INSIDE | Investigation continues in shooting death at fruit stand [3]
.com
REPORTER
NEWSLINE 253-872-6600
KENT
Sports | Chargers’ Thungc digs for a record on the floor [15]
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2013
City builds up cash reserves, might hire more police BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
The city of Kent’s building up cash reserves and paying down debt this year because of new
taxes as well as increased taxes and permit fees. In fact, city officials even discussed at a council workshop Oct. 15 about adding six or more police officers in 2014 because
of the positive financial picture Mayor Suzette Cooke and her staff presented during the 2013-14 biennial budget update. “You’re going to hear a lot of good news about our budget this
year, finally,” said Tom Brubaker, city interim chief administrative officer, to the council. “There has been good strides in our financial goals,” said Bob Nachlinger, city finance director.
The general fund cash reserve is expected to hit $5.6 million by the end of this year as the city hits it 10 percent target of general [ more BUDGET page 4 ]
Committee leaves North Park out of downtown plan rezone
Eye for nature: Danny Najera is dedicated to studying the complexity of honeybees. ROSS COYLE,
BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
A Kent City Council committee agreed with residents that the city’s proposed downtown development plan should leave North Park alone. Three North Park residents asked the city’s Economic and Community Development Committee on Oct. 14 to follow the recommendation by the city’s Land Use and Planning Board to keep a half block north of James Street between Fourth and Fifth Avenues, south of Cloudy Street, zoned for townhouses and condos rather than changing it to commercial use. City staff had recommended a rezone to commercial as part of an overall Downtown Subarea Action Plan designed to revitalize downtown over the next 10 to 20 years. “We just want to make sure that what comes out of this committee’s recommendation follows through with the Land Use and [ more PLAN page 5 ]
Kent Reporter
WHAT’S ALL THE BUZZ? Expert: students can learn eco connections through honeybees BY ROSS COYLE rcoyle@kentreporter.com
MUCH FOG, NO FISH A fisherman returns from a fruitless attempt as fog shrouded the Lake Meridian fishing pier Tuesday morning. Fog and 50-degree temperatures kept a grip on the Kent Valley throughout most of the week. ROSS COYLE, Kent Reporter
Bee stings don’t really hurt Danny Najera like they used to. After years of studying the creatures – including accidentally dropping a hive while carrying it in the middle of the night – he’s come to accept them as simply an occupational hazard. Now Najera is bringing his enthusiasm for the insects to Green River, where he uses the bees as way to not only show the complexity of life, but to illustrate how ecosystems are interconnected. “There is a direct connection between the health of bees and the health of our agricultural system,” he said. “Do you like apples?
Supporters mount campaign for school district levy BY ROSS COYLE rcoyle@kentreporter.com
Another year, another time for taxpayers to decide whether or not to renew the Kent School District levy. A handful of teachers, officials, community leaders and Kent
residents gathered at the Kentridge High School library on Oct. 17 to launch an official campaign for the district’s proposed levy. “Someday we may be fully funded with state and federal dollars, but until that day we’ll need local money,” said Kent Educators Asso-
ciation president Cindy Prescott. Until higher governments can better support education programs in schools, many districts turn to raising funds from the community to keep extracurricular activities afloat. [ more LEVY page 5 ]
Kent teen dies in car crash BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
A 17-year-old Kent boy died from injuries suffered when his car collided early Sunday morning with a
Yeah. Then you like bees. Do you like strawberries? Yes. Then you like bees.” Najera, a Ph.D from the University of Kansas, has brought in his own bee colonies to illustrate the complexity and interconnectedness of the environment to his biology students at Green River Community College. “There has been no other organism that I can carry around in a box and get anything near as much as a powerful lesson as these honeybees.” The boxes he refers to are his colony demonstrations, two plywood boxes two with hinged shutters covering Plexiglas for observing the bees. They serve as Najera’s live instructional displays. The bees produce an audible buzzing despite the Plexiglas wall, but the sound pales in comparison to the tactile vibrations [ more BEES page 4 ]
King County Sheriff ’s Office patrol car in Kent. The accident occurred at about 12:30 a.m. at the intersection of South 196th Street and 68th Avenue South, also known as the West Valley Highway. Brandon Gonzalez, the [ more CRASH page 3 ]
[2] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
We welcome your news items and photos email us at: submissions@kentreporter.com
BECU seeks new site after TOP Food closure BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
BIG SKY
C O N ST RU C T I O N , I N C
REMODELING SOUTH KING COUNTY SINCE 1987
RESIDENTIAL & LIGHT COMMERCIAL • CUSTOM KITCHENS • UNIQUE BATHS • REMODELS • INTERIOR UPGRADES • ADDITIONS
• SKYWALLS & SKYLIGHTS • DECKS • EXTERIOR FACELIFTS • MAJOR/MINOR REPAIRS • FINISHED BASEMENTS
BECU is looking for a new Kent location for its Neighborhood Financial Center with the decision by TOP Food and Drug to close its store within the new few months on the East Hill. BECU, the state’s largest credit union, operates a center inside TOP Food at 26015 104th Ave. S.E. TOP Food announced Oct. 15 it would close stores in Kent, Auburn and Yakima in an effort to improve its overall business performance.
“We are in the process of finalizing both a new temporary and permanent location in the Kent area,” said Todd Pietzsch, BECU spokesman, in a Oct. 17 email. “Our goal is not to have any disruption in service to our members.” The credit union has more than 40 neighborhood centers in Puget Sound area. The only other Kent location is inside the Fred Meyer on the West Hill at 25250 Pacific Highway S. Pietzsch said the new permanent location will not be in a grocery store, but rather, a “stand-alone” Neighborhood Financial Center that will be
much larger (in excess of 2,000 square feet) than its current in-store location. “Our goal is to have the new permanent location open by the second quarter of next year,” he said. “With the larger location our members will then have the opportunity to make appointments with experts who can help with everything from retirement and estate planning, buying or refinancing a home, or growing their business with BECU Small Business Services. The larger location will also help us to better serve our growing membership base in the Kent area.”
DAN SCHULTZ 253-833-1041 www.bigskyconst.com License #BIGSKCI009CO 900199
Ask Your Lawyer by Dan Kellogg
What is a Health Care Directive? Each person can make decisions about their own health care. A person can also indicate whether they want artificial life support to prolong life after the point of natural death by signing a Health Care Directive. The earlier version was called a Directive to Physicians. These documents are often erroneously referred to as a living will. A Health Care Directive can express decisions about end-of-life health care that may be deemed futile. Protect your right to distribute your estate as you intend in a cost-effective manner. Consult an estate planning attorney.
I have more than 39 years of experience providing thoughtful and comprehensive counsel for clients. Please call 425-227-8700 to make an appointment.
Committed to you and the community.
www.dankellogg.com
Getting the Kent experience The Kent Chamber of Commerce’s annual Experience Kent – a free family event – returned to the ShoWare Center on Oct. 17. The event included exhibitions, the Taste of Kent, education and do-it-yourself presentations, the Turkey Challenge Food Drive,
prizes and giveaways. Two Men and A Truck defended its title of Best Booth for two years running. The business made its booth a castle entirely out of moving boxes. Century Link was the presenting sponsor of the event. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter
898433
kennedy catholic high school
open house Tuesday, November 5 6:30 to 8:30 pm
Holiday CRAFT MARKET
Juried Handcrafted, One-of-a-Kind Gifts All in One Stop!
A Variety of Quality Crafts
Free Admission
Friday, November 1 s 9am-5pm Saturday, November 2 s 9am-4pm
Free Onsite Parking
Festive Entertainment
Kent Senior Activity Center 600 East Smith St., Kent, WA 98030 | (253) 856-5150
Figgy Pudding Café
www.kennedyhs.org for more information 898843
pksrW08600_10_13
October 25, 2013 [3]
www.kentreporter.com
BY STEVE HUNTER
shunter@kentreporter.com
SCHOOL BUS DRIVER REMAINS IN HOSPITAL Lynn Hagan, the school bus driver who was hit by a bus earlier this month, remained in critical but stable condition Tuesday at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. A school bus driven by Marnie Harstad struck Hagan as the she crossed the parking lot at the Kent School District’s bus depot at 6:40 a.m. on Oct. 14. Hagan’s injuries will require several surgeries to recover from, sources say, but her family remains supportive of her efforts. The Kent School District has not yet released an official statement on the incident, but district spokesman Chris Loftis said that everyone hopes for a quick recovery. “Everyone in the school district is hoping for a swift and full recovery,” Loftis said. “This was a serious accident and has reminded us all of how quickly lives of service can be so quickly unsettled by tragedy. Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with Lynne and her family.” Harstad, who has worked for the district for six years, has been placed on paid administrative leave as the investigation continues.
A 21-year-old man pleaded not guilty to second-degree burglary in connection with a break-in Oct. 2 at the Frager Farm Stand in Kent that resulted in the property owner shooting to death a second burglary suspect. Dylan M. Taylor entered the plea Oct. 17 in King County Superior Court in Kent and was released Thursday from the county jail on personal recognizance, said Dan Donohoe, King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office spokesman. Taylor is scheduled to return to
court Oct. 29 when a trial date could be set or attorneys could ask for more time to prepare the case. Pablo Young, 19, the second man found inside the Frager Farm Stand office, died from a shotgun wound to the chest, according to the King County Medical Examiner’s Office. The investigation into the shooting remains open, said Sgt. Cindi West, spokeswoman for the King County Sheriff ’s Office, which handled the case because it occurred just outside the Kent city limits. The 64-year-old property owner, who lives next door to the office in the 25100 block of Frager Road South, was not arrested.
[ CRASH from page 1 ] driver of an Acura that crashed with the patrol car, was a senior at Thomas Jeffeson High School, according to a message on the school’s website by Principal Liz Drake. Thomas Jefferson is a Federal Way School District school located in Auburn and draws students from Kent, Auburn and Federal Way. Counselors were available at Thomas Jefferson to help students and staff members cope with the tragedy, Drake said. Family and friends placed flowers and a cross at the southeast corner of the intersection as a memorial to Gonzalez. The patrol car was traveling south on 68th Avenue while an Acura, driven by Gonzalez with two passengers, headed east on South 196th Street, said Sgt. Cindi West, spokeswoman for the King County Sheriff ’s Office, in an email. “The intersection is controlled by a traffic signal,” West said. “Both vehicles entered the intersection around the same time. The patrol car struck the driver’s side of the Acura.” Paramedics transported
Thank you Kent for nominating us
BEST SALON
The business owner heard the initial commotion from his house next door and went to investigate. The men had fled, but he found the damaged door. Later that night, at about 1:36 a.m. Oct. 2, the property owner heard his dog barking. He picked up a loaded shotgun, went outside and approached the business office, according to charging papers against Taylor. The property owner could hear someone inside, saw the door to the office partially open and he could see someone inside. He yelled something like, “Don’t come out” or “Get down!” When the door started to open, he fired his shotgun.
“We are still waiting for forensics and conducting some interviews,” West said in an email. “Once we close it on our end we will forward it to the prosecutor’s office and they will review and see if any charges (against the property owner) are warranted.” According to charging papers filed Oct. 4 against Taylor, Young and Taylor initially kicked in a door to enter the indoor fruit and produce sales area around 10:30 p.m. Oct. 1. The business office is in a separate building from the produce stand. Taylor and Young fled the produce stand minutes later because they got “spooked.”
Ex-Kent attorney gets 25 years in prison for child porn offenses BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
Friends and family of Brandon Gonzalez gather after arranging a memorial at the intersection of 68th Avenue South and South 196th Street, where Gonzalez was killed Sunday when his car collided with a King County Sheriff ’s Office patrol car. ROSS COYLE, Kent Reporter Gonzalez with critical injuries to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, where he later died of his injuries, West said. The deputy was treated at Valley Medical Center in Renton for a broken wrist. The two passengers in the Acura were treated at Valley Medical Center for minor injuries. “There were no indications of alcohol or drugs at the scene,” West said. As of Wednesday, the accident remained under investigation by the King County Sheriff ’s Office major accident response and
reconstruction unit. West said the deputy told investigators he had a green light while the surviving occupants of the other car were unsure if their light was green or red. “We are actively seeking any witnesses to the accident,” West said. One passenger in the Acura told investigators they had been racing another vehicle prior to the accident, West said. The intersection is near a popular illegal street racing section of the North Kent industrial area.
KEVIN COPP Attorney at Law 253.277.1254
A former Kent family law attorney and South King County youth baseball coach received a 25-year prison sentence Monday in U.S. District Court in Seattle for production, receipt and possession of child pornography. David Scott Engle, 50, of Maple Valley, also was sentenced to lifetime supervised release. He pleaded guilty in July after his arrest in November. He has been jailed since his arrest. Engle volunteered and ran a business involving youth baseball, according to a U.S. Attorney’s Office media release. At sentencing, U.S. District Judge James L. Robart took issue with a defense claim that these were not violent attacks. ”Molestation is violence…” Robart said. “Sure, he didn’t threaten to break an arm… but this is violence, let’s be very clear on that.” “This is a heart-wrenching betrayal of trust of the victims and the community,” said U.S. Attorney Jenny A. Durkan. “While nothing can undo this damage, the long sentence will protect the community and sends a strong message about the horrendous acts. Our advocates are resolved to do everything possible to support the victims as they deal with the horrific abuse.” According to records filed in the case, Engle came to the attention of law enforcement following the investigation of an international movie production company that operated a website offering DVDs and streaming videos for sale. The materials depicted young boys in sexually explicit activity. Between 2005 and 2011, Engle purchased 184 items from the website. The international movie production company was put out of business when agents seized its inventory and records.
Think Outside the Candy Box!
BUY BAC NDY K A C We want to
buy your candy for
FREE Initial Consultation SAVE $100 on any
1/pound
$
Monday, November 4, 4-6pm
Will or Trust Package
with this invitation. Mention this ad. Offer Expires 12/31/13
884127
KENT
LOCAL
Frager Farm shooting still under investigation
Children 12 and under accompanied by an adult
218 1st Ave S. | Downtown Kent | salonivoni.com | 253.813.1700
kevin@kentprobatelaw.com
kentprobatelaw.com
898622
*See club for details
h Sue Hollinswortnt 98
0S e E 24 0th St, Ste B3 • K
2
Dr.
04
32 1
1
10% Off
1st visit for new customers!*
886404
Support our troops overseas.
25028 104th Ave SE Fax: 253.277.2296 Kent, WA 98030 Toll Free: 855.224.6119
[4] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
fund monies in cash reserves, Nachlinger said. He added the city will have another $1.5 million in a contingency fund for unanticipated costs and $458,000 for a new strategic opportunity fund. The city also has started to pay down internal and external debt. Brubaker cautioned the council, however, about the positive budget numbers. “I just want to warn you even with the good news, we still need to bring our reserves up, our debt down and we still have not settled our labor negotiations for the next year,” Brubaker said. While city officials reached a contract agreement with the Kent Police Officers Association, the city remains in negotiations with Teamsters Local 117 that represents public works, parks and
[ BEES from page 1 ] that hundreds of insects give off. Touching the plastic barrier feels like touching a low power massage ball. Najera developed an interest in biology while living in Washington and
facilities employees, and Ralph and Boyce. Local 2617 of the Ameri“Like Dana I am can Federation of State, concerned with all of the County and Municipal good news we’ll be in the Employees (AFSCME) frame of mind to start that represents adminisspending but it looks trative staff, corrections pretty good,” Thomas said. workers and building “I agree with Bill we need Brubaker inspectors. more officers.” “I want to make sure we The council adopted its look at the outcome of two labor first two-year budget in Decemcontracts,” Councilwoman Dana ber 2012, rather than voting each Ralph said. “If we look at adding year on a budget. That 4-3 vote more police officers, we need to last year included a new business look at support in the police office and occupation (B&O) tax to as well.” raise about $5 million per year; a Councilman Bill Boyce reacted 6 percent cable television utility to city staff ’s proposal to add six tax to bring in about $1.3 million more police officers. per year and higher permit fees “The police are not staffed for developers for about $1 milwhere they should be,” Boyce said. lion per year. “Six more is good but I’d like to Council members also apsee more than that.” proved a 5 percent jump in storm Councilman Les Thomas drainage tax rates, 4 percent agreed with points raised by increase in sewer rates and a 3
attending Green River and followed that passion through his schooling when his family moved to Kansas. “I got the fascination with bees at University of Kansas,” he said, “but generally the fascination with life, and why I’m a biologist, came from the Pacific
Northwest.” Najera’s lessons at Green River help to impart some of the knowledge developed by Austrian zoologist Karl Von Frisch, specifically his 570-page tome that examines bee communication, to his students. Najera developed his interest in
Ready for rising rates? Let’s talk. Call or visit our financial advisors in the Auburn/Kent area. Scott Shoemaker AAMS® Financial Advisor 1251 Auburn Way N Auburn, WA 98002 253-804-2722
www.edwardjones.com
Kevin P Hasslinger AAMS® Financial Advisor 205 E Meeker St Kent, WA 98032 253-850-1241
Member SIPC
886438
percent jump in water rates. The storm, sewer and water rates are at 13 percent and scheduled to go up again in 2014, although the council plans to take another look at those increases. “We have to look at water, sewer and storm rate increases to make sure we want to move forward with the increases,” Councilwoman Elizabeth Albertson said. Any decrease in utility rate jumps for next year would cause staff to readjust the 2014 budget because of less revenue. The council adopted the new taxes and tax increases last year in an effort to diversify the city tax bases, build back cash reserves and pay down debt. The city’s financial struggles over the last few years has led to downgrades in 2012 to the city’s bond rating by Moody’s Investors Services. The council still hasn’t figured
bees while studying at the University of Kansas under Von Frisch’s pupil Rudolf Jander, who taught a class on animal cognition. “We got to see how complex they were, and it just blew my mind,” Najera said. To illustrate this complexity, Najera walks his students through how a bee “dances” to alert other bees to the location of food. While Aristotle, observing the bees thousands of years before, believed that these motions were simply done because the bee was happy it found food, Najera says that it’s part of a complex and hard-wired method of communication within the colony. When a worker bee discovers a source of pollen, it returns to the hive and shakes it’s thorax while revolving clockwise. Each shake provides direction, and each revolution an indication of distance. By repeating this dance, the
out what to do about the financially struggling Riverbend Golf Complex, which loses money each year and has a $2.25 million debt. The general fund also includes $500,000 each year to help cover operating losses at the city-owned ShoWare Center. Council members plan further discussion about the budget at a Nov. 19 workshop. “We still have a tremendous amount of unmet need for parks and streets,” Brubaker said. “It’s good news, we’re climbing out of our hole. But we have a long, long way to go. We still have to be very responsible with how we handle our money.” The city budget is available online at http://kentwa.gov/Budget.aspx.
bee can give fellow workers the distance and direction of food to within a meter of precision. The complexity of bees can’t be overemphasized, says Najera. If a bee travels to a food source and finds it depleted, it can consult a built in map of other sources. This information is all hard-encoded to the bee’s brain almost like a computer, says Najera. Narjera says that learning about honeybees helps his students better understand the interconnections of plant ecology. When they’re not cross pollinating plants in an area, they’re a mild indicator of how an area is doing. Even their wax and honey absorbs pesticides and can be used for research on the chemicals. “They’re miniature plant ecologists. They’re better plant ecologists because they don’t take the weekends off.” When he’s not studying
or teaching about bees, Najera, who lives in Kent, spends time with his sons or runs and hikes outdoors. But mostly it’s the bees. “My poor wife,” he said with a laugh. “I need a blanket for the bees, which one can I have? She’s like ‘none of them?’” As the world becomes more ecologically minded, Najera believes that bees will become more important in our education and understanding of its systems. “This species for me is a flagship organism to starting to curb our impact ecologically,” he said. His hope is that by simply spending an hour learning about bees, students and visitors will be able to respect and appreciate the multifaceted aspects of nature. Even the ones that sting us.
MEDICARE
Open Enrollment Oct 15 - Dec 7
Compare Plans!
Based on your health, doctors, lifestyle and budget.
Meet 1 on 1 with a broker NO FEES FOR MY SERVICES!
Representing: United Health Care Humana - Regence - Premera SoundPath Amerigroup - Group Health
Mary Maiwald 206-972-1269
mary@wespeakmedicare.org
905250
898580
[ BUDGET from page 1 ]
Neither We Speak Medicare or Mary Maiwald is connected with the Federal Medicare program.
October 25, 2013 [5]
www.kentreporter.com These tax levies, which run for four school years, help fill in the gaps in state and federal funding and pay for everything from district support staff to band and athletic equipment. In Kent’s case, the two levies voters will decide on Feb. 11 will pay for technology purchases and maintenance as well as district program maintenance. The school district hasn’t released any hard figures on the new levies, said district information officer Chris Loftis. They’ll look into how much they’ll need to raise with each levy, and where it will come from — usually an increase in property taxes, Loftis said. According to Loftis, the technology levy will yield
[ plan from page 1 ]
catastrophic to the educational experience.” The school board will meet for the workshop on Oct. 30, and then finalize the proposal at its Nov. 14 meeting. In the meantime, Kent City Councilman Bill Boyce and City Council candidate Jim Berrios are coordinating campaigning efforts with residents. Berrios points to the district’s achievements in the last decade as a reason to continue levy funding. It has received 10 technology awards and 30 academic achievement awards in the past three years. These awards have been capped each year with a financial transparency award from the Association of School Business Officials. “My point that I’m trying to express here is that the
district is maximizing what they’re doing with those bond and levy dollars,” Berrios said. For those who want to volunteer, they can sign up at citizensforkentschools. com to volunteer for phone banks and door belling. While levies tend to stir up debate between those who support public education and those against higher taxes, no one from the opposition camp has raised their voices regarding the idea. Loftis is confident that they’ll become more vocal as the months progress. “Every school district out there is aware of a strong lower tax or no tax or antitax sentiment,” he said, “but that’s what the elections are for.”
appreciate you guys taking the time to do that.” City staff expected a developer might want to build on the half block if able to buy up all dozen or so properties because the land is so close to the city-owned ShoWare Center that hosts Seattle Thunderbirds hockey games, concerts and many other events. Councilman Les Thomas suggested at a September council workshop that a Burger King might be a good addition to the North Park property. That comment didn’t sit well with North Park residents. “I feel very strongly the half block I live on should remain zoned as is and not changed to commercial,” said Susan Stoddard, who has lived in North Park for 12 years. “There’s no developer on board to do anything with the property. The only thing I heard is maybe a Burger King would be good on the corner. I don’t see it worth doing that.” North Park residents said they have cleaned up the neighborhood and children can now use a local park. They said it’s not an affluent
neighborhood but people talk to each other, get along and like that it’s affordable. “We’ve spent a tremendous amount of emotional energy cleaning up our neighborhood getting rid of the prostitution houses, the drug houses and the graffiti that’s along the railroad tracks and underneath Highway 167,” Malcolm said. Tina Budell, president of the North Park Neighborhood Council, called the area a “modern day Mayberry,” in reference to
the neighborly setting of two television sitcoms from the 1960s. “We want to keep our neighborhood a neighborhood,” Budell said. “There’s plenty of open space in the downtown corridor. Meeker Street needs a facelift. Work on the areas that are an eyesore and can bring in money.”
November 16 9am - 6pm
Southgate Masonic Hall 1004 SW 152nd, Burien Dealer Space Available
206-290-3658 ••
colm said. “Quit encroaching farther and farther north into our neighborhoods.” Staff and council are updating a 2005 downtown plan that already accomplished goals such as the development of the Kent Station shopping mall and Town Square Plaza park.
Located in Kent, WA, Radcliffe Place offers affordable apartments with the opportunity for meals and housecleaning – never worry about making dinner again! Spend your time relaxing in the game room, working out in the fitness center or laughing with friends in the tea house. • • • • •
Pet friendly Restaurant-style Dining Life Enrichment Program Scheduled Transportation Active monthly calendar
• Housekeeping and Flat Linen Service • Daily Concierge Service • Movie Theater & Fitness Center • Handicapped accessible units
Availability is limited. Call TODAY! 253-220-6322 13510 SE 272nd St. Kent, WA 98042
253-220-6322 www.radcliffe-place.com
Until 1/31/14 - Limitations apply. See stores for details.
North Kent
21402 84th Ave S Kent, WA 98032
In Bellevue
13200 NE 20th, #100 Bellevue, WA 98005
902566
12135 SE Kent Kangley Rd. Kent, WA 98030
Much of the focus of the new plan is to increase residential housing downtown and bring in more retail businesses, even to allow developers to build as high as five stories or 65 feet. “Take care of what you have in the old downtown district and everything south of James Street,” Mal-
At Radcliffe Place, You Can Afford to Leave the Chores Behind!
Save Up To $500 Call 425- 214- 4366
Two Kent School District seniors have been selected as National Merit Scholarship semifinalists. Kate Khazoyan of Kent-Meridian High School and Tracy Tran of Kentridge High School are each competing for one of approximately 8,000 scholarships worth around $35 million. Semifinalists are selected because they scored the highest on the preliminary SATs last fall. Each semifinalist will now submit an essay, a letter of recom-
mendation from a school official, a list of extracurricular activities, a detailed academic record, and an SAT score from this year. “I’m glad to see our students compete for such a high honor as a direct result of taking PSATs as juniors,” said Superintendent Edward Lee Vargas. “This is why the Kent School District offers PSATs, SATs and other college preparatory tests for free to our students.” National Merit Scholarships Corp. will name about 15,000 finalists in February and scholarship winners sometime between April and July.
BURIEN ANTIQUE SHOW Saturday,
FIREPLACE REBATE EVENT
Fireside Stove Shop
Kent seniors selected as National Merit Scholarship semifinalists
•
Planning Board recommendation to leave our neighborhood alone,” said Bruce Malcolm, a 23-year resident of the area, at the meeting. “We don’t need a 65-foot tall building at the corner of our neighborhood.” The committee voted 2-0 to approve the downtown plan recommended by the Land Use and Planning Board. Councilwoman Jamie Perry and Councilman Bill Boyce approved the plan. Councilwoman Deborah Ranniger did not attend the meeting. The downtown plan is scheduled to go to the full council for approval on Nov. 19. “This is how the process is supposed to work,” Perry said prior to the vote. “We get recommendations from expert staff members, the community is supposed to have input and ultimately the Council is responsible for making sure the proper decisions get made. Everyone appearing at the Land Use and Planning Board and putting in their input that’s exactly what’s supposed to happen. I really
the most visible results for the district. “The technology levy will pay for devices in schools, things that students use every day. When people pay for those things through their taxes they see something really tangible.” But Loftis is careful to not discount the importance of the maintenance and operations levy, which will support many sustainment efforts, such as the district’s lunch program. Should the levies not be passed, the district will be forced to cut 22 percent of its programs and staff, leading to severe changes for Kent schools in cuts that Loftis describes as “draconian.” “If we lose 22 percent of our maintenance and operations funding, that’s
•
[ levy from page 1 ]
902564
[6] October 25, 2013
KENT
OPINION
www.kentreporter.com
O Q U O T E O F N O T E : “I just want to warn you even with the good news, we still need to bring our reserves up, our debt down and we still have not settled
our labor negotiations for the next year.” – Tom Brubaker, city interim chief administrative officer, on the city’s 2013-14 biennial budget
GUEST EDITORIAL
Transportation taxes, project reform debate need your input
Vote online: www.kentreporter.com Last week’s poll results:
“ Is Debbie Raplee a good alternative in the City Council race?? ” Yes: 67% No: 33%
KENT
REPORTER 19426 68th Ave. S., Suite A Kent, WA 98032 Phone: 253.833.0218
Polly Shepherd Publisher: pshepherd@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600, ext. 1050 Mark Klaas Editor: mklaas@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600, ext. 27-5050 Advertising 253.872.6731 Classified Marketplace 800-388-2527 Letters letters@kentreporter.com Steve Hunter, reporter shunter@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600, ext. 5052 Ross Coyle, reporter rcoyle@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600, ext. 5056 Delivery inquiries: 253.872.6610 or circulation@kentreporter.com
Scan this code and start receiving local news on your mobile device today
Rep. Mark Hargrove
?
“Should the city hire more police officers with the additional money?”
