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August 22, 2015 edition of the Marysville Globe
Citation preview
13
75
09
7
INDEXBUSINESS 5
CLASSIFIED ADS 16-18
LEGALS 9
OPINION 4
SPORTS 10
WORSHIP 15
Vol. 122, No. 6
Tribes: Stan Jones honored by state for service during World War II. Page 13.
WEEKEND EDITION AUG. 23, 2015 WWW.MARYSVILLEGLOBE.COM 75¢GLOBE
THE MARYSVILLE
WEEKEND EDITION JUNE 8TH, 2014 WWW.MARYSVILLEGLOBE.COM 75¢ An Edition of HeraldTHE SUNDAY
Education: Schools fixed up before students return. Page 8.
History: Some of city’s first laws were pretty funny. Page 7.
Steve Powell/Staff Photo
Marty Norsby buys supplies at E&E in Marysville, one of many local stores the city shops at.
BY STEVE [email protected]
MARYSVILLE – The city of Marysville encourages residents to “Buy Local.”
But what exactly does that mean?
A snapshot of city pur-chases and bills in July over a three-week period shows Marysville bought from local businesses 20 percent
of the time. Of the 282 ven-dors, 56 were local.
The portion of money spent locally was a much smaller percentage, just 1.2 percent. The bills totaled more than $27.2 million, with $328,101 going to local vendors, city finance direc-tor Sandy Langdon said.
“We buy local when we can,” she said, “then we get the sales tax.”
She explained that when making purchases or sign-ing contracts, the city always tries locally owned businesses first.
“We like if they know the area a little bit,” Langdon said. “We branch out from there trying to keep the money in the state because we benefit there, too.”
If they can’t find a local business, with a local owner,
they will try a franchise or national business that at least is located here. Then they look for one in a sur-rounding city, one in the county, one in the Puget Sound region, one in the state and one on the West Coast before going national.
The object is to keep the money close to help the local economy.
The city also gives prefer-
ence to local when sending projects out for bid. But in that process the city has to take the lowest bid, unless there is a problem with a company’s quality or refer-ences.
The only time the city will go elsewhere is if the expertise needed isn’t avail-able locally, or if they can
What it means to buy local
BY STEVE [email protected]
TULALIP – The deaths of four young people in a crash this week has dev-astated the Tulalip Tribes and the Marysville School
District.“Any death is heartbreak-
ing, when we lose loved ones so young it is even more shocking and painful,” Tulalip Tribes Chairman Mel Sheldon told the tribal-owned newspaper. He asked
people on the reservation “to hold your loved ones close and to give comfort to each other during this try-ing time.”
Tulalip Tribes spokes-woman Niki Cleary added, “We’re definitely in shock.”
The two young female victims were going to be juniors at Marysville-Pilchuck High School.
“We are grieving today over the devastating loss of four young people, all cur-rent or former students in
our district,” Superintendent Becky Berg said. “We extend our support and sympathy to all of their families. This is yet another reminder of how fragile life is and how
Tulalip mourns four who died in accident
SEE LOCAL, PAGE 9
SEE TULALIP, PAGE 2
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we must again bond togeth-er as a community.”
Marysville Mayor Jon Nehring also sent his regards to Sheldon.
“We offer our deep-est condolences to the families involved and the entire Tulalip community,” Nehring said Aug. 20. “We stand here ready to help” in any way we can.
It was less than a year ago, on Oct. 24, 2014, that the two communities faced another tragedy together. An M-P freshman brought a gun to school and killed four classmates and himself
in the cafeteria.The Snohomish County
Medical Examiner’s Office identified the four people who died in the crash Aug. 18, saying they all died of accidental drowning.
They are:•15-year-old Ariela
Vendiola of Marysville.•16-year-old Lynnishia
M. Larson of Marysville. •21-year-old Tyson D.
Walker of Tulalip.•22-year-old Dylan D.
Monger of Tulalip.The four were in a truck
that left the roadway and landed upside down in a fisheries rearing pond near the 7500 block of Totem Beach Road.
A call came in to 9-1-1
around 3:30 a.m. that day reporting that a truck had gone off the roadway, over a foot-tall concrete embank-ment, through a cyclone fence and into a pond, Snohomish County sheriff ’s spokeswoman Shari Ireton said.
Holly Reed, assistant manager at the Tulalip Hatchery, said she was downstream from the wreck monitoring chinook salm-on when she saw the truck pulled out upside down Monday morning. By noon she was using a monitor to check the water quality at the crash site.
She said ironically that usually this time of the year there is no water in that pond, but now it’s about 10 feet deep. But in February 1 million coho will be there.
Reed said work was done recently on that bridge, and fisheries was concerned that the railing wasn’t high enough. They were con-cerned kids would climb over the railing and climb on the net that keeps birds away from the fish.
“They came around the corner, lost control and ended upside down in the water,” Reed said of the acci-dent victims, adding fam-ily members had been there that morning.
Mourning continued
throughout the week. More than 100 people gathered near the accident scene late Aug. 19 to light candles, sing and remember the vic-tims. The bridge fence was decorated with balloons and flowers.
People turned to social media like Facebook to express condolences to the families and communities.
“My daughter was in this. Why oh my god? Why did god take her?” Emma Larson of Seattle wrote.
To which Shannon Lee Walburn Ogden replied: “Emma - I am sorry - Lynnishia was beautiful, smart and caring. I went to see Ty last week and met her while visiting. I am devas-tated for your loss.”
Joyce Chester wrote: “Prayer for heart broken. I worked with Tyson. What a polite guy,”
Tracy Ness Jacobson of Marysville added, “Prayer for the ones they left much, much too soon. So sad.”
Alethia Cyrus wrote: “I’m sad to see my neighbors in mourning and have sent out prayer requests and such. My brother’s been comfort-
ing the family. It is a tragic loss, as all such losses are.”
Shelley Booher Ricker of Seattle wrote, “Prayers for all the families who lost loved ones in this tragic accident.”
And Shannon Lee Walburn Ogden wrote: I work on the rez, live on the rez and my nephew lost his sister. I am sad for my family and my commu-nity and everyone effected. As a community we have
been through a tremendous amount of pain this year.”
Ironically, one of Monger’s final Facebook posts is of a poster of a beautiful sunset that says, “Focus on the great things life gives you.”
The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe2 August 22, 2015
TULALIP FROM Page 1
Steve Powell/Staff Photo
Police tape cautions people to stay away from where a truck flipped into a pond, killing four people. At right, Holly Reed monitors to make sure fuel didn’t pollute the waters.
August 22, 2015 3The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
BY STEVE [email protected]
MARYSVILLE – To improve, sometimes you have to take a good, hard look at yourself. As educa-tors, the Marysville School Board knows that.
So at its two-hour work session Aug. 17 it went over a self-evaluation led by Colleen Miller of the Washington State School Directors Association.
“We want to do more and better,” Director Bruce Larsen said.
One of the areas they rated themselves on was preparation. Board member Chris Nation said he would like information packets on meetings earlier so he has more time to prepare.
Miller said some districts deal with that by agreeing that as long as someone has questions, they will keep talking before voting.
Another concern Nation had was that the board adopts policy set by the dis-trict, rather than directing the district.
Board president Tom Albright disagreed, saying the board is young and the next step in the natural pro-gression is to set policy.
“You can make a motion to direct the superintendent to tap into that expertise,” Miller said, adding the
board needs to review its protocols. “That’s how the vision of the board can be put into action.”
Nation brought up that the board expressed an interest in the district devel-oping plans to make sure buildings are maintained along with landscaping, etc. But since a directive wasn’t voted on, Nation wondered if the schedules would be done. Superintendent Becky Berg said something’s wrong with the relationship if requests like that need to be mandated.
Another area the board said it could improve on is educating the public. “The community doesn’t know what you do,” Miller said. “They think they can just call, and you’ll fix it for me.”
Larsen said people need to know the benefits schools provide, such as free lunch-es. “More comes under the umbrella of school,” he said. “There’s a lot of poverty and fewer resources.”
Miller added, “If a child is sick, tired, scared, neglected they’re not going to learn.”
Albright said the board hopes to communicate all that to the public better through its new director of communications.
Another area they dis-cussed was high ethical standards. Director Pete Lundberg said a personal-
ity inventory Berg gave to the group has helped him deal with their differences. Knowing others’ motives helps him understand why another board member may feel differently on an issue.
“It makes it easier to accept when you know the differences,” Miller said.
Berg added, “Maybe not accept but help understand.”
Committing to high standards and equity was another topic. Lundberg said equity and equal are different. “We value equity. Those who are underserved need more resources,” he said. “We need to question the district how to do it, and then provide the resources.”
Berg said some may ques-tion that because some of the poorest schools are in the worst disrepair.
Nation asked what are high standards? Berg said at or above grade level while Miller said it might have to do with academic and per-sonal growth.
Berg concluded, “It’s edu-cating the whole child.”
The self-evaluation will continue at a future meet-ing, but Miller explained the goal is to govern in a deeper way. “Stay engaged, take risks and check for under-standing,” she said to make sure the board works as a team. “Understand there are different perspectives.”
