo rides and games for the writer. Blake Herman, Student Relations Committee, said plenty of people help with the judging, although it’s a lot of work. “The letters are very creative, and very colorful,” he said. “Some of the kids spent a lot of time on them, wrote a lot of pages, added glitter, and so on.” Some of them also tug at the heart, he admitted, with personal stories of how drunk driving has affected them.
Amanda Smith laughs as she tries to negotiate a turn while responding to text messages on her phone. distractions, then receiving and responding to text messages, and finally, wearing “beer goggles” to simulate intoxication. Teacher Jean Jacques Tetu also drove. There was little variation in their performances. VanLiew got off to a rocky start on the texting run because he had extra distractions to start. “Everybody’s texting me!” he said. Smith drove confidently during the text run, making Trooper Julie Judson speculate “I think she’s done this before!” Each driver crushed more cones with every pass, and surprisingly, each picked up speed on their last run, wearing the beer goggles. “That’s because alcohol lowers your inhibitions,” explained announcer Courtney Popp, a traffic safety resource prosecutor with the Highway Patrol, and member of the national board of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. “They think they’re doing better!” They really weren’t. The football players who volunteered for a relay race wearing the beer goggles, after the driving demonstration didn’t do very well,
either. They definitely had the speed, but came up short on both accuracy of hand-offs, and staying vertical after they were done running. Peyton McCulley, called down from the bleachers for a surprise appearance in the trials had a double handicap, wearing the strongest goggles, (simulating a .17 blood alcohol) and simultaneously texting. It was all fun and funny, but the message was never missing: Don’t try this. “This is game time,” explained ASB advisor Charlie Kinnune, “It’s all about being focused and trying to put on a good show.” For the show-stopper, Rachel McNaul, a Mount Si graduate and now substitute teacher, spoke about her experience as a victim of a drunk-driving crash. In December, 2010, McNaul was hit head-on by a drunk driver, both cars traveling at 70 miles per hour. Few people thought she’d survive the accident, let alone start her career as a physical education teacher — she’d just graduated from college. “Two broken arms, two broken legs, I could do
Rachel McNaul, victim of a drunk-driving crash three years ago, asks students to make good choices. nothing,” she said. “I was just like a newborn baby.” McNaul remembers waking up in the hospital. Her first question was “What happened?” Her second, “Was it my fault?” Thankful that she doesn’t remember the accident, McNaul has also been able to see something positive in it. Everything happens for a reason, she says, and it could be that she, as a teacher, was meant to share her story with teenagers, like she did at Mount Si, and through a documentary that students made about her, available at (http://mshswildcattv.weebly.com/thinkand-drive.html). “I almost died,” she told the students. “It was really intense for my friends and family. You don’t want to put anyone through that, so make good choices.”
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • May 29, 2013 • 3
VETERANS FROM 1
New day, new era for memorial bike rodeo
Veterans of World War II, which drafted more than 10 million soldiers into service between 1940 and 1946, were recognized previously, and Korean War (1950-53) veterans were honored in a similar celebration last October. Sunday’s event is also Schencke’s day, since he served during the Vietnam era, but he’s reticent about his own service. “I started in ‘74, but that doesn’t really count,” he says. “I was in training, I didn’t really do anything in ‘74.” Schencke says his inspiration for the event came from the heroes in uniform he sees every day, including soldiers, police and firefighters. Hero worship these days often goes more to actors or sports figures, he said, and “They’re not heroes. Heroes are the people who put their lives on the line for their country, for their community.” He hopes lots of children will come to the event, he says, to see real heroes. “I want the young people to see that, to see their neighbors and know that these are the guys who made the sacrifice.” The event is open to all veterans, of all eras, and from all over the area, not just Carnation. Regardless of how many people come, Schencke is making sure they have a memorable event to enjoy. “Each time that we do it, we learn more about how to throw an event like this,” he said. So this year’s event will include five bands performing live music throughout the day, a display of (unloaded) firearms from that era, and, he hopes, a large display of refurbished military vehicles from area collectors. There could be a tank, he said, or maybe a howitzer on a track, but “I hesitate to promise anything because these things break down!” Photographer Shaun McWhinney will take group portraits throughout the day, and the event begins at 2 with a reception, followed at 2:30 by comments from Carnation Mayor Jim Berger, Duvall Mayor Will Ibershof, and a presentation by a Tolt Middle School student. The only other items on the schedule are a flag lowering and folding ceremony, and a flag retirement ceremony, both conducted by local Boy Scouts. “It’s an ebb-and-flow thing,” Schencke said. Guests can come and go as they like. “The main thing is we just want to honor the veterans, thank them for a job well done, show them America loves them … and acknowledge for the young people, these people are the true heroes.” Parking on site will be extremely limited, since the military vehicles will be on display outside. Some motorcycle parking is provided across Bird Street at Hopelink, but for most people planning to attend, Schencke strongly encourages parking across Tolt Avenue at the Sno Valley Senior Center. A shuttle van will take guests to and from the Legion Hall, to ensure their safety crossing the highway, and to free up parking at the Hall. For more information,visit martysmusic4u.net.
Children’s safety party returns, Foundation more low-key
Zach Hartman, 4, of Fall City, gets a lesson in stop signs from police officer Michel Bos during the Tanner Jeans Bike Safety Rodeo last June. The rodeo returns June 1.
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The ninth Bike Safety Rodeo in memory of Snoqualmie boy Tanner Jeans is back this weekend. The rodeo, hosted by Snoqualmie Police, is 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 1, at Snoqualmie Ridge Community Park. The event starts with a children’s parade at 10:45 a.m., starting from the park. The safety rodeo is the highlight of a more low-key year for the Tanner Jeans Memorial Foundation, which formed a decade ago as a reaction to the accidental death of Tanner Jeans, 7, of Snoqualmie. With the departure of founder Laurie Gibbs and her husband Max in 2012, the nonprofit foundation is not actively fundraising this year. “Laurie and Max are definitely irreplaceable,” said Christen Jeans, Tanner’s mother, and treasurer for the six-person foundation board. It was a decade ago when Tanner was killed in a bicycle accident in Snoqualmie. As the then-small community gathered at the scene on June 23, 2003, someone suggested raising funds for a memorial park bench. That effort grew into one of the largest children’s safety events in the state. Former executive director Laurie Gibbs started the foundation after she received $15,000 in donations for Tanner’s memorial within two months. The Gibbs family moved to Virginia last year. “They did so much for the foundation,” Christen Jeans said. “It’s been challenging with them gone.” The foundation has three simple goals: Increasing safety awareness among local youth; Boosting healthy lifestyle via sports; and promoting education. Tanner’s cause raised thousands of dollars to put on the annual bike safety rodeo, offer elite-sports program scholarships to Valley athletes, donate to educational programs in Snoqualmie Valley Schools, and, in one of its first acts, establish two full scholarships to the University of Washington for one boy and one girl from what would have been Tanner’s graduating class, the class of 2015. Tanner would have been 16 this year. The foundation is still on track to award scholarships, and will select the recipients in future, Jeans said. Meanwhile, the foundation continues to support the annual rodeo. Snoqualmie Police and the Snoqualmie Emergency Workers Association are organizing the event, with financial support from the foundation.
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Valley Record SNOQUALMIE
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C reative Design Wendy Fried wfried@valleyrecord.com Advertising David Hamilton Account dhamilton@valleyrecord.com Executive Circulation/ Patricia Hase Distribution circulation@valleyrecord.com Mail PO Box 300, Snoqualmie, WA 98065 Phone 425.888.2311 Fax 425.888.2427 www.valleyrecord.com Classified Advertising: 800.388.2527 Subscriptions: $29.95 per year in King County, $35 per year elsewhere Circulation: 1.888.838.3000 Deadlines: Advertising and news, 11 a.m. Fridays; Photo op/coverage requests in advance, please. The Snoqualmie Valley Record is the legal newspaper for the cities of Snoqualmie, North Bend and Carnation. Written permission from the publisher is required for reproduction of any part of this publication. Letters, columns and guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views of the Snoqualmie Record.
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Bonds and portables: Food for thought
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hen it comes to portable classrooms, the numbers get really interesting. Snoqualmie Valley Schools are home to 59 of the mobile classrooms. They hold two school building’s worth of students. Elementary schools alone account for 31 portables. Today, Valley schools have between a fifth to a quarter of classroom capacity in portables. Since older students change classrooms several times a day, that means a lot of kids walk into a mobile classroom at least once a day. The last school bond the Upper Valley passed was 10 years ago. The $53 million bond built Twin Falls Middle School. That school opened its doors in 2008. The only construction measure that Valley voters passed in the decade since was for portables—a $27 million measure in 2009 that was focused on tearing Seth Truscott up the old tennis courts and oaks Valley Record at Mount Si and adding a block of portables, accessible by a metal Editor deck and ramp. When the Twin Falls bond passed back in 2003, the city of Snoqualmie’s population was around 4,800 people, less than half of today. North Bend’s population was about the same, 4,600. Property values have since peaked, in 2009, then fallen. The Snoqualmie district actually reduced its taxes at the crest of the recession, one of two school systems to do so in King County. With the change in education facilities in this district, more portables are coming. The district ordered seven units, 14 classrooms in all, this winter, and they’re being installed as we speak. What’s interesting is that teachers and students don’t seem to mind using them. After all, more classrooms are better than none, so these structures aren’t perceived all that poorly. That seems to mesh with the district staff ’s finding that the mere use of portables do not appear to impact learning. But, big picture-wise, portables are a bandage—a way to bridge the gap between increased enrollment and real brick-and-mortar buildings. They don’t solve underlying issues—too many kids, not enough school buildings, cafeterias, commons, libraries, and other core areas. How many more years must elapse before Valley voters can unite behind a bond that puts Valley students in new, ‘real’ classrooms? Ones that don’t come on wheels.
Are you planning to travel more this year, or cut back?
Past This week in Valley history
Thursday, May 26, 1988
“About the same. We go boating, and the gas is expensive, but we still do it. We do it every year.” Mark Davis Snoqualmie
“This summer, we have family coming to us! We like to travel in the offseason, but when it’s summer here, there’s nothing prettier, and we’d just as soon stay here.” Dana Conaway Snoqualmie
Mary Miller’s secret shapes
I
t was not at all surprising to see Mary Miller form the group at her recent “Heart of the Valley” photo session into a giant peace sign. After all, Mary’s style is all about a laid-back love of all things Snoqualmie Valley. As I approached the crowd on the field, it was clear this this May 19 event was bigger than Mary’s first venture in 2012, despite the iffy weather. Everybody had their own reasons to come—for memories, for scrapbooks, just to be part of a community gathering. Everybody left with a sense of sastisfaction and belonging. Bad things can happen in any community. Good times come and go, too. Some things stay the same. Community spirit is always around in every generation. Mary Miller’s giant community hug proves it.
Out of the
“We go to the coast every month, but we stay here in the summer. We love it here, we love our Valley!” Keith and Sadie Dolge Snoqualmie
“We’d love to take a trip or two this summer, but at this point, we’re not planning on anything.” Mary Wilkison Snoqualmie
• A major section of the Snoqualmie River is classified as an “impaired water body” in a new report on pollution by the state Department of Ecology. The inventory of 135 impaired river segments includes a 19.5 mile stretch of the main stem Snoqualmie, from the junction with the Tolt River at Carnation to the junction with the South Fork Snoqualmie east of Snoqualmie.
Thursday, May 30, 1963 • Chief Melvin A. Wicks of the North Bend Police Department escaped injury in an accident which culminated a lengthy pursuit of another vehicle at 4:30 a.m., May 22. Chief Wicks said he pursued Harley H. Stoner of North Bend, driving east on PSH No. 2 at excessive speeds and followed the Stoner vehicle when it turned into the Lake Keechelus Dam Road. During the chase, Wicks said the Stoner car sideswiped his care several times, running him into the ditch at one point.
Battle of Ages at Mount Si Fans of quiz shows like "Jeopardy," take note: Mount Si High School's Knowledge Bowl team takes part Thursday, May 30, in the "Battle of the Ages." The student team goes up against three Advanced Placement teachers and an Honors teacher at 2:30 p.m. at the high school; tickets are $2.