COMMENTARY
Question of the week:
Transportation infrastructure is critical to our state’s economy. As the assistant ranking Republican on the House Transportation Committee, I know that moving freight in our trade-dependent state and getting residents to work, home and other important destinations should be our top priorities when considering road and bridge projects. While a $10 billion transportation tax package was debated and barely passed in the House of Representatives at the end of the second special session (June 27), it did not pass the Senate. Many arguments for not passing the tax proposal at such a late date have merit. I believe holding off on the tax package was best in order to allow lawmakers time to listen to constituents and craft a plan that could receive strong bipartisan support. On Oct. 9, I participated in the Senate’s bipartisan transportation feedback forum in Tacoma. Of the dozens of residents who spoke at the forum, all but three supported a “revenue package,” which would mean increasing the state gas tax and other fees to fund current and future transportation projects. However, as I listened to those testifying and groups they represent, I considered how 47th District residents offered strong support of ballot measures requiring a two-thirds vote of the Legislature to increase taxes and repealing the soda and candy taxes passed by the majority party in the Legislature. It concerns me that the voices I heard are not representative of our district as a whole. I want to hear your thoughts, so I have created a short online survey for constituents. You can access it at this web address: www.surveymonkey.com/s/ZSDNZ6Z. Clearly, we must complete Highways 167 and 509 to connect our ports, highways and warehouses. This is critical to Washington’s economy and would aid in job creation in [ more GUEST OP page 7 ]
BALLOTS ARE OUT: King County Elections mailed ballots last week for the Nov. 5 general election. Voters’ pamphlets are mailed separately by bulk mail and may arrive on a different day than ballots. All households will receive two voters’ pamphlets for this election, the state edition and the King County local edition. Citizens can return ballots by mail with a first class stamp, postmarked by Nov. 5, or by 8 p.m. Nov. 5 to any of 25 locations, including ballot dropoff boxes, dropoff vans, and Accessible Voting Centers.
O L E T T E R S...Y O U R O P I N I O N CO U N T S: To submit an item or photo: e-mail submissions@kentreporter.com; mail attn: Letters, Kent Reporter, 19426 68th Ave. S., Kent, WA, 98032; fax 253.437.6016
Vote to reelect Mayor Cooke Suzette Cooke is a proven leader who cares about people. She worked on leading all the cities impacted by the possible flooding of the Green River by placing sandbags to prevent flooding. She has lowered crime and greatly improved police service. Cooke started the Neighborhood Councils program in Kent, so our whole city is involving young people to work together to improve their own neighborhoods. In tough economic times over the last four years, she has worked closely with the City Council to reduce staffing and city expenditures while successfully maintaining high levels of service. Most importantly, Cooke has been the people’s mayor where she has been tirelessly out in our city working with all parts of our amazingly diverse population and in all areas of our city. We are the sixth largest city in Washington, but we have the best mayor. I’ve lived in Kent since 1933, so I have experienced a lot of Kent mayors. Suzette Cooke is clearly Kent’s best mayor in my 80 years of being part of this city. – Len McCaughan
Business people good for the council A letter to the editor mentioned too many candidates running for office are business people.
Letters policy The Kent Reporter welcomes letters to the editor on any subject. Letters must include a name, address and daytime phone number for verification purposes. Letters may be edited for length. Letters should be no more than 250 words in length. Submissions may be printed both in the paper and electronically. Deadline for letters to be considered for publication is 2 p.m. Tuesday. I think people with experience running a business should be elected. They know how to purchase supplies and prioritize spending or go out of business. Looking back at all the failed programs or projects Kent has failed on is a big reason business experience is needed. We need candidates who will fund roads, utilities, parks and police before funding all the feel good social programs. You should check out Jim Berrios’ flyer to see his experiences before voting. It seems this is the kind of councilperson we need. – Gene Brenner
Let’s figure out how to work together I am equally unhappy with the national legislative state of affairs. I’ve leaned toward split government, house of one party, senate of another (or
vice versa) because I thought that might force them to work together since neither party alone could move anything. That didn’t (hasn’t) worked. I’m not a big fan of oneparty government because that lends itself to overreach. A republican majority and a democratic president doesn’t (isn’t) working. Likely neither would the opposite. A republican majority and a republican president did not take the country to a better place – although, much was passed and signed into law. I’ve got to think a democratic majority and a democratic president would likely add up to the same. Gerrymandering has resulted in safe districts in which candidates like tenured professors are immune (or at least highly resistant) to the consequences of bad decisions. Term limits only changes the interim in which candidates from safe districts are replaced. I’ve come to realize it’s not, never has been about the party. It’s about sound governance in which there are consequences for bad actions and checks and balances both in the electoral process and in governance. And, I’m inclined to think that what might absolutely fix that would be more competitive districts in which getting elected is not a sure thing, but depends on getting the votes of a broad cross section of constituents – left, right, middle. [ more LETTERS page 7 ]
October 25, 2013 [7]
www.kentreporter.com [ LETTERS from page 6 ] Sure it’ll make the process more difficult. It will also require, I hope, a greater degree of accommodation of diverse viewpoints. Something right now, sorely lacking. Come next election, I’m likely to vote strictly democratic. I haven’t in the past. But I’m not persuaded that President Obama is evil incarnate. And I think he deserves a chance, just as much as a republican president, to attempt to enact the policies he, his (or her) party supports. Grinding the system to a halt because one doesn’t like the electoral outcome is self-centered and selfish – left or right. In the future, I’d much rather see competitive districts than safe districts. Run the real risk of losing an election rather than pleasing the choir. It’s just not proving to be good for the country. Less strident, less adversarial, less rock throwing for the sake of throwing rocks and not much else. By the year 2043 or sooner we will be a far more diverse nation than we currently are. It is in our best interests to figure out how to work together to sort out our difference. Getting bent out of shape because things are changing, they’re not as they “used to be” is just short-sighted and unproductive. How things “used to be” isn’t the direction we’re moving in, whether or not we like it. Let’s do ourselves, our nation, and the world (by example) a favor, and figure out how to make it work. – Mike Moore
[ GUEST OP from page 6 ] our communities. And, we certainly need to fix the Highway 167/405 interchange. However, before I can support the Legislature taking more tax dollars from constituents, we must put in place commonsense reforms that address costs in the transportation system. The reports on the faulty 520 Bridge pontoons, a ferry that lists due to design flaws, and an off-ramp on Highway 16 being put in the wrong place have eroded taxpayer trust. These errors are costing us hundreds of millions of dollars. There are some simple solutions we can and should adopt in our state transportation system as part of any transportation tax package debate to lower the cost of projects and improve accountability. Here are some of the many solutions being considered: Ensure accountability for tax dollars by requiring the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) to report engineering errors to the Legislature and find solutions to avoid making the same costly mistakes again
Please replace bridge, at least post some signs I was disappointed that the Alvord T. Bridge was being torn down when I was going to use it recently as a short cut to avoid rush hour traffic. If there was not any money in the budget to maintain it and/or to replace it, then that’s understandable. But it should at least be replaced with a pedestrian bridge for bicycle riders, motorized wheelchair users, walkers, runners, etc. to use. I’m sure there can be some money found in the budget for that. Signs should be posted at the spot where the bridge was to direct people to an alternative route to use to drive across Green River. If there is not going to be a replacement bridge at that spot for pedestrians, then there should at least be one more pedestrian bridge installed elsewhere across the Green River. If a pedestrian bridge does get installed, regardless of where it is going to be, then it should also be a covered bridge to give users a break from being in the rain. I think us taxpayers should be able to decide if we want a pedestrian bridge installed or not. It’s our tax dollars so we should have the right to decide what to spend it on. – Eric Thornton
Water polo continues to grow in our area I was very happy to read in the Oct. 18 Kent Reporter that water polo is growing in popularity in the area
(House Bill 1986). End the practice of paying sales tax on transportation projects, which diverts dollars meant for roads to the general fund to spend on non-transportation related programs and agencies (House Bill 1985). Streamline the permitting process (House Bill 1236), making it more predictable to ensure projects are started and completed on time. Address duplicate and costly land management studies required for large projects. For example, by allowing one exception to the Shoreline Management Act for the 520 Bridge project, the state saved $165 million. The Legislature is also studying why it appears that the costs of transportation projects in Washington state are significantly higher than similar projects in other states. We should have a better understanding before the next legislative session, when hopefully we will take necessary action. Let’s have a debate on what reforms will work best to make sure citizens are getting the most bang for their buck. But, we cannot ignore the reality that more
and that an invitational tournament brought more attention to the sport. I played water polo in high school in Honolulu in the late ’70s and early ’80s, when it was also a developing sport with only four schools fielding teams. Since then, through promotions such as tournaments, water polo has steadily grown to be a popular sport with several schools now participating. It has been 31 years since I played and although I was not a starter and I cannot remember the scores, I enjoyed the games and keep it as a source of pride. In practice I was able to “egg beater” across the pool holding three water polo balls over my head. I want to wish Coach McKee and all of the individuals and players in the South Puget Sound League the best of luck in all of their games and continued success in growing the popularity of water polo in South King County. – Finn Palmer THE SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL OF KENT service club is taking applications for the Women’s Opportunity Award. The program gives women, who are the head of their households and providing the primary income for the home, a chance at achieving their educational goals. To apply for the award, contact Soroptimist International of Kent member Amy Khela at amenpreetkhela@ yahoo.com for an online application. The deadline for the award nominees is Dec. 15.
cost controls, accountability and common-sense changes must be made before we embark on new projects that will ask taxpayers for more to fund them. What do you think? Please share your thoughts with me at www.surveymonkey.com/s/ZSDNZ6Z.
Or, call or email me with your comments at (360) 786-7918 and Mark.Hargrove@leg.wa.gov. Rep. Mark Hargrove, R-Covington, serves the 47th Legislative District. He is the assistant ranking Republican on the House Transportation Committee.
Grease Was the Word
An exhibit that Rocks, Revs, and Celebrates Teenage Years in the 1950s and 60s.
...obituaries Stan Bassett Stan Bassett passed away Tuesday, October 8, 2013 in Ellensburg, WA. Born September 21, 1944 in Auburn, he spent his entire life in public service and as a staunch advocate for children. A memorial service will be held Saturday, November 2nd at 1 pm at Ellensburg High School – 1203 East Capitol Avenue. 904989
Larry Paul Westendorf Larry Paul Westendorf passed away while on vacation on October 16, 2013. Larry was born in Renton on April 18, 1946 to Edgar and Audrey Westendorf. He spent all of his childhood living in Kent. He graduated from Kent Meridian Senior High School in 1964 and attended Centralia Community College for 2 years. Larry was drafted into the army in 1966 and served in Vietnam. Before going overseas he married his high school sweetheart Linda Williams on May 21, 1967. He worked as a supervisor in the printing industry for 40 years and retired in 2008. He is survived by his wife Linda, children Lance, Lyal (Laura), Lori and grandchildren Brendan, Bralen, Bobbi, Layla, Logan and Lexi.Also survived by Jerry (Penny), Karen (Dave) Zabor, Cheryl (Gary) Leider, Randy (Cindy), and Joan (Pat) Michaud, sister-in-law Sue Williams along with many nieces and nephews. A celebration of his life will be held on Friday, November 1, 2013 at 11:00 am at the Messiah Lutheran Church in Auburn, Washington. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Messiah Lutheran Memorial fund. 905535
Douglas William Helgeson Doug Helgeson, 70, of Vashon, passed away on October 11, 2013. Doug was born to the late Mel and Harriette Helgeson on March 14, 1943 in Kent. He graduated from Kent-Meridian High School in 1961, earned a BA in Education from Western Washington University in 1966 and later completed a master degree in Educational Administration from Central Washington University in 1990. Doug worked as a teacher, coach, and administrator in the Kent School District for 26 years; with 24 of those years being served Kentridge High School. He was the Principal of Shelby High School, in Shelby, MT for nine years and completed the last eight years of his career as a teacher/administrator at the International School of Bangkok in Thailand. Doug was an active member of the Vashon Lutheran Church, a beloved family man, and always wanted what was best for people; especially children. Doug is survived by his wife, Dinah Helgeson, his son, Tim Helgeson and wife Corrine Helgeson of Kent, daughter, Teri Coombs and husband Jack Coombs of San Francisco, and daughter, Heidi Dowling and husband David Dowling of Duvall. He is also survived by three grandchildren, Riley Helgeson,Trey Helgeson, and Avery Dowling, two brothers, Jerry Helgeson and wife, Ardith Helgeson and Lanny Helgeson and wife Kathy Helgeson, mother-in-law Laila Lindberg, and numerous nieces and nephews. Services will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, November 2nd at the Family of Grace Lutheran Church in Auburn,Washington. In lieu of flowers the family is suggesting donations be made to: “After The Wave” – a foundation that helps educate orphaned, young Thai children, who were affected by the 2004 Tsunami in SE Asia, Flathead Lutheran Bible Camp, Toole County Education Fund, or a charity of your choice. Please visit an online guest book at www.islandfuneral.com
Through November 10th
905598
918 H Street SE, (Les Gove Park) Auburn, WA 98002 • (253) 288-7433 M USEUM A DMISSION : $1 for children and seniors, $2 for adults Admission Free Each Wednesday & 4th Sunday Sponsored by: Foundation www.wrvmuseum.org
885620
Place a paid obituary to honor those who have passed away, call Linda at 253.234.3506 paidobits@reporternewspapers.com All notices are subject to verification.
[8] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
Heroin addict leaves bloody mess in restaurant restroom BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
A heroin addict reportedly left a bloody mess in a Kent restaurant restroom. Officers responded to a call at about 6:44 a.m. Oct. 15 to the McDonald’s restaurant, 10125 S.E. 256th St., about a man who stayed in a bathroom for about 45 minutes and then left blood on the floor when he exited, according to the police report. A witness spotted a vehicle in the parking lot the man entered after leaving the restroom. Officers found the man sitting in the car and asked him what he had been doing at the McDonald’s. The man initially replied he just went inside to use the bathroom. But then he admitted to injecting heroin in the restroom and had cut himself.
milk to take away the sting Police searched the man’s after security at a nearby backpack and found bar had used pepper spray several syringes, plastic POLICE on her. baggies, Q-tips and a The woman’s boyfriend tourniquet - each items told police he and his girlused by heroin addicts. friend were at the El Parral Officers arrested the man nightclub and the woman started for investigation of possession of a fight inside so security pepper drug paraphernalia sprayed her. They went to the Assault nearby store to get milk to relieve Police responded to reports the burn from the spray. at about 1:30 a.m. Oct. 12 of an When the woman started to intoxicated woman inside the pour milk over herself inside the Shell station store, 26010 Pacific store, the boyfriend tried to get Highway S. her to go outside. She became When officers arrived, they upset and hit him, which caused said the woman appeared to be his cheek to swell. extremely intoxicated and was The girlfriend admitted to covered in milk, according to the police she drank “lots,” including police report. Tequila. The couple had dated for There were two empty milk jugs about four months. The boyfriend in the parking lot and a lot of milk reportedly discovered at the on the floor inside the store. The nightclub that his girlfriend was woman reportedly tried to use bi-sexual and wanted to leave. But
BLOTTER
WASP plans pre-Halloween patrols The Washington State Patrol will conduct a pre-Halloween emphasis patrol through the “King County Metro Zone” Oct. 23-26. The “Metro Zone” is the area on Interstate 5 between Ravenna (Seattle) and Interurban (Tukwila), according to a State Patrol media release. Troopers are anticipating several social functions that could increase the amount of impaired drivers in the Seattle area due to
Halloween celebrations. Last year’s Halloween patrol efforts saw an 81 percent increase in DUI arrests and a 60 percent increase in traffic stops compared to the year before. This helped in having no traffic collision fatalities in the area in 2012. The WSP wants to build on this momentum and help to prevent any serious injury or fatal collision this year. The emphasis patrols will occur daily from noon to 4 a.m., using marked and unmarked patrol vehicles.
the girlfriend didn’t want to leave which led to the disturbance. Police arrested the woman for investigation of fourth-degree assault for hitting her boyfriend.
the man ran out the door, got in a car and drove away. Police did not find the man and cited him at large.
Theft
Escape Officers cited a man for escaping community custody after he fled the annex at the city jail facility programs office, 8323 S. 259th St. The man reported for his assigned community service but earlier had submitted a doctor’s report with restrictions on his work duty, according to the police report. A corrections officer told the man he would need to be reassigned to a new work program and would be taken into custody until that assignment. When told he had to be taken into custody,
Police seek donations to equip K9’s with protective vests Kent Police are asking for donations to help protect their K9’s with protective vests. Kent police K9 Kato was stabbed by a suspect on Sept. 24 while he was doing his job. He was not wearing a protective vest at the time of the incident. Kato underwent surgery, is feeling much better and is expected to return to duty after he completely heals.
Officers cited a man for investigation of third-degree theft after he allegedly took a bottle of whiskey at about 7:45 p.m. Oct. 13 from Safeway, 210 Washington Ave. S. A store security officer saw the man conceal a whiskey bottle under his jacket and exit the store with no attempt to pay, according to the police report. Security stopped the man outside the store, brought him back inside and called police. The man told officers he just needed the liquor.
The goal is to raise $1,900 for this life saving body armor. Each vest costs $950 and has a 5-year warranty. Donations for the Kent Police K9 vests may be made directly at www. crowdrise.com/K9HerosofKentPD. Donations are tax deductible and may also be mailed to Vested Interest in K9s, Inc. P.O. Box 9 East Taunton, MA 02718, please note: KENT, WA on checks. For more information visit www. vik9s.org or call 508-824-6978.
D E L I V E R I N G R E S U LT S W I T H I N T E G R I T Y Tom Jacobs Branch Manager
Lorelei Windhorn 253-569-1058
Robbyn Adelsman 253-569-0106
Philip Baskaron 206-255-3400
Duane Coleman 206-818-1706
Pat Conger 206-227-1959
Larry Davis 206-949-3434
Dawn Dubé 206-396-8926
Jennifer Gilbert-Smith 253-653-9033
Joan Hanson 206-949-4811
Phyllis Hay 206-295-7649
Berkshire Hathaway owns 55 companies worldwide including, See’s Candies, GEICO, Dairy Queen, Mars Inc., Heinz, Fruit of the Loom, Ben Bridge Jewelers, Pampered Chef, and Benjamin Moore Paint, just to name a few.
Linette Wilson 425-260-3696
Prudential Real Estate was ranked No. 1 by J.D. Power & Associates in three categories, making it one of the most desirable franchises in America. We are pleased to announce the Prudential Real Estate Franchise has been purchased by a Berkshire Hathaway Company— HomeServices of America—creating a new franchise, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices.
Liliana Torres 206-290-7575
Calvin Gligorea 206-795-0794
This franchise will bring you the strength, integrity and trust of the Worlds No. 1 Most Respected Company— Berkshire Hathaway, plus the success of Prudential Real Estate.
We’re Changing Our Name!
Elizabeth Waloweek 253-217-6173
Jan Glenn 253-261-3025
As we combine the strength of Prudential Real Estate with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, we bring you even stronger marketing with global, national and local exposure!
Julie Horton 206-300-0400
Len Huber 206-930-8079
Rhonda Ingalls 253-332-9941
Cathy Jacobs 206-755-4840
Zdenka Kalezic 206-407-4404
It’s A Good Sign! (253) 854-9400
Prudential Northwest Realty Associates is a brokerage member of Prudential Real Estate, a network brand of HSF Affiliates LLC, of which HomeServices of America, Inc. ™ is a majority owner. Equal Housing Opportunity
253-854-9400 NWKent.PNWRealty.com 25230 104th Ave SE, Kent, WA 98030
Karen Stevenson 206-251-6200
Pat Sheets 253-740-1102
Marilyn Schroeder 206-999-3276
Mary Saucier 253-639-8608
Sandy Sargent 206-949-0552
Teresa Saenger 206-510-8407
Tracie Pentzold 206-920-1063
Florence Ong 253-347-0510
Dominick Mandato 253-797-1568
Teresa Lyman 253-709-0913
Leon Lyman 253-639-3350
Lisa Kimball 253-223-7444
Cindy Lucas 206-714-9716
Cris LeCompte 206-595-7422
904317
Denise Tholl 253-740-6986
October 25, 2013 [9]
www.kentreporter.com
Frosty fall allows for some landscaping possibilities
Arts commission seeks volunteers The city of Kent Arts Commission is seeking volunteer members (adult and youth) to advise city staff and assist in bringing high quality arts and cultural experiences to residents. The Commission celebrated its 38th anniversary in October. Founded by City Ordinance in 1975, the Commission is an advisory board of 14 citizens, appointed by the mayor to promote cultural programs and provide citizen input to the planning of arts and cultural activities. Kent Parks, Recreation and Community Services staff provide support to the group. Major programs include an extensive public art program, performing arts, two grant programs, and several special community events and festivals.
THE GARDENER
One of the sweetest smelling daffodils is Narcissus jonquilla with names like “Pheasant’s Eyes”, “Minnow” and “Thalia.” The Tazetta Narcissi or Poet’s Narcissi are also fragrant and easy to grow. An easy project with many happy returns is to fill a large pot with a few inches of potting soil, layer in enough narcissi so that they are sitting close to one another on their fat bottoms and then cover the bulbs with at least six more inches of potting soil. You can add a top layer of smaller bulbs such as crocus or snowdrops and cap this with a few more inches of soil. Top the layers of bulbs off with some winter-blooming pansies. Next make sure the container will drain quickly by setting it on “pot feet” made from repurposed plastic water bottle caps. Leave this pot outdoors so the bulbs can experience the chill of winter cold that they need before they can flower. In spring you’ll have a beautiful display of fragrant flowers that will push up through the top layer of pansies. The pot can be moved to a front porch, back patio or just outside a bedroom window. Now you’ll really know what it means to have the smell of spring in the air. Marianne Binetti
The end of October is when frost finishes off the summer garden, but there is still time to improve your landscape if you enjoy working outdoors with a nip in the air. It is not too late to add trees and shrubs to the landscape or to transplant overgrown shrubs. You can move shallow rooted shrubs like rhodies, camellias and azaleas any time of year but you won’t have to worry about keeping the soil moist after the transplant if you move them in October. You can continue to add bulbs to the landscape and even to pot up bulbs such as Paper White Narcissus and hyacinths for early winter forcing indoors. When it comes to “how deep to plant” your bulb the sage advice is to plant at twice the height of the bulb. This means the larger the bulb the deeper the hole. Here are a few more unusual bulbs to seek out and plant now: Sweetly scented daffodils: The term daffodil applies to many members of the genus Narcissus a spring bloomer that adapts to shade, is not eaten by deer or voles and loves our climate. You can find different varieties that flower from February up until May and when you plant the bulb will influence when the flowers bloom. Planting in late October or November means you’ll have to wait longer for the flowers to bloom come spring.
Multi-flowering or bouquet tulips Why plant a tulip bulb and get just one bloom,
The Commission also offers free or low-cost community workshops and school residencies in conjunction with many performances and visual arts programs. Candidates should have a commitment to the arts in our community and some knowledge or background in the arts. Candidates must reside or own property within the city or one of its utility or parks department service areas or, alternatively, work or own a business within the city’s municipal boundaries. Youth candidates must be of high school age and attend a Kent school or live within the city of Kent’s municipal boundaries. Commissioners attend monthly meetings and assist with events throughout the year. Interested candidates should contact Cultural Programs Manager Ronda Billerbeck at rbillerbeck@ kentwa.gov.
when for the same amount of work you can enjoy a bulb that flowers with four or five flowers? Welcome to the world of multiplestemmed tulips. The variety “Happy Family” is a rich pink while the multiple blooms and the tulip ‘Antoinette’ starts out pale yellow than changes to green and pink. My favorite tulip is called
‘Angelique’ and it displays double pink blooms flushed with white and always with more than just one flower per bulb in my garden. Angelique blooms on stems just 18 inches tall which is considered a bit short for a tulip but in our rainy spring climate it is the taller tulips that seem to topple over so I like to plant shorter varieties.
You don’t even need to know the names of the bulbs that you add to your garden this month. Gardening is an adventure and your yard is your playground. Scoop up any end-of-season bulbs you find for sale and just dig in. Spring will unwrap itself in mystery flowers, a gift for adventurous gardeners.
Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardens” and several other books. For book requests or answers to gardening questions, write to her at: P.O. Box 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply. For more gardening information, she can be reached at her website, www.binettigarden.com.
NEW FROM PREMERA BLUE CROSS!
From
*
0
$
a month!
Medicare Advantage plans that
fit your life.
Call toll free for more information: 855-339-5207 (TTY: 711) 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Pacific Time)
OR JOIN US AT A FREE SEMINAR** NEAR YOU: Kent Kent Commons Community Center Mill Creek Room 525 Fourth Avenue N October 30 at 10 a.m. November 5 at 10 a.m. November 12 at 1 p.m.
Burien Angelo’s Ristorante & Lounge 601 SW 153rd Street November 1 at 1 p.m. November 15 at 1 p.m.
*You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. **A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 855-339-5207 (TTY: 711). Plans are available in King, Pierce, Snohomish, Spokane and Thurston counties. Premera Blue Cross is an HMO and HMO-POS plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Premera Blue Cross depends on contract renewal. H7245_PBC0052_Accepted
028571 (06-2013)
[10] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
KENT
CALENDAR Events Public hearing on clean air maintenance plan: 6:30 p.m. Oct. 30, Kent Commons, Mill Creek Room, at 525 Fourth Ave. N.. The Washington Department of Ecology seeks public comment on the proposal. Kent and parts of Seattle and Tacoma, formerly listed as air-quality problem areas, would continue to meet a clean-air standard for airborne particles at least through 2020,
under a proposed plan drawn by state and local agencies. Comments by Nov. 4 also may be sent to: email: AQComments@ecy. wa.gov; or letter: Department of Ecology; P.O. Box 47600; Olympia, WA 98504-7600; ATTN: Laurie Hulse-Moyer. The proposed plan is available at www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/air/sips/plans/maintenancesip.htm. Kent Lions Club: Nov. 2, Auburn Golf Course, 29630 Green River Road SE. Celebrating 75 years in the Kent community.
Got an event? submissions@kentreporter.com or post online at www.kentreporter.com Come share your memories about Kent Cornucopia, Winterfest and other service projects brought to the community by the Kent Lions. Cost: $40 per person or $70 per couple for dinner and program. Contact lionpatty@gmail.com for tickets. Fall Antique Bottle, Insulator & Collectible Show: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov. 16, Kent Commons, Green River Room, 525 Fourth Ave. N. Old bottles, glassware, insulators, advertising collectibles, breweri-
PUBLIC NOTICES ASSESSMENT INSTALLMENT NOTICE LOCAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT #361 CITY OF KENT Supplemental Assessment Roll for Local Improvement District (LID) No. 351, designated as LID No. 361, for the construction of the South 277th Street Corridor Improvements, as originally provided by Ordinance No. 3496. Notice is hereby given that the seventh (7th) installment of the assessment levied for the above named improvement, comprising Local Improvement District No. 361 under Ordinance 3817, is now due and payable and unless payment is made on or before November 7, 2013, said installment will be delinquent, will have a penalty of nine (9) percent added, and the collection of such delinquent installment will be enforced in the manner prescribed by law. Dated this 7th day of October, 2013. R. J. Nachlinger Finance Director City of Kent, Washington Published in the Kent Reporter October 25, 2013 and November 1, 2013. #878576. KENT CITY COUNCIL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING 2013 – 2014 Biennial Budget Review 2013 - 2018 Capital Improvement Plan NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Kent City Council will hold public hearings on the 2013 – 2014 Biennial Budget and the 2013 - 2018 Capital Improvement Plan on Tuesday, November 5, 2013 at 5:00 p.m. and Tuesday, November 19, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. in the Council Chambers at Kent City Hall, 220 Fourth Avenue South, Kent, WA 98032. All interested persons are invited to attend and will be given an opportunity to speak. Any person requiring a disability accommodation should contact WKH &LW\ &OHUN¶V 2I¿FH LQ advance at (253) 856-5725. For TTD relay service, call the Washington Telecommunications Relay Service at (800) 833-6388. Ronald F. Moore, MMC City Clerk Published in the Kent Reporter on October 25, 2013 and November 1, 2013. #903265. Superior Court Of Washington County Of King Estate of: Stuart A Smith, Deceased. NO. 13-4-00329-5 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The personal representative named below has been appointed DQG KDV TXDOL¿HG DV SHUVRQDO UHS resentative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any
otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and ¿OLQJ WKH RULJLQDO RI WKH FODLP with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) Four months after WKH GDWH RI ¿UVW SXEOLFDWLRQ RI WKH notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date Of First Publication: October 11, 2013. Personal Representative: Carolee R. Dunn Attorney for Personal Representative : Alan E. Millet, WSBA #11706 Address for Mailing or Service: P.O. Box 1029 Sequim, WA 98382 Published in the Kent Reporter on October 11, 2013, October 18, 2013, October 25, 2013. #900143. CITY OF KENT NOTICE OF APPLICATION Project Permit Applications KDYH EHHQ ¿OHG ZLWK &LW\ RI .HQW Planning Services on October 14, 2013. Following is a description of the applications and the process for review. The applications and listed studies may be reYLHZHG DW WKH RI¿FHV RI .HQW Planning Services, 400 W. Gowe Street, Kent, WA. APPLICATION NAME/ NUMBERS: BANDON EAST SUBDIVISION SU-2013-4 / KIVA #RPP3-2133638 ENV-2013-18 / KIVA #RPSW-2133637 PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The
applicant proposes to subdivide three parcels totaling 4.23 acres into 30 single family residential lots, a recreation tract and a stormwater facility located offsite to the southwest on vacant land. The property is currently developed with a single family residence, outbuilding and driveway all of which will be removed. The proposed development will take access from 96th Avenue South and 98th Avenue South via a new public road. No sensitive areas have been identi¿HG RQ WKH VLWH 7KH ]RQLQJ LV SR-8, Single Family Residential. The properties are located at the intersections of South 45th Place and 96th Avenue South and South 45th Place south and 98th Avenue South; King County parcel numbers 1922059027, 1922059415 and 1922059416. The site for the stormwater IDFLOLW\ LV LGHQWL¿HG DV 94th Avenue South, parcel 3585100010. OTHER PERMITS AND PLANS WHICH MAY BE REQUIRED: Demolition permit, Civil Construction permit, Building permits for each new home PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD: October 25, 2013 to November 8, 2013 All persons may comment on this application. Comments must be in writing and received in Kent Planning Services by 4:30 P.M., Friday, November 8, 2013 at 220 4th Avenue South, Kent WA 98032. A PUBLIC HEARING IS TENTATIVELY SCHEDULED for 10:00 A.M., Wednesday, January 15, 2014, before the City of Kent Hearing Examiner. This public hearing will be held in City Council Chambers West in the City Hall Building located at 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, WA 98032. Please be advised this meeting date is subject to change. If you have any questions, please call Sharon Clamp, Kent Planning Services, at 253? 856? 5454. Dated: October 25, 2013 Published in the Kent Reporter on October 25, 2013. #905929.