Board evaluates itself
BY KIRK [email protected]
When Gil Emory and his for-mer classmates get together at his house, the conversations sound much like you’d expect at a high school reunion, as old friends catch up on each other’s families, activities and ailments.
But what sets the Arlington High School graduating class of 1950 apart from most is that it’s still getting together after 65 years.
Jim Brothers confessed that his doctor placed his life expectancy at 87, just shy of when the 70-year reunion would be held, since the class meets every five years.
The class of ‘50 originally tout-ed at least 70 students, but now there’s 16 members. Valedictorian Frank Prather read aloud from a list of the names of the departed, before their peers lined up for a potluck.
“Just hope your name isn’t on there in five years,” Emory said.
Far from a morbid affair, though, the gathering was a cel-ebration of life.
While Prather moved to California, Dell Foster stayed
local, moving to Carnation in 1959. Still, the boy who was born on a farm boasted that he never left family farming.
“I grew up on the prairie where the Safeway is now,” Foster said,
noting that Highway 9 didn’t arrive until right around when he left. “I remember the surveyor kept putting up stakes around our land, and I kept cutting them down with my Model-A John Deere,” he laughed.
Former Arlington teacher Ruth Porter Munizza joined her students, and took the time to praise Edna Bulle Sebers and Ellen Bergevin Dodge for their talent at sports.
“Your mom was one of my good athletes,” Munizza, the wife of for-mer school coach Larry Munizza, told Nancy Sebers Putnam, the daughter of Sebers.
“It’s fun to see these old pictures,” Putnam said as she paged
through a class yearbook. “She hasn’t changed a bit.”
“My hair got a little lighter,” Sebers laughed.
Munizza taught at the old high
school for four years, and had to receive permission to marry her husband, since they taught at the same school.
“When the new principal said we couldn’t teach at the same school, I quit,” Munizza said.
Sebers has only just recently completed her 22 years of living on the road in her RV, after she sold her house in Lake Stevens. She played tennis, but empha-sized that girls weren’t allowed to compete in sports against other schools.
As for Dodge, she loved tum-bling and acrobats, but didn’t rate her own skills as highly as Munizza.
“I loved performing, though,” Dodge said.
Prather couldn’t remember who the class salutatorian was, even though he considered her to be at least as good a student as he was.
“I got all As, except for chem-istry, which I hated,” Prather said. “Her grades were as good as mine, but she’d just moved there her senior year.”
After attending college in Ellensberg, Prather met his future
wife in California in the early 1970s. He retired from teaching music in 1991.
By contrast, former football star Art Lee moved no further than Bellingham. As he and Emory traded tales of their time in the military, he reflected on the reg-imen that had kept him going through 25 years in the Marine Corps.
“I must have done 300 road races, starting in the Philippines,” said Lee, a Vietnam veteran who still hikes hills and walks while carrying weights. “I had a head injury that broke all the straps in my football helmet, but I was able to join the military by promising I wouldn’t file for disability. I’ve stayed close to the Lord, and I’ve lived to drink about it.”
“That would have been too much for me,” Emory said. “I did Korea, and then got out and went right back to the sawmill.”
“I’m impressed that they all still know each other’s names,” said Putnam, as she watched her moth-er interact with her classmates. “I don’t think I would. It really makes you realize how precious life is.”
Grads celebrate ‘precious life’ after 65 years
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Nancy Putman looks through a yearbook while her mom, Edna Sebers, talks to Ellen Dodge.
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Public schools are not just underfunded by the state as Washington’s Supreme Court has made abundantly clear. Most of them are also failing, according to the fed-eral government.
Parents are receiving let-ters explaining why their child attends a school deemed failing by the U.S.
Department of Education. These letters offer parents a chance to transfer their child to a non-failing school in their district, if one exists, and to obtain tutoring if their family qualifies.
Roughly 90 percent of the state’s 2,300 schools must send out these letters. It’s punishment for not comply-
ing with a provi-sion in the federal No Child Left B e h i n d A c t requiring every stu-
dent meet state standards in math, reading and English.
This was all kind of a big deal a year ago and has not made as much a stir this summer. Remember Washington began 2014 with a waiver from the fed-eral education law’s strin-gent rules. It then lost it. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan had warned he would revoke the waiver unless state law was changed to require the use of stu-dent test scores in evaluat-ing teachers. That set off a fierce fight involving law-makers, Gov. Jay Inslee and Superintendent of Public Instruction Randy Dorn.
Inslee and Dorn met with Duncan in Washington, D.C. to gauge his resolve. They returned with deter-mination to preserve the waiver, crafting what they hoped to be a compromise
bill. It never earned a vote.After Duncan kept
his word and yanked the waiver, 1,916 schools sent out the failing school let-ters. Only 260 schools didn’t because their students met the standards.
The letters are attracting less attention partly due to the commotion caused by the Supreme Court’s $100,000-a-day fine against the state for lawmakers not turning in a plan to ensure ample funding for schools.
Another reason is that lawmakers, the governor and state schools chief did
not battle as long or as loudly on getting the waiver back in the long legislative session.
Then interest waned as a rewrite of the No Child Left Behind law drafted by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., made its way through the Senate. As written it would do away with waivers – and the letters would stop – if it reaches the president’s desk.
On Monday, when Dorn released results of Smarter Balanced Assessments, he declared that while there continues to be gaps in achievement among ethnic
groups at each grade level, overall “learning actually went up. The rigor actually went up.”
Those letters express a different message and one that can cause unneces-sary confusion and worry for parents, he said. But like underfunding, they’re a burden borne by public schools until those making the laws figure things out.
Jerry Cornfield is The Herald’s political reporter. Contact him at 360-352-8623 or [email protected].
4 THE ARLINGTON TIMES.THE MARYSVILLE GLOBE August 22, 2015THE PUBLIC FORUM
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August 22, 2015 5The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
8 honoredMARYSVILLE - Five
students from Marysville and three from Arlington made the Columbia College dean’s list. All attend the Marysville campus of the Missouri school.
Arlington: Jessica Burns, James Orr and Tanya Shaneyfelt.
Marysville: Elfren Dyoco, Brittany Mack, Jason Sanders, Noe Torres and Laura Wheeler.
Fire fundraiserARLINGTON – The
Arlington Fire Department will host a fundraiser Spaghetti Dinner Sept. 11 from 5-7 p.m. at Station 46 downtown. Tickets are $10 per person purchased in advance at City Hall finance window.
Organ concertWestminster Presbyterian
Church is hosting a pipe organ concert by Halden Toy of Marysville Sunday, Aug. 30, at 6 p.m.
The church is located at 2531 Hoyt Ave. in Everett.
The concert is free, but an offering will be taken to assist Toy with the expens-es of his university studies in organ performance. A reception will follow.
Business opensMARYSVILLE – Mayor
Jon Nehring will cut the ribbon on the new Play It Again Sports store in the Marysville Mall Saturday, Aug. 22, at 9:30 a.m.
The new location is 115 Marysville Mall Way, near the Staples store. Prizes and doorbusters are planned.
Fire helpMARYSVILLE – Ten
Rapid Deployment Force members from the Marysville and King County areas are assisting with road closures in Chelan County.
Chief John R. Batiste approved the deployment Aug. 18. Troopers are assist-ing with evacuation efforts due to a huge fire.
Fires continue to spread in Chelan putting more homes and businesses at risk. Fire resources from all around the state have responded.
Deaths8/18/15 – Deloris J.
Pearsall, 85, Arlington8/18/15 – Charles K.
McKenzie, Sr., 79, ArlingtonWeller Funeral Home,
Arlington
BRIEFS For all of your local online news needs, go to our websitesat www.marysvilleglobe.com or www.arlingtontimes.com
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The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe6 August 22, 2015
TULALIP – More than 50 exhibitors will be looking for tal-ent at the free Snohomish County Career Fair Sept. 10.
The Daily Herald and Tulalip Resort Casino will host the event to provide a comprehensive talent search for exhibitors and career opportunities for job-seekers.
Exhibitors include aerospace, health care, retail, school districts, colleges, transportation, automo-tive, the armed forces and more.
“We’re excited to bring together businesses and professionals, rep-resenting a wide array of indus-tries in Snohomish County to provide career opportunities to
qualified job-seekers,” said Josh O’Connor, publisher of The Daily Herald.
Register and upload your resume today online at snococa-reerfair.com. On the day of the event, the first 50 registrants to check in at the Sound Publishing table will receive two free tickets
to a Mariners game.The fair, sponsored by Cabela’s,
Providence Health & Services and Everett Community College, will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Orca Ballroom, 10200 Quil Ceda Blvd.
Tulalip Resort Casino offers complimentary shuttle service
from the following locations: Quil Ceda Creek Casino (www.QuilCedaCreekCasino.com), Seattle Premium Outlets (www.PremiumOutlets.com) and from businesses within Quil Ceda Village.
For details about the career fair, go online to: snococareerfair.com.
Huge Career Fair coming to Tulalip Resort Casino
BY STEVE [email protected]
MARYSVILLE – The first law passed in the town of Marysville, before it even became a city, was on April 4, 1891 was to ban prostitu-tion.