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Every minute, there are a million single-use plastic bags used in the United States. This is a staggering and alarming statistic, especially considering that many of these bags end up in the landfill or, even worse, in the bellies of whales or turtles or around sea birds’ necks. Just last year, a gray whale in Puget Sound was found dead with 20 plastic bags in its stomach. This animal was very lethargic many days before it washed ashore and may have been starving to death because of intestinal blockage from plastic. As a marine mammal biologist and environmental educator, I have had the great fortune to visit some very remote places in our world. We think of these places as untouched and pristine, but many are littered with huge amounts of plastic debris. We now have a great big swirling patch of garbage in our ocean that may be equivalent to the size of the United States. Unfortunately, when an animal is caught in plastic, biologists and observers may only see it once and without a great amount of effort and money, there is little we can do to save the animal. Eliminating plastic bags is a healthy step in the right direction for our health and the planet’s. The conveniences of keeping plastic bags are far outweighed by the detrimental effects of them. As with everything, a step in the right direction requires thinking out of the box and a grander vision! Issaquah, Port Townsend, Bellingham, Seattle, and
Edmonds all have plastic bag bans in effect. At least 20 nations and 88 local governments have passed some legislation to keep bags out of our environment. It is time for North Bend to get on the bandwagon. Yet, we need your help in gathering support. The city council must be progressive and pass legislation in order for a ban to go into effect. Because of the number of corporate stores in North Bend, addressing a ban store by store (having them voluntarily stop using plastic bags) is not practical. Local and state legislation is necessary The Snoqualmie Valley Record welcomes letters and will have an effect far to the editor. Letters should be 250 words or beyond the local level. fewer, signed and include a city of residence Without local businessand a daytime phone number for verification. The Record reserves the right to edit letters for es and citizen support, we length, content and potentially libelous material. cannot show our council Letters should be addressed to: how important it is to our Letters to the Editor community to be leaders The Snoqualmie Valley Record PO Box 300, Snoqualmie, WA 98270 and progressive thinkers. or email to editor@valleyrecord.com We are gathering sigOpinions expressed are those of the author and natures to support the do not necessarily reflect the position of the ban now. If you would Snoqualmie Valley Record. like to sign, please e-mail sahawks@uw.edu. In the subject line, please state, “I support the plastic bag ban.” Please include your name, address (must be a North Bend resident) and number in the body of the e-mail. If you would like to get involved with the group at any level, please join us at our next meeting, 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, June 1, at 14824 439th Place S.E., North Bend.
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • May 29, 2013 • 5
Publication Date: June 19, 2013
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Too often, volunteer efforts of engaged Valley citizens remain unseen or forgotten. Snoqualmie Valley Community Network’s upcoming Rise and Shine Breakfast is an occasion to recognize the generosity of many eligible volunteers. On Tuesday, June 4, more than 25 Rise & Shine Awards will be given out to individuals and groups of volunteers during a celebration of their efforts, starting at 7 a.m. at the Sno-Valley Senior Center in Carnation. All are welcome to attend. Awardees were nominated by close acquaintances such as friends, families, colleagues, and neighbors. A Snoqualmie Valley Community Network Board committee selected final recipients. Guests get a free breakfast prepared by Culinary Arts students. A suggested donation of $5 per breakfast goes to scholarships. To register, visit www.riseandshinebreakfast2013.eventbrite.com.
PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE #792991 CITY OF NORTH BEND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CANCELLATION AND ADDITIONAL SCHEDULED PUBLIC HEARINGS Proposal: Amendments to NBMC 18.10.030 and 18.10.025 concerning tattoo parlors and piercing studios as permitted uses in certain zoning districts, and amendments to NBMC 18.10.050 concerning home occupation uses Description of Proposal: Amendments are proposed to NBMC 18.10.030 (Table of Permitted Uses) and 18.10.025 (Special Districts) revising the zoning districts in which tattoo parlors and piercing studios are a permitted use, including limitations within those districts of where the use may be permitted. Amendments are also proposed to NBMC 18.10.050 providing additional standards governing home occupation uses. The draft amendments are available on the City’s website under public notices. Hearing Cancellation: The public hearing originally scheduled on this proposal for the June 4 City Council Meeting at 7pm has been cancelled. New hearings on the proposal have been scheduled below. Public Hearing before the Planning Commission: On Thursday, June 13, 2013, 7pm at the City Hall Conference Room (211 Main Avenue N.), the Planning Commission will hold a public hearing to receive public comment on the amendments described above. Written comments to the Planning Commission may be accepted until 4:30pm, Thursday, June 13, or in person at the hearing. Email or deliver comments to the contact below. Public Hearing before the City Council: On Tuesday, June 18, 2013, 7pm at the North Bend Senior Center (411 Main Avenue S.), the City Council will hold a public hearing to receive public comment on the amendments described above. Written comments may be accepted until 4:30pm, Tuesday, June 18, or in person at the hearing. Email or deliver comments to the contact below. For More Information: Contact Gina Estep at the Community and Economic Development Department at (425) 888-7640 or via email to gestep@northbendwa.gov. Email or mail written comments to the North Bend Community and Economic Development Department, PO Box 896, North Bend, WA 98045. Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record on May 29, 2013.
PUBLIC NOTICE #793013 LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF NORTH BEND King County, Washington Notice is hereby given that the North Bend City Council at its May 21, 2013 City Council Meeting adopted the following Ordinances. The summary titles are as follows: Ordinance No. 1488 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, EXTENDING A FRANCHISE TO PUGET SOUND ENERGY, INC., TO SET, ERECT, CONSTRUCT, SUPPORT, ATTACH, CONNECT AND STRETCH FACILITIES BETWEEN, ALONG ACROSS AND THROUGH THE FRANCHISE AREA FOR THE PURPOSES OF TRANSMISSION, DISTRIBUTION AND SALE OF ELECTRIC ENERGY FOR POWER, HEAT, LIGHT AND ANY OTHER PURPOSE FOR WHICH ELECTRIC ENERGY CAN BE USED Ordinance No. 1489 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, ADOPTING FINDINGS OF FACT IN SUPPORT OF ORDINANCE NO. 1482, WHICH ESTABLISHED INTERIM ZONING REGULATIONS RELATING TO HOME OCCUPATION BUSINESS LICENSES; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; AND ESTABLISHING AN EFFECTIVE DATE Ordinance No. 1490 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF NORTH BEND, WASHINGTON, AMENDING THE CITY’S 2013 BUDGET AND SALARY SCHEDULE ORDINANCE NO. 1474; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; AND ESTABLISHING AN EFFECTIVE DATE The full text of the above Ordinances may be viewed on the web at http://northbendwa.gov, at the North Bend City Hall, 211 Main Ave., N. or to request a copy by mail please contact the City Clerk at (425) 888-7627. Posted: May 22, 2013 Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record: May 29, 2013.
To place a Legal Notice, please call 253-234-3506 or e-mail legals@ reporternewspapers. com
BUSES FROM 1 Snoqualmie Valley Transportation’s new route will be running up and down the Valley every 90 minutes. The new Intra-Valley Shuttle Service from SVT is a big part of Metro’s future plans, Metro supervisor Matt Hansen told the North Bend City Council at its May 7 meeting. Hansen was there to give an overview of Metro’s proposed changes, and to answer any questions. “We’re not actually proposing to reduce any services,” Hansen emphasized. Instead, Metro has committed to, and the King County Council on Monday, May 13, approved a five-year plan that will replace all or parts of three routes in the Valley with expanded service from Snoqualmie Valley Transportation, and add a new route with peak access from the North Bend Park and Ride, through Snoqualmie Ridge, to
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the Issaquah Transit Center. “From the standpoint of a North Bend citizen, the only thing that’s changing here is that if you still want mid-day access to Issaquah via Preston and North Bend, you have to go through the Snoqualmie Ridge,” Hansen said.
What’s planned The proposal, developed with feedback from more than 500 bus riders in the Valley and more than 14 community groups, calls for: • Contracting with SVT for Intra-Valley Shuttle service, with trips from North Bend to Duvall every 90 minutes from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. • Reducing outbound trips on Route 209 to three trips each morning and afternoon, and eliminating the Northwest 14th Street to Boalch Avenue Northwest to S.R. 202 loop. • Creating a Route 208 to provide service between North Bend and Issaquah via Snoqualmie and Snoqualmie Ridge middays, evenings and Saturdays. • Cutting the Snoqualmieto-Duvall portion of Route 224, but adding a loop through Redmond Ridge. • Cutting the Woodinville to Duvall portion of Route 311. Hansen said the cost of the shuttle service, fully subsidized by Metro, would be about $400,000, plus some startup costs this year. The service will also continue to operate under its demand-response, or diala-ride model within North
...obituaries Thomas Hamerly
Thomas William Hamerly, 56, died peacefully, surrounded by family and friends, on May 21, 2013. He was born in Nelems Memorial Hospital on June 1, 1956, raised in the Snoqualmie Valley and graduated from Mount Si High School in 1974. He was an avid sportsman and will always be remembered for his love of fishing and bird hunting. Tom and Karen, his lifetime partner, split their time between their homes in Loreto, Mexico and Quincy, Washington. Tom is survived by his beloved Karen Westerlund Kramer, his sons Dustin Hamerly and Michael D. Hamerly, granddaughter Isabella, his parents Dick and Gerene Holt, his sister Tracy Lockhart and several step brothers and step sisters. He was preceded in death by his father, Donald Hamerly and brother, Michael J. Hamerly. A graveside service will be held at the Fall City Cemetery on June 1, 2013 at 11:00 followed by a Celebration of Tom’s Life at 1950 W. Snoqualmie River Road, SE, Fall City. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the American Cancer Society. 793982
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Bend, Snoqualmie and Fall City, using its own buses and funding. A few councilmen asked pointed questions of Hansen following his presentation. David Cook asked approximately how much Metro funding, in terms of bus fares, property tax support, congestion reduction fees, and so on, came to Metro from North Bend citizens. Hansen said it was roughly $7 million, and that Metro provided the city with roughly $6 million worth of service hours. Ross Loudenback commented on how frustrating that was for the city. “We send in a lot,” he said, but service tends to get cut first in such smaller communities. “We do have concerns that we’re the first on the chopping block,” he added. Hansen assured him, “Metro will not eliminate last connections (between cities, transit centers and other areas of transportation activity), and the Intra-Valley Shuttle Network is a last connection.” In a follow-up phone call, Hansen told the Record, “We’re maintaining the last connection, because we can get you to Duvall, then to Redmond through the 224.”
Local opinion SVT is not the last, but the only connection that some of its riders have for transportation. Last fall, for instance, Cleo Krenzler said she had to give up driving after developing macular degeneration in both her eyes, so she was a regular bus rider, and one of many. “We move 36,000 people a year,” said Biggs, for everything from daily job commutes, to shopping, to socializing. “Without transportation, a lot of people end up losing everything.” When the service lost funding last fall and had to shrink, cutting out all trips to the Lower Valley, she said, they scrambled to find ways to keep offering the service. “These are such wonderful, caring people, it hurt them to tell someone ‘no, we can’t help you at that time,’” Biggs said. They raised fares — to $1 per trip — and required at WELCOME TO OUR LADY OF SORROWS CATHOLIC CHURCH
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Saturday 5pm • Sunday 8, 9:30 & 11am 39025 SE Alpha St. Snoqualmie, WA 98065 425-888-2974 • www.olos.org Rev. Roy Baroma, Pastor Mass at St. Anthony Church, Carnation. Sundays at 9:30am. Spanish Mass at 11am on the 1st Sunday 425-333-4930 • www.stanthony-carnation.org
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least three days notice for rides, so they could build schedules that kept the service running efficiently, if a little less conveniently for riders. Later, they added a fixed route from North Bend to Fall City, called “the loop,” to the service. The loop bus circulates through six regular stops and all three cities throughout the day, picking up riders from outlying areas and shuttling them on to their destinations. It also doesn’t require an appointment. “It’s nice because people know, if they’re at one of the stops, that within an hour, a bus will be there,” said Biggs. The regular stops include the Mount Si Senior Center in North Bend, the Snoqualmie Casino, Snoqualmie Coin Laundry, Sno-Falls Credit Union in Snoqualmie, the North Bend Library, and North Bend Safeway. The loop is an efficiency that has helped to keep the struggling service operating as it comes to the end of a two-year funding cycle. Starting July 1, SVT will begin a new season, supported by a two-year $700,000 grant from the state Department of Transportation (WSDOT), and will restore demand-response service to the lower Valley. The state funding is separate from the Metro contract that will begin in September, although the services will share the administrative staff and drivers. They might share equipment, too, since none of the Intra-Valley Shuttle buses Metro will provide will have ORCA card readers. All shuttle rides will be offered for a suggested donation of $1. Metro, like SVT, is always in need of additional funding, however. The new fiveyear plan will actually cost Metro more to implement in the coming year, Hansen said, but should result in savings of $40,000 or less in the following years. He also said the plan is not dependent on the outcome of any state legislature decisions regarding local funding options for transit systems. “We would be doing this anyway, whether we were getting more funding or not,” he said. For specific details on the proposed changes, visit http:// metro.kingcounty.gov/have-asay/projects/alternative-service/ snoqualmie-valley.html.