PUBLIC NOTICES To place a Legal Notice, please call 253-234-3506 or e-mail legals@reporternewspapers.com
PUBLIC NOTICES
ana, photos, pottery and more. Early buyer admission $5 from 1-5 p.m. Nov. 15. Free admission Nov. 16. For more information, email wbcaweb@gmail.com. Veterans Day Remembrance: 11 a.m. Nov. 11, Tahoma National Cemetery, 18600 SE 240th St., Kent. Keynote Speaker is Rear Admiral Bette Bolivar, U.S. Navy Commander of Navy Region Northwest. Also speaking is Congressman Dave Reichert (R-Auburn), 8th District. The U.S. Navy Band conducted by Chief Petty Officer Nate Bissell, performs. It marks the first time a military band will be playing at the cemetery. The Allrego Women’s Ensemble led by Kathy Lundberg also will perform. Parking at the cemetery is limited. More parking available at Tahoma High School.
Benefits Holiday Shopping Fair: 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Oct. 26, Kentlake High School, 21401 SE Falcon Way, Kent. Vendors include: Arbonne; doTerra; Grace Adele Purses; Healing NRG Massage; Jamberry Nails; Longaberger Baskets; Made With Love; Origami Owl; Partylite; Pink Zebra; Scentsy; Stella and Dot; Tastefully Simple; Tomboy Tools; Tupperware; Vault Denim; Velata Fondues; and others. For more information, contact Barry Smith at 253-373-4962 or barry. smith@kent.k12.wa.us. Dancing with the Stars Kent: 5:30-10 p.m. Oct. 26, Lindbloom Center, Green River Community College, 12401 SE 320th St. Auburn. The Kent Parks Foundation and Arthur Murray Dance Studios presentation. Proceeds benefit the return of pianist Alpin Hong for a Spotlight Series concert and educational assemblies at the Kent School District. Additional funds will supply new tools for the Green Kent program. General admission is $30, dinner tickets are $100. For tickets and more information, visit www.kentparksfoundation.org. Fall Festival/Trunk or Treat: 4:30-7 p.m. Oct. 27, Riverview Community Church, 4135 S .216th St., Kent. Carnival with games, popcorn, cotton candy, and face painting. Come dressed in your favorite costume and visit the Trunk or Treat. Free. Pizza and hot dogs on sale. Visit www. rcckent.org or call the church office (253872-8881) for more information. Quota International of Kent Valley’s dinner auction: 5:30-10 p.m. Nov. 1, Kent Commons, 525 Fourth Ave. N. Live and silent auctions, a dessert dash, raffle, and heads or tails. Items up for bid include vacation packages to the Caribbean and Cancun, group wine tastings, theater tickets and sports teams’ tickets and items. Proceeds will help local, national and international needs, with an emphasis on women and children, and the deaf and hard of hearing communities. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased at the door. For more information, visit www.quotakentvalley.com. Holiday Craft Market: Nov. 1-2, Kent Senior Center, 600 E. Smith St. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday; 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Large creative gift boutique hosted by the city of Kent. Juried show features 70 booths of handcrafted gifts. Event includes free onsite parking, Figgy Pudding Café and Bake Sale, hourly door prizes, live Christmas entertainment. Major event co-sponsors are Stafford Suites, SHAG Housing and Regence BlueShield. Proceeds benefit senior center programs and services. For more information, call 253-856-5150. Sunrise Elementary School PTA Autumn Craft Fair: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Nov. 2, Sunrise Elementary School, 22300 132nd Ave. SE, Kent. Local artisans selling their items – handbags, wood crafts, jewelry and more. For more information, contact sunrisecraftfair@gmail.com Julefest Christmas Bazaar: 9 a.m.3 p.m. Nov. 2, Zion Lutheran Church, 25105 132nd Ave. SE, Kent. Norwegian needlework, ornaments, quilts, wall hangings, children’s items, garden decor, bake sale, lunch. Demonstrations of traditional Scandinavian foods and crafts. Proceeds benefit local food banks and mission quilts and health kits. For more information, contact the church office at 253-631-0100. 26th annual Holiday Affair Craft Bazaar: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov. 2, Martin Sortun Elementary School, 12711 SE 248th
St. Featuring more than 65 table spaces of handcrafted items. More information: 253-639-8852 or martinsortuncraftbazaar@ yahoo.com.
Health Second Annual Optimal Health 4 You Talk Series: 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Nov. 9, Kent Commons, 525 Fourth Avenue N. Kent4Health presents a free presentations by local health practitioners on chlosterol, staying active in the winter, fighting winter doldrums and nutrition. www. kent4health.com
Clubs, programs Ghost Hunt: 7 p.m. Oct. 28, Lifetree Café, Community Room, First Christian Church, 11717 240th St. SE, Kent. A team of paranormal investigators confronts the unknown in an exclusive film. Program is free. Snacks and beverages are available. For questions about Lifetree may be directed to Bob Brooks at 206-653-6532 or pastorbob@ kentdisciples.org. More information is available at Lifetreecafe.com. Kent Black Action Commission Action Up Meeting: 3-6 p.m., every fourth Saturday from September through June. November and December meetings are on the third Saturday, Kent Commons, 525 Fourth Ave. N. Welcome all who live, work, or attend school in Kent or the South King County region to join us. For more information, call 253-852-0614 or visit www. kentblackactioncommission.com.
Volunteers Green Kent Day projects: 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Oct. 26. All are welcome and no experience is necessary for participation in restoration and tree-planting projects. Volunteers are needed at the Green River Natural Resources Area, 21250 Russell Road S., and Morrill Meadows Park at 10600 S.E. 248th St. Registration is required at KentWA.gov/ ComeVolunteer.
Faith Soul’d Out Christian Center Party Service: 10 a.m. Sundays, Kent-Meridian High School, East Wing Auditorium,10020 SE 256th St., Kent. Join us at “The Hot Spot.” Weekly services. www.souldoutkent.org. Chancel Arts at Kent Lutheran Concert: 3-5 p.m. Oct. 27, Kent Lutheran Church, 336 2nd Ave S., Kent. Musician Nathan Jensen performs. Advance tickets are available at www.brownpapertickets or at the door. For more information: call 206-954-7602. Renton-Kent Christian Women’s Connection Luncheon: 11:15 a.m.1 p.m. Nov. 20, Golden Steer Restaurant, 23826 104th Ave. SE. Lloyd Gillis speaks on the topic, Out from Under the Law. Special feature: Norm Hummel from Union Gospel Mission and Jerry Goodman, Special Music. Monthly luncheons are on the third Wednesday of the month. Come and bring a friend. Nursery available with reservation. Cost: $16.50. For more information, contact Mary Barlow at 425-227-8312 or dougbarlow2@comcast.net.
Entertainment SHOWARE CENTER 625 W. James St., Kent. 253-856-6777. Order at www.tickets.showarecenter. com. Events include: Cage Warrior Combat 9: Nov. 2. Mike “300” Hayes will battle Jeff “The Snowman” Monson in the main event; at least 12 other bouts. Tickets $102, $77, $67, $47 and $37 (military section and a no-alcohol family section). Lamb of God with Killswitch Engage: 7 p.m. Nov. 11. Heavy metal concert. Lamb of God and Killswitch Engage join forces for a fall tour. Tickets $28.50 for reserved seats, $33 general admission floor seats. Disney On Ice, Rockin’ Ever After: 7:30 p.m. Nov. 13, 14, 15, 17, 17; 7:30 p.m. Nov. 18; 11:30 a.m. Nov. 16, 17; 3:30 p.m. Nov. 16, 17. Musical showcase, a rockin’ remix of royalty. Tickets go on sale Oct. 15. Pretty Lights, Analog Future Tour: 7 p.m. Nov. 22. American electronic music artist performs. Tickets: $32.75-$32.75 Country duo Florida Georgia Line: Dec. 14. Sold out. SPOTLIGHT SERIES Tickets for the Kent Arts Commission’s 2013-2014 Spotlight Series are on sale now. The performing arts series brings exceptional entertainment to Kent. Magical Strings 27th Annual Celtic Yuletide Concert: 3 p.m. Dec. 8, KentMeridian PAC, 10020 SE 256th St., Kent. The Boulding Family’s musical celebration of the holiday season features Celtic music, Irish dancing and storytelling. Tickets: $22 general, $20 senior, $15 youth ELSEWHERE Breeders Theater presents ‘Blood Pudding’: 7 p.m. Oct. 25, 26, Nov. 1, 2; 2 p.m., Oct. 27, Nov. 3, Des Moines Beach Park Auditorium, 22030 Cliff Ave. Written by local playwright and author T.M. Sell. The play is a satire on vampire and current affairs. A failing company brings in a new CEO, a turnaround specialist who happens to be from Romania. Tickets $20, and available at www.brownpapertickets.com. Tickets also are available from the City of Des Moines at the Des Moines Field House Recreation Office, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., either in person at 1000 S. 220th St., Des Moines, or by credit card at 206-870-6527. “Young Frankenstein”: 7-9 p.m. Nov. 13-16 and Nov. 20-23, Kentlake Performing Arts Center, 21401 SE Falcon Way, Kent. Mel Brooks’ musical adaptation of his classic comedy film comes to life on the Kentlake stage. All tickets $10 at the door or at www.brownpapertickets.com. For more information, please contact 253-373-4659. “Scrooge the Musical”: 7 p.m. Dec. 13, 14, 20, 21; 3 p.m. Dec. 14, 15, 21, Performing Arts Building, Green River Community College, 12401 SE 320th St., Auburn. Heavier Than Air Family Theatre performs classic tale of Ebenezer Scrooge’s transformation into a new man through his night of ghostly visits, only with a melodic, musical twist. Tickets: $10 advance, $12 at the door. To order tickets or obtain more information, visit www.heavierthanair.com.
Network
Museums
The Kent Chapter of Business Network, Int’l (BNI): Meets every Wednesday morning at 7 at the Old Country Buffet, 25630 104th SE, Kent. Chapter is growing. Currently have 38 members. Do you want excellent, personal, word of mouth referrals for your business? Then come join us. For more information, contact Dr. Allan McCord at 253-854-3040.
Greater Kent Historical Society: 855 E. Smith St., historic Bereiter House, Kent. Hours: noon-4 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday, and by appointment. Admission: suggested $2 donation; no tickets are required for entrance. Parking is available behind the house off East Temperance Street. GKHS is a nonprofit organization that promotes the discovery, preservation and dissemination of knowledge about the history of the greater Kent area.
Health Insurance Enrollment Event: 1-5 p.m. Nov. 9, Kent Memorial Park Building, 850 N. Central Ave., Kent. Learn more about new affordable health insurance options. Assistance available in English, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese and Somali. Legal immigrants need to supply a passport or green card. For more information or to find additional enrollment events in your community, visit www.kingcounty.gov/ coverage or call 1-800-756-5437.
PROGRAM The Life of Christopher Columbus: 7-9 p.m. Oct. 30 at the Kent Historical Museum, 855 East Smith St. The public is invited for a discussion on the great explorer with guest speaker Hilda Meryhew. Tickets are $10 for members, $12 for non-members and $5 for students. Call 253-854-4330 for reservations.
October 25, 2013 [11]
www.kentreporter.com
Helping rebuild a shattered homeland
FALL EVENT & SALE 2013
After 30 years as an expat, GRCC advisor returns to Somalia to advise on education programs BY ROSS COYLE rcoyle@kentreporter.com
Affordable Style • Small thru 1x
10
% OFF
Your Over $60 Purchase*
*Excluding markdown merchandise
Saturday, November 2 • 10am to 4pm
Michi Bags MON-FRI 11-5 • SAT 10-4 • CLOSED SUN
903788
Linda Sparks, Owner
25822 104th St. SE, Kent •253.850.4153
Marti Reeder
REALTOR | BROKER | CRS
Wrack and ruin: Two versions of the Somali capital. Above, the Somali Capital in a circa 1960s photo. Below: The capital as it stands today, almost destroyed by civil war. Many public buildings like the capital became refuges for victims of the wars. SUBMITTED PHOTOS FROM ALI SCEGO
Changing seasons… changing real estate market. Call me!
206-391-0388 marti-realtor.com
887028
When Ali Scego returned to Somalia after living in the United States for 32 years, he could barely recognize his house. Mortar shells and bullet holes radically remodeled it. The Green River Community College coordinator left Somalia in 1981 on a student visa with the goal of getting an education in America and then returning to the America later with a college degree. As the nation slowly spiraled out of control, his plans were delayed until this last June, when he spent nine days in Mogadishu and six in Nairobi. Scego, along with 150 other Somalis from throughout the world, returned to their homeland as advisors for the National Education Conference for Somalia to help the nation recover from almost two decades of strife and conflict. “When we went there, you know the idea was having Somalian people solve Somalian issues” Scego said. “It was sponsored by UNESCO and UNICEF but they were there for technical assistance. Somalis were supposed to be coming up with solutions for Somalis.” As the workforce program advisor at Green River Community College, Scego was asked to advise Somalia’s education minister Dr. Abdinur Sheikh Mohamed on ways to re-engage the Somali youth between 13 and 21 in school. Civility has slightly returned to the war-torn African nation in the past seven years thanks to the help of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). The 17,000-member force has helped maintain the peace and stability necessary for a permanent federal government and is a coalition of soldiers from nations such as Sierra Leon, Burundi and Rwanda. That doesn’t mean that the area is completely safe. Scego was escorted by private security guards wherever he went in Mogadishu. Scego’s professional experience focuses on
Kent Teaching & Toys vocational training at the high school and junior college level, so he joined the committee to help develop the Somali youth. “During the civil war groups migrated and then you have a brain drain,” Scego said. “So even if you salvage some institution then you don’t have capacity or people to come work there.” The goal, said Scego, was to get them away from the militias and into schools, but it was difficult to do when public institutions were in complete disarray, often being used as refugee camps. The challenges that Scego and his team faced were twofold. To start, the team had to assess the problem that most Somali youth — a “lost generation” as Scego refers to them — had no education whatsoever. “Those kids, the only thing they learned in the last 20 years was how to shoot,” Scego said.
The team’s suggestion was to start with a literacy survey for Somali youth to find out which ones would need to return to school to simply learn to read and write. For those that weren’t illiterate, Scego said that they would be referred to vocational and technical schools to start developing practical industry skills such as fishing, farming or manufacturing. While the warlords and feudal governments of the past twenty years are in decline, the nation faces new challenges that any budding democratic system
will face, including how to shape the laws and correctly demarcate territorial lines in the nation. The government will undergo some reorganization in the next few months, Scego said, so he’s waiting to see how effective the conference’s plans will be. Scego said that the trip helped him refocus his efforts to act local, but think global. “What I can do in Somalia may be limited, but there’s a lot I can do here by building the bridge between Somalian’s community here in Green River.”
Teaching Materials Toys • Books • Games • Gifts 225 W. Meeker Street, Kent, WA 98032 (253)852-0383 www.kentteachingandtoys.com kentteachingandtoys@outlook.com Mon - Sat 10am to 6pm • Sun 11am to 5pm IN-STORE SAVINGS COUPON!
30% OFF
ANY HARDCOVER BOOK IN STOCK Limited to stock on hand, must show coupon to receive discount. Coupon valid through November 3, 2013. 886472
It’s BOGO COUPON DAYS at Goodwill! Buy any one donated item, get ONE FREE!
BOGO Coupon - Valid Saturday, Oct. 26
BOGO Coupon - Valid Oct 27-31
Good at all participating South Puget Sound & Olympic Peninsula locations. tacomagoodwill.org
Good at all participating South Puget Sound & Olympic Peninsula locations. tacomagoodwill.org
Must present coupon at time of purchase. Free item must be of equal or lesser value. One free item per coupon. One coupon per customer, per transaction. Not valid at blue, Online or Outlet locations. Excludes candy, snacks, beverages and mattresses.
Must present coupon at time of purchase. Free item must be of equal or lesser value. One free item per coupon. One coupon per customer, per transaction. Not valid at blue, Online or Outlet locations. Excludes candy, snacks, beverages and mattresses.
[12] October 25, 2013
25239 104th Ave SE Kent, WA 98030 Ph 253-852-3280 www.easthilltire.com
www.commongroundcupcakes.com
Jim Sullivan
900 S. 3rd St., Unit A • Renton phone 425.235.1717 fax 425.687.3152
Agent
All Major Brands 898299
Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710
Tires & Custom Wheels Complete Automotive Service Napa Auto Center 898332
1520 Duvall Avenue NE, PO Box 2259 Renton, WA 98056-0259 Bus: 425.226.3322 Fax: 425.228.9001 www.jimsullivaninsurance.com 898338
We Buy Antiques! 918 S. 3rd St. Renton, WA 98057 425-235-6449
Hut
Providing Insurance and Financial Services
Local Owners Putting You First
“Best Antique Store” 3 Years in a row!
r2021m@aol.com ebay - mrsantique1
The Comic
State Farm®
Se habla español
Come Visit Us For A Warm Spooky Drink or Treat!
898350
FREE Comic Book October 26th during 2O·GH )DVKLRQ +DOORZHHQ 3DUW\ Comics & Collectibles Hours: Mon-Fri 12-6; Sat 11-5; Sun 11-4
822 S. 3rd, Renton
425-235-1663
898352
Antique Country Station
www.kentreporter.com
Always A Better Pizza, Always A Better Deal™
“You’ve tried the rest, now try the Best!”
23819 104th Ave SE • Kent
DINE IN or TAKE OUT
425-228-7415
901040
253-856-7777
3809 NE 4th St • Renton
The Star
898356
Pizza...Pasta...Sandwiches... PIZZA • PASTA • SUBS • CALZONES • RIBS • GYROS
Your Child’s
902556
SOUTHCENTER kid’S DENTISTRY
Mon - Sat: 10am - 9pm Sun: 10am - 8pm 898402
411 Strander Blvd. Suite 303 Tukwila, WA 98188 206-575-1130 + fax: 206-575-1133
253-630-5980 13121 SE Kent Kangley Rd #105, Kent WA 98030
www.doctorbuda.com
(corner of 132nd Ave SE and Kent Kangley)
NAILS By DESIGN
Kent’s
Manicure Specialist
25821 104th Ave SE Kent, WA 98030
Terri 253.350.2591
(Next to Chuck E. Cheese’s)
(253) 854-1181
23812 104TH AVE SE KENT 98031
www.CorbinFamilyChiropractic.com 898850
901047
BOOK YOUR HOLIDAY PARTIES NOW!!
Name_______________________________________________________________________________________________ Age _______________
Get a FREE Scary Face on October 31.
Phone ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Address______________________________________________ City __________________________________________ Zip _______________
Please mail or bring your completed entry to Kent Reporter: 19426 68th Ave. S., Kent, WA 98032. Open to all ages, however, only kids up to 13 years old are eligible to win. One entry per person. Entries must be received by Friday, November 1, 2013 at 5:00p.m. to be eligible for prizes. Employees of participating sponsors are not eligible to win. Winners will be announced in the Kent Reporter on Friday, November 8, 2013. No photo copies of entries.
SALES • SERVICE • PARTS
901042
HAIR | BEAUTY | SALON
253-854-2892
26121-104th Ave SE • Kent, WA 98030
253.520.7300 www.bibsalon.com
WE CARRY 40+ PROFESSIONAL PRODUCTS AND HAIR TOOLS. 901045
901038
Trial Lesson
25441 104th Ave SE • Kent, WA 98030
BEST SALON IN 2013!
FREE
2011 Best of Kent Finalist!
26415 79th Ave. S. - Kent
253.520.1973 hartsgymnastics.com
WE W ILL MAKE YOU
BOO -T
Halloween Trick-or-Treating Costume Contest Oct. 31st 4 - 6:30pm
Sponsored in part by
KentStation.com
IFUL!
TUKWILA
901043
17250 Southcenter Pkwy • 206-575-0330
SEATAC
20402 International Blvd • 206-592-5928
RPINITO CA BROTHERS
PUMPKIN PATCH & CORN MAZE!
OPEN daily through Halloween 9am-Dusk 901019
901014
1234 CENTRAL AVE. N. KENT 253-850-3550
This October, pancakes are getting scary.
253.856.1355 207 E MEEKER ST • KENT, WA
www.carpinito.com
901024
Since 1958
KR
October 25, 2013 [13]
www.kentreporter.com
…halloween happenings Coloring Contest Prizes sponsored by
Jokes and Riddles Q: How do you mend a broken jack-o-lantern?
1st place $100 gift card to Kent Station
Q: Whom did the monster invite to the Haunted House? A: Evaeryone he could dig up.
3rd place $50 gift card to Kent Station
A: With a pumpkin patch.
2nd place $75 gift card to Kent Station
Olde Fashion Halloween Party Saturday, October 26 • 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. al Car niv Main Street Square Games Face (Enter 200 block Main Ave S, Renton) P a i n t ing Popcorn
Sponsored By: Renton Reporter, Renton Chamber of Commerce, Renton Eagles, Renton Printery, First Savings Bank Northwest, St. Charles Place, R&D Thrift, Green River Construction and Antique Country Station
898360
Stroll Downtown Renton for Trick or Treating
RPINITO A C
Halloween Trick-or-Treating Costume Contest Oct. 31st 4 - 6:30pm
Sponsored in part by
BROTHERS
PUMPKIN PATCH & CORN MAZE!
Fun for the whole family!
OPEN daily through Halloween 9am-Dusk Pick your own pumpkin on over 20 acres – all shapes & sizes!
Fze F O 1 Ma ult Corn $
Ad Admission with this ad
offer good for up to 4 adults
• Two themed corn mazes • Tractor-pulled hayrides • Farm fresh produce • Fall decorations • Hot roasted corn • Kettle corn • Carving supplies • Hay Maze • Farm Animals… And more!
Group discounts/packages available for school, church and scouting organizations 6868 S. 272nd • Kent, WA Located on the corner of 277th & W. Valley Hwy across from Smith Brothers Dairy
900139
KentStation.com
253-854-5692 • www.carpinito.com
[14] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
THE GREATER KENT HISTORICAL SOCIETY presents The Life of Christopher Columbus on Wednesday, Oct. 30 at the Kent Historical Museum, 855 East Smith St. The public is invited for a discussion on the great explorer with guest speaker Hilda Meryhew. The program is from 7 to 9 p.m. Tickets are $10 for members, $12 for non-members and $5 for students. Call 253-854-4330 for reservations. For more information, visit kenthistoricalmuseum.org/
Nudging Kent students toward healthier choices FOR THE KENT REPORTER
Your POINTSWEEN
HALL
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31
No tricks, just a treat of 5X points automatically when you play with your Preferred Players Club card from 6am – 5:59am! See Preferred Players Club for complete rules and details. Management reserves all rights.
When it’s lunchtime at school, do kids choose more pears and apples if fruit is easily accessible in a basket instead of in a stainless steel pan? What about moving the salad bar away from the wall into the middle of the lunchroom near the cashier, or placing white milk in front of chocolate milk? The Kent School District is at the forefront of making these types of changes known as Behavioral Economics. These low-cost changes to school cafeterias can make a big difference in the food kids choose. Six secondary schools are trying this innovative approach to nudge students to make healthier food choices. Cafeteria managers from Kentlake, Kent-Meridian, Phoenix Academy, and Meridian, Mill Creek and Meeker middle schools recently attended training by national experts to learn about how best to make these changes to their school lunchrooms. At the training, Kent School District Superintendent Edward Lee Vargas welcomed everyone and
Kids will eat healthier with better food choices in Kent schools. COURTESY PHOTO voiced his strong support for the project. Dr. David Just, an expert in behavioral economics from Cornell University, followed by presenting a summary of proven behavioral economic strategies used in restaurants and school lunch rooms. The cafeteria managers talked about the changes they’ve begun making in their lunchrooms and together, came up with creative solutions for some of the challenges they face. One of the training activities involved a Restaurant Challenge with teams arranging a variety of school
foods in attractive containers. Dr. Just critiqued the food arrangements and provided insights into what worked and what might be improved. Jane Walburn described that her DECA students from Kentlake will be developing a marketing campaign to support the behavioral economic strategies in the six secondary schools. They will create food photos, new catchy menu item names, posters, signage, package labels and taste testing to give students opportunities to provide feedback on the new changes to their cafeterias. The project is being evaluated by the University of Washington Center for Public Health Nutrition. The evaluators are looking at changes in the food kids buy, what foods they leave behind, and will be interviewing cafeteria staff and students about the program. The project is funded through the Center for Disease Control’s Community Transformation Grant to Seattle Children’s Hospital along with Public Health Seattle and King County and the Healthy King County Coalition.
October 25, 2013 [15]
www.kentreporter.com
Four Kent East Hill Boxing Club fighters came away with wins in the recent Thurston County Invitational Tournament/USA Amateur bouts at the Nisqually Community & Youth Center. John Gibbons, a student at Kentlake High School, scored a TKO in the first round in the heavyweight division for 16-17-year-old novice amateurs. In the novice division for 17 year olds, Kent-Meridian’s 140-pound Mustafa Sudani and K-M’s 135-pound Amad Nisharov received championship belts. Ethan Gerber, 10, an 84-pound novice who attends Meridian Elementary, earned a championship belt.