How do we know? Because the city recently found some ledgers in a city vault dating back 125 years.
The first ordinance made it illegal to practice prostitu-tion or lewdness. The fine was no less than $20 and no more than $100.
The second law made it mandatory for dogs to have a license. The cost was $2 in 1892.
Law No. 3 was an issue the city still deals with today. It banned peddlers, hawkers and auctioneers.
No. 4 had to do with reg-ulations regarding bowling alleys and gaming tables.
Oddly enough, if you look again at No. 4, the fifth law deals with preventing and punishing gambling.
Ordinance 6 set the sala-ries of officers, up to $40 a week.
Law 7 set the date of council meetings at the sec-ond and fourth Saturdays of the month.
No. 8 set the meet-ing place, which was the schoolhouse.
Law No. 9 established the annual practice of paying property taxes.
And Law No. 10 began the construction and the operation of the railroad.
The first volume of laws was 360 handwritten pages and ended on April 10, 1914.
Records officer Tina Brocks said the two vol-umes of ordinances will be sent to the state archives office for preservation.
“They’re kind of falling apart,” she said.
She plans to scan the pages and give the originals to the state.
The other ledgers that were found, which deal with business transactions, she hopes will be taken by the Marysville Historical Society and placed in their new building near Jennings Memorial Park.
Those volumes have other interesting informa-tion. Such as:
•Harry Matthews didn’t pay his fine in 1907 but he said he was going to get out of town.
•The Marysville Globe did some printing for the city and was paid $2.50.
•Yearlong retail liquor licenses cost businessess
anywhere from $300 to $1,000.
•James Comeford, for whom Comeford Park is
named after, was listed for making a business transac-tion in 1892.
August 22, 2015 7The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
1891 laws found: 1st one banned prostitution
Steve Powell/Staff Photo
Marysville communications officer Bronlea Mishler and records officer Tina Brocks can’t help but laugh at some of the city’s first laws. Below shows the handwritten laws by the clerk at the time.
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The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe8 August 22, 2015
BY STEVE [email protected]
MARYSVILLE – The Marysville School Board approved a $163.293 mil-lion budget at its meeting Aug. 17.
The General Fund is $139.7 million, the Transportation Vehicle Fund $580,000, Capitol Projects almost $10.974 million, Debt Services almost $8.666 million and Associated Student Body almost $3.173 million.
The second year of the local tax levy will bring in $25.9 million, and the tech-nology levy $3 million.
The district is planning on 160 more students, thanks mostly to fill-time kindergarten.
Finance director Jim Baker said a breakfast pilot program started at Liberty Elementary last year will be expanded in November to Quil Ceda Elementary.
School Board direc-tor Pete Lundberg said he appreciates being able to have more savings in the budget.
“That’s a significant change from four years ago,” board president Tom Albright said. “It’s nice to see that number going up.”
Also, the board agreed on a contract with the Public School Employees Union for the next school year. The fiscal impact will be $225,000 more.
Lundberg said he was impressed with the process.
“The teams worked together both ways for the children with dignity and respect,” he said, adding, especially considering how contentious bargaining can be.
In other news:•Baker said the district
received the full amount to fund a new 16,000-square-foot eating area and com-mons at Marysville-Pilchuck High School, which will cost $7,391,268. “We hit a home run” with legislative support, he said. Plans are to open the new facility by Sept. 1, 2016.
•Albright said it seems like “the calm before the storm” as the start of school is Sept. 9. Back to School events start with the 9th Grade Welcome at Arts and Tech High School Aug. 31.
•District facilities super-visor Greg Dennis thanked his summer maintenance and grounds crew for their hard work. Superintendent Becky Berg said, “I’m sorry they are not here to get their pats on the back.”
•Anthony Munoz of The Grove Church was honored for the I Heart Marysville program. Hundreds of hours were donated by church volunteers to land-scape, paint, pressure wash and clean up schools, along with re-roofing two dug-outs. “You’re walking your talk,” Berg said, adding
Grove was a great partner in a difficult year.
•Jack Monpas-Huber talked about the Highly Capable Program, and how it is changing from grades 2-8 to K-12. Current pro-gram services include self-contained classrooms for grades 2-5 at Pinewood Elementary; language arts,
social studies and mathematics pro-grams at the three larger middle schools and addi-tional services will be developed for kindergarten and first grade, along with 9-12 at the high schools.
•Lundberg said he hopes the gov-ernor calls the legis-lature back this fall after the Supreme Court ruled it has not done its job yet in fully funding education.
• D i r e c t o r Mariana Maximos looks forward to kids going back to school with “no fear, feeling safe.”
•Baker said going into the final week 2,086 meals were served this summer by the school district to help chil-dren in need.
Steve Powell/Staff Photo
Troy Tucker paints a bridge white at Marysville Getchell High School.
Schools get fresh look before kids return
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August 22, 2015 9The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
2015 Biosolids Removal and Reuse Project
CALL FOR BIDSNotice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the City Clerk at Marysville City Hall, 1049 State Avenue, Marysville, WA 98270 until 10:00 a.m., lo- cal time, on Thursday, Septem- ber 10th, 2015 at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. The City will not consider proposals re- ceived after this time. Bidders shall submit original bid in a sealed envelope labeled with the bidder’s name and project title.The work to be performed under this contract will provide for on- site dredging, screening, and de- watering 4,500 dry tons of biosol- ids from the City’s wastewater treatment plant’s (WWTP) north- ern lagoon with an additive bid
item to remove up to an addi- tional 3,500 dry tons of biosolids. Also included is the hauling and land application of the dewa- tered and screened biosolids at a Washington State Department of Ecology permitted beneficial use facility. Bidder qualifications re- quire the successful completion of three (3) similar projects at treatment facilities within the last five (5) years. The Engineer’s Esti- mate for the base bid is $3,200,000 to $4,000,000. Please address any comments and ques- tions you may have to Kari Chen- nault, Water Resources Manager at (360) 363-8277.Plans, specifications, addenda, and plan holders list for this pro- ject are available online through Builder’s Exchange of Washing- ton, Inc., at http://www.bxwa.com; 2607
Wetmore Avenue, Everett, WA 98201-2929, (425) 259-3832. Click on “bxwa.com”; “Posted Projects”, “Public Works”, “City of Marysville”, “Projects Bidding”, “I agree”, and Project Bid Date. (Note: Bidders are encouraged to “Register as a Bidder”, in order to receive automatic email notifi- cation of future addenda and to be placed on the “Bidders List”. This service is provided free of charge to Prime Bidders, Subcon- tractors & Vendors bidding on the project. Contact Builder’s Exchange of Washington at 425-258-1303 should you require furtherassis- tance.)Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check, cashier’s check or bid bond (with an au- thorized surety company as sure- ty) made payable to the City of
Marysville in an amount not less than five percent (5%) of the bid amount.The City of Marysville reserves the right to reject any and all bids and waive any immaterial irregu- larities or informalities in the bid or in the bidding. No bidder may withdraw its bid after the hour set for the opening thereof or before award of contract, unless said award is delayed for a period of sixty (60) days. The City further re- serves the right to make the bid award as deemed in the best in- terest of the City. April O’Brien, Deputy City ClerkCity of MarysvillePublished: Marysville GlobeAugust 22, 2015#1394096
LEGAL NOTICES
save a lot of taxpayer money by buying elsewhere.
Langdon said it is more difficult to buy local with items such as consultants.
“We don’t know a lot of them in Marysville,” she said.
That’s what happened recently when the city decided to process its util-ity bills from a company in Caldwell, Idaho. It also happened with a jail consul-tant hired out of California. Such outsourcing of city job work means lost revenue locally.
“It’s got to be a huge price difference,” Langdon said.
Mayor Jon Nehring talked about the issue at a recent Coffee Klatch.
“In general, we do make a good faith effort to buy local,” he said. “But some-times the cost savings are just so great.”
City spokeswoman Bronlea Mishler said the city is saving $1,000 month-ly by changing the billing company.
“There is no local com-pany” that prints bills, she said, adding they did have some issues with the previ-ous firm in Seattle.
To save money, the city also belongs to some buy-ing co-ops “to stretch our dollars as far as we can,” she said.
There are other things to look at, not just price, Langdon said. For example, the parks department often buys from local nurseries. Even though it may cost a little more, there is no deliv-ery charge.
Marty Norsby has been working for Public Works in facility maintenance for 17 years. He said he has always been encour-aged to shop local. He buys small quantities of supplies almost daily.
“We usually don’t shop too far ahead,” he said, add-ing they don’t have a lot of storage space.