8:15 a.m. Traditional, 10:45 a.m. Praise Sunday School/Fellowship 9:30-10:30 a.m.
Please contact church offices for additional information
Dir., Family & Youth Ministry – Lauren Frerichs “Like” us on Facebook – Mt. Si Lutheran Youth
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Snoqualmie Valley Record • May 29, 2013 • 7
SNOQUALMIE Valley
Sports
Blake Herman commits to Wheaton College Blake Herman, a six-footone, 210-pound starting defensive end and offensive guard for the Wildcats last season, is on board for college play. Herman committed to play for Wheaton Thunder this Blake Herman coming fall. Wheaton College is a perennial Midwest Division-3 powerhouse known for their academics. Off the gridiron, Herman intends to concentrate on mathematics. He was one of two Mount Si nominees for the ScholarAthlete award by the National Football Foundation’s King County chapter this spring.
League pride Season’s over, but plenty of Kingco honors for Mount Si soccer
Photos by Calder Productions
Mount Si soccer players on the KingCo all-league teams; Top left, Alex Censullo, league MVP, and right, junior Aaron Baumgardner. Above, Kody Clearman, first-teamer. Below, second team goalie Hunter Malberg puts in the ball against Interlake.
Mount Si High School’s soccer team had plenty of honors on the Kingco 3A/2A all-league list. Senior Alex Censullo is conference most valuable player. Censullo, who made 13 goals and 11 assists in the season, was a powerhouse for the Wildcats with fellow first-team member Kody Clearman. A senior, Clearman racked up 12 goals and 13 assists. Also on first team was junior Aaron Baumgardner, who had five goals and four assists. Goalkeeper Hunter Malberg, a senior with two shut-outs this season, was named to the second team. Reid Howland (three goals in 2013), Connor Williams (one assist), Robin Casillas (three goals), and Colton Oord (one assist) all picked up honorable mentions. The Wildcats ended their postseason bid on May 7, falling 1-0 to Bellevue. They had a 11-5-1 record this spring.
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Trophy for RidgeValley’s U-12 team The Ridge Valley VBC U12 team won the Puget Sound Regional Volleyball Championship in the U12 Silver Championship Bracket on Sunday, April 28. Pictured from left are Lauren Spencer, Sedona Turner, Kami Smith, Riley Wilkins, Grace Madsen, Rose Pliego, Coach Cristin Richards, Renee DePencier, Bellah Gogan, Annalise Jensen, Sydney DeRouren. Not pictured: Harper Click.
Get ready for Fall City Days Fun Run The 24th Annual Fall City Days Fun Run is Saturday, June 15. The event includes a 10-kilometer, 5-kilometer and a one-kilometer Kids Run. The 10k and 5K courses are USATF certified and sanctioned. The courses are flat and fast through country settings. Register or learn more at fallcity.org/run.html.
Holes in one at local courses Mei-Miao Su Chang hit a hole-in-one on Sunday, May 5, at the Cascade Golf Course in North Bend. She used a driver on the 125yard sixth hole. Steve Funk got a hole in one on Tuesday, May 15, at the TPC Snoqualmie Ridge 17th hole, a 175-yard shot.
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Learning soccer the Wildcat way means taking on the game in a way that’s captivating and fun. Teaching that method, fourday 2013 Wildcat Attack camps return starting June 18, for boys and girls ages 5 to 13. Cost is $95, with a price break for additional family members. Sessions focus on beginning and advanced technical and tactical aspects. Players will be challenged to improve the skills needed to compete at the higher levels of youth soccer. Current Mount Si players and former Wildcats now playing at college will demonstrate the game. Mount Si head coach Darren Brown leads the camp. Learn more about the camps or register at www.wildcatattackcamps.com.
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Funk, of Snoqualmie, almost eagled the next hole, a par-five. His approach shot stopped within a foot of the hole and he tapped it in his birdie putt.
8 • May 29, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
SAVING FROM 1 After she and husband Jim bought the North Bend Theatre seven years ago, one thing that surprised them was how much fun they could have running this 250-seat cinema, one of about 20 legacy movie houses still running in Washington state. “It’s absolutely a labor of love,” says Walker. “We enjoy such a sense of community. We know so many great people.” But another lesson they soon learned is that time marches on. The digital era had dawned when they bought the 72-year-old movie house. Now, several face-lifts later, the theater is bracing for its biggest change yet—a full digital conversion.
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“We’ve been put on notice that the holiday films will not be out on film this year,” Walker said. “We knew in 2011 that the date was going to be 2013.”
The campaign On May 1, Walker started the “Save Our Theatre” campaign, raising money a the $200,000 digital conversion— a new, state-of-the-art projector. With the campaign in full swing, she plans to place the order in the next few weeks. The Walkers turned to crowd funding for the conversion, going through GoFundMe.com (http://www. gofundme.com/2b5f9c). They also created a Facebook page for the drive. Similar to other crowdfunding sites, they’re offering
a set of rewards for donations, which range from a base of $50, which nets donators the “Theatre Lover” package, including two movie tickets and a thank-you in the newspaper. On the top end, the “Digital Deal” package includes permanent recognition at the theater: An engraved sidewalk star, chair plaques, two private parties, pre-screenings and lunch with the owners. For Walker, the campaign asks one big question. “How important is the theater to the community?” she asks. “We’re stewards of the theater. This is what the theater needs right now.” A letter on the website describes the situation and pleads the case. All we’ve done is a very sim-
ple ask,” Walker said. Before starting the campaign, she talked to other small theater owners to find out what works. The appeal to the public, with rewards, seems to be the way to go. North Bend Theater is already, four weeks in, a third of the way to its goal. Theater friends and patrons have stepped up, making donations with their comments on the website. “Giving back to NBT just seems like the natural thing to do,” wrote Kenneth and Karon Pauuw, when they gave on May 16. “The North Bend Theatre is a cornerstone in our community,” Boxley’s owner Danny Kolke told the Record. “Having a movie theatre in North Bend helps bring families downtown in the evenings. And having
We believe every child should be treated the way we would like our own children to be treated.
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Cindy Walker explores the storage room behind the North Bend Theater stage, where legacies of the movie houses’s past remain—a relic projector, seat parts from the days when this 250-seat theater seated 400 people with little leg room. Walker hosts many live, local events on front of the stage, from film festivals to benefit events.
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The plan is for the digital projector to be installed in September. Between now and then, Walker has plenty of opportunities to raise funds, including at North Bend’s downtown festivals. Before buying the theater, Walker was in the brokerage business. The stress level in running a movie house (Walker also runs the Emerald City Smoothie shop next door) is a tenth of her old job, and Walker loves the flexibil-
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ity. She likes being part of the special events the theater puts on, and has supervised dozens of local teens who’ve worked the booths over the last seven years. She’s not sure what will happen to the 1970s-era projector—boat anchor is one, joking, option—but there’s an even older projector in the back of the house that has more museum potential. “The movie world is changing,” says Walker, who takes a realistic approach to the digital revolution. “Film is expensive. It’s not environmentally friendly when you’re done with it, and there’s a lot of it.” Going from film to digital, “it’s like (going from) watching a black and white TV, to HD, full color. You’re nostalgic about it, but it’s not what you want to do every day.” Instead of swapping a series of reels, a projectionist simply slides a computer hard disk into place and pushes play. The tech lets North Bend Theater show 3D movies. Walker can also bring in more sports, live concerts, even the New York Metropolitan Opera. “It will mean a better end product for the customer,” says Walker. But she doubts going digital will really impact the bottom line. If she did, “we’d just pay for it out of revenue.” This change needs to happen, Walker says. The alternative is to start losing the firstrun films that actually bring people in the door. “If you can’t do that, then you can’t do the fun stuff,” she says.
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SNOQUALMIE Valley
Scene
80th birthday open house for Betty Spear in North Bend The family of Betty Spear — Rick, Gregg (Wendy), Craig (Kathy), Susan, Derek (Monica), Renee and Brandon — invite family and friends to Betty’s 80th birthday celebration. An open house is 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 8, at the Mount Si Senior Center in North Bend. No gifts, please. Betty, a North Bend resident, is pictured at left.
Snoqualmie Valley Record • May 29, 2013 • 9
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North Bend Theatre Showtimes Wednesday, May 29 • Epic, (PG), 11 a.m. & 7 p.m.
Thursday, may 30 • Epic, (PG), 7 p.m.
FRIday, May 31 • Epic (PG), 2, 5 & 8 p.m.
Saturday, june 1 • Epic (PG), 2, 5 & 8 p.m.
Sunday, june 2 • Epic (PG), 2 & 5 p.m.
Monday, june 3 • Epic (PG), 7 p.m.
Tuesday, june 4 • Epic (PG), 7 p.m.
Wednesday, june 5 • Epic, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Boy Scout breakfast in Snoqualmie Fall City Boy Scout Troop 425’s Pancake Breakfast is 8 to 11 a.m. Saturday, June 1, at the Snoqualmie Eagles Lodge, 8200 Railroad Ave. Join Scout families for a hearty breakfast and help send the boys to camp this summer. Cost is $7 for adults, $5 for children age 8 and younger.
Secrets of the Kingdom: Bible school at church Registration is under way for Snoqualmie United Methodist Church Vacation Bible School, aimed at children age 5 to 12, happening Monday, June 24 through Friday, June 28. This year, the church is teaming with Twinlow Ministries for full- and half-day camps. Children will explore stories from the Bible through activities, song, dance, games. Register by phone at (425) 888-1697 or visit www.snoqualmieumc.com.
Courtesy photo
This container by Pamela Wickard’s front door is a good example of Thriller, Filler and Spiller: Thriller – New Zealand Cabbage Tree (Cordyline australis ‘Burgundy Spire’); Filler – Ascot Rainbow Spurge (Euphorbia martinii ‘Ascot Rainbow’); and Spiller – Creeping Juniper (Juniperus horizontalis). Each has a unique quality (color and texture), but all have the same sun-loving conditions.