During her good games, Kentridge High volleyball player Mae Thungc typically comes in with nine to 14 digs to save the ball on a volley. At the Chargers’ match against rival Kentlake on Oct. 2, she grabbed 37 digs to set a school record, beating out previous record holder Kenna Satterstrom by four. While setting a school record is an honor, it was the last thing on her mind during the games. “When I found out about me setting the record I felt a rush of confidence,” said the enthusiastic Kentridge junior. “It was also a sense of relief, like I know that I was doing well and doing my job.” After losing the first two games of the match, Kentridge came out swinging to beat Kentlake. “We can’t lose another one, or we’re out, and then we pushed through the next three games,” said Thungc, who plays libero, a position also known as a defensive specialist. Thungc is happy for her success, but also feels that it
Caden Borden’s last-minute, 22-yard field goal lifted Auburn past Kent-Meridian 31-28 last Saturday at French Field, securing a South Puget Sound League North 4A victory and the Taylor Trophy. The Royals (1-5 South Puget Sound League North 4A, 2-5 overall) fought back from a 28-13 deficit in the fourth quarter, with quarterback Quincy Carter scoring twice on the ground – once from 62 yards and once from a yard out – and adding a two-point conversion in the quarter to tie the game with
enticed to club volleyball by a friend’s parents and having found a talent, stuck with the sport. “It was a sport to play with, a thing to hold on to through the years,” she said. “It’s a thing that I can concentrate on, one thing that motivates me to get on with life.” The record is indicative of a girl who’s spent much
less than five minutes left. Auburn responded with a 76-yard drive that ate up the remaining clock time and resulted in Borden’s game-winning kick. Auburn (5-2, 5-2) was paced by quarterback Brier Atkinson who had two touchdown runs for 5 and 3 yards, and halfback Kieo Buchanan who added two rushing TDs. Carter had all four touchdowns for the Royals. The Trojans will travel to Federal Way (6-1, 6-1) at 7 p.m. Saturday to take on the sixth-ranked Eagles in a nonleague contest. Kent-Meridian travels
of her life playing volleyball, often giving up other aspects of her life to keep playing. “There’s tournaments on weekends, a lot of the weekends, and that’s when my friends and I want to hang out,” she said. Other times, Thungc has to choose between getting enough sleep after a fivegame match or studying for a test the next day.
to Highline Stadium at 7 p.m. Friday to play Mount Rainier (0-7, 0-7).
Tahoma 26, Kentwood 14 Tahoma kicked off week seven South Puget Sound League 4A North football action Oct. 17 knocking off Kentwood while Kentlake blew out Kentridge the following evening. Tahoma and Kentwood faced off at French Field with the Bears seeking to upset the Conquerors and give Kentwood its first league loss of the season. Tahoma struck first on the third drive of the night
Locally Owned and Operated
Cremation starting at
$550
Burial starting at
$950 425-988-2598 SerenityRenton.com
Kent-Meridian receiver Nate Barton catches a ball behind Auburn’s Don Ecklund. RACHEL CIAMPI, Reporter en route to a 26-14 defeat of Kentwood. Bears quarterback Shane Nelson threw deep to DeShon Williams, who was brought down at the 34-
yard line to move Tahoma into Kentwood territory. Shortly thereafter the Bears were able to carry the ball [ more FOOTBALL page 16 ]
REACH 2.8 MILLION READERS.*
Serenity Funeral Home and Cremation
903698
The Seattle Thunderbirds got goals from six players last Saturday night to skate to a 6-3 victory over the Swift Current Broncos at the ShoWare Center. Riley Sheen, Seth Swenson, Branden Troock, Roberts Lipsbergs, Jared Hauf and Justin Hickman had goals for the T-Birds. Seattle goalie Justin Myles stopped 24 of 27 shots to get the win and improve his record to 5-2-0-0. Seattle (9-3-0-1) is at the TriCity Americans at 7:05 p.m. Friday. They are at home Saturday for a 7:05 p.m. game against the Vancouver Giants at the ShoWare Center.
reflects a larger trend of the team establishing cohesion after several weeks of losses. They’re trusting each other more to do their jobs, Thungc said, and that has helped develop the chemistry needed to succeed. Thungc discovered volleyball when she was 12 years old after trying several other activities, including track and choir. She was
Auburn edges K-M 31-28 REPORTER STAFF
SIX PLAYERS SCORE AS T-BIRDS DOWN BRONCOS
Kentridge’s Mae Thungc set a school record with 37 digs on Oct. 2 against Kentlake in a South Puget Sound League match. ROSS COYLE, Kent Reporter
While Thungc looks up to her fellow athletes for support and inspiration, she said that her parents have been the biggest drivers behind her dedication to volleyball. “They are my biggest supporters, and they are my role models,” she said. Her mother and father fled to the United States with their parents as Laotian refugees from the Vietnam War. Thungc said she is inspired by their ability to make a successful life and career after arriving in America with few skills and not knowing English. Their perseverance is what inspires her to attend college and play volleyball at a collegiate or professional level after high school. She’s considering schools with a good communications program and volleyball team, preferably out of state. “Mostly because I want a fresh start where I don’t really know people,” she said. After beating Mount Rainier on Tuesday, Kentridge (4-3, 4-8) hosts Thomas Jefferson at 7:15 p.m. Oct. 29.
New Beginnings Christian Fellowship 8:00am & 11:00am
www.thenbcf.org 19300 108th Ave. SE Renton, WA 98057
To advertise your services, call Kathy Sherman 253-872-6731 or email ksherman@ kentreporter.com
INCLUDES 102 NEWSPAPERS & 33 TMC PUBLICATIONS.
12
AVERAGING LESS THAN
$
PER PAPER!
CONTACT YOUR LOCAL WNPA MEMBER NEWSPAPER TO LEARN MORE.
Just By Placing One WNPA Statewide 2x2 Impact Ad. GO STATEWIDE OR TARGET A REGION. COASTAL: 295,000 circ. 678,000 readers* EASTERN: 272,000 circ. 625,000 readers* METRO: 680,000 circ. 1.5 mil. readers* *BASED ON STATEWIDE SURVEYS SHOWING 2.3 PEOPLE READ EACH COPY OF A COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER.
KENT
REPORTER
.com
KENT EAST HILL BOXERS WIN TITLES
BY ROSS COYLE
rcoyle@kentreporter.com
886572
KENT
SPORTS
Thungc shines as KR defensive specialist
253-872-6600
[16] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
[ FOOTBALL from page 15] over the goal line and the extra point put Tahoma up 7-0. Both teams’ defense kept things bottled up until late in the second quarter when Kentwood quarterback Brian Campbell connected with Terrence Grady who made the catch with nothing but open field in front of him and ran the ball in for a Conks touchdown. Tahoma was forced to punt with 1:30 to go in the half but held Kentwood and got the ball back with less than a minute to go. On the last play of the second quarter, Nelson scrambled to find a receiver before launching a Hail Mary pass into the end zone as time expired. Williams grabbed the ball amid heavy coverage by the Conks and came down in the end zone, scoring a touchdown for the Bears. The extra point was good, putting Tahoma up 14-7 at halftime. Late in the third quarter the Conquerors duplicated their first scoring drive with Campbell again connecting to Grady downfield who ran the ball in for Kent-
Kentwood’s D’Vaughn Wells gets tackled during a SPSL North game against Tahoma. The Bears won 26-14. ROSS COYLE,
FOOTBALL SPSL 4A NORTH STANDINGS Team Auburn Riverside Kentwood Auburn Jefferson Tahoma Kentlake Kent-Meridian Kentridge Mt. Rainier
League Overall W L W L 6 5 5 4 4 2 1 1 0
0 1 2 2 2 4 5 5 7
6 5 5 4 5 2 2 1 0
1 2 2 3 2 5 5 6 7
LAST WEEK: Tahoma 26, Kentwood 14; Jefferson 41, Mt. Rainier 0; Kentlake 56, Kentridge 28; Curtis 49, Auburn Riverside 22 (nonleague); and Auburn 31, Kent-Meridian 28. THIS WEEK: Tahoma at Kentlake (Thursday); Kentwood at Auburn Riverside; Jefferson at Kentridge; KentMeridian at Mt. Rainier; and Auburn at Federal Way (Saturday, nonleague). (All games kick off at 7 p.m. Friday unless otherwise noted.)
wood’s second touchdown of the night, tying things up with the extra point at 14-14. On the next drive a catch by Tahoma’s Julian Sumler put the ball in Kentwood territory. Jerome Woods finished off the Bears’ drive with a touchdown. The kick was no good and Tahoma was up 20-14 with 1:10 left in the third quarter. Kentwood was forced to punt on its next drive, but got an interception on the subsequent Tahoma drive. Kentwood couldn’t get the ball to the end zone and Tahoma took over on its 19. Tahoma pushed downfield and Williams went into the end zone again. The try for two was no good and Tahoma was up 26-14 with less than six minutes to go in the game. On their next drive, the Bears lost ground when a snap went over Nelson’s
DELIVERY TUBES
FREE! AVAILABLE
.com
The Kent Reporter is published every Friday and delivery tubes are available T KEN R FREE to our readers who live in our E T REPOR distribution area. Our newspaper tube can be installed on your property at no charge to you. Or the tube can be provided to you to install at your convenience next to your mailbox receptacle or at the end of your driveway. Pick up your FREE tube at our Kent office, located at 19426 68th Ave S during regular business hours.
(Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.) UI "WF 4 4UF " ,FOU 8" t t www.kentreporter.com
head and the Conks got the ball back for one last drive. Tahoma’s Woods snagged the ball for a turnover and the Bears took a knee to run out the clock. Campbell was 12 of 25 for 238 yards and two touchdowns for the Conks. Brandon Sytsma had 11 carries for 43 yards, Terrence Grady had seven catches for 203 yards and D’Vaughn Wells had two catches for 46 yards.
Tahoma’s Nelson was 22 of 36 for 347 yards and two touchdowns on the night. Joe Donahue had 16 carries for 66 yards and Woods had 19 carries for 77 yards. Williams had nine catches for 151 yards and Denham Patricelli had eight catches for 138 yards.
Kentlake 56, Kentridge 28 After narrowly beating winless Mount Rainier
Kent Reporter
the week before, Kentlake rolled over Kentridge. The Falcons raced out to a 42-13 lead at halftime and never looked back as they put together the most complete game of the season against the Chargers, who fell to 1-5 in league play. Kentlake scored its first touchdown a little more than two minutes into the game after Daunston Kaunda returned the opening kickoff 40 yards. Jordan
Axelson and Tyler Harris carried their share of the load in the first half as their back-to-back runs set up a two-yard score to cap the Falcons first drive. Kentridge responded quickly though with a Malik McFerrin 53-yard scoring run. On the next drive, Kentlake started on its 7-yard line, but a pair of big plays including a 54-yard pass from D’marye Dedrick to Harris which moved the ball down to the Kentridge 3, set up another quick score. Harris took the handoff and followed Axelson to run it into the left corner of the end zone. John Morasch capped the first quarter with a tip drill interception that he ran back 27 yards to set up Kentlake’s next touchdown. In the third quarter, Morasch returned an interception 35 yards for the score. Falcons wide receiver Matt Burley was responsible for back-to-back touchdowns. Carter Johnson had a three-yard touchdown run for Kentridge in the second quarter while tight end Matt Fleming pulled in an eightyard pass in the corner of the end zone early in the fourth quarter. Braiden Beckman pulled in an interception and returned it 55 yards for a touchdown with 4:12 left in the game to cut the Kentlake lead to 56-28.
www.nw-ads.com
October 25, 2013 [17]
www.kentreporter.com
SUPERSIZED
That Work!
That Work!
Call 800-388-2527
call toll free: 1-800.388.2527
$ JUNK $
click:
NW-Ads.com LittleNickel.com
YARDWORK
900935
886289
253.397.9775
206-941-9573 Lic#BEAUTGS957PK
Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage
Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage
Real Estate for Sale Pierce County
Year Round Creek on 10 Acres with Drilled Well, County Road Frontage. Close to Lake Roosevelt. $59,900 $500 Down $650 Month Also, 9 Surveyed Acres with patented Mining Claims, Close to Metaline Falls & Sullivan Lake. $39,900. $500 Down $417 Month
! F F O R D A B L E ĂĽ 4A C O M AĂĽ BDRMĂĽ SQFTĂĽ ĂĽ "ASE MENT ĂĽ (ARDWOODĂĽ &LOORSĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ & ( ! ĂĽ 4E R M SĂĽ +ĂĽ %LIGIBLE ĂĽ 2OBĂĽ ĂĽ 2EALTYĂĽ 7ESTĂĽ
Use our handy online ad 24 hours a day form by clicking the “Place an ad� link at www.nw-ads.com to put an ad in the Classifieds online and in your local paper.
FRONTIERNORTHWEST COM Real Estate for Sale King County
&E D E RA L ĂĽ 7AY ĂĽ 3 P L I T ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ "DRMĂĽ ĂĽ BATHĂĽ SQFT ĂĽ ĂĽ -AKEĂĽ /FFER ĂĽ ĂĽ 2EALTYĂĽ 7ESTĂĽ 7OW ĂĽ &REEĂĽ ,ISTĂĽ OFĂĽ OVERĂĽ ĂĽ +INGĂĽ #OUNTYĂĽ (OMES ĂĽ ĂĽ TOĂĽ ĂĽ -ANYĂĽ WITHĂĽ ,OWĂĽ $OWNĂĽ 0AYMENTĂĽ &(!ĂĽ &INANC ING ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 2 % ! ,4 9ĂĽ 7 % 3 4 ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ WWW REALTYWEST COM Real Estate for Sale Mason County
'RAPEVIEWĂĽ "UY ĂĽ .EWERĂĽ BDRMĂĽ ĂĽ BATHĂĽ 2AMBLERĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ 'ARAGEĂĽ "IGĂĽ ,OT ĂĽ 0RICEĂĽ REDUCEDĂĽ TOĂĽ ĂĽ &(!ĂĽ 4ERMS ĂĽ $IANEĂĽ ĂĽ 2EALTYĂĽ 7ESTĂĽ
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.nw-ads.com
CASH
ĂĽ#!3(ĂĽ
Best Prices in the Area
4OWINGĂĽ!VAILABLEĂĽ
&/2ĂĽ*5.+ĂĽ#!23 50ĂĽ4/
Call 800-388-2527
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.nw-ads.com #ALLĂĽ NOWĂĽ FORĂĽ &REEĂĽ ,IST ĂĽ ( 5 $ O W N E D ĂĽ 0 I E R C EĂĽ # O U N T Y ĂĽ ĂĽ ( O M E SĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 2 % ! ,4 9 ĂĽ 7 % 3 4 ĂĽ T H EĂĽ (5$ĂĽ %XPERTS ĂĽ WWW REAL TYWEST COM #LASSICĂĽ 3OUTHĂĽ 4ACOMAĂĽ B D R M ĂĽ & I X E R ĂĽ / N L YĂĽ ĂĽ & ( ! ĂĽ 4E R M S ĂĽ +ĂĽ %LIGIBLEĂĽ #ALLĂĽ $IANEĂĽ ĂĽ 2 E A L T YĂĽ 7ESTĂĽ
Real Estate for Rent King County 2%.4/.
, ! + % & 2 / . 4 ĂĽ ĂĽ " 2ĂĽ (/-% ĂĽ &ULLYĂĽ FURNISHED ĂĽ Running or Not INCLUDESĂĽ EVERYTHINGĂĽ PLUSĂĽ Same Day Service ĂĽ FLATĂĽ SCREENĂĽ 46 S ĂĽ With or W/out Title )MMEDIATELYĂĽ AVAILABLE ĂĽ ĂĽ /"/ ĂĽ .OĂĽ SMOKE ĂĽ 253-217-5862 .OĂĽPETS ĂĽ ,IKEĂĽ .EWĂĽ 3OUTHĂĽ 4ACOMAĂĽ .)#%ĂĽ ĂĽ&LEETWOOD 2%4)2%$ĂĽ ĂĽ 7/22)%$ĂĽ ( O M E ĂĽ ĂĽ " E D R O O M S ĂĽ ĂĽ "ROADMOREĂĽ XĂĽ ABOUTĂĽ BURNINGĂĽ THROUGHĂĽ "ATHĂĽ SQFTĂĽ ĂĽ 'ARAGE ĂĽ ĂĽ"DĂĽ ĂĽ"AĂĽ MONEY ĂĽ !REĂĽ YOUĂĽ INĂĽ YOURĂĽ 0 R I C E ĂĽ R E D U C E D ĂĽ T OĂĽ /.,9ĂĽ S ĂĽ & ( ! ĂĽ 4E R M SĂĽĂĽ !MERICANĂĽ(OMEĂĽ#ENTER ĂĽ ,OOKĂĽ NOĂĽ FUR THER ĂĽ %XQUISITEĂĽ SENIORĂĽ LIVINGĂĽ ĂĽ 2OBĂĽ ĂĽ 2EAL FULLĂĽ SERVICESĂĽ FORĂĽ THEĂĽ RETIR TYĂĽ7ESTĂĽ EEĂĽ WHOĂĽ WANTSĂĽ TOĂĽ SAVEĂĽ .ICEĂĽ'RAHAM T H E I R ĂĽ N E S T ĂĽ E G G ĂĽ # A L LĂĽ &AMILYĂĽ#OMMUNITY Real Estate for Sale Manufactured Homes .EWĂĽ$ELUXEĂĽ-ARLETTEĂĽORĂĽ 2HONDAĂĽ FORĂĽ AĂĽ FREEĂĽ DIN NER ĂĽ TOURĂĽ OFĂĽ 2ADCLIFFEĂĽ &LEETWOODĂĽ4URNĂĽ+EYĂĽ ĂĽ . ) # % ĂĽ $ O U BL E ĂĽ 7 I D EĂĽ 0LACE ĂĽ INĂĽ +ENTĂĽ #OVINGTONĂĽ 2EADYĂĽW ĂĽ,ARGEĂĽ -OBILESĂĽ )NĂĽ !UBURNĂĽ ANDĂĽ 3PACIOUSĂĽWOODEDĂĽBACKĂĽ +E N T ĂĽ &R O M ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ YARD ĂĽ/NLYĂĽ MOĂĽ)NC ĂĽ ĂĽ 0LEASEĂĽ CALLĂĽ 2 ĂĽ .EWĂĽHOMEĂĽANDĂĽ,EASEDĂĽ 3OUTHĂĽ4ACOMA ĂĽ " E D R O O M ĂĽ ĂĽ " A T H ĂĽ % ĂĽ *IMĂĽ ĂĽ FORĂĽ SHOWINGS ĂĽĂĽ ,OT ĂĽ SQUAREĂĽ FEET ĂĽ 2AM &INANCINGĂĽ!VAIALBLEĂĽW ĂĽ BLER ĂĽ ĂĽ CARĂĽ GARAGE ĂĽ ĂĽ 'OODĂĽ#REDIT ACRE ĂĽ FULLYĂĽ FENCEDĂĽ BACKĂĽ Find what you need 24 hours a day. !MERICANĂĽ(OMEĂĽ#ENTER YARD ĂĽ DOGGYĂĽ DOOR ĂĽ ĂĽ FIRE PLACE ĂĽ WOODĂĽ FLOORS ĂĽ ALLĂĽ "ROOKDALEĂĽ!REA Need extra cash? Place APPLIANCES ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ STĂĽ .ICEĂĽ "DĂĽ ĂĽ"A 7ILLĂĽ(AVEĂĽ2EARĂĽ$ECKĂĽ ĂĽ your classified ad today! MONTHSĂĽ RENT ĂĽ 0ETSĂĽ NEGO TIABLEĂĽ Call 1-800-388-2527 or .EWĂĽ!PPLIANCES ONĂĽ#ULDESACĂĽ,OT Go online 24 hours a Sell it free in the Flea /NLYĂĽ day www.nw-ads.com. 1-866-825-90 1 &INANCINGĂĽ!VAILABLE (URRYĂĽ7ON TĂĽ,AST !MERICANĂĽ(OMEĂĽ#ENTER .EWĂĽ$ELUKEĂĽ7AVERLYĂĽ #RESTĂĽ !PRX ĂĽ SQĂĽFT &AMILYĂĽ2OOMĂĽ,IVINGĂĽ 2OOM ĂĽ BDĂĽ BA ĂĽ-UCHĂĽ -UCHĂĽ-OREĂĽREADYĂĽFORĂĽ 6EIWINGĂĽONLYĂĽ ĂĽATĂĽ &RYHUHG !MERICANĂĽ(OMEĂĽ#ENTER 3DUNLQJ INĂĽ0UYALLUPĂĽONĂĽ -ERIDIAN 885897
Weeding Pruning Trimming Hauling Retaining Walls Patios
&RONTIER
for Junk Cars
) Lock Out ) Jumps General Cleanup ) Roadside ast 24/7 CALL Mike 206-242-4378 ) Se Habla EspaĂąol
ĂĽ ĂĽ BRĂĽ ĂĽ FT ĂĽ ĂĽ &A R M ĂĽ S T E A D ( O B BYĂĽ &A R M - I N O T ĂĽ ! C R E A G E "EAUTIFULĂĽ ĂĽ BRĂĽ HOUSE ĂĽ 'ARAGEĂĽ ĂĽ ACRESĂĽ 2USO ĂĽ .$ ĂĽ !ĂĽ NEWĂĽ FARMĂĽ SITEĂĽ ANDĂĽ REMODELEDĂĽ ĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ RANCHĂĽ HOMEĂĽ LOCATEDĂĽ JUSTĂĽ OUTSIDEĂĽ OFĂĽ 2USO ĂĽ .$ ĂĽ ĂĽ 4HREEĂĽ BED ROOM ĂĽ ONEĂĽ B A T H ĂĽ H O M E ĂĽ T H A T ĂĽ W A SĂĽ M O V E D ĂĽ O N T O ĂĽ A ĂĽ . % 7ĂĽ BUILDINGĂĽ SITE ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ !CREĂĽ MATUREĂĽ FARMSTEADĂĽ !P P R OX ĂĽ ĂĽ EX T R A ĂĽ A C R E SĂĽ AVAILABLEĂĽFORĂĽPURCHASE ĂĽ &ULLĂĽBASEMENTĂĽ ĂĽREADYĂĽTO F I N I S H ĂĽ ĂĽ , A R G E ĂĽ E A T I NĂĽ KITCHEN ĂĽ ADJOININGĂĽ DININGĂĽ ANDĂĽ LAUNDRYĂĽ ROOMĂĽ WITHĂĽ $URA#ERAMICĂĽ TILEĂĽ ĂĽ .AT URALĂĽ STONEĂĽ BACKĂĽ SPLASHĂĽ A N D ĂĽ N EW ĂĽ C O U N T E R T O P SĂĽ THROUGHOUTĂĽ ĂĽ .EWĂĽ CE RAMICĂĽ TILEĂĽ INĂĽ BATHROOMĂĽ ANDĂĽ ALLĂĽ UPDATEDĂĽ FIXTURES ĂĽĂĽ . EW ĂĽ V I NY L ĂĽ S I D I N G ĂĽ A N DĂĽ GUTTERSĂĽ ĂĽ !TTACHEDĂĽ ONEĂĽ CARĂĽ GARAGEĂĽ ĂĽ "RANDĂĽ NEWĂĽ FULLĂĽ BASEMENTĂĽ ĂĽ READYĂĽ TOĂĽ lĂĽNISHĂĽ ASĂĽ YOUĂĽ LIKEĂĽ ĂĽ "ASE M E N T ĂĽ H A S ĂĽ R O U G H ĂĽ I NĂĽ PLUMBINGĂĽ FORĂĽ TOILETĂĽ ANDĂĽ WATERĂĽ ĂĽ "RANDĂĽ .EWĂĽ WELLĂĽ ANDĂĽ 3EPTICĂĽ SYSTEMĂĽ ĂĽ !LLĂĽ N E W ĂĽ E L E C T R I C A L ĂĽ A N DĂĽ PLUMBINGĂĽ ĂĽ 0ERFECTĂĽ FORĂĽ (OBBYĂĽ &ARMĂĽ ORĂĽ (ORSES ĂĽ #OWS ĂĽ (UNTING ĂĽ ETC ĂĽ !REAĂĽ ISĂĽ GREATĂĽ FORĂĽ HUNTINGĂĽ ANDĂĽlĂĽSHINGĂĽWITHĂĽPLENTYĂĽOF !CRESĂĽ AROUNDĂĽ THEĂĽ -INOTĂĽ ANDĂĽ 6ELVAĂĽ AREAĂĽ FORĂĽ YOURĂĽ WILDLIFEĂĽ VIEWINGĂĽ ORĂĽ HUNT ING ĂĽ9OUĂĽ CANĂĽ HAVEĂĽ YOURĂĽ OWNĂĽ DEERĂĽ STANDĂĽ MINUTESĂĽ FROMĂĽ YOURĂĽ FRONTĂĽ DOOR ĂĽ
ĂĽ -/6%ĂĽ ).ĂĽ 2%!$9ĂĽ #/. $)4)/.ĂĽ
ĂĽ #ANĂĽ DOĂĽ QUICKĂĽ CLOSINGĂĽ IFĂĽ NEEDEDĂĽ
ĂĽ &I NANCING ĂĽ 0OSSIBLEĂĽ OPTIONĂĽ FORĂĽ #ONTRACTĂĽ FORĂĽ $EEDĂĽ ĂĽ O W N E R ĂĽ F I N A N C I N G ĂĽ F O RĂĽ DOWNĂĽ PAYMENTĂĽ ANDĂĽ WELLĂĽ QUALIFIEDĂĽ BUYERS ĂĽ )ĂĽ BUILTĂĽ T H I S ĂĽ H O M E S T E A D ĂĽ . % 7ĂĽ FROMĂĽ THEĂĽ GROUNDĂĽ UPĂĽ ANDĂĽ MOVEDĂĽ THEĂĽ HOUSEĂĽ TOĂĽ THEĂĽ SITE ĂĽ (OUSEĂĽ ANDĂĽ 'ARAGEĂĽ HASĂĽ BEENĂĽ FULLYĂĽ UPDATED ĂĽ 0ROPERTYĂĽ ISĂĽ JUSTĂĽ OFFĂĽ .%7ĂĽ ",!#+4/0ĂĽ ()'(7!9ĂĽ ĂĽ COMINGĂĽ FROMĂĽ 6ELVA ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ ORĂĽ TEXTĂĽ TOĂĽ GETĂĽ MOREĂĽ INFO ĂĽ *OEĂĽ ĂĽ GeorgeLeggJr@Yahoo.com
Your ad runs in Auburn Reporter, Federal Way Mirror and Kent Reporter.
email: ENCUUKĆ‚ GFU"UQWPFRWDNKUJKPI EQO
ALL KINDS OF
Best Deal Tow Services
Place your ad in the Southwest SUPERZONE and reach 79,297 homes each week!
6WRUDJH
1 BR: $675 2 BR: $875 3 BR: $1000 Quiet Auburn Neighborhood
'HFN
+8'
: 5HDO (VWDWH 6HUYLFHV
!5"52.ĂĽ3/54(ĂĽ%!34 ĂĽ
ĂĽ"2 ĂĽ ĂĽ"!ĂĽ!04
ĂĽĂĽ
.EWĂĽCARPETĂĽ ĂĽPAINT ,AUNDRYĂĽONSITE 7 3 'ĂĽINCL MO ĂĽDEP
%XPANSIVEĂĽ6)%73 STARTINGĂĽAT
INCLUDESĂĽUTILITIES ĂĽ ĂĽDINNER (ILLTOPĂĽ(OUSEĂĽ!PTS 1.25 million readers make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise. 800-388-2527
Washington Cars Buy Here/ Pay Here No Credit Checks WashCarsInc.com 206-241-7145
LET ME HELP!
Call Today!
(206) 575-3700 or 1-800-277-6790 www.coverallwashington.com
Apartments for Rent King County
!FFORDABLEĂĽ (OUSING
Want more business this year?
602-388-2197
) " ## $" " " ) $ #% # !% $ % ) & ) % "$ ) ' ' ( $ CALL COVERALL OF WASHINGTON " # $ " ' " " # *
,AKEĂĽ "AYĂĽ 6ALUEĂĽ BDRMĂĽ B A T H ĂĽ 2 A M B L E R ĂĽ / N L YĂĽ MOĂĽ 3EEĂĽ AT ĂĽ ĂĽ THĂĽ 3TREETĂĽ +03 ĂĽ 37ĂĽ OFĂĽ ( O M E ĂĽ O F F ĂĽ 7 H I T E M A NĂĽ 2OAD ĂĽ 'OODĂĽ #REDITĂĽ ANDĂĽ 3TEADYĂĽ %MPLOYMENTĂĽ RE QUIRED ĂĽ
3%!44,% 3ENIORSĂĽ
Tukwila, WA
+ $"%! ( !* )& ' + # ( )# &*
A Great Janitorial Business Opportunity ) % " $ $" $# %
Real Estate for Rent Pierce County
I can deliver your message to tens of thousands in your market. Call me today to find out more Leianna Tutmark, 253-872-6600 ext. 3500 ltutmark@KentReporter.com Whether you need to target the local market or want to cover the Puget Sound area,
898393
WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED!
KENT
REPORTER
.com
Reach 79,297 homes with a Southwest SUPERZONE Package each week. Your ad runs in the Auburn Reporter, Federal Way Mirror and Kent Reporter.