Following is a list of local vendors the city used dur-ing the three-week snapshot of city bills:
Albertsons, American Cleaners, Bank of America, Rae Boyd, Capital One Commercial, Captain Dizzy’s Exxon, Carquest, Carr’s Ace Hardware, CNR Inc., Coop Supply, Craft Mart, Deaver Electric, Arline DePalma, Dwaine’s Backhoe, E&E Lumber, East Jordan Iron Works, Feldman & Lee P.S., HD Fowler Co.,
HD Supply Waterworks, Hertz Equipment Rent, Kidz Love Soccer, K-Mart, Lake Industries, Lasting Impressions, Les Schwab Tire Center, Department of Licensing, Marysville Fire, Marysville Printing, Northend Truck Equipment, Office Depot, Monica Olason, Pacific Plumbing, Petrocard Systems, Pick of the Litter, Pilchuck Rentals, Platt Electric, Puget Sound Security, Red Curtain Foundation, Roy Robinson, Safeway, Sound Publishing, Springbrook Nursery, Staples, Strawberry Lanes, Suburban Propane, Sunnyside Nursery, Tim’s Backflow Test, Vinyl Signs & Banner, Waste Management, Wayne’s Auto Detail, Western Peterbilt and White Cap Construction.
LOCAL FROM Page 1
State test scores were released Aug. 17, and state schools superintendent Randy Dorn explained why results were different from previous years.
Dorn said the previous testing became politicized so it needed to change.
He said the first year of the new testing was tough, but much better than the pilot test the year before, when students scored in the 30 percent range. This year’s scores were up to 60 per-cent success rate. In the past, the test scores showed stu-dent understanding of basic skills. Now the tests measure college and career readiness.
“The standards are higher. We’ve raised the bar for all students,” a presentation by Ready Washington says.
Ready Washington is a coalition of state and local education agencies, associa-tions and advocacy organi-zations that support college and career ready learn-ing standards and assess-ments: Common Core State Standards, Next Generation Science Standards and Smarter Balanced Assessments.
Educators say the changes were needed because 54 per-cent of graduates going into college had to take remedial math or English. Also, the state is in desperate need of better-educated students.
About 50,000 science, tech-nology, engineering and math jobs will go unfilled statewide by 2017.
Common Core standards were developed with the need for jobs in the future in mind. The standards build on each other and allow more depth of study on fewer topics. Skills devel-oped include research, lis-tening, problem solving and communication reasoning.
The Smarter Balanced Assessments taken online will be a graduation require-ment to pass in 2017. Teachers can look at ongo-ing assessments during the year and adjust accordingly to make sure students get it.
Preliminary scores show 10th- and 11th-graders scores 62 percent in English, while grades 3 to 8 scored from 53 percent to 58 per-cent. For math, 11th-grad-ers only scored 29 percent, while third-graders were the highest at 58 percent.
The one negative in the testing was 11th grade. Scores were so low because only 53 percent of students in that grade took it. All of the other grades were at 95 percent or better. Deputy superintendent Gil Mendoza said that falls short of fed-eral Annual Yearly Progress standards so there could be ramifications from the Department of Education.
Schools chief explains scores
BY BRANDON [email protected]
ARLINGTON — It didn’t happen last year, but Cascade Valley Hospital was able to form a coed softball team this summer.
“It’s really hard to get peo-ple to show interest,” team manager Shawn McGlothlin said. “The employees at the hospital don’t find them-selves very athletic.”
But after continuous encouragement he was able to field a team.
“We had a couple of new players this year,” team-mate Cindy Mellem said. “As soon as we told them we needed players, they all came out.”
Millem works in medical billing, enjoys the compe-
tition and also the social aspect.
“It’s fun, when all the co-workers get together with their families,” she said. “It’s been fun, so it’s sad it’s going to be over.”
Cascade Valley com-petes in a league formed by Arlington Parks and Recreation. It competed in its last game Aug. 19 at Twin Rivers Park.
“It’s a fun experience win or lose,” McGlothlin added. McGlothlin works main- tenance at Cascade Valley,
but like everyone who works indoors all day, he needs to get out. He finds himself playing softball throughout the summer, but also helps other people enjoy it.
To make sure it was a fun experience for every-one, it was important for McGlothlin to not come off as “coachy” to his team-mates. “We’re out here to have fun,” McGlothlin said. “If I see something I’ll say it.”
Teammate Sara Picklesimer also works in billing. She wasn’t able to play last year because she was living somewhere else due to her husband being a Marine. “I used to play in high school. It’s a fun way to know your work people better,” she said. “It’s nice to blow off some steam and get some exercise.”
But there were others on the team who didn’t work for Cascade but heard about it through friends.
“They actually needed girl players, so they asked me to come out and play,” said Brandi Miller, who goes to hair school.
Others were happy to help, like Shane Farr, who works for Parr Lumbering in Marysville.
“You can’t beat being with and playing with friends,” Farr said. “I like getting out and exercising except the heat I can do without.”
10 THE ARLINGTON TIMES.THE MARYSVILLEGLOBE August 22, 2015SPORTS
Brandon Adam/Staff Photo
Cascade Valley softball team manager Shawn McGlothlin, left, pursues first base after a hit to leftfield while teammate Shane Farr delivers a pitch.
Coed softballers hang with co-workers
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ARLINGTON — A variety of circumstances brought the families of close to 500 K-12 students from Arlington, Lakewood and Darrington to Presidents Elementary for the sixth annual Back2School Rally.
But one thing they had in common was how hard it would be for them to make do without the Aug. 16 giveaways of backpacks and school supplies.
“Without this, I’d be hunt-ing for bargains at thrift stores, or hoping that my kids didn’t tear apart enough of their supplies from the previ-ous year to make it through this year,” said Amanda Woodward, who acknowl-edged that coping with the aftermath of the Oso slide in her hometown of Darrington has provided her already cash-strapped family with further challenges.
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“What would we do with-out this event? That’s a good question,” said Arlington mom Jennifer Courtney, whose 7-year-old, Zak, is going to Presidents, while her 13-year-old, Ty, heads
off to Haller Middle School. “Thankfully, we don’t have to think about that.”
Jennifer and her husband, Bill, have lived in the dis-trict for a decade, and have attended the Back2School Rally since it started six years ago. They’ve benefitted from the Arlington Family Resource Center, but even with the economy suppos-edly on the mend, they’ve found themselves at a loose
end. “We’re still playing the waiting game,” Courtney said. “We’re in a transitional phase. If we didn’t live in a community that helps its own, through things like the Family Resource Center and the Back2School Rally, I just don’t know. There are still plenty of people out there who are stuck in transitional phases, and they’re hurting. Not only are they not going anywhere, but they’re going
backwards.” This year’s rally signed up 456 kids before-hand, but event organiz-ers expected a number of walk-ups who hadn’t made reservations. Last year saw 419 students pre-registered, and another 86 arrive as unscheduled walk-ups. The Arlington Back2School Rally is supported through dona-tions made to the Arlington Assembly of God and Christ the King churches.
The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe12 August 22, 2015
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Sydney and Owen Kal get backpacks while grandma Debbi and mom Heather look on.
Biggest Back2School ever
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Jayden reaches for a backpack while Paige, Nathaniel and Makynzye Woodward await for theirs.
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OLYMPIA – Stan Jones, longtime Tulalip tribal leader who gave food to Japanese orphans surviving an atomic bomb blast, is the 12th and final World War II veteran being pro-filed by Secretary of State Kim Wyman’s Legacy Washington team.
Jones’ story is told by Legacy Washington Director Trova Heffernan in an online profile that can be viewed at: http://1.usa.gov/1Ml6nGF.
“We can all learn from the life of Stan Jones,” Wyman said. “World War II did not end in the summer of 1945 for children orphaned by the atomic bomb. Stan Jones and other Marines occupy-ing Nagasaki treated them not as the enemy, but as human beings.”
Titled “The Atomic Veteran,” the profile on Jones traces his life on the Tulalip Reservation, where he spent his childhood drifting from one impover-ished home to another. He lost his mother at age 3 and an older brother to tubercu-losis. Jones enlisted in the U.S. Marines at 17 by lying about his age. He was part
of the June 1944 invasion of the South Pacific island of Saipan, driving a Sherman tank. Just over a year later, Japan surrendered.
“When they told us Japan had surrendered, and two atomic bombs leveled two cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we felt relief,” Jones said. “We were going to make it back home.”
He returned to the U.S. in 1946. He eventually married JoAnn Barrie. Their 65-year marriage has produced four children, and many grand-children, great-grandchil-dren and great-great-grand-children. Starting in 1966, Jones served on the Tulalip Board of Directors for 44 years. He spent 26 of those years as a chairman.
The free, privately funded exhibit in the state Capitol marks the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II.
BY KIRK [email protected]
TULALIP — Wild ani-mal pelts, handmade toy boats and duck calls high-lighted Cabela’s Fall Great Outdoor Days Aug. 15-16.
Tom Fowler, of the Seattle Puget Sound chapter of Safari Club International, showed off the furs of bears, raccoons, cougars, badgers, possums, skunks, nutrias, bobcats and otters native to the area, along with an arc-tic fox and a mountain goat, as part of a “sensory safari.”
Fowler explained the Safari Club has spent $2 mil-lion on wildlife conserva-tion efforts in Washington, including the purchase of dogs to allow bears to be herded without having to be shot, as well as the reloca-tion of sheep and the rein-troduction of antelope.
“We work with Native American tribes and the Department of Fish and Wildlife to restore habitat and educate children and adults alike,” Fowler said.
“It’s kinda cool,” said Marysville’s Albert Maldonado, as his 4-year-
old daughter, Leah, touched the animal skins.