Welcoming the garden home Valley Garden Club: Plant almost anything in a pot with a thriller, filler and a spiller By Pamela Wickard
Snoqualmie Valley Master Gardener
No matter what you want to plant – salad makings, welcoming front porch plants or a screen for your patio, you can plant some version of it in a container. All you need is an appropriate container and some soil. A successful container garden starts with good potting soil, complete with ample nutrients and good drainage. Certain materials will affect fertility and have an impact on drainage, so start with a soil that is labeled potting soil; if it has compost in it, even better. Then you'll need some slow-release fertilizer. Just about anything can be used as a container. There are the conventional ceramic, terra cotta or wood, but why not try an old wagon, hiking boots, baskets or a colander. Just make sure there are holes for ample drainage. Avoid the suggestion to put gravel in the bottom of your container to increase drainage. It doesn’t work, and in fact is counter-productive, taking up valuable soil and roots space. Also, if it’s a large container, think about how you will move it before you add soil and plants. For extra-large containers, try filling the bottom half with empty gallon milk jugs. Just make sure to leave plenty of space for soil. Now the fun part, the plants. When you’re choosing plants for your container, make sure that they are “like” plants, with the same needs (sun, water and nutrients). Consider the site where you want the container to be located (sun or shade). Most containers will require daily watering, in the warmer months; just check the container first before watering. Then make sure all the plants in one container need and like the same conditions; combining plants with different needs will allow for some to suffer while others thrive. The plant label will usually give you this information; nursery or garden center staffs are a wealth of knowledge as well – just ask. The three key elements in a successful container design are simple. You’ll need, 1) the Thriller, 2) the Filler, and 3) the Spiller. This recipe works every time. It’s also important to consider leaf texture, color and size. Try to vary each. You can get even more creative by adding in a splash of color from assorted annuals, like the pansies pictured above. Happy planting! Additional information on weeds can be found at www.svmastergardeners.com. Bring your gardening questions to the Snoqualmie Valley Master Gardeners at the Nursery at Mt. Si on most Saturday mornings through mid-June, and then at the North Bend Farmers Market. • Wickard is a master gardener in the WSU Extension Master Gardener Program.
Across 1. ___ of sweat 6. Drinks in great gulps 11. Impede, with “down” 14. Cab driver in “It’s a Wonderful Life” 15. Drudge 16. Cable network 17. Professional performer 19. “A pox on you!” 20. Limit access to 21. Famous tower in Paris 23. A pint, maybe 24. Those who try to frighten 25. Pinpoint 29. Extreme paleness 30. Be theatrical 31. Diminished by 32. Blast 35. Kudzu, for one 36. People person 37. Lady of Lisbon 38. “___ alive!” (contraction) 39. Frigid 40. Philanthropist 41. Even more senseless 43. Putting areas
44. Lack 46. ___ green 47. Outdo 48. Ramparts 53. “___ we having fun yet?” 54. Sleight of hand 56. Big ___ Conference 57. A short composition for a solo instrument 58. Indian salad 59. “Dig in!” 60. Crowded 61. Lug
Down 1. “Cold one” 2. Coastal raptor 3. Aardvark fare 4. Losing proposition? 5. Notched 6. “The final frontier” 7. Habeas corpus, e.g. 8. Carbonium, e.g. 9. High school choral group (2 wds) 10. Novels produced in installments 11. A neutral area between two rival powers (2 wds)
12. Basket material 13. Highlanders, e.g. 18. Game piece 22. Away 24. More rational 25. Dolly ___ of “Hello, Dolly!” 26. Bypass 27. Not contradictory 28. Absorbed, as a cost 29. Covered with hair 31. Donnybrook 33. Soon, to a bard 34. Links numbers 36. Solid, in a sense 37. ___-eyed 39. Covered, in a way 40. Bloomers 42. After expenses 43. Neuter 44. Decrease 45. Kentucky college 46. Blender button 48. Resting places 49. Asian nurse 50. Commuter line 51. Sky box? 52. Become unhinged 55. Revolver
10 • May 29, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
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10 • May 29, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
Carlson gets Air Force Academy appt. Valley student Nichole Carlson will attend the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs next fall. Carlson lives in Duvall with her parents, Calvin and Robin Carlson, and her younger sister Ashley Carlson. She was inter-
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viewed by U.S. Representative Dave Reichert‘s panel of the 8th Congressional District and given a nomination to the Air Force Academy. Carlson was offered an appointment in January and accepted the appointment. Carlson is is a cabinet member of Honor Society, Captain of the swim team, a Cadet Captain in Civil Air Patrol, and Cadet Commander of Northshore
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Carlson had many choices to make, but the Air Force Academy was a dream comes true. She also received a four year Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps scholarship to the University of Rochester, and a four-year Air Force ROTC scholarship to Rochester Institute of Technology, and accepted into the women’s Engineering Dept. The Air Force requires the applicant to excel in academics, athletics and leadership. The application requires letters of recommendation from teachers, counselors and local leaders. The scholarship is valued at $414,000.
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Four-year-old Ethan Wilhelm of Snoqualmie got a thrill last month when he had lunch with Snoqualmie Police Sgt. Chris Todd. Mom Jodi Wilhelm says Ethan is “mesmerized by police officers,” and he was at the Snoqualmie Falls Candy Factory with his family when he met Sgt. Todd. He confidently approached the officer and asked to join him, then hurried to grab his burger. Ethan and the sergeant had a 25-minute conversation that encompassed video games, police cars and how to catch the bad guys. “He gave Ethan a sticker badge that he proudly wore to school,” said Wilhelm. “After lunch, Ethan told me today was the best day ever. We now stop by the Candy Factory every now and then. The first place Ethan goes is to the booth in which he shared with Officer Todd! This gentlemen made my little guy’s day! He’s a hero in the eyes of Ethan.” Todd has been with the force for 15 years.
Puzzle Answers FROM PAGE 9 Cosmetic and Preventative Dental Care
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Dr. Brian Mayer DDS
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www.rivertreedental.com 38700 SE River Street Snoqualmie
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Find us on Facebook: Jazzercise Fall City Chief Kanim Middle School • (425) 785-8766
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Serving local communities including Ballard, Bellevue, Capitol Hill, Crossroads, Crown Hill, Downtown Seattle, Duvall, Eastgate, Eastlake, Factoria, Fall City, First Hill, Fremont, Greenlake, Greenwood, Interbay, International District, Issaquah, Juanita, Kennydale, Kingsgate, Kirkland, Leschi, Laurelhurst, Madison Park, Magnolia, Mercer Island, Montlake, Newcastle, Newport Hills, North Bend, Northgate, Preston, Queen Anne, Ravenna, Redmond, Sammamish, Snoqualmie, Snoqualmie Pass, Totem Lake, University District, Vashon Island, Wallingford, Wedgewood, Woodinville.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 800-388-2527 Real Estate for Rent King County North Bend
real estate for rent - WA Real Estate for Rent King County FALL CITY
3 BR, 1 BATH DUPLEX incl water and garbage. Small pet negotiable. $1,200 month, $300 deposit. 425-985-9701. NORTH BEND
2 BR WITH LARGE fenced yard, garage and shop. Lawn care included. Pets okay with dep. $1,400/ month. First, last, dep. 425-495-1131.
Apartments for Rent King County Snoqualmie
WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent SNOQUALMIE
COUNTRY LIVING mobile home. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. No pets. Water, garbage paid. $900 m o n t h . C a l l 4 2 5 - 8 8 8 - 2 BDRM, $960/month. 4-Plex in Snoqualmie. 4747 10 minutes to Issaquah. No smoking, no pets. First, last, damage. 425Whether you’re 861-4081 buying or selling, the Classifieds has it all. From Find what you need 24 hours a day. automobiles and Find It. Buy It. Sell It. employment to real Looking for the ride estate and household of your life? goods, you’ll find �������������� 24 hours a day everything you need 24 hours a day at Classifieds. We’ve got you www.nw-ads.com. covered. 800-388-2527
SAFEWAY FUEL STATION - 721 SW MT SI BLVD SAFEWAY #1528 - 60 SW MOUNT SI BLVD TACO TIME - 726 SW MOUNT SI BLVD BURGER KING - 736 SW MT SI BLVD SHEL - 2 SW MOUNT SI BLVD CASCADE GOLF COURSE - 436TH AVE SE KEN’S GAS & GROCERY - SE N BEND WY
Announcements
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 (425) 803-9061. www.fossmortgage.com
announcements
ADOPTION- A loving alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You chose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866-2367638
LG FURNISHED ROOM in spacious ranch style home! Phone jack, Direct TV & high speed internet. Utilities included. Available second week of June. $525. 425-2818395.
financing
WA Misc. Rentals Want to Rent
Money to Loan/Borrow
General Financial
Announcements
I AM A Single Woman, no kids left at home or pets. I need only a room to rent or basement would be fine, in the Fall City/ Snoqualmie area. Access to running water and bathroom facilities are a necessity. Have Government Background Check done for Employment. Need Quiet Place. Call Tracy, 603-833-3264 (cell).
BAJILLIONS STILL AVA I L A B L E fo r g o o d R.E. Contracts, Notes and Annuities. Receiving Payments? It may be time to give us a call. Skip Foss 800-6373677.
CREDIT CARD DEBT? Discover a new way to eliminate credit card debt fast. Minimum $8750 in debt required. Free infor mation. Call 24hr recorded message: 1-801-642-4747
ADOPT: Active, Energetic, Professional Couple years for 1st baby. Sports, Playful pup, Beaches await! Joyce 1-800-243-1658. Expenses paid.
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from calling. 877-858-1386
ADOPT ~ Art director & Global executive yearn Your new job is waiting at fo r p r e c i o u s b a by t o �������������� LOVE, adore, devote our lives. Expenses paid. 1- Classifieds. We’ve got you 800-844-1670 covered. 800-388-2527
Find Us Around Town! SNOQUALMIE MKT - 8030 RAILROAD AVE N UNION 76 - 8250 RAILROAD AVE SE MILK BARN DELI - 9075 RAILROAD AVE SE SNOQUALMIE RIDGE IGA - 7730 CTR BLVD SE BURGER & GRILL - 7726 CENTER BLVD SE # 13 POUR HOUSE BAR & GRILL - W N BEND WY MOUNT SI DELI - 745 SW MT SI BLVD
Money to Loan/Borrow
SHELL / EDGEWICK VILLAGE - 468TH AVE SE COUNTRY PRIDE RESTAURANT - 468TH AVE SE LES SCHWAB - 610 E NORTH BEND WAY UNION 76 - 520 E NORTH BEND WAY QFC #829 - 460 E NORTH BEND WAY ROCK-O’S DINE - 247 E NO BEND WAY SCOTT’S DAIRY - 234 E NORTH BEND WAY
Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in up to 12 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 815 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 or go to www.classifiedavenue.net
PICK-UP A WEEKLY COPY OF THE LITTLE NICKEL ADS AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS IN SNOQUALMIE & NEIGHBORING AREAS...
SHEL - 225 E NORTH BEND WAY NORTH BEND BAR & GRILL - E NO BEND WAY MOUNT SI SNR CTR - 411 MAIN AVE S TWEDES CAFE - 137 W NORTH BEND WAY FALL CITY GRILL - 4050 FALL CITY CARNATION POST OFFICE - 4225 335TH PL SE FARMHOUSE MARKET - SE RED-FALL CIT
HAYDITTERS LIQ & BEVER - SE RED FALL CIT EL CAPORAL MEXICAN RESTAU - SE RED FALL RAGING RIVER CAFE - SE REDMOND FALL CIT SMALL FRYES BURGERS - FALL CITY R VALERO - 4224 PRESTON FALL CITY R CHEVRON - 9301 CARNATION-DUVALL RD PETE’S GRILL & PUB - 4640 TOLT AVE
SHELL - 4333 TOLT AVE STARBUCKS - 31722 EUGENE ST # 8 IGA CARNATION MkT FRESH - EUGENE ST # 1 DUVALL POST OFFIC - 26400 NE VALLEY ST THAI RESTAURANT - 26321 NE VALLEY ST SAFEWAY #1572 - 14020 MAIN ST NE LA TIENDA MEXICANA - 15930 MAIN ST NE
DUVALL MARKET - 15820 MAIN ST NE SHELL - 15729 MAIN ST NE TEXACO - 15410 MAIN ST NE FAMILY GROCERY - 15215 BROWN AVE NE SHELL / PRESTON GENERAL - SE HIGH PT WY THE KIND ALTERNATIVE - SE HIGH PT WY
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www.nw-ads.com Announcements
Business Opportunities
NOW HIRING!!! $28/HR. Undercover Shoppers Needed To Judge Retail and Dining Establishments. Â Genuine Opportunity. PT/FT. Exper ience not required. Â If You Can Shop- You Are Qualified!! www.AmeriMeet singles right now! canShopperJobs.com No paid operators, just r e a l p e o p l e l i ke yo u . Schools & Training Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. AIRLINES ARE HIRINGC a l l n ow : 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 9 4 - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Ca9351 reer. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783 AT T E N D C O L L E G E ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call Employment 8 0 0 - 4 8 8 - 0 3 8 6 Professional www.CenturaOnline.com 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.
jobs
Executive Director/ Event Planner Join the fun! The SAMMI Awa r d s Fo u n d a t i o n seeks an executive director to lead the organization in its mission to celebrate and promote community involvement. The organization holds an annual Celebration of Community Service event that brings together local nonprofits, businesses, community groups, and schools to honor amazing volunteers who give back to the Sammamish community and make is a wonderful place to live, work and play! The executive director is responsible for administration, communication, out-reach and event production. This position is part-time and is a wonderful oppor tunity to wo r k d i r e c t l y w i t h a l l community stakeholders.
stuff Antiques & Collectibles
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Silvana Vintage and Art
barngold.com
NOW OPEN!!