Apartments for Rent King County
3%รฅ!UBURN #2%$)4รฅ02/",%-3
7%รฅ#!.รฅ(%,0
sรฅ'REATรฅ#OMMUNITYรฅs รฅ รฅ รฅ รฅ"Dรฅ!PTS %XCELLENTรฅ,OCATION รฅ3MALLรฅ0ETSรฅ7ELCOME
#ALL รฅ
3UNรฅ6ISTA !PARTMENTS +ENT รฅรฅรฅรฅรฅรฅรฅรฅรฅรฅ
รฅBDRM ,ARGEรฅ รฅBDRM รฅรฅ รฅBDRM รฅ รฅรฅ ,ARGEรฅ3TORAGEรฅ รฅรฅ $ECK รฅ#ENTRAL LOCATION รฅ4HESEรฅARE SPACIOUS รฅWELLรฅรฅ MAINTAINEDรฅUNITS
www.kentreporter.com
'%4รฅ &2%%รฅ /&รฅ #2%$)4รฅรฅ #!2$รฅ $%"4รฅ ./7 รฅ #UTรฅรฅ PAYMENTSรฅ BYรฅ UPรฅ TOรฅ HALF รฅรฅ 3TOPรฅ CREDITORSรฅ FROMรฅ CALL รฅ ING รฅ 'UARANTEEDรฅ )NCOMEรฅ &ORรฅรฅ 9OURรฅ 2ETIREMENTรฅ !VOIDรฅรฅ MARKETรฅ RISKรฅ รฅ GETรฅ GUAR รฅ ANTEEDรฅ INCOMEรฅ INรฅ RETIRE รฅ MENT รฅ #!,,รฅ FORรฅ &2%%รฅรฅ COPYรฅ OFรฅ OURรฅ 3!&%รฅ -/. รฅ %9รฅ '5)$%รฅ 0LUSรฅ !NNUITYรฅรฅ 1UOTESรฅ FROMรฅ ! 2ATEDรฅรฅ C O M P A N I E S รฅ รฅ 3TAR Tรฅ CASHINGรฅ INรฅ TODAYรฅรฅ TRADINGรฅ SMALL CAPรฅ STOCKS รฅรฅ &REEรฅ OPENรฅ ENROLLMENTรฅ TOรฅรฅ T H E รฅ M O S T รฅ S U C C E S S F U Lรฅรฅ SMALL CAPรฅ NEWSLETTERรฅ ANDรฅรฅ T R A D I N G รฅ G R O U P รฅ N O Wรฅรฅ THROUGHรฅ รฅ 6ISITรฅรฅ W W W 3 M A L L # A P 4R A D รฅ ERS COMรฅNOW Announcements
!DVERTISEรฅ YOURรฅ PRODUCTรฅรฅ ORรฅ SERVICEรฅ NATIONWIDEรฅ ORรฅรฅ #ALLรฅ BYรฅREGIONรฅINรฅUPรฅTOรฅ รฅMIL รฅ LIONรฅ HOUSEHOLDSรฅ INรฅ .ORTHรฅรฅ -ON &RI รฅ AM PM !MERICA Sรฅ BESTรฅ SUBURBS รฅรฅ 3AT รฅBYรฅAPPT 0LACEรฅ YOURรฅ CLASSIFIEDรฅ ADรฅรฅ INรฅ OVERรฅ รฅ SUBURBANรฅรฅ WA Misc. Rentals NEWSPAPERSรฅ JUSTรฅ LIKEรฅ THISรฅรฅ Duplexes/Multiplexes ONE รฅ #ALLรฅ #LASSIlEDรฅ !VE รฅ NUEรฅ ATรฅ รฅ ORรฅรฅ GOรฅ TOรฅ WWW CLASSIlEDAVE รฅ *4 Months NUE NET รฅรฅรฅรฅ รฅรฅรฅ
Free Rent
Beautiful, Private So. Auburn - โ A Streetโ Spacious 1000sqft 2bdrm 1ba Apt $895. Full size W/D, Fireplace, Prior Eviction OK. Bad Credit OK $750 Dep. (Pmts. OK) *Section 8 Welcome
206-919-3900 *(conditions apply)
WA Misc. Rentals Parking/RV Spaces
Hammond RV Park $99 Special First Month Westport, WA Water/Sewer/Garbage/ Internet & Cable. Clean park. No dogs. *$230/Mo*
360-268-9645
26รฅ3PACEรฅรฅ
&ALLรฅ -OVEรฅ รฅ)Nรฅ3PECIAL ร รฅรฅ#LEANรฅ รฅ1UIET ร รฅรฅ)NDOORรฅ0OOLรฅ รฅ3PA ร รฅรฅ รฅ(R รฅ!CCESSรฅTO รฅรฅรฅรฅรฅ3HOWERรฅ รฅ,AUNDRY รฅ ร รฅรฅ&REEรฅCABLEรฅ46 ร รฅรฅ&REEรฅ7IRELESS ร รฅรฅ" VUE รฅ%ASTSIDEรฅ
#ALLรฅ4/$!9 รฅ
#/50,%รฅ3%%+).'รฅ4/รฅรฅ !$/04 ,OVINGรฅCOUPLEรฅSEEKINGรฅTOรฅรฅ !$/04รฅANรฅINFANT รฅ7Eรฅรฅ CANรฅOFFERรฅYOURรฅBABYรฅAรฅรฅ LIFETIMEรฅOFรฅOPPORTUNITY รฅรฅ HUMOR รฅADVENTUREรฅAND lNANCIALรฅSECURITY รฅ7Eรฅรฅ WILLรฅPROVIDEรฅAรฅHAPPYรฅรฅ HOME รฅSHARINGรฅOUR INTERESTSรฅINรฅTHEรฅOUTDOORS รฅรฅ TRAVEL รฅMUSIC รฅANDรฅรฅ SPORTS รฅ,ETรฅUSรฅHELP SUPPORTรฅYOUรฅWITHรฅYOURรฅรฅ ADOPTIONรฅPLAN รฅ#ONTACTรฅรฅ USรฅATรฅDIRECTรฅAT รฅTOLL FREEรฅรฅ ATรฅ รฅORรฅรฅ EMAILรฅ!NDREW#OR รฅ LEY OUTLOOK COM 9OUรฅCANรฅALSOรฅCONTACTรฅOURรฅรฅ ATTORNEYรฅAT รฅASKรฅFORรฅรฅ *OANรฅlLEรฅ 02%'.!.4 รฅ #/.3)$ รฅ % 2 ) . ' รฅ ! $ / 0 4 ) / . รฅรฅ /PENรฅ ORรฅ CLOSEDรฅ ADOP รฅ TION รฅ รฅ 9/5รฅ CHOOSEรฅ THEรฅรฅ F A M I L Y รฅ รฅ , ) 6 ) . ' รฅ % 8 รฅ 0%.3%3รฅ 0!)$ รฅ รฅ !BBY Sรฅรฅ / N E รฅ 4R U E รฅ ' I F T รฅ ! D O P รฅ T I O N S รฅ รฅ # A L L รฅ รฅรฅ รฅ รฅ รฅ 6OIDรฅ INรฅรฅ )LLINOIS .EWรฅ -EXICO )N รฅ DIANA &LORIDA
WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent
Lost
/.4!2)/รฅ(/4%,
รฅ #!3(รฅ 2%7!2$รฅรฅ
&URNISHEDรฅ2OOMS 3TOLENรฅ รฅ 2EDรฅ9AMA รฅ HAรฅ 2HINO รฅ 3IDEรฅ "Yรฅ 3IDEรฅรฅ MO รฅ WKรฅ !46 รฅ HASรฅ ROOFรฅ รฅ WINCH รฅรฅ #ABLEรฅ46 รฅ$OWNTOWN 3EATTLE รฅ รฅ!IRPORTรฅรฅ 7AYรฅ3 รฅ(RS รฅ AM PM
45+7),! 3MALLรฅ FURNISHEDรฅ ROOMรฅ FORรฅรฅ RENT รฅ )NCLUDESรฅ UTILITIES รฅรฅ HOUSEHOLDรฅ SUPPLIESรฅ รฅ รฅรฅ CABLE รฅ รฅ MO รฅ .EARรฅรฅ BUSLINE รฅ รฅ /NEรฅ PARKINGรฅรฅ SPOT รฅ
)Sรฅ MISSINGรฅ TAILGATE รฅ #ASEรฅรฅ รฅ รฅ รฅ รฅรฅรฅ
,/34 รฅ0/-%2!.)!.
รฅรฅรฅรฅรฅ
General Financial
#2%$)4รฅ #!2$รฅ $%"4 รฅรฅ $ISCOVERรฅ Aรฅ NEWรฅ WAYรฅ TOรฅรฅ E L I M I N A T E รฅ C R E D I T รฅ C A R Dรฅรฅ D E B T รฅ F A S T รฅ - I N I M U Mรฅรฅ รฅ INรฅ DEBTรฅ REQUIRED รฅรฅ &REEรฅ INFOR MATION รฅ #ALLรฅรฅ HRรฅ RECORDEDรฅ MESSAGE รฅรฅ # U T รฅ Y O U R รฅ 3 4 5 $ % . 4รฅรฅ , / ! . รฅ P A Y M E N T S รฅ I Nรฅรฅ (!,&รฅ ORรฅ MOREรฅ %VENรฅ IFรฅรฅ ,ATEรฅ ORรฅ INรฅ $EFAULT รฅ 'ETรฅรฅ 2ELIEFรฅ &!34รฅ -UCHรฅ ,/7 รฅ %2รฅ PAYMENTS รฅ รฅ #ALLรฅ 3TU รฅ DENTรฅ (OTLINEรฅ รฅ รฅ
.EARรฅ THรฅ ANDรฅ THรฅรฅ INรฅ +ENT รฅ รฅ 2EDรฅ รฅ 4ANรฅรฅ /LDERรฅ -ALEรฅ7ITHรฅ !Nรฅ )N รฅ JUREDรฅ &RONTรฅ 0AW รฅ 7Eรฅรฅ -ISSรฅ (IMรฅ 3Oรฅ -UCH รฅรฅ 0LEASEรฅ (ELPรฅ 5Sรฅ "RINGรฅรฅ (IMรฅ (OME รฅ รฅ 2EWARDรฅรฅ 7ILLรฅ"Eรฅ/FFERED
Youโ ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: nw-ads.com.
Employment General
Lost
General Financial
รฅรฅ
!$6%24)3).'รฅ3!,%3รฅรฅ #/.35,4!.4 4IREDรฅOFรฅWORKINGรฅNIGHTSรฅรฅ ORรฅWEEKENDS ,OOKINGรฅFORรฅANรฅEXCITINGรฅรฅ CAREERรฅINรฅ3ALES
รฅรฅรฅรฅ
- ) 3 3 ) . ' รฅ $ / ' รฅ รฅ , / รฅ '!. รฅ -ISSINGรฅ SINCEรฅ !U รฅ GUSTรฅ THรฅ FROMรฅ !UBURNรฅรฅ AREA รฅ 3IGHTINGSรฅ INรฅ +ENTรฅรฅ ANDรฅ "ELLEVUE รฅ -INIรฅ "LUEรฅรฅ -ERLEรฅ !USTRALIANรฅ 3HEP รฅ HERD รฅ 6ERYรฅ SCAREDรฅ ANDรฅรฅ S K I T T I S H รฅ 0 L E A S E รฅ C A L Lรฅรฅ $IANEรฅ ATรฅ รฅ IFรฅรฅ YOUรฅ SEEรฅ HIM รฅ 2%7!2$รฅรฅ /&&%2%$ Employment General
2%0/24%2 4HEรฅ %NUMCLAWรฅ #OURIERรฅรฅ (ERALDรฅ ISรฅ SEEKINGรฅ Aรฅ GEN รฅ ERALรฅ ASSIGNMENTรฅ REPORTERรฅรฅ WITHรฅ WRITINGรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅรฅ ANDรฅ PHOTOGRAPHYรฅ SKILLS รฅรฅ 0RIMARYรฅ COVERAGEรฅ WILLรฅ BEรฅรฅ CITYรฅ GOVERNMENT รฅ BUSI รฅ NESS รฅ GENERALรฅ ASSIGN รฅ MENTรฅ STORIESรฅ ANDรฅ COULDรฅรฅ INCLUDEรฅ AR TSรฅ COVERAGE รฅรฅ 3CHEDULEรฅ MAYรฅ INCLUDEรฅรฅ S O M E รฅ EVE N I N G รฅ A N D O Rรฅรฅ WEEKENDรฅ WORK รฅ !Sรฅ Aรฅ RE รฅ POR TERรฅ FORรฅ 3OUNDรฅ 0UB รฅ LISHING รฅ YOUรฅ WILLรฅ BEรฅ EX รฅ PECTEDรฅ TO รฅ USEรฅ Aรฅ DIGITALรฅรฅ CAMERAรฅ TOรฅ TAKEรฅ PHOTO รฅ GRAPHSรฅOFรฅTHEรฅSTORIESรฅYOU C O V E R รฅ P O S T รฅ O N รฅ T H Eรฅรฅ PUBLICATION Sรฅ WEBรฅ SITE รฅรฅ BLOGรฅ ANDรฅ USEรฅ 4WITTERรฅ ONรฅรฅ THEรฅWEB รฅ LAYOUTรฅ PAGES รฅรฅ USINGรฅ)N$ESIGN รฅS H O O Tรฅรฅ ANDรฅ EDITรฅ VIDEOSรฅ FORรฅ THEรฅรฅ WEB รฅ 4HEรฅ MOSTรฅ HIGHLYรฅรฅ VALUEDรฅTRAITSรฅARE รฅ C O M รฅ MITMENTรฅ TOรฅ COMMUNITYรฅรฅ JOUR NALISMรฅ ANDรฅ EVER Y รฅ THINGรฅ FROMรฅ SHORT รฅ BRIEF รฅ TYPEรฅ STORIESรฅ ABOUTรฅ PEO รฅ P L E รฅ A N D รฅ E V E N T S รฅ T Oรฅรฅ EXAMININGรฅ ISSUESรฅ FACINGรฅรฅ THEรฅCOMMUNITY รฅรฅT O รฅ B Eรฅรฅ INQUISITIVEรฅ ANDรฅ RESOURCE รฅ FULรฅ INรฅ THEรฅ COVERAGEรฅ OFรฅ AS รฅ SIGNEDรฅBEATS รฅรฅT O รฅ B Eรฅรฅ COMFOR TABLEรฅ PRODUCINGรฅรฅ FIVEรฅ BYLINEDรฅ STOR IESรฅ Aรฅรฅ WEEK รฅ THEรฅ ABILITYรฅ TOรฅ WRITEรฅรฅ STORIESรฅ THATรฅ AREรฅ TIGHTรฅ ANDรฅรฅ TOรฅTHEรฅPOINT รฅTOรฅBEรฅAรฅMOTI รฅ VATEDรฅ SELF STARTER รฅ TOรฅ BEรฅรฅ ABLEรฅ TOรฅ ESTABLISHรฅ Aรฅ RAP รฅ PORTรฅWITHรฅTHEรฅCOMMUNITY #ANDIDATESรฅ MUSTรฅ HAVEรฅรฅ EXCELLENTรฅ COMMUNICATIONรฅรฅ ANDรฅ ORGANIZATIONALรฅ SKILLS รฅรฅ ANDรฅ BEรฅ ABLEรฅ TOรฅ WORKรฅ EF รฅ FECTIVELYรฅ INรฅ Aรฅ DEADLINE รฅ D R I V E N รฅ E N V I R O N M E N T รฅรฅ -INIMUMรฅ OFรฅ ONEรฅ YEARรฅ OFรฅรฅ PREVIOUSรฅ NEWSPAPERรฅ EX รฅ P E R I E N C E รฅ I S รฅ R E Q U I R E D รฅรฅ 0OSITIONรฅ ALSOรฅ REQUIRESรฅรฅ USEรฅ OFรฅ PERSONALรฅ VEHICLE รฅรฅ POSSESSIONรฅ OFรฅ VALIDรฅ 7!รฅรฅ 3TATEรฅ $RIVER Sรฅ ,ICENSEรฅรฅ ANDรฅ PROOFรฅ OFรฅ ACTIVEรฅ VEHI รฅ CLEรฅINSURANCE 7Eรฅ OFFERรฅ Aรฅ COMPETITIVEรฅรฅ HOURLYรฅ WAGEรฅ ANDรฅ BENE รฅ FITSรฅ PACKAGEรฅ INCLUDINGรฅรฅ HEALTHรฅ INSURANCE รฅ PAIDรฅรฅ TIMEรฅ OFFรฅ VACATION รฅ SICK รฅรฅ ANDรฅ HOLIDAYS รฅ ANDรฅ +รฅรฅ CURRENTLYรฅ WITHรฅ ANรฅ EM รฅ PLOYERรฅ MATCH รฅ %MAILรฅ USรฅรฅ YO U R รฅ C OVE R รฅ L E T T E R รฅ R E รฅ SUME รฅ ANDรฅ INCLUDEรฅ FIVEรฅรฅ EXAMPLESรฅ OFรฅ YOURรฅ BESTรฅรฅ WORKรฅ SHOWCASINGรฅ YOURรฅรฅ REPORTINGรฅ SKILLSรฅ ANDรฅ WRIT รฅ INGรฅCHOPSรฅTO
3OUNDรฅ 0UBLISHING รฅ )NC รฅรฅ HASรฅ ANรฅ IMMEDIATEรฅ OPEN รฅ INGรฅ FORรฅ ANรฅ !DVER TISINGรฅรฅ 3ALESรฅ #ONSULTANTรฅ WITHรฅรฅ THEรฅ &EDERALรฅ 7AYรฅ -IRROR รฅรฅ 4HEรฅ IDEALรฅ CANDIDATESรฅ WILLรฅรฅ DEMONSTRATEรฅ STRONGรฅ IN รฅ TERPERSONALรฅ SKILLS รฅ BOTHรฅรฅ WR ITTENรฅ ANDรฅ ORAL รฅ ANDรฅรฅ HAVEรฅ EXCELLENTรฅ COMMUNI รฅ CATIONSรฅ SKILLS รฅ MUSTรฅ BEรฅรฅ MOTIVATEDรฅ ANDรฅ TAKEรฅ THEรฅรฅ INITIATIVEรฅ TOรฅ SELLรฅ MULTIPLEรฅรฅ MEDIAรฅ PRODUCTSรฅ INCLUDINGรฅรฅ ON LINEรฅ ADVERTISINGรฅ ANDรฅรฅ SPECIALรฅ PRODUCTS รฅ WORKรฅรฅ WITHรฅ EXISTINGรฅ CUSTOMERSรฅรฅ ANDรฅ FINDรฅ WAYSรฅ TOรฅ GROWรฅรฅ SALESรฅ ANDรฅ INCOMEรฅ WITHรฅรฅ NEWรฅ PROSPECTIVEรฅ CLIENTS รฅรฅ 3ALESรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅ NECES รฅ SARY รฅ 0RINTรฅ MEDIAรฅ EXPERI รฅ ENCEรฅ ISรฅ Aรฅ DEFINITEรฅ ASSET รฅรฅ -USTรฅ BEรฅ COMPUTER PROFI รฅ CIENTรฅ WITHรฅ DATAรฅ PROCESS รฅ INGรฅ ANDรฅ SPREADSHEETSรฅ ASรฅรฅ WELLรฅ ASรฅ UTILIZINGรฅ THEรฅ )NTER รฅ NET รฅ 0OSITIONรฅ REQUIRESรฅรฅ U S E รฅ O F รฅ P E R S O N A L รฅ C E L Lรฅรฅ PHONEรฅ ANDรฅ VEHICLE รฅ POS รฅ S E S S I O N รฅ O F รฅ V A L I D รฅ 7!รฅรฅ 3TATEรฅ $RIVER Sรฅ ,ICENSEรฅรฅ ANDรฅ PROOFรฅ OFรฅ ACTIVEรฅ VEHI รฅ CLEรฅ INSURANCE รฅ7Eรฅ OFFERรฅ Aรฅรฅ COMPETITIVEรฅ SALARYรฅ PLUSรฅรฅ COMMISSION รฅ ANDรฅ BENE รฅ FITSรฅ PACKAGEรฅ INCLUDINGรฅรฅ HEALTHรฅ INSURANCE รฅ PAIDรฅรฅ TIMEรฅ OFFรฅ VACATION รฅ SICK รฅรฅ ANDรฅ HOLIDAYS รฅ ANDรฅ +รฅรฅ CURRENTLYรฅ WITHรฅ ANรฅ EM รฅ PLOYERรฅ MATCH รฅ )Fรฅ YOU REรฅรฅ INTERESTEDรฅ INรฅ JOININGรฅ OURรฅรฅ TEAMรฅ ANDรฅ WORKINGรฅ FORรฅ THEรฅรฅ L E A D I N G รฅ I N D E P E N D E N Tรฅรฅ NEWSPAPERรฅ PUBLISHERรฅ INรฅรฅ 7ASHINGTONรฅ 3TATE รฅ THENรฅรฅ WEรฅ WANTรฅ TOรฅ HEARรฅ FROMรฅรฅ YOU รฅ รฅ รฅ %MAILรฅ USรฅ YOURรฅ COV รฅ ERรฅLETTERรฅANDรฅRESUMEรฅTO
Employment Skilled Trades/Construction
-ETERรฅ%LECTRICIAN !PPRENTICE รฅ รฅ H O U Rรฅรฅ 0LUSรฅ %XCELLENTรฅ "ENEFITSรฅรฅ 3EATTLEรฅ #ITYรฅ ,IGHTรฅ ISรฅ RE รฅ CRUITINGรฅ TOรฅ FILLรฅ TWOรฅ POSI รฅ TIONSรฅ INรฅ THEIRรฅ APPRENTICE รฅ SHIPรฅ PROGRAMรฅ TOรฅ BECOMEรฅรฅ -ETERรฅ %LECTRICIANS รฅ 4HISรฅรฅ ISรฅ Aรฅ THREE YEARรฅ APPREN รฅ TICESHIPรฅ INCLUDINGรฅ BOTH รฅ ON THE JOBรฅ TRAININGรฅ ANDรฅรฅ EVENINGรฅ ACADEMICรฅ TRAIN รฅ ING รฅ &ORรฅ MOREรฅ INFORMA รฅ TIONรฅANDรฅTOรฅAPPLY รฅVISIT WWW SEATTLE GOV JOBS BYรฅ รฅ4HEรฅ#ITYรฅOF 3 E A T T L E รฅ I S รฅ A N รฅ % Q U A Lรฅรฅ /PORTUNITYรฅ%MPLOYERรฅTHAT VALUESรฅ DIVERSITYรฅ INรฅ THEรฅรฅ WORKFORCE Employment Transportation/Drivers
#$,รฅ"5,+รฅ$2)6%23 +%.4 รฅ7! #OMEรฅGROWรฅWITHรฅUS รฅ!IRรฅรฅ ,IQUIDEรฅISรฅTHEรฅWORLDรฅLEAD รฅ ERรฅINรฅGASESรฅFORรฅINDUSTRYรฅรฅ HEALTHรฅANDรฅTHE รฅENVIRONMENT 2EQUIRED รฅ#LASSรฅ!รฅ#$,รฅรฅ W (!:-!4รฅANDรฅ4ANKERรฅรฅ รฅYEARSรฅDRIVINGรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅ &ULLรฅ"ENElTS รฅ + รฅรฅ -EDICAL รฅ$ENTAL รฅ รฅVACATION #ALLรฅ,ETICIAรฅ รฅORรฅEMAILรฅรฅ RESUMESรฅTO รฅLETICIA MURO AIRLIQUIDE COM รฅLETICIA MURO AIRLIQUIDE COM
$RIVERS +ENT รฅ รฅ #OMPANYรฅรฅ $R IVER รฅ $EDICATEDรฅ !C รฅ COUNT รฅ ,OCAL 2EGIONALรฅรฅ - I X รฅ ' E T รฅ ( O M E รฅ รฅรฅ . I G H T S รฅ รฅ 7E E K E N D S รฅรฅ #LASSรฅ ! #$,รฅ รฅ 4ANK รฅรฅ hreast@soundpublishing.com 7EEKรฅ -INIMUMรฅรฅ ORรฅMAILรฅTO 3OUNDรฅ0UBLISHING รฅ)NC รฅรฅ 'UARANTEE รฅ !PPLYรฅ /NLINEรฅรฅ รฅ WWW THEKAG COMรฅ /2รฅรฅ รฅ THรฅ!VENUEรฅ3 รฅรฅ #ALLรฅ รฅ รฅ /Pรฅรฅ +ENT รฅ7!รฅ
!44. รฅ(2 &7-
3OUNDรฅ 0UBLISHINGรฅ ISรฅ ANรฅรฅ $RIVERS %QUALรฅ /PPORTUNITYรฅ %M รฅ !NSWERรฅTHEรฅCALL รฅ P L O Y E R รฅ % / % รฅ A N Dรฅรฅ STRONGLYรฅ SUPPORTSรฅ DIVER รฅ 3EASONALรฅ$RIVERSรฅรฅ SITYรฅ INรฅ THEรฅ WOR KPLACE รฅรฅ .EEDED #HECKรฅ OUTรฅ OURรฅ WEBSITEรฅ TOรฅรฅ lNDรฅOUTรฅMOREรฅABOUTรฅUS $Oรฅ YOUรฅ LOVEรฅ TOรฅ BEรฅ OUT รฅ www.soundpublishing.com SIDEรฅ ANDรฅ HAVEรฅ EXPERI รฅ ENCEรฅ DRIVINGรฅ Aรฅ COMMER รฅ CIALรฅ VEHICLE รฅ )Fรฅ SO รฅ THISรฅ ISรฅรฅ #!22)%2รฅรฅ YOURรฅ CHANCEรฅ TOรฅ WORKรฅ INรฅ Aรฅรฅ 2/54%3รฅรฅ D Y N A M I C รฅ E NV I R O N M E N Tรฅรฅ !6!),!",% ANDรฅMAKEรฅEXTRAรฅCASH
).รฅ9/52รฅรฅ !2%! #ALLรฅ4ODAY 3ENIORรฅ3ERVICESรฅ ISรฅLOOKINGรฅFOR
รฅ&4รฅ6ANรฅ$RIVER
+ELLYรฅ 3ERVICESยงรฅ ISรฅ HIRINGรฅรฅ TEMPORAR Yรฅ DR IVERSรฅ FORรฅรฅ & E D % X รฅ ' R O U N D ยง รฅ Aรฅรฅ SMALL PACKAGEรฅ GROUNDรฅรฅ DELIVERYรฅ COMPANYรฅ SERV รฅ INGรฅ BUSINESSรฅ ANDรฅ RESI รฅ DENTIALรฅ CUSTOMERSรฅ ACROSSรฅรฅ . O R T H รฅ ! M E R I C A รฅ 9O Uรฅรฅ COULDรฅ BEรฅ HIREDรฅ IMMEDI รฅ ATELYรฅ IFรฅ YOUรฅ MEETรฅ THESEรฅรฅ REQUIREMENTS
sรฅ รฅYEARSรฅORรฅOLDER sรฅ 3TRONGรฅCUSTOMER รฅรฅรฅรฅรฅรฅSERVICEรฅSKILLS sรฅ -INIMUMรฅOFรฅSIXรฅรฅ MONTHSรฅCOMMERCIALรฅรฅ DRIVINGรฅEXPERIENCEรฅรฅ WITHINรฅTHEรฅLASTรฅTHREEรฅรฅ YEARSรฅORรฅ รฅYEARSรฅรฅ WITHINรฅTHEรฅLASTรฅ รฅรฅ YEARS sรฅ #$,รฅNOTรฅREQUIRED
&ORรฅ OURรฅ 4RANSPOR TATIONรฅรฅ 0ROGRAM รฅ SER VINGรฅ THEรฅรฅ !UBURNรฅ AREA รฅ รฅ 3CHEDULESรฅรฅ M AY รฅ I N C L U D E รฅ - O N D AYรฅรฅ hreast@soundpublishing.com THROUGHรฅ 3ATURDAYรฅ SHIFTS รฅรฅ &ORรฅ COMPLETEรฅ DETAILS รฅ IN รฅ ORรฅMAILรฅTO 3OUNDรฅ0UBLISHING รฅ)NC รฅรฅ CLUDINGรฅ INSTRUCTIONSรฅ ONรฅรฅ รฅ THรฅ!VENUEรฅ3 รฅรฅ HOWรฅ TOรฅ APPLY รฅ PLEASEรฅ VIS รฅ ITรฅOURรฅWEBรฅSITE +ENT รฅ7!รฅ
!44. รฅ(2 %#( รฅWWW SENIORSERVICES ORG !Sรฅ Aรฅ +ELLYยงรฅ EMPLOYEE รฅรฅ YO U L L รฅ R E C E I VE รฅ WE E K L Yรฅรฅ รฅรฅ%/% 3OUNDรฅ 0UBLISHINGรฅ ISรฅ ANรฅรฅ ELECTRONICรฅ PAY รฅ Aรฅ SERVICEรฅรฅ %QUALรฅ /PPORTUNITYรฅ %M รฅ Advertise your BONUSรฅ PLAN รฅ BENEFITรฅ OP รฅ P L O Y E R รฅ % / % รฅ A N Dรฅรฅ TIONS รฅ ANDรฅ MORE รฅ $ON Tรฅรฅ upcoming garage STRONGLYรฅ SUPPORTSรฅ DIVER รฅ MISSรฅ OUTรฅ ONรฅ THISรฅ OPPORTU รฅ SITYรฅ INรฅ THEรฅ WOR KPLACE รฅรฅ sale in your local NITYรฅ TOรฅ DRIVEรฅ WITHรฅ ANรฅ IN รฅ #HECKรฅ OUTรฅ OURรฅ WEBSITEรฅ TOรฅรฅ community paper DUSTRY LEADINGรฅCOMPANY lNDรฅOUTรฅMOREรฅABOUTรฅUS and online to reach )NQUIREรฅ.OW www.soundpublishing.com thousands of households 2ATEรฅOFรฅPAY รฅ รฅPERรฅHOUR in your area.