Holly Lindsay also wasn’t expecting Great Outdoor Days when she and her 4-year-old daughter, Sadie, stopped by the store that Sunday.
“We’re heading back to Cashmere, after visiting family in Birch Bay,” Lindsay said, as her daughter assem-bled and decorated a min-iature wooden boat. “We’ve been to this Cabela’s sev-eral times, though. We live right on Mission Creek, so she can sail this boat down there.”
Tolmie Ratcliff, with the Center for Wooden Boats, sees building toy boats as a stepping stone to getting comfortable with full-sized ships. “It lets them use their imagination,” said Ratcliff, who enjoys the boats at Camano Island. “I feel in love with the boathouse there. It has a huge history, and they keep the boats consistent with the histories of their time periods.”
Chris Straiter, the Everett area chair of Ducks Unlimited, didn’t have as
interactive a booth, aside from the duck call that Amber Blakney was reluc-tant to use. He nonetheless offered a wealth of knowl-edge about his group’s wet-land protection efforts in
the area, which Jennifer Stahl of Northwest Fishing Guides confirmed helps area salmon as well.
“If they didn’t do what they do, we wouldn’t have any fish to fish,” Stahl said.
August 22, 2015 13The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Sadie Lindsay puts together a toy boat at Cabela’s.
Courtesy Photo
Stan Jones
‘Sensory Safari’ at Outdoor Days
State honors Tulalip elder for WWII
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BY KIRK [email protected]
ARLINGTON — After 103 years, the Stillaguamish Valley Pioneers’ annual reunion and picnic has become a comfortably rou-tine affair. Members bring potluck dishes to Pioneer Hall before receiving updates from the president of their association and the mayor of Arlington.
Unfortunately, a shortage of volunteers has become an accepted part of that routine. President Myrtle Rausch expressed her appre-ciation to the three high school and two college stu-dents currently pitching in for the Pioneers. However, she noted that the average age of volunteers is between
75-80. At age 75, she’s one of the younger members, and she frequently has vol-unteers in their 80s and 90s
helping her out.“It’d be nice to get some
more of the descendants of our current members, since they already know a lot of what’s going on around here,” said Rausch, who
estimated that only half of the Pioneers’ members are either ambulatory or live close enough to help out.
“We still need docents to help show visitors around our museum,” she added. “We’re not set up for folks to just wander through. We need people who can tell them where to go and what we have, and what the his-tory of it all is.”
The Pioneer Museum strives to stay open three days a week, and also make itself available by appoint-ment for tours. Just as important is the manual labor and maintenance to keep up the Pioneers’ facili-ties. Since the last picnic, that hasn’t been a lot — Pioneer Hall had a new hot water heater installed, and the Pioneer Museum received a new furnace and a fresh coat of paint on its porch poles — but with a labor crew in their 80s, those tasks become more challenging.
The Pioneers tout the age of their members as a resource. As they do every year, they honored the old-est man and woman born in the Stillaguamish Valley — Harley Robb, 93, and Martha Young, nee Grimm, 92 — as well as the longest married couple with one of them born in the valley, which was again Sylvia and J.Y. Dycus, married 71 years now.
But if they’re going to pass their legacy on, the Pioneers will need younger members, Rausch said.
The Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer Hall and Museum are at 20722 67th Ave NE in Arlington. For details, log onto www.stillymuseum.org or call 360-435-7289.
The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe14 August 22, 2015
Kirk Boxleitnerx/Staff Photo
Mayor Barbara Tolbert gave a State of the City address.
Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo
Sylvia and J.Y. Dycus have been married 71 years.
Pioneers seeking younger volunteers
BY KIRK [email protected]
ARLINGTON — “It’s been a darn good year for Arlington,” Mayor Barbara Tolbert told the Stillaguamish Valley Pioneers during her annual State of the City address Aug. 16.
The city fire department will roll out a new fire engine and ladder truck in October, in addition to the eight police vehicles it had already replaced, she added.
Tolbert reviewed the police department’s reorga-nization over the past year, including its restoration of a Pro-Act Team, to make it more responsive to drug-related crimes. She likewise cited the role of “commu-nity policing” in addressing issues such as homelessness.
“We’ve started the Pooch Patrol,” Tolbert said. “People who walk their dogs daily can serve as extra sets of eyes and ears for the police.”
The city also completed its update to its compre-hensive plan. Arlington is required to update its comp plan every 10 years, and every one is required to project the city’s expected levels of population, resi-dential and infrastructure growth out 20 years, or to 2035.
“Those estimates will
determine the course of our housing, transportation and schools,” Tolbert said.
Tolbert reiterated what city consultant Al Aldrich had shared with her and the City Council last month, which was the rela-tive generosity of the state Legislature in awarding money to projects that will serve Arlington. The $39 million widening of 172nd Street will address one of the city’s most challenging traf-fic areas, while more than $2 million will go toward expanding the Arlington Boys & Girls Club.
Also expanding is the Arlington Family Resource Center, at the Stillaguamish Senior Center, whose one part-time and two full-time staff members have been working with families before they find themselves homeless, or with their utili-ties disconnected, by con-necting them to agencies that can address their needs.
On the business front, Tolbert explained that the former Thrifty Food Pavilion will soon be home to a dollar store and a Grocery Outlet, but she admitted that she has no idea what might be mov-ing into the former Haggen Food & Pharmacy.
Arlington’s ‘darn good year’
SEE MAYOR, PAGE 15
Long time M a r y v i l l e r e s i d e n t Wayne Donald H o u g e n passed away N o v e m b e r 17, 2014 at Peace Health M e d i c a l Center in Eugene Oregon. He was born on June 27, 1922 in Warden, WA.
He moved to Cashmere, Washington in the 1920’s and lived there until joining the Navy in 1942. Following his discharge he returned to Cashmere until 1954 when he moved his family to Everett/Marysville area.
He married M i l d r e d (Millie) in 1948 and had 3 children Sam Hougen, B r e n d a Elmgren and Rob Hougen.
He was a member of Carpenter’s Union 562 for 50 years retiring in 1984. After retirement he and Millie traveled extensively finally residing in Bullhead City, Arizona.
A memorial will be held at Kayak Point County ParkAugust 22, 2015 at 1:00pm.
Wayne Donald HougenJune 27, 1922 — November 17, 2014
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By KiRK [email protected]
MARYSVILLE – Null up tat aug ait ili quat. Ut numsan velendre min ea am iure del ullamet ing eugiam quat lum velenim nulla con veros do odigna alit atisit aut lorperi ustrud magnia-met acipsum aliqui ero do od tet nisi.
Et nisl inissim volummo luptat. Dui blan ullumsa ndiat, quisit, si tie venim iliqui tio conullaor iurer sed minci tio od do core mod diam nullamet prat in uta-tionsequi tations equipsum eliquip elis exer iustrud tem zzrit utem dunt ipit, sus-cill andreetum aliscing elis dolum do con et lum do ea amconse dit do odo odit alit praessed tionsequat, quat ullan utetum in vel ute doloreet lore magna commy numsan vel ulputem zzrius-to core tin volore consenim alit, sectet nullutate el iri-ureril dolorerci bla commy nisit nosto od dolobore minit vullaore ver sum vel et lut alisit wisit ea faccum duisit amcon erillam con-ummy nonsed eugait ex ero doloborem velit luptat. Duis
Six-car wreck snarls
freewayBy KiRK [email protected]
ARLINGTON – Nulluptat augait iliquat. Ut numsan velendre min ea am iure del ullamet ing eugiam quat lum velenim nulla con veros do odigna alit atisit aut lorperi ustrud magniamet acipsum aliqui ero do od tet nisi.
Et nisl inissim volummo luptat. Dui blan ullumsa ndiat, quisit, si tie venim iliqui tio conullaor iurer sed minci tio od do core mod diam nullamet prat in uta-tionsequi tations equipsum eliquip elis exer iustrud tem zzrit utem dunt ipit, sus-cill andreetum aliscing elis dolum do con et lum do ea amconse dit do odo odit alit praessed tionsequat,
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ummy nonsed eugait ex ero doloborem velit luptat. Duis nim venis doluptat aliquatie eum alis nisismo lortin ver sequat, conse eu facin esed
Record floods hit region
Xxxxx Yyyyyy/Staff Photo
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By KiRK [email protected]
MARYSVILLE – Nullu ptat augait iliquat. Ut num-san velendre min ea am iure del ullamet ing eugiam quat lum velenim nulla con veros do odigna alit atisit aut lorperi ustrud magnia-met acipsum aliqui ero do od tet nisi.