CARRIER ROUTES AVAILABLE
1401 Pioneer Hwy Downtown Silvana, Tues - Sun 10am-6pm
IN YOUR AREA
silvanavintageandart.com
DRIVERS -- Tired of Being Gone? We get you Home! Call Haney Truck Line one of best NW heavy haul carr iers. Great pay/benefits package. 1-888-414-4467. www.gohaney.com Business Opportunities
STACK LAUNDRY
We will pick up your unwanted appliances working or not. Call
800-414-5072 KENMORE FREEZER
Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft. freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain, interior light
*UNDER WARRANTY* Make $15 monthly payments or pay off balance of $293. Credit Dept. 206-244-6966
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
425-299-1281 find us on facebook!
Se Habla Espanol! Para ordenar un anuncio en el Little Nickel! Llame a Lia
866-580-9405 LToupin@littlenickel.com
Appliances
AMANA RANGE
Deluxe 30� Glasstop Range self clean, auto clock & timer ExtraLarge oven & storage *UNDER WARRANTY* Over $800. new. Pay off balance of $193 or make payments of $14 per month. Credit Dept.
Make Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready Drink-Snack Vending Machines. Minimum $4K to $40K+ In206-244-6966 vestment Required. Locations Available. BBB MATCHING Washer and A c c r e d i t e d B u s i n e s s. Dryer set, $355. Guaranteed! 360-405-1925 (800) 962-9189
* Under Warranty! *
Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.
206-244-6966
NEW APPLIANCES UP TO 70% OFF All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches and Factory Imperfections
*Under Warranty*
For Inquiries, Call or Visit
Appliance Distributors @ 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.
206-244-6966
NEW APPLIANCES UP TO 70% OFF
%206-244-6966% STACK LAUNDRY
Deluxe front loading washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles. Like new condition
* Under Warranty *
Over $1,200 new, now only $578 or make payments of $25 per month
%206-244-6966% Beauty & Health
Medical Collective Mon-Fri 11-7 Sat & Sun 11-5 Our Medibles are Delicious & Potent! We have a wide variety of , Clones, and Top-Quality Medicine.
360.886.8046 www.thekindalternative medicalcollective. webs.com
&INDĂĽIT ĂĽ"UYĂĽIT ĂĽ3ELLĂĽIT NW ADS COM Want Your Business Noticed? Call Cathy Harry
BEAUTIFUL SMILES
Denture & Dental Clinic AExtractions &
Dentures Placed Immediately (onsite) AIn-house Lab AImplant Dentures A1/hr Repair/Reline AFree Consultation
Michael A. Salehi LD
at the Little Nickel for your print & online options
I Can Make Your Phone Ring!
425.493.5061
Bothell
18521 101st Ave N.E.
425-487-1551
Lake Forest Park 17230 Bothell Way
206-362-3333
BeautifulSmilesLLC.com
charry@littlenickel.com
Want Your Business Noticed? Call Cathy Harry at the Little Nickel for your print & online options
425.493.5061
For Inquiries, Call or Visit
Appliance Distributors @ 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.
206-244-6966
All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches and Factory Imperfections
*Under Warranty*
For Inquiries, Call or Visit
Appliance Distributors @ 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.
206-244-6966
Get To Know Us Special $3/g Headband * Must mention this ad. Limited 3g per patient per day, limited quantity while supply lasted, no rain check
206-209-0870
ClassiďŹ eds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527 REPO REFRIGERATOR
Custom deluxe 22 cu. ft. side-by-side, ice & water disp., color panels available
UNDER WARRANTY! was over $1200 new, now only payoff bal. of $473 or make pmts of only $15 per mo.
Credit Dept. 206-244-6966
SCHEDULE TODAY
1.800.840.8875 MEDICAL CANNABIS AUTHORIZATIONS Safe*Legal*Compliant 24/7 Patient Verification
WWW.GMGWA.COM
charry@littlenickel.com
Add a picture to your ad and get noticed 1-inch photo 1-inch copy 5 weeks for one low price Call: 1-800-388-2527 or go online www.nw-ads.com
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the ClassiďŹ eds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com
AIRLINES ARE HIRING dĆŒÄ‚Ĺ?Ĺś Ä¨Ĺ˝ĆŒ ŚĂŜĚĆ? ŽŜ Ç€Ĺ?Ä‚Ć&#x;ŽŜ DÄ‚Ĺ?ŜƚĞŜĂŜÄ?Äž Ä‚ĆŒÄžÄžĆŒÍ˜ & Ä‚Ć‰Ć‰ĆŒĹ˝Ç€ÄžÄš Ć‰ĆŒĹ˝Ĺ?ĆŒÄ‚ĹľÍ˜ &Ĺ?ŜĂŜÄ?Ĺ?Ä‚ĹŻ Ä‚Ĺ?Äš Ĺ?Ĩ ƋƾĂůĹ?ĎĞĚ Í´ ,ŽƾĆ?Ĺ?ĹśĹ? ĂǀĂĹ?ĹŻÄ‚Ä?ĹŻÄž >> Ç€Ĺ?Ä‚Ć&#x;ŽŜ /ĹśĆ?Ć&#x;ƚƾƚĞ ŽĨ DÄ‚Ĺ?ŜƚĞŜĂŜÄ?Äž
877-818-0783
1x8 Cedar Bevel 42¢ LF 31x6x8’ T&G.......59¢ LF
“CEDAR DECKING�
Cemetery Plots
Electronics
2 LOTS Azalea Garden, G r e e n wo o d M e m o r i a l Park, Renton. Lot 192, Block 15, space 3 & 4. $8,000 for both. 509522-4743
DirecTV Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636. in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Star t saving today! 1-800-2793018 Dish Network lowest nationwide price $19.99 a month. FREE HBO/ Cinemax/Starz FREE Blockbuster. FREE HDDVR and install. Next day install 1-800-3750784 DISH Network. Starting at $19.99/month PLUS 30 Premium Movie Channels FREE for 3 Months! SAVE! & Ask About SAME DAY Installation! Call877-992-1237 FREE 10� Internet tablet when your order DISH installed free. Free HBO. Offer ends Soon Call for details. 1-866-845-7776. Restrictions apply with approved credit. M y C o m p u t e r Wo r k s. Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-866998-0037 *REDUCE YOUR Cable bill! * Get a 4-Room AllDigital Satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/ DVR upgrade for new callers, SO CALL NOW. 1-800-699-7159 SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone-Sate l l i t e . Yo u ` v e G o t A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 877884-1191
4 PLOTS IN The Highly Desirable Sunset Hills Memorial Cemeter y in Bellevue. Lincoln Memorial Garden. (3) Side by Side in Lot 235, Spaces 3, 4, 5. (1) in Lot 12, Space 1. Can Buy Individually At $3,250 or All 4 A s A Pa ck a g e A t $12,000! Call: 425-7883291
5/4x4 Decking 5/4x4 10’ & 12’..............30¢ LF 5/4x6 Decking 38’ to 16’ Lengths.85¢LF
Complete Line: Western Red Cedar Building Materials
Affordable Prices OPEN MON - SAT
360-377-9943 www.cedarproductsco.com
FREE ESTIMATE
for Purchase of NEW Garage
Doors 1/2 OFF Glass w/ Purchase of
Garage Door
Military and Senior Discounts!
a-1doorservice.com
I Can Make Your Phone Ring!
*Under Warranty*
“CEDAR FENCING� 31x6x6’..........$1.19 ea 31x4x5’......2 for $1.00 36’x8’ Pre Assembled Fence Panels $24.95ea “CEDAR SIDING�
$100 OFF Any Double Garage Door
Board Certified Denturist Gabriela Aluas DDS General Dentist
All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches and Factory Imperfections
NEW APPLIANCES UP TO 70% OFF
Snoqualmie Valley Record • May 29, 2013 • 11 Building Materials & Supplies
* Under Warranty *
Over $1,200 new, now only $578 or make payments of $25 per month
Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft. freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain, interior light
Heavy duty washer & dryer, deluxe, large cap. w/normal, perm-press & gentle cycles.
Beauty & Health
Deluxe front loading washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles. Like new condition
KENMORE FREEZER
KENMORE REPO
Employment General
DRIVER -- One Cent Raise after 6 and 12 months. $0.03 Enhanced Quarterly Bonus. D a i l y o r We e k l y Pay, Hometime Options. CDL-A, 3 months OTR exp. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com
APPLIANCE PICK UP SERVICE
Credit Dept. 206-244-6966
(425) 334-GOLD
Employment Transportation/Drivers
Appliances
*UNDER WARRANTY* Make $15 monthly payments or pay off balance of $293.
Please send cover letter and resume to: Connie Rawson, SAMMI Awards Foundation board member, at: crawson@comcast.net by June 15, 2013.
Call Today 1-253-872-6610
Appliances
1-888-289-6945
A-1 Door Service
(Mention this ad) Cemetery Plots
ACACIA Memorial Park, “Birch Garden�, (2) adjacent cemetery plots, #3 & #4. Selling $4,000 each or $7,500 both. Located in Shoreline / N. Seattle. Call or email Emmons Johnson, 2067 9 4 - 2 1 9 9 , eaj3000@msn.com GREENACRES Memorial Park, Ferndale. 2 Side by Side Plots, Block 16, Section 101, Lots 5 & 6. Sold Out Section! Capacity Per Lot: 1 Casket, 3 Urns OR 4 Urns. Current Value: $1,470 Each. Asking $2,000 for Both. Owner Will Pay $125 Transfer Fee. Call Judy, 360-435-3344 SUNSET HILLS Memorial Cemetery in Bellevue. 2 s i d e by s i d e p l o t s available in the Sold Out Garden of Devotion, 9B, Space 9 and 10. $15,000 each negot i a bl e. A l s o, 1 p l o t available in Garden of Devotion, 10B, space 5, $10,000 negotiable. Call 503-709-3068 or e-mail drdan7@juno.com
u COMPUTER u
Reach thousands of RUNNING SLOW? 1 s p a c e ava i l a bl e a t readers 1-800-388-2527 Or Not Responding? Sunset Hills Cemetery, Washington Memor ial u Computer Network Svc c o m p l e t e w i t h H e a d - Park. Section 18 Garden u Instruction ARepair stone in Bellevue. lot 75 of flowers. 4 plots, side u System Setup space 4, Lincoln section. by side, $ 2,000.00 ea, Multiple use, space re- or $7,000.00 for all 4 or uHouse Calls uOffice Calls tails at $22,000 asking $3,600.00 for 2. Call Dave 425- 867- 0919 $18,000. 425.949.2549 3 6 0 - 2 8 9 - 2 8 9 6 or 425.408.0109 leave d p a n d r l h @ c o a s t a c - 3ELLĂĽITĂĽFORĂĽFREEĂĽINĂĽTHEĂĽ&,%! msg THEFLEA SOUNDPUBLISHING COM cess.com
12 • May 29, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
A+ SEASONED FIREWOOD Dry & Custom-Split Alder, Maple & Douglas Fir
Speedy Delivery & Best Prices!