#RYSTALรฅ-OUNTAIN รฅ2ESORT
.OWรฅHIRINGรฅFORรฅALL รฅWINTERรฅ รฅ รฅ SEASONALรฅPOSITIONS รฅรฅ 0LEASEรฅAPPLYรฅONLINEรฅATรฅรฅ
#RYSTAL-OUNTAIN2ESORT COM
Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.nw-ads.com
1UALIlEDรฅCANDIDATESรฅรฅ PLEASEรฅSENDรฅYOURรฅ RESUMEรฅTO รฅ NWSTDW TEMPDRIVER NET NWSTDW TEMPDRIVER NET
!Nรฅ%QUALรฅ/PPORTUNITYรฅรฅ %MPLOYER
www.nw-ads.com Employment Transportation/Drivers
Employment Transportation/Drivers
% 8 0 % 2 ) % . # % $รฅรฅ # , ! 3 3 รฅ ! รฅ $ 5 - 0รฅรฅ 4 2 5 # + รฅ รฅ 4 2 ! ) , % 2รฅรฅ !.$รฅ 3)$%รฅ $5-0รฅ $2)6 รฅ %23รฅ %XPERIENCEDรฅ #LASSรฅรฅ !รฅ $UMPรฅ 4RUCKรฅ รฅ 4RAILERรฅรฅ ANDรฅ 3)$%รฅ $5-0รฅ $RIVERSรฅรฅ 7ELLรฅ ESTABLISHEDรฅ $UMPรฅรฅ 4RUCKINGรฅ #OMPANYรฅ LOOK รฅ I N G รฅ FO R รฅ # L A S S รฅ ! รฅ # $ ,รฅรฅ $UMPรฅ 4RUCKรฅ ANDรฅ 4RANS รฅ FERรฅ $RIVERSรฅ FORรฅ HAULINGรฅ INรฅรฅ +ING รฅ 0IERCEรฅ ANDรฅ 3NO รฅ HOMISHรฅ #OUNTIES รฅ !PPLI รฅ CANTSรฅ MUSTรฅ HAVEรฅ Aรฅ MINI รฅ M U M รฅ O F รฅ รฅ Y E A R Sรฅรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅ $UMPรฅ 4RUCKรฅรฅ ANDรฅ 4RAILERรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅรฅ WITHรฅ THEรฅ FOLLOWINGรฅ RE รฅ QUIREMENTS รฅ *OBรฅ RESPON รฅ SIBILITIESรฅ INCLUDE รฅ #LASSรฅรฅ !รฅ #$,รฅ 7ASHING รฅ TONรฅ ,I รฅ CENSE รฅ -EETSรฅ $/4รฅ $RUGรฅรฅ 4E S T I N G รฅ A N D รฅ # U R R E N Tรฅรฅ -EDICALรฅ #ARDรฅ -USTรฅ HAVEรฅรฅ ANDรฅ MAINTAINรฅ Aรฅ CLEANรฅรฅ DRIVER Sรฅ RECORD รฅ PROMPT รฅรฅ DEPENDABLE รฅ HARDรฅ WORK รฅ INGรฅ ANDรฅ PRACTICESรฅ GOOD รฅรฅ SAFEรฅ DRIVINGรฅ SKILLSรฅ ATรฅ ALLรฅรฅ TIMES รฅ +NOWLEDGEรฅ OFรฅ 0ITรฅรฅ L O C A T I O N S รฅ A N D รฅ $ U M Pรฅรฅ 3ITESรฅ INรฅ 0UGETรฅ 3OUNDรฅรฅ !REAรฅ -AINTAINรฅ DAILYรฅ PA รฅ PERWORKรฅ ANDรฅ WORKรฅ LOGSรฅรฅ ANDรฅ MAINTAINรฅ Aรฅ PROFES รฅ S I O N A L รฅ A P P E A R A N C Eรฅรฅ
+EEPSรฅ THEรฅ TRUCKรฅ CLEANรฅรฅ INSIDEรฅANDรฅOUTรฅ"ENElTS
#OMPENSATION รฅ $/% รฅรฅ &ULLรฅ -EDICAL รฅ $ENTAL รฅ 6I รฅรฅ S I O N รฅ A N D รฅ + รฅ 9E A Rรฅรฅ AROUNDรฅ WORKรฅ ONรฅ 0UBLICรฅรฅ ANDรฅ 0RIVATEรฅ WORKรฅ 0LEASEรฅรฅ DOรฅ NOTรฅ RESPONDรฅ WITHOUTรฅรฅ THEรฅ PROPERรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅรฅ %MPLOYERรฅ WILLรฅ INTERVIEWรฅรฅ A P P L I C A N T S รฅ - O N D A Yรฅรฅ THROUGHรฅ &RIDAYรฅ AMรฅ TOรฅรฅ PM รฅ &!8รฅ 2%35-%รฅ 4/รฅรฅ
$R IVERS รฅ รฅ ,OCAL (OMEรฅรฅ .IGHTLY &LATBEDรฅ รฅ2EEFER Kรฅ รฅ Kรฅ YRรฅ รฅ 'REATรฅรฅ "ENElTS #$, ! รฅ YRรฅ%XP รฅ2EQ !PPLYรฅWWW GOELC COM $2)6%23รฅ รฅ4IREDรฅ OFรฅ "E รฅ INGรฅ 'ONE รฅ 7Eรฅ GETรฅ YOUรฅรฅ (OME รฅ #ALLรฅ (ANEYรฅ 4RUCKรฅรฅ , I N E รฅ O N E รฅ O F รฅ B E S T รฅ . 7รฅรฅ H E A V Y รฅ H A U L รฅ C A R R I E R S รฅรฅ 'REATรฅ PAY BENElTSรฅ PACK รฅ AGE รฅ รฅ ORรฅรฅ WWW GOHANEY COM $ 2 ) 6 % 2 3 รฅ รฅ 7 H E T H E Rรฅรฅ YOUรฅ HAVEรฅ EXPERIENCEรฅ ORรฅรฅ NEEDรฅ TRAINING รฅ WEรฅ OFFERรฅรฅ UNBEATABLEรฅ CAREERรฅ OP รฅ P O R T U N I T I E S รฅ 4R A I N E E รฅรฅ #OMPANYรฅ $RIVER รฅ ,EASEรฅรฅ /PERATOR รฅ ,EASEรฅ 4RAIN รฅ ERS รฅ รฅ รฅ CEN รฅ TRALDRIVINGJOBS COM '/2$/.รฅ 425#+).' รฅรฅ )NC รฅ !รฅ BETTERรฅ #ARRIER รฅ !รฅรฅ BETTERรฅ #AREER รฅ #$, !รฅรฅ $RIVERSรฅ .EEDED รฅ 5Pรฅ TOรฅรฅ รฅ SIGNรฅ ONรฅ BONUS รฅรฅ $EDICATEDรฅ &LEETรฅ /PTIONS รฅรฅ (OMEรฅ WEEKLYรฅ AVAILABLEรฅรฅ INรฅ SOMEรฅ AREA รฅ %/% รฅ #ALLรฅรฅ รฅ DAYS WEEK รฅ รฅ
Extra auto parts bring in extra cash when you place an ad in the Classifieds. Open 24 hours a day www.nw-ads.com.
Business Opportunities
-AKEรฅ 5Pรฅ 4Oรฅ รฅรฅ 0ERรฅ 7EEK รฅ .EWรฅ #REDITรฅรฅ #ARDรฅ 2EADYรฅ $RINK 3NACKรฅรฅ 6ENDINGรฅ -ACHINES รฅ -INI รฅ MUMรฅ +รฅ TOรฅ + รฅ )N รฅ VESTMENTรฅ 2EQUIRED รฅ ,O รฅ CATIONSรฅ !VAILABLE รฅ """รฅรฅ ! C C R E D I T E D รฅ " U S I N E S S รฅรฅ รฅ
Appliances
887262
887266
NEW APPLIANCES UP TO 70% OFF All Manufacturer Small Dingโ s, Dents, Scratches and Factory Imperfections *Under Warranty* For Inquiries, Call or Visit Appliance Distributors @ 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.
206-244-6966
886291
[18] October 25, 2013
2EAL รฅ%STATE รฅ#AREERS %ARNรฅYOURรฅREALรฅ ESTATEรฅLICENSEรฅ BEFOREรฅTHEรฅMARKETรฅรฅ GOESรฅBACKรฅUP รฅ %VENINGรฅCLASSES รฅ7Eรฅ4AKEรฅ0AYMENTS
,IVEรฅ)NSTRUCTED
+NIGHTรฅ0ORTรฅ3ERVICESรฅรฅ "LUEรฅ%MERALDรฅ2EAL GETSรฅYOUรฅHOMEรฅEVERYรฅรฅ %STATEรฅ3CHOOL WEEKENDรฅ!.$รฅ +INGรฅ#O WEรฅTRAINรฅYOUรฅONรฅHOWรฅรฅ TOรฅRUNรฅTHEรฅ0ORTS 7Eรฅ TRAINรฅ EXPER IENCEDรฅรฅ #LASSรฅ !รฅ #$,รฅ HOLDERSรฅ ONรฅรฅ RUNNINGรฅ THEรฅ POR TS รฅ 4HEรฅรฅ PORTรฅ POSITIONSรฅ OFFERรฅ GREATรฅรฅ H O M E รฅ T I M E รฅ A N D รฅ GR E A Tรฅรฅ PAY รฅ "Eรฅ HOMEรฅ WEEKENDSรฅรฅ ANDรฅ OCCASIONALLYรฅ THRUรฅ OUTรฅรฅ T H E รฅ WE E K รฅ / U T รฅ O F รฅ O U Rรฅรฅ +ENTรฅ 7!รฅ TER MINALรฅ YOUรฅรฅ AREรฅ ABLEรฅ TOรฅ STAYรฅ WITHINรฅรฅ 7!รฅ ANDรฅ /2 รฅ $RIVERSรฅ AREรฅรฅ AVERAGINGรฅ รฅ Aรฅ WEEKรฅรฅ RIGHTรฅNOWรฅANDรฅ-/2%
887248
BLUEEMERARDREALESTATE COM
Schools & Training
!)2,).%3รฅ !2%รฅ ()2).'รฅรฅ n รฅ 4RA I N รฅ FO R รฅ H A N D S รฅ O Nรฅรฅ !V I A T I O N รฅ # A R E E R รฅ &! !รฅรฅ APPROVEDรฅ PROGRAM รฅ &I รฅ NANCIALรฅ AIDรฅ IFรฅ QUALIFIEDรฅ รฅรฅ *OBรฅ PLACEMENTรฅ ASSIS รฅ TANCE รฅ รฅ #!,,รฅ !VIATIONรฅ )N รฅ STITUTEรฅ OFรฅ -AINTENANCEรฅรฅ Antiques & Collectibles
#HECKรฅ USรฅ OUT รฅ $Oรฅ YOURรฅรฅ RESEARCHรฅ ONรฅ '//',% รฅรฅ ").'รฅ ORรฅ EVENรฅ &ACEBOOK รฅรฅ #OMEรฅ INรฅ ANDรฅ SPEAKรฅ WITHรฅรฅ Aรฅ DRIVER รฅ !SKรฅ AWAY รฅ #ALLรฅรฅ ANYTIME รฅ 4AKEรฅ Aรฅ TOURรฅ OFรฅรฅ OURรฅ YARD รฅ 3EEรฅ THATรฅ OURรฅรฅ E Q U I P M E N T รฅ I S รฅ N E W E R รฅรฅ MAINTAINEDรฅ ANDรฅ JUSTรฅ ASรฅรฅ $300 to $5000 L OVE D รฅ A S รฅ O U R รฅ D R I VE R S รฅรฅ -EETรฅTHEรฅTEAMรฅTHATรฅISรฅGO รฅ All Recovery Services of Washington INGรฅ TOรฅ MAKEรฅ YOUรฅ รฅ ANDรฅรฅ GIVEรฅ YOUรฅ THEรฅ RESPECTรฅ THATรฅรฅ 7HAT Sรฅ INรฅ YOURรฅ ATTIC รฅ )Fรฅ ITรฅรฅ DRIVERSรฅ ACROSSรฅ THEรฅ NATIONรฅรฅ ISรฅ ANรฅ OLDรฅ 34!-0รฅ #/, รฅรฅ DESERVE , % # 4 ) / . รฅ B R I N G รฅ I T รฅ T Oรฅรฅ 3 % ! 0 % 8 รฅ T H E รฅ 3 E A T T L Eรฅรฅ 2EQUIREMENTS 0HILATELICรฅ %XHIBITION รฅ %X รฅ sรฅ รฅYEARSรฅOFรฅAGE PERIENCEDรฅ STAMPรฅ COLLEC รฅ sรฅ รฅ MONTHSรฅ /42รฅ EXP รฅรฅ TORSรฅ WILLรฅ BEรฅ MANNINGรฅ Aรฅรฅ INรฅ PASTรฅ รฅ MONTHSรฅรฅ TABLEรฅ TOรฅ OFFERรฅ ADVICEรฅ ONรฅรฅ /2รฅ รฅ MONTHSรฅ /42รฅรฅ SELLINGรฅ IT รฅ WITHรฅ DEALERSรฅ ATรฅรฅ EXP รฅINรฅTHEรฅPASTรฅ รฅYRS THEรฅ SHOWรฅ LOOKINGรฅ TOรฅ BUY รฅรฅ sรฅ 47)#รฅ #ARDรฅ 7Eรฅ CANรฅรฅ 3ATURDAY รฅ .OVรฅ รฅ ATรฅ THEรฅรฅ HELPรฅYOUรฅWITHรฅTHIS 4U K W I L A รฅ # O M M U N I T Yรฅรฅ sรฅ .Oรฅ $7) $5)รฅ INรฅ LASTรฅรฅ #ENTER รฅ รฅ NDรฅ !VEรฅรฅ รฅ Y E A R S รฅ A N D รฅ N Oรฅรฅ 3 รฅ AMรฅTOรฅ PM F A I L E D รฅ O R รฅ R E F U S E Dรฅรฅ DRUGรฅTESTING Appliances sรฅ -USTรฅ HAVEรฅ GOODรฅ DRIV รฅ INGรฅSAFETYรฅRECORD sรฅ . O รฅ M O R E รฅ T H A N รฅ รฅรฅ MOVINGรฅ VIOLATIONSรฅ INรฅรฅ LASTรฅ รฅYEARS sรฅ .Oรฅ MOREรฅ THANรฅ รฅ PRE รฅ VENTABLEรฅ ACCIDENTรฅ INรฅรฅ LASTรฅ รฅYEARS
887241
Building Materials & Supplies
WE BUY Fixable Cars
253-255-6044
#ALLรฅ!NNETTEรฅAT รฅOPTIONรฅ 3TOPรฅINรฅANDรฅSEEรฅUS รฅ3รฅ THรฅ3T +ENT รฅ7!รฅ WWW DRIVEKNIGHT COM
887236
h#%$!2รฅ&%.#).'v X X รฅEA X X รฅFORรฅ h#%$!2รฅ3)$).'v X รฅ#EDARรฅ"EVELรฅ `รฅ,& X X รฅ4 ' `รฅ,&
h#%$!2รฅ$%#+).'v X รฅรฅ$ECKINGรฅ X รฅ รฅ รฅ รฅ,ENGTHS `รฅ,& X รฅ$ECKING รฅ รฅ รฅ,ENGTHS `,&
รฅ#OMPLETEรฅ,INE รฅ7ESTERNรฅ2EDรฅ#EDARรฅ "UILDINGรฅ-ATERIALSรฅ
รฅ!FFORDABLEรฅ0RICES รฅ/0%.รฅ-/.รฅ รฅ3!4
WWW CEDARPRODUCTSCO COM
Cemetery Plots
รฅ 0LOTSรฅ ATรฅ 7ASHINGTONรฅรฅ -EMORIALรฅ 0ARK รฅ ,OCATEDรฅรฅ INรฅ 2OCKรฅ ORรฅ !GESรฅ 'ARDEN รฅรฅ ,OTรฅ ! รฅ BOTHรฅรฅ PLUSรฅ TRANSFERรฅ FEE รฅ 0RIVATEรฅรฅ SELLER รฅ
&INDรฅIT รฅ"UYรฅIT รฅ3ELLรฅIT NW ADS COM
å 0,/4å å ).å 0RETI GOUSå 3UNSETå -EMORIALå 0ARKå INå "ELLEVUE å6IEWå OFå THEå MOUNTAINS å 3OLDå OUTå SPACEå INå THEå DESIRABLEå h'ARDENå OFå 0RAYERvå SEC TION å ,OTå å å SPACEå å å /WNERå PAYSå TRANSFERå FEEå å ENDOWMENTå CAREå FEE å )Få AVAILABLEå WOULDå RETAILå ATå å 0RIVATEå OWNER å
å 3)$%å "9å 3)$%å PLOTSå )Nå 3UNSETå (ILLSå -EMORIALå 0ARK å å )Nå SOLDå OUTå ,INCOLNå å SECTION å PLOTå å å ANDå å 0RIMEå LOCATIONå FORå EASYå ACCESS å 7ONDERFULå MOUNTAINå VIEWSå INå ONEå OFå THEå MOSTå HIGHLYå SOUGHTå AFTERå CEMETERIESå INå THEå 'REATERå 3EATTLEå !REA å å EACH å å ASå Aå PAIR å #ALLå 3TEVEå 3COTTå ATå å #%-%4%29å 0,/43 å !SKINGå å EAå ORå BOTHå FORå å ,OCATEDå INå T H E å D E S I RA BL E å 3 U N S E Tå ( I L L S å # E M E T E R Y å 7E L Lå MANICUREDå 'ARDENå OFå 0RAYER å ,OVELYå PANORAM I C å C I T Y S C A P E å S E T T I N G å %ASYå ACCESS å RIGHTå OFFå THEå ROADå LOCATEDå INå ,OTå å SPACESå å å å /WNERå PAYSå TRANSFERå FEE å 0RI VATEå SELLER å 3HIR LEYå ATå
Sell it free in the Flea 1-866-825-90 1 /.%å 30!#%å !VAILABLEå INå THEå 3OUGHTå !FTERå h'AR DENå OFå 2ESTvå ATå 3UNSETå (ILLSå -EMORIALå 0ARKå INå "ELLEVUE å )Tå ISå 3PACEå å INå ,OTå å WHICHå ISå "EAUTI FULLYå ,OCATED å !å 2EALå " A R G A I N å A T å å 0LEASEå CONTACTå (ERBå ATå HESTA FRONTIER COMå ORå CALLå
& 5 4/ . å Q U E E N å S I Z E å METALå FRAME å 'REATå COND å å 3EA4ACå å BILLANDLAURIE COMCAST NET
,!$)%3å STYLISHå LEATHERå COAT å 3IZEå å CALFå LENGTH å WORNå VERYå LITTLE å LIKEå NEW å G R E A T å FO R å &A L L å 2 E T A I Lå å 3-!,,å !00,)!.#%3 å å SELLINGå å å EA å #ALLå FORå DETAILS å 0LEASEå CALLå $IANEå 3EA4ACå å åAFTERå PM Flea Market
BILLANDLAURIE COMCAST NET
!4 , ! 3 å - I C R O P H O N Eå 3TAND å å $%##!å #LASSICå 'UITAR å -ODELå å -ADEå INå *A PAN å å $%,,å #/-054%2å WITHå THEå WOR KS å 4OPå OFå THEå LINEå SPEAKERS å NICEå å FLATå SCREENå MONITORå WITHå 7INDOWSå 80 å å å ORå $ININGå 2OOMå4ABLEå å SOL I D å O A K å v å R O U N D å #OMESå WITHå å SOLIDå OAKå CAPTAIN Så CHAIRSå ALLå INå GOODå TOå EXCELLENTå SHAPE å å %XECUTIVE Så (/-%å "!2 å - A H O G A N Y å T O P å H O M Eå BAR å vå LONG å vå WIDE å vå H I G H å 7 I L L å S E A T å å PEOPLEå ATå BARå COM F O R T A B L Y å % X C E L L E N Tå SHAPE å 'REATå ADDITIONå FORå YOURå HOME å å /"/ å #ANå DELIVER å #ALLå å
Mail Order
Mail Order
å 'UARANTEEDå /MA HAå 3TEAKSå å 3!6%å å ONå 4HEå 'RILLINGå #OLLEC T I O N å å . / 7 å / . ,9å å 0 L U S å å & 2 % %å ')&43å å R IGHT TO THE DOORå DELIVER Yå INå Aå RE USABLEå COOLER å /2$%2å 4ODAY å å å 5SEå #ODE %4!å ORå W W W / M A H A 3 TEAKS COM OFFERGC
#ANADAå $RUGå #ENTERå ISå YOURå CHOICEå FORå SAFEå ANDå AFFORDABLEå MEDICATIONS å /URå LICENSEDå #ANADIANå MAILå ORDERå PHARMACYå WILLå PROVIDEå YOUå WITHå SAVINGSå OFå UPå TOå å å ONå ALLå YOURå MEDICATIONå NEEDS å #ALLå TODAYå å FORå å OFFå YOURå FIRSTå P R E S C R I P T I O N å A N D å F R E Eå SHIPPING
4!+%å 6)!'2! #)!,)3 åå ' E T å å M G M Gå 0ILLS å FORå ONLY å å å "ONUSå 0ILLSå &2%% å å å -ALEå %NHANCEMENT å $IS CREETå 3HIPPING å å 3AVEå å å #ALLå å
/34%2):%2å ",%.$%2å ANDå )CEå #RUSHER å å FORå SET å 3TEREOå SPEAKERS å å ,ADIESå 3UEDEå *ACK ET å 3IZE å 3MALL å #OLOR å 0LUM å å -ICROWAVEå å å ORå å # A L L å A F T E Rå NOON
Think Inside the Box Advertise in your local community newspaper and on the web with just one phone call. Call 800-388-2527 for more information.
Home Furnishings
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.nw-ads.com
! å 15 % % . å 0 I L L OW å 4O På -ATTRESSå 3ET å INå ORIGINALå + ) , , å " % $ å " 5 ' 3 å å PLASTIC å å å 4 ( % ) 2 å % ' ' 3 å " U Y å Aå ( A R R I S å " E D å " U G å + I T å #OMPLETEå 2OOMå 4REAT MENTå 3OLUTION å /DORLESS å Mail Order .ON 3TAINING å !VAILABLEå ! L O N E å % M E R G E N C I E Så ONLINEå HOMEDEPOT COMå (APPEN å 'ETå (ELPå WITHå ./4å).å34/2%3 O N E å B U T T O N å P U S H å -EDICALå !LERTå FORå 3ENIORSå M O N T H å & R E Eå å å MONITORING å &2%%å EQUIPMENT å &REEå SET UP åå % Q U I P M E N T å & 2 % %å 0ROTECTIONå FORå YOUå ORå Aå 3 H I P P I N G å . A T I O N W I D Eå L OVE D å O N E å # A L L å , I FE 3ERVICE å å -ONTHå 7ATCHå 53!å #!,,å -EDICALå 'UARDIANå 4ODAYå
Professional Services Home Services Attorney, Legal Services Concrete Contractors
All Types Of Concrete
425-443-5474
25 years experience
4OPå "RANDå 7EIGHT ,OSSåå 3UPPLEMENTSå 4HATå 7ORKå 4EX T å 3 L I M å å $ OW N å å 4Oå å /Rå 'Oå4Oå .UTRITIO NAL'AIN COMå 4Oå /RDERå 9OURSå4ODAY Miscellaneous
2 % & 2 ) $ ' % 2 ! 4 / 2å å FREEå STANDINGå GASå låREPLACEå å .EWå TANKå LESSå HOTå WATERå HEATERå å 2ECLINERå å -INIå BIKEå å 7HEELå BARROWå å å SCAFFOLDSå å , A M I N A T E å R O U T E R å L I KEå NEWå å "IKEå å "IGå PLASTICå "UDWEISERå BOTTLEå L I G H T å å
Home Services Landscape Services
Home Services Plumbing
! å3(%%2 '!2$%.).'å å ,!.$3#!0).'
/NEå CALL å DOESå ITå ALL å &ASTå ANDå 2ELIABLEå 0LUMBINGå 2EPAIRS å #ALLå å
TOM’S CONCRETE SPECIALTY Stamped
&INDåIT å"UYåIT å3ELLåIT NW ADS COM
å#LEANUPå å4RIMå å7EED
å0RUNEå å3ODå å3EED
å"ARKåå å2OCKERY
å"ACKHOEå å0ATIOS ååå å åå
Home Services Roofing/Siding
2//&).'å 2%-/$%,).'
åå,IC å! 3(%', *-
Home Services General Contractors
3ENIORå$ISCOUNTS &REEå%STIMATES %XPERTå7ORK
Danny’s Lawn & Trees Fall Storm Clean Up
!,,å3ERVICEå#ONTRACTING /VERå åYRSåEXP åIN å
2EMODELåDå(OMEåREPAIRå D "ATHSååDå+ITCHENS Då"ASEMENTSååDå!DD /N D #ABINETSååD #OUNTERSåå
Thatch, Seed, Sod
!MERICANå'EN å#ONTRACTORå "ETTERå"USINESSå"UREAU ,ICå !-%2)'# "
All Lawn Renovations Guaranteed!
Reach the readers the dailies miss. Call 800-388-2527 today to place your ad in the Classifieds.
Expert Pruning, Ornamental, Rhodies, Hedges, Trees, Gutters, Roof Moss Control, Pressure Wash, Blackberrys.
D #USTOMå4ILEå D 7INDOWSåå
D &ENCESåD $ECKSååååååå 2EF AVAIL å D
,IC "OND )NSååALLSEC LQ
Senior Discounts Danny: 253-282-2273
Home Services Electrical Contractors
Home Services Tree/Shrub Care
Home Services
/NEå CALL å DOESå ITå ALL å &ASTå Lawn/Garden Service ANDå 2ELIABLEå %LECTRICALå 7ROTEå Aå BOOK å 'ETå ITå 2EPAIRSå ANDå )NSTALLA LAWN PUBLISHEDåANDåSTARTåEARN TIONS å #ALLå SERVICE INGå ROYALTIES å 3ELLå YOURå Summer Clean Up PRINTå ANDå E"OOKå EDITIONSå Landscape ONåMAJORåBOOKåSITES Home Services Yard Care -OREå INFO å HTTP JPPI IN Handyperson FO #RENEL0UB
PK
Beauty Bark Weed
Home Services Appliance Repair
A 2-DAY SHOW!