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do odo odit alit praessed tionsequat, quat ullan ute-tum in vel ute doloreet lore
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Worship Directory
1137
099
NON DENOMINATIONAL
953369
Olympic TheaTer107 n. olympic ave.
arlington
LUTHERAN
Pastor Rick Long & Pastor Luke Long
Sunday Worship - 8:30 and 11:00amWeekly Bible Studies Youth Ministry
Sunday School 9:30am
9533
62
Bible teaching, upbeat music, friendly and casual atmosphere
CTK Arlington 10:00am Sundays21108 67th Ave. NE
Pastor Rick Schranck 1-888-421-4285 x813
953367
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9533
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ASSEMBLY
9533
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COMMUNITY
953364
BAPTIST
9533
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COMMUNITY
EmmanuelBaptist Church
14511 51st Ave NE Marysville, WA 98270
Interim Pastor Ed Feller
Church: (360) 659-9565
Worship TimesSunday School: 9:15amMorning Service: 10:30amEvening Service: 6pm
812465
SBC 953370
BAPTIST
9533
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COMMUNITY
Arlington United Church
United in Serving Christ and Neighbor
www.auc1.org 360-435-3259
Sunday Worship at 10:15AMCulto Bilingue: Ingles/Español¨
Pastor Deena Jones • Corner of 4th & McLeod
United Methodist and Evangelical Covenant Church
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METHODIST
“Family Oriented — Bible Centered”6715 Grove St., Marysville • 360-659-7117
Hillside Christian Preschool 360-659-7117
Marysville Free Methodist Church
Summer Worship Service for the whole family . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45a.m.Kidz’ Zone and nursery up to age 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45a.m.Student Ministries (Jr . and Sr . High - Thursday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 p.m.Hillside Christian Preschool NOW Enrolling for the 2015-16 School YearGroups for Children, Youth, College/Career, Young Marrieds, Families and Seniors www.marysvillefmc.org
9533
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FREE METHODIST
To advertise in this Directorycall Nancy at 360-659-1300
“Come Worship with us... Our doors are always open.”FREE METHODIST
Arlington [FM] ChurchSundays @ 9 & 10:45am
730 E Highland Dr • Arlington 360-435-8988
9533
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www.arlingtonfm.com • [email protected]
Sunday @ 10:30am
360-435-8986
LUTHERAN
1424 172nd St NE • Marysville360-652-9545
God’s Work
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Services on Sundays 10am
1207793
953374
MARYSVILLE GOSPEL HALL5202 - 116th St. NE, Marysville • 658-9822
Sunday
Monday
Wednesday
Remembrance Meeting .................... 9:30 a.m.Bible Teaching & Sunday School ....... 11 a.m.Evening Service .....................................6 p.m.
Family Bible Hour (Sept.-May) ...........7 p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study .........................7 p.m.
Non-Denominational • All Welcome
NON DENOMINATIONAL
August 22, 2015 15The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
“The owners of the prop-erty aren’t communicating with the city,” Tolbert said. “As for the Food Pavilion in Smokey Point, we’ve worked with seven different clients, and negotiations with the last one fell apart after four
months. I don’t think the owners of the property are being realistic. That can be a problem when the owners don’t live in the city.”
In better news, Arlington and Darrington became one of 50 quarter-finalists, out of the 382 communities that applied for a Frontier Communications contest to
expand broadband Internet access. Tolbert explained that their prize for mak-ing it into the quarter-finals was $50,000, plus another $15,000 from one of the sponsoring companies, pro-vided the community could match it.
“We not only matched it, we beat it,” said Tolbert,
noting that the community raised $16,000 a week before it was due. “What winning this would mean is compre-hensive internet access, all across the valley. It would be too expensive for us to pro-vide on our own, but no one in the modern world can get ahead without it.”
In addition to install-
ing the infrastructure so that visitors to public parks could surf the web on their laptops, the economic development funded by this contest would also include a program to foster more volunteerism and com-munity investment among youth in their high school and college years, as well as
providing the education and resources for local business-es to enhance their “curb appeal.”
“We knew that Millennials see themselves as entrepreneurs, so when they start their own busi-nesses, we want them to put down roots here,” Tolbert said.
MAYOR FROM Page 14
The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe16 August 22, 2015 The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe16 August 22, 2015
call toll free: 1-800.388.2527 email:
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Email resume to [email protected] ext. 3304
CREATIVE ARTIST(Everett, WA)
Sound Publishing, Inc. has a Creative Artist posi-tion available at the Daily Herald in Everett , WA. Posit ion is PT and the s c h e d u l e r e q u i r e s flexibility. Duties include performing conceptual design for ads, logos, page layout, marketing campaigns and collateral. The position will require providing excellent cus-tomer service to both in-ternal and external cus-tomers.
REQUIREMENTS:Experience with Adobe Creative Suite 6, which includes: InDesign, Pho-toshop, Illustrator, Dream-weaver, Flash and Acro-bat. Basic understanding of HTML, Flash animation and web layout preferred. Excellent customer ser-v ice, organizat ion and commun ica t ion sk i l l s . Ability to work indepen-dently, as well as part of a team, in a fast-paced en-v i ronment. Newspaper and agency experience is p re fe r red bu t no t re -quired. If you can think outside the box, enjoy collabora-tive, creative-type brain-storming and would like to be part of a highly ener-gized, competit ive and professional team, we want to hear from you! Please email your cover letter, resume, and a few work samples to:
ATTN: PTCA Sound Publishing is an Equal Oppor tunity Em-ployer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us!www.soundpublishing.com
Your new job is waiting at www.SoundClassifieds.com
Reach thousands of readers 1-800-388-2527
www.SoundClassifieds.comfind what you need 24 hours a day
EmploymentGeneral
DRIVER (Class B)Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for an exper i-enced truck driver with a CDL-B to dr ive out of Paine Field area in Ever-ett, WA. Must have ex-cellent driving record, be able to l ift 50 lbs and load/unload truck. Posi-tion is Full-Time, 40 hrs a week and include ex-cel lent benef i ts. The schedule varies and re-quires f lexibi l i ty. Must have knowledge of the Puget Sound area. Must provide current copy of driving abstract at time of in ter v iew. P lease email application to [email protected]
or mail toHR Dept/DREPR,
Sound Publishing, Inc, 11323 Commando R W,
Unit Main, Everett, WA 98204
E.O.E.
EDITORSound Publishing has an immediate opening for Editor of the Journal of the San Juans in the beautiful San Juan Is-lands o f Wash ing ton state. This is not an en-try-level position. Re-quires a hands-on leader with a minimum of three years newspaper experi-ence including writing, editing, pagination, pho-tography, and InDesign skills. editing and moni-toring social media in-cluding Twit ter, Face-Book, etc.
We offer a competitive compensation and bene-fits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an em-ployer match.) If you are interested, please email your cover letter, resume, and up to 5 samples of your work to:
[email protected] be sure to note: ATTN: EDJSJ in the subject line.
Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em-p l o y e r ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diver-sity in the workplace. Check out our website to fi nd out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com
GAS STATION CASHIER NEEDED
Part time, night shift in Ar l ington. Exper ience preferred, but will train right person. Must be 21, independent worker with great customer service. Duties: stocking, clean-ing, cashiering. Call 425-272-2987 leave msg.
FT/PT Computer Based positions avail, Familiar with the following: Corel Draw or equil, PS4 or l a te r, Publ i she r, MS Word, and PS Elements. Must be a self star ter, love helping people, and have good written and verbal direction. Apply www.bfranklincrafts.com or in store, Monroe.
EmploymentGeneral
Multi-Media Advertising Consultant
Marysville, WADo you have a proven track record of success in sales and enjoy man-aging your own territory? Are you competitive and thrive in an energetic en-vironment? Do you de-sire to work for a compa-ny that offers uncapped earning oppor tunities? Are you interested in a fast paced, creative at-mosphere where you can use your sales ex-pertise to provide con-sultative print and digital solutions?I f you answered YES then you need to join the largest community news organization in Washing-t o n . T h e M a r y s v i l l e G lobe and Ar l i ng ton T i m e s , d i v i s i o n s o f Sound Publishing, Inc. are looking for self-moti-va ted , resu l ts -d r iven people interested in a mult i-media sales ca-reer. This position will be responsible for print and digital advertising sales.The successful candi-date wil l be engaging and goal oriented, with g o o d o r g a n i z a t i o n a l skills and will have the ability to grow and main-tain strong business re-lationships through con-s u l t a t i ve s a l e s a n d excellent customer ser-vice. Every day will be a new adventure! You can be an integral par t of these communities while helping local business partners succeed in their in print or online brand-ing, marketing and ad-ve r t i s i n g s t ra t e g i e s . Whether their marketing footprints are in Marys-ville, Arlington, Snohom-ish County or Western Washington - you have the opportunity to help them with their success. Professional sales expe-rience necessary; media experience is a definite asset but not mandatory. If you have these skills, and enjoy playing a pro-act ive par t in helping you r c l i en ts ach ieve b u s i n e s s s u c c e s s , please email your re-sume and cover letter to:
ATTN: MMSCMAR.Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em-p l o y e e ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diver-sity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us!www.soundpublishing.com
FullTime - HVAC Technician - #06957 -
Full TimeTemp - Maintenance Mechanic - #07955
To apply: www.careers.wa.govState of Washington
North Cascade Gateway Center,
Sedro-Woolley, WA
For more selection... www.SoundClassifieds.com
EmploymentGeneral
REPORTERT h e a w a r d - w i n n i n g n ew s p a p e r W h i d b ey News-Times is seeking an energetic, detailed-oriented reporter to write articles and features. Ex-perience in photography and Adobe InDes ign prefer red. Appl icants must be able to work in a team-oriented, dead-line-driven environment, possess excellent writing skills, have a knowledge of community news and be able to write about multiple topics. Must re-locate to Whidbey Is-land, WA. This is a full-time position, 32 hours per week that includes excellent benefits: medi-cal , dental , l i fe insu-rance, 401k, paid vaca-tion, sick and holidays. EOE . No calls please. Send resume with cover letter, three or more non-returnable clips in PDF or Text format and refer-ences to [email protected]
or mail to:HR/GARWNT
Sound Publishing, Inc.11323 Commando Rd
W, Main UnitEverett, WA 98204
Advertise your service800-388-2527
For great deals visit www.SoundClassifieds.com
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Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527
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Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.SoundClassifieds.com
EmploymentGeneral
REPORTERT h e a w a r d - w i n n i n g w e e k l y n e w s p a p e r , Bainbr idge Island Re-view, on Bainbridge Is-land, WA, has an open-i n g f o r a g e n e r a l assignment reporter. We want a skilled and pas-sionate writer who isn’t afraid to tackle meaty news stor ies. Experi-ence with photography and Adobe InDes ign prefer red. Appl icants must be able to work in a team-oriented, dead-line-driven environment, possess excellent writing skills, have a knowledge of community news and be able to write about multiple topics. Must re-locate to Kitsap County. This is a part-time posi-tion, up to 29 hours per week, and includes paid vacation, sick and holi-days. EOE. No ca l l s p lease. Send resume with cover letter, three or more non- re tu r nable clips in PDF or Text for-mat and references to [email protected]
or mail to:HR/GARBIR
Sound Publishing, Inc.11323 Commando Rd
W, Main UnitEverett, WA 98204
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds.www.SoundClassifieds.com
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
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EmploymentGeneral
SINGLE COPY SALES ASSISTANT
CIRCULATION (EVERETT, WA)
The Daily Herald, a divi-sion of Sound Publishing currently has an opening for a Single Copy Sales Assistant. This position is responsible for all cir-culation dealer billing-
system functions, as well as customer service with local retailers. This is a full time, hourly position.