(425)508-9554
flea market Flea Market
2-IN-1 TABLE; CHICCO Music ‘n Play side and block side. $10. Details 360-471-8612. ARMS REACH Bassinet Extremely clean CoSleeper mini convertible. Excel cond! $75 or best offer (new $200+). 360471-8612. Food & Farmer’s Market
100% Guaranteed Omaha Steaks - SAVE 69% on The Grilling Collection. N O W O N LY $49.99 Plus 2 FREE GIFTS & r ight-to-thedoor deliver y in a reusable cooler, ORDER Today. 1- 888-697-3965 Use Code:45102ETA or w w w . O m a h a S teaks.com/offergc05
Home Furnishings
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM
Mail Order
Alone? Emergencies Happen! Get Help with one button push! $ 2 9 . 9 5 / m o n t h Fr e e equipment, Free set-up. Protection for you or a l ove d o n e. C a l l L i fe Watch USA 1-800-357ASAP ~ MUST SELL! All 6505 in great shape! Couch, AT T E N T I O N S L E E P loveseat, bookcase and A P N E A S U F F E R E R S side tables $1250. with Medicare. Get Brown fabric couch and C PA P R e p l a c e m e n t l ove s e a t , s o l i d w o o d Supplies at little or NO bookcase and two side COST, plus FREE home t a b l e s . G r e e n fa b r i c delivery! Best of all, precouch & loveseat, with vent red skin sores and three piece glass top ta- bacterial infection! Call ble set (rod iron with 1-866-993-5043 gold leaves on the base) all $750. Glass dining Canada Drug Center is room table with 4 leath- your choice for safe and er/ brass chairs (custom affordable medications. made) $700. Blue futon Our licensed Canadian c o u c h s l e e p e r $ 2 0 0 . mail order pharmacy will Beautyrest Sleeper mat- provide you with savings t r e s s b o x s p r i n g a n d of up to 90% on all your frame (only 6 months medication needs. Call o l d ) $ 6 0 0 . E n g l a n d e r today 1-800-418-8975, mattress and boxspring for $10.00 off your first with sleigh bed frame p r e s c r i p t i o n a n d f r e e $300. 3 Piece wood bed- shipping. room dresser ensemble Medical Alert for Seniors $500. Black wine table - 24/7 monitoring. FREE rack $250. 6 mo new E q u i p m e n t . F R E E washer and dryer May- S h i p p i n g . N a t i o n w i d e tag set, excellent condi- Service. $29.95/Month tion $600. Please call for CALL Medical Guardian details 360-434-3423. Today 866-992-7236 WWW NW ADS COM Medical Equipment ,OCALĂĽJOBSĂĽINĂĽPRINTĂĽANDĂĽON LINE Jewelry & Fur
I B U Y G O L D, S i l ve r, D i a m o n d s, W r i s t a n d Pocket Watches, Gold and Silver Coins, Silverware, Gold and Platinum Antique Jewelry. Call Mic h a e l A n t h o ny ’s a t (206)254-2575
New Jazzy Select Power Wheelchair by Pride, cost over $8,000. Will bring to show you if necessar y anywhere in western WA. Beautiful blue...it’s just for you. $1,350. (425)256-1559 Find what you need 24 hours a day.
Miscellaneous
50% OFF SALE On all the Antiques and Collectibles from our Tasting Room of 31 Years. Some Furniture, Antique Wine Glasses, Decanters, Cork Screws, Books, Prints, Paintings, Old Bottles, Mason Jars, Oil Lamps, Collectible Decorator Items and M i s c . S a t u r d ay s a n d Sundays from 12-5pm. 8989 East Day Road, Bainbridge Island. 206842-9463 BELLEVUE SCHOOL Distr ict Sur plus Book Sale. May 29th, 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm, 12037 NE 5th Street, Bellevue, 98005. Electric adjustable bed, single, Maxwell product. Like new $300/OBO. (425)485-0439
FREE ESTIMATE for Purchase of NEW Garage Doors 1-888-289-6945 A-1 Door Serice (Mention This Ad) Fr i g i d a i r e Fr i d g e & Frezzer & $75, Whirlpool dishwasher $40. Lazy Boy Couch $150. Lazy Boy Chair $50. Dresser $40. Bob (206)268-0712 KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor. Odorless, Non-Staining, Long Lasting. Kills Socrpions and other insects. Effective results begin after the spray dries! Available at Ace Hardware, The Home Depot or Homedepot.com SAWMILLS from only $3997.00 -- Make and Save Money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free I n f o / DV D : w w w. N o r woodSawmills.com 1800-578-1363 Ext. 300N TO O M U C H Fa b r i c ! Come see what we have. $1 to $3 per yard. Call Liz after 3pm for appointment, 425-4836341
Miscellaneous
Grand Opening NW Garden Supply Save Up To 50% 1000 Watt Grow Light Package Includes Ballast, Lamp & Reflector!
$129
2 Locations Fife/Seattle 9100 E Marginal Way, South Tukwilla 206.767.8082 2001 48th Ave Court E Unit #3 Fife 253.200.6653 Most of our glass is blown by local artists, hand crafted, a true work of art! water pipes, oil burners, keif boxes, nug jars, holiebowlies, hightimes magazines, calendars, clothing and literature along with a full line of vaporizers. Goin Glass Open 7 days a week! 425-222-0811
Yard and Garden
www.nw-ads.com Wanted/Trade
Birds
Dogs
CASH for unexpired DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Free Shipping, Friendly Service, BEST p r i c e s a n d 2 4 h r p ay ment! Call today 877 588 8500 or visit www.TestStripSearch.com Espanol 888-440-4001
SINGING CANARIES Hens & Males, also pairs $ 5 0 - $ 7 5 . R e d Fa c tors/Glosters/Fifes & Recessive Whites. Auburn, 2 5 3 - 8 3 3 - 8 2 1 3 Unavailable on Saturdays
AKC COCKER Babies most colors, beautiful, s o c i a l i z e d , h e a l t h y, raised with children. Shots, wor med, pedigrees. $600 up. Terms? 425-750-0333, Everett
Find what you need 24 hours a day.
CASH PAID For: Record LPs, 45s, Reel to Reel Tapes, CDs, Old Magazines/ Movies, VHS Ta p e s . C a l l T O D AY ! 206-499-5307
RECORDS WANTED Top prices paid for used vinyl & CD’
House call available 206-632-5483
pets/animals Birds
See Photos Online! Whenever you see a camera icon on an ad like this:
Just log on to: www.littlenickel.com 2012 SNAPPER Coronet RE 200 Series Rider Mower. 14.5 Gross HP with 30� Mower Deck. A l m o s t N ew. $ 2 , 2 0 0 . Available to see at True Va l u e t h r o u g h D o u g . 206-409-6414 Wanted/Trade
Buying Deer Antlers. Please call (425)888-3372
Cats
Simply type in the phone number from the ad in the “Search By Keywords� to see the ad with photo! Want to run a photo ad in Little Nickel? Just give us a call! 1-800-544-0505
Sell it free in the Flea 1-866-825-9001
BENGAL KITTENS, Gorgeously Rosetted! Consider a bit of the “Wild� for your home. L i ke a d ve n t u r e ? T h i s may be the pet for you! www.seattlebengals.com then click on “Kittens� to see what’s available with pricing starting at $900. Championship Breeder, TICA Outstanding Cattery, TIBCS Breeder of Distinction. Shots, Health Guarantee. Teresa, 206-422-4370. Long Hair Sweet Calico Kittens, 3 and 4 color tortoise shell, polydactl ( extra toe) $125. Mixed Maine Coon & Ragdoll, great personality $125. Call 425-870-5597 or 425-870-1487 Dogs
AKC Chocolate Pointing Labs. Great hunting instincts with very family friendly dispositions. Litter is due on May 25th. Pedigrees are impressive including Black Forest, Chugach Hills Barracyda Hills. Hips/Elbow/ Eyes and Geneic testing complete. Sire has Master Hunter title and both dogs hunt constantly. $600- $900 depending on sex and pointing sign. Breeding hand picked to provide a pup for the owner. Preferense given to owners who hunt. Contact Don @ 253 6775639 or dmooney@becu.org for more info.
AKC Standard Poodle Puppies. Cream, Apricot & Red. 2 Males, 3 Females. Bor n Apr il 9 t h . Fo r m o r e i n fo, please visit our web site at: www.ourpoeticpoodles.net or call 509-582-6027 3ELLĂĽITĂĽFORĂĽFREEĂĽINĂĽTHEĂĽ&,%! THEFLEA SOUNDPUBLISHING COM C O C K E R S PA N I E L Puppy Tri-Colored Parti Sable with blue eyes. Registered litter. Adorable, loving, fluffs of fun! Born 3/6/13. 4 males. All colors. First shots received. References from previous litter owners. Exceptional dogs, ver y smar t and l ov i n g . S h ow q u a l i t y. Parents on site. Includes paper: $550 each. For appointment please call Dawn 253-261-0713 Enumclaw GREAT DANE
AVAIL NOW 2 LITTERS Of Full Euro’s; one litter of blues and one of mixed colors. AKC Great Dane Pups Health guarantee! Males / Females. Dreyrsdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Great Danes, licensed since ‘02. Super sweet, intelligent, lovable, gentle giants $2000- $3,300. Also Standard Poodles. 503-556-4190. www.dreyersdanes.com
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Current Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com INSIDE SALES CONSULTANT "SF ZPV SFBEZ GPS BO FYDJUJOH DBSFFS XJUI ZPVS DPNNVOJUZ OFXTQBQFS 5IF 3FOUPO 3FQPSUFS JT MPPLJOH GPS TPNFPOF UP QFSGPSN B UFMFNBSLFUJOH SPMF UP HFOFSBUF BEWFSUJTJOH TBMFT UP OFX BOE FYJTUJOH CVTJOFTTFT JO BOZ DPNCJOBUJPO PG BMM PVS OFXTQBQFS QVCMJDBUJPOT 5IJT JODMVEFT EJTQMBZ BOE DMBTTJGJFE BEWFSUJTJOH TQFDJBM TFDUJPO QSFQSJOUT QSJOU BOE EFMJWFS BOE BOZ PUIFS QSPEVDUT PS TFSWJDFT BWBJMBCMF XJUIJO PVS GBNJMZ PG OFXTQBQFST 3&26*3&.&/54 r 4USPOH TBMFT DVTUPNFS TFSWJDF BOE QIPOF TPMJDJUBUJPO TLJMMT r $PNQVUFS QSPGJDJFOU JO EBUBCBTF BOE TQSFBETIFFU TPGUXBSF QSPHSBNT r &YDFMMFOU QIPOF DPNNVOJDBUJPO TLJMMT XSJUUFO BOE WFSCBM
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www.soundpublishing.com
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM
www.nw-ads.com Dogs
Horses
MINIATURE
REDMOND
ANNUAL MULTI Family Sale at Sammamish Forest Manors. 20+ homes participating. NE 24th at 1 7 5 t h Ave n u e N E i n Redmond. Friday, May 31st & Saturday, June 1st, 9am to 4pm.
Australian Shepherd
Puppies. Males and females, $650-$850. Registered, health guaranteed, UTD shots. 541-518-9284 Baker City, Oregon.
Oregonaussies.com
Get the ball rolling... Call 800-388-2527 today.
2 STALL BARN
POMERANIANS Te a c u p a n d To y, Adults and puppies. Va r i e t y o f c o l o r s , s h a p e s a n d s i ze s. Health guaranteed, shots, wormed. $300-$600 Graham. 253-847-1029 Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the ClassiďŹ eds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com PUPPIES! Faux Frenchies, Boston’s & Bo-Chi’s Many colors, shots, wormed. Loved and kissed daily! $650 & up. See webpage:
(2) 10’x12’ Perma stalls w/split opening wood Dutch doors, 3’x6’8� man door, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight, 2� fiberglass vapor barrier roof insulation, 18 sidewall & trim colors w/45 year warranty.
www.littledogpage.com 541-459-5802.
PUPPIES! Rhodesian Ridgeback/Labrador mix. 3 Gir ls, 5 boys. First Shots, wormed. 7 w e e k s , k i d f r i e n d l y. Ready for a good home t o d a y. $ 3 0 0 - $ 4 0 0 . (206)579-8930
Garage/Moving Sales King County
24’x30’x9’
RENTON
permabilt.com General Pets
ALPACA Herd Disposal; great pets, mowers or for fleece! 12 gir ls, 2 boys $250 each. Whole herd $2,000! 360-3671868.