Plus - NEW - Wine Tasting Event Monday Evening
ARTISAN’S FESTIVAL
Nov. 4 Nov. 5
'5.å &!.#)%2å 7ANTSå T O å BU Y å P I S T O L S å R I F L E S å SHOTGUNS å /LDå ORå NEW å 0 H O N E å Q U O T E S å G L A D L Y å #ASHå OFå COURSE å å #ALLå å4HANKS
Food & Farmer’s Market
Flea Market
Professional Services Printing
35.3%4å (),,3å INå "ELLE VUE å å å 3IDEå BYå 3IDEå "U RIALå 3ITESå INå THEå 'ARDENå OFå !SSURANCE å ,OTå å 3 P A C E S å å å å å EACH å 3ELLERå WILLå PAYå TRANSFERå FEE å #ALLå
Mon. Tues.
Firearms & Ammunition
.OTICEåTOå#ONTRACTORS 7ASHINGTON å3TATEå,AW 2#7å REQUIRESå THATå ALLå ADVER TISEMENTSå FORå CONSTRUC TIONå RELATEDå SERVICESå IN CLUDEå THEå CONTRACTOR Så CURRENTå DEPAR TMENTå OFå , A B O R å A N D å ) N D U S T R I E Så REGISTRATIONå NUMBERå INå THEåADVERTISEMENT &AILUREå TOå OBTAINå Aå CERTIlå CATEå OFå REGISTRATIONå FROMå , )å ORå SHOWå THEå REGISTRA TIONå NUMBERå INå ALLå ADVER TISINGå WILLå RESULTå INå Aå låNEå UPå TOå å AGAINSTå THEå UNREGISTEREDåCONTRACTOR &ORå MOREå INFOR MATION å CALLå ,ABORå ANDå )NDUSTRIESå 3PECIALTYå #OMPLIANCEå 3ERVICESå$IVISIONåATå ORå CHECKå , )Så INTERNETå SITEåATåWWW LNI WA GOV
"%,,%65%
KENT GUILD
Electronics
- Y å # O M P U T E R å 7O R K S å #OMPUTERå PROBLEMS å 6I RUSES å SPYWARE å EMAIL å PRINTERå ISSUES å BADå INTER NETå CONNECTIONSå å &)8å )4å . / 7 å 0 R O F E S S I O N A L å 5 3 BASEDå TECHNICIANS å å OFFå SERVICE å #ALLå FORå IMMEDIATEå HELP å
2%$5#%å9/52å #ABLEå BILL å å 'ETå Aå 2OOMå !LL $IGITALå 3ATELLITEå SYSTEMå INSTALLEDå FORå &2%%å ANDå PROGRAMMINGå STARTINGå ATå M O å & 2 % %å ( $ $6 2 å U P G R A D E å FO Rå NEWå CALLERS å 3/å #!,,å ./7 å 3!6%å ONå #ABLEå 46 )N TERNET $IGITALå 0HONE 3AT E L L I T E å 9O U { V E å ' O T å !å #HOICE å /PTIONSå FROMå !,,å MAJORå SERVICEå PRO VIDERS å #ALLå USå TOå LEARNå MORE å #!,,å 4ODAY å $ISHå .ETWORKå LOWESTå NA TIONWIDEå PRICEå å Aå Firearms & M O N T H å & 2 % % å ( " / å Ammunition # I N E M A X 3 T A R Z å & 2 % %å "LOCKBUSTER å &2%%å ($ OR å "59).'å '5.3å $62å ANDå INSTALL å .EXTå 2IFLES å 0ISTOLS å 3HOTGUNSå DAYå INSTALLå ANDå OTHERå RELATEDå ITEMS å #OMPLETEå COLLECTIONS å ESTATESå ORå SINGLEå PIEC $)3(å 46å 2ETAILER å 3TART ES å &REEå EXPERIENCEDå I N G å A T å M O N T Hå APPRAISALSå 0,53å å 0REMIUMå -O !å3%2)/53å'5. VIEå #HANNELSå å &2%%å FORå #/,,%#4/2å "59).'å å -ONTHS å 3!6% å å !SKå INDIVIDUALå PIECESå ORå EN !BOUTå 3!-%å $!9å )NSTAL TIREå COLLECTIONS å ESTATES å LATION å #!,,å å &AIRå PRICES å 2ICKå
35.3%4å (),,3å -EMORI ALå #EMETERYå INå "ELLEVUE å 3ELLINGå å 3IDEå BYå 3IDEå 0LOTSå INå THEå 3OLDå /UT å 0RESTIGIOUSå ,OCATIONå OFå THEå 'ARDENå OFå 'ETHSE MANE å "LOCKå å 3PAC ESå å å å %ACHå VALUEDå ATå å .EW å 2EDUCED 0RICE å å EACHå ORå å FORå THEå PAIR å #ALLå å ORå å 0,/4å ).å $%3)2!",%å 7ASHINGTONå -EMOR IALå "ONNEYå 7ATSONå 0AR K å Electronics ,OCATEDå INå THEå PEACEFULå ' A R D E N å O F å & L O W E R S å $ I R E C 4 6 å å / V E R å å "EAUTIFULå MATUREå FLORALå CHANNELSå ONLYå å Aå LANDSCAPEå WITHå FOUNTAIN å MONTH å #ALLå .OW å 4RIPLEå 6A L U E å å / W N E Rå SAVINGS å å INå 3AV PAYSå TRANSFERå FEE å !SKINGå INGS å &REEå UPGRADEå TOå å ORå BESTå OFFER å 3EAå 'ENIEå å å .&,å 3UN 4AC å NEARå !IRPORT å DAYå TICKETå FREE å å 3TAR Tå SAVINGå TODAY å
åååå
October 25, 2013 [19]
www.kentreporter.com Cemetery Plots
3pm - 8pm 9am - 7pm
Many New Juried Artisans! Delicious Food Available * Unique Gift Selection Holiday Decorating Items * Fine Arts Handcrafted Treasures * Raffle
Meridian Valley Country Club 24830 136th Ave. SE Kent, WA 98042
Meridian Valley Artisan’s Festival is sponsored by the Kent Guild of Seattle Children’s Hospital. Your participation enables Seattle Children’s Hospital to ensure quality medical care for all children of the Northwest regardless of each families’ ability to pay.
!PPLIANCEå 2EPAIRå å 7Eå FIXå )Tå NOå MATTERå WHOå YOUå BOUGHTå ITå FROM å
Free Estimates & Senior Discounts
)NSUREDå å"ONDED
2EMOVALS
4OPPING å0RUNING ,)# å**4/0*0 **
www.PKLawnService.com
Home Services #(%!0å9!2$å3%26)#%å !.$å!å(!.$9-!.åå
"!#+(/%
0RESSUREåWASHING GUTTERåCLEANING åETC å å&ENCE ååDECKåBUILDING #ONCRETE å0AINTINGå å 2EPAIRS å !NDåALLåYARDåSERVICES å
"ULLDOZING å$UMPå4RUCK
#LEARING å,OGGING
&OUNDATIONS
%COLOGYå"LOCKå7ALLS
åORå
(!.$9(9
åå
+./,,å42%%å3%26)#%
åå
h4HEå4REEå0EOPLEv
åå
4REEå2EMOVALå ANDå4HINNING
3TUMPå'RINDING å "RUSHå(AULING å%TC
åå
^ ^ WWW KNOLLTREESERVICE COM ,)#%.3%$ å"/.$%$ å).352%$
HILLIJC QZ
Home Services Cabinetry
&REEå%STIMATES
253-631-1199
Backhoe/Dozing/Tractor
One call gets your ad in your community newspaper and on the web. Call 1-800-388-2527 or go online to nw-ads.com for more information.
* *å 42%%å3%26)#%
876706
Cemetery Plots
887296
www.nw-ads.com
å7!)4% 3åå(/-% 2%0!)2 !NYå å!LLå(OMEå2EPAIRS ANDå2EMODELING å å 9EARSå%XPERIENCE !NGIE Så,ISTå!WARD 7INNER å /FlåCE å #ELL å
å
waiteshomerepair@yahoo.com
,IC å7!)4%(2 "'
Home Services Property Maintenance
å
,!7. -!).4%.!.#% åå
&REEå%STIMATES #ALLå
åå å
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.nw-ads.com
Domestic Services Adult/Elder Care
#!2%')6%2
3EEKINGå%MPLOYMENT
åPERåHOUR
%XPER åINå#AREGIVING
!CTIVITIESå$IRECTORå -ENTALLY 0HYSICALLY )MPAIREDå å)NFANTåTOå!DULT
#ALLå#HRISTINE
åååå
ååå
#!").%4å7/2+
ååå
.EW å2EFACEå/R 2EPLACE 7Eå#ANå3AVEå9OU å-ONEYå
#ALL
!LLå 4HINGSå "ASEMENTY å "ASEMENTå 3YSTEMSå )NC åå #ALLå USå FORå ALLå OFå YOURå BASEMENTå NEEDS å 7ATER PROOFINGå å &INISHINGå å 3TRUCTURALå 2EPAIRSå å (U MIDITYå ANDå -OLDå #ONTROLå & 2 % % å % 3 4 ) - !4 % 3 åå #ALLå
885162
[20] October 25, 2013 7EĂĽBUYĂĽBROKENĂĽĂĽ ANDĂĽUNWANTEDĂĽĂĽ CARSĂĽPAYĂĽUPĂĽTOĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ
Yard and Garden
www.kentreporter.com Dogs
Wanted/Trade
Miscellaneous
Dogs
/,$ĂĽ '5)4!23ĂĽ 7!.4 ĂĽ %$
ĂĽ 'IBSON ĂĽ -AR TIN ĂĽĂĽ &ENDER ĂĽ 'RETSCH ĂĽ %PI ĂĽ PHONE ĂĽ 'UILD ĂĽ -OSRITE ĂĽĂĽ 2ICKENBACKER ĂĽ 0RAIR IEĂĽĂĽ 3 T A T E ĂĽ $ ! N G E L I C O ĂĽĂĽ 3TROMBERG ĂĽ ANDĂĽ 'IBSONĂĽĂĽ - A N D O L I N S " A N J O S ĂĽĂĽ SĂĽ THRUĂĽ S ĂĽ 4/0ĂĽĂĽ #!3(ĂĽ 0!)$ ĂĽ ĂĽ
ĂĽ !2'%.4).%ĂĽ $OGO ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ 'REATĂĽ $ANEĂĽ 0UPS ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ M A L E S ĂĽ ĂĽ FE M A L E S ĂĽĂĽ 4HESEĂĽ DOGSĂĽ AREĂĽ GOINGĂĽ TOĂĽĂĽ BEĂĽ BIG ĂĽ MUSCULARĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ ATHLETIC ĂĽ 4HEYĂĽ WILLĂĽ MAKEĂĽĂĽ GREATĂĽ GUARDĂĽ DOGS ĂĽ "OTHĂĽĂĽ BREEDSĂĽ LOVEĂĽ KIDSĂĽ ANDĂĽ AREĂĽĂĽ EXPECTEDĂĽ TOĂĽ BEĂĽ HEALTHY ĂĽĂĽ 0UPSĂĽ WILLĂĽ BEĂĽ READYĂĽ BYĂĽĂĽ . O V E M B E R ĂĽ T H ĂĽ A T ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ WEEKSĂĽ OLD ĂĽ 4AKINGĂĽ DE ĂĽ POSITSĂĽ NOW ĂĽ 7ILLĂĽ BEĂĽ 54$ĂĽĂĽ
/,$ĂĽ 2/,%8ĂĽ ĂĽ 0!4%+ĂĽĂĽ ONĂĽ SHOTSĂĽ ANDĂĽ DEWORMED ĂĽĂĽ 0 ( ) , ) 0 0 % ĂĽ 7!4 # ( % 3ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ EACH ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ FORĂĽ PICS ĂĽĂĽ 7! . 4 % $ ĂĽ $ AY T O N A ĂĽĂĽ INFO ĂĽ 3UBĂĽ -ARINER ĂĽ ETC ĂĽ 4/0ĂĽĂĽ # ! 3 ( ĂĽ 0! ) $ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ !+#ĂĽ ,!"ĂĽ 0UPS ĂĽ "LACKĂĽĂĽ ORĂĽ 9ELLOW ĂĽ -ALEĂĽ ORĂĽ &E ĂĽ MALE ĂĽ ĂĽ TOĂĽ ĂĽ 3ELLĂĽĂĽ ORĂĽ TRADE ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ Cats "ELFAIR
+),,ĂĽ 3#/20)/.3 ĂĽ "UYĂĽĂĽ (ARRISĂĽ 3CORPIONĂĽ 3PRAY ĂĽĂĽ )NDOOR /UTDOOR ĂĽ /DOR ĂĽ LESS ĂĽ .ON 3TAINING ĂĽ ,ONGĂĽĂĽ ,ASTING ĂĽ +ILLSĂĽ 3OCRPIONSĂĽĂĽ ANDĂĽ OTHERĂĽ INSECTS ĂĽ %FFEC ĂĽ TIVEĂĽ RESULTSĂĽ BEGINĂĽ AFTERĂĽĂĽ T H E ĂĽ S P R A Y ĂĽ D R I E S ĂĽĂĽ !VAILABLEĂĽ ATĂĽ !CEĂĽ (ARD ĂĽ WARE ĂĽ 4HEĂĽ (OMEĂĽ $EPOTĂĽĂĽ "%.'!,ĂĽ +)44%.3 ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ M A L E ĂĽ ĂĽ F E M A L E ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ORĂĽ(OMEDEPOT COM MONTHS ĂĽ (YPO ALERGENIC ĂĽĂĽ &ULLĂĽ OFĂĽ SPOTS ĂĽ 6ERYĂĽ EXOT ĂĽ Wanted/Trade I C ĂĽ " O X ĂĽ T R A I N E D ĂĽ 6E TĂĽĂĽ CHECKED ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ # ! 3 ( ĂĽ F O R ĂĽ U N E X P I R E DĂĽĂĽ $ ) ! " % 4 ) # ĂĽ 4 % 3 4ĂĽĂĽ 342)03 ĂĽ &REEĂĽ 3HIPPING ĂĽĂĽ - ! ) . % ĂĽ # / / . ĂĽ 2 A GĂĽĂĽ &RIENDLYĂĽ 3ERVICE ĂĽ "%34ĂĽĂĽ $OLLS ĂĽ -AINĂĽ #OONĂĽ "EN ĂĽ P R I C E S ĂĽ A N D ĂĽ H R ĂĽ P AY ĂĽ GALS ĂĽ 7ILLĂĽ BEĂĽ BIG ĂĽ 4HEĂĽĂĽ MENT ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ TODAYĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ M O M ĂĽ - A I N E ĂĽ # O O N ĂĽ I SĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ O R ĂĽ V I S I TĂĽĂĽ L B S ĂĽ $ A D ĂĽ 2 A G ĂĽ $ O L LĂĽĂĽ www.TestStripSearch.comĂĽĂĽ LBS ĂĽ ,OVING ĂĽ DOCILE ĂĽĂĽ %SPANOLĂĽ DOG LIKE ĂĽ HUGEĂĽ PUFFĂĽ BALLS ĂĽĂĽ 7OR MED ĂĽ STĂĽ SHOTSĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 'UARANTEED ĂĽ ĂĽ .OĂĽĂĽ )ĂĽ"UYĂĽ(!-ĂĽ2ADIOS ĂĽ (I &IĂĽCOMPONENTS ĂĽLARGEĂĽĂĽ # H E C K S ĂĽ P L E A S E ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ 7EEKENDĂĽĂĽ SPEAKERS ĂĽTUBES ĂĽETC ĂĽĂĽ $ELIVERYĂĽ0OSSIBLE 3TEVEĂĽ
!+#ĂĽ !,!3+!.ĂĽ -ALA ĂĽ MUTEĂĽ PUPS ĂĽ 'IANTĂĽ LINES ĂĽĂĽ , OYA L ĂĽ Q U A L I T Y ĂĽ B R E E D ĂĽĂĽ 0HOTOSĂĽ ANDĂĽ DESCRIPTIONSĂĽĂĽ AT ĂĽ WWW WILLOWCREEKMA ĂĽ LAMUTES COM ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ LEAVEĂĽ MESSAGE ĂĽĂĽ WCMALAMUTES MSN COM
www.nw-ads.com
Dogs
Dogs
!+#ĂĽ -).)ĂĽ 3CHNAUZERĂĽĂĽ 0UPPIES ĂĽ ĂĽ 6ARIETYĂĽ OFĂĽ #OL ĂĽ ORS ĂĽ .OWĂĽ TAKINGĂĽ DEPOSITSĂĽĂĽ FORĂĽ ,ATEĂĽ /CTOBER ĂĽ MIDĂĽĂĽ .OVEMBER ĂĽ ĂĽ "EAUTIFULĂĽĂĽ 7 H I T E ĂĽ " A B I E S ĂĽ 2 E A D YĂĽĂĽ 3OON ĂĽ 3HOTSĂĽ ANDĂĽ 7ORM ĂĽ INGĂĽ 5PĂĽ 4OĂĽ $ATE ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ -ALES ĂĽ ĂĽ &EMALES ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽOR GONETOTHEDOGSKENNEL COM
!+#ĂĽ 3TANDARDĂĽ 0OODLEĂĽĂĽ 0UPPIES ĂĽ "ROWNĂĽ MALESĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ FEMALES ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 2EADYĂĽ FORĂĽĂĽ THEIRĂĽ NEWĂĽ HOMESĂĽ /CT ĂĽĂĽ TH ĂĽ (EALTHYĂĽ ĂĽ WELLĂĽ SO ĂĽ CIALIZED ĂĽ 'REATĂĽ TEMPERA ĂĽ MENTSĂĽ ANDĂĽ PERSONALITIES ĂĽĂĽ 0LEASEĂĽVISITĂĽ WWW OURPOETICPOODLES NETĂĽ ORĂĽCALLĂĽ
&RENCHĂĽ -ASTIFFĂĽ 0UPPIES ĂĽĂĽ 0UREĂĽ "RED ĂĽ "ORNĂĽ 3EPT ĂĽĂĽ TH ĂĽ &IRSTĂĽ SHOTS ĂĽ &E ĂĽ MALESĂĽ ĂĽ NEGOTIABLE ĂĽĂĽ #ALLĂĽ ĂĽ ORĂĽĂĽ ! + # ĂĽ 2 % ' ) 3 4 % 2 % $ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ%LMA '/,$%.ĂĽ 2%42)%6%2ĂĽĂĽ ' O L D E N D O O D L E S ĂĽ F R O MĂĽĂĽ 0 5 0 0 ) % 3 ĂĽ 2 % ! $ 9ĂĽĂĽ !+#ĂĽ POODLEĂĽ ANDĂĽ !+#ĂĽĂĽ . / 7 ĂĽ ( ! $ ĂĽ 3 4ĂĽĂĽ GOLDENĂĽ RETRIEVER ĂĽ GREATĂĽĂĽ 3(/43 ĂĽ ĂĽ -!,%3ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ LINESĂĽ ONĂĽ BOTHĂĽ PARENTS ĂĽĂĽ & % - ! , % 3 ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 2EADYĂĽ INĂĽ $ECEMBER ĂĽ RE ĂĽ %!#( ĂĽ #!,,ĂĽ ĂĽ S E R VE ĂĽ N OW ĂĽ ĂĽ !+#ĂĽ $OBERMANĂĽ 0INCH ĂĽ E R S ĂĽ " L A C K ĂĽ ĂĽ 4A N ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ WEEKSĂĽ OLDĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ
Dogs
, ! " ĂĽ 0 5 0 0 ) % 3 ĂĽ & / 2ĂĽĂĽ 3 ! , % ĂĽ ĂĽ 2 % ! $9ĂĽĂĽ & / 2 ĂĽ 4 ( % 2 % ĂĽ . % 7ĂĽĂĽ (/-%3ĂĽ '//$ĂĽ (5.4 ĂĽ ) . ' ĂĽ " ! # + ĂĽ 2 / 5 . $ĂĽĂĽ ,/6%).'ĂĽ !.$ĂĽ ,/9!,ĂĽĂĽ 3 ( / 4 3 ĂĽ 7 / 2 - ) . 'ĂĽĂĽ ! . $ ĂĽ $ % 7 # , ! 7 3ĂĽĂĽ $/.%ĂĽ ĂĽ ')2,ĂĽ !.$ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ - ! , % 3 ĂĽ " , !# + ĂĽ ! . $ĂĽĂĽ 9 % , , /7 3 ĂĽ # ! , , ĂĽ / 2ĂĽĂĽ 4%8ĂĽ ĂĽ Need extra cash? Place your classified ad today! Call 1-800-388-2527 or 2 /4 4 7 % ) , % 2 ĂĽ 0 U P S ĂĽĂĽ Go online 24 hours a ! + # ĂĽ ' E R M A N ĂĽ 6O MĂĽĂĽ day www.nw-ads.com. 3 C H W A I G E R ĂĽ 7 A P P E NĂĽĂĽ 0/-%2!.)!.3 ĂĽ !+#ĂĽĂĽ BLOODLINES ĂĽ (IPSĂĽ 'UARAN ĂĽ 2 E G I S T E R E D ĂĽ ĂĽ ' O R ĂĽ T E E D ĂĽ 2 O BU S T ĂĽ ( E A L T H ĂĽĂĽ GEOUSĂĽ "ABIESĂĽ TOĂĽ #HOOSEĂĽĂĽ 3HOTS ĂĽ 7ORMEDĂĽ ĂĽ 2EADYĂĽĂĽ &ROM ĂĽ 6ARIETYĂĽ OFĂĽ #OLORS ĂĽĂĽ 4O ĂĽ ' O ĂĽ ĂĽ ! L S O ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ -ALES ĂĽ ĂĽ &EMALES ĂĽ 5PĂĽĂĽ 9E A R ĂĽ / L D ĂĽ & E M A L EĂĽĂĽ 4O ĂĽ $ A T E ĂĽ O N ĂĽ 3 H O T S ĂĽĂĽ ! V A I L A B L E ĂĽ ĂĽ (EALTHĂĽ 'UARANTEE ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ p f l e m i n -ALES ĂĽ ĂĽ &EMALES ĂĽĂĽ glive@ymail.com ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 1.25 million readers ĂĽOR
9/2+3()2%ĂĽ4%22)%2ĂĽ ĂĽ9/2+)%
34!.$!2$ĂĽ0//$,%ĂĽ
-).)!452%ĂĽ$/.+%93 6ER YĂĽ AFFECTIONATEĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ ,/6%ĂĽ PEOPLE ĂĽ !LLĂĽ AGESĂĽĂĽ O F ĂĽ B A B I E S ĂĽ ĂĽ A D U L T S ĂĽĂĽ 3OMEĂĽ -OMSĂĽ ĂĽ BABIESĂĽĂĽ SOLDĂĽ ASĂĽ PAIRS ĂĽ OPENĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ BREDĂĽ JENNETS ĂĽ ĂĽ PROVENĂĽĂĽ BREEDINGĂĽ JACK ĂĽ !LLĂĽ COLORS ĂĽĂĽ JACKSĂĽ ĂĽ JENNIESĂĽ STARTINGĂĽĂĽ ATĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ UP ĂĽ !LLĂĽ CANĂĽ BEĂĽĂĽ SEENĂĽ ATĂĽ WWW LORDSHILL ĂĽ FARM COMĂĽ ĂĽ ORĂĽ EMAILĂĽ DEBIS x TELTZ AOL COMx x x ĂĽ
#()(5!(5!3 ĂĽ 0UPPIESĂĽĂĽ FROMĂĽ ĂĽ TOĂĽ ĂĽ &I ĂĽ NANCINGĂĽ !VAILABLE ĂĽ !DULTĂĽĂĽ !DOPTIONSĂĽ ALSO ĂĽ 2EPUTA ĂĽ B L E ĂĽ / R E G O N ĂĽ + E N N E L ĂĽĂĽ 5NIQUEĂĽ COLORS ĂĽ ,ONGĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ 3 H O R T ĂĽ ( A I R E D ĂĽ ( E A L T HĂĽĂĽ 'UARANTEED ĂĽ 54$ĂĽ 6ACCI ĂĽ NATIONS ĂĽ WORMINGS ĂĽ LITTER ĂĽ BOXĂĽ TRAINED ĂĽ SOCIALIZED ĂĽĂĽ 6IDEO ĂĽ PICTURES ĂĽ INFORMA ĂĽ TION ĂĽVIRTUALĂĽTOUR WWW CHI PUP NET 2EFERENCESĂĽ HAPPILYĂĽ SUP ĂĽ PLIED ĂĽ %ASYĂĽ ) ĂĽ ACCESS ĂĽĂĽ $RAIN ĂĽ /REGON ĂĽ 6ICĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ -ARYĂĽ +ASSER ĂĽ ĂĽ GONETOTHEDOGSKENNEL COM '2%!4ĂĽ $!.%3 ĂĽ "EAUTI ĂĽ FULĂĽ PUREBREDĂĽ PUPPIES ĂĽĂĽ (ARLEQUIN ĂĽ -ANTLE ĂĽ "LUEĂĽĂĽ -ERLE ĂĽ 7ONDERFULĂĽ DISPO ĂĽ SITIONS ĂĽ ĂĽ EACH ĂĽ 0IC ĂĽ TURESĂĽ EMAILEDĂĽ UPONĂĽ RE ĂĽ Q U E S T ĂĽ # A L L ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ4ACOMAĂĽAREA - ! ,4 % 3 % ĂĽ 0 5 0 0 ) % 3 ĂĽĂĽ 0UREBRED ĂĽ ĂĽ FEMALE ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ WEEKSĂĽ OLDĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ MALESĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ O B O ĂĽ 3 H O T S ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ WORMED ĂĽ 0ARENTSĂĽ ONĂĽ SITE ĂĽĂĽ
!+#ĂĽ 0//$,%ĂĽ 3TANDARDĂĽĂĽ 3UPERĂĽ SWEETĂĽ PUPPIES ĂĽĂĽ VERYĂĽ INTELLIGENTĂĽ ANDĂĽ FAMI ĂĽ L Y ĂĽ R A I S E D ĂĽ 4W O ĂĽ Y E A RĂĽĂĽ HEALTHĂĽ GAURUNTEE ĂĽ !DULTĂĽĂĽ WEIGHTĂĽ BETWEENĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ LBS ĂĽ "LACKĂĽ COLORING ĂĽ LIT ĂĽ T E R S ĂĽ ĂĽ P U P P I E SĂĽĂĽ AVAILABLE ĂĽ ĂĽ "ROWNĂĽ COLOR ĂĽ ING ĂĽ ĂĽ "LACKĂĽ COLORING ĂĽĂĽ !CCEPTINGĂĽ PUPPYĂĽ DEPOS ĂĽ ITSĂĽ NOW ĂĽ ĂĽ EACH ĂĽĂĽ 0LEASEĂĽ CALLĂĽ TODAYĂĽ ĂĽ
SHUTDOWN SAVINGS!! Deluxe Daylight Garage 24’x36’x10’
MONEY SAVING COUPON AVAILABLE ON OUR FACEBOOK PAGE!
Facebook.com/ PermaBilt Deluxe 2 Car Garage 20’ x 24’ x 8’ CONCRETE INCLUDED!
4� Concrete floor with fibermix reinforcement and zip-strip crack control,16’x7’ raised panel steel overhead door with mitered corners, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/selfclosing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 4’x3’ double glazed, cross hatched vinyl windows w/screens, 18� eave and gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.
$ $ 14,132 184/mo. 12,799 2 Car Garage & Hobby Shop 24’ x 36’ x 9’
$
21,333
$
19,631
$
282/mo.
Our 40th Year!