Qualifi ed candidates must possess strong customer service, or-ganizational, and time management skills; ex-cellent phone, data en-
try, reporting, verbal and written communication skills. Must also have
good working knowledge of Excel and Word soft-
ware programs; and ability to learn proprie-tary software systems..
We offer a competitive salary and benefi ts
package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holi-days), and 401K (cur-
rently with an employer match.) If interested, email us your resume
and cover letter to careers@soundpublish-
ing.com and note:
ATTN: SNGLCOPY in the subject line.
Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em-
ployer (EOE) and strongly supports diver-
sity in the workplace. Check out our website to fi nd out more about us!
www.soundpublishng.com
Find it. Buy it. Sell it.www.SoundClassifieds.com
Open 24 hours a day 365 days a year.
Real estate MaRket
To be included in this Directory call Nancy 360-659-1300
9540
68
Wendy Smith360-454-0629 95
4072
$156,000
Cute 3 bedroom 2 bath rambler. Nice size living room with vaulted ceilings and bamboo floors. There is a fully fenced backyard and entertainment size deck. Two car garage. Ad#R295
Diamond in the rough! Home needs some TLC to shine again. Nice size home with sound and mountain views! Open floor plan with 2 bedrooms up and a bedroom downstairs. Large family/bonus room. Enjoy a view of the sound from the entertainment size deck as well as from the living and kitchen windows. One car garage. Ad#R296$155,000
HUD HOMES!!!
August 22, 2015 17The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe August 22, 2015 17The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
EmploymentGeneral
CIRCULATION SALES MANAGER
(Everett, WA)The Daily Herald, a divi- sion of Sound Publishing Inc., is seeking a Circula- tion Sales Manager. This is a position for a self-mo- tivated goal oriented indi- vidual who loves working in the local community.
RESPONSIBILITIES:Deve lop and execu te sales programs and initia- t i ves. Deve lop ing and overseeing single copy planning of store partner- ships and promot ions. Manage effective single- copy draw management. Liaison with independent contractors and third-par- ty vendors. Reinforce re- tention efforts Involved in circulation revenue and expense budgets. Work with Audience Develop- ment Manager to coordi- na te co r po ra te sa les ini t iat ives. Collect out- standing bills on single copy aging accounts. De- sign both internal and ex- ternal solicitation efforts and measure resu l t s . Achieve and exceed cir- culation unit and revenue goals – monthly, semi-an- n u a l l y a n d a n n u a l l y. Works closely with Direc- tor of Audience to grow both digital and print audi- ence.
REQUIRED SKILLS TO PERFORM THIS JOB
SUCCESSFULLY:The ideal candidate will have 2+ years’ exper i- ence in an outside sales B2B role designing and executing outside sales campaigns. The sa les manager must be able to pr ior i t ize and execute mult iple sales projects while maintaining excel- lent communication with the circulation team. Ef- fect ive communicat ion and leadersh ip sk i l l s . Ability to effectively ana- lyze data to make strate- gic decisions. Ability to set and meet sales relat- ed goals. Ability to assist customers and resolve concerns through prompt response. Ability to orga- nize information and bal- a n c e m u l t i p l e t a s k s . A b i l i t y t o e f fe c t i ve l y present informat ion in one-on-one and smal l group situations to cus- tomers, clients and other employees. Flexible and a d a p t a b l e t o m a r ke t changes and demands. Ability to maintain a cost- efficient budget and sales plan. Ability to learn spe- cial ized computer sys- tems and Excel. Must be self-motivated, innovative and creative. Experience in newspaper circulation is preferred. Computer and mathematical skills. Good driving record and reliable transportation to f u l f i l l du t i es o f pos i - tion.Valid Driver’s License and proof of current auto insurance. This position earns a base salary plus bonus. We offer a com- petitive benefits package inc lud ing heal th insu- rance, paid time off (vaca- tion, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match).To apply, please send a cover letter and resume to
p lease inc lude ATTN: CSMW in the subject line. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em- ployer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us!www.soundpublishing.com
Find your perfect pet in the Classifi eds.www.SoundClassifieds.com
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EmploymentGeneral
CREATIVE ARTIST (EVERETT, WA)
Sound Publishing, Inc. has a Creative Artist po- sit ion available at our Print Facility in Everett, WA. Position is FT and the schedule requires flexibility. Duties include performing ad and spec design, trafficking ads & providing excellent cus- tomer ser v ice to the sales staff and clients.
REQUIREMENTS:Experience with Adobe Creative Suite 6, InDe- sign, Photoshop, Illustra- tor, and Acrobat ( fo- c u s e d o n p r i n t ) . Excellent customer ser- vice, organization and communicat ion ski l ls. Ability to work indepen- dently, as well as part of a team, in a fast-paced environment. Newspa- per experience is pre- ferred but not required. AdTracker/DPS experi- ence a plus! Must be able to work indepen- dently as well as part of a team. If you can think outside the box, are well organized and would like to be part of a highly en- ergized, competitive and professional team, we want to hear from you! Please email your cover letter, resume, and a few work samples to:
[email protected]: HR/CAEV
Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em- p l o y e r ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diver- si ty in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us!www.soundpublishing.com
REPORTER(EVERETT, WA)
The Daily Herald, a divi- sion of Sound Publish- ing, Inc. is looking for a productive journalist with the steady habits of a beat reporter, the human touch of a feature writer, and the voice of a col- umnist. Our community n ew s p a p e r w a n t s a spor ts repor ter who’s ready to become a fan favorite. Readers count on the Daily Herald to do a great job wi th high school and community spor ts in Snohomish County, WA. And they love our first-rate cover- age of professional and college sports in Seattle. Can you he lp us do both? Candidates need to be self-star ters and should be comfor table working for both pr int and digital platforms -- maintaining a blog and feeding a Twi t ter ac- count. Experience as a beat wr i ter preferred. Column-writing experi- ence a plus. Please email resume, cover letter, and up to 5 samples of your work to:
[email protected] sure to note ATTN: EDHREP
in the subject line.Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em- p l o y e r ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diver- si ty in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us!www.soundpublishing.com
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EmploymentGeneral
REPORTERT h e a w a r d - w i n n i n g n ew s p a p e r W h i d b ey News-Times is seeking an energetic, detailed- oriented reporter to write articles and features. Ex- perience in photography and Adobe InDes ign pre fer red. Appl icants must be able to work in a team-oriented, dead- line-driven environment, possess excellent writing skills, have a knowledge of community news and be able to write about multiple topics. Must re- locate to Whidbey Is- land, WA. This is a full- t ime posi t ion that in- cludes excellent bene- fits: medical, dental, life insurance, 401k, paid vacation, sick and holi- days. EOE . No cal ls p lease. Send resume with cover letter, three or more non- re tu r nable clips in PDF or Text for- mat and references to
[email protected] or mail to:
HR/GARWNTSound Publishing, Inc.