Se Habla Espanol! Para ordenar un anuncio en el Little Nickel! Llame a Lia
866-580-9405 LToupin@littlenickel.com
Rottweiler Pups AKC German Vom Schwaiger Wappen bloodlines, hips guaranteed, Robust health, shots, wormed & ready to go. $800. 425-971-4948. pfleminglive@ymail.com
LOVING Animal Care Visits - Walks Housesitting Home & Farm JOANNA GARDINER 206-567-0560 (Cell) 206-228-4841
Selling two 13 week old female pure bred German Shepard puppies! Both have AKC registration! Puppies are loyal and extremely intelligent. Pictures available upon r e q u e s t ! 9 5 0 $ e a c h , garage sales - WA price negotiable. Located in Gig harbor. Call Ril e y a t 2 5 3 - 2 2 5 - 5 1 2 4 Garage/Moving Sales King County anytime! SMALL MIXED Breed puppies. Bor n 4/4/13. Excellent companion puppies. “Heinz 57�. $200 each. Call Skyway at: 206-723-1271 WEST HIGHLAND WHITE TERRIER PUPPIES Registered APR, 2 Females for $800 each. 9 weeks old. Health guarAdvertise your enteed. Had first shots GARAGE SALE and wor med. Deliver y in the Little may be possible (meet you half way). Call for inNickel! formation: 360-436-0338 Farm Animals & Livestock
ALPACA Herd Disposal; great pets, mowers or for fleece! 12 gir ls, 2 boys $250 each. Whole herd $2,000! 360-3671868. www.nw-ads.com We’ll leave the site on for you.
Add a picture to your ad and get noticed 1-inch photo 1-inch copy 5 weeks for one low price Call: 1-800-388-2527 or go online www.nw-ads.com
2 print editions + online Up to 40 words
only $16 Call 1-800-544-0505 M-F, 8am-5pm
ISSAQUAH / SOUTH LAKE SAMMAMISH
5 NEIGHBORHOODS Sale! Hundreds of families participating. Crazy huge annual sale! Friday, 5/31 and Saturday, 6/1, 9am- 4pm. Follow signs from West Lake Sammamish Road, at intersection of 188 th or 192nd Avenue.
1986 PORSCHE 911 Euro Cabriolet. Guards R e d , B l a c k i n t e r i o r. 126,000 miles. Engine runs strong with no oil leaks. Tight suspension with good brakes and new tires. $16,000. Call 360-914-1057 Oak Harbor, Whidbey Island.
2011 HONDA FIT compact hatchback, white, Snow bird owner, has only 3,000 miles! Immaculate condition. Auto trans, all power, 4 door. $17,500. (360)279-2570
Year Round Indoor Swap Meet Celebrating 15 Years! Evergreen Fairgrounds Saturday & Sunday 9 am - 4pm FREE Admission & parking! For Information call
MONROE
360-794-5504
Shoreline LARGE COMMUNITY PARKING LOT SALE Over 40 families. Tabernacle Baptist Church, 16508 8th Ave N E , S h o r e l i n e. S a t u r d ay Ju n e 1 s t , 9 a m - 2 p m . Fr e e h o t dogs. 206-362-8363 SNOQUALMIE
HUGE ESTATE SALE 6/1-6/2
Easton 2004 Alpenlite trailer, 2001 Ford flat bed fifth wheel attachment, collectibles, fishing gear, lawnmower, tools, dishware, glasses, utensils, mason jars...a life time of cherishables! 3400 square foot shop is plum full! Saturday and Sunday from 7am to 5pm located at 3230 East Sparks Road. Vashon
Services Animals
MONROE
Year Round Indoor Swap Meet Celebrating 15 Years! Evergreen Fairgrounds Saturday & Sunday 9 am - 4pm FREE Admission & parking! For Information call
50+ SELLERS!
$16,217 Washington #TOWNCPF099LT
Automobiles Honda
360-794-5504
Was $17,988
800-824-9552
Automobiles Classics & Collectibles
19TH ANNUAL COMMUNITY SALE! Sat. June 1st, 9am-4pm Sunnydale Community 375 Union Ave SE Renton Highlands
S a t u r d a y O n l y, 8 - 4 . Tools, furniture, and other misc. household items. 8025 SW 234th St. Off Kingsbury Rd.
Estate Sales SNOQUALMIE
HUGE ESTATE SALE 6/1-6/2
Easton 2004 Alpenlite trailer, 2001 Ford flat bed fifth wheel attachment, collectibles, fishing gear, lawnmower, tools, dishware, glasses, utensils, mason jars...a life time of cherishables! 3400 square foot shop is plum full! Saturday and Sunday from 7am to 5pm located at 3230 East Sparks Road.
wheels Marine Power
Garage/Moving Sales Kitsap County
CLASSY TREASURES EVENT Fri, 5/31 & Sat, 6/1 8am - 1pm Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church 11042 Sunrise Drive Bainbridge Is, 98110 Offering a wide variety of Holiday Decorations and Commercial Decor from Seattle’s Premier Decorating Company. Miles of Phenomenal High End Wire-Edged Designer Ribbons. Incredible Assor tment. Large Quantities of Poinsettias, Flower Arrangements, Holiday Wreaths, Ornate Tassels, Creative Artistic Supplies, Faux Flowers & Leaves. Spectacular Selection! Wholesale Prices and N eve r B e fo r e S e e n Items! Cash or Bainbridge Check Only! Add a picture to your ad and get noticed 1-inch photo 1-inch copy 5 weeks for one low price Call: 1-800-388-2527 or go online www.nw-ads.com Garage/Moving Sales San Juan County FRIDAY HARBOR
HANNAH ESTATE Sale Part 1. 3148 Bailer Hill Road. Friday, May 31 st , 1 t o 6 p m , S a t u r d ay / Sunday, June 1 st and 2 nd, 8am to 1pm. Tools, hand / power, shop, marine, construction, farm, vehicles, back hoe, steel, Generators, hardware & much more! 360378-5720 www.lodgingfridayharbor.com www.lodging-fridayharbor.com
Snoqualmie Valley Record • May 29, 2013 • 13
Garage/Moving Sales General
3 4 ’ 1 9 8 8 B AY L I N E R Sportfisher 3486. Beautiful! $29,900. Sleeps 6, 2 staterooms, 1 head & shower, propane galley, salon, flying bridge, large cockpit. Twin 454’s - 305 gal. fuel, well maintained boat. 2-VHS radios, Raymarine Radar, Depth Sounder. Full bridge enclosure, windless. Call Ken 206-7144293 for details. B O AT F O R S A L E $20,000. 1938 Monk designed Classic Cruiser. This boat is very clean and well kept. She is extremely economical to run. 30’ x 8’6� x 3’, Volvo 25hp diesel, 7-8 knots, 1 1/4� Cedar over Oak, all Brass hardware. This is a tur n key boat and ready to cruise, or live a b o a r d , f r e s h s u r vey Oct. 2011, includes 10ft Livingston skiff with 6hp outboard, recent professional hull work, zincs and bottom paint 12-12, covered moorage. Health Forces Sale (406)295-9902 RARE 1991 BOSTON Whaler 16SL. Dual console, 90 HP: 2 stroke Mercury, 8 HP Mercury Kicker, EZ Steer, dual down riggers, water-ski pylon, depth finder, canvas cover, anchor with rode, anchor buddy, & EZ Loader Trailer. Safety equipment including fire extinguisher, throw cushion & more. One owner! Professionally maintained! Located in La Connor. $9,500. 206726-1535.
CLASSIC 1973 DODGE Charger. One Owner! Engine rebuilt to approx 340, dual exhaust system, rebuilt front end, BF Goodrich T/A tires. Original paint and vinyl top. Interior very good. Many new parts. Garaged and well maintained. Runs like a dream. $15,500 Reasonable offers considered. Additional photos available via email. 360678-0960.
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5th Wheels
**40’ TETON SUMMIT Homes in Gold Bar Nature Trails. All Appliance s i n c l u d i n g Wa s h e r, Dryer, Dishwasher. Pellet Stove, Furniture, Air Conditioning, 3 Out Buildings, 2 Decks. Lot and Membership IncludMiscellaneous Autos ed. Great Place To Have Fun! Trade Or Best OfSAVE $$$ on AUTO IN- fer. Love To Sell By MeSURANCE from the ma- m o r i a l D ay. 5 0 9 - 3 9 8 jor names you know and 8536 or 425-210-4114 trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call Vehicles Wanted R E A DY F O R M Y QUOTE now! CALL 1CASH FOR CARS! Any 877-890-6843 Make, Model or Year. Auto Service/Parts/ We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Accessories Tr u c k T O D AY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1888-545-8647
Cash JUNK CARS & TRUCKS
Free Pick up 253-335-1232 1-800-577-2885
Reach thousands of readers with just one phone call.
1.25 million readers make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise. 800-388-2527
LOG ON TO A NEW FRONTIER... Whether you’re buying or selling, the classifieds has it all. From automobiles and services to real estate and household goods, you’ll find everything you need at
www.nw-ads.com.
14 • May 29, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
Professional Services Auto Repair Service
Professional Services Legal Services
AUTO CARE ZONE Enumclaw
ALL AROUND AUTO CARE & REPAIR Local & Affordable All makes & models Se Habla Espanol
Divorce For Grownups
(253)335-3747
www.CordialDivorce.com Professional Services Farm/Garden Service
Se Habla Espanol! Para ordenar un anuncio en el Little Nickel! Llame a Lia
206-842-8363 Law Offices of Lynda H. McMaken P.S.
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad. Home Services Asphalt/ Paving
CUSTOM PAVING
866-580-9405
No Job Too Big or Small! 40yrs Exp.
LToupin@littlenickel.com
Lic#CUSTOP*907PK/Bond/Ins
New Driveways, Parking Lots, Repair Work, Sealcoating, Senior Discounts Free Estimates
Se Habla Espanol! Para ordenar un anuncio en el Little Nickel! Llame a Lia
866-580-9405
Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the ClassiďŹ eds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com Home Services Concrete Contractors
Professional Services Legal Services
TOM’S CONCRETE SPECIALTY
206-801-7777 (Sea/Tac) 425-355-8885 Everett
All Types Of Concrete
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Friendly, Flat Fee FREE Phone Consultation Call Greg Hinrichsen, Attorney
425-443-5474
25 years experience
#POE r *OT r -JD 50.4$$4 %.
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gregwh2000@yahoo.com
CONCRETE
DIVORCE $155. $175 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. BBB member. (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalter natives.com legalalt@msn.com
Notice to Contractors Washington State Law (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all advertisements for construction related services include the contractor’s current depar tment of Labor and Industries registration number in the advertisement. Failure to obtain a certificate of registration from L&I or show the registration number in all advertising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor. For more information, call Labor and Industries Specialty Compliance Services Division at 1-800-647-0982 or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov Home Services Excavations
425-318-5008
LToupin@littlenickel.com
BANKRUPTCY
Home Services General Contractors
All Phases - All types Excavations, for ms, pour & finish. 30+ years exper ience, r e a s o n a bl e p r i c i n g . Call for free estimates.
Concrete Design Larry 206-459-7765
lic#concrd9750z
concretedesign.95 @gmail.com
Excavation Work Specializing in Small & Medium Jobs Demolition Trenching & Grating Brush/Stump Removal Hauling Services Top Soil/Bark/Rock
206-510-3539 Licensed, Bonded & Insured
Home Services Hauling & Cleanup
AFFORDABLE q HAULING Storm Cleanup, Hauling, Yard Waste, House Cleanup, Removes Blackberry Bushes, Etc.
Spring Special! 2nd load 1/2 price 25% Discount Specialing in House, garage & yard cleanouts. VERY AFFORDABLE
206-478-8099
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM
Home Services Hauling & Cleanup
A+ HAULING
We remove/recycle: Junk/wood/yard/etc. Fast Service 25 yrs Experience, Reasonable rates
Call Reliable Michael
425.455.0154
Home Services Landscape Services
GOT CLUTTER?
Junk, Appliances, Yard Debris, etc. Serving Kitsap Co. Since 1997
360-377-7990 206-842-2924
Man & Truck for Hire Hauling & Light Moving, Power Washing. Will do your yardwork with your tools. Also Available for Day Labor.
Call Roger at 206-643-2141
Home Services Property Maintenance
All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing ? Finishing ? Structural Repairs ? Humidity and Mold Control F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-888-698-8150 Home Services
House/Cleaning Service
Housekeeping & Janitorial Services Bonded & Insured
*Prune *New Sod *Thatching
*Paving Patios *Rockery/Retaining Walls *General Cleanup
206-244-6043 425-214-3391 ....LANDSCAPING Spring Clean-Up
General Yard Cleaning Trim, Mow, Weeding, Blkberrry Removal, Gutters, Haul Downed trees, Pruning, Pressure Washing and
SO MUCH MORE!! Affordable Prices FREE Estimates.
* Cleanup * Trim * Weed * Prune * Sod * Seed * Bark * Rockery * Backhoe * Patios 425-226-3911 206-722-2043
Lic# A1SHEGL034JM
360.830.7699 www.americanlawn-care.com
www.american-lawn-care.com
SHELLY’S GARDENING All Kinds Of Yard Work
Prune, Weed, Bark, Reseed, Hedge Trim, Thatch, Etc. Free Estimates Senior Discounts
425-235-9162 425-279-3804
HI MARK LANDSCAPING & GARDENING
* SILVER BAY * All Grounds Care
Complete Yard Work DTree Service DHauling DWeeding DPruning DHedge Trim DFence DConcrete DBark DNew Sod & Seed DAerating & Thatching
Clean-Up, Pruning, Full Maint., Hedge, Haul, Bark/Rock, Roof/Gutter
206-387-6100
AGL PAINTING
Free Estimates
360-698-7222 Home Services Painting
Senior Discount FREE ESTIMATE Lic#HIMARML924JB
Advertise your service
Home Services Lawn/Garden Service
A-1 SHEER GARDENING & LANDSCAPING
All Year Lawn Care Aeration & Dethatching Clean-up & Restoration Senior & Mil. Discounts
425-244-3539 425-971-4945
Kenmore, Bothell, Kirkland, Redmond areas
Home Services Landscape Services
Home Owners Re-Roofs
lic#stevegl953kz
HAWKS.......
ALL AROUND LAWN LAWN MAINTENANCE. Brush cutting, mowi n g , h e d g e s, we e d eating, hauling, & pressure washing. R & R MAINTENANCE 206-304-9646
425-350-6958 425-343-7544
• Excellent Home
• • •
Painting. Interior/Exterior Pressure Washing
Lic/Bond/Insured. WA L&I AGLPAPL87CJ www.AGLPaintingExperts.com
&INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE OFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE WWW NW ADS COM ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAY
Lic # 603208719
LAWN CARE PLUS
*Gardening * Mulch* Weeding*Paverstone *Edging*Walkways* *Patios*Call Tim*
360.969.4510
Home Services Roofing/Siding
ROOFING ALL TYPES
*Bark *Weed *Trim
800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com
&INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE OFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE WWW NW ADS COM ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAY
Home Services Plumbing
Any kind of
10% off Special
Call 206-550-6807
Home Services Lawn/Garden Service
YARDWORK
Call Steve
WE TAKE IT ALL!
www.nw-ads.com
Manuels Painting 2 year warranty on any painting job. 15% off exterior painting. Free Estimates
Exterior and Interior Spray, Roll, & Brush
(206)661-8482
manuelspainting@q.com Lic./Bonded/Ins. MANUEP*9920Z
$ My Specialty
Small Company offers
$ Low prices
1-800-972-2937
“FROM Small to All Give Us A Call� Licensed, Bonded, Insured -PACWEWS955PKEastside: 425-273-1050 King Co: 206-326-9277 Sno Co: 425-347-9872
www.pacwestservices.net
Reach readers the daily newspapers miss when you advertise in the ClassiďŹ eds. 1-800-388-2527 or www.nw-ads.com
Your Local Plumber
For 27 Years
On Duty 24/7 Never Any Overtime Fee!
Call 425-788-6235 Lic. Bonded. Ins. Lic# KRROO**099QA
ROOFING & REMODELING Senior Discounts Free Estimates Expert Work 253-850-5405 American Gen. Contractor Better Business Bureau Lic #AMERIGC923B8
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad. Home Services Tree/Shrub Care
JTS INC
FREE ESTIMATES
Tree Removal/Trimming Residential & Commercial Certified in Power Line ROBISPS000CG Clearance Home Services ISA Certified Arborist Pole Builder/Storage Lic. ~ Bonded ~ Insured Free Estimate on Serving All Counties post or stick frame buildings including 253-435-4494 garages, shops, barns, www.treeworkbyjts.com arenas, carports, mini-cabins & sheds Visit our web site for great Our reputation, quality deals nw-ads.com & service can’t be matched! Call Chris @ Domestic Services Ark Custom Buildings Adult/Elder Care 1-877-844-8637 www.arkbuildings.com
360-373-1700
EVERGREEN IN-HOME CARE
23+ Years Experience In Nursing & Residential Assisted Living
TED’S SHEDS
My Prices are Reasonable I Build Custom, Storage Sheds, Garden Sheds, Small Barns Horse Stalls Please call Tim for a Free Estimate 425-486-5046
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Tent attack: At 1:52 a.m., deputies received a report of an assault in the 13500 block of 436th Avenue Southeast. The victim, a homeless person sleeping in a tent in the woods nearby, reported that someone had entered the tent while he was sleeping and attacked him with a flashlight.
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Trail robbery: At 11:08 p.m. a deputy was called to a robbery on the Snoqualmie Valley Trail, near the 4400 block of Southeast North Bend Way. The victim said someone met him on the trail, punched him in the face and stole his bicycle.
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Drive-through assault: At 11:33 p.m., deputies were called to an assault in the drive-through lane of a restaurant in the 400 block of Southwest Mount Si Boulevard. One subject had a knife, but did not use it.
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Monday, May 13 reversal: At 9:49 p.m., police were called to the 32100 block of East Morrison Street, for a reported assault. The caller said she’d been hit with the butt of a gun. Sheriff’s deputies provided assistance and police believed a woman in the home was still in danger, so they forced their way inside. No one was there. When all parties were contacted later, the caller was arrested for felony harassment, for making threats while holding a shotgun.
Shower theft: At 3:36 p.m., a caller in the 46600 block of Southeast North Bend Way reported a theft of items valued at more than $250. He said he’d left his driver’s license, debit card, cash and green card in an unlocked stall while using the public showers, then forgot about them. When he returned to get them, they were gone.
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Thursday, May 16 Under the influence: At 8:54 p.m., a citizen flagged down an officer on patrol to report an erratically driven vehicle on the CarnationDuvall Road. The officer stopped the vehicle in the 8000 block and cited the driver for driving under the influence, and for driving with a suspended license.
Tuesday, May 21 Truck fire: Snoqualmie firefighters responded to a truck fire on 384th Avenue and 85th Street in Snoqualmie. Units arrived to find flames coming from the engine compartment of a Ford F-150. The vehicle was reported as a total loss. Alarm: Snoqualmie firefighters responded to Motion Water Sports for a fire alarm. Upon arrival, they found that employees had tripped the beam detectors. There was no fire.
Tuesday, May 14 Burglary: At 7:26 p.m., a caller in the 31800 block of West Commercial Street reported a burglary at home.
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16 • May 29, 2013 • Snoqualmie Valley Record
www.valleyrecord.com
Calendar SNOQUALMIE Valley
LOOK FOR THE SNOQUALMIE VALLEY VISITOR’S GUIDE IN THIS WEEK’S PAPER
Wednesday, May 29 Manga teens: Anime & Manga Club meets at 3 p.m. at the Snoqualmie Library. Teens can watch anime movies, eat popcorn and practice manga drawing.
Written by and for Valley locals and for tourists alike, the 2013/2014 Snoqualmie Valley Record Visitors Guide is the booklet to keep year-round, and to refer to over and over again.
Thursday, May 30 Chess club: Snoqualmie Valley Chess Club meets at 7 p.m. at North Bend Library. Learn to play chess or get a game going. All ages and skill levels welcome. Live music: Paul Green performs jazz standards and blues, 7:30 p.m. at The Black Dog, downtown Snoqualmie. Live music: Open mic begins at 7 p.m. at Slider’s Cafe, Carnation. Live show: Simpatico, Sam Shepard’s tragicomedy about the world of horse racing, is 8 p.m. at The Black Dog Arts Cafe, Snoqualmie; blackdogsnoqualmie. com.
The Visitor Guide is a supplement to the Snoqualmie Valley Record.
Friday, May 31
VALLEY RECORD SNOQUALMIE
Coming up, we also have our ever-popular ‘Snoqualmie Valley Women in Business’ section, and the Valley Summer Festival pages.
Live show: Simpatico, Sam Shepard’s tragicomedy about the world of horse racing, is 8 p.m. at The Black Dog Arts Cafe, Snoqualmie; blackdogsnoqualmie. com.
425.888.2311
8124 Falls Ave. • Snoqualmie • www.valleyrecord.com
Saturday, June 1 Live music: Bluegrass jam session is 2 to 5 p.m. every Saturday at Slider’s Cafe in Carnation.
Monday, June 3 Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can drop in for free homework help from volunteer tutors, 3 p.m. at Fall City Library. A Place at the Table: Meet Ann Larkin Hansen, author of “The Organic Farming Manual and Finding Good,” 7 p.m. at Carnation Library. Learn what to know before purchasing farmland in order to make sound decisions and avoid future problems. If you are planning to use the land to transition from traditional farming to organic, you will need guidance. Ann is a frequent contributor to Mother Earth News, and she runs her own farm in Bloomer, Wisconsin. Open Mic: Share your musical talents, 8 to 10 p.m. at Snoqualmie Brewery, 8032 Falls Ave., Snoqualmie. Hosted by Ask Sophie, all ages and skill levels welcomed.
Tuesday, June 4
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We feature things to do, places to go, sites to visit or to re-visit, as well information about local entertainment, live theater, trails, farmers markets, Valley history, trails, restaurants and more!.
Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can drop in for free homework help from volunteer tutors, 3 p.m. at North Bend Library, 3:30 p.m. at Carnation Library, 5 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library. Book club: First Tuesday Book Club discusses “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins, 7 p.m. at the North Bend Library. Stories: Spanish Story Time is 6:30 p.m. at the Carnation Library, all ages welcome with an adult.
Children’s bike rodeo is Saturday The Bike Safety Rodeo, hosted by Snoqualmie Police and the Tanner Jeans Memorial, is 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 1, at Snoqualmie Ridge Community Park. A bike parade begins at 10:45 a.m. The day includes bike safety inspections, face painting, bounce toys, free food, bike helmets and t-shirts, a Legends Car Club antique car display, and other activities. Sponsoring organizations include Chase Bank, Gregg’s Cycle, Tim’s Cascade Snacks, DirtCorps, Snoqualmie Y, Advanced Refreshment and Legends Car Club.
Game On: Children can play video and board games at the Carnation Library, 3:30 p.m. Pizza will be served.
Wednesday, June 5 Book sale: Snoqualmie Friends of the Library Book Sale begins, runs during library hours through June 8. Support library programs and buy gently used books. A Place at the Table: Wilderness guide, forager and Western Washington University Professor of Wild Food, Jennifer Hahn, will share an enticing evening of west coast foraging tips and tastes, 7 p.m. at North Bend Library. Learn how to identify dozens of delicious and nutritious wild edibles from field, forest, beach and backyard. Do it all using her sustainable harvesting guidelines and fabulous dishes by celebrated local chefs. Study Zone: Students in grades K-12 can drop in for free homework help from volunteer tutors, 3 p.m. at Fall City Library.
Thursday, June 6 Live music: Open mic begins at 7 p.m. at Slider’s Cafe, Carnation. Live music: Paul Green performs jazz standards and blues, 7:30 p.m. at The Black Dog, downtown Snoqualmie.