1973-2013 Call 800-824-9552 permabilt.com 0RGLÀ HG *ULG %DUQ ¡[ ¡[ ¡
make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise. 800-388-2527
9ORKSHIREĂĽ 4ERRIORS ĂĽ !+# ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ BOYS ĂĽ ĂĽ GIRLSĂĽ READYĂĽ FORĂĽĂĽ THEIRĂĽ NEWĂĽ HOMES ĂĽ 0AR ĂĽ ENTSĂĽ ONĂĽ SITE ĂĽ SHOULDĂĽ BEĂĽĂĽ NOĂĽ BIGGERĂĽ THANĂĽ ĂĽ ,"3 ĂĽĂĽ ! L L ĂĽ S H O T S ĂĽ W O R M E D ĂĽĂĽ HEALTHĂĽ VERIFIED ĂĽ ĂĽ
! + # ĂĽ 2 % ' ) 3 4 % 2 % $ĂĽĂĽ 0UPPIES ĂĽ -ALESĂĽ ANDĂĽ &E ĂĽ MALES ĂĽ 6ER YĂĽ 3MALLĂĽ &A ĂĽ THERĂĽ ĂĽ LBS ĂĽ ANDĂĽ -OTHERĂĽĂĽ !REĂĽ /NĂĽ 3ITE ĂĽ "ORNĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ 2 A I S E D ĂĽ ) N ĂĽ / U R ĂĽ , I V I N GĂĽĂĽ 2 O O M ĂĽ 7O R M I N G ĂĽ A N DĂĽĂĽ &IRSTĂĽ 3HOTSĂĽ $ONE ĂĽ #OMEĂĽĂĽ ANDĂĽ "EĂĽ ,OVEDĂĽ "YĂĽ -YĂĽ ,IT ĂĽ TLEĂĽ "ABIES ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ !NYTIME ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ORĂĽ ĂĽ Farm Animals & Livestock
ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE: 2 3 $ *"% ++ )(* **$ * ((! '+-% ,$(' 2 $ / %% *$& (%(*+ / * ** ',1 (Denim Series Excluded) 2 * ' (& ('+-%, ,$(' 2 % '+ 2 '"$' *$'" 2 *&$, *.$ 2 * ,$(' 2 - * ', * !,+& '+#$) 2 '"$' * (* $' 0)(+-* '(/ ( *If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.
Hundreds of Designs Available!
2 Car Garage 24’x24’x9’ CONCRETE INCLUDED!
CONCRETE INCLUDED!
´ &RQFUHWH À RRU ZLWK ¿ EHUPL[ UHLQIRUFHPHQW and zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x9’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self- 4� Concrete floor with fibermix reinforcement and zip-strip crack control, 10’x12’ closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18� eave and gable & 9’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing overhangs, (2) 12’x12� gable vents (not shown), 2’ poly eavelight. hinges & stainless steel lockset, 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen. $
ĂĽĂĽĂĽ
High Bay RV Garage & Shop 14’x30’x16’ w/ (2) 30’x12’x9’ Wings
CONCRETE INCLUDED!
Dogs
$
$ $ 352/mo. 26,689 24,485 Deluxe Garage 24’x36’x16’
4� Concrete floor with fibermix reinforcement and zip-strip crack control, 16’x8’ raised panel steel roll-up door, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/selfclosing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 2’ fiberglass eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, 8 sidewall & trim colors w/25 year warranty. $
$ $ 13,988 182/mo. 12,695 RV Garage / Storage 30’x30’x12’
CONCRETE INCLUDED!
4� Concrete floor with fibermix reinforcement and zip-strip crack control, 10’x14’ & (2) 10’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (4) 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl windows w/ screens, 24’x12’ 50# loft w/ L-Shaped staircase, 3’ steel wainscoting, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $ $ $
31,688 412/mo. 28,724 2 Stall Horse Barn 24’x30’x9’
CONCRETE INCLUDED!
4� Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 10’x12’ & (1) 9’x9’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 5/12 scissor truss, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, 2’ poly eavelight along 1 eave. $
21,733
CONCRETE INCLUDED!
$
19,848
$
285/mo.
Buildings Built
19,260 Square Feet ´ &RQFUHWH À RRU ZLWK ¿ EHUPL[ UHLQIRUFHPHQW DQG ]LS VWULS FUDFN control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 4’x3’ 10’x9’ Metal framed split sliding door w/ cam-latch closers, (2) 10’x12’ Permastalls w (2) 4’x8’ split opening wood Dutch doors, 3’x6’8� PermaBilt GRXEOH JOD]HG YLQ\O ZLQGRZ Z VFUHHQ œ ¿ EHUJODVV HDYHOLJKW œ 3’x6’8� PermaBilt door w/ self-closing hinges & stainless steel door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 4’x3’ double glazed cross-hatch FRQWLQXRXV À RZ ULGJH YHQW VLGHZDOO WULP FRORUV Z \HDU ZDUUDQW\ ORFNVHW œ SRO\ HDYHOLJKW œ FRQWLQXRXV À RZ ULGJH YHQW vinyl window w/screen, 18� eave & gable overhangs, 24� cupola vent w/weathervane.
17,979
$
15,999
$
$ $ $ $ $ 18,744 230/mo. $18,870 247/mo. 17,232 16,932 243/mo. PERMABILT.com facebook.com/PermaBilt
As of 9/30/13
800-824-9552
901872
$
20,484,138
45 year warranty
Washington #TOWNCPF099LT
Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B�, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 11/12/13.
#/6).'4/. ååå
+%.4
#RAFTå&AIR ATå3UNNYDALE å5NIONå!VEå3%
2ENTONå(IGHLANDS &RI å.OV å STå AM PM 3AT å.OV å NDå AM PM (ANDMADEåITEMS å4ABLEå$ECOR å(ATS å$OLLåå #LOTHES å"LANKETS å å*EWELERY #RYSTAL å#ANDLES å2UB å BERå3TAMPSå åå#HAIRå -ASSAGE Find what you need 24 hours a day.
2%.4/. åå
å &! - ) ,9 å % 3 4!4 % åå -OVINGå 3ALE å &RIDAYå ANDåå 3ATURDAY å /CTOBERå THåå å TH å å A M å å å P M åå ,IVING å $INING å "EDROOM åå /FFICEå &UR NITURE å 7ALLåå -IRRORS å 0AINTINGS å #RYS å T A L å ' L A S SW A R E å # O L å LECTIBLES å 4OOLS å 'ARDENåå A N D å / F F I C E å 3 U P P L I E S åå +ITCHENWARE å 3MALLå !P å PLIANCES å -/2% å åå 5NIONå !VEå 3% å 5NITå åå INå ,EISUREå %STATES å .Oåå %ARLYå 3ALES å #ALLå å å 4Oå 2EQUESTåå 0HOTOSå/Få,ARGERå)TEMS 3%!4!#å
NEED CASH?
s AMå]
4 ( % å +E N T L A KE å +E N T å WOODå 3POR TSå -EDICINEåå #LASSå 0RESENTSå Aå (OLI å &ORåAåLISTåOFåCARSåVISITåOURåSITE D A Y å 3 H O P P I N G å & A I R åå WWW !IRPORT4OW COMå !IRPORTå4OWINGå &UNDRAISERå ONå 3ATURDAY åå /CTOBERå THå ATå +ENTLAKEåå (IGHå 3CHOOL å å 3%åå "URIENå4OWINGå & A L C O N å 7 A Y å + E N T åå å (OURSå AREå AMåå å P M å ( O M E å " A S E Dåå åå " U S I N E S S E S å / F å - A N Yåå 4YPESå 7ILLå "Eå 2EPRE å SENTED åå
åå
!5#4)/.
Marine Power
/CTOBERå TH åå )NåACCORDANCEåWITHåTHEåRE å VISEDåCODEåOFå7ASHINGTON
å 34/2-å )NFLATABLEåå "OATå WITHå MOTOR å BATTERY åå ANCHORå å OARS å !LSOå IN å CLUDESå TWOå WAYå PUMP åå VALVESå ANDå MORE å 'REATåå lSHINGå BOATå FORå Aå LAKEå ORåå SLOWå RIVER å 'OODå COND åå å O R å M A K E å O F F E R åå +ENT å å HARMUNSON Q COM
;2#7å =
0%4% 3å4/7).'å 3%26)#% ,/#!4%$å!4 å0!#)&)#å(79å3/
$%3å-/).%3 å7!åå
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.nw-ads.com
Auto Events/ Auctions
4OWå4RUCKå/PERATORSåå å
AIRPORT, BURIEN TOWING ABANDONED VEHICLE AUCTION NOVEMBER 1, 2013 @11:00 AM PREVIEW: NOVEMBER 1, 2013 8:00-11:00
!..5!,å"!:!!2 å"!+%å3!,%
!"!.$/.%$å 6%()#,%å!5#4)/.
878787
Bazaars/Craft Fairs
åh)vå3Tå.% å!UBURN
!)20/24 "52)%. z 4/7).'
0REVIEW å.OVå ST å åå AM å3å THå3T "URIEN å7!å
BURIEN TOWING 206-433-0660
Christmas Items, House wares, Infant & Toddler Items, Jewelry, A Variety of Specialty Crafts & Much More!
Auto Events/ Auctions
6%()#,%å!5#4)/.åå
.OVå ST å
!,,å '/%3å ./7å 3!,% åå &RAMEDå ARTå WORK å X åå -IRROR å WOMENSå JEANS åå SHIRTS å OFFICEå SIZEå åå KITCHENå GALORE å GLASSES åå 801 S 176TH St, DISHES å POTS å PANS å SIL å Burien WA 98148 VERWARE å CLEANINGå SUP å FOR LIST OF CARS PLIES å FUR NITURE å GLASSåå COFFEEå TABLE å FANS å GLASSåå VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT 46å STAND å FUTON å COMPUT å WWW.AIRPORTTOW.COM ERå DESKSå å MORE å 3AT å åå AIRPORT TOWING N O O N P M å å 3 åå 206-243-6252 NDå3T å
3AT å.OVå å AM PM 4HEå2IVERå%STATES åå
Auto Events/ Auctions
!"!.$/.%$
åå
,!34å #(!.#%å å (UGEåå -OVINGå 3ALE å %VERYTHINGåå - 5 3 4 å ' / å / C T O B E Råå TH å THå ANDå THå FROMåå AMå TOå PM å å 3%åå THå 3TREET å #OVINGTON åå å 4/ / , 3 å - A S å SAGEå #HAIR å &UTON å /UT å DOORå å 0ERSONå 3WING åå vå 46å WITHå 3TAND å ,OTSåå OFå (OLIDAYå )TEMS å ,OTSå OFåå - I S C å - O R E å 2 A I N å O Råå 3HINE å
October 25, 2013 [21]
www.kentreporter.com Bazaars/Craft Fairs
-ONDAYå å å#ORVETTEå 0REVIEWå !!UCTIONå !-å ! 3EATTLEå4OWING å,,# å STå!VEå3 "URIEN WWW TOWSEATTLE COM
7ILLåSELLåABANDONEDå VEHICLESåTOåTHEåHIGHESTå BIDDER 6IEWINGåBEGINSåATå åAM !UCTIONåBEGINSåATå åAM
ååååå
!54/å !5#4)/. å 4HURS å DAY å /CTOBERå ST å PM åå 0REVIEWå &ROMå PM åå å#HRYSLERå , ( 3 åå å&ORDå % C O N O L I N E åå å # H E Y Y å 4A H O E åå å &O R D å % X P L O R E R åå å 3UBAR Uå ,EGACY åå å ( O N D A å ! C C O R D åå /NEå 3TOPå 3ERVICESå 4OW å INGå ANDå 2ECOVERY å åå 3 å THå 3TREETå åå +ENT å 7! å å 'Oå TO åå WWW KENTTOWING COM Need extra cash? Place your classified ad today! Call 1-800-388-2527 or Go online 24 hours a day www.nw-ads.com.
#/6).'4/. åååå
GARAGES PLUS INC.
Automobiles Lexus
Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
,%853å3#å /.,9å å å 3TOCK å( $
$1000 cost $149 APR 105.89% for 3 months
#ASH x*5.+å#!23å åå
Automobiles Oldsmobile
Pawn your Car, Boat, RV, Motorcycle or ATV Airport Auto & RV Pawn
Motorhomes
425#+3å
&REEå0ICKåUP
8500 Old Hwy 99 SE, OLY å
å
å www.airportautorvpawn.com
%.').%3
Automobiles BMW
å"-7å I å$R å"LACKå,OTSåOFåCARåå FORåTHEå /.,9å 3TOCK å "-7å- /.,9å å 3TOCK å( ! #LEANå3TYLISHå#AR
åå
42!.3-)33)/.3 .å'UARANTEEDå.
å /LDSMOBILEå !URORAåå !UTOMATIC å 6 å åå MILES å /NEå OWNER å 7ELLåå MAINTAINED å %VERYTHINGåå WORKS å å å
!CURAå4HRUå:EPHER åINåSTOCK
&OREIGNå å$OMESTIC )NSTALLATIONå!VAILABLE #ARSå7ANTED å7ILLå4OW &EDERALå7AYå!UTO å7RECKING å-ILITARYå2Då3O
Automobiles Saab
Automobiles Chevrolet
å3!!"å 'REENå å$Rå(!2$åTOåå lND /.,9å 3TOCK å
#(%62/,%4å)MPALA /.,9å å 3TOCK å6 ' 37%%4å2IDE
Automobiles Toyota
Automobiles Ford
å4/9/4!å#OROLLA 7HITEå3WAUTOMATIC 3TOCK å /.,9å å4/9/4!å#AMRY 'REENå7/7 3TOCK å /.,9å
&/2$å&OCUS /NLYå å 3TOCK å( ! 'REATålRSTåCAR &/2$å &2%%34!2åå /.,9å å 3TOCKå å6 !å #LEANå2IDE
Pickup Trucks Ford
Automobiles Honda
(/.$!å!CCORD /NLYå å 3TOCKå å06 * Automobiles Hyundai
å(95.$!)å!CCENT å$R å"LACKåRUNSålNE /.,9å 3TOCK å å (95.$!)å 'ENESISåå # O U P E å å , å 4U R B O åå ,EATHERå (EATEDå 3EATS åå "UILTå )Nå '03 å 3UNå 2OOF åå 7HITEå 7ITHå "LACKå ANDåå -AROONå )NTERIOR å åå - I L E S å å / " / åå
å å 3%!"2%%:%åå å ORå TRADEå FORå Aåå å å &ORD å "ASE å MENTå MODEL å RECENTå TIRES åå BATTERIES å DUALå !# å HY å DRAULICå JACK å +6å GEN åå T W I N å B E D S å å &O R D åå " A N K S å E N G I N E å M O D E L åå TOWå BARS å BRAKEå ASSIST åå
ATVs
$ Cash for Junk Cars $ JCR HAULING 253-973-253-973-9091 9091 360-581-5173 EBZT B XFFL BN QN t -JDFOTFE JOTVSFE WE PAY CASH GPS BOZ DPNQMFUF WFIJDMF 'BTU GSJFOEMZ DPVSUFPVT +VOL $BS 3FNPWBM
å #!3(å 2%7!2$åå 3TOLENå å 2EDå9AMA å å&/2$å& 3HE Så'OTåTHEå")'å4IRESåå HAå 2HINO å 3IDEå "Yå 3IDEåå !46 å HASå ROOFå å WINCH åå å7HEELS )Så MISSINGå TAILGATE å #ASEåå 3TOCK å å å å /.,9å Need extra cash? Place Sport Utility Vehicles your classified ad today! Ford Call 1-800-388-2527 or å&ORDå%XPLORER Go online 24 hours a å$Rå'REENå(OWåWEåDOåå day www.nw-ads.com. IT å3TOCK å å/.,9å Misc. Recreational Vehicles You’ll find everything 7!.4%$ å26 Så/&åå you need in one !.9å490%å å7),,å"59åå &/2å#!3(å/2å42!$%åå website 24 hours a &/2å#!2 day 7 days a week: å"å å"å26å3!,%3å nw-ads.com.
å . % 7 - ! 2 å $ U T C Håå 3TAR å å 6 å &ORDåå %NGINE å 3UPERå SLIDE å SPLITåå BATH å TWINå BEDS å å SOLARåå PANELS å å AIRå CONDITION å ERS å å WATTå GENERA å TOR å HYDRAULICå JACKS å .Oåå PETS å NEVERå SMOKEDå IN åå 6ERYå CLEAN å ALWAYSå GAR å A G E D å å / " / åå #ALLå
Vehicles Wanted
#!3(å &/2å #!23 å !NYåå -AKE å -ODELå ORå 9EAR åå 7Eå 0AYå -/2% å 2UNNINGåå ORå .OT å 3ELLå9OURå #ARå ORåå 4R U C K å 4 / $ !9 å & R E Eåå 4OWING å )NSTANTå /FFER å å å $/.!4%å 9/52å #!2 å &ASTå &REEå 4OWINGå å HRåå 2ESPONSEå å 4AXå $EDUC å T I O N 5 . ) 4 % $ å " 2 % ! 3 4åå #!.#%2å &/5.$!4)/ å ./CTOBERå ISå "REASTå #AN å CERå !WARENESSå -ONTHå åå (ELPå SUPPOR Tå OURå PRO å GRAMS å 'OTå JUNKå CARS å 'ETå åå 0! ) $ å 4 / $ !9 å & 2 % %åå TOWING å ,ICENSEDå TOWERS åå å &2%%å GIFTå VOUCH å ERS å å !,,å -AKES !,,åå -ODELS å #ALLå TODAYå å 3!6%å å ONå !54/å ). å 352!.#%å FROMå THEå MA å JORå NAMESå YOUå KNOWå ANDåå TRUST å .Oå FORMS å .Oå HAS å SLE å .Oå OBLIGATION å #ALLåå 2 % ! $ 9 å & / 2 å - 9åå 15/4%å NOW å #!,,å å
Tree & Stump REMOVAL 253-677-4791
887231
Garage/Moving Sales King County
Lic#HOSANSC9570H • www.christianbikertabernacle.org
JAPANESE IMPORTS
LOW MILEAGE Ask About Our Engine Installation Special
ENGINES TRANSMISSIONS AVAILABLE
Head Gasket Specialist
REMANUFACTURED ENGINES AVAILABLE TOYOTA • MAZDA • NISSAN • ISUZU • HONDA 7505 Portland Ave E, Tacoma WA Tacoma 253-539-5030 Toll Free 1-877-956-1100
887215
www.nw-ads.com
Japanese Engines & Transmissions
# # " # #
Domestic & European Engines & Transmissions
FREE ! " "
(Most Areas)
Se Habla Español
(877)307-9889 • Low Mileage • 1 Yr Warranty • Low Prices • Tested/Cleaned • INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AONEENGINE.COM
foreignengines.com 897940
Lic. No.GARAGAP1974RS
Advertise your upcoming garage sale in your local community paper and online to reach thousands of households in your area. Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 Go online: nw-ads.com
Size
Sq. Ft.
9’ Walls
10’ Walls
24x24...................576 ..............$18,000 ..................$19,000 24x30...................720 ..............$19,000 ..................$20,000 24x36...................864 ..............$20,000 ..................$21,000 24x40...................960 ..............$21,500 ..................$22,500 887255
#/-%å 4/å /URå THå !N å NUALå #RAFTå "AZAAR å "AKEåå 3ALEå å 1UILTå ANDå 'IFTåå "ASKETå 2AFFLES å 3ATUR å DAY å /CTOBERå THå FROMåå AMå TOå PMå ATå !L å L I A N C E å " I BL E å # H U R C H åå å 3%å THå 3TREET åå #OVINGTON å å /VERåå å $ I F FE R E N T å 6E N D O R Såå 3ELLINGå 7ONDERFULå (ANDåå #RAFTEDå ANDå /NE /F ! å +INDå )TEMS å 0ROCEEDSåå 7ILLå "ENEFITå /URå 9OUTHåå 0ROGRAMS
1-888-922-9800
7 ,"*2#$0 201-+ * ,0 7 -,-*(1'(" -2,# 1(-, 7 8 * ! 7 (/$ $0' 7 5 12#0 8 7 (#(,& 7 2*)(,& 7 ,& /200$0 7 / --% 7 /$ /(+$# "( 7 --/ 7 5 (,6* (#-4 7 5 #--/ -, & !*$ $,# 7 --1(,& 5" 3 1(-, , 6-2/ *$3$* 0(1$ 4 ""$00 7 *#& .$/+(1 1 5
Call Spencer Tracy 253-863-3088 Office/Cell Visit us at GARAGESPLUSINC.com
$
1,725
Starting At $1,499 Rebate expires 9/30/2013
“Your NW Engine & Transmission Headquarters”
Prices subject to change without notice.
876843
[22] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
www.nw-ads.com
October 25, 2013 [23]
www.kentreporter.com
... SENIOR LIFESTYLES “It helps treat high blood pressure, arthritis and all of those things. Yoga makes everything better. It’s good for you.” Yoga classes run from 10:30 a.m. to noon Tuesday and Thursday at 26108 Woodland Way S., near Scenic Hill Elementary School. A $15 donation is suggested per class, with a sliding scale as needed. Instructors are welcome. For more information, call Elder at 253-243-7690 or Hatch at 253-347-4772.
Listening to your body: Kathy Elder, right, and Karen Hatch perform yoga at Hatch’s home. MARK KLAAS,
t
$2per m
Dentures Reline
$225 Repairs starting at
$35
www.lifelikedentureswa.com • FREE CONSULTATIONS • Dentures • Partial Dentures • Implant Dentures
• Repair/Relines (most done while you wait) • In-house Lab • Dental Insurance Welcome
(253) 813-8000 25052 – 104th Ave SE Suite G • Kent WA East Kent Dental Complex Across from Red Robin
Michael Holden, L.D., D.P.D. Denturist
886913
Experience the Stellar Life at Farrington Court! Dorothy enjoys the full array of activities that Farrinton Court has to offer. She especially enjoys Casino Night and our any-time dining. Want a sneak peak of the full experience? Come see for yourself! Call today for The Grande Tour to include a full course meal, meet the staff and talk to the our residents!
Finding the Connection Since 1989
Upcoming events! It’s FREE and You’re Invited! Monday, November 11th – “ Honoring Our Vets” Full course pancake bonanza, made and serve by our very own Stellar staff! 7am to 11am. Please RSVP by Saturday 11/09/13. Saturday, November 16th – “SHIBA Seminar” The seminar will cover any questions you may have on coverage options and rights, help you find affordable coverage and help evaluate and compare health insurance plans. This service is free, unbiased and help provide confidential assistance with Medicare and healthcare choices. Please RSVP by 11/14/13. Thursday, November 21st – “ Family Dinner” Put your palate to the test! Come join us for the full 5 Star Dining Experience and tell us what you really think! Please RSVP by 11/18/13.
Providing Premier Memory Care Day Stay, Short Term & Permanent Residents We Coordinate Long-Term Care Insurance
Call Today For A Tour
FARRINGTON +COURT A STELLAR LIVING COMMUNITY
Call Today for a Tour! 253.852.2737 516 Kenosia Avenue, Kent, WA 98030
253-630-7496 15101 SE 272nd St., Kent, WA 98042 Close to Hwy 18 on Kent-Kangley
www.StellarLiving.com
889724
They met during a support group at the Kent Senior Center. One woman, a retired teacher, owned a home that accommodated one of Kent’s most successful preschools and kindergartens for 35 years. The other woman, a certified yoga teacher, taught at one of the largest yoga facilities in Hawaii before moving to Kent. Both 71, Karen Hatch and Kathy Elder decided to come together to help seniors feel young again. Hatch’s home – a cozy haven that served generations of families as Scenic Hill Preschool and Kindergarten – recently has been converted into a spacious exercise studio for senior men and women to practice yoga. “I knew I could use it. … And I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be nice to try something like this?’ ” Hatch said. “Everybody’s got aches and pains at our age and you realize we don’t move enough. I felt this was a great idea. “(Yoga) actually forces you to slow down and listen to your own body,” she said. “It’s very helpful.” Elder, a classically trained instructor and a master in yoga education, was willing to share her many years of professional experience with fellow seniors. The health benefits are many. “Practicing yoga retards the aging process without a doubt,” Elder said.
0th 5 2 on
Providing personalized care to give you a confident smile.
898541
REPORTER STAFF
a ng
rti
a St
Kent Reporter
Right at home with yoga
THE KENT SENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER Reader’s Theater troupe, the Knot Quite Write Players, performs its fall show on Monday, Nov. 4. Performances are 10 to 11 a.m. and 1-2 p.m. in Room 6 at the center, 600 E. Smith St. The troupe’s program includes such skits as “Santa Flunks Retirement”, by Drena Heizer; “The Pie Ladies Make Bail”, by Sherry Piros; and “A word from our sponsor Commercials”. One-dollar tickets on are sale in person or by phone at 253-856-5150.
[24] October 25, 2013
www.kentreporter.com
We Pay The Sales Tax! 3 Days!!
Y L N O S Y 3 DA October 25th
GIGANTIC WAREHOUSE
Friday, 27th r e b o t c O ay, Thru Sund house Sale Hours: m Ware
Special pm Sat-Sun 9-6 p Fri 9-7
Sale
A P P L I A N C E S
Over 500 Appliances In Our Store and Warehouse...Some Closeouts...Some Scratched And Dinged... Some Floor Models...SAVE...SAVE...SAVE!
Whirlpool® Stainless Steel 3-Piece Appliance Package! Featuring ENERGY STAR qualified Dishwasher!
SPIN THE WHEEL FOR EXTRA SAVINGS With purchase over $499
EVERYBODY’S A WINNER
STARBUCKS
10% OFF
GIFT CARD
PURCHASE
$99
5% OFF
PLUS MORE!
KITCHENAID
1507
WHIRLPOOL® 1.6 CU FT RANGE HOOD-MICROWAVE
TABLE MICROWAVE
PURCHASE
$
ALL 3 PIECES!
WHIRLPOOL® SUPER CAPACITY TALL TUB DISHWASHER
#WMH31017AS
DISPOSAL
WHIRLPOOL® CONVECTION ELECTRIC RANGE WITH SELF CLEANING OVEN
STAINLESS DISHWASHER
$499
WASHER/DRYER PAIR
$699
#WDF510PAYS
#WFE525C0BS
$
999
$
$ $
$
WHIRLPOOL® CABRIO® TOP LOAD WASHER: 11 Wash Cycles, 4 Temperature Settings, 6th Sense™ Technology & H210W™ Wash System
$
699
MAYTAG® 20.6 CU FT TOP-FREEZER REFRIGERATOR with Spill Mizer Glass Shelves, Humidity-Controlled Crisper, Icemaker
#WTW8000BW
WHIRLPOOL® CABRIO® ELECTRIC DRYER: 7 Drying Cycles, 4 Temperature Settings, Wrinkle Shield™ Plus Option & AccuDry™ Sensor #WED8000BW
WHIRLPOOL® TALL TUB DISHWASHER 3 Automatic Cycles, 3 Wash Options, Super Capacity, Hard Food Disposer & 4-Hour Delay Wash Option #WDF310PAAB
WHIRLPOOL® STAINLESS STEEL 1.6 CU FT OVERTHE-RANGE MICROWAVE 1,000 Cooking Watts, Two Speed 220 CFM Venting System, Hidden Vent, Auto Cook, Defrost & Reheat Cycles #WMH31017AS WHIRLPOOL® DUET FRONT LOAD WASHER 12 Automatic Cycles, Eco Heavy Duty Cycle, Eco Whitest Whites Cycle & LED Display
®
MAYTAG JETCLEAN PLUS STEAM CYCLE DISHWASHER with ToughScrub Stainless Steel. Cleans everything from your messiest pans to your finest stemware.
WAREHOUSE SALE
with payment (OAC) Delivery & installation Available.
599
WHIRLPOOL® 25 CU FT SIDE-BYSIDE REFRIGERATOR Adjustable SpillGuard™ Glass Shelves #WRS325FDAM
WHIRLPOOL® 18 CU FT TOP-FREEZER REFRIGERATOR with HumidityControlled Crispers #W8TXNGZBQ
#MITXEGMYS
WE PAY THE SALES TAX TOO! 3 DAYS ONLY Demos and Floor Models Reduced Now!
Month No Interest Financing
$
#WFE525C0BS
#MDB8949SBM
12
259
329
799
WHIRLPOOL® STAINLESS STEEL SMOOTHTOP ELECTRIC RANGE 4 Radiant Burners, Ceramic Glass Cooktop, Self-Cleaning Oven, Convection
1298
HOME OF THE
Whammer
DEAL
Shown on optional pedestals.
#WFW70HEBW
PAIR PRICED
$
1598
WHIRLPOOL® DUET ELECTRIC DRYER 9 Drying Cycles, 5 Temp Settings, Quick Refresh Steam Cycle & LED Display #WED70HEBW
PAIR PRICED
1099
$
WHIRLPOOL® SUPER CAPACITY TOP LOAD WASHER: Multiple Wash Cycles, 6 Temp Settings, Xtra Roll Action™ Plus Agitator, Fabric Softener Dispenser #WTW4900AW WHIRLPOOL® ELECTRIC DRYER: 12 Dry Cycles, 6 Temp Options, AccDry™ Sensor, Wrinkle Shield™ Option Plus & Timed Dry #WED4900XW
Pedestals optional
A P P L I A N C E S 4608 NE Sunset Blvd • Renton WA Across from Albertsons & Starbucks in the Renton Highlands
www.kingandbunnys.com • 425.277.0600
We do Business the Old Fashioned Way!