11323 Commando Rd WEverett, WA 98204
SOCIAL MEDIA AND MARKETING
COMMUNICATIONS CONTRACTOR (Everett, WA)
Sound Media, a division of Sound Publishing Inc., is seeking a Contractor to lead its social media and marketing communi- cations. Requires some- one who is passionate about Social Age Tech- no log ies and under - stands the cross channel campaign strategies of- fered by an innovative, 21st century consultative marketing team. Among many other things, this person will be respon- sible for:· developing enterprise- level online and offline marketing communica- t ions p lans and exe- cutable strategies, to be delivered and managed across multiple channels written for unique target audiences.· developing content and copy appropr ia te fo r press releases, online channels (web, digital), and marketing campaign messaging. · fo r mu la t i n g c u s to - mizable marketing com- munications solutions for e a c h u n i q u e c l i e n t t h r o u g h a t h o r o u g h needs-assessment, en- sur ing recommended campaign strategies and related tactics meet or exceed client expecta- tions.Position may require a bachelor’s degree and at least 5 years of experi- ence in the field or in a r e l a t e d a r e a , o r a n equivalent combination of education and practi- ca l exper ience. Must possess a reliable vehi- c le, val id Dr iver ’s L i - cense, and proof of cur- rent vehicle insurance coverage. This is an in- dependently contracted position and is paid as outlined in the contract.
To apply, please send a cover letter and resume
please include ATTN: SocMediaCon
in the subject line. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com
5 Week Photo Specials Call 1-800-388-2527 formore information. Look online 24 hours a day at www.SoundClassifieds.com
EmploymentSkilled Trades/Construction
BUILDING MAINTENANCE &
REPAIR
Pacific MobileMarysville
$18 to $20 per hour with full benefits pack- age. Perform mainte- nance and se r v i ce calls on Mobile Offices a t c u s t o m e r s i t e s . Skil ls/Qualif ications: 5+ years carpentry ex- per ience, cus tomer service skills, Plumb- ing and electrical trou- bleshooting and repair, Acceptable dr iver ’s record, Forklift certifi- cation preferred
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2 PLOTS AT RENTON MEMORIAL PARK; side by side in the beautiful Azalea Garden. Value $16000 selling for $5000 Seller pays transfer fee. Call 206-470-9680.BELLEVUE. 2 SxS PLOTS in the sold out Garden of Devotion. Beautiful Sunset Hills. Located in the original section of the cemetery; it is a prestigious, beauti- ful local. Nestled along side of a tree, near en- trance. Asking price is $14,950 OBO for both (includes transfer fee). Retail price for 1 plot is $22,000. Lot 19A, space 9-10. Call 425-821-5348 or 360-687-7571.Rare, 6 adjoining lots in the Garden of Devotion at Sunset Hills Memorial.sold out for 30 years. O u t s t a n d i n g v i e w s . Worth $24,000 each. All $45,000 or $8,000 each.Seller pays transfer fees. Call Mike at (661)695- 4734 or [email protected]
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PIXIE BOBS Cat Kitten- TICA Registered. Play- ful, lots of fun! Hypo-al- l e rgen i c , sho r t ha i r, some polydactyl, short tails, very loving and loy- al. Box trained. Excellent markings. All shots and wormed. Guaranteed! Taking deposi ts now! R e a d y f o r F o r e v e r Homes in July/August. Prices starting at $350. Cal l for appointment: 425-235-3193 (Renton)
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AKC English Lab Pups $550 - $800. Chocolate & b l a ck L a b s w i t h b locky heads. Grea t hunters or companions. Playful, loyal & healthy. Family raised & well so- cialized, OFA’s lineage, first shots, de-wormed and vet checked. Par- ents on site. 425-422-2428.
AKC Eng l i sh Mas t i f f Kennel has 5 week old puppies available. Ac- cepting deposits now. Great purebred family pets. Ideal security dogs. Perfect show dogs. Ex- tremely gentle & patient. 3 boys & a girl. Colors are an Apricot Male, a Red-Br ind le Ma le , a Brindle Male & a Fawn F e m a l e . K i n g s t o n . $2500. Francis 360-535- [email protected]
AKC German Shep- herd Puppies. Europe- an lines, black and red. Both parents hip and el- bows OFA certified, first shots, wormed. 2 Fe- males $900ea. Ready n o w. w w w. g e r m a n - pups.net (360)457-9515GREAT DANE Puppies All males; 9 weeks old, born June 3rd. Fawns. Dad is AKC. Mom is p u r e b r e d . S h o t s & wormed. $700 each. 253-761-6067.Need to sell old exercise equipment? Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today.
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The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe18 August 22, 2015 The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe18 August 22, 2015
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( 1 block East of I-5 )
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Dogs
CHIHUAHUA Puppies, call for pricing. Financing Available. Adult Adop- tions Also, $100 Each. Reputable Oregon Ken- nel. Unique colors, Long and Short Haired. Health Guaranteed. UTD Vacci- nations/wormings, litter box trained, socialized. Video, pictures, informa- t ion/v i r tua l tour, l ive puppy-cams!!
www.chi-pup.netReferences happily sup- plied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-459- 5951
MINI Austral ian shep- herd Purebred Puppy’s, r a i s e d w i t h f a m i l y, smart, loving. 1st shots, wormed. Many colors. $550 & up. 360-261- 3354
PUG PUPPIES! Thor- oughbred, parents on site. 4 male fawns $500 . Gets along well with chil- dren, other dogs, and any household pets. It has a high socialization requirement. Pugs are lovable lap dogs who like to stick close to their owner’s side.Call or email (707)580- 8551, [email protected]
Y E L L OW L A B P U P - PIES, family raised, gor- geous, born July 20th, parents AKC registered, OFA health clearances, champion bloodl ines. Puppies ready 1st week of September. Worming, 1st shots & vet checks. Come check out puppies $800. (425)868-7706Parent photos at labrooklabs.com/more puppies
Dogs
PUPPY KISSES FOR Sale! Bernese Mountain Dog cross puppies. 4 puppies, 9 weeks old 3 boys & 1 g i r l ! Super cute! Great family dogs! Both parents on s i te. Call Christine for details $600. 360-858-1451. www.facebook.com/SeedMountainFarmwww.facebook.com/SeedMountainFarm
R O T T W E I L E R A K C Puppies. Great Imported line, large blocky heads, excellent temperament & pedigree, Family raised, gentle parents. Starting at $1,000 360.353.0507
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Farm Animals& Livestock
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transportation
AutomobilesChevrolet
2011 Chevrolet Impala LT
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AutomobilesFord
2010 Ford FusionStk P1262A $10,998
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AutomobilesFord
2012 Ford Fusion SE Sunroof, power seat,
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FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
AutomobilesHonda
2005 Honda Accord Sdn EX-L
Stk 150173C $11,998
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tires.Stk 28705TB $7,988
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AutomobilesSubaru
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2012 Subaru ImprezaAWD, 1 Owner,Low 30k Miles
Stk 28605PD $15,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
AutomobilesToyota
2007 Toyota PriusNav, Leather,
up to 60 mpg city, backup cam
Stk 28613TB $8,688
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2008 Toyota Avalon Limited, Nav, leather,
sunroof, low 64K, luxury.
Stk 28710PD $15,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
2013 Scion FRsCertified, 1 owner, low
21KStk 28708PA $21,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
2015 Toyota ScionTC, Certified, 8K, roof,
auto.Stk 28601TB $18,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
Pickup TrucksChevrolet
2009 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LT
Stk 150224A $23,998
HONDA OFMARYSVILLE360-436-4620
Pickup TrucksFord
2004 Silver Ranger XLT, great tires, automatic, 6 cylinder, runs great, rear whee l d r i ve , 78 ,700 miles. Well maintained $7,000. (425)485-0439
2011 Ford F150Crew cab, 4x4 Chrome
20’s, tow, chrome boards.
Stk 28666PD. $26,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
Pickup TrucksToyota
2007 Toyota Tacoma Crew
4x4 6spd. matching canopy, tow
Stk 28634PD $24,488
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Sport Utility VehiclesAcura
2006 Acura MDX4WD, nav, leather, sunroof, 3rd row.
Stk 28615TB $12,988
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2010 Honda CRVAWD,Sunroof, leather,
1 owner.Stk 28493TC $17,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
Sport Utility VehiclesToyota
2013 Toyota RAV4Stk P1313 $18,999
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2012 Toyota FJ 4X4Rare Trail Team Edition, loaded,
certified. Stk 28693TB $35,988
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low 10K miles, certified.
Stk 28714PD $24,988
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Vans & MinivansGMC
2014 GMC Savana 2500 Cargo Van
11k miles, Pwr pkg, Factory Warranty
Stk 28671PD $21,988
FOOTHILLS(360)757-7575
Motorhomes
1998 Thor Pinnacle. 30’ class A wide body. Ford 460 chassis, basement model with only 55,000 miles. Sleeps 6, walk around queen, 2 TV’s, 2 A/C, awnings, outside shower. Excellent condi- t i o n i n s i d e & o u t . $14,000 (425)255-6763
Tents & Travel Trailers
1999 RV SPACELINER in great cond.! Sleeps 6 +. All the extras! Ready to roll!! Asking $5,000. Auburn. Call 253-631- 7130.
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August 22, 2015 19The Arlington Times / The Marysville Globe